Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 October 1951 — Page 33
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FRIDAY, OCT. 28, 1951 ___ ry
Rocky Hopes to End
| Joe's Champ D | But Brown Bomber Is
Favored, 6-5
By United Press
NEW YORK, Oct. 26— Rocky Marciano, unbeaten Brockton slugger, will try to
belt aging Joe Louis into re-
tirement tonight and prove himself top contender for the heavyweight crown. Boasting 37 straight victories, the confident Massachusetts maul-
ream
irl gt +g "Indianapolis fight fans will have a chance to watch the 10round Louis-Marclano bout tonight. It'll be on WFBM-TV at 9.
+
Louis (top) and Rocky Marciano (bottom) will be belting one anoth-
er will combine hi t act $ youth, punch _o. ond not the training bags shown here.
and aggressiveness in an all-oiit" attempt to shatter the idol who has symbolized boxing for 17 _ years. Louis was favored at only 6-5 today to tag the stocky, blackhaired Italian with his first defeat in their 10-round bout at Madison Square Garden. » » u THIS significant bout between a 37-year-old ex-champion on the comeback trail and a 27-year-old “comer” was expected to attract about 16,000 to the Garden and millions more to television sets on the most extensive coast-to-coast TV network in ring history. _ Because the bout is a make- } or-break fight for Louis, he will receive 45 per Sept of the net proceeds; Marciano, only 15 percent.” A knockout or a bad beating would shatter Louis’ dream of being the first man to recapture the heavyweight crown. It will be Joe's ninth comeback fight since he was outpointed by Ezzard Charles in September, 1950. Since the Charles’ defeat, Louis registered five decisions and threes knockouts.’ His best victory was a sixthround kayo over Lee S8avold. In most of the other bouts he ap-| peared lacking in hand-speed, co-| ordination and accuracy. He was particularly unimpressive in his
Fight Facts, Figures |
Principals—Ex-champlion Joe Louis of Detroit vs. Rocky Marciano of Brockton, Mass.
Distance—10 rounds. Place—Madison Square Gar- |
6 Bowl Games Are Approved by NCAA for Jan. 1
CHICAGO, Oct. 268 (UP)—8ix'S football bowl games have been
last bout with Jimmy Bivins at 4. Baltimore on Aug. 15. | Time—® p. m. (Indianapolis a un » { Time).
MEANWHILE Marciano's most, hotable victory this year was his| sixth-round knockout of Rex Layne, who had been hailed as!
Promoter—Jim Norris’ ternational Boxing Club.
Expected Crowd—186,000.
In-
the No. 1 “white hope.” Rocky, Expected Gate—$175,000. ‘approved by the National Colstiffened Rex on July 12. Ex-| TV-Radio Receipts—$185,000. legiate Athletic Association, it
Champion Ezzard Charles required 11 rounds for a technical] kayo over, Layne on Oct. 10 at) Pittsburgh. Rocky would be favored to Win} tonight were it not for the dif-| ficulties he had beating Red Applegate on April 30 and Reere/ Simmons on Jan. 29. be Brockton slugger has| 6-5. Ited out 32 of his 37 opponents. He never was on the Ape Louis Tale of Tape scored 55 kayoes in his 70 fights, Rocky Marciano
Fighters’ Purses—Louis gets ‘Was announced today. 45 per cent of net proceeds; They were the Cotton, Gator,| Marciano, 15 per cent. Rose, Sugar, Sun and Refrigera-
Television—Over NBC net- tor Bowls,
1952. work (Indi - Tv). (Indianapolis, WFPM Announcement of the approval)
. J thlet{ iRadi vir ABC fietwork. was made by UCLA Athletic D
{rector Wilbur C. Johns through Betting—Louls favored at ‘the NCAA office. us
Johns said his extra events committee had received several requests for certification late and Joe Louls’that these were under study now.
