Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 November 1951 — Page 13

8, 1051"

R 50 YEARS 'EHOUSE

ig ports ricated!

gain

wants . home ou see bout it really come wu. It's are of , that

IENCE

* Adephi 46, N. Y. Aggies

Sp

a

.t Section Two

2 Sports fey

> he

os

Notre Dame ..12 N.Carolina ... 7

.46 1

14

Tennessee . . . Miss. U. . ...

Louisville eh Wash. & Lee

Wabash DePauw

Wm. & Mary. .14 Duke ...

Xavier, O. ... .26 7 Cincinnati .... 0

viv sic BY

1.5.14 Ind.

ried 13

Indiana

AIR |

FOOTBALL SCORES

STATE

Purdue ........13 6 0 0—19 Minnesota 013 0 0-13

a tsps

Indiana ......... 0 0 12—26 Michigan State ..14 0 7 7-30 wa. 6 0—12 0 14—41

SRASRA4 0000000000000 000 MANNRNRARRNRNRNAIIIIN

DePauw ........ 0 6 Wabash ........ 1%

XN. Carolina ..... 0 0 1 Notre Dame .... 0

0— 7

Indiana State ... 0 0 0 7— 7

Butler sessvsenr @ 1 7 Gueld| Toye Boilermakers gave MinneHanover ........13 6 9 7—35 sota a chilling reception before Anderson ....... 0:0 0 0— 029,000 fans in their first visit here in 56 years, to back up their Elmhurst ...... 6 0 6 6—18 S| — Rose Poly ...... 0 0 0 0— 0x, 3 povixT OFPONENTS Nov. 24—Wisconsin ad Minnesota. BIG TEN . - __ [third league win in four starts Ohio State ...... 0 0 0 0— 0 and thus assure themselves their Hitnois cesses 0 0 0 0— 0 first winning season in Big Ten toe trees ———— play since 1944. Michigan ....... 0 0 0 0— 0 . =» & Northwestern ... 0 6 0 0— 6 te sesame —— TODAY'S VICTORY gave PurWisconsin ...... 0 13 14 7—34 due a second-place tie with WisJows ..... sisies 3 0 8 7 consin in the Big Ten standings. a weer. Should Hlinois, tied by Ohio : MIDWEST State today, lose next week at aati. B® 6 6 “o Northwestern and Purdue win at Cincinnati ..... .0 0 6 0—0 . ~__og Indiana, the Riveters could winXavier, 0. ...... 6 13 9 1—28 the crown. Missourt ........ 6 0 0 12—12 Purdue powered into a 19-to-0 Kas, Stats ...... © 1 7 0—I14 lead midway in the second period - — iw before the Golden Gophers came Nebraska ....... T 0 0 7-14 alive, They battled on even terms Colorado ....... 6 14 9 7-36 from then until the end.

Cape Girardeau 45, S. Illinois 6. Dayton 34, Marshall 13. - Denison 14, Case 7. ; E. Kentucky 27, Ohio U. 13. E. Illinois 46, James Millikin 6. Hl. Wesleyan 14, Wash. (St. Louis) 7. \ John Carroll vs. Baldwin-Wallace, postponed, snow. Marquette 26, Detroit 18. Monmouth 6 Knox 6 (tie). Muskingum 48, Otterbein 19. New Hampshire 7, Kent State 0. N. Illinois "State 27, Omaha 26. Ohio Wes. 34, Wittenberg 0. Wayne 27, Mich. Normal 13. W. Michigan 46, Central Mich. 23. Wooster 47, Oberlin 14.

