Newspaper Page Text
JONDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1951,
"—-—'—'————-———-———
BANNER - HERALD
GPORTS
MERRITT FOUND.™ Sports Editors
iss- T
Ole Miss-Tennessee
Tilt Tops SEC Card
By The Associated Press
efore this confusing football session started there
nardly was enough regard for the_ forthcoming Tennessee
\{m;;ppi football game to class it as anything except just
“nother perfunctory Southeastern Conference engage-
Wmont. S i A O B S S o g .
meit. g LiiE L
In September, Mississippi rated
_« nothing but another easy bite
which Tennessee would take in its
“orging of both Southeastern and
national championships.
Mississippi now has developed
into quite a football team and a
very lurge bite for even Tennessee
to take. The tnought of Mississip~
oi, especially in Oxford, this Sat
urday s enough to give the Volun=-
seers Indigestion., -
And to make the situation much
worse, Kentucky follows Missis-~
sippl on the Tennessee schedule.
General Bob Neyland seldom has
been & hand to line up such pow
ers on successive Saturdays for his
vols to Imock sos. Bat that’s pre
cisely . the Gieneral has come
up with tis November,
Las « Mississippi gave an
except o ally good Auburn team
its woost beating of the season.
Mississipr ! scored three times on
Agburn o the first five minutes
and played out the game for a 39~
14 walrning. General Neyland
graciously held back on his horses
but ever he couldn't keep the
magnificent Vols from running up
a 60-14 victory over Washington
and Lee.
While Mississippi and Tennes
see got set for each other with
wide victories, Georgia Tech, the
Southeastern’s other unbeaten
team besides Tennessee, polished
off ¥. M. 1. 34-7 and salted down
an Orange Bowl bid. Tech didn’t
look as good as usual and at times
the Yellow Jackets played as indi
viduals and not as a team.
The SEC's second most impor
tant game comes off in Legion
Field between Tech and Alabama.
Alabama, now moving smoothly
after losing four early season
games, is in the perfect spot to
upset Tech. Last week Alabama
showed off its returned power and
precision with a 40-7 victory over
Mississippi Southern. Alabama
has the fire power to whip Tech.
Tech eould be in a letdown after
winning six major games, tying
Duke, whippin V. M. I. and win
nir}x% the Orange Bowl invitation.
orida conveniently had an off
Worry of
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Only The Best First Run Pictures
LAST 3 DAYS 12:45
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GEORGIA open LAST DAY
s Features: 1:1105, 3:35, 5:35, 7:30, 9:30
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TUESDAY — WEDNESDAY
Features: 1:30, 3:30, 5:25, 9:20
THE STORY OF A (SN S 8 : ; FER TR e,
i, e||V3 6T 1 S
e e M)~ L o
ey RCHARD CONTE
T Y nuDREY TOTTER S @) |
Saturday set up the week before
taking on Georgia last Saturday in
Jacksonville, But the day off
didn’t help Florida much and the
Gators lost their second SEC
game of the year by one point.
The margin was 7-6 for Georgia.
Auburn defeated Florida, 14-13.
The third ranked SEC game be
tween Auburn and Georgia is the
traditional game played in Co
lumbus, Ga., Saturday afternoon.
Florida meets Miami in Orange
Bowl stadium Saturday night in
an attractive sounding battle.
Tulane and Vanderbilt play an
afternoon game in Nashville and
Mississippi State meets L. S. U,
in Baton Rouge at night. The
final game is a semi-~breather for
Kentucky in Lexington as prepara
tion for the coming of Tennessee.
George Washington is Kentucky’s
opponent.
Vandy defeated L. S. U. 20-13
and Kentucky committed football
murder against Tulane with a 37-
0 victory. Mississippi State al
most lost to little Memphis State
but managed a late touchdown to
win 27-20.
