Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 43, Number 265, Decatur, Adams County, 9 November 1945 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
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Indiana Slight Favorite Over Gopher Eleven Chicago, Nov. 9-(IT! Indiana's undct*at«*d Hoosiers attempt to puncture an old Jinx tomorrow when they send their "cokeyed T" attack against Mlnncaota in a hid for their first big ten football championship In history. Coach H<> McMillen's "cockeyed T," with on- halfback behind the end. has roiled up some notable victories so far thia season, stick an Michigan. 137. and Tulsa. 72. Hut a triumph over Minnesota really would put cream in .McMillin's "T”. fndltfia will find Itself in a hot spot at Minneapolis. Some 45.000 rabid honvtown fans will jam .Minnesota stadium In the hope of seeing their golden Gophers. who Were knock'd flat 26<> by Michigan last Saturday, rebound with an upset victory over the only undetected team In the big ten. The Hoosi'-rs actually face a double Jinx. The have met Minnesota 15 times and only won two Kames for a .154 percentage, their all-time low against conf< rente teams. Indiana also has been try Ing to win a championship since 19(H) Hut In 45 years, the Hoosiers have come close only three tint s and one of those times It was Minnesota that knocked them sprawling. Although the Gophers are out of the race. coa< h Rcrnle Bicrmsn and hl< squad could save a lot of face with a victory over the Hoosiers. and Minnesota always is
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Week's Schedule For Adams County Basketball Teams Friday Monroeville at Commodores. Geneva at Berne. Hartford at Monmouth. Pleasant Mill* at Huntington Catholic. .Monroe nt Willshire, O. tough Just after losing a "Little Brown Jug" battle to Michigan. lAM-al bookies, however, quote the Hoosiers as six-point favorites. Tliat'ii th- top game on tomorrow's card of three conference contests, with Illinois and lowa, the big ten's two cellar teams, meeting at Champaign and Northwest- rn at Wisconsin In another ’'also ran” game. The bookies have chalked Northwestern up as a six point choice and Illinois as 27 points better. Meanwhile. Int* rest shifts to the <-ast where two of the big ten's top teams and Notre Dame carry the midwestern football han nr. Michigan's oncoming WolverInes, whipped by Army In their first venture into tin- east, are given an even chance to regain prestige against Navy at Baltimore, where a capacity crowd of fifi.otH Is vxpei ted. The Middles were consider d "lucky" to squeeze out of their Notre Dame battle with a fi to fi ts. Saturday and this time middlewesterners believe the law-ot-av-•-rages will catch up with undefeated Navy. Notre Dame's battered Irish, battered and bruised but still undefeated, meet Army In the headline game in New York. Eighty thousand are schcdnied to jam Yankee stadium to see If Army, a 20-polnt favorite, is as good as people say. Coach iliighl- Devore, before entraining for Hear Mountain. N. Y., with the team yesterday, said at South Bend that "My kids showed me they have the h art against Navy and they'll come back with another great one. I'm sure." onio State's Huck yes should have little trouble in whipping Pittsburgh, already defeated twice liy big ten teams. The Hucks arclassed 30 points better. Purdue probably will romp to its seventh victory against .Miami. (), University' while in the oth r major midwestern Kame. Marquette Is favored over Kansas of the big six. — - -—o Hunting Season To Open On Saturday Indianapolis. Nov. 9 (UP)—The Indiana conservation dopartmen’ I told Hoosier hunt* r.i today that | studies Indicated a slight increase In plieamint and quail thi>« season. Yesterday, the department said the rabbit population was down. The hunting season on bird* and bunnies pens simultaneously tomorrow. For pheasants, ft close* Nov. 17. The quail-hunting deadline is Dec-. 20. and rabbits maybe killed until'Jan. 10. The department also announced that the trapping was n for furbearing animals opens Nov. 15 and extends to Jan. 15.
