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PAGE TEN
BANNER - HERALD
SPORTS
808 OLIVER, SPORTS EDITOR
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¢BBOTH BARRELS—Given a year of seasoning and Walt Kellner,
#Peft, could combine with left-handed Alex, the Athletics’ first 20-
t_ me winner since Lefty Grove, to give the A’s a two-way brother
Working out at West Palm Beach, Fla., the 21-year-old right
r confirmed reports that he is faster than his southpaw brother.|
STUDIES HOLD BROWN
Giant First Sacker
Slugging .750 Aveg.
" PHOENIX, Ariz., March 14.—(AP)—Jack Harshman,
peeking to fill the departed John Mize’s shoes as a slugging
first baseman for the New York Giants, is off to a fine start
in the grapefruit campaign.
All young Harshman has done in the first three exhibi
tion ifimel is hit 750, getting six hits in eight at-bats to
lead the team.
ST, PETERSBURG., Fla,
ghnl 14 — (AP) — The New
York Yankees will have to get
w&out their holdout ¢%Lird
, Bobby Brown, until at
Beast April 1.
The elub has been informed by
Brown that his medical studies at
Tulane will keep him in New Or
feans the remainder of this month.
SAN BERNARDINO, Calif,
March u‘;l—hi(tAPS)o_ l?gh;ll{uzava,
e Sox pitcher, may
mlned for several days after
being spiked.
Kuzava was spiked on the right
ankle In the second inning of the
Sox mimifion yesterday which
the St. Louis Browns won 2-0.
SARASOTA, Fla, March 14 —
(AP)~~Third baseman Johnny
| Pesky who didn’t play for the
‘Boston Red Sox yesterday in an
exhibition against the World
Champion Yankees mal have his
allln{l side X-rayed foday. Johnny
was held out of action because of
a reported muscle pull.
~ ORLANDO, Fla, March 14 —
;eAP) « The Washington Nations
1t better today after shaking
off their two-game losing streak
and taking over the Phillies, 7-5,
yesterday in their finest session
so far of this Grapefruit League.
TUCSON, Ariz, March 14 —
(AP) — Pitchers for the Cleveland
¥ndians will be doing more drill
ing on pick-off plays, if the last
three exhibition games are any in- |
dication.
Pick-offs were stressed for sev
eral days in the first week of
training, but Gene Bearden tossed
two wild throws Saturday and Bob
Lenon uncorked one yesterday.
CLEARWATER, Fla., March 14
—(AP) — President Warren Giles
rejoined his Cincinnati Reds today
—and with mo word about any
new plaiu's.
Giles has been shopping around
for three days at Miami and Vero
Beach with the Brooklyn Dodgers
but ¥ he accomplished anything
he wasn’t talking,
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla,
March 14 — (AP) — The Phila
delphia Athletios aim for a 10-man
mound staff was })laoed today on
the shoulders of rookie Robert
Nelson Hooper.
The 27-year-old righthander
had vpmn'uN'to"s'hh“u!;m b
op y ow the s
which made him the Irternational
Lm" best won-lost percenfage
» last year.
..But, Battery Coach Mickey
Cockrane said yesterday other
rookfes In um need further sea
soning and ess == Oor until ~—
Hooper delivers, the 10-man pitch
ing staff will not materialize.
Listen T 0....
Spotlight On Sporis
With , ...
808 OLIVER and ED THILENIUS
i WGAL! — MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY, 3:35
Cornell U.
To Possess
Tricky Attack .
BY HUGH FULLERTON, JR.
ITHACA, N. Y., March 14 —
(AP) — Warning to Cornell’s
football opponents: Lefty Jamss is
croking up a few offensive ideas
that may have you dizzy next fall.
«.+ The lean Cornell coach is a
guy who seems fascinated by of
fensive maneuvers and he says he
got that way when he was chief
scout for Carl Snavely and for ten
years did nothing but set up de
fenses. . . . The nature of thesa
ideas is a carefully guarded secret
except that Lefty says: “Our
spring practice will be completely
crazy while we're experimenting.
