Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
BANNER - HERALD
SPORTS
e R OND. % " Sports Editors
“¥ireball Frankie”
Resigns Tampa Post
TAMPA, Fla., Feb. 18.—Fireball Frankie Sinkwich, pos
sibly the greatest football player in University of Georgia
Fhistory, Sunday announced his resignation as Tampa’s head
i eoach.
The 30-year-old Youngstown,
{ ©Ohio, native said he would enter
' the furniture business here upon
effect of his resignation March 1.
« Sinkwich did not close the door
eompletely to a return to football,
gsaid, “right now I have no
p ns for coaching.”
“Of course, anyone would be
i foolish to make a statement that
was through with the busi
ness he has been in all his life—
‘#m my case foothall.”
& Last spring Sinkwich resigned
is job here but reconsidered at
insistence of the alumni as-
Ywsociation and other foctball fans,
L. Soon after the close of the reg-
F wular season last fall, he was re
| ported in line for a post as back
field coach at the University of
Pennsylvania, but nothing ma
terialized.
Dr. E. C. Nance, Tampa U.
president, expressed surprise and
recret at Sinkwich’s leaving. He
gaid trustees and the faculty ath
letic committee will meet soon to
consider a successor.
When Sinkwich came here in
1950 for his first fling at college
coaching, he inherited a squad
ttat had won only two Bames in
two years, He won 11, lost seven
and tied one in two seasons. He
climaxed his achievements with
an upset victory last fall over
Florida State University.
Frank made All-American at
Georgia in 1941 as a broken-jawed
tailback, repeated in 1942. He was
Most Valuable Player in pro foot
ball in 1944 with the Detroit Lions
but injured his knee in a game
with the Air Force and never re
gained his old form after dis
charge. He played briefly with
both the New York Yanks and
Detroit Lions before forsaking his
active career,
o ST
OF MILLIONS...
Wy
- e UL L NS
m' Laids LAST 3 DAYS
pen
FEATURES: 1:40, 3:35, 5:30, 7:30, 9:25
NSRRI e T e -;:;;
Hn all the annals of love there’s !
<o Ll > never been a
o A &8 ./[ chaperone
.‘ 3 v ; CLIFTON
: (S !
\ %l S, WEBB
§ \Wsay g, M| %D xfij@ §
| QNS L Y
ANNE FRANCIS "~ OO
: e, W W SON
CHARLES BICKFORD Reginald (;Anomu-!v:yi "vA'n'Dtfl'og GILLMORE,
WILLIAM LUNDIGAN £red KoHiMAR - HENRY KOSTER - BESS TAFFEL
Added: Bugs Bunny in “OPERATION RABBIT”
m Open LAST TIMES TODAY
i 12:45 — Features —
1:30, 8:25, 5:25, 7:25, 9:20
Joseph Cotten — Barbara Stanwyck
in “THE MAN WITH A CLOAK”
w
. TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY
MM
: WHAT WILL THEY
fi%[‘“” M“S”HS? FIND_ON yn_us'?
;,‘1 ¢ 1S '\—»- ' ""'5"".".‘:.';4-”:
—: T - . W, A 5 ,x"'
= -—“-' =“‘ Pt ‘//\’ -
. B W B T e
$ ! . : (3 s , .. -
“G s \"\ 3 ’ -:..: L
3 N bl
‘ o . o\u 5 / ' \ 8
7(" g Y | SRR T
VUV TR ARG
3 Vi \\-";'l: \:’\, -
,__-.b t’/i‘ QS{_‘
owing WATGUERTTE CHEPHAN - CANERON MITCHELL SoLeA ¥
bSO ONECOLD
Extrat § Stooges in “HULA-LA-LA”
L .
High Scoring
» .
Highlights
Cage Picture
NEW YORK, Feb, 18—(AP)—
Have the nation’s college basket
ball powers adopted a slogan made
famous by some of their foothball
counterparts: “Close the gates of
mercy?”
They seemed to be doing just
that Saturday night as seven of
the nation’s top AP-ranked 10
teams scored 73 or more points in
one-sided victories, with the
slaughter running close to three
figures in Kentucky’s 95-40 wal
loping of Tennessee. Two of the
top 10 in the Associated Press
poll did not play, and only St.
Bonaventure, a 58-41 victor over
Toledo, kept the score down.
St. Louis, ranked seventh in the
poll, moved closer to the NCAA
tournament by whacking Tulsa,
73-55, to clinch at least a tie for
the Missouri Valley crown.
