Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Dec. 21, 1951, edition 1 / Page 9
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' DECEMBER *l. 19*1 | -mas g I •; ; W vJWi , rr --: • - ■ • - | ,Ta Ann Aar s J 'l ".JJBKW ' i ' In Garden NEW YORK , student Chico Vejar gets a person al appearance at Madison, Square | Garden Jan. 4 because he evaded j the descending curtain ;in the i second round at Bt. Nicholas Arena last njght and then battered welter- j weight Carmine Fiore until he was i redder than his name. .1 Chico’s unanimous decision vic tors over Brooklyn’s Fiore in their television 10-rounder earned’ him a 1 main event at the Garden with Enrique Bolandoe of Los Angejes. In the second round it appeared 20-year-old Vejar from Stamford, Conn., would suffer the second de- FARM BUREAU INSURANCE John K. Stripes Office la located In FCX Bonding Dunn, N. C. Phone 2254 1 1 i;r Smart Styt for your Spring Wardrobe SUITS THAT DOUBLE AS SEPARATES j j quart i I • ■wMKBmSs fl k^m WtU BUR 9|H - apart! Both stylos ihfrtraowwili nrtrrii'iirt WoMm , - • tgoM wdtincs rrsats rtfirtwrt•iMth-iTfTfff Both aft ■ 1 * * ■% ■:, "*■ > ' V . . Jj ' mpjhWaawWai.'bMtfcW.or«Manywto** W* 5 ; Mo** fnfri tfrinat nn afhiti Mack skirt nr niYV cord Ml Whitt. CUiu iTnpf» on mmt, oik* w « 7 wviu *> .* ». Y^KPji JUUtS p :y^ v •"• % ■ ■ ■tf'H jvV^ mseS; . ’ I Stepping in for Jot isl PvJSk .cs’i,' . ■ W! OUTFIEIDIR Mickey Mantle holds one of his own shoes in Commerce, Qkia., and wonders whether ne will be able to All the fabulous footwear -of retired Joe DiMaggio. Yankee manager Cagey Stengel tapped Mickey |o take over the spot in cen ■ ter field which Joe played brilHant rly for.many years. (International) feat in his carehr of W profes | sional bouts; for a left-hook to the kisser dropped him to the canvas. HAS WHAT IT TAKES Though'badly hurt, Chico lurched to his feet at the count of seven. Then stocky Flore tore after Chico and staggered him thrice before the gong sounded. Vejar, a dramatic student at New York University, provided the 1,338 fans with plenty of drania in the third round. He rallied magnificently and with a fiery, but intelligent assault took command and held it throughout. Vejar gave Flore, a 3-1 under dog, such a beating that Dr. Vin cent Nardiello considered stopping the bout at the end of the seventh session because of gashes in both of Fiore’s brows, on his left cheek, and his nose bridge and in his lower lip. ' - •, .PROFESSORS PITCH IN . " -BHEPHERDSTOWN, W. Va. (W- Dr. John Goulding, instructor -in act*nee rat Shepherd CWUege, had his hand caught in Machinery on his farm, so fellow faculty mem bers decided to help, while Gould - ing was being treated at a hospital, faculty members and , students pitched in to husk the com cmp on the Goulding farm. Coach Norland's Volunteers • Take Swell Record To Bowl: By JULIAN GRANGER i Sports Writer KNOXVILLE, Tenn. flfl Gen. Bob Neyland who learned the sol dier’s maxim at West Point that the best defense is a good defense is making the reverse (lay off with his Sugar Bowl-bound Tennessee football team. . Neyland, who served as an aide at the point when Gen. Douglas MacArthur was its commanding of ficer, teaches his Volunteers-the nation’s No. 1 gridiron machine this season-that the best offense is a good defense. That strategy has paid off dur ing 20 “Neyland years” with 163 victories, 24 defeats and 11 ties in 198 regular-season games. How well it works against the best ground-gainer the Vols face this season will be determined when romEß^s ELECTRIC IRON SwSMm^SUNric ' torn htm stu *lml 1 S _ ooc MIXER '. * ! ! SEWING MACHIME LIKE i| i T °lß 95 ER " 5 46,50 1 • ** fl 1 TpliftwoHd’smßrtv I GIVE MODWN vacuum cieaniri .* .1 |J| I « Compare the feature* of - *™***^*^****^ iuguu.wme.ett X I I _ . ' ..f MSTuuMnruMs a Rock Steady TV J s —— ——— ——__ —.. —. ■■■—.■ . TH* 040.? ftjseoftft. new*, n. V. ' *< ’* : v . they tackle Maryland in the Sugar ' Bowl ,Jan. 1. ■ I • Neyland regards the Terrapins not the Vols-as the nation’* No. 1 train. And he thinks Jim Tatum is one of the finest! young coaches. He said today that the ; Vols will have to play their best game to win. < Taking it easy Yet, while the Terps have been undergoing almost daily drills, the general has let the Vols off with only a few workouts. Sad experi ence in his “grand circle" of the major bowls was taught him that rest often is a better touchdown tonic than constant scrimmaging. His teams have won only two games and scored 50 points to the opposition's 55 in two trips to the Orange Bowl and one each to the Rose, Sugar and Cotton Bowls. Neyland’s constant strategy is that the other team, bowl-bound or not; will always make mistakes. What’s more, hr knows that long punt returns ib series often can be more damaging then an End sweep by hU All-America tailback. Hank Lauricella, or the crunching off tackle drives of Hank’s Understudy, Harold Herky Payne. ' REALLY HAUL ’EM BACK Against 10 opponents the single wing -Vols returned 4T punts for 800. yards the equivalent of eight touchdowns—While their foes got only 144 yards in 18 returns!! | This year Lauricella, Payne and | UWIS GODWIN AND CO. j JKfiaßr GRADING CONTRACTORS 1 PONDS CLEARING BULLDOZING FREE ESTIMATES fullback Andy Kozar-with guard John - Michels and wingback Bert Rechichar opening the way- ran up the biggest sum of points ever scored In one season by a Neyland coached team - 373 to 82. Power told for the Vols. They netted 3,068 yards rushing while holding the opposition to 1,077 but their, passing fell short, 617 to 1,163. Hurrin’ Hank got the biggest Reelfoot Lake, a reservoir basin of the Mississippi river in Tennes see, was formed by an earthquake I in 1811. PAGE ONE bite with 881 net for a79 average, Conference in but Payne led the Southeastern points. 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The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Dec. 21, 1951, edition 1
9
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