Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 262, Decatur, Adams County, 6 November 1951 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
| SPORTSI
Tennessee Is Still Tops In College Ranks New York, Nov. 6—(UP) —The Veiled Press board of coaches named Tennessee’s unbeaten powerhouse as the nation’s top-ranked college football team for the third straight week today and awarded Stanford a place among the top 10 for the first time this season. Illinois barely odged Michigan ( State for second flace: Southern California also" had a slim margin over Maryland in the battle fpi* fourth place, and Texas returned to the top 10 after an absence of two weeks, in other significant ranking? of the 35 leading coaches who comprise the board. - Tennessee. 27-0 conqueror of North Carolina, last Saturday, for j its sixth “victory of the season and ' its 16th straight over the past two years,’ attracted -2Q first place? votes and a total of 307 points in the weekly coaches’ ballot. Coach Bob Neyland’s volunteers thus topped the weekly listings for the fourth tinie this season. They led the first back " to second or third; place while California took over for three straight - weeks, the No. 1 ranking the past three weeks. f - . ( Illinois (6-0) retained the runnerup spot with three first place voles and 263 points after beating L ■Michigan. 7 to 0. for a two-point | margin over third place Michigan . State. The Spartans (6-0). who 1 were idle last weekend, had six j first place votes-but received few- t er points for succeeding places, i -Southern California (7-1)? whteh i beat army, 2S-6, held fourth place I with three first place votes while [’ Maryland Jumped one notch to ■ fifth' with one first place ballot’ and 220 points after making Mis-’’ souri *its sixth straight victim, 37-0. ■ ; Princeton, unbeaten In jeix- games • this season and in 19 straight snice 1949, advanced two places• to sixth with one :first place vote ! and 147- polntai Following the Tigers came Georgia Tech, which dropped from fifth aftbr being held to a 14-14 tie by Duke. The engineers had 107 points. To relieve a baby from the dis-.' comfort of prickly heat, he should, be sponged often with a sudsy | ■ washcloth. ; • ■ INSURANCE r Leo “Dutch” Ehinfret FIRE WINO AUTO No. 3rd St. Phone 3 2004 K\\\liPL< SJk *\\ UI j jig _ —« — Last Time Tonight — “PAINTING THE CLOUDS WITH SUNSHINE’’ Dennis Morgan, Virginia Mayo ! j ALSO —Shorts 14c-44c Inc. Tax *T ” 1 * WED. &THURS. ? o- - —0 OUR BIG DAYS’ 'I First .Show Wed. at 6:30 Continuous Thur, from 1130 BE SURE TO ATTEND! s “ — ——• MVIW CUMMINGS M. wi IRWIN Mint MUM ROBERT MiTCHUMMffI FAITH CLAUDE RAINS 0818 SR ’A* Fri. A Sat.—Clifton Webb, “Mr. Belvedere Rings the Bell” O —O •’ Coming Sun.—Premier Showing I “The Tanka Are Coming”
Week's Schedule Os Adams County Basketball Teams i Tuesday ; Commodores vs Pleasant Mills at D. 11. 8. . Adams Central at ! Mtnmouth (Adams Central home game). Friday Commodores at Monmouth. . Adams Central at Geneva. ; Pleasant Mills at Bertie. Jefferson at Bryant. Klenk’s Defeated In Season Opener H.: ‘ Klenk’s of Decatur j opened its basketball season Monday night, dropping a tough 64-60 battle to the Sand Point Merchants at the Lincoln gym. .. The visitors held a 14-0 Advantage at the first quarter but Klenk’s ; rallied to take a 33-23 lead at the half. This margin was cut to three points. 47-44, at the third period and Klenk’s was unable to stop the Sand Point surge in ?the final quarter. Scoring honors were well divided for both clubs. Orv Reed leading Klenk’s with 16 and Ken Spiker scoring a similar number, for Sand Point. Sand Point ' FG FT TP Van Allen , ... 0 0 0 | Van Ryan .. .1 30 6 Hornberger _ 1 0 2 Baker — 0 0 0 Ke JU Sp|ker 4 8 16 Keith Spiker : *3 5 111 McClure ......U—...1.... 4 6, 14 1 Snodgrass 71 15 (Baumgardner 0 0-0 p■ ■ ■ I- | Totals i. 22 20 64 Klenk’s FG FT TP ; Crist ..i ... 33 9 .Lehman 0 4 4 Briede J 0 0 0 Reed -- 6 4 16 ! Price 4—H 5— 515 Ballard u L.. 2 1 5 ‘.Weaver 1.... 3 2.8 (Rickord 1.:.. 0 11 Meyer i 1 \ 0 2 Totals .. 20 20 . 