Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 February 1952 — Page 11
17, 1952
SROUP
Us HES
$1.00 CEKLY
——ARNYAR
[EEKLY
’L-3431
HONO im"w
ime eopporr+ you SAVE niral sombiamous Rew it produces Xtra bright, new UWP phone plays y ...up to Jo
EY LAST! SAVE $100!
NEW re Detail!
's clearest, «oo lip te th Admiral's ay - picture include jineered to where, aay « + easy to with built-in nna. Beautithis brilliant your most re.
“
- Amherst 64, Wesleyan. 54. : : Th ; ; : y " Chicago, Pittsburgh, and At- e second quarter was a Bowling Green 89, Kent State 19. lantic City, N. J. also pos- tragic reversal for St. Joseph. The Brandeis 67, Illinois Wesleyan 65. Gh oneiae Pumas were held to a field goal
Minot
+
. . . Hew
‘The Indianapolis
Sports
° : § rarer ern : | as SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1952 : :
Section Two
PAGE 11 ;
IU, Wildcats Set Big 10 Scoring Record
Walcott-Charles Fight Butler Sears St. Joe, 89-48,
Hoésiers Triumph,
96-85, as Schlundt
OK'd for June; IBC For All-Time Point High - Sets New Mark
To Determine Site By FRANK ANDERSON
By JACK CUDDY SIRENS SOUNDED in the
United Press Sports Writer x i NEW YORK, Feb. 16—Jersey-Joe Walcott at long last Fieldhouse last night when agreed today to defend his world’s heavyweight champion- Butler's basketball firewagon ship against Ezzard Charles in June. ran down St. Joseph, 89-48. The agreement climaxed a ng ‘series ol discussions *-W2¥ the highest score In Bullores : ater [with the International Boxing
Club in which Walcott sought ‘to pass up Charles, the man from
dog history. The siren, a student gimmick, had lots to spund off about, Thirwhom he won thé world’s most teen of the 15 players used by valuable ring crown, last July 18 Coach Tony Hinkle scored. And and instead fight young Rocky Butler tightened its hold on first Marciano, the Brockton, Mass. Place in the Indiana Collegiate slugger who has become 'a great Conference. gate attraction. The victory was Butler's sixth And the agreement came just in seven ICC starts and boosted two days before the Feb. 18 dead- it'1': games ahead of the shellline given. Walcott by the New shocked Pumas from St. Joseph. York State Athletic Commission Coach Dick Scharf’s crew is secchairman. If Walcott had failed ond in the loop with a 4-2 record. to agree by Monday, Commission For the overall season ,the BullChairman Robert K. Christen- dogs have a 9-11 mark, The berry had threatened to declare Pumas have won 10 of 16. Kentucky Wesleyan 95, Oakland the title vacant. a. .u 9 City 83. &. 8 # ST. JOSEPH'S had only 10 Lake Forest 75, DePauw 70. WALCOTT covered himself minutes of joy. The Pumas were Taylor 89, Manchester 83. against such action by telegraph- ahead at the end of the first - OTHER BIG TEN ing word of the agreement to quarter, 20-16. They were apparIllinois 80, Ohio State 53. Christenberry’s office ently zéroed in on the range for Michigan State 57, Wisconsin 53. In the wire, the 38-year-old the evening, making 10 of 19 Minnesota 32, Michigan 44. Camden, N. J, champion ex- Shots from the field. But Butler OTHERS plained that the exact date and was just getting warmed up. Albright 60, Wagner 58. frpite of the bout would be de- Pums Chet Pilat was the only Adelphi 58, Queens (N. Y.) 19. termined by President Jim Nor- man = stand in the Bulldogs American International 63, New ris of the IBC. Norris has said Way. But after his six baskets in
AR 1 that Philadelphia is the “most the first period, Pilat, too, was Britain State 54. likely” spot, with New York, swept under by the Butler tide. .
BEINN EARNER RAR RRR RR,
Baskethall Results
STATE Butler 89, St. Joseph's 48. Franklin 66, Earlham 60. Hanover 66, Anderson 63. Indiana 96, Northwestern 85. Indiana Central 75, Wabash 57. Indiana State 72, Ball State 51. Towa 90, Purdue 67.
