Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1952 — Page 27

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ci olly’ s Brewers Invade Wigwam

By - EDDIE ASH Times Sports Editor

HAVING SNAPPED their losing streak at five straight| by barely outlasting the Louisville Colonels, 4 to 3, last] night, the Indianapolis Indians now will turn their attention to skirmishing with an intersectional foe, none other than

the defending champion Milwau-i

i i ! { | ) | |

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Jee Brewers, -_ Tribe Box Score LEAGUE STANDINGS Always a rough opponent for, LOUISVILLE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION the Tribesters, AB R ARO A KE Rewiile CIATION + the Brewerytown 8 4.4 4 ge Rakes Biigade probably «2 . i 2: § Riptos " rough "ae 6 1 8 rer than ever in this "2 ih HE Th Li A SET ET mca opening at Viec- ‘3 | : : : ss : tory Field to- " "0 al TAR Babi night, Is = m= w= oe wxiCleveland .... The Brewers Brvtme 1 led out 1 & Douglas In ing New Forno nn x a for Hisner in ninth. hicago Fa | sot Ahmped Sut INDIANAPOLIS Philadetohia of first place BR HO AE phn while they were Muimbers’ 1 i $2.5 8 NATIONAL LE Ao pet. G0. Ash in Kansas City Lehner, of 1 13 8 ommat 8 4 Ger inl and tis said rhart, 6 o oe Chicago 8 4 867 | ope, rf a ® 1 5 2 ol New York 6 4 B00 a Manager Jolly Cholly Grimm is Conyers, 1» ..iii1. 8.0 & O & Prnad aden Bs : 3 a ih rocking on his heels as a result Jnim, 3 ¢ 31 3m 3 8 3 3 of the unexpected setback at the Narleski, » 8 6 0 0 6 [Pitaburen © AON La oe hands of the second-division| Tatuls ax ™ Ry 1 os LeiOth on Blues. Be that as it may, the JRBIWtroiss Joi Loo a01—3 LH ta. S 3 Tn Indians don’t intend to let Tel RUNS BATTED IN—Nislsen. Maxwell RYE 3. 8 3 34 Brewers use them as a spring-/hope, Convers. Montalve. Chapman, Buek- |Sorineneld “4s ‘sn 3 board to bounce back on top and] no 08s Eg Wilsan. uekwalter. | | Baltimore 2 de He it's a safe guess Skipper Grimm| alOUBLE LAYS Cong: ers (unassisted), |OtHAVR SOPTRERN ASROG 3 on Th will have to do more than ust| "1 Li¥r b oN | BASE S—Toulsuiite” 7. Indian- | Mobis: : wan 10st ra GB laugh his way through this 3° nlis 9 ON BALLS—Off Narleski 5. Herrin |New Orleans | a 13 830 } game set in the Tribe wigwam. % Chattanooga «1 7 81 STRUCK OUT-By Narleski 7, Wisner 6. Atlanta “ BoB 4 er Lieyd Dickey has been| ae inne. in 215 innings, Ris. Lite hock goaennan 8 8 £4] § ven the Indians’ mound assign- Birmingh AL | 1 .368 y ment in the new series Jasign Eos TCHR A Hors i (Nielsen). | Gio mphie 4 238 a tonight to try for his first win of| TIMES Sckowiki and Stewart. ¢ TEXAS 1gaoUE Pct. GB the season. He has started. two, ATTEND ANCB—17on Baas re ly NM games and relieved in one, with {Houston ........0.. 1 8 ‘818. 1 no victories and one defeat. is Soneerned, ae mythical totem (Bailes, mand 2 8 50 8» {pole on e ctory Field reser-|8sn Antonio woes FM ALY Mh THE BREWERS are the first of vation is still slippery with grease. ok Bishoms rod RB uo 1% the American Association's west-| The boys can't get the right hand | THREE-1 JEAGUE Pet. GB ern clubs to invade the Tribe hold on their bats. Burlington ........ 2 1 867 — premises and are to be followed oo» EVANSVILLE" Tt 1 3 3% i by the Blues, Saints and Millers... no SPECIAL batting prac. ounce «3 3 8 4 But the Indians are in a pre- | tice was to be held today. It's |Naterioo an: i 3 WM 5 fitious Josition and They now a reward for winning last night. (TERRE HA I + Wm 1, ' eir ng 8 feeble | Anyway, extra hitting practice | | GAMES TODAY and the league's western clubs | doesn’t seem to be the remedy | AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

are heralded as «Power.

