Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 October 1951 — Page 21

12, 1051 "FRIDAY, OCT. 12, 1951 a TIMES SE

THE INDIANAPOLIS

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Mustangs Are Worrying L Lea

But His Tears Have

Drowned IU, Detroit;

Alumni to

By FRANK

See Butler

ANDERSON .

Thanks to the Yanks, football's competition has. been erased. Gridirons now can hog the sportlight.

This week theré’s more action than you'll find a All 19 of the state's college a Fifteen of

lionaires’ crap games.

squads are scheduled. the 19 are playing in Hoosierland. Two-thirds of the state's Big Three take to the road. Purdue is at Miami of Florida tonight. Indiana meets not - 80 - mighty Michigan in Ann Arbor tomorrow, Notre Dame stays home to play host to Sdliithern Methodist in the state's game of the ‘day. ” » nn LOCALLY, Ball State is Butler at 2 p.m. tomorrow. Indiana Central hikes down the pike for a Hoosier Conference scrap with Anderson. Other games tomorrow Wabash at Knox (Ill); at Rose Poly; Oberlin at DePauw; St. Joseph's at Indiana State; Valparaiso at Augustana in Chicagd; Earliam at Hanover: Manchester at Taylor. Quincy (Ill) visits - Evansville for an are-light tilt,

at

find Franklin

SMU at Notre Dame

MUSTANG-IRISH games have always been closer than a 15-vear-old boy's shaves, It figures to follow the pattern tomorrow. The Irish are on the upswing Frank ILeahy’'s tears have only served to drown Indiana and De troit. The Mustangs, too, are improving. After losses to (Georgia Tech and Ohio State, they 34-0, last Saturday night. L.agt time the teams 1949. Notre Dame for 27-20 win. It closed the seafon the Irish, who had already heen crowned national champions,

met, ir had to rally

for

» ~ ” irish opened 20-14 victory

IN 19%0 sferies with a repeated in 1939 by a slim The 57.000 fans who'll stream into Notre Dame Stadium will expect an aerial show. And thev'll get one. The Mustangs Fred Benners is one of the nation's best throwers with a completion record of almost 60 per Notre Dame's

the the They 20-19,

cent,

Mazur and Tom Carey carry on the tradition of Irish quarterbacks. They pass . and Carey carry on the traditions of Irish quarterbacks. They pass . . . and how, ” The game worries ILeahv. Rut that's not news. He's been worrying since the season started. Despite Frank's worries, only opposing coaches have sprouted gray hair,

~ ” - RUNNING-WISE the Irish will have to stop Halfbacks Henry Stollenwerck and H. N. Russell both fleet afoot. SMU faces a torpedo attack in Neil Warden John Petithon and Billy Barrett plus whatever I.eahy has been keeping under wraps. The Irish will make their season debut on Midwest television. The game is being carried by WFBM-TV, starting at 1:45 p. m

Indiana at Michigan

ITS NOT always good to be a Hoosier Even with Michigan this season, the find themselves underdogs. Michigan iz winless in starts against Michigan State and Stanford. Indiana has a 48-8 loss to Notre Dame and 13-6 win over

Pitt. The Hoosiers haven't defeated Michigan since 1945. The only possible explanation why TU is the underdog is that Pitt was considered inferior to Stanford. Anyway that's not

hothering Indiana Coach Clyde Smith. He's promised to be in Ann Arbor tomorrow Racks Rob Robertson, Gene Gedman and Lou D'Achille.

with

vy ¥ ” D'ACHILLE WILL throw and Robertson—and-Gedman-willrun. What they'll run against is hard to say. Michigan's pass defense was easily riddled by Stanford However, the Wolverines have a power back in Bill Putich and a speedster in Don Oldham, former Crispus Attucks star. Indiana should win if ball carHers and blockers get together

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But if Michigan suddenly comes

to life, watch out.

