The Tribune from Seymour, Indiana (2024)

SEYMOUR DAILW, TRIBUNE; SEYMOUR, IND. FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 1917 Editorials flations to meet the demands of modern employ ment, With student bodies increasing on every hand "the need for larger' facilities is apparent. Young people are learning That aWbad tion has. advantages to those who go out Into tile Gridiron Changes Coaches feociation.Qianges Rules After Questionnaire Is ent'Out Loyalty to Government' is First John Lewis. nd the United wurlrf to mef-4t ramnrtttvn r.

V.I PAGE TWO "7" Ji Goverwnentrthe United "States' vi rfw-TKw1" H4VtWlt pan ruies cuanges ciiremuy as a puouc survey anaiysi. tsui ne confines his; sampling to football coaches. His questionnaire is based on suggestions he gets' every fall from a voluminous correspondence that begins even befyre the end of the season, It goes to 1,200 high school and to the start of the game, the i A -i i college coaches. More than one third replied last A tabulation of their responses was studied "by- the coaches' football rules committee -of the American Football Coaches Association. Lou out threat to Constitutional government and "the Nation's welfare, The Court also' said the first loyalty ot the miners' chieftain and his ofganiza-.

tion should have been to the United. States. In a to opinion, the Couri ruled that the Union must pay a tine of $700,000. The original I penalty was fixed as $3,500,000. The other 800,000 is held over the union's head' to be as-, fsessed if it strikes March 31 tor any other tinie so long as the Government operates the mines.

The fine of $10,000 against Lewis also was upheld. The opinion is of fundamental importance as it "holds in effect that the miners called their strike against the Government after they had been in-'structed by the court not.to do so. In other words the undertook to interpret the law for themselves. Such a course eventually would destroy organiied Government. 1 It would lead to anarchy.

Only so long as recognized Constitutional gov eminent is preserved will organized groups be able "to function; ''It is under such government, but within certain limitations which protect and sa re has been committee chairman for 15 years. Then the recommendations went to the National Collegiate Athletic Association, and important rule changes were made. Ever since the start football rules have been changing." "We are speeding up the gajne and we are keeping abreast of the potentialities of its -development," Lou, head football coach at Columbia, declares proudly. "Football 8" few years ago was cut and dried and very stereotyped. Now it is fast and exciting." Coaches, last fall voted on nine coaches' committee turned it down.

Three propositions for a change in the rule governing recovery of a fumbled ball, grouped in a single question, were turned down, 22 being in favor of the present fumble rule, and 196 for a change. The recommendation to bring the ball in 20 yards from the sidelinesinstead of 15 at present found 318 in favor and 98 against. The N.C.A.A. decided ortfapproxi-mately 18 yards. The proposal to liberalize substitutions Lou Little holds this one to be the most important of alt was approved 276 to 211.

The N.C.A.A. adopted the liberalization. On the proposal that if a penalty would "carry the ball more than half the distance to 'the offenders goal line, the rule should be changed to make the penalty only halfthe distance to the goal, 233 were in favor and 153 against. Lou's committee also rejected this. On the proposal for legislation against the type of shift that acts to draw the defensive team offside, 261 were in favor 68 were against and 95 did not answer.

The N.C.A.A. approved the rule changed. On the proposal to legislate for By Peter Edson, NEA Washington Correspondent Washington, D. NE A WBi topic for speculation in Washington is how long Gen7Ceorge C. Marshall's "honeymoon" as secretary- of.

state will last. No one has yet had an unkind word to say about him; congressman points out, "He hasn't asked us for" anything as yet, and we haven't asked him for anything." In the few' weeks he has been in the State Department, Marshall has shown he is a far abler administrator than either Hull or Byrnes ever were. Marshall's big test will come at Moscow when he goes up a-gainst the Russians in negotiations on Austrian and German peace treaties. Margaret Truman hopes to make her debut as an opera or concert singer next year. But she doesn't want to open in Washington.

Says she's afraid she'd recognize many people in the audience and get 'stage fright. Newspapermen covering the long-drawn-out McKellar inquisition on Dave Lilienthal's nomination to be chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission have in dull moments made up their own slate of five members who could really run the project into the ground. McKellar would be chairman and under him would be Bilbo, O'Daniel, Gov. Herman Talmadge, and Congressman John Rankin. Or as an alternate, the Republican B-teara could, iie.

run in Brewster, Bricker, Butler, Bridges ant Brooks. Those much-advertised Republican probes of Democratic administration mistakes' aren't doing too well. Latest venture is Sen, Owen Brewster's War Investigating Committee inquiry on Howard Hughes's $18 million world's largest flying boat. The laugh of this is that the real start of this project grew out of hearings held by the same committee when Harry Truman was a senator. In July, 1942, Henry Kaiser came to town, full THE" BEDFORD STONECUTTERS (left to right.

