Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 November 1951 — Page 11

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SI0AY, NOV. 21, 1951

CAA To

8

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

et Drastic Plan Curtailing College S

. 5 + v

By FRANK LEAHY Head Football Coach, University of Notre Dame

WITH THE 1951 season drawing to a close this coming week-end definitely looms. as “showdown week” in every section of the country. Due to the several tie-ins between!

bowl games and collegiate conferences d

placed on the winning of a conference championship.

The only game which matches two teams actually deadlocked for a league lead is the Texas Chris-tion-Rice game to be played in Ft. Worth. Both teams have won three and lost one in Southwestern Conference competition where the Jeague leader becomes the host, team in the -annual Cotton Bowl classic. This game will P¥ature Dutch Meyer's unorthodox offense against Jess Neely's'strong defense. Sharing the Southwestern spotlight will be the BaylorSMU game, Baylor is but one-half game off the league pace and plays Rice one week hence. What an aerial circus this should be with Baylor's Larry Isbell and SMU’s Fred Benpers flooding the passing lanes. = = A GAME of prime national interest will take place in Lexington, Ky., where the Wildcats will entertain unbeaten Tennessee. Last year the situation was just the opposite and Tennessee marred Kentucky's. perfect season by an upset. With Parilli getting hotter each week Kentucky chances are infproving and you may be sure that Kentucky will go all out to reverse the situation completely. Illinois’ right to go to Pasadena is being seriously challenged by Purdue and Wisconsin, and the Illini's arch rival, Northwestern {s, once again, the team which stands between their neighbors and the west-bound train. With the Midwestern weather getting fnoreasingly worse it appears that the outcome of this game could be decided by the weatherman. Regardless of how Illinois does, Purdue must beat a tough Indiana team to remain in contention. Wisconsin's early season tie with Ohio State considerably lessens their title chances. but a win over Minnesota would place them in the top spot if the other two teams were upset. ” "

PRINCETON hag but one more ‘hurdle to clear to complete their second consecutive perfect season. They oppose Dartmouth. Columbila is but one-half game behind the Tigers. in the Ivy League but will have more difficulty with Brown than Princeton will have with Dartmouth. Stanford is already set to be the West Coast representative in the Rose Bowl but/in order to clinch the Pacific Coast Conference crown they must defeat defending champion, California. The two runners-up. Southern California and U. C. L. A. meet for the number two spot and the possible chance to tie Stanford for the title. All in all it looks like an exceptionally interesting week-end for this late in the year.

Dick Dunkel's

Football Index:

Dick Dunkel's football ratings will be on WFBM-TV tomorrow night from 10:35 to 10:50.

PRINCIPAL GAMES

Underdog 1 Taveeits THURSDAY *80.7 Colo. AEM on 1 Detrott 71.1 Wichita 33 Uta *73.1 ldaho 8 2 Vv, M «885 Va. Tech 3 3 Wash. & Les T14 Richmond 93 SATURDAY oe ] “89 I' Florida 8 Bayior +1050 8 M. 20 Boston U +893 Syracuse O33 Brig. Young 60 7 Pepperdine 23 Cincinnati *95% Miami al Clemson *383 Auburn 5 $ Columbia *30% Brown 543 Corneil 902 Penn 33 "Duke *g1 3 Np: Carolina 1 F yraham *g1 8 New York { 44 $ Gn. Tech e100 7 Davidson 383 Hdn-8im's *79.7 Arizona 81 } Holy Cross 98 1 Temple S33 Illinois 1005 No western 33 L 8 U 983 Villanova 82 4 i *106.2 freind i Maryland «108.) Color ado 9 4 Notre Dame *923 Joma a i. Ohio Stata 18 Mic ea se Oklahoma 84 Nebraska " Okla. A&M 79.8 Houston +123 Oregon St 95.1 Oregon a ! Penn State 84 3 Pit sour th 33 A 102 Artmou 18 Princesa 940 Indiana *81 4 Rutgers *73.3 Colgate 33 8 Carolina +816 Wake Forest 32 Stanford *105.8 California 313 80 Calif 3 UC L A att Tennesses 114.0 Kentucky 108 4 IT CO “981 Rice Jia Texas Tech 908 N. Mexico 2803 Tex West'rn 611 W Texas St 5 8 Tulane 28.7 BE Louisiana 5 ] ; 23 Arkansas Tabdersint Sd Memphis St 81.4 Virginia +500 Wm. & Mary 5 ] Wash. State 908 Washington » 2 Wisconsin 100.4 Minnesota a6 Wyoming 815 Tempe Bt Hu : Xavier, O. *100.2 Toledo 16.4 Yale *78.8 Harvard 10.8 OTHER MIDWESTERN SATURDAY tate 87.9 80. Illinois *1R 7 na Mo. *41.7 Sewanee 394 . Re » OTHER SOUTHERN THURSDAY oe ckaonv'le *20.4 Howard EHR *68.2 Ohio L 88 : Southern Bt #536 Ark. A&M 45.1 SATURDAY “a *79.8 Miss. South’'n 7 ons at 90.1 Chattan’oga 56

¢ Power Index proison of the relative teams for this sea 50.0 team has been

EXPLANATION—Th vides a direct compar strengin of any two son te date, us, a Hi scoring points stronger than a 40.0 team eon their comparative records, In which average scoring margin has been weighed against average rating of epposition. However, this dees nol mean that a M.0 team should defeat a 40.0 team by 10 points in the future. because ihe ratings have not "been adjusted for sue important forecasting factors as home team sdvantage, injuries, lineup changes, Therefore, they are not ia be construed in any way as gambling Information. The Dunkel system correlates ree. ords of all college teams and was started in 1929. |

College Basketball

Franklin 92, Oakland City 88

aylor 111, Coneordia 59 rata (ind. a Satin 0) 8. . . orbert s Hy ent Toke) 51, Okmulgee (Okla) or At 68, ‘ Plattesville (Wis)

ba A ok hiversity 73, New: York State’ oy ime 47.

ual emphasis is’

Mexican Road

Race Plagued With Wrecks

By United Press

OAXACA, Mexico, Nov. 21 —The 68 surviving entries from yesterday's wreck-

plagued opening run flashed toward Mexico City today in the second leg of the Pan American stock car race led by French ace Jean Threvoux and his 1951 Packard. Yesterday, two drivers were killed and several others injured in crashes along the winding 329mile run through mountainous southern Mexico. Mexican driver Jose Estrada Menocal and his copilot, Miguel Gonzalez, were burned to death after their Packard dropped into a canyon north of Tehunatepec. ” = y TREVOUX, one of Flurope's top stock car jockeys, set a # Cord of 78.48 miles per hour in finishing far ahead on the starting leg from

v

Tuxtia Gutierrez to this ancient colonial city. His time was four hours, 11

minutes and 37 seconds, almost a full - seven minutes better than second-place Troy Ruttman of Lynwood, Cal., who is driving one of the oldest cars in the race, a 1948 Mercury. The pre-race favorites, Louis Chiron of France and Alberto Ascari of Italy, both champions in their own countries, set a fast pace at the start but bogged down with mechanical trouble. Both finished in time to save their qualification, however. Chiron was 32d with a time of 4:52:15 and Ascari 45th with 5:03:00.

2 = » THE U. 8. champion, Tony Bettenhausen of Tinley Park, Ill: was a doubtful starter today. Brakes on his car burned. out, and he narrowly missed crashing into spectators as he roared to the finn line, His time was 5 hours 50 minutes. Johnny Federicks of Detroit crashed his Cadillac 200 feet down a mountainside after missing a turn at 100 miles per hour. His assistant, Joe Bozied, was injured slightly, but they put the Cadillac back on the road and finished in time to qualify. Trevoux's first-lap time shattered the 1950 record of 4 hours 35 minutes, set by Johnny Mantz of Los Angeles.

