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PAGE EIGHT TODAY'S SPORT PARADE By OSCAR FRALEY (United Press Sports Writer) MEW YORK (U>) Fearless Fraley’s facts and figures: 2 At* example of how deep a guy can get in the doghouse is shown bp. the way the New York Yankees ignore Gene Woodling in talking about thelr potential “kid outfield" of 1952. v " Rians call for the “kid outfield" to be, composed of 19-year-olrt Mantle, 25-year-old Jackie Jenson and 29-year-old Hank Banc with no mention of Woodling, although he is only one nionthe older than Bauer, and probably a better ball player right now than any one of the trio named. There’s a suspicion that despite his feud with Manager Casey Stengel, Woodling will hold down one of the berths Incidentally, outspoken Tommy Henrich says that if Jensen could forget he at one time was an All-America fullback he might make | a great outfielder. Now that the men tennis players are coming home, the gals of the nets are starting out. Doris Hart and Shirley Fry are on their wav by boat to Colombo, Ceylon, for the Asian Championships starting Feb 4. After that they yiill go to Pakistan and Egypt, then to the South AfriMs dhampionships, Rome, Paris and. finally, Wimbledon .... Between the two of them, it will be virtually a clean sweep, too. McMillin, coach of the Philadelphia Eagles and one of Centre's hareas of that ancient upset of Harvard, is very ill at his Indiana heme; keep pitching, 80. ."fOne of the oddities at the 42nd annual National Motor Boat Show ai~H#W York’s Grand Central Palace, Jan. 11-19, will be an exhibi tier) of scrimshaw. In case, like me, you don’t know what scrim £&y is, it’s intricate decorative carvings of whalebone. ...’ Conservation Corner: The two most poisonous snakes in the woT’ are said to be the Australian tiger snake and the Brazilian slanc JMBKS. Fagin, youse is a -viper the one-time Calumet cannonball, made long tail; fash ionable in horse racing. The other extrema is C. A. O’Neil’s filly Signor’s Girl, now training at Hialeah. Due to a shipping aoci Seftt, her derriere adornment is less than six inches long whei tDm.it uns last they can blame it on feminine vanity. -*»**BSemory I eoe: Sixteen vears ago today, Helen Willis and Howar ' ESS** volleyed a tennis ball 78 minutes-2,001 shots—without mi sing and that’s a lot of volleying. Phil Ammirato pulled off one of those once-in-a-mil’ion golf shots i thd* 'New Jedsev amateur. His opponent was on the green with “gimme'’ putt for an eagle. Phil was stymied bv a tree far from th BKkm, he played nut to the right and the ball struck a waterpio bounded high in the air and over a trap to the green where ii voile into the cup-for an eagle which halved the hole. Play way! NCAA Opens Annual Meeting TomorrowWithDe-emphasisms CINCINNATI (IF) The National Collegiate Athletic Associ ation, opens its 46th annual conven tion- tomorrow, aiming for drastic legislation to take control of inter collegiate sports .before other bodies, lay down hard and fast rules towkfd de-emphasis. The majority of the nearly 300 delegates were arriving today, but only two NCAA committees were to hcftl pre-convention sessions the executive committee and the publi cations committee. A spokesman said the executive committee would clean up routine business, such as prorating dates and sites for tournaments, while the publications committee would complete work on season summary volumes. Actual voting on suggested leg islation to tighten rules on financial aid to athletics recruiting and eligibility will occur Friday 'and Saturday at the regular business meetings. « PREPARATION The television committee will kneet both Wednesday and Thurs day. to prepare its recommendation Tbr NCAA action. Its report was expected to be one of the high lights of the session because thi an). Ovppfy v Invite /ou to their big U.S. Royal IxeSliif now going on! *’*' ,v ' ■ r */1 I J Wt'MKfISBBLL^'WKm '* s?