Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 December 1951 — Page 42
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OF;
THE
s By JIMMIE ANGELOPOLOUS : Coach Paul Brown, Carl Snavely and Earl Blaik are not
being considered for the Indiana University coaching job. I don’t know who is specifically. The field is reduced to
five candidates. According to late word, announcement of]
the man to take resigned-coach| Clyde Smith's place is expected to/three of the nation’s top ten take place. before Christmas. |teams—Michigan State, WisconIndiana officials think they sin and Illinois. have pin-pointed the right man. . 2 a -8 They say he has the qualities the] IT MIGHT be noteworthy that university is looking for in a the cultural and academic minds coach. among Indiana University I don’t know what that means alumni in. several fields did not since Clyde Smith's qualities, in recognize overtly their football this period of sports scandals and| team’s over-all accomplishments under-the-table handoffs, have this year. begun looking rather rosy to] That's easily explained. Indiana many Indiana alumni who have alumni have never been the diebeen concerned about the .tur- hard “you - gotta - win -’em - all” bulent Indiana football situation. type. Neither have the Purdue] aa 8 lalumni. Hoosier alumni would be | WORD HAS it that an ava-| content to “win their share” and
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
aps Seek 5th Straig
Es
&
se
lanche of pro-Smitty sentiment | keep an erstwhile reputation in| has swept the administration Big Ten football as it has in building in Bloomington. other sports. It has hit from all over Bloom-| Indiana can’t afford to gamble ington, Indianapolis, and .points With its choice of football coach! north and south, in and out of the and that's one reason Indiana state. It hasn't been concentrated, cannot be expected to hire an however, and that's why it prob-/Indiana high school coach to ably will not have any immediate tackle the job. I think a few of, forcible effect on Smitty's resig-them could do it, but the situanation, tion has changed now. As for Brown, he would prob- It's common knowledge that ably relish consideration of a changing coaches at Indiana is Big Ten job, but whether he not the problem. I don’t know would strongly consider Indiana (what the real problems are. It's| is “highly conjectural. His pro {foolish to think that knowledge of | commitments with the Clewe-
{the state's prep football picture] land Browns are all-consuming
|alone can qualify a high school] and he probably wouldn't. step coach for the Indiana job. out of the Browns’ dynamic pic- | Any ‘coach wh¥%takes that job ture even if he could be re- (would do well to shop as thought leased. {he were buying a business estabBrown was being paid by the lishment. He had better find out Cleveland organization, it’s said,/how good the business has been, | while Brown was in the Navy. Hisland why it hasn't been any bet-| qualities as football coach, busi- ter. He should find out who his| ness man, recruiter and discipli-|customers are and with what kina narian are widely respected. He/of clients he is dealing with. doesn’t always have to have ma-/ He'd better find out where terial. He makes it, | His revenue is coming from and a = 8 how he can make business pick up. He'd better find out who is boss and who is going to keep the books.
I CAN'T EXPLAIN the BlaikSnavely sidetracking other than all “big-name” coaches - who might be available for the Indi- This vicious football business
(will get a little more sane than it ana job wouldn't necessarily fit , into the Indiana picture. {has been, .but it's still going to
| That's to Indiana's credit. Ire 8 Dusiness—a full-time busi.
Indiana officials are looking for ness: The new coach probably a specific type of coach who will} dove-tail into Indiana's expecta-|n8 a comparable Big Ten
: . lcoach’s salary because Indiana tions in Big Ten football, it should , ~ 0 been shopping for another
at ecifiBet iat an Se oi ualitied coach first, then talking its football participation in the money second.
won't have to worry about get-|
0
_ GALLOPING GREENCLADS—Morris Wray, Al Northington, Norman Wilson and Bafney Murray (front row, left 'o right), and Earl Meadors, Myron Garland, Don Lineback, Joe Sexson and Gil Tate (second row) will lead Tech's basketball team in its defense of the Tech tourney title it won again
last year, Coach Herman Hinshaw's five has won three of four games, losing only to Southport. Tech |
faces Watlington of 1:30 p. m. and Howe meets Broad Ripple. at 3-p. m. The reserve-team finals precede the finals at 8:15 p.m.
