Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 50, Number 249, Decatur, Adams County, 21 October 1952 — Page 7
. . . ■’ 1.7" - TUES-DAY, OCTOBER 21, 1952
f sports]
Monmouth’s Net Schedule Is Announced The Monmoutli Eaglet will open their 1952-53 basketball season Friday night, Nov. 7, tangling with the Hartford Gorillas at flartford. Eagles lost forir of last season’s sectional squad by graduation, with three of them regu- - lars. - ' e .The complete, schedule follows: < Nov. 7—Hartford at'j Hartford. Nov. 711 —Adams Central at - Monmouth. Noy. 14—Commodores at Decatur. ’ -a , Nov\ 21—Ohio City, 0., at Monmouth. • j . - Nov. 26—Huntington Catholic At Hunflngtom ■ ? "X-.i Dec. R—Rockcreek at ’Rockcreek. Deet-6 —Hoagland at| Hoagland. Dec.. 112—(Pleasant Mills at Mon•in du th,l' • ; . ' - Dec. Ip-Jefferson at Monmouth. Jan.| 6 —Geneva at Monmouth, Jan. JtrXlluntington. , Union at .Mogmouth. -..J. ' Jap. 23— at Monmouth. Jan, 3b—Berne' at Monmouth. I Feb. s—Petroleum atAfletroleum I Feb. 10 —Pleasant Mills at Pleasant Mills. I’Feb.' 13 —Adams Central at Attains Central. -. I \ Feb/17--Pennville at Monmouth. —Feb. at NH Haven. i ’ I - ' 3 . 7 ~~ / ' Football Boys And Dads Meet Monday \ , .5 \ , • 7 Jleeattir high s varsity*and second string football teanik treated their fathers to a bean Supper at the high school last night, after I which they, trooped to Northman field to see the freshmefi pigskinnefes lick the seventh a|id eighth graders, 20 : 0. 7 The 'supper is an anntial affair. At least 75 fathers and; sons enjoyed the festivities. The victuals 1 were prepared by .'the; gfrls. of the home , economics class, at the school. - I-
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—■ - ■—- ;— y——. Klenk's To Practice Thursday Evening Klenk’s independent team will hold a practice session At the Lincoln school gymi Thursday evening at 7 o’clock. All can} didates for the team are requested to be present. : * : Strikebreaking Is Charged To Officials Formal By Richmond Union Richmond, ind. up —staking employees of the International harvester plant here have formally accused Richmond city bfticijals Os “strikeb, peaking.’’ } ii | A document filed in Washington by the Farm Equipmefet-lpnited Electrical Workers Local life leveled five charges against Mayor Lester Meadows, police chief Lucas Rxihe, prosecutor William Heller, city /judge Andrew Herlitjs, the Palladium-Item and' the Fir|t National Richmond.j’ The FE-US memorandum was filed Saturday with the U. $„ senate’s labor and ‘ public Welfare committee and the civil rights division of the U. S. department oS justice. ’ I The officials were charged with “attacking free speech, undiermining tpe- right to 'picket pfeacjefqlly. excessive hail, unequal justice oh the part of the prosecutor aird city court, and open 4 support Os strikebreaking for the conipanji’’ The Palladium-Item, Riphjnond’s ; only: newspaper, was accused of acting as a “propaganda' publicahon’i. for International Harvester. The (document charged thej First National 'Bank with “prefespre on the Strikers” by pressing ;fo'r foreclosure; on instalment loans; A i.wu-iponth-old strike, involving 900 workers, has been t|ie s|«ne of oecgsional piehet line yiolfende. The union is asking a (Jontracf renewal with;a higher wage scale.’ : *—- . Deer and other Jug gaihe are said to thrive better on forage consumed from living plants I rather than stock feeds because: their digestive organs are bettef adapted to such coarse diets; X l| —
Michigan Stale 'Retains Top Football Spot NEW YORK iIP — Michigan State retained the No. 1 spot, in ithe United Press football ratings (for the fifth consecutive week today as it came within 24 points of the perfect score of 350. 1 In making the strongest showing in the ratings this Reason, the powerful received j 19 first place votes, 13 second \place ballots, one fourth and two ' fifth to compile a total of 326 points, 54 mord than second-place Maryland. Maryland, moving from third place into the runner-up position, received five first place votes and a total of 272 points to replace California in the No. 2 spot. The west coast team dropped down to third with four first-place votes and a total of 257 points. I Michigan State was the [only team which retained v the same spot in this week’s ratings as there were two newcomers to the top 10 —Wipeonsi'p in ninth plpce and Qhio State in 10th. Kansas, defeated by Oklahoma, and Purdue. which lost to Notre Dame, dropped out of the top 10. Behind Maryland and California came Oklahoma, Georgia Tech Southfern California. Duke and UCLA in that order. Oklahoma, with four first-place votes and 2371 points. nioAed from fifth to fourth place as Georgia Tech, with three first-place ballots and 205 points, exchanged places the Sooners. ’■ | | k .Southern California and Duke each moved up a spot as Kansas, sixth last week, received only 10 points for a tie for 16th place. UCLA jumped from 10th to eighth. All of the top eight teams are undefeated, although Oklahoma was tied by* Colorado in Its season’s opener. Wisconsin and Ohio State each has lest a game. There were shifts in the second teams as well as the top 10. Notre Dame, which received only three . points last week, headed thfe second ten with 27 points with Pennsylvania. Villanoya. Texas Virginia trailing in that order. Kansas and Tennessee were tied for 16th, followed by Pittsburgh \hnd Penn State while Minnesota and Illinois were tied for 3Mh place. . j i X ' Points are scored on the basis of 10 for a' first place vote, two for . a and so on doum to one for a 10th. \| Stroh Youth First Duck Hunting Death KENDALLVILLE, Ind. UP — Eldan D. Miller. 21 j Stroh. Monday became Indiana’s, first duck\ hunting fatality. j \ r y He was fatally' shot only hours after the season opened when the gun of ’ Robert ' Stienbarger, 23, Kendallville, his companion, acci+ dentally discharged whiles they were hunting from a boat on the Elkhart river. .\■7: d ' ■ d Democrat Want Ads bring Results r "'>>7 a '~~ jh --|-y z ' ( j-:-:-
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* 7— — f —? —¥ o — -J o . I Today's Sport Parade • | (Reg. U. S. Pat Off.) t By Oscar FraleyX/ ’ I o NW YORK UP — An ava-. lanche ot high scores and an epidemic of fumbles w£re contributing generously to the woes of the nation's football coaches today and the harried victims had numerous reasons for these catastrophes. ' , The bobble champions last weekend were Purdue and Notre Dame. The Boilermakers,' acting as if they deserved theit\\ nickname through liquid consumption, flubbed the ball 11 times. Notre Dame managed only IP fumbles, for a total of 21 in the ball game. Kentucky, Auburn and Princerfon ail crowded into the act witly eight each. In the “Hit ’em again, harder” department. South Dakota State WRllopfed North Dakota. G 9-6: Detroit flatened Drake. 57-0;. Miami of Ohio belted so on into the bruised and weary i night. ' Hufchie the former Notre Paine and St? coach now at NYU, explains these phenomena 'byi asserting that the fumbles are, due tp the fast-break ing offense currently in vogue while the high scores may be at* 1 trityuted. to the forward pass. *lfn the split-T formation particularly.” Devdre asserted, "fumbles are a big hazard, that’s because is a lot of speedy ball handling, first to one side and then to the other, and this everincreasing tempo results in more and more fumbles. "As for the big scores, the main reason is the forward pass." he insisted. “Just about any running attack can be bottled up with a tight defense. Even a good running club eventually goes to the pass aid when it has an adept passer it completely demoralizes the defense.
"Add to that the fact that by this time of the year the passers know their receivers and their polentialS from experience,, and you have tlie reason for the touchdown parade." he added. Art Ralmo. the Villannva coach whose team is undefeated in five games, agreed- He pointed out that his victory skein was due to offensive balance — and that he, permits both halfbacks to throw the ball even though neither la particularly accurat|. Haimo calls his Gene Filipski, a former Army star, "one of the finest: running backs in the country." llutj be disclosed, he lets .Filipe ski the ball, ‘ too, on occasion—even though Galloping Gene hasn’t completed as pass this season. -The theory is “Throw it— 1 and keep the defense loose." i Vet, Benny Friedman, fornjer I Michigan All-American coaching I undefeated Braudels, thinks some . quarterbacks throw the ball too much, He sent in directions to his quarterback last weekend to call a fake pass and send the fullback through the middle. Tho play netted a touchdown. ♦‘Gee. coach.” the signal caller tpld him, "You’re a pretty feood . quarterback, too.” <_ Stringing 1 AJong,., ' Alliance. Neb. (upj — There was a string to'*hc purchase' of & local man at h downtown store; He walked a block with the package - the clerk had wrapped before\o»w> ' one called hls, i to that the'cleric hadn’t cut the pord.
*——r’ — : —| Lee Os Notre Dame Is Lineman Os Week CHI'CXgO, UP — Jack Lee won A as a Notn? Dame lineman as a freshman last year, and this season he’s winning praise from <?oach Frank Leahy fop a standout job as the middle guard on the Irish defensive line. Sophomore Lee. for his stellar tackling and pushing against Purdtis Saturday, today was named United Press lipeman of the) . 1 The ISO pound. 80-yeai’-old from Medford, Mass., was ohe of the unsung-rookies who helped NotYe Dajne to an unexpectedly good 19$U «eason of only defeats and orte ,t|e on a 10 game schedule* '.I This -season Leahy never had any ddubt where the "lad" would fit into the Irish program. 1 J "Lee will be our middle guard on defense," he said eheh time he named. a tentative starting lineup, “and we hape that he doesn’t gkt huyt.” ISo far. Lee, of Irish descent, has been in action virtually every a Notre Dame opponent hgs had the ball this season. Bdt Saturday, as the Irish scored their second .victory in four games this, ybar, k 26-14 upset decision over Furdue, Lee played his best game. 'ile ‘‘shot’’ the line on virtually every play and pneb. when the Bop.erriliakersT' Norin Montgomery was back to punt in the Purdue spread* formation. Lee c a.m e t'jLr o u g h so fast he partially blocked; the ball- It went, out of bound® in Purdue territory and. tUWIgh there was a pass intercep-1 tion and a fumble thereafter, Notre Dame tallied another touchdown jto pikke victory more cjMiaiiy
BOWLING SCORES CLASSIC LEAGUE Team Standings W L Pts S>ftiith Insurance __x 15 3 ,21 West End *--.13 5 18 Marbach s 10 8 15 Acker .Cement 9 9 13 Decatur Dry Cleaners -. 9 9 12 Equity -Dafry 9 9 12 Burk Elevator |_.l 9 9 12 Arnbid.Lumber j.... 7 11 7 Smith Pure Milk 6 12 7 Moose Cliib 3 15 3 i High Series; Zelt (614 i 180, 202. 232; Multeineier (60S) 145. 258 J 205. Ilißhi, games: Appelman 204, Butmah'n 211, Hoffman 216. Beery 203-213; Beinking 200, Hleeke 210, c;. Stevens 226, Ahr 220, Ladd 201, Civil War some of the first volunteer Union troops sent, to; Washington were housed in the Senate and'House chambers of the Capitol. - ♦ • J : ■
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56 College Teems Unbeaten, Untied d MW YORK UP — A few doaen football teams hardly known outside their own area were listed with such college powers as Michigan State, Maryland and California today on the nation’s honor roll of! 56 unbeaten and untied elevens. X ! 1 The Select list, which inevitably must dwindle with each succeeding week, included 10 major college teams. Two of/the small football schools — Maryland State Ind Montclair N; J. Teachers re unscored upon in three games each. Maryland State has scored lib points and Montclair. 53. Among the majoif college teams, Maryland, California, Georgia Tech, Southern California, Duke, Villanova and UCLA has won five games: Michigan State, Virginia and Holy Cross have Won four each. ! . Four of the teams on the perfect record list. have won six games each. They are Peru Neb. State, William Jewell of Missouri, Northeast Oklahoma State and Stevens Poikt of Wisconsin. Eighteen of the teams have won five games each, 22 have won four, 10 have won, three, apd two teams have wdh tvio gaipes each. Among the perfect-record teams is Susquehanna, coached by 90-year-old Amos Alonzo Stagg and his son, Paul.. Eusquehanua, in Pennsylvania, has won three contests and scored .66- points to 20 for its opposition. 'L 1 ’ The most prolific scoring team in the group is East Texas State, which has am massed 234 points in ■ ; * --• u. t.- ■ tr . ■ . u-
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wlnfcihg five games. At least three fef the teams mukt' be knocked fronL thei list during t,he coming woekend when Californio plays Southern California, Duke meets Virginia, arid Miami, O. faces Ohio University. W/JS,. Ji gflk ■ V «m ft "i 4' j. r sg OFF TO SEE Rita Hayworth in Ma* ditid, feinger -Robert Savage say: gbodby from plane steps at Neu York’B LaGuardia field, fle indicated AJy Khan must have rockj ini his head for not wanting tc sit by the fireside with Ritd, feme that he intended to win her. Ir Spain, she\said he was wasting his time and money. A decorated Former Air Force officer, I he Was scheduled for a film test but called it, off in his rush to get tl Madrid. f Internatioiial,
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