Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 September 1951 — Page 11
eferred to sked Demo= | an intere 3 are ‘our imber and
d nator Brien & tieut wants ald to do to address A “Mr. Am-
aA
pt RE
Se
grpneess:
e aid, Edhas been sador to his hough, he's 1elp Senator legislative or the adréas. j
ador Ayerell an of more
people api of the
uet players. —
§ |B
fi i fac
PRING and oces at this
| mothproof
Y WOMQie
OMPLETE i TOOLS
osxle
PA TRIE IT ISTO |
“Sports
Section Two
_ The Indianapolis Times
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1951
PAGE 11
Editorials, Pa ge 22| x Features, ‘Page 23
FOOTBALL SCORES
FE Er Eh
NL Still
z
ied Up On Final Da
STATE i Butler ....cssvive 0 017 W. Reserve ..... 0 ’ 86 0-6. Franklin ....0o00. 0 0 0 0— 0 Ind. Central ..... 0 6 0 0— 6 Notre Dame ..... 7 35 0 = Neil W rdel Indiana .ccove¢s. 0 0 6 Oe 6 Purdue s.eeccsse 0 0 0 0— 0 3 Texa8 ..eoovs «7 7 0 0-14 Stars for Hanover ..oseese 0 7 0 0 7 DePauw ...v0e00 0 T 7 Suit Wabash ........ 6 1 7 14—84] Ball State ...... 6 13 0 0-19 Earlham ....... 0 0 0 —6 Manchester ..... 8 0 0 7—13 oY Ep SAINSBURY Taylor ......c... 6 6 0 0—12, SOUTH BEND, Ind., Sept. Anderson ....... 0 0 0 0— 029 Notre Dame revealed a Sk Norbert ..... 6 0 0 13— 0 new running star in Sopho-
8b Joseph ...... 0 7 0 0 7
Valparaiso 46, Indiana State 7.
more Neil Worden and took | advantage of every break today
{to slaughter Indiana, 48 to 6,
BIG TEN | before 55,790 fans. i Worden, - DHNOIS +veevvee. 7 O14 A 20 year old 187 UCLA 010 pounder £79 i SRNR Milwaukee, Northwestern 14 0 14 slashed for four Colorado ....... 0 0 7 touchdowns in a 35-point second Michigan ....:.. 0 0 0 period and only Michigan State .. 0 6 13 through Coach Ohio State .,.... 0 7 0 Frank Leung. SMU wxse 0 0 0 Betas held out of the Minnesota .....« 9 7 6 contest most of Washington .....12 6 0 the second half : | WORDEN to give the HooTows .eeecseseee 2 0 7 T—16/siers, shaky every instant, a Kas. State «cee: 0 0 0 0— 0 {chance to avert complete collapse. Wisconsin tenes 2 6 0 122 Lod . » Marquette ...... © 0 0 6— 6 WORDEN carried the ball’ 14 - {times and bounced 59 yards, And _ MIDWEST his driving plunges were a perfect KAnSas .....e0¢ 71418 1933 foi) for the passes of Quarterback| Yowa State ......12 14 0 John Mazur and the speedy end Cincinnati Bree 14 13 13 47 NENTS Tulsa essere 7.9 6 13—35| Oct. Salts Dame 21 Detrot (night). Toledo ..peevses 0 0 0 8 runs and quick opening plays of Westra Mich. .. .7 0 0 —14| Halfbacks illy Barrett and John ssssnnee 7 0 7 x Petite Bradley fen 7 0 6 71—20| For the first period it was a| rough and rugged ball game and Albion 18, Olivet 6. ithe Irish marched 83 yards on
Beloit 55, Dubuque 14. Buena Vista 46, Upper Towa 6.
Gustavus Adolphus 21, Concordia |
(Minn.) 20. HL Normal 20, S. Illinois 0. Tl. Wesleyan 13, Augustana 12. Knox 19, Carleton 6. LaCross State College 1, Steven. | Point State College 7 Lake Forest 35, Ill. College 18.’ Lawrence 35, Grinnell 0. Lincoln U. 41, Miss. Industrial 6.