*' > : 5 "-)*,'^7' : n- —-ss^^^^crf^N _S«« WHAT YOU COULD NEVER SEE BEFORE! /v radical tire aid tube advancements now avail- (< ) Sea MODERN TIRE « ."JJB* *• •«*«• *<*• qwoStte* and features that have j SERVICE at its bait) V) '^T l ’ u “* ~d * ri * 0< “ ita ** e '“ ,e,y " wl ““”" y * It s_ „ . . . / Wlui aUJ airailofllnii —— ,4 |u_ ,»■ \ *” wr cvmptwwiy Wfwippuu lU BRED wliU lifU pi OTD(* \ Tlgn llllliil lj' new and diiferent! .2/ madam retreading plant and meat rO 'T/lffl* y ton ass fMsn Ufa rubai Hint pramiu tin [C our factory-trolnad ax port*. Saa Ik mwm* from happening. Tubs. as strong as Hr..l \7 » h ®V mak » «W tire. leak and if \ j |!|i» IjL. ||.-u UlilUl I( You can actually demonstrate many of these \l •*”* CY features youraeU. Don’t miss this BIG SHOW! This fj) »“•"*«< rereading mothods. "AA byw opportunity and protection-before you mak* 7? JJ Lee s Truck Terminal M FAYETTEVILLE HWY. DUNN HmUml r •>•«> ' NCAA policy permitting on'v ex perimental live television of foot-' ball last fall was severely criticized. There was little doubt, howevc | that should the committve recon) - mend continuation of the ban o'i unrestricted video of football th > action would be approved Th original ban was voted by 96 p*>'- cent of the delegates at the Dallas convention last year. REMODELING Other proposals by the council most of them certain to win in vention support on the theory that delegates wculd oppose sin. would require institutional approval of all aid granted athletes, require nomal academic progress for an athlete in order to retain eligibility,; and ban or restrict out of season practice in basketball and football. Two other proposed constitutional amendments would put teeth into the code again, somewhat replac ing th* "sanity code" repealed at the convention last year. One would establish a member ship committee which would act to investigate and to recomAiend pun ishment to the council any school violating the constitution. The second provides for an ethics committee to investigate and cen- Three Greenwave Cage Teams Face Clinton Teams Tonight Dunrt Meets First AA Foe Os Season In Sampson Squad Dunn High teams get into full swing again tonight. The boys have just eturned from the state of Alabama where they took a couple of lickings, and the locals will be scrapping to get a win to even the ledger. Coach Waggoner's green team will be engaging in the first AA contest of the current reason when they faije the Clinton Dark Horses tonight. The locals have a single win, against Lilling ton. to with the two losses. Tonight’s program has three Mines scheduled with the invaders from Sampson County as the Jun ior Varsity boys meet at 6:30 in the opener, the girls’ team clash in 'he second game, and the AA con-{ Terence Varsity boys battle in the! eature. SLIPPING A LITTLE The Dunn girls showed promise j of having a strong team this sea- j on in the first and only game of j he season.' The local lassies foughtj the strong and experienced Lill-1 ngton girls, who,hold second place! n the Harnett Conference, to at ie and exhibited enough scrap and '.ulent to give most high school •iris* teams trouble. In recent practices, however, the local girls 'nave lost some of their scrap and ■interest, and they have replaced im siw features with “led-down” and “ehild’s-plav” This has prob ably resulted from the lapse in •ehe.>*le, and the girls will most ’ikely get down to business again following the game tonight. They can. but they m>—t strive for it, have an outstanding Greenwave team. The gir's have a 5-5 record in tough circles. . Coach Troy Godwin has his JV boys in good physical condition, and he has improved their ability since practice began. In licking • good Lillington JV team in their only try, the local JVs have shown possibilities of becoming a strong team. Some of these boys should make fine future material for the varsity. Their opposition tonight' will be strong. In their only game, the Clinton JVs took a 34 point magin win. LACK OF EXPERIENCE Coach Waggoner will probably start the same lineup that was used in the two games Just past; that would be Ebie Dixon and Skeet Carr at the guards, Corbett Hart ley and Daley Goff at the .forwards, and Tommy Waggoner at center. Claude Pope, who was a starter in the opener, has been having trouble with a leg injury and has not been sure or recommend to the mem bership committee any violation of