In defeating league - leading Louisville last night three of the Tribe's four runs were put on base by walks and a hit batsman. One run was forced in by a walk with the bases loaded and another tallied on an infield out. Hits by Milt Nielsen and Dave Pope batted in the other two

markers. » ” »

BUT IT was an exciting con-

test for the 1798 customers as the Tribesters fought like frontiersmen to prevent the Colonels “from overpowering them in the

-eighth and ninth. The Indians were unable to score after the visitors changed | pitchers. in the third inning and the Tribe's Ray Narleski

checked Louisville after the fourth. bY Howey eighth, after one do Food walked Ed

Lyons. Then Charlie Maxwell's [Rue

single put Lyons on second. This is where Dave Pope and his arm brought the fans to their feet. Taft Wright singled to right and Pope's throw-in cut Lyons down at the plate, Maxwell stopping at second.

A THIRD * straight single was |;

delivered by Al Evans, over second, but Bobby Wilson made a diving stop and held Maxwell at third. With the bases filled and two down, Pope raced—@ver—the foul line in deep right and caught Bud Peterson’ s drive to retire the side. In the ninth, after one. down, Ken Chapman singled an a seored on Harold Buckwalter’'s drive to the wall in right center. Buckwalter, a pinch hitter, tried to stretch it into a triple and was erased on fast throwins by Pope and Wilson to Al Smith. Tommy Umphlett grounded to Smith for the e-ending out. BN arieski Ee became the first Tribe pitcher to last the route and win. He allowed eight hits, fanned seven and walked five. Tom Herrin was the losing pitcher. Harley Hisner, his successor, stopped the Indians and rolled up six strikeouts, Herrin issued seven walks before Louisville Manager Mike Higgins lifted him.

THE INDIANS Ss won on eight hits and left nine runners stranded. The Colonels left seven on hase. On two occasions, the home hoys left three runners stranded. Louisville won the series, three games to one. The Indians launch intersectional play tonight tied for third with Minneapolis, two games behind first-place Louisville and a game and a half behind secondplace Milwaukee. In 13 games With teams ir their own sector, the Redskin: have won seven and lost six, witk

five of the defeats inflicted or|!

the home grounds.

” MILT NIELSEN broke his bat < in three pieces as he singled in the first stanza to drive in Wilson, who had doubled and moved third on an infield out.

- ” COMING orp with the vital plays, plus Narleski's pitching, won the game for the Tribesters. Insofar as the Indians’ batting

laden with |

| ting .300 are two infielders, Malmberg and Wilson. They collected four of the Tribe's eight hits last night.

became a near casualty in the third inning. With the bases full, Pope lined a hit through the box! iand it caromed off the umpire’s| {left leg. The hot smash crippled | {Stewart momentarily and time {was called. The drive was headed for center field. Under the rules it went as a single and one run| allowed.

Tribe Averages

Brewers Lose 3d Straight

WHEN Manager Rollie Hemsley’ said his Toledo Mud Hens wouldn't finish last in the Ameri{can Association, he meant it. { Toledo, paced by Red McQuil-| {len’s 5-for-5 last wnight, whipped {Columbus, 7 to 5, at Columbus. {That gave the Hens a .500 {ing in the Association with 7-7 {and mired the Red Birds deeper in {the league cellar at 4-10. In other Association action last night, the defending champion Milwaukee Brewers were knocked down for the third straight time. Kansas City whipped the Brewers, 5 to 1, although both clubs had 5 hits. Minneapolis pounded a trio of St. Paul pitchers for 13 hits and a 7 to 4 victory at Minneapolis. Each team clouted three home runs. Dom Dallessandro

» BOB STEWART, base umpire, |

for this team. Only players bat- |

stand- | go

paced the Millers with three hits, including a double and triple. |

Lorraine, Leo Start New Sports Program

A new gports program, featur-| the

morrow night over WFBM-TV. The program,

10:45 p. m. program sponsored by Fehrs

beer.