* University of Louisville 28, Wayne, to Chet Ostrowski for 34 yards,
{ University 12. Oberlin 18, Wittenberg 6. Qhio U. 40, Akron 7. Ohio Wesleyan 20, Otterbein 0. Miami (0.) 46, Bowling Green 7. Milwaukee. State 19, Oshkosh 6. Monmouth 13, N. Central 0. Muskingum 23, Bald.-Wallace 19, N. Illinois 21, E. Illinois 7
straight football - for Barrett's {four-yard scoring dash. 3 Then Indiana folded up. Center {Mel Becket sailed the ball far lover punter Bobby Robertson's (head, and when the pileup lifted, {it was Notre Dame’s ball on the {Hoosier eight. Worden smashed six. yards for his first score,
- T
put Reserve in the loss column, 7-6.
Butler
» ” ~
THEREAFTER Mazur passed B
To Top
{and Worden plunged two for the marker. Then -Indiana’s Bill Dozier fumbled and Dick Syzman{ski recovered on the Hoosier 18. {Again Worden counted on a six{yard plunge. Next time it was Ray (Petrauska'’s pass, intercepted by {John Lattner, which set up an 11-
Washington (St. L.) 21, Missouri | yard scoring run by Worden.
Mines 8. Wash. & Jeff. 28, Denison 21. Wooster 25, Ohio Northern 13.
EAST Army [ERR R RE -.e 0 0 0 Yo 1} Villanova aiseacs id 0 7 02 YARIS ssesncsnse»T1. 6 0 Navy Bess srs anes 0 0 0 ToT Harvard .....¢ 6 00 0—6 Holy Cross ..... 621 0 Penh. «octosssss 0.0 0 00 Californias ...... 714 0 Pit. <cvsassssnss 1 0.7 0-14 Duke + sssseessT 6 0 6-19 Penn State ...... 0 7 20 13-40 Boston U, «cose 7 T14 6-34 LOR ¢eosse-14 13 14 13-54 A 0 0 718-20 Dartmouth veses 8 0 0 0— 6 Wordham ..¢e¢ = 7T 1 0-14 Wash, & Lee .... 0 7T 0 7-14 Maryland tieesss14 18 7 20-54
Alfred 27, Rensselaer Poly 13. rst 20, Colby 1s. doin 47, Tufts all 54, Muhlenberg 19. Clarion 12, Edinboro 6. t Guard 20, Norwich 6. Connecticut 27, Delaware 14. rnell 21, Syracuse 14. 5 Be a 20, Millersville 19. Franklin & Marshall 52, Johns Hop! 1. Indiana (Pa.) 7, Mansfield 0.
Indiantown Gap 12, Lebanon Vv 1.
3
Sutztown 20, Shippensburg 7. 20, Williams 6. ne 12, Rh Island St. 0. Maryiand 54, Washington & Lee
husetts 21, Bates 0. ose State 45, Delaware State : 6. New Hampshire 38, Brandeis 20. . ‘Carolina A&T 14, Virginia ¢ Union 0. ortheastern 27, American International 20. hester 10, Allegheny 6. rs 47, Lafayette 12. Michael's 41, Vermont 7.
it. Lawrence 48, Union 6. Vincents 31, Davis Elkins 8.
ed on Page 13—Col 2
‘Musial Series =: Tomorrow fot,
itwo te count.
Centers — Hunter, Szymanski, Beil. Schrader. Right’ Guards—Varrichio Ostrowski, Duniay, Cyterski, Gaudreau Cattablne, Binanco.
Fullbacks—Waorden, Shannon, Joseph.
INDIANA J. Anderson ft
Gua Righ Tackles—Talarico Right en Luft, Kebul Quarterbacks DA Ashburner, Byers, Righ
Fulibacks~Gedinan. Morgan.
