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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 13

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 13

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TOMMY HOLMES 5 A Student Tak 3 Traditional Dishes Listed on Grid Menu At the Football Writers' Brunch i Li, BELTRAM HAS INDIAN SIGN ON CARKIDO Willie Stops Foe At Eastern Parkway In Fourth Meeting By JOE LEE Contest Laurels Howard Lander. 914 Years Old, One Point Off Actual Grid Score Tip your hats, folks, to little Lynn Howard Lander, age MBWIW- ii inniliiliill hhmm mm i THE RULE WILL STICK If this comer were to 9, of 731 Washington Only Lynn came really close to Penn, Cornell Clash in Annual Turkey Festival By RALPH TROST guessing what would happen when the football Dodgers met the San Francisco '49ers in that wild and wooly game played at Ebbets Field Sunday afternoon and the Grade 5A student of hazard a guess it would be that the unlimited substitution rule in football, a by-product of which is Red Blaik's two-platoon system at West Point, is here to stay. At least, it's here to stay for a while. There may be weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth on the part of football coaches at smaller colleges and other assorted characters. Bu the big time coaches like the rule and what they like is more Jikely than not to stick, regardless of the storm.

Ever since the football writers in this area started There are three football games coming up this week each nicely wrapped in tradl P. S. No. 9 thus grabbed the big jackpot of prizes going to the best predictor in the Brooklyn Eagle Football Guessing Contest. The score of Sunday's game was San Francisco, 63, Dodg tion and all that.

Thursday Willie Beltram may not be able to handle boxers like Tippy Larkin, but when it comes to Joey Carkido of Youngstown, Ohio, Beltram has what it takes. The pair met for the fourth time last night at the Eastern Parkway Rink and Beltram stopped the stable-mate of Tony Janiro at 1:22 of the seventh round. Referee meeting each Monday this Autumn, the speeches have re i "I that's Thanksgiving Day, Penn and Cornell carry on a foot ers, 40. Our little seer from Washington Ave. predicted a ball festival started back in 1893, interrupted only once, in 62 10 count, just one point off and plenty good enough to win the war year 1918.

Saturday, in the jackpot. Philly's Municipal Stadium, Jim Freeman stopped the bout An' ardent football fan, Lynn Army and Navy renew a series of polite affairs started by a attended the Sunday fracas and was plenty excited when when Carkido went down for the second time. In previous meetings, Beltram won two plebe named Dennis Michie, on the final whistle blew and he the plain at West Point in 1890. decisions and fought a draw in knew he was-within one point Nowhere near as old (born sembled a long drawn-out debate. And yesterday, tne coi-fee had barely washed down the roast beef hash before Lou Little of Columbia was on his feet.

Early in the season, the erudite and articulate Mr. Little had been against the present rule. At least, he was wondering out loud whether something better than unrestricted substitutions could be devised. But now he has swung away from the theory that touchdowns have been Cheapened by the development of football specialists on large squads. 'THE BEST FOOTBALL' "The rule I must favor," he began, "is the one that will give us the best football and I'm convinced that we've had the best football possible this year because the rule has permitted us to use our best 11 men on the field at all times." The week before the attitude of the speakers had been all the other way.

Most of the orators gave the present rule a thorough going-over and Pudge Heffelfinger, the 80-year-' fc4d Old Blue, was present, hale and hearty, to tell of how, in his day. they played 60-minute games every Wednesday of hitting the 63 40 score on 1889) but still far from an up start, the N. Y. the button. His dreams came true when final tabulations another.

It was the third win for Bel- tram since he lost to Larkin in the Garden ring. He decisioned tradition carries on at the Polo Grounds. yesterday disclosed that he was Calvin Smith and Jimmy Col The forecast Is for Army's the winner of the $100 bond, free weekend in Atlantic City, all-winning team to pin back football tickets and big mer the ears of Navy's all-losing Midshipmen, even more easily chandise prizes. than the 210 job last year lins in Philadelphia and is looking forward to four straight when he tackles Joe Belfiore in that city on Nov. 29.