EAST : A —————————(—_———————— BUT GIEL also was the goat of Harvard ........ T14 7 6-34 the game, His one pass inter- By FRANK Brown .........0 7 7 7—21 ception and fumble set up two Dartmouth 3 — "6% 7 8 18 Puitue touchdowns. + urdue struck for its Cornell ......... 0 7 14 0-21 : ; ¢ touchdown midway in the first : > Yann ... © 0 7 0— 7period. On the first play from Previously unbeaten, untied DePauw, 41-12. APY sevoesvins 0 6 0 0— 6scrimmage. Quarterback Dale The unbeaten, but once-tied Little G Tre ————— i Samuels handed the ball to Klezekiyme of it. A spow crust that Princeton ....... 31 13 Who broke loose over tackle for covered the field before kickoff Yale — Sib nia - §2 yards. a . ‘time quickly melted under the Columbia ....... 0 0 7 Then Jim Whitmer, Purdue's {orriq heels of the Wabash backs. Navy cossevecaes 7 3% 21 alert halfback, pulled in one of A crowd of 4700 shivered

7 0 7-1 6. Albright 13, Muhlenberg 9. American Int. 13, Springfield 0. Bethany 38, Grove City 12. Boston C. 20, Villanova 18. Boston U. 39, Wichita 6. Bowling Green 20, Bradley 6. Bucknell 338, Delaware 6. Buffalo 30, RPI 20. ~ Carnegie Tech 35, Westminster 6. Conn. 21, Rhode Island State 6. Delaware State 18, St. Augustine 0. Dickinson 31. Allegheny 18. Fordham-35, Temple 6. Hamilton 32, Union 20. Hofstra 19, Upsala 0. King’s College 27, Wilkes 7. Lebanon Valley 34, Juanita 0. Lehigi+-32, Lafayette 0. Mass. 6, Tufts 6 (tie). Miami, O. 34, W. Reserve 7. Middlebury 51, Vermont 42. Millersville 28, Mansfield 13. Morris Brown 25, Benedict 0. ‘New ‘Haven 39, Brooklyn College 0. Penn State 13, Rugers 7. Pittsburgh 32, W. Virginia 12. Rider 26, E. Stroudsburg 7. Scranton 12, Waynesburg 0. Susquehanna 19, Ursinas 183. Swarthmore 19, Haverford 7. Syracuse 9, Colgate 0. Wesleyan 6, Trinity 8. © W. Maryland 33, Johns Hopkins 8. Williams 40, Amherst 7. Westchester 13, Drexel 0.

SOUTH i

18U ..0ooinveee 8 0 0 0 8] Miss. State ...... 0 0 0 0— 0

Alabama ....... 0 0 0 1— 7] GA. Tech +.cucue 0 6 18 7—27

MSV. veeenne. 7 7 0 1-31

77 0 1-2 Tennesses .......13 6 6 21-46

— | Kentucky .......14 19 7 7-47 Geo. Wash, ..... 0 6 0 7-13

Maryland .......14 19 6 14—58 N. Car, State ... 0 0 9 0— 0)

Wm. & Mary .... 7 7 0 0—14| DOKS +veieveeee. U0 T Gull)

Vanderbilt ...... 0 7 3 0—10| Tulane .....0000.°0. 7 0 T—14

GOOTEIA +vvrover 14 12 13 7—46 Auburn ......... 7 0 0 T—14

Miaml ccovvvneea 7 7T 7 0-21 Florlda ......000. 0 0 0 6— 8 Albany A&M 41, Knoxville ©. | Albany St. 18, Florida Normal §.| Camp Lejeune 21, Morris-Harvey' 1. Central ‘State 19, W. State 0. | Clemson 84, Furman 14, Emory-Henry 39, Randolph-Ma-con #0.

Virginia

>

Boilermakers

Put Chill on Gophers, 19-13

By KURT FREUDENTHAL * |

United Press Sports Writer LAFAYETTE, Ind, Nov. 17-—Purdue’s aroused Boilermakers, sparked by ‘the tremendous running of Phil

6 0—I12 Klezek, defeated Minnesota today,

19 to 13, and kept alive their hope for the Big Ten championship.

- x » KLEZEK, a 20-year-old junior halfback from Chicago who only recently rejoined the squad after being injured on the field, scored Purdue's first touchdown on a dazzling 62-yard run and the third, racing 20 yards. But Minnesota, suffering from its third conference loss against a win and a tie, also had its star in triple-threat bd Giel, a 19-year-old sophomore 'signal-caller, and senior Halfback Dick Gregory, who accounted for most of Minnesota's rushing. Both scored Gopher touchdowns. Giel's twisting 64-yard touchdown run was the prettiest of the game. = > »

_ Giel's passes on the Minnesota 44.

