Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 April 1951 — Page 13

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SUNDAY, APRIL 1, 1951

Two Records Are Set

Features, Page 23

Eddie Ash Says— | Tribe Not Flag Contenders Yet

Still Need Reinforcements; In. Birmingham for 2 Games

No. 37 Loses

Grade Crown By VAL DICKMAN.

basketball today,

. BIRMINGHAM; Ala., Mar. 31—After putting in a month of training in Florida, practicing and playing exhibition tilts, the Indianapolis Indias arrived in Birmingham|-’ Indianapolis late today to resume. firing against Southern Association High School Basketball Crown. clubs. E | More than 1000

Still hopeful of landing reinforcements at a later date, 8723¢ school

There's a new star in Hoosier

It's a rugged little team from School 26, that out-fought and out-played a much larger School 37 squad, 28 to 22, last night te first Junier

screaming pupils and adults ’ watched the speedy team from

School 26 Wins Junior

but none too happy about the Be way the “parent” Pittsburgh| Training Camp Briefs, Page 14 Times Grade School

Pirates are putting off .|thelr-training base at Kissimmee. A [l_ P g send | In 10 exhibition games prayed All Tourney Team . ing help, the Indians still have | Herbert Swannigan, No. 26..F

in Florida, thé Hoosier Redskins one thing in their favor, on only an even break. But| Tom Givan, No. 85 F Elester Berryhill, No. 26.....F

cesses asans

pr

N 0 They rounded into excellent winning five and losing five is 1 J ¢ § physical condition during their not a bad record for a club that Curtis Evans, No. di reves F, | y long stay in Florida and made had to go to camp with a short- ire Adkin, Na, 5.1 lenil i the most of the ideal. weather age of infielders and not too ronan oN ri o, 3 CG J conditions that prevailed around many seasoned pitchers available. To Do Ne 8a y George Robinson, No. 26....G

Lint to Toil Against Birmingham FOR THE first game against the Birmingham Barons tomorrow, - Tribe Manager Don Gutteridge said he would rely upon his Birming- District 8 stop No. 37 with speed, ' ham-born lefthander, the veteran Royce Lint. : deception, and drive,

And Lint said he was ready to cut loose, mainly because he had notified his home-town friends in advance that he was due to toil on the mound.

James Haywood, No. 26.....G

Wl nd

the

Lint ‘has not worked many quintet. innings this spring, but since he vens, Nanny. Fernandez, Don Hard-driving Shirley’ Adkins, played winter ball, he looks all’ Hedrick and Russ Peters or Mel- School 26 center, took scoring

honors with 13 points. School 26 led at the first quar-

set to pitch five or six rounds, vin ‘Malak in the infield; Earl depending, of course, on how well Turner behind the bat, and Lint.

he performs at the start. Usually, The schedule calls for two ter 10 to 3 and at the half 20 to if Lint gets off to a winning pace,'gameg in Birmingham, tomor- 14, he usually holds to it. row and Monday; two in Mem-| 1, (5, tnirq period it was

School 26, 22; School 37, 15.

School 37 rallied in the final quarter and with two minutes to

Manager Gutteridge did not phis, Tuesday and Wednesday; announce his hitting order forlone in Little Rock Thursday; tomorrow's game here but said open date Friday; two games in the following players would start Chattanooga, Saturday, Apr. 7, : the game: 8 Da Kalin, Bob and Sunday, Apr. 8, and two Play, had narrowed the lead to Wuesthoff and Dom Dalles- games in Atlanta, Monday, Apr. sandro in the outfield; Ed Ste-'9 and Tuesday, Apr. 10.