Back Row Dick Pace. Jack Turner. John r. guard public interests, that organized groups are permitted to exist If the integrity of orderly so-x ciety is destroyed, law and order fail. The miner's union now can look towards the completion of a new contract.

The opinion clari-, ties the uncertainties which tended 1o bold up ne-i gotiations. proposed changes. In seven cases their response was favorable, and two propositions were voted down. diff, Wayne Girdleyr" Second Row Morris Root, Bob Corbin, Bob Sohn. Front Row Manager Koetter i i- di.

iv mien, rfuc 1 1 uc, dimniie ucx. 9 Here is. how the voting went: On the proposal that a blocked Phillips Knocks Hoosicr Sportswriters Because They Are "Often More Sugar in 1947 kick on try for point after touchdown be declared dead, preventing the kicking team from advancing, on recovery, 309 voted for the rule, 113 against. The rule was adopted. mi On the suggestion that block ed punt' which goes through and out of the end zone or out of equipment that would protect the bounds-behind the goal line be ruled a touchdown instead of a HARDWOOD CHATTER player and not be so hard as to injure opponents, 179 were in fa vor, 55 against, and 290 did not answer.

The legislation was adopted. Actually changes were made that were not covered in the safety, 326 voted against the change and 88 for it. The rule was not changed. Although 225 voted in favor questionnaire, but they were on and 118 against giving the team scored on the right for choice of goal, receiving or kicking similar minor points. end of the tournament as the best of the field.

As a matter of fact eny team may hit a fabulous percentage of its shots and beat an admittedly superior team in any one game. If the possibility weren't always present, about 700 of the state's" high schools wouldn't bother to send in their entry blanks. If the better teams always won, the tournament wouldn't draw crowds, the IHSAA wouldn't make any money, and Mr. Phil, lips could handle his Job on week ends and teach school the rest oi the time. Nevertheless, it's a Hoosier custom to make a great to-do ovei the tournament 'winner.

A dozen or so coache "always believe their teams cdlild have beaten the champs four games out of five, but they hold their peace. Maybe they Reason, they'll get the breaki some other year. And so, the IHSAA tourney ha become the biggest show of its aV- VJuJk Increasing sugar allotments to 10 pounds per capita for the second and third quarters of this year, making the total 25 pounds for the first nine moMM ot this year equal toThe TangiTTor all of 1940 will be good news for housewives. The higher ration was made possible by the Interna-4 tkmal Food Emergency Council's action in increasing the United, States' allotment from the world supply to 6,800,000 tons as compared with the 194S total of 3,597,000 tons. Sugar ws formerly problem commodity be- cause or 'world overproduction.

Yet it was the first food to be rationed to consumers after this country got Into the wax. Today it is the only food remaining on OPA's rationed list, unless rice is regarded as4 food. "According to those who ought to know, (here is no semblance of excuse for continuing to ration it Recounting the mistakes that made the sugar j'. shortage more acute than it might otherwise have been, particularly last year, would serve no pur- pose. But there is occasion for reconsidering this nation's peacetime sugar policy toward Cuba In view of the falling off of domestic production dur-: ing the As protection against the "Cuban sugar menace" jiassed the Jones-Costlgan Act of 1934 that guaranteed domestic and insular producers a fixed annual 'quota.

That act. was superseded by the Sugar Act of 1939. still in effect, which set ex-i act percentages for all the producing areas, again to Cuba's disadvantage. Added was a new sys From the reports that filter in1 from over around Marengo way, the Cavemen are all ready to knock oft the Owls in the afternoon bout and then go on to finish off the other contestant and have a regional title in their pockets the chief scorers, seem to be Charles Miller who dunked 48. points In the sectional and Fred Huffman with 42 "I Bob' Poe got 38 to back them up here are some of the statistics on the team Seymour will meet in their open- ing regional Player Hgt; Age Wt.

CL Charles Miller 6-2 17 184 Sr. 'ir j.j,. of plans to build flying boats which would lick the submarine menace. The Truman Committee gave him a hearing. That publicity build-up inspired the War Production Board to give Kaiser an $18 million experimental contract against Army Air Forces advice.

Kaiser took in Hughes as partner. Then Kaiser lost interest and pulled out. Now the War Investigating committee is investigating its own, child. Douglas Whitlock, Washington lobbyist for building materials industry, and one of the most violent critics of government spending for the veterans' housing program, has now reversed himself completely. His big campaign used to be that If private industry were just let: alone, it would build all the houses needed.