«+ ¢« You know,” he adds, “You
seldom see straight single wing or
T formation stuff any more. The
coaches add something here and
change something there and foot
‘ball is just a series of spread for
mations. Maybe we'll just spread
them a little bit more. I won’t
know until I see what the boys
can do.”
GUYS WHO THINK
James, a great admirer of Pop
Warner, tabs him as the No. 1
coach of all time because “he came
up with more things that made
them change the rules — he did
more than anyone else to change
football.” . . . . Lefty also puts
A. A. Stagg, Fielding Yost and. Bob
Zuppke among the “great” coach
es, but he doesn’'t include Knute
Rockne. . . . “Rock was a great
organizer, not an originator,” he
explains. . . . on second thought,
Lefty adds Ralph Jones, the
“jdea” mman in the triumvitrate
which brought out the modern or
“Bears” style of a T formation
play. . . . “But Warner was the
greatest of them all,” James con
cludes. “ome pro club ought to put
him on its staff as an advisory
coach. He’s still thinking way
"ahead of the rest — so far ahead
that it would take a good pro
club to use the stuff he dreams
up."
| RACING
MIAMI, Fla. — Happy Smiles
($14.90) splashed to a runaway
vicwfi in the featured sixth race
at Gulfstream Park.
HOT SPRINGS, Ark. — Caco
mo ($5) defeated 10 other sprin
ters in the Arkadelphia Purse at
Qakland Park.
AT COUNTRYCLUB
State Amateur
Golf July 18-22
It has been announced that the date for the Georgia
State Amateur Golf Tournament will be July 18-22 here at
the Athens Country Club. The tourney begins on Tuesday
and runs through Saturday.
Country Club officials have
been trying for several years to
get the tournament here and at
long last efforts have paid off.
Jimmy Dudley, President of the
Country Club, is a member of
fthe State Amateur golf board,
and it has been mainly through
his untiring efforts that the
tourney is being played here this
year.
This will give Athens two great
golf tournaments during 1950. The
Southern Intercollegiate affair will
be played here next month (26-
29).
A large field is expected for the
’SO amateur show. Such top links
stars as Jack Oliver, Dynamite
Goodloe, Charlie Black, Gene Gil
liard, Bob McCoy tthe cross-eyed
wizard), Billy and Jack Key, Arn
old. Blum, George Hamer, Morton
Bright, Tommy Barnes, Dick Hac
kett, Jennings Gordon and Alvin
Averett, former National lefthand
ed champion, will be on hand.
Jimmy Dudley, Edsel Benson,
Griffin Moody and Howell Hol
lis will be among the local en
tries. Hollis qualified for the
tournament last year on the
Radium Springs course in Al
bany and went {wo rounds be
fore being eliminated. Harold
Spears, University of Georgia
golf captain, will also be among
the large group here.
Jack Key, the Columbus boy
who is half of the famous brother
act from that city (young Billy is
the other half), is defending
champion. He defeated Goodloe,
the big colorful golfer Goodloe,
dosta, in the finals last year.
There will be 32 players in the
championship flight, from which
your winner is taken. There will
be other flights, the number be
ing decided by how many enter the
tournament,
Qualifying will be over a 36-
hole distance on Tuesday, the
18th, match play will begin Wed
nesday, and the 36-hole final
;vzilldbe played on Saturday, the
nd.
George Mikan
Set Three
Cage Records
NEW YORK, March 14—(AP)—
Almost every season George Mi
kan sets some sort of basketball
secoring record. This year is no
different—the talented Minneapo
lis Laker center already has writ
ten threé new pro marks into the
books of the National Basketball
Association.
The six-foot-ten Mikan, with
1,801 points in 66 games, is the
greatest scorer in the history of
hoopdom for one season. His 625
field goals and 551 fouls also are
all-time top figure. Mikan has
one game to play.
Only four other members of the
far-flung 17-team circuit have
achieved the elusive 1,000-point
mark. They are: Alex Groza of
Indianapolis, 1,413; Frank Brian of
Anderson, 1,103; Max Zaslofsky of
Chicago, 1,058, and Adolph
Schayes of Syracuse, 1,000.