"I guess that takes care of Carkido for keeps," said Beltram in his dressing room. "The next time I meet him, I'll have to marrv the euv." winners over all but Penn State and Army, and Cor nel, beaten only by Army, are and Sunday and scrimmaged 60 minutes in practice drills expected to have nothing less TITLE CLAIMANT Primo Camera (center), who claimed wrestling crown when contending mat clans buried the hatchet yesterday. Bill Johnston (left) and Bill Jr. side with Primo. Camera also said he'd like to rassle Joe Louis.

than a gigantic duel of suffi' npltram ParHrlr! cient zest that many particl Plenty of Scoring "I figured the 49ers were going to do plenty of scoring," Lynn explains, "and I also figured the Dodgers would do some for a change. So I put clown that 62 10 score although my dad said I was crazy doing it. Boy, it sure worked out the way I hoped it would" The ten runnersup who will had an edge in some of the pants will have their Thanksgiving Day dinner standing up rounds before he got loose to throw some punches in the "HERE'S HOPING!" With one jackpot already in the bag, young Lynn H. Lander, 9V2, of 731 Washington takes time off from his school books to fill in the coupon for the Dodgers-Baltimore game now featured in the Brooklyn Eagle Football Guessing Contest. Lynn copped last week's swag list with a 6240 prediction on that wild and wooly Dodgers-'49ers game of last Sunday.

or lying down not sitting. N. Y. U. and Fordham, both every other day.

FRESH PLAYERS "They talk of 60-minute men," said Little, "but I don't believe a man can play 60 minutes effectively in modern day football. The less tired a man is, the better football he'll play. I think the present game is the best game of football we've ever known and it still has of development. We're bound to forward. "Hook Mylin of N.

Y. U. says that he hasn't enough seventh. "I felt I was getting some, place when I started to roundly beaten by bigger teams, give little clue as to hit to the body. Then I knew I Pair of Eights could take him, he said.

what's what. Clues are no good in meetings between the Violet it was a fairly close fight as far as it went. Carkido rushed and Ram, anyway. players to adopt a two-platoon system. Well, neither have his man most of the way and ah ot wnicn recalls a season just two years back when had him backed into the ropes Muncrief Trouble Spells to Flock until Beltram got smart to his moves and began to sidestep ana spin his foe.

Both were warned by the referee- in the 1 ngni now. we Luaunes niubi leuuim uui iwiuau icm.cn to meet the two-platoon system, that's all, and if rebuilding isn't enough the only answer is to drop back and meet teams In our own class." Of course, the Columbia coach's recommendation of the current rule didn't go unchallenged and presently Mr. Dave Camerer was on his feet to point the finger of scorn at present day football. CAMERER CHALLENGES Dave played a lot of foot- sixth round when the going got a little rough. HAROLD C.

BURR By Feature Boxing Card at B'way It was about a year ago this time when a young Italian fighter out of the East side by the name of Joey Brocato was winning acclaim at the Broadway Arena. Today it is another young descendent of Italy who also hails from the East Side who has won the hearts of the Arena fans. each receive a pair of tickets to the Dodgers-Baltimore Colts game of next Sunday are: Rose O'Donnell, 717 56th Mrs. Dominick LoCurto, 397 Lincoln Road; Evelvn Richardsen, 729 45th Mrs. Lila Roth, 2291 E.

21st Betty Ann Borgstrom, 1228 Flatbush Woolf Burnstein, 3039 Ocean Parkway; Harry C. Madsen, 2005 Corle J. P. Garvey 1721 Linden Arthur Meyer, 1259 E. 94th and A.