ethics of competition. THE DAILY RECOfctL DOT*!. N. <X ,‘able to play. Clinton will bring their footbal stars of the past season back here in basketball uniforms tonight. The names of Newma, Royal, Rob erson and Bethune will be famllar to the fans who saw the grid game in the Fall. Coach Jones will start Bill Rob erson and Ferdle Faison, both six feet tall, at the forwards, either Marshall Newman, six feet, or Joe Best, six feet plus an Inch, at cen ter, and Fuller Royal and JiiVny Bethune, five plus ten and five plus eleven, at the guards. Jimmy Hobbs and John Winfrey will also see a lot of action, Hobbs being another six footer. . The Dark Horses have a 9-1 re cord and will come hee as heavy favorites. They have licked Clem ent., Herring, Taylors Bridge, Elize bethtown, Salemburg, Eureka, Bla den boro. Herring again, and AA Tabor City. The only loss of the season came at the hands of a strong Sampson County rival Rose boro. First game tonight begins at 6:30 when the JVs meet, and that game should be as good as the Cam panel la Refuses Operation On Elbow NEW YORK Uh Manager Charley Dressen of the Brooklyn Dodgers will attempt today to con vince catcher Roy Campanella that an operation on his left elbow is necessary A job which Club President Walter O’Malley has fail ed to do three times. Dressen said he would intervene in the deadlocked argument over whether or not Campanela’s elbow hurts him this afternoon. Meanwhile. Campanella insisted he “definitely would not” undergo the operation. The latest storm over Brooklyn broke yesterday when Campanella abruptly refused to accompany a Dodger official to the hospital where the operation was scheduled. Campanella said the elbow never bothere dhim but O'Malley said Campanella had said it bothered him jvhile on a 34-game post season barnstorming trip. Campanella injured the elbow in a collision with Whitey Lockman of the New York Giants last August. X-rays revealed four bone chips floating around in the arm. College Heads Offer Proposals Athletes To Get Some Treatment As Others .. By WILLIAM GALBRAITH .. SPORTS WRITER WASHINGTON (IP! A rigid code of ethics which would elimi nate bowl games, athletic scholar snips and spring football practice was recommended today by a spe cial committee of the American Council on Education. The code, if acceptable and en forceable. wouui revolutionize col lege athletics as they are known today. The recommendations, which al so included regulating coaches' sal aries, controlling the length of foot ball. basketball and basketball sea sons and encouraging concentra tion of intramural Instead of var sity sports, will be submitted to the council’s executive committee in a few days. The executive committee can ac cept the cope but regional accred iting associations would have to be called upon to inforce it. Power to Inforce Accrediting associations could wield “the stick” of withholding accreditation of any college or university which violated the code. The absence of suclf a “big stick” was a fundamental reason why the so-called “sanitv-code” proved little more than a slip of paper. The code would eliminate bowl games by restricting the length, of the college football season from Sept. 1 to the first Saturday in De cember. It would also limit the basketball season from Dec. I to March 15 and the baseball season from March 1 to the commence ment date of the college. Spring football practice would al so be eliminated by the application of the rule restricting the length of the gridiron season, according to John A. Hanna, chairman of the committee. The code would wipe out athletic scholarships by demanding that all financial aid be granted under uni form rules geared to “demonstrat ed scholasticability and economic need ** Ns Special Privilege The committee further strength ened the rule by recommending that the athlete could receive noth ing more than tuition, board and room and books. Hanna, president of Michigan State College, said that coaches’ salaries should be drawn Into line with salaries paid professors and teachers-Valthough he said all ex isting ccontracts “should be honor ed" , 1 Under the code no athlete would be permitted