Towa and Illinois, co-leaders in
the Big 10, and the Big Seven
contenders, Kansas State and
Kansas, all poured in points in
rapid succession. Towa, ranked
fifth in the poll, whipped Purdue,
90-67, while Illinois, No. 6 team,
kept pace with an 80-53 win over
Ohio State, :
Around 250 pine seedlings will
yield 25 cords of pulpwood after
10 years of growth, say Extension
foresters.
Entebbe is the capital of the
British Uganda proctectorate.
& ”, "
Trojanettes Enier
Tourney Play At 8
BY ALVA MAYES, JR.
The Athens High Trojanettes move into the first phase
of Region 2-A tournament action tonight in Winder when
they meet the Toccoa Hurricane lassies in the gsecond of ‘a
three-bill tourney card which occupies the initial round of
the 1952 girls’ play-offs, :
' The Trojanettes play at Bp. m.
immediately following the Hart
well-Canton game which starts
play-off activity at 7 in the Win
der High School gymnasium.
' The third game on tonight’s
opening card will be played be
'tween the host team Winder and
'the Monroe lassies and will get
underway about 9 p. m.
| Good Record
~ The Trojanettes enter tourney
action with one of the best sea
sons records of any of the ten
schools participating. The Ath
ens girls, who closed out their
’rcgular season’s activity with the
‘Marietta Blue Devils last week
end, boast a 19-4 record for the
gseason ,and one.of the stronger
contenders for the Region title
again this year.
They will be defending that ti
tle when they meet the Hurricane
tonight.
Only one of the ten squads en
tering this years playoffs have de~
seated the Athens girls in regular
season play, that being Monroe.
These girls are reportedly the
most likely contender to take the
region crown from the Trojan
ettes.. Should they get a shot at
the title however, it can not come
until the playoff finals.
Tourney Schedule
Should Trojanettes by-pass the
Toccoa girls tonight they will meet
Stephens County tomorrow night,
and a victory over them will place
them in the semi-finals Wednes
day night. :
All these games ‘will be played
in Winder, but the finals will be
held on February 25 in Gamnes
ville at the same time as the boys
Region finais are held.
The Trojanettes are ready for
tonight’s encounter with the Hur
ricane lassies according to Coach
Marion Norris, Athens mentor.
Her starters will probably be the
same that answered the call for
the Trojanettes all season with
Jean Fulcher, Marion Hopkins,
and Sibyle Fanning at forwards,
and Pat Messer, Sue Winfrey and
Annelle Williams at the guards.
Class A.B.C,
Cage Playolffs
Begin Action
ATLANTA, Feb. 18. — (AP) —
Boys' prep basketball teams this
week begin drives for the titles
won last season by Canton in
Class A, Irwinville in Class B,
and Braselton in. Class C.
A few of the girls’ tournaments
will hold over into the current
week and one boys’ tourney al
ready has passed through the pre
liminary stage. It is the District
3 Class € meet, in which Monte
zuma looks fully capable of re
taining its title of a year ago.
Girls still to see action this
week are in Region 1, Class A
where the finals are set for Tues
day at Douglas; Region 2, Class
A, where the entire tournament is
slated Monday through Wednes
day at Winder, and the finals at
Gainesville, Monday, February
25, and the Eighth District Class
B and C, where finals are sched
uled at Waycross for Monday.
As for the holdover champs,
Canton has another top flight
Class A team but may run into
trouble in its regional meet
against Athens and Elberton.
Irwinville suffered heavily
through graduation and its coach,
Wallace Childs, has moved to
Blackshear, where he has put to
gether a combination which could
be a state threat.
Braselton is an unknown quan
tity.
Meanwhile, the budding giants
of Pepperell and Carnesville, to
name only two, are typical of
what the week’s developments
may bring.
Carnesville looms as the top
Class B team in the Tenth Dis
trict and the same holds true of
Pepperell in the Seventh.
Braves Sign
Southworth
For Scout
BOSTON, Feb. 18.—(AP)—Gen
eral Manager John Quinn of the
Boston Braves announced Sunday
that Billy Southworth, former
manager, is returning to the club
as liaison scout.
The 58-year-old Southworth
quit the Braves last June 19 be
cause of ill health. He was suc
ceeded as manager by Tommy
Holmes, former Braves* outfielder,
who was brought up fromr the
management of the Hartford club
in the Eastern League.
