Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 February 1952 — Page 12
we
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
oy EDDIE ASH
who rarely get their names in the baseball headlines outgide of their own bus and gas light circuits, sometimes defect something special in’a young player that would be overlooked by a big league scout who sees the ‘player only infrequently . These unsung managers slave away down in the sticks always looking for the rainbow that will move them up in the profession . ,. They lead a rough life handling green kids but keep plugging away shaping the careers of future maor league stars by being ever watchful of a player's actions. Harrison Wickel, new ‘director of the Chicago Cubs’ farm system, is a case in point . . . He spent 16 years in the St. manager and scout . . . Wickel, 41, was the first manager to play Stan Musial in the outfield and he converted Jim Hearn, now of the New York Giants, from an infielder into a pitcher . . . Discussing his experiences as a skipper in the little minors in Chicago the other day, Wickel said, ¢ “Musial was pitching for me at William- il I gon, W. Va. his second season in league ball. I saw he could hit, yet it took an ‘incident’ to cause me to shift him. Our third baseman made trouble and I had to let him go, on short notice, which made us shorthanded. I brought in the left fielder to play third and put Musial, the pitcher; in left. But it wasn’t until two years later that Stan became an outfielder permanently. “In Jim Hearn's case, | was managing Columbus, Ga., and he was a third baseman in a league below our classification in the Cardinal chain. | asked Branch Rickey to promote the infielder to my club. Rickey's notes on Hearn were contrary to mine. He said, ‘We haven't even got a league in our organization low enough for this boy to play in. “But I kept begging and wound up with Hearn on my roster. I turned him into an outfielder and he hit the ball the proverbial mile in spring training games. But when the regular seascn got under way he couldn't hit his hat. " “Rickey chuckled over my mistake in judgment but advised me to keep-trying. I noticed Hearn had a good, strong arm and like most infielders, he also threw a curve. So I experimented again and trained Jim to be a piteher. Once started, he became progressively better. He had found his proper place in baseball.”
= ” 5 o Ho " When fight fans in England think the boys in the ring are smelling up the joint with @ waltz-me-around-again act, they don't boo, catcall or throw things . . . Instead, the crowd indulges in rhythmic handclaps . . . hoping the subsequent vibration will jor the pugs out of their lethargy . . . That trick wouldn't work in America . . . The pugs would be apt to mistake the handclaps for applause. :
Eddie Ash Louis Cardinal farm system as player,
Stan Musial
» o. rv ” ” ” PARKE CARROLL, general manager of the Kansas City Blues, is a man of few words . .. A note to this department said, “If we have a good club we're going to Rave a very good year.” ... You can’t top that for get- | ting it over with in a hurry instead of shooting the breeze ... Carroll has overcome a lot of obstacles . He's Bounced hack more than once . .. Formerly a Kansas City sports editor he lost out when the paper folded. He caught on with the Minneapolis Millers as public relations chief and lost out again when the Millers were gold to the New York Giants . . . His next job was business manager of the Newark Bears of the International . League.
A Ry— a # = . # =» Since the Newark club was under the well-heeled New York Yankee ownership, Carroll felt secure, at long last . . . Strange to relate ond a shock to baseball, the Yankees surrendered the Newark -franchise, the club folded and Carroll was jobless again . . But the Yankees decided Parke had ao lot on the ball, so they worked him into the Kansas City assignment at a later date . .. He was back home. Carroll set some sort of a record in one of the depression years . . . With business on the blink and his paper short of funds, he traveled via sidedoor pullmans from Missouri to the
Blues’ training camp in Florida. ” »
o os n 4 5 HANNIE URBANUS, fresh from overseas, hard by the Zuyder Zee; Amsterdam, Holland, that'is, is a rookie = pitcher in the New York Giants’ training camp . . . That's quite a jump . . . Fact is, we didn’t know Holland had a ball team . .. But if Hannie Urbanus makes good he'll get plenty of ink in the press but his name will probably go to surgery and come out in the Box score as Dutch = RIrba, ’ ”
» " “ 1 ” un The new Brandeis University. (enrollment 660) of Waltham, Maoss., will graduate its first class in-June . . . This is the first season Brandeis U. has had a varsity basketball team . . . $0 for it has won seven games and lost seven . .. No alumni pressure on the coach, “though . . No alumni o outer
" gnother year. -
IF A big-time college football coat has a losing seagon he hears the rattle of tinware . . . If he has a winning season and tops it off with a bow! victory, he’s sentenced to the banquet circuit for the winter . . . Jim Tatum, Maryland coach, whose team trouriced Tennessee in the Sugar Bowl, is just now nearing the end of .a schedule of about “50 dinner and luncheon appearances, all calling for a
‘of Tennessee received some valentines last week in ich regrets were expressed that he thought he had "been booked to play Marysville stead of Maryland,
a Although the Bradley University basketballers have lost 10 games, still the Braves of Peoria have something to crow ‘gbout . . . It's the only team in the country to beat the two gams that defeated mighty Kentucky, _ Minnesota ond St.