But now Whitlock wants the government to appropriate more money so the Department of Labor can train more apprentices for the building trades. It has not been publicized, but President Truman cut nearly $8 billion from expense estimates of government agencies before he sent his budget message to Congress. If original requests by government departments had been forwarded to Congress as submitted, the budget-would have been $45 billion instead of the $37.5 billion it was before Congress applied the axe. Indianapolis, March 7 (A') Commissioner L. V.

Phillips of the Indiana High School Athletic Association has made what seems from this angle an ill-advised criticism- of Hopsier sportswriters The writers should not attempt to choose the ten best teams of the state, Phillips said in a speech at Kokomo Thursday, because they often are wrong. The implication, of course, is that the IHSAA'S state tournament system does select the best 64 teams through its sectional tourneys, the best 16 by means of the regionals, the best four by its semi-finals and the absolute top-notcher by its finals. Phillips presumably didn't think about the corollary of his -remark, because eliminations by geographical areas wouldn't bring the best 64 in the state out of the sectionals once in hundred years. Nor do the regionals save all of the top 16. As to the ehances-elwayt rethat at least one of the four met only mediocre opposition on the way up and could be whipped by half a hundred teams Jn the other three quarters of the state.

The-single-elimination, geographical set-up simply is a convenient method of whittling the state's 781 schoolboy teams down to one in the shortest time. The winner is the team that can play the equivalent of half a season on four week ends without losing a game. It takes an outstanding team, to win the tournament. Just as it takes a superior ane to go through half the regular season undefeated. It also takes a heaping measure of luck in the drawings and in the close games that almost invariably occur along the winner's Always a Chance r- -i Donald 8-2 ,16 88 kind ort earth but dnly 'becouse jtenneth Clark.

6-1 18 176 Sr. 6.1 1 17i Jr. mns. ot vasi majority oi Walter McDonald 5-lt 15 155 Jr. Fred Huffman 5-11 13 181 Sr.

Sylvan 5-8 18 185 Sr. Doug Denton 6-1 15 145 So. Denny Vernon 5-10 17 159 Sr. Not nearly as tall as some of the previous reports had them on the starting five, four are over the 8 ft. mark and one if 5-11 the Owls have come up gainst much taller outfits both Bedford and Jeff are taller all the way around.

Hi tem of benefits to mainland and insular producers, paid out of a processing tax. The decline In the value of Cuban sugar imports, running into hundreds of millions of dollars, was a direct loss to American producers of machinery and other products formerly exported 'mm, 1" luiri out eai'n year in me nupc that their teams will beat bettei teams. Everybody's happy and practically nobody wants to split the tournament into big and little schools, to limit it to -conference champions, to change to some kind of double-elimination system, or- otherwise tamper with it. At the same time, the weekly selection of "Big Tens" during the regular season by the wire services and individual newspapers also is part of the tradition. Nobody pretends they're infallible, or they wouldn't1 change from week to week.

However, the commissioner might note that eight of the ten teams-" in the APs final ratings survived their sectionals. And one of the two eliminated, Hammond High, was put out by East Chicago Washington, a team the sportswriters gave a higher rating. to Cuba. Although after the outbreak of war in Europe, in.3irmarkeling"quair were "suspend ed to offset rising they can be restored any time the President orders. warn-.

There is no reason to get a lit- Senators in Republican conference complained bitterly when Sen. Robert Taft first suggested that the Senate meet on Monday and Wednesday nights to speed up legislation. They said it woul interfere with their social engagements. Taft said they could be taken care of on other nights of the week, stuck to his point, and won out. Little five-year-old Mike Myatt runs across diamond at Washington Senators' training field in Orlando, Fla flanked by pitcher Rae Scarborough, left, and his father, George Myatt, infielder.

tie over-conuaent aoout me open- ing game dont forget these boyS from Marengo knocked off the "Vallonia Redbirds the one Seymour had such a tough time with and never got within shout- ing distance until the third quar- most outstanding. Playing against the Wabash Little Giants in the ter. second game of the 1944-43 season, Grizzly Star Completes Season i Call for Education 1 With every institution of higher learning tswamped by record enrollments of ex-GIs, edu-r cational officials are voicing concern over the need for increased facilities. Desire for a college or university degree is now as widespread as was the cal1 tot a high school diploma 40 years ago. Col- 2 lege presidents say it is all a part of a steady dem-f ocratic growth in America's educational pattern.

It's pleasant fiction to regard the survlvofs of any one week Hohnsteiter tallied 22 points to be the high scorer of the game. Dallas Hohnstreitef of this city, DAILY BIBLE THOUGHT Prew and Radio Copy Presented bjr The Radio BIBLE SERVICE BUREAU Such pious hungers have helped raise men from Barbarism to chivalrous civilization. It will make a glorious person of you: Let the words of my has completed his third consecu- tive year on the Franklin College The pairings over the state for the regional tourneys are as follows the" first two teams play at 1:15 p. m. and the next at 2:30 the winners of the first two tilts meet at 8:15 p.

m. At Bedford Bedford Jeffersonville. Marengo Seymour. At Bloomlnffton Linton Garfield (Terre basketball team as the Grizzlies ended their season at Manchester last week. mouth, and the meditations of my heart be accept-1 But increased enrollment must be attributed largely to the opportunity provided veterans to Improve their educational status.

