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PAGE EIGHT
BANNER - HERALD
808 OLIVER, SPORTS EDITOR
Tallulah “Y” Camp
y
Completes 4th Week
'yn' BY CURTIS DRISKELL
. ATHENS ““Y” CAMP, Tallulah Falls, Ga. July’ 12—
(Activities for the first four-week session of Athens PLYEr
#Camp for Boys reached a peak this week and will taper off
by the end of the week as the first month nears ifs end.
A big portion of more than 250
_ecampers were out of camp Mon
day, Tuesday and yesterday, tak- |
hng part in short hikes, overnight |
‘trips and a 60-mile canoe trip
"which will keep a number of
campers out for two nights and
almost three full days.
Asgistant Director Dick Clary
Jheaded the group that began the
s canoe trip on Montay. The
travelled up the 30-mile
through Lakes Rabun, Bur
and Seed, and were slated to
‘weturn to camp on Wednesday
_afternoon after spending two
wights out along the way.
Simultaneously with the depar
ture of the big canoe trip, Assis~
gtant Director Frank Inman and
gupervisor Forrest Neely left
rcamp with Pioneer and Juniorl
nit four-week campers on the
us frip into the Great Smoky
Mountains of Tennessee. That
@roup went through beautiful
. Scenic sections of Georgia, North
Carolina, and Tennessee, visited
lingman’s Dome — 6,643 feet
sea level—and then spent
lh:flx at Smokemont camping
’E before returning to “y”
amp on Tuesday.
- Every four-week camper is
. scheduled ¢p take the bus trip into
b“' Smokias before the close of
! #he first month of camp. The first
f!:- weeks of camp will end next
ednesday, July 18, and new
_campers will begin arriving here
¥ for the second month on the fol
. The Cub Unit was the last to
visit Tallulah Gorge, making the
short hike Monday. Camp Direc
. tor H. C. (Pop) Pearson, jr., and
}"Supervisor John Kennedy accom
+panied the Cubs on the descent
‘and return trip from the “Grand
Canyon of the South.”
Included in the activities of the
fun-~filled Gorge hike were swim
i ming in the pool at the bottom of
the Gorge, sliding down a lomg
" natural rock slide, and a visit
" through the Tallulah power plant
at the other end of the Gorge.
i Campers descended into the pow=
er plant ¢n a cable car and rode
! baek out the same way, through
the courtesy of the plant officials.
Another group of campers left
Tuesday afternoon on the trip to
Clingman’s Dome. .With them on
Ahe trip there were to be Assistant
Director Inman, who drives the
“¥"” bus for all such trips, and
Supervisor Bobby Forbes.
No groups were slated to leave
camp Wednesday, but Thursday
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BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY
’ ATHENS COCA - COLA BOTTLING COMPANY
@ 1950, The Coto-Cola Compeny E ;
Assistant Director Mike Castx-onig
will head another big canoce trip
leaving - for the 60-mile paddle
along the chain of three lakes in
North Georgia’s vast power sys
tem.
“Y” campers will pay a return
visit to Camp Chattooga for Girls
on Saturday night, ending one of
the fullest weeks of camp with a
period of recreation,
No physical contests are slated
this Saturday morning. Physical
tests will be conducted Monday so
that campers may note their im
provement after more than three
weeks of camping. Also on Mon
day, Supervisor Neely will lead
another big canoe trip out of camp
and Mr. Inman will supervise an
other group in their visit to the
Smokies.
Talent night was held Saturday,
July 8, and wrestling was the star
attraction Monday evening. Re
sults of the grappling card wese‘
as follows: |
. Donald Cofer, Athens, 108
pounds, decisioned Bill Johnston,
Passa Grille, Fla,, 114 pounds;
Pat Dye, Blythe, Ga., 85 pounds
beat Sherman Lancaster, Augusta,
90 pounds; and John Tumlin
Marietta, 78 pounds, got the nod
over Tommy Neal, Millen, 75
pounds.
Inspection prizes for the neat
est cabins in each unit were to be
awarded at morning assembly
Wednesday morning.
Guest speaker at “Y” Camp this
week is Dean William Tate, dean
of men at the University of Geor
gia. Previous speakers have been
Rev. T. R. Harvill, Prince Avenue
Baptist Church, and Rev. Harmon
Ramsey, First Presbyterian
Church, both of Athens.
——-————-—-—.—
e o e —
® e ‘
Fights Last Nite
| By The Associated Press
PITTSBURGH. — Bob Baker,
202, stopped Bill Weinberg, 210,
Boston, 4, . ‘
SALT ‘LAKE : CITY. — Rex
Layne, 195, Lewisw.), Utah, stop
ped Bob Blevins, 193, San Fran
cisco, 3.