Pras ne,
ight Halfbacks — Barrett, Flood, Paterra, Reynolds, Jack Bush. McHugh,
Jngiels i Tackles—Russo, Bird, ft Guards—Thom: Rieh as, Fioritto, Morgan.
bur Roth, “Corinors. Bmith,
Ricky,
| These were enough to break {Indiana apart as three scores [ame in three minutes and 40 seconds, four in six minutes and five in nine minutes and 20 {secords. The fifth was a s L [parade of 44 yards in five plays {as Mazur passed to Mutscheller 0— 7/for 25 yards and Lattner went
Right Body Mutschafter, O'Neil, Pensa, QuartérbacksMasat, - Carey, Guglielmi, Left Halfbacks—Petitbon, Whelan, Heap, Lattner, |
Left Ends—C. Anderson, Inserrs, Zuger, Bvytanek,
Petrauski
Left Haitbacks—Robertson, Holzbach, @. ¢ » Haifbscks—Donter, Elis, Wisher, Van _.OQoyen, Olson,
ander. |
~~
got got the nod at quarterback most of the
ON THE MOVE—Butler's Don Kelly picked up 5 yards on this first quarter the Butler drive fizzled out on the 3 because of a fumble. Next fime the Bulldogs got the ball they put it where it
ses ‘Heart Reserve, 7-6 Te
By FRANK ANDERSON | BUTLER defeated Western |
Oct. o—Batier at
TOIPORENTS
bash Oct. 6—Kent State at W. Reserve (N).
Reserve, 7-6, in Butler Bowl|their fierce desire to win made
yesterday because courage|® first-quarter touchdown stand
isn't measured by the yard. The less-experienced, lighter Bulldogs lost the battle of the statistics by a big margin, But |
up all the way.
A crowd of 3000 turned out to isee Coach Tony Hinkle's men even {their season record at one win, jone loss. The sun-bathed, wind-
=e: Greyhound Conference Game, 6-0
Notre Dame's unexpected early | {assault gave Leahy a chance to! 3| {find out what the squad might | withstood a goalline challenge {have and he used 56 players in | from Franklin's Grizzlies in the| 14 g5 the rout. However, Mazur
Indiana Central's Greyhounds
third period to win their second straight Hoosier College Confer-|
NEXT OPPONENTS get. 6—Indiana Central at Earlham. . 6~~Hanover at Franklin (N).
s Win 2d
"Diagram Photo, Page 13
{Carter's placement was wide. In the first session Central {drove to the Franklin 3 on a 24{yard pass play from Woods to Joe Hurrle. Shaw made three {yards to the 3-yard line but the
lence game, 6 to 0, at Delavan {Central drive sputtered, Franklin
way and completed two of 10 {passes for 74 yards. The lineups: NOTRE DAME Left Ends trowski, - {Sialaral, Katchik, Cabral, Mats, Kohano- | Left T - | ay Koaekies Poehler, Joe Bush, Bar
uskas,
Smith Field yesterday afternoon.
Central thwarted the visitors] {on the one-yard line early in the
ny, a Rg man, Lee, Me-| {period after Halfback Bob Clark! Palumbo, Hamby,/madé a80 Ale ’ T estandrint, Right Tackles—Toneff. Ready, Murphy,
it first down on the Central 2. Eldon Graham banged to the one, but the stubborn Greyhounds threw the Grizzlies back six yards.on the next two plays
to get out of danger. Jack Moore
had set up the Grizzlies’ serious drive with a 14-yard run around right end, » ” ~ Central ‘scored on a 41-yard march in eight plays with three minutes remaining in the second period. Dave Shaw ground out 13 yards and Bob Woods threw to Walt Stahlhut for 12 more|Des
yards to the Franklin 17. Woods| why
flipped again to Stahlhuh who lateraled to Halfback John Preston who scored from the 5. Abie
| taking over on downs. » ” ” THE LOSERS dropped their second straight Conference tilt. The winners won the first downs, 11 to 4, gaining 189 yards rushing off 8 first downs on the ground. Franklin's rushing fotal was 98 yards. The passing yardage was 48 to 13, Central.