Red Will Be the ‘Welcome Home' Hue

AFTER Atlanta, the Indians will head for home, arriving on Wednesday, Apr. 11. The games booked in Memphis will be night ‘attractions. All others in the afternoon, according to ‘the most recent information received from the several Southern Assoclajon Cities. ; . . If the Indians don’t lose their Florida complexion on this tour through the South, the fans back 3 : home are going to look at red status from bench manager to 7 Il jowed with 11. faces, Ted noses and red necks that of playing.manager, and sta-'¢ E Pe x ysoiation bracket, when the squad arrives to play tion himself at second base. This ot 300 Re i y speedy Tommy four exhibition games in In- would come at a ‘later. date, of Tans i” points, won the third diana before opening the Ameri- course, in the event infield help P are Position In the tourney beatcan Association championship fails to arrive before the regular me ard-fighting School 84, 30 to season against the ‘Milwaukee season gets under way. # I th Brewers at Victory Field Tues-| He could switch Nanny Fernan- Hit So Jat consolation game day night, Apr. 17. dez to shortstop, if young Don,“ ioe} 55 squeezed by School But sad to relate, the Indians Hedrick loses his grip, and call *™ 0“ are not now ready as a team to up Coach Russ Peters to play be counted as a flag contender. third, with Ed Stevens at first. Even Manager Gutteridge, al-' Much depends upon how well though reluctant to make. the the Indians fare on the trip move, may have to change his through the south.

Smoke Signals From the Tribe Wigwam WHEN Fernandez's active baseball playing days are over, he can hire out as a typist. He is learning the touch system on the _ keyboard and is pretty good at it already. He used the hotel office typewriter in Kissimmee to get along with his lessons.

drove in -hard and |quick buckets anc

In the first

scored two the ziincher.

land's 11 points, downed Schoo 20, 41 to 23. : School 26,.in the second semifinal tilt; waltzed by School 35 with a lop-sided 36-to-14 victory. George Robinson was high man with 14 tallies and James Robin-

Continued on Page 14—Col. 1

y

Gehrmann’s ‘Kick Wins Mile Again

BUFFALO, N. Y., Mar. 31 (UP) Don Gehrmann, who talks safety, but practices speed. set a new 174th Armory record tonight as his finishing kick brought him to the tape 10 yards ahead of G-man Fred Wilt in the Niagara District AAU Invitation mile race. Gehrmann's time was 4:09.1 and eclipsed the former record set by Jim Rafferty of Syracuse in 1945 by 01.8. The former Wisconsin ace, who now; lectures school children on traffic safety, prevailed with his usual formula—the last lap sprint. Bilt Irland of Syracuse University scored a double victory. He finished first in the 1000-vard Niagara District race in 2:20, and also took the collegiate mile run in 4:32.8. v

» = ~ — a When the Indians played the , 4p. Jat day, as practice Cincinnati Reds in" Tampa (5.4 one of the boys palmed and were being mauled by a , well ysed ball, placed it in onesided score, a fan’ shouted: g,,i's mouth, patted him affec-

“Even the peanuts are minor “tionately, and then chased him league. They're stale. home. . . .

» 2 2 . » a 2 MANAGER Gutteridge did a Siu radio recording performance on’, AlL ABOARD for Kissimmee one of. the Indians’ trips to Bar- ii 1952. On the evening of the In- : dians’ last day there, a letter tow, Fla., and received a tie and ; a haif" brush as a reward. He dropped into our slot at the Brah-

would have preferred more Tribe An Ina.

Fhe postman didn't have to hits and runs and no errors. ring twice. We beat him to it. The

gan WHEN Stevens reported to the letter was from Dick Shinkle, Indians he“wore 3 Texas style 10- Chamber-of Commerce manager gallon hat, no novelty in the Kis- and all around sports fan. simmee area of Florida, however,. In part, it read: which is a cow country with plen- “It's needless to say that we, ty of cowboys around dressed in in Kissimmee, appreciate the old frontier style. thousands »f words you have BILL HOEFT, the boy wonder sent acs home to your Indianpitcher from Wisconsin who won con L @lives readers about our 10 games and lost but one for the 4. .; 5 g sprin © kDa ug Richmond, Ind: league {eam last (..... coo ¢0 ow that ean season, is listed on the Toledo ,.. inte the com Simi a roster but still was with the par-| 0.0 vo op made oad ent Detroit Tigers last time the ,,.- immunity and pig citi Indians met the : Mud Hens this zens, Now the time has come to , Say good- pi p Hoeft worked out at Indianapo-| “j¢ YS in oe Tal wo Jo ike lis’ Victory Field one day last o, 1000" Jig "gq nice to know | summer and looked impressive to vo, Come back again.” on Pirate agents. But Detroit scouts * —— galn," eventually won the race for the giant lad and farmed him to Richmond.

