Newspaper Page Text
3ANNER - HERALD
S S
CURTIS DRISKELL, SPORTS EDITOR
I{?ooper Bangs Five
Hits As Braves Win
By The Associated Press
walker Cooper smashed out five hits, including three
wecutive homers, today to pace a 16-hit attack as the
ston Braves blanked the Denver Bears, 13-0. Cooper
" 4 in six runs and scored four himself.
YA ELCU 348 e . e
‘The Boston Braves’ “B” team
oched half their 10 hits for four
uns in the third as they defeated
ne St. Louis Cardinals, 5-2.
puddy Kerr singled to open the
ig Boston third. Then Wall’s in
onded sacrifice was thrown poor=-
v to second by pitcher Max La
“er, Luis Marquez doubled in
oth of them, then scored on Bob
4dis’ single. Singles by Ebba St.
|aire and Bob Thorpe added the
ourth run of the inning.
The Cincinnati Reds jumped on
efty Gene Bearden for four runs
o the seventh to win their fourth
onsecutive exhibition game from
.shington, 7 to 8. Third baseman
rady Hatton drove in four runs
nd brought victory to Ewell
Jackwell
Four Straight
The St. Louis Browns ran their
vinning streak against the San
atonfo missions to four straight
jith & 5 to 2 triumph over their
oxas League farm club. Roy
jevery hlt a three-run homer for
he Browns.
The National League champion
hiladelphia Phils scored 10 runs
| the first three innings and held
1 for dear life to edge the Pitts
urgh Pirates 11 to 9.
The Detroit Tigers dropped a 10
SATURDAY’S SCORES
Boston (N) “B” 5, St. Louis
N) 2.
Cleveland (A) 8, New York
N) 1
Philadelphia (N) 11, Pittsburgh
N) 9.
Chicago (A) vs. Chicago (N)
cancelled—rain),
Cincinnati (N) 7, Washington
A) 3. ]
Brooklyn (N) vs. Atlanta (SA)
cancelled—rain).
Boston (A) vs. Birmingham
SA) (cancelled—rain),
Memphis (SA) 7, Detroit (A) 2.
New York (A) 3, Beaumont
L) 2.
8 Philadelphia (A) 10, Greensbo
o (CL) 2.
@ St. Louis (A) 8, San Antonio
L) 2,
Boston (N) 13, Denver (WL) 0.
SUNDAY'S SCHEDULE
Philadelphia (N) vs. Pittsburgh
N) at New Orleans.
Chicago (A) vs. Chicago (N) at
ashville,
St. Louis (N) vs. Beaumont
TL) at Beaumont.
Cincinnati (N) vs. Washington
) at Charlotte.
Brooklyn (N) vs, Atlanta (SA)
Atlanta,
New York (N 3 vs. Cleveland
) at Dallas.
l?oston (N) vs. Tulsa (TL) at
uisa
Boston (N) vs. Fort Worth (TL)
Fort Worth.
Boston (A) wvs. Birminghan
A) at Birmingham,
Detroit (A) vs. Memphis (SA)
Memphis,
New York (A) vs. Houston (TL)
Houston,
Philadelphia (A) vs. Baltimore
LL) at Baltimore,
St Louis (A) vs. San Antonio
L) at San Antonio.
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l Chicks of the Southern Association
and along with it lost the services
of Hal Newhouser, their No. 1
pitcher, for at least a few days.
Newhouser, who started for the
Tigers, was hit on the Instep of
his left foot in the first inning. He
was taken to Campbell Clinic
where Xrays showed that despite
a serious bruise there was no frac
ture. |
The New York Yankees man
aged to edge out their Beaumont
farm team of the Texas League,
? ?V.lickey Mantle hit one of the
longest homers ever hit here, ap
proximately 410 feet over the cen
terfield fence in the third.
Independent
Begins Slate
Next Saturday
Action in the Athens Indepen
dent Baseball League will official
ly get underway Saturday, April
14, when the ten teams qualifying
for berths in the association stage
their season openers in play on
five local diamonds.
Colbert, Watkinsville, Statham,
Whitehall, and Winterville will be
the scenes of the opening tilts ac
cording to pairings made at a
meeting for the organization of the
league held last week. Colbert will
face a team led by James “Red”
Henderson, Watkinsville will meet
Farmington, Statham takes a crack
at Bogart, Whitehall will meet
Athens V. F. W., and Winterville
will vie against Comer.
