Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Nov. 30, 1951, edition 1 / Page 5
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FRIDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 30, 1951 \ - v . Plenty Os Action At Armory Tonight .. . ' HBp 1■ I 1111 IH I *■•'' ‘ VJT ' ' ' ' ' fink H fit iLaal i ■ OTTBTAIIDINGCAG^ER^MS*^^H«TTrnw^MS^W»S!r^?iSSnnj!r shew of shows at the armqrj tonight. Some of the players from both sides posed together here to friendship before the raging battle begins. Front rpw, left to right; Mr*. J. I. Thomas, hire. Trey (> j Godwin, Miss Sybil Barrett, ang Mrs. Erwin Stewart. Bacg row; Mrs. P*wl Walker. Mr* Frank Spruill, and Mrs. Charles Aycqcfc. (Dally Becord phpto by Loul* Dearborn). v Todays Sportsparade By OSCAR FBALEY NEW YORK Ilf) The cloak ot Invincibility clinging in Utters to their battered irame, the Brooklyn Dodgers today laced the necessity ol making a major trade to bolster their pitching sUff which must cost them Duxe Smuer or Carl Furillo. For the first time since the Branch Rickey era, the Dodgers were laced with the necessity of dealing ofl one ol their stars. Here gefore there was a major surplus ol luring second-line strength. But now that bait has been virtually spent. But pitching post the Dodgers tne pennant last season. They dissipat ed a is 1-2 game lead and then, after battling bpek even to a play off with the Giants, lost the final decision as the mound staff ran out of vitamins. The nucleus still is there Preacher Roe, Don Newcombe, Clem Labtoe, Carl Erskine and Ralph Branca, with Clyde King as head m relief mdn. But, to put it mildly, the rest are Thanksgiving fowl.' The big three ot the Dodgers outfield are Snider, Furillo and Andy Pafko, who was obtained last season from the Chicago Cubs. But the Pafko deal already has backfired in more ways than one. First, as trading material he isn’t too acceptoble. There is to TCgin with the - matter ot his $36,000 salary, *n expensive price for a fading piece of baseball machinery. Andy is only 32 but shewed sigps of tolling off as he hit but .255 last season. There wouldn’t be too many Interested parties. • The Dodger? might bp interested in dialing him off, and certainly would in preference, to letting go of Snider or Furillo, for Pafko’s salary is higher than those of Jackie Robinson and Pep Wee Reese and already has caused the second saCker to pop off that he wants SBO,OOO this year in comparison. The lack of interest in Pafko, however, leaves Snider and Furillo as , FOR TUI Entire Family Make CROMARTIE'S your headquarters for gifts far the whole family for the toys, wheel goods, houseware gifts, for sporting g«*Js. There are hundreds of items to choose 'from. FOR THE {MDREN • Basketballs ” • toller Skates • Goals & Nets • Vexing Gloves • Footballs • Wagons all fixes • Badtninton Sets t Blackboards • Tablf Tennis sets • Many typos toys ♦ Benjamin Air Rifto & H*tol» K* THE IUY j :scsr :ss«sk • Pyrex Oven Wore • Kitchen Knives • "gKJSTLd FOR THE MAN • Guns • Gifn Cleaning Equipment* issuer «HJS Sni YOU YOUR 1951 sje HUNTING LICENSE l v “The Complete Hardware Store 99 ' | I phone 2257 Dunn, *N. C. I Buies Creek Bey*, Boone Trad Olrl* Win In HC Opener A surprisingly strong Boone Trail girls’ team had a big first quarter and went on to defeat the Buies Creek girls by a 48 to 25 score last night in the Campbell gym in the opening game of the season in Har nett County Conference play. The Buies Creek boys came back in the' second game, as they did against Benson, to avenge the de-r feat of the BC girls by downing the Boone Trail boys by a 44 to 40 score. Jean Stewart was the high scor er In the first game when she toss ed the ball through the hoop for 16 points. Teammates Virginia Har rington and Earnestine Mills scored 10 ppihts each for the visitors. Two of tjie best guards In Die county last season, Coreen and Marie Gum ter took oyer where they left off last season by playing good de fensive games. Edna Page and Joyre Dorman did the scoring for the home team as they totaled 12 and 11 markers. A)tce Franklin and Sue Dixon split the defensive honors. Buies Creek 4 #lO 2—45 Boone Trail 18 11 15 6-46 - The Buies