IU Tops Miami, 4-1 BLOOMINGTON, Apr. 30 OP) 3 —Heavy hitting and steady pitch-|

versity a 4-to-1 victory over| Miami University of Oxford, 0.| Don Colnitis retired the first nine Miami batters, struck out eight, and gave. up one run, a homer by Right Fielder Carmen | Cozza. Don Luft, TU left fielder, iced the game in the first with a 380foot 2-run homer.

Miami pe . 000 010-000-- 1 7 1 Indian 300 100 00x 4 12 1 Reynolds ‘and ‘Wilkinson; Coinitis and| Sampias. Home Runs--For Indiana: Luft,|

Coach Quits

ing Manager Leo Durocher of (UP)--Wabash College today anNew York Giants and hisinounced .the resignation of Wilwife, Lorraine Day, will begin to-/liam G. Trapp as varsity baseball land football “Double Play,” played end on the grid varsity vill have Leo and Lorraine en- [team in 1941 before entering the .ertaining sports celebrities in in- |service. ‘ormal talks between 10:30 and|staff during his senior year ‘at It will be a weekly (Wabash.

Table Tennis

Scores at Table Tennis Center last [Ean

Ayres TV Service 5, Allison 4. Entries stil] are being accepted for the city tourney) ing yesterday gave Indiana Uni-| Saturday | and Bund day.

‘Milwaukee at INDIANAPOLIS (8:15), (Only game scheduled.)

AMERICAN on 13» Chicago at Washington (2, night),

Ble bad ork (2 Cleveland - Philadelphia NATIONAL nt

(night). AGUE

ew Yor! Philadeinhie @ Brooklyn at St. Louis night),

GAMES TOMORROW AMERICAN ASSOCIATION

(All Night Games) Milwaukee at INDIANAPOLIS (8:15), Minneapolis at Toledo. St. Paul at Columbus. Kansas City at Louisville. AMERICAN LEAGUE 8t. Louis at Boston, Detroit at New York (night). Chicago at Philadelphia (night). Cleveland at Washington (night),

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BATTING New York at Pittsburgh, ab r h 2b 3b hr rbi av.| Boston at Cincinnati. timer st 8 [2 1 19 §38¢ Prookivn at Chicsso S04 | ° i t . . W 8 3 1s 3 si 39 | elphia at 8t. Louis (night) N 8 10 203 8 263 i bt : 13 : 3 i 3 Ja RESULTS YESTERDAY G Y 2 0.0'1 3 0 AMERICAN ASSOCIA TIO! SSnyers Ann 3 3 10 9 3 : 3 136 | Toledo AAR 0 101 pa —34 11 a. . 5 ENBr + vanens 24 1 3 0 01 pr a Rann oo 1 3000 & Krieger (1) tha i. “ Ade Riven ia oyner nnin — d 1 Sacrifices—Lehner 2, Wilson. Smith, Losing pi lider 421 = | Stolen Bases—Wilson. 4, Convers 3. Pope Milwaukee... @. 0000-1 § 1 {2, Malmberg, Turner, Montalvo. {Kansas City 1 000 01x 5 | Club Batting—2 RING Wall schmidt 9). Zumouchgiie ar a nser; Cicotte and Owen, aw L IF R'm 8880 Chol ilwe. te An Welt Run ipple ....... 6 1 0 11% 2. 1 0 48 Paul ......... 001 NO2°000— 4 9 13 Vitter ...... 3 } 01 1 6 4 "4 LL 300 303 0ix— 7 13 MoCall | penny 4 1 18 7 18 12 5| McGlothin. Negray (8), Lakos (7) snd Naresh i ral 21 24 10 18 17 20|Cash; Harshman, Zabala (9) and Katt Brernathle } } 12% 11 14 6 3 Home Runs—Cash. Whitman, Sharman, Dickey Greer 13% & 11 9 Tiplaylock. Winning Pjtcher—Harshman. eign 201 Sh}? ross Flohr McG hin, prs 330 3 13% 3 (Ph Alon TON eae Si 13 0 { adelphis ...... Wile: Pltches—Vitter, Harris. © 2 Chicago .. - 000 100 _1 oo— 1 1 Hit Batsmen— Vitter, Abernsthie: ’ Simmons (1-0) and

an Bess; Ru Hacker (8), Dublel (7), Ramsdell (8) and Chiti, Losing Pitcher—Rush (1-2). Home Run—Chitl.