one fewige), +o . You figure it out.
HUNDU,
UNSUNG MANAGERS in the little minor leagues |
speach . . . Meanwhile, it is rumored Coach Bob Ney-: |
ouis .. . edging the Gophers by four points and the Billikens :
Kokomo Now Plagued Trout Beaten
In Baseball
By Injury to Guard
By JIMMIE ANGELOPOLOUS
! KOKOMO'S rugged Wildcats, who tripped Tech, 65 to, 05 despite a siege of illness, were dealt another serious gretiow, blow yesterday. Jimmy James, scrappy defensive guard who scored nine points against Tech Friday, may =m, be lost to the team for the sec tionals, Coach Joe Platt told The 4-Way Tie (Seusns Country Club. Times last night, James, tinental received an eye injury when a piece of steel flew in his eye and scratched the cornea. He wore no protective goggles at the time of | the accident. ™
By United Press Fla., Feb.
Chicago White
Giants here’ today the. Baseball
- (round of
Dk Feb. 16 Dark, 5 and 4. Tigers
By United Press SAN ANTONIO, Tex. Jackie: Burke of Houston and [ (hiree swarthy unknowns swept nts E Tolir-way tie for-the lead in DOCTORS at first believed the the $10,000 Texas Open today injury to be serious enough to with halfway-point totals of 132 damage the sight of one eye but as pace-setter Lew Worsham lost announced the player is not hurt his first place despite seven that seriously. birdies, James will have to remain in = Jay hed at home one week with both shot eyes bandaged, however. Coach @ 65 and Walter Romans a Platt said whether James plays in over Brackenridge Park's the regionals should Kokomo ad- yard par-71 course. vance that far depends on how Their 10-under totals gav fast the injured optic heals. them a shaky one-stroke lead as ou =» the bulky field again whacked big MEANWHILE, Coach Platt chunks off par in an effort to ‘had high praise for Guard Cliff gurvive for tomorrow's [Clester and Center Ken Toye, the play, restricted to the 60 low pros |state champion high hurdle ace. and 10 amuteurs, [Clester and Toye broke into the [starting lineup in the absence of PAR |Clyde Cox and Phil Mitchell both from Toby of whom have been ill with the N.Y, whose game fairly sizzied letics, | virus. Cox was in bed but Mitchell played nearly eight minutes in[termittenly. He hit five timely | points. Starting of Toye and marked the first time in 18 ball
of the championship flight,
pitcher shot the best game his life, a four-under-par 66 ~ ~ ~
Hebert and Tony
seven-under-par 64's, Burke COUTSE,
=
6. and 5. In the morning rounds,
and 1; ” took its worst
1-up; Ryan
28-33
3 and 2, and Russell
Slester seventh place.
games Coach Platt changed his Were Julius Boros of Mid Pines, | a, regular starting lineup of Corky N.C. and Ed Purge! of St. Lows, : Williamson, Mitchell, Cox, James Whose 78 35 66, respectively, Baskethall |and Junior Phipps. left them at L ,
AT 134 with the stocky Lyons were Worsham, who seemed helpless at times and great at others ; as he carded seven birdies but 3 could do nn better than a 35- 36—’ 71, and six others.
| MITC HELL " expected to: be {ready this week against New Castle, ‘Mitchell is 5-11 but weighs only 130 posnds. He has a 12{point average. The Kats won the NCC crown {with a 9-2 record as Muneie-Cenl-(tral lost 43 to 36 -at Frankfort | Friday. Cox has a 13.8 point average in 10 loop games and should Lemans il. Mu {be ready for the sectionals in of Midlothian. IIL.
