Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 September 1952 — Page 23

T. 3, 1052

air | Purdue-

ok wh

es. Holcombe | An error run across, off the Tribe ut an infield

88 sacrificed, d to Pitcher apped Wilson the Colonels n, Pope tried » Kentuckians hey tried for | Ed Lyons’ and the ball sville dugout,

” er run, tallied 1g, Was regisn, He doubled vo down on a mberg. Louise lone run in phens walked 11 doubled to made a wild ind Stephens

ters opened d in the secthe Colonels in the first » & hit batshes, a passed ing flies did

” ~ lowed three he second he Tosheff, Tom 1side-the-park bases loaded } was retired en additional

a homer for ne on in the worked the ille rubber,

nell Player

— Danny I. 8. Army, hortstop and , Was named today in the )ngress tours

at shortstop ing Military on Colonials, rst baseman other ex-In-0 serving in

:

role as the Big Ten’s 1951 runner-

HEE LE UTI REE ERLE MLE FREE EON SARL LEAS OER RE LESSENS ERLE LER ea we SALAS LEE LORRI OEE EOLA EO EARS

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 3, 1952

By JIMMIE ANGELOPOLOUS LAFAYETTE, Sept. 3 — Just because Coach Stu Holcomb has a libéral sprinkling of married men on the football squad — don’t think the Purdue Boilermakers are. going to get housemaid's knee this fall. Those wedding bands could be a good omen. Purdue's talented,’ young men can get serious enough to improve on their bridesmaid’'s

up ‘eleven to Illinois Rose Bowl champions. The Boilermakers don't have petticoat fever, Theirs can be a fever of petals. If the scent of Roses drifts Lafayette-ward this fall, Stu's Boilermakers should be as capable of a good whiff as anybody in the league. Making it a double-ring ceremony—grabbing the Conference title and a Rose Bowl bid—would be a fitting climax to the careers of erst-while married men like Dale Samuels, Allen Hager, Billy Bruner, Phil Klezek, Jerry Thorpe and others. Right now, the likeable Holcomb, an impressionable gent who tempers optimism with realism, eyes his vigorous, ninegame schedule with character istic Holcomb frankness.

8 8 = team that's taken a 4-year “PVE POSTED a notice,” the lease on the Old Oaken Bucket curly-haired mentor said, “and Will miss All-American End Leo told the boys we're going to shoot Sugar and Rarrell Brewster.

at a 6-3 record.”

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

BOILERMAKER BLASTERS—The ground gobbling corps of Purdue backs which led the Big Ten in rushing last year are off and running again, Halfback Earl Heninger, Halfback Phil Klezek, Fullback Max Schmaling and Quarterback Dale Samuels were last year's starters. And kneeling are four more lettermen—Roy Evans, Rex Brock, Jerry Thorpe and James Reichert, who kicked a 41.yard

Little League Baseball, football.

Scenting Roses? |" 'iMe le

{of the gridiron sport sniffing

| fall, This week the ranks were bolstered with pre-teen lagers who will perform this year. |in an organized city league. {~ Little League Baseball made |a successful debut in Indianapolis [this summer and officials of the group want to afford the same opportunities in football. n ” » THE CALL IS out for all boys, {between the ages of 9 and 11 who live in" the Fairgrounds - and {School 76 area to participate in a | paperweight “style of football. {The weight of players will range between 70 and 90 pounds. George Walters, local businessman and keen enthusiast of football, has joined hands with Bud Harris, Eddie Pear- | soil and Frank Hamilton, all of ! | Little League's * baseball or- | ganization, to complete plans |

| for the football campaign. “We want to have eight teams

field goal against Notre Dame last year. Phil Mateja is the ninth letterman back—a safety man— in the league.” Walters explained,

and Norm Montgomery is a three-year punter and linebacker, another letterman, '

until the 19thy” Stu stated, | which happens to be eight days after the Boilermaker strategist.reaches his 42d birthday, 2 8 a means Purdue is youthfully spirWHAT ABOUT Purdue? The ited throughout. The average age

is 20 years 3 months. Purdue has the depth in most positions that keeps a staff feeling warm when the winters get cold. Injuries—and fum-

FOURTEEN of the 28 are seniors, only six of whom are on the |10-letterman starting eleven. That

Thrée-year-man Clint Knitz, a

“We'll have to get in good defensive bulwark, leaves 195- ples—hurt Purdue considerably copdition. We'll go twice a day [P0Und Walt Cudzik as the likely j.¢¢ year, Those were two of

center replacement and Cudzik (will be the only nonlettéerman

the biggest factors in Wiscon- | sin’s 34 to 7 conquest of Pur-

° Leahy Still [Hee on the 6p offensive unit. | due, only Purdue loss. in five |

® * ® Pessimistic | By United Press SOUTH BEND, Sept. 3—Notre|

Dame Grid Coach Frank Leahy |

All-round halfback Jim Whit- | league games in 1951. mer was drafted two weeks ago, 0 a NO

but the Boilermakers have the | SIX RETURNING tackles are finest crop since Stu came to ' monogrammed but a seventh—

