Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
BANNER - HERALD
SPORTS
eet Foen . Sports Edlitors
Bulldogs Win SEC’s
Fastest Swim Meet
Georgia’s swimmers, retal
ference championship late Sa
Ky., had the honor of winnir
ence annals.
Reid Patterson, sophomore of‘
Pineville, Ky., and Charley Guyer, |
junior of Savannah, tied for high
peint honors, each with 21 points
on three first places.
Charley Cooper, senior of Augu
ste, won two individual events and
swam anchor man on the victorious
Georgia 400-yard free style relay,
to give him three gold medals, too.
New Records
Patterson set three new con
ference records, Guyer two. Geor
gia now holds eight of the 12 con
ference records.
Although the meet had the fast
est field in conference annals,
times would have been even bet
ter had the pool been “faster.” The
rope lanes were not thick enough
to prevent choppy waves and the
water was too cold, which tighten
ed up the swimmers after 75 yards.
Both Georgia and Florida swim
mers reported their times about
a second slower per 100 yards than
times they have been doing in
their home pools,
Other scorers on the unusually
small 11-man Buildog team were
Charley Cooper of Agusta, 17.5;
Steve Mitakis of Linden, N. J,,
16.3; Charley Sligh of Athens, 12.-
5: Chuck Henninger of Ozone Park,
N. Y., 10; Jim Harris of Atlanta,
i il 1
“GUARD
AGAINST
/74 13
SURETY-BONDED CONTROL
b Priced From
q $1295. to $1895.
v
1l 1950 Studebaker Cham-
Iy pion 2-dr. Sedan. Black,
i overdrive, heater and seat
i covers.
o 1951 Studebaker, Co m
#% mander, 4-dr. Gray, radio,
| heater and overdrive,
| 1949 Chevrolet Fleetline.
# 4-dr, Gray, radio, heater
k] and seat covers.
4 1951 Studebaker Cham
il pion, 2 dr. Green, radio,
heater, overdrive, hill
! holder and seat covers.
8% 1950 Studebaker Cham
pion Blue starlight coupe.
Overdrive, hillnolder, seat
covers and white side wall
tires,
Priced From
& $495. to $995.
1947 Chevrolet 4 - door
il Fleetmaster., Two tone
4 green. Radio, heater &
N new tires.
3§ 1948 Packard 4-dr. Se
dan, Blue, heater and ra
dio.
& 1947 Mercury 4-dr. Gun
Metal Gray. Radio heater
and guaranteed recondi
tioned motor.
1941 Pontiac Six, 2-dr.
@ Black. Heater and good
tires.
: $395. and Less
t® 1941 Ford 2-dr. Blue.
@ Good tires.
il 1940 Oldsmobile 6 Club
R Coupe, Extra clean with
: gocd tires, radio and
i 4 heater.
9| 1942 Ford 2-dr. Gray,
i Good tires, heater and ex-
M tra good motor.
it 1941 Pontiac Eight 2-dr.
! Blue sedanette with radio.
¢! All Cars listed above are
®% priced below ceiling.
% TRUCKS
§8 1949 Studebaker 14 ton
B Pickup with overdrive
and heater,
1939 Chevrolet. 115 ton
g cab and chassis.
f 1941 Chevrolet. Cab over
engine, Flat body.
& 1942 Dodge Army Pick
up.
1940 Ford 3; ton pickup.
Broun Motor Co.
Broad at Pulaski
‘“Your Studebaker Dealer”
R Open' Evenings €l 6:30
ning their Southeastern Con
turday night at Lexington,
g the fastest meet in confer-
8; Paul Johns of Fairburn, 7.8;
Hal Heckman of Athens, 7; Bobby
Cooper of Augusta, 6.3; and Car
ley Parrott of Athens, 4.5.
Conference champions crowned
during the three-day meet:
50-yd free style—C. Cooper,
Georgia. Time—:24.3.
100-yd free styvle—C. Cooper,
Georgia. Time—:s4.l.
220-yd free style — Patterson,
Georgia. Time—2:l6.2. Patterson
set conference record of 2:16.1 in
trials.
440-yd free style—Patterson,
Georgia. Time—s:ol.2 (Conference
record). .
1500-meter free style—Barney
Hungerford, Florida, Time—2:4l.3
(Conference record).
100-yd breaststroke — Guyer,
Georgia. Time—l:ol.3. (conference
record).
200-yd breaststroke — Guyer,
Georgia. Time—2:26.o (conference
record).