F. Roehn, 1935 E. 29th St. Please note that milady did strictly O. K.

once again this football guessing seems to be a knack of kids and gals! Meanwhile, a flood of entries marked the opening of the current contest involving the score of Sunday's Dodgers- Another National League contender has strengthened its Beginning of End team to make it harder for the Dodgers. The Braves recently A solid left hook to the head Army, with Blanchard, Davis, Tucker, Poole, Foldberg, Bryant, Green, Steffy, et al, was supposed to wipe Navy right off the field. Penn, with brawny lads like Savitslty, Bed-narik, McCarthy, Dickerson and Littleton on the line and Skippy Minisi, Bobby Deuber and the strongest man in the Army, Ed Allen, in the back-field, was supposed to tie Cornell in a kind of knot even Alexander couldn't cut. And Ford-ham, with backs like Joe An-drejeo, Joe Ososki, was added Outfielder Don Thompson to their squad where Billy Southworth was weakest and yesterday the Pirates, who finished only a stride behind last Fall, bought Bob was the beginning of the end for Carkido. Beltram nailed him in a corner and followed up with lefts and rights to the head and body that dropped the Youngstown lad for a nine Muncrief from the Cleveland Indians, and now it's Billy Meyer bolstering his wobbly count.

When he arose, Beltram pitching staff. just plainly too much for N. If Muncrief proves to be an ball at Dartmouth a dozen years ago. He was a tackle in the snowstorm at Princeton that hallowed afternoon when a spectator ambled down from the stands and lined up in the slush. with the other defenders of the Dartmouth goal.

In fact, he lined up right beside Camerer. "I didn't shoo him away," said Dave. "I needed all the help I could get that day." Dave turned to sports writing after Dartmouth and spent a season rolling around the country with the baseball Dodgers. He is1 now sports editor of Pic magazine. In spirit, he never has strayed very far from the campus.

For instance, he admits that as late as last Saturday afternoon he was one of those intrepid souls who tried to tear down the eoal nosts at Palmer Stadium, stalwartly defend other Nelson Potter, who won Colts fray. Deadline for mail several key games for the Braves, then the Corsairs will become at least five games ing entries in this competition is Friday midnight and you'd better do it now for the Thanksgiving Day holiday usually shoves evervthing else stronger than last year. Y. U. to handle.

Hard to Believe Uhuh, that was the forecast. What actually took place that week is hard to believe. Messrs. Blanchard, Davis and Tucker found themselves, their backs to the wall, fighting furiously to hold a super-charged Navy for half a minute more so that an unbeaten, untied record Muncrief has passed his peak. He was with the Browns in the ROCKY TO WITHDRAW FROM APOSTOLI BOUT Rocky Graziano will withdraw from his mheduled fight with ex-champion Fred Apos-toll at Oakland, Dec.

1, it wan learned today. Graziano, who had been scheduled to return to Oakland yesterday, decided today to withdraw from the bout because he is "too mixed up mentally" to train properly. A friend of the ex-rhanipion staid, "Rocky flew in from Oakland because, he was homesick, but now he wants to go away somewhere and rest until he straightens himself out mentally so he can start training again." aside. He is Joe Miceli, slugging lightweight who this evening faces Al Pennino of Red Hook in one of the co-featured eight rounders at the Broadway. One of the busiest men in his division, Joe has scored seven knockouts while engaging in 16 bouts since the start of this year.

His record also lists four decisions and one draw. An aggressive puncher, Miceli will be facing another forward-moving foe in Pennino, who has scored over Bobby Ruf-fin and flattened Pedro Biesca. The other eight rounder finds Georgie Small of Brownsville facing Charley Dawson, a Southerner. Small is no strang American League for eight full caught him again in a neutral corner and blasted him with heavy artillery to the stomach and Carkido wilted to the canvas. Carkido was downcast after the fray.

"I just can't get past that bird. He's my jinx. It's the second time he's interrupted me when I was going good." Carkido's most recent fight was a draw with Rocco Rossano. Beltram scaled I38V4 and Carkido was a half pound heavier. In the semi-final six, Eddie Dutton, 174 Reading, snapped the winning streak of Billy Doerner, 173, East Side, by scoring a TKO at 2:39 of Remember, your postcard may be the one that will bring campaigns.

Ihe Indians used him only sparingly and almost exclusively in relief roles. His you the jackpot of such valuable prizes as the Fed-Flash camera with flash attachment donated by Federal Manufac ed by other intrepid souls from Princeton. Camerer paid his personal respects to Coach Little and then launched his personal opinion of present day football. It is an opinion that should be preserved on asbestos. WHAT LANGUAGE! He called it "the cheapest football ever plaved." "a horrible burlesque." Although he is could be protected by a skinny record was five won and four lost.

