Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 September 1951 — Page 13
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‘16, 1951
ie ick :- i TD's Ohio State's
etl today for
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itandings) but int them.” Raffensperger h posters were ring the Iowa tch before the
» n preparation inst Washing1 today, began ig scrimmage efensive workJophefs have k in polishing h Wes Fesler 1@ more largeturday in Me-
= GH, a frosh harp in prac‘oach Bernie higan concenills yesterday, 1 his ' backs for passing the Fairmont, his sharpest
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» he Michigan t through a voted almost fense and ofie Munn rearterback Al ent to a hosith “a badly ould be ready State opening n State Sept.
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ed me won the feaat the Speed8 racing that sent to St. or treatment, came in the 1 by Bill Ramon the south vall. He was nd mouth in-
asualties haprea as’ Don Carison, both ifferent cars, the - radiator lew off and hot water Midland, Ind. e feature and Heat winners 't., Dan MontRamsey. Bentrophy dash semi-final,
ins nature
ast night set i at the West peedwass “atid pture a heat p feature. his time trial 18.04. -He had winning the » race had to mes because for the race
re won by prschel White he two semiken by White or while the Charlie Jack-
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SUNDAY, SEPT. 16. 1051
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Football Primer—
Here's Football For The Ladie
By PAUL (TONY) HINKLE Athletie Director, Butler University TYEAR LADIES: ! Football
is. one of the great American games . . . one in which you all should be in-
terested. It is no more difficult to understand and enjoy than any other game once you know a few simple principles: First, football is an outdoor Its season. Games are never postponed due to weather conditions. Thils "spectators and players must endure a burning sun, rain, or ice and snow. Don't let this worry you . + the fun’ and glamour are worth it. Dress according to the weather. Football is what's known as a goal game. In all goal games the object is to get a ball in the goal.’ Golf, basketball, and hockey are goal games. Baseball and tennis are not goal games Football is played on a field 360 feet long and 160 feet wide. Players must stay within these limits or play stops.- Lines known as goal lines are located at either end of the field 30 feet in from the outer dimensions. The area behind these lines i¢ the goal. Goal posts, the “H” shaped affairs, are located at the: extremes ends of the 360 foot field. In professional ball the goal posts are located on the goal lines,
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game. The fall is
Hinkle
THE GAME is played with a bali known as the football or pigskin. Unlike most balls, it is not round but oval in shape. The object of the game is to score. made in the following ways: ONE—Getting the ball into the opponent's goal legally by running or throwing.. This is known as hn
Scores are
- - ia
@
Wyoming, 13-0
JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Sept. 15 (UP)-—A fast-building University of Florida team started its 1951! football season off tonight with a 13 to 0 victory over Wyoming, the team touted for the Skyline
~ : or - — & ®
comes to football—teaching, techniques and interpretation—The Times turns to one of the game's top authorities in Indiana, Butler's Paul D. (Tony) Hinkle. Coach Hinkle herewith explains the game for those of you—particularly the ladies—who may be seeing it played for the first time , . . on television and in stadia. Times Staff Cartoonist Gene Feingold pen-points the referee signals for you, tao. a touchdown and counts six points. After a toichdown has been made, the team making the score is entitled to attempt to score an additional point . «.. known as the point after touchdown: If they can run or pass the.ball into the opponent's goal or kick the ball, by drop kick or place kick, through the upper portion of the “H" goal post, “one point is scored. Only one try is allowed. TWO—By kicking the ball by drop kick or place kick through the upper portion of the ‘H” like goal post . ¢. this counts three points. (A.drop Kick is accomplished by dropping the ball to the ground and kicking it as it hits the ground. A place kick is holding the hall on the ground and kicking it as it is held there.) THREE—By pushing your opponents, when they have the ball, back into their goal, thus scoring a safety . .. for two points. . : The game of football is played by two teams of 11 men each. Don’t ask me why 11 men . .. why nine men in baseball or five in basketball? The length of the game is determined by a clock. “olleges play a 60-minute game, high schools play a 48-minute game, and grade schools play a 32-minute game. This time limit is divided into quarters of equal duration.