Purdue at Miami (Fla.) PURDUE TOOK the air to Miami. It probably will play the

same way. It's up back Dale Samuels’ wing l.ast year the Boilermakers lost 20-14, to the Hurricanes. It was considered an upset at the time But Miami went on from there to national prominence. The game this year shapes up as about even The Boilermakers are fresh from a last 24-30 win over Iowa. The icanes have split two games, | Tulane and thumping Flor ” ” o MIAMI COACH son has moaned about } inability ]

minute, Hur! sing to

to contr the _ Tha Miam! defens« (Nn

wails about ck of a

time a leaky son also passing attack. Purdue has : tack and a brilliant passing show Samuels has 26 of 46 passes in two games fr a 565 mark. End Bernie FI and Halfback Phil Klezek have caught 12 of Dale's throws. Samuels will heave to anybody eli Purdue is Joaded with catchers . =u ” n DESPITE GUSTAFSON'S ¢complaints, Purdue's Stu Holcomb has cause to worry. The Hurrianes re d 410 ground ag lorida Stats wheels in : Frani All - American Smith, Jim I ( 8} t Bob Schr i Tay F K Harry Mall All Hur I Peondary r re fast Purdue by. Backs Thorpe, ( Heninger has : on 26 carries. Holcomb Purdue's ready to raise Hurricane. That

for us.

fair running at-

completed

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SAVR

Ball State at Butler BITLER DONS the favorite’'s

mantle for a change. It had better fit. The alumni are hack for homecoming Last the Bulldogs. tied Wabash; 26-26, with a 13 point sprge in the fourth quarter. Meanwhile, Ball State was losing to DePauw, 14-7. The. Cardinals are

winless in three start

Butler used the Wabash game to uncover some new talent. End Jim Crumley was a known quantity. But Backs Fred Davis and Don Kelly rprised Davis handled the quarterbacking for almost the whole game and acquitted himself well. = ” = THERE'S BEEN more to the game than football this week Butler paint somehow found its way to Ball State hiiildings and

Rall State didn't Sight of the Butler blue to turn Ball State red with anger So personal and grid squabbles

appreciate it

is enough

ill be settled in Ene Bowl tomorrow. In attendance will be eight high school bands from throughou 1t the state, who'll perform du ring the hall = BUTLER HASN'T had too mich trouble with Ball State in the past. The s standing is 14-2 in the B ' favor. last Cardinal win 5-2, in 1945. The Bulldogs spent most of this week on pass defense. There should be something in -the air

ides hand music,

Ind. Central at Anderson

INDIANA CENTRAL lost a tough one to Earlham last week. The scare was 3-0. Somebody will have to pay for it, Anderson is the pig Anderson hasn't won in three tries. Indiana Central has a 2-1 record. But this one's”a Hoosier Conference game. Records go out the window when loop rivals play.

hes

Yeon

uy " n 2 GREYHOUNDS of Central are slim in personnel. But thev're long on spirit and doubleduty plavers. The Greyhound line has vielded hut 10 points in three That's just three less than

THE

games. Anderson has scored in three games, Two injured players, Tackle Arnold Spilly and Quarterback |

Ray Swayne, cut the Greyhound effectives to 25. If Anderson finds any safety at all, in will be in numbers,

Additional Sports On Page 22 & 23

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WASHINGTON'S CONTIMENTA 8 WILLMEET BROAD WIOILE'S ROCKETS waPH Two FORMER 1.0. TEAMATES, JOE TORIL AND WALT JORKIEW ITZ, AS RESPECTIVE COACHES,

Football With Leahy—

Tigers Picked In Ivy League

By FRAN

he A DEFINITE opinion as to-the final winner of the 1951 ih

K LEAHY

[vy League race should be reached by tomorrow evening. Defending champion, Princeton, meets the top contender, ers and a pair of outfielders will be

