Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 December 1951 — Page 15

-33..1051

25

ng. call

ne .old story y considered, rs had hoped

y Get lles on letes

>. 10—-The Big to tighten its id to athletes. of. Guy Sundt, >ayseur, North\igler, Michigan mons, Michigan ucted to study | make a recomnext conference

» permits tuition e top half of his who maintains d additional unstudent in the his high school ains a “B” av-

was instructed representatives g the regulation, ulty had defeat- » vote, a plan to holarship to any icademic stand- > plus unlimited urs of work per season and R during the gsean. pposed was undeo of football rs wanted regunal scale,

» . Y decided that becomes eligible as a freshman 1 year shall rety, even though ar extends into when the freshvill be in force,

‘Basketball s Week

rsday tur Central. [anual at Cathedral ay Warren Central, yy. hport , Pike Township, in Township ial at Cathedral, iter Grove ayns South Side,

ay ashington vs, Tach, 3road Ripple, 3p, mm: t Washington), Lawrence Central.

ral Day at Park Schoo!

lotes

at Dearborn Gym Heston Concrete 49 llory 47, Greenwood

1ell Scott 26, Inter- ; New York Central idwest Trees 56, Intime). -7, Thomas & 8kinamber; 8, Link Belt ilways: 9, Cornell yd Lumber.

Joins

ateur Team ». 10 (UP)—Pat hree basketball the Bradley Uni1, has joined the an AAU team,

a a

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vice on all free miles.

00. L243 Nick Toombs

— —

- =

TOP ATHLETE—Johnny Bright receives plaque roid

him lowa's outstanding amateur athlete of 1951 from Harold (Re

To Beware of

By JOE WILLIAMS |searching, alertly comprehending:| NEW YORK, Dec. 10—General they reflect his dedicated zeal, deDouglas SpeANS Sl 2" termination and unflinching faith.! 2 Pe was relieved of The lofty lilt of his prose Is his command was at .a “Touch-/present even when he. discusse down Club where he warned that such relatively small matters a‘

college football must guar d|gollege football in relation to teleagainst expanding federal con- vision, as he was doing in Col trols. ; IMcEwan's suite before the dinner, This was not a political dinner. and so persuasive are his manner The New York audience of some and speech even the most stub700 was made up of football play- horn dissenter lends attentive go Soa shes and Bidions of as-lears. ; sorted vintages, Henry Twombley, Yale ’'83;' Bill Hollenback; Penn| As you know, he alleges in '08; Jim Thorpe, Carlisle "12, rep- Posed a partial blac put on 1 . resenting a long stretch of years, Ome screen this year by way o overlapping generations. Lying to Setermine the inroads of | ate receipts. : Yet this was the one remark in| On Ease P | the General's speech, extolling the 2 8 a | manly virtues of the sport and its| «pga WAS wrong,” the gen-| alTy-over Yalues In Hfe, JRRUCY [eral protested. “The economic ¥ "ed P-| factor should never be permitted praise. them on the’ battle gta] to obtrude on the spirit and flavor that yanked the crowd to its feet ,¢ ype sport. The purpose of footin ‘full-throated endorsement, a|y.; of any competitive game, ' protmaed Swish, Bighs to provide fun for participants e Dec h » land relaxation for the spectators, not significance, to a Washington| wpather they be in the stands

§

observer. {or in the home.” "8 8 The idea that the colleges INCIDENTALLY, as the Gen-|{ Would concern themselves so

greatly with finances and make

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

MacArthur W

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oe.

a Sa ®

ES

olleges ontrols

what appeared to be ardent ap-“How does football look to you |

arns

Grid

proval. |today?” asked tha toastmaster, Some of the all time greats of] football were on view at the din-! ner, There was a standing ova-| my . | me was r . » Ta tion for Thorpe who repeated his 440 0, nn The baa Blea for the return of his Olympic away. The toastmaster was beophies which were withdrawn | ginning his brief closing remarks.

on grounds ‘of professionalism. |: "Prvere is something elze I want It was a pleasant surprise toto say,” the mtn un Octoge- | see Thorpe, smartly tailored from|, arian ‘insisted. Then returning to

head to boot. I had read so much! a : the mike and pointing to Gen. of his distress I suppose I rather aacArthuf, his Ro oriole expected to see a figure resem-| 3

bling Mr. Mullin’s tattered Brook. Im and. vibrant, he barked: | Iyn symbol. ‘If Washington had let him] ~ alone we wouldn't have had a war} in Korea and we wouldn't have COL. McCEWAN managed a di-|lost 100,000 lives.” | verting touch when he introduced| This, as the General most cer-| Henry Twolbley, 89, who played tainly would never say, tore the Yale football nearly 70 years ago. |joint down.

