Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 December 1950 — Page 10
Fails
Baseball Never Once
Playing ‘As Usual’ Doesn't Mean Stars Dodge
Once Again Looks to State
Team That Beat
the Flag
ars
NOW
‘active sports figures.
are on the point of repeating the dodging as Uncle Sam agai sounds a call for increased manpower, Mr. Schneider was caught off base on that one . . that baseball carried on in the majors and high minors during the last war . . . but only because the teams managed to get by ‘playing the over aged, 4-F's and 16 and 17-year-old kids. Almost all able bodied ball players of draft age served with tHe Army, Navy, Air Force, or wherever assigned by the military. Baseball asked for no special previleges or deferments, and received none, unless here and there some draft boards granted exemption in individual cases where the player or players dropped out ‘nf the game and worked a farm or held down an essential job in a war plant.
» » » SINCE THE Korean war, ball players gradually have been moving out of the sports pice ture to don the U, 8. uniform, . . . Baseball wasn't “as usual” fn World War II and it won't be “as usual” next season. "If Mr. Schneider will consult the records, he'll learn that in World War I the 1918 major league seagon was curtailed and that our own American Association closed its gates on July 1... So many players joined up there were not enough left in civilian life to put teams In the field. » » ” : TAKE A LOOK at Indianapolis’ 1950 team . . . Members who saw military service in World War II - were Nanny Fernandez, Ted Beard, Tom Saffell, Earl Turner, Bob Ganss, Johnny McCall, Monty | Basgall, Ed Bockman, Dom Dal-| lessandro, Frank Kalin, Paul _LaPalme, Royce Lint, Jim Mims, | Russ Peters, Whitey Platt, Forrest Main, Culley Rikard, Bob Kellogg, ! Bob Malloy. |
Also, several members of the 1950 Indians were just schoolboys and under military draft | age in the last big war, namely, Dale Coogan, Danny O'Connell, Gus Bell, Ed FitzGerald, Bobby Friend and Al Grunwald. | Since baseball is part of American life, it never has failed to contribute its share in time of peril . . . Players are subject to the military draft without reservations . . . like in football, basketball, hockey, or in any line of non-essential employment. i » . ”
{AL LOPEZ'S Cleveland Indians will be in Chicago next season for Sunday double headers on May 13 and Aug. 19... The champion New York Yankees also are booked for two Sunday twin bills at the White Sox park, June 10 and | Aug. 26 . . . Sox officials look _ for. heavy box office support | < %-fe¥m Hoosier ‘fans whenever Lopez's ¢lub invades for a bar- | ain attraction , . . Anent the | Pe they always draw, re- | gardless, . =" d i BABY SITTERS will be in demand in Cleveland on the night of} May 1... It will be the first night | attraction of the season there and the visiting team will be the Bos-| ton Red Sox . .. Get the point? « « « It's smart promotion
dreau, will .be wearing Boston flannels and it's a dead cinch his legion of admirérs will turn out in force . , . It will be Boston's first 1951 appearance in Cleveland ‘es » New Manager Al Lopez will have to be careful that he doesn’t ‘make a mistake directing the Cleveland -pastimers while their former chieftain is on the premises and playing for the invaders . Since the Red Sox play the
SAN FRANCISCO, Dee. 30 (UP)-—Marchmont Schwartz has turned down a new five-year conAfact as head football coach .at Sjanford University today with a surprise announcement he plans 10 leave the coaching profession *for good.” ‘While newspapermen and wellWishers crowded around to congratulate him on the performance of the’ West Shrine team he cocoached to victory, Schwartz outlined his plans for the future. : “I have gone as far as I can in this profession,” he said. *1 only hope I can go as far in some-
thing else.” : Schwartz has been under fire at -Btanford throughout the last
football season. His Indians were .. overwhelming pre-season favor--‘Jtes to capture the Pacific Coast Conference crown, but the team dropped decisions to Army, Washington, and UCLA and tied'Callfornia and USC,
Irish All-American Bchwartz, one-time All-Ameri: can backfield star at Notre Dame, was head coach at Stanford for five years. His all-time record with the Indians was 28 victories, 28 defeats and four ties. Only two weeks ago, Schwartz
‘contract by Stanford and only one ‘week ago acknowledged that he
Stanford, director
‘Behwartz was athletic
By EDDIE ASH, Times Sports Editor Li THAT added speed has been applied to the mili-| As Lost. Year tary draft, it's well to get it straight about the status of | .