Samuels fired a pass to Klezek who went to the eight, and Max Schmaling bulled over from there. Purdue recovered Giel's costly fumble when End Darrel Brewster fell on the ball in the second period and seven plays later Klezek galloped 20 yards for the tally. ~ ~ »

MINNESOTA THEN scored its 13 points, all in the same period, with Gregory climaxing a 70-yard drive and smashing over from the nine. Then Glel got off his sparkling 64-yard run after failing to spot a receiver for a pass play. Minnesota threatened once more in the fourth period marching to the Purdue 20 but the Boilermakers- threw. back ' three line plays to protect threir slender lead and finally took over on their 11-vard line. Statistics i \ Purdue Minn. First downs . 19 Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passes attempted Passes’ completed Passes Inlercepted Punts Punting average 6 Fumbles lost i 1 Yards penalized ‘hannah 25

. 309 . 128 37 18 1

wo W tt Ot

PHILLIP'S 62—Purdue's Phillip Klezek reeled off a 62.yard touchdown scamper for the Boiler- - maker's first touchdown against Minnesota at Lafa Continued on Page 14—Col. 6 | quarter. Klezek out-ran Fred Techel (26).

4

" Butler

Baylor Wake Forest... 0

Oklahoma lowa State ... &

(vanes 14

: Purdue State .... 7

...35 Rice

Minnesota . ..

Princeton ... Yale ......... 0

.28

Texas A&M ...13

19 13

27

SMU

N'western .... 6 Michigan

Navy ....... Columbia ..

Arkansas

he Indianapolis Times

Ohio State. . ..

Hanover ..35 cin Anderson a tiinels A] Kansas' ......27 Gua.Tech ...-. .. 7 Okla. A&M ...12 Alabama ..-...

.47 AT

Colorado ... Nebraska ...

.36 14

Kentucky .... Geo. Wash. . . .

Features, Page 23 Editorials, Page 24

0 Mich. State .. .30 0 Indiana ......26

29 Penn ........ 7 7 Army ........ 6

47 Kas. State ....14 13 Missouri .....12

Wisconsin a lows . . .... 7

Maryland . es 93 N. Carolina S.. 0

ve 14 ex 10

Tulane . .. Vanderbilt

oses, 30-26; Purdue Wins

i |

LIKE THE WIND—BIll Dozier, Indiana right halfback strews Michigan State players all over the field

Wabash Rings

as he takes off from his own 49.yard line and through the center of the line for a 15-yard gain that

: y eee.

y 5 : b 4 85 LUKE

Times Diagram Photo By John Spicklemire and J. Hugh O'Donnell.

sails

sparked Indiana to its first touchdown,

Breaks Help Keep Spartan String Intact

‘By ED SAINSBURY United Press Sports Writer

BLOOMINGTON, Ind, Nov. 17—Top-ranked Michigan State barely outlasted

Indiana’s Hoosiers today, posting a 30-to-26 triumph to remain undefeated with 14 straight wins, nine this season, in a scrap

fought in 32-degree temperature in a snowstorm. & ¢ But for the breaks the Spartan’ winning streak would have been cruelly shattered by a. downNEXT OPPONENTS Nov, 24—Purdue at Indians. Nov. 24—Colorado at Mich. State. trodden club which has won only two of eight games this year and was a 17-point underdog before 20,000 home fans. » » = INDIANA GAVE up the Spartan’s. first two touchdowns on fumbles. Dick Tamburo, a line“backer, accounted for the first when he recovered a bobble by Lou D’Achille in the end zone and his recovery of another lost ball by Bill Dozier on the 25 set up the second Spartan score. The marker came, finally, on a fiveyard pass from Al Dorow to Paul Dekker. - Thereafter, the Hoosiers were very much in the battle, which turned into a bloodletting in the final period as the Spartans’ Frank Kapral and Indiana's John Morgan were thrown out for a one -round battle in midfield. Hardly 30 seconds later, the Hoosiers hefty tackle, Pete Russo, also was sent to the bench for