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Glen
Hendershot, 145, Miami, stopped
Irish Johnny Kilday, 150, Jack
sonville, 7.
LOS ANGELES.—MiIo Savage,
157%, Seattle, stopped Jay Cald
well, 159%, Los Angeles, 10.
NEW BEDFORD, Mass.—George
Araujo, 127'%, Providence, out
pointed Leo Lebrun, 123, New
York, 10,
HARTFORD, Conn. -~ Teddy
“Red Top” Davis, 130, Hartford,
outpointed George Dunn, 134,
Hartford, 10.
SAN JOSE, Calif.—Manny Mad=
rid, 138, Los Angeles, and Eddie
R » 7 €Wt g eey
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7 ot A SR A B B R T o e
FIRST PITCH IN ALL-STAR CA Y TR
Here comes the ball (arrow) down the
alley to Willie Jones, first batter for the
National League in the All-Star game at
Chicago Tuesday. Pitcher Vic Raschi and
Catcher Yogi Berra, both of the New
York Yankees, form the opening battery
METHODIST BEST BAPTIST
P Office Outfi
ost ice Oulit
@ ©
Rips Manufacturing
The underdogs had their way in Municipal Softball play
last night at Legion Park. Post Office and Oconee Street
Methodist Church won impressive victories, with the Post
()ffice win sending them into first place in the Blue League.
With Ralph Bradley pitching a
two-hitter, Post Office unseated
Athens Manufacturing Company
from first place in the Blue
League, scoring a 9-1 victory. In
the second game, Oconee downed
their church rivals—Prince Ave
nue Baptist, 18-9, as they continue
their return to prominence.
Post Office’s win put them in
first place in the Blue Loop by a
half game. Going into last night’s
contest, Athens Manufacturing had
a half game lead on PO, but today
the order is reversed. The Mail
carriers now have a 4-1 reading,
the Manufacturing has 3-1.
Oconee’s win in Red League
play put them in a tie for third
place, knotted with Prince Ave
nue.
Tonight, Oconee will be given
another chance to gain ground, but
the opposition will be rough. They
play league-leading Optimist Club
in the first game at 6:45. ‘This
game will be aired over WGAU
FM, with Bob Oliver doing the
play-by-play. In the second
game, University Courts battles
Athens Manufacturing.
Tomorrow night's card reads
like this: first game—Jaycees vs.
Post Office (Blue League); second
game—University Profs vs. Prince
Avenue (Red League),
STANDINGS:
Red League
Team W L .Pet
Optimist Club ...... 4 1 .800
Uiy, «Bnats . - 0.8 3 .500
Y. A Baptast ... 2 .8 400
QOconee Street ...... 2 3 400
Blue League
Team w. L Pou
Post Office ........ & 1 .800
Athens Mfg. Co. .... 3 1 150
Jayeees ;.. cdiss el 3 .250
Unty. Courts i 1 -+ .200
Johnson, 135%%, Oakland, Calif.,
drew, 10.
PHILADELPHIA. — Ike Wil
liams-Sugar Costner fight post
poned to tonight (Wednesday).
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
for the American League team. The um
pire is Bill McGowan. In the grandstands
are 49,000 spectators. The National Lea-.
gue won, in 14 innings, 4-3. — (AP Wire
photo.)
Post 20 Rips
Lexington ‘9’
Athens Post 20, Junior American
| Legion baseball club, trounced
Lexington yesterday in that city,
15-4, to work their way to the
finals in the Northern division of
the 10th district legion tourney.
The Panthers were slated to
play Monroe here this afternoon,
and if the locals win this encount
ier, they will meet the wihner of
the Southern half of the district,
which include Thomson and Au
gusta. The tourney is a double
elimination affair; Athens is still
undefeated in tournament play.
In yesterday’s game, Jimmy
Thompson went the distance for
Post 20, scattering eight hits. Pan~
ther batsmen jumped on the op
position for 12 base Kknocks.
Thompson fanned 12 batsmen in
his mound performance.
| LINE-SCORE
Post 20-—Ol2 040 08x—(15) (12) 2
| Lexington — 002 020 000—4 8 4
Thompson and Booth; Matthews
and Reynolds.
ARABS PROTEST
ISRAEL ZONES
JERUSALEM, Israel — (AP) —
Arabs living in the Upper Galilee
sector of Israel want the govern
ment to abolish military zones. A
delegation called upon the deputy
speaker of parliament. It repcrted
12,000 Arab residents had signed
a petition saying they were suf
fering economically because it was
almost impossible’ for many to
move from village to village be
cause of military restrictions.
Israel has an Arab population of
165,000. Of these, 120,000 are Mos~
lems, the remainfler Christian
Arabs.
Lewis Hurls
4-0 Win For
East Baptist
East Athens Baptist Church,
behind the shutout hurling. of L.