W L T Pet. PF OP
Ga. Tech 5 0 0 1.000 100 28
Tennessee 2 0 0 1.000 41 13
Mississippi 3 1 1 .750 111 177
Auburn 3 2 0 600 80 93
Kentucky 3 2 0 .600 102 40
Vanderbilt 83 3 6 .500 110 118
L. -8.-U. 2 -2-1-500-110 118
Miss. St. 2 3.0 400 18 55
Alabama 2 3 0 .400 635 76
Georgia 1--8§ .0 .200 31 .35
Florida 3 4 0 200 88 75
Tulane 0 4 0 000 13 93
All Games
W L T Pect. PF OP
Ga. Tech 7 0 11000 169 56
Tennessee 7 0 0 1.000 264 40
Mississippi 5 2 1 .714 184 104
Auburn 5 2 0 .14 158 107
Kentucky 6 3 0 .667 151 139
Vanderbilt 5 ‘3 0 .625 151 139
a 8 U, 6 8 1 0% 88 3l
Miss. St. 4 30 511 B 1
Alabama 5 4 0 .556 204 124
Georgia 4 4 0 .500 124 122
Florida 4 4 0 .500 138 89
Tulane 2 85 0 2806 68 141
= .
Accident Claims
.
Stock Car Driver
TAMPA, Fla., Nov. 12—(AP)—
James McDowell, Tampa stock
car driver, was killed yesterday
when his racing auto finished a
qualifying lap and turned over
five times.
McDowell’'s car went into a
slide on a turn beyond the finish
line at Speedway Park then start
ed rolling over end over end. His
safety belt became unfastened and
he was thrown into the path of
the tumbling car, McDowell raced
under the name of Jim Mack.
Maryland Tops
Prospects For
Cotton Bowl
DALLAS, Nov. 12—(AP)-~By
Thursday all teams left with a
mathematical chance at the South
west Conference football cham
pionship will hand in a list of
teams they’'d like to play in the’
Cotton Bowl.
Several schools already have
filed their lists,
The way things stand all seven
members of the league still have
a mathematical chance although
that chance is highly slim for four
of them, Texas Christian, Rice and
Baylor appear destined to pro
duce the champion, which is the
host team in the Dalls New Yezr's
Lay classic.
While nobody knows except the
schools themselyes who they are
going to suggest as Cotton Bowl
foes, there’s little reason to be
lieve that Maryland won't be on
all of the lists,
Maryland, however, poses a
problem. Cotton Bowl officials
would like to sign this team up
right now but how to go about it
is the question, The Southern Con
ference school presidents went on
record as opposing bowl game
participation. Maryland has indi
cated it will take a bowl bid any
way.
YV ien Georgia Tech signed last
we .k to play in the Orange Bowl
it took away one top prospect. Of
ficials say that now the good pros
pects are few, indeed. Tennessee
is likely if it doesn’t go to the Su
gar Bowl. There has been discus
sion of Kentucky, Holy Cross and
Oklahoma, even though the latter
has lost games to two Southwest
Conference teams this season.
But, one unofficial but well-in
formed source said, some move
will be made within the next few
days to get a visiting team before
all the good ones are gobbled up
by the other bowls. If Kentucky
were taken, there would be a lot
of silent praying that the Wild
cats beat Tennessee Nov. 24, Last
year Tennessee was signed up be
fore it met Kentucky and joy
knew no bounds when Tennessee
beat Kentucky. It made the Cot
ton Bowl look very good.
Grid Powers
View Week-end
Cautiously -
NEW YORK, Nov. 12 (AP) —
Coaches and Athletic Directors of
the country’s top football teams—
a cautious lot — were walking
around their campuses with fin
gers crossed today, afraid even to
think of the games coming up.
Every time they begin to look
to the coming Bowl games and
perhaps start figuring what's
going in the cash box, they shud
der and think back to what hap
pened to Southern California.
The big, powerful Trojans were
the shoo-ins of the Pacific Coast
conference, especially after they
bounced undefeated California,
the pre-season favarite, a couple
of week ago.
But Stanford, completely over
lcoked before the start of hostili
ties, crashed the Trojan hopes to
the ground Saturday with a start
ling 27-20 victory.
Same thing in the Big Ten.
Illinois boasts a 4-0 mark after
trouncing lowa, 40-13 Saturday.
