SPORTS
University Daily Kansan, November 4, 1983
Page 12
Memorial for George Halas draws 1,200-plus
By United Press International
CHICAGO — More than 1,200 friends, fans and colleagues paid tribute yesterday to George Halas, owner of the Chicago Bears and one of the founders of the National Football League more than 60 years ago.
Services for Halas, 88, who died Monday after a long illness, were held at St. Ita Raoman Catholic Church, when they attended in an hour-long memorial service.
"Anyone who knew George knew that his life was not always a happy one." said the Rev. Charles Banet, president of St. Joseph's College, Resnaeral, Ind., where the Bears trained before moving to north suburban Lake Forest.
"There were moments of great pain and hurt, physical and emotional. Were beyond that to share the hurts and pain of his players and friends," he said.
OUTSIDE THE CHURCH, Chicagoans lined the street as an American flag-draped coffin carried by six of Halas' grandchildren was lifted into a
limousine that led a procession of 70 cars to St. Adalbert's Cemetery in suburban Niles.
Among those attending the memorial service were members of the 1983 Bears team, who filed off three bushes and silently into the church.
Following the service, the Bears returned to Lake Forest to continue preparing for Sunday's game against the Los Angeles Rams.
"Halas would have wanted it that way," a team snokesman said.
Hundreds of Halas' friends, former team members and adversaries in the NFL were also present to pay their respects to the man known as "Papa Bear."
MANY COMMENTED on the man who helped found the NFL on a shoestring more than 60 years ago and who is now a millionaire worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
"George invented, helped and helped in the growth of the NFL," said League Commissioner Pete Rozelle. "He'll be dearly missed."
Former Bears General Manager Jim
Finks, who resigned in August after Halas diluted his authority, said Halas' death was a mixed blessing.
"I feel very sad. But it's a blessing since he had four or five months of suffering." Finks said. "He was a real people person." The president was like walking down the street with the president. He always bad time to say hello to everyone."
Genie Upshaw, president of the NPL.
Players Association and a former player for the Oakland Raiders, said he exemplified what the NPL stood for.
"I FEEL WHAT HE DID for the game is beyond reproach, and we're going to miss him." Upshaw said.
Tex Schramm, president of the
Baylor School of Medicine, would
power heyers without Halaes.
"He was the glue, the tough man that saw the future and believed in the future. He is beyond a legend." Schramm said.
"I really loved the man," said DePaul basketball coach Ray Meyer. "Twenty years from now we'll really understand how great a man he was."
PREDICTIONS
| Carothers | Brown | Budig | Cravens | Hartley |
|---|
| Colorado at Kansas | Kansas 30-21 | | Kansas 41-21 | Kansas 35-24 | Kansas 36-34 |
| Oklahoma at Missouri | Oklahoma 27-21 | Oklahoma 35-14 | Oklahoma 23-20 | Oklahoma 21-20 | Missouri 27-21 |
| Iowa State at Nebraska | Nebraska 57-12 | Nebraska Pi squared-2x | Nebraska 52-20 | Nebraska 63-14 | Nebraska 55-6 |
| Kansas State at Oklahoma St. | Oklahoma St. 33-13 | Oklahoma St. 30-14 | Illinois 38-13 | Oklahoma St. 28-0 | Oklahoma St. 27-12 |
| Illinois at Minnesota | Illinois 40-7 | Illinois 27-0 | Oklahoma St. 23-10 | Illinois 38-6 | Illinois 45-13 |
| Florida at Georgia | Georgia 21-17 | Florida 24-14 | Florida 16-13 | Georgia 17-16 | Florida 22-21 |
| Clemson at North Carolina | North Carolina 31-24 | North Carolina 28-21 | North Carolina 20-17 | North Carolina 24-10 | North Carolina 26-21 |
| Pitt at Notre Dame | Notre Dame 13-13 | Pitt 13-10 | Notre Dame 17-14 | Notre Dame 17-14 | Notre Dame 17-16 |
| Maryland at Auburn | Auburn 24-21 | Auburn 27-17 | Auburn 24-17 | Auburn 21-17 | Auburn 30-21 |
| Northeastern at Cent. Connecticut | Northeastern 44-4 | Northeastern 20-6 | Northeastern 24-11 | Cent. Connecticut 9-8 | Northeastern 37-14 |
| Season Totals | 59-20-1—.746 | 53-20-0—.726 | 56-23-1—.708 | 48-31-1—.608 | 52-27-1—.651 |
The predictors are James Carothers, associate professor of English; Larry Brown, head basketball coach; Chancellor Gene A. Budig; Jeff Cravens, associate sports editor; and Andrew Hartley, sports editor.
SPORTS ALMANAC
MONEY
1. Hal Sutton $169,261. 2. Fuzzy Zelzer $147,597. 3. Lanny Wagkins $169,271. 4. Calvin Veine $131,845. 5. Gil Morgan $100,132. 6. Rex Cadalew $164,75. 7. Ben Hickman $100,132. 8. Alex Burch $164,75. 9. Kate Tomic $25,666. 10. Jack Kisnick $166,158.
LPGA GOLF
1, Johanne Carrier $283.029, 2, Patty Sheehan $246.781, 3, Pat Bradley $282.541, 4, Dana Ripken $259.881, 5, Ben Daniel $267.104, 6, Lucia Miller $155.941, 7, Hollis Stacy $149.036, 8, Amy Alcott $141.091, 9, Okayako Mugai $149.036
MEN'S TENNIS
**Asia (Ass of Tennis Professional)**
1. Ivan Petrovic, 865,114. Gulliver Vals, Argentina, $635,735. 4. Mats WILander, Vitals, $681,012. Jimmy Connors, $346,467. 5. Tom Smati, Smid, Czechovskadia $346,467. 6. Tom Smati, Smid, Czechovskadia $346,467. 7. Tom Smati, Smid, Czechovskadia $346,467. 8. South Africa, $753,543. North France, $677,590. 10. Hill California, $611,272.
1. Martina Navarrete $1,232.99; 2. Chris Evert
$338.48; 3. Pam Sharr $26.58; 4. Andrea
Jaeger $23,621. 5, Wendy Turnbull, Australia,
$161,625. 6, Kathy Jadow $39,599. 7, Joanne
Brady, T皇城 Palace Hanka, West Germany,
8, Andrea T皇城 Palace Hungary, $17,407.
6, Billie Jean King $131,633.
1, Darrell Walpurgle $167,000 2, Bobby Allison $168,352 3, Dale Fleer $380,271 4, Richard Fletcher $381,974 5, Jon Grace $342,105 6, Bill Elliot $282,852 7, Dave Marcus $285,000 8, Cary Lawborough $285,100 9, Terry Marris
1. Tet Somva $35,330. 2. Al Uster Sr. $400,109. 3. Teo Fasio $450,566. 4. Marten Riess $468,362. 5. Bock Means $450,765. 6. John Paul II $468,362. 7. Al Uster Sr. $471,214. 8. John Paul II $471,487. 9. Pancho Canocher $185,000. 10. Chip Gassman $185,000.
1, Earl Anthony $135,602. 2, Marshall Halman $109,435. 3, Tom Milton $87,933. 4, Joe Berardi $84,322. 5, Turin Duran $78,222. 6, Doren Gerael $70,415. 7, Tank Bakek $60,748. 8, Pete Kerner $60,748. 9, Weber $60,970. 10, Mark Hosta $67,424.
THOROUGHBRED RACING
Dalila Racing Kerry
(Compiled by Daily Racing Form.)
JACKEYS 1. Annel Cordera $749,768. 2. Chris
Maccaron $740,844.1 Lainfaff Cirk Jr. $737,157.6 Jorge Vesperia $388,387.9 Pat Day $425,928.6 Kobe Van Bessing $382,376.1 Pat Day $352,918.6 $4,847.75 Jacinto Vasquez $739,307.9 Jean-Luc寿马 $529,231.10 Pat Valenzuela $424,838.2 Wayne Luks $306,219.2 Wayne Luks $306,219.2 Woody Stephens $297,847.4 Laz Barberry $287,954.7 Jack Van Jenkins $287,954.7 Jerry Fanning $182,918.4 Phil Johnson $184,810.1 Melvin Szelawski $178,352.8 NHS Harlem $190,888.8 Jerry Fanning $182,918.4 Phil Johnson $184,810.1 Melvin Szelawski $178,352.8 NHS Harlem $190,888.8 Jerry Fanning $182,918.4 Phil Johnson $184,810.1 Melvin Szelawski $178,352.8 NHS Harlem $190,888.8 Jerry Fanning $182,918.4 Phil Johnson $184,810.1 Melvin Szelawski $178,352.8 NHS Harlem $190,888.8 Jerry Fanning $182,918.4 Phil Johnson $184,810.1 Melvin Szelawski $178,352.8 NHS Harlem $190,888.8 Jerry Fanning $182,918.4 Phil Johnson $184,810.1 Melvin Szelawski $178,352.8 NHS Harmlen
HOUSES - 1, Ralph Hanover #711.329, 2. Josee Bauer
666.809, 3. David Wong #600.478, 4. Tracie Lobel
666.709, 5. Carter Bird #700.168, 6. Trustone Lobel
665.103, 7. Apple Circle #645.577, 8. Shannon Fancy
733.509, 9. Why Not #679.104, 10. Lucky Jack
HARNESS RACING
(Compiled by U.S. Trotting Assn.)
BASEBALL
Free Agent List
Pitchers
Doug Barr, Detroit; Jim Barr, San Francisco; Jim Bibby, Pittsburgh; Doug Bird, Boston; Jamie Easterly, Milwaukee; Kami Hamada, Chicago; Kamia Karny, Jerry Kosman, Chicago (AL); Frank Lacarte, Houston; Dennis Lamp, Chicago (AL); Hugh Moffett, Chicago; Joel Krug, Chicago; R.J. Richard, Houston; Dan Schatzeler, Montreal, Lary Sorenstein, Cleveland; Elias Sao San Diego; Ken Tekulve, Pittsburgh; Jon Ransom, Underwood, Oakland; Wil Milwox, Detroit
Milwaukee Infielders
Catchers Ted Simmons. Milwaukee
Bert Campanieri, New York (AL); Rod Carew, California; Julio Cruz, Chicago
Henry Bender, San Francisco; Bethen Hobner, Pittsburgh; Pitcher Bob Piccoli, Milwaukee; Aurelio Riguel, Chicago (AL)
Manny Trillo, Montreal
Nelly Mark, Mark Wagner, Texas
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Nominations-Self Nominations due in Graduate Student Council Office, Kansas Union
By Friday, 12 pm November 4, 1983
!!GRADUATE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE ELECTIONS!!
(STUDENT SENATE-FUNDED AD)
Also soliciting names of write in candidates for graduate student senators.
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If you enlist for training in these extra challenging skills for three years, you could qualify for a bonus of $4,000. Or you could get $8,000 if you enlist for four years. And maybe even money for college.
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BE ALL YOU CAN BE.
In the October 31st issue of the University Daily Kansan (UDK) can be found an astonishing effort by UDK staff columnist Kalpana Trivadi entitled "Third World Fights for Fair Information Flow." Ms. Trivadi attributes "the Third World's demand for the creation of a New World Information Order" to the Western press's commitment to the sensational, distorted and "negative." (It might interest Ms. Trivadi to learn that this same claim was frequently made by former Vice-President Spiro Agnew before his unmasking.)
A FEW THOUGHTS ABOUT THE THIRD WORLD'S FEAR OF THE FACTUAL
For over a decade the Soviet Union and various Third World countries have ignored Article 19 of the U.N.'s Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which endorses the right to freedom of opinion and expression, by calling upon the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization to license and otherwise control all news correspondents. The New World Information Order which so excites Ms. Trivadi can only become manifest by transferring Western technology to Third World countries so that each of these governments might manipulate its own news apparatus, and limiting the Western press's access to and dissemination of information in said countries.
Although Ms. Trivadi feels that the Western press erred when it "offered the stories of . . . Pol Pot's regime in Cambodia, the Ayatollah in Iran . . . and Idi Amin in Uganda as evidence of failure in Third World leadership", she fails to cite anything productive accomplished by any member of this murderous triumvirate. Says Ms. Trivadi: "To Third World leaders, freedom of the press is seen as an illusion . . . and a luxury that their societies cannot afford."
The October 1st issue of the Kansas City Times contains an example of what Ms. Trivadi probably considers naked negativism. This article, which describes Africa as "stumbling toward calamity," discusses the Dark Continent's population growth, death rate, infant mortality rate, environmental problems, limited amount of safe water and increasing dependence on imported food. Perhaps there's a relationship between the vigor with which Ms. Trivadi and some Third World leaders claim that such problems as the aforementioned become illusory when examined by the Western press and their inability to see that neither prolonged prevarication nor subsidized propaganda is "a luxury that their societies" can now afford.
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