“In his capacity as liaison
scout,” Quinn said, “Southworth
will service the Ohio area for the
Braves, but will also do special
scouting jobs throughout the en
tire nation. He also will work on
special assignments such as base
ball clinics and duties which will
take him to all parts of the coun=-
tl'y."
As manager of the Braves,
Southworth saw the club reach its
greatest heights when it won the
National League pennant in 1948
—the first time in 35 years that
the Braves had won the title, Dur
ing his five-year regime the club
always finished in the first div
ision.
Agronomists suggest that Geor
gia farmers order fertilizer early
in 1952 in order to be sure that
fl‘fiir requirements will be avail
able,
THE BANNER-WERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Cobras Lead
‘Y’ Cub Class
Cage League
In cage action at the Athens
YMCA last week the Globetrotters
of the red division in the Cub class
defeated the Cobras, 74-62, in a
scorefest. Jack Tolbert added 56
points to the victorious Globetrot
ters score and Jimmy Allen was
good for 10 points. Francis Tarken
ton showed his mettle for the Cob
ras, séoring all 62 points.
Also in the red division of the
Cub league the Ringers walked
over the Fighting Five taking their
fray with a 64-24 score. Ted Ridle
huber was responsible for 20
points for the Ringers, followed
by Doug Ross who hit the hoops
for 18 points. Ennie Mitchell and
Tommy Henson were the high
scorers for the Fighting Five, get
ting 8 points each.
In statistices the Cobras are
leading the red league with
9 games won and only 3
lost. The Ringers are a close
second with an 8-4 record. The
Fighting Five and the Globetrot~
ters follow with 5-7 and 2-10 re
cords, respectively.
Leading the Bible study in the
red league are the Globetrotters
and the Fighting Five with 100
points each. The Cobras are next
with 99, followed by the Ringers
with 96 points. ‘
White Division
In the white division of the
Cub league the Dribblers last week
beat the Fireballs, 76-42, with Ray
Danner getting 60 of the markers
for the winning team. Dean Up
church scored 16 for the Dribblers
and high scorers for the Fireballs
were Peter Range and Robert
Honea with 20 and 22 points, re
spectivelv. The Chiggers of the
white division out-pointed the
Phantoms by. 10 points last week,
taking them with a 28-18 score.
LaVonne Brown hit the hoops
for 24 of the 28 points scored by
the Chiggers while Jimmy Sey
mour and Bobby Ramsev shared
honors for the losing Phantoms
with 8 and 6 points, respectively.
The Dribblers are at the top
of the statistics list for the white
division by virtue of their 11 wins
and one loss. They are followed
by the Chiggers who hoast of a
6-6 record. The Fireballs have a
4-7 tally of games won and lost
‘and the Phantoms have won 2 and
lost 10.
The Fireballs lead the league in
Bible study with 78 points and are
closely rivaled by the Chiggers
who have 74 points. Next in line
are the Phantoms with 57 points
and the Dribblers aye last with 45.
l Blue Division
Tn the blue leaguc the Hearcais
mounted a big score against the
Stratas Jets last week winning their
' oame with a 58-16 score. Skipper
' Thurmond was high scorer for the
'‘Bearcats by virtue of his 24 points
and Tommy Wilkins was good for
a good second-place with 14 points.
George Brown eame through for
the losers to the tune of 12 points.
The Bulldogs of the blue divi
sion edged by the Cinco-Hombers
with an 8 point margin, beating
them 80-22. Marvin Jones and
Larry Lewis were high scorers
for the victorious Bulldogs, gett
ing 16 and 14 points respectively.
Joe Wilfong scored 13 for the
losers. L e ‘.
The Bulldogs lead the league in
the blue division with an admir
able record of 11, wins and only
one loss, followed. closely by first
place contending Cinco-Hombres
who have a 9-3 record. The Bear~
cats have won 4 and lost 8 while
the Strata- Jets have won none
and lost 12 games.
Prep- Midget League
In Saturday’s Prep-Midget ac
tion the Smugglers defeated the
Tarheels, 2115, and the Wolfpack
outpointed the Hoopsters. 24-22.
High scorers in the Smuggler-Tar
heels fray were Bobby Thompson
and Cesar Jackson who bucketed
7 and 6 points, respectively for the
Smugglers, while Bobby Townes
oot 10 for the Tarheels. Dan Mat
thews scored 18 for the victorious
Wolfpack against the Hoopsters
while Don Tolbert hit for 9 and
Ed Dudley and Jim Hall got 6 each
for the losers.
The Bombers beat the Tornadoes
and beat them with a safe margin
of 40-24. Don Epps scored 23 and
Carlton James 14 for the Bombers.