” ” ~ EVEN newspapermen get careless at times and make mistakes, Earl Ruby, veteran Louisville Courier-Journal sports scribe, toured all American Association] training camps in Florida this spring as a roving author doing features on each club. He landed in Kissimmee to do a “plece” on the Indians only to find nobody home. They were| playing in Tampa that day, 80 miles away.

-Cage Results

By United Press NCAA West All Stars 75, NCAA East All Stars 59

NATION AL_ASSOCIATION VLAYOFFS

At Peoria. Ill. Wyoming 52 76, Bradley

Utah 55

(consolation), Syracuse

J : 75 (finaly, All-Stars Move NEXT Sunday is A-Day for the Indiana College All-Stars.

By JIM HEYROCK That's “arrival day”’—the day they will report in at Butler University to prepare for the second annual Indianapolis ‘Times charity basketball game against the Indianapolis Olympians. The All-Stars, leading senior basketball players from colleges throughout Indiana, will spend most of next Sunday getting set in the houses on the Butler campus that they will call home for a week. - Six of the players will be quartered in the Phi Delta Theta Fraternjty house and the other nine will stay in the Lambda Chi Alpha house.

his next stop and got by without) making a second trip to the tribe camp.

Ing and the other in the evening after 6.

It'll be a gruelling week for the All-Stars as Hinkle and Dietz, who are handling the

Two tiny guards, George Robinson and James Haywood, were sparkplugs of the winning

24-22. But Adkins and Robinson °

semi-final game, School 37, led by Thurman Strick--

School 84 won over a deter.

ALLEY OOP—John Walton

(4) of School 37 and James Hay.

wood of School 26 (25) do a once-over as they scramble after a

loose ball in the championship game of the grade school tournament here last night. School 37's Ed Killibrew (12) comes in after the sphere, too. School 26 won the crown, 28-22. 3

Basketball Title

THAT'S MINE—If's James Haywood" gon. Pe a ght for the

mighty mite gets nu two taller foes to gr

d out of

the ll. He left it to

. Ed Killibrew an an unidentified teammate get the ball in the mix-up. Who's arm is who's? The games were held at Washington High School. :

West Gives East Marshall Sets World Mark, Des Moines Wins Paces Yale to Swim Title |

Freestyle Record Falls in NCAA Meet; Thoman Upsets Taylor in Backstroke

Basketball Lesson

Score 75-59 -Victory

In Benefit Contest { By EARL WRIGHT

United Press Sports Writer NEW YORK, Mar. 31 —The West all-stars gave the East a 75-t0-59 basketball lesson tonight

{

in the sixth annual Herald Tribune

fresh air fund game at Madison Square Garden before a crowd of. 10,431. x

Capt. Zeke Sinicola of Niagara gave his East team a 2-0 lead in the first minute of play. That was the best showing the Easterners made all night. They didn't have a player to match the rebounding, inside, or outside shooting and allaround team play of the Westerners.

It was a team victory but Mel Hutchins, Brigham Young; Ray! Ragelis, the Big Ten scoring! champion from Northwestern; 6-11 Marcus Freiberger of Oklahoma; Capt. Myer Skoog, Minne-! sota; Bob Payne, Oregon State and Ernie Barrett, Kansas State gave the West so much power that it was able to coast after the first 15 minutes. Horvath scored 14 points for the east to -lead the individual scoring but the most valuable player award went to Hutchins, who started the East's downfall with 11 first half points.” Hutchins added a field goal in the second half for a total of 13.

U.& LEAGUE PLAYOFF "ulsa 4. Omaha 2

“Groza, Appreciation Night.”

sional players, today, mittee,

1

as

57.5 seconds, four-tenths of a second faster than Taylor's time.. {The record was the sixth set in the meet. William Sonner of Ohio

tance tonight.

By United

Press

AUSTIN, Tex., Mar. 31-—Australian-born John Marshall of Yale

swimming championship. .

!set a world record in the 440-yard free style event tonight to pave the way for the men of Eli to “amass 81 points and the NCAA!

Marshall's time was 4 minutes 30.2 séconds and it bettered his own mark of 4:31.0 last week at Harvard in the Eastern Inter- But the Des Moines Deaf Club

collegiate swimming meet. It was the sixth record set in the University of Texas pool. His record-breaking feat came just moments after Richard Thoman of Yale. had splashed to a new NCAA 100-yard back-stroke mark to upset favored Jack Taylor of Ohio State. Yale had it all the way on points. Michigan State was the nearest contender with 60. Ohio State netted 58 Stanford 25 and Texas 135 to take top places.

