Newspapers / The Daily Record (Dunn, … / Feb. 12, 1952, edition 1 / Page 5
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WEBDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 12, M 2 -7 v **v7 mmm i w $ >i i ■ —m 1 r Sanford Teams Here Tonight Oresnwave Teams Are Underdogs The Dunn High teams suffered three defeats on their visit to the new Sanford High gym on Jan-| uary 15, and the locsd teams will be the underdogs in the tripleheader at the armory topight. The scores of the games played at the Lee I County school were JVs, 31-80; B)rls, 63-34; boys. *5-33. j Op the bests of the last meet-! ings, the Dunn JVs have the best chance to get revenge tonight. The girls will have a tough assignment in stopping tall Lucy Blue who scored 33 points against the locals! at Sanford. The odds against the' local boys are even greater than be fore since some of the squad mem- ■ bers have been lost since the last meeting. « v MINUS one One of Coach Barrett's first string guards is on the ailing list, Keck Butt, but all other players on the squad seem to have recup-! ergted. Big center Bobby Truelove was high scorer against the Green-; wave in the previous meeting with 12 points, and Bud Castleberry was HOBBY in beautiful heart-shaped HfAR T'Mo“^iHK! Ck9aM ' 55< >0 ** °° lond C 2lbasJJo Vw J vvtuvivv vviw f#ii w f BUTLER ft CARROLL-DRUGS S 9. PHQNg mg DUNN, N. C. H KfWINKLER LP OIL BURNER m ■ ’iHrliwere . ■ i Save funl-iavo money t ■ This Low Pressure Oil Burner emeees men who thought they knew »U the answers on oil heating I It eliminates wasteful over-firing by releasing just the amount of heat your boiler or furnace can . efficiently absorb. 4 The kind of burners you've knowp in the past \ ates on the Jo w preeeure principle end cen be j ” eofrectly aimed to tha requirements of the home / * heating plant. *■«*■■- --A J ft , Tbat> why this .sensational ! t ’ burner can make a subsun- ; 1 reduction in your Ammm consu motion. <|; ptiTiSSSsJgssi \\«P*T ; s*r nffiiffS i wH by| j mm m ,- me ■ Mctomh Supply Co, D am / m tmM mn Jkf f’ * —: P TV -r«- —-T- Plans Have Been Completed For Harnett Co. Basketball Tourney Way Begins Feb. IS In County Seat Gym ! Plans for the Harnett County Basketball Tournament have been | completed for the week of Feb ruary 18 through 23. With a meet ' ing of- the Athletic Committee about a week ago and the meeting of the Educo Club last night, the arrangements are fundamentally complete. I Coach Hal Bradley of Lillington, | head of the Athletic Committee, has j announced that the biggest jobs and most difficult situations have been solved. They are—the officiating, the pqlrlngs, the date and Dunn High. second high with 10 points. Greenie center Tommy Waggoner will have the responsibility of trying to hold I the beefy Sanford center to in • : effectiveness. | The JV contest will begin at 6:30, and it may be the best of the throe. 11. It was decided at an earlier meeting that the .officiating would be handled by local officials, those who had been doing the #job all | , year: but after tpklng all compli cations into consideration, the coaches decided that the officials ’ would be secured from the Eastern Carolina Basketball Officials As ! soclation of Fayetteville and Ft. \ Bragg. 2. The pairings were arranged by picking four top teams in the girls’ , and boys' divisions and placing them i in brackets, and the other teams I drew for opponents. An extra game i wijl be played by the Buies Creek . and Coats girls, and the Lilllng i ton and Anderson Creek boys to de cide the eighth club for the play off brackets. 