100-yd backstroke—Patterson,
Georgia. Time--1:02.8. Patterson
set conference record of 1.00.1 in
trials.
200-yd backstroke — Frank
Strickland, Georgia Tech. Time—
-2:26.7.
150-yd individual medley —
Guyér, Georgia. Time—l.3B.3.
One-meter diving — Mitakis,
Georgia. Points—4s7.9.
Three-meter diving — Mitakis,
Georgia, Points—s44.9s.
Other Times
300-yd medley relay — Florida
(Dees, Robinson, Bennett). Time
-—3:44.5.
400-yd free style relay—Georgia
(Sligh, Johns, Parrott, C. Cooper).
Time—3:44.s.
Final team scores: Georgia 132,
Florida 125, Georgia Tech 61; Ken
tucky 16, Tennessee 8.
: Conference records still stand
ing:
50-yd free style—:23:3 by Bob
Percy, LSU, 1940.
100-yd free style—:s3.l" by C.
Cooper, Georgia, 1951.
150-yd individual medley — 1:-
35.4 by Theyx Stéwart, Georgia,
1949,
200-yd backstroke — 2:25.3 by
Jim Enyeart, Florida, 1951.
400-yd free style relay— 3:41.2
by Georgia Tech (Thrasher, Edle
son, Harrison, Crouch), 1951.
300-yd medley reiay — 3:06.0 by
Ggesorgia (Sligh, Guyer, Fisch),
1951,
LaGrange,
Jeff Davis
Win Crowns
DOUGLAS, Ga., March 10 —
(AP)—LaGrange High boys and
a sextet from Jeff Davis took
state Class A basketball cham
pionships here in the finals.
The Colquitt-LaGrange game
was tied up at 48-48 at the end of
regular playing time but in over
time the Grangers hit for a field
goal and a free throw.
Joan Howell led the Jeff Davis
girls in scoring with 25 points as
they downed Colquitt’s team, 44-
40.
The island of Barbados was un
inhabited when discovered by an
English sea captain more than 325
years ago. ; .
LT X T VY SR
(8 TaBLETS £
\CTING /36
o Ly R
There isn't anything better or faster for nerve-racking e ‘:'::::::":":': "
headaches or neuralgic pains than quick-dissolving HEADACKE
“BC” Headache Tablets or Powders. Also widely NI
used for minor muscular aches and functional _ _carSSNINg etz
periodic pains. "BC” Tablets or Powders— ~,"\.\..--A«*“‘f' D
same famous formula, same fast relief. \ o e |
Bs sy eßr o Neer ) N e
The books of the City of Athens are now open
for receiving Tax Returns, and Returns must be
made in the Office of the Tax Collector in the
City Hall by March 15th to avoid the penalty.
This embraces returns of Real Estate, Furni
ture, Jewelry; Automobiles, Businesses, and a
Street Tax on all males between the ages of 21
~ and 50.
sll 1 A. G. SMITH, Treasurer,
BY ORLO ROBERTSON
NEW YORK, March 10.—(AP)—Seeded teams will be
on display for the first time in the 15th National Invitation
Basketball Tournament at Madison Square Garden tonight
when the orjginal field of 12 will be reduced to six.
The schedule calls for the sec
ond straight tripleheader com
posed of two quarter-final games
and one first-round affair.
The quarter-finals will send
fourth-seeded St. Bonaventure
(19-5) against Western Kentucky
in the opener and third-seeded
St. John’s (22-3) against LaSalle
(21-5) in the second game.
Holy Cross (23-3) faces Seattle
(29-7) in the first round encoun
ter as the grand finale.
Top-Seeded
Top-seeded Duquesne (21-1)
and St. Louis (21-6), seeded No.
2, will get their tournament bap
tism tomorrow night with the
Dukes taking on the Holy Cross-
Seattle winner and the Billikens
meeting Dayton (25-3).
The semi-finals will be played
Thursday and the finals Saturday.
Meantime, 32 smaller colleges
will star the weeding out process
in the NAIB tournament at Kan
sas City and three games with an
important bearing on the NCAA
tournament will be played in the
Big Seven and Pacific Coast con
;elrences. NCAA play opens March
Washington, No. 6 in the final
Associated Press poll, meets
UCLA in the rubber game of the
Pacific Coast playoff for the right
to enter the NCAA championship
play. UCLA surprised with a vic
tory over Washington last Friday
night but the Huskies came back
to square accounts with 53-50
triumph Saturday.