. When it
A REST PERIOD is provided between the second and third quarters. This is known. as the half. This period prbvides the ‘bands an opportunity to show off their abilities. In between the first and second. and third and fourth quarters only enough time is allowed for the teams to reverse their goals. All games must have a beginning. Football
wry
is> ...
w
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
S
started with what's known as the kick-off. One side Kicks the ball to the other. Objéct of the team receiv‘ing the kick-off is to advance the ball across the goal line ... thus making a touchdown. The team’ kicking trys to prevent the man with the ball from making a touchdown. Most of the fime the kicking team:' succeeds and the man with the ball is stopped . .. but hard! } The man the ball considered to be
carrying is
. downed when his forward progress is stopped (that is,
when in the grasp of an opponent) or any part of his body, other than'his hands or feet, touches the ground, In professional ball he is down only when the whistle blows. Naturally, he must stay on the playing field or he is considered “out-of-bounds.” The teammates of theeman with the ball try to prevent his being tackled by members of ‘the opposition. Their efforts in his behalf are known as blocking.
oo “ >
AFTER the runner with the ball has been stopped on the kick-off, the following continuation of the game is known as “scrimmage.” You have seen the team in possession of the ball go into what is called the huddle. The huddle is for the purpose of planning and calling the next play so that the opposition can not hear. Plays-are called by the quarterback.
The object of scrimmage i§ to advance the ball 10 yards in four tries. These tries are known as downs. The team with the ball can... run... pass... or kick. The team with the ball can keep ‘it as long as 10 yards are made within the limit of four tries. If they fail to make 10 yards in four tries they give up the ball to the other team. .The process starts over again. : Naturally, there are limitations as to the use of the hands, off-side, and other various rules to make the play fair and safe for the players. Don't worry about these rules, . . accept the judgment of the officials . . . those four men in black and white striped shirts . . . that's why they are being paid. You came to enjoy the game . . . not officiate. The officials came to work . not necessarily enjoy the contest.
Oo
x
Link Forges Way Into 700 Pin Clu’
By MARION CRANEY
WHAT ° HARRY LINK Jr wouldn't have given for a chain of 245s.
But instead of the triplicate he harnessed games of 245-212-245 for a 702 series, and top scoring honors for .the week in bowling. Link, Carter's
190 in
who averaged for
Farm Market
made his scoring debut lon Fox-Hunt alleys 5-6 in the |Classic there.
The Sicanoff Tallow
- _—
Bowling— = -
league ‘apolis . . chio and Right Wing Louis Jan-
the first professional contracts with {Broad Ripple Classic last season, Detroit Friday Adams.
would make the Indianapolis Caps Corp. squad; and on their present show-| Baseball Quiz consisting of 20 in-
PAGE 13 * |
rs F
2 rl
Sports Roundup— ;
2 Amateur Stars
By EDDIE ASH
Times Sports Writer . A DISPATCH from Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., training camp for the Detroit ice hockey Red Wings and affiliates,
disclosed that a pair of star amateur ‘puck chasers were
signed to Detroit contracts. yesterday.
That makes news for Indian- . Center Alex Del Vec-
n ” n - MEETING on the gridiron next Saturday will be Bradley and Tampa universities . Who you pickin’ and by how many points? . . . Bear in mind it's football, not basketball.
