PAGE TEN Grandstand Views r 4 The basketball players involved in the point-shaving mess were only 10 or 11 when the first scandal broke a dec ade ago so they probably don't remember Sherman White, Ed Roman, Ralph Beard and Alex Groza. These were just a few of the big name stars who saw their careers and lives change overnight because the temptation of $lOOO was too much. There were others—Ed Warner, Floyd Layne, and Gene Mel ehiorre—but the names aren't important anymore. Time has healed their wounds somewhat but the memories never will be forgotten. "I hope they don't make these kids go Through what we did. Just don't crucify them. Don't be too quick to condemn," said one of the fixers who preferred not to be mentioned. He spoke directly from experience because he knows the stigma attached to scandal and he knows what will happen when the details of the present case are made public. Most of the players involved in the 1951 scandal have managed to carve a life for themselves but society is still wary. "People always look at us in a bad light. Nobody believes anything we say. Nobody realized we were just kids who made a mistake," the anonymous point-shaver said. After the scandal talk died down 10 years ago, the National Basketball Association was off limits to the fixers but Ilarry Rudolph's Eastern League decided to take a chance. White, Roman, Layne and Warner have been familiar names to Eastern League box score readers for years and on numerous occasions they have proved their ability to play big-league ball. Roman, one of the league's all-time scoring leaders, is coaching the Wililamsport team this season and has done an excellent job in a tough situation. Layne, who teamed with Roman and Warner to bring CCNY the NIT and NCAA championships in 1950, is a teacher now in addition to playing for the Wilkes-Barre Barons. Warner also is with Wilkes-Barre and works as a factory foreman in New York during the week. White, an LIU All-American before the fix, plays for the Baltimore Bullets and works for a whiskey distribution firm in New York. For Alex Groza, things have turned out better than expected. The former Kentucky ace is the only fixer who has returned to the college game. He coaches Bellarmine College in Louisville, Ky. When it comes time to recruit, Groza reminds his prospect that he is the same Alex Groza who once fixed games at Kentucky. He frankly tells his prospect about his experiences and then asks the boy for a decision. Beard, one of Groza's teammates, had a harder adjustment than most of the other fixers. He was playing pro ball with the Indianapolis Olympians of the NBA when the scandal hit the headlines and when it was all over he found himself banned from further competition. His wife couldn't adjust to the pressures and divorced him. Ile couldn't get a decent job anywhere and when he returned to Kentucky to pick up 11 credits for a diploma no one would talk to him including coach Adolph Rupp. His uniform, which was retired after his final year, was thrown away and his picture was removed from All-America Row. Beard tried the Eastern League for a while and then he re married. He was drafted soon after and Army life seemed to help him quite a bit. Now he has started over again but readjustment hasn't been easy. It hasn't been easy for the others either but they were willing to accept their fate if someone else benefited from their ex- perienees. Last weekend the memories and bitterness came back again and they all shared the same feelings—all their suffering had been in vain. 000090000101100901100900000 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 04111•041111•••••111000111•••••••• CABIN PARTY MARCH 25-26 Sponsored by PSOC It Was All In Vain C. E. Cabin Tickets and Sign-up Sheet at HUB Desk Tickets a Must THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. STATE COLLEGE. PENNSYLVANIA By Sandy Padwo Collegian. Sports Editor Ohio State Battles St. In NCAA Semi-Finals By DON WEISS Associated Press Sports Writer KANSAS CITY (M— Ohio State's unbeaten Buckeyes, confident they won the one 'game they might have lost, resume defense of their NCAA basketball championship tonight, meeting unsung St. Joseph's in the semifinals of the 23rd national showdown. The top-ranked Bucks, (26-0) with Jerry Lucas and a 31-game winning streak, are 14-point fa vorites in the 7:30 p.m. CST, opener over the Hawks from Philadelphia, who have won 15 in a row for a 24-4 record. Cincinnati, which