Baseball
EXHIBITION BASEBALL
By The Associated Press
YESTERDAY’S RESULTS
At Sarasota, Fla. — Boston (A)
7, New York (A) 6.
At Tucson, Ariz. — New York
(N) 3, Cleveland (A) 2.
At Mesa, Ariz. — QOakland
(PCL) 13, New York (N) “B” 2.
At Lakeland, Fla. — Detroit (A)
10, Cincinnati (N) 8.
At Burbank, Calif. — St. Louis
(A) 2, Chicago (A) 0.
At Orlando, Fla. — Washington
(A) 17, Philadelphia (N) 5.
At Riverside, Calif. — Chicago
(N) 6, Portland, (PCL) 2.
At Fullerton, Calif. — Los An
geles (PCL) 11, Pittsburgh (N) 0.
At St. Petersburg, Fla. — St.
Louis (N) 8, Boston (N) 5.
At Anahein, Calif,, St. Louis
(A) “B” 5, Sacramenta (PCL) 2.
TODAY'S SCHEDULE
Cleveland (A) B squad vs. Oak
land (PCL) at Mesa, Ariz.
Detroit (A) vs. New York (A)
at St. Petersburgh, Fla.
Chicago (N) vs. St. Louis (A) at
Burbank, Calif,
_ St. Louis (N) vs. Boston (N) at
Bradenton, Fla.
Cleveland (A) vs. New York
(N) at Phoenix, Ariz.
Cincinnati (N) vs. Philadelphia
(A). at Clearwater, Fla.
Chicago (A) vs. Pittsburgh (N)
at San Bernardino, Calif.
Fights Last Nite
By The Associated J’ress
NEWARK, N. J. — Tony Pel
lone, 150, New York, outpointed
Tommy éiarlo, 147 1-2, Waterbu
ry, Conn., (8)
PROVIDENCE, R. I. — Charley
Angelee, 159 1-4, Pawtucket, R. 1.,
knock out Curtis Moore, 160 1-4,
Newark, élO).
CHICAGO — Bob‘%y Jar\.r;{, 147,
Chicago, outpointed Bob Neal, 147,
Monaca, Pa., (10).
HOLYOKE, Mass. — Harry La~
I R T
i s on, N. J.
| JAQ%NGTON —= Charley Ti
tone, Brooklyn, 124, outpointed
'Cdfin Leigh, 128 1-2, Rochester,
N» Y., (10)0 % "
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
“Y” Champions
. . .
Visit WGAU's
“SOS” Wednesday
Coach Cobern Kelly and his
Athens YMCA Cub class State
basketball champs will be special
guests of WGAU’s “Spotlight on
Sports” tomorrow afternoon at
5:35.
Thirteen members of the team
that won the State meet in
Savannah recently will be on the
program. They are Bobby
Towns, Jim Hall, Rhett Tanner,
Valdon Smith, Charles Singleton,
Alston Steiner, Rippy Watson,
Carlton James, Silas Read, Jim
my Lowe, James Key, Donald
Tolbert, and Tommy Matthews.
“Spotlight on Sports” is heard
each week-day on WGAU, and
features top sports personalities
as frequent guests. Bob Oliver
and Ed Thilenius are hosts at
the “Spotlight” mike.
New Situation
In Cincinatti
Baseball Camp
TAMPA, Fla., March 14—(AP)
—This is a different Cincinnati
training camp. The old guard is
gone. No Bucky Walters. No
Johnny Vandermeer. The last
remnants of the 1940 champions
have vanished.
Luke Sewell is the manager in
this Cincinnati new deal. It's the
same Luke who won a measure of
fame by leading the St. Louis
Browns out of the wilderness to
their first and only pennant in
1944.
“We’ll win more games than we |
did last season,” Sewell said today
with conviction. He knows the
1949 details because he served as
coach under Manager Walters.