BOCA NETINENIN IAIN RNa. SEENRTRANNNRESRIRERRIY
Bridgeport 74, Brooklyn Poly 70. Walcott's victory over Charles, and a free throw for the 10 minBuffalo 91. Bucknell 75. the clever boxer from Cincinnati utes as the Bulldog defense glued Carnegie Tech 72, Washington & at Pittsburgh last July ranked as in. Meanwhile, Butler wa€ throwJefferson 56. 5 one of the greatest upsets in a ing .in 25 points in race-horse Carroll 79, Montana Mines 68. year or ring surprises. It was the Style. Eight points by Jim Crosley
Centenary 57, Louisiana College fifth time he had challenged for 2nd seven by Keith Greve applied 33. the crown, having been turned the spur to the attack.
Charleston 78, Jacksonville 46. pack twice hy Joe Louis and # =x » Chicago Teachers 76, Illinois twice by Charles. BULLDOG BALANCE and free SIVY Pier 3 arn oNioun 2.4» substituting by Hinkle kept the ind 3, ! ga TONIGHT's agreement pre- Pumas off balance during the third period. At the quarter's end
sents mustachioed Charles with an opportunity to write a new page in boxing history. Should he conquer Walcott * this time, he would be the first heavyweight champion to lose the title and then regain it. The series of discussions lead-
CCNY 64, Brooklyn 46. Clemson 77, North Carolina 69. Coe 80, Chicago 49. Colby 67, Northeastern 50. Colgate 71, ‘Syracuse 58. Columbia 83, Harvard 57, Connecticut 66, Maine 53. Cooper Union 82, Pratt 68.
Butler led, 60-37. Only Pilat was doing much about it for the Pumas. “ The Bulldog lead rose faster than the price of steak in the fourth quarter. Subs, happy to be off the bench, took it out on the visitors from Rensselaer, scoring
By United Press
EVANSTON, Ill, Feb. 16—Indiana, fed by Guard Sam Esposito’s 25-point splurge, beat Northwestern, 96 to 85, The record was for most points scored by two teams ‘ in one game, The previous mark Hlinois Stays of 176 points, set last year when } oN 79, ‘was topped by five points. Neck n Neck Northwestern took the lead with two minutes and 30 seconds took over 45 seconds later and remained ahead the rest of the way, By United Press e' » ” CHAMPAIGN, Ill, Feb. ‘16 NORTHWESTERN threatened Clive Follmer, a veteran forward, in the third quarter as a free defending champion. Illinois scere 65 to 64, but Esposito, at swamped Ohio State, 80 to 53, to 5-foot-D the shortest man on the remain: tied with Towa for “first court, came In with a layup and
tonight and set a new Big Ten scoring record. Northwestern beat Purdue, 97 to With ! gone in the game, but Indiana dropped in 20 points tonight as throw by John Biever made the place .in the Big Ten basketball put Indiana ahead 67-64. North-
race, western never. came close after Illinois was ahead, 35 to 28, at that. the halftime and held a 52 to 37, Three . Northwestern starters
{edge after 30 minutes of play. In fouléd out in the third quarter, the fourth quarter it turned intoiand a fourth in the final quarter. a runaway, as Illinois racked up Indiana lost but two men on 28 points, most of them on fast! fouls. breaks and drive-ins which the|- Another scoring record was set {tiring Buckeye defense couldn't by Don Schlundt, Indiana's fresh
stop. man center, who . broke the | . 8 & Hoosier scoring record of 302 BOTH teams were shaky points set by John Wallace in throughout and roughness re- 1945 Schlundt made 11 frea
{sulted with 19 fouls called on throws and five field goals for a Illinois and 25 on Ohio State. season's total of 314. 1 Ohio State held the champions Northwestern (83) Indiana (96)
= : =e a
fairly even in the. first quarter tg ft pfl - 1s and it was 12 to 12 until Follmer{Peliefield,t £8 ¢ 3 Leonardt 238.4 made a jump-shot from the side Grant.f i 1 4X naak.! 141 with nearly eight minutes passed Petranceke 8 2 5 Schlundte 5 i io "oi nos head, hen EC 1 4 {Be [1 | e ‘ Lo A caught up. | Mottram g 1 i dE. He 3 | a. n= | Totals 20 27 34 Totals 29 3891 PAUL EBERT, Ohio State's] SCORE BY QUARTERS Y sophomore scoring star, was |Nehwestern ooo 3) 33 3 ROR
held to 11 points by Kerr and| pies Throws Missed—Dellefield 5, Grant Bob Peterson. 5. Biever 2, Petrancek, Blaha, Motiram,
, Schlundt. Kraak, Esposito. It was Illinois’ eighth confer- : -—
ence win against one defeat and = : the 15th victory in 17 == Taylor Grabs
| (this season.