Syracuse Nips Bradley, 76-75

Great Comeback Results in Title

By United Press

PEORIA, Ill, Mar. 31 —« A bring Syracuse team with an indom-

Thoman swam the distance in jtaple spirit tonight scored the

State, the old record holder, came ,. athall tournament.

in third with a 58.5 for the dis-

Harold Shoup of Michigan State followed Sonner, and Bernard Kahan, University of Michigan, was trailed by Everett Brooks of Purdue. Taylor cracked the meet record in the afternoon . preliminaries

57.8 seconds

Detroit Wins 2-0

Utah

nudged Wyoming third place 55 to 52.

for

The Orange trailed 18 to zero

They moved back into contenwhen he swam the distance in tion 40 to 35 at halftime to grab

The

the lead 43-40 midway through the third quarter.

changed hands six times before The Jowans began. to slip slightly

advantage

victory in three games of their the Braves up 76-75 at 0:34. Kiley called the Orange Men's

best-of-five semi-final series.

Sunda

Alex, e

one of the top profes-

Jack Brown, Bill Tosheff and Phil Buck, Indiana; Norm Greiner

and Glen Bahler, Purdue; Bob Barnett and Bob Sakel, EvansDwight Evan Fine, Canterbury; Norm Wilhelmi, Taylor; Franklin, and Gus Moorhead, Hanover.

ville; Jim Ove, Valparaiso;

Shoe Store, 18 FE. Washington St

Swails, Indiana Central;

——— gixth time out,

d and

will. be given gifts by the JayCee Com- champions.

A “draw” event.

became

a mistake which resulted in a technical foul with eight seconds left, Preece hit on the free throw. but a final desperation shot by Schlictman failSyracuse

the

The 15, players selected by a panel of Indiana basketball 1st Pro-Am Tomorrow coaches “as the top senior cagers in the state for the All-Star . team are John Stauffer, Dob: Neal Fichtel, Notre Dame; On South Grove Links The first pro-amateur match of 1951 to be sponsored by the Professional Golfers Association will Loyd Smith, he played tomorrow over the Prep Basketball South Grove golf course. .

Hornets Sting B’ars

Tourney for Deaf

Defeats Milwaukee Cagers Here, 57-48

Nobody swore at the officials « » there were no ear-splitting Icheers from the winner . , . no {public address system. = jcagers are national champions— {real champions, today. ~~ | The fast-breaking Des Moines quintet -won the American Athletic basketball tournament last night in the Tech High School gym, outplaying the Milwaukee Deaf Club, 57 to 48. Cheers in Sign Language Even two pretty girls, who led cheers in sign language before the 800 fans, were unable to the Milwaukee club through to victory. The Milwaukeeans took their

Des Moines club came back with a field goal and a free throw. It was their game from that point on. At halftime they had

lin the first three minutes of play Piled up an 11-point lead, 32 to 21, but went along with the adage|largely on the play of Marvin that a team which won't be beat can't be beat.

{ Tuttle, a husky forward, and Bob | Fisher, guard. Tuttle gathered 10 points in the first half and Fisher got nine. ; Use Only Six Men The Des Moines team used only six men throughout the .game.

New York a Syracuse 75 (overtime) Indiana's Bill Garrett got four Jack® Kiley's 25-footer with 3:23 ;, the second half and Milwaukee 70, s 66— (Best v ————————— i ® . ’ , series, tied 1-1 o i Oh theo The defending champion Detroit geil URIS PiSL i fem Bt Sey auickly called a VF ONAL TOURNAMENT n : > me out an r Bellingham, Sy Boteman. Mont. © e ce Red Wings battled back into the ,. co” 0" 0% 0 goals by George Tuttle led the scoring with 22 Lebanon, Ind, 67." Aberdeen. 8. D.. 49 Pi MERICAN SHCUE PLAYOFF Stanley Cup playoff picture to-Macuga, Gene Melchiorre and points while his teammates, Fish-| “Pinal; 0 Th Bellingham. Wash. 89 TSouTEh 3. Hershey 3 (Triple over- i nt by defeating the Montreal Fred Schiictman, along with er and Larry Marxer, each hit for| NATIONAL CAMPUS TOURNAMENT |. ~ NATIONAL LEAGUE Canadiens, 2 to 0, for their first/ Aaron. Preece's free toss pulled 13. Centar Phil Plocar led for