Monon Bell

ANDERSON

Times Sports Writer

BLACKSTOCK FIELD, GREENCASTLE, Ind., Nov.

through the proceedings in Blackstock Stadium. DePauw partisans had spirits to match their blue noses. The hottest any DePauw back got was when he stopped to toast his frosty fingers at a sideNEXT OPPONENTS Season completed for both teams. line fire during the half. And Wabash with it hard charging line and tumbling backs chilled the Tigers more than the 30degree temperature. = = = CHIEF MONON bell ringer for the Little Giants was Fullback Stan Huntsman, who picked up 143 yards on 14 carries, Helping Stan pull the rope on DePauw were his brother, Quarterback Jerry, with -11-of -16- passes connecting, and Halfback Joe Dooley with 88 vards in 15 rushes. Today's win gave Wabash a 10-8-2 edge. in the Bell series and

17 a 29-28-35 advantage in the over-

all rivalry since 1890. Indicative of the way things went for DePauwy was QuarterContinued on Page 14 —Col. 8

3

first 17—Wabash used the Mohon Bell today to ring curfew on

iants had an easy

Olymps Beat Hawks, 68-58

By United Press MOLINE, Ill, Nov: 17— The Indianapolis Olympians broke a first-quarter tie and went ahead to stay for the remainder of the game as they downed the Milwaukee Hawks, 68 to 58, in a National Basketball Association game here tonight. After the first quarter ended in a 14-all deadlock, the Hawks came close to catching the front-run-ning Indiana team only once. = n = THE LOSERS pulled to within two points of the lead at 55-53 early in the fourth quarter, but a six-point-splurge-by the Indianapo=

Notre Dame Squeaks by

N. Car. 12

Bry United Press

CHAPEL HILL, N. C., Nov. 17 — Notre Dame squeaked

Buckeyes Tie ~“.

‘Illinois, 0 to O

By United Press

COLUMBUS, O., Nov. 17—An inspired Ohio State de-

|beginning another brawl with

{Michigan State’s Don McAuliffe jon the sidelines.

URGED in the {second period 85 yards in 17 plays, {before Gedman plunged over from {the one foot marker for a score. Then Indiana paraded 59 yards in 12 plays before the drive fizzled lout on the one. Dick Ashburner flipped a 50-yard touchdown pass to Clifton Anderson to. =~=~<w-—g

out a 12-to-7 victory today fensive unit put the first black mark on Rose Bowl hopeful halftime tie with only ‘vue second over a North Carolina team Illinois’ record today as the Buckeyes battled the unbeaten left to play.

that unleashed two furious last- Illini to a 0-0 tie in one of the most brutal Big Ten contests period drives trying to avoid the contests ever played in Ohio stad-|—=—

defeat that may cost Coach Carl Snavely his job. With minutes to play, two Tar Heel drives for a touchdown that would have meant a startling up-

NEXT OPPONENTS Nov. 24—Jowa at Notre Dame. Nov. 24—N. Carolina at Duke.

set stalled on the Irish 3 and 10. Notre Dame tallied on power drives that covered 55 and 80 yards in the second and third periods, but failed to convert each time. A field goal attempt also wen awry. ~ ~ »

SUDDENLY AROUSED late in the third period, North Carolina scored on a 37-yard pass from Tailback Connie Gravitte to Wingback Jack Cooke, then monopolized the last period with an 86-yard drive that stopped just three yards short of the goal line.

A partisan crowd of 44500

The Spartans retaliated expertly as the second half got under

way. Indiana, highly keyed, went

lum. J ‘dog. That was Illinois’ last threat downfield to the Spartan 17 but The “unsung heroes” of bothiin the first half, while Ohio State/lost possession. So Billy Wells teams played outstanding ball, grove twice to scoring territory. |romped 83 yards for a touchdown

but it was Ohio State's defenders

{on the first play, then finish who stole the thunder from Illi- 12 the seeqnd period, Ohio drove per with

