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The Indianapolis News from Indianapolis, Indiana • 51

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Indianapolis, Indiana
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51
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WcdnciJoy November 18, 19S9 INDIANAPOLIS NEWS fag 51 VIEWS OF SPORT Bowls, Big 10 in Real Muddle Chiefs Drop 9fh Straight COACH OF WEEK Yale-Harvard Tiff Labeled The Game7 1 RED SMITH not such effect that whenever By NEW YORK It may Syracuse's Ben Real 'Hard-Nose' Special to The News ST. PAUL There's no rest for the wicketespecially the Indianapolis nets. St. Paul's Saints peppered the Indianapolis Chiefs with a five-goal barrage in the final 20 minutes last night while Murphy bowed his head he passed out. After the Yale victory, fist fights enlivened By Unittd Prm International "In the past we've had some have been Harvard's weakest team in 70 years of football, but it had contrived Harvard's sorriest record.

Starting with a 44-0 defeat by Stanford, the boys from The Yadd had lost seven of eight games and yielded up an average of 31 points to each opponent. Yale was no name to strike terror in jersied bosoms, either, outstanding boys (Jim Brown, nowythe NrL star, but we were never so strong right across the board," he said. A fleet of able backs, plus The gristly-scholars of New the "sizeable seven" first-unit line and the alternate wall which spiritedly calls itself the "unknown seven," share Haven had beaten- Connecticut, Columbia and Holy Cross, had permitting the Hoosiers only one shot on goal to win, 9-2. It was the first time the Chiefs had tested St. Paul's entry in the International Hockey League.

And it was no different than the first eight games played by the Chiefs. They now have nine straight defeats and must deal with the Saints again tomorrow night and Milwaukee Friday night before opening their home schedule at Indianapolis Saturday night against Omaha. Fred Brown, Don Hart and Howie Hughes put in two goals each for the Saints. Glenn Ramsay, last year with Ft. Wayne, turned back everything except a couple of middle-period shots by Denny Menard and Stan Maxwell.

ft equally the credit for the 8-0 been bounced a- Syracuse record. Operating from Schwartz walder's unbalanced T-forma' tion. these operatives have ffVfl around by Cornell, Dartmouth, Brown and Princeton. Yet on the aft SYRACUSE, N.Y, The equipment: Two strong units with no apparent weak spots. The attitude: "Hard-nosed" football.

The result: The first Eastern team, other than a service academy, to be rated the No. 1 football team in the nation by United Press International. The man who combined the equipment and the attitude to produce the result: Ben Schwartzwalder of Syracuse, today was named UPI coach of the week. The honor came after the former paratrooper's charges clobbered arch-rival and neighbor Colgate, 71-0 Saturday. But the selection was as much a salute to the fact that Schwartzwalder had brought his undefeated gridders to the No.

1 rating and a Cotton Bowl berth. Schwartzwalder, in his 11th season at Syracuse after three years at Muhlenberg and several at various high schools, has no doubt that this club is the best he ever has coached. taken with relish to the gray ing mentor's "hardnosed" phil osoDhv of football which is Sy Aiieciotid ftss The annual guessing game which goes something like musical chairs on which teams will wind up in which postseason bowl games is under way. This year, though, its even nore complicated than usual jecause the Xiberty Bowl in 'hiladelphia (December 19) nd the Blue Bonnet Bowl in Houston are in the market for top teams. Add these to the Rose, Orange, Cotton, Sugar and 'Gator Bows and you lave confusion.

As of now, only one team, Syracuse, is down for a major jowl game. The Orangemen will play the winners of the Southwest Conference championship in the Cotton Bowl. The Blue Bonnet Bowl is reported to have the inside track sn Mississippi along with the runnerup in the Southwest Conference. The Orange Bowl would iearly like to have Penn State, out the Nittany Lions, second ttnly to Syracuse in the East, leem to lean toward the Liberty Bowl because it's a home-itate proposition. If Penn State turns down the Orange Bowl, Georgia almost certainly will wind up there.

