The Ithacan, 1952-10-24
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Boxed out of The
BOXED OUT OF THE NBA REMEMBERING THE EASTERN PROFESSIONAL BASKETBALL LEAGUE BY SYL SOBEL AND JAY ROSENSTEIN “Syl and Jay brought me back to my brief playing days in the Eastern League! The small towns, the tiny gyms, the rabid fans, the colorful owners, and most of all the seriously good players who played with an edge because they fell one step short of the NBA. All the characters, the stories, and the brutally tough competition – it’s all here. About time the Eastern League got some love!”— Charley Rosen, author, basketball commentator, and former Eastern League player and CBA coach In Boxed out of the NBA: Remembering the Eastern Professional Basketball League, Syl Sobel and Jay Rosenstein tell the fascinating story of a league that was a pro basketball institution for over 30 years, showcasing top players from around the country. During the early years of professional basketball, the Eastern League was the next-best professional league in the world after the NBA. It was home to big-name players such as Sherman White, Jack Molinas, and Bill Spivey, who were implicated in college gambling scandals in the 1950s and were barred from the NBA, and top Black players such as Hal “King” Lear, Julius McCoy, and Wally Choice, who could not make the NBA into the early 1960s due to unwritten team quotas on African-American players. Featuring interviews with some 40 former Eastern League coaches, referees, fans, and players—including Syracuse University coach Jim Boeheim, former Temple University coach John Chaney, former Detroit Pistons player and coach Ray Scott, former NBA coach and ESPN analyst Hubie Brown, and former NBA player and coach Bob Weiss—this book provides an intimate, first-hand account of small-town professional basketball at its best. -
THE NCAA NEWS/March A,1988 Two Attendance Records Set at ‘88 Convention in Nashville Two NCAA Convention Attend- Percent
Official Publication of the National Collegiate Athletic Association March 9,1988, Volume 25 Number 10 House overwhelmingly passes bill to broaden Title IX scope The House overwhelmingly discrimination in Federally funded rent law to provide that entire insti- passed a landmark civil-rights bill education programs applies only tutions and government agencies March 3 that would broaden the to specific programs or activities are covered if any program or activ- scope of Title IX and three other receiving Federal assistanceand not ity within them receivesFederal aid. statutes, but President Reagan has to the entire institutions of which The broad coverage also applies to vowed to veto the measure. they are part. the private sector if the aid goes to a The Civil Rights Restoration Act Supporters of the act said corporation as a whole or if the was sent to the White House on a hundreds of discrimination corn- recipient principally provides cdu- 3 15-98vote. The Senate passedit by plaints had been dropped or rcs- cation, health care, housing, social an equally lopsided 75-14 vote in tricted since the decision, the services or parks and recreation. January. Associated Press reported. In addition to Title IX ofthe 1972 In letters delivered to several Education Amendments, the act Both chambers passed the bill by amends three other civil-rights laws House Republicans, Reagan said the two-thirds margin needed to potentially affected by the Supreme override a presidential veto, but it flatly he will veto the measure “if it is presented to me in its current Court ruling: the 1964 Civil Rights was unclear whether the margins Act, barring racial discrimination in form.” would hold up following Reagan’s Federally assisted programs; the vow to reject the measure. -
The Notre Dame Scholastic VOLUME 91, NUMBER 13 JANUARY 13, 1950 Examination Horror Falls on Campus