10 aays. |Coelho of Honolulu. Lovelock, Lopez On Tuesday Card
Vincent - (The Rope) Lopez land Al Lovelock will meet in a return bout in the semi-windup | i | 49. { f ‘Tuesday night's hand. Anderson College a 66 to : J xv aon Y ar 63 setback in a Hoosier College Brazil 61, Rammony Noll 49. ¥ at W v wre Conference hardwood game here Concord wp. 64, Lopez defeated Lovelock here (Elkhart County) 55.
RRR EInevanan
Resulis
Continued from Page 11
Durham, ~N.C.,, Doug Ford of 66.
Mike Homa of West| 48. Jimmy Walkup
and Herman High School Games CITY, COUNTY {Howe 45, Warren Central 35.
Haro Foe. Throws Top Anderson, 66 to 63
Times State Service
16—Han-
ple 49. Westfield 57, Park School 44.
ANDERSON, Feb. OTHERS
{two weeks ago. It's for one fall tonight. ° N {with a 30-minute time curb, Hanover's King had 24 points Ft Veteran Joe Millich, will tackle and John Johnson of Anderson Ft. Wayne Concordia 61,
the masked Mr. X, in the first made 17. Following a 16-all first| Wirt 44.
levent. It also calls for one fall quarter tie, Hanover kept a Goshen 54, Kendallville 51. or 30 minutes. 27-33 halftime lead and main- Monticello 64, Peru 58. Lou Thesz, heavyweight cham- tained a 50-to-49 third quarter New Castle 40, Connersville ‘33.
|plon, will risk his crown in the score. Anderson has a 10- 10 rec- South Bend Central Catholic 54,
Marion St. Paul 41,
Golf Tourney
16: — Loi) Sox | {hurler, defeated defending cham-| pion Alvin Dark of the New York] in the second | Players Golf tournament at thé Miami
Kretlow, who beat Earl White- |
who works at the Con- hill of the Detroit Tigers, 2-up, Steel Co. on Baturday, In Texas Open: the morning's round, came
in the afternoon to drop
Coach —Diek Bartell pushed medalist Dizzy Trout out
and 1. Only yesterday the Tiger!
IN OTHER top flight after- =’ Holguin noon matches over the 68310-yard + George Abrams of the + gg Cincinnati Reds, downed Connie 6400- Ryan of the Philadelphia Phillies, 5 and 4, and Jack Russell, former e pitcher for the Yankees, beat Paul Waner, former Pittsburgh Pirate,
Dark rallied on the back nine to edge 36-nole Freddy Hutchinson of Peto Trout beat Judge J. W. Monahan of the Boston Braves, beating 4 and 3; Bartell defeated Jimmy Lyons of Jamestown, Dykes of the Philadelphia Athedged Jim as he came within a stroke of the Hearn of the Giants, 1-up in 20; PGA competitive record with a Abrams beat Johnny Dell of Cin61 that gave him a 134 cinnati. 5 and 4; Waner downed total and an eight-way tie for Allie Reynolds of the Yankees, beat Joe Pressing the quartet of leaders Medwick of the Cardinals, 4 and 3.
over hit 18 of 24 free throws to Ashland (0.) 58, Culver Military exhibit
3
of
BIG WARRIOR—Kelvin Bur-
2' nett, ranked among the Ameri-
can Hockey League's top scorers, will be in the Syracuse lineup tonight when the Warriors face off with the Indianapolis Caps in the Coliseum at 8:15. It will be the final Sunday night game here. The remaining four Sunday games will be played in the afternoon starting at 3 o "clock.