» o THE LATEST issue of Collier's magazine carries an interesting
kowski agreed to terms for their General Manager Jack
Adams said the lads certainly
[team supporter pulled down the ing they mdy: even be given a triguing questions and answers,
[young season's series. He fell short of the [Jack Henry smashed ‘night at Pritchett-Hunt-O’Grady. 2 on 4 THE FIRST 3000 team total of the 1951-1952 tilt popped up in the Classic when Laundry cracked 3080 and opponent Tompkins Ice Cream racked up 3063. Aided by Mike Bisesi's 245-236-175 658, Tompkins still stole two of the three games from
Mechanics. The laundry team won the middle test on ‘a 1103 game total. Patty Striebeck and ‘Marge
Skelton, former Milano Irin teammates, dressed up women's scor{Ing in the first full week of the season's league howling. Patty bounced 636 pins with games of 174-233-229, leading her new Morris Plan team at FoxHunt. She cracked 596 for Bowes Seal Fast earlier in the week. [Marge scattered 207 sticks twice, {and 187 for 601, sparking the new (Milano“>Inn ‘five. in ..the PennIsylvania Classic. 5 » = ANOTHER DOZEN men topped the 650 mark. They were: Dick
second plus-700, brief
733 League opening morale.
Mechanics. The pair played together with the
Eight championship, before 25.000
{Bardy, 696 in the Holy Name
trial with Wings
the Nationallauthored by Dan Daniel, New boost their vork World-Telegram and Sun sports writer The ScrippsHoward writer is one of the nation's leading baseball experts ., Question No. 3: Has any pitcher won two games in one day more than once in a segson? . DanOshawa Generals of the Junioria then points out that Iron Man Ontario Hockey Association and joe McGinnity did it three times tallied more than 100 goals be-/¢,r the Giants in 1903 . This tween themselves. : will cause oldtime Indianapolis The kids made one appearance fans ta, remember Louis (Bull) in Detroit last March, playing for pyrham. who. in 1908, helped the Wings against Montreal in pitch the Indianf to the penthe last game of the Nationallpnant by winning five doubleLeague's regular season schedule. headers. \ ’ u » 5 LAST APRIL, Indianapolis’ Ownie Bush predicted Al Lopez would master mind the Cleveland Indians to the pennant in his freshman year as a major league pilot . , . Bush's | opinion was shared by many Indianapolis fans . , . As of | now, looks as if it will come | to pass.
to
» n ” DEL VECCHIO and Jankowski were the two of the highest goal scorers _in all hockey last winter.
5 "- ” SOME of the beer commercials on TV prize fight presen‘tations often are more exciting than the fight , . . Rough going, however, for a guy riding the wagon . . . What'll you have? «os» We'll take vanilla.
” » ”n ONE YEAR sometimes makes a great difference in the Ameria 2 ican Association ., . A year ago BY FINISHING in the second Indianapolis and Columbus division it looks as though the landed in the post-season play-
Indianapolis Indians saved money offs . . . In the first round, the in the counting house. . . Rainy,| Indians eliminated St. Paul and cool weather put a crimp in at-| the Red Birds eliminated Min-
s * . : OFFSinE WLEGAL POSITION ILLEGAL MOTION OR | peLAY oF | PERSONAL Foul | ROUGHNESS Ave CLIPPING ROUGHING | CRAWLING, MBLPING TH IC p aL + rainsoaked fans at the scene of SAL [oo | p i : {Church loop at Beech Grove; Carl the. Cowboy's last victory LOR PROCEDURE Sur GAME. PiLing ON | LTHE KICKER Ronme, reuot nd Fox, B86 for Methodist Men at games oe C 5 St r, I~ PERENC ! . : : Haywood Sullivan hurled one 3 ® @ = {Beech Grove; Jimmy Johnston, Paul.
touchdown pass early in the sec-
ond period and set up another a few minutes later. But the weather made it a defensive
game on both sides except for Sullivan's arm. - Wyoming climaxed an unbeaten season in 1950 by trimming Washington and Lee in the ‘Gator Bowl game on New Year's Day. They had -not been. beaten since Baylor did it in 1949, under the “Bame coach whose team they faced today—Bob Woodruff.
Kentucky Mauls
Tenn. Tech, 72-13 |
Br United Press .
