Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 November 1951 — Page 20

PAGE 20

»

Sports Roundup— /

8). College Prexies ‘WB Also Enmeshed

By EDDIE ASH Times Sports Editor

THE END of the road is just around the bend for football and basketball players who go to a big-time college but don't gain a lot of knowledge. : It also may be the end of the road for a lot of college

executives and other faculty members who have been per-

g s remain ———————— Star athletes to hout formation had come its way about an incident in the South , . , It seems that a %tar high school halfback was recruited last spring niversity of Miami, Fla.

mitting eligible fop-varsity sports wit being bonalide sfidents. Some college administrators make strong statements that I th 3 s isn't true but New York a Saul S. Streit appears to. . The “swivel hip” reported at have evidence that some concrete Miami in early September but doomed basketballers and foot- after a few days he transferred ballers managed to become juniors/to Rollins College, where he has or seniors in the game programs been starring . . . A few days without applying themselves to ago, when the first term ended, he the curriculum leading to a de- received a report card from Migree, except maybe, in that soft ami . . . He had passed every touch known as “physical educa- Subject. tion”. But for that physical educa-| tion gimmick, some big-time coaches would be hard up for] talent,

THERE'S STILL no end of the line at 89 for Amos Alonzo Stagg Sr.... Susquehanna College presented its veteran | football coach with an undefeated, untied season this fall «+. The Grand Old Man of the Gridiron co-coaches the Sel-

” » = WE DON'T think the college sports mess is as bad as judge Streit pictured but still it is

pretty bad, in spots. . . . The | insgrove, Pa. college with his college presidents and other | som, Amos Jr. . a executives have had to put | #. 8»

out a lot of double talk in recent years, especially since the end of World War II when competition for star athletes and the price for star athletes

ON THE college football menu there are so many “big games” scheduled this Saturday that it ‘would be well for a committee to call around and beg the nation’s went sky high. chief weatherman to have a heart 2 2 = On the last big football Sat= IN THE old days the college urday last year a blizzard struck president dominated everything, and snow drifted as high as your alumni, coaches, key professors neck .. . That was the day Michand athletes. . . Eventually, | igan defeated Ohio State without however, this situation went into making a first down . This reverse and the alumni and year’s battle between the Wolver-

S ; dominate ines and Bucks will be on your Soa shes oe Hd 3 By Wom ® television screen this Saturday. The pressure became so great) : # = =n the presidents lost their authority! THE COMMAND probably and were forced to ease up on the will go out in Lexington, Ky. athletes. . . . Either that or see Saturday to check pistols and his job. jeopardized by influential) squirrel rifles at the gate as alumni groups. the well loaded Kentucky WildnT 8 = cats tie into old rival TennesFIRST STEP in the house- see, undefeated and untied. . .. cleaning now in the skillet will We hope the blood letting be to eliminate the double among the keyed up rival rootstandard as practiced between = ing forces will be held to a athletes and regular students, minimum. including the banning from E88 varsity sports the tramp ath- STILL IN the running for the lete who flunks out at one col- Big Ten title and a Rose Bowl lege and then is welcomed with trip, the pressure is on Purdue in open arms by another college in [the annual Bucket Battle with dire need of a quarterback of a Indiana. . .. But the pressure on muscleman tackle . . . They used highly regarded Illinois will be to call ’em tramp athletes . . . greater as the Illini tackle NortnNow they're listed as “transfer western. . . . The Wildcats interstudents.” cepted five Michigan passes last = {Saturday and clipped the favored ANENT THIS Subleck: the Chi- Wolverines. And only a field cago Tribune turned up a gem goal beat them in an earlier the other day . . . It related in- match with Ohio State.

Illinois Dominates All-Conference Team

By United Press CHICAGO, Nov. 20—Illinois, undefeated but once tied and still the leading contender for the Big 10 championship and a berth in the Rose Bowl, dominated the United Press

all-conference team today with four first team positions.

The Illiri landed three linemen, tackle Chuck Ulrich, guard Chuck Studley and linebacker Chuck Boerio, plus halfback Johnny Karras, a three-year star

Reichardt, who was threatening to set a new conference record for total yards rushing during the season, and Perry were the most

Colleges Start Probe of Judge's Forgery Charge

« By United Press

NEW YORK, Nov. 20 — Shocked college authorities started a swift investigation”

today into Judge Saul Streit's

charges that: some of the bribed basketball players he sent to prison had entered City College of New York by “ A special committee of three was appointed by the board of higher education ‘to look into Streit’'s report that at least two players Al Roth and Herb Cohen--were admitted to the free college on the strength of false high school grades. =" 2 = “I SUGGEST that in the cases of Roth and Cohen there was deliberate fraud and possible forgery,” Streit said yesterday in a bitter denunciation of “athletic corruption as he sentenced five players and a ‘master fixer” to prison terms. Other charges made by Streit in his 41-page statement having equally explosive effect on college campuses across the nation, = Ld ” AND STREIT said the ‘“commercialism” of college sports that led to bribery began with football first and then spread to bas-’

ketball, He said his survey found: ONE--At_ the University of Michigan recently, 100 faculty

members charged a double standard was used in crediting athletes and nonathletes for extracurricular activities. TWO—At William and Mary, “there is the shocking situation of the alteration of a preparatory school transcript to admit an

athlete.” THREE At Bradley University, “a spot check of 15 athletes

shows that eight were majoring in physical education and among the courses for which credit was given were handball, elementary swimming, social dancing, football and first aid.” FOUR—At Ohio State football players were on the payrolls of state agencies. FIVE-—At Oklahoma, a senior football player was taking introduction to Secgrapny. theories of

3 City H. S. Cage Teams Fire Tonight

By JIMMIE Ig Crispus Attucks, Cathedral

and Manual—a trio of city basketball teams looking for a bright future in the 1951-52

hardwood season—begin the first of the Thanksgiving midweek net firing tonight. Attucks, primed for another shot at the state title that carried them to the afternoon game of the state finals last year, entertains Sheridan, a good team even without the high-scoring Larry Hobbs. The game's at Tech at 8 p. m. Last year Attucks won 26 and lost two. One loss was incurred by Coach Eli Yeager's Howe five, 53 to 42, later avenged in the finals of the local sectionals. Evansville Reitz beat Attucks in the final two minutes, then lost in the finals to Muncie Central in the final four seconds on a shot by Charley Mock, now at Colorado with

fraud and forgery.”

were |

with the Ray Eliot eleven who has forced the Illinois opposition to employ special defenses all vear. Michigan, the defending con-

popular choices. Each was placed on the first team by eight coaches and on the second by one. 2 nr =

THE TWO platoon system com-

Tommy Harrold. Manual, which won 9 and lost 10 last year, has promise. The Redskins will rely on Dick Nyers,

<

ra vo »

3 THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Edward Gard S. T. Sollazzo

basketball, volley ball. SIX--At Denver, the state industrial commission ruled that former Denver U. football player Brad Nemeth had been hired to play: football and was entitled to disability pay for his football in-

swimming games and Judge Streit said that Roth was credited with an 89.4 per cent high school average at his entrance into CCNY, although “his average should have been 70.62, and that “in Cohen's case; there ‘is a 10-point discrepancy between his high school average. as shown in the high school books, and the

SEVEN The University of !Fansier sheet at the college.” Texas grants 100 athletic scholar- = Candidates for admittance to ships a. year; Texas A. and M. CCNY must show high marks in 120: S. M. U.. 154. high school, and Streit said that EIGHT —At the University of 00th Roth and Cohen actually Maryland, of 97 football players, were ‘ineligible’ for the school. 42 are from Pennsylvania, 10 7 x = from New York, five from New COHEN WAS one of nine playJersey, and three from Rhode ers whose sentences were susIsland. pended by -.Streit. The others

EJ ” ” IN RESPONSE to this last observation, Coach Jim Tatum of the University of Maryland admitted Streit's figures were correct but defended them. “We ! 7 them (athletes) before ou larship board, and if they p: we give them books, tuition, room, board, and $15 a month,” said Tatum. “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, I'd quit right now.” = = ="

were Adolph Bigos, Leroy Smith, Nate Miller, and Dick Feurtado of Long Island University, and Ed Roman, Floyd Layne, Irwin Dambrot and Norman Mager of CCNY, Roth, $id Warner of CCNY and Connie Schaff of New York University were sentenced to six months each. LIU star Sherman White drew a one-year sentence, and LIU plaver Eddie Gard was given an “indeterminate” sentence which could last three vears. “Master fixer” Salvatore Sollabas- zzo was sentenced to from eight Roth and Cohen.to 16 years

Coilege Heads Say, ‘Cleanup Needed’

By United Press

WASHINGTON, Nov. 20—A new set of rules governing the recruiting and subsidization of athletes with an effective means of enforcing them loomed today as the

most probable result of a meeting of a special committee of college presidents charged with —mM8M8M8 ———

The committee of 10 the task of cleaning up intercol- : residents, appo 7 legiate athletics. P Ppointed oye

American Council on Educatien, Emphasizing that no con- held two meetings yesterday and

clusions have been reached, John Scheduled a third today before it B. Hannah, chairman of the com- "'! adjourn.

mittee and president of Michigan State College, admitted that a house cleaning was in order. 0 on owl opes

“We realize something has to By United Press

be done because our hands are not clean,” Hannah said, “and “This . committee has been DALLAS, Tex.. Nov. 20 The charged with great responsibility Cotton Bowl, which picked the and we are prepared to meet it. Winner in last year's TennesseeBy. that, I mean that we are not Kentucky football feud, hopes it going to be rushed into making has done it again in inviting Kenour conclusions and recommenda- tucky to the 1952 Cotton Bowl.

IN THE case of convicted ketball players

college

while ‘we have not determined just what evils we must correct and how we must remedy them, we are facing the situation as it is and not how we would like it to

Bevens Big

Surprise in Player Draft

By United Press

CINCINNATI, O., Nov. 20 —Baseball circles insisted to-

day the Cincinna ti Reds

“must know something."

| They dug deepest to come up with {all - but - forgotten Floyd {Bevens in the annual player draft.

(Bill)

Cincinnati's acquisition of Bevens from Salem of the Class B Western International League where he won 20 games and lost

12 last season, qualified as the draft in

“big surprise” of the which 17 minor leaguers wer drafted by 11 major league clubs for a total cash outlay of $159. 000.

» 34-year-old sixBevens once starred for the Yanke He had a no-hit, no-run game-in the 1947 Vorld Series #gainst Brooklyn until Cookie Lavagetto's ninthinning double with two out changed the entire complexion of

x = THE BURLY, foot, four-inch

the game. He was watched closely by the Reds the past season while hurling for Salem The 17 players selected repre-'. sented a general apathy to the

draft and marked a decrease of 11 players from the number who were drafted last November. = = = unk FOURTEEN PLAYERS were drafted from Triple A classifications, including six players from the Pacific Coast League; one player was plucked from Houston of the Double A Texas League; one came Birmingham of the Double A Southern Association. : Number choice fielder George Schmees by the St. Montreal of ‘League for long-ball h left-hander, batted .328 of the PCL last year, walloped 28 homers

from

one was Outclaimed Browns from International Schmees, a

Louis the £10.000 itting

for Hollywood

and impressed Seattle manager Rogers Hornsby now pilot of the Browns recently. = n ” THE BROWNS also drafted Pitcher Earl Harrist, {ormerly

with the White Sox and the from Oakland of the PCI. Other ex-major leaguers drafted were Infielder Gene Mauch by the champion Yankees, Pitcher Glen Elliott by Washington and Pitcher Con Dempsey and First Baseman Vernal (Nippy) Jones by the Phillies. In addition to Bevens, the Feds drafted Catchers Joe Rossi from Portland (PCL) and Hank Foiles

Reds,

from Kansas City (AA). The Cubs picked up Infielder Bill Hardin from Rochester (IL). Outfielder

IL)

from

Harvey Gentry from Ottawa Pitcher Tom Simpson Buffalo (IL Detroit Arf¥ied Shortstop

and

Alex Grabowski from Seattle; the Athletics claimed Outfielder Keith Thomas from Syracuse (IL); the Red Sox took Infielder Joe Bevan from Hollywood. and the Pirates drafted Clem Koshorek. a five foot four inch shortstop from To-

ledo (AA).

: TUESDAY, NOV. 20, 1951

Front- Running Royals Are in

Town Tonight

By FRANK ANDERSON Last time the Olymps were in Rochester, N. Y., fire swept the. Eastman Kodak plant. The Olymps weren't suspested of arson. ; . But if anything happens to Rochester tonight .the hps Wi t a ri Olam ML be EL me rom the Bed is the Royal pit

8:30. "ona THE ROCHESTER shooting av-

Rochester is leading the National Basketball Asscociation’'s West- erage is 44 per cent. Six players ern Division by 1'; games. The gre gnipping at better than 50 per Olymps are four games astern in/cent: They are Bob Davies, Bob fourth place. Wanzer, Red Holzman and Arnie Les Harrison's Royals are johnsen of the regulars and Rook‘defending champions of the NBA. jes Sam Ranzino and Ray Ragelis. And their current good fortune in| In points per game averages the Western Division shows that! the Royals surpass anything the the eyes still have it. Accuracy Qlymps have. Royal Center he Arnie Risen has a 16.5 mark. Davies and Wanzer give Risen 15.8 and 15.5 help, respectively. Holzman at 13.8 is 1.4 points a game better than Joe Graboski, the Olymp leader.

» » - THE ROYALS aren't coming to Indiana for their health. They found their Eastern climate sufficiently invigorating. Five of their six victories were secured on their bandbox court in Rochester. The wide open spaces of Butler Fieldhouse ould retard the Royal growth The Olymps' shooting has been colder than Joe Stalin's heart. And their free throws have been little more than throws. But they can run. And that could be the way of defeating the Royals. Who knows? One can't tell about the Olymps, They rarely do the same thing twice. Consistency iz a virtue owned only by Leo Barnhorst. Wah (Comeback Kid) Jones and Graboskli. It's difficult to write about a losing ball club. How about. helping the press, Olymps?

ROYAL FLASH-—Sharpshoot-ing Bobby Wanzer helps make the Rochester Royals tick.

Off the Backboard—

ORGANIZED BASEBALL is interested in the Kentucky basketball “fix” case. It's especially interested in the status of Ralph Beard.

George Trautman, czar of the minor leagues, has asked

New York District Attorney Frank Hogan for a transcript of 158 in California. Now he’s turned Beard's ‘point shave’ confession. UP as a Ft. Wayne player. The

In the confessio

Beard admitted Pistons obtained him last Friday taking bribes I

rocked the from Philadelphia's active reserve

'

diamond game in 1919s World his Series. And organizéd baseball cf 2 = hasn't forgotten. . IT DOESN'T seem {0 make . 7» sense. The Ft. Wayne club has

about $250,000 tied up in players. It has a surplus of talent. Now one of the high-priced boys will have to give way to Closes. Philly didn't want Closs. And he could have helped the Olymps. 80 tal-

BEARD IS the property of the Boston Braves. Two years ago he played with Evansville in the Three-1 League. Last he passed up a promotion to Denver

summer

of the Class A Western Associa- ant-rich Ft. Wavne grabs him tion in order to work with Junior For what? BdAseball here and play semi-pro No one is talking. But ball. wouldn't surprise us if Closs had Trautman says he will use the heen sealed up by the Pistons confession transcript to determine pefore he was offered to the Beard's future in baseball, Olymps by Philly. Pro basketball Sh th K if is like that. The hand that isn't arpen e niie holding the gift holds the knife THE GUY who was going to help” the Olymps is helping Leave It to Boys somebody else. PRESSURE FOOTBALL i= Remember when the “fix” case Worried about giving the game deprived the Olymps of Alex back to the boys. But it needn't Groza and Ralph Beard” Maurice Df. Pdooloff, the NBA prexy, said Football haz always belonged he'd get the league to help the to the bovs at Wabash and Va Olymps with players. Well, Phila- paraiso. And the boys have taken delphia said the Olymps could good care of—ii._ The records have Bill Closs. a bounding. re- prove it. Valpo finished unbeaten bounding. scoring type player. untied for the second straight Closs said “uh. uh.” He was re- season. And Wabash’'s anlv blemtiring to his sporting goods busi- ish was a 268-28 tie with Butler.

TUESD! Lois Wor

Scoring Goes t

The 1951 Ir lege football to Valparais with a total touchdowns. The sawed Chicago did: but he easil Royce Rowe nold for the with 72 and 6

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Expert w ment. Pi liable ‘ser

ference champion whith has DOW city-county scoring champ with a tions for when we do that we The circumstances aren't quite

plicated the voting, however, and it was high tribute to Boerio that he won a first team position. The Illini placed one man on the second team and three on the third for a total of eight, while Wisconsin won four seeond team spots and three on the third eleven for the same total.

Each ef the nine teams in the conference placed at least one man on the three teams; but Reichardt was Iowa's only representative while halfback Pat Gedman, on the second team, was the ‘lone player from Indiana. Both Minnesota and Indiana were blanked on the first team. The Gophers’ sophomore Paul Giel, however, won a second team position and narrowly missed beating Janowicz out of a first team berth. He was named by every coach to a first or second

lost three of five league games, was the only other school to place more than one man on the first team. The Wolverines landed both end Lowell Perry and tackle Tom Johnson. = = = OTHER ALL conference players were end Leo Sugar, Purdue; guard Don Mac Rae, Northwestern; quarterback John Coatta, Visconsin; halfback Vic Janowicz, Ohio State, and fullback Bill Reichardt, Iowa. Janowicz and Reichardt were the anly repeat selections who won all conference honors last vear. But Janowicz was not nearly so prominent in the opinion of the coaches, who selected the! Gg team for United Press, as in 1850 when he was a unanimous choice. This year only five coaches placed the Ohio State star on the first

team. team post. . U. P. Choices Pos. Wet. Hgt Class Hometown E Lowell Perry. Michigan 178 6 Jr. Ypsilanti, Michigan E ieo Sugar. Purdue ‘ew 197 6 Sr. Flint, Michigan T Tom Johnson, Michigan .., 22% 62” Sr. Muskegon Heights, Mieh. T Charles Ulrich, Illinois 219 64” Sr. Chicago, Illinois 6G Charles Studley, IHinois 191 yim Sr. Pontiac; Hlinois t+ bon MacKae, Northwestern 195 a1 Nr. Dundee, Illinois C Charles Boerio, Illinois 191 511 Sr Kineaid, Illinois B John Coatta, Wisconsin ...... 177 31” Sr. Dearborn, Michigan B John Karras, Illinels ........ 171 511" Sr. Argo, Illinois B Vie Janewicz. Ohio State 186 39" Sr Elyria. Ohio B Bill Reichardt, Jlowa 205 sn” Sr Towa City, lows Second Team Pos, Third Team Hal Faverty, Wisconsin. ......... E Darrell Brewster, Purdue Sherwin Gandee, Ohio State E Joe Vernasco, Illinois Jerry Smith, Wiseonsin =... ..... T Marvin Berschet. Tllineis Diek Logan. Ohio State .. .. ......% iT Roger Zatkoff, Michigan Bob Kennedy, Wisconsin G Deral Teteak, Wisconsin Joe Skibinsk. Purdue Ch: cinnne Bill Gable, Wisconsin Wayne Robinson. Minnesota C Clinton Knitz, Purdue Tom O'Connell, Illinois B.. Tony Curcillo, Ohio State Paul Giel, Minnesota ~~. ....... B Rollie Strehlow, Wisconsin Gene Gedman, Indiana ........ B Don Stevens. Illinois Alan Ameche, Wisconsin B Diek Alban. Northwestern

