Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
BANNER - HERALD
CURTIS DRISKELL, SPORTS EDITOR
; RN ®
- s
10th District Boys
Finals Slated ke
Greensboro and Carnesville in Class “B” and Bogart and
Union Point in Class “C” will battle for the Tenth District
boys’ basketball crowns here Saturday night in Georgia’s
Woodruff Hall. The “C” teams start play at 8 p. m. and
the “B” finalists at 9 p. m. i ;
.
N
Big Basketball
Slate Planned
A 66Y'99
For Local
Three Indian class intra-squad
basketball games will be held at
Athens Y. M. C. A. tonight with
the first beginning at 7 o'clock.
Parents and friends of the young
cagerg are invited to attend.
Tomorrow two “Y” teams will
vie with Thomasviile here. The
groups taking part will be 14
vears old and under and 12 years
o'd and under. The first game be
gins at 9 a. m.
The Intermediates whipped the
Midgets, 146-72, in an inter-class
tilt last nigh:. The Intermediates
were expected to win as older boys
are in that class.
Top scorers for the winners
were Fain Slaughter, 34; Dryson
Tanner. 23: George Upchurch, 20; |
Allen Ecker, 17; Donald Epps and ‘
Johnny Fortson, 13 apiece. For the
losers Billy Slaughter bucketed
ten and Bobby Yarbrough hit for |
nine points. ‘
Cub class intra-league action |
yesterday: |
Group One — Hurricanes 24,
Fireballs 10 (Troy Matthews made |
ten points for the Hurricanes); |
Hotshots 36, Screwballs 19 (Jim
my Allen and Eddie Sams hit for
12 each for the winners) .
Group Two — Mustangs 24,
Bullpups 20 (Richard Marbut
again was high man for the Mus
tangs with 12 tallies); Hawks 6, |
Bruoisers 0. !
Group Three — Hornets 8, Ter
ranins 8; Eagles 14, Tigers 8. .
7o Relieve |
T LQUID OR TABLETS = SAME FAST REUEF |
\
SPOTLICHT on SPORTS
AN ACLGLIGERLT T LI
Tips for Fishermen
Fvery fly-fisherman is prac
tically an artist in his own
right, and can tie some mighty
fancy flies and knots. Here are
some tips that some of you
might not be
familiar with:
1. Making Bass
~ Bugs float: Heat
~)f,. ./ ! pint of gaso
-7 (7 line in a pan of
i '(fi’ hot water. Dis
' ‘\< , solve an ounce of
3 shaved paraffin
=y @ in the gas, and
wmwi. 182 dip bass flies and
bugs in this be
fore going fish
ing, They'll float three or four
times longer than wundipped
lures.
2. Outsmarting the walleyes
and trout: When your spinning
minnow fails, try this wobbling
one. It works on bass, pickerel,
and pike, too. Use an extra
long-shank hook, and run it
under the skin, eye first, from
the gills to a point close to the
tail, where the eye of the hook
is left sticking out, Tie leader
to hook, and take a clove hitch
around the body just ahead
of the tail. When trolled with
the tail first, the gentle wobble
of the bait brings ’em up rarin’.
Good luck!
We hope you are familiar with
the grand stock of nationally
advertised beer from GREEN’S
PACKAGE SHOP. It's com
plete at all times.
00
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‘ *
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auto with Cotton Farmers Insurance Association?
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"~ ASSESSABLE POLICIES
Winners of the two champion-
ship games will represent the Dis
trict in their respective classes in
the State basketball tournament.
Greensboro forged its way into
the finals last night by whipping
Thomson, 48-30, on the Greens
boro "home court, Carnesville, a
l veritable “darkhorse” of the play
loff, gained the finals by edging
| Watkinsville, 53-51.
‘Union Point poured in the points
to stop Hephzibah, 65-29, in one
“C” serhi-final game, In the other,
Bogart took Ila by a 37-33 count.
‘Trophies will be awarded to
winners and runners-up in the
finals by E. W. Carson, Tenth
District tournament official, Sat
urday night.
Woodruff Hall is expected to be
filled with an overflow crowd for
the District showdown. Basket
ball fans are urged to come early
for the start of the championship
double-header. Tickets will be on
sale at the door.
The Tenth District qualifies on
ly one team in each class for the
State basketball playoffs.
SCORES 1
T S —————— ;
COLLEGE BASKETBALL \
EAST
Wake Forest 77, Buffalo 59.
