Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 October 1951 — Page 34

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PAGE 32

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By HIRAM F. BATTEY

Officials charged with the protection of college amateur sport {have practiced the methods of the professional promoter in pursuit {of institutional glory and the financial dollar while masquerading las amateurs. They have hauled down their academic banners and entered . ‘the business of sports promoting. This could result only in attracting the same crowds which follow the race tracks, prize fights, and wrestling contests. With them came the betting clientele, and, of course, the fix followed.

At Coliseum Tonight (115g

The Times

Ed Bruneteau Still Qut

Olymp Future Bright With Injury

Even Without Stars

By FRANK ANDERSON ir ; THOSE WHO would bury the Indianapolis Olymps had best check the “corpse.” The Olymps are dead game and in dead earnest. pla] Their acquaintanceship with the adjective “dead” ends|peteay there. In truth, the Olymps just, muscle. won't stand stil long enough to| WITH THE exception of Wah-|Stasiuk and Bert Hirschfeld. also ~hespsepe.draped.,. : __...Wah Jones, all Olymps SAW AC-| pay he. in unifor a Even if ghosts . walked on tion. And everyone but Buckshot: hex e-10..] as Loni, stilts, spirits couldn’t be higher O'Brien got at least oné point..' " PROVIDENCE, which scored than the Olymps’. Doubters can/Bucky got in the last 12 minutes 17 goals in its first three games

By BILL EGGERT THE Providence Reds, who fizzle when they get near the wide open playing spaces of Western Division rinks, {wind up their current road trip {tonight here against the Indianapolis Caps. The Caps aren't in the best of shape with Eddie Bruout with a pulled side Bert Giesebrecht, Vic

” a o THE SHOCK and revulsion that millions felt as a result of the scandals have been replaced now by the inevitable post -mortems that always follow disclosure of a moral weakness in our national character, The answer—like the answer to any moral question— is not easy to get at. As a nation, we have, over a period of) vears§, permitted our standards of| integrity to disintegrate alarm-! ipgly., . We have only to read the “testimony. before tHe Kerauver Committe® to grant that. Undeniably, we have becomé a

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‘RESOLUTION = Hoyd “Dur: ham, the Caps' bad boy, has

resolved to mend his ways

check with the Ft. Wayne after ‘being delayed by trans- at home, has notched only three against Providence tonight. He people who tend to condone the Pistons. portation problems. goals in two road games. The has 2i It inutes in fi 1alf-truth, who excuse the cheap The Pistons and 1000 fans. The “oh and ah” type of fans Reds were thumped, 9 to 2, in St. NS penalty minutes in hve and shoddy on. Ahe ground of dropped into the Greencastle got their money's worth in Paul Louis Tuesday night and were games. comercial. necessity. and. we High School gymnasium last (Lefty) Walther, Walther sepa-/Shut out,’ 1 to 0, in Cincinnati —mm™ ———mF————— must expect to pay a penalty for

rated himself from the rest of last night. the floor splinters long enough They have some consolation in to get 16 points. Walther’s hones/ the announcement that Goalie take more of a beating than the ‘Harvey Bennett, a veteran in the dice at Monte Carlo. nets, has agreed with Providence Gunners Frank Brian and Owner Lou Pieri over the number

. . of $ ‘1 a contract. Bennett, who Freddie Schaus quite naturally) 2 led the Piston scorers. Each had walked out of the Providence

! . training camp, Oct. 10, signed 17 points. It's easy to spot Brian ya. 4 : Signe 3 sterday. s S on the floor. He never goes in!j Jay. 11 his absence, Rookie

Bob ¢ , without ‘the ball. 0 Perrault has been playing n on ps

= = 5 FT. WAYNE may be the team W350 in uniform tonight for to beat in the National Basket-|tDe Caps will be Player-Coach ad baen used up the scoreboard re ball Association's Western Di- Ott Heller, who now has more