Tilinels (R0) Ohio State (33) ; “ | Is ft pf! fg ft of; Bemoras,! 3! Armstrong. 2 8 i e C F i Hains, : hi
Cortland State 59, Lenioyne 57. Creighton 33, Iowa State 25. Dakota Wesleyan 82, Black Hills Teachers 68. Dayton 97, Baldwin Wallace 64. Denver 61, New Mexico 44. Detroit 72, Marquette . 66. Detroit Tech 85, Defiance 64. Drake 74, Witchita 48. Dubuque 51, Platteville 47. Eastern Kentucky 77, Marshal} 68. Florida 80, Georgia Tech 72. Florida A.M. 98, Tuskegee 45. Florida State 79, Tampa 60. Fordham 84, Muhlenberg 67. © Furman 77, Presbyterian 76. Georgetown U. 69, Richmond 54. Grinnell 49, Knox 47. Hamline 73, Macalester 59. Holy Cross 80, Boston College 74. Illinois State Normal 72, Southern Illinois 57. Towa State 59, Creighton 58 (ov-’ ertime). John Carroll 57, Fenn 53. Johns Hopkins 64, Randolph-Ma-con 46. Kansas 90, Nebraska 52. Kansas State 86, Missouri 58. Kentucky 95, Tennessee 40. La Salle 68, St. Joseph's (Pa.) 50. Lawrance 75, Ripon 65. | Lincoln U. 77, Fisk 62. { Loras 54, Westmar 49. . Loyola (La.) 85, Pensacola Navy 40. » Loyola (Md.) 72, (Md.) 57. : Lycoming 74, Rio Grande 54. Lynchburg 82, Towson State 39. Manhattan 77,- Temple 60. Milwaukee Teachers 77, Stout 63. Teachers 69, Ellendale Normal 61. | Mississippt 74, Tulane 70. ! Montana 57, Colorado ALM 46. N.Y. State Tech 84, Union JC 42 North Carolina State 71, George Washington 58. North Dakota 68, South Dakota 64. Penn 70, Navy 65. Penn State 85, Army 73. | Princeton 68, Cornell 54. Rochester 60, Hamilton 46. St. Anselm’s 75, St. Michael's 64. St. Bonaventure 58, Toledo 41. | St. Francis (N. Y.) 91, St. Peter’s| (N. J.) 64. t | St. Lawrence 79, Hofstra 60. St. Louis 78, Tulsa 55. Scranton 60, Niagara 49. Seton Hall 96, Kings (Pa.) 44. ¢ Shaw 64, Lincoln 59. South Dakota State 62, Northern 53. Southwestern Louisiana 64, South-| eastern Louisiana 50. Springfield (Mass.) 67, Springfield (Mo.) 87, Cage Girardeau State 60. Spring Hill 71, Louisiana Tech 62. Swarthmore 70, Haverford 52. - Tennessee State 92, Milligan 59. Texas A&M 61, Southern Meth- | odist 47. . { Texas Christian 54, Texas 47. { Texas Wesleyan 53, St. Edwards 48. . { Thiel 77, Fredonia State 58. Trinity (Conn.) 73, Upsala 64. Union .(N, Y.).68, RPI 81. Vanderbilt 73, Georgia 51. Vermont 77, USCG Academy 57. Villanova 86, Louisville 84. WwW ington (Seattle) 75, Idaho
Inst.
