Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 October 1950 — Page 17
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troit Red wings:
et for the first:
ne that it seemed ing “excuse me”: shed against ane
ist of eight: erly played with:
ities were calle st and none of. nfractions. There: pmiplaint against
n Top or-All Oct. 28 (UP) Mohawks took possession of the western div merican Hockey by beating the
Ss, 3 to 1 ina | in a wild free-
rted when Tod » Mohawks and of Cleveland at 14:44 of the yers from both pn to the ice and g punches and ler was restored. 1 Russell handed enalties and two It of the fracas,
Goals et Victory , Oct. 28 (UP)— ki broke a 3-all riod with a goal tsburgh Hornets .merican Hockey yver the Buffalo
had taken a pass assen to put the at 7:01, Johnny the length of ihe st from Johnny the victory with il at 16:25,
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To Canterbury
Knights Keep Perfect Record For This Season: « DANVILLE, Oct. 28 (UP)— Canterbury College's Bob Courtney and Trent Gipson staged a
two-man scoring circus today by racking up six touchdowns be-
“Tie, Stay In
i —————
First of Many For Ohio State
%®.
_|Anderson’ s Macholtz Scores But Mates Fail To Trim Crippled Foe
Indiana Central Will Face Knights In Tough Drive for Top Spot in Conference
Indiana Central's Greyhounds had as much consolation today as a grid team can get from a 7-all stalemate. Coach Walt Bartkiewicz' boys came from behind in the third period to gain a deadlock from Anderson and retain their chances for a Hogsier Conference title. The Greyhounds added the tie to their 3-1 league record and can begin: the rocky climb to the|—————=s——rm—mrorre——————— title by knocking off Canter-and Charles bury’s unbeaten Knights Satur- through the line for the final
J =
Texas Seuss
Hoosier Conference Standings
Canterbury ......co00. TAYIOF ..oivcocinensnns Indiana Central ....... HaROVer ...i...vavsess ARGEISOR «.»ossis sess {Manchester .......c00 Franklin ....cco000000s {EAFEDAIN +... su vesianas
Om Mea [on
ito a 40 to 7 victory over Rose Poly.
Acme Telephoto.
The pass intended for Western Reserve Back Emil Danciu (80) is blocked by Don Rodick (35) and Ron Hallam (rear) of Butler during the first quarter of the game played at Shaw Stadium in Cleveland yesterday. Butler won, 25 to 14, for its second victory this season.
Army Machine Finally Shifts | Into High, Beats Lions, 34-
Cadets Turn to Al Pollard After Columbia
Throws Back Powerful Soldier Attack NEW YORK, Oct. 28 (UP)-
Army's awesome football machine
Valpo Racks Up
th Straight Win
i VALPARAISO, Oct. 28 (UP)— to pace Princeton to a 27 to 0 victory and topple Cornell from the a
coo momooh
|tween them to lead their mates
Canterbury, unbeaten and un-|
Princeton Drops Cornell
From Unbeaten Ranks
Dick Kazmaier Paces Tigers to 27-0 Victory Over Treditional Rivals
PRINCETON, N. J. Oct.
28
(UP)--Dashing Dick Kazmaler
n five yards for one touchdown and 70 yards for another today
|Valparaiso’s Crusaders won their ranks of football's unbeaten and untied.
sixth straight game of the season today, beating Ball State, 21 to 7, for their slimmest win of the year.
The unbeaten Crusaders now have rolled up 262 points while
{allowing their opponents oniy 20, jan average of 43.3 per game. Ball State held a 7-0 halftime edge as Dick Isenberg went over from the 2-yard
line and Bob princeton
The two touchdown sprints by Young Kazmaier, noted as a passer, came in the first half and gave unbeaten-untied
lead on which to work. The brutally rushing Princeton line took over after that and held Cornell in check until the Big Red donated two more touchdowns in the last period. A
Princeton a
watched Cornell's
47,500 smear
crowd of
who is also
Kentucky Amazes Ga. Tech, 28-14
ATLANTA, Oct. 28 (UP) Vito
Baker kicked the extra point with vaunted offense into haphazard (Babe) Parilli, a. quarterback ma-
only two minutes remaining in the second period.
Valparaiso tied it up in the third
ineffectiveness. Cornell couid ‘gain only 27 yards through the Princeton line—and that tells as
stalled and stuttered for almost a quarter under lead gray skies on a fourth down pass and an much the story as the final score.
at Baker Field today.
extra point and picked up two .
But the Cadets slipped’ into high gear and roared to their 25th more TD's and conversions in the
game without defeat and fifth win of the season by flattening last
Columbia, 34 to 0. Thrown back fiye times by a! charging line whigh hoped to duplicate Columbig’s famed 1947 upset of Army, fhe Cadets ned! to sensational Al Pollard The loping fullback from Los Angeles put them out in front with a 66-yard touchdown gallop. He: then kicked the point for a 7-to-0 lead and the crashing Cadets were on their way.