Dallas Tarkenton and Ed Thomp
son shared scoring honors for the
Tornadoes with 10 and 9 points
respectively.
The Bombers are leading the
pack in the Prep-Midget league
as to games won and lost with
an admirable record of 9 won and
2 lost, followed by the Wolfpack
with an 8-3 record. The Tornadoes
have a 6-5 record statistically as
do the Rascals. The Hoopsters are
next in line on the roster with a
5-6 season tally and the Smugglers
have won 3 and lost 8. The Tar
heels bring wup the rear with a
game won and 10 lost record.
Athens YMCA fans are reminded
of the State Basketball Tourna
ment which is slated to begin here
on Friday, February 29. There are
at the present nine towns which
have entered the toixme{ and
there will be over 200 out-of-town
boys. Games played here Friday
against teams from Anderson, S.
C. promise fast action for the
tournament as Anderson will be
one of the strongest contenders in
the play.
‘o6“‘\s
wofic‘%
REWEVED B\!R“S T
gealds ; Gimp'e Cuts* . X ‘
Mino® Sin \rfih\’\om oR
Gcrap®s Chate 'i" b LINE
wu OR k LELA
Al
PETROLEUM JELY 10
%
; 7 A
U. S. WINNERS IN CLYMPICS — Ken Henry (right)
and Don McDermott display medals they won in 500-
meter specd skating race at the Winter 'Dlympics in
Oslo, Norway, They came in first and second, respec
tively. Henry is a Northern Illinois State Teachers Col
lege student while McDermott is from Englewood, N. J.
— (AP Photo by radio from Oslo.)
Wildcats Can Reig
As All-Time Ch
s All-11me CGhamps
BY STERLING SLAPPEY
Associated Press Sports Writer
The Kentucky Wildcats can play at three-quarter speed
Thursday night and become the Southeastern Conference’s
top scoring basketball team of all time.
If that potential record isn’t
enough to show how superior
Kentucky is to the remainder of
the SEC, then consider these re
cords also: -
The Wildcats have won nine
consecutive conference champion
ships; should the 1951-52 team de
feat Vanderbilt Thursday night
the Wildcats will become the ninth
Kentucky team to play through
a conference slate without a de
feat;
Of 18 SEC tournaments, Ken
tucky has won 12, and, of 54 team
tournament records, Kentucky
holds or jointly holds, 29 of them.
Through 24 games this season—
-22 of which were victories —
Adolph Rupp’s near perfect bas
ketball mechanics scored 2,068
points. The record is 2,134—by
Kentucky—in the 1949-50 season.
Besides the Vandy game in Lex
ington Thursday, Kentucky has,
the DePaul game in Chicago Sat
urday night to accumulate the
necessary 67 points to make the
1951-52 team the top point maker
of them all. :
The present clip of the 1952
Wildcats is 86 points per game,
best in the nation.
League Games
W L Pct. PF¥ OPF
Kentucky 13 0 1.000 1141 690
Vanderbilt 8 4 .667 820 766
Florida T % 588 758 Ti 6
LB, 7 8 DB3 B 8 T7%6
Miss. 7 5 .83 889 794
Alabama 7.8 583 769 136
Tulane 6 6 .500 1798 832
Auburn &% Al% T3O 758
lennessee 5 7 417 761 821
Miss. State 4 8 .333 793 871
Ga. Tech 2 10° 467 710 8533
Georgia 2 11 .1564 1723 992
All Games
W L Pct. PF OP
Kentueky 22 2 917 2068 1321
Vanderbilt 16 7 .696 1531 1394
Florida 14 B 3% 1241 1150
.S . 12 6 .667 1277 1109
Miss. 13 9 .591 1597 1430
Alabama 10 8 .556.1198 1051
Tulane 11 10 .524 1344 1440
Auburn 13 10 .565 1491 1370
Tennessee 10 8 .556 1156 1152
Miss. State 11 8 .579 1316 1238
Ga. Tech 6 12 .333 1168 1398
Georgia 3 19 .136 1238 1694
Jack Russell
Wins Player
e
TEE,
Golf Crown
MIAMI, Fla.,, Feb. 17—(AP)—
Jack Russell, former Washington
and Boston Red Sox pitcher, Sun
day won the Baseball Players’ golf
championship by defeating Dick
Bartell, Detroit Tiger coach, 3 and
2 in an 18-hole match at the
Miami Springs Country Club.
