Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 January 1952 — Page 23

10, 1951, Jre rines ke

yers

‘ronin of the question tha ed Williams’ s career?” 1d require “a

ams to come ‘Ted’ might do

visualize Ted service and reat the age of “The odds are gainst him.” continued, classic Irish iama. sets his ymething, he'll

» Ted's sudden ne rich Boston 0 warning, to 11 and said he Manager Lou possible trade next week. sadly, “it is at you cannot + Williams.” /illiams’ greating Ted's temoke slowly and . the slugger's IT player. tJ not talk much vhen he called after hearing said. “He just pring training 8s he could for rly +season.” n't have much x. He is schedquantum naval hysical examiand, if found report to the ‘aval Reserve

on what Ted J) Cronin said, en well condi« blessed with muscles. You er that he has her determined

” 88," Cronin Id be the third

that the “twa he great slug1en World War career and in when he sufft elbow when miskey Park's

* much about a hard-luck id. “But those ough blows.” =

rn to his coun- > a severe blow cetbook. As a Fed will earn r compared to | Sox paid him. 1952 contract and that he a day or two t as well tear

1 from 1943 | instructor for fighter pilots andout record. at Pensacola, of World War

1afe Votes

of Year ., Jan. 10 (UP) 2 unanimously lution declaring lege’'s unbeaten No. 1 team in ‘oach Clarence the “coach of

nn noted that coaches had as the nation’s the Volunteers faryland in the Michigan State No. 2 by the

JON!

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FANS

| Taylor And

“we

THURSDAY, JAN. 10, 1951 _:

«

thn i z THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES d Warner Set - For Coaching Honors

By JOE WILLIAMS

| |

| |

Scripps-Howard Sports Writer ah | N

: i : : ! ig were as tired as Milton —————————— a 08.5 ., CINCINNATI, Jan. 10—Practically the entire history vf “ Berle's jokes today. But College The Olymps won't get much of college football, from the turtle necks to the crew cuts, 1 rest: ‘They: had to g chance. to. Test When they ges i i ] z jthey coptdrt v y STATE . | off the train at Indianapolis. will be personalized at the Scripps-Howard Coach of the catch a train. " the Kentucky Wesleyan 84, Oakland City 63. | They're going to play the BosYear gala in the plush Netherland-Plaza hall of mirrors | Fatigue caught up wit . OTHERS ton Celtics in.Naptown’'s Butler toni y : . Cinderella kids here last hight Arkansas State 67, Hendrix 40. Fieldhouse tomorrow night. Bosonight. = . Wa : {when they dropped a 91-74 de- Army 38, Fuerta, Rico 63. 4 ab { ton is leading the Eastern Divi- : : $ . : { A a ake oston’ Co 3, d s : ~ There will be a gap of 50 years in the'ages of Stanford's ty Lm Ise le Mea pa Lake th Bowling Green bi. Toledo 53 (overtime). | sion. ; 0 > La » a8 secon or ¢ n 7 ‘ y 70, \ 61 | TH a OF Chuck Taylor, the 1951 coach of the year and the stalwart 3 the two clubs in two nights, The Cotimbia, 58, Harvard Lie Wms h be hy bt : . . » : A i 5. Alderson- . stf, 7 Mikkelsen ey 3 octogenarian, Pop Warner, who is being honored for his $ Olymps had polished off he Daxian 161; Ohio University 7. | Jones. fe 3.3 3Pellarat” 12 3-2 i i | i 4 Ars, 2-75, ianapolis Defiance 94, Cedarville 65. 3r n > Mikan.c iY past contributions to the sport, first of the old-timers to be Lakers. 83-75, 4n India apo Denison £3, Marleita_@0." |Toheffg" 1 1 Jifarrioong 3 1 4 i i i Sn 16 eae nie.” fLofgrant 4 9 4 Schultz! 22 so saluted in this new and special award category. But fatigue ‘wasn't the wholé Jieh Point a Guilford a8 = Holfindf. 8 1 J Huong 0 1 Glen Scobey Warner as coach of the picturesque Car- \stary. The Olymps were able to Holy Cross td Kr Towson 64. voas. BRT Tota IR “ . . . : . seve - IK 8 70, Akron 5: otals 2 2 ot i ) lisle Indians and inventor of streamlined power football— DR only § Sve, men Meh 12 Rings Foin ‘oh, Mofstra 38 NDIANAESCOrInE by Quarters i 3 : eS 8S. t - rksville (Mo.) . Parsons 47, } by 8 . 20 33 ‘the single and double wing—was a legend before Charles , form were Paul Walther, Cliff Jair, Co Mhieniets, May Free Throws Missed Grasonscl. To: iol : - | Avav kd Xi 2 n 32, Holland 2 Mikkelsen 2 A. Taylor, who upset the dope by winning.the Pacific Coast ;{Barker and Bob lavoy. The lesistille Ji, Xavier (Ohio) 61 Bio an 3. Holland 2. Mikkelsen f rence ham : hi 1 t b £ seven survivors stayed close to Miami 106, JElorida Southern ue Confe championship last season, was even born. ' [the Lakers until-the last quarter. Missisipot 73, Mississippi State 62. Pro Basketball The two of them came in here together from California } - [They were down only 71-62 at the Ohia, Weslesan 85, CAPI So. NATIONAL ‘BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION for the dinner. They made an engaging picture in the hotel : fend of tires periods. algo cg hy Eaetun Diviion oir : : : . 4 { " ns a oc . 1 A ny 68 " 4 13 Aaa lobby, Pop with his snow white hair and labored walk, due : THE LAKERS. too. were short- Rutgers ha Lech 30 ew or BONER ee 20 12 gas es ; Ra Haw. Spring (Ala) 82, Loyola ( RA ITE nil B00 4 to athritis; Taylor a red head, hatless, his strong young handed with eight players How, EL us Wn Elsetstown Philadelphia inn 13 18 4 8 face wreathed in smiles, looking much more like a college Om ert, Mion, (4. V3 0 | western Division FC player than a coach who hal already. made the Rose Bowl. 56 points between them. Mikan Weslevan a: fui ie” West Viselita ii imier sens Be 18 00 { n oa Ss “ y 4 ‘ a vi Y > . * 4 14 Q “A remarkable old gentleman,” {had 29 and Pollard 27. Westesan 34. red {NUIANAPOLIS ..... 17 14 M8 ia Taylor beams in an aside. > a The loss dropped the Olymps Wisittn Cant 0 eden. Sydney 60, Milwaukee ww % 3B Hb “A fine young boy,” nods Pop, {313 games behind the Lakers in| Wittenberg 77, Heidelberg 63. ® RESULTS LAST NIGHT