But Michigan and Wisconsin each
have 3-1 marks, and all three still
have two conference games to
play.
Offhand, it would seem that
Wisconsin has the easier row to
hoe. The Badgers whipped Penn.
16-7, but Michigan dropped be
fore Cornell. 20-7, Saturday, in a
couple of Big Ten-Ivy League
games.
Tennesee, perhaps, is the only
team that can take things moder
ately easy-—-with the exception
of Georgia Tech, which already
has accepted an invitation to the
Orange Bowl in Miami. The Vols,
masters of the Southeastern Con-~
ference, had a 60-14 limbering up
exercise at the expense of Wash
ington and Lee Saturday, and need
worry only about Kentucky.
Even if the slow starting be
hemoths from the blue grass should
beat Tennessee, Gen. Bob Ney
land’s outfit would get into some
Bowl—Sugar, Cotton or Orange.
Rabe Parilli and his Kentucky out
fit could do it, too. They slaught-~
ered Tulane, 37-0, Saturday.
Form hewed close to the line in
most of the week’s games. In the
Ivy League, Princeton and Dick
Kazmaier soildifed their hold on
the top rung by crashing Har
vard, 54-13.
Maryland, which should win the
Southern Conference championship
with as little effort, licked its
neighbohood rival, Navy, 40-2 i,
and is a prime candidate for a
bowl spot. Georgia Tech, by way
of celebrating its fourth invitation
to the Orange Bowl, shackled
Vigrinia Military Institute, 34-7.
In the Southwest Conference,
the issue still is not anywhere
near settled. Baylor, Texas Chris
tian or Rice all still could win
the title and be the host team
in the Cotton Bowl Baylor tum
bled Texas, 18-6, and Rice nipped
Arkansas, 6-0, while T. C. U. was
idle.
‘Clarke County
Allotted Good
-
Frosh Tickets
When Georgia’s freshman foot
ball squad meets the Georgia Tech
frosh in the annual Scottish Rite
Hospital game Thanksgiving Day
in Atlanta. Georgia students will
have equally as well situated seats
as the boys and girls from the
Flats.
Leroy Michael, chairman of the
Scottish Rite Benefit Committee
for Clarke County, announced that
the ducats for the tilt which were
alloted to Clarke County are
among the best to be had.
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Bulldogs Offer “Brat”
As‘Sophomore Of Year’
BY DAN MAGILL, JR.
Geox:gxa offers Zeke Brat
_}fowskl as its candidate for
Sophomore of the Year” in
the Southeastern Confer
ence.
The young T-quarterback al
ready has smashed the conference
“sophomore” passing reccrd of
1,098 yards set last year by Hay
wood Sullivan of Florida. In fact,
Zeke broke the mark in hig sev
enth game against Alabama two
weeks ago when he reached a to
tal of 1,174 yards and last Satur-‘
day against Florida he added 115‘
yards more to boost his total to
1,289 yards. And he has two more
games remaining: Auburn at Co- '
lumbus Saturday and Georgia
Tech in Atlanta Dec. 1. {
Bratkowski’s passing record
compared to the two best previous
passing marks compiled by sopho
mores in the Southeastern Confer- \
ence: |
Bratkowski (Georgia)— |
Yr. A. Cmp.lnt. Yds. TD G.
1861 1598 92 21 1289 9 &
Sullivan (Florida)—
Yr. A. Cmp.lnt, Yds. TD G.
1950 170 89 8 1,008 9 10
Parilli (Kentucky)—
» A. Cmp.lnt, Yds. TD G.
1949 150 81 13 1,081 8 11
Statistics of Georgia-Florida
game at Jacksonville Saturday,
won by Georgia 7-6:
GEORGIA
Rushing No. Net Gain
Rsber. ¥B .. ... ' 12 51
Morocco, LH"..,... 4 19
Magond, B . ..vvivv 2 6
SOO, B .. lisiin B B
Roberts, RH .....ovvd 4
Hargrove, RHE . ..., T -1
Manisera, LH ...... 1 -5
0k L. i 79
Passing Att. C. Int. Net
Bratkowski, QB .. 28 10 3 liid
Pass Receiving No. Yds.