Russell advanced to the finals
Sunday rm-rning by knocking off
George Abrams, ex-Cincinnati
Reds pitcher, 6 and 5, while Bar
tell upset Lou Kretlow, Chicago
White Sox pitcher, 6 and 5, in the
other 18-houe semifinal.
Ken Yount, 20-game winner for
Niagara Falls, N. Y., won the
minor league championship by
downing Pete Harris, ex-Atlanta
Cracker infilder, 3 and 1.
Jim Hearn, New York Giants’
pitcher, won the Big League’s
consolaion flight' by tripping
Judge J. W. Monahan of the Bos
ton Braves, 2 and 1. Hearn and
Alvin Dark, who beat Hearn for
the title a year ago, tied for third
place in the driving contest with
286-yard socks. Kretlow was first
with a 302-yard tee shot, with
Dizzy Trout, Detroit pitcher, sec
ond with a 297-yard blast.
*®
R. Pidcock,
Sportsman,
ies Tod
Dies Today
ATLANTA, Feb. 18. = (AP) —
Ramsey Pidcock, 45, sportsman
and golfer, died of leukemia at
Emory Hospital Saturday.
He had learned only ten days
ago that he was a victim of the
blood-destroyia dise‘ise.
A former en rven Club
(Thomasville) golf champion,
Pidcock was a tobacco grower and
warehouse operator at Moultrie.
He was also president of the
Moultrie Country Club.
Georgia Mermen
Meet Emory In
Stegeman At 4
The University of Georgia
swimming team will swim Em
ory tomorrow afternoon at 4 p.
m. at Stegeman Hall.
The public is invited to the
meet, the first of the current
season between the two teams.
Weathervane
First Lap
Goes To Babe
MIAMI BEACH, Fla, Feb 17—
(AP) — Belting Babe Zaharias al
most blew up on the final four
holes but still had more. than she
needed to win the first 36-hole lap
of the $17,000 Weathervane coast
to-coast golf tournament Sunday.
She put a 74 with 71 for a total
of 145 and a five-stroke victory.
Louise Suggs of Carrollton, Ga.,
one of the favorites in the pre
tournament speculation, and Betty
Jameson of San Antonio, Texas,
tied for second at 130.
Mrs. Zaharias broke the wom
en’s record for Normandy Shores
Saturday with her 71, which
was a stroke under men’s par
for the heavily-trapped course
which lies on a wind-raked,
man-made island between the
Atlantic Ocean and Biscayne
Bay.
Sunday, despite winds, it looked
for 14 holes, like the Babe was
going to muscle another two or
three strokes off the mark. At
the 14th, she was three under
men’s par and well ahead of her
Saturday preformance.
But on the 15th came a streak
of wildness rare in the golfing
career of the Babe, the woman
athlete of the half century. Her
second shot flew into the rough
and, as the Babe said, “I had the
darndest time getting that ball
back on the fairway.”
She wound up the 15th with a
big eight, three over par, and
never recovered her composure
as she went a stroke over par
on the 17th and 18th.
e e A chest cold can be
it gl very annoying, caus
g ing many aches and
gl pains—so take action
& "% . ™ at once against the
g’d‘ cao» i glightest cough,
fi‘g :s scratchy throat, or
H sniffle caused by a
cold. Rub on stimulating, com
forting Musterole!
The great pain-relieying medi
cation in Musterole (Camphor,
Oil of Mustard, Menthol and
Methyl Salicylate) not only
quickly relieves discomforts but
helps check irritation and breaks
up congestion in the upper bron
chial tubes, nose and throat. Ne¢
other rub gives faster relief.
If good old reliable Musterole
doesn’t give ‘you prompt relief—
see your'dector at once.
0 »
®
H l SRR
’ Double Feltunfi
“BETRAYAL” Part 2
all colored cast
“ONE “MILLION B. C.”
Victor Mature
Jack Burke, Jr. Wins
TexasOpenTourney
SAN ANTONIO, Texas, Feb. 18.— (AP) —Hands
Jack Burke, jr., sen of a famed Houston, Texas, golt ‘p;, :
fessional and called the idol of bobby-soxers along g, e
tournament trail, smashed the PGA record for 72 1. S
today to win the SIO,OOO Texas Open with a total of 2¢
The 29-year-old links star, win- ——————__~
ning his first tournament in two
years, finished with a seven-un
der-par 64 on each of his last
rounds. He had 67 in his first
round- and 65 the second.
It was a record for .72 holes on
course with par 71 or better. Ben
Hogan did 261 in 1945 at Port
land on a par 72 course. _.