Rhode Island State 71, Maine 49.
CCNY 67, Lafayette 48.
Syracuse 71, Canisius 59.
Princeton 57, Yale 41.
Columbia 61, Army 47.
SOUTH
Tampa 66, Florida Southern 46.
East Caroiina Tchrs 76, Lenoirl
Rhyne 71. ’
Mercer 86, Oglethope 42.
George Washington 72, Virginia
69.
Hampden-Sydney 83, Richmond
59.
Catholic 60, Baltimore 52.
High Point 86, West Carolina
Tchrs 80.
Millsaps 67, Mississippi Col
lege 65. ‘ ‘
MIDWEST
Detroit 64, Michigan Normal 60. |
SOUTHWEST |
New Mexico 74, Arizona St.
(Flagstaff) 57. |
IN TOURNAMENT
Georgia’s freshman basketball
team, which owns a 16-5 seasonal
record, has entered the Georgia
AAU tournament at Atlanta start
ing Saturday, Feb. 24,
The Bullpups last week-end
avenged a recent double loss to
the strong Snead Junior College
team of Boaz, Ala., winning twice
here, 61-52 (overtime) and 54-51.
Little Louis (Red) McGee, guard
of Washington, Ind., is the top
Bullpup seorer with 276 points—
-13.1 average,
' THE SAME STOREY
i MONTREAL — (AP) — Red
Storey, first year referee in the
National Hockey League, is the
same Red Storéy who was hailed
as one of Canada's outstanding
lfootball players. He was a fleet
i footed back for the Toronto Ar
gonauts. In a Canadian final be
tween the Argonauts and the Win
nipeg Blue Bombers, Red ran wild
in the final quarter to score three
touchdowns to give Toronto a
80-7 victory. Before Red staged
his one-man show, the score was
7-6 in favor of Winnipeg.
THAILAND PREPARES
FOR OLYMPICS :
BANGKOK— (AP) —Thailand
has taken the first steps to dis
patch a team to the 1952 Olympic
Game at Helsinki, Finland. The
Ministry of Education has decided
to request SIO,OOO from the 1952
national budget to cover the team’s
expenses. It will be the first Thai
| team to compete in the Olympics.
The highest ttendance at Eb
bets Field for a ‘single baseball
game was 37,512 when the Dodg
elzgi7played the Giants Aug. 30,
‘ New Evidence
Causes Furor
e
In Fix Query
BY RAY KOHN
NEW YORK, Feb. 23.—(AP)—
The college basketball fix inves
tigation has spread to all New
' York teams which played games
last season in Madison Square
- Garden,
| The current sports scandal
reached back into last season when
a newspaper said yesterday that
police have undisclosed wiretap
recordings of other fixes last
year.
The newspaper, the Brooklyn
Eagle, said the reported evidence
involving all local Garden teams
was ordered withheld by an uni
dentified high official.
Former Police Commissioner
William P. O’Brien entered a gen
eral denial of the report.
Police Commissioner Thomas F.
Murphy, while saying he has no
information that such evidence
exists, has ordered a search of
police files. The commissioner said
the _ departmental record check
might take *“a couple of days.”
District . Attorney Frank S. Ho
gan, who last Sunday broke the
bribe case that rocked the sports
world, said he never saw or heard
of suppressed wiretap evidence.
He added that his office had no
wiretaps on basketball before last
January 12. Wiretap evidence was
used to gain confessions in the
present fix case.
49 Records
The newspaper report said 40
wiretap recordings made during
the 1949-1950 season indicate a
giant fix by gamblers involving
all Garden dates kept by every
metropolitan area team.
Hogan had a long talk yesterday
with Eddie Gard, former Long
Island University player accused
of offering bribes to three LIU
stars and a trio of City College of
New York team members. Gard
also is charged with acting as a
go-between for the alleged brains
of the fix, Salvatore ' P. Sollazzo,
and a New York University play
er.
The district attorney said he
questioned Gard about any others
who might have been mixed up in
the scandal. Hagan declined to
say what progress, if any, result
ed from the questioning. He added
that the inquiry is “far from
complete.”
The other athletes arrested are
Sherman White, Leroy Smith and
Adolph Bigos, all of LIU; Ed War
ner, Ed Roman and Al Roth, all
of CCNY, and Connie Shaff of
NYU, LIU was rated among the
best in the country this season,
and CCNY won the national cham
pionship last season.