Washington
Augustana
Harry Matthews of
ing to tonight's agreement began
last month when Walcott received from Harry Hunt of Los Angeles an offer of a guarantee of $250,000 to risk his title against Seattle, |Wash.,, in a West Coast bout. However, Norris claimed Wal{cott;s, manager, Felix Boechicchio had no choice in the matter because his return agreement with
Charles was “iron-clad” and the i
Charles people refused to step aside,
Westfield Hurt
Park, Steve DeVoe
Park School Guard Steve DeVoe suffered a broken nose last night in his team's, 57-44, loss to Westfield. The game was played at Park. It was Park's third loss in 17 games. | However, one half of the DeVoe
{all 29 points. St. Joseph fouled { liberally trying to get the ball. So the subs obliged by cashing in 13 of 16 free throw attempts. Leading the shocking -array
of Butler point pourers were reg- . s ane Shorty Burdsoll and Jom dogs George Theofanis (14) and Jim Crosley (1 1).
Crosley with 14 and 16 points. It was surprising that any Bull-
ing, -so rapid was the substitut-
|point first period, was top point man with 18. Most of his eight baskets were from far out. But-}
By United Press
close. | Butler scorched in 36 of 77 : 3 shots from the field for a .468 victory in nine games.
MUST BE LEAP YEAR—Butler's Bulldogs jumped at every opportunity coming their way last night. This picture proves it. Whenever St. Joseph's Pumas went up after a ball they had lots of Bulldogs for company. Leaping with St. Joe's Ralph Meyer (11) and an unidentified Puma’ are Bull-
dog did any concentrated scor- lowa Wallops Purdue eur, wind 0 ue FOr 8th Big 10 Victory
LAFAYETTE, Feb. 16—High-ranking Iowa remained {ler didn't leave many holes in in the thick for the Big Ten Conference basketball crown ship of the Indianapolis Indians tonight by walloping Purdue, 90 to 67, for its eighth league thought it was all set in its Vic-| "0, 0,
0 1 Sacer ° ° H wilh = 3 8 2 Pret 88 damet 143 Wwe Sty ion bof a rere] ] Jamies 11 Hien A Er 3 | Bredar.« 3 2 1liJonesc o 1 i/16—Taylor's Trojans ran true to {Fletchers $3 3 joness 8 } 3 form here tonight as they des Times photo by Willlam A. Oates Jr. IE, « 8 3 Cau, : 3 $i feated Manchester, 89-83. tH : . Dutcher.g 1 2 0 Moores 00 o clinch the 1952 . Hoosier Confers Totals. RI IM Tat 30 13 33 ence basketball championship,
3 otals SCORE BY QUARTERS 0-200 Taylor takes the crown home Diinots, yotooo 48 18 10 308 with a 9-1 record. The Trojans |p iYee. Throws Missed--Bemoras } C.llone defeat was administered by
Follmer, Peterson, Kerr 2, Bredar Fletch er 2, Wright, Hague, Ebert 8 Gillaugh.
|Franklin earlier in the season, |The Trojans defeated Manchester {in December but it was a toughet
'Old Regime’ ‘Adams Quintet {assignment this, trip. Causes Edna 707: B.R, 62-99 | sur spit vis To Quit Tribe
SOUTH” BEND, Feb. 16—Tall y),,y nag the satisfaction of presss ALTHOUGH the new
South Bend Adams got the most iho Taylor to the final gun. shots and rebounds to down] Taylor had too much depth ia Broad Ripple of Indianapolis, 52| yonn Bragg, Forrest Jackson, and {to 49, here tonight. | Ted Wright. Bragg led the attack Adams, a two-point winner over| with 26 points while Jackson and ltory Field office staff for the Central during the wright dropped in 22 and 21 ree 1952 season. it is in the field for Year, hit 23 of 61 field goal at-|gspectively, Ken Moore was high 'a new office secretary-ticket sup- tempts for a .380 average, but for Manchester with 19.