•The Notre Dame Too Little. Too Late January \^, \g^o PROVE TO YOURSELF NOCIBARETTC HANGOVER when you smoke PHILIP MORRIS! HERES ' Z^As, voo can RTfftS ALL YOU ,„ iust a .ew ^l PHILIP WORM* iif^i ^.. ««•« •t> Remember: less irritation means more pleasure. And PHIUP MORRIS is the ONE cigarette proved .. •. light up your definitely less irritating, present brand definitely milder, than . • • •••9''* "P^i* any other leading brand. PHIUP MORRIS 2Do exactly the tam\ntik^e tn^,.^thing —DON_ T u..:^ ,1,01 ijitj^ Hioi (ting? . -uff-DONT INHAIE INHALE. Notice that bite, that sting? NO OTHER OGARETTE I,HEN •.«;^Ve;P«« ^^ ^„,, .0^ „„.„_..- Quite a difference from PHIUP MORRIS! CAN MAKE THAT 1^^ -. A- NOW .. _ ^^ ^^^^,^^ ,,„, ,OR«IS. STATEMENT. HOW YOU KNOW WHY YOU SHOU _ K niUP MORRIS The Scholastic Letters mmm^<^:^4.!s Sunny Italy Room for Improvement? A Notre Dame Tradition Editor: The annual football issue of the SCHOLASTIC, like Frank Leahy's football team, keeps getting better and better, "Rosie's." Here You'll even though one wonders how there Always Enjoy the can be room for improvement. Just Italian Accent on how good can they get? It will be hard Fine Food. to top this latest one, however. The SUNNY ITALY CAFE Kodachrome cover is a dandy. 601 NORTH NILES William A. Page Fort Thompson, South Dakota. -•- Mistaken Identity Editor: AULT'S SHUTTER BUGS It seems that Dan Brennan has an Photography is an interesting apology to make to the Christian hobby. You'd be surprised how Brothers and Manhattan College. In economically you can become an his "Names Make News" column in the amateur photographer (Shut- Dec. -
2013-14 Men's Basketball Records Book
Award Winners Division I Consensus All-America Selections .................................................... 2 Division I Academic All-Americans By School ..................................................... 8 Division I Player of the Year ..................... 10 Divisions II and III Players of the Year ................................................... 12 Divisions II and III First-Team All-Americans by School ....................... 13 Divisions II and III Academic All-Americans by School ....................... 15 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners by School................................... 17 2 2013-14 NCAA MEN'S BASKETBALL RECORDS - DIVISION I CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS Division I Consensus All-America Selections 1917 1930 By Season Clyde Alwood, Illinois; Cyril Haas, Princeton; George Charley Hyatt, Pittsburgh; Branch McCracken, Indiana; Hjelte, California; Orson Kinney, Yale; Harold Olsen, Charles Murphy, Purdue; John Thompson, Montana 1905 Wisconsin; F.I. Reynolds, Kansas St.; Francis Stadsvold, St.; Frank Ward, Montana St.; John Wooden, Purdue. Oliver deGray Vanderbilt, Princeton; Harry Fisher, Minnesota; Charles Taft, Yale; Ray Woods, Illinois; Harry Young, Wash. & Lee. 1931 Columbia; Marcus Hurley, Columbia; Willard Hyatt, Wes Fesler, Ohio St.; George Gregory, Columbia; Joe Yale; Gilmore Kinney, Yale; C.D. McLees, Wisconsin; 1918 Reiff, Northwestern; Elwood Romney, BYU; John James Ozanne, Chicago; Walter Runge, Colgate; Chris Earl Anderson, Illinois; William Chandler, Wisconsin; Wooden, Purdue. Steinmetz, Wisconsin; -
THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Fri.L.N
'Spirited 9 Males Serenade Women Residents By MIRK FEARING At that moment the police ear pallet! to a stop in "Jesus Loves Me" was the second selection while front "ever vigilant" folic come on boys," shouted a of the dorm and the campus ropa "Show Me the Way to Go Home" In of from r car. Car doors slammed and more shouts Several flushed their prey from that bush front the dorm. serenade ended with "Good Night Six piled into the back seat of a hundred no- dosed" females raced to their windows In Resigned to the fact that they "had him." the raln- boys left In a fury of sing one more song. day night ian to the blue cruiser. The policemen remalned-both cars visible by their A string of firecrackers were exploded scattering At this, the Indignant coeds, watching from the red tail lights. In the the small band of sllghtlv "spirited- male wrll wishers windows, shouted their disapproval by booing the four Me." In all directions—most of them jumping into a nearby At 11:40 and three policemen climbed car for a quit* get-away As the cruiser carrying the captured boy pulled away, out of their with a passerby. the getaway car appeared and unpiled a yelling, shout- get-away car. \ ircond cruiser imi Some words of the conversation such as "state law" side street. night fMlWi down a drifted through the air. Then came "we pulled through Come on boys, it's all right." one shouted. And as "Reorganize group!" shouted another boy and a small here and they must have hid." If Robin Hood had called his merry band together, the group <>t .lightly weaving, yelling, leaping boys again "Were going to hang around here." one policeman small crowd began to grow as boys stood belore Keeneland and began to sing. -
Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1953-01-21
Serving the State ~ The Weather University of Iowa Cloud, tocla, and a little .. wlrmer. Snow or freet. Campus and ID, rain Thunda,. H~rh Iowa City locIa)', 31; low ZI. Hlrh al owan TueNay, 3%; low, 1'7. Est. 1BSB - AP Lemsed Wile - Five Cents Iowa City. Iowa, Wednesday. Jan. 21. 1953 - VoL 97. No. Bl eace' e's 400 Convicts Give · UpS~ate * ' G;~up l C~ndidates for Town Men's Queen Sets 'No Appeasement' . •• • Delays Hearing Policy in Inaugural Talk WASHlNGTON (IP) - Dwillht D. Eisenhower became President of the United States Tuesday and, with a prayer on his lips, set for his new administration a goal of peace with honor. But RIotIng ContlnueSFor Wilson It must be a peace based on strength and unity In the tree world he said, and there must be no appeasement, because: ' WASHINGTON (IP) - A delay in the formation of President Ei "A soldier's pack Is not so heavy a burden as a prisoner's chain~." ~ Guards Still Held senhower's cabinet developed In a mO\'ing, digni!ied ritual as old as the nalion itself, the 16 Initiated into Phi Beta Ka small. town boy from Kansas took the oath that made him America's Tuesday nlght with an announce- ~ 34th chief executive. ment that the senate armed ser- ~ Prison Mutineers Makel Brief Acldrell vices committee has postponed W k I' f bundredBELLEFONTE or the 800, Pa .rioting (IP) - Fourcon- Wednesday's hearin"~ for Charles ea e's 0 Then, in a brlet Inaugural ad- vicUi at Rockview State peniten- E. -
And Babies Moms
moms and babies you annual report 2008 the year 2008 The March of Dimes helps moms have full-term • The first-ever Premature Birth Report Card pregnancies and healthy babies. And if something brought much-needed attention to the growing goes wrong, we offer information and comfort to problem of prematurity. families. We research the problems that threaten We invested $26.8 million in new research grants our babies and work on preventing them. • to better understand and eventually prevent birth Despite a down economy, we were able to count defects, premature birth and infant mortality. on the dedication of our volunteers and donors. To continue making progress, we extended our With $241.8 million in revenue, we ended the year Prematurity Campaign to 2020 and will work to slightly behind last year, but we are determined to address the problem of premature birth globally. continue funding research, helping moms, support- ing families and promoting the health of babies. With everyone’s support, we look forward to doing even more to help give every baby a healthy start. In 2008, we made progress in the following areas: • NICU Family Support® sites across the country now reach more than 50,000 families with a baby in newborn intensive care every year. Dr. Jennifer L. Howse Kenneth A. May • Advocacy efforts for newborn screening paid off, President Chair of the Board and every state now mandates testing for at least 21 serious but treatable conditions. For the 2008 online annual report, visit marchofdimes.com/annualreport • The Surgeon General’s Conference on Preterm Birth resulted in an action agenda to reduce the prematurity rate. -
Plan Offered to Students of Georgia Tech; Would
A r.4 _ J ' A *A .... H7 IftCrt TW1?. TF. rWMIOTTF. ATLANTA. GEORGIA THE Published Semi-Weekly by Students of the Georgia Institute of Technology X-lll—Vol. XXXIII ATLANTA, GEORGIA, TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 17, 1950 No. 47 Constitution Is Approved 'Sports Sampler' Plan Offered For St. Patrick's Council To Students of Georgia Tech; By Lockwood Seegar The constitution and by-laws of the St. Patrick's Council of the Georgia Institute of Technology were ratified by representatives from various honor ary engineering societies on the campus at a meeting held Friday evening, Would Lower Recreation Costs January 13. The primary purpose of this organization is to promote the interests of Tech and the several I . _ . , , honorary and professional societies committees designated by the council Booklet of Tickets Will Sell Unexpected Passing within its academic schools and to president, in proportion to the mem sponsor the Engineers' Week cele bership of the society. At Fraction of Actual Value OfProfessor Daniel brations. Thirteen Societies "The Sports Sampler," a booklet priced at two dollars, but containing The constitution requires that the The St. Patrick's Council will con the equivalent of over forty-three dollars in admissions to Atlanta's numer Is Blow to School council shall be composed of at least sist of the following societies: In ous recreational spots, may become available to Tech students before the John Lawrence Daniel, former head two representatives from each school stitute of Aeronautical Science, Archi end of the week if a plan presented to the Student Council by Mr. Henry of the Georgia Tech Chemistry De of the college of engineering and two tectural Society, American Institute Hilton, of the Recreational Institute, partment, former dean of tfte Grad each from the schools of physics and of Chemical Engineers, American i§ put into effect. -
2006 NCAA Final Four Records Book
360,000 student-athletes 1,200 members 88 championships 23 sports 3 divisions 1 association 10 0 years 1906-2006 NCAA 52045-1/06 F4 06 THE NATIONAL COLLEGIATE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION P.O. Box 6222, Indianapolis, Indiana 46206-6222 317/917-6222 http://www.ncaa.org January 2006 LSU Sports Information Researched and Compiled By: Gary K. Johnson, Associate Director of Statistics. Cover Photography By: Clarkson and Associates. ON THE COVER Top row (left to right): Francisco Garcia, Sidney Wicks, Sean May and Bruce Weber. Second row: Roy Williams, Artis Gilmore, Lute Olson and Patrick Ewing & John Thompson. Third row: Bill Bradley, Deron Williams & Raymond Felton, Christian Laettner and Tom Izzo. Bottom row: Rashad McCants, Wilt Chamberlain, Rick Pitino and Luther Head. Distributed to Division I men’s basketball sports information directors and confer- ence publicity directors. NCAA, NCAA logo and National Collegiate Athletic Association are registered marks of the Association and use in any manner is prohibited unless prior approval is obtained from the Association. Copyright, 2006, by the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Printed in the United States of America. ISSN 0267-1017 NCAA 52045-1/06 2 2005 NCAA FINAL FOUR Contents The Final Four...................................................... 7 The Early Rounds ................................................. 35 The Tournament ................................................... 49 The Coaches ........................................................ 91 Attendance and Sites ........................................... 111 The Tournament Field ........................................... 127 Index................................................................... 246 Photo by Rich Clarkson/NCAA Photos CONTENTS 3 New to this Book AP No. 1 vs. No. 2 in the Championship Game list .......................................................... 21 Top 5 Team Tournament Scoring Margins for a Series ....................................................... 56 Photo by Brian Gadbery/NCAA Photos All-time No. -
(Iowa City, Iowa), 1952-03-06
On the Inside , The Weather Paril7 elollll7, ...able Accelerated Droit Seen • • . snow &lid not 110 ~141 to . Paqe 2 Uy. CloUd)' "ith oera J)arlinq on AP All-American • . alonal raiD. pOMibl,. .. Paqe , m1xecl with ,_, Frida),. Quake Victims. Get Aid . _ . at Klib toaa.y, 3Z; low, 11. .. Page 6 Hllh WedneMa7, 2'7; low• S beI ••_ Eat 1868 - AP Leased Wire, AP Wirephoto - Five Centa Iowa City, Iowa, Thuraddy. March 6, 1952 - Vol. 86, No. 110 Acheson' Says He Cleared Mor. 'ris'I Partner Reveals State Ollicial WASHINGTON (/P) - Secretary or State Dean Acheson acknow ledged Wednesday that he per Sonally cleared O. Edmund Clubb alter II loyalty-security board Firms! Role In Red Deals found Clubb a security risk. Acheson's action permitled the veteran foreign service ofCIcial - who otherwise could have been fired - to retil'e on a $5,800- a P a fty Lady Broker year pension. The secretary of Bevan Divides Labor state said, however, that his deci sion had nothing to do with Also Figpred Clubb's retirement. Left-Wing Rift Clears Asks Pension Withdrawal Chairman Pat McCarran (D Nev.) of the housc judiciary com Arms Program Vole In Ship Sales mittee promptly demanded that LONDON (iP) - Aneurin Bevan, WASHINGTON (IP) - Houston congress reverse the secretary of left wing Socialist leader, split the W. Wa son t Ull d W dn sday state "by cutting oCt the pension." Britis'h Labor party wide open that he and Newbold MorriS, fed Sen. }lomer Ferguson (R-Mich.) Wednesday and paved the way for President Turns Tables on Photographer a member of McCarran's internal an overwhelming 314-219 vole of eral anti-corruption chief, were security subcommittee, demanded lawyers lor a Chine N tiona list PRESIDENT TRUMAN WENT TO WORK with a press eamera Wednesday in the ro e garden of the conCldence lor Winston Churchm's to know how many state depart handllng of the rearmament pro shipping 1lrm which hauled oll White House. -