Kansas needs a victory over
Colorado or a defeat of Kansas
State by Oklahoma, to win the
Big Seven spot in the NCAA post
season play. In event of a tie,
Kansas and Kansas State will
meet in a one-game playoff for the
title.
11 the Big Seven race is set
tled tonight ,only one conference
berth will be left in the NCAA
tournament. That goes to the win
ner of the Ivy League, which
could end in a three-way tie.
Penn beat Cornell Saturday,
76-62, to go into a second place
tie with the Ithacans at 8-2.
Princeton, with a 9-1 record,
meets Columbia Wednesday and
Penn Saturday. Penn also plays
Yale while Cornell will meet Co
lumbia and Dartmouth. s
Four Eastern teams remain to
be selected “at large” for NCAA
play but they may not be named
until after the NIT is completed.
One NCAA bracket was filled
over the weekend when North
Carolina State whipped Duke, 77~
68, for the Southern Conference
crown.
Since Duke had won 15 straight
and All-America Dick Groat
tossed in 27 points for the Blue
Devils, North Carolina State’s vic=-
tory game is somewhat of a sur
prise.
But it was no more of a surprise
than the 66-59 jolt handed: St.
Bonaventure by Villanova, and
Wisconsin’s 58-48 whipping of Ill
inois’ Big Ten champions, the
nation’s No. 2 ranked team.
Holy Cross had to go all out in
the last half to turn back Ford
ham, 62-58.
High Scorers .
The first three games of the
NIT Saturday produced two in
dividual high scorers in Don
' Meineke of Dayton and Tom Gola
of LaSalle. Each notche#l 30 points
as Dayton defeated NYU 81-66,
'and Gola joined Fred lehle to
' pace LaSalle to an 80-76 upsest of
iSeton Hall. lehle dropped in 25
i points.
~ Both Dayton and LaSalle
stamped themselves as dark
\horses but Coach Ed Diddle was
confident his Western Kentucky
Hilltoppers would go all the way
after their eliminated Louisville,
62-59.
In 1915 an earthquake caused a
Nevada mountain to grow 30 feet,
says the National Geographic So
ciety - .
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Steve Wadiak
Killed In
Auto Aecident
COLUMBIA, S. C., March 10—
-—(AP)—Steve Wadiak, one of the
great- names in Southern College
sports, is dead, victim of a high
way accident, g
The 24-year-old University of
South Carolina all-Southern Con
ference football halfback was in
jured fatally yesterday near
Aiken, S. C. The car in which he
was riding left the highway and
turned over five or six times. -
Wadiak and five companions
were thrown from the four-door
sedan. His head badly eut, his
neck broken, the university foot
ball captain died soon after at an
Augusta, Ga., hespital.
Wadiak, a navy veteran from:
Chicago, was all-Southern in 1950
and 1951. He was named the out
standing player of the Southern
Conference in 1950, when he set
a new conference rushing record
of 998 yards.
He was planning to sign with
the Pittsburgh Steel2rs for pro
fessional football after graduating
in June, L
His companions, two men and
three girls, were hurt. Two of the
girls suffered broken legs, the
third a number of serious injuries.
Joel Clinton Ray, identified by
investigating Cpl. W. W. McTeer
of the ‘state highway patrol as
owner and driver of the car, is
charged by the officer with reck
less driving, pending an expected
Aiken county inquest.
Ray is manager of 8 drive-in
eating place here at which the
three girls worked. They were
identified by McTeer as Lois Hull,
Goldie Rhoden and Betty Dugger.
They are being treated at an Au
gusta hospital,
George Clauson, sixth member
of the group and a university
basketball player from South
Bend, Ind.,, was injured slightly.
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A
Wonder Lad
Burke Still
On Rampage
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.,, March
10 -~ (AP) — Golf’s winter won
der lad, Jack Burke, looked for
ward eagerly to new conquests to
day after running his tournament
winning streak to four in a row.
The young Texan captured the
SIO,OOO St. Petersburg open yester-
day with a record-shattering 266
and picked up his $2,000 first prize
with the air of a fellow who in
tends to go on winning tourna
ments indefinitely.
8 Strokes Margin
His margin was eight strokes
over his nearest opponent, Al
Bessenlink of Chicago.
The victory increased Burke’s
bankroll, the biggest of the winter
golf circuit, to $8,720. In the three
weeks before coming to Florida,
he had won the Texas open, the
Houston open and the Baton Rouge
open in succession.
Burke had a six-stroke lead
going into the final round yester
duay and all the pressure was on the
opposition. A straight par game
would have been good enought for
him to wrap it up.