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Kirkland Defeats Jefferson, 36-14 The Kirkland Kangaroos scored an easy 30 to 14 victory over the hapless Jefferson Warriors Thursday night at the (h-neva Kirkland led at the half, 14 tn 4. Fruechte led the Kirkland scorers with II points, followed by 11. Longenberger with nine. Hill was alriut the whole show for Jefferson with eight points. Kirkland TO FT TP Landis, f 10 2 H. ixingenberger, 4 1 9 Fruechte, c ........ 5 111 Smith, g I»>2 D. lamgenlierger, g.. 3 0 « Shady, K 2 2 fi TOTALS 15 4 35 Jefferson Hill, f 3 2 It HmPley. f 2 1 5 Merritt, c oil Buckingham, g .... 0 o o Gerber, g .......... 0 0 0 Johnson, c ........ 0 0 0 TOTALS 5 4 14 Preliminaries Kirkland 25. Jefferson 14. Jefferson Jr. HI 15, Bryant 8. —O - Spilling The Pins With Decatur Bowlers In League Activities Major League Kraft Foods won two from West End Restaurant; Nussbaum Novelty won two from Ossian Tin Slr>p; Kohne Drug won three from Itivervle wflarden-c; Kuhnor won three from Standard Oil; .McMillen won two from Smith Bros. Standing ’ W L Kohne 21 9 Kraft ... 19 11 West End IN 12 Buhner 17 13 Kivervt-w lb lb Nussbaum .* 15 15 Standard 13 17 McMillen .. 13 17 Ossian 12 IN Smith Bros 7 23 High games: Elzey 2'12, Schroeder 200. Murphy 233, Schneider 203, Hoagland 213-213. Udd 207. H. S. BASKETBALL Danville 31. Pittsboro 19. Concord Twp. (Elkhart co.) 3S, Goshen 28. Jeffersonville 43. Silver Creek 26. —o Urges Women Delay Nylon Purchases LsFeyett*. Ind.. Nov. 9—(UP) — A Purdue Unvensity clothing specialist advised Hoosier w-nu-n to postpone the purchase of nylon fabric* and garments for a few m<>n‘hs, because nylons now appearing In stores were "a poor fabric for garm<-nts." .Miss Frieda Stoll. Purdue extension expert, sakl tlvat nylons on sale now are "chiefly government surplus fabrics, tMUjIly made for use In parachutes."
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Purdue Opens Net Season December 1 loiFayetie. Ind., Nov. 9—(UP)— C-aih Ward "Piggy” loimbert'* 29t.h Purdue I'nlve-wlty basketball quintet will play a strenuous 20game schedule this season. The Boilermaker card, announced today by athletic director Guy "Red" Mackey, includes a dozen Big Ten games. Purdue opens with Indiana state here on Dec. mid winds up against Indiana at Bloomington on Feb. 16. The schedule: Dec. I Indian.i State; Dec. fiat Ixmit'vllle; Dec. 15 Washington of St. Louie; Dec. 19. L ulsvllle; Dec. 22 at Notre Dame; Dec. 29 Great Lakes; Jan. 2 Notre Dame; Jan. 5 at Ohio Stale, Jen. 7 .Northwestern; Jan. 12 at Wls consln; Jan Hi Indiana; Jan. 19 Iowa; Jan 21 Ohio State; Jan. 20 at Minnesota: Jan. 28 Wiscon sin: Feb. 1 at Northwestern; Feb 2 Minnesota; Feb. 9 At Iowa: Felt, io at Great latkes; Feb. 16 at Indiana.
Defense Interrupts Yamashita's Trial Misinterpretation Os Testimony Charged Manila, Nov. 9 (UP)—The trial •>r Gen Tomoyukl Yamashlta wax interrupted today by a defense •■barge <if "scandalous* misinterpretation of testimony and a request for n w Interpreters. The five-man U. 8. Army commission hearing the case ruled after a recess that the charges against the interpret* rs were unwarranted and apologized to them. It ruled, however, that two Interpreters be assigned simultaneously henceforth. The commission ordered nn evening session to review the evidence of witnesses whoso testimony was challenged as to interpretation. and to hear further evidence regarding provincial airocltl s charged against Yamashita's forces. lapt. Milton Sanncrg of Keyport, N. J., of the six-man defense staff, presented the charge of misinterpreting, alleging that it had Korn* on to a "scandalous" extent. Maj. Gen. R B. Reynolds, president of the trial commission, called to the stand three Filipino newspaper reporters named as the source of Sanberg's charge. A recess was called to consider the situation, and the ruling was handed downl*ate In the day th • testimony turned to the alleged massacre of 2,0(H» non-combatant civilians tiy the Japanese at Cuenca In Balangas. Cipriano De I.a Pena said that last Feb. 3 the Japan* se killed 39 persons at Barrio Putol near Cuenca. Another witness, Valentina Itiiiio, said that three days later the Japanese rounded up about 100 persons, including women and children. most of whom were never seen again. l-eonardo Maulion said that on Feb. 14 at Barrio San Felipe near Cuenca he