In a letter published in the Hoosier Forum (Times edi
torial page)-the other day, Mr. A. J. Schneider implied that league baseball players evaded service in World War II and Indiana high school basketball
. It's true + + -
| ‘The Team’ Strong
By KURT FREUDENTHAL United Press Sports Writer - The late Henry Mantz picked his Gary Froebel crew in midsummer of last year as the next
i
{ champions
usual 11 games in Cleveland, both €arly. a clubs figure to benefit in a big way Mantz. wasn't around when his!
at the box office as a result of the classy outfit: compiled a brilliant)
perhaps a year too
“new conditions” brought about S¢ason record, losing just two!"
by the change in management Bames—he died two weeks after | Although the Cleveland club Making his prediction. — and received nothing for Boudreaws Johnny Kyle took his place. i contract it probably will take in| The Blue Devils lost to Ham-| more at the gate in Boston at-mond in the Calumet's regional tractions than any price it could Sra. to 42, to drop out of the vi e s ol 1 | . - TES manager io, 04 PAYEE Today, Kyle's Steel City elub is| iat least as strong as last year, | and his boys are off and running
” » » PLAYING IN the Orange jagain. Kyle lost three of his first
Bowl in Miami, Fla., tomorrow will be the Clemson and Miami of Florida football teams, . . Clemson is a South Carolina school. . . . But the state of Pennsylvania will have a large hunk of the representation on the field when the rivals square off for the kickoff. . . . Twentytwo players from the two team rosters learned their football fundamentals In Pennsylvania high schools. n
feared double-pivot combination of giants Johnny Moore and Viademir Gastevich—but that's enough trouble for any foe, |
Successful Lineup
He elevated Herman Banks, George Elieff and Chuck Koval to starting assignments to fill in for graduation losses, and this lineup has been eminently successful, ry x clicking off seventh consecutive| IT'S NOT unusual for a college Wins, including a tremendous 54-| foot ball team to have co-captains 10-44 victory over Lafayette Jeff but Clemson will be led by five|in the latter's holiday tourney! captains in the Orange Bowl bat- Friday. t tle tomorrow. . . . We concede| Jeff ran up a nine-game win-| that's tops in any league. . , , NINE streak before being stopped Team captains are chosen by the by the upstate whirlwind. squad at Clemson in the spring’ “They kind of fooled me a bit,” after spring practice is com- admitted Lafayette mentor Mar-| pleted. . . . Last spring, several lon Crawley. But Crawley, who
i
ballots were run off and no one developed three state champs and
man could gain a majority. , . ./ nearly had a fourth last spring—!
Coach Frank Howard stepped in his youngsters lost the title game and said, “Well, boys, they are all to Madison— paid great tribute
good fellows, so let's settle this to. Froebel's talented squad. | thing by making them all team captains and go home.” , . , Now he said. “I guess they were on| known as the Tigers, teams used to be nicknamed the thought they would ,.." i Country Gentlemen. . . . Men of ‘Too Early To Tell’ |
distinction, eh? Froebel hit better than 40 per)
{
- » ” 5 FIVE MIDWEST college foot- [cent of their shots, while La-| ball teams participate in bowl fAyette's 33 percentage also was
attractions tomorrow. , . . Detter than average.