And what ot Louisiana State, last ytor't national champion end practically forgotten merely because if lost one game by a tingle point? The word it that the Bengali from the Bayou are interested in any good bowl assign-vent. Their task it complicated, however, because by state law -they ore not permitted to play against integrated teamt. The Rose Bowl has a definite commitment, the Big 10 champion against the West Coast champion. Wisconsin, Morthwestern and Michigan State all are in contention for the Big 10 title. Southern California, best on the Coast, is in the NCAA's doghouse and ineligible for bowl games.

That leaves Washington (8-1) if it "an awareness that this is physical contact game and en joying that phase of it ernoon of No- Smith vember 19, 1949, here were 61,000 customers in the bowl brandishing their rusty bowlers alcfi, rending their mangy raccoon coats, while the inoffensive academicans of Yale smacked the peace-loving in team that really likes to hit," as Schwartzwalder explains the term. ICE HOCKEY INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Division Schwartzwalder, who still retains the slow-poke drawl Pts. 6 OG 14 45 It 11 it 14 of his native Huntington, W.Va., is the most successful coach Syracuse has ever had with a career record of 63; the walk from Hampden Park in Springfield, Mass. to the railroad station. Frank Hink-ley was Yale's captain, and a New York newspaper honored him with an editorial.

"No mother or father worthy of the name," the edi- torial declared, "would permit a son to associate with the set of Yale brutes on Hinkley's football team." For two years no Harvard mother or father did, but by 1897 scars had healed. "Forgetting the past," an editorial in the Harvard Crimson said, "and resolving on a generous -open-hearted rivalry in the future, Harvard again joins hands with Yale and welcomes her heartily to her old -place as Harvard's nearest and dearest foe." (Copyright Its. New York Herald Tribune, Inc.l COLLEGE FOOTBALL FRIDAY NIGHTS GAMES Davidson at Furman. Michigan Stole at Miami San Jos at College of Pacific. SATURDAY'S GAMES Notre Dame at Iowa.

Purdue at Indiana. Northwestern at Illinois. Ohio State at Michigan. Wisconsin at Minnesota. Drake at North Texas (night).

Dartmouth at Princeton. Colorado Stat University at Brighara Young. Florence Stat at Vanderbilt. Florida State at Florida. Hardin-Simmons at Arizona Stat Univef sity (night).

Holy Cross at Marquette. Harvard ot Yale. Iowa State at Oklohoma. Montana at Idaho. Missouri at Kansas.

Memphis Stole at Alabama. Mississippi Southern at Auburn. New Mexico ot Air Force. Nebraska at Kansas State. North Carolina State at South Carolin.

Oregon State at Oregon. Penn State at Pittsburgh. Rice at Texas Christian. Rutgers at Columbia. Syracuse at Boston University, Southern Methodist at Baylor.

Tennessee at Kentucky. Tulane at Louisiana State. The Citadel at West Virginia. Texas Tech vs. Arkansas at Littl Rock.

Texas Western at Arizona. UCLA at Southern California. Utah State at Utah. Virginia at Maryland. Villanova at Detroit.

Wichita at Dayton. Wake Forest at Clemson. Washington State at Washington. Louisville Ft. Wayne Toledo INDIANAPOLIS 4 30 34 22 72 Susie's Excited FT.

WORTH Susie Handley, Texas Christian sophomore, beams vvith delight as she points to a headline announcing TCU's 14-9 upset of Texas, ending" the Longhorns' unbeaten string. Behind Susie is her boy friend, Harry Moreland, who won the game with a 56-yard touchdown run. AP Wire-photo Georgia Quarter Is Back of Week 34-2. Western Division Pts. OO St.

Paul 4 2 1 13 34 Denver 3 12 44 Omaha 5 2 44 Milwaukee 1 I I 14 II Yesterday's Results McKeever Now Draw Twins Raves St. Paul INDIANAPOLIS 2 Ft. Wayne 4, Omaha 1 (overtime) By Associated Press a 19- Tennessee, the team that beat Tonight's Game Milwaukee at Denver NATIONAL LEAGUE Tonight's Games Detroit at Toronto. New York at Chicago. AMERICAN LEAGUE Tonight's Games Providence at Buflaio.

