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1. IDS: Hoosiers Well Represented In Basketball Hall Of Fame (Sports, 11/30/99)
The first electronic scoreboard was made by john H. Davis in Salem, Indiana. Thursday,July 27. PR disaster No 'twaan at Big Ten football media day.
http://idsnews.com/news/113099/sports/113099rep.html
Hoosiers well represented in Basketball Hall of Fame
by Kate Hairopoulos
Indiana Daily Student Published November 30, 1999
Updated Tuesday, 30-Nov-1999 01:50:04 EST The first display placed just past the entrance doors of the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass., Friday featured Temple and IU jerseys, along with one of the infamous red sweaters formerly sported by coach Bob Knight. The exhibit's prominent position marked the matchup of the evening's Tip-Off Classic, which IU went on to win 67-59. But there are plenty of other permanent tributes to IU and the state of Indiana's contributions to basketball in the game's only shrine. Ever heard of the Fort Wayne Hoosiers? Labeled as "early barnstormers," and it was one of the first teams to travel, playing basketball all over the Midwest for pay in 1930-31. Other Indiana teams included the Indianapolis Kautskys, Indianapolis Jets and the Fort Wayne Pistons. The Pistons were the World Champions in 1944-45, before evolving into the National Basketball Association's Detroit franchise of today. The first electronic scoreboard was made by John H. Davis in Salem, Indiana. One of the first simple boards is displayed in the Hall. In stark contrast to the jumbotrons of today, it displays only the quarter, minutes and scores of both teams. IU and other state universities were some of the first to use them.

2. IDS: Hoosiers Well Represented In Basketball Hall Of Fame (Sports, 11/30/99)
The first electronic scoreboard was made by john H. Davis in Salem, Indiana. PR disaster No 'twaan at Big Ten football media day
http://www.idsnews.com/news/113099/sports/113099rep.html
Hoosiers well represented in Basketball Hall of Fame
by Kate Hairopoulos
Indiana Daily Student Published November 30, 1999
Updated Tuesday, 30-Nov-1999 01:50:04 EST The first display placed just past the entrance doors of the Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass., Friday featured Temple and IU jerseys, along with one of the infamous red sweaters formerly sported by coach Bob Knight. The exhibit's prominent position marked the matchup of the evening's Tip-Off Classic, which IU went on to win 67-59. But there are plenty of other permanent tributes to IU and the state of Indiana's contributions to basketball in the game's only shrine. Ever heard of the Fort Wayne Hoosiers? Labeled as "early barnstormers," and it was one of the first teams to travel, playing basketball all over the Midwest for pay in 1930-31. Other Indiana teams included the Indianapolis Kautskys, Indianapolis Jets and the Fort Wayne Pistons. The Pistons were the World Champions in 1944-45, before evolving into the National Basketball Association's Detroit franchise of today. The first electronic scoreboard was made by John H. Davis in Salem, Indiana. One of the first simple boards is displayed in the Hall. In stark contrast to the jumbotrons of today, it displays only the quarter, minutes and scores of both teams. IU and other state universities were some of the first to use them.

3. IDS: Hoosiers Finally Healthy Again (Sports, 11/12/99)
by Michael Petry and Matthew H. Zimmerman Indiana Daily john Swann, a redshirt freshmanback, was just cleared PR disaster No 'twaan at Big Ten football media
http://idsnews.com/news/111299/sports/111299healthy.html
Hoosiers finally healthy again
by Michael Petry and Matthew H. Zimmerman
Indiana Daily Student Published November 12, 1999
Updated Friday, 12-Nov-1999 01:46:32 EST After playing with a thin bench and suffering few injuries for much of the season, the last few weekends proved to be especially costly for the men's soccer team. "Intensity is way higher in practice. Higher than it was last year, higher than it's been all season." Tyler Hawley, sophomore back But, after two weeks off, the Hoosiers appear to be back at 100 percent. "A lot of guys are injured," senior forward Aleksey Korol said. "It was good for us to take a week off and prepare for the Big Ten tournament." The week off gave many of the Hoosiers a chance to recover. Senior midfielder B.J. Snow had been nursing an hamstring injury all season but appears to be back at 100 percent. Senior midfielder Yuri Lavrinenko also strained his hamstring in practice last week, and playing a game last weekend would have been nearly impossible for him. John Swann, a redshirt freshman back, was just cleared to play this week. Junior goalkeeper T. J. Hannig continues to recover from a bruised shoulder, and sophomore Ryan Hammer, who hasn't played all season because of an ACL injury, was cleared to play this past week and will give the Hoosiers an extra body off the bench.