Conservaiion In Sports Show
The Conservation Department's : exhibit will he one of the features : of the Sports Show at the Fair "| Grounds, Mar. 1-9. The show will be held in the Manufacturers’
They included Tommy Bolt of William and Mary 71, Maryland Building. Arrangements for the exhibit Harrison, N.Y., Marty Furgol of Wyoming 48, Bringham Young were
announced - by John | Matthews, show manager. | Authorized by Kenneth Kunkel, {Conservation Department direc[tor, the exhibit will occupy more than 5000 square Yeet. of space. One of the nation's most com-
South Bend Adams 62, Broad Rip- ,10te exhibits of its kind, it will
be under the supervision of-Heinie | Moesch. | Among the highlights of the will be “aquarium on wheels.” It is a trailer containing a dozen varieties of fish from
Jamestown Indiana's eight hatcheries.
Other features will be displays
. Wayne Central 70, Decatur 35. (of conservation books, state parks Gary and forestry. A state-wide casting
[tournament will be held in con{junction with the show.
Pro Basketball
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION
Western Division w
{main event against Ray Eckert.’ ord. Pct. GB i i’ . EE | Rochest er 647 ~ ~ ——— go— ee a Minneapolis $27 1 Indians polis 519 6'a | ‘Junior Tourney Wavie 42 1001 ec u i i i Milwaukee 275 19 | Pct GB (To Stark Mar. 1 losis i oe } e res ing ina 4 | T Basten... oa 563 4 e first round of the sec New York - 338 h round o econd Philadelnhia 22 2 440 10 : h Bend) _deocsioned annual city Junior High School Baltimore 16 314 16'; Times State Serviee 145 Tirotia (South enc RESULTS LAST NIGHT Dinwiddie (Crawfordville), 1 basketball tournament will get os 2g MUNCIE, Feb, 16—Tech's un- Meclatenie (Jeff) decisioned Burge Rochester 9¢. Syracuse 5 ALLL, . i 135 MOC atehle 4 underway Mar. 1, George Far- Boston 77. Minneapolis 75 heaten Greenclads qualified six (Crawfordsville. 3 fordsvilie), de- i Ohvs | Rew York 202 [Briiinore 82 185 — Cummings (Crawfordsvill kas, city school physical educa-| (Only games scheduled for the state mat meet as they cisioned Bankowski (South Bend. 4-1 : : : : . GAMES TONIGHT th tional qualifications _.7--Stephens (Crawfordsville: decl- tion director, ‘has announced. Indianapolis at Rochester won the sectional quall sioned Rohr (Jeff), 10-6. red Kreuger| OiXty-one teams will begin Minneapolis at Ft. Wayne. with 59 points here tonight. Hwt,—Schrader (Jeff) pinned Kreug ’ : | New York at’ Syracuse ' iSouth Bend, 1:08 play in the eighth grade school! Philadelphia at Baitimere.
Shortridge had four state finalists with 44 points and Muncie Panthers Place 7
Times State Secvice {Central and Anderson qualified BLOOMINGTON, Feb. 16 one each.
{ Muncie had 34 points,
|ing at 8:30 a. m. First
Ander-
RY . seven for the state mat tourney terfinais slated Mar. 15. Semi~ son scored 26, Broad Ripple made by winning seven of the 12 in-/finals are billed Mar. 22 and
{20 and Richmond went scoreless. | Tech winners were: Yuland { Baker, 85; Bob Pollak, 112; Bill | Pruitt, 120; Edgar Lamb, 127, Dick Jones, 145 and Jack | Woolen, 165. ’ ’
95—BaKer (T) decisioned Warmke (A),
dividual eliminations here tonight.
and were followed by Decatur | Central, 51; ‘Davis 20; Mater Dei 17, versity School 6. (Muncie), decisioned
Decatur Central qualified five ?declstoned Lewis (M), for next week's finals. South- Betty Bush 6th in
Hend port's defending state champions bhi failed to qualify anyone. Weathervane Meet
and Uni-' Session for adults only.