Springfield at Hershey. Francis Tarkenton, By Associated Press are twin in tackles McKeevers tellectuals of Harvard, 29-6, in the 66th engagement of their holy war. In the press box, Charley Loftus swept the devout congregation with incredulous eyes. "This," he said, mentally computing the gate, "really and truly is The Game." So it was in 1875 and so it is in 1959. Harvard meets Yale again this week and what has gone before in this season is of no consequence.

For thousands who travel to New Haven Saturday to truckle at the shrine, this and this alone is The Game. Some of the reasons why this is so are explained in the 134-page program that Charley Loftus has prepared for this encounter. The program includes a special supplement containing records of all 75 Yale-H a a meetings from 1875 through 1958, a massive compendium of facts developed in three years of research. There have been only six breaks in the series since the trouble started in Hamilton Park, New Haven, November and Marlin is sec year-old junior quarterback at Georgia, today was named back of the week by the Associated Press for his performance against Auburn in the game that clinched the Southeastern Conference title for the Bullfrogs. both Auburn and Louisiana State.

Charlie Flowers ground out 168 yards in 26 carries, scoring one touchdown. Jack Gibbs passed for two scores and set up a third. Dean Look, Michigan State's sensation, competed 7 out of 7 passes for a new Big 10 record; pitched a screen pass to Herb Adderley for a '28-yard CHIEFS SUMMARY reasons why Southern California is undefeated and untied after eight bruising football games. Singly, or in tandem, the twins Mike and Marlin are rougher than a stucco bathtub. informed yesterday ond.

"But I get more because they rarely try to run around Marlin's end," explained Mike. Mike was in the headlines for several days after the California game when the Cal coach accused him of piling on and slugging a downed halfback. The back was out for the season with a crushed cheek and nose. INDIANAPOLIS ST. MacPherson With 30 sec (2) L.

D. R. D. L. W.

McKey PAUL Ramsay Summers Lanyon Larkin snorr onds to go.rt Kuzma Rubic Kukulowicz Maxwell R. Melynchuk T. D. play and scored from the Spares-lndianaoolis: Melanchuk. vi.

they had been named Associ kelis, Clements, Menard. Brillant. Haves. 1. a 15-10 victory over North- press linemen Qf the Mickalien; St.

Paul: McRae. Scobie, Hughes, Brown, Derretl, Hart, Brunei. week for helping hold Bay FIRST PERIOD St. Paul. Larkin (unas Tf VJVV1 II.

Arkansas Lance Alworth 2 staged a one-man show against ueorgia trailing, 13-7, fourth down and 13 to go, Tarkenton hit end Bill Her-ron in a corner of the end zone. Durward Pennington, a placement spec-a 1 i then sisted), 2, St. Paul, Hart (McRae, Kukulowicz), 3, St. Paul, Hughes (Brown, Brunei), 8:53. 13, 1875.

Penalty-Melanchuk (tripping), 1:5. SECOND PERIOD Seoring-4, St. Paul. Summers (Brown). gets by Washington.

State. Northwestern and Wisconsin will run into tradition-toughened rivals Saturday. And if both happen to lose, Michigan State will sneak off with not only the championship but also the Rose Bowl bid. Illinois' last-play triumph over Wisconsin and Michigan State's victory over Northwestern last Saturday left the three contenders tied for first place with 4-2 records. Michigan State, however, has nothing more to say about the race following its 15-10 decision over Northwestern.

