PAGE FOUR ■Mr fi9 f£* E ££ s 1 •- MWiilii i x 1 j IBrlßir-ffe SK&V :/MLS. . h’MTNTTT I ■ •yjgaf G% \ :4- • A.Biswor /(PURDUE -4 ••• ~~ • ~ Fdelay's Sport Parade j By OSCAR FRALEY (United Press Sports Writer) ♦JEW YORK (iß lt’s that time of the year, fellows, and be fore* the man in the white coat shows up I’d like to get 2,153 pounds of sees off my cliest Fearless Fraley’s 1951 All-American football Mf4 li* kicking off, I’d like to say that old Fearless is completely qualified. I’ve seen pictures of every one of them .some moving, and* these lads were highly photogenic from a block and tackle standpoint. i Tga rest Is hearsay, persuasive talk by publicity men, ear-bending by the office boy, vindictive speeches by beaten coaches, tabu lated statistics, guesswork and personal cussedness. Bo here they are: £NDS: Bill McColl, 21, 225 pounds, 6 feet 4 inches, Stanford; BobJCarey, 21, 215 pounds, 6 feet 5 inches, Michigan State. (TACKLES; Don Coleman, 21, 185 pounds, 5 feet 10 inches, Michigan StatS; Lamar Wheat, 22, 200 pounds, 6 feet, Georgia Tech. GUARDS: Bob Ward, 23 185 pounds, 5 feet 10 inches, Maryland; Pat JDannamela, 22, 210 pounds, 5 feet 10 inches, USC. RENTER: Dick .Hightower, 21, 215 pounds, 6 feet 1 inch, SMU. BACKS: Vito Parilli, 22, 188 pounds, 6 feet 1 inch, Kentucky; Diclf Kazmaier, 20, 175 pounds, 5 feet 11 inches, Princeton; Hank LauficeUa, 21, 170 pounds, 5 feet 10 inches, Tennessee; John Karras, >2, jK pounds, S feet 11 inches, Illinois. fistepd team: Ends: Barker, Washington State, and McPhee, Prlifxton; Tackles, Pearman, Tennessee, and Toneff, Notre Dame; (Uards, Daffer, Tennessee and Richter, California* center, Boerio, Illinois; backs, Isbell, Baylor; Kerkorian, Stanford; Agganis, Boston 0., and Matson, San Francisco. Jrhe line may be regarded as a bit on the light side, averaging Rounds. But it’s fast, mobile and every one of them g rough. kick with ends that go six four and six five, the “light” [uards have cut bmay a bigger man down to size this lightower is ope of the best centers to come along in early adept backing up the line. . ' I’ve got some guys you think ought to be in the first team old Fearless is sold oh his quartet. Parilli holds three ing records and his aerials have gained more yardage than the surveyors who laid out the state boundary is gong to wind up as the top total-yardage man in the ear and Lauricella, who also does everything but take 8 gate, has averaged 98 yards per carry. Karras has si forget Red Grange and Buddy Young. 7 are. Knock ’em down if you can! irowns-Giants, Packers lears Head Pro Program > »y Bad Wright ! and-a-half pro seasons. ♦ ’ ••• {CsIW Brass Sports Writer) _iw YORK —(IB The National Foquail League will feature one of its newest and one of its oldest ritgