Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 49, Number 306, Decatur, Adams County, 29 December 1951 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

I SPORTS I

1.U., Purdue - Take Classic Meet Openers * djndlanapolis. Dec, 29—(VP) — Indiana "’’and Purdhe. Hoosierlands two representatives in the Western • conference, walked off with victories last night in the' opening games. the fifth ’annual Hoosier -.basketball classic as three were broken and two othefs tied. . The—unbeaten Hoosiers ffom Bloomington, knocked Notre Dame from the ranks of the Nation’s unbeaten, 67 to 54. ending a six-game - winning streak for tbeLXSouth Benders. * , • T 9 ™ Purdue edged host Butler 55 to 51. In the second session tonight. Purdue meets Notre Jlame. and In- ‘ diana meets Butler. ’ X Towering Don Schlundt of Indiana led the Hoqsier attack with 17 points, a mark matched goal tor goal by Notre Dame forward -Leroy Leslie. , ' , ' ’ Center Carl McNulty of Purdue . was high scorer of the night, tfith 19 pn nine fielders and a free 7 throw, small potatoes in these days of razzle-dazzle race-horse basket\halL ‘ ! h. z v Thus, the record-making was all team stuff. Purdue set a new classic record for the most free throws made in a single .game. 31. breaking its own mirk of 24 set against Notre Dame last year. Butler took dubious honots in set- . ting’ a record for the worst free throw shooting, averaging .259 to break its old mark of ,350 against Indiana last year.' . And’-sNotre Dame committed 36 personal fouls to break a record 4 set by Indiana at 34 against Butler . last year. 1 The t'lgd records were most free ■ throw attempts. 40. by Purdue, tying Butler’s old record, and fewest free throws - made, seven, by Butler, tying Its own.record against Purdue in 1948. A* . Indiana hit consistently in the ■_» second half to beat jhe I pish. The game wag rough and just, as close during the first half and was slowed by constant fouling. Dame lost two good men, center Dick Rosenthal and, center Norb Lewinski. in the third period for fouls. , Lewinski went out as Indiana led by a single point at 4.3 to 42. Then Hdiana commanded a height advantage. that Notre Dame couldn’t overcome. This, with the Irish loss of three other players on. fouls, spelled defeat. - i 'Purdue and Butler were tied in the beginning of the second. half when sophomore forward Jack Run» yan of Purdue snapped through two baskets and gave the Boilermakers a lead they never- relinquished. ‘ x ! ( • Butler’s loss appeared due largely tp inaccuracy from the foul stripe. The Bulldogs hit tyily once- there in 13 chances in the* first half and didn’t do much better after, intermission. ‘ More than 12,000 fans .watched wefe expected tonight. ’ /. the games and as many or more TODAY & SUNDAY JX Continuous Both Days ’ ‘.“MAN FROM PLANET X” Robert Clarke, Margaret Tield & CHAS. STARRETT “BONANZA TOWN” With Smiley Burnette Only 14ci30c lnc- Tax

.SUN. AND MON. (Continuous Sun. from 1:15 NOTE—Come As Late as 10 P. M. Mon. Eve for Complete Show! “technicolor Muslco’medy! “TWO TICKETS ? TO BROADWAY” s Tony Martin, Janet Leigh, Eddie Bracken, Ann Miller ALSO—Shdtts 14c-44c Inc. Tax ——-o—oTues. Only—ConV. from 1:30 “SATURDAY’S HERO” s \ John Derek, Donna Reed ■ *0 ■*O-"-’ TODAY — U FORT WORTH 0 Randolph Scott —In Color! ALSO—Short* 14c-44c lnc._ Tax

Bingen, Friedheim Are Winners Friday I Bingetj, defeated Holy Cross of Fort ' eifgecTnjut a 20-iy victory over Goeglein in a double header LuthI erah grade exhibition at the Mon-, mouth gjrrfi. Friday night. ■ Bingen g FG FT TP i Zelt 2 - 5 \ & -10 . | BratU'milier 0 0 0 » IGallmeyer— 4 3 11 ’ | Bliltemeier 3 17 f V T6TALB.I3 c 4 30 . .Y \ . FG FT TP , Lepper 11 3 Roemke. ...NX- 0 $ Dammeyer 1 6 ’’- 2' ! IHejne 2 0 0 0.1 ijeason XJ-.X-2 I * O'? 2. ’ Stockarhp • j. 1 f* 3 Ivohlinger 1 0 7? / ' : — TOTALS 5 2 .12 i . . Friedheim M - FG ?FT TP r-ettmer-4 0 . 8 Fenner < 0 •; 0 0 1 R, Keuneke 3 3 9 B. Kbunekel 1 3. Bjiuermeister O' 0 O’. ’ Schaefer + L... 0’ 0 0 t TOTALS 8 4 20’ Goeglein , FG FT TP L. Goeglein _4_l 0 2 jJ. Goeglein 0 3 3 IA. Hetrman 2 0 4 ■ I Burkholder 0 0 'b. i Eredemeyer 0 Q.’ 0 ID. Herman,2_X.3 2; S Spires -J. r 1 0 2 ... Ay. ■ —; - , TOTALS7 5 19. Collpop BasketbaU i Illinois 73, UCLA 67., DePaul 84* St. Ambrose 62. (.’alifoyhia 68, Wisconsin 49. Washington 78, Ohfo State 43. Ihwa Ste, Oregon 72. .Terre Haute Tourney , Wayne 61. Indiana .State 60. . Ottawa 62. Indiana Central 61, Hoosier Classic - V Indiana 76, Notre Dame. Purdue Spartan Classic. : u' I Minnesota 63, Princetdn 57. . I Michigan State 57, Dartmouth 42. Sugar Bowl Tourney Kentucky 84, Brigham Young 64. Bt. Louis 73. Villanova 69. . s Steel, Bowl ; . Michigan 66, .Virginia 52. Benn State 62, Pittsburgh 40. ■’' • J Makin Island In the South Pa cific’s Gilbert group also is called Taritari. ‘ t ■T .JE rflM ACTRESS Debbie Reyrrolds shows Sgt. Paul Lillard around the studio lot in Hollywood, they met for the first time following a pen pal correspondence. The sergeant began writing to her shortly after he arrived in Korea with the first U. S. trobps. When he got back after 14 months he went to see her, stayed with her family several days before going/, to his home in Yuma? Ariz. Only II members of Lillard’s qrlginal regiment.survive. (International)

diverting from our regular :7:00 A.,M. to Midnight schedule FAIRWAY _ r will be open NEW YEAR’S DAY A ' from 7:00 A M. to 8:00 P. M.

/REVIEW OF THE YEAR—By Alan Maven. U-. ..... JUNE I Hogan - cops p/s r — —... U. S. . Wisconsin, w/nmer ........ op&n /N /sis fteGArrA A r -I —i —m I ' i •sarr* s - i W : sr counT£Rpomr 'TA.KES TEE • I &EL./ftONT ■ ..J - ■ WP' ' M TE'.TitC \. i • /sMB V/ / Billy V .A 57 / Z PES/GAS AS i \ JAKe LA MOTTaL / MWa&ep of rAE X. *f7KG‘p 0Y 000 / ( &OSTOri ORAVES- > 7* H S J £>»fnlmCed Fcb/hfc* SvadicafA *

- “ ~~ T~ Brooklyn To Lose Newcombe To Army New York. Dec. 29.-MUP)—The armed services beckoned, big Don Newcombe today and sent the Brooklyn Itodgers Into a. frantic / search ferr?a! replacement. The 27-year-ojd right-hander, who won 20 games apd ‘lost nine last season with an earned" run average of 3.28, was notified yesterday by the adjutant' general’s office in Washington that be has been determined fit for military service. Newcombe will be ..inducted atGovernor’s Island tn New YorlJ at a date to be determined Uy the first'army. The chairman of the star pitcher’s praft board at EHza- ” beth. N.J.. . indicated , he probably will he called up around Feb. 1. ■ ; . < The impending nf combe, who with Warren . Spahn of Boston Braves for the National* league leadership in strikeouts with 164, was A severe blow to the Dodgers’ 1952 pennant hopes. The six-foot-four, 230-ppund negro right-hander won 17, 19 and 20 games during his three seasons with the club, being often called upon as a reliever as Well as a starter. . In an effort to replace Newcombe, President Walter p’Mallev was reported ready to offer 1 a huge sum of cash or some of Dodgers’ promising Minor league talent for a star pitcher from an' opposing National leagde club. Amons the pitchers the Dodgers are known to be seeking are. Spahn. Bubba Church or Fox of the Philadelphia Phillies, or Murray Dickson, the Pittsburgh Pirates’ 20-gaine widner. ‘ r - Newcombe has been married for six years but is childless, and thus became eligible for the draft under a revised selective service ruling.' ' - t— L ’ S’ - - 1 Before 1700 the word “gazetteer” usually was used to describe a journalist rather than a dictionary. Trade in a Good Town —Jpeyaeuf

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High School Basketball \ Fort Wayne Tourney Fort C. C. 48. Elmhurst ‘ 43 (.'coinisolation). FprtV Wayne North 72, Hynterj town 50 (finkl). , if / \ Lafayette Tourney Soutij Bend Central 6?. Indianapolis Attucks 59. ;.; x . East Chicago Washington 61, •4' Lafayette Jeff 59 (overtime). Peru Tourney ' . ■ Peru-55; Wabash 6’4 (overtime), * Tipton. 51. Rochester 42. . ? South Bend Tourney 1 South Bend Adams 68, Washinge ton-Clay 60 (consolation). : South Bend Washington 40, Michigan City 35 (finalf. ; b Evansville Tourney Evansville Reitz 56, Princeto'nAl * ' Winslow 67, Evansville Central 54. A Gary City Tourney Wallace- 48 , , s Tolleston 38. ;. * ■ fFroebel 50. Wirt 23. t'\ 1 Roosevelt 51, Mann 47. JJETnerspo 47, Edison 34. 1 fX. Huntingburg Tourney ‘ ‘Uuntingburg 33, Washhigfon Q 2. > Jasper Vincennes I ’ . Whiting I Whiting 53, East Chicago Roosei veil.<2. I Hammond Clark 71, LaPorfo 52. * Hammond 60. Haminond Tech 38 j (cqnsplation). ’ ‘ LaPorte 4$ East Chicago Roosevelt 48 (consolation), i Whiting 43, Hammond Clark 41 p (final). » ' ’ 1 \ r ’I ’ Oldtjme Newspaper ) s > Death Dec. /9 — (VP) — FentMKJ. Lawler, J 54,, who once ownlsS’the Democrat and ..tro . Noblesville Times news-! PpPerßßhtfied yesterday in Metho dist hospßbal. Lawler sold his pa-

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Aftucks Loses First Game Os Season Friday Indianapolis, Dec. 29 —(UP) — Those Indiana high school basketball tourneys remained as unpredictable as the weather ..today as high-flying Indianapolis Crispus Attacks picked up the pieces from its ‘broker! winning string and cheers went up for little Winslow. Attucks, the topteanking quintet in the United Press honor roll, was swept off the boards by once-beat-en South Bend Central, 62 to 59, in the opener of the two-day Lafayette holiday show last night. In the second game, third-place East Chicago Washington picked Up its sixth conis’ecutive victory in an overtime struggle over.twfce-beaten and wellregarded Lafayette Jeff, 61 to 59, on Norm -fielder with four seconds td go. Thus .tonight. South Bend Central, eighth by U.P., and East ChlcagtXface each other for the second lime this month. Four weeks ago East yhicago edged the South Bendas, 42 I(^37’— thek only blemish in seven games. Attucks’ loss ended a six-game winning streak for the undefeated negro five. Both games were played'with the pressure on; apd both rated championship They were seesaw struggles all" the way. Lafayette, however,? blew Its game and threw away a golden opportunity to turn its session Into a complete reversal of the form chart. The Broncos of/ coach Marlon Crawley held a nine-point lead with less' than four minutes to go whep they got careless. Pint-sized Bob Flynn lifted a .through the nets for, the upstate ’ Senators, also with seconds to go, to throw the game into overtime. W’lnslow’s Eskimos, licked only once so far, hit 42 percent of their shots and had fine balance to sink favored Evansville Central, 67 to 54, and Evaosville Reitz upended defending holiday champion Princeton, 56 to -51, as the pocket city show got under way. •< Winslow tossed In 26 points in -the first period’- and had The reserves in when Central closed the gap to 41-teHO late In the third frame. Dick Wood and Lou Beck eayh got 17 points’and Jack Bechtel 16 to pace Winslows, Guard Ken Herrenbruck with 24 points Was Reitz's big show as Princeton went” down -ofily for the second, time in 10 games. - ■ ■ . r-a . XX ; . F a ’ . - > Sentenced For Lifexx On Kidnap Charge .Indianapolis, Dec. 29 — (UP) — Joe Edward Brown, 27, was sent•eaced to life yesterday for kidnaping a family of .three, last summer. §«roWir was conyUted by a jury twp Weeks ago. Marion Criminal O. Chamberlain passed sentence. pers years ago and for the last) 30 years worked as a- printer for* an Indianapolis commercial firrri.

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OZARK IKS j 1 '' / <’bb All#* ( OZARK CRASHED )/ th'kid \ ( A SAFETY j - ( o GST, Thompkins/. xofn|f l I into th goal ( went down) X could st} • I MV DWW > POST AS TH' X( NEAR TH’ / COST 'EM I . Z>, J f FINAL GUN GOAL LINE A TH GAME/ ft " I *-t licked /4ro/f < Isl B£ c\ sounded/ J»ga outon-^», A- iessn yuh give . r s K r* -wSMfrjEaMNi wh,ch . Vi £s3* pRKj t IS4IIW ■ J- - i\ a X-- x- ~ f\4K± If g //\ >®-viKOTi4? hwo z —A " zfIJRIFT — * W » • /B WCufWBflkR t ? KilZ.l xyi /*.■ W x B B S ‘WHOKNOWS rw A/ui v,i I til l#T the • .JLL^r^ I—‘J’ • 1 V ,/:xr r- r • 1 I- l —■ I > r-A :._ —-r ——* ! —5 ■.■■ — ' ■/ r-

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Tallulah's Maid Is Convicted By Jury Actress Is Joyful Over Court Verdict ' itew York, Dec. 29 — (UP) — Unpredictable Tallulah Bankhead ’ held a conference in her - hotel Suite last, night to proclaim ■ her joy over the court verdict ’ which vindicated her of “sex? nar- ’ cotics and gigolos’’ /allegations. ‘ Miss Bankhead was jubilant ov- ‘ er what she called her Exoneration by the jury which . late L found her maid, Mrs.' Evylpen ’ Cronin, 59, guilty ofi three counts of second degree larceny for rais- ‘ iug -the Amounts of Tallulah’s ! checks. ' The charges of sex, narcotics, ’ gigolos and liqudr for Miss .Bank-. ’ head came out during Miss Cron- ’ in’s 13-day trial. Ji * “I’m not going to say much, ; dahlings,’’ Miss Bankhead told the newsmen and. photographers. ,“I have a rehearsal tomorrow. I’m I naturally gratepil that the trial is , over and. to me the most wonder- . ful thing to come out of it was ; , that I iv aß exonerated by the jury — bless their hearts.” Bankhead greeted the , press dressed in a blue frock with I a full Skirt, her were a peevish poodle; a fluttering para- , kuet and her lawyer. “I have nothing, absolutely noth- . ing to say about . . . the defend- . ant. Except, -perhaps, that I hopje [ that always in’ future innoceAt - people will have the courage to , grand up and answer any charges made-against them ...” i In one languorous movement i she brushed away the parakeet, i Scratched the poodle’s ear dnd , » flicked her cigaret in an ash fray, i / **ilow am 4 doing, dahling?” she , asked Donald Seawall, her lawyer, r “Wonderftri, wonderful, as always,” he replied. r v —■—n —■ ' Greensburg Man To ■ Head Bus Drivers ‘ ; Indianapolis. Dec. 29 —§(UP) « 1 Gordon Amos, Greensburg, was 1 elected president of the Indiana School Bus Drivers’ association 1 at the end of a one-day convention. ! ; ATOM ENERGY I * HCoatlnard Frew Pane One> eliebtric current supplying t hte 1 building to the atonilc-powered geni editor. i I'tit. Walter It. Zinn, director of the Argonne National laboratory gOLemont; 111., Who supervised the along with H. V. Lichtenberger, laboratory project engineer for the experimental , breeder reactor, said “two or . three” tries were necessary before . the, switch-over came off satisfactorily. ;. A. Tammaro, AEC Chicago operL ations office manager, said the . purpose of the experiment wjgs to i “secure experimental information on the handling of liquid metals at , high temperatures under radio- ( active conditions and on the extraction of heat from a reacts in a Useful manner." ] • Tammaro said “no comparison”

should be drawn from the cost of producing power from this reactor and from .producing power by “conventional” means, / The AEC in the past has emphasized that the government is readv to spend much more money producing atomic power than >ny commercial, operation could hope to do and remain competitive With “conventional” power producers,, “Cost was not an essential factor in the power phase of the Idaho reactor and the\ experiment Is in no way intended to establish the feasibility of. producing electrical power economkhlly from nuclear sources,” Tammaro said. t

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TENSION I (CentlaweSjfrvo— Oar* ‘ the UnitedT States, in addition to severing diplomatic relations, include conflsoatioa pf ’ Hungarian assets in thia country, further protests to Hungary, requests for United Nations action, demande—rfor return o/*tbe C-47 cargo .plane confiscated by the Reds and publication of a full record of the incident from Nov. »19; through yestefday. ? ’ ' State department officials declined to say what furtherj.actipn might be taken. But their word watf that the case was not closed.