In 1894 Yale's Fred Murphy 1, Indianapolis, Menard (Brillant, Tarkenton fetched Harvard's Bob Hallo t'7 i 1, Clements), 2, Indianapolis, Maxwell (Brillant, Menard), 1:07. well a clout that broke his nose. Harvard retaliated with Penolties-Scabie (slashing), Sum mers (tripping), 12:34. THIRD PERIOD calmly kicked the extra point that meant victory, 14-13. It was Tarkenton's pinpoint passing to fullback Don Sober-dash that set up the score after guard Pat Dye had recovered an Auburn fumbie on the LADIES DAY ouuuieui mciauuisu nc gauicu 131 yards, scored one touchdown and added a 2-point conversion.

He also kicked out of bounds on the Southern Methodist 2. Skip Face of Stanford scored 27 points in a 39-22 decision over Oregon State. Teat Smith of Indiana and Rost Fichtner of Purdue both drew nominations, at did Willie West of Oregon, Don Perkint of New Mexico, Dale Betty of Maryland, Richie Maya ot the Air force, Joe Caldwell of Army and Bill Brown of Illinois. Scoring-5, SI. Paul, Harl (Kukulowicz, Brunei), 4, St.

Paul, Brown (Derretl, Scabie), 7, St. Paul (Hughes, Brown, Derrett), 8, St. Paul, Derrett (Hughes, St. Paul, Brown (Kukulowicz, Larkin), 18:44. Penalty-Rubic (tripping), 17:44.

SAVES BY PERIODS MacPherson 11 4 13-30 Ramsay 4 13 1-1 The Spartans have concluded Auburn 35. He completed league play and will finish the passes for 16 and 9 yards to lor to a measly 3 yards on the ground, Mike replied: "We're real proud." Marlin said, "We're honored, it's great." These were characteristic answers for the crewcut, 215-pound identical twins, who always think of themtelvet tit "we." They're a fearsome example ot together-nest. Although both were standouts at Los Angeles' Mt. Car-mel High School, only Marlin was selected for the annual postseason Northern California vs. Southern California bowl game.

Officials didn't want to pick two players from one school. So Marlin refused to play unless his brother did, too. The McKeever-less South lost, 20-0. Between them the McKeevers stopped 25 of Baylor's 72 offensive plays. Mike made 13 tackles, one more than his brother.

Mike leads the Trojan team $28,600 Pledged for '500' Open The "500" Festival golf committee hit $28,600 in signed pledges received today. Dick Stackhouse, president -of the Festival group, said the committee would appreciate having pledges returned to golf chairman Tom Moses as soon as possible. The goal is $75,000, which is to take care of the $50,000 in prize money for the Festival Open to be played at -Speedway next May 26-29." The remaining $25,000 will be used for a pro-celebrities tour- nament and other incidental" expenses. Soberdah and then finally connected with Herron on the last-chance throw. Penn State's Richie Lucas staged another tremendous show, gaining 216 yards in a 46-0 romp over Holy Cross.

The quarterback set a new university career record with Cats Choose Jones EVANSTON, 111. (AP) The Northwestern University basketball team has elected senior forward Willie Jones captain for the upcoming season. Telecast Canceled The telecast of the Notre Dame-Iowa football game Saturday, scheduled for the In- a total of 1,184 yards, erasing diana Theater, has been can season at Miami of tionaa Friday night. Wisconsin, knowing at half-time that Northwestern had lost and holding a 6-2 over Illinois, saw its title chances, diminish when Bill Brown tumbled into the end zone as the final gun sounded. What minutes earlier appeared to be success suddenly turned into a 9-6 defeat.

Although; both Northwestern and Wisconsin will be on the road Saturday, the Badgers seem to have a better chance than the Wildcats. Wisconsin will go against Minnesota which is in the Big 10 cellar, having beaten only Since that triumph, the Gophers have "dropped five straight Conference COLLEGE BASKETBALL the old mark set by Lenny celed. Persons who have pur-Moore, chased tickets may get a re-Mississippi had double fund by calling Jim Welch, heroes in its 37-7 victory over ME 7-4369. Butler Nominee Dr. Robert A.