Record Man "Babe Would Trade All to Beat Vols

By United Press And he already held the record

LEXINGTON, Ky. Nov. 20— tor touchdown passes in one seaThe “forward passing” section of gon with the 23 he tossed a year

the NCAA's football record book ag0, read like a biography of Vito, But the Babe never has conkarl today, but the Kentucky nected for a touchdown against

would trade all the figures Tennessee, and next Saturday will Champion Lou Thesz here next| >

for one touchdown toss against be his last chance. Tennessee next Saturday. | The unbeaten Vols, five-deep at After a three-touchdown spree every position, will enter the

against George Washington last|/game a definite favorite except in Saturday, Parili held no less|the hearts of Kentucky fans —

than four all-time national rec-| {who each November about this teammate Johnny (Satan) Rococo. Leonard, t

ords for Pigskin pitching. . = year." | IN HIS three years of play, he, The sober fact is that Kentucky now has thrown 50 scoring pass- has beaten Tennessee only once, es, accounted for 4172 fin 25 years, and never while Gen. through the air; and com {Bob Neyland was in command of | 316 passes—all national records. /the ‘Vols, '

. iw

time set up the cry, “this is the

‘331 points

delphia. outpointed { Pittsbur

17.4 average; Bill Green; who averaged 8.5, and Charles Raker, a rugged rebounder. Nyersshad in 19 games. Green had 153 in 18.

= = 5, CATHEDRAL, the host,

opens with Jimmy Doyle's first complete season as Irish mentor. Doyle took over at mid-season after Cleon Reynolds went to Shortridge. After hitting the

skids late in the season, the Irisn finished strong, being eliminated by Crispus Attucks, in the semifinal game of the local sectionals Chief returnee’for Cathedral is Bob Springer, who hit 22 points against Warren Central in the 1951 sectional opener. Nine games are slated tomorrow on the pre-Thanksgiving night bill of fare. Manual goes to Lawrence Central Friday and Southport clashes at Tech Saturday night.

The Southport-Tech battle is the first meeting of the two schools since Tech won in the

last second, 61 to 60, in the final

{game of the local 1949 sectional.

Tech is ailing, however, Norm

Wilson will be out for two weeks’

{because of a football injury. His bruised arm is in a cast. CRISPUS ATTUCKS ROSTER Class Age Bh Ht. Hallie Bryant Jr 17 Al 6-2 Leishman Covington Sr. 17 13 5-9 Harold Crenshaw Seph. 17 152 4-1 Willie Gardner Jr. IR 181 6-6 Cleveland Harp Jr. 17 184 6-5'% Robert Parrish Sr. 17 140 5.8 Willie Posley dr. 17 139 5-8 Bailey Robertson Jr. 17 1686 3-11 Joe King ver J 18 136 6-2 James Lee «. Soph. 16 133 6-1 Robert Jones .. Boph. 18 149 5-18'; Claude Bartee . Sr. 17 184 5-14 Rudolph Adams ..... Sr. 17 156 5-81; Holsey Hickman . Sr. 17 174 6-0 17 178 6-0

William Carr Sr

Two Main Bouts On Mat Card .

A double main event will headline tonight's pro wrestling card to be staged at the Armory, with big Otto Kuss facing Ivan Rasputin, the “Russian Bear,” in one! of the star bouts. The winner has been promised a title shot with Heavyweight

week. The other show topper will be lan Australian tag-team battle pitting Buck Weaver and Larry! {Chene.against Sheik Araby and!