AMERICAN LEAGUE Cleyeland ......... 3 200 Philadelphia . . Peller (2-1) an egan, Tebbetts (6); | Kellner, Byrd (3), Kueab (17), Horle (8), Fowler (8) and Tipton, Home Runs -Ro- | 3, Tebbetts, ajeski, Losing Pitc ~Kellner (0-3), St. Louis at New York, postponed: wet| grounds Detroit at Bostan., postponed; wet grounds. Chicago at Washington, night,

poned; wet grounds

T Montreal » purale ax i ave la meeting of officers and direct-|Tire & Rubber Co., Akron, O., an® Torenio 4" Ottaws 1." lors of the District and Indiana/increase of $4000 over 1951, and SORES ASSQCIATION Golf Associations in the Colum- $10,000 by Pure Oil Co., Chicago, Little Rock 3, Mobile 2 bia Club. {offered for the first time. Nashlie 16, by Memos 3 5. The 3-day medal-play meet | Chattanooga 5, Atlanta 1. will be played over Meridian

TEXAS LEAGUE Oklahoma City 13, San Antonio 8. Houston 7, Tulsa 3 Beaumont 2, Ft. Worth 1. Shreveport 5, Dallas 2. THREE-1 LEAGUE Cedar Rapids 5, Evansville 3, Waterloo 3, Terre Haute 1. Quiney 1, Yeats eokuk 12, Davenport 8

CRAWFORDSVILLE, Apr. 30

line. coach. Trapp

He joined the coaching

Post Office 5, Table Tennis Cenfor or 5 Home Outfitting Si 2halco 3; Engle. rvice ndianapolis C Electric 5, YMCA 4: mes

a Western

Look Your Best Ina LEVINSON $7.50

. «your hatter

HARRY LEVINSON

37 N. Penn. Iilinois and Market

ist, 1 on; for Miami: Cozza, 5th, none on,

© ThE GL. 26877 I sy TERMS

t a Ema Sty oth ventn®

0 01 ig 501-1 3 o/nephew of George, ovale do) wna Westrum’” Biackwel Bloomington Country Club. Mas{ter of ceremonies was Art Londe, 63 070-21 25 3; 321 900 3 1 i/chairman of golf at Broadmoor.

(pions.

ETI)

AS SURE AS TAXES—Laurence M. Bscagha of Lon Cal., and Wiggles, his toy terrier, are first in

A

Beach,

at the Mile

track general admission gate for the fourth straight year.

THE SPEEDWAY can go

| ahead with the 500-Mile Race

now. Unofficial herald of the annual May 30 race is Laurence M. Bisceglia, 54-year-old migrant from Long Beach, Cal. Bisceglia and Wiggles, his toy terrier who will be 4 years old Memorial Day, arrived yesterday at 1:30 p. m. to be first in line at general admission gate No. 3 on W. 16th St. It is Bisceglia’s fourth straight “first” and the earliest any racing fan has pitched camp to be first through the gate May 30.

Bisceglia left Long Beach Mar. 3 and stopped at SBacramento, Cal, Phoenix, Ariz., Albuquerque, N. M,, and Chicago to visit friends and relatives. His 1933 DeSoto sedan has made the round-trip three times, Bisceglia’s favorite race drivers are hometowners Johnnie Parsons and Walt Faulkner. Wiggles still has the same tricks; strumming a guitar and sitting up and stretching. Last ‘Year a passerby, driving a Cadillac convertible, offered Bisceglia $300 for Wiggles. No sale.