owner-
reading. St. Joseph hit 19 of 67 Purdue's last - place Boilerfor .284. 2 makers made it a ballgame for The substituting made the the first 20 minutes. But then Gophers Slap floor more crowded than the the Hawkeyes, sparked by 6-foot,
stands. Only 1196 fans bothered 8-in. Center Chuck Darling who Down Michigan
brother ‘act, John, fared better. to show up le 2 i y ’ , . : : ollected 28 points, took over and Say with the Indians asince 1942 He scored 29 points to top both Butler 89 St. Joseph (1%) led the rest of the way. AYN SREOR. Mich., Feb.. 18 urned in Her resignation last 28 to 16 and 45 to 38. Dick withstood the late challenge of teams. Burda? 3 5 Ph pratt I FF a Joa inhesota Happed SOwN a week, 'Shenenberger, with 22 points, and | Manchester and led 61-54 entering Westfield overcame an early Greve! s 1 3 Dwyer. 1 1 «+ THE LEAD changed hands third-period - c gan UPrISINg io French: said he was completely | Bruce Parker, with 16, paced the|the fourth period. 7 Park lead and led from the first|Reed,r 3 3 LiKukoyt ~~ 0 0 1ithree times in the first period, defeat the Wolverines in a Big tisfied with Miss Hickey’s work |Tebounding Adams team, winner| Taylor (8) Manchester (83) quarter on. Its victory was grannvf - 1 1 liKscmare 2 0 land Purdue led at’the first pole, Ten basketball game here tonight,’ nd appreciated her knowledge of [of 13 of 20 games T Wright. 15 '} 1) Angatin.g nav 1 i Frag n, eyer,c- 2 2 a - { > § . | right, ' helped when John DeVoe fouled | Stewart.c 2” 1 4! Boff.c 0 0 1/20 to 17, as Center Carl McNulty, 52 to 44, : the office and ticket departments, Ripple's Gene Neudigate had 17 | Nelson.t 2 2 6 Weaver. 4 2 out with-the-score only 47-44, In| aegis § | Jiderie 0 J llsecond only to Darling in con-| Led by giant Center Ed Kalafat | "yy, "ys genanl business for the Rockets, getting all except | yams"! 19 3 istnet = 4 8° Westfield’s favor and three min-|Groers = 7 2 liReutebuche 1 0 Tiference scoring, and Foward Glen the Gophers came from one point : 2 : lone in the second half ‘Habeggerc 0 1 2(Huffmane 3 2 utes left to play. | Holloway 0 0 2 Drakes i 2 4 Calhoun kept Darling bottled up. behind to outscore the Wolverines, | 8 & 8 : Adams: (42) Broad Rivpis (49) | Honaker.s a : 31 Moora. : : Westfield (57) Park. cli} jgneotanize 39 3: . | Darling began finding the 17 to 6, in the final period. Kala-| MISS HICKEY said she got i fx ft pf) : fg It pf Sos 0 0 Of Heeter.s 60 1 fg ft pf tg tt pt| Ellenbergerg 1 3 1) ; __Irange from outside the free throw|fat registered 18 points as Minne- along with the “new order” all Shenb eer! Bilt PY as HDT Tole nbn Pollard ¢ 0 1 4Downing.t 1 1°4l rota 36 17 211 Totals 19 10 22 lcircle in the second period, how- sota chalked up its eighth Big Ten/right only to learn recently that Millers. 12 4| Bosley. 1-1 3 Halftime Score—Taylor 44, Manchestef Chance t § s ShecCrav i 1s a Score by Periods » 2 gg |€VeT, _and once his. hook-shots|win in 11 games. Michigan's loss she wasn’t getting along with a) peters 1 0 3 Neudigatex 8 | 3 Pores Throws Missed—Taylor 11. Mane Hudson o +s DeVoec 0 ’ 5|Bu Joseph. T.lliii'i 20 “3 14 11—48|found their mark, Jowa was off was its seventh in nine conference member of the old Tribe regime, | an. 0 i Jot 3 3 g |chzster T. linen. Fb Wane: Porat oard.g 6 0 2Moistney.g 0 0 0 Free Throws Missed—Burdsall 3, Greve, | and runnin games « {Ted Sullivan, public relations -| Gibson.f r 0 1 3 Morris! Y ¥°33 oli . . Ballard.g 1 0 4Walrod.s 0 0 2Cranny, Stewart 2. Englerth, Crosley, g 5 4 i Kedzie. 