Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 March 1951 — Page 15
other is inter-
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Sinclair was He refused to charged with ie Senate. He icted, sentenced ine and three
1e whole case e to the Justice w for prosecuSenate lacked Attorney Gengherty, another who had been ontinuous critifal prosecutors Owen Roberts, Court Justice, ee Pomerene of
1 the Doheny 8 almost simulall's first moves Elk Hills to They traced ernment bonds, edit of Fall or back to Harry
’ os ases were ore On June 35, Sinclair were onspiracy, and ny for bribery. ity, the indictown out. New re returned. heny were ace spiracy to deernment. Fall were acquitted onspiracy trial. as found guilty re sentenced
jail and fined
Doheny was acarge of bribing
TUBSDAY, Man. 13, 1051 liad
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
5
starter instead of a relief man, like last season, before being shipped off the New Orleans in ; the Southern Association. But now that the Tribe hurlers are beginning to twist . the ball along with their straight ones, LaPalme is gaining new _ stature. iy Indianis in. 1950, alme won
Eddie Ash four and los} two, ONLY reason that LaPalme was sent to the Pelicans was the fact that the Indians were overloaded with southpaws and thought they could spare him to help New Orleans, which was also a member of the Pittsburgh organization. Supporting the prediction that it’s in the cards for LaPalme to be a mainstay this year is an opinion expressed by Bill Burwell, who managed New Orleans the sécond half of the 1950 season. Burwell, who piloted the Indianapolis Indians two seasons and who was their ace pitcher in the long ago, said the left hander showed him enough in the Southern Association to warrant a promotion to the majors without putting in another hitch in the American Association. - “LaPalme is a better pitcher than his over-all 1950 record indicates,” said Burwell, who still is connected with the Pirate organization in the capacity of farm club personnel adviser. Bill resides at Daytona Beach, Fla. and called up from Deland, where the’ Pittsburgh’s little minor league teams are assembling to work out together in a large scale venture. “In fact,” Burwell added, “at
Busy
first. time since the Indians
THE TRIBE players were in in for heavy duty today, morning and afternoon. Raih came to Kissimmee yesterday for the fur shop this week. pitched camp and shortly after 1 p. m. the workout was canceled. Gutteridge inspected the field and decided the diamond was
8:30 tonight. After the Nats leave fown the, Olymps’' agenda reads like this: At Ft. Wayne tomorrow;
ep Up Search For New Commissioner Paul LaPalme, Southpaw Hurler, Shaping Up as Tribe Mainstay
Indians, Rained Out, Face Heavy Duty; Fiscalini Joins Up
By EDDIE ASH
Times Ean. KISSIMMEE, Fla, Mar. 15 ook “for Paul LaPalme, southpaw thrower, to be one of the Indianapolis Indians’ ace pitéhers when the American Association reels off its 15th campaign this
ar. Hustling hard in spring training camp, the chunky hurler is coming along at a gradual pace and is being tagged as a regular
Nats Here Tonight Open Week for Olymps
Play 5 Games Before Season Ends Sunday; Scheduled Here Saturday With Knicks
The Indianapolis Olmpians are busier than RFC clients in a
The Nationdl Basketball Association closes its regular season | Sunday, Between now and then the Olymps play five games, Firs off is a tussle with the Syracuse Nationals in Butler Fieldhouse at
PAGE 15.
Chandler Repudiated Third and Last Time
Remains as Baseball Boss for Time Being; 25 Candidates on Club Owners’ List
By LEO H. PETERSON United Press Sports Editor
MIAMI BEACH, Fla., Mar. 13—Major league club owners, have |ing repudiated A, B. (Happy) Chandler for the third and last time, set out today to find a new baseball commissioner, As soon as they do-—and it probably will not be until July at the earliest—their lame duck commissioner will resign. Until that time and perhaps until his contract expires on midnight Apr. 30, 1952, Chandler will continue to rule baseball.
| Philadelphia. Phillies; President The same screening committee Ford Frick of the National which has been working since League; President Willlam Har. {last Dec. 11, when the club own- | 7/d8¢ of the American League; ers twice voted at St. Petersburg] Charles Segar, head of the Nanot to renew Chandler's contract, tional League Service Bureau; t was ordered to intensify its Leslie O'Connor, the right hand search for a new commissioner, man to baseball's first commisThere was absolutely no indi ‘sioner, the late Mountain Kene-
Indianapolis [ (30) Barnhorst ... at|{ Hy Holland r
PROBABLE LINEUPS saw Landis, and sports writer Syracuse cation of who the man might be, c.0hi1ang Rice. The name of an-.
Schayes (4) but gnly 25 out of some 100 orig- other sports writer was on the bor (1 po Jormbor (13 [inal candidates were still left Of iat but his name could’ not ‘be
too soft for work. He found 8) Gross . the outfield in fairly good home to New York Thursday; at| (ia) Beard renee i. colar OJ) the list which was given to the) arn ed.
Baltimore Saturday; at Rochester
Shapé, but since ft stl was in the season wind-up Sunday
raining, he.didn’t call the boys out for running exercise, An hour later, ‘after the players scattered: ta hunt for
a knack-down-drag-out fdght foc
the elusive fish, or go sight seeing drives, the Si and the sun popped out. But it was a long, heavy rainfall, the first in the Kissimmee area since December and the citrus growers and farmers welcomed it.
But the Indians were to be
asked to make up for their vacation today in the first “doubleheader’ practice of spring, » s
” NEWEST addition to the Tribe squad is Johnny Fiscalini, who checked in from California yesterday. He's 25, not 24, as the club roster lists his age.
He played with two clubs last |
season, with Albany until the | end of May and with Charleston the rest of the season, batting .325 for Albany and .338 for Charleston, both in Class A -
SHORT SPOKES—Dom Dallessanro,
--Times Photos by John Spicklemire
Indianapolis Indians’
center fielder, peddles the bicycle at the Indians’ spring training
| grounds, Kjssimmee, Fla. -
NC State-Seton Hall,
It's
{the Western Division,
|Fastern Division on a 31-31 record. They've slipped a lot this|in 1950, is expected to defend her Giles of the Cincinnati
But Al Cervi's still prac-title.
If the Olymps can even the sea- m: gon at 3-3 with the Nats. tonight
INDIANAPOLIS ~~ Walther 15). Lavoy (8), Lofgran
Syracuse. Macknowski (8), Haguumt
|club owners for the first time at| Any club owmer has the right to fia o| Sunday's separate American and jv. oo (oher candidates. (18), Mshnken, National League meetings here: | Yesterday's vote was the same Great care was taken to keep. 4 the second. ballot taken at St. he 1st secret) Hut (he United pagerstrgsnine slub owners vot-
Reserves.
Ratkovicz 4 f. Cerv( (18\. -in Butler - Pleldhous
a third-place tie with Ft. Wayne| Broadeasis—WISH and WAJC- -FM, 8 "6 Press learned that these names ing to re-elect Chandler and seven
pops up tomorrow night. | Pistons now hold the position in| one and one-half games ahead of the! Olymps. - A win over Syracuse| cuts the deficit to one game, Nuff sald? { Syracuse has been tough for the | locals. ' The Nats bSunced back hard after dropping their first
two meetings with the locals this| Country Club of Indfanapolis. | The 168 low players air the rector J. Edgar Hoover; Stuart] * * {to put the Olymps down 1-2-3 in qualifying will begin match play Symington, chairman of the Na: on June 26. The final champlon- tional Resources Board; Federal Fight Results
season, That bounce was enough
the next trio of tilts. The
season.
The |P-™:
Women's Golf Tourney Set
Opening with an 18-hole quali-| dential campaigns; fying round, the Indianapolis Lausche of Ohio; CHief Justice [Browns, Phillies and Dodgers. Women's Golf Association tourna-| Fred Vinson of the U. 8. Supreme Sax ment will be hreld June 25 over the! (Court; U. 8, Supreme Court Jus-| gers, Senators, A
‘Nats - are fourth in the|ship Is slated for June 29. Jane Nelson, winner of the title York; General Manager Warren Montreal stopped Gaby Ferland, 147, Mone
definitely were on it: voting against it. Twelve votes— | George M. Trautman, president 5 three*fourths majority—is nece of the minor leagues; James A, Jessary for. election. Farley, former postmaster gen-| Here is how the clubs voted in eral-—the “brains” behind Presi-| lyesterday’s secret ballot: dent Roosevelt's first two presi-| Against—The Braves, Gov. Frank nals, Yankees, White
CardlSox, - For—The Red Indians, Tiletics, Giants, tice William O. Douglas; FBI Di-| Reds, Pirates, Cubs. :
By United Press
|Judge Harold Medina of New| MONTREAL, Can.—Johnny Greco,
147, |treal. | NEWARK, N. J.—Bobby Senti, 135, New
Reds; | Owner Bob Carpenter of the! Milourn, No Jo 8). Johnny Kamber, lon
ticing his form of psychological warfare as playing-coach. The) Olymps know too well what Al can do and does. « Nats Are Tough
/Arizona-Dayton Tonight
St. John's Tops St. Bonaventure In Last 3 Seconds in NIBT Play
r . piest bench in. the league. BY NORMAN MULLER Try these Nat averages on for |
NEW YORK, Mar. 13—Arizona plays Dayton and North Caro- size: f lina State meets Seton Hall tonight in games that complete the - Dolph Schayes, "16.8; Fred Sco-{quarter-final round of the National Invitation Basketball Tourna- lari, 13.4; George Ratkovicz, 12. 6; After graduating, Fiscalini ment at Madison Square Garden. | Billy. Gabor, 10.9, and Noble Jor-| saw some service with New Top-seeded St. John's edged dogged St. Bonaventure, 60 to 58, gensen, 10.2. Cervi is good for 8.8 Orleans that season and then jon a field goal in the last three seconds by Center Bob Zawoluk, and and he’s considered the “grand-| spent the 1949 campaign be- polished Brigham Young, seeded pa” of the NBA. ithird, raced to a surprisingly easy| The Olymps pack one of the,
~Cervi’s mind-over-matter stuff] |is supplemented by five players in| | the double-figure. scoring averages, speed. to burn and the pep-
leagues. ‘Fiscalini hails from San Bernardino, Cal, and was gradu- | , ated from the University of | California in 1948. Hp gives | the Indians another “military draft proof” member since he | has a service record of two and a half years.
tween Davenport in the Three-I | League and Waco in the Big | p arco’s
State League.
the minor league convention Smoke Signals
held in St. Petersburg last December I was on the point of recommending LaPalme to the parent Pirates when Tribe President Owen J. Bush talked me out of it. He wanted the southpaw saved for the Indians and I consented.” “Bush and. Burwell are oldtime baseball buddies. When Bush piloted the Indianapolis club in the early 20's, Burwell was one of his leading pitchers as well as an assistant manager without portfolio. Bush didn’t know the American Association teams any too well when he took over the Indians in 1924 and depended upon Burwell for inside information on the strong and weak points of opposing hitters. » “” ” BURWELL managed Indianapolis in 1925 and 1926. It presented one of the Amerfcan Association’s oddities. In a three-year hitch under Bush in the\20’s, the Indians finished second each time. And in a two-year hitch under Burwell in the mid-40’s, the Tribesters also finished second both years. Like Burwell and Bush, new Manager Don Gutteridge thinks LaPalme has the physical assets to enjoy a big season in 1951. Don keeps his 11 pitchers in camp active at all times whenever the weather is right and if they're not serving 'em up in batting practice they are runnig or shagging in the outfield. And for full measure, Gutteridge gives the hurlers special hitting and bunting practice and a round of outfield drill.
Boughton Buys Owensboro Club
Purchase of the Owensboro, Mangan;
Ky., baseball club was revealed
here today by Joe Boughton, local Boston (N)
excavating contractor. Boughton sold his Indianapolis |
business after completing a stock | | Home runs, Jjoost (A's) and Mauch (Bos- |DEnileY.
deal for the Kitty League club. Boughton lives at R.R. 17, box { 490.
WHEN Outfielder Fiscalini checked in at the Tribe hotel yesterday, players grouped in the lobby immediately asked if he ever played first base. The answer was “no.” Second query was, “Did you ever play second base?” They got the same answer. That's how hard put the Indians are for infielders. . Fiscalini is the seventh Californian in’ camp. When in col-
Tops AHL Scoring
Glover, McNab Tied for 6th
Buffalo's rink-wise Ab DeMar-|
co is just 15 points from a new three-quarters of the game, ral-| [lied valiantly from a 14-point|
| American-Hockey. league scoring the|in guest seats for tonight's ses-|
record but the veteran Bison cen-|
|75-to-58 triumph over St. Louis'most powerful one-two punches
last night in the other quarterfinal games before 10,124 fans. The winner of the DaytonArizona game will be pitted! against St. John's in Thursday
in the NBA in Alex Groza and {Ralph Beard. Groza is averag-| ing 21.1 and Beard 16.7. Beard is fresh from a 35-point effort (the greatest of his career) against
|night’s semifinals while the North Rochester Sunday.
|
Carolina State-Seton Hall sur-|
Speaking of Olymp distinctions,
|vivor will play Brigham Young. [they ve done what no other team |
(ter has only three more games, Olean, N.Y.
Rally in Fourth
has done in months: Sidelined
St. John's, after trailing for the Crispus Attucks Tigers.
{last half deficit to nip |rough-and-ready Bonnies from
in a foul-ridden but
including one tomorrow night in thrilling game.
lege he played against Johnny | Buffalo against Indianapolis,
McCall, Tribe southpaw pitcher.
DeMarco scored one goal last
| |
In college, however, McCall also [week and had five assists to push|
played the outfield for the University of San Francisco. He had rare batting ability for a collegian, Fiscal Sal
NOTHING new developed last night on the proposed player transaction in which Whitey Platt, holdout outfielder, would be used in a deal with the Philadelphia Athletics in exchange for a first baseman. But President Bush still is hopeful, he said.
= ” s ROYCE LINT is edging up
{his season’s total to 104. Carl; |Liscombe - (Providence ’47-'48)| ‘holds the league record with 118 |points.
Providence’s Jack McGill trails
DeMarco with 96 and Grant War-|someback that slowly ate
wick, also of Buffalo,
St. Bonaventure, Redmen ragged with a rough{house ball-hawking game and a
racehorse offensive led by Bobby|school fends, F. A. friends.
Sassone, forged a 32-to-22 half{time lead and widened it to 40, [to 26 in the first four minutes of | {the second half, But St. John's began a game! into |
is third the Bonnies’ lead. With the score
with 92, DeMarco and McGill tied 58-58 Zawoluk took a
each have 69 assists. Indianapolis’ Freddie
league leading total to 46,
more than Walt -Hergesheimer,|
[Cleveland.
near the basket and let fly er
Glover a push shot that swished cleanly notched two goals to raise his through the
net for
six|Zawoluk had 24 points. | In contrast to the rough second) game, Brigham Young, paced by Glover and teammate Max Mc- Roland: Minson's
brilliant 28-
on Johnny Hutchings as king Nah are tied for sixth in the Point performance, breezed past
of the training camp’s fishermen. Lint has three to his’ credit. Hutchings, with five, is resting on his oars until his record is tied or surpassed.
7 on on COACH RUSS PETERS and Nanny Fernandez took advantage of the rainy day vacation
and shoved off to Orlando for |
a round of golf. unreported.
on ” ” JACK FETTE, American Association umpire, has been assigned to work the exhibition games at the Kissimmee camp. Seven member clubs of the AA are walamg in onda,
Exhibition Baseboll |Bitsturen At Pa hn “PIB Cot
Scores were
gos 040— i 18 4 010 100 Hergesheimer,
, scoring race with 79 points.
Gil Mayer, Pittsburgh, has the {opener.
best goaltending average, 2.42 |and Buffalo's Harry Dick spent
St. Louis in a smoothly-played
Make 11 Straight The Cougars from Provo, Utah,
' eight more minutes in the pokey although tied twice in the early
to increase his league
record- Stages of the game, broke away
running the|
victory. | |
The Olymps accomplished that little feat by putting the Tigers
sion. The Tigers hope to resume
{
|ownership of the Fieldhouse Sat-|
(urday. The Nats may as well ‘know now that the Olymps intend to set an example for their ne F. A.
Top Teams Swing Into Cage Action
Evansville Favorite In NAIB Tourney
United Press KANSAS CITY, Mo. Mar. 13 —Three highly regarded teams were spotlighted today as the 13th annual National Associa-
(tion of Intercollegiate Basketball | Tournament went into its second
day of action. The week-long tourney in Municipal Auditorium saw eight teams take opening-round victories yes-
breaking penalty time to 212 min- to a 35 to 19 advantage with a'terday. Today's full schedule will
utes.
Cleveland .. 68 40 37 177
attle (Pac.) 000 Beatle Wilson (4), Koski “ n Burnett, Springfield ..: 685 26 44 Davis, Smith (6) 7 Sheers d| |LaPlante, Providence 67 18 52 ontalvo (6). NATIONAL LEAGUE
7p/also are entered 70 tournament,
chances for a “grand slam” were,
string of 11 straight points—
in the NCA S|
and - thus their,
complete the opening round.
In’. the National League De- eight of them by Center Mel, Top-seeded Evansville (Ind.)! | troit’s Gordie Howe romeagve Le! Hutchins—and widened the lead! College plays Westminster of points. Terry Sawchuk, Detroft| {to 38 to 21 at half time. New Wilmington, Pa.; Hamline| goalie, leads the National with St. Louis, given a lift by some University of 8t. Paul, Minn.,! | nine shutouts. (deadly outside shooting from Ray Second - seeded, meets Rocky! {Sonnenberg and little Ray Stein- Mountain College of Billings, | On the Ice ler, rallied and closed the gap to Mont, and highly regarded AMERICAN HOCKEY LEAGUE [56 to 48 midway in the second! Baldwin-Wallace of Bera, O., rae er GP G A Pis half, but an uninterrupted nine- plays American University of | Warwick, Buffalo i... 1 33 40 g3 Point surge in which Joe Richey Washington, D. C. Meal, Providence 68 21 6 9 9% scored two field goals, pulled] Most of yesterday's winners | |Sullivan, Hershey ........ 67 28 53 a BYU away to a safe lead again. had little trouble in advancing. Glover, Indianapolis .. 66 46 33 McNab, Indianapolis 1 34 45 1 St. John's and Brigham Young s 8 a
Basketball Results |
By United Press
Owensboro has been owned and Burarink (5)
operated by the Boston Braves for the past five years, winning Ne three pennants and never finishing out of the first division. One| year they drew just a few thou-
sand spectators less than the St. team Louis Browns, according to club!
records. Club ownership will be a stock corporation with Boughton. hold-
‘fhg controling interest.
Boughton sald he hopes to work | out an agreement for the Kentucky team to link up with a major league parent organization. The former excavating contractor was vice president of the Indianapolis Amateur Baseball Association for the past three years. He announced that Wayne Blackburn, former outfielder-in-fielder with ‘the Indianapolis In-| dians, will be his playing manager. Blackburn played with Little Rock in the Southern Association last year and has been|
managing with Rollie Hemsley |
Al ‘West Palm Beach, Fla. EADY G A Pts Philadelphia (A). © 200 906 Sn 4 : Alone a i ot, i 3 a 3{ucent alive, Navona} Trviation Re Conley, Kell char ontrea | Pherson ' (7) and ‘Bi + Jonngon 13, ellner| Schmidt, Boston .. 31 3 8 orth Carolina State, seeded mrignam youne 75. 8t. Louts 3), Coleman (7) and Tipton. Astroth (6, Abel. Detroit ak 3 $ 8 isecond, and Arizona, seeded St John's (Brooklyn) 80, St. Bonaventure | Lindsay. Detroit... 22 31 3 fourth, also are double entries| ° Northeast Collegiate Tournament At Fullerton, Cal. Sloan, Toronto 28 23 3iland are favored to win their] a4 Medford, Mass, | Chicago (N) 000 010 020— 3 9 1 Kennedy, Toronto 14 236 Trinity 817. { Ly ghick, 5 000 bix— 4 § {Qaranep. Chicaso 3 5 i games tonight — their first ap- Tufts ss, Williams 56 “handler. Schmitz | hitti; Besse, Site of ty, Biller wh and [pearance after drawing first| MIDWEST iroun yes as seeded teams. NAIB Tournament at Kansas City, Mo At Tucson, K | ki Eck ’ ' v yore ay d0 Ton! owalski, Eckert is : ert #1 Soom or . {Clevane an i g 307 © i 3 : "Wrestle Toni ht '‘Barnhorst Talks" RCE A & M88, Glenville (W, Va.! | ) a {7 eve Bihalnd, Courtney, Srisndos hid he Tee, J State Be uyeryity 55. South Dakota { He an, ome run n, co aofitne” New ¥ ) Ne 3pd Two wrestling glants-meet-in At Cage Dinner {Arkansas Poly-Tech 64, College of Pacific ortland ( ) ittsburgh (N) “B" am 3. the main event at the Armor to-| Be hnwest Texas State 70, Morehead (Ky 1] a ork (Nb vs Boston {AL al Saras y Leo Barnhorst, ex-Notre Dame " state 62.