Olymps 77, Pistons 62. | . é Tyr ) _|vision, But it will take time for|aCtive years of playing profes- iy, .. # , in the towers try to maintain ‘The pleasant result in Green Coach Paul Birch's Eastern style| sional hockey than any other Washington Redskins as it's pos

i ; + the fiction of athletic purity by castle left the -Olymps in tune : |player in history sible to get and still miss, is re- » | U i { , J. 3 . ie IBS he players not to tell. for tonight's game with Milwau-|t0 catch on. Until the Pistons In league games last night the tUNing to his old job as line asking the pla)

|knit together, any team outrun- i ee kee in Franklin, Ind. Ining a will oat them home teams were all victorious C0ch of the Chicago Bears. that even the president of a unia . . hivpi ’ with Hershey whipping Syracuse,

The victory last night was th . The former Notre Dame star versity can talk out of the side THE MAN who obtained that ol y g ele to 1, Providence being shut out announced last night that he nad of his mouth. For the eighteenlasting lead for the Olymps last

mps’ inus Lira Thi minus by the Mohawks, and Cleveland accepted a pay boost from owner- year recruit the atmosphere of night was Bill Tosheff of Indiana. |} bition play they've won six of Nanging a 5 to 3 decision on coach George Halas of the Bears the fix is already a reality—and Tosheff set shot, glided in, ran goyan > Buffalo. : and will be back whipping Chi- will become more so when he over, pirouetted and paraded: to, mpa Olymp sky isn't black Not | Although he traded punchesicago’s line into fighting shape sees that his coach can arrange 19 points. He wound up high] h : \With Bronco Horvath of Syracuse, next Monday. for special classes, special abscorer and caused one and all to]

even if the stars have departed. e i i Indianapolis (17) Ft. So 62) Hershey's Arnie Kullman racked Only last week George P. Mar- sences, special tutoring, special

night. The crowd expected a wake with the Olymps as the rigid host. After all, Alex Groza and Ralph Beard had departed. What was left?

our frailty. It is clear that the demoralizing factor in college athletics has been money. There was no problem until gate receipts got big enough to matter, When they did, the ivy towers were quick to see the magic equation—good teams draw big crowds, which mean larger stadiums, which in turn demand more good teams to fill them. The result is that, practically all big colleges playing major schedules buy players. But close to becoming .coach of the even while subsidizing them, those

Hunk Anderson Gets Pay Boost, Stays With Bears

By United Press

CHICAGO, Oct. Heartley (Hunk) Anderson, who came as

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THAT which was left in the Olymps soon left the Pistons bewitched, bothered and bewildered. The Olymps took the lead at 2322 in the second quarter and blinked their side of the scoreboard with abandon ever after. When 48 minutes of play had

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. up his second hat trick of th , i 3 d other privileges demurmur: | fg ft pf! 1g ft pf : o € shall, owner of the Redskins, grades. and o p “Those Olymps aren't in such Giabgskif-c 4 3 '1iSchaust 3 f{Season last night with a three- hired Anderson to coach his nied his non-athletic friends. bad shape after all.” Holland.¢ 0 1 4 Pender t 0 1 {fon Shree against the Warriors. squad. But Halas demanded a s 3 &5 But it wasn't a one-man show Lavoyc 5 1 1 Share 3 1 Yc Horvath each grew three tackle in return for canceling THE MAJOR regponsibiniy Ie that beat the Pistons. It was shot iaice™® 1 DT meat oy & sticking WL a yh Anderson's 1951 contract with the mess a out money caution, a pressing defense and Salifers 1 3 SEGHEE® 0 8 1 = "c. Tening. ine Bears and National League|VY towers who pave JEL MeEney spirit. The Dlymrs made 28 ot 70 Firiens S § JBpane + 3 4 ROOKIE Herb Dickenson Commissioner Bert Bell backed ahead ee oy the box office— from the field for. , enough to] mm ema : — — — flashed the l6ne goal for Cin- him up : y- : i : ve! Total 28 | s ted : n-| . i llar—is the critemake Coach Herm Schaefer's] Totals 23 Eo Sheu 24 14 3 cinnati against Providence while! Halas then turned around and the BE a rey so long as grin kingsize. |Indianapolis. ........... 14 23 19 21—m7/Mohawk Goalie Emile (The Cat) offered his old colleague the same "°° © red solely because Bruce Hale, an Olymp who has Ft. Wayne .. 0000000000 17 11 13 21-62 Francis kicked out 35 shots. | coaches are fired solely}