He lost but twice—on a knockout 27 ‘yrs. Age 37 by Max Schmeling and on a de 33 ys. Weight 2310 ys He said a final list of certified cision to Charles. Joe will have! : (Expected) games would be announced short-| about 25 pounds advantage. He 87 in. Reach Td after Nov. 1. will also have advantages ins ft, 11in. Helght = 61f, 2 in. nok Ooo, (0 De certified by the height, reach and skill. (39 tn. Chest “> in. NCAA, the games must include | (Normal) a rat least two yepresentatives of LARGEST SELECTION M3 In. “Chest °° 45 tn. NCAA member institutions on the ,.® Linclewm in Indiana (Expanded) {sponsoring committee, give one RUGS from $2.39 32 in. Waist 36 in. third of the tickets and 75 per Leek for the store rity the big red 14 in. Biceps 151, in. cent of the gate receipts to com- * HOOSIER * 161, in. Neck 7 in. Peting schools, and obtain agreePAIN 22 in. Thigh 929i. jn. Ment from the competing schools mR iT & L INOLEUM Le. 10 in. Ankle 10 fn. OB Sieisis, - J 143, in. Calf 141; in eeee— (by Waist WL in. Mini Club to Sponsor | y MATCHED 12 in Fotearm * Itig on . Train to Michigan Game UNIFORMS The Illini Club 'S Indianapolis OVERALLS State will Help a ! Min Spon special train to the a 4 STONB H Ds I ois - Michigan football game, iC ple = Hunters Dress Deer _ |Nov. 3, in-Champaign, II. | 1 pp hacd uy | The Indiana Conservation De-| Round-trip fare and game ticket| ASH partment said today Hoosier deer Will cost $15.50. Mrs. Russell
——— hunters may have their game | Burkle, 3741 N. Chester St., CH-| \dressed free of charge at seven| 3937, is accepting reservations. checking stations set up- through-|
2
[olis, Nov. 3, at 9 a.m.
HOUR out the state. and arrive | { : | “Department employees will be lin Champaign at 12:15 p.m. The| DRY CLEANING |glag to dress deer for inexperi- |Special will return from Cham-| lenced hunters who don’t wish to Paign-at 6 p.m. and arrive here SERVICE do so themselves,” officials said. 2! 9 p.m.
Amateur Football |
All members of the Lincoln Bears footall team meet for a special practice Pp. m. at Belmont Park.
Additional Sports| On Page 34
{The three-day season starts) {Nov. 1. | Stations are located at Lynn-|,
mn Ab Ylll m3 We Have Just Installed a New Machine That Enables ‘Us to Give You This Special Service}
MAYFAIR CLEANERS 657 MASS. AVE. _ FR-0603
|ville, the fire tower at Harrison rr at 1:30 | State Forest near Corydon, North| |Gate of Brown County State Park. | {main entrance of Morgan-Monroe| |State Park, Brownstown, Scottsburg and Shoals. |
’ +o x ¥ : |
75 TOPS / THE GENERAL ELECTRIC Foothall Roundup
RED 8 BARBER—Emcee
IT WON'T BE LONG—Things will be different tonight. Joe
all scheduled Jan. 1,
The train will leave Indianap-|
{day of Kenneth Kimball,
3
Shortridge
132d Time
Shortridge plays at Tech tonight. That's not a novelty. It's been going on since 1920 and each year the Blue Devils and the
{Big Green square away in one of] [the city's annually-awaited skirm-|
Jimmie Angelopolous, The Times high school grid picker, is batting .1000 in nine games this week going into the TechShortridge game tonight. He picked Tech tonight and At- | tucks over Deaf School tomor-
| row. Before this week, his per-
centage was 69 right, 16 wrong for a .812 averige.
lishes that lacks no less luster each
{time the rival pair meats. Tonight's no exception.
— The pair will square Pip mi Some SH06 THE a Yl
lhand and the two teams3, both’ of them still in the city title race, have the local high school grid} spotlight to themselves. 5
THE TWO will be meeting for the 32d time. Shortridge has ‘won 15 games, Tech has taken 13 and three have ended in deadlocks. Tonight's game follows the same pattern of speculation as
= "2
¢ have many other Tech-Shortridge
battles. Three years ago, an undermanned Tech team smacked a 16 o 7 pasting to Shortridge in the
{mud. Two years ago, Shortridge
handed a strong Green team a 6 to 0 upset with Big Bill Ralph
catching a Fred Davis pass to| 11th un-|
give Shortridge its disputed city title claim. Tech
#% won the NCC that year. | Tech, which last won a sole city
| title—No., 9—in 1941, got a morsel of revenge last year with a 19 to {0 convincer and a piece of the city title. Tech and Cathedral {shared the city crown with 4-0
"records last year.