Purdue in 1947. | t If lettermen are an index to a Een Panfil, ‘4 245-paund, 6-6'vet-

maintained his usual pre-season |'®3M’s potentialities, Purdue is eran, may be unable to play bepessimism today, greeting a squad (weil fortified with 28 old hands. {cause of an operation several

of 60 players to inaugurate. the f 64th Irish football season. “There isn't any game where! we can logically be figured as favorites,” Leahy said. “You have to concentrate on one game at a time, and now we're thinking of our opener at Pennsylvania Sept. 27.” Leahy's prospects actually were no more grim than those of numerous other mentors scanning their squads this year. Among the crew at hand were some notable names, headed by Halfbacly John Lattner, who last year played 401 minutes, more than any other Notre Dame play, r, was second in scoring, rst. in intercepted passes, averaged five yards per carry, and did the punting in the last three games, p

Riviera Gets Swimming Coach

Times Special KENOSHA, Wis, Sept. 3—Riviera Club of Indianapolis had a new swimming coach today when Johnny Glavich signed to rebuild the Hoosiers into a national threat for AAU titles. Galvich, prominent on the American swimming scene, re-| signed as coach of the Kenosha Youth Foundation to accept the Riviera Club post.

Atlas Beats Balbo,

Mighty Atlas, 221, Hollywood, | inaugurated the indoor wrestling season last night by defeating Salvatore Balbo, 202, of LaGrange, Ill, at the Armory. Atlas won the first fall in 11) minutes with a full Nelson. Balbo | evened the match with a cork-| screw and toe hold but Mighty Atlas clinched it with another full Nelson. Billy Fox, 196, Napoleon, O. won from Iron Mike Angelo, 204, Toledo, in 1 minute, 15 seconds with a body slam and press. Dave Sims, 225, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, and Scotty Williams, Chi-| cago, drew in the 30-minute opener.

Flanagan Held Fight Favorite

CLEVELAND, O., Sept. 3 (UP) | «Dandy Del Flanagan was a 2 to 1 favorite to beat Johnny (Red) | DeFazio, Bayonne, N.J., here to-| night in the third meeting be-| tween the two. highly rated welterweights, The fight will be televised over WFBM-TV and WTTV at 9 p. m.

Vaughn Winner

ial SHELBYVILLE Jimmy Vaughn of Indianapolis headed a| foursome here yesterday which won the weekly PGA pro-am golf meet with a best ball of 60, 12 under par.

months ago.

5. [I They include: David Whiteaker, Welsh Rare Bifs

{Joseph Wojtys, Indianapolis’ Walt \ By JACK WELSH Viellieu, Bruner, Ray Pacer and Robin Hood robbed the rich

Fred Preziosio. End Bernie Flowers should to help the poor. Yesterday an- | blossom into a top offensive other Robin by the name of | flankman after being overshadRoberts robbed the Dodgers. | owed by the Sugar-Brewster allBut it was little help to those league duo. Johnny Kerr is a

poor Giants--who were idle, comer and husky Ed Dwyer, +

ke Fornieles, the 20-year-old Havana lad, was throwin g smoke balls in that 1-hitter for | defensive wingman. Washington. But with a name | Hager and Jack Houston are like that, most fans did a double [top guards followed by lettermen take—they didn’t know whether [Thomas Roggeman and Thomas he wds a player or a cigar. Bettis. 4

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the ex-Howe High School stal- | wart, is a promising sophomore |

i‘and, of course, we need a spon3 . {sor for each club, Every league | IN SAMUELS, Purdue has an team will play an eight-game

All-America candidate, a great schedule. Fach squad will have little- .5-10 “I" quarterback who 15 players.” thas a 468 average, hitting 155 of There will be paid officials 331 flips for 2023 yards in two| for each game and each: conyears, good for 17 TDs. test will be four S8-minute Max Schmaling, a blaster, has! quarters, The halftime inter-top-flight league promise as a jun-; mission will be 10 minutes. ior fullback and Heninger and, Boys who are eligible, may regKlezek, are the ground-eating ister tomorrow beginning speedsters. vo r at 6:30 p. m. at the baseball dia-' This quartet wore most of the | 2 " »

Labor Day throughout the nation always sends lovers

ue Football

WELSH Inc, now has a brother—

the air for the first signs of

mond at 49th and Haverford Sts. The first workou. will be held Sept. 8. » » » | WALTERS SAID all boys will be given rating tests to judge ability on running, kicking, passing and knowledge of football fundamentals. Each league team | will be equally balanced with the proper distribution of playing! talent. : i It has been tentatively scheduled to play opening games Sept. 20. Teams will practice | one afternon each week. | Walters emphasized that every player must be equirped with hel-! met; shoulder pads, football pants and tennis shoes. i

BASEBALL 8:15

"Grotto Night"

INDIANAPOLIS INDIANS

CHARLESTON SENATORS VICTORY FIELD

W. 16TH AND HARDING Reservations MA. 5371

————

golden slippers in Purdue's | [f7—

Cinderella-like Big Ten showing |§ | last year. | 3 | That's the reputation Purdue! [carries at Penn State, Sept. 27; at! Ohio State, Oct. 4; against Iowa, | {Oet. 11; against Notre Dame, Oct.| 18; at Illinois, Oct. 25; against! Michigan State, Nov, 1: at Minne-| sota, Nov. 8; at Michigan, Nov. 15 and against Indiana, Nov. 22.

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