|salary he would have received Barker,| Cleveland wrapped up its vie-/with the Redskins Ehlers tory against the Bisons with a $1500 a week. {three-goal rally in the opening and

they don’t win, so long as academic honesty is perverted in the name of sport, just so long

| Free throws missed—G: , Mi 3 been a professional basketball Laver. PO A de Crahoskl 4 Mogue player for 10 years, said that the Valter 2. Brian 2, Schaus, Burris,

team “showed more drive and| Technical foul—Foust.

a reported Anderson agreed said he would be in the

Shooting percentages: Indianapolis—28] . . , 3 ct the fix and all spirit” than he's ever seen before. of 10 FGA. 400: Pt. Wayne—24 of 11 Fai, period. Ike Hildebrand tallied stands Sunday to watch his old tan Wali by-products Hale has been around and should |# wil dianapolls 21, of thy x » 870 twice for the winning Barons team play the Detroit Lions at er emphasis ) (Purdue) y Ol = —_.

Officials—Babe Wheeler

and ( Whil y v Firman Grimes (Indiana State), i e the v

eteran Fred Thurier i Froaen Detroit,

ith one goal and two!

know. The situation is no more de-

Halas wouldn't comment on plorable, however, than the greed

The Threat to American Amateur Sporfs—:

Academic Banner Hauled Dow m for Champion Flag

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_ THURSDAY, OCT. 25, 1051'

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Odds Favor

: By United Press NEW YORK, Oct. 25-— Heavy support for Rocky Marciano dropped the betting price another half-point to-

A 7 7 ~~ , “- ay “ i wn CAMPUS “en willy, 4 CEUE-Q Hiram P. Battey, Superin- , this problem. The leopards

tendent of Schools at Lennox, Mass. delivered a vital message at the annual sports banquet «atthe YMCA College in Spring-. | field, Mass. in May, 1951." His Message followed the out-break of the college basketball scandals now sweeping the nation. Because of its timeliness, The Indianapolis Times has been granted permission to reprint his address.

sues college courses in oil .painting, public speaking, drama, and swimming, something besides philanthropy is in the dean's mind. It isn’t the athletic scholarship as such, it's the misuse of it and the dishonest claim of philanthropy. Why not a free ride for the honor student in chemistry—he couldn't catch the basketball. A third ° objection is, “why should we lose good team material to another college which would make the boy a better offer?” That's one way of saying that we must have a good team. The academic banner has been hauled down to make room for the championship flag. = 5 ” IN 1989 Chicago dropped football. Chicago seems to be getting along as an educational institution. In 1934 Johns Hopkins dropped athletic scholarships and admissions to games. Anyone heard of Johns Hopkins going out of business? How has M.I.T. managed with Notre Dame getting all ‘the football players, Kentucky the basketball talent, West Point the polo players, and the University of Glasgow the soccer stars?! Georgetown has recently announced that they have dropped football. Shall we look for Georgetown to pass out of existence? Now let’s be sensible. Let's put things in their proper places. Let's render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's and let's get our heads out of the sand. Who's kidding whom? Those in the ivy towers have failed to meet their obligations to