1—Jean Trevoux, France, 1851 Packard 4:11.07 2- 0 Ruttman. Lynwood, Cal, 1842 Mercury. 4.1821 3-—Douglias Ehiinger, Mexico. 1951 Packard 4.2108 4—Robert Korf, Colorado Springs, Colo. 1851 Nash. 4 25.10 $—Wililam Sterling, El Paso, Tex. 1851 Chrysler, 4:25726 6 Walt Paulkner. Long Beach, Cal, 19851 Lincoln. 4:30 46 7—~Bud Sennett, [os Angeles, Cal, 1950 Oldsmobile, 4.32 06 8 -Clyde Johnson, Tuscola, Tex, 1051 Chrysler. 4:32.83 9-—~Marshal! Teague

Dartona Beach, Fla 1951 Hudson, 4:24 12 Jose Antonio Solana, Mexico, Oldsmobile. 4370)

1851

Fight Results

By United Press

NEWARK, N. J. -~Chico Vejar. 141, Stamford. Conn. stopped Jimmy Gee Dee, 151, Plainfield, N. J. (3.

WATCH REPAIRING Immediate Sorvice : ® Main Springs

® (Crystals ® Crowns ® Sloms

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All Watches Tested on Dee's Time-0-Graph

WILLIE GARDNER Wiki BE A ROUGH BOY’ FROM HERE OW OUTh |

Attucks Has The Look of Champions

| By JIMMIE ANGELOPOLOUS | Crispus Attucks, which still |wears last year's TV look this year, will win more friends ‘and more basketball games

before everyone's satisfied next {spring. r But right now, in fact, tonight,

will give his hoys a treat,

Coach Ray Crowe, a gentleman, ¥ a scholar and"a basketball coach,

| 3 »

The popular Attucks mentor is &=

getting married tonight to Miss Betty Ewing of Indianapolis and Ball State, and his boys will be at the reception.

Then his Tigers get the treatment. It's back to work again. The mild-mannered Crowe knows how his Tigers got to the semifinal game of the state tourney last year and he'd like a reserve seat there again, 7

” =

WINNING 64 to 42 from a scrappy comparatively smaller Sheridan team (it was only by one point at Sheridan last year), got the Tigers’ 1951-52 season under way in expected first-game style. The Tigers had a little of everything—even greatness, like Willie Gardner banking in high-lob passes while in mid-air; Hallie Bryant faking, Holsey Hickman'’s scrap; Cleveland Harp's promise, and Bailey Robertson's deadly one-handers. They made mistakes, too, but the many coaches who sat in the overflowing crowd of 5000 saw plenty.

GARDNER. pivoted his hook shot to start the scoring in the first seven seconds of the game. Bryant followed with two nifty flicks and Attucks rolled to a 25 to 13 first-quarter lead.

They simmered to 29 to 18 at the half and Coach Crowe shuttled his Tigers back and forth through the third period that ended 43 to 34, largely because of Hickman's tireless, jumping-jacking. Attucks went to work in the fourth again and Bryant capped his team with 19 points, Gardner had 16, and Hickman 15. Roland Wallace showed up with 17, but it was Louis Steele's three straight fielders that kept Coach Larry Hobbs' peperpots alive in the third. Attucks’ 9-for-18 first quarter gave the Tigers a .382 game average from 26 of 68 field goal attemps. Sheridan, minus regular Tom Coppess, fired a creditable 327, hitting 18 of 55 shots,

"x =

THE GAME, halted by a firemarshal in the second half to get the fans out of the aisles, was well worked by Officials Charles Northam and Bill Mays, who officiated the same tilt last year. Tech and Attucks officials, too, handled the well-behaved crowd in a gym made to seat 4400. ks (64) Sheridan 42)