But he knows how to three points If ever a crowd of over 101,000 did their lungs turing Engineering 211- pitch. It might be just a coincidence, but Potter was orig inally a Brownie, too. justice, that was the day. I 217 Steuben St. To go' with this tninK ecnoes ot tne roars are prize, the Wabash Corporation, To make room for Muncrief, 34.3 Carroll has contributed stni roiling around tne super structure of the shipyards a box of ten of their famous Super-Flash bulbs.

down where the Schuylkill the sixth round. Dutton led most of the way, unloading York Catholic Youth Organization and the Journal-American meets the Delaware. In the Penn-Cornell game. heavy barrages with both Sandlot Fund. the Pirates sold Stan Ferek, a southpaw, to Albany of the Eastern League.

Cleveland confessed that the price tag on Rob was something in excess of the $10,000 waiver price. Muncrief is 32 years old and should have some good baseball left in his right arm. the Big Red team from Ithaca The Giant officials are going er to the Arena where he's fought a number of impressive bouts over the past two years. Dawson has outscored Mike Jimmy Fields. Jackie Caparell and flattened Lairy Shaw.

In a special six, Izzy Blum of Brooklyn is paired with Casi Shinkevich of Poland in a middleweight return go. The! stormed trom behind to pass with devilish accuracy as it un friendly toward nea BiaiK, wno was nis coacn ai uamnuuin, Dave was one of the booers at the Army-Stanford game. He said he had no respect for the half a football player the two-platoon system develops and declared there were guys at both ends of a tackle. He said that a school might just as well send basketball coaches out to scout football opponents. "You could do a swell comedy skit ten years from now on a couple of characters who are playing today.

They meet at a class reunion. They don't know each other, never heard of each other although they both played varsity football. Finally a great light dawns. 'I was on the offensive one of them says, 'so you must have been a defensive All nf which spttled nothing, of course, but it was just hands. In two other sixers, Lou Gillespie, 151 Vi, Ozone Park, outpointed Vince Mazac, 148V4.

Seymour, Texas, and Jackie to eat their Thanksgiving dinner in Florid a. President Horace Stoneham, Farm Di Here's the Swag For Football Contest Winner! $100 Savings Bond, 2 tick-ets for Brooklyn -Cleveland game, Dec. 5. Abraham Straus Fulton St. $10 gift certificate.

rector Carl Hubbell, Treasurer Edgar Feeley, Secretary Eddie Cooper, 119, Borough Hall, decisioned Leonard Lukes, 164, leashed an attack that wasn't stopped until, with seconds to go, a big lad named Charley Bednarik, merely a soph then, knocked a Cornell back out of bounds six yards from pay dirt when he, Chuck, was the The Giants and Yankees presented Mayor O'Dwyer with a check for $20,000. It was their Brannick and Scout Mel Ott Rrooklyn. Sammy Thompson West Side, outpointed Car will be present at Thursday joint contribution to sandlot housewarming at the Giants' baseball and will be distributed last lad in Penn uniform between that red-shirted Cor- about the only excitement of the meeting. No one could get latter took the nod in their first setto. In four-rounders, Bruno Lijoi takes on Sammy Sanchez, Gene Darcontte opposes Angel Martinez and Bobby Martinez and Bobby Arciullo faces Frankie Madden.

The Jamaica Arena, tomorrow night, lists Herbie John mine Vitale, 161 Jackson Heights, four rounds. Hurley Sanders, 154, Newark, N. won a four-round decision over Bobby Thompson, 159, Nyack, ir. the opening four. nellian and the tying T.