Fight Results -

By United Press PHILADELPHIA — Johnny Baxion, 146, New York, outpointed Charley Balas, 149, Ariz. (10). H—-Otis Graham. 163, Phila- | Floyd Morris, 188, sh (10),

want to make sure we are doing the right things. And above all, the committee would like to em-

the same as last season when undefeated Kentucky met oncebeaten Tennessee, which just pe-

phasize that it has not been ap- fore the game had accepted a pointed to white-wash inter- Cotton Bowl invitation rather collegiate athletics. We are going than wait for a Sugar Bowl bid to do our best to preserve what is if it won, good in intercollegiate athletics

= = = THIS YEAR it's Tennessee that’s unbeaten, and the Vols already have signed for the Sugar Bowl while Kentucky has three early season blots.on its record. But, yesterday the Cotton Bowl

and eliminate what is bad.” Hannah admitted that the revelations made yesterday in New York at the sentencing of some of the persons involved in

the colleg baske ibe ; soendat li Rashetball Sri gambled again and hoped it would rk of the pring a good luck charm to Ken-

Committee more vital than ever,

tucky by inviting the Wildcats to meet the Southwest Conference host team-—whoever that might be from a field of four contenders. Kentucky promptly accepted.

Hashes Win, Warriors Lose

The Southeastern Conference . . team’s opponent won't be terMarion County's prep basketball mined until Dec. .1 Toi a

teams were half right last night against out-of-county opposition. Franklin Township's Flashes, winner the Greenfield and county championships last year, tripped Fortville, 47 to 43, at home.

Warren Central, playing without Bob Hage, ace center last year, lost 39 to 32 to Shelbyville’s visiting Bears,

Franklin Township, under new

of

Vals he No. 1 Again

NEW YORK, Nov. 20 (JP) Tennessee regained the top spot

(coach Earl Snider, won at the ball ratings ‘today, but its lofty free-throw line, out-shooting the position and perfect record face! visitors, 13 to 9. Franklin led 22 a stiff test Saturday in its tra-|

to 20 before a tightly played second half, Warren's season opener for new mentor Blackie Braden was lost

ditional game against Kentucky. The powerful Volunteers celebrated their acceptance of a Sugar Bowl bid last week-end by

in the final minutes after the War- STusming isdssiop, 46-21, for riors led 12 to 5 In the first pe- th ir Straight Vietory over riod e past two seasons. That con- | WAR Cuniral 12) Khelbyville (39) Vinee oe 3» Jeadng coaches iz 1t of fg It pt prise the board that the McCord f 6 3 4p vf 4 | Rasim. ' 3 i 3 Taster : : 3 you helmed pack on top after ass, 2,8 one-week ahsence. Prange, ¢ n-0 0 1 Rjange. £ 3-9 Forster. § % 1 31 Michigan State, last week's No. Brune, : 0 0 3 Brown. w } J 3 1 team, won a 30-26 squeaker Henkes 130 ' from Indiana, being forced to Totals RTH. Tela 121411, come from behind in the last half Store. by Quatiderss Lor, fhe fifth time this season, Warren Central 12 6 13 1-32 and dropped to second place. | Bhélbyville 5 10 14 10-3] Only Kentucky and Vanderbilt

Free Throws Missed—Ransom 3, Henke Fish 2, Taylor 2, Brown 3, Plymate Kelley 2, Phillips, Bass 3.

Franklin ™°. iF un Fortville us

of the Southeastern Conference now stand in the way of Tennessee's quest for a perfect season |

ft Carpenter g TE Sitar. 1 Ie tt a and tl the national er ———————lonship. | Martin 4 0 0 Combs, f 5 0 amnhe 38 fy 433 M HO | Meyer, g TI TH a Fi 3 "SCHIFF SHOES IFF. S ES | 2 2 3 Canaday. f 610! tiles, f 0 0 0 Grissey, { 0 13 Be he.o 1 2 Denger. « 101} for Men, Women and Children Copeland, g nao Si ann La at Terrific Savings! 7 otale 17 918 wSeore by Quarters— Big . 59 E Wash, (Borteille |... HM 4 18 1-4 ® 40 E Wash anklin Twp... 11 11 9 16-47 © 346 W, Wash. Pree Throws Missed-—Carpenter, Hannah § ° Stor 063 Virgin a 3 Keough 2, Meyer 5, oars rd 3. Rea- es .f r, Suitor 8, “Combs 2, ‘Brown Ireton 3 NI.

Southwest C onference race closes.

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