Wabash Tramples Franklin, 4 to 13
CRAWFORDSVILLE, Oct. 28
period while holding the Cardinals at midfield.
Califomia Whips St. Mary's, 40-25
ard AH Oct.
Blocking Good The first touchdown came in the first period—and on the first !time Princeton got the ball. It [was a 48-yard drive taking only
|nine plays, with Kazmaier dash.
ing around right end for the actual touchdown. In the second period Razmaler
gician with a full bag of tricks led the Kentucky Wildcats to a 28-14 victor over Georgia Tech today before 37,000 homecoming fans. The tricky Parilli . completely befuddled the Engineers as he passed for two touchdowns and led the Wildcats to two more with his sensational quarterback work, Tech - had its moments with Bobby North plugging through the line and Chappell Rhino ad-
28 eased through the right side of ding a twisting 36-yard run for a
{ (UPJ —California’s Golden Bears the line from his 30, cut sharply, score. But the game was all Ken-
rolled to their sixth straight vic-/to hig left and dashed the dis- tucky, today by whipping St. tance to a touchdown as End Ed parade of fine backs down the (UP)—The Little Giants of Wa- Mary's Gaels, 40 to 25, but it was Reef. Center Redmond Finney field and tackle Bob Gain stand-
tory
with Parilli sending a
They tallied twice more in the bash Collége pleased a Dads’ Day a 135-pound Gael halfback Who and End Frank McPhee dashed up ing out in a defensive Wildcat second period with Vie Pollock crowd of 3000 here today by roll- stole the show by running two ts chop down the Cornell sec- line that rarely yielded.
ing over the Franklin Grizzlies, 42 to 13. Wabash
packing it over, They added an: other in the third quarter by the high-stepper from Linfield, Pa. along with one by Jack Martin o Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Then they coasted through a scoreless fourth period with the reserves holding Columbia's defeated but not discouraged Lions at bay. Columbia's forward wall tied the teeth of the Army backs in the first period until with seconds remaining Pollard tucked the ball under his arm and sweet-| stepped 66 yards for the opening score. That started the Cadets rolling. The first time they got the ball in the second quarter, they went 80 yards in nine plays with Pollock hammering over from the three.
scoring, distributed very period as the Little Giants pier 2 on Franklin fumbles! and blocked kicks and turned them into touchdowns. The Little Giants scored four times in the first half on plunges | ‘by Ted Steeg, Chuck Gainer and | Bunny Woollen and once on a pass | 5 trom fullback Bob Mace to end {Ken Beasley. Their second-half TD's came on plunges by Mace and Gainer. Franklin scored in the first pari{od when tackle Marvin Armstrong intercepted a lateral off a punt and jogged 22 yards into the pon zone. The Grizzlies’ second marker wasn't until the fourth frame | wheén quarterback Gene Walters! [sneaked the ball across from the I yard line.
Huskies Keep Atop PCC, Beat Stanford
STANFORD, Cal, Oct. 28 (UP)
Do work-horse quarterback,
OOo. Tex. Oct. 28 (UP) kicked, passed and ran the Uni-
—Don Heinrich, a smooth-oper-!
{kickoffs all the way back. Sam Bombiani, a five-foot, five-inch halfback, ran one kick-
fied by a penalty, Undaunted, he took another boot on his own 9-yard the. third period and sprinted 91 yards for a touchdown right through the entire swprised Cali[fornia team. The Bears scored their 30th consecutive Tegulaz » stason vic|tory.
Aces Win, 195 On Two Bobbles
EVANSVILLE, Oct. 28 (UP)—|
{Evansville College, a three-touch-idown underdog, powered across one touchdown and took advantage of fumbles for two others tonight to: beat Mississippi Delta, State, 19 to 6. A 73-yard third period march
ipdid off when Quarterback Dick|
McKasson tossed a six-yard pass
Fullback Byron Townsend scored versity of Washington Huskies to to Ray Bawel for a score,
two touchdowns today as Univer- a 21 to 7 victory over the Stanpity of Texas smashed Rice In- ford Indians here today * before stitute, ‘35 to 7. for its second 35000 fans. Southwestern Conference football, The victory for the Huskies victory. kept them at the top of the The result set the stage for a pycific Coast Conference standclimactic collision at Austin next ings .and at the same time just week between Texas and South- anour knocked Stanford -cut of ern Methodist’ University, now ine race. It was the Indians’ secthe only teams with a-clean con- 4 straight conterence loss.