Crispus Attue

fx itp fx ftp Bryant! T $5 1 Wallace! t 5 4 Grenshaw.f 0 0 3 Steele! 3 +3 Gardner ec 8 4 2 Pitts.e 3 0 8 Rohertsong 3 0 0 Hobbsg 2.061 Covingtong I 1 0 Garr. ge 0 § Hickman.g T 1 2Stafford! 310 Polsey 8 0 1 Collierf 1 0 2 Harp. {-¢ 1} Parrish.g I ¢ 1 Jones. f 1 00 King.g 6 0 0 Totals W121F Totals 18 720 Halftime scores: Attucks 29 Rheridan 18 Pree throws missed —Brvant 1. Gardner 4 Hickman 4 Harp. Wallace 3 Steele Pitts. Hobbs 2. Gary 31. Stafford 2 . Officials Referee, Charles Northam Umpire. Bill Mars

INvers, of Manual, tried to kee

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STOP!—Here are two gentlemen from Indiana who'll have much to sav about Purdue's forward progress at Bloomington. Guards Danny Thomas (left), a senior, and Benny Fioritto, a junior, are the two returning lettermen at guard who'll try getting Indiana Coach Clyde Smith his first Old Oaken Bucket victory in four

years,

Clark Griffith Hopes to Change Baseball Draft

WASHINGTON, Nov, 21 (UP) ~The present baseball draft rule providing that only one player from each minor league team may be drafted into the majors is blocking the progress of deserving young players, owner Clark Griffith of the Washington Senators said today. The 82-year-old baseball magnate said he would propose at the major league meetings in New York next month that this rule be changed.

GRIFFITH EXPLAINED that some major league teams owning farm systems were taking advantage of this rule to “protect” many of their choice farm system players from the draft. : They do this. he explained, hy putting most of their minor league stars on- the roster of a single team. Thus, as soon-xs—one player in this group has been drafted, all the others immediately become draft-proof. z 2, BASEBALL MEN at the recent draft meeting.in Cincinnati noticed the Brooklyn Dodgers used tactics similar to those described by Griffith. At draft time, most of the Dodgers’ best minor leaguers were on the roster of the Montreal Royals of the International League. The St. Louis Browns, who had first draft choice, picked hard - hitting Royals’ Outfielder George Schmees, and ‘thus the other Royals’ stars were made ineligible.

= =

Spartans Will Vote Against Bowl Games

°

By United Press WASHINGTON, Nov. 21— The future of the Rose Bowl ' agreement between the West-

ern. and Pacific Coast Conferences when the presenit pact expires after the 1954 New Year's Day game was placed in jeopardy today. : President John A. Hannah of Michigan State College disclosed his school definitely would vote against renewal. = HIS STAND means that the four Western Conference schools which voted against the threeyear renewal of the pact after the original [five-year agreement expired must change their mind if the arrangement is to continue. Hannah explained that Michigan State did not vote on the three-year renewal “because as far as football is concerned we are not eligible to take part in the conference's championship race until the 1953 season.” ” a

= =

=

BUT HAD Michigan v it would have been “no,” Hanna added. The vote for the three-year renewal was five in favor and four against. If that division should continue and Michigan State is added to the other four opposition schools, it would result in a tie vote, 5 to 5. “My understanding is that the matter of renewal requires a majority of the members,” Hannah said. He refused, however, to predict

oted then, h

the pact comes up for renewal.

“THE ONLY thing I am sure of is that Michigan State will vote against renewal,” he said. Hannah has long been known as a foe of bowl games, regarding them as “another incentive to win” which is responsible for many of the commercial troubles besetting college. sports today. Hannah's revelation came after the special committee of college presidents appointed to ‘investigate intercollegiate athletics finished its first meeting yesterday. Hannah is chairman of the committee. Hannah reported “definite progress” was made at the meetings held Monday and yesterday and said that while the problem the committee faced was a difficult one, there was general agreement ithat the situation was not at all “hopeless.”

GO!—Purdue University has a sterling, hard-running back . who'll give the Boilermakers plenty of go in the annual In-diana-Purdue Old Oaken Bucket clash at Bloomington Saturday. He is Max Schmaling of Sterling, lil, a 200-pound sophomore.