ta, Fla., cancele Bet Washington (A) vs. troit (A) at Lakeand, Fla., canceled, rain, Boston (N) vs. Bt. Louis (N) at 8t| Petersburg, Fla, , rain. Cincinnati (N) vs. Philadelphia (N) at {Clearwater, Fla., canceled, rain.
Plan Banquet
‘might as Wladek Kowalski,
De- cage star now with the Indianap-| M
troit, goes against Ray Eckert, olis Olympiahs, was guest speaker |
California, Mo., two out of three
(falls with a 90-minute limit.
Midget wrestlers furnish the ac-!| tion in the
[last night at Sacred Heart Hall as the school’s basketball team! {was honored.
Awards were presented by
semiwindup with Coach Harry Caskey to Juniors
The Annual Shortridge Dad's Fuzzy Cupid,” Providence, R. I,/Harlan Petty and Dick LaFave Club Banquet ‘will be held Tues- taking on the Mighty Fritz from and Seniors John Dwenger, John|
day, Mar, 20, at 6:30 in the school |
cafeteria. The Key Club, boys |
elub connected with the Kiwanis | {Club, is handling ticket sales. |
Cracken, IU basketball {Mickey McCarty, and Homer Barker, member of 1900 Short-| {ridge basketball team.
lini Name Captain CHAMPAIGN, II, Mar. 13
Rican winter baseball leaghe dur- Fletcher will captain next sea-|
ing the .off season,
| son’s Illinois basketball team: He
Boughton said he plans to take was chosen yesterday Capt. Don promising amateurs from Indiana] |Sunderlage was named most val-
down . for Hyouta with * his Jew,
club,
~|
{uable player on this year's Ten championship squad.
Big
Luxenbourg, Germany.
Squaring off Iraiser will be Lou Britten, Mdntreal, . against
Solunar Tables
Plan Jour, fishing days so that you will| be fishing in good territory during the | Bolunar times. ; periods are when fish active. Major periods ‘begin at the] times shown and last for an hour and a
half or two hours thereafter. The Min of] CARLISLE DELUXE and Rogers Hornsby in the Puerto (UP)—Junior Guard Rodney periods are of Somewhat shorter duration. BALLOON TIRES. Size
P.M Minor Hatt BALLOON,
Minor dl Today S940 3:25 10:00 Tomorow ...10:30 4:15 10:45 i rd Thursday «x 33D 24s 11:35 5:20 Friday dns * 5:1 12:05 6:20 Saturday 12:30 6:30 1:00 113 onda: svesds 1i38 1:40 3 8 LH nd BY won 2:15 © 9:20 3:3 04d (Central Btandar 8)
d Tim
|Caito, Don Clark and Dallas Kelin the curtain sey.
Catholic character awards went |
Gentleman Jim to Caito for football and Dwenger | Speakers will be Branch Mc-| Dobie of Windsor, Canada, at for basketball. coach;| 8:30 p. m,
They were pre-| sented by Oscar Stumpf, president of St. Francis Aid Society. The]
annual free throw trophy was | presented to Kelsey by John | | | Noone. FR
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Memphis State 76. Portland University 74. Regis College 72, East Central Oklahoma State 55 Ottawa (Mans.) 73, Hillsdale 58 | James Millikin 77, Eastern New Mexico University 63. SOUTHWEST NCAA Elimination Texas 35, Texas A & M 34, EXHIBITION Minneapolis (NBA) 67, Big Ten Stars 59.
Additional Sports, o Page 16 .
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