Thursday, Dec. 28, 1944 Once Over Lightly L__By Andy Rooney NEw YORK, Dec. 27—Do you detect |: an odor? Do you smell something funny? Whether you detect it or not, | something is beginning to smell, and it is the big time gambling racket which is | moving in on amateur and, in particular, |: college sports. A few weeks ago University of Kan- sas basketball coach Dr. Forrest C. ‘‘Phog’’ Allen popped off again. Good Doctor Allen is always popping off about E this time of tlie year, but never- theless he had something to say. Simply, Phog told everyone who}. wanted to hear it and ~- some who|. didn’t that gam- blers have become a threat to college |: _ athletics. Speci- | - fically Allen pointed! out the case of & . Utah University PHOG ALLEN Coach .Vadal Peterson, who answered the door in his | hotel room in New York before a game in the Garden and was confronted with a man who asked the question: “How much will it cost me to have you see to it that your boys lose to Dartmouth in _the finals of the NCAA basketball tournament?’ Peterson slammed — the door. Allen . offered further information without laying himself open to a libel case about two college players, who sold their own team to professional gamblers for a price. And lastly, Allen suggested that there is a scandal in the making . which’ will make the Black Sox mess look like a penny pick-pocket affair. OSTLY what Phog Allen was talking about was Madison Square Garden. where the biggest basketball business in America is being carried on every. winter by Ned Irish. ‘The facts are that hun-.} dreds of thousands of dollars are ex- changing hands on the results of the Garden winners and where there is that much involved someone is going to get: approached. College gambling is not a! haphazard affair participated in by a few | track bookies during the off season ; it is a big time racket all by itself. These odds often quoting the prices the gamblers are offering are not set by guess work and too often they are set by in- formation not available to the public.