Wednesday, April 11, will be the
deadline date for managers to turn
in their opening game rosters in
order for members of their team
to be able to compete in Saturday’s
games. -
Not more than 20 players may
compose a team’s roster with all
players living within a 25 mile
radius of the team with which
they play, and these complete
player lists must be filed before
6 o’clock Wednesday at the Athens
Sporting Goods Store.
A schedule is now in the pro
cess of being drawn up for the
league which will stage a 36 game
series during the course of the
season. As last year, the season
will run from April 14 until late
August at which time league play
offs will be held.
The ten teams composing the
league this season qualified for
action at the managers meeting
held last week. Eight of the ten
teams that participated last season
will return with Whitehall and
Henderson’s nine being the two
new squads accepted this year.
Saturday’s openers will begin at
3 p. m. on the respective fields and
will be under the supervision of
members of the University of
Georgia Officiating Association
which will provide officials
throughout the season.
Snead Ties Riegel In Masters 'At 211
THREE GAMES
Athens High Nine
BY GEORGE ABNEY, JR.
Athens High’s baseball team will get into full swing this
week with three games of an 11-game schedule on tap.
The Trojans, stronger after the addition of several players
from the football squad, will meet Monroe and the Univer
sity of Georgia freshmen here, and will play Gainesville
is thabwiny, - * . *
Coach Arnold DeLaPerriere’s
charges now number about 16 ow
the varsity squad, and a “B” team
composed of about the same num
ber, have begun practice.
Aiding DeLaPerriere with the
varsity is Ace Adams, former
Georgia ace pitcher, Coaching the
freshmen is Jimmy Horn. The
“B” squad is composed mainly of
freshmen and sophomores who are
expected %o be members of the
varsity next year. This year they
will be taught the fundamentals
of high school baseball and will
play several games.
Starting Nine
This week Coach DeLaPerriere
plans to start practically the same
team as in the Royston victory,
8-1, in that city. He may start
Johnny Short at catcher instead
of Terrell Brooks, and Bill Saye
may begin at first base, an open
position. Last week it was played
by Jimmy Thompson, a pitcher.
The second baseman will be Bob
by Wallace; . shortstop, Sonny
Saye; third baseman, Jerry Walk
er, Pitcher will be Thompson,
Tommy Williams, or Avery Har
vill, who won a no-hitter against
Royston.
There may be some outfield
changes. The starting outfield
against Royston was comvosed of
Bill Compton, Charles Flanagan,
and Danny Huff.
Region Tilts
Athens’ first game in the re
gional play-off will be with Elber
ton, tentatively scheduled for El
berton. It will be played on April
27. The winner of this tilt will
play Canton on May 5.
In the other bracket both teams,
Monroe and Gainesville, drew
byes. They will meet in quarter
final play in Canton on -May 5.
The Gainesville-Monroe winner
will play the winner of the Canton
vs. Athens-Elberton in the finals.
the tournament games are in addi
tion to the regular season tilts.
The Trojan baseball schedule
announced by V. C. McGinty, ath
letic director for Athens city
schools, follows:
April 11, Monroe, here; April
13, Gainesville, there; April 17,
Gainesville, here; April 20, Mon
roe, there (tentative); April 24,
Royston, here (tentative); April
27, Region play-off; May 2, Gain
esville, there; @May 5, Reyston
play-off; May 8, Gainesville, here.
Dates for the three games with
the Georgia freshmen will be
worked into the schedule as op
portunity permits. Negotiations are
being made for a game with
Winder also.
Dr. Harris Wins
Prize For Trout
A number of spectacular catch
es were entered in the Athens
Sporting Goods’ first weekly fish
ing contest of 1951, with a 16~
inch German Brown Trout caught
in the Chattahoochee River by Dr.
Hershell Harris taking first prize
of $2.50 in trade at the local store.
Runner-up honors went to E. V.
Carter who hauled a 4 1-2 pound
bass from the Water Works Lake.