1 1 0 Bagley! o 1 3] Indianapolis. Eastridge;g 1 2 1/ClM 0 ; rer * x = . on rector. and former business man- o£ ai i ; oe ——————————————— Egstr] ive 3 ne.g 0 0 Kolloway, HH 2. Phas; Merk! az. rake | IOWA took the lead at 26 to 25 THE GOPHERS took an early ager : Van Horne.c 0 4 t! Cooley. : : : L t S d Shot i. . — — . ie tasue en] { ‘ " . ! . ; | Is 70 231 - : Totals 23.11 221 - Totals i612 20° Field Goal Shooting: Butler—36 of 17 midway in the second period and|10 to 5 lead with Freshman Guard | sarted company with Toa RRS oa Broad Ripple as econ : e Score by Periods { attempts, 468; St. Joseph—19 of 67 at- ; lead hock M | hitting, but led only So she pa pan) westtieig JY PY TO": 13 9r_s7itempts. 66 igradually pulled away, leading. Chuck Mencel hitting, bu Y the Indians, after 10 years’ serv- '°y asd Ad 7. Broad 3 h S : he: Trirows Missed Pollard Bae Ee I Sete Ro 1 a 40 to 33, at the intermission, and 14 to 12 at the end of the quarter..,,, ,,4 js already employed else- Riss frou Mites Ee he Saves Mic . tate. §. Lively, Hoard 2, Eastridge. Downing 2. tempts, 345. . “a top heavy 65 to 45 margin go- Then Kalafat-got hot and scored Officials—Todd and Mossette . % (u McQuiston, McCray 5, J. DeVoe 3; S.| Technical Foul-Kacmar : p : d EE rate a Mi where. MADISON, Wis. “Feb. 16 DeVoe, Cline sa * 7! Officials—Cloyd Julian and John wil- ing into the final 10 minutes. three quick field goals and Minne- : Leif Carlson, rangy forward, Officials—Stout and Pope. Hams. = Darling had fine assistance gota jumped to a 26 to 20 halftime ® » flipped in a desperation jasts * from G-fonta. veteran Guardiiead Only 1 n IanS ign, {second push shot to give Miche
Garden.
Tufts 52. (Ing Gehrmann rocketed to the run. (front at the end of the first lap) ‘and scorched his opposition into/ahead of Penn State's Ollie Sax Stark 'the yellow spruce boards as hein the 600 in 1:10.9, breaking the [meet mark of 1:11.2 set by Hugo
roared home 35 yards on top to smash the 2:08.8 mark set by the late John Borican in 1939.
” » ~ SECOND PLACE, far back, went to former champion Reginald Pearman of the New Yor Pioneer Club, whose teammate, defending champion Roscoe Browne, was third. Gangling Bill. Mack, former IC4A champion’ from Michigan | State, turned in a smashing upset [in the mile run with a list-lap best of speed which nailed the favored Fred Wilt of the New
? . Free Throws Missed—Cathoun srewster. College Gymnastics { Runyan. 5. Schorr 2 McNulty 3. Toeppe,| yards Banas, . Davis 2, Clifton 3.!Michigan State 53, Illinois 43.
finished Penn State 58. Navy 38.
“Moore three Darling 3,
Maiocco of New York in 1950.
Mud Hens' Owner Feels Manhattan crea its new : world Jatiah a mark "Honor Bound" fo Toledo
in the afternoon qualifying trials, shattering the record of 1:53.86 created by Villanova in 1950 by almost a full second. The quartet {of Vern Dixon, John O'Connell,
By United Press CHARLESTON, W. Va, Feb, Interests. 16—Danny Menendez, youthtul|
Attucks’ 8th Grade
Wins District Title
the 1060 yards in 1:52.7.
keep his ‘team's Toledo {if that “concrete assurances’ Rupport for 1952.