Stewart, a 1934 graduate of Butler University and a varsity football letterman in 932-33-34, has been nominated for the 1959 silver anniversary all-America team selected by Sports Illustrated. Now living in California and associated with Cerber Products, Dr. Stewart is one of 71 candidates for the honor based on distinguished living in the 25 years after college graduation. Youth, Girl Sentenced for Check Spree "Why worry about a mistake in the program makeup the show must go on, I always say!" AT FT. WAYNE Indiana Tech 107, Giftin 3 Leading Scorers-Indiana Tech: Hatch and Mock each 14, Johns 13, Hubenthal 12, Foster II, Stegelman 11, Beerman I.

COLLEGE GRID STANDINGS SKYLINE CONFERENCE All Games WLT Pet. TP OP IVY LEAGUE All Games WLT Pet. WLTTP OP SOUTHEASTERN CONFERENCE Alt Games WLT Pet. TP OP 5 1 IJJ 1 I 147 41 4tt l.oot I Itl 75 Penn Dartmouth Yale 4 11 4 3 I 14 2 153 1 150 4 1 0 .100 Bri ley Gets 45; Cubs 'Held' to 87 Wyoming Col. St.

U. New Mexico Utah Utoh Stat Denver 4 1.00 I 1 242 42 5 1 J33 4 3 11 133 4 2 .447 i 3 232 108 1 2 .500 4 4 2)3 153 2 4 .333 4 5 112 144 2 4 .333 2 7 104 1)5 1 Itl Harvard 4 I 4 2 Georgia La. State Mississippi Auburn Alabama Georgia Tech. Tennessee 4 2 144 games. Even though .447 .500 .500 .500 .147 .143 Special to The News FRANKFORT, Ind.

An 18- year-old youth and his teen- agj girl accomplice were under sentence today for a 17-day bogus check spree in three counties. Clinton Circuit Judge Everett N. Lucas sentenced Jack L. Da vis of R.R. 2, Frankfort, to to 14 years in the Indiana Re I 2 71 5 142 5 ill 101 4 4 0 117 S5 2 1 37 104 17 54 173 3 1 2 3 2 0 3 2 1 Brown Columbia Brighom Yeunf 1 5 Montana 1 St .147 2 7 (7 154 .147 1 7 7 241 4 3 115 5 2 1 112 1)1 II .447 .447 .400 .513 .500 .333 .100 .000 .000 3 4 1 12) Vonderbtl! 2 2 2 Florida 2 4 0 Tulone (41 Kentucky 0 4 Miss.

State ...0 4 0 MAJOR COLLEGE TEAM LEADERS 3 5 1 142 3 4 120 107 I 4 0 4 154 Madison's Cubs and Jasper's was clipped, 51-44, by Rush- ville of the South Central Wildcats last night taught hu TOTAL OFFENSE (Average Yards, a Game) MID-AMERICA CONFERENCE All Games WLT Pet. TP OP Bowling Green. 5 1.00 I 241 74 formatory and fined him $300, The Frankfort girl, Alice YANKEE CONFERENCE (Final) All Games WLT Pcf. TP OP Connecticut 4 0 1.000 3 17 100 Massachusetts 2 2 .500 1 I 1 111 1)2 Maine 1 2 2 .400 1 3 2 124 11 New Hampshire 1 2 1 .375 1 3 2 1)1 144 Rhode Island 1 2 1 .375 3 5 1 44 150 Vermont (It .000 4 3 112 133 ATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE All Games WLT Pet. WLTTP OP mility to Springs Valley and former coach Rex Wells.

Rex, after two tremendous 15, was sentenced to Indiana N. Tex 357.1 New Mexico 349.2 So. Cal 348 6 Ohio Univ. ...4 1 Syracuse Iowa Mississippi Wyoming Utah 443.6 399.9 361 358.3 357.5 seasons at springs Valley, New Mm. St.