60 Plan Net Clinic At \ Bluffton Thursday | An IHSAA basketball rules clinic -will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Bluffton community building. Rules will be demonstrated and discussed by Paul Bateman and Roscoe Hall of the Northeastern Indiana officials association, P \ I Following a movie on basket-1 ball, a short intrasquad game will be played. Robert Hinshaw, assistant commissioner of the IHSAA, will also attend. REDS DEMAND y (Continued From Pane One) | Communist self-propelled guns, ar- t tlJlery and mortars also supported (lit thrust northwest of Yonchon with a ‘jheavy concentration of fire.” A sinaller-scale Communist attack west of Yonchon drove other UN units from advance positions, but the allies regrouped and recaptured the lost ground against licht enemy resistance. Farther east, two Communist battalions drove'the allies off two, more hills north of Chorwon short-: ly after midnight (9 a. m. Monday' CST.) But there, too, the allies reoccupied the lost ground without resistance later in the morning. A UN tank-infantry task force struck back on the central front with a raid deep into the area east of Kumsong. They damaged S 2 enemy bunkers and 12 building < before returning to base. The increasing enemy attacks added hundreds more toi.the grow- , ing Communist casualty lists. The Sth army announced that allied i soldiery killed, wounded or captur- i erf morq than 74,0(>0 Communist tioops last month, j • ' Man Killed As Auto Sideswipes Tractor North Webster. Ind.. Nov. 6.— (UP)—lnjuries suffered when his car side-swiped a farm tractor on day to George W. Harrqff, 72, Kimmel. i — More than 14,400,000 kroner has been raised for the first cancer hospital in Norway, which will be built soon at Oslo. \ _ INSURANCE PHONE .KENNETH RUNYON Decatur Insurance Agency .
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“ ‘ : ~] 4r— —— t—— — , Today's Sport Parade ( (Reg. U. S. Pat Ott.j | By Oacar Fraley o "■ -■ e b New York, Nov. 6. —(UP) —An Notre Dame football team which has been beaten Lonly once this season was counting on its surprise-a-week system to knock off unbeaten Michigan State this weekend, athletic director Ed (Moose) Krauee disclosed today. ') Coach Frank Leahy, one of the mdst proficient gridiron gloom spreaders in the coaching ranks, won't be publicly enthusiast!!’. But Krause, who at times gives the lachrymose Leahy a willing assist with the weeps, insists that "we have a' great chance.” Krause was almost smiling as he contemplated the 19 to 0 Irish victory over Navy the last tinie out and revealed that last Week’s a surprise was a shift in the maneuverings of Neil Worden; the Milwaukee fullback. “A new play was one of the breaks,” Krause explained. -“Previously, Worden had run a delayed sijiash inside tackle. This time we worked it outside —and it I paid off?’ , The surprise package which Michigan State will have to handle is Paul Reynolds, a freshman who has been kept fairly well binder cover by Notre Dame. Krause touted ? him as "one of the best running backs on the squad.” ! - He quickly tempered this praise .by comparing the current Notre Dame era with that of Knute Rockne. / - “In those days,” Krause related, “a freeman was just a freshman: Sophmores didn't even make the team. W’hen you were a Junior you made the second team. When you were a senior you 'finally made the grade.” This undoubtedly is the Leahy influence which, it can be gathered from Krause’s remarks, still runs tearfully rampant at South Bend. For Krause said that after the 30 to 9 Notre Dame win over Purdue he congratulated Leahy on a "fine game,” “We did pretty well on one play,” Leahy replied. , Notre Dame’s only loss this season . was to Southern Methodist and the all-out passing of Fred Benners, 27 to 20. Benners threw 45 aerials in that contest—but since then SMU has lost two games. “ \ ? “Phil Cavarretta of the Cubs said after that game,” Krause commented, "that after so much pitching Benners wouldn’t be able