- the was not to be stopped on the
Carol Pence Candidate For ‘Athlete of Year’
the United States to win the trophy. Richards, in addition to becoming the second man ever to clear 15 feet in the vault, also won the 1951 pentathlon championship on his first try. And he did it with the fourth highest score ever recorded by an American in this event. Rounding out the list of candidates, any one of whom would be a fitting winner, are John Davis, Brooklyn, weightlifter; Patricia Keller McCormick, Los Angeles diving star; Wayne Moore, Yale swimmer; Carol Pence, Lafayette, Ind, swimmer; Jim Thomas, Baltimore swimmer; Mal Whitfield, Columbus track ace, and George Yardley, San Francisco basketball player. "
wane By- OSCAR FRALEY United Press Sports Writer
NEW YORK, Dec. 13—Nine candidates were being voted upon today for the James E. Sullivan award as the year’s outstanding athlete and it looked like a close race between tennis champ Maureen Connolly and pole vaulter Bob Richards. Richards, the vaulting parson | from Chicago who was the first | man since Cornelius Warmer-
| dam to clear 15 feet, appeared { on precedent to have an edge over the 16-year-old national amateur court queen. For of the 21 previous awards, 12 were { won by track stars.
= » 2
TWO SURPRISES in the vote | being conducted by the National AAU were the snubbing of Dick | Kazmaier, Princeton football All-American, and Billy Max-
= » DAVIS, 1948 Olympic champion, has been national heavy-
Big Ten. Every effort, individually an collectively, should be made to back up that policy and the in-| coming coach. | I think one of the reasons
Coach Smith ‘must have resigned
was that he didn't get an un-
qualified vote of confidence when
| The frony of it all will prob- | d ably come up next fall. Indiana's football team, if it remains funda-
should go to Clyde Smith.
But it won't, Too many will| “See, I knew a new coach]
say:
he and his gutty football team could do it.” How foolish can we|
needed it the. most. That was Set? : at mid-season. ip ————————— Then Indiana proceded to be- Local H. S. Basketball
come a stable, cohesive unit and . chowed it by scaring the day- Schedule This Week
lights out of Michigan State, | Friday (30-26) and Wisconsin (6-0), Decatur Central at Warren Central,
after bowing to Rose Bowl Illi-| nois, 21 to 0. Indiana was not the better] team when it lost to rugged] Purdue 21 to 13, but it was in the! men Tourney ball game all the way. The Hoo-|1 s,m Hove vs Bogs Spal, giers, incidentally, were the only| Warren Central at Lawrence Central. team in the conference to face
Greensburg, Southport. Lawrence Central at Pike Township, Greenfield at Franklin Township Ben Davis vs. Manual at Cathedral. Beech Grove at Center Grove. Shortridge at Ft. Wayne South Side.
Saturd
uthport at Cathedral.
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— Your hey 10 Holiday Hospitality
Add fame to your name as a friend and host. Send and serve the favorite Bonded Bourbon of Kentuckians. Insist on it ; ; in Familiar Fifth or Mansion Gift Package : . . at better stores today.
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® . .