Pennsylvania, in what may be the East's

fall We favor Princeton in a very close game. Next in Eastern-importance is the Yale-Columbia game in which we pick Yale to win. In another Ivy League game Cornell is far too strong for Harvard. Fordham will bounce back from last week's beating ‘and down Boston College. Army's improving eleven will register their initial win over Jlartmou Illinois with § versity, Brown

have little diffiuse, Boston Uni and Connecticut are the choices over Camp le Jeune, Rhode Island and Spring- | field, while Colgate and Rutgers get nod over Western Reserve and NYU

the

o n ” MUCH OF the nation's attention will be centered on Dallas

as the Texas IL.onghorns attempt to hand Oklahoma their second defeat in a row. This is a tough one to call. IT ‘know that Bud Wilkinson is one of the very best in the business, and if any coach can ratty his team off-the ropes; he is the man. But it is my honest opinion that Oklahoma does not haye the over-all strength to‘beat the Longhorns. Texas is our choice. Baylor gets another severe test but will beat Arkansas. A surprisingly strong Colorado team will defeat Missouri. Navy's trip to the Southwest will be worthwhile as they should beat Rice, Wyoming, Kansas and Arizona are picked over Colorado A&M.

Utah and Texas Western, while Texas Christian will subdue Texas Tech, u ” » DOWN SOUTH the Georgia-

Maryland game is a big favorite and we prefer Maryland. Georgia Tech has fooled us for three consecutive weeks, They "get an-

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best game this other big test tomorrow and we are picking them to edge out LSU. Tulane will find the visiting Crusaders from Holy Cross too tough to handle. High-rank-ing Tennessee and Mississippi should win easily: from Chattanooga and Vanderbilt. North--ern teams foresee an even split a= Purdue downs Miami and Alabama beats Villanova. Kentucky, are favored over Mississippi State, North Carolina State, and Washington & Lee, while North Carolina, Wake Forest and George Washington get the nod over South, Carolina, William & Mary and Virginia Tech. » » x ACTION 1S relatively light on the West Coast with the Stan-ford-UCLA game occupying the top spot. Our pick is Stanford in a close game. California continues to roll —- this week it's Washington State. California will State after a battle. ington-Oregon game will Washington back in the win col umn. ( Here in the Midwest our Notre Dame-Southern Methodist game is of vital importance. This game means a great deal to us and I do hope we can slow down their exceptional passing attack. Ohio State will prove their class in the Big Ten by beating Wisconsgin, Michigan and Northwest: ern are close favorites over Indiana and Minnesota. A real fine game matches two of our future opponents, Iowa and Pittsburgh. A slight edge in size tips the scales in JTowa's favor. Michigan State, Penn State and Cincinnati close the day's schedules with victories over Marquette, Nebraska and Louisville. {

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Cleveland Adds

1 Players to Tribe's Roster

THE Indianapolis Indians have started rebuilding for 1952 with announcement that seven have been transferred here. The three pitchers, two: infieldmoved here from the Cleveland minor league system The flingers include Rav Narleski, righthander who won 14, lost 8 this year for Dallas; Righthander Joe Kotrany, who won 13. lost 8 for Wichita of the Western League, and Ernie Gurjillo, another righthander with a record at Wichita. = & ” OTHERS are First Baseman 308 Macko, a long-ball hitter who .284 for Wichita: Outfiel Eddie Knoblauch. who hit .309 for Dallas; Mike Lutz, a 24-year-old flychaser. who stands 6-1 weighs 200 and hit .247 including 19 home for Dallas, and Third Baseman Bob Prentice, who batted .276 for Wilkes:Barre in

.276 the Eastern League this season.

runs

Vejar, Volpe

Battle Tonight

NEW YORK. Oct. 12 (UP)

Southern Chico Vejar and Sonny Lou Volpe, get by Oregon two ambitious 20-year-old welterThe Wash- weights, “will fight for récagnition put ag

“big-timers” tonight in their 10-round bout at St, Nicholas Arena. Vejar, of Stamford, Conn., was favored at 11-5 over .the New Yorker because of his greater experience in 33 professional bouts Volpe has had but 14 commercial scraps. Each youthful 147-pounder lost but one of his fights. Vejar unbeaten until Sept. 21, when he dropped an unpopular, split deci sion to Eddie Compo New Haven at Madison Square Garden. Volpe suffered his lone defeat on a six-round decizion to Jack Randolph in Brooklyn in September, 1950. Volpe has achieved six knockouts, Vejar 20,