Michigan in the Rose, Miami of { Kyle, however, said it's still too
five starters, retaining only his =
“They've got a nice ball team,” |}
Clemson edge and did better than we
Ba
”
Ohio in the Salad, Cincinnati in [©arly to speculate how his boys 4
the Sun, Valparaiso and La. [Will fare in the next state tourney.
Crosse (Wis.) State Teachers in | “There's East Chicago Wash-! the Cigar. ... Miami won the [ington and Gary Emerson, and
i ride. | No wonder, then, that Calumet
ss {area fans are chanting more than WHEN BO McMILLIN was
lever for the ‘state.” It's been 11
Games track and field competi-| Second Team
Z i tion today by winning both the ley, Beech Grove.
| held the story
voted out of his job as coach of” the professional Detroit Lions football ‘team, he was given the prerogative of announcing the story to the press « +» He kept it a secret eight days . . . Although it was a $60,000 question for the club directors (it required that sum to pay Bo off), they still withuntil McMillin released it... Well, with $60,000 running interference for him, Bo was in no hurry.
lyears since Lou Birkett's Ham- half and quarter mile races as {mond Tech boys brought the coy-|U. 8. stars failed to win an event. leted crown for the first time to| Wint led all the way in the half Lake County, {mile and came from behind in the! {quarter mile. He beat stiff opposi-| {tion in both events, including his
Cravath to Judge {1948 Olympic rival, Mal Whit-| | . {field of the U. 8. Army Air Forces. | | : | At Santa Anita | Cliff Simpson of New Zealand ARCADIA, Cal, Dec. 30 (UP) Was third. Whitfield ran second {Jeff Cravath, who resigned under most of the way, but couldn't [pressure as University of South- muster his usual sprint in the run
ern California football coach, has to the tape and wound up fourth. accepted an appointment as rac- Wint was timed in one minute,
rt
Lawrence Central |
»
Pugh,
Mid-American Conference title [Several other clubs, including - : and Cincinnati finished second Hammond, could come late,” he Back Roy Sprecklemeyer, Back Harold Kuykendall, Back'8ob . . . Butler's Bulldogs used to ald. Froebel still has Northern sae n Davis Speedway Lawrence Central travel in that league. {Conference dates with all three,! rr ns > , wo" jas well as with East Chicago ’ . SOME CO LL E G E bandsmen Roosevelt and two other Gary 1950 All-County Football Team reagily undergo rugged traveling quintets. : (Us . ars d . Pos. Age Ht Wt. Class to follow their football team . .. But the 5000 fans who crammed | John Snyder, Pike Township... End 18 5-10 170 Sr. The LaCrosse (Wis,) State Teach- Lafayette’'s gym and gazed in| Charles Teney, Ben Pavis.... End 11 5-11 165 Sr. ers College 30-piece band made utter amazement at Froebel's In New Jealand David Marksbary, eBn Davis.. Tackle 16 6-0 210 Jr. the long haul to Tampa, Fla., by terrific exhibition of basketball Ray Rice, Lawrence Central... Tackle 17 590 © 175 Sr. buses to toot for théir football wizardry were convinced they ad EE Joe Lawler, Ben Davis..:..... Guard 17 5:9 200 Sr. {classmates in the battle with tre seldom seen a better ball club,| CHRISTCHURCH, New Zea-| Ronald Grimes, Lawrence Cntl. Guard = 16 5-8 155 Jr. Vaparaiso Crusaders in the Cigar With Moore performing brilliantly jand Dec. 30 (UP)—Arthur Wint,| Bob Egenolf, Southport....... Center 17 6-2 180 Sr. {Bowl game tomorrow . ., , The under the backboards, and com- the giant-striding Olympic ch i Bob Pugh, Lawrence Central.. Back 17 57 152 Sr, [team traveled by plane . , . The bining with Gastevich, Banks and B U'ymp 4M Don Hager, Ben Davis........ Back 18 5-11 175 Jr. ltooters are a cinch to be pretty Chris Christoff to give the Blue pion from Jamaica, B.W.L, domi-| Roy Spreckelmeyer, Ben Davis Back 17 5-8 150 Sr. {well winded after that return bus Devils a great scoring punch. nated the Canterbury Centennial. Harold Kuykendall, Speedway. Back 19 6-0 195 Sr.
Ends—Phil Wampler, Franklin Township, and Norval Wheat-
Tackles—Ralph Potter, Speedway, and John Martin, South-
Guards—Jerry Grummel, Southport, and Junior Burden, Pike
Township. Center—Jim Whitaker, Southport.
Backs—Bill Messer, Beech Grove; Dwaine Bell, Plke Township; Gar Wallsmith, Lawrence Central, and Dean Templin, Pike
Township.
NCAA to Discuss
eoach ‘at Creighton Univer.
ein (losses, while Colorado lost allil4 errors for the season and City en thres starts, batted 324, tne Righest. in ‘his League nex
» - » i AS A REWARD for winning ing official at Santa Anita race
+" +/the National League pennant, track, the track announced today.! Cleveland's ex-manager Lou Bou-
Philly players will be permitted to] Carleton F. Burke, director of | take their wives to training camp racing at Santa Anita, said the next spring . .. That calls for igi had been approved trip to Florida for a long stay by the CalMfornia Racing Board! under the soft, southern sunsnine and was effective immediately. for the fraus, who called Man- Cravath’s enforced resignation ager Eddie Sawyer an old meanie from USC is effective Monday. last spring when he barred them| Cravath, who moved out of his from camp... The Phillies trainigrid coach job which brought at Clearwater, a pleasant, restful, him a reported $14,000 a year, will resort on Florida's West coast’. . . become a placing judge while he It's another whopper victory for develops his “qualifications in the women, sport of horse racing,” Burke said. Cravath, only alumnus ever to coach Southern: California's foot-
Schwartz, Stanford Coach, pall -team, quit Dec. 20 after a Quitting Football ‘For Good"
dismal season that saw his_ club) win only two games, losing five and tying two. He accepted a reported $30,000 paid by the uni-
Schwarts resignation Stafiford versity for the two-year balance joined Ohio - State University, of his contract : Minnesota and University of SIL Rh i
Southern California among major football schools seeking J hew coaches. Wes Fesler resigned at! VIENNA. Dec. 30 (UP)-—-Wel-Ohio State - because. of illness; terweight Champion Ray (Sugar) Bernie Bierman-himself one of Robinson, who will fight Jake Lathe coaches at the Shrine game motta for the world middleweight today—was eased out at Minne- title in Chicago on Feb, 14, probapolis after a sad season, and Jeff ably will meet German Middle-| Cravath resigned at USC and ac- weight Champion Leo Starosch In| cepted a position with the Santa Vienna next summer, Promoter] Anita race track. |Hermann Kurz said today.
Sugar vs. German
52.2 seconds.