| Washington vs. Tech. 3p. m.;
ny wa Spartans Edge Past
lto give his Spartan mates their| fourth victory in five games. UC S aces
weight lifting champion since 1938 and holds the world records in all three lifts in his
| well of Odessa, Tex., who came | out of nowhere to win the Na- -
tional Amateur Golf champion-
oe st hand mo] Sh, Tw riders Do 5° Mer of the success it may have | a no ucleer, 1949 through this year and is
both of Army, were previous | winners and Kazmaier certainly deserved recognition as a candi-
the only woman in swimming
Carol Pence history to hold all five diving
li d in it revious 21 h io i 0 i | date at least on his new national an gwar 5? Samp hships in one given | total offense record. 2 2 Moore holds the national
But the AAU snubbed Kazmaier and Maxwell and named four swimmers, two track aces and one each from weight lifting, tennis and basketball for the battle of the ballots. Yet the race appeared to be between Miss Connolly and Richards, even though Don Budge in 1937 was the only tennis star ever to win the Sul-
“LITTLE MO,” as the San Diego court slugger is known, contributed one of the year’s outstanding athletic achievements when she matched Helen Wills Moody's unprecedented feat of winning the national tennis crown at 16. Her victory in the deciding match of the Wightman: Cup series against England also enabled
7200 and 400 meter. freestyle championships and is a member of Yale's world record relay team. Miss Pence set American records in winning the national indoor and outdoor 200 yard and 200 meter breaststroke championships. Thomas, former North Carolina swim star, holds the outdoor 100-meter backstroke and indoor medley crowns. Whit= field, holder of the Olympic 800-meter mark, won the 400 and 800 meter races at the Pan-American games and last summer in Japan competed in 30 events without a loss. Yardley, former Stanford basketball star, was top man of the Na-
Manual, 54 to 50
Decatur Cent (57) Mooresville (26)
Sacred Heart and Decatur Cen-
Charles Whips Maxim for Shot at Title
SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 13
—Former heavyweight cham-
and ready today to make a
liar out of the guy who said, “They never come back.”
Negro gave notice last night that
comeback trail when he belted out a clear-cut decision over light-heavy champion Joey Maxim
at the San Francisco Cow Palace » n »
THE VICTORY, Charles’ fifth
Maxim, was a long step back for the man who fell heir to Joe Louis’ title only to lose it to aging Jersey Joe Walcott. The bout was a bruiser, but it was no-fun for the audience—and the crowd showed its displeasure with the same boo’s, clapping and catcalls they might give a couple of second-rate waltzers.
ja “champion when he recently boxed the ears off Irish Bob Murphy, showed little or none of his fancy work last night. » = ” ' ON THE United Press score card he won only two of the 12 rounds. Two were even and the rest went to Charles without question. Referee Jack Downey, low blows, gave the former heavy king 671% points to 641; for Maxim. Judge Billie Burke gave Charles 681;. to 63% for
called it 70 for Charles and 62 for Maxim,
pion Ezzard Charles was fit{
The mustached Cincinnati]
in a bruising but dull 12-rounder|
against the willing but unable,
Maxim, who looked every inch|.
I who | warned Charles several times for
Maxim, and Judge Frankie Brown |¥
At Coliseum Tonight
By BILL EGGERT SHOWING improved signs of eventually getting out
of the American Hockey League cellar, the Indianapolis” . § Caps will latch onto a piece of local tradition tonight in
the Coliseum. Cap squads for the last two seasons have had winning habits during the month of December, The current crop of Caps, victorious in only one of five games already this month, will try to right their wrongs tonight against Providence. uo 8 = . . USUALLY all the Caps have to do against the Reds is skate out on the ice and Providence is beaten. In four out of four pre- © vious games this season, the Caps i have won and accounted for twothirds of their six victories. That's strange when it is considered that, there are five other clubs in the AHL that the Caps have failed to whip. yet—Buffalo, Cleveland, Hershey, Cincinnati: and Pittsburgh. Pinched by a lack of reserve strength, Cap Player-Coach Ott Heller will be forced to put himself in the defensive lineup tonight replacing the injured Larry Zeidel,
NEW CAP FACE—Lou Jankowski, rookie who suffered a fractured skull in the Indianapolis Caps' opening road game and didn't rejoin the team unti the Nov. 25 game in Providence, will play before local fans for the first time tonight in the Coliseum against Providence. Jankowski was a highscoring teammate of Alex DelVecchio with the amateur Oshawa Generals last season. DelVecchio now is with Detroit.