4

Cathedral Sinks Manual, 64-38

Consistent control of the rebounds and an early first-period offensive enabled Cathedral's Irish to pull away from the Manual Redskins for a 64-38 basketball victory before 1500 fans at Cathedral last night, It was the first 1951-52 cage appearance for both schools but from the outset it was evident that Cathedral would make it a winning one,

Bob Springer. a senior forward,

and Johnny Meyer, a senior center, were the chief point-makers

the Redskins alive witih his 17point output. Nyers led the city with a 17.4 average last year. With Springer and Meyer staging a two-man attack, Cathedral quickly had Manual reeling under a 13-1 deficit. The quarter ended 13-3 and the Redskins uncorked

their best attack in the second ther who Wound up with 15 points,

period when 16 points left them

!trailing 26-19 at the half-time.

However, Cathedral was not to

{be denied and roared back with a

21-point spree that virtually clinched the decision in the third period. Cathedral (88) Manual (38) fg ftp fg ftp Springer.f 7 8 2 Green. t 1 1 4 Vurpiilet,t 0 0 0 Burkhart.f 1 00 Cotton. { 2 1 1 Shaner.t 1 64 Moe. 2 1 1 Sandler! 2 @ 4 Mever.c 8 4 3 Raker, c 2 23 Mahoney ¢ 0 0 1. Lakes ¢ oO 00 Blackwell g 3 0 3 Williams. ¢ 4 0 3 Lehaneg 0 0 0 Heacox, x 1 0 2 Folev.e 2 8 1 Nvers. g 1 3 3 Schrader.g 2 0 4Crow, x 101 Totals 2612 16 Totals 16 6 20 Seore by Quarters Cathedral . 13 13 21 17-84 Manual 3 16 10 9»-38 Halftime score—Cathedral- 26-19

Free throws missed-Cathedral 13. Manial 11. Officials—George Gale, referee. Reghert, umpire

Jim Nye Named to Captain Sacred Heart

Sacred Heart's football team will be captained next year by Jim Nye, a junior who plays cen-

ter. Nye was elected last night at a banquet honoring Coach Harry Caskey's Spartans.

Olymps Make Grade In Extra 10 Minutes

The Indianapolis Olympians last night displayed more

snap than a rubber band in defeating the Rochester Royals, 69-65, in a double overtime at Butler Fieldhouse.

nice pray Friday night when they meet another eastern team, also a division tionals.

half they've ever had, hitting only ] . nine shots in 56. They went off for the Irish with 20 each. Dick the floor trailing 34-23. Rut they P came roaring back to start the second half.

running Royals by one field goal

Now Herm Schaefer's boys can take it easy, eat a

Thanksgiving dinner ‘and for a repeat performance

the Olymps got a sleeper off the: hands of Bob Lavoy, but the Royals retaliated with one by Arnie Risen. And then another sleeper bucket, again. by Lavoy and the score was 69-65 and that's the way it ended. In the dressing room Leo Barnhorst who's hard work netted him 12 points, smiled. “That was a good one. Tough to win, but man it was sweet.” Indianapolis JS Rochester os