the losers with 12 points, 11 of them in the first half. Officials Frank Baird and George Bender did an excellent job handling the game. Although all of their decisions had to be by hand signs, there was never a doubt what they meant. Local Team Honored After the final game, individual and team awards were made, also in sign language. Indianapolis Deaf Club, eliminated in the quarterfinal round by

Continued on Page 14—Col. &-.

: | # = . 5 § , Ruby neglected to consult the) ; . ® x # IN THE preliminary game, starting at 7 p. m. will be the | The pro-am will be played every TOURNAMENT AT COLUMBUS spring training schedule and his| AND ON Monday morning they will become Silver Circle Bar team, city independent champs, against the Monday throughout the spring and “goes Bash Bi: Hamilton Public 39 face became redder than a Flori- Hie property” of Head Coach Tony Hinkle and Kingan's team : summer. “Bill Russell is host pro Gand Rapids 52, Waynesburg 51. (Class da sunburn. But Earl was re. his assistant, Bob Dietz. Hinkle is planning Tickets for 3 ; : > all, rm: 8 § the All-St: § 8¢ for the r, whi rill be --a rrr ESTEE i: sourceful. He used the phone at| two practice sessions a day, one in the morn- e I-Star game are on sale at the Marott fo opener, which Ww a

Association of the Deaf’s|

. a a cml aca mamma TT"""WHENEVER a néw player | reported in at the Tribe's Kissimmee camp ‘this spring, he

| game. was greeted by a stock ques- | |

The problem will be to develo

tion, propelled by Trainer: Jim

basketball» talent in the state ma will see an outstanding show.

Coming down to go fishing or to play ball?”

» ” » EVER hear of a dog: being given a baseball for a souvenir? It happened in Kissimmee, ~~ Spot, a small terrier, made the park his playground every time ‘the Indians turned out for practice or a game. The little pooch chased and picked up baseballs

the introduction of the All-Stars the Butler band. At halftime there will be a band under the direction co-eds

” n ” A SPECIAL feature of the Alex Groza, great center of the

great favorite of the players, So

¢

coaching assignment for the second consecutive year, whip the stars into shape for the Apr. 14

jon that can cope with the high-flying Olympians. already are in top physical condition,

Pierce. son of basketball for their respective schools. It was: “Welcome to the Ba ow . ’ land of perpetual sunshine. IN ADDITION to seeing the top college

Proceedings officially will start at 8 p. m. Apr. 14 with

: 3 i ; Among the all-star players who will participate against the EAST LANSING, Mich. Mar, and the Qlympians, aided by Olympians will ‘be player-coach Bob Dietz, ‘Bob Evans, Charley 31 (UP) Wisconsin. and Michi- : “oat : Maas, Carl Schaefer, Dwight Swalils, Jim Riffey, Bill Berbarian, gan State boxing teams battled oF oN resehied p the Butler Charlie Black and Mal McMullen. Bob Lavoy will be loaned hy to a 4-4 draw tonight with the § (Chuck) Henzie, and Butler the Olymps to play with the all-stars. Badgers scoring two technical

almost constantly and became a| Junior Chamber of Commerce and the baskétball fans, In addition to the charity game, the night also will-be keown

nmin

Olymps to Begin Tour of Indiana ting B'e pment eT RNY “HERSHEY, Pa. Mar. 31 (UPJ]

The Indianapolis Olympians, playing against a team of all- —Bobby Solinger's goal at 14:30] stars, will open a barnstorming tour of Indiana at Greensburg of the third overtime period entomorrow night. (abled the Pittsburgh Hornets to As permanent members of the all-star team wi |eke out a 3 to 2 win over the (Buckshot) O’Brien and Jimmy Doyle, former Pg id Hershey B'ars tonight in the first tour is designed, in part, to keep the Olympians in playing shape [Same of the American Hockey| for thelr game against the Times Indiana College All-Stars in | League semi-final playoffs before Butler Fieldhouse Apr. 14. | 7761 fans. |