LEXINGTON, Ky., Sept. 15—|
Kentucky, last year’s Bowl champion, mauled Tennessee Tech today, 72-13, in a prevue showing of its 1951 power before a crowd of 26,000. The game, scheduled as little more than a dress rehearsal for Kentucky's important tussle with Texas next week, turned out to be just that. : Kentucky's power again was built ‘around Vito (Babe) Parilli, the brilliant passing specialist. Coach Paul Bryant, using his
Sugar
first stringers most of the first half, ran up a half-time score of 39 ton 0.
N. C. State Scalps Catawba, 34 to 0
RALEIGH, N. C., Sept. 15 (UP) —North Carolina State college massacred the Catawba .Indians 34-0 here today and displayed its first foothall scalp of the seasen to 5000 shirt-sleeved fans in Riddick Stadium. Tailback Alex Webster knifed
© at will through Catawba’s light
line scoring three touchdowns and setting up another as he paced the State victory. : His 94-yard touchdown run with the _third period Kickoff brought the crowd screaming to its feet. The first two touchdowns were set up by blocked punts with Webster plunging over from the one and then the six.
Sets Swim Mark
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 15 (UP)~—Phebe Cramer, 15-year-old Berkeley, . Cal, mermaid,
splashed to. a claimed new world record of 30.7 seconds in the 50yard freestyle "event for girls aged 14-15 today at the opening
events of the, AAU Pacific Association’s first “annual junior olympic swimming and diving
championships.
JOINS TOP PROGRAM
rtney, Thorpe. Sacrifices—Peterson a top role this séason on Theatre Soubie Plavs_—Clarkson to Mauch to ’ we, 2. Left on ases— waukee 6, Gulld on the Air, Tonight, don’t Crone, 7. left on Bases Milvukes or:
miss Helen Hayes and Montgom-
ery CHft in Tennessee Williams’ (Qi potersoa te ih Ti Tarerson
great drama, “The Glass Menagerfe.” Tune in Sundays, 7:30 p. m,,
. WIRE, U. 8. Steel Hour.
tiny,
Ray Milland has signed to play th
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Lausche Withdraws From Baseball Race
By United Press © “THERE are thousands of COLUMBL'S, 0. Sepi. 15-Gov. young men in the military forces Frank J. Lausche of Ohio an- wp, could make more money and houriced today he is withdrawing enjoy greater comfort in civilian his name as a candidate for the life, but to them an assignment job as commissioner of baseball. has been made to serve : their The Governor, who has been| antry.” Lausche said “I. 25 a rumored in line for the job va- 20 Y, e pea he yh cated by A. B. Chandler at the public official, cannot do less ” request of the baseball own- The affable, curly-haired Lau-
$13,000.
tradicting all that he has advocated “if I took the position because ofyits lucrative remuneration and comparative comfort.” The job as baseball commissioner pays $65,000 a year, while
sioner when they meet cago next Thursday.
eral manager of the «Cincinnati
ers, said he was deciding on the sche said he felt he would be con- pected to name a new commis- | it won't be me.”
action «because of his responsibility as governor of Ohio. “In truth, I would like very -much-—-to-takeit-but-—I nave a responsibility as governor which
I cannot abandon with any moral justification,” the governor said.
Brewers Beat Blues, 3-0,
Lead .in Series, 3-1 KANSAS CITY, Sept. 15 (UP) —Righthander Dick Donovan pitched four-hit ball tonight to give Milwaukéé's American Asso: ciation pennant winners a 3 top0 win over Kansas City in the league playoffs, The Brewers have won three of four games played so far, and can
advance to the final play-off with another victory here tomorrow, wl | Milwaukee Kansas City AB HO : AB H O Klaus.3h 4 1 1 Wahl ss $d 13 Thorne, If 4 1 3Marquis. cf 30358 “larkson ss 4 1 0 Bollweg.lb 31 1 8 |Crowe, 1b 3 013 Jensen rf 3 8 1 Basso.cf 4 1 2: Thomas if $4 0 2 Olmo.rf 40 1{Begrist.2h 4] 3 | Mauch.2b 2 1 5iCourtney.c 313 Burris.c 4 1 1{Carey,3b 3103 Donovan.p 4 0 1 Peterson.p 1 0 } | IMuncrief.p 000 | Partee 1 0460 | Totals 33 621 Totals 28 427
Partee fouled out for Muncrief in 9th (Milwaukee 010 000 020-3 {Kansas City .... <v.....000 000° 000—0 Errors—Crowe. Runs Batted In—Burris, orpe, Clarkson. Two-base Hits—Walrl,
Muncrief 2, 1, Peterson 1.