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- Bowling As Usual At Mies Recreation Carl Mies, owner of Mies Recreation, stated this morning that bowling will continue as usual, despite the fire which badly damaged the tap room early today. The regular league schedule will be held tonight. A ■ - —— CLASSIC LEAGUE Sandings W L Pts. Burk Elevator 17 iq 23 Old Crown 16 n 22 West End 15 12 21 Fairway 1 ____ 13 14 lgy | Wolff Hdwe 12 12 16 Standard Oil 13 14 ig Casablanca 10 14 Smith Ins. 9 is iQ Hißh series: Appelman 636 (244-183-209); F. Ahr 616 (266-181-169). High games: Hoagland 214, Ladd 210. Reef 223. Marbach 206, R. Hobbs 206. Meese 220, J.- Hobbs 202,’ Moeilering 220, Raber 210, Bauserman 201. MOOSE-MINdR LEAGUE Standings W L Pts. Midwestern Lifers - 23 4 30 Krick-Tyndall io 7 28 Moose Purity 19 g 26 Moose Progress 16 n 20 Heart Club 12 15 16 Moose Aid 48 5 to throw again for three weeks.” Krause, a smile on his lipa which wouldn't be permitted by the master back at South Bend, said with pfceudo seriousness that from the SMU game the fighting Irish had salvaged the record for the longest pass, in football history. "It was from Johnny .Mazur to Chet Ostrowski—pole to pole.” Pro Basketball NBA STANDINGS ' Eastern Division W L p ctSyracuse 2 P i.Ood Boston 1 0 1 Philadelphia 11 s qq New York 1 j 500 Baltimore | 2 .333 Western Division W L Pet, Minneapolis 11 .500 Indianapolis 11 ,g©o Rochester 11 .500 Fort Wayne 1 2 333 Milwaukee 0 1 .009 Last Night’s Results ’ Baltimore 96, Philadelphia’ 90. The U.S. Naval Observatory was established in 1830.
■iiMswwyw—— «—*■! II ■. iiieiwßeF* — Chuck Dressen Is Rehired To Boss Dodgers ’N- j- — ■ New York, Nov. 6.—(UP)— The Brooklyn Dodger front office stood solidly behind manager Chuck Dres» Bed today?—with aces poised. Dapper, whilin’ Charley will be back as boss of the Dodgers next year; But it will be on borrowed time —and Bu.rt Shottpn’s time, at tha|< 1 Club president Walter O’Malley made that clear when he announced that bressen would be rehired. In an astounding accompanying statement, O’Malley staged flatly that “the .basic reason Drassen Is being rehired is because Shptton was fired for less.’’ Sh<>tton was fired on Nov. 27, 1959 because the Dodgers lost the penpant bn the last day of the season, Dressen's 1361 Dodgers also lost? the pennant on the last day of the reason. But Charley is being spaied, according to O’Malley, ‘‘because we are all a year older and wiser.” * Perhaps no manager in baseball history ever stood so clearly on the spot as does Dressen in 1952. His employer is on record with a statement that his predecessor would still be managing the club if he had the decision to make over again. AM despite his i general defense of OrdMen, O'Malley made it clear that CharleyTi mistakes did not go unnoticed. “t\ “SYe think Charley will be a bettari manager next year,” O'Malley said., “Like all of us, he should profit by his experiences. Jle probably yvill try to conserve something fort the stretch run,” Asked whether Dressen would receive a raise in pay, O’Malley replied. “I don’t think hetll press that point.” O’Malley himsatf introduced Shot-top-s name into yesterday’s ’press conference and then publicly apoloKlin for firing him a year agoj when a newspaperman -asked the ba4ic reason why—Dressen waa belug rehired. Shotton was fired for ' :
— - ——■— — .■ ■■ .... >. tv / ' * *'A 'A?'.7 - u-.* s 4 WALL OP POLICI bplds back a surging mob of wildcat doclt strikers gt Pier 90 in New York following arrival at the pier of a crew of nop« striking longshoremen to unload the Queen Elizabeth.yiaderaatinuai? This Week Is FAIRWAY WEEK i In Decatur....... :'V ■ ' ' TONIGHT IS CHICKEN & FAMILY WIGHT ' (AU You Can Eat) • • • Restaanni . a 1 cars a isataal Highways 27, 33, 224 , J