“But I'd have more respect for

¢ -

Find No Relief in Minneapolis

1 MINNEAPOLIS, Jan, 10—- Western Division, {The ‘Indianapolis: Olymps

the battle for second place in the! Fas, 24. 2 or steubenville 46.

ii ; a we Egg

PAGE 23

or

ired as Berle’s Jokes,

Times Special [National Basketball Association's |17-point delivery. He had scored 14 points over the Lakers TuesDon Lofgran continued. to be the day. Center Joe Graboski was held Olymp “Surprise package with a to 10 points. et

| Minneapolis 91, INDIANAPOLIS 74. (Only game scheduled.)

Yale 64, Brown 5

him if he played the single wing.” ” o ”

POP’'S PREFERENCE for this type of“football is obviously sincere not because it sprang from his drawing board, but because he believes it represents football at its best. I suspect, however, that his professed open scorn for any other type of play is a mischiev- - ous pose, for he is not a professional old timer and he’s as mentally alert as he was when we last had him around the east as coach at Temple University.

Genuineness and character are written all over young Taylor. If is easy to understand how he was able to get a group of youngsters to put out for him, to play so far over their heads as to confound and confuse the critics who had

be (CAS

Px, ¢

OY

A ) oS uy assigned -them to a position in 4 (YJ : the second division. His youth R & o NSLS i OL UH L400) OO) > 2 (31) was a help rather than a ( [0] (4A A V3 4 gs NT ~~ ] handicap. He was able to attune al , QO =) [{ « rd “4 d himself to the spirit and emotion ~% IS ye . 0) = ZN —7/ of his squad. It paid dividends. - F&I P= < ’ 2" vo}

He had a champion his very first year as varsity coach.

A o PP AM as | : Pop will be 81 next April. «Sh id D V G by p S ° had many great teams at Cornell| ; tr os t t and Stanford and before that at or I ge, e oe ra rep PO ! Georgia, but he'll always be re-| membered as the man who

coached the Carlisle Indians—and Jim Thorpe. This must be one

f |

Shortridge’s resurging Blue its winning triumph over Law-|ridge got well quickly in its pro-laway from a 23-all stalemate as] evils and Park School's Johnny rence Central’s Bears: lific third quarter with able re- De Voe hit 22 points in the Second) De Voe held the local basketball = Personal fouls early in the serve strength. . half, 3 { Westville hed 1 limelight today. |keyed-up North Siders’ tilt with Bop Bruce hit four field goals en Zody of Nashville ha of 1s Soot: Jaseinaung cuepiers| Shortridge grabbed it because the rival Rockets almost costianq Mark Peterman got two Loints, tollowey by Bmmate Ren " _/of its flashy 63 to 41 victary over Shortridge its sixth victory in hortri oland Ww . e victory People never seem to tire talk y more in Yelief roles as ShoririiZe; marked the third lime this season

wh ple at Tech. De Voe stepped into ae nga, Oddly, because he shined with a 36them. Pop's about the only one P0int Production as unbeaten left who could and give it au- Park downed previously-unbeaten thenticity. Nashville, 65 to 44, at Nashville. “I'm too lazy,” he tells you. In a third game, Howe continued