8-1. { 103—McClelland {Greenstein (8), 3113—Pollak {T)
| 7-2 | 130—Pruitt (T) { M), 11i ld -Lamb (T) decisioned Dudley (BR) {4- . 95 Myers . (B) i Yia— Barnes (A), decisioned Young 2 (BR), § to 6 138 ~Bose (8), pinned Gale (A), 5-4 (DC), - 112 -Jiadaway 3.
i ls I; S—doues (Th) pinned Cooper (M). 3:34 (Bt 2 | ( i |"
decisioned
Finals decisioned Hines
103 i (B) decisioned
154--Packham (8) decisioned Bathauer 120 Srna (B) decisioned Marke (DC) { a oh sa. a : ov el 4 ment with a one-under par 71 at 7 . deel “| 3 27 i e (5 won y eferee’s eJos- Woolen M decisioned Clock - (M), eislon Oke, a. yen the long Normandy Shores 176-~Anthony (8) _ decisioned Norris 5 133 TMurpby (DC: decisioned Hughes course, i Ry Erick 18) deciaioned Hiner (3. . 138 Krutz (DC) “pinned Sisson (Bi, Mrs, Zaharias, who lost the 1851 4-2 : "145 —8ansone (B) pinned Bradfield (B), title to Pauy Berg of Minneapolis, | 3.08 ook a on the front nine, the South Be 154 ~ Davis (B) decisioned Beibert (Ma- n nd Gets 6 Pg To : 5 carved her strokes to 34 on the . Times State Sargies y if Richardson (B) pinned Pflum (BD) way in to edge runner-up Louise | LAFAYETTE, Feb. 16 — South Ri Lechner (DC) pinned Sweeney Suggs of Carrollton, Ga., who : ; (BD), : Bend Central qualified six for the "gui “ringer (DC) decistoned Trainer Carded a 36-3773. Miss Berg was state high school wrestling finals (Mater Del), 4-0 far down the list with 40-3979. here next Saturday after placing Senators Take 4 Mrs. Betty Bush, Hammond, nine men in the sectional finals Tinws State Service |Ind., was tied for sixth with.
tonight, EAST CHICAGO, Host Jeff and Crawfordsville Washington placed four men in| with (d Ss. scored with three winners each. the state finals by winning the
Tom Robinson, 138; Jim Mec- sectional mat trials with 41: 4 . :
Clatchie, 155, and Jim Schrader, points. Hammond - Tech, which heavyweight, won sectional and had 37 points, qualified three, | finals berths for Jeff, Howe Military and Roosevelt had Schrader pinned Jay Kreuger two each and Hammond Clark) of Central, who lost his first placed one. | match in 14. Krueger had won 12 of 13 matches by falls this ya 4. season. 103—Colias (T) decisioned Garces ww), | Jeff's John Neubauer, 95- pound| “17—Rameriz - (T) state champ last year, lost in the RCI in (R) won referee's fect- |
finals of the 120- sion over Guzman (W) a fall. pound cass py 27—Lenzo (T) decisioned Jostes (Dyer) |
85--Bratton 133-0 Conell | Stauber” T:, 6-2
FINALS | Bob Kemetz (R) decisioned Marsh
Wins a new Friend with each bottle purchased. Big 4 Tonic’s “Foam Action” the quick gentle foamy
decisioned George |
8-2 (South Bend) decisioned (W) _décisioned Dortphin if
(Peru), 6-0
| ni fi—Ciaxten South Bend) decisioned a lax (W) decisioned Tallman bubbles, thoron (Crawfordsville) (Clark) 6- | | SA i—leraet {Bauth Bond) ‘pinned Hilt Lm -Shehigan (W) .decisioned Lloyd pughly cleanses scalp | hy seconds’ (Howe) 15 { | 120—Chambers (Crawfordsviile) pinned _154—Von Steiner Howe) won referee's) and hair as it dresses. [Neubauer (Jeff), 2:26 {decision over Pearson (R K 131—Erchorst (South Bend) decisioned| 165—Kerapkaso (W) decisithed Barnell| ee your hair abso- . ye
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(Howe) decisioned ' Kovach (Clark) pinned Corrado
{South Bend) | I Roninson. Loutt : oe on ' over Birner (Per). b. wen hy ohn
ark), wt —Collins. 5:42.