Babeock, BRE .....viiss B 46
White, BB . onknsioe B 36
Roborts, BE .icoviiess 20
MOroee, LEE & vivevvine B 13
TOMEL oo itionsnine B 115
Punt Returns No. Yds.
Manisera, safety ...... 2 34
HOP T 3 . vvaieniv 2
T e 36
Kickoff Returns No. Yds.
Morocco, safety ...... 1 23
Mool B o 21
TeL . i@ 44
Interceptions No,. ‘Y
Pl B e -
Punting No. Yds. Ave,
Bratkowski, QB .... 6 254 423
FLORIDA
Rushing No. Net Gain
Oosterhaudt, LH .. 19 87
Long, 1L oo ... ias B 31
Hugging, FR . ..piorss € 28
Cesares, B . sgsoegs ¥ 26
Reddell, RH ........ 9 21
W 0 LH ek 13
Sullivan, QB ...... ¥ €
Nichols: QB . ..avees 1 1
DAY s imaais .B 0 213
Passing Attt C. Int. Net
Sullivan, QB .... 18 10 1 94
Receiving No. Yds.
el B .GO B 27
Brown, T 8 ..iivsires 3 21
iKnight, I Caviniee B 21
Long, LH Seseeiedsrie X 14
Comares, B ... 1 6
'David, LT (lateral) .. 0 5
TR oty 30 94
Punt Returns No. Yds.
Ball. aalety ... .00 2 23
Kickoff Returns No. Yds.
(Nichols, QB ....ceooo. 2 40
Long, LH ...ccooooeoo 0 10
N e
Interceptions N Yan
Horton, Tdß <o vabeass 3 13
Song L .o it X 13
Nichole BIE .. 0000 3 0
HOIE ... iuiiiviir; & 26
Punting No. Yds. Ave.
Quinn, "QB- .. eoeas. 8 121 242
Cesares, FB ...eOO.. 1 48 48.0
Tatal ..o e i B 109 381
‘Jenks’ Gillem
F Grid
ormer Il
l ®
Player, Dies
BIRMINGHAM, Nov. 12—(AP).
One of Sewanee’s all-time football
stars and a former coach at the
University of the South, Jennings
F. (Jenks) Gillem, 61, is dead.
Gillem died yesterday in a
Gadsden hospital where he had
been under treatment in a lengthy
illness.
The Birmingham insurance man,
a native of Nashville, Tenn., won
fame as a Sewanee end. He was
picked on the all-time Sewanee
eleven, and named an all-south
ern flanker while playing there.
Later he returried to Sewanee
in the middle 1930 s as coach, after
holding similar posts at Howard
and Birmingham-Southern here.
Fiery, Smarting ltch
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“Sophomore of the Year” Candidate
Clean Prep Slates
Grow Slim At Wire
By The Associated Press
The ranks of undefeated teams in Georgia high school
fog'tball are growing mighty slim.
Tl STV U TR, RN NN O SR Y. )
There are still three battle tested
teams with no losses against themi
this year—Albany in Region 1-AA
and Newnan and Northside in Re- ‘
gion 3-A. Albany downed Val
dosta 14-6 last week while New-1
nan ran over Fulton 34-0, North
side had a close one shaving North ‘
Fulton 7-6. Valdosta is one of
nine teams still keeping a pertect‘
season within their region,
Next week-end Albany plays
Lanier while Newnan has an open
date and Northside meets South
west DeKalb. *
Besides those already mentioned
the others with undefeated records
in their region include Richmond
(2-AA), O’Keefe (3-AA), Tifton
(1-A), Ellijay (3-A), and Elber
ton (4A). '
Tifton downed Americus last
week 25-19 and takes on Colquitt
next week. Americus plays Cairo
on the coming week-end. Ellijay
has an open date while Elberton
meets Gainesville, Ellijay downed
Toccoa 38-25 last week and Elber
ton romped over Covington 27-0.
LaGrange took a Region 4-A
contest from Gainesville 14-0 last
Friday and takes on Lanett, Ala~
bama high this week.