342.4 Girls School at Clermont until she is 18. Oklahoma 338.6 .40 .50 .500 .200 .004 7 1 204 )) 5 3 151 47 4 3 111 110 4 5 1)5 114 1 7 40 307 2 4 1 123 200 moved to Greensburg this fall Miami 12 Kent 3 3 west. Michigan 3 3 Marshall 14 Toled 4 saves some of its best football for Wisconsin, the Badgers shouldn't too much trouble, considering the title is at stake. Northwestern, however, it beget with a tremendout problem against Illinois. Not only are the lllini tough enough to hold their own against any one, as Wisconsin can verify, but thit will be their last game under coach Ray tliot.

Eliot it stepping out as coach to become assistant athletic director, and Illinois psychologically will be as high at it possible. In the Oregon-Washington State same. State led 6-0 as RUSHING (Average Yards a Gomel and Madison spoiled his debut there, 87-45. ROCKY MOUNTAIN CONFERENCE All Games WLT Pet. WLT TP OP Idaho Stat 3 1.000 4 2 140 7 Adams 3 I .750 1 217 111 Colo.

St. 3 2 .400 7 2 240 tO Colorado 2 3 .400 4 4 144 111 Cole. Mines 1 3 .250 4 4 131 183 Western Col. 1 4 3 1 1 107 It SOUTHWEST CONFERENCE All Games WLT Pet. WLTTP OP Arkansas 1 .133 7 2 122 S6 Texas 4 1 .100 I I 1)2 34 Tex.

Chr 3 1 .750 4 2 108 44 Se. Meth I 2 1 .375 4 3 1 117 100 Rice I 2 1 .375 1 5 2 5 13 Baylor 1 3 .250 3 5 4 103 Texas A. and M. 5 .000 3 4 (4 121 BORDER CONFERENCE All Games WLT Pet. WLTTP OP Aril.

St. 3 1.000 7 1 22 127 Arizona 1 1.000 3 5 5 184 Hardin-Simmons 2 1 .447 3 4 152 21 Texas Western. 2 2 .500 3 4 153 177 New Mexico St. 1 2 .333 5 3 242 137 West Texas 4 .000 lit 132 275 BIG FIVE All Games 296.1 291 Davis and Miss Shaw, who authorities said lived in a house trailer at Bunker Hill, were arrested by state police when Davis drove through a Buster Briley set a Madison school record and Greensburg Syracuse N. Tex New Mexico So.

Col Oklahomo 283.1 261.4 255.9 252 8 240.1 236.4 Utah Wyoming iowa Iowa State Mississippi .133 .44 .400 .400 .500 .500 .000 .000 4 3 173 42 4 148 154 5 3 144 125 5 3 151 104 4 5 104 10 3 5 104 14 17 )2 154 I 4) 331 Clemson 5 1 North Carolina 4 2 Woke Forest ..32 South Carolina 3 2 Duke 2 2 Maryland 2 2 NX. Stat 0 4 Virginia 4 272.8 262. li BIO EIGHT All Games WLT Pet. TP OP ..41 3 1)2 137 3 2 .400 4 154 121 3 2 .400 5 4 112 101 3 2 .40 7 2 234 31 3 3 .500 4 5 145 16 2 3 .400 4 5 4 131 gym record of 45 points, tying the losers all by himself and let PASSING (Average Yards a Game) stop sign while fleeing from Oklohoma Kansas Missouri Iowa Stat Colorado Nebraska Kansas State ting his mates make the 42-point the Kirklin town marshal. 208.6 191.9 SOUTHERN CONFERENCE All Games WLT Pet.

WLTTP OP margin, breensburg tried a pos 197.9 Coll. Pac. Cincinnati Syracuse Iowa 160.8 155.4 154.9 147.5 147.1 Stanford Marquette Army Son Jose Boston Coll. 5 .00 lit 252 session game and it worked to the 187.8 184.5 extent of holding Madison under Va. Poly Va.