rist’s. Ask for it at your
TRUCK TRAILERS CUSTOM BUILT ALSO REPAIRING —PAINTING
Barber's. Carried in All Haag's
Begin ng Feb, 24, Games Will Be 4h od
vo sua 80 Sunday Afterioans . , . 3:00 P. M, Feb. 8, Providence—March ur... COLISEUM Fy
{districts with first games startround | — winners will move into the secBloomington’s mat team qualified ond round Mar. 8 with the quar-/
titles in the sectional the finals will be staged Mar. 29.] Only admission charge will be The Panthers scored 66 points made on the final two Saturdays Admission for the semi- finals Southport 28; Ben'and finals will be 25 cents per | i
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. Feb. 16 (8). (UP)—Long-hitting Babe Didrik- | Wright son Zaharias of Tampa, Fla., won |§ (DC) decisioned Meadows the first round today of the crosscountry Weathervane Golf tourna-
Feb. 16 — | Peggy Kirk of Ponte, Vedra, Fla.
TONIC AND SHAMPOO
(Only games scheduled)
! i k | ¥ I ¥
Streamliner 500
cusing barrel .
at Loebers
Caps Lose Overtime To Syracuse,
SUNDAY, FEB. 17, 1952
4}
Pidhirny Scores
Heller Ties
SYRACUSE, N.
X., Feb.
‘Winning Goal After
Up Game
16—Harry Pidhirny scored
a goal with only two minutes to play in a’ sudden-death period to give the Syracuse Warriors a 5 to 4 victory over Indianapolis in an Amerftan Hockey League game before
a crowd of 3197 here tonight. Pidhirny took a 20-foot pass from Leo Curick and rammed
the puck past Goalie Glenn Hall at 2:01, Player-Coach Ott Heller of Indianapolis had given the Caps a 4-4 deadlock with 1:10 to play in the third period. Hell¢r scored
duriig a scramble in front of the Syracuse foal. aw : " ” n
INDIANAPOLIS took the lead early ‘in the game when Bert Hirschfeld cast a shot with only 1:13 gone in the game. Syracuse tied it up on a goal by Ken Hayden at 1:58, but Doug McKay gave the Caps another scoring on an assist and Larry Zeidel. Pidhirny, however, tied it up later in the period beating Hall with a 15-foot blast. Doug McMurdy netted the lone marker of the second period scoring for Syracuse at 17:45. Two penalties against Frank O'Grady and Jim Hay gave Goalie Hall plenty of trouble, but his defense held during these spells of shorthandedness. . . 8 » = DON ASHBEE, playing his first game with the Caps since reporting from Buffalo, scored at 17:30 in the third period. O'Grady flipped a pass to Ashbee in front of the goal. Ashbee flicked the goal by Goalie Gordon Bell. George Ford of Syracuse scored on a 30-foot shot with only 3:12 left in the third period, the puck bouncing off Hall. Heller poked in a rebound with only 1:10 left to force the overtime. The victory avenged a seasonopening overtime loss to Indianapolis here. The teams left immediately after the game for Indianapolis where they meet again tomorrow night. Syracuse also will play in. Indianapolis Thursday night.
Deadline Today For Cage Toancy
Amateur basketball is feeling the selective service pinch. H. G. Englehardt, who directs the annual city independent tournament ai Dearborn Gym, sald yesterday that only 35 teams have registered for the 35th meet that will begin Friday. Eighty teams entered last year. Englehardt will accept tional entries today only. Silver Circle Bar is the .de-
addi-
. fending champion,
n us "2 MEANWHILE, the Indianapolis ‘sectional of the Indiana
AAU basketball tournament will-
move into the second round today at Dearborn, Today's Dearborn Gym sched{ule is: | Noon | Guard
- Ravens ys
Lebanon National fexhibitioni; 1
Kingan Koch News: 2, Silver Ci rele Bar WBA 8: nington Post; 3, Swinford Texaco vs. Allison Jets (Big 8 playoff): 4:30, Eagles Lodge vs. Andy's Tavern of Lapel; 5:30. Kehls of Connersville -vs, -'Pete Wood Eo cuilpment Co.