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SPORTS BULLETIN Bloomingtan, Ind., Nov. 6 — (UPJ—lndiana University football coach Clyde Smith resigned today, effective at the end of the season, Smith, under ffre last year ■and. again this fall because of THsTlllure to produce a winning football team, made hie surprise announcement at moon. He Mid he resigned “because In the next three weeks I want to be happy and coach the foot* ball players the way they should be coached.”. He made no other comment. ' i I less,” O’Malley, said firmly, _ “I really believe now we would not have been so precipitate in Shotton’s case if we had it to decide over again,” O’Malley went on. “They say confession is good for the soul. "If so, there it is. We are not going make a whipping boy of one man.” ' . . Bven Dressen seemed to sense that 1952 will be a make or break year in his "It took a little'nerVe to renew iny contract,” he said When told the news In Los Angeles. He added that he did not expect to have any trouble with O’Malley in contract negotiations. Dressen will sign the contract when he comes east after Thanksgiving day. Shotton, the stern but honest ; cold gentleman from Barton,-Fla., refused to be drawn into the Dodger picture again even when advised of O'Malley's apology. “I am .enjoying myself and at peace with the world,’’ he said. “That’s all I care about” j > Milk Truck Driver Is Killed By Train i New OaMie, Iftd., Lester, Crtst, 44, Muncie, whose milk truck was hit by a Nickel Plate railroad train east of New Lisbon, died last night in Henry .county hospital. * , ’ 1 ‘ _1 ■■ Monticello, Ind., Nov. 6.—(UP) — Officials of Hollycraft Industries) , today estimated a loss of $75,090 . from a fire at their furniture plant. Fireman said an oil header explosion yesterday apparently caused the blase. ■ I ■ :
FRENCH (('•■((sued From Pa*e One) human contact with each Other, to exchange ideas personally, to consider their differences without any agenda or public debate . . .” Repoks that the U.S. delegation already had contacte<L==Bqviet deler gate ambassador Jacob Malik regarding "peace proposals” were denied by official American spokesmen. U.S. secretary of state Pean Acheson authorised the denial, sayling that no contacts" have been made- With Malik. v Mr. Truman conferred with Stalin for the first and last time' at Potsdam in 1945. He has said Since he would be glad to see the Russian chief in Washington. Stalin has said his health does not permit him-to leave Russia. Meantime, western delegates at the opening session talked unabashedly in the corridors about outpropagandizing the Russians this time. ■ A preview of a momentous U.S. •plan for world peace came last night in a proposal, co-sponsored by Britain- and France, for an- international UN commission to investi-’ gate the chances of' holding free elections throughout Germany. Mr. Truman and secretary of state Dean Acheson are expected to reveal other aspects of a promised global peace plan in two days. Mr. Truman goes on the radio Wednesday night (9:30 pmi. CST) and Acheson will follow with an address to the UN assembly the next day. i The broad outlines or the western scheme for preventing a third? world war—as outlined by reliable sources—calls for: , ’J 1. An interniflonal census of troops, military equipment and arms factories. A questionnaire
DANCE Immediately After Commodore - Pleasant Mills | Game TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6th at the . K. of C. Hail Orchestra—Prizes —Refreshments ' j ED EE To All Commodore |"KEB “BOOSTERS” — ! - j?■ r 1 Drive A Bargain At Brant’s 1 I ** <'■ •• 1949 MERCURY 4-Dr. Sedan Heater, O. D., W. S. W. Tires, Radio >1595.00 ■■ , ■' —..... ■ - . ... —. ■ ——— -Y 1950 FORD Custom 2-Door Heater and Radio >1395.00 19.6 CHRYSLER 4flr. Sedan j Heater, Radio, Fluid Drive ’1045-®® ' 1946 FORD 2-Door, Heater ’79s®® 1940 FORD 4-Door Heater >295.00 BR.WT MOTORS, he. v. ■. - ■ ■-7 p - ■/ j . ■ . " PHONES 3-2716 and 3-2709
■I .. ■ TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 6 19C1 j i
would seek Information on atomic bombs and weapons. 2. UN teams to inspect military establishment of al Ikinds-^—land. , sea and air—-and arms factories. 3. Limitations later on armies, pavies, air forces and heavy armaments industries on n percentage basis. The halibut hnd flounder arejbut two of about’ 600 species of flatfish. \ L Trade in a Good Town 4— Decatur A I- \ ® 1 KIM WON KYU, 11-ye&r-old South Korean boy held by the Communists for 19 days after he wandered into the truce area, takes on a load of rations at Pan Mun Jom after his release. Later, he was taken to his parents at nearby / Chosan. , (International)