EE Athete Aid Rule
In the quarter mile, Wint] LOS ANGELES, Dec. 30 (UP) changed his strategy. He let|—Eased restrictions on aid to Whitfield lead most of the way, athletes will be considered when but took the lead with a tre- the NCAA discusses revamping mendous spurt coming into ths its sanity code at its January last turn and beat the Air Force Session, Association. President runner by eight yards. John Voight Hugh C. Willett has announced. of Oklahoma A & M was third.! Six schools face possible susWint finished in 48.5 seconds. {pension from the National ColWint and his fellow Jamaican, 1éSiate Athletic Association for Herb McKinley, forced Whitfield non-compliance with the. code, to take third Place in the Olympic Willett said. He pointed out that 400 meter final in 1948, but Whit- One Of the main items on the field beat Wint in the 800 meter 28€nda of the Dallas meeting was test at London. revamping the constitution and Roger Bannister, Britain's fine, 2Mendment of the sanity code. . distance runner, opened the pro-| Willett said =ix senools out of gram by breaking the New Zea- 11 turned in for violation of the
land mile record with a clocking %anity code had been recomof four minutes and nine seconds. mended by the 17-member NCAA
- (council for suspension. Further , {study is being made on one school Shead Enters Tourney land four others are expected to LOS ANGELES, Dec. 30 (UP) have their houses in order by the ~Defending Champion Sammy Snead, this year's leading golf
money-winner, has filed his entry for the $15000 Los Angeles Open, scheduled Jan. 5-8 on the Riviera Country Club course. | Snead, who won the title on a| rain-drenched cou.se last year in|(UP)—The American Hockey) a playoff with Ben Hogan, also League gamé between the Provitook first money in 1045,
Fog Postpones Hockey Game
of the
Missouri Defeats Player Colorado, 62-54 | :
KANSAS CITY, Mo. Dec. (UP) Missour! University pulled away in the second half here to-
jvitational Basketball Tourn a- Player horrors, 3
iment. | . Tied at the intermission, 35-35, Writers award yesterday when it
{the Tigers jumped into a 40-35 included Rizzuto in its annual se{lead early in the final period, held lections of the outstanding men a 50-46 advantage at the 10-min-|of the game. ‘ lute mark and then steadily pulled] The Sporting News also named away, sparked by a brillant scor-| George Weiss, vice-president of] {ing performance by Gene Land- the Yankees, the top major, {league executive of the year; Robert (“Red”) Rolfe, . Detroit
Lolt. | Missouri had two sparkplugs in
Adams counted 15 of his 20 points Clarence s P t of Oak-! and in the closing half it was Lan lan: the Pacific Coast League, doit who paced the offensive, hit- top minor league executive; Rollie ting 16 of his 19-point aggregate Hemsley, Columbus, best minor in the period. Wayne Tucker with 14
had been given a new five-year ,,.. game. In the first half, Bill Clarence awd oe f the year;
league manager; and Frank! and Saucier, San Antonio outfielder,
ny. Ar {Roger Stokes and Kenny Koop top r league player. The 41-year-old coach refused with 12 each led the Colorado - ank Sparkplug say what business he intended scoring. : The News said Rizzuto received ’ as finish It was Missoui{’s only triumphithe award for _the spark-!
the tournament, against two plug of the Yanks. He made only
«Goes to ‘Scooter’ Rizzuto
Tha baseball “bible” added its accolade to that of the Baseball |
Year Award [ie te me ave sn Bi
ditions that made traveling dangerous,
BROCKTON,
seven major league seasons, i a He was sixth among the ranking heavyweight Boxes, regulars in hitting, tied for bare s dayghsecond in runs scored, was second In total hits, second in wih doubles, led in sacrifices, and tied for second in stolen bases in the} American League. hard Weiss was credited with being the power behind the throne of: the Yankee dynasty that won 11; of their 17 pennants. He has served through three changes of
ownership. Hemsley, Columbus
Series nal season and ¥
. PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 30 ( Marciano Married { FH Philadelphia Spo Mass, Dec. 30 Association tonight named ace | (UP)—~Rocky Marciano, 26, of Relief Pitcher Jim Konstanty of | Brockton, the nation’s seventhithe Philadelphia Phillies as Amerand ica's outstanding athlete for 1950. Steven Van Buren, star back of were the Philadelphia Eagles, won the 11949 award.