As a result of the New York
scandal, a half dozen schools
throughout the nation have pulled
their teams out of further Garden
competition.
The New York grand jury,
which started sifting fix evidence
Wednesday, is expected to take
about a week or 10 days before
deciding what charges might be
made against the eight accused
collegians and Sollazzo.
. .
Table Tennis
.
Officers Named
Officers have been elected for
the Athens Table Tennis Club
which meets each Wednesday
(8-10 p. m.) at the YWCA, on
Hancock avenue.
Elected were Tommy Thomason,
president; Tom (Jitterbug) Har
vill, vice-president; and Nancy
Holsapple, secretary-treasurer.
Matches with University of
Georgia fraternity and sorority
teams, as well as inter-city con
tests, are planned.
REFEREE VOSS NEEDS A HOSS
MONTREAL.—(AP)—CarI Voss,
referee-in-chief of the National
Hockey League,” might be aptly
called the Bobo Newsom of hock=
ey. He played for eight National
Leageu teams during his six years
as an NHL player. Voss was the
first player signed by the Toronto
Maple Leafs. The other clubs he
played fer were New York (Ran
gers and Americans), Detroit, Ot
tawa, St. Louis, Montreal and
Chicago. He finished his playing
career as a meber of the 1937-38
Stanley Cup champion Chicago
Black Hawks.
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A FEW POINTERS—FiIm star Burt Lancaster, left, listens atten
tively in Hollywood as Jesse Hill, track coach of Southern Cali
fornia, tells about the care and use of spikes. A former professional
athlete, Lancaster is playing Jim Thorpe in a picture, (NEA)
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS. GEORGIA
Bulldogs Tangle
. / .
With Kentucky,
, . .
Vols During Trip
Georgia’s Bulldogs of the
basketball court are biting off a
big chunk of opposition tonight
and tomorrow night during a
tough road trip through Ken
tucty and Tennessee.
Tonight, Georgia plays the
nation’s number one team—Ken
tucky—at Lexington, Ky., and
Saturday night meets Tennessee
In Knoxville. Playing without
the servicegs of star guard Joe
Jordan, the Bulldogs finish up
the trip by meeting Vanderbilt
in Nashville Monday.
If Large Gate
Is Evil, Let
Fans In Free
BALTIMORE, Feb. 23—(AP)—
Is it the “evil” of large gate re
ceipts which has drawn some col
leges down the road to the cur
rent “basketball fix” scandals?
A world-famous university here
believes it has the solution.
Let spectators in free, says
Johns Hopkins University.
They’ve been doing that at Hop
kins now for 16 years.
Here's the philosophy:
“If intercollegiate athletics have
any value other than monetary,
they should be financed by the
university and controlled by the
educational and not the monetary
values.”
Hopkins appropriates $40,000 a
year for athletics. That lets the
university field teams in 13 in
tercollegiate sports and pays for
their traveling expenses.
No guarantees of any sort are
paid to opponents and none are
asked of them. Hopkins livals pay
their way to Baltimore {o play for
nothing. In return, they can keep
all the gate receipts from their
home crowds when Hopkins is the
visitor.
At Hopkins, no players are re
cruited. No scholarships are hand
ed to athletes. There are no train
ing tables.
“Our only purpose in elimi
nating guarantees and gate re
ceipts is to remove any reason, or
even the slightest temptation, to
conduct our intercollegiate pro
gram other than for the educa
tional value therein.”
That’s Marshall S. Turner
speaking. He’s in charge of the
physical education program and
intercollegiate sports at Hopkins.
Turner points out that between 68
and 90 per cent of the under
graduate student body of some 1,-
750 take part in some form of
athletics, depending on the sea
son.
The financial de-emphasis of
sports at Hopkins hasn’'t meant
that the university takes a back
seat when it comes to producing
winners.
It's a perennial contender for
the national Lacrosse .champion
ship.
Hopkins even got a bid to a
football bowl—usually a gate re
ceipts bonanza. After an 8-and-1
season in 1948, the Hopkins grid
ders were invited to the Tan
gerine Bowl.
The answer was, “no, thanks.”
e .
Fights Last Nite
By The Associated Press
BROOKLYN (Eastern Parkway
Arena) — Joe Giardelle, 156 3-4,
Brooklyn, outpointed Hal Samp
son, 164 8-4, Secaucus, N. J. (8).