Meantime he spends much of! his time blue pencilling distorted

| the story of the now defunct In-| dian school. Like the time he was| ° . supposed to have knocked Thorpe | 00 P Itc i stiff when the Indian broke train os ing. “Never happened, true Jim had | been drinking. I didn’t want him |

By Unit

good talking to, appealed to his pride and he went to his room.

menace Wage Board to Throw

a 15-to-8 first quarter lead with ‘Tom Hollett and the foul-laden Ralph Duncan paving the way. | | Ripple narrowed the gap to 24-[to-21 at the halftime in the roughly played tilt, but Short-

|

to Musial

ed Press

ing about the exploits of the Red. Stubborn but luckless Broad Rip- nine games. Shortridge got itself nit 50 per cent of its shots in the

21-point third quarter outburst in which Shortridge hit 13 straight points. That warded off the challenging Rockets, who trailed 45-to-26 going into the last quarter. n 2 =u

SHORTRIDGE hit approximately 40 per cent of its shots all game, Ripple managing just above the 20 per cent mark. Bruce

{racked up 17 points for his mates 10 to lead the losers, who bowed

while Gene Neudigate grabbed 11 for Ripple. Peterman of Shortridge had five field goals. ~

De Voe's total came on 16 field

WASHINGTON, Jan. 10—The Salary: Stabilization goals and four charity tosses, runto be seen in public. I gave him a Board, caught in a squeeze play By Stan Musial, today be- ning his six-game total to 166 in| : gan revising its baseball salary policy to lift the year-long

six games. The Park five broke Shortridge (63) Broad Ripple (41)

Coach Seward Wilshire's five had stopped previously unbeaten] teams. Clifford and Jackson| | Township of Boone County had)| each won three before meeting] Park. Howe grabbed victory No. 8 in 10 games leading at the stops, 14 to 6, 32 to 12, and 44 to 23, paced | by Bob Schrier, Don Thomas and| Bob Walton. Rice Morris made| for the fifth time in eight games. | The victory, however, was costly /for Howe. Dave Weir injured an ankle in the first quarter and re-| mained sidelined all the game.

| Ig ft pf ig. ft pf} : 2 8 8 Board Oe Vie have hed | Jone. 1 : i 3 Newbold. 3 8 : . POP EXPLODED another|UP 2PDrova, of the boost since it'fore Feb, 1 ~~ the deadline for(Duscas.c. 2 § 3Spicerc 8 #' myth. The one about sewing the "aS 8ranted last January, moved clubs to mail out 1952 contracts. Barnes.s 1 1 4 Neudigate.s 4 3 3 - replica of a football on the shirts 0 TéWrite salary regulations for Musial said he wants to get his Edder/hnt 0 0 0 Cooley. g 113 of the Indians for the Harvard the major leagues after a visitold contract clarified before he Peterman.c 5 0 3 Imes, ¢ 3 01 By United Press yesterday from the St. Louis receives the new one Bruce ie ’t 8 dom g gos r game. Carding? star . Stailwood, g '1 0 8 Hinchman, 1 $39 ST. LOUIS, Mo., Jan. 10—Vet*“Never happened. We had I'he Lorre ot d { t | The board had refused to per- fonnson.c 0 1 7 Appel eran heavyweight Cesar Brion of played around with the nonsense e planned meetings to- mit the 1951. increase—given by Shoemker.g 0 3 0 | Argentina moved up a notch or|

v

Brion Advances

Very peacefully, I wish to add.” ban on the slugger’s $35,000 pay increase.

day and tomorrow on a new the Cardinals after Musial won| rotals [policy which was certain to re-the National Leagué batting title! move the freeze on Musial's 1951 in 1950—Dbecause it would pierce increase — reported .to hike his the present ceiling on ballplayers’

in a minor game and Percy Haughton (Harvard coach) heard we were going to pull the stunt against him. “If you do we won't

241522, Totals 151118, two in the challengers ranks to- “ Halftime Score—Shortridge 24, Broad day after hammering out a unanis 1 e 3 Pr Missed— Shortridge 11, MOUS 10-round decision over pre-