lead. at 2:55, Montre from Heller i
College Conference
On the Ice
AMERICAN LEAGUE Western Division
. L T G OG Pts Pittsburgh I 13 3 216 138 19 Cleveland «33 11-3 30 141 7} Cincinnati 25 26 % 155 184 58 St. Louis . 33 31 1 205 208 47 Indianapolis 17 34 5 192 223 3» Eastern Division w 1 T © OG Pts Hershey 27 22 5 104 162 39 Providence a5 21 3 214 2A A Buffalo ; 22 28 4 172 227 48 Svracuse 2 34 0-119 2M odd. RESULTS LAST “NIGAT Byracise 5 Indianapolis 4 (overtime), Pittshur ren 4, Providence 2, Pe ¥, Buffalo 2 8t. 'Lo ha 3. Hershey 1
GAMES TONIGHT Syracuse at Indianapolis (8:15), Cleveland at Buffalo Fi tisburgh at Providence.
Hershey 'at Cincinnati NATIONAL LEAGUE WwW L T OG og Pts De fo inariaines 32. 11 10 150 4 I 24 18 13 130 AH Al 21 3 7 151. 128 8} 18 25 10 137 159 48 17 24 12 113 138 48 14 33 6. 117 167 24 RESULTS LAST NIGHT Montreal 5, New York 1 Foronto 2, Chicago 2 (tie), (Only games scheduled | GAMES TONIGHT Montreal at New York Boston at Chicago (afternoon), (Only games sfheduled y ’ It's Kentucky s 109th Straight Win at Home LEXINGTON, Ky., Feb. 18 (UP) The University of Kentucky’s Wildcats, rated as the
nation’s No. 1 ‘basketball team, rolled over the Tennessee Volun« teers, 95 to 40, tonight for their 16th straight victory. The Wildcats are in 13 league games and have won 22 of 24 this season. The victory was Kentucky's 109th consecutive on the home floor. Kentucky, paced by Guard Frank Ramsey with 28 points, surged out to a 27 to 6 margin in the opening period and rolled on to a 49 to 21 halftime lead.
Sycamores Crush Ball State, 72-51
: Times State Service TERRE HAUTE, Feb. 16—Indiana State completed its Indiana schedule {with a 6-4 standing tonight after lan easy 72 to 51 victory over Ball State. . Basil Sfreddo "led the Sycamores’ scoring with 26 points while Fred Powell topped Ball State with 11.
Grade School Basketball
DISTRICT NO, 2 At Tech Gym School 20 defeated School 21, 38-33 School 26 .beat School 73, 81-19, an School 27 beat School 39, 38-24, CRISPUS ATTUCKS
(District 8) School 2 defeated School 5, 9 to § At tucks Eighth Grade defeated hoo] 3%. a 3 ti School 63 defeated h » to
AT WASHINGTON fDistriet 4) School 47 defeated School 50, 40 to School 25 defeated School 16, 25 to School 67 defeated School 30, 38 to a School 52 defeated School 46, 26 te 1 Schoo! 49 (bye. AT MANUAL District § School 19 defeated School 18. 25 te x! Manual 8th Grade defeated Sched to 11; School 35 defeated Scho to 17; School 72 defeated School nn 3 to » AT TECH (District 8)
School 37 defeated School 9. 54 te 8 School 81 defeated School 54, 13 to 1
‘ School 51 defeated School 38, + 31 to 11,
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undefeated -
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Indianapolis varsity swimm St. Xavier of 1 yesterday in tt Two record: addition to a women’s Natic backstroke. 8t. Xavier high school « tucky. Paul Xavier nipped one-tenth of a 200-yard free clipped :04 se
record:
” ,GOING into freestyle relay at 34-all. IAC 1:39.7, " establis
“record and ul
the state recor In tHe” AA women, Betsy 15 rivals to ° time eclipsed 2:36.4, establis man of Amba ington, D. C,, | St. Xavier's feated IAC, 3: Su
30-¥ard | Frees IAC: 2, David (
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