“It looks great the way Kaz-|

maier plays it.” |

u “ 5

i

that speak a (\ portsman’s languag

oa

Fish 8

ran. PAGE. 25

Grange. The selection was made by the lowa AAU. Bright has accepted a bid to play with the West team in the annual East-

West Shrine game Dec. 29.

eral stood alongside the toastmaster, Col. John McEwan, Army '14, the physical contrast was! startling. Indeed, there is little

Baruch Diagnoses Troubles Of Sports and the World

By United Press NEW YORK, Dec. 10—Bernard Baruch took time out from his duties as America’s elder statesman today to diagnose the ‘ills

about the General's appearance

a public issue of it was disturbing, if not appalling, to the general and was patently at sharp variance with his conception of

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tice at most schools. It should be

that matches the popular figure the true ideals of college sport. of his heroic stature as the] As head of West Point in 1919 world’s foremost. military figure.|the general instituted intramural You would never pick him out|athletics, a sports-for-all proin a crowd as a man who has/gram. That was a long time ago.

lived so long, so valorously and so| Long before TV. Even radio was

dramatically with history. A|young.

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banned.” |teacher of mathematics, perhaps, ‘ . 2.8 ior a banker in suburbia. Slight of BARUCH, an accomplished nyjid, almost. frail, sedate.in athorseman and a follower of rac- tire, quiet in speech, precisely af-

| | | | |

I DID NOT get to ask the gen-! eral his views on apparently well

that have beset the sports world. (ing all his life, thinks the new|taple, somehow the attributes of| founded reports that West Point

The 81-year-old financier, turf enthusiast and adviser to Presidents concluded that:

ONE—The new federal tax on bookies is “rather silly” because] “you can't stop people from gambling.” TWO—The college basketball scandals must be blamed on “those young athletes who never learned the value of moral in-

federal bookie tax will solve majesty and magnificence just | nothing. |don’t seem to fit. You can’t stop people from| And yet who among all living gambling on horses. And Why Americans can claim them with| should you prohibit a man from more validity, or, on occasion, backing his own judgment? It'S|wear them with greater respenanother form of personal in{tia-| gence? tive,” he said. 4» As a former first baseman during his college days at City Col-| YOU ARE not long in his preslege of New. York, Baruch has ence, however, before you perceive

tegrity.” THREE—The recruiting of col-| lege football players should be banned before it ruins the sport completely. Commenting on the bribery stories that have rocked college basketball, Baruch said it was obvious that the involved players| never learned to play the game, fair and square.

# 2 =

“IF THEY were taught the values of good sportsmanship, they would have been able to) resist the temptations of accepting tainted money,” Mr. Baruch said. “But, then, that’s the trouble with the world today . . . politically, economically, nationally and internationally. People have not learned to play the game fair and square.” Regarding the overemphasis in college football, Baruch pointed out that “here, too, you find a lack of fair play.” © “It's against all the rules of

maintained his interest in base-|the source —maybe secret’s the ball down through the years. |word—of his commanding perAsked who was the greatest|sonality. His eyes, they are bright, hitter he ever saw, Baruch con-| ceded that Babe Ruth, Joe Di-| Maggio and Ted Williams were in a class by themselves. | “As a Yankee fan, that Wil-| liams fellow makes me tremble every time he steps up to the

Give him a Levinson

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plate,” . Baruch said. “He's so .2 destructive. a ET ————————

Pairings Set For HCC Tourney

Indiana Central and Taylor are in the same half of the draw for the Hoosier College Conference basketball tourney at Marion, Dec. 13-15. Pairings are: - THURSDAY, DEC. 18

P.M. 6:15—(1) Manchester vs. Hanover, 7:30—(2) Earlham vs. Anderson. 9:00—(3) Indiana Central vs. Huntington

He gets this mina. ture hat and box to exchange for the gift

is to emasculate its football policies but it was noted that when another speaker referred to the possibility with a marked lack of warmth the general applauded in

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HARRY LEVINSON

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10:30—Loser Game 3 vs. loser Game 4 SATURDAY, DEC. 15 7:15—Consolation bracket finals. 9:15—Championship finals.

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