Rupp

eepsa; Hinshaw Resigns

viet

By United Press LEXINGTON, Ky., Apr. 30 — Basketball Coach : Adolph Rupp of Kentucky ‘and university officials both declined comment today on charges Rupp

“aided and abetted immoral sub-| sidization” of star players on his teams. “I won't make an official statement until I confer with uni-| versity officials,” said Rupp when contacted at Pikeville, Ky. - » Hn UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS on the campus refused to comment, and University President Dr, Herman L. Donovan was out of town and could not he reached. The accusations were aimed | at Rupp yesterday in New York by Judge Saul 8. Streit in a statement made at the sentencing of former Kentucky players Ralph Beard, Alex Groza, and Dale Barnstable on basketball fixing charges. The three players were given suspended sentences, as the judge aimed his heaviest criticism at Rupp. Streit charged Rupp openly dis. cussed gambling “point sprea on games with his players, once bawled them out when a friend lost a het, and at least once phoned a ‘notorious bookmaker”

to find out a point-spread. § » .

|

that he (Rupp) aided and abetted in the immoral subsidization of the plhyers,” sald Streit, “With his knowledge, the charges in his care were openly exploited, their physical welfare was neglected, and he utterly failed to build their characters or instill any morals—indeed if he did not Impair them.” Kentucky Gov. Lawrence Wetherby, who was praised by Streit for his “wholehearted co-operation,” sald no action was planned by the university's board of trustees, of which he is a member, in the affair. “It is entirely up to the athletic board, not the hoard of trustees,” sald Wetherby. Streit also criticized Kentucky Welfare Commissioner Luther T, Coheen for an attitude toward the investigation of the fixing scandal “tantamount to obstructs ing justice” In refusing to inves.

By JIM JHEYROCH THE LATE George L. Soutar

iat Broadmoor Country Club.

Broadmoor Posts Plaque to Soutar

Broadmoor’s membership last night made certain the|

fessional until his death in 1949,

will be preserved by dedicating a| plague, 8 feet by ‘4 feet high, to!

his memory.

3 The presentation to the club sh, {Was made last night by Bernie Lehman at a dinner designed to] officially start the 1952 golf sea-|

Brooklyn ........ 000 010 300— $ 10 1 8t. Louis 000 P00 010— 1 § 2|80D. n Roe (3- 0 ‘and Campanella rene. ay » » as (7), over (8) an . ce Oslin. plteher—Presko (0-1), fl ON _HMAND to recall stories Bo eburen raves 0000 G6 010 000 165 ¢ 34 : about the lovable Scotch pro were| ah ) an cooper; an i Mag 5 and, “MeCuitough, y Sui File President Bud Hoaser Javon er— Priel { New ork... 201. 000 001 4 0 x an an mn n'a

pro at the!

The plaque iz designed to bear) the names of future club cham-| » “w »

COURSES FOR the 1952 In-|

vost-|dianapolis District Golf Tourna-| | {ment were selected yesterday at/awards were $12,000 by Firestone,

Bantam Ben Hogan, National

Open Thurs.

3|memory of Soutar, who served as the club's first golf pro-

{Hills this summer. ition, either on June 19 or 22, will {bring the mighty Hogan $1500, it was announced yesterday.

42,700 in Accessory Prizes Up for 500

Indianapolis Motor Speedway {officials announced today $42,700] {cash accessory pribes already| {have been posted for the 36th annual 500-Mile Memorial Day auto classic. Not included ig the Speedway's| guaranteed prize fund of $75, 000! and $20,000 in lap prizes. ‘t ".8

THE list

TOPPING of cash

{Others included $5050 by, Champion Spark Plug Co. To-

Hills, Ulen Country Club at Leb-|ledo, O.; $7000 by General Petro-| anon and Broadmoor, June 9, 10feum Corp, and 11.

Los Angeles, and '$2750 each by Perfect Circle, [Corp., Hagerstown, Ind. and|

Open champion, will make an ex-/Burd Piston Ring Co., Rocktord, hibition appearance at Meridian 1m.

| |

-—12 to 8:30

Take the Guess Work

Out of

Fishing!

the

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SPORTING GOODS CO. CO Lk344s

| | | i

The exhibi-|

|- Resignation of Herman, T. Hin-

“THE UNDISPUTED facts are,

Charles Ma ead Tech

Tech's Big Green basketball te am today had a new coach,

| shaw, who led Tech to four sec- | tional championships ‘and a rune nerup spot in the state high school finals, was announced yes(terday by Charles Dagwell, Tech's

athletic director. Charles Maas, former Tech and [Butler University star, who has served the past two years as reserve coach, has been named ‘head coach, Hinshaw will remain lat Tech as assistant director of guidance, a post he has held {the past two years,