CELEBRATE NEW YEAR'S EVE AT THE COLISEUM
GAPS vs. CINGINNATI—To
hight, 8:30
Tinymile Football
WACO, Tex. Dec. 30 (UP)—A tinymite football New Orleans played like college stars today as they mauled the Mexia, Téx., Peewees, 50 to 0, in the National Milk Bowl me. ~Small but enthusiastic crowd of 3000 assembled at Baylor Stadium to cheer the “Midget” players of both squads, none of whom weighed more than 100 pounds or was more’ than 14 years old. {Richey Petitbon, a dehydrated replica of Notre Dame's great breakaway runner Joan Petitbon participated in two scoring plays. ; Petitbon, who hopes to become another Notre Dame great like big brother Jawn, went over for a touchdown on a nine-yard burst and accounted for six more points on a 42yard pass play with Joe Cannizzarro on the receiving end.
team from
‘time the convention starts Jan. 8. Bonaventure Stings -— 'W. Kentucky, 62-57
BUFFALO, N. Y,, Dec. 30 (UP) {—Undefeated St. Bonaventure, re{fusing to crack under a sustained ifull-court press, stung the touring SPRINGFIELD, Mass., Dec. 30, vestern Kentucky basketball team with its fourth defeat to-
dence Reds and ‘the Springfield | night, 62 to 57, before a sellout
Indians was called off tonight be-|SToWd in Buffalo's Memorial torium. b
Moe = Plots, senior ee: lover the Toronto Maple Leafs to number of bouts during 1950, a
The Providence team was en Sophomore guard, paced St. Bona-
lane in sixth.
Milwaukee Journal Or nk 30 (UP)
To Dec.
President William O. Dedenied a report that , wealthy Milwaukee made a concrete offer of the 8t. Louis American League baseball club, DeWitt said Miller's attorneys | on “several” lots of money and was interested Ben Davis in getting a major league club in Milwaukee,” DeWitt said, “but we
“Besides,” sald the executive, “Mr. Miller never made a written offer.” | DeWitt said the Browns “abisolutely” would be playing In “1Sportsman’s Park here in 1951.
Reports Offer
The Milwaukee Journal sald Miller had offered to buy the team for between $2 million and $3 million, In a dispatch by Sports Writer Russ Lynch, the Journal said {Miller said the deal will go through if the Browns’ owners, Bill and Charles DeWitt, meet his conditions. \
Miller, the newspaper said, plans to move the Browns to Milwaukee as soon as playing facilities are provided, if his offer is accepted. . | “The contract is in the hands of the DeWitt brothers and the American League,” the news‘aper quoted Miller as saying, and I cannot discuss the matter intil they have reached a decision.” Miller said the DeWitts are satisfied with his offer, but that o Winners Trail 32 {ne is not completely satisfied with . . 4what the DeWitts have to offer. Points at Half He declined, however, to reveal RALEIGH, N. C,, Dec. 30 (UP) the obstacle to completion of the —Guard Dick Groat, a six-foot deal. junior from Swissdale, Pa., turned
in the greatest performance ‘in Kentucky Rallies
4 is ji
End John Snyder, Pike Township
Duke Upsets Tulane, 74-12
the two years of the Dixie Classic basketball tournament today! as he dragged Duke from 32 To Whip Syrac minute of play. | : The consolation championship] NEW ORLEANS, Dec. 30 (UP) put Duke in fifth place and Tu- —Kentucky trailed the entire first
points behind to defeat a great Tulane team, 74-72, in the last half but raced hack after tha inAn efficient Navy team out- termission to down Syracuse, 69
|classed a wobbly Wake Forest to ! 59, tonight in the Sugar Bowl
ketball tournament consolation game. : Renueky: ranked the No. 1 Em {team in the nation, was unde-56-24 at hEIf. [feated until knocked off by St. _ Groat, who scored only thrae|youis Friday night. For the frst field goals in the first half, be- half of the consolation game, it came a one-man team on defense’ appeared the Wildcats were goand whipped in 10 field goals to0!ing to take licking No. 2. lead the most amazing comeback Syracuse, piaying racenorse in Duke history. | basketball, took the lead on ‘he Duke's defense buttoned down first goal and kept ahead of bob-