PORTLAND, Me. — Larry Grif
fin, 133, Lewiston, Me., outpoint
ed Dick Lundy, 132 1-4, Portland,
Ma. (10) . ¢ et
PHOENIX — Oscar Price, 133,
Fresno, Calif,, outpointed Gil
Muniz, 131, Mexico, (10).
Tom Saffell, rookie outfielder on
the Pittsburgh Pirate roster, was
born, raised and still lives in Eto
{ wah, Tenn.
Athens, Canton Matched Here
Tonight In Region Title Bouts
Athens and Canton, perennial “strongmen” of North Georgia basketball, square off
here tonight in a pair of title games that will carry more importance for the two schools
than any other games either team has played during long and brilliant seasons.
Boys™ and girls’ teams from Athens and Canton meet in the Athens High gymnasium
in the Region 2-A finals, starting at 7:30 with the girls’ game.
Canton and Athens—boys and
giris—are _aireadqy 1n the State
tournament to be played in Atlan
ta in early March. Both finalists
in the Region automatically quali
fy for the State, but tonight's
games carry heavy portions of
prestige, nevertheless.
The Athens Trojanettes are in
their first Class “A” tournament
in history. It’s nothing new for
either Canton team, since both
went to the Atlanta playoffs last
season, as did the Athens High
Trojans.
Canton’s boys edged the Trojans,
31-29, in the climactic Region 2-A
finals last season, played in
Gainesville. Both Athens and the
Greenies were eliminated in the
first round of the State playoffs.
Both games tonight are rated
virtual toss-ups, based on the slim
amount of comparison drawn from
mutual foes during the season.
The Trojanettes, strongest girls
team to represent the local high
school in years, face off against the
Greenie girls in the opening game
at 7:30. The Greenies and Trojans
take the court at about 8:30 for
their replay of last year’s thriller.
Two Stars Out
The Trojans, however, will be
playing minus the services of two
of their stalwarts in regular sea
son play. Warren Thurmond and
Charlie Parrott, captain and co
captain of the local boys squad,
will be on the bench with injuries
when their teammates take the
court tonight. ;
Thurmond suffered a broken
ankle shortly before the close of
the Trojans regular season, and
Parrott suffered a dislocated el
bow in the semi-final contest
against Elberton Wednesday night.
Coach Arnold DeLaPerriere will
probably start Bobby Duncan and
Sonny Saye in place of the two in
jured Trojans, and expects Larry
Jones, guard, and Jimmy Williams
and Jimmy Thompson, forwards,
to see a lot of action.
Both the Greenies and Trojans
have had outstanding seasons this
year with the Canton boys winning
-21 and losing seven and Athens
winning 19 and losing only three.
The Trojans beat Eastanollee and
Elberton in their region division
and Coach D. T. Smith’s Canton
boys took wins over Gainesville
and Monroe for right to play in the
finals.
Jack Nichols, former pro bas
ketball star, is now the big gun on
the Quantico Marines- basketball
squad. Nichols is now a staff ser
geant.
Tom Lynch, a former umpire,
was once president of the Nation
al Baseball League.
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Ana] sua]cien]y.... all other cars seem tame !
You can't trace the magic to any single
feature . . .
All you know is that everything
about this 1951 Packard is conspiring
to make you forget there's anything
mechanical about motoring.
You flash a wish to the new Packard
Thunderbolt engine—and to its team
mate, Packard’s exclusive Ultramaric
Drive—and the road ahead is suddenly
bebind you ~ . with a silent smooth
ness that can’t be matched.
BY ALVA MAYES, JR.
D )
Pao i g
G §
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HAS 'EM GOGGLE-EYED—
Wearing a light, wind-proof
parka, Joan Macklaier adjusts
her racing goggles before speed
ing down the Middlebury, Vt.,
College tricky slalom trail.
Middlebury men and women are
in form for their school’s 20th
annual winter carnival, Feb.
22-24. (NEA)
A BRAVE FAN
~NOTRE DAME, Ind. — (AP) —
Joe McArdle, assistant on Frank
Leahy’s Notre Dame coaching
staff, is a very definite Boston
Braves fan when the baseball sea
son is in session. This is under
tandable since Billy Sullivan, Di
rector of Public Relations for the
Braves, is his brother-in-law.
For the third straight year 12
colleges will participate in the Na=~
tional Invitation basketball tourn
ament in Madison Square Garden,
March 10, 12, 13, 15 and 17.