The curly-thatched Burke took
the 6,400-yard Brackenridge Park
course apart to win with campara
tive ease and grab a check for
$2,000.
Burke was tied with three other
players for first place when the
final two rounds started. He had
132. He forged ahead by three
strokes over Lew Worsham of
Oakmont, Pa., in the third 18
holes, then romped in with the
title,
" Doug Ford of Harrison, N. Y,
won second money. Ford closed
out with two rounds of 66 and
had a 72-hole total of 266. He
won SI,OOO.
In third place were Bob Duden
of Portland, Ore., and. Julius
Boros of Mid Pines, N. C., with
268. Duden did 68-64 while Boros
had 67-68. Each won $920.
Burke’s 260 is not an all-time
record for all courses. Byron Nel
son did 259 at Seattle in 1945 and
Hogan the same at Greenbrier, W.
Va,, in 1950, but they were par 70
courses.
A heavy money-winner, Burke
did not, however, take a first
place last year. His last triumph
was at Sioux City in 1950. He
tied for first in the Los Angeles
Open this year but lost in the
play-off, taking second ' money
there.
Two rulings by Frank Caywood,
tournament supervisor, helped
Burke on the last round. His ball
was in a divot on No. 3 and he was
allowed to drop it without penalty,
S 0 he got a birdie. On No, 12 the
ball was in-a gopher hole and he
again was allowed to drop it. This
time he got a par.
There were two withdrawals of
top golfers, Jimmie Demaret of
Ojai, Calif., quit after taking a
37 on the first nine. He had 141
for 36 holes. Skee Riegel of Tulsa,
' Okla, withdrew because of ill
‘ness. Riegel had 141 for 36 holes.
| A T NOW SHOWING
pAIA cE l Doors Open 1:15
| ATOENS PAVORITE THEATEDY. - gips, Soad seon, 720, 513
| zm:y HAD FOUR, 1y VAN HEFLIN 3
oS For Germyyg | PATRICIA NEAL
R«'ED... s, l
ntio 4y~ gui | GIGI PERREAU |
’s’%::@ Q\\Gg -
| Ko\ Igfi S
:f }*\’ .v 4 ‘“& _ 4 J (
L PR,
O G Pather
with VIRGINIA FIEID° RICHARD DENNINGSmpIfl by JOSEPH HOFFMAK
Ditced by DOUGLAS SIRK Produced by TED RICHMOND » A UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL PICTURE
Plus: Terrytoon “Prehistoric Perils” “Latest News Events”
Joe Doakes “So You Want To Be A Bachelor”,
| Athens Drive-In Theatre
DoorsC Open 7:00 — First Show 7:30
MONDAY & TUESDAY
HOWARD HUGHES presents cKE .
'T“E )R A . m'm ‘;}
\ ROBERT MITCHUM - LIZABETH SCOTT- ROBERT YAN U
EXTA -~ CARTOON & NEWS. =
WANT TO TRADE?
Your ‘46, ‘47, ‘4B or ‘49 Coar
For A
Brand - New ‘sl PLYMOUTH
A Real Good De9|
- Awaits You At
J. SWANTON VY, Inc.
IRA B Hasvearkh Bui’ Phone 1487
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1952
.
April 23 Set
F
or Class D
Ga-Fla Opener
BRUNSWICK, Ga., Feb., 15
AP)—The Class D Georgia-F|o..
ida League will launch its 1952
schedule April 23 with last ye.,
first and second place teams iy
an opening encounter,
Valdosta’s pennant winners o,
the 140-game slate at Albany,
Waycross plays at Brunswick.
Cordele at Moultrie and Tifton at
Thomasville,
The second round of openers
announced yesterday, s en ¢«
Brunswick to Tifton, Albany 1o
Cordelle, Moultrie to Valdos:s
and Thomasville to Waycross.
Seven of the entries were in the
league last year. Thomasville, the
only newcomer, replaced Amer
icus and will work with the De.
troit Tigers.
The directors decided %0 clowe
the 1952 season Sept, 1.
TODAY — TUESDAY
Doors Open 12:45
That “Pickup”
Girl Is Back!
: HUGO HAAS
BEVERLY MICHAELS
in
"THE GIRL
on the BRIDGE"
Plus: Special “Land of
Trembling Earth”
Blue Ribbon “Goldilooks &
Jiving Bears”
- Features —
1:00, 2:44, 4:28, 6:12, 7:56, 9:40