squad, 66-46. | Tulane’s accuracy made a farce] of the first half and Duke trailed,
|and the Tulane team which hit bling Kentucky for a 39-35 half-
25 field goals in the first half time lead. Kentucky was licked was held to six in the second. lon almost every leap at the With less than four minutes boards. left, Duke was behind by 20| But after the intermission the points, But Guard Scotty York lumbering Kentucky machinery began looping in long shots and creaked into gear. Seven-foot Bill Groat and Center Dayton Allen Spivey's two tap-ins in the first tore inside to tie up the game with minute and a half of the second less than a minute to go. Allen half tied the score at 39-39, and tossed in the winning goal. {Shelby Linville's layup put KenGroat collected 32 points while tucky in front, 41-39. But after
{Tulane Forward Bob Reed was that Kentucky started pulling
runner-up with 22. ‘away, slowly but ever so surely. In today’s first game tiny but; Three men dominated the Xenfast Rhode Island State defeated tucky scoring. Spivey got 24 North Carolina, 93-69, to take points, Linville 20 and Frank seventh place in the tournament. Ramsey 16. = ! |
Lakers Ordered Gives Up Sports
. For Air Force To Halt 1} | BUFFALO, KN. ¥,, Dec. 30 (UP) {—Nicholas G. Mohacsy, six-foot,
‘six-inch Canisius College basketNEW HAVEN, Conn, Dec. 30 (UP) — The Minneapolis Lakers Dall prospect, gave up a promising have been ordered to stop tele- collegiate: sports career today to vising thelr home games because enlist in the Air Force, of a drop in attendance, President! Mohacsy, a displaced person Maurice Podoloff of the National who arrived in this country 14 {Basketball Association said to- months ago, had attended Caninigat. Lok tea" since September. hot 3 “The ers were granted! “But I've wanted to en n Sheds, permission for TV at the the American Air Fores for 8 long nning o e year, on € time,” Mohacsy said. “So I di condition that this permission jit, and I believe I'll make a career would be cancelled if the attend- of the service. It's the least I ance suriereq, sald Poaglatt, . {can do for this country Which hag e ers’ attendance has given me freedom and a new life. fallen off, and we attribute that, wMohacsy s s four lan 8. slump directly to television,” said pig Gacey Speaks Or anguages. jFodojetf “Therefore, the special Royal Hungarian Mounted Police {permission was revoked.” 'until the Communists took over Podoloff declined to reveal the i; that country after the war. exact figures on the attendance The Mohacsys then fled to Ger-
“considerable.” ‘before coming to the United
| : Jr— [States in 1049; Wings Widen Lead
TORONTO, Dec. 30 (UP)—The Sharp Cuts ‘Detroit Red Wings increased] BOSTON, Dec. 30 (UP)—Protheir National Hockey League|fessional and amateur boxing in lead to three points tonight, earn-| Massachusetts suffered sharp cuts ing a clear-cut 3 to 1 decision|/in attendance, revenue and the
stretch their unbeaten string to report by the State Boxing Com-
route here by bus when the post. Venture to its sixth win of the nement was announced. No Season. ST: LOUIS, Dec. 30 (UP)-—Shortstop Phil Rizzuto, the New! new date was set immediately for v to defeat Colorado 62 to 54, York Yankee “Scooter,” made it unanimous today with the an-/playing the game. in the consolation bracket nf the nouncement that he had won the Player of The Year Award of the! - annual Big Sevén Conference In- Sporting News to go with his American League most valuable
[Konstanty Wins opp: HM APP Y
UP) ters’
12 games. _... mission showed today.
A NEW “QV, | YEAR! 7/INfFE Ca ROM af THE HEADGUARTERS FOR | LARGE MEN'S CLOTHING...
| i
——
decline, but adn:itted that it Was many and spent four years there -
\§
San Pr 5 Stanfor 318 Total
Orang PLACE OPPON
40 Texas 47 Hardin.
346 Tots
a wr y Tange SN PLACE- *¥+ OPPON]
- Qo ~ rr » ~~