The tour, however, is not a project of the Olympians’ corporation.

p the All-Stars into a combinaThe college boys having just finished a sea-

~ ~ and .professional

tch skills, a near-capacity crowd ‘

College Bouts Draw

The schedule includes, Apr. 2 at Greensburg; Apr. 3-4 open; Apr: 5 at Brazil; Apr. 6 at Washington; Apr. 7 at Vincennes; Apr. she 8 at Delphi; Apr. 9 at Franklin; Apr. 10 at Terre Haute; Apr. 11 at 1 Frankfort; Apr. 12 at Martinsville; Apr. 14 with the Times All- College Baseball Stars in Butler Fieldhouse; Aps, 15 at Batesville i == cancalisd “(wal

: Ie

knockouts and the Spartans ane.

game will "he the "honorhg of ~VER Olympians, by the Indianapolis UP ‘AND OVER—Don La pole vault record last ni

~

lays

2%

1

.

Hii, Beit Stars Chalk Up

New Marks

. Wolverines Lose Their Bid for Fame

| By JIMMIE ANGELOPOLOUS | Times Sports Writer

PURDUE FIELDHOUSE, Mar. 31 — Two new records were written into the colorful {Purdue Relays record books here tonight, but the heaviest ink was used to log the entries reserved for the depaft-

ment of the unusual.

A sellout crowd of 5324 saw Illinois get four first-place honiors, Michigan Normal three |firsts and a fine Michigan team {lose a chance to hold a new American record in the 240-yard

_ {shuttle hurdle relay event be-

cause of a disqualification.

Illinois had four firsts, ‘one second, one third, twa. fourths and

record in the pole vault by Don Laz.. He still set a Purdue Relays record with his poorest vault of the year. - : on Laz vaulted 14-27 inches, héttering his own relays mark of 14-15% two years ago. - This was

ithe first time he failed to go hé-

yond the 14-foot, 4-inch mark this year. :

Beloit Nofches One The second record was broken

z

by Beloit in the college sprint | medley relay event. A fine kick | lby Carrol Schumacher gave his

mates a 3:36.8 performance. The old record of 3:37 was set hy Grinnell last year. iz

Michigan cracked the American indoor shuttle relays mark. of :30.1 made by Michigan State in 1940 by five-tenths of a second, but the Wolverines were disquali-

day, jumped out of his starting block & moment too soon on the baton exchange of the final

Hoover fell on the second hurdle of the 60-yard low stick finals and a pulled muscle forced him to forsake the high hurdles in favor of the shuttle relays. - Indiana's Big Ten indoor shot put champion, Cliff Anderson, took the iron ball laurels with a heave of 51-feet, 8% inches. Laz Cracks Mark

Michigan State's Jesse Thomas came back in the 60-yard highs, missing the relays mark of 7.4 seconds by only one-tenth of a ‘second. He won in :07.5, nicking Jim Philbee of Bradley. Purdue’s Don Hocker was third and Indiana's Bill Taylor was fourth. Hoover, who pulled a muscle in the low event, was scratched to compete in the shuttle hurdle (relays. Illinois’ Don Laz went below the 14-foot, four-inch mark for {the first time this season in the {pole vault, but the chunky Illini

greatest comeback in Robertson only lead in the first two minutes vaulter had enough zing to crack

Field House history to edge top/of the game when Wallace Rein-| seeded Bradley 76 to 75 and win ick slipped under for a fielder. Vening.

the first annual national campus Their lead was brief as the taller!

the first relays record of the

He cleared the bar at 14 feet, {23 inches, failing in his attempt to clear 14-4 in three tries. He {bettered his old relays mark of {14-15% inches set two years ago. {| Laz, the only collegian in his- | tory to clear 15 feet (he made 15-1 early this month), missed the {American Indoor mark of 14-6% {set by Earl Meadows of Southern California in 1939.

Continued on Page 14—Col. 7

" Ld

|

UMPHH — Cliff Anderson | son tosses the put 5l-teet, 83 inches to win in the shotput at \ ‘Purdue Relays. His afternoon effort held up. :

of Ninois cragked the

one fifth and accounted for the

ps

[Editorials , Page 24 Pe

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