leader, the Syracuse Na-

THE OLYMPS had their hands ull. They had the coldest first

They only out-scored the front-

i : fg ft p ig ft P in the third period, but they were totgran.f 1 3 1 Coleman. f 5 2 2 layi t h Y Lavoy. f § 3 3 Noel. f 0.0 0 playing together and their ac- girnhorst.f 8 0 3 Wanzer. fg 3 3 1 tions seemed to warn of better Jones. ! 3 3 2 Holzman f 0 30 i Graboski.¢ 3 3 3iRisen. ¢ $ 41 things to come. And come they ggjiand, c 1 0 0 McNamee, c ? 1 a y y 7al- Walth 8 3 3Davies,g ~ § : did. Headed by Lefty Paul Wal Hauhene Nae 101 Toshefl. ¢ 01 0' Spears. & 30 2 the Olymps tied the score at 59- OBrien.x 1 0 2 — all at the end of the regulation Totals 2715.17 Totals 241712 game time. Score by Quarters INDIANAPOLIS 14 9 20 18 0 10-69 ’ . An - 1717 18 T 0 6-85 THE FIRST overtime period pres throws missed—Graboski, Walther was a masterful scene of almost 3. Coleman, Johnson. ) ing percent INDIANAPOLIS perfect ball control’ by both v1 one C108 POA 250: Rochester—24 of 80 teams. ‘The period was ‘scoreless. FGA, 300 INDIANAPOLIS "13 ols FTA, The second overtime was a dif- >>> Rochester—ii 0 ee ferent story. . The Olymps got the tip, a Pro Basketball : rarity for them. and then started NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION ™ . Aas : “Western Division their now flawless possession Won Lost Pct. GB game. With 313 minutes of the Rochester ceei 8 1 oe 1 overtime gone, Walther hit a TNBIANAPOLIS a8 lay-up. Olymps 61, Royals 59 Miluaukee 3s 10 4 . . . ayne dhe 3 But Odie Spears hit a soft onehander. Tie again Eastern Division “AY o 141 : Won Lost Pct GB Walther hit two free throws ssracuse : ? 1 as after being deliberately fouled. Rose}, --:::v:iriie 3 338 a On a drive- Ww - Philadelphia ........ ; 3 J} . drive-in alther got an Ehiiideln 3: §& 133 ws

{other bucket and that {65-81. Arne Johnson hit for the {Royals closer. On the out-ofbounds play,

made it .: Results Last Night

INDIANAPOLIS #9, Roches‘er 88 (double overtime) New York 88 Baltimore 86 Philadelphia 80, Milwaukee 64

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PAGE 11

sorts

| Policy Making Group

Approves Program

By United Press

CHICAGO, Nov. 21—A drastic plan to curtail bowl games and basketball ‘tournaments, financial aid, practice sessions and eligibility will be presented to the National

Collegiate Athletic Associat

Jan. 9-12, The program was approved by the policy making NCAA council after a two day-session. It called for: ONE—A resolution requesting members.~to make no commitments for post-season games. aft-| er Jan. 2, 1953, pending a report by the extra events committee on how to eliminate pressures TWO —-Two constitutional | amendments on out - of - season football and basketball practice, one limiting practice to the season of the sport, the other restricting workouts to 20 days. The convention. would be asked to approve one. THREE —A constitutional amendment requiring an athlete,

Jack Adams . Checks Caps

DETROIT, Nov. 21—The boss of the parent Detroit hockey club, Jack Adams, started working on the Indianapolis hockey club's losing habits today. The Caps, due here- today to work out two days under Adams after losing in St. Louis, 5 to 2, last night, are not scheduled again until Sunday night in Providence. The Caps are now without victory in their last 10 games. Their last triumph was Oct. 28 over the Flyers

2,8 #8 HARRY TAYLOR and Jackie

lead in the first two periods last night. The Caps came to life in

Dutch Reibel and Enio Sclisizzi but St. Louis was there with three by Taylor, Glen Somnor and Steve Hrymnak before 2854 Arena

ans

Hockey Summary

8t. Louis Goal, Almas: defense, McNab, Raglan: center. D. Morrison; wings. Kelly, Sonmor: alternates. Lundy, Black Taylor, Simpson. Hamilton accari, Nicholson. Hrymnak. Milligan INDIANAPOLIS: Goal, Hall: Zeidel, Coflin; center, L. Wilson: Bruneteau. J. Wilson; alternates. Sclisizzi,

defense, wings,

ion's Cincinnati convention

to remain eligible, to enter in accordance with published requirements, maintain academic standing, and make satisfactory progress toward a degree. FOUR—A constitutional amendment making ineligible any athlete who receives financial assistance not administeréd or approved by his institution. FIVE —A resolution to give the

football rules committee survey results showing the “majority” of members “want something

done” to limit free football substitutions, affecting the platoon system, SIX—A resolution appointing a committee to study scheduling practices and recommend to the 1953 convention limits on the number of games and the length of seasons for- all sports, particularly football and basketball, = »” ”

THE COUNCIL also approved a statement that college athletics’ difficulties arise from undue pressure to win, particularly upon coaches, and the need for foot-

“pall gate receipts to finance ath-

letic programs.