8.85 ZEIDEL, bothered by a bruised knee, has been ordered to keep his feet out of shoe-skates until Monday. If Zeidel were available, Heller planned to put Defenseman Pete Durham up front as a wing on the third line. 3 Durham, who isn't choosy whom he bashes against the sideboards, is more valuable as a wing than a defenseman. It is
|
‘Caps’ Scoring
{habits will be picked up by other
Charles relaxed on a rickety stool and said Maxim, “didn’t give me any trouble.” 2 Showing only a small bruise on
milling, he said Maxim was easier to defeat this time than in any of their four previous bouts. = » = “HE’S A smart fighter,” Charles reflected, “and he rolls with a punch good. But he didn’t give me any trouble.” Charles said the fact he weighed in at 190 pounds, heaviest for any fight, may have accounted for some of the slowgoing. His manager, Jake Mintz, said he thought the ring mat was overly thick. Mintz said Charles would meet Walcott for the championship in either February or March, the exact time and place to be de-
cided by the International Boxing
Club. . -
Fight Results By United Press
ARES Ah » y u 8, A TORON Mera
Cincinnati,
outpointe . Cleveland, P fae Ton Jam 1 MIA
(12) —nontitle bout. EACH, Fla.—Bobby Dy
delphia, (10).
Pro Basketball
Yo pt et DBR
Games Tonight
Milwaukee at Syracuse. (Only Game Bcheduled).
Results Last Night
Boston 89, Milwaukee 84. Minneapolis 99, Baltimore 79,
In the winner's dressing room, g
his lower lip for the 12 rounds of|
> 3 s. PIM| SOMAInal > + vvsvisenen % o As Pl PIN | wings, who are prone to bruises. Rebel 2 2 Bp 3-1 # = =» L._ Wilson “ 3 4.7 1 2 LOCAL fans will get their first Melomh = «23 3.3 7 3 look at Cap Rookie Lou Jan- & Wilson + 48 3 1] o/ kowski tonight. Cofitn reeves 36 9 4.8 28 The 20-year-old wing suffered Heller ".. : Is 2:3 ¢ 2a fractured skull in the Caps’ op|eide) © ‘26 o 5 5 99/ening road game and returned to [McKay ... .22 1 3 4 Sliaction Now. 25. He has been | Ges hci 2 1-1 4&8 '8 (Jankowski 1.10. ® 1 1 1 Hrightsiding the third line and whee GOALIE'S ‘AVERAGE working with Doug McKay -and Hall... on... 3b B38 NS BQBilly McComb with Frank | KEY—GP, games played: G. goals; A,|O’Grady and Bert Giesebrecht
assists; Pts. points; PIM. penalty in s : minutes; GA, goals against: 80, shut-/filling in as spares. out. ;
Heller is set with his first two lines; the Wilson brothers, Larry and John, working with Eddie Bruneteau on No. 2 group and
Olympian Scoring
i (18 Games) | G Fg Ft Pts Ave.
“ THURSDAY, DEC. 13, 1951
ht Win Over Reds
Zeidel Out of Lineup
- {hoped that some of his checking . }
18 84 T1 239 13.3 : | Waltner a 1 n 80 2 123 Enio Sclisizzi and Bert Hirschfeld Poshert .... 12% © 12 132 flanking Earl Reibel on the No. 1 15 50 29 129 86! line. O’Brien 17 52 30 134 19 Lofgran .. : 1 3 a 13 si ” ” - 1 A Bh 13 3 2 WHILE the Caps have won eracker 1100 21 § % 13|only four of their last 24 games,
. 511 410 1432 0.6.
Totals: .1..oii *No longer with team Team average per game. ......
Hinkle Shakes Up Bulldog Cagers
they have scored 11 goals in the last three road games while the opposition was getting 10. Previous to that, the Caps couldn't put the puck in an ocean. . The Caps are scheduled in Cincinnati Friday night. They will
| Tjve old hands have lost their] the invasion of Hershey Sunday
be idle Saturday night awaiting §
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y.—Johnny Williams, DY it. outnointed Phil {
). { ori OR NTO Alan McFater, 141, Toronto,| terday demotipn and promotion Qutpointed Harry Smith, 139, Rochester.|day for the Bulldogs. Down to SAN FRANCISCO—Ezzard. Charles, 190, 8. senior
MI ykes, 152, Miami, outpointed Joe Giardello, 16, Phila
3 Freshmen Jesse Eirmann and 632| Jack Frayman.
Western Division w L Pct Rochester .....c.cssveice 12 1 83 Minneapolis “is 12 7 INDIANAPOLIS 11 7 61 Ft. Wayne ..... 8 13 318 Milwaukee: ...... elec one 5 15
250| der to provide the Bulldogs with
| varsity basketball jobs at Butler. night. Hershey is the Eastern Di- | And five new hands have profited! vision leader that holds four straight triumphs, including ‘two shutouts, over Indianapolis.