Benedictine upset Commercial
13-0 last week while Boys Catho
lic and Glynn Academy battled ii
out to a 0-0 tie. Benedictine has
an open date this week before
taking on Savannah. Boys Catho
lic and Glynn Academy battled it
out to a 0-0 tie. Benedictine has
an open date this week before tak
ing on Savannah, Boys Catholic
also has an open date. Commer=-
cial meets Statesboro and Clynn
Academy will play host to Rome.
Other games that look interest~
ing for next week-end include
Baxley at ‘Adel, Cartersville at
Canton, Thomasville at Waycross,
Fitzgerald at Nashville, Valdosta
at Jesup, Trion at Summerville,
Athens at Andrew Jackson, Avon
dale at Covington, Monroe at Bu
ford and Spalding at Griffin, s
®
Nation Boasts
22 Undefeated
College Teams
NEW YORK, Nov. 12—(AP)—
Cincinnati, with nine victories,
tops a list of 22 unbeaten, untied
college football teams today.
Four schools have won eight
games. They include Stanford,
Valparaiso, Northern lilinois and
Bucknell,
Six previously-unbeaten teams
suffered defeats this weekend to
drop off the select list. They were
Rochester, Eastern New Mexico,
Morris Brown (Ga.), St. Vincent
(Pa.), New Haven (Conin.) Teach
ers and Centre (Ky.)
Six of the leading teams in col
legiate football still boast unblem
ished records. They are Tennessee
(No. 1), Ilinois (No. 2), Maryland
(No, 3), Princeton (No. 4), Mich
igan State (No. 5) and Stanford
(Ne. 7).
YMCA Scores
Three Wins
This W
is Week-end
This past week was a very suc
cessful week for the Athens YMCA
in their grid encounters with three
wins to one loss scored in their
four games. Tough competition
made the record look even better,
On Thursday evening of last
week the Scorpions took the Jef
ferson High “B” team with a 46-
39 score on the Jefferson home
ground, Scorers for the Athens
team were Bobby Mathews, Ches
ter Leathers, David Bell, Jim Had
daway, and Billy Slaughter.
Atheng YMCA split their pair of
games with the Greenwood South
Carolina team that visited here
over the weekend. Athens’ Indian
class team beat the Greenwood
Indians 33-12.
~ Jest Mills and Bill Bittles led
‘the scoring attack for Athens
while linesmen Terry Melton and
%Harold Yarbrough were standouts
in offense and defense.
| Greenwood Wins
The Greenwood Cubs beat the
Athens Cubs in the last three min
utes of the fray making a touch
down which put them safely ahead.
The final score of that game was
25-20. Leading the ground attack
for Athens in that thriller were:
Ernie Mitchell, Jim Allen, Dick
Ferguson, Tommy Gordon. Lines
men whb distinguished themselves
in the tilt were: Skipper Smith,
Jimmy Bryant, Jo Ed Gunnels, and
Larry Lewis. 5
The Scorpions in the second
game of their long weekend took
another fray, avenging themselves
for the defeat that the Elberton
“B” team recently inflicted upon
them. The Athenians went to El
berton where they held that team
scoreless and sent boys over the
scoring stripe twice during the
game, to end the tilt 13-0.
Slaughter and Mathews were
the scorers in the fray and were
adequately supported by the en
tire team. Kelley expressed his
extreme pleasure at the success of
the Scorpions as well as the other
teams over the weekend.
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Fishing Dodd Keeps
Bowl Invite Waiting
BY STERLING SLAPPEY
ATLANTA, Nov. 12.—(AP) —Orange Bowl bound Geor
gia Tech, first major team selected for a post season invi
tation, should be too old a hand at playing in the bowl lea
gue of college football to get excited about another invita
tion.
But the Yellow Jackets are ex
cited just the same. And so is head
coach Bobby Dodd although you
nev?‘r would have guessed it last
week. Y
Bobby Dodd becamae the first
coach in history to keep a bowl
invitation and & bowl selection
committee waiting while he went
fishing with his wife and kide,
“You know,” happy-go-lucky
Dodd explains, “I get credit for
doing some strange things. But,
honest, I''mn not crazy enough to
fish through an Orange Bowl in
vitation, I was fishing, yes, but it
was all an accident.”
