Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 October 1950 — Page 14
/
(
i
f t
half stuff had hécome old and in due
course the Cadets, no longer fumbling, had taken complete charge
Dywalt Cops Salem Feature
Hoosier Named
PAGE 14
Joe Williams Says— Army-Michigan No Contest
Cadets-Wolverines Give New York a Rare Big Game
NEW YORK, Oct. 16—Once Army got straightened out it was no contest with Michigan in the No. 1 football game of the week, which in some odd manner managed to wind up in the big town. We have so few class games these days it is always a shattering purprise when we get one with national
‘two factors:
half was due | Inabili the visitors” ‘baffling defensive patterns, The second might no have had any noticeable effect if th€ Cadets hadn't fumbled so of¥én at the start. (They fumbled he ==11 five times all told and lost it five.)
~ » on IT WAS A TRIBUTE to their superior skilis that they were able to spot the Midwesterners so many openings and still win so decisively. For, make no mistake, this was a first class Big 10 team, fast, spirited, powerful and shrewdly coached. And, getting ful! time service from Chuck Ortman, as fine a triple threat back as you'll see all season, Michigan was at its absolute peak. Yet, against this newest streamlined jet model Coach Earl (Red) Blaik has created, it was just another football team. Sounds incredible but that's how it was,
” ns n BENNIE OOSTERBANN had hoped to spring an upset by using new defensive stuff-—traps, loops and shifts he had designed especially for the Cadets. A year ago Blaik spent most of the summer studying films of Michigan games. As a result he had an excellent book on Oosterbann's techniques and made it pay off. There was no way the Michigan coach could protect u himself from the films but at least he could try to concoct something different; at least something Blaik wouldn't expect from scout reports. Which is precisely what the young man did “Just about scared the daylights out of us, too” admitted Blaik to me yesterday at the Giants-Steelers game. .
BUT BY started Oosterbann’s
I EY J ~ the time the second new
of the game. One reason we don't have mors?
big time college football games here parks wield. No matter in whieh park (yiants and the Yanks split the
is the monopoly the .ball
played the
the game Is
jough down the midd’e. To get nto the stadium Saturday Army and Michigan were clipped for
$25.000 rental right off, plus $5000 Woods? to clean up the park. Then came moralists afd politicians can be he sees to pay it is to pound it
the big squeeze: from Tom program gales and conces-'is desirable.
All the monies!
t Michigan
implications. The: Cadets’ sluggish start—it was 6-6 at the
se
blame 'em. After all, Tn and own!
do have their
parks. THE OTHER * AFTERNOON 1
| |
i
asked Ezzard Charles when a ga
prize fighter should call it quits. | “When he sees a punch coming] and finds he can no longer get out! of the way” the heavyweight | champion replied. This being a reasonably accurate description | lof the present day Joe Louis. Hollywood is simply fantastic. The script of the Ben Hogan pic-| ture calls for a scene with Sam Snead and guess who's going to! play the part? 8am Snedd himself! It Hank Greenberg has his way Lou Boudreau will not be back as (Cleveland manager next year— but it's no cinch the front office chief is that strong. Or so I'm told by a gent who is close to the situation. :
n J » TROUBLE with these governmental crusades it's never easy for the innocent bystander to tell where sincerity of purpose ends and shameless politicking begins. Consider Sen. C. W. Tobey who came into our town with the Washington statesmen investigating crime last week and took a rap at Tom Dewey and conditions upstate. “Why does your governor tolerate gambling in Saratoga?” he wanted to know. Perhaps this is a good question, though obviously it would have been a better one during the racing season. Now I'd like to ask you a question, Mr. Senator. You represent New Hampshire. It is evident you are extremely sensitive to law breaking. What have you ever done about conditions in Bretton Woods, N. H., where the top bookies of New England spend their summer vacation each year and where the daily betting runs into boxear Hgures?
¥ YOU Know 0 much about lour state you surely must know all there is to know about your own state. You can't lose any votes by denouncing gambling in alien New York. Maybe you
wouldn't lose any in your native
New Hampshire—but just for the record, have you ever moved against the boys in Bretton Somehow consistency in
most reassuring. In any case it
Times State Service
SALEM, Oct. 16—Driving a
supercharged midget Offy, Jimmy Daywalt 20-lap with a time of 6:52.51.
of Wabash won the feature here yesterday
Daywalt took the lead on the
first lap and was never headed. Second was Duane Carter of De-
roit; Bill Mackey, Indianapolis, hird, and Johnny Tolan, Denver,
fourth.
