Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 December 1944 — Page 27
21, 1944 Home ons
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1944
ato: Favorites in
Cage Tourney ’ By UNITED PRESS Two Kentucky teachers college Moorehead .and Murray, were “inj stalled as co-favorites , today capture the first annual midwest college basketball Terre Haute, An eight-team field from Indiana Illinois, Ohio, Kentucky, Missouri and Jowa starts play tomorrow |
The semi-finals are] Saturday afternoon and the finals | that night, »
title duel comes to a quick head] Saturday in the first semi- final | game,
Loras Finds Trouble
Both figure to take first round | games handily, Moorehead's fastbreaking Eagles, with an attack built around the South's leading collegiate scorer of last season— Warren Cooper, meet Central Normal, Danville, Ind. in the tournament’s first game. Murray drew Loras college, Dubuque, Iowa, in the second. Loras, last:.season’s Iowa conference champion, came to Indiana this week with an impressive record, only to lose to Notre Dame, Valparaiso, Indiana State and Bunker Hill navy by wide margins. The tall and high-scoring Sycamores of the host school, Indiana State, figured to be the biggest fly in the all-Kentucky ointment, primarily because of a favorable draw,
«- Sycamores Leads Scorers .
Concordia Seminary of St. Louis, the opening round opponent of! State, dropped a 46-34 decision to the Sycamores at St. Louis a few weeks ago, while Eastern Illinois Teachers, Charleston, Ill, another of the lower bracket quintets, has bowed twice to Indiana State, 4745 and 46-36. Coached by Glen Curtis, who piloted four high school teams to Indiana cage championships, the Sycamores have a rangy quintet averaging six feet, four inches tall. Clarence Disney, “freshman, has
lead the Hoosier scoring race. Miami university, Oxford, O., tangles with Eastern Illinois for the right to meet the Indiana StateConcordia winner in the other semifinal. Miami took a 67-34 lacing from Notre Dame,
SFE NTR NTA JSR RE
BR ST sa POR a TT AS Eo a TR Es 1
This Christmas!
Assortments!
tournament at) .orrhages. Sa
'lCub teams after
Tinka rT Great
Infield Combine, in Hospital
ORLANDO, Fla., Dec. 21, (U. P.).—
Joe Tinker, the play-maker in the
great Chicago Cub infield combina-~ tion of “Tinker to Evers to Chance” was in “only fair” _. condition today at the Organe General hospital
ted suffering from nasal hem-
The 65-year-old star of the great
the turn of the century, played with them from 1002 to 1912,
toe Tinker
was manager of the, Cincinnati Reds in 1913 and reThe expected Moorehead- Murray | turned to Chicago as manager of | year, are going to “change jobs."
[the old Federal league team there, in 1914 and 1915.- In 1916, when he came back to the Cubs as manager, they set an all time major league record for victories in a 154 game season, with 116, He remained |
Basketball Scores
HIGH SCHOOLS
Aurora 51, North Bend O. 25 Batesville 41, North Vernon 16 Evansville ° Lincoln 31, Henderson, Douglas 20. Goshen 39, Ft. Wayne North 2 Greenfield 29, Lapel 28 (overti Bo. : Hartford City 42, Alexandria 20,
Ky
South Bi Washington 42, Washington
Clay 2 Terre Haute Garfleld 43, Brazil 37. Vincennes 26, Bicknell 25.
COLLEGES
Corpus Christi Naval 63, Texas A. & M 20 Ft. Harrison #7, Butler 42. Indiana State 54, Loras 32 Johns Hopkins 44, Mt. St. Lafayette 52, LaSalle 45 North Carelina Pre-Flight 49, Ft Personnel Center 44. Syracuse 63, St. Lawrence 37. Temple 42, Princeton 25. Tufts 54, Massachusetts Institute 50
Mary 35. Bragg
| Wichita 40, McPherson 13 | Wisconsin 51, Iowa Pre-Flight 43
3 League Games
-Tonight’s Bush - Callahan Manufacturers Basketball league schedule at the South Side Turners: 7:15—Allison vs. Inland Container; 8:15—Link Belt vs. Curtiss-Wright; 9:15—Eli Lilly vs. Lukas-Harold.
at the helm with the Cubs until 1920 when he retired from major league baseball. Last winter he suffered a serious pneumonia attack, but recovered
Aland had been considered in excel-
lent health,
Cowles, Earl Brown
i To ‘Change Jobs’
HANOVER, N. H, Dec. 21 (U. P.). ~Osborne (Ossie) Cowles, who led
B Dartmouth’s basketball team to six
straight . eastern intercollegiate
navy and Earl Brown, the football coach who filled in for him last
Cowles, a naval lieutenant who
Ireceived a discharge from the service yesterday, will resume his coaching duties at Dartmouth Jan, 1. | Brown, who carried on. ably for Cowles by capturing the seventh straight title last year, is going into the mavy as soon as he recovers from an appendicitis operation,
23 Eastern Stars Reach West Coast
civilian grid stars today began intensive practice for the 18th annual East-West Shrine football game New Year's day.