> ® ® assists. . : A i $ . 936 Buckshot O'Brien Si ns | : [Anderson's status next season. and dishonesty ip American edu- can gh 39% Soles Cap Scoring We have to beat the Lions and cation which produced the climate 3 i or ™n C - ie F Cc } 4 With Ol Tar! Rete GP. G APP then win the one after that and in which this ugly fungus -pros- ri Peco a a County 37] Reibe -5 0 5 5 othe one after that until the sea- d : y : Alex DelVecchio |... .. : e Sea- pered. 3 3 ; i i i on rac ymps Bert Hirschfeld oa 13% 3 § on is over before we can start! Now before we consider what vas S50 hig lo» them. This nine Ralph (Buckshot) O’Brien Enio Sclisizai y 3 3 1 3 § thinking of next year,” he said. can be done Jets Sonsider soine hos ra tof con ig sole ’ . N . . Heller 3 1 1 2 ¢ —— objections which are made to re- § § S1syesterday signed to play with usn Sorin niily 11 3a 2 ot il and what is being done in renee The chavadrer building i is Olympains. in ar ae ee «2 2 0 2 0 1 some institutions not involved in values, the principles of amateurthe Indianapolis ymp (Bote Mea i 3 1:18 Bill Norman Signs scuttling amateurism. ism, the assets of sportsmanship, The former Butler cage Bill” MeCom Tari As Brownie C The first argument against Te- have been scuttled for the tinsel| star resigned a faculty job at OY aa $2 al | oac form is that basketball brings of notoriety, the overnight pubBroad Ripple High School in Bert Giesebrecht aie 3 % 3 oo? ST. LOUIS, Oct. 25 (UP)—Last' money to pay for sports not licity, the favor of sportswriters, order to sign with the local Na- GOALIE'S AVERAGE 0 season's entire St. Louis Browns otherwise afforded. That's a and the dollar. tional Basketball Association Hall GF 0A Ave 80 coaching staff was out looking for high-sounding pious statement,’ When the lid is off the light team. othEYG OP. games played. G. goals: A, new jobs today. insinuating that basketball re- divulges the insidous inroads His Broad Ripple position in: fr a Owner Bill Veeck discharged ceipts are being used in a mis- made by the termites, there is no, cluded physical education teach- . On the Ice the lot of them yesterday in his sionary prpgram to broaden the hesitation to cancel schedules, ing and assistantships in cross- wed AMERICAN HOCKEY LEAGUE campaign to put new life into the athletic program. when we:knoW=suspend players; call in the Discountry and. baseball coaching. { . Western Division : chronic “American League fayiiie very program we Syitjeize trict Attorney, and adopt the-in-He'll pldy with the Olymps when + [Pittsburgh ... 5 4 6 Fr 89% fuys. : needs more and more 10 Xe€epP dignation of: the pious parson. they meet Ft. Wayne in an ex- INDIANAPOLIS "03 4 0 10 30 14 He immediately filled one of the it going. How much broadening Why can’t we do less than all hibition in Greencastle tonight. Sleveland 34 3 15 14 posts—the first base assignment— could North Carolina 2 With tha! this to prevent the condition? The signing of O'Brien is ex- Eastern’ Division ' 1% with Bill Norman and announced $21.000 ja Silene poets per FIRST: The college game pected to lead the Olymps from Hershey ... 3 §¥ oF 5 OG that ‘new Brownie manager Ututions u vi money they are Should be brought back to the shadows of the Beard-Alex Groza ra. {49 3s 31 Rogers Hornsby will take over|Z oli? Wo 0 re national] college campus. If the Ameri-point-shaving scandal. O’Brien Buffalo RESULTS g hr fuidas? 11. 1 the third base chores. ST if they are serious ©¢®n Public wants the atmos:should be a shot in the arm to Hershey 8. ‘Syracuse 3 Sioa oR rman, 41, has managed the about broadening OY second ob-| phere of the race track and , | neinn . y ; ¥ | i ’ y . 8 attendance at the club’s Butler Cleveland 5. Buffalo 3° © : [Cleveland Indians Wilkes-Barre, jection is that there is nothing fight ring let them go to the Fieldhouse games. NATIONAL LEAGUE -» farm club for the past two race track and fight ring. The i WL T Ps. 0-OC seasons. He had be wrong in scholarships for players Offensively strong, but defen- Buckshot O'Brien [Detroit 4 S33 a . een touted asp, might not otherwise get a college game ‘should stay at sively weak, O'Brien will fill the] {Toronto . 3 3-2 inp 2 osgibie successor to Don |ogjjege education. On the face of home under control. d | . 2 : club's need for color and outside going on before Beard and Groza ghicaso ... 2 321 8 10 14 Su ser ee to pilot the Indian-|that statement I agree, but when SECOND: There must be shooting. Coach Herm Schaefer were voted in the latest bas- New York crits rast Nrogy® 12. oPos Indians, Cleveland AAA!; scholarship is given a six-foot-. enough sane men left in inexpects to team O'Brien with Bill ketball/ “fix” case. The club office] goon TENE orig) VIGHT farm club. six son of a coal miner who pur-

fluential positions to handle |

The discharged coaches are

prize guard candidate declared that O’Brien was signed Ralph Winegarner, Johnny Tobin, |

on his own merits and not as a ;

Tosheff (Only Game Scheduled.)

from Indiana University.