H. Lewis, defeated Sporting
Goods 4-0 in a Teen-Age Twi
light ball game at Lyndon House
last night, sending the -four-team
league into a solid deadlock.
With the Baptist victory, all
four clubs now have records of one
win and one setback.
Obie Gene Brooks was the los
ing pitcher, although he turned in
a fine mound performance. Both
flingers relinquished five base
blows, but five errors were charg
ed against the losing Sporting
Good crew.
Coile Triples
After scoring one run in the
second, the big frame for the vic
tors was the third, when they
pushed three markers across the
platter, the big blow was a long
triple by Bobby Coile, Baptist
first baseman, that scored two
runs.
Tonight, Lyndon House faces
Sporting Goods at Dudley Field.
The game begins at 6:30. Watkins
ville, who is scheduled to face
East Athens tomorrow night at
Lyndon House, will not be able to
play. This game will be post=
poned and played at a later date,
probably next Monday.
STANDINGS
Team W L Pel
Lyndon House ...... 1 1 500
Sporting Goods .... 1 1.5 4000
East Athens Bapt. .. 1 3600
Watinsveille v%Y 1 500
| 5 \ JMSTANDING {”
i SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION
i ‘ W L Pct
ATLANTA . .ivive D 420 851
Birmingham ....... 83 32 624
Memphis ... \ui..» &7 39 D 547
Nashuille .. ... ..o 40 % 535
New Orleans ...... 40 45 471
Mobile oy Tov i ihes OB 40 -48 T
Chattanooga v, . ... 98'52 422
Tittle " Rocke ... 0 27 07 321
SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE
W .L Pctl
Mace® ... 5 ... 08 32 670
Columbia seiivers.s 91,44 537
Savannah c..ccc..... 49 43 533
Coleentbus .o, civaenia Dl2B 536
Charleston ......s. 40 40 484
Greenville .......... 40 50 .444
Augusta .. ..o 4188 - 427
Jacksonville ........ 38 59 372
* TODAY'S SCHEDULES
NATIONAL LEAGUE
~ No games scheduled.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
..No games scheduled.
SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION
Birmingham at Chattanooga.
Atlanta at Nashville.
Only games scheduled.
"SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE
Macon at Augusta.
Columbus at Charleston.
Savannah at Columbia.
Jacksonville at Greenville.
TEXAS LEAGUE
Dallas at Shreveport.
Fort Worth at Beaumont.
Oklahoma City at Houston.
Tulsa at San Antonio.
GEORGIA-ALABAMA LEAGUE
Newnan at Alexander City.
Griffin at Valley.
LaGrange at Rome.
Carrollton at Opelika.
GEORGIA STATE LEAGUE
Eastman at Vidalia.
Tifton at Jesup.
Douglas at Dublin.
Baxley at Fitzgerald.
SOUTHEASTERN LEAGUE
Selma at Pensacola.
Montgomery at Meridian.
Anniston at Jackson.
Gadsden at Vicksburg.
P o SR e |
GEORGIA-FLORIDA LEAGUE |
Albany at Tallahassee. !
Cordele at Valdosta.
Moultrie at Americus.
Waycross at Thomasville.
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
Buffalo at Toronto. |
Rochester at Montre-11.
Syracuse at Jersey City.
-« Springfield at Baltimore. . 5
Schoendienst “Calls”
®
omer In 4- ictory
BY JOE REICHLER "
CHICACY), July 12.— (AP—Red Schoendienst . .. Andy Pafko ~ .Larry Jansen, .
Ewell Blackweli-, . . :
These are the names on everybody’s lips following yesterday’s National League stin.
ulating 14:inning 4-3: victory over the favor ed American Leaguers “in the greatest f
all 17 All-Star games.”” AT hen R SO RGO o Sakia s 8
- Maybe you'd better add Mapa
ger Burt Shotton,:Enos Slaughter
and Ralph Kiner. For. they, too,
sparkled as - the . victory-starved
Nationals -won ‘for the’ f)irst ‘time
Sinoe- 8E44. 05 v gl 4 S
‘Schoendienst was the big hero,
of course. It was his home. run
into the upper deck of the left
field stands in the top of the 14th
that broke up the three hour and
19 minute overtime struggle—the
first extra inning affair in All-
Star competition.
Schoendienst, like the immortal
Babe Ruth, called his shot.
“I"'m going to end this thing
right now,” he told teammates
Walker Cooper and batting prac
tice pitcher Murry Dickson as he
selected a bat. “Watch me hit one
into the upper seats.”
The scrawny-looking 160 poun
der from St. Louis has hit only
three home runs all season in 73
games. In 1946 he went through
the entire season without hitting
any home runs.