» = - IN LEAGUE action last night, the Cleveland Barons scored their the reserves went John Hall, : letterman, Senior Dick first triumph in six games with Cranny, Juniors Tom Huff and Pittsburgh, 4 to ‘3, on a winning Charles Johnson and ‘Sophomore 802! tipped in by Rookie Ike Hil-. Don Holloway. Replacing the de- debrand at Cleveland. Baron Demoted varsity men were Sopho- fenseman Phil Samis scored two mores Norm Ellenberger, Bob mar Fack’s ‘ti? R d Jack Brannon and ee ged on goals carried Buffalo to a 6-to-3 victory over Cincinnati at Buffalo and the Syracuse Warriors surprised Hershey, 3 to 2, for their
more scoring punch and hustle, |fifth victory. “=~
Coach Tony Hinkle made yes-
The changes were made in or-
706 They lost their first two starts, Caps’ Record %%1/both defeats came at the hands 421| of Big Ten teams. The week-end Providence ;
Won Lost Tied Pts.
brings Butler more Western Con- Brimaio
ference opposition. Ohio State[Gievsiand ".. will be met in Columbus Saturday Cincinnati night and Michigan in Ann Arbor [syracuse
Monday. ; Totals
al HOQOOOHM Le? - 31 Mw wl pooorwcs =i | coos
fg ft pf] 1g 1t pt| tional AAU basketball chamtral moved into basketball's win- McKinney.t : 171 scott 4 3 4| pions : : v e » * ning circle last night. Plummer.t 01 3 Almonds 9 © 2 It's a good list, even withy : a. > X - Howey er, the Spartans hag tne Edwards. to 11 YBaime™ 93 4 out Kazmaler and Maxwell, but n, { " lougher .chote: Sacre | Goiinee 1 1 1 Moaime ~ o o of the rooting in this corner is squeezed out a 54-50 victory over Shipley.¢ : 8 9 Goldman.g ! 9 1 for “Little Mo.” £ v arthen the Manual Redskins in the final Larrisong 3.0 3 po re. 0 0 4 minutes at Cathedral gym. De-| Massingale.s 113
catur’s quintet was never in se-|
rious danger and Soasted 0 a) Phin oeart 3 guariers— 3 9 = - acatur ral ... — 57-26 victory over Mooresville at| Decatur Cen Tour R
the Hawk’s home gym. | “Pree Throws Missed—McKinney, Plumo mer, Edwards 3, Allison, Larrison, Scott 2.
3.8 |g : , Whitaker 3, Warthen 32. HARLAN PETTY of Sacred|iooigy Sdn 3 Whitaker 3. Warthen
Heart was accurate with two Officials—Williams and Schwomeyer, field goals in the final 60 seconds|
Petty scored 21 points. He also scored nine from the free throw! » stripe and missed nine shots. The scoring honors were cap- oJ, . p r in
tured by Dick Nyers of Manual{
who poured in 27 points. Nyers, . ? nearly became the all-around] I at Jeff hero when his 10th field goal
gave Manual a 50 to 48 edge with little more than a minute, Crispus Attucks’ Tigers will to go. {probably get their first real test| Bob Prestel of Sacred Heart of the current net season when tied it up at 50-all and then Petty they tangle with South Bend Cenbroke the Redskins’ back with his|tral in the fir§t game of the Holiquick shots, |day Tourney at Lafayette Jefferan # ison High School Dec. 28. MANUAL, which suffered its| The Tigers face Central at third defeat in five games, trailed|{7:15 p. m. and Coach Marion the Spartans, 17-11, at the quarter|Crawley’s Jeff Broncos meet but moved ahead, 25-23, at the|tough East Chicago Washington halftime. The Spartans surged|at 8:30 p. m. The winners clash back to lead, 39-37, at the third|at 8:30 p. m. on the following period rest. night with the losers meeting in Harold Holderfield and Billla preliminary consolation game. Shipley each scored 12 points as| Crawley, who hand-picks the Decatur Central scoped its fifth{tourney among’ the state’s most victory in six games. promising quintets for his ChristThe Hawks jumped to a 17-8/ma$ basketball treat, said the aflead at the end of the first period fair is a sell-out.’ and extended the margin to 31-12] A coaching school will be conat the halftime. Decatur led, | ducted during the second annual 48-16, at the third period. laffair., It is’ scheduled from 9 Pete Scott was the standout for/a. m. to 4:15 p. m. Friday. Mooresville with 11 points. Participating will be: Dr. L. J.