It is caused in lesser degree by the need of educational quali- Hohnstreiter entered Franklin able in thy sight, Jehovah, my rock and my redeemer. Is. 19:14. in 1944 and began his athletic car eer there by gaining a tackle hfKIlettsvilleCory. OUT OUR WAY berth on the varsity grid team and then was elected to captain the By Williams 'A team in the 194S-46 season.

This year he was again a stalwart on the Grizzly forward wall artd'won his third consecutive football let ter. i With the closing of the football seasons, Hohnstreiter turned to the hardwood and played regular forward for the 'Grizzly five for three consecutive years. During the 1943-46 season, he led his team in scoring with 165 points. The former Owl hoopster cited his second collegiate game as his DALLAS HOHNSTREITER The Seymour Daily Tribune Iisucd every evcnlnf except Sunday. Seymour Tribune Publisher JOHN H.

CONNER Editor Manager Entered at the Seymour. Indiana. At Clinton Covington Clinton. Creencastle Crawfordsville, At Evansville Tell City Princeton. Central (Evansville) Boonvill.

1 At Fort Wayne South Side (Fort Wayne- Spencerville; Silver Lake KendallvUle. At Greens burg Madison Shelbyville. North Vernon Franklin. At Hammond i Rensselaer Emerson (Gary). Michigan i Washington Huntington Chester Center Huntington.

Monroe Portland. At Indianapolis Southport Fortvllle. Pendleton Clayton. At Lafayette Zionsville Lafayette. Rossville Otterbein.

Logansport Monon. 1 Flora Peru. I At Marion Tipton Jco*komo. North Manchester Marlon. At Munde Spartanburg Burris (Munclei Richmond.

At RushvUle Tr Everton Arlington Napoleon. At South Bead Elkhart Winamac. Central (South Bend) Culver, At 1 Catholia (Washington) Shel- roatomce ae second Ilia Matter. DAILY TRIBUNE Br Carrier StfiPy THAT'S THe ART i M'sSf SOME NEW TOOL OF LOOKIM' WS- STEEL IN THEM 1 IMPORTANT- SANDY HOLES- I'D HATE TO A THEY'VE GOT TRY THREADlN' 1 i II THEIR HEADS A NEEDLE th TOGETHER AROUND lb)) 1 THE BARFf lPi i 5 awe we rwtM wtiff One $10.00 Six Month! 5.00 Three Months 150 One Wee Sbisla, Cctpy DAILY TRIBUNE By mail in ad vance: JackaOn and adjoining counties, one week. We; three months; tLM: six He is a former Shields High School football and basketball player.

A three-letter basketball star, he played on the Owlet squad his freshman year and then quickly graduated to the varsity the following season: He climaxed his high school hardwood career by captaining the 1943-44 team through the season. Hohnstreiter is a member of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity and was a member of the "Frank-lin (college news publication) staff during his freshman year. Ha wat tapped for Lancers, the underclass honorary for men, near the end of his sophom*ore year and is a three-year member of the Men's Club. He will graduate this spring with a Bachelor of Arts degree In history and physical education and plans to take a teaching position next fall. At the present time Hohnstreiter is doing student teaching in the ffranklin High SchooL He Is the'son of Mrv and Mrs.

Albert Reater; "714 North Park street Seymour. months. S2.7S: on year. S5.00. El: Where in Indiana, one week three months.

$1.75: six months, 13.25; one year. Ss 00. Outside of Indiana, week, SOc; three months. S2.0U; sis months. S3.T9; one year.

170. a-j. -1, WEEKLY Jackson County, three mewths. soc; six months, j01' oc; six months, SOci one year. tlM.

Zones S. three months, 80c; six monins, ai.au; one jwrnr, utMt. Member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication ot all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and alao tbc local news published herein. National Advertising Representatives Whiz Kid Gene Vance; Illinois forward, leaps high to block I -scoring attempt by North western's George Felt, as -Ken Memke; 38, comes in to aid, at Chicago Stadium Illinois came from be r-hini -to register thrilling 52-5Uvictorjr, Inland Newspaper Representatives, burn.

..) Inc. MO-S42 wrigiey Buiiainx. Chica i Vlnbennes-J asper, go; Jia FUUt Avenue, New Yws..

The Tribune from Seymour, Indiana (2024)

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