to the seven and Vic Janowicz at- oN NS van wi 26-mileanhour wind. but a ba BOD Carey, who converted three : |of the four Spartan scores, pro- . pass from center marred his ef- vided insurance points with’ 29. nois’ running<and passing attack forts. Moments later, Quarter-| oo field 3001 Te Hie 3 which made Coach Ray Elliott's back Tony Curcillo passed and|giate a 16-point edge Miehigan crew a two-touchdown favorite. |Janowicz ran to the 10, where a % a 2 ® = flurry of end zone passes were > THREE TIMES in the final/knocked down. |r CH ASDIANA Yefusel to ult. period Illinois had some 79,457 In the last half, Illinois virtu-|; qo “00 0 a A ard fir homecoming fans’ hearts jumpingially stole the show. Famed Half- by Tom Tewecic — Pt as they neared the Ohio goal, but/back Johnny Karras was Pre- ounds on Michigan State's 43 two fumbles and a pass inter. vented from getting the one! chile sneaked over from ception by Ohio’ State defenders touchdown that would haye en-tne one. Then Charles Raxmic saved the day. abled him to tie the immortal hauled in a fumble by Leroy That final period was a pretty Harold (Red) Grange's mark of Bolden on the Spartans’ 43 and in good example of the play all after- 13 touchdowns in one season. four plays, Gedman rollicked aver noon which was marked by fum-. Karras finished the game with from the one for another score, bles, vicious tackles, and pass minus 11 yards. There the efforts died as Michinterceptions. ss 8 = igan State stormed downfield in The Hlini had won seven THE ILLINI got to the 35 in the the snow to hold the ball on the straight before today and their third period on two of Quarter- Hoosier 16 and the match fin-

NEXT OPPONENTS 24—lllinois at Northwestern. 24—Ohie State at Michigan.

Nov, Nev.

lis club, while the Hawks were moaned when Gravitte's pass into going scoreless, gave the winners'the end zone on fourth down was a comfortable margin and coasted batted away by Notre Dame de-

in from ‘there. =

fender Gene Carrabine. The Tar Heels ground back, but

PAUL WALTHER, Indianapolis Halfback . Johnny Lattner inter-

guard

points. Leo

Continued on

La

| "9

Barhhorst

and Page 14—Col.

1

led the scorers with 26 cepted Gravitte's ‘long pass on Bill the Irish 10 and ran it

to the Notre Dame 33. From there Frank Leahy's men, winning their seventh game, methodically ran out the clock. Freshman Quarterback Tom Carey and Frosh Halfback Paul Reynolds teamed up to spark the Irish 55-yard scoring march in the second period and aided Lattner and sophomore Fullback Neil Worden in an 80-vard march in the third. ” » 5 REYNOLYDS BURST through the middle of the Tar Heel» line jon a 12-yard spring to start the {first scoring drive. Then Carey {passed to Reynolds for 10 more. {Sophomore Frank Paterra ripped {for 13 and Worden crashed to the {3 in two plays. Reynolds took it {over from the 1 on his second trys Dick Lackey blocked Neil Mavarides’ extra point try. Worden bulled over from the 3 for the second Irish score midway in the third. Mavarides’ kick was wide. A. B. Willams converted for.

North Carolina after Cooke's score, Statistics:

First downs

four straight conference victories made them odds on favorite to represent the Big 10 in the Rose Bowl, The tie gives both teams credit for a half game won, and thus the Illini were saved the humiliation of a loss that could have changed the entire picture. It was Ohio State's second tie. The Buckeyes previously deadlocked the Wisconsin Badgers, 6-6. Ohio State now has won four, lost two and tied two and has two victories, two ties and a loss in the conference. n - » FOR OHIO STATE, Defensive Safety, Fred Bruney, Line-Backer Martz Beekley, End Sherwin Gandee and Center Bob Heid with their tackling and fumble-recov-ering were outstanding. Illinois had its defensive heroes too, in Halfback Al Brosky's timely interception and End Frank Wodziak's heads-up play on fumbles. Illinois had driven to the Ohio 35 the first time it got the ball, but the Ohig line held like a bull-