WAS

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Irish. So. Cal. On Roa

Back To Glory Days

By United Press NEW YORK, Oct. Notre Dame and Southern California, both on the road back to glory days, were favored today to clear another maior hurdle stomorrow as e¢ollege football recaptures its, preworld series flavor, ! For Notre Dame, it's a stern test against fast-closing Southern Methodist at South Bend, Ind. in this week's coast-tn-coast telespecial. Although beaten SMU is solid enough to provide a tip off how far the Irish ha after the dizastrous 1950 campaign. Notre Dams twice a winner this rated a 14

12

Vigion twice on Just

fe come

sea-

]0Nn, was point favorite, = = IP) SOUTHERN California, victor Washington last

point spread

Weer arew

over Oregon

howdonwn that figures

the campaign to

30W], ‘0ians were Washin take Oregon State held mighty State to’ a tight 6 L Top game East is Princeton at Pennsylvania, with Penn a slight choice to .end Princeton's 15 game winning streak, Texas and Oklahoma at Dallas is the leading attraction in the southwest with Texas the pick by six points Intersectionally, ®it's Villanova at Alabama, at Tulane, Purdue at Miami (tonighti, Pittsburgh at Iowa, Navy at Rice, and Clemson at College of Pacific. = = ” CONFERENCE showdowns ocmuch of the sectional interest with three league games in the Big 10, five in the Southern. one in the Southwest, two in the Big Seven and four in the Far West. BRIG 10 -Indiana at Michigan, Northwestern at Minnesota and {Ohin State at Wisconsin. Wisconsin has lost one conference game. SOUTHEASTERN — Kentucky tries to climb on the victory trail at Mississippi State, Louisiana ! State plays tough Georgia Tech at Atlanta, Florida at Auburn and Mississippi at Vanderbilt. SOUTHERN — North Carolina State at Duke, South Carolina at North Carolina, West Virginia at Richmond, Wake Forest at William and Mary and George Washington at Virginia Maryland plays outside league, at Georgia BIG SEVEN Missouri, pled by SMU, plays at and Kansas State at Non-conference: Penn State at Nebraska, Utah at Kansas. SOUTHWEST Baylor and ArKansas tangle in the only leagues game, Baylor favored by 13. Texas Tech, non-conference, plays at Texas Christian PACIFIC COAST to . Southern Cal UCLA lifornia at

impre but

sqive can't , for the Michigan

to 0 decision,

1gainst

gton

ightly

peavers

in" the

Illinois at Syracuse,

Holv Cross

cupy

tramColorado Iowa State.

In addition and Oregon plays at Stanf Washington State and Oregon ‘at Washington THE EAST, Army and Dartmouth go shooting for their first victory at West Point, Harvard, and Rutgers

State, ord,

Cornell Yale at Columbia at New

York U.

Rit CARSON

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PAGE a

Your TV Grid Roster

. Notre

Na, Name

1—Mazur,

© John Ei qb.

2—Carey; Thomas F., gh. 3—Gugielmi, Ralph V., qh. 4—Bucel, Donald, qh. S5—Gaudrean, William L., 8—Martin, Robert<L., qb. T—Buczkiewliez, Edward, qb, 10—Paterra, Francis F., hh. l4—Lattner, John J4., hb, 17—Whelan, Jack D., hh. 18—Reynolds, Paul R., hb,

20—Carrabine, Eugene P. hb, 23—Petithpn, John E., hb, 24—Joseph, Robert, hb, 26—Bush, Jack, hb. 27—Hovey, William, hh, 28—Sarna, Edward, hb, 29—Dunlay, James, t-g.

qb.

30—McHugh, Thomas X., tb. 31—Bubick, Raymond, t, 32—Flood, David, hb, 33—Shannon, Daniel J. fh, 37—Barrett, William C., hb, 40—Bianco, Donald J., hb,

42—Heap, Joseph I.., hb,

44—Arrix, Robert J., fh. 15—Rigali, Robert J., hb, T—Gander, Fidel, fh. 48—Worden, Neil J., fh,

19—Caprara, Joseph, fh, 50—Hunter, Arthur J, c 51—Boji, Byron B., ec.’ 52—Szyvmanski, Richard, e. 53—Schrader, James LL, ¢ 54—Bartlett, James J., ¢

Dame

55—Hamby, James H, c, 58—Beacker, John J., ¢ 57—Fraser, Richard, es.