For the second straight spring,
Ewell Blackwell is the big ques
tion mark. Virtually useless last
summer after a serious kidney op
eration, “Blacky” piled on some 30
pounds during the winter, The
gangling righthander with the baf
fling sidearm motion now weighs
more than 200. Last spring he was
a “ghost” at 165. :
“Blacky looks tco good to be
true,” said Sewell. “That weight
ought to help him. Last spring he
was thin as a rail. He never re
gained his full strength. I'm quite
optimistic about him.
~ “We're going to have a better
bench this year. We'll have more
reserves to throw in when we need
' them. Then fellows like Grady
Hatton, Red Stallcup, Ted Klus
zewski and Lloyd Merriman have
another year under their belts.”
Sewell, feeling his way slowly,
counts only two Reds sure of their
jobs—Hatton at third and Stalicup
at short. He has a four-way fight
'at second. First is a battle be
| tween Kluszewski and injured Joe
Adcock, up from Tulsa.
“Pickin my outfield is the big
problem, said Sewell. “We have
nine in camp. Merriman is going
to be tough to beat and Johnny
Wyrostek hit three homers against
| Detroit Sunday.”
Merriman, a bonus player, must
remain with the club. Among the
other candidates, Sewell has such
proved major leaguers as Ron Nor
they, Danny Litwhiler, Maryv
Rackley, Peanuts Lowery and Wy
rostek. Also a rookie named Russ
Burns, a .340 hitter at Tulsa.
“Walker Cooper, our -catcher,
looks good,” Sewell added, “right
now he’s in better shape than all
last season. He put on the greatest
one-day hitting exhibition I ever
saw last year when he hit three
homers and drove in 10 runs in a
23-4 game against the Cubs.
“Back of Coop, we have John
Pramesa and Everett Johnson, a
kid catcher we drafted from the
Cuba chain. He has been very
impressive.”
Sewell counts on Blackwell,
Herm . Wehmeier, Ken' Raffens
berger and Howie Fox as his sure
starters. Relief is a problem still
to be solved.
Baskethall
ity
Last Night's College Tournament
Basketball Results.
By The Associated Press
N. L. T. (Quarter-Finals)
St. John’s (Brooklyn) 69, West
ern Kentucky 60.
Bradley 78, Syracuse 66.
N. A. L. B. (First Round)
George Pepperdine (Los Ange
gz) 54, American Univ. (Wash
) 50.
Central Washington College of
sEsllensburg 61, Murray (Ky) State
Hawline 74, Regis (Colo) Col
lege 66.
Tampa (Fla) 85, New Mexico A.
& M. 78.
Westminster (Pa) Teachers Col
le%!ot Conn. 62.
vis and Elkus iW. Va) 79, Bt.
Thomas College (St. Paul, Minn)
35.
Portland 48, Montana 4T7.
Central (Mo) College 68, Peru
Nebraska Teachers 59.
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WHAT A PUNCH—Stan Musial demonstrates power of hands and
wrists to Cardinals’ coach Tony Kaufmann in St. Petersburg, Fla.,
training camp. The three-time National League batting champion
is again happy to contribute his remarkable batting punch -to
the St. Louis attack.
Pros, Amateurs Team For
Golf Play At Palm Beach
PALM BEACH, Fla., March 14—
(AP) — Touring golf professionals
team up with amateurs today for
the second round of the 54-hole
SIO,OOO Seminole Golf Club’s ama
teur-Pro Tournament,
Henry Ransom of St. Andrews,
111, led the 42 pros in opening
rounds yesterday with a 33-36—
69, three under par, for a one
stroke lead at the end of 18 holes.
Four other pros were one stroke ‘
off the pace. They are E. J.
(Dutch) Harrison, St. Andrews,
I 11.; Lew Worsham, Oakont, Pa.;
Jimmy Demaret, Ojai, Calif., and
Roberto Di Vicenzo, Buenos Aires,
Argentina.
Bunched as 71 were Jim Turne
sa, Briarcliff, N. Y.; Pete Cooper,
Ponte Vedra, Fla.; George Fazio,
Conshohocken, Pa.; Jack Burke,
jr., White lains, N. Y., and Bob
Hamilton, Landover, Md. ;
In the 36-hole play starting to
day, 32 pros will.team with 64
amateurs, with scores kept for
each team and individual medal
scores for the professionals.