D. excited about the coming Army-rvavy game. 1075 por- new baseball school at San-ford. The Dodgers did their preliminary conditioning at San-ford three years ago, but then the hotel accommodations were among six of the kid leagues the Kiwanis Boys Baseball League, the Queens Nassau Alliance, the Police Athletic Aleon Photographers, Flatbush Ave Studio trait. Back in New York the same Saturday Fordham's Andrejco League, the New York City Williams' Hand Broken In Bout With Nixon Baseball Federation, the New poor.

ran 70 yards on the first play from scrimmage whereupon N. Y. Joe Bonacorse went son and Johnny Marino in the Walker Cup Play Set Liehtweieht champion Tke top bout. The second show of 80 yards from scrimmage on the week at the St. Nick finds Williams suffered a slight fracture of his right hand in a hcotiann Royal and Ancient Golf Club today accepted an invitation to play the 1919 Walker Cup match at the the first play of the second Chester Rico battline Artie Army-Navy Buildup bout with Billy Nixon at Phila King on Friday night while 21 quarter and the continued going for short lopes of FIGHT RESULTS ST NICHOLAS PALACE Al (Boiol Constantino.

148. Nfw York, outpointed Dave Andrewa, 146. Boston (81. BOSTON Johnny Shkor. 216.

Boston, drew with Angelo Sotlllo, 203, Argentina (101. HOLYOKE. Mass Oeorgle Dunn. 132, Hartford. Conn outpointed Teddy (Red-stopi Davts.

132. Brooklyn (10). WASHINGTON Fllberto Asarlo. 125. Vtv York, outpointed Tommy Cooper, 124 'a.

Washington (101. PROVIDENCB, R. I Artie Levlne, 16B. Brooklyn, stopped Henry Chemel, 169, Portland. Me.

(41. NEWARK, N. Joe Curclo. 153 Newark, outpointed Johnny Crosby, 146, New York (Si. hours later Giho Buonvino delphia Thursday, his manager, Frank Palermo, disclosed Mamaroneck, N.

Winged Foot "course Aug. 19-20, the U. S. faces Red Cameron at the 60 or i0 yards until underdog N. Y.

with less than two Fails to Stir Scribes yesterday. Williams, who stop Ridgewood Grove. Golf Association announced. minutes to go, uncorked a' Finn to Millman pass that put the ped Nixon in the fourth, was not aware that he had injured his hand until he tried to play golf Saturday. Violet out in front, 3328, the Norm Daniels of Wesleyan, the football coach who never has lost a game, lauds Harry Forbes, crack backfield operative of the Little Three champions Desperate efforts at whether Jim could be patched up for action.

Danowski, incidentally, thought the Rams had a chance to beat Rutgers Saturday. But the Rams got badly fooled when Herm Hering threw that Y. A. Tittle Leads Colts Against Football Flock final score. I just wanted to remind you of that weekend in '46.

Football runs like that. It could Arthur Murray Dance Studios, 1 Smith St. Gift certifi-cate. Boro Hall Music Shop, 3 Myrtle Ave. Album popular records.

Crown Druj? Stores, 376 and 540 Fulton St. Venus Pen and Pencil Set. Federal Mfg. Eng. 211-217 Steuben St.

Fed-Flash Camera and attachment. Friedman's Sporting Goods, 965 Flatbush Ave. $10 gift certificate. Goodwear Sporting Goods 177 Flatbush Are, $5 gift certificate. James Weir, Florist, 324 Fulton St Orchid corsage.

Loft Candy Shop, Flatbush Ave. L. I. K. R.

Candy gift, box. Nam ni's, Fulton St. $5 gift certificate. Paramount Travel Bureau, again this week. the Football Writers luncheon tity In the Colts' ranks after his to steam up Saturday's Army Navy game from the competi Tililp's shut trom Llevelana because he By BE.V COULD For a castoff, Mrs.

little boy, Yelberton, McDermoft Wins pulled a leg muscle in July dur tive angle were futile Said Lou Little, whose Columbias beat Navy but did not play "-v iiirwim opened their exhibition Ice Palace Feature Army, "Like every one in this tests against Los Angeles in August on the West Coast, Y. A. was nanoea over to the Baltimore Colts by the Cleveland Browns because of another Tittle rode the bench. room, I'd be surprised if the Army didn't win. But I'll say one thing for those Navy lads.

They're aggressive and they passer Dy the name of Otto But when the Dons got the upper hand, Tittle went into ac Graham is the main factor why the Baltimore team is bidding lor division honors In the All- I tion and looked so good that Coach Cecil Isbell started to work on him in earnest. I.sbeH's efforts weren't wasted. In an exhibition against Cleveland, Tittle tossed two touchdown passes to give the pass. Hering has been a passer only twice in his career. The unrestricted substitution rule has developed instances of confusion that hurt.