=n n =
TONIGHT'S GAME is no titu-
ilar affair but will have a direct,
bearing on the outcome. Cathe-|
hs dral rides in front with a 3-0
{slate with Broad Ripple and Sacred Heart remaining. | Tech, with two Shortridge and Washington to go,|
can keep up with Cathedral per-igscores of 778-894-897 — 2569,
centage-wise, thus title again. That's where Shortridge, which lost 25 to 13 to| [Cathedral for its only loss in {three city games, comes in. Coach George Gale's boys have improved in leaps and bounds. Minus plucky Stan Feezle Jr., who! (had a field day against Tech be-| tween the goal lines last year, Shortridge will relay on the fling-| ing of little Dick Hall and the| work of Ron Passwater, End| Jaek Barney and an improved {line bolstered by tough Jay Jacobs, a tackle converted from fullback. 2 = = THE BLUE DEVILS, however, |will have to stop Joe Sexson, who| has been stopped only by Richmond. Sexson spurted for all three|
{Tech TDs in the Green's 19 to 18|
{narrow squeak over big Broad Ripple. Shortridge, which has not failed to score at least two touchdowns in each of its six games, has given up 10 touchdowns. Tech has yielded 13, eight of them by air! {through the air. Shortridge has won 4 games, Tech, 5 of 6. Crispus Attucks squares off with (Deaf, School at, the Shortridge field tomorrow afternoon at -2 p. m. The Tigers are winless in six games and the Deaf School has won two in the same number of tilts. (J.A.)
SHS-Tech Series
1920—Tech 7, Shortridge 1921—Tech 0, Shortridge 0 t 1922—Tech 21, Shortridge 2 1923—Tech 57, Shortridge 0. ,1924—Tech 26, Shortridge 0. 1925—Tech 14, Shortridge 0. 1928—8hortridge 12, Tech 0. 1927—S8hortridge 19, Tech 0. 1928—S8hortridge 12, Tech 0. 1929—S8hortridge 7, Tech 0 1930—8hortridge 27, Tech 0, 1931—Tech 7, Shortridge 4
1938—Snortridee 19, Tech 1936—Shortridge 26. Tech 86, 1937—Tech 6, Shortridge 0 1838—8hortridge 12, Tech 6. 1939—Shortridge 7, Tech 6 1940—S8hortridge 20, Tech 0, 1941—Tech 7, Shortridge 2 1042—Shortridge-8, Tech-§ 1943—Short ridge 13, LR 12. 1944—Tech 6, Shortridge 0 1945—Tech 0. Shortridge 0 (tie). 1946—S8hortridge 1, Tech 0 (forfeit), 1947—Shortridge 20. Tech 0. 1948—Tech 16, Shortridge 7, 19490—Shortridge 6, Tech 0 1950—Tech 19, Shortridge 0 Total Shortridge 15, Tech 13, three ties.
‘Millers Sign
Perfect Hurler
MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 25 (UP)
{~The Minneapolis Millers base-
ball team announced purchase tominor league pitcher who hurled the only perfect game in organized
{ baseball last season.
Kimball, 24-year-old righthander from San Francisco, was acquired from the Idaho Falls club of the Class C Pioneer league. He came up with his flawless game Aug. 12 when he regired 27 Great Falls batters in succession.
He posted a 12-8 record for the.
season, striking out 154 batters in 177 innings and allowing 97 walks. During one stretch, he
pitched 24 hitless innings out!
of 217.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
each!
down and, The Shuster Coal
sharing thellead 22-2 in the Bowes Seal Fast dies’ poker game.
