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...Manhattan courtroom, General Sessions Judge Saul Streit addressed himself to an unpleasant duty. Awaiting sentence before him were 14 college boys under indictment in the New York basketball fix scandal.* All had pleaded guilty. Judge Streit listened gravely to the recommendations of the district attorney, who wanted the boys left unpunished as an encouragement to others to testify against the gamblers. Then the court announced his decision...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Lifting the Curtain | 12/3/1951 | See Source »

...disclosure that the records of basketball stars Alvin Roth and Herbert Cohen had been faked came Monday when Judge Saul S. Streit sentenced gambler Salvatore Sollazzo and 14 basketball players from colleges in the New York area for their roles in fixed games...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CCNY Files Probe To Open Monday | 11/23/1951 | See Source »

Meanwhile, in New York, the judge who handed down jail sentences in the basketball bribery scandal yesterday named eight schools, including Pennsylvania, as examples of athletic over-emphasis. Judge Saul S. Streit, following his sentences, claimed that it is the task of the country's schools, and not of the District Attorney, to keep athletics clean. In addition to Pennsylvania, the colleges named as guilty of over-emphasis are: Maryland, Oklahoma, Texas, Texas A & M, Southern Methodist, Tennessee, and Kentucky...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NCAA Asks Rigid Athletic Controls | 11/21/1951 | See Source »

...Judge Saul S. Streit, in sentencing fixer Salvatore Soliazzo to eight to 16 years in jail and former players Ed Gard, Ed Warner, Al Roth, and Harvey Schaff to terms ranging from six months to three years, strongly criticized the nation's colleges yesterday for "commercialism and over-emphasis in arthritics and intercollegiate football in particular...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Judge Sentences Game Fixers, Scores Penn's Overemphasis' | 11/20/1951 | See Source »

Denverites give the credit to Saul Caston, 50, their energetic conductor since 1945. Denver picked Manhattan-born Saul Caston partly for his musical ability (he was associate conductor of the Philadelphia Orchestra under both Stokowski and Ormandy), partly for his dependability: he proposed to take root in Denver, not just use its podium as a springboard. Conductor Caston built up his orchestra to 76 pieces on the same principles-ears cocked for musical ability, eyes peeled for settlers. The result is "a happy orchestra," with most of the musicians under 30. Among them: a Negro bass viol player...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Denver's Happy Orchestra | 10/29/1951 | See Source »

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