Another nice catch was made by
Zeke Biggers who caught two bass
totaling 4 3-4 pounds from Bar
netts Lake.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Georgia Tops
Clemson In
Track, 74-51
CLEMSON, S. C., April 7—(AP)
Georgia defeated Clemson 74-51
here today in a track meet run
during a heavy rain, The track was
two inches deep in water in spots,
and by agreement the relay events
were eliminated.
Georgia’s freshmen beat Clem
son, 9-4.
The summary:
Mile run—l. Hadaway (G). 2.
Brock (C). 3. Coile (G). Time 4:34.
440~yard dash—l. Sutton (G). 2.
ngogdward (C). 8. Doar (C). Time
100-yard dash — 1. Hornbuckle
(G). 2. Hudson (C). 3. Sutton (G).
Time 10.3. .
Time 10.3.
120-yard hurdles —l, Mitchell
(G). 2. O'Quinn (G). 3. Richard
son (C). Time 16.3.
880-yard run—l. Lewis (C). 2.
Fleming (G). 3. Froelich (C).
Time 2:09.4.
220-yard dash — 1. Hornbuckle
(G). 2. Sutton (G). 3. Hudson (C).
Time 22.4.
Two-mile run—l, Hadaway (G).
2. Coile (G). 3. Batson (C). Time
11:01.
220-vard hurdles—l, Revell (C).
2. Weller (G). 3. Radcliff (C).
Time 27.3.
High jump—l. Gasking (C) and
O’Quinn (G) tie. 3. Mitchell (G)
and Weller (G), tie. Height 5
feet 10 inches.
Shot put—l, Hudson (C). 2.
Langley (G). 3. Salerno (G). Dis
tance 43 feet 734 inches.
Javelin throw — 1. Mainsealco
(G). 2. Freudenberger (C). 3. Mul
linax (C). Distance 163 feet 4
inches,
Pole vault—l. O’Quinn (G). 2.
Akers (C). Height 10 feet 3 inches.
Broad jump—l. Jacques (G). 2.
Rackley (G). 3. Ferrette (C). Dis
tance 19 feet 7% inches.
Discus throw—l. Hudson (C). 2.
Graham (C). 3. Gaskins (C). Dis
tance 130 feet 10% inches.
AMONG THE PREPS
Jefferson Grid Team Views
Films Of Last Year’s Games
Softball Loop
At “Y” Starts
Full Schedule
Action opens in the Midget-In
termediate Softball League at Ath
ens Y. M. C. A. tomorrow with the
Monkeys playing the Hillbillies at
§:45 p. m. and the Tinhorns meet
ing the Buckaroos at 7 p. m.
Schedule for the remainder of
the week: Tuesday—6—Tigers vs.
Yard Birds, 7:ls—Jack Rabbits vs.
Sluggers; Wednesday — 5:45 — Tin
Horns vs. Yard Birds, 7—Tigers vs.
Buckaroos; Thursday —6 — Mon
keys vs. Tigers, 7:ls—Hillbillies
vs. Jack Rabbits.
Games scheduled in the Indian
Class Monday at 3:20 p. m.: Buck
eyes vs, Muleheads, Eagles vs. Jets,
Bombers vs. Baboons. The Red
skins and Elks will have gym
classes.
In the Indian Class Friday the
‘Bombers beat the Redskins, 15-7,
the Jets outdid the Baboons, 18-10,
and the Elks took the Muleheads,
24-12.
Many Homers
In each’ of the latter two tilts
four home runs were hit. Getting
them for the Jets were Jerome
Winfrey and Randall Whelis, and
hitting for the Baboons were Mike
Tolbert and Joe Neighbors. In the
other game all four homers were
socked by the Elks. Hitting them
were Jimmy Gabrielson, David In
glis, Dub Anderson, and Byron
Alexander, During the day Pat
Shields also hit a homer.
In Saturday’s Cub games the
Grasshoppers took the Blue Devils,
13-9; the Hot Shots beat the Black
Hawks, 11-2; and the Mohawks
downed the Cherokees, 12-9.
Claude Beck was the star in the
first tilt as he got three for three
for the winners. In the second
game Tommy Gordon and Jack
Tolbert each hit safely in all three
trips to the plate for the Black
Hawks. Eddie Sams was top man
in the last tilt as he hit four times
in that many times at bat for the
Mohawks.
Hitting homers in the Cub
League were Eddie Sams, Bill
Fanning, Ed Dudley, Richard Mar
gut, and Claude Beck.