But while the others strained
for birdies, Burke played his us
uval game, and he came in with the
day’s best score of 66, six under
par for the Lakewood Country
Club Course. »
He admitted afterward that he
had shot for the tournament record
of 268 establishment last winter by
Jim Ferrier of San Francisco.
Actually, Burke’s score of 266
was six strokes better than Fer
rier did in 1951, because the Calif
ornian set the record of St. Peters
burg’s Pasadena course, where par
is 71. Par for the tougher Lake
wood course is 36-36—172. ¥
Burke said he would play in the
one-day Lagfice pro-amateur
tournament in Miami and the two
day Seminole pro-amateur at Palm
Beach before the Jacksonville
Open, next major 72-hole tourna<
ment on the winter tour,
Week’s Rest
Then he plans to take a week's
rest before the Masters at Augusta.
Burke put together rounds of
66, 69, 65. and 66 in winning the
St. Petersburg open. Besselink
fired rounds of 66, 69, 71 and 68 to
finish second at 274 and take-place
money of $1,400.
Cary Middlecoff of Memphis,
Tenn., who led at the end of the
second round, tied for third with
Tommy Bolt of Durham, N. C., and
Skee Reigel of Tulsa, Okla. at 278.
May Be End Of Road
For Yank Frank Shea
BY ED CORRIGAN
Associated Press Sports Writer
The World Champion New York Yankees aren’t exactly
counting on Frank Shea, the 1947 wonder-boy—and 1948-
49-50 and ’sl flop—to be of much help this year. But
they're hoping, and apparently Manager Casey Stengel
aims to find out just what Shea has without anymgelEX: -
Shea, a big fellow, won the All-
Star game and two Werld Series‘
games in ’47. Then his arm went
bad, and he put in stints at Ne
wark and Kansas City.
Unless he shows something this
year it's the end of the road.
Stengel tossed Shea in against
the St. Louis Cardinals in an cx-l
hibition game yesterday, and, al
though you hardly could call it a
thorough test, he did hurl three
hitless innings, even though the
Yanks went down to a 2-1 defeat.
Eddie Lopat, a 20-game winner
last year, gave up one Card run,
but Art Shallock, a lefthander,
was charged with the defeat,
yielding the winning tally in thel
eighth. Enos Slaughter batted in |
the first Redbird marker and scor
ed the second. |
If the Yanks got some good news
out of Shea’s performance, the Bos- |
ton Red Sox had little to crow |
about. With new manager Lou
Boudreau trying to get all gears
meshing, the Red Sox took a shel
lacking fromy the Philadelphia |
Phillies, 13-4.
Not only did the Phils slap the
offerings of rookie Jim Hisner for
three runs, but they teed off on
veterans Ray Scarborough for
four and Walter Masterscn for
six. Most of the Sox players
couldn’t do much against Bubba
Church and Jim XKonstanty.
The Cleveland Indians hung a
5-4 defeat on the National League
champion New York Giants. '
Sal Maglie, who won 23 for the
Giants last year, gave up two
runs in the seventh, Jimm Hearn
and Larry Jansen, the other mem
bers of the Giants’ big three,
hurled creditably. Lou Brissie,
who worked three innings for the
Indians, was the winner.
The Boston Braves polished off
the Brooklyn Dodgers for the sec=-
ond time in a row, 6-2. A three
run homer by Sid Gordon off
Johnny Schmitz in the seventh
made things easy for the winners.
John Podres and Ben Wade, a
couple of rookies who are expected
to stick, worked for ihe Dodgers.
The St. Louis Browns swamped
the Pittsburgh Pirates, 11-5, col
lecting six runs in the first off
rookie Ken Barbao. The Philadel
lphia A’s defeated the Washington
Senators, 4-2, on a two-aboard
homer by Pete Suder in the sec
ond. '
The Chicago White Sox nipped
the. Chicago Cubs, 3-2; the Cin
cinnati Reds edged the Detroit
‘Tigers, 1-0, and the Phillies “B”
squad thrashed the Reds’ second=-
lstringers, 12-5, n other exhibi=
On ’Z/am 3&;&;@!«& @n&;
e UP TO S2OOO
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SHACKLEFORD BLDG., ROOMS 102-104, 215 COLLEGE AVE,
ATHENS, GA., - TELEPHONE 1371
Serving the South for 25 UYeari
COMMUNITY INVESTMENT CERTIFICATES PAY 3% PEE ANNUM
MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1952
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Helps You Cvercome
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