Struck Hits | Munrief, {0 in 135 innings. Hit by Pitcher, By--Donovan, Bollweg and Carey, Balk Peterson. Losing Pitcher—Peterson. Umpires—Mullen, Jackowskl, Applehans, Time 2:15. ,
lovan 5, Peterson 1, { By—Donovan
BRAKE INSPECTION
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Lausche's® announcement today seems to make Warren Giles, gen-
Reds, the top candidate for the the governor of Ohio receives job. Ford Frick, National League president, said yesterday he didn't The baseball owners are ex- know who would be elected “but|
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AT A sHoE store" |
tendance at the early AA playoff (neapolis, the 1950 pennant. winat Milwaukee and St. ner ... The playoff finals proAnd the gate wasn’t duced a torrid seven-game series, |682 for Richie Gulf Service; Bud too good in the first game at With Columbus downing IndianSchoch, 670 for Mechanics Laun- Kansas City*... No games.have apolis in the title battle that .dry in the Indianapolis Classic at been played in Louisville thus lasted 13 innings .. . This year, . |Pritchett lanes. far. Indianapolis finished seventh, Co-- | Vern Havens, 667 for Greeley y x +lumbus eighth. Brothers Texaco at Fox-Hunt:| A LITTLE LUCK doesn't | Jim Magill, 661 in the Chevrolet) hurt to boost a man up in the eircuit; Windy Nave, 662 for Team! world . . . For instance, there's | {No. 7; Louie Stumpf 660 at Sport| Al Lopez . . . Luck broke his | |Bowl. : | way when he got out from under | | Paul Stainbrook, 858 in the Na- the inept Indianapolis Indians | story book material . for the [tional League at Fox-Hunt; John of 1951 . . . Had he stayed, the | records . . . One year IndianBrannan, 657 in the East Side chances are his reputation of | apolis signed a rookie and he (Chevrolet Classic at P-H-O; Wel- being a managerial magician | hit a Victory Field homer on {don Rugh, 655 for Whitaker probably would have lost lustre. | his first trip to the plate . . . Pump, and Ernie Koch, 651 in the | Peripd . .. The pitchers got his Methodist Men's loop. number pronto and he was gone 5 — in a week.
” "= EJ WAYNE BLACKBURN, former Indianapolis favorite, piloted
” ” n Bob Nieman hit home runs in his first two appearances at the plate in the majors, with . the Browns , . . That's really
= = ” ACCUSTOMED to laboring in a St. Paul warehouse during the baseball off season, Frank Kalin, Indianapolis outfielder, has Sept. 15 changed diet and signed to play
Bowling Increase | MILWAUKEE, Wis.
| (UP)—Membership in the Ameri- winter ball in the Cuban I.eague Owensboro to second place in can Bowling Cangress hit a new/. .. Year around ball is a stren-/the Kitty League this Year . . . jall-time high for the fifth straight uous assignment for an old timer'In the playoffs, “Blackie’s” team
|year during the 1950-51 season. {when 325,147 tioned. This was an increase of drifts in St. 3092 teams over the
season.
. -» But Frank probably figures won in the first round buf was teams were sanc- it beats shoveling out of snow blacked out in the finals, losing Paul , . , Blizzards four straight to Fulton 1949-50 were a common occurrence. Kalin's home town last winter.
. ++ It goes in‘in the books as a good season for Wayne, however, .
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