Dodd’s Account
Here's what happened, accord
ing to Dodd's account, Before the
Tech-Duke game of Nov. 3 the
Orange Bowl said if Tech defeat=-
ed Duke a committee would come
to Atlanta Nov. 5 to talk business.
Instead of defeating Duke by a
predicted couple of touchdowns,
Tech was lucky to get out with
a 14-14 tie. In Bobby Dodd’s book
a tie is not a victory over Duke,
So, the Tech squad was given
Monday off and the Dodd family
went fishing.
Van Kussrow and Bill Ward,
members of the Orange Bowl
committee, tried to reach Dodd
but he couldn’t be found. And
Kussrow and Ward, with an in
vitation worth $90,000 in their
pocket, had to wait all afternoon.
When the committeemen and
Dodd finally met the Tech coach
said he was “embarrassed at
seemingly having ducked an ap
pointment. But I thought Tech
had at least beer. put on proba
tion for that 14-14 Duke tie until
after our Alabama game this com=
ing Saturday.”
No Opponent Named
As the affair unfolded however,
Tech was far from being on pro
bation. After whipping Virginia
Military Institute Saturday 34-7,
the Orange Bowl announced
Tech's selection and acceptance.
An opopnent has not been named.
The Rambling Wrecks were the
first team in the nation to play in
all four of the major bowls—Su
gar, Rose, Cotton and Orange—
and is the first team to receive
four Orange Bowl bids.
Under consideration as a possi
ble opponent for the Engineers
from Atlanta are Maryland,
Clemson, Oklahoma, San Francis
co, Holy Cross, Vflianova, Texas,
Texas Christian, Baylor and
Texas A & M.
Stuart W. Patton, president of
o
Jimmy Carter,
Art Aragon To
+ Ld
Vie For Title
I.OS ANGELES, Nov. 12 —(AP)
—Art Aragon, who is a prizefighter
and not to be confused with a
thousand dance halls of the same
name, gets the big chance of his
career Wednesday night.
Aragon climbs into the ring at
the Olympic Auditorium at the
‘unusual hour of dinner time and
subjects himself to:
' The unfriendly countenance and
bristling fists of the lightweight
'Champlon of the World, Jimmy
Carter of New York.
~ The immeriate gaze of some 10,~
000 people in the auditorium, and
no telling how many sitting be
fore television sets at points at
least 150 miles east to Los Angeles.
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PATHE NEWS.
PAGE SEVEN
the Orange Bowl Committee, said
the committee did not expect to
pick Tech’s opponent in the Jan.
i, 1952 game ‘for another week
or two.”
Tommy Bolt
Takes North,
Q‘
South Money
PNEHURST, N. C, Nov. 12—
(AP) — Tommy Bolt, the Texan
who plays golf out of Durham, N.
C., has “created some thunder,” as
Carry Middlecoff put it, and fin
ally crashed into the big winner’s
circle of professional golf.
The 33-year-old Bolt, in his
sixth year as a professional, had a
$1,500 check in his pocket today
to go along with the walking on
air feeling after coming in with
a three-under par 69 te win the
$7,500 North and South Open by
three strokes yesterday.
Bolt’s 283 on rounds of 71-72-
71-69 was five under par for 72
holes around the 7,007-yard No.
2 cours2 of the Pinehurst Country
Club.
Tommy, who’s been on the tour
ney trail much of the past two
years, has threatened before, but
something always happened some
where along the line to keep him
from winning a big one. He tied
for fourth in the Miami, Fla., open
last fall and a week after that
was second in the Savannah, Ga.,
open, That was as close as he got
to the important money. Known
for his occasional club-breaking
tendencies in former years, he was
in control of himself and his game
at all times.
*lt was a great feeling coming
to the last hole and knowing I
could take four putts and still
win,” he said after the initial ex
citement had passed.
Boors Open 12:45
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