Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 274, Decatur, Adams County, 20 November 1951 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

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Four Illinois Stars Named On All-Loop Team i Chicago. Nov. 20 —(UP)—lllinois, undefeated but once tied and Hill the leading contender tor the Big Ten championship and a berth in. the Rose tiowl, dominates! <the United Press all conference team Today with* four first team pos! lions. v '■ ! 4 : The Uiini landed three linertien. tackle Chuck Ulrich, guard Chuck Studley \ and linebacker Chuck Boerio, plus halfback Johnny Karras. a three-year star with the Jlay Eliot eleven who has forced the Illinois opposition to employ special defenses all year. ' •. i . Michigan, the defending confer* ence champion which has now lost three of five league games, was this only other school to place more than one man on the first team; The Wolverines landed, both end . Lowell Perry and tackle Tom Johnson. ' < ' - .',y. ; Other all conference players were end Leo Sugar. Purdue; guard, Don Mac Rae, Northwestern; quarterback John Ooatta, Wisconsin; halfback Vic Janowict, Ohio State, and full back Bill Reichardt. lowa. - 1 Janowicz and Reichardt were' the only repeat selections who won. all . conference honors last year. But Janowicz was not nearly %o prominent in the opinion of the coaches, who selected the team for United Press, as in 1950 when he was a, unanimous choice. This year onlyfive coaches placed the Ohio State star on the first team. . jt Reichardt. who was threatening to set a new conference record for total yards rushing during the sea son. and Perry were the most popular choices. EacK was placed on tHe first team by eight coathes and pp the second by one. j Ther two platooh system complicated tlie voting, however, and It was high tribute to Boerio that he won a first team position. The ’ Uiini placed one man on the second team and three on the third for a total of eight, while Wisconsin won four second team spois and three on the third eleven for the same total. Each of the uine teams in the conference flared at least one man on the thre£ teams, but Reichardt was J ova’s only representative while halfback Pat Gedman, on the

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Week's Schedule Os Adams County Basketball teams Tuesday Hartford va petrxUenm at Gen* va. ■ . ; " Geneva at Montpelier, . Wednesday 1 V I Commodores jvs ail| Hoagland. AdamsOntr.il nt I'lreMwC I Berne at Portland . \ r ' •. Krhday ’Geneva at Yvljow Jackets ’■ sbcohd tram, *a* the lotte pla.yvjt i from Indiana Both Minnesota Ah|i Indiana were blanked on thrtliitj team. | The Gophers* 1 ‘sophomore Paul i Geil, however; won a second team! position and narrowly rulw-ed beat-1 ing Janowicz. out of a first train berth. He was named by every coach to a first or second train post. Klenk's Is Winner By 108-56 Score I JClenk's of Decatur went over the .' century' mark Monday night to submerge Superior Fuel of Fort j Wayne. 108-56. . s The Decatur team was out id front at al periods. 24-18, 47-33 and 78-40. Six Klenk players scored in double figures, with Jim Price lead*Ing the pack with 27 points. W. ■Yoder tallied 20 to lead Superior, Klenk’s FG FT TP ; Meyer 7 3 17 Ripley . 0 1 li Reed ------— 5 6 16 Brie de' - 0 3 3 Ballard — 5 1 11 Gonrad L 6 J 13 Grist ----- r 9 2 20 Price — 11 5 27 Rowden '0 0 0 Totals 43 22 108 * Superior " 4 , FG FT TP O. Yoder -- — 3 17 D Valentine 113 Jacoby - — Oil B. Valentine —J-— 5 0 • 10 T. Jacoby ---- 6 3 15i W Yoder j.-j—- 9 2 20 Totals 24 8 5d Pistons Will Play Syracuse Thursday Fort Wayne, Ind- Nov. 20—Coach Paul Birch and his “overtime kids" tackle s "league leading Syracuse Thursday night at Fort Wayne, play at Rochester Saturday l and come right home Sunday to meet the Baltimore Bullets. The Pistons are fast picking up the tag as the <ough luck team of the National Basketball Association. They've played four overtime games in their nine outings, losing every one of the decisions, and had one other one point defeat tacked on to their record. ■ —4 FOUR PERSONS (Continued From Page One) J leg. He w'as taken to the il inois Central hospital at Chi- ' cage. . \ ■ The ears that jumped the tracks consisted of a diner, club car. two Pullmans and five coaches. Passengers in the pullmans vere transferred to the IC’s Panama Limited which came through Gilihan a short time after the ac--1 eident. Coach passengers were put aboard a special train which was made Up h©re. The railroad ' said the northbound track here was "torn up a lhtle bit" but that traffic would: continue thrdugh here on schedule • routing over the southbound track. uiiman is an important junction point at which southbound trains rae swtiched for Memphis and points south or to St. Louis. The train left; Memphis iat 8 o’clock last night and was due at nicago, 98 miles north of here, at 8:15 a. m. (CST) today. \ African Paradise Tanganyika, stretching from tha Indian ocean deep into east-central Africa, is • third larger than Texas and has a population of between five and six million people. Its mountains tower nearly 20,000 feet, and the.-’bottom drops out” to form part . of Africa’s gre-t Rift valley, of ancient volcanic creation. Resources Include tin, diamonds, gold and silver, as well as fertile cotton and coffee iknds, and forests of mahogany and ebony. Elephants, giraffes, buffaloes, lions, ostriches, and antelopes have made this region a happy bunting ground for big-game sport*men- ; _ Nation's Highways The nation’s hignway system includes some 415.000 miles of state highways. 2,400,000 miles of county, township and village roads, and 250,000 mile* of city street*. Os thia, |T 1,415,000 miles are unsurfaced. k>.f ’’ ■■ : ' , . I ♦ *

- _ , jgiMMM H ? J .n tv Mr 4 'Mb* IK , 'fl ... I fl I , ‘ rs 'i t • flWr • > •■’ WHlTfe ilnhi, former l»*\h.it laignd University cage star, aw huinvii) *>t x \ I .i.ilz evar their predicament nt:•*/*&«o' York * (leheial Court where an|d I 4'| healdtbaH pUyera were HenteuytHl for their part in the huge I B\ vheuie|.i ot ttamtiler Balvature Hoi«»<o White wax sentenced (4oiil .v«'wi th tail . Nvhaff sot six tnonthe, and collapsed on the court- | . i*i«*Mii |l«H»r «m| Judge I‘aul Streit handed down.the HeiitenceN. including vUhl jo 16 yeuiM for Sula»»o d \

Judge Lashes Al Corruption In Athletics New York, Nov. 20. -(UP)--Shocked college authorities started a swift investigation today into judge ’Saul Streit's charges that soiile of the bribed, basketball playeri! he!sent to prison had entered City College ol New York by “fraud and forgery.” A special committee of three was appointed by tlae board of higher education to iook into Streit’s re-i post that at Hast two players—Al Roth and Herb Cohen —were admitted to the free college on the strength of false high school grades. . 1 ’[l suggest lhat in the, cases of Roth and Cohen there was deliberate fraud and possible forgery,” Stiielt 'said yisterday in a bitter denunciation cf.athletic corruption as he sentenced five players and a, “mhster fixer” to prison terms. Other charges made by Streit in his 41-page statement were having equally explosive effect on college campuses across the nation. . And Streit said the "commercialism” of college sports that led to bribery began with football first and then spread to basketball. He said pls survey found: 1. University of Michigan recently, 100 faculty members charged a dout le standard was used in crediting athletes and nonathletes for extra-curricular activities. ’ 2. At William and Mary, "there is the shocking situation of the* alteration of a preparatory school transcript to admit an athlete.” 3. At Bradley University,22a spot check of 15 athletes shows that eight were prajoring in physical education and among the courses for which credit was givep were handball, eleinentary swimming, social dancing, football, and first aid.” 4. At Ohio State football players were on the payrolls of state agencies. - * 5. At Oklahoma, a senior football player was tating introduction to geography, theories of 'basketball, swimming games, and volley ball. 6. At Denver, the state industrial commission ru ed that former Denver U. football player Brad Nemeth had been hired to play tbotball and was entitled tj disabili|(y pay for his football injury. y 7. The University Os Texas grants 100 athletic sctlblarships a ■year; Texas A. and M. 120; S. M. Uv *154. 8. At the University of Maryland, of 97 football players, 42 are from Pennsylvania, 10 from New York, five from New Jersey, and three from Rhode Island. In response 10 this last observation, coach’ Jin Tatum of the University of N aryland admitted Streit’s figures were correct but defended them. “We bring tjhem, (athletes) be-

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DECATUR DAILY DEMOtftAT, DECATUR, INDIANA — , .. -■ —•

' \ , 71.. ■' j Classic league , . Standings \ W L Pts. Burk Elevator 22 11 30 1 West End 20 1 3 28 [ Fairway 19 14726 | H.R.M.P.M. 181115 1 22 Old Crown —l6 17 22 ( Woltf Hdwe. j 4 16 19 I Casplancal.._. JO 20 14 i Smith Ins. 10 23 11 I High series.: Tutewiler 609 (219-178-212)“ E. Bultemeler 605 (177-, 197-231).. . j High games: Hoagland 204, Ladd 4 212-208, i Mutschler 214. Hoffmftn 203, Refef 200. Marbach 201-220, ; Zielt 201| Gies 209, Bleeke 203-216. M Note: The Classic league will not bowl Thursday, Nov. 22. j MOOSE MINOR LEAGUE Standing* w L Pts. Krick-Tyndall 25 8 34 Midwestern Lifers 25 8 3.3 MooSe; Purity T, 21 12 30 Heart Club 15 18 20 Moose Progress -22 11 28 Moose Aido 3 0 game: Zimmerman 220. G.E. ALLEYS MONDAY NITE LEAGUE Flanges copped 2 from Packers; Office took 3 from Stators, f \ J 600 series: Bob Lord 614 <193-177-244); Q. Laurent 616 (229-195-j 1921. i 200 scores: Bob Sheets 217, Rog Schuster 202, Ken Jackson 220. G. E. FRATERNAL G. E. Club took 2 from West End: Peterson Elevator topk 2 from Moos&Burke; Elks took 3 from K. of C.;' Teeple Truck Line took 3 from American Legion. 600 series: Petrie 612 (213-223-176). 200 scores: Zelt 234. Cook 210, P. Hoffman 1 257, Patterson 202. Steury 224, Macklhi 231; Leonard 206, A. Murphy 202, Wolpert 207, Faulkner 209. Beery 235, Laurept 222. G. E.- WOMEN’S LEAGUE Team No. 3 took 2 from Team No. 2; Team No. 1 took 2 from Team\No. 4. , High series: Schafer 469, Reynolds -468. —• I High scores: Stults 177, Wellman ISO, Laurent 161. fore our scholarship board, and if they pass, we give them books, tuition, room. board. and sls a month,” said Taturii. “Sure we help them. Everybody, needs a little help now and then. But it's no racket. If I thought I was running a racket, l'd quit right now.” ANDERSON. From One> a member of the Disabled American Veterans, Elks,* Moose Lodge Lions, and a director of the Decatur Chamber of Commerce. He is a trustee of the Fifst Presbyterian church, married, and the father of two sons. ' » ■ • -■> .' < ( ; Pro Basketball \ Baltimore 71, Milwaukee 70,

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