.._ PAGE 33
Tech Hosts Beard- Groza Tennessee Waltz’ Has ‘Fix’ Skeletons Dancing
o By OSCAR FRALEY | United Press Sports Writer nessee game and revealed ‘that it NEW YORK, Oct. 26 -—~ A was such big business that the |coach was under investigation for payoff came by cashiers’ check. the first time today in the can|cerous college basketball scandal 4; px GROZA, Ralph Beard and authorities hinted that charg- ,,4 paje Barnstable already had es would be made soon against = cocceq throwing their National players from Invitation “Tournament game two more # against Loyola of Chicago. AsLh a - |sistant District Attorney Vincent { lay- O'Connor announced, they adpiay mitted shaving the points on the
Monday night.
n " o o ” ”
received $1000—not $500 as hej first said—for the Loyola fix. He collected $2000 in a New hotel room for that game, then gave his two buddies $500 each.
[EF 2d ready 7 {Tennessee game played at Lex- before the basketball grand jury| in bs re $75,000 ington, Ky., Feb, 18, 1949, for several hours yesterday. Once! Ite, P 2 ov : 29 They were favored by 18 points. they left the session to be briefed
They won by only 15, 71 to 56. The payoff was $1500—8500 per player. It was sent from New York by confessed fixed Saul Feinberg by cashier's check, O'Conrior
by a judge on their legal rights. Courtroom authorities said this] indicated they were telling of new fixes, and that they were being told just
anes the ten|tacles now point{ed toward a {western coach? land players
from one school Mr. Fraley said. cate themselves by telling such. in the South and one in the East.! This is the second game the stores, i And three former Kentucky Kentucky players have admitted Meanwhile, coaches whose
team® were being scanned by in-
nine SUEALOTS were strangely quiet. “AVirenthe - trout Ar ADE.
most coaches® heatedly and vehe-
gliniversity basketball stars told fixing, although Beard also said
TY
: Ol ympians Nee ~d Shots For Noses and Scores
By FRANK ANDERSON THE DIFFERENCE between coach and player is a matter of perspective. We offer these comments in evidence: “Brr,” said Olymp Bob Lavoy. “We ought to get some cold shots. My nose is running.” “Brr,” said Coach Herm Schae- — 'fer, looking at the scoreboard ini, the third quarter. Entering the the Franklin High School gYM. period with a 44-36 lead, they pro-
“We ought to get some foul shots. ceeded to miss like hot-rod motors That's the shot in the arm We ;, 5 frost. Pretty soon the Hawks
Ginn c denied that their boys could be involved ‘in such machinations.
n " INTERVIEWED at the very beginning, Clair Beé of Long Island University was outraged. “If they ever catch one guy of mine,” he raged, “I'll quit basketball.” Subsequent revelations involved eight of his players who allegedly tossed 10 games over a period of three years. Yet Bee, who
n
need.” had them, 45-44. The Hawks a x stayed in front the rest of the LIKE LAVOY'S nose, the way. Olymps ran last night. But their. The third period Olymp field
(side of the scoreboard caught goal shooting was as uncertain as cold. And the Olymps couldn't prices. A rancid 2-of- 20 hurt. So catch the Milwaukee Hawks who did six missed free throws. CUff won, 75-69. The Olymps missed Barker missed on five. 16 of 35 free throws. i 8% =» Olymp scoring began to snifflel THERE were two tonics for the Olymp system. One was Joe Holland. The other was Don Lof-| gran. Both played the backboards
Women Teams : with skill, a thing the Olymps must have. this season.
Tops in Bowling must nave tis season. ~~
Honor counts went feminine ;..q_ wheeling type of team. It last night as two five-women s,,.aq the Olymps to desert their teams registered the only top .aution. And that proved fatal. {scores in local kegling. Schaefer has ordered position on girls, cap- all shots. It didn't work out that tained by Judy Hindel, combined way last night. The Olymps were to wilder than the cards at a la-
ENEMY TO THOSE WHO MAKE HIM ENEMY... FRIEND TO THOSE WHO HAVE NO FRIEND!