Chuck Dressen, new Dodger
manager, played 16 of his 19 ac
tive years in professional baseball
as a third basemn,
Emsu: mlufiuéjwm ONE
Georgia, Tech
Swimmers Vie
Saturday At 3
Georgia's powerful array of
swimmers, the best in the school’s
history, will go after more records
here Saturday afternoon at Stege
man Hall pool.
Georgia Tech, winner of the last
four Sutheastern Conference
meets, will provide the opposition.
The freshman meet starts at 3
p. m., the varsity meet at 4 p. m.
The public is invited. No admis
sion price is charged.
Georgia Coach Bump Gabriel
sen will send his star freshman
backstroker, Reid Patterson of
Pineville, Ky., after the Georgia
school record in the 100 yard back
stroke, set by Theyx Stewart in
1949 at 1:01.5. Patterson in practice
this week did 1:01.9.
The Bulldogs’ ace varsity free
styler, Charley Cooper of Augus
ta, is capable of setting new school
records in any free style race: 50,
100, 220 or 440. He holds the
Stegeman Hall pool record for the
50 at 23.6 seconds, for the 100 at 53
flat, and holds the school 220 mark
of 2:20.7 set last year in the NCAA
meet at Columbus, O.
Coach Gabrielsen is undecided
on the events he will enter Cooper.
A swimmer can compete in only
three of the nine events in dual
meet competition, including the
relays.
The Bulldogs beat Georgia Tech
in Atlanta three weeks ago, 51-24.
! CALLING MR. TROUBLE
i MlAMl.—(AP)—There’s an in
| teresting story behind the naming
of C. V. Whitney’s Mr. Trouble, a
leading candidate for Hialeah’s
$50,000 Widener horse race. After
having more than 100 names
turned down by The Jockey Club
for the colt, Whitney was flying
tto a meeting which was going to
prove troublesome. He picked up
'a magazine and the first article
!he spotted was titled “Mr. Trou
i ble.” The rest of the story needs
| no explanation.
STANDING ROOM ONLY
STATE COLLEGE, Pa.—(AP)—
Penn State hung and SRO sign
even before its indoor sports sea
son began. The reason: its Recrea
tion Building seats only 5,500; its
student body is twice that num
ber.
You bréeze along, cradled by a
Limousine Ride that’s as relaxing as a
lullaby—and gradually you remember
you've been missing the old kick-up at
railroad crossings, the jab of the frost
breaks, the side-thrust of winds.
It's more than a car g
--it’s a
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1951.
High School
Basketball
By The Associated Press
CLASS AA
REGION TWO
Boys Catholic 38, Glynn 23,
Savannah High 51, Richmong
Academy 23.
| REGION FOUR
West Fulton 60, Cedartown 34
Russell 59, Marietta 43.
Rome 52, Marist 23,
North Fulton 47, Rossville 43
CLASS A
REGION ONE
Adel 37, Americus 35.
Tifton 41, Bainbridge 28,
Colquitt 72, Cairo 46.
REGION THREE
Avondale 41, Fulton 39.°
2“Druid Hills 27, Newton eouniy
" REGION FOUR
36LaGrange 43, Murray County
Newnan 59, Cassville 50,
\ NINTH DISTRICT
Rabun County 49, Cumming 5,
Tate 41, Jefferson 38.
Dacula 54, Rabun Cap 37.
Pickens County, 40, Snellvilie
26.
TENTH DISTRICT
Greensboro 48, Thomson 30.
Carnesville 53, Watkinsville 71,
CLASS C
TENTH DISTRICT
Union Point 65, Hepzibah 29,
Bogart 37, Ila 33.
Three Argentinian, one French
and one Irish-bred horses were in
the same race at Hialeah. The win
ner was a racer bred in the U, S,
&
The shortest term of any Nai
tional Baseball League president
was that of the first prexy, Mors
gan G. Blkley. He retired after
one year.
ToTreat BRONCHITIS
Chronic bronchitis may develop if your
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help loosen and expel germ laden
llzhlegm and aid nature to soothe and
eal raw, tender, inflamed, bronchial
membranes.
Creomulsion blends beechwood
creosote by special process with other
time tested medicines for coughs. It
contains no narcotics.
No matter how many medicines you
have tried, Creomulsion is guaranteed
to please you or druggist refunds
money. Creomulsion has stood thg
test of many millions of users. (Adv.)
And bear in mind: Packard preci
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So come in—drive the greatest Pack
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other cars will seem tame!