CHICAGO, Oct. 16 (UP)—John
Sox farm sys-
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The Beech Grove alleys’ 2-in-1 tourney has reached the halfway point of its two week-end tenure. John Branam leads the singles actual and the Bob Kays-Wilbert Schuck team is pacing the doubles handicap. Branam has 847 for four games and Kay and Schuck have racked up 1724 off a 63-pin handicap. Meanwhile, there were few stiff arms among league bowlers today. Last night's scores attest to
Mostil of Whiting, Ind., was pro-the fact that the keglers took it moted to field supervisor of the easy. Chicago. White tem Toporcer,
Best effort of a lack-lustre night was Bob Gulley’s 612 for Elstrod Motors and Patty Strie-
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CAMDEN, N. J, Oct. 16 (UP) — Ben (Sonny) Morrell, captain of the Camden Catholic High School team; was in critical condition today with a broken neck suffered while leading his team to a 25-7 victory over Bridgeton High School Saturday. y Morrell scored two touchdowns before he was injured in a pile-up at the scrimmage line in the third quarter, He was placed in an iron lung at Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital.
‘Week-End Prep
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The nation's No.
| football team isn't a one-man with West Point's fame on the gridiron. They are (left
army. These five cadets have a lot to do to right) John Martin and Frank Fischl, backs;
Dan Foldberg, captain and end; Gil Stephenson, back, and. Chuck Shira, tackle, Maybe they're foot soldiers, but they don't travel on defeat. Army is unbeaten.
Today's Sport Parade—
Negotiations Under Way For Louis-Cesar Brion Bout
Brown Bomber Plans to Come Out Of Retirement, Lasted 2 Weeks, 2 Days
By MILTON RICHMAN, United Press Sports Writer NEW YORK, Oct. 16— Overwhelming pride and an undersized meet next Sunday for an 18-hole 20d a brother survive him.
pocketbook kept
Joe Louis back-
doomed and inevitable dead end.
Negotiations already are underway for Louis to come out of Lin that lasted all of two weeks and two days.
a “retirement”
James Norris,
announced that
|
-pedaling dizzily today toward a
3 Local Golfers In Publinx Playof
Baker, Berry, Hess Tie Lead With 145s
Three Indianapolis golfers will
playoff in the
the International Boxing Club impresario, has the South Grove course.
Louis probably | -
will be matched with Cesar Brion,
a willing but tinian on Nov. Louis,
awkward 29 at Chicago. in his last ring appear-
Argen-
he is too enthusiastic for his own| good.
associated with him, was totally|
Indiana Public ks Championship after ending in a three-way tie yesterday over
ATLANTA, Oct. 16 (UP)—"The worlds of golf and news mourned 0. B. Keeler today when word writers was dead here at the of 68.
He died early Sunday of a liver, ailment that incapacitated him for several weeks. Funeral services were to be held here this afternoon. He rose to national prominence together. For Atlanta papers, Keeler had covered every tournament in which Jones played, and he Wee wrote a biography of the “Grand Slam” champion.
! “My Dearest Friend”
Jones had just arrived at White Sulphur Springs, W. Va. for a vacation when he learned of Keeler's death, and immédiately took a train back to Atlanta. “He was my dearest friend,” Jones said. Keeler began his career in 1909 {with the now-defunct Atlanta | Georgian, working for nothing [oe supplying his own typewriter. He worked on the Kansas City Star for three years, but returned) here to specialize on golf for the! Georgian and the Journal His widow, a daughter, a son
Grid Date Changed
The high school football g between Deaf School and Plain. {field Charlton, originally sched-
Chet Baker, Reese Berry and ,joq4 for 2:45 p. m. Wednesday, Chuck Hess, all of Coffin, finished will be e played tomorrow.
The aura of greatness, so often the two-day meet with totals of Next Sun-|
145 to tie for first.
args that the dean of American! if the young man age
Keeler, recently retired from active service by the Atlanta Journal, had been one of the first!