has parlayed 20 straight victories and a 25-3 record into 'the No. 2 national ranking, is a 6-point pick over Utah (23-6) in the other semi final beginning at 9:15 p.m. A capacity crowd of 10,500 will pack Municipal Auditorium to see if the experts are right in forseeing an all-Ohio final in the title match Saturday night. The cloud of a new bas betball scandal hasn't tempered enthusiasm here one bit. Ohio State, unanimously ac claimed all season as college bas- East Squad WM Train At Buffalo University BUFFALO, N.Y. OP) The University of Buffalo was picked recently as the training base for the East squad in the All-Ameri can Graduation Bowl football game here June 23. The sponsoring American Foot ball Coaches Association hopes the game will be the first of an annual series. This year's game will be for the benefit of the Foot ball Hall of Fame. Penn State's Rip Engle and Bill Murray of Duke will coach the East squad while Minnesota's Murray Warmath and Washing ton's Jim Owens will coach the West. A man with Alo doesn't need this deodorant He could use a woman's roll-on with impunity. Mennen Spray was made for the man who wants a deodorant he knows will get through to the skin . . where perspiration starts. Mennen Spray Deodorant does just that. It gets through to the skin. And it works. All day. More men use Mennen Spray than any other deodorant. Have you tried it yet? 640 and $l.OO plus tax •Complete lack of body hair, including that of the scalp, legs, armpits, face, etc. MENNEN DEODORANT and other Mennen Products available at McLanahan's Drug Co. 134 S. Allen St. and McLanahan's Self Service 414 E. College Ave. * * * . . . hawk-eye * * * ketball's best team, gave the oth er clubs more than a whisper of hope when it needed a scram bling, desperate comeback in the last couple of minutes to survive a Mideast regional semifinal with Weiss Will Head INew York Entry MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (IPA The new National League team in New York has made its most important move since its or ganization last year by luring George Weiss out of retirement to serve as its president for the next 1 . ie years. The famed baseball executive, who as general manager of the New York Yankees, was respon sible for the creation of 10 pen nant winners and seven world champions in 13 years, will as sume duties immediately al though the club will not begin operation until 1962. ecia Universalis* FRIDAY. MARCH 24. 1961 Joseph's Tonight Louisville, 56-55, a week ago. "Sometimes you have to win on bad night," Buckeye Coach Fred Aylor said yesterday. "That was bad night. Our free-throw shoot tg was way off and of course ffry was held to the fewest aints of his career (9 points). lut we hit our top field goal per !ntage of the season against Ken icky the next night and looked such better. "All of the boys were involved major examinations all last ek before we went to Louis- Ile and I think they might have !en tired mentally." St. Joseph's, called the "most tetermined learn I ever had" by roach Jack Ramsay, picked up :onfidence with victories that „railed coming in a string after an 87-75 loss to Xavier of Ohio in Jan. 19. Jack Egan, a 6-6, 215-pound senior, is the key Hawk-leading scorer with a 21.7 Overage and leading rebounder iith 12.1 per game. The Cincinnati-Utah game fig ures to match the scrappy, tire less Bearcats' balance against 'Billy (the Hill) McGill, the 6-9 junior from Los Angeles who I Coach Jack Gardner of Utah likes Ito call "the greatest offensive center in college basketball his- Itory." AN UNPAID TESTIMONIAL Napoleon Bonaparte says: I'd goer have lost to ellinoton* ...if I'd been wearing a Jacket, POWER-KNIT T-SHIRT Q: You mean ... ? A: Ouil I spent so much time tugging at my baggy, Baggy T- shirt ... I couldn't concentrate on the battle. Q: I see. Well do you realize that Jockey's new T-shirt is Power- Knit with a quarter again as much resilient combed-cotton yarn to stay soft and keep its per fect fit, even after countless wash ings? The new Seamfree. collar won't sag; the full-proportioned body won't bag. And the deep tuck tail stays every inch as long as the day your Jockey Power- Knit T-shirt came fresh out of the package. A: NOW he tells me! *Napoleon's final defeat came at the hands of the Duke of Wellington in the Battle q Waterloo, June 18,1815. ..• ' • •%; •• . • W ,4 . •. . . ,• AA.: • Jockeil POWER-KNIT •,,,,. T-SHIRTS COOPER'S, INC. • KENOSHA, WIE•