Indiana Central (8)
Ends—Hurrle, Stahlhut, Creek Tackles—Savenelll, Martin, Hurrle, and
Zielinski. y Guards—Robinson, Cole, Martinez, and Dininger. Centers—Carter and Pleroshel. Quarterbacks—Wood Halfbacks-——Preston, shaw, “hae, and Ransburg. Fullbacks—Crowe and Dunean, Franklin (0) Ends-—-Fox, Riley, and Pisher Jackles—-Johnson, Babbs, Lewis, and wGhardsMurphy, Becht, Muir, Barker.
Be ots-—Barron. Barnett. Supstern acks-——Gr; ahin ah d Moo Alfbacks-»Chase, ecio, Meyers, and
Clar Pulibacks—Parks and Ferguson.
’
““irustled fans saw Reserve's vaunted single wing become a lame duck when the going got rough. It was Reserve's opener.
= = » BUT EVEN the ambitious Bulldogs needed an assist from the “breaks.” They were supplied by slippery-fingered Reserve ball carriers. Red Cat backs fumbled the
-iball five times and lost it three
times. Two of the fumbles were recovered by Butler Tackle Ralph London, a standout all afternoon. The other Reserve fumble recovery was made by Butler's Norman Ellenberger. It turned out fo be the costliest for the Red Cats. There were five-minutes left in [the first quarter when Ellenberger recovered an Al Morhard lateral oh the Reserve 30. The Bulldogs lost little time once they had the ball. Halfback Don Kelly ripped off five yards. Then Fullback John Manka raced a handoff to the Reserve 17. Two plays later Quarterback Ron Hallam tossed la 13-yard screen pass to End {Charley Johnson for the touchdown, Manka kicked the point.
#8 8 BUTLER HAD driven to the Reserve 3 on the series preceding the touchdown. But a fumble by Halfback George England ended that threat. Butler's pass defense showed) {up well in the second quarter, jbut was momentarily loose enough to let the Red Cats get to the 9. Halfback Jim Nyers and Ellenberger snuffed out two drives with interceptions. The third Reserve drive was gathering steam on the Butler 13 when the half ended. Reserve scored its touchdown in the third period on a 63-yard march after the kickoff. With Backs Ernie Russell and Ivy Millstein eating up the yardage, the Reserves moved to the Butler 4. Morhard took it over in. one stab. Ned Cooney’'s hurried kick fell short and that was:the ball game.
THE TEAMS Spent the rest of the period exchanging punts, Butler got as far as the Reserve 27 in the final 15 minutes. Reserve's best effort in Butler territory in the final quarter ended on the Bulldog 15. Reserve had the ball on the Butler 43 when
‘|the time ran out.
Hinkle was pleased with the Bulldogs’ showing, but preferred pot to look at the statistics. “We'll be outgained a lot this year,” he said. “All.I’'m interested in is that final score.” Butler had heroes aplenty, But the standouts were London, the rough, tough freshman tackle
Continued on Page 12 Col. 4
Isix Umpires Named {For World Series
CINCINNATI, Sept. 20 (UP)—
{The World® Series umpires were
announced today by Acting Sec-
|retary George Denman from the {baseball commissioner's office.