Free Throws Broad Ripple 18 {viously unbeaten. Wesbury Bas-

play you,” he wrote me. “So if PaY from $30,000 © $85,000. salaries. Howe. (51) Lawrence (31) com of East St. Louis, III. I ever had any idea of trying to! MUSIAL GOT a promise from 5 # ol . 5 rt rl er.t 557 Bascom's supporters believed deceive the Harvard boys I quick- poard officials Ay Eons action aE. BASEBALL segulation, Seber, 1 3 0 i Sebaniei.{ : i 0a change of Eo led to the ly abandoned it. Harvard was a would be taken on his case be- os 4 & INOSH entirely re. en? 5 o Joa 0 o 0 downfall of the hard-punching s writt t lub big money game for us.” ; riiién, prevents a club from Thomas.c 5 3 2Brunton.e 1 1 3/Negro who sustained his first derere ° (boosting a player's salary above Jiaries.c 0 1 OQ'Reibel ¢ 3? Yiteat in 54 professional fights Capital District ‘8 SIMPSON Is [he top athlete's pay on the clun Kh 7“ 3 § Eminee 8 1 {FA 4 Professional fights ; ince Musial was the Cards’ pee 0 0 0 Perrin, g 0 1 0]y had employed a hit-and-run atT T C o d ° highest paid player, the ruling Walton.g 0 3 3 Conrad. g 08.0. ; eam lourney Larde T R froze his salary at $50,000 | Total 3914 Total 91311 tack, eireling away from Nis op Franklin “Township will be de- wp eimnsman Musial said he had not talked . .. Score By Quarters °° .. ponents and firing punches. But

fending champion in the annual Capital District reserve. team bas-| ketball tournament at Beech Grove Saturday.. Off Friday Franklin Township

| Howe : ..... 14 18 12 7-51 he didn’t box Brion although the GOSHEN, N, Y,, Jan. 10' (UP) 3bout a 1952 increase with Cardi Lawrence, - 8 8 Il 8&3 prcentinjan outweighed him by

: FP —John F. Simpson of Chester, iy Owner Fred Saigh. However, i rnomas 4 Thompson, Walton. Lawrence: some 16 pounds. 8. C, was the leading money-win- € Wrapped up his fifth National Chandler, Lambert 3 Bascom’'s style was just what

'ning driver on the Grand Circuit League batting title last season ieinismnialinn and Hurve

; ; > Park (65) Nashville (44) |Brion apparently wanted. ‘When : for 1951 with earnings of $246,- 3nd was the major league's top | ' will play the Deaf School at the .. 0 / §8 OF $296) titer With o 355 average. Musial Downing © 3 '3 Mvolsndt '§ 'g 7} the fight ended, Bascom's face ioles’ for the right to 859.44 in harness racing’s “major i Young 0 0 0 Copelt 1 0 3 was puffy and his left eye comDrioles re ve at Be Hg or lleague,” it was announced today. | May bring up the points when McCraef 5 1 3K Volandt & 3 3 rl ty y meet Beec rove a e | Simpson, the general ma er he talks about contract terms JDeVoee 16 4 2 Bondc 2 4 5 pletely sed. Saturday in the second game of 5 PEON. U Be o Faroe (with Saigh, | Wairoa. 0 4 3 Moore¥ | 5 Before the fight Brion was the toumney at 2:30 p. m. [Petter coor dre Tae] = |Motknere 0 0 IRopestss § § 8 ranked seventh “among heavyBeech ~“ . 2 1 fia00y, . In the nel game BY ee 78-year history of the Grand Cir- Davis Cup Captain Tolats IEEE Tota 7s 12 1; Weight contenders. in the latest Goeve ay, ke A Ship cuit to earn more than $200,000 in| pm ; —Scoring by Quarters— Ring Magazine standings. Bason game will precede the Purses during a single season. ue Defends Team Choice [Rie nnd 0B -iicom was ratehaih by the maga

beat out Del Miller of Meadow-| NEW YORK, Jan. 10 (UP)—| Free Throws Missed—McCrae 3. J. De- Zine Jmong the light NeavyweiEnt lands, Pa., by more than $76,000 Ted Schroeder was picked over edit Devoe 3. Walrod, M. Voland 4 (contenders for the crown of Joe {but did not surpass the record of Dick Savitt in the Davis Cup|..Oficlals—Driver and Furr. Maxim. {$259,933.13 won last year by matches against Australia “be- | Miller. {cause he was playing the best Miller took the runner-up spotitennis on the spot.” : with earnings of $170,591.31. B. J,| That was the explanation given Schue, the Hayes Fair Acre Stable by U. 8. Team Captain’ Frank reinsman who lives in Grand Shields following his return from Forks, N. D., jumped from ninth! Australia, where his squad was|

final championship game. Bob Crouch and Herb Schwomeyer will officiate." . ,

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