Military The Citadel West Virainia NEED CASH? TOO points for the first time in WILLIE WEST took a handoff WLT Pet. TP OP SCORING (Average Yards Gome) Syracuse 38.5 Wyoming Mississippi ...31 Iowa MISSOURI VALLEY CONFERENCE All Games WLT Pet. TP OP North Texas ..311 .75 1 1 233 73 Houston 3 1 .75 3 4 17 13) Tulsa 2 1 .447 5 4 114 13) Wichita 2 1 .147 4 3 I 142 122 Cincinnati 3 1 .125 4 4 1 17 141 3 1.000 4 3 21 141 41 7 1 1 204 )1 4 1 .800 7 2 1)7 12) 2 1 .467 3 4 40 1)4 3 3 1 .500 3 5 1 141 132 2 2 0 .500 2 4 3 153 2 4 .333 4 5 12) 135 4 .000 1 7 111 145 5 .000 It 53 11 three games. Seconds Richmond I Furman for Oregon with 10 3 1.000 8 184 44 3 1 .750 I I 18 48 Springs Valley, under new So. Col.

Washington UCLA Stanford California 2 1 .447 3 3 1 139 105 Nex Mex. St. 30.3 Iowa State 56 .9 26.8 26.2 25.9 25.8 William-Mary. Davidson Geo. Wash.

30 .000 3 4 215 231 Arir. St. U. 28 N. Tex ,130 .00 1 8 5 204 Penn State 27.6 I New Mexico coach Gene Flowers, was slugged, 82-60, by Jasper the PHONE first time the Blackhawks have been thoroughly beaten in the three seasons they have oper Newport Star Heads for Two Gaits FRIINDLr BOB ated.

Jasper's Bob Luegers, 6-feet-614, scored 28 points. league. Coach Ick Osborne lost 8 of 10 men from the Anderson club that won its opener froirf Rushville last year. TOMORROW'S GAME WOOD vs. Whiteland at Manual.

FRIDAY'S GAMES BEECH GROVE at Carmel. Charlottesville at FRANKLIN TOWNSHIP. Danville at PIKE. DECATUR CENTRAL at BEN DAVIS. Franklin at SOUTHPORT.

SPEEDWAY at Ploinfield. WARREN CENTRAL at NORTH CENTRAL. 4i Anderson at Central (Ft. Wayne). Auburn at Peru.

Austin at Salem. Bluffton at South Side (Ft. Wayne). Bickneil at Mt. Vernon.

Bedford at Jasoer. Boonvill at Petersburg. Charlestown at Paoli. Covington at West Lafayette. Clinton Central at Frankfort.

Columbia City at Angola. Crawfordsville at Greencastl. Ferdinand at Tell City. Froebel (Gary) at Riley (South Bend). Greensburg at Rushville.

Garrett at New Haven. Hagerstown at Central (Muncie) Kendallvill at Central Catholic (Ft. Wavne). Lawrenceburg at Madison. Liberty at Connersvilie.

Linton at Brazil. Mooresville at Martinsville. North Sid (Ft. Wayne) at Hartford City. North Vernon at Columbus.

Oakland City at Princeton. Plymouth at St. Joseph (South Bend). Rochester at Marian. Rensselaer at Monticello.

Rockport at Huntingburg. Roosevelt (East Chicago) at Elkhart. Seymour at Mitchell. Silver-Creek at Shelbyvill. Sheridan at Elwood.

State (Terr Haute) at Riley. Tolleston vs. Wirt at Gary. Tipton at Kokoma. Vevay at Scottsbura.

Winomac at Logonspart. Winslow at Washington. SATURDAY'S GAMES Center Or eve at SPEEDWAY. Alexandria at Hagerstown. Attica at Greencastl.

Calumet at Roosevelt (Gary) Greenfield at New Castle. Lebanon at Lofayette. Ligonier at Kendallvill. Middletown at Burr is (Muncie). New Paris at Goshen.

Sheridan it Adams (South Bend). ADAMS: Senator and North Central, one ot Marion True Chief, Hal Direct Spangler. County's top teams, got off to a ME Inn MI '25 AT THE TROTS LOANS left, fourth down on the State 4, and goal to go. One tackier hit him and missed, the second bounced off, the third ditto and the fourth the same. West scored and Oregon won, 7-6.