3. The date of the tourney, and Kentucky Increases Lead As Best College Team; Kansas State Second By NORMAN MILLER NEW YORK dpi Kentucky, the United Press Board of Coach es’ pre-season choice for the na tional college basketball champion ship, was rated tops in the nation for the second week in a row to day by a. wide margin over runner up Kansas State. Coach Adolph Rupp's Bluegrass powerhouse, winner in 19 of its first 21 games, received 26 first place votes and a total of 328 out of *a possible 350 points from the 35 leading coaches who make up the United Press Rating board. Kentucky's 87-point lead over Kansas State was the widest mar gin enjoyed by a first place team this season. The Kentuckians clinched their ninth straight Southeastern Con ference title and a berth In the NCAA tournament by walloping Georgia Tech last Saturday night. Kansas State 16-3 replaced Il linois in the second spot with one first place vote and, 241 points. The mini 13-2, who topped the nation for seven straight weeks before i Kentucky took over last week,' dropped from second to third ; place with 214 points. THROUGH SATURDAY t The coaches based their ratings on games played through Satur day. Feb. 9. In other major changes in this weeTtf ratings, lowa 14-1 ad vanced from ninth to fourth place and St. John's of Brooklyn 17-2 moved into the top 10 again after an absence of four weeks. Behind lowa came St. Bonaven ture and Duquesne, which ran through their ffrat 16 games of the season unbeaten. lowa had 201 points: St. Bonaventure, which held fifth, had two first place votes and 184 points, and Duquesne which jumped from eighth to sixth place, had four first place ballots and 164 points. St. Louis 17-4, Kansas 15-2, the Washington Huskies 19-3 and St. John’s rounded out the top 10 teams In that order. St. Louis dropped from fouth to seventh place; Kansas from sipth to ninth, and St. John’s advanced from a tie for 12th to 10th piece. St. John's replaced Oklahoma The nation's top college teams: ). Kentucky (26) ggg 2. Kansas St. (1) 241 3. Illinois 214 4. lowa 201 5. Bt. Bonaventqxe (2) 184 6. Duquesne (f) ig| 7. St. Louis (1) - is* 8. Kansas 133 9. Washington (1) ua 10. St. Johns ji 11. Indiana 24 12. Wyoming 18 13. Dayton ik 14. geton Hall 14 15. Louisville 12 16. N. C. Stale a 17. West Virginia g 18. Oklahoma City U. ""'a 19. New York U. a 20. DePaul 6 DUKE MENTIONED Other teams among the 33 that reclived points In this week’s rat, 4>ga were: UCLA. Tulsa, Cali * ... Our Complete One Stop Service Will Help Mc*» Your Car Rfody for Any Driving ExperrSm’ V * * Oil Chance jS^S^ked AM Powerful E»*o % Extra • ' r .# WILKINS the location, have been known for sometime from February 18 through 33. 4. No one had seemed to know the position of Dunn High to re lation to the county tourney, neither i the Dunn coaches or the Athletic Committee. This problem was sol ved quickly and easily last night when Mr. A. B. Johnson, principal of Dunn schools, announced that Dunn High teams bad not qualified foi the tournament. Other announcements to come 1 out of the meetings were that the selection of All-County teams have been completed, but the names pf the players will not be revealed un til the completion of the playoff; and the names of the eligible play ers have been turned iqto the Su- i 1 perintendent’s office. fornja, Pepn State, Brigham Young, Villanova, Duke, Texas, Arizona, Oklahoma A&M, Louisi ana State, Idaho and Pennsylvania. The coaches from whose ballots the ratings are compiled include: Everett N. Case, North Carolina State; E. A. Diddle. Western Ken tucky; Adolph Bupp. Kentucky; Tom Scott, North Carolina ptnd Cliff Wells, Tulane. Duquesne Hits 47% Os Shots In Downing St. Bonaventure By RUDY CERNKOVIC (United Press Sports Writer) i . PITTSBURGH M Du quesne’s Iron Dukes are the na tion's only major undefeated col lege basketball teSm today and the odds are they’ll stay that W*y through their remaining five regy uar-season games. Coach Donald “Dudey” Moore's “swlsh-fhooters” rang