By HARMAN W.
was a town
|
lis’ newest
Plans the great Bobby Jones professional boxing unit, “Hoosier
All-Star Boxing Enterprises,” to stage a fight card this Friday night have been shelved for one
week. Norbert Updike, head of the organization, which was given permission last week to promote fighting, today said the Armory, scene of the city’s indoor boxing, is in use this Friday. The Hoosier’s first card will be Oct. 27 in the Armory. The main event of the opener will be a 10round championship battle for the
ship with titlé-holder Joe Sgro meeting Andy Anderson, former local Golden Gloves champion. Updike, who has had experience
Indiana welterweight champion-|
Father ‘Mac’ Is Dead, Suis Memory
Permeates Campus at Cornerstone Laying . NICHOLS, United Press Staff Correspondent AN uA, Oct. 16—This is about Father “Mac” whe disciplinarian and a fine moulder of character at . But the Jesuit priest always could think up a néw excuse, They tell this casa Father “Mas” 1
{promoting fights in Greensburg, |
says he intends to stage fight cards each week during the winter.
Badgers Challenge Michigan Rating
Georgegave a kid a break,
EVAN
* Imagina
Jenced” | confining cooler w lice. ~The b armed — Bafe whi pushed : The rol enough ation sy B500-poun the door.
ROSIE, ee Baia. = —— ‘That's original,” admitted Father Mac. Stories of that sort about the Rev. Fr. Vincent 8S. McDonough rippled across the historic old campus Saturday when they laid the cornerstone of a new. gymnasium—to be called, quite properly, the McDonough gym. Father “Mac” is dead. Father “Mac” said mass one day. Then he listened to a newscast, announcing the German armies had spilled over into Poland. It was too much for the priest, who was thinking of his boys who would have to go under fire. He died there is his easy chair. Father “Mac” had dreamed of a new gymnasium at Georgetown. Something to replace old Ryan Gym, which played host to only 69 persons in the first basketball game there and couldn't house many hundred more than that— ever.
The dream didn't die with the
good father. It was perpetuated last week-end by the alumni who |gathered for the solemn ceremony ‘and corner-stone laying for the new gym. The new building—modern as they come—will cost $860,000, When the former GU clan gath{ered there still was a deficit of $240,000. It is being made up— | after the reunion. The building
CHICAGO, Oct. 16 PY Wis- WE 80 up.
{consin will find out for the Big
High School Football |Ten this week-end whether the| Wins Trapshoot
South M, Suh Bena)
missing in Louis’ last test with day's playoff round will begin a
ance against Ezzard Charles on Charles. His once rapier-like left] 12:30 p. m.
"schedule This Week-End conference has much chance
Sept. 27, was little short of pa- ¢ thetic. He left the ring a battered, seemed dulled to the point of| Hess was the leader at the end TOMORROW |end Michigan's three-year domi-| sorry hulk, his features puffed bluntness and his right lacked its|of firing Saturday with a 69. But! p Fiainfleld Charlton at Deaf School. 3:45 nation of the league football race. like overbaked biscuits and his usual knockout authority. {he had a bad round yesterday Thursday The Badgers, temporary Big pride severely wounded. Louis even moved differentiy|when he shot 37-3976. Par is|gMorton Memorial = Koighstown ve. Ten leaders with two victories and From that bout came a cour- than before. Where once he glided | 35-35-70. Baker yesterday had | 5 day : no defeats, travel to Ann Arbor ageous Charles, the new world capably and confidently, now he 36-35—71, to go with his Satur-| on Davia “at anual. of 5. >. m. |to open the Wolverines’ Big Ten heavyweight champion, and then i’ad slowed to an unsteady and |day score of 74. Berry had a 73| Jech at Broad Ripple. 8 ». om. . season. And though Michigan the downcast Louis, not even an uacertain shuffle. ion the opening day and fired 5. 5 * will be the thvorite, Wisconsin authentic pretender to the throne. In his prime Joe's name was) {36-36—72 yesterday. heridan, rien Aacktur Sentral, | might have the ability to push the Entering his dressing room Magic and quick victory was his| Russ Rader and Clyde McEn- |? Franklin Township at Pike Townsiip, defending eco-champions ‘to the] after the fight, Louis was peevish- calling card. Now, Somewhat ure were just over the tying acore| 8 Boliville st W Central, 8 peak. stouter, slower and balder, he with 146s. ‘The scores: | Hows 8% Anderson, & Db. m. » =." The Ann Arbor spectacle head-
ly quiet for a long time. Then, in answer to a question, he curtly: mumbled he was finished,
Washingt Saturday lines a three-game - as ington vs. Shortridge at CYO, § program. In other games, arate Purdue opens league play at Iowa,
never approaches the brilliance of | Bob Ludlow, 75-73—147: Jack Pleifer, | 5 {71- m Neal 78-73 yesteryear. is Binder. 1 74-75—-45; Buck Hainelc.
Pra “ ’ ” One thin about th (77-131 Lee, 74-15—149; ET through fightin’ for good. 8 e man, gn g g 8 though, is that he keeps coming. | (Campell 13-8 6149: Arnold K Koshler, § CYO C d t Football while Ohio State, co-holders of Memory Cut Short nice. Poynter. aae +d : : Even as he does, however, there] Clayton Nichols, 77-74—151; en Funk, RESELYS YB AY the ‘league title with Michigan, A pressing debt, however, has is more than just suspicion that Buller 13-83-i54: James B-10—184; Bill Division 1a AY 15, se |Will play at hapless Minnesota. cut the ex-champion's memory the ever-proud Joe Louis actually! 135; Bud Owens; 80-15-158 Tea Dra er | Catherine 0: St. Philip 21, St. Patrick 0;, On the non-conference schedule short. It is understood he owes is going. Hoy Jr., 18-11—185. Ges 3 sacred Heart 10: OW Lady of Washington plays at Illinois,
{Lourd 79-13, Holy Trinit Notre Dame at Indiana, Pitts-
the government $150,000 in back Carl Lines, 78-719--157; Doug Crist.
79 i a t 5 taxes and probably the only w1Y New Yorker Wins NE, ERA Rh Magu ITE OFF
a [TH yea, 83-88—171; Pant Oliver: 86-87—-173. (Name 0; Sacred dan a bye.
6: Christ Ane King 12. St. £80 Ans 0° 0; "cphagral burgh at Northwestern, and MarARGIW. & quette at Michigan State.
out. dollar for dollar, with his Winchester Race weary, once-wonderful fists. Times Stale Service Louis’ ultimate goal is another WINCHESTER, Oct. 16—Lioyd shot at Charles, the plodding pore of Frewsburg, N. Y., cap-|curly-haired Cincinnatian who de- typed the 200-lap, 100-mile late feated him at Yankee Stadium model stock car race here yoster less than three weeks ago. day. He drove a Mercury. The Brown Bomber’'s immediate The winner took the lead on, objective is the swarthy Brion, the 150th lap and finished with al rated the outstanding South time of one hour, 33 minutes and| American heavyweight prospect 55.5 seconds. Bud Sager of Toledo! since Luis (Angel) Firpo. Brion, was second with Eill Rexford of! a hard puncher but painfully Jamestown, N. Y., third. short of experience, has won 31; Fastest qualifier was, Dick Lin-| of his 34 professional fights and der of Pittsburgh with’ a one- lap, could - conceivably nudge Louis time of 26. 15. further toward fistic obscurity. Whatever the outcome, Louis Aygsie Half-Miler Killed
has little to gain outside his ve By Starting Gun Blast
purse which already must channeled in the direction of WELLINGTON, New Zealand, | Uncle Sam. Oct.’ 16 (UP)—Champion Half-| ‘Too Enthusiastic’ Miler Philip Brady Jr., 19, bent Louis admits to several mis- down on the mark for his spefakes during his boxing lif:time cialty at an Otane athletic meet. and one of them was .taking. When the official starter fired Charles too lightly. his cut-down service rifle, Brady He now says he will traifi/fell fatally wounded. Police| harder for Brion but the coasen- blamed the blast from the blank!
sus along Jacobs’ Beach Is that shell.
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CLINTON, Oct. 16 — Smashing 90 out of 100 targets, Charles Ad{kins of Indianapolis yesterday won the sub-junior title in the 10th annual Wabash & Valley Championship trapshoot.
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