Fix’ Scandals Blamed

points a game with Waterloo and Mess. Grand Rapids in the now-defunct National Professional Basketball League. A 1950 graduate of Butler, he holds every scoring record in the school’s books. He was a four-year regular for Tony

Last season as a pro basket- Solution to personnel problems Ed Redys and Johnny Berardino.| ball rookie O'Brien averaged 15 brougnt_ if the Beard-Groza On College Officials Ht MA aL ro (F. A. o5 Mails’ Mother Dies

BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Oct. {(UP)—A vice president of the, SAN QUENTIN, Cal. Oct. 25 {National Collegiate Athletic As- (UP)-—Mrs. Mary Newby, mother {sociation believes that university of baseball great Walter Mails, [officials are to blame for many died today at her San Quentin athletic scandals. home. She was 83. Prof. William R. Breneman,| Her son, Walter, was a major

Delay Lowering IHSAA Eligibility ENEMY TO THOSE

WHO MAKE HIM ENEMY... FRIEND T0 THOSE WHO

Hinkle's Bulldogs and teamed! The Indiana High School Ath- a 4 ited Ren league” pitching st Mh with Jimmy Doyle, now coach at|jetic Association postponed action V0 recently retired as Indiana 5& § Star. wi e Cathedral High School. 5 PosLp 3 University’s faculty representative Cleveland Indians. Known as

today on’a proposal to lower the The dickering between the age limit of schoolboy athletes. Olymps and O'Brien had been| "The 25-member athletic coun- ” pe cil of the THSAA voted last night to postpone action on the proposal to lower the age from 20 to 19 until its meeting next May. The proposal was submitted recently by the Northern Indiana

in the Big Ten, says crowded bas-| The Great Mails” and “The Im-: ketball schedules, long road trips, Perial Duster,” Mails also pitched a general over-emphasis on the [OF the San Francisco Seals.

sport and commercial tie-ins have SCHIFF SHOES

led to scandals in the past. “How can college presidents for Men, Women and Children at Terrific Savings!

Ask About Our Budget Plan

permit such schedules and prac{tices and still expect the players!

|

bat objectionable recruitment” (followed by some colleges, and report its findings Session.

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aren't going to change their spots over night, and not all influential people are going to join up. But somebody has got. to call for a last ditch fight to Keep professional sport professional and amateur sport amateur, or it will all be professional. So second, I say, those with the title of Dean, Athletic Director, President, Coach, and others who are still sane, should agree to reduce their athletic scholarships one-tenth, or some similar frac-

tion of the dollars available for scholarships in their respective institutions. Let the

mavericks continue to run the range. Those refusing to adopt the agreement should be refused scheduled games, Publici-

ty should be widespread and I'll take my chances of the public support. THIRD: Schedules of intersectional contests should be limited. FOURTH: Here's one—they

should eliminate the two 1952 National Tournaments to provide a cooling-off period. FIFTH: I like the idea of Princeton's Dean Brown and I give it to you. “Educate your alumni by educating your undergraduates. In time you will have a non-pressuriz-ing alumni. Of course that is possible only if we remain as

educational institutions in- | stead of sports promoting bureaus. But it is possible.