to participate in a varsity sport until he completed a yearß study at the college. This would bar use at freshmen and transfer students from playing on varsity teams for a year after en tering a school. ' If an athlete should fall a course. Henna said, he would be required 1 Erwin Teams Take Win From Coats Erwin High basketball teams ad ded victories to their records at the expense of the Coats High boys and girls last Friday night. The game between the girls’ team was figured to be an Erwin win without much trouble, but after the Coats boys had upset Boone Trail, the game between the boys was in the spotlight. The outcome was con vincing. The girls won by a 56 to 34 score, and the boys took their victory by a 52-33 score. Freshman Jerry Matthews led . the Erwin scoring again as she has I all season. The tall forward scored 1 24 points against Coats. Others' scoring were Doris Oldham with 12, Dorothy Strickland with 10. Pat Woodworth got 4, and Caro McLean made 2. Delores Mason led the defense. Josephine Johnson led the scor ing for Coats with 14 points. Becky Upchurch made 8, Joyce Stewart got 7, and Lucille John son 2. Sue Langodn was the top o-nard. ERWIN 12 18 17 5 52 COATS 8 4 7 14 33 The Erwin boys jumped into the lead right in the beginning and ! held an 11-5 lead at the end of the I first quarter. The Coats team came I back in the second period to tighten ! up the game, but the Erwin boys j really broke loose in the last half as they outscored the foe by 37 tol7. George Earnshaw was the scor ing leader for the winners as he popped in 25 points. Others scoring were George Lucas with 13, James Faircloth with 8, Devon Stewart 4, R. C. Jackson 3, Billy Odom 2, and Stacey Wood 1. George Lucas also played a good defensive- game. Freshman Mac Turlington gbt 10 points to lead the scoring for Coats. Rudy Miller scored 7, Hoover Johnson made 6. Dennis Pope got 4, Tommy Smith scored 4, and Lundy Denning got 3. Miller topped the defense. ERWIN 11 8 21 IG 56 COATS 5 11 9 9 34 Taxicab, bos' and railroad offic ials are serving on noise abatement committee in several cities. These groups have helped cut down un necessary noise made by thes? im- 1 portant branches of transportation. ■ LEE «/ CREECH K NOW OPERATING AMOCO Service Center On Highway 301, South dunn, n. c. yWwmm COMPLETE GARAGE AMOCO 3 GAS AND jim COMPLETE GAS AND OIL J SERVICE 'lr. . SERV,CE jk OIL Mr. J. H. Creech and Mr. Faison Lee, both well-known mechanics in this area, are professionals in their trade. Mr. J. H. Creech was formerly Associated with I Mr. Faison Lee, Automotive Mechanic and Ma- Riley Motor Company of Lillington I chinist, was formerly with Automotive Supply 1 Company f Dunn. FOU EFFICIENT SERVICE THAT MEANS SAFER DRIYINQ, STOP AT THE s AMOCO SIGN ON HIGHWAY 301 , SOUTH. Amoco Service Center Angier, Benhoven Divide Twin-Bill Angler and Benhaven High teams split a doubleheader last Friday night to boost their posit ions in the Harnett Conference race. The Angler boys, who are In a race for second place, topped Behhaven by an overwhelming 72- 44 score, and the top place Benhav en girls boosted their strength by taking a 47 to 36 win. The three Benhaven forwards split the scoring rather equally between themselves, which is the sign of a strong team, as Chris tine Holder took the edge with 19 points, followed by Grace Ken nedy with 15, and Eloise Thomas got 13. Ruth Strickland was the Barbara Barnes shared the high scoring honor for the night' by making 19 points to lead the at tack for the visitors. Rachel Man gum got 11 and Emily Johnson scored 6 for the losers. Shirley Collins was the best guard for the visitors. A big third quarter was the de ciding factior in the ball game. ANGIER 4 12 8 12—36 BENHAVEN 9 723 8—47 After being held down in the opening period, the Angier boys began to move away in the second stanza and continued the move ment throughout the last half. Four Angier boys shared the lead in widening the margin of the score as the game, Jimmy Mat thews headed the list of scorers with 19 points. He was followed closely by Harold Partin 14, Max Matthews 13 and Wayne Lee with 14. Both Matthews and Partin played good