4. IDS: Hoosiers Finally Healthy Again (Sports, 11/12/99)
by Michael Petry and Matthew H. Zimmerman. Indiana Daily Student impossible for him. john Swann, a redshirt freshman back, was PR disaster No 'twaan at Big Ten football media day
http://www.idsnews.com/news/111299/sports/111299healthy.html
Hoosiers finally healthy again
by Michael Petry and Matthew H. Zimmerman
Indiana Daily Student Published November 12, 1999
Updated Friday, 12-Nov-1999 01:46:32 EST After playing with a thin bench and suffering few injuries for much of the season, the last few weekends proved to be especially costly for the men's soccer team. "Intensity is way higher in practice. Higher than it was last year, higher than it's been all season." Tyler Hawley, sophomore back But, after two weeks off, the Hoosiers appear to be back at 100 percent. "A lot of guys are injured," senior forward Aleksey Korol said. "It was good for us to take a week off and prepare for the Big Ten tournament." The week off gave many of the Hoosiers a chance to recover. Senior midfielder B.J. Snow had been nursing an hamstring injury all season but appears to be back at 100 percent. Senior midfielder Yuri Lavrinenko also strained his hamstring in practice last week, and playing a game last weekend would have been nearly impossible for him. John Swann, a redshirt freshman back, was just cleared to play this week. Junior goalkeeper T. J. Hannig continues to recover from a bruised shoulder, and sophomore Ryan Hammer, who hasn't played all season because of an ACL injury, was cleared to play this past week and will give the Hoosiers an extra body off the bench.

5. Steelers Report: Notes, Quotes, Anecdotes - CBS SportsLine
Will lam Banks, Mose Banner, Henry Barnett., john W. H. Barnett, 3osephine Ann Barnett, Lizzie Barnett, Spencer Barr, t satisfied in tom, so twaan t long tors I heer.d
http://cbs.sportsline.com/u/ce/teamrpt/0%2C1601%2C5289557_59%2C00.html
Help Web SportsLine Home NFL NBA MLB ... NFL.com Steelers report: Notes, quotes, anecdotes April 30, 2002
Inside slant
Strategy and personnel Antwaan Randle El, the Indiana quarterback the Steelers The rookies are permitted to return to Pittsburgh for workouts May 16 provided they have either graduated or their college class has graduated by then. Seven of their eight draft choices are eligible on that date. LB Larry Foote has to wait until May 26. QB Tee Martin has lifted his Rhein Fire to victories in two of three games in NFL Europe by throwing TD passes in the final seconds. Last Saturday, Martin threw a 1-yard touchdown pass with five seconds left to beat Berlin, 20-16. He completed 20 of 36 passes in that game for 189 yards and no interceptions. He's improved as the season goes on and is playing behind a poor offensive line. Martin has been the Steelers' No. 3 QB the past two seasons. Rookie QB Travis Cole, signed as a free agent from Minnesota, was erratic in his first pro camp. He has a strong arm and he showed it, but center Chukki Okobi wasn't impressed when he snapped the ball on one play, stood up and was drilled in the back of the head with a Cole pass. The Steelers added veteran tight end John Allred last week, signing him to a one-year contract that will pay him the minimum of $525,000 and count $450,000 under their salary cap under new NFL rules. Pittsburgh did not draft a tight end, nor sign any free agent rookies at the position. Allred was a second-round draft choice of the Bears in 1997 and was in his fourth season when he tore two ligaments in his right knee in 2000. He became a free agent after that season, signed and was cut by St. Louis and did not play in 2001.

6. Message To Kinshiro's Steeler Page
The summary for this Japanese page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://www2.biglobe.ne.jp/~steeler/omes.cgi?_25

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