Toledo
franchise In yo14 outdraw city gives him i. qance , of financial :
Big 10 Standings
>
: |Bob Clifton, who hooped 19 ead, Michigan's 6-foot, 7-inch ea State a 57 to 55 victory ove Gehrmann Sets NeW [oni hie Meicniey Davis center, topped the Michigan . i | chipped in with 10. scorers with 18 points. Mencel and 4 be Id | Michigan State worked to a 58 1000 Y d Mn Makai Jed Durie Wih 15 Means each tallied 12 for Minne-; i i 0 0 | Mistigan State worked ts 54 oints, an res x sota. : lt lay. NY . o a ecor Ip . . y ’ Ito p ¢ {Denny Blind followed with 13. hi TY Minnesota (52) | By EDDIE AS r x Fh (67) Towa (90) | Meira ix ft pt! fg ft pf} Times Sports Editor \ Veteran Badger Guard Ab By United Press eBeant. 2 Pl tay fg 14 pf gkala.t $0" Welss.t 0 1°13 Without ing names General Manager Chuck Nicholas Sige : free ; sho [Cathount 3-1 3 Davis Tiernanf = 98 [Re ithout nami ’ Michigan te got possession o - 2! J (kin. t 100 ’ | Reid. f 00 } NEW YORE, Feb. 16--Renty Don Genrmaw), the Eman : 2 RE 2 0 2 Meade 8 : 2 Meas! . 3 3 3 French revealed last night that only 10 of the players on the the ball and quickly moved it Wisconsin whippet, dropped down from his favored mile|VcNuise 6 3 4 Cochranef 3 1 4 Eadave = 3 0 1 Walerluse 1 2 11. , ter k eturned contracts with their John" position for Carlson's game y ; . Stone, f 0 0 0 Darlingc 12 & 2 Toppg 0 0 0 Mencel.x § 0 0 Tribe's 1952 roster have r ‘lwinning shot. : distance to blast out a new world indoor 1000-yard record Bind _ 5 3 jHetiricke 3 0 5 ‘|Holmess © © 3pyaraocks attached * Both teams creaked through 8 tonight when he covered the distance in a dazzling 2:08.2 in |M¥cMulens © § 0 gtegicf 1 0} 12 | 4 : : {tumble-filled first quarter, matches 3 * . { y 2 ! Total 16 12 14! Totals 21 10 17) | q { the National AAU track eham-; | Servers 30 aciiftons. 812 A i Bpars hy Quarters © © That adds up to 20 who have yet to sign legal papers on, Dad passes ang ‘Wild shots © plonships at Madison‘ Square world sprint medley relay mark Rigs 0 0. 3 Mit eos 17 12 '3 17.52 the dotted line. — At halftime, the Spartans led for Manhattan LER E a goa Free Throws Missed: Michigan—Mead : g subs . don't et pearance only a week or so ago, 24 {0 23. As Wisconsin hit a 104, and a new AAU} pws {5 72/4. Lawrence 2, Eaddy. Minnesota—Mencel, Minor league clubs. ( ge | Inember clubs already are tear-ls “ 3 . Changing both his distance and record for the New Yark A. C./s| """ g ORE’BY QUARTERS ll Am too worked up when their athletes joi" ys in some BY frais the sield aly Michigan 25% { i % | Purdy 20 13 12 22 ————— { LOC 8 5 his tactics, the usually late charg-/Charley Moore in the 600 yard |Furdue 17 23 25 25-00 |are slow in coming through with| Indianapolis and Milwaukee| pay) Mop paced. ee on
|would not accept “promises” from |letters from several who want
A representative tor the city of “mainly fron ‘players who Have tate in July to make way for an| iCharleston assured Menendez a/been ‘exposed’ to the plus e in| iit wi he i 'Lou Jones and Bob Carty stepped Owner of the Toledo Mud Henslgi0000 advance ticket sale if the big leagues. Also a few of the exhibition tilt with the Chicagoiy;ne and 52-41 at the third quare of the American Association, sald |¢}, team were moved here, and players comidg up tonight he feels “honor bound” t0|.aiq4 he was positive Charleston of lower classification apparertly| in at- think the Indianapolis club is in