Creek boys showed the advantage of practice as they took a 44-40 win over a B. T team that hasn’t completed training yet. The home team outscored the visitors In three of the four periods as the Boone Trail boys made numer ous wild Basses ahd missed mast of the shots at Dig basket . Guard Jipimy Campbell was the Btar ql the gam* tor the winners . as he missed only one shqoting attempt while ' scoring 13 yolpts and a swe}l job qn detense. Re also added to the Mww when he col lided wlfb Leaman Knight of Boone Trail just as the game ended and dislocated his nose- Billy Upchurch was runnerup In the scoring column fqr B Q with H points. Bill Henshaw and Travis Roes had 8 each.’ Henshaw and Leggett, did * good Job of scrap ping for rebounds as did Boss. Wallace Cash wgs about the only BT boy whp was able to make a Carolina Students Send Duke Students Preeebt plans for more careful guarding in students spirited away the coveted victory Symbol %fter^ Hill were unable to find the bell. But but nlaht toe bril w#s m turnad to the Duke campus With a poligd escort- |t g%g Iqsprjbed with iiFi; j 14 Hour Road 1, j Ii i • Mil a*, r-.v ... And Wrecker I I Service I || . • j 1 II j TOE DAILY RECORD, DUNN, N. C. Parents Meet Teachers In Cage Battles Deubleheader Perfection Everyone in Dunn, sport fan or not, ynll want to see the basket ball games being' Played at the Armory tonight. Most of the player taking part have not played ball In at least ten years. Its the game between parents and the teachers that everybody is talking about. The ladies tangle in the opener, • and it’ll probably be difficult to untangle it too, and the men clash in the finale. The game will have some of the finest cheerleaders this side of Southern California. Mrs. B. C. Pridgen will scream for the teach ers while Mr. Howard White and Dr. Duncan Wilson will lead Die cheers for the parents. Moss of the fans have heard Mr. Wilson sljput in the court room and are famil iar with his qualifications. Cokes and candy and etc., w)il be on sale. The referees w ill be Skinny Ennis and Shamrock penr ning. The admission is 25 and 50. FIRST GAME—Teachers: Bar rett, Godwin, Braswell, Waggoner, Wade, Johnson, Davis, Thompson, and Ryals. Parents: Spruill, Trjom-? as, Walker, Aycock, Barrett, Britt, Alabaster, Stewart, Lynch and Jackson. SECOND GAME —Teachers Bras well, Godwin, Waggoner, Cheek, Denny, Ausley and Burrage. Pati ents: Snipes, Britt, Finch, Stewart, Wilbourne, Gardner, Wilkins, Me-1 Lean, Hill and Barefoot. Note: The parents have to use more players because the shoes get so hot from speeding that a sub stitute must be used in order for the shoes to cool. Southeastern To Ban Off-Campus Cat a Tilt* MERIDAN, Miss. ident of the Southeasern Confer ence prediited today that the loop’s basketball teams will be allowed tc plap only in conferencercontrolled gymnasiums In order to eliminate "fixing” or games. * Dr. Fred T. Mitchell, president of the SPG apd president of Miss issippi State College, said he ex pected this action would be taken at a meeting of the conference’s athletic association in New Orleans Dee. 14-15. , ’ Re said be believed such a ruling would be of great help In prevent ing the bribing of players to “shave polhfll” fqr. the benefit of gamb lers. , a Mitchell said the adoption of such a campus-qnly rule probably would eliminate Louisville, Ky., as the site of the league's aimUAl tournament, but would not affect tf»e appearance of teams In Die an nual Sugar Bowl tournament at Bey Prisons. good show. Cash got most of the rebounds for bis team,' and he scored 13 points wlfh mostly jump shot? from close to- Although the BT team was a little ragged, as Coach Carillon had warned, the boy* shoygd lots of possibilities. a fsf}rti Campbell of BC and Leaman Knight of BP made some of the host payee to the game apd set up score* with them. B&saf-isitfcs the message “Merry Xmas, Dook, PWVBXT BIOT North Carolina Student* were thwarted }a their plans tp return she be)) Ip style. Police stopped a Caravan Os shouting students en route to .Durham yesterday. The bell was retumpd to Chapel Rill and ppllce waited until the stu dents gave up pnd wqnt home. Then C)e cop tqqk D)e