The easterners staged a practice session ‘yesterday only a few hours
| after arriving here. Tomorrow, the
under the
°
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ra ——
Smart Bet Must: Carry 124 Pounds
‘CORAL GABLES, Fla, Dec..21 (U. P.) —Smart Bet, winner of both of his races at Gulfstream park this season, has been top-weighted at 124 pounds for the $7500 Tropical park inaugural race’ on Christmas day. The gelding, owned by Mrs. E. J. Wolfson, was given ene more pound than Okapi Lancer” and two more than Harvard Square, with the three considered best in the field of 30 horses\ nominated for the event, Unless scratches pare the field, track officials said that it.probably would be necessary to run the event in two divisions money for each because of the . heavy entry list. championships before going into the | -
North Carolina
year” yesterday, The
with the $7500 at Cornell in Ithaca, N. Y,, the 1936 season,
Snavely Signs af
CHAPEL HILL, N. C., Dec. 21° |7 (U. P.) ~Football hopes for next season at the University of North | Carolina were on the rise today after the signing of Carl Snavely, Cornell coach, who returns to the Tarheel campus after a record as one of the outstanding mentors in eastern intercollegiate football. Snavely signed a five-year con-
tract at “an estimated $8500 a veteran football technician who coached here in 1934 and 1935 had been | since | |
SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 21 (U.P). | —Twenty-three of the East's best |
squad, leadership of
sota, will move tomorrow to a training camp at Santa Clara, Cal. Kem said he was optimistic over his team’s chances against the West team headed by Babe Hollingbery, Washington State, and Homer
out that it is less experienced than his outfit last year.
Co-Coaches Andy Kerr of Colgate | and George Hauser of Minnesota, | assisted hy Bernie Bierman, Minne- |
Norton, Texas A & M, but pointed
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a. Po pen Pe
T TOOK guts to discover this country in the first place. Guts to settle it. Guts to push back the wilderness, weather the icy winters, stand up to savage hate.
It took guts to talk back to a king, to fight his armies, to set up a nation and go it on our own.
It took guts to carry on despite panies, floods, fires, civil war. But we did it.
And we built thle richest, healthiest, freest, best-fed, best-educated nation in all history.
* * *
Then came the Big Depression. And we forgot all about guts. We became timid and afraid. We thought we might better entrust our destiny to government —a government that couldn't give us a dime more than we gave 4.
Then we got into war. And back came our guts. At Pearl Harbor, Guadalcanal, Tarawa, Salerno. On the beaches of Normandy.
Back they came in shipyards all along the coast and a thousand miles inside our borders. At plane plants, tank plants, factories, machine shops, hastily constructed workshops everywhere.
We proved once again that we can outdream, , outthink, outwork, outproduce, outfight, outinvent, outprosper any country in the world. And with the return of our guts we began to notice a lot of other things. We found that rl government and business could actually work together. That labor and management had more in common than they had at variance. That all the various-groups in our country could and would pull together in a common cause.
Is war the only common cause that can unite us?
Not unless we think that poverty and back wardness and lack of full opportunity for all aren’t every bit as worthy of our blood and our
steel as the Japs and Nazis. The rebirth of our creative spirit, of invention, of discovery, of incredibly increased productivity, can give us a life of abundance such as no people on earth — including ourselves — has ever seen.
* * *
Right now we have the greatest productive
capacity in all history. Much of it was built for war—and will have to be rebuilt for peace.
In rebuilding it, however, we must take steps to make sure we will be able to buy all the many things that our factories and farms will produce.
And that can be dome. Not through government handouts--which result only in more and more debt. But by using our productive capacity to provide us with more for our money in the things we buy, so that we can buy more—and thus create more jobs and more earnings for all.
In short, by making full use of this country’s limitless energy and ambition, we can help lead the world into an era of peace and plenty greater than any yet seen.
Two things are necessary to realize this opportunity. One is a liberal, forward-thinking policy on the part of business. The other is public cooperation,
Business is pledged to do its part — first, by increasing the oppdrtunities for all to earn and, second, by increasing the opportunities for all to-buy.
To increase the opportunities for all to earn, business pledges a just and enlightened wage policy, and the opening of every possible avenue of advancement. for the worker.
It proposes to proceed at the earliest possible moment with the starting of new ventures and the expansion of old in order to provide more
Ns
These messages are published to make clear the steps that must be taken to assure the American people of an econdbmy of abundance in the posiwar world. They are sponsored by the NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL INFORMATION COMMITTEE of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF MANUFACTURERS, wabveabpnas Bouts of Sflront vse Sore end sg, employing 13 Jur Sent of Sa wags oirners i the weijactiing industry. :
; UIs
jobs for more people — including returning servicemen and demobilized war workers.
It proposes to put into workers’ hands the most efficient tools available—so that a worker, by increasing his production, may add still fure ther to his earnings.
To increase the -opportunities for all to buy, business proposes to make full use of the technological “know how” it has accumulated during the war to put on the market the finest products that can be made, at the lowest prices for which they can be sold.
It proposes to seek, through unending study and research in the fields of production and distribution, every possible means for lowering prices still further over the years, so that more of the good things of life can be enjoyed by more and more of the people.
It proposes to encourage full and free competi= tion to avoid restraint of trade and so assure
better and better values. * * * This is business's program for the future. To
bring it about as quickly as possible will require your help. For its accomplishment will need legislative action—action that you can encourage. Postwar tax policies that leave sufficient funds for expansion. Laws that clearly prevent unregulated monopoly. Labor policies that establish the responsibilities of both labor end management. And business operation under low
instead of by unpredictable “directive.” .
If you wish to know more about this progrant) write for the free booklet, How Americans Ca: Earn More, Buy More, Have More. Address National Industrial Information a
14 West 49th Street, New York 20, N. Y.
prea
Frou