66. “ VW. ie 80, Washington (Mo.) 58. York A. C, at the tape in 4:11.4,| Crispus Attucks’ Eighth Grade, Menendez was here to inspect 1 . Indians. Ralph Ferguson - scored 23 Westminster 82, Pittsburgh 74. | Wilt, the defending champion, led basketball team won its District pageball Oh ape WL Pct. TP OP “BUT I intend to, contact of- Cleveland has 36 players on its Frawkiin, BY : West Virginia 84, Virginia Mili- all ‘the way until Mack . caught 3 grade school league by downing toward moving the triple-A club own ........ 8 1 .889 661 564 ficials of the parent Cleveland current roster, which is 11 more i more mnt tary 49. : {him on the final turn and won by School 87, 24 to 18. William Rob- to Charleston if Toledo interests Illinois ...... 8 1.889 632 516 1.1 next week and try to iron out thar the American“League player - =. HOOSIER CONFERENCE i. Loon Vas 150k 3 ‘inches with Brown's Walt Mo- rtson, brother of Attucks’ Bailey do not provide an advance ticket Minnesota .. 8 3 .727 688 610 tpg situation. In our book, players limit. However, the player limit taylar uc... i A Continue on Page ‘ol. lineaux tire, S's tao lor vimacy it sale of $45,000 “within the next INDIANA “as i 3 ih ge Se are not classed as holdouts jgesnt pecame effective until Indians Central Th INDIANA CONFERENCE RMAN ; te. § ; 118i few days.” Soin : {Mich, Nt. -... 5 5 %500° 3% this league unless they fail to|after mid-May. = - i ay INDIANA £0 W. L, Pect nO EHRMANY performance far sixth in seven starts, reversed an He 'said in deference to Toledo's Ohio Slate ...4 6 400, 640 698|check in at training camp on the] “It's my guess, though,” French 1 a act an unprecedented earlier loss to 87. School 87 was long participation in the Associa- Northwestern 4 7 .364 747 840 : " added, “that we'll receive : 2 867|gixth t vietory for | : ng participation in the Associa ‘thwes designated reporting date. hp a 1 Se tarrison Dil) Lol or lean|runnerup in the city grade school tion, he felt morally to/Wisconsin .. 2 6 .250 453 480| It also came to light that al- shipment or two before the Amer-| 4 "0 Ha . of IClevajand. in| championship last year. Attucks keep the team in. the OBio city. Michigan ... 2 7 .222 484 547 though the an Associa ican Association curtain goes u 5 Saalthe. 60-Y ard high ‘hurdles, ® 31W[ba8 NOR 14 of 19 Genes vernal, However, he emphasized ‘that UE ... 2 8 .200 877 771[tion’s 1952 schedule made its ap on April 16.” [oe yi] } : : i ry a rh, / Re : 5 data Fe 3 - ne ro = a TH aN . 3 Sa ? 3 ut ’ 2 hae hl ; i hi : 2 . 4 : - rg : . a : of 2 :
|ervisor- today. couldn't match Ripples at 44| Manchester led 3-1 early in ie | Much to the surprise of per cent firing. The Rockets, |first quarter but Taylor rush General Bae ree rey however, got only 45 shots, hit: to the front and led at the quarter {Miss Edna Hickey. who has been ting 20. [rest, 30-14. The Trojans’ lead was r Quarter scores were: 19 to 8, cut to 44-39 at the half but they
Isigned contracts, but since this were first to make a change. An|poth teams with 26 points. "lis mid-February, and spring Indianapolis May 12 game in
training reporting date is Jess/Breweryiowh has beet Hoye © Franklin Gets By than four weeks away (Mar, 12), 30 oben al ere, ay y 5 French is slightly perturbed over permit the Brewers to mee ¢ Earlham, 66 to 60 3
the number of his players who St Louis Prowne ie aa exhibition | Times State 8 . : Ae have not entered the fold. jatiraction £ pl BY 5 FRANKLIN, Feb. 16—A torrid “yp few ‘comeback’ ! : Tl ‘| second-quarter spurt put Franks Iva Jeceived 5 : THE BREWERS also are ma-|lin too far in front for Ear salary upped,” he said, neuvering to change another date/to catch tonight as the G ' edged the Quakers, 66 to 60. Earlham, down 33-20 at halfs
| their
hite Sox. : . Iter, outscored Franklin, 29 to 14, But French also had some in the final period. Franklin, SE cheering news. He said he has however, had outscored Earl : instead of the been “almost assured” that 24 to 12, during the second quars Cleveland intends to send six or.ter. Dudley Moore of Earl 1 seven more players to the Hoosier Jed all scoring with 28 points,
from leagues W
* la ‘major league {Triple-A ‘minors. ! ol ” ”
~