Caps Face St PITTSBURGH, unaccustomed - to losing hockey

games on the road this season, brings the best defensive

11 a2 Rushing vardage Las 144 278 Pussing yardage 68 118: club in the American Hockey sses m ¢ 1 2 Pastes obed : 3 League to Indianapolis tonight. [asses had intercented - 3 J The Hornets, unbeaten in six Punting average rave 313 sw 4+ road games and almost invincible “umbies lost heer : 3 y > . Yards penalised 5 go At home where they have won ree - seven, lost one and tied one, will face a struggling Indianapolis Western Conference squad in fhe Coliseum at 8:15 W LT Pet. TP OP lines : 1 an a wb ™ J jseonsin “adivy : ! } 3 1a 3 ‘ a Nn » Michigan 73.1 3 Gm 3 INDIANAPOLIS won au tts jo State 113: a four victories during the first : . . Northwestern ..... * 3% # 400 | { : yette yesterday. The sprint took place in the first Minnesota" 01 8 1 me K% 138 eight games. In the next eight te Towa ae ee 3 1 ues

e

back Tom O’Connell’s passes only. ished.

to have the threat stopped by

Indiana had the first half sta-

Beekley’s interception on the five. | tistical edge, gaining 207 total When Illinois got the ball again Yards to Michigan State’s 73. For it moved to the 24 ‘where Rex! the contest, the Hoosiers still held

Smith bobbled and Beekley again pounced on the ball Ohio's lone threat in the same

period with Janowicz and Klevay

sparking the drive got te the 24. But it was the same old story as Klevay fumbled and Don Ernst, who played heads-up.balV all the day, recovered for Illinois. The Illini fought back viciously in the fourth period. And only Bruney's interception on the one Kept the Illini from scoring. Moments later Wodziak recovered Janowicz's fumble only to have Tate fumble on the next play and Heid recover. Then Armstrong fumbled and Elie Popa recovered for Illinois.

the edge with 173 yards passing and 178 rushing, but the Spartans came fast at the finish to post 289 yards rushing and only 47 passing. Darow was the only Spartan tosser to complete a pass, hitting on five of 12. For Indiana, D’Achille, Gedman, and Ashburner all took to the air, with Ash- | burner the most effective with | four completions in eight tries for 99 yards. D’Achille hit on three of four for 53 yards. It was the fifth time this season Michigan State had to break out of a tie or come from behind

in the last half to win. Statistics

OSU Tlinois Indiana Mich. St. Mest downs ............0000 10 11 ' First downs . seine XT 14 Rushing yardage . 88 48 Rushing yardage . 178 Wm Passing yardage 10% 119 Passing yardage . «373 4 Passes attempted 12 25 Passes attempted + 12 12 Passes completed .... 5 9 Passes completed «3 5 Passes intercepted .. + 1 4 Passes intercepted . «38 i Punts tisens sess M0 10 | Punts wo 8 8 Punting average . casas d3S 38.8 Punting average . ..320 23 Fumbles lost . canseeies oh 2 Pumbles lost . ND | 3 Yards penalized «43 65! Yards penalised ......... . 28 n ingy Pitt Here Tonight However, only two AHL clubs The St. Louis Flyers wers

this season have managed to score more than two goals against

Pittsburgh's outstanding goalie, Gil Mayer. 8t. Louis has scored three and four while losing twice and thé Caps were edged here, 4 to 3, by Pittsburgh, Nov. 4. Mayer leads the league's goalies with the top defensive average of 1.86 goals. Indianapolis Goalie Glenn Hall has permitted an average of 3.8, a figure just a shade above the 3.06 that Terry Sawchuk allowed during his first year with the Caps. ” » -

an early-season rage in the Western Division, but now they have lost six straight and won only one game in the last 10. The Flyers, however, have played a lopsided schedule thus far; only five games at home and 12 on

the road. . » ”

THE CAPS are headed for a nine-game road trip following tonight's home battle. They will be gone until Dec. 13 because of the Hollywood Ice Revue. ) They are scheduled next Tues-

day night in St. Louis and then will -

will go to Detroit where

INDIANAPOLIS isn't alone in work out under the Red

8% i%¢/games, the Caps are winless the league's hockey oddities. General-Manager Jack Adama. 8

al

co

Juba pops ue