Schoendienst, a personal Shotton
pick because of his defensive wiz
ardry and his ability to fill in at
either second, third or short, was
batting righthanded against south
paw Ted Gray of Detroit. He is a
switch hitter. It was his only time
at bat during the game.
Pafko saved the game in the
bottom half of the 12th with a
sensational catch of pinch hitfer
Tommy Henrich’s terrific clout
that appeared labeled “home run”
the instant the ball left the bat.
Jansen pitched near-perfect ball
in a five-inning tenure, the long
est National League stint by one
pitcher since Lon Warneke hurled
four innings in 1934. He allowed
only one hit — a handle-hit sin
gle —- and struck out six in shut
ting out the American Leaguers
from the seventh through the 11th
innings.
Blackwell came close to match
ing Jansen’s performance, holding
‘the American Leaguers to a lone
hit in three shutout innings. The
long, lean Cincinnati right-hander
sent the near-capacity Comiskey
Park crowd of 46,127 home limp
from exhaustion when he wound
up things by forcing the great Joe
DiMaggio to slap into a game
ending double play.
Nearly all 19 of the 25 National
Leaguers who appeared in the
lineup covered themselves with
‘glory. There was the brilliant
_catch by Slaughter of Walt Dropo’s
isecond inning clout that appeared
'headed over the center field wall.
'There was Ralph Kiner’s titanic
home run that tied up the game
in the ninth inning. Slaughter also
shone on offense. It was his triple
in the second inning that set up
both runs. Jackie dßobinson, who
YESTERDAY’S RESULTS
All-Star Score by Innings
Nat. 020 000 001 000 01—4 10 0
Am. 001 020 000 000 00—3 8 1
{l4 innings). ;
Roberts, Newcombe (4), Kon
stanty (6), Jansen (7), Blackwell
(12) and Campanella; Raschi,
Lemon (4), Houtteman (7), Rey
nols (10), Gray (13), Feller (14)
-and Berra, Hegan (5).
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
Portland 4, Sacramento 3, (12
innings).
San Diego 9, Seattle 8.
Oakland 4, Hollywood 3.
Los Angeles 6, San Francisco 3.
INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE
Baltimore 4-7, Springfield 3-5
(2d games suspended end Bth cur
few).
Montreal 5, Rochester 4.
Syracuse at Jersey City post
poned.
~ Only games scheduled.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
Indianapolis 7, St. Paul 3.
- Toledo 11, Kansas City 5.
- Milwaukee 6, Columbus 5.
Minneapolis 10, Louisville 4.
TEXAS LEAGUE
San Antonic 5, Oklahoma City 2.
Beaumont 8, Dallas 7.
Shreveport 6, Fort Worth 4.
Houston 3, Tulsa 2.
SOUTHERN ASSOCIATION
Nashville 3, Little Rock 2 (13
innings).
Birmingham 15, Mobile 5.
Memphis 4, Chattanoga 1.
New Orleans at Atlanta post
poned.
EASTERN LEAGUE
Williamsport 3-2, Wilkes Barre
2-9. |
Scranton 7, Elmira 4. |
Utico 11, Albany 4.
Binghamton at Hartford post
poned.
SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE
Savannah 8-7, Columbia 3-9.
Augusta 10, Macon 4.
Columbus 5, Charleston 4.
Jacksonville at Greenville post
poned.
SOUTHEASTERN LEAGUE
No games scheduled. |
GEORGIA-FLORIDA LEAGUE |
No games Scheduled . |
GEORGIA STATE LEAGUE
No games scheduled.
GEORGIA-ALABAMA LEAGUE
Carrollton 13, Rome 5 (called
end 6th rain).
Opelika 2-6, LaGrange 1-5 (2d
called end 6th curfew).
Newnan 6-14, Valley 2-3.
Alexander City at Griffin post
poned .rain. " aki
led off the inning with a single to
right,” ‘crossed “the: ‘plate on
slaughter’s - clout to the center
" W
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Tonite and Tomorrow
ERROL FLYNN — VIVECA LINDFORS
“ADVENTURES OF DON JUAN"
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The St Sy
GE(inG EA’IUARI:M, 3‘:01 :. 7:08, 9:04.
| Now Showing
Double Feature
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. CUMMINGS
AETEET TN 1 R [T S
" SCOTT- LYNN
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3 \“fi\\\l B wam BROOKS
WS St my Love”
wieased Bry Unisd Atats L 0
—_“l
WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1950,
field wall. Slaughter cajne in with
the second run when Hank Sayer
flied_to right.. 7
RITZ
Now Showing
PRI
* - TARZAN 3
| ‘7 THRILLERSES
e .gs
_f‘icin fce. '.".{ ‘. ' }.
LA R,
Starring /f
JOHNNY WEISSMULLER