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PAGE TWELVE
BANNER - HERALD
MERRITT POUND. IR SO4 Editors
Line Battle Expected
in Tech-Tiger Clash
By The Associated Press
Georgia Tech Coaches Bobby Dodd and Ray Graves are
expecting a “terrific line battle” when the Yellow Jackets
tangle with Auburn’s Tigers in Atlanta Saturday.
Whfle the Tech squad e e
through a light drill Coach Graves
said Jacket linemen will have a
rough time stopping Auburn’s of
fensive wall. But he added hasti
ly that he had a defensive line
ready to do the job.
Auburn Coach Ralph Jordan
sent his squad through a tough
defensive drill in preparation for
Tech's powerful passing attack.
Jordan said his unbeaten but
underdog squad “were ready” for
Pech and will go into the game
with the intention of winning.
Alabama’s ground gainer, soph
omore fullback Tommy Lewis,
dropped from the lineup with in
juries and the Crimson Tide’s
hopes against Tennessee slumped.
However, the loss was partly ac
counted for with the return of
center O. E. Phillips, ready for
offensive duty after three weeks
of idleness. He too has been side
lined with an injury.
Vanderbilt Workout
The Vanderbilt Commodores
spent their last major workout of
the week brushing up the tech
nique of fumble recovery. They
hope to practice this art Saturday
when they visit Florida. A major
port of Vanderbilt's win over
Mississippi last week was cover
ing the Rebel fumbles.
Louisiana State University
Coach Gaynell Tinsley says he’s
“expecting a tough game and I
don't know who's going to win,”
when LSU meets Georgia this
weekend.
Tinsley said there would be
plenty of fresh talent in the game
for LSU, but “it'll probably be a
fossup.”
Mississippi Coach Johnny
Vaught a thorough review of of
fensive and defensive work as the
Rebels headed towards tomorrow’s
homecoming game with Tulane.
The Rebel squad showed plenty of
spirit during the workout. It was
the same attitude they displayed
just "before they upset Kentucky
21-17.
Vol Preparation
Tennessee closed out its work
out for the week with a light 90-
minute drill in preparation for
their tilt with Alabama Saturday
in Birmingham. :
A short drill today will end
Kentucky's preparation for their
Saturday night date with unbeaten
villanova. Coach Paul Bryant
emphasized that a varied offense
may be needed to gain yards
against Villanova. A part of the
day’s workout was spent on honing
up their kicking game, including
field goals.
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:
Otto Graham is one good rea
son why the Cleveland Browns
have been a top team ever since
they joined the pro football loop.
His passing has been consistently
sensational and his field general
ship is little short of uncanny. But
there’s nothing uncanny about
Otto’s choice of anti-freeze for his
car. He picked the best! Otto says,
“There’'s nothing like ‘Prestone’
anti-freeze for my monag4 Ume
shot lasts all winter, so I put 1t in
and forget about it. I know I'm
safe from freeze-ups and boilovers
——no matter how cold or warm it
gets from week to week. I know
of no other anti-freeze that gives
the same degree of protection.
‘Prestone’ brand is guaranteed!”
SHE’S A COMING!
Athens Greatest Fair-October 22
Athens YMCA
Is Eleventh
In Swim Meet
im M
Results from headquarters of
the International Swimming Com
petition in which the local YMCA
is participating, reveal that the
Athens Association placed elev
enth in the tabulation of the first
days records. The “Y’s” are listed
in order of the number of map
miles which they have conipleted.
Of the 58 groups of swimmers in
the distance meet the highest
number of map miles completed
on the first day went to the
YMCA of St. Louis, Mo., with 220,
Waterbury, Conn., was second
with 218, and Salem, Ore., was
third with 210. Athens placed
eleventh by virtue of the 166 map
miles which they completed the
first day.
A total of 79.5 miles was ac
credited to the local boys yester
day. These were not nrap miles
but actual distances swum. That
brings the overall total of the four
days swimming to 337.6 actual
miles completed. Coach Coburn
Kelley will receive a report each
day from now on about the num
ber of map miles which have been
swum. ?
Jeff Mills and Billy Steedman
of the Indian class stroked out a
total of two miles yesterday.
Cubs swimming two miles yes
terday were: Dick Ferguson,
Frank Hubert, Ted Ridlehuber.
Scorpioas were: Valdon Smith,
Duane Hall, Bill Bruce, Westey
Westervelt, and Jim Hall
Bob Bruce yesterday completed
the first mile accredited to a mem
ber of the Beginners. Indians
swimming a mile were: Mike Tol
bert, Maurice Wilkerson, Charles
Brackett, and Charles Rowland.