up the Mg one-r-a 69 to 63 victory over pre viously unbeaten St. Bonaventure in (heir "game of the year” last night. The Dukes, clicking on 47 per cent of their shots, took a com manding 39-94 helMlme lewd and were never seriously threatened thereafter. To complete an unbeaten cam paign, the Dukes now must only repeat lopsided victories over Cin cinnati, villanova, Akron and Ge neva and defeat seven-times beat en Baldwin-Wallace. The difference appeared to be in the shooting averages. While pu quesne hit on almost 50 per qent of its shots, the Bonnies connected on only 27 percent —a figure al most guaranteed to lose a game against a first-rate opponent. Even SHOP IN COATS, N. C. For Better Bargains, Mqre Quality—and Lower Cost. ONLY 10 MINUTES FROM DUNN 5 Minutes From Erwin 19 Minntm Wm Angler *0 Minutm From UUtocton Next Time . . > Be Owe f • SHOP IN com move HTI COATS 1 lilg 1 Television Dots ' PRICE Mob fMrtw iMlalUltaß ■ 14' Screen 315*90 214.95 , L „„, ! ' - Dne Papering on mi jjtaaw Pjwchied hem ..rti: prow, if. a Duke-State Game Highlights Loop ScMvk la Southern Conference KAEEIGh —ip— Duke, gunning for » Southern Conference tourna ment berth, gets its return engage ment tonight with North Card Una ‘ Stag's Wolf pack b e/ore a sell-out crowd ope Os the few this season, at the huge State Coliseum. Outyt needs a Victory to nail down a tournament berth, although the pevils could probably sqimme to Ohyway if they lose tonight- But victory would he doubly sweet be cause State nipped Duke to » dou ble-overtime affair at Durham 72 to 70 earlier in the hardest-fought game of the current league cam paign. A crowd of 12,000 fans is to watch the contest that may shape into a preview of what the finals of the tournament March 8 hold in store on the same hadwoods. State climbed back atop confer ence standings with a win over Davidson Saturday while Duke was boosting its record to 7 to 3 with a victory over William and Mary. AFTER LOOP LEAD A state win tonight would give the Wolfpack the league lead again whlph it shared today with West Virginia. Roth have a 9-1 record. Two other teams battling for tournament berths clash at Chapel Hill. South Carolina’s Gamecocks, With a 6-3 league record, go against the North Carolina Tar Heels. A loss for North Carolina would almost eliminate them from tour ney contention. Coach Tom Scott’s cages have eight confdtance wins put six losses charged against them- The Tar Heels, who tripped Fur man's tournament-bound Paladins in their last outing, promise to be tough. Alter tonight the Tar Reels play three more league games against Clemson, State and puke ’South Carolina must face five more league opponents—Wake For- so, toe Dukes outacored the Bonnies from the field by only 26 to 25. WILDCATS ROMP AGAIN Meanwhile. Kentucky made a valiant effort to steal the spotlight from the natural game of the night by rolling up a 110 to 66 triumph qvgr Mississippi State which set a new scoring record for the Wild cats’ Lexington court. Cliff Hagan looped In 30 points and Frank Ramsey scored 29 for the winners. lowa and Illinois remained tied for the Big 10 lead with impres sive victories over league oppo nents. ; . Chuck Darling, flipped In' 29 point* as lowa smothered Mlcht fan, gZ to 69, for its 15th vrih in US games and Illinois dumped Michigan State 84 to 63 for its 14th triumph in 16 starts. Both are bed for the Big 10 lead with 7-1 records. In games tonight, Buffalo faces Cantus, Connecticut takes on Holy Proas, Texas meets Baylor, Day ton faces Bowling Green, Dart mouth opposes Yale, Duke takes pn North Carolina State, George town plays Catholic University, Tex** Tech opposes Hardin-Sim mws, South Carolina faces North Carolina and Rice plays TCU. FORBES of Costs FLORIST and Rsmnmnt Shop —Flowers and Gifts fer Ajl Occasions —Wan River Fabrics. Rem nants of all kinds. —Shoulder Pads—Sewing and Alterations —Setts and Buckles —Rattens —lingerie ■Hess PPATS, 3, C. f Ben-Ton . <g&T. Cleaners R Hat Blocking Set I mro—'ii.ii; i iin.'ij i' ■. -f 1 ' Re Sure, When IPs Medicine To* Owl, You Visit Our Pre- Shop lor Nationally ***** r. I GOOSE SHOES pet, twice, puke, ' Davidson and Clemson. 