defense ball. High-scoring Joe Holms passed the 20 mark again as he hit for 25 points to carry the load for the home team. Ed McCormick got 8. Billy Kelly made 8, Ted Reece got 3, and Billy Olive and Vaughn Clark made 2 each. ANGIER 9 21 22 20—72 BENHAVEN 10 15 8 11—44 DODG7RS SELL BARNEY PHILLIPSBURG, Kan. OP) Rex Barney, who might have been one of baseball’s greatest pitchers, will continue his pathetic search for the strike zone in the American Association next season. It was a search that proved fu tile in Brooklyn, Vero Beach, Fla. and Forth Worth, Tex., since the tall fire-ball suddenly lost his control in 1949. The Brooklyn Dodgers announced yesterday that they have sold the no-hit, no-control pitcher to their St. Paul Farm club in the A.A. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 8, 1953 Unbeaten Illinois Tops Cagers For Fourth Time By NORMAN MILLER (UP Sports Writer) NEW YORK (W For the fourth week in a row, the United. Press Board of Coaches named unbeaten Illinois a* the nation's top-rank ed college basketball team today, while Kansas supplanted Kentucky as runner up. St. Louis moved up one notch to fifth place and lowa gained a place among the top 10 teams for the first time (his reason in other major changes in the weekly ra tings. The Illinl, who added Marquette and Minnesota to their list of vic tims in running their string to eight straight, received 17 first place votes and a total of 320 out of a possible 350 points from the 35 leading coaches based their rank ings on games played through Sat urday night. MOST VICTORIES Kansas; undefeated in 1 games for the season's longest winning streak, advanced one notch to 2nd place with I first place ballots and 275 points, while Kentucky (8-2), which had to come from'behind to beat Louisiana State Saturday night, dropped one place to third with three first place votes and 243 points. Kentucky, picked as the best bet (or the national championship in the coaches' pre-season ratings, led the first weekly listings before giv ing way to Illinois four weeks ago. Indiana, with an 8-0 record, re tained fourth place with two first place votes and 217 points. St. Louis, victorious in nine out of 11 games, advanced to fifth place with two first place ballots and 204 points, exchanging places with BUCHANAN LEAVES RALEIGH IV) Kim Buchan an, former N. C. State basket ball forward who failed to ap pear for Saturday night’s game at Duke, told sports editor Ben Templeton of the Raleigh Times today that he was “dissatisfied” there and has left school. “I think I will be better off at some other school. I have been thinking about enrolling at Southern California or Miami. I did not return to State for the current quarter because I was dissatisfied.” he said. Coach Everett Case left with his team this morning for Char lotte without knowing the whereabouts of his substitute for ward. Buchanan led the Wolfpack scoring during his first three games but saw only limited act ion - thereafter. < j. Washington at Seattle (10-3) whim dropped back to sixth with 144 points. / SUFFERS FIRST LOSS I Kansas State (9-3) and St. John of Brooklyn (9-1) also moved up one place each as New York Un iversity, which suffered Its ffrst set-back in 14 games during the week, fell two p’.ipes to ninth. Kansas State had 108 points, St. John’s 62 and NYU 52. lowa, undefeated in eight continued its steady progress jumping from 13th to 10 place with 40 points. The HaWkeyes were the week’s only newcomers among the top 10, replacing North Carolina State which dropped back to 11th place. St. Bonaventure (7-0) jumped from 16th to 12th place, Louisville (9-2) from a tie for 18th to 13th, and West Virgina (8-1) unranked the previous week, was 20th. Utah was 14th, followed in ordA by Syracuse and Seton Hall, both unbeaten. Minnesota was ranked 17th, Notre Dame 18th and Okla homa A&M 19th. SALES AND SERVICE Let Us Repair Your Car For Winter Strickland < Motor Co. 192 E. Edgerton St, Phone 5295 Dunn, N, C.
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
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Jan. 8, 1952, edition 1
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