Cubs swimming a mile were:
Tommy Henderson, Jimmy Allen,
Jack Tolbert, Jere Huggins, Buz
zer Howell, Tommy Gordon, Larry
Lewis, LaVone Brown, Willis Ful
ler, Linton Dunson, George
Brown, Jimmy Carlyle, Danny
Glasner, Joe Wilfong, Bill Stroud,
David Price, Barry Wenzel, Bob
Richardson, and John Thurmond.
Scorpions swimming a full mile
were: Mahlon Spears, Troy Mat
ews, Jimbo Laßoon, Billy Seabolt,
Jim Hadaway, Boozie Newton,
Buddy Griffeth, George Ramsey,
Don Henderson, Mac Cornelison,
Dan Mathews, Ed Dudley, and
Chester L.eathers,
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Bulldogs To Rely On Passing
Attack Against Bengals Here
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WARREN VIRGETS
All-Southern Conference Nominee to See Duel With Babcock
California-USC Top
Grid Scene Saturday
NEW YORK, Oct. 19.— (AP)—Most of the nation’s top
ranking college football teams flaunt their biceps before
neighborhood audiences tomorrow, with the headline at
traction sending California against Southern California at
Berkeley.
i gt e g e Re T R W 1 R
The Golden Bears of California,
No. 1 nationally and with a string
of 38 straight regular season vic
tories, rule a two-touchdown fav
orite over a solid Trojan eleven
rated No. 11 in the Associated
Press poll.
The Bears have averaged 41%
points a game in smashing past
Santa Clara, Penn, Minnesota and
Washington State. Southern Cal
has won four games and lost only
an informal skirmish with Camp
Pendleton.
Of the other teams in the top
ten, Tennessee, Texas A & M,
Maryland and Baylor also appear
to have a busy afternoon ahead of
them, although all are favored by
from 13 to 14% points.
Tennessee’s thick-thighed young
men, second in the national rat
ings, defend their unsullied record
against thrice-beaten Alabama at
Birmingham, Ala. The Crimson
Tide’'s inferior record can't be
taken too much into account since
this is a traditional battle in which
they pile up the injured like stove
wood.
Tradition also puts added teeth
into the fray at College Park, Md,,
between Maryland and North Car
olina, longtime antagonists of the
Southern Conference. Maryland,
seventh-ranked, has shown tre
mendous power in winning three
games but Terrapin Coach Jim
Tatum, a former North Carolina
guard, generally has trouble with
his alma mater.
Texas A & M, No. 6, one of the
leading favoriles for Southwest
Conference honors, plays twice=-
beaten Texas Christian at Fort
Worth while Baylor, No. 10, has
a tough test at Waco against Texas
Tech, 33-19 conqueror of TCU last
week.,
- Two of the Paecific Coast’s five
—third-ranked Michigan State and
eighth-rated Illinois—take to the
road.
Michigan State journeys to State
College, Pa., where it rules a 14-
point favorite over a Penn State
team that has won two and lost
only to Villanova. Illinois invades
Seattle for a wrestle with rebound
ing Washington, The Illini are
5% point picks.
Texas goes after its fifth straight
victory in a Southwest Conference
tilt with Arkansas at Fayetteville,
Ark. The fourth-ranked Long
horns are an eight-point choice.
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THE BANNER-NERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA ~™™
Georgia Tech, No. 5,1 s host 1o
Auburn. Princeton, No. 9, will
strive to make LaFayette the 17th
link in the longest winning streak
now going in major ranks.
Two of the Pacific Coast's fine
independent clubs come east to
impress eastern experts.
The College of the Pacific, win
ner of its first four games, takes
on Boston University tonight. San
Francisco, also unbeaten and own
ing an outstanding back in Ollie
Mattson, plays Fordham at New
York. :
Notre Dame, side-tracked last
week by Southern Methodist, is a
13% point favorite over Pittsburgh
at Pittsburgh. SMU, meanwhile,
meets Rice in a night game at
Dallas. .
Grid Clashes
On Tap For
“Y” Members
Football is the order of the day
for most Athenians this fall and
the members of the YMCA are
certainly no exceptions. A heavy
and enjoyable slate of grid work
is set up for members of the ooy
this week.
An intrasquad tilt will get un
der way tonight at the Athens
YMCA field with Captains Jack
Tolbert and Joe Ed Gunnels lead
ing their Cub aggregations into the
game.
Coach Coburn Kelley, athletic
director at the “Y”, wili leave]
Athens tomorrow with an im
pressive portion of his Cub class
to meet the Warner Robbins 105
pound and under team. The boys
will leave at 8:30 in the morning
and will return in time for supper
on Saturday evening. They are
to carry picnic lunches for the day.