60—Varrichione, Frank, g. 61—Taylor,” Robert H., g-t. 82—Seaman, Thomas J., g. 63—0strows ki, Chester, E 64—Burns, Paul EF. g. f5—Lee, John P., g. f8—Rohst, Paul K., g. 67—Palumbo, Samuel, g. 68—Alessandrini, Jack, K. 69—Petranick, Albert G., g. 70—Kelly, Robert J, t, Menil, 72—Zambrowski, Anthony, 73—Bysh, Joseph R,, t, 74—Ready, Robert, t, 15—Toneff, Robert, t, 76—Poehler, Frederick, t. T7—McCarthy, WHliam, t. 78—Murphy, Thomas L., t, 79—Bardash, Virgil, t. 80—Weithman, James C., e-t, 81—Kohanowich, Albert, s, 82—0'Neil, Robert, a, 83—Penza, Donald, e. 84—Kapish, Robert J., e. R5—Mutscheller, James, (8) @. 86—Mangialeria, Fred, a. 87—Hall, William L., a. 88—Cabral, Walter K., eo, 89—Gomoka, Stephen T., e, 90—Metz, Paul A, e. 91—Katchik, Joseph, eo,

T1—Mavraides, t-e,

>

Southern Methodist

Sl—Hightower, Dick, ec. 52—Fox, Bill, « 34—Cole, Don, ec. 50—Thompson, Jimmie, e, 62—I1.af Darrell, e.

“B3—Riley, avid, e. &1—Robb, Ike, e. 66—Turk, Paul, 67—Forester, Heri hel, e. 77—Quinn, Hal, 0TH aon: Ralph, e. 40—Russell, I. D., t 57—Landers, Jim, t.° 61—Partee, Buford, t.~ 68—Ligon, Wayne, t. 14—Stollenwerck,- Sam, b 17—Mills, Gayle, b. 18—Crawford, Johnny, bh, 20—Walker, Val Joe, b. 21—Musslewhite, Benton, b, 22—Gunlock, Jack, e. 24—Russell, H. N,, Jr, b 25—Moore, Dale, b.

26—C'risler, Rill, b. 33—Stollenwerck, Henry, b, 35—Knight, Pat, b, 38—Miller, Don, bh, 37—Hansen, A), b,

T88—Forester, Rill, b,

44—Norton, Jerry, b, 45—Gillis, Gene, b. 47—Benners, Fred, b, 70—Mayo, Leland, t. 71—Clem, Jerry, t 73—Cadwallader, Bob, t. 78—Miller, Lau, t. 83—Dean, Harry, t. 80—Mahew, Jim, eo. 81—Tunnell, Mack, eo. 82—Hawn, Jimmy, eo. 84—Rippey, Bill, eo. 85—Litowkin, Alex, e. 86—White, Ben, e, 88—Powell, Dave, a, 89—Hooks, Bob, e.

Cleveland Signs Tony Cuccinello

CLEVELAND, Oct. 12 (UP)— Tony . Cuccinello, former Brooklyn Dodger infielder, was signed today by the Cleveland Indians as coach. Indian officials, in announcing ‘uccinello’s signing, =aid it was

hoped he would be considerable help with the Indian's young incoach at with Jake Flowers and Mel Harder Red Ruffing's

field. Cuccinello will third base, moving to first, to the bullpen.

status still is undetermined, offi. cials said. Cuccinello broke into the majors with Cincinnati and then spent most of his playing career with Brooklyn and the Boston Braves, where he was a teammate of Al Lopez, the present Cleveland pilot. He ended his career with the Chicago White Sox in 1943 where he missed the American League batting crown by less than .001. He was a Cincinnati coach last season.

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