to say
Sacred Heart (54) Manual (50) Holladay, Jeff team physician; ularity. Your only premium ent MEURH wf John Longfellow, Indiana State Leppert 0 $ femme § 8 i| mentor; Bob Primmer, Central pale beer at popular price. titel. 3 kent 0 0 1|coach; Ray Crowe, Attuck’s head Toda “151 nettes 3 i 1h kharte 8 1 #iman; John Baratto, Washington y, say Atkins § 8 Ayers. 10 1 3|coach, and Crawley. o eng Eo ie 35h) ’ | h, 661 : on. BE Ce 50 57 First Since 1943 HYDE PARK BREWERIES ASSOCIATION —S8core by Quarters | ANNAPOLIS—Navy's ‘football ST. LOUIS, MO. Sacred Heart ..... 17 6 18 1338 upset of Army in 1950 was the *
Free Throws Missed: Sacred Heart—| ° i T! el 5, Petty 9, Lynette, - Manual-—Nyers first in the service series since , Green, Shaner, 5. 1943 Offidials—Luzar snd Stiner,
|Gl Series $4000 Gate | FRANKFURT — The 1951 GI's} PASADENA-First Rose Bowl | world series in Germany found 16|game in 1902 drew a gate of only former minor. league players on|$4000 as Michigan defeated Stan-| the two competing teams. . |ford by a 49-0 score.
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omorrow.
Twenty-one ‘reatest am trive for pe; «8 their blad -vact a Unit eam at the nd 22. The two-d: acted under ‘nited States - ciation in - Jinter Club
x _. HARRY R 1e 1952 Oly he city Mon _ “onfer with ‘omplete arr wrrival of th The 1952 w “eld in Oslo, 14 through F “ ‘inals will be ‘um, an ou sats 30,000 “We select use of its adix said, xcellent fac ‘sum, The arena he country a ger of the -operated 100 Harry pr Olympic tryo previous elin roster of cos the “Who's V ing” and eve empt as defe
~-orilliant.. Dic
wood, N,’J., special exhib t THE - STA referees, whi hail from & country, wil skaters and |
* fill Olympic
also be two dance pairs to the wor scheduled shc pics in Paris. Skating er an opportuni country’s al Button arriv Now a senior sity, the 22-y ice has virt sweep of all Button wo! championshiy Canadian . er ‘European chs pic champior world champ “a row. Dick in January Garmisch-Pa the site of th "All skater
= tryouts here
‘novice, junio ships during + The skaters, are in their t passed a rigc prior to a tr Heading tI single skater 20-year-old s Skating Club Grogan has Button for f the latest co in the world 4 ANOTHEF ‘Hayes Jenki who is currel western. Jen North Amer competition world event " was third in the French Earlier this in the world kins is 18 yi An equall stars shine sion. Sonysz Island, N. Y North Amer ley Albright a world mee Detroit, wa world team kie of St. - novice cham Dorsey of XN is the Ameri Tickets fo sale now at
Glob Fives
THE Harl touring agai The fame squad, alon professional double-heade Coliseum, D . The openi ‘ Boston Whi ~ledo Mercur
“Iwo Gail USTA Re
COLUMB! -—Re ati with U Association high today. Renusth trar, "have er ure "the end of Breeze O
Leo C, McN ~ Gaits Farr the filly w + mark of 43