! Five other agencies have “signi-

fied an intention” to help seek solutions for these, the council said. They were the American {Council on Education, accrediting agencies, the National Student Association, the National Association of Governing Boards of State Universities and Allied Institutions, and the Football Writers Association.

10 conference Hamilton gave the Flyers a 2-0) The resolution covering bowl

Zames said that a “nationwide survey . . . found a strong senti-

what the outcome wiil be when'the final session with tallies by ment against continuance of post-

season games.” = = ” SHOULD THE convention support the resolution and later bar {such contests, only the Rose Bowl, which has both the Pacific Coast and Big Ten conferences committed to furnish teams, could operate in 1954 for the last time. Presumably all basketball tournaments would cease in 1953. A two-thirds vote of the mem-

Reibel. Hirschfeld. McKay Giesebrecht, MeComb. Durham, Polk, Har Rated bers present would be necessary ficiails eferee, alton 88 : Linesmen, Leo Carbol, Ernie Trigs. to approve the constitutiona} 5 Lo Score By ‘Periods : . amendment while resolutions may . uis RAR a oe INDIANAPOLIS “CORING o o 2—2 be approved by a majority of the PIRST PERIOD. 1. St. Louis. Tayler delegates. ; Black, Metan, 8.58 CL ad In the past the success of counSECOND PERIOD; 2. st & ouis. “Hamil- cil - spon sored resolutions or ton +(Hrymnak, mpson ery mnak Simeon 3 inter ieenes, | Amendments in conventions has Hay : and Aymnak, highsticking and been spotty. However, spokesmen ghting). an (tripping). ry Ea Tt oe priate Caray Sram would (Nic. son, nay’ “40. - 118 OR einel “iHbschield, Sclisizai) 413, Sain greater support as it reflects SS anOuls, Sonmor. (Morrison) Lae the opinion of approximately 70 2 . 8 { ) El 5. SE ymnsk (Bimpson) 16:34 Per cent of the membership who Penalties—none replied to the survey. On the Ice < PR Western Division P W L TPis. GOG Pittsburgh ..:.. 18 14 4 1 29 64 02 i St. louis ...... s 9 1 19 70 68 ° Cincinnati .....' 171 9 71 I 18 43 48 Cleveland : 8 8 2 18 51 40) INDIANAPOLIS Je Siz 2 10 472 T 1 astern ivisien mn peiion 0 0c | TPUCK Owners! Hershey +318 8 2-18 65 44 Buffalo 15 7 6 216 43 M0 rovidence 5310 1 11 58 1] Syracuse 15 4 11 0 8 45 59 RESULTS LAST NIGHT St. Louis 5, INDIANAPOLIS 3. | (Only game scheduled.) i NATIONAL LEAGUE GP W L T Pts. G OG Detroit : 1790 3 5 28 43 28 Toronto IT 8 53 6 18 1 28 Montreal 1 1% 7T 3 NaN Boston 17. 8 8 § 13 B32 Chicago 16 5 8 72 1213 39 New York 3 4 8 3 NN 3A 4

RESULTS LAST NIGHT Detroit 2, Boston 0. (Only game scheduled )

Taylor's 111 Points Is New School Record

Times State Service UPLAND. Ind., Nov. 21—Taylor University has a new team scoring record to shoot at in its future basketball games. The Trojans scored freely last night in a 111 to 59 victory here over Concordia of Ft. Wayne. The previous high was a 108-39 triumph over Giffin. Harold Hawbegger led the Taylor scoring last night with 17 points.

Game Injuries Fatal DALLAS, Tex, Nov. 21 (UP)— Graham, Tex. high school halfback, died in a Dallas hospital yesterday of injuries he received in last Friday night's game with Breckenridge, Tex.

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rules require all entries Coal Heating

A luxurious trip to Miami via Eastern Airlines for

expenses paid plus a gen-

PHONE IM. 4514

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