Amateurs include some of the
Nash sales growth since the war has been more than
4 times as great as that of the Automative Industry as a whole® . ..
2. “’“\
W ————— W“‘i&
WHY NASH
Why Nash? Because Nash has consis
tently led in the power parade—builder of
valve-in-head engines for a third of a century
—a leader in high compression.
Because today Nash alone builds a valve-in
head engine of 7.3 to 1 compression ratio
that utilizes regular gasoline.
Why Nash? Because Nash was first with
automatically-controlled, pressurized heating
and ventilation, probably the greatest single
health, comfort and safety feature of the
modern automobile.
Because today’s Nash Weather Eye Condi
tioned Air System is still first in efficiency
and in safety—with fresh, untainted air
drawn from outside, above the engine
compartment.
See Your Nash Denier
Teday—take an Airflyte ride
and you’il discover why
Nask cars are the
Year’s Greatest Values!
« There’s Much of Tomorrow in All Nash Does Today
TALMAGE MOTORS
133 W. Clayton St. Athens, Ga.
nation’s business, industrial and
society leaders.
Jersey Joe
Kayoes Skhor
In Ist Round
PHILADELPHIA, March 14 —
(AP) — Jersey Joe Walcott, who
wants a fourth crack at the heavy
weight boxing title, added weigth
to his argument last night at the
expense of Baltimore’s. Johnny
Skhor.
The 36-year-old Camden. N. J.,
ring veteran belted Skhor with an
overhand right after 1:34 of the
first round of their scheduled 10-
rounder at the arena.
Skhor toppled backwards like a
felled redwood tree. He made an
effort to rise at the count of six
but dropped to his face, unable to
continue. He finally managed to
leave the ring under his own
POWer.
Why Nash? Because Nash has been first
- and foremost in advocating—and delivering
—greater gasoline mileage.
Because Nash today builds a big full-size
car that delivers more than 25 miles to the
gallon at average highway speed.
Why Nash? Because Nash was first to
mass-produce the Unitized, welded body-and
frame car that is more rigid, durable, safer
and free of squeaks and rattles.
Because today, 12 billion owner miles have
proved that Unitized Nash Airflyte Con
siruction has set a new standard for long
" life and economical operation.
Why Nash? Because today’s Nash Air-
DELIVERED HERE
Statesman Super
. 3 181500
Ambassador Super 2.155.00
2-Door Sedan $ ”55
(Car illustrated)
sState and local taxes, if any, extra. Hydra-Matic Drive
available on the Nash Ambassador at mew low price,
White sidewall tires, Airliner Reclining Seat and Weather
Eye System optional at extra cost. Prices may vary
slightly in adjoining communities due to transportatiom
charges.
LOCAL “Y” ENTERS
The first anpual Braselton Invitational Basketball T
n?rgerlgl(t) opens in the Braselton gymnasium tomorrow 1 4
at 6:30. 2
The tourney is divided into
three divisions: Juniors, 8 and 9th
grades, ana Midgets. Athens
YMCA is entering the Bth and 9th
grade division.
Cobern Kelley, Athens “Y”
physical director, said today that
about 20 of his players, who are
in the eighth and ninth grades,
will make the trip to the tourna
ment Athens meets Buford at 7:30
on Thursday night and, in the
same division, Braselton plays
Gainesville at 9:30. &
Firstround games scheduled for
tomorrow evening follow: Junior—
Jefferson vs. Winder at 8:30;
Maysville vs. Braselton at 9:30.
Midgets—Hoschton vs. Chesnut
Mountain at 6:30; Braselton vs.
Jefferson at 7:30.
Other Tilts
Besides the eighth and ninth
grade bracket tilts on Thursday
there will be Junior division first
round tilts as follows: Statham vs.
Buford at 6: 30 and Victron vs.
Gainesville at 8:30.
Semi-final and final tilts in
each of the divisions will be played
on Friday and Saturday nights.
Sixteen teams are participating in
the tourney.