" » ”

IN COACHING the Tech team the past seven years, Hinshaw led the Big Green to victory in more than 70 per cent of its games. His record shows 128 wins and 53 de. feats, Bectional trophies were

{won by Tech in 1946, 1040, 1050 i and 1852. The 1050 team ad- |

vanced to the semifinals before being sidetracked by Madison and

tral. Hinshaw won state-wide reeognition in 1940 when his Lapel Bulldogs became the favorite state tournament team. Lapel lost to Hammond Tech in. the afternoon of the finals, Hinshaw left that year to go "to Ben Davis, In 1944 Hinshaw moved tp Tech as a teacher and

coach. » » .

MAAS WAS graduated from Tech in 1943, after starring in basketball and baseball. He

and then went to Butler. He played three seasons of basketball with the Bulldogs, being captain of the team for the 1948-49 season, After leaving Butler, Maas moved into the head coaching job at Decatur Central, In 1950, he moved to Tech and one semester later became head baseball coach. He then replaced Powell Mooread as

coach, Moorhead is now fresh. man basketball coach. At the age of 28, Maas becomes the second youngest coach in the! (publ city, second only to his former Butler teammate Jimmy Doyle, coach at Cathedral; : a

tigate the social background of the accused players.

Baron Leone Wins

In Armory Match

Long-haired Baron Michele | Leone last night used the same

TV fans have watched him use lto defeat Al Lovelock in the main event of the wrestling pro. gram in the Armory. The and third falls with a neckbreaker after Lovelock took the first with a jackknife. A rerowd of {3800 watched and several hun[dred other fans were unable to (get in. ~ Ralph Garibaldi won the semi(final over Frank Taylor and] Chris Zaharias defeated Irish Jack Kennedy In the opener.

—————— re |

| Additional Sports

Baron took the second;

Hannibal the horse didn’t cross the Derby: trial finish line because he was scratched, » " "

Bon Veeck Jed a hase

dy by players io Japan. Taoce? was ne players fo i in the deal but if haired works out okay, there's going to be a yest ior mare, 2

Sheldon Jones was a disap. pointment with the New York Giants, Now with the Boston Braves, he's right mn his ele ment ., . .

‘Browns Trade 3

CLEVELAND, O., Apr. 20 (UP) ~The Cleveland Browns today tannounce a three-for-one trade {with the Green Bay Packers, sending veteran tackle Chubby

On Pages 28, »

TASTE, NOT

-

BE YOUR OWN WHISKEY EXPER

THE PRICE TAG can't show smoothness and mellowness

That's why it pays to compare the taste of Calvert Reserve with any other whiskey,

regardless of price or type.

We're confident you'll prefer Calvert because it is protected from bite, burn or sting by

Calvert’s “vacuum distilling.”

"But, after your own taste test, if you still pre-

fer another brand, stick with i

Calvert Challenges Comparison

with any whiskey on

CALVERT RESERVE BLENDED WHISKEY . 83.4 MOOS . 5% GRAN NEUTRAL

put in a glass, and the same amount of any other whiskey in another without knowing which is which. Taste each one for smoothness, flavor and freedom from harsh. ness. Then pick the one that really tastes better to you.

northerners in return for backer Walt Michaels.

——————————————————————————

PRICE, IS THE...

7 Have 34 oz. of Calvert

the difference in between whiskies.

t. Fair enough?

i

this past season played in the | final game against Muncie Cen- :

became Tech's head basketball |

served three years in the Army

assistant basketban padded a

Grigg and two rookies to thei line- |

as Th Cage Job

Robinson, Bam

3 | Pato,

Rowen Todian ko, Dodgers | Bauer, Cubs

Klussewsk), Mody Sauer, Cubs Campanella, Dodge.

® 140 E Wash. ® 346 W. Wash.

pi

hn

True test of whiskey value

sh pO rs BRE gl HE Rye

28