be}l back-witfi- Some 460 Duke student* had Manned a raid fan the land of H. S. Bogan in Chapel Hill last night to recover the bail. They alw announ- insisted that the stolen bell w|s not'hidden on his farm. : ■" j rib* —— . I "Ypurfm ' here tomorrow night agatost Temple University and the antici pated scoring duel between two of the nation's top players makes it Die top' intersectional match to *m country. t* ck Groat -of Duke and RIU on ine strengtn Os nßUonai scoring rggmls they racked up I*s pmon. , groat led the nation’s ipajor col- 2fl, setting re- Twly S*id the Tjltfl tl i jt^lyI f Tr yBH| Hr fl mmlM Jhk'w the New year’* Pay Cotton Bowl football riasric to PaHas, T«*>, is stlH three and a ntof months *w»f wd no ona know* what j two grid teams will participate, ftoarron Henry ot the gllgoFf gpijege i Bangerettes is already u» form foe the game. The troupe ofw jpprgeou* Rangerettes will stage an elaborate mHSI--cpmedy show between balre* of the annual post-season foothaH onroe, fl atenm*’ Ray Elliott Os Illinois Cob "Coafh Os Tha Wwk" Honor NEW YORK. (W He *ays flatly: “This is the eery best team I ever coached.” Bystanders, whp have been watching all season, agree; but also say Just as flatly: “This year he dig by far the greatest job of coaching of his career." That’s the nutshell story of the United Press Coach of the Week, Ray Eliot of the unbeaten Big Ten champs from Illinois, who earned .a pose Bowl date with Stanford 'by beating Northwestern, 3 to 0. "shat isn’t exactly overwhelming the opposition and belittlers might also point out that on the previous Saturday, the boys from Illinois had to battle to a rare 0 to 0 stand off with Ohio State. But arpuqd. the Big -Jen where there is blood on the-moon from September through November, they consider It mihUMi lqus that the Illlni escaped without a beating. And Eliot shares the feeling. WEEKLY TARGET “What we had to contend with almost all the way was that every team was pointing fpr us,” he said “Everybody alms to knock off the fellows who are on top.” Nevertheless, E)lot had a hupch back at the start of the campaign that this could be one of those years for Dltopis. At that time he called his quarterback, Tom O’Con nell,. agUe and said, “This is g shoot the works season and I’m *» — 1 ■ .. ■- ! « Star's Death At ViHanova Was Suicide VHiLANOVA, Pti. —OPI Radnor Township police closed the case of V Ulanova College football st*r Domenlc “Nick” Liotta today by listing his sudden death as suicide in A apparent fit ot > depression over bis squad’s late-season losses. Liotta, 22-year-old co-cqptaln of the team which won five games arid lost three, was found deqd Wednes day to his c&topus dormitory. 80-, lice grid a length of telephone wire was looped around his neck. A brief announcement by the Very Bey. Francis X. N. McGuire, president of the college, said: “The college considers the matter doted. Theye wjll be no further statement from the college.” VUlanova had said earlier that Ltatta had been ill for “several day* and that the cause of his death wag not known. 149ria was said to have been de jected over his team’s final lospes to Boston College and I CARS - TRUCKS /V aJt '■'‘ --a giving you complete power on^the With O’ConpeU directing opgra am the He# aw} AJhApteriPe ck Johnny Karras sparking the running attack, the Ilini never stalls} offensively qptil the final two weeks. Gardner<Webb It Play On Galtitn f#l# BRUNSWICK, Oa. —flftr-Two of the top junior college football teams in the nation. South Georgia Col lege of Douglas and Gardner-Webb of Bolling Springs, N. C„ ' clash here tomorrow night in the second annual Golden Isles Bowl. The Sbiph Georgians, defending ohampionk in the classic and ran ked seventh in tpe nation, are bank ing on stocky Johnny iipsey, for mer A)l-Southem prep halfback of Tiftoh, to carry the mall. Gardner-Webb’s Bulldogs are ran ked fifth nationally, and have rolled up a season’s total of 209 points while the Bulldog defensive unit has had S 3 touchdowns scored a ganist it. The Bulldogs rate a slight e4ge over the Tigers in the game, spon sored by Brunswick Moose y/ith proceeds going to a fund for medi cal treatment for needy children. wsH ’I I motic « WhftV TW *r s r w, PP** “ ■ 1951 Chavrolot B«| Air, fully I K t 1f 46 Pofd, 1 Door. A-l condition. w r ***** f* lfsl ftrp, 2 Door. Fully acral*- I jra t r w T"r ■ ii « AUTO EXCHANGE I ri "Mowwrj!i ■ m&M* wtKm . ATuiia-ifinWßf ups, p\-iPhone 4#Bi Rivals Explode Against Each Other, Tides Are At Stake In Final Football Clashes Most College Teafps End 'sl Seasgn On saftirday BY STEVE SNIDER (UP Sports Writer) NEW YORK OR—The 1951 col legiate football season, beset by many off-the-field disturbances, roars to the end of its regular schedule this weekend with a tight but significant list of games rang ing from Tennessee’s defense of the No. 1 spot in the nation to the Army-Navy feud before (.he glittering brass and braid at Phila delphia. Two major conferences the Southeastern and Southwest— will crown champions. Berths in* the Orange Bowl and Cotton Bowl are among those at stgke. Tennessee, unbeaten, untied and headed for the Sugar Bowl against Maryland, w*s he|d a 26-point fa vorite to knock over Vanderbilt and rctetn }te nosit ons gt the nation’s top team- With a victory also could go the southeastern crown (f Geor gia. a jo-point underdog, upsets high-riding Georgia Tech- Teph, however, already n*s won too more ponterence games than Tennessee and Wfltod rate as eftamp }f it de- || T ”p ec^i TTLE Jn toe dlssv Soutowest champion ship race which carries toe host’s tote In toe Potton Bowl for the winner, Tessa phrisrian .was rated a Seven-point favorite to wrap up the .Crown py downing southern Methodist. Baylor, like Texas Chris tian, beaten once on conference Pi»y t»Mt alto tied one®, drew a smrpoint spread over B*c« and couid move in as champ with a vitomv 4f TPP loses: the service classic. Army’s de cimated forces hoped trickery would odercon#. Bevy’s superior power but toe oddmakers rated N»ry at a Wrpslnt favorite to meks it two to e to*; And to the far West, Southern California was held a* seven points over its bitter intersectomai rival, Notre Paine. There's a (}«rry of other activity, beginning tonight wito Miami fa vored hy 19 potnte pver invading Nebraska. Marquette even with San Jose State in the Far West and Qeprge Washington at Furman. Companion place to Army-Navy In toe Bast Saturday is Holy Cross at Boston College with high-scor ing, bowl-hopeful Holy Cross fav ored by *1 points. Tl)e lone Midwest engagement of importance matches Missouri at Kansas State with the home team favored by 14. LOTS OF ACTIVITY' 1 " Busiest conference in the nation is the Southeastern, which winds it up with five league games headed by Vanderbilt at Tennessee and Georgia at Georgia Tech. Alabama is favored by seven points at Aupurn, Louisiana State by sia at home against Tulape ai)d Mississippi by three over Miss issippi State Saturday night. Ptoers in the Southwest bring to gether Oklahoma a* a |3-point fav orite against Oklahoma A AM, De troit at Tulsa, Utah, State at New Mexico, Hardin-Slmmons at Texas PAGE FIVE Tech with the Border Conference title at stake, and Houston -at North Texas State. • • * Detroit replaced Villapovg as Tub. sa’s opponent after the death, of Villanova guard Dominic LioMa. Texas was eliminated from title contention yesterday when it was upset by Texas AAM, 22 to 21, in a belated “Thanksgiving Day" tussle. Braves' Bonus Boy WASHINGTON OP) Johnny Antoneili. the Boston Braves’ ppp time *50,000 “bonus baby” pitdher. may be discharged from the Amy soon for physical disability. The Army announced today ..thsit Pvt. Antoneili, who was inducted March 16, has been ordered to re port to Walter Reed Hospital ,heto for an examination that may result in his discharge. Thp examination was ordered!‘be cause of pis frequept yijitS to the Fort Meyer, Va., dispensary ,.a sinus condition, asthma, and .mi graine headaches. Antoneili is a member of the TWrd lufgnljry, based at Fort Myer. CENTER Vlgiy _ wda? ’ Sunset r Boulevard CARTOON " SATwteAt'WflLY " *"" Uzzvxy cqMfpT * cartpo* 2 rundayH ” ; - -INBtAViH j OME FOOT ■£ ■ " v ' * *«r> J CARTOON ' - Z 2%w< Shows Start At 7 And >
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Nov. 30, 1951, edition 1
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