Think it over. The solution to this situation is going to be a long pull. In summation I feel that this scandal break is a good thing. It has revealed the ugly cancer and the truth, distasteful as it is. But honest confession is good for the soul, and now we have

the facts. I think the future of collegiate sport is. assured if ® Hats Cleaned & Blocked those in the ivy towers see the | ® Expert Shoe Repairing light and act. If they don't we SERVICE better take an inventory of our INDIAN SHOP

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to—wind=up— prediction:

~~ 2 W. WELCOME

{day to 6-5 favoring Joe Louis as [both principals rested before their | big fight tomorrow night. | The continued robust backing for the unbeaten Brockton slugger provided a surprise because ex-champion Louis much more impressive in his last workout Tuesday than Marciano was yesté®day. Bookmakers were laying 5; (to 5 that Bomber Joe beats stocky Marciano in their 10-rounder at Madison Square Garden, and they were taking 62 to 5. That

left 6-5 as the price for man-to- .

man wagering. | In knockout betting, 37-year. old Louis was more highly fa. vored over his 27-year-old opponent from Massachusetts, |Bookies. were offering 13-5 ‘that. Louis ‘does not belt out Rocky, and 4-1 that Marciano does not kayo Joe. Both fighters will break camp tomorrow and drive into New York for the noon weigh-in. The ex-champ expects to scale about 210 pounds; Marciano, about 185, Rocky was more modest in his “I'l beat him,” than was Louis in his “I'll knock him out.”

Simmons Narrowly Misses 700 Series

The pressure is on when you're going for that 700 series. Easy Simmons knows. Easy was well on his way to that 700 count last night with games of 258 and 268. But he faltered on his last game and finished with 171 for a 697 total. He was rolling with the Arlington Super Market

club in the American Legion League at Pritchett's. Bill Beck marked up 205-244.

210 for 659 with the Broad Ripple .

Post in the Legion league. In the West Side Merchants loop,” A] Hussung carded 225-220-213—658 and Ed Dobbins had 201-232-234—667,

Undefeated Season WINCHESTER, Ind. Oct, 25 (UP) — Winchester's Yellow - ljJackets romped over Mississinewa last night, 34 to 7. to complete their 1951 Indiana high school football season undefeated, with an eight-game winning streak.

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THURSDA ny orc . 1Give: The only t] ball relationsh Hefty Bro than its 3-4 n to its 31 to 7 un undermanned M Ripple arcs last But Coach who knows how done (38 to T Richmond), emj] classmen in the Ripple couldn’ Jurkiewicz his

margin of his th career at the Ri

» YOUTHFUL can smile cou face of Manua power shortage, men also. He co is down to the k rel and he’s scr . Manual sank “Straight loss. ('rispus Attuck: season's opener.

. BOTH TEAM moments. Ripple forward with a total. It shook rett around the touchdowns, 13 arries for a aided by John ing thrusts. Gi right end for 2: minutes to go i .he scored on a in the third and minutes later | more after a } back on fourth on the Redskin A Bill Vaugh land pass for 1! Ripple its secon ond period, set 69-yard gallop, ual’'s Dick Nye: Tom Welton co ” NYERS, HIM a® Manual shut vard reverse on the fourth quar placement, addi ing distinction 51 of his team season, this season. Higley roarec after for a 10-) cash payments End Ted Bos ling captain, h fumble that lec and was a sta and defensively idle punter. Rip boot. Manual's and Ripple’s 1 were two reas were three Mar orie of them fingered Nyers. Manual ....... Broad Ripple. . Springer Pe Cathedral hs three-touchdowr fourth quarter f born Batesville, Bulldogs’ den. Held to a 6-2 into the final erupted as End lied his mates 1 fort sandwichin touchdown jab Springer’'s ale netted both to tercepted ‘passe: carried back a tion early in ti tercepted anotl 43-yard runbacl remaining. Batesville, wl two games in e 6 to 0 lead In building a 90-y: four straight p yards. Louie Di 24-yard pass fr Shortly after ered a fumble 46. After Dan Meier paced the man tallied fro man had a 27+) back on a Cath ing the marcl both Irish con Batesville, wl downs, seven only 10 yards r 209 yards pass 31. Cathedral h all rushing, go making 20 yar Catljedral uae Batesville ....

Hawks Triv

Host Decatu the No. 1 with county crown, ville 34 to 6, la It was the straight win o one loss. Central grab in the first per by Quarterbac) Right End Ha: runs of 14 and tively. Virgil ? first of three Danville scor in the second back Byron from the 4. In the fina poured on 21 p

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