FLORIDA VICTORY
CAINESVILLE, Fla., April 7.—
(AP)—The University of Florida
track team took the measure of
Georgia Tech’s thinclads here to
day for the first time since 1939
by a score of 73-53.
Bantam Ben Third, Mangrum
Fourth; Last 18 Holes Today
BY WILL GRIMSLEY
AUGUSTA, Ga., April 7.—(AP) —Sammy Snead’s blaz
ing copper-headed putter and a dreary, drenching rain
caught Robert (Skee) Riegel today and so it’'s a two-way
tie for first going into the final round of the Masters Golf
Tournament, o e
The hillbilly croesus from White
Sulphur Springs, West Va., and
the young professional from Tulsa,
Okla., the halfway pace-setter,
were bracketed at the 854-hole
stage with 211, five under par for
the Augusta National Course.
Snead, stroking sensationally on
the greens, whipped around the
g,floo-yard, par 36-36-—T72 layout
in 84-34—67, finishing with the
hottest round of the day.
It was perfectly dry when
Sam started before noon and it
was only drizzling slightly when
he came in to report his best card
in weeks.
Remarkable Round
Riegel, the former U, S. amateur
champion with the blacksmith
arms, had to look at this sizzling
round and then go out and try to
mateh it in a rain that grew in in
tengity. The skies were gushing
when he holed out a par on the
sodden 18th for a remarkable 70.
Just one stroke back at 212 go
ing into tomorrow’s climatic round
is that ever-pressing little guy
from Texas, Ben Hogan, who
matched Riegel's 70 before the
~commi‘ bec;dme almost tglnpllt;yable.
0 angrum, e Dapper
Nflu.’gn, veteran who won lt)l‘:e
National Open in 1946, was in
fourth place with 213 after a hard
earned 33-37—T70. He finished
after Riegel.
Lew Worsham, jr., the apple
cheeked Oakmont, Pa., profess
sional, followed at 214, a stroke in
front of former Natiofial Open
champion Cary Middlecoff of
Memphis and Dave Douglas, of
Newark, Del.
George Fazio, the scrapiron deal
er from Conhohocken, Pr., who
led in the (;{enlng round, shared
the 216 bracket with Johnny Bulla,
long-socking former Airline pilot
from Phoenix, Ariz. After these,
it doesn’t matter much.
Jimmy Demaret, the three-time
winner and defending champion
was among the “other scores” with
998—a tremendous comedown for
one of the game’s leading stars.
Bunched at Top
So many players were bunched
at the top that followers were
freely predicting the third play
off in the 15 years of this glamor
ous event.
A large part of the crowd of
6,000 flowed out onto the pine
fringed course to watch Riegel,
needing only par in for the last
two holes to maintain his lead,
make his fight for it.
There were groans when the
36-year-old Riegel missed his sec
ond shot on the 400-yard 17th and
By MERRITT B. POUND, JR.
JEFERSON, Ga., April 7 — The
Jefferson High School Dragons are
making good use of the 1950 foot=
ball movies filmed by the Jeffer
son Touchdown Club.
The local Touchdowners, in ad
dition to other notable activities,
last year had three of the Dragon
regular season games filmed.
Coach Red Yancey is taking ad
vantage of adverse weather con
ditions by pointing out to his
squad weaknesses that show up
in the films.
MADISON, Ga., April 7—Under
the sponsorship of the “M” Club
of Morgan County High Scheol, a
pre-season football game is slated
for Madison on Friday night, April
20, with former stars of the school
participating.
Proceeds from the game will go
for the operation of 2 football
camp for interested b(és a week
or two before the opening of
school next fall.
A number of former star ath
letes of Morgan County will play
in the grid contest, according to
Coach Rabbit Smith.
Athens High's varsity baseball
team held a light scrimmage yes
terday morning against the “B”
team aggregation and came out
victorious, 6 to 1, in five innings.
Varsity hurlers Tommy Williams
and Avery Harvill limited the
“Bees” to two hits—both doubles
from the bat of catcher Terrell
Brooks. Jimmy Thompson, varsity
pitcher throwing for the “B” team,
was the loser.