Athens YMCA Cubs won the
State YMCA Basketball champion
ship at Savannah recently and
'members of the Prep Class parti
\ cipated in another division of the
tourney, but were eliminated early
in play.
This year no State “Y” tourna
"ment is being held for boys of
older ages .as has been the cus
tom in the past; however the
Athens eighth an ninth graders—
members of the “Y” Midget Class
' —will vie in the Braselton tourney.
’
Yesterday’s Sports
In Brief
By The Associated Press
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
NEW YORK — Bradley defeat
ed Syracuse, 78-66, ana St. John’s
of Brooklyn beat Western Ken
tucky, 69-60, to reach the semi
finals of the National Invitation
tournament.
PRO BASKETBALL
NEW YORK — George Mikan
of the Minneapolis Lakers was
named to the National Basketball
Association’s All-Star first team,
along with Jim Pollard, Lakers;
Bob Davies, Rochester; Alex Gro
TOESDAY, MARCH 14, 195, -
‘Cats Expect
Trouble From
CCNY Tonight
NEW YORK, March 14—(AP)
—What Coach Adolph Rupp calls
the best potential quintet in Ken
tucky history—He’s already haq
some of the nation’s greatest—
expects plenty of trouble tonight
from darkhorse CCNY in the Na
tional invitation baskethall tou:-
nament.
If they’re as good as the blue
grass Baron believes, the Kentuci:v
five, made up mostly of sopho
mores, has a chance to ecrack =
mark set by Wildeat wonder
teams of recent vintage. Rupp's
boys won in NIT in 1946 and ¢}«
NCAA in 1948 and 1949,
But classy Ed Warner will have
plenty to say about Kentucky titic
hopes tonight. The flexible 6-10. i
2 1-2-inch negro turned in the
tournament’s best performance
Saturday in leading CCNY’S route
of defending champion San Fran
cisco.
The Wildcats, seeded second he
hind Bradley, are four-point f: -
orites to whip the Metropolitan
five. Kentucky had advanced ‘-
the quarterfinal on a bye.
Duquesne plays Lasalle in ‘e
8 p. m. (EST) curtain-raiser. The
Pittsburgh Dukes, although third
seeded, rate three points under
Lasalle, 72-66 victor over Arizona
Saturday. Lasalle is unseeded.
In last night's games, Bradley
and St. John’s overpowered two
fast rolling opponents in the mid
dle of the second half, then weni
on to win comfortably.
The Peoria, 111, Braves, rated
the nation’s No. 1 team in the fina]
Syracuse, 76-66. St John’s tamed
Western Kentucky, 69-60.
Both losing teams had taller
boys who wore out against ihe
better-manned victors.
Tonight’s winners meet in the
other semi-final match Thursday.
za, Indianapolis, and Max Zaslof~
sky, Chicago.
BOXING
PHILADELPHIA — Jersey Joa
Walcott, 197 , Camden, N. J,
knocked out Baltimore’s Johnuny
Shkor, 216, in I:3¢ of the firsy
round.
#ln the four post-war years just ended, Nash sales have increased
95.7% over the same period pre-war, while the indusiry regisicred
only a 21.3% gain, post-war over pre-war.
flyte tars by scientific wind-tunnel test have
been proved to have 20.7% less air drag than
the average of 10 other cars tested—with
noticeably less wind-noise, less fuel consump
tion, and noticéably greater stability.
Why Nash? Because Nash was first o
attack the problem of rust by Bonderizing
and by more durable baked enamels.
Because today all sheet metal parts of
Nash Airflyte are many times more resistant
to wear and fading.
Why Nash? Because today’s Nash Air
flytes offer more combined passenger and lug
gage space, dollar for dollar, than any other
car.
Why Nash? Because Nash has been years
ahead in the development of the car interior.
First to have the curved, one-piece windshicld
on all models, and Uniscope —and today i
the only car offering an Airliner Reclining
Seat and Twin Beds.
% ‘% E
" THE AMBASSADOR + THE STATESMAN
Great Cars Since 1902
Nash Motors, Division Nash-Kelvinafor
Corporation, Detroit, Michigan