+ Al Barlick and Lee Ballanfant|
p jwin officiate from the National
with Arthur Gore as al- ‘ iE - American
-Notre Dame Slaug ters Indiana, 8-6
Dir hol by Bey Gio J, aod ugh Oden
play against Western Reserve. He advanced the ball +
it belongs . . . across
o the Reserve 13, Minutes later the end zone stripe. And Butler
Rookies Win Two for Yankees
| By Unilied Press ie { NEW YORK, Sept. 29° The brand ‘' new American League champion Yankees employed rookies and second stringers to win both ends of a double-header, 4 to 0 and 3 to } against the drowsy and deflated Red Sox today. -
In the apener, Ed Lopat and Bob Kuzava collaborated to pitch a four-hit: shutout., the 23d for the Yankees this year. Lopat received credit for his 21st win. Rookie Tom Morgan worked five innings of the second game, pitching two-hit ball; to gain his ninth victory. Ernie Nevel, just up from Kansas City, pitched the last four innings and yiélded one more hit. >”. 2 THE YANKEES gave the Red Sox an unearned run in the first inning of the second game when Al Richter walked and Mel Hoderlein was awarded first base when Rookie Catcher Clint Courtney tipped his bat for an error, after which Richter scored when Morgan fumbled a grounder by Clyde Vollmer, Morgan's double and a single by Johnny Hopp tied it at 1-1 in the third and the Yankees scored their other two runs in the fourth when Mantle walked, Hank Bauer
and Morgan came through with a| | two-run single. ”
IN THE opener the Yankees! scored in the first on singles by Billy Martin,» Mantle and Bauer, and again in the third on Jim Brideweser's single. A walk tb Bobby Brown, a double play, and a wild pitch. Jackie Jensen singled, stole second, went to third on a single by Joe Collins and scored on a fly by Charley Silvera
Continued on Page 12-—Col. 7
Indians Beat Tigers, 7-6
CLEVELAND, Sept. 29 (UP)— Pinch-hitter Paul Lehner’s single! scored Harry Simpson in the 13th inning today to give the Cleveland Indians a 7 to 6 victory over the Detroit. Tigers. Simpson beat out an infield hit and stole second before Lehner came through with the game winning blow off relief pitcher Dizzy Trout. Luke Easter's two home runs and a triple off starter Bob Cain accounted for six runs and kept the Indians in the game, His first homer came with the bases filled and his second—his 27th of the year—tied the score in the eighth. » » .
earned runs off .Rookie Dick Rozek, but Brissie held them scoreless in his four Inning. relief stint. Rozek’s wildness gave the Tigers two in the first, Lipon walked, Knell singled and Rojek threw wildly to second on Groth's tap, to the box, Lipon scoring. Kell scored ‘when Wertz hit into a Jouble play. Easter tripled and scored on
doubled, Jerry Coleman walked)
victory each today by coming [from behind with two out in the
THE TIGERS scored five un-|J
Simpson's infield out for, the|out—B;
DePauw ‘Wins Opener, 14-7
HANOVER, Sept. 29 (UP)—
Big Newcombe Shuts Out the Phillies, 3-0
By MILTON Yama United Press Sports Writer
PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 29 ~—Burly Don Newcombe cupped a protective right: hand over the Dodgers’ flick» ering pennant flame by firing fast balls past the Phillies tonight for a 5 to 0 triumph that brought Brooklyn back into a tie for the National League lead. The victory, Newcombe's 20th of the season, was a “must” for the Dodgers, who slipped out of first place early today for the “*irst time since May 13 when the Giants wrested the league lead by beating Boston, 3 to 0. There were numerous Brooklyn heroes tonight. Andy Pafko, for his screaming 333-foot, tworun homer; Robinson, for his baseline acrobatics, and Gil Hodges for his standout defensive
{work around first base.
® = = RUT THE bulk of the glory went to the husky, hard-working Newcombe, who limited the Phils lies to seven singles and struck Newcombe, who owned ‘a 3:0
lead as early as the top haif of
le a all on strikes. als
Pafko’s 28th homer ot the year, ss =» ’ SINGLES by Hodges and News
be plus Dick Young’ ee Furillo’s skip Ra
Continued on Page 12-—Col. 8
3-Curve Sal Sets Down
DePauw opened its 1952 football season today by defeating HanxT T OPPO S ot: in San at A (ND). over,’ 14 to 7, for the Panthers’ second loss of the season. But Hanover scored the most spectatular touchdown of the game—a 96-yard run by Jerry Klaybor, Klaybor acted after Stev@ Nagy scored for the Tigers on passes from Gene Gephart and Pen Faber. Klaybor caught DePauw’s kick on his own four line down field for the score and Terry Hudson kicked the extra point. DePauw's extra point was on a pass from Gephart to Nagy. DePauw scored again in the third quarter on a drive from the Panthers’ 48 yard line. The score was on a pass from Gephart to Faber who got the touchdown. Bob Stephens converted.