Powerful Syracuse is scoring at a nation-leading pace but coach BEN SCHWARTZ-WALDER is always looking for something new. In the fourth quarter of the Orange's 71-0 rout of Colgate, halfback Ernie Davis took off around right end. found the way blocked, turned around, raced across the field to the left sideline, cut back, danced, jigged and finally went. 56 yards for a touchdown. Later Schwartzwalder was jotting something in a notebook and was asked what he was doing.

"Puttin' that play in our book," he said. 5U0 Ol COM! IN 7 OFFICES 103 S. Meridian ME 6-4457 3107 Lafayette RtJ; WA5-I42li 957 N. Pennsylvania ME 5-44771 list of the top money-winning trotting stallions behind only Scott Frost, Galophone and Trader Horn. Off a good showing at a 1-year-old, when he gathered in earningt ot $35,674, including the $30,695 Horseman Stake at Indianapolis, he wat one of the early favorites for the classic Hambletonian prize for 3-year-olds.

But bad luck camped on hit trail that season, and he had to mist mott of the top money ttaket down the Grand Circuit line. Star took his speed mark as a 5-year-old, at Springfield. 111... where he knocked over the trotting greats, Kimberly Kid, 1:59, Darn Safe, 1:59 and Prince ictor, 1:58. Special to The News CARMEL, Ind.

ThaJ gallant trotting stallion, Newport Star, 1:59, bred and owned by Grand Circuit president Octave Blake, South Plainfield, N.J., has gone his last race. After seven years of battling the top horses, over every major Grand Circuit oval from New England to California, the 9-year-old is being retired to the stallion ranks at Two Gaits Farm, near Carmel, for the 1960 season. Trainer Del who has guided the trotter throughdut his entire career, chalked up winnings of $220 000 with Newport Star. This placed the horse fourth in the Star got better with age, and in 1958, when a lot of 8-year-olds are out to pasture, he finished on the head end in 13 engagements and was the winner of, $56,000. He finished up his racing career this fall at the "overcoat" meeting at Rockingham Park in New Hampshire, with a record'of having visited the winners circle 51 times.

The Blake-Cameron alliance, one of the most famous owner-trainer combinations in trotting, also raced Star's sire, Axomite, 2:02, and his dam, Miss Key, 2:05, both Grand Circuit stars in their day. In the stallion barn at Two Gaits, Newport Star will, join Colby Hanover, Quel Veinard, flying start with a 60-41 romp over Zionsville. It took a closing rush by Marvin Wood's Panthers, however. The score was tied at 39, but North Central scored 21 points while the Eagles could muster only 2 in the final min-' utes. The Panthers hit .450.

Bill Johnson got 18 points for the winners. Huntingburg, 2-point winner over Springs Valley in sectional play last February, had another close one last night before nipping Winslow, 52-51, on two last-minute free throws by 6.5 Dick Welp. Anderson, first North Central Conference team to start. Indiano-brea RAIDER FROST, driven by Joe 0 Brien, took the Wilmington Pace at Hollywood Park In Scotchllte second, a half-length bock Deb-ora Frost wos third. Raider Frost paid 57.20.

Brien won tour races and finished second in his other two starts sewing up his seventh Western Harness Association driving title. For the second year In succession, BILL HAUGHTON, Americas leoding driver, has amassed earnings of more than SI million. He boosted his 1959 earnings ovene the million-dollar mark when he guided Actor Pick to victory in a pacing event ot Roosevelt Raceway last night. Nosotner driver In the history of harness racing had earned a million dollars in one season until Haughton accounted tor $1,038,800 1958. Houghton's 1959 earnings now total SI .000,949.

DEMON DAMSEL scored a lVi-length victory over Dundeen In the Carolina Trot. The time was John Caton drov the 4-year-old winner, which returned $7 30. Favored Shodydal Nifty finished third. ME 5-4333) ME 8-1443! FL 9-5387 WA 4-42 11 2051 W. Wash.

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