1 In a game that will have no bear -1 ipg on tournament entries, Virginia Tech plays at VMI. IN. State Leaders Get Second Straight Lose By UNITED rRPSS Elon, leading North State Con ference standings, took its second drubbing in a row from a loop team last night. High Point whipped the invaders 75 to 62. East Carolina snapped Eton’s 10-game winning streak Sat urday apd Eton apparently hadn’t yet recovered from the shock. In tonight's only loop game Le noir Rhyne goes to Guilford. French Welterweight Seeks Middleweight Beut With Rohinson PARIS (W Frenchman Char les Hume , elated at hi 6 victory over formidable Norman Hayes of Boston, announced tpday he would campaign for a shot at Sugar Ray Robinson’s middleweight crown. Humez. 155 pounds, won a un popular 10-round decision over Hayes, 159, before 15.000 at the Palais des Sports last night. Today’s announcement surprised many boxing men because • Humez. welterweight champion of Europe, had been negotiating several weeks for a world welterweight title fight with Kid Gavilan of Cuba, who is recognized as champion by Ameri can organizations. Europe’s 147-pound class cham pion will try to clinch a shot at ROWnson’s 160-pound crown by meeting middleweight Laurent Daulhuille of France at the Palais des Soprts on March 17. DUNN m Is Buying CORN and SOYBEANS At The FARMERS WAREHOUSE - HOURS - 7:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. la.. ■ Close 12 Noaa Sat. Fayetteville Hwy- Dunn, N. C. |gi 5§ Wk6llis m\ IK IIIH L iHI ■ lIwMACI 1 ID | 11* A II AE| Wlf ' j vdMT flB (l Carvica t - **** ‘ • ! f TLfi || A)|fC J C l^mJl me news is uooa: i r » These supreme Air Ride Tires J. nrts HunSlfililfl I. UA „ _ AUI | / arg «v«PW If jfW hqwi j The huge demand for these unique tires has j Q been going or ever since their sensational J ■ roflr ’ nlnHnnink/l all n- n/lam aiiinwiAhilo ■j* f .T® tn * ftBAl I S and driving. / Effete SS I Will Uw, nahroned Air / N. I. T. To Open With Tripleheoder* ~ NEW YORK - W - Triple— headers, instead of the usual dpu bleheaders, will be offered on the first two nights of the National In vitation tournament at Madison Square Garden next month. Asa Bushpell. chairman of the NIT committee, said the triple headers would be played on March 8 and 10 because many of the teams now in the running for bids are scheduled to play regular sea son games on March s*■ A 12-toc.m field will be chosen liy mf i Insulation serves you so many ways. If reduces •' fuel bills, cuts down on outside noises, adds to your safety because it is fireproof . . . and - makes your home more comfortable, prevent- ' ing drafts from walls and ceilings. Phone for free eitimate. SASH DOOR & MIUWORK Company PHONE 2124 DUNN, Nu£* FOR SALE Registered Spotted Poland e China Bred Gilts • Open Gilts Bears Os All Ages CARSON GKEGORu ANGiIR, td, C, lQ¥Tg2| PAGE FIVE for the tournament with the -tour., top-seeded team drawing Byes in the quarter-final round. . • 4 ..... GREAT PROSPECT DURHAM —One of the top pros- V pects on Duke’s track squad ‘this Spring wilt be Joe Sankle, all-round gee from Spencer who starred at Randolph-Macpp Academy before coming here. His top prep record for the high hurdles, tor instance, was 14-4—only one tenth of a sec cond off the Southern Conference record set In 1939.
The Daily Record (Dunn, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 12, 1952, edition 1
5
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