BRASELTON, Ga., April 7 —-
Braselton High's Class “C” basket
ball chanipions were feted at a
banquet here Friday night in hon
or of their successful cage season.
This year’s squad is reminiscent
of the 1930 team that won national
prominence.
WINDER, Ga., April 7—An in
tra-squad game to be played on
Tuesday night will conclude spring
football drills for the Winder High
School Bulldogs.
A schedule is being mapped out
for the Athens Hizgh School tennis
teams with matches against Wash
ington High already slated. Tenta
tive matches are planned with
Gainesville, and the boys and girls
teams will compete in the Region
al playoffs at Dahlonega on April
24.
Leading contenders for berths on
the girls squad are Marlon Hop
kins, Pat Messer, Ann Hailey, Sy
bil Fanning, Peggy Fulcher, Elsa
Parrott, Jerry Alexander, Janey
Mae Cooley, Annelle Williams, and
Joneta Daniel,
Members of the boys sanad are
Merritt Pound, Louis Smith, and
Danny Huff.
went wide of the green. He chip
ped four feet of the pin but missed
his putt for a one-over-par five,
On the 18th he whanged a tre
mendous drive up the fairway and
then piked a beautiful six-iron
shot straight at the pin, missing
the cup by six inches and rolling
10 feet past. Skee coldly went for
the birdie putt but the ball slid
six inches wide of the gash and
rolled about three feet past. He
made it for his four.
Snead putted like a demon with
the copper-headed implement he
flaunted in 1949 to win this title
with 282 and launch a series of
links successes.
“If I had been playing as well
from tee to green today as I did
in 1949 and putting the same way
I would have been eight or nine
shots better,” the 38-year-old
slammer said.
28 On Greens
Snead one-putted eight greens
and used only 28 strokes on the
greens, eight under regulations.
Snéad’s approach putting by
his own admission, was remarka
ble.**l was laying them up there
dead from 30 and 40 feet”
he said. “My longest putt all day
was an eight-footer on the sev
enth.”
Hogan, the Fort Worth gamester
who has won every important U.
S. title except this, fired a 36-34
gat did not completely satisfy
m.,
“I didn’t think my shots out
very well,” he said, “I picked the
wrong club a couple of times.”
This was particularly true on the
par three sixth where he missed
the green and took a four and on
the seventh where he skied his
drive and wound up with a one
over five.
Middlecoff, the tempermentsl
Memphis dentist, was the second
hottest performer of the day.
Playing in a twosome with Snead,
he almost matched the West Vir
ginian on every green as he one
putted six greens for 35-34—69.
The colorful round man from
Valdosta, Ga., William (Dyna
mite) Goodloe, stole a large htunk
of gallery from Riegel, Hogan and
Snead to shoot a 72 that gave him
first among the amateurs with
217. He was tied with two old pro
Masters — Byron Nelson and
Lawson Little. The present ama
teur champion, Sam TUrzetta of
Rochester, N. Y., had a 78 for 223,
Jim Ferrier, the advance favor
ite and leading money winner of
the year, shot a 74 for a 218 that
counted out his chances. He blew
up in the final six holes a year
ago to lose out to Demaret.
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Second Bulldog-Vol
Contest Rained Out
BY CURTIS DRISKELL "
Banner-Herald Sports Editor
Tennessee’s baseball team was on its way back to Knox
ville today with a firmer grip on the SEC top spot than the
Vols had when they came South. Two victories over Geor
gia Tech and a 5-4 decision over the Georgia Bulldogs
made the Vol position more firm. b .
The second game of the Geor
gia-Tennessee series, scheduled to
be played yesterday afternoon,
was postponed after one and one
half innings of play. A downpour
of rain prompted Umpires Red
McCutcheon and Frankie Allen to
call it off.
Tennessee was leading at the
time, 1-0.
Tennessee topped the Bulldogs
Friday on a bit of brilliant relief
hurling by Billy Joe Bowman
which cut off a threatening Geor
gia rally.
Bowman came in to relieve Billy
Joa O'Kain in the eighth after two
men were out, two runs were
across, and one man remained on
Goodloe Sets
Amateur Pace
For Masters
AUGUSTA, Ga., April 7—(AP).
William (Dynamite) Goodloe,
easily the most colorful golfer in
the 15th Masters Tournament, to
day became the hottest amateur.