Eastern Illinois 1967-68 Basketball Schedule
Eastern Illinois University The Keep Eastern Illinois University Bulletin University Publications 12-1-1967 Bulletin 272 - 1967 Winter Sports Guide Eastern Illinois University Follow this and additional works at: http://thekeep.eiu.edu/eiu_bulletin Recommended Citation Eastern Illinois University, "Bulletin 272 - 1967 Winter Sports Guide" (1967). Eastern Illinois University Bulletin. 104. http://thekeep.eiu.edu/eiu_bulletin/104 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the University Publications at The Keep. It has been accepted for inclusion in Eastern Illinois University Bulletin by an authorized administrator of The Keep. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 1967 Winter Sports Guide GENERAL INFORMAnON OFFICIAL NAME-Eastern Illinois University LOCATION-Charleston, Illinois FOUNDED-1895 ENROLLMENT-6,491 (fall quarter) PRESIDENT-Or. Quincy Doudna FACULTY REPRESENTATIVE-Or. William Zeigel NICKNAME-Panthers COLORS-Blue and Gray HOME GYM-Lantz Building (6,800) AFFILIATION-NCAA and NAIA CONFERENCE-Interstate Intercollegiate Athletic Confer· ence (IIAC or Interstate) UNIVERSITY PHONES-581-2021 (Area Code 217) ATHLETIC STAFF Walter S. Lowell-Director, School of Health, Physical ~· Education and Recreation Tom Katsimpalis-Director of Athletics• William Riordan-Director of lntramurals Maynard O'Brien-Chairman, Division of Physical Education for Men; Head Track, Head Cross Country Clyde Biggers-Head Football Robert W. Bissell-Trainer Robert Carey-Head Golf John Caine-Head Basketball Frank Chizevsky, Jr.-Asst. Football, Asst. Wrestling Robert Eudeikis-Asst.. Football, Asst. Track Robert Hussey-Head Gymnastics, Asst. Soccer William McCabe- Head BasebaW Estel Mills-Diving, Asst. Swimming Ben Newcomb-Asst. Baseball, Asst. Football Ronald Paap-Asst. Basketball, Asst. Baseball Raymond Padovan-Head Swimming; Asst. -
Men's Basketball Award Winners
MEN’S BASKETBALL AWARD WINNERS Division I Consensus All-America Selections 2 Division I Academic All-Americans by School 14 Division I Awards 16 Divisions II and III First-Team All-Americans by School 22 Divisions II and III Academic All-Americans by School 27 Divisions II and III Players of the Year 30 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners by School 32 DIVISION I CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS 1909 1915 BY SEASON Biaggio Gerussi, Columbia W.P. Arnold, Yale Teams used for consensus selections: (Helms Julian Hayward, Wesleyan (CT) Leslie Brown, Cornell Foundation 1905-48; Converse Yearbook 1932- Tommy Johnson, Kansas Ernest Houghton, Union (NY) 48; College Humor Magazine 1929-33, 1936; Charles Keinath, Penn Charlie Lee, Columbia Christy Walsh Syndicate 1929-30; Literary Digest Ted Kiendl, Columbia George Levis, Wisconsin Magazine 1934; Madison Square Garden 1937- Pat Page, Chicago Elmer Oliphant, Army 42; Omaha World Newspaper 1937; Newspaper John Ryan, Columbia Tony Savage, Washington Enterprises Association 1938, 1953-63; Colliers Raymond Scanlon, Notre Dame Ralph Sproull, Kansas (Basketball Coaches 1939, 1949-56; Pic John Schommer, Chicago Wellington Stickley, Virginia Magazine 1942-44; Argosy Magazine 1945; True Helmer Swenholt, Wisconsin Ray Woods, Illinois Magazine 1946-47; International News Service 1950-58; Look Magazine 1949-63; United Press 1910 1916 International 1949-96; Sporting News 1943-46, William Broadhead, NYU Roy Bohler, Washington St. 1997-present; The Associated Press 1948-pres- Leon Campbell, Colgate William Chandler, Wisconsin ent; National Assoc. of Basketball Coaches Dave Charters, Purdue Cyril Haas, Princeton 1957-present; U.S. Basketball Writers Association William Copthorne, Army George Levis, Wisconsin 1960-present).