Although the Indian Class team
has not planned a tilt for this
weekend, it was revealed that the
entire class would be side-line
guests at the Georgia-L. S. U. fray
at Sanford Stadium tomorrow
night. The boys are expecied to
stage a entra-squad tilt- before
game time, The YMCA scrimma
ges at the Georgia games are al—l
ways looked forward to by fans'
of the Bulldogs. ;
Bratkowski- Babcock Combo
To Spearhead Aerial Route
Georgia’s Bulldogs, their defensive forces critically
weakened by a siege of injuries, will rely on their danger
ous passing attack outscoring Louisiana State University
here Saturday night in Sanford Stadium, kickoff time 8:15.
A crowd of 30,000 is expected
for this Bulldog-Bengal clash, the
twelfth in the series begun in 2928.
LSU has won seven, lost three and
tied one. Georgia has dominated
the series the last four years, win
ning three and tying one (13-13
last year).
LSU has won three games (Miss
issippi Southern, 13-0: Alabama,
13-7; Rice, 7-6) and lost to Georgia
Tech, 25-7.
Georgia Record
Georgia’s record shows victories
over George Washington, 33-0,
and North Carolina, 28-16, and
losses to Mississippi State, 6-0,
and Maryland, 43-7.
The Bulldogs have come up with
two of the most colorful offensive
performers in the south: sopho
more quarterback Zeke Bratkow
ski, who has better some SEC pas
sing records and is threatening
more, and junior right end Harry
Babcock, considered Georgia’s
greatest receiver since Pan Ed
wards made All-America in 1947.
Georgia enters the game with
two offensive regulars sidelined
with injuries; left end Art De
Detroit Pitcher Suggests
Baseball Tax Consideration
WASHINGTON, Oct. 19.— (AP)—Freddie Hutchinson,
Detroit Tiger pitcher, suggested today that baseball play
ers—athletes with short careers—should be given special
income tax treatment. i
There should be some allowance
for ball players similar to depre
ciation on a structure or machine,”
he said.
Hutchinson told a House Judi
ciary subcommittee that the aver
age major league career of a
player is about five years. He
said players were trained solely
for the game. Some relief should
be given them from taxes, he said,
because their biggest income lasts
for only a few years. 5
A player should be allowed to
deduct for his maintenance when
he is away from his permanent
home with his family in the city
where his major league team is
based, Hutchinson said.
The subcommittee 1s trying to
determine whether baseball vio
lates anti-trust laws.
One of the points in question is
the reserve clause under which a
player is tied to the club that owns
his contract so long as he plays
ball.
Hutchinson, the American
League’s players’ representative
on the executive council of major
league baseball, favors it.
“In my opinion the reserve
clause is a necessary and reason
able provision for the preservation
of organized baseball,” he said.
Hutchinson said the minor
leagues could not survive without
continuation of the reserve clause.
The past president of the Base
ball Writers Association told the
committee yesterday that as far
as he's concerned organized base-
" " L
Georgia Aberdeen-Angus Association
FALL SALE
MACON, GA.
Central City Park — 10:00 O’Clock A. M.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1951.
29 FEMALES 3 BULLS
From Herds of:
Beaverdam Seed & Cattle Farms — Colbert.
Berry Schools — Mount Berry.
Frank G. Binford — Thomaston.
Ralph Bridges — Lexington.
Chickamauga Farm — Chickamauga
Japalynka Farm — Statesboro.
Joe A. & J. S. Johnson — Jefferson.
Dwight Kennedy — Claxton.
Lorraine Farms — Macon.
Mclntosh Farms — Monroe.
Milton Mize — Americus.
Mulkey Farms — Millen.
A. S. Gibson — Thomaston.
Sandra Farms — Rome.
Snap Finger Farms — Decatur.
Jones Yow — Toccoa.
W histle Top Farm — Cornelia.
Field trip at Lorraine Farms, 2:00 P. M., Monday, October 29,
followed by barbecue for Aberdeen-Angus breeders and others
attending sale.
Annual meeting of Georgia Aberdeen-Angus Association, Hotel
Dempsey, Macon, 8:00 P. M., October 29.
s " =
Georgia Aberdeen-Angus Association
Q. A. N:}}LKEY, President GEORGE W. GIBSOI;{, Execd Sec'y.
Millen, Ga. ome, Ga.
For catalog, write — W. T. Bennett, Sale Manager,
Care Central of Georgia Railway, Savannah, Georgia.
l Carlo and left guard Jeff Burgamy;
also four defensive regulars out
| with injuries: linebacker Derwent
Langley, left tackle Richard Steele,
right end Robert West and right
guard Rocco Principe. Burgamy
and West were hurt in the Mary
land game.
Depensive Changes
Coach Wallace Butts this week
made two defensive changes he be
| lieves will pay dividends: moved
offensive center Hurley Jones of
Jesup, fleet sophomore, to the
right linebacker spot and put big
Mal Cook, offensive left half, at
the safety post.
Probable starting offensive line
up: (Weights in parenthesis)
Georgia Pos. Louisiana State
Poss 197 LE MecLead 202
Anglin 218 LT Coyne 185
Salerno 198 LG Fournet 205
McClung 190 O Smith 200
Greenway 202 RG Modicut 205
Yelvington 217 RT Yeager 202
Babcock 195 RE Virgets 188
Bratkowski 187 QB Stevens 175
Cook 205 LH Barton 175
Roberts 159 RH Hedges 175
Bilyveu 188 FB West 200
BY DILLON GRAHAM
ball is pretty much okay as it is.
And Chairman Celler (D.-N.Y.)
of the Houss Judiciary Commit
tee said the group has no idea of
trying to Impose federal control
on sports.
Frank Yeutter, of the Philadel
phia Bulletin, who this month
completed a one-year-term as
head of the baseball writers, add
ell he had “little sympathy at this
time” with the committee’s hear
ings into whether baseball violates
the anti-trust laws.
Red Smith, of the New York
Herald Tribune, agreed. He told
the committee he thought it could
be doing something more vital
than investigating baseball.
“you'll forgive me for thinking
that in these times,” he said,
“there are far more important
things to worry about.”
But Russell G. Lynch, sports
editor of the Milwaukee Journal,
found plenty wrong with base
ball. &
He said the major leagues had
a monopoly through owning more
than half of the ball players-in the
country and were ruining the
game,
They are destroying the fans’
confidence in minor league clubs,
he said, by operating these clubs
only for their own major league
benefits. Fans lose interest when
a big league club jerks a good
player away from a farm club and
causes it to flop out of the pennant
race, he said.
Athens-Monroe Se:
6-6 Deadlock Battle
BY ALVA MAYES, JR.
A defensive minded Monroe Hurricane eleven haii|.g
the Athens High Trojans to a 6-6 deadlock in Sanf,g
Stadium last night to hand the locals their first smear (), ,
previously spotless slate in Region 4-A competition 1}
season.
The Hurricanes, playing a strict
ly defensive game, held the fav
ored Trojans through three quar
ters after allowing them to score
in the early minutes of the first
period.
Their score came shortly after
the opening of the third quarter
on a high snap from center which
sailed over Athens Captain Jimmy
William’s head to be scooped up
by Bobby Peters, hard running
Hurricane fullback, who raced 40
yards for the score.
Price’s conversion attempt for
the Trojans was wide and the
Hurricane extra point attempt fell
short to complete the scoring for
the night.
Trojan Score
The Trojans score came as the
climax to a drive from their own
36 yard line with Williams and
Calvin Winfrey sparking the run
ning power which moved the ball.
Winfrey scored from the 2 yard
line on a move through center to
put the Trojans ahead.
The Athenians threatened to
score several more times during
the rest of the first and the second
period but left the field at half
time with their. 6 point lead. Mon
roe meanwhile, offered no serious
threat for a score throughout the
first half although the running of
Peters, Walt Hutchings and an
other Peters named Hugo showed
plenty of power.
With the advent of the third
period the Trojans received the
ball on the Monroe 36 yard line
when Frank Wheeler's punt was
blocked by the rushing Athens
line. On the second play from
scrimmage by the Trojans how
ever, Bill Saye’s snap from center
glanced off the shoulder of tail
back Williams, bounded down into
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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 145
Athens territory where it .as
picked up on the Athensg 49
Peters who outran the Tiojs,
secondary for the score.
The Trojans then set to 1
to see about putting more Iy,
bers up for Athens. In the pe.
maining minutes of the fourth
period tl.ley produced another
drive which fell short and giy
Saye’s punt put the ball decp in
Monroe territory.
Short Fourth Period
The fourth period took over here
with the Hurricanes putting on
one of their most determineq
drives of the night in an effort t,
beat the Trojans if they coulq,
But again the Athens line helqg
and forced Wheeler to punt. Wil
liams returned the punt to the
Monroe 47 and ihe Athenians had
driven to the 38 in the most power
that they had shown all night
when the clock caught them
there. ’
The Trojans played a very fine
defensive game with Elmer Chgp
man, Jimmy Mercer, Ronald Stap
ford and Willie Fowler leading the
line. Chapman, who was expect
ed to see only limited service dye
to an injury, played one of his
best defensive games of the sei
son in spite of the injury.
Mercer also starred on®defense
in his first starting role of the
year, and promised the Trojans
good service from now on out.
Stanford and Fowler as usual were
standouts; Stanford operating from
his tackle position and Fowler as
the right flanker.
Mell Knox Bell led the Hurri
cane forward wall in its strategy
with help also from Bobby Peters
who saw duty both as the fuliback
and tackle.