was the only survivor of 25 hayon* ted by lhe Japanese. He showed the commission two bayonet scars. Earlier an 18-year-okl Filipino Kiri testified that Japanese troops tied her and 15 other civilians to a Mango tree and attacked them with bayonets and grenades until only she survived. “I was bayoneted twice and wounded in 15 places by fragments of hand grenades,” Mllagros BarHon told the military tribunal trying Gen. Tomoyuki Yamashlta for the torture deaths of 57,000 persons during the battle of the Philippines in 1944 and 1945. Miss Barrlon was one of more than 2,000 non-combatant civilians who were brutally mistreated or slain during the Japanese massacre of the tiny town of Taa! In Ha tangas Province. Berne Man Arrested Following Accident T. M. Parr, S 3, Berne, will be arraigned in mayor's court late this afternoon on two counts as the aftermath of an automobile mbhap Thursday afternoon when the car he was driving struck a lamp post on North Second street, moving the post aereral inches oft its base. Local police arrested Parr and charged him with reckless driving and operating a motor vehicle without an operator's license. Parr was not Injured In the accident. — o 50-Year Sentence To 13-Year-Old Killer Monmouth, 111., Nov. 9—(UP)— Thirteea-year-old Ricnwrd Sells today awaited transfer to an Illinois state reformatory wPiere be will begin a 50 year sememe for murdering an elderly woman wi»h a length of pipe because abe "made me mad."
Harvester Union Asks Strike Vote Work Stoppage At Plant Unauthorized Fort Wayne, Ind., Nov. fi—(UP) - Local 57 of the United Automobile workers (CIO) at International Harvester Company hns sent a petition asking for a strike vote under the Smith-Connally Act to the secretary of lahor and the national labor relations board. Charles Shrock, union president announced today. The work stoppage nt International Harvester Company which began Wednesday and has caused approximately 2.500 workers to be Idle, wns termed an "unauthorized walkout” by Shrock. Th- walkout was precipitated by a retiming of jobs on the assembly line and piece-work wages, under which the union Mid workers recciv-d less money than before a 10 percent general increase was given to th* m a few months ago. Shrock said the stoppage was not a "strike" because neither the bargaining committee of the union nor the local's officers have authorized any such action. Officers and committee members have tried Io get the workers to return
w —— L&TAR? Km Ami If i m livW J 1 ' 11 •“IWWES Ik CJ' wjgNßk FORT WAYNE’S tfaeat'RtqionA(_ . BEER AND ALE HOFF-BRAU BREWING CORP., TORT WAYNE, INDIANA ■ ■■■«■• «1.1 ■ ■ ■ • ■ : Loyal Order of Moose a INITIATION and DINNER ■ - STAG - Tuesday, Nov. 13 DINNER SERVED 6 p. m. Prompt MEETING and INITIATION 8 p. m. The Portland Degree Staff will install the new class. A prominent speaker of Fort Wayne will be the guest speaker. YOUR PAID UP CARD IS YOUR ADMISSION.
Io their Jobs, he said. The workers vot-d io petition for the strike vole at a general membership meeting of the union. Move To Showdown On Training Bill > Republicans Propose Delay In Action Washington. Nov. 9 (UP) — The House military affairs committee drove toward a showdown t.Miay n a Republican proposal to delay action <m Pre»ident Truman* request for universal military training. Accusing Republicans of “flllbuatering,” Chairman Andrew J. May. D, Ky.. *ald the committee would vote Tuesday on the proposal. He pred'eted It would I* defeated, but the opposition wax equally confident it would pass. The winrnittee opened hearings yMteriay on n hill to require a ywir's military training of all 18 year olds. But the xewton blew up when Rep Dewey Short. R , Mo. offered a motion to postpone hearings until next year or until the program Is a« t*d upon by the Senate Miliary Affalra committee. Bwxiuse vs heavy Democratic abxenteeixm at the meeting. Short a prapoxal would lx* carried If a vot"
had l»een taken. Rep. Paul KilJay. D., Tex., saved the day for &<|' ministration by breaking up the meeting on a tmhnkallty. He pointed out that the committee could not sit while the House was in BMaion, and no vote was taken on Short's motion. The hearings were to !wve run through next week. After Short's maneuver, however. May said the committee would not meet until Tuesday when a vote would lie
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