Sir Dynamite, a favorite in
Great Britain just like his pre
decessor from Georgia, Bobby
Jones, shot even par golf on the
par 36-36-72—Augusta national
today to jump three strokes ahead
of Dick Chapman of Pinehurst, N.
C., and Charles Coe, of Oklahoma
City.
Dynamite’s total is 217 after 54
holes and Chapman and Coe have
220. Frank Stranahan, one the
bobby soxers favorites from Tole
do, Ohio, was fourth amateur with
222 after a third straight round
in 74 strokes,
National open champion Sam
Urzetta, of Rochester, N. Y., three
putted the first green and never
recovered to score a 78 for a 223
aggregate score.
Goodloe’s fine par leaves him
six strokes back of Sam Snead and
Skee Riegel, tournament leaders
with 211 strokes each.
The tubby Georgian from Val
dosta would have cracked par by
from two to four strokes if he had
not mis-judged several greens on
the back side of the 6,900-yard Na
tional.
Good short putting saved him
several times %ut still left him
with a par when his game from
tees and on approach shots looked
like championship golf.
e e A
g Gt .. R R
o o i
S g t,
e RN : . 4
Q{\\ Y
U R I e
e Y
S s ey
31,000 miles oa“fol-'te car — bave
taken omt over sharp objects —
no flats.” — G. K. STANFORD, Madie
son, South Dakota,
PAGE THIRTEEN
base. Bowman threw three
straight strikes past Jackie Rob
erts to retire the side and nip the
rally one run short of a deadlock.
Georgia had been unable to
touch O'Kain consistently after the
first inning, when the Bulldogs
pushed across a pair of runs.
Tennessee, however, had already
tallied three in the first on Dale
Powell’s tremendous home run
with two mates on the bases.
Into Lead
The Vols jumped into the lead
when Watson Bell singled, Julian
Dease walked, but was out when
hit by B. B. Hopkins’ sharp grass
cutter. Powell delivered with a
380-foot clout over the right-cen=
terfield.
Sonny Shealey, Georgia starter,
was tough after that until the fifth
and sixth frames, when the Vols
got one run in each.
Georgia got two runs in the first
as Nathan Williams walked, Don
ald Part and Sonny Dykes singled
in succession, and Jackie Roberts
lived on a fielder’s choice.
Hal Payne doubled and scored
on two infield outs in the fifth for
the Vols. Tennessee added another
when Hopking doubled and scored
on Bert Rechichar’s single in the
sixth.
Phil Calaicova took over for
Shealey in the ninth and retired
the side without getting into trou
ble. Parr and Dykes, with three
hits apiece, accounted for all
Georgia’s safeties.
Three Volunteer double plays
helped Tennessee’s pitchers along
the winning route. One of the
twin-killings ended the game and
another Georgia threat, O’Kain
fanned 13 Bulldogs.
Carburetor Too Rich
Makes Motorist Too Poor
Car owners who are wasting
money and not getting proper gas
mileage due to over-rich mixtures
will be pleased to learn of a Wis
consin inventor who has developed
a very clever unit that helps save
gasoline by “Vacu-mating”, It is
automatic and operates on the su
percharge principle. Easily in
stalled in a few minutes, Fits all
cars, trucks, tractors. The manu
facturers, the Vacu-matie Car
buretor Co., 7617 « 720 I State St.,
Wauwatosa, Wis.,, are offering a
Vacu-matic to anyone who will
install it on his car and help in
troduce it to others. They will
gladly send full free particulars+if
you write them or just send your
name and address on a penny post
card today.
( 3
d 3 h:
'l' :2/ E; p
b 7 S 0
X-ray Phete shows:
(1) Rim-sdal ridges form air-tighl
lock orn any standard rims
(2) Inner layer of special rubbe®
holds air longer
{3) Gummy material snder tread
seals punctures.
{4) Special vaive Wi present rims
ge . ~
% o o g : i
bR; R v '
%RR v !
4 B e,: s '
b % 2 a’f 3
| AT p : S
AR o e fié:;i 7. .
VIR oy A RBS ]
o o & :":?“ 74
“Over 22,000 miles with wo flats or =
blowowmts, )bo?b many wmwils bave
beew removed.” — REvV. D. L
DUNCKLEE, Pipestone, Mina.