Brewers Defeat Royals 4-3 to Even the Series
By United Press MONTREAL, Sept. 29 — The Milwaukee Brewers evened the {“Little World Series” at one
ninth inning to edge the Montreal Royals, 4-3, on singles by Earl| Wooten and Gene Mauch. Lefty Chris Van Cuyk, the| Royals’ International League allstar pitcher, who entered the game as a reliever in the ninth, was the victim of the Brewers’ rally.
” un o LUIS OLMO of Milwaukee was on second base as the result of a double when Manager Wally! Aston of Montreal sent Van Cuyk | into the game to relieve Bill Voiselle with one out. Van Cuyk got the next tter, but then manager Charlie Grimm of the
Braves, 3-0
By FRED DOWN United Press Sports Writer
BOSTON, Sept. 20 Swarthy, dead-pan Sal Maglie, the pitcher with three curves and the guts of a
burglar, fired a five-hit master piece in windswept Braves field today to give the New York o| Giants a 3-0 victory over Boston, The shutout kept the Giants even with Brooklyn in the torrid race that ends tomorrow. It was a fough, tension-filled duel between Maglie and Warren Spahn, Boston's stylish lefthander. Both were trying for their 23d victories but Maglie and the Giants were trying for something more inmportant, too, and they simply would not be beaten behind their great pitcher today. Maglie's victory total is the highest for a Giant pitcher since Carl Hubbell won 26 games in 1936 and the highest in the major leagues this season.
MAGLIE was magnificent as he walked only one man and was in trouble in only the seventh and ninth innings. Singles by Walker Cooper and Willard Marshall posted a threat with two out in the seventh but Magli€ got Sibby Sisti to bounce out. In the ninth, the tension became tremendous as Maglie walked Earl Torgeson with one out and
Continued on Page 12-—Col. §
LEAGUE STANDINGS
Brewers sent Wooten to bat as| a pinch-hitter for piicher Virgil | Jester. Wooten came through with a| single to right that scored Olmo and took second on the throw to home plate. Seconds later, Mauch singled Wooten home with the! winning run, The teams meet here again tomorrow in the third game of the series before moving to Milwau-
kee for the remaining games. | Milwaukee Montreal ABHOA AB HOA Mauch,3b 3 2 0 3Gillman.3b 3 1 0 2 Shothelt 0 5 1Ginfrddo,lf 120 ssn 4 3} dates 1284 uba.r Basso,.cf 400 {f Hanarct 4 3 4 0 Reed.2 4 2 5 3Byam,1b 4 010 0 imo, r{ 4 1.1 ? Organ. ty i Unser,c 308 ala, johnson,p 3 2 2 1|Mallette,p 1 Jester,p 0 3 00 ay 1 00 Burris,c 1 0 0/Ban 0000 Wooten 110 0Voisellep 0 0 0 : Hover,p 000 oly aucCurk.p 000 1 Pfister 1000 Totals 37 92715 Totals 7) 73710
Wooten singled
Rodrisues sing
oa "for ‘Tuite tn
Pater “Frou for Rodriguez in seventh. 4 ed out for Van Cuyk inf waukes Sas AE eA ae ARAN tresses 008 00% 203-3
bat in
RE RRR
Ma
860,
AMERICAN LEAGUE Won Lost P
ct G.B New York 56 634 p Cleveland “ow 60 608 4 1 3m 18 Bic 52 a caro exe 81 471 25 Philadelphia 83 454 27's Washington . ... 81 81 401 35% Bt. Louis . 81 102 S333 48 NATIONAL LEAGUE Won Lost Pet G.B, New York .......ees 95 58 621 ' Brooklyn 25 58 621 8t. Louis ... 80 72 525 144 Boston kid 497 18 Philadelphia .. 80 41M 22 Cincinnati 85 Add 27 Pittsburgh 0 412 1 ChICAEO «ov svvansess 91 401 1% GAMES TODAY Little World Series (Best-of -seven) Milwaukes aii 2% A A (Int). efit at agin at Fak J } BE SE :
RESULTS YESTERDAY
at gen aig AB as 3, 3, Bos a.
4 Ch