|Classic at the West Side Alleys. 2 = =n
Laverne Biers’ Ban-Dee Restau- DIKE EDDLEMAN . with 16] rant quintet fashioned scores of and Don Boven with 18 led the! 1845-882-816 — 2543 in the same Hawk point pourers. Paul Wal-| © league. ther was high for the Olymps|
4 Tomorrow, Chicago's nationa Tonight the Olymps play Ft.
{match hopefuls take off in the’ 3 {first half of the 24-game district Wayne in Logansport. It's apt to be cold there, too. A warm
{tourney to decide the Indianap|olis tation P” Schaefer pep talk may show Ft.| Wayne that the Olymps are not | The Indiana alleys will be the to be sneezed at.
scene of action with six games
Indianapolis (69) Milwaukee (75)
at 3:30 p, m. and six more at 8:30. fs ft pf! 1% 16 pt Alleys for the final 12 games Barnhorst. f 20 3 Mehen 1 ‘ 30 3 to be played on the following Loteran. £ 3 1 3 Wison. t 001 week will be selected by the field. Hollan Boven, t-¢ 410 4 Mo 2 2 1,Christi'ns'n,c 4 3 3 |The winner will be determined by See « 33% § Siaenter.’s © 001 oshe x ‘Shea, g the total pinfall. arket, 0 5 2 Fddleman,g 7 2 3 9:30 Entries will be accepted until Hues © 0 0 0Renicke, § i § 3 {starting time tomorrow. Na en Es 54 pEumastensg ee] EE . Irony ened in the tourney, ..... 2515 27° Totals Fins are Dick Weber, Bob Earl, Jack, Score by Quarters’ Henry, Curt Heady, Carl Hindel, vpraxaporis .... 18 26 11 14—60 Russ Houze, John McGrew, Mer- Milwaukee . 20 .16 22 17-75 ! Fr Throw Missed=—Barnhorst, Grab: ritt Neese and Red Stuart. BZ Loteree “Movus 2. Lavoy. Toshef, | | The Terre Haute A state-wide elimination tour- Barker 7, Walther, Eddleman, Wilson, | i
Meh ney of 18 games to be held NOV. Renicke, Boven 2. Christisnsen, Burmaster,
3-4 will produce two girls for the shoting Percentages Indianapolis— 25 ot|
89. PGA, 281; Milwaukee—27 of 65 FG women's national at Chicago. The ys; Indissiapolis—19 of 38 FTA, 543; S|
winners will joint automatic na- waukee—21 of
tional qualifier Patty Striebeck. Ofticials—Jewell
! Jerry| - __|Steiner. 3 |
— and
of shaving points in the 1949 Ten- there was a third—‘"agalnst Caro-1had mentioned returning to the lina, I think’'—when he was met coal by reporters at the airport here] levent, hadn't at last reports ap|plied for a miner's lamp.
GROZA also admitted that he|Writers’ Association had a ready
York when and |8athering momentum, that:
The trio of players appeared
how much they impli-|
‘—Quarterback Billy Stephens
s KENT TAYLOR y LOIS COLLIER v FRANK ORTH ZND AN ALL-STAR SUPPORTING CAST
FRIDAY NIGHTS at WFBM-TV CHANNEL 6
Presented by
Terre Haute, Indiana
mine country in such an
But the New York Basketball
[reply for Adolph Rupp. The Bairon from the Bluegrass snorted the investigations were
“I've talked to my boys and {nobody could touch them with a 110- foot pole.” Saturday three of his boys were volved. The Basketbalk Writers him ‘and 11-foot pole.
sent
Southv Carolina Upsets
Favored Clemson, 20-0 COLUMBIA, 8. C., Oct. 25 (UP)
streaked 74 yards with a punt to day to start the South Carolina Gamecocks to.a 20 to 0 upset victory over their d rival," Clemson; before 35,000 state fair fans
The Gamecocks, who look like the hen-of the species to mos: rivals but turn into a raging banty rooster on “Big Thursday,” converted a stout defense into a decisive scoring weapon. It was the fourth victory in six vears of the series for South Car olina. In each case, Clemson had been favored. Score by periods: Clemson South Carolina .
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