On Saturday Harvard was caught with 12 players on the field in the shadow of their own goal posts. The ball was moved from the six-yard line to the one and Yale scored a touchdown. Rutgers also lost a touchdown as the result of 12 men on the field. Ted Rosequist of Brooklyn College ascribed the beating the Kingsmen received from R. P.

I. to sheer weariness. "We played nine games instead of seven this year," said Ted, "and the lack of manpower finally caught up with us. I had 11 starters and six playable subs and the issue was decided right at the start. R.

P. I. won the toss, elected to receive and carried the kick-off to a touchdown." R. T. Colts a 21-17 victory over the America Conference.

A native of Marshall, Texas, Mrs. Tittle's offspring has no idea where he got the name of Yelberton Abraham from. And since he has no particular liking for it he calls himself But the more Important thing Is the way he passes a football. "I just grab it and chuck it" is the way he terms his formula of success. Donald McDermott, Gros-singer S.

won the. featured Class A Senior Men's -mile race last night in the weekly series of speed skating meets sponsored by the Middle Atlantic Skating' Association at the Brooklyn Ice Palace. Clayton Meade of the Grand St. Boys was second with Mike Heidt of Jamaica third. McDermott was clocked in 2:30.4.

PeKgy Murray outsprinted the field In the 516 of a mile ladies' race in 1:06. Maureen Millerick of Grossinger S. C. finished second ahead of Ellen Ward of the Paterson S. C.

C. Danzig of the Acme S. C. captured the Class Senior Men's -mile event from Joe Reimer, Paterson, S. and Stan Rosen, unattached, in thunderstruck Browns and don't back up very much." Ed Danowski of Fordham is having worries about the middle of the line the week of the traditional battle between the Rams and N.

Y. U. The father of Herb Seidell, his first-string center, was seriously injured in a fall from a ladder while putting up storm windows at home and Herb will be away from the squad all week. Seidell's replacementJim Murphy son of the old Gray Eagle on these pages suffered a kidney injury in the Boston U. game.

Danowski had Murphy visit a specialist yesterday to see when the Yankees invaded Municipal Stadium, Y. A. Tittle passed for no less than six touchdown passes, including an "517 New Utrecht Ave. Weekend for two at Brighton Hotel in Atlantic City. Park Square Motors, 103 Empire Boulevard Set of seat covers.

Free Installation at Veterans Trim Shop 1804 Coney Island Are. Peter Quality Jewelers, 480 Fulton St Large sterling coxtume jewelry pin and matching leaf earrings get with stones. Rex Stores, 86th St. 18th 4th Ave. 87th St.

$10 gift certificate for toy de-partment. St. George Hotel, Clark Henry Sts. Dinner for two at the Stardust Room. Wabash Corporation, 315 Carroll SU Box of 10 Super-flash bulbs.

so-yard play to Johnny North, his big end. fcl mm ii jnis rangy ace who 11 lead the Colts against the Dodgers at Ebbets Field on Sunday afternoon is more than just passer. A consistent ground gainer and a clever faker, he's also outstanding on defense. It's not uncommon for him to see 40 and more minutes of action In this day of double-platoon teams. Tittle waa an unknown quan- 2:32.4.

M. Lendenauer, Queens- This performance earned him four AAC records and headlines all over the nation's sports pages. More important Is the fact that Tittle's feats have assured Baltimore of continued football activity in the A. A. C.

for the team last year went into the red hy $166,000 and its survival was doubtful In the face of another bad season. brook S. defeated C. Cos- SPORTS TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1948 grove and D. Paterson, un DOUBLE TAKE The Scotvold twins, Joanne left, and Joyce, are two of the bright attractions of the Ice Follies of 1949, running in Madison Square Garden until Sunday night.

Here they are as featured in "All Aboard for Candyland." attached, in the Class half-mile Senior Men's race. The winner's time was 1:44.1. i 13 Mate.

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