ference record for the season. ; North Carolina Whips
A capacity crowd of 70,000—a good portion of them unbelieving Rice ‘alumni back for a home- William and Mary, 40-7 coming—saw Texas demonstrate = ay,ppy, HILL, N. C.. Oct. 28 superiority by an unexpected (yp). North Carolina Halfback margin in every department. |Dick. Wiess galloped 78 yards to But the brightést Texan of score with the ‘opening Kickoff them all was big, bruising Town- today- and start a marathon in'' send, who moved with the deter-| pion twice-beaten and once-tied ‘mination of a baby tank. Rice North Carolina whipped William fought back, but never on 28] ang Mary, 40 to. 7. terms. .A 100-yard dash by Halfback ‘Bob. ‘Gant was the longest of || North- Carolina's scoring sprints, but others went for 80, 78 and 58 yards.
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On the next kickoff, Bob Hemp- | hill fumbled on his 11 for the Greenies and the Purple Aces took over. Joe Unfried went over; on the next play. A Delta pass attempt in the last period. also was fumbled and Evansville turned) that break into its final TD. Delta scored in the fourth when Quarterback “Fats” Dalton went over from the one-yard ifhe tw
cap a 40-yard nareh,
Vandy Moves by Arkansas, 14-13
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. Oct. 28 P) — Vanderbilt junked its usually phenomenal passing pattern today and turned big Dean
Davidson loose on the ground of
get by the Arkansas Razorbacks, to 13, Some 21,000 partisan fans
yatehed the Commodores from:
ashville, Tenn., stave off a last-|
[Nasi Arkansas threat to win! Itheir fifth victory of the seaon against only one defeat. | Arkansas ) up a tight {aerial defense that all but stopped [the Vanderbilt passing tandem of} {Bill Wade and Bucky Curtis, the {nation’s leaders in the throwing and catching departments, respec-| ively.
Professional
OPENING H Olympians vs
Nov. 7th, 8: BUTLER FIELDHOUSE
Lond
ondary. Bob Unger missed his extra int try after the second touch-
? among a flock of backs, éame in off 94 yards only to have it nulli- down, but made all the others in
the four-touchdown attack. After that it was a matter of
last period. ® A fumble made possible the first Princeton touchdown and an intercepted pass set up the second. There might even have been a third had not the clock run out, for Princeton was probing deep after a Cornell fumble in the game's fading moment,
Colgate Triumphs Over Brown, 35-34
PROVIDENCE, R. I, Oct. 28. (UP)-—Brown University put on a vicious four-touchdown attack in the final period today but lost out to Colgate 35 to 34 when a nalty for delaying the game jcanceled a successful point conversion. Brown had only 10 men on the field after it scored its fourth {touchdown late in the fourth period. Coach Gus Zitride’s substi: {tute dashed onto the field as quarterback Walt Pastuszak's I cleared the bars. The play was called back and he {missed his second attempt, cost{ing Brown a tie. Colgate’s - backlog of touchdowns and another one: sandwiched among Brown's fourthperiod flurry of scoring proved just a little too much to overcome,
Fordham User Frisco Dons, 21-14
NEW YORK, Oct. 28 (UP)— Battered for tremendous losses for two periods, Deadeye Dick] Doheny doggedly pursued his ap-! pointed task today. He passed] {Fordham to a 21-14 upset victory over the San Francisco Dons before a small but happy crowd of 11,000 at the Polo Grounds. The poised Fordham flash, un‘deterred by the physical beating he took in’ the first half as the Dons rolled up a 14-to-0 lead, pitched a third period touchdown pass after escaping a trap in. his own end zone, set up another score with a 43-yard pass a few moments- later and climaxed the winning drive with a 26-yard’ heave into the end zone.
Basketball OME GAME | . New York 30 P. M.
Nels lov Oc Sue—Cavd Ye Sv: ® 0 0p 5
Southern ‘Cal Grabs
Season's Ist Victory LOS ANGELES, Oct. 28 (UP) The University of Southern Call-
line in} Siding Cornell down until the fornia, smarting under criticism
of its coach, broke into the win column far the first time this season today by defeating a game Oregon team, 30 to 21. Coach Jeff Cravath's players were held even by the aggressive Oregon team for the first 26 minutes and had only a 13 to lead at halftime. But Southern California rolled jn the third period, scoring two touchdowns and a field goal to 8am, its margin.
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day. i Coach "Bob Meyne's Canterbury {squad, unbeaten in six games, has a 5-0 loop lead in the Conference. { The Greyhounds meet Taylor and Earlham the rest of the way. The Greyhounds’ deadlock came wtih the locals badly crippled. Marion Burleson a Renaldo Savenelli, hurt two weeks ago, missed the game and Tom Barnes and Bill Crowe missed the second half of yesterday's fray because of sprained ankles.
[tied this season, pleased a home-| \ Anderson Scored in Second {coming crowd by scoring in every| ’ Anders ‘hich h 2-1-1 (period while limiting the visitors! AS pr voto: to date. scored its TD in to a single tally in the final We en the second quarter after a 60ig a 13-yard pass.from Half- hi yard drive spearheaded by Indiback Cliff Hennig to End Bob : : 3 : ) Acme Telephoto. . anapolis’ Carter Byfield and Jim {Owens. Ohio. State's great Vic Janowicz scores the first touchdown of the 83-21 rout of lowa by plung- Macholtz Courtney ran for four TD's, the ing from the |l.yard line. Ohio's 67 is Julius Wittman, lowa 38 is Duane Brandt—while the lowan Byfield flipped for 24 yards for {last a 50-yard sprint in the fourth hitting the dirt (No. 25) i is Burt Britzmann, quarterback. the backbone of the drive to the quarter. Gipson rang up the ae . Central 21, then Mackholtz lugged other two on center plunges, one the leather for the final nine each in the first and second vards in three tries for the touch-
Manchester Trips
John Horevay placekicked.
Central matched the drive, —- going 56 yards to erase the lead “artham N to 0 in eight plays Ray Swayne - dy passed 19 yards to Wendell Rob-
erts on a screen play to the Anderson 36. Barnes made 12 on a reverse, Jack Hall skirted for 10
Centre Whips Hanover, 24-14
NORTH MANCHESTER. Oct 28 (UP)-- Halfback Jim Minear scored two Manchester touchdowns today as the Spartans took 20 to 0 Hoosier College Conference and homecoming victory from the Earlham Quaker®.
An Earlham fumble set up the MADISON, Oct. 28 (UP) (iret Manchester touchdown-:as Centre College of Danville, Ky. the Spartans recovered on the made a field goal in the first pe-|
Quaker 31 and Quarterback Dick riod and then added three touch-
Supinger went over and then con- downs later in the game to beat verted. Hanover, 24 to 14, today. The second started from the Stopped on the Hanover eight-
Manchester 20, with Supinger contributing a pass good for 43 yards to halfback Bud Olinger. A 15-yard penalty against the Quakers for piling on shortened the distance. Bob Hoover intercepted an Earlham pass on the Quakers’ 25 to set up Manchester's last TD.
yard line, Centre's kicking artist Fred Cain calmly booted a threepointer. He added three points-alter-touchdown for a perfect day. Two Panther passes were intercepted by Centre to set up two of their «touchdowns and a Hanover fumble was responsible for the third
nine yards. Joe Hurrle converted. Both teams threatened in the final period. from its own 18 to the Central 25 but Anastacio Martinez recovered a bobble on the Cen~ tral 25. The Greyhounds bounced back only to stall on the Anderson 26. Swayne hit Roberts for 20 yards, then found Walt Stahlhut for 15 more to the Anderson 20. A ree verse lost six and two income pleted passes gave the visitors the ball on downs. Anderson marched again late in the period but Doland Schroeder recovered a fumble on the Central 33 after the invaders ripped to the Central 8. Macholtz threw to Byfield for 17 to the Central 43 and a 15yard penalty moved to the 28. Macholtz -and Dave Badorf went to the 8 but a holding penalty ended the immediate threat. Anderson won the first downs, 18 to 10, gaining 101 yards rushing to 75 for the locals.
INDIANA CENTRAL (7 Hurrle,
Md ds Roberts, tuninut. Chane d Tac klos Gi. Schroeder, Spilly, Kincaid, H. Martinez, Piercefield, Gus ards Roberinson, R. Bechroeder, As Martinez, Cole. Strachan. Centers—~Hillycord, Webb. | Quarterbacks—Brown, Swayne, Zoff Halfbacks—Barnes, Preston,
Halfbacks.-Hall, Terrell, Ransburg. Fullbacks—Crowe. nts, Thay AN DERioR Nn Ends—Murphy, Redmon, Hogdson, Tackles—LeViere, Schiavone, Guards—Sebree,. Ameredes, Bayman Center—B. Skin Quarterbacks ‘Badart, Walker ght Halfbacks—P. By inoer, Left Halfbacks—Macholtz Fullbacks—Byfield. core by Periods Indiana Central 8 0 i Anderson Touchdownser Jouchdewn
Referee McNaught;
Y ouinifs Jones. Kardatzke
-Horevar.
1 70 0 ~Macholts, Lents. Point aft-
Horevay. Oficials
Hurrle, J. Thatcher; "Umpire, H. Mead Linesman, Cy Proffit. STATISTICS
First downs By rushing By passing . By penalties , Yards gained rushing .. ards gained passing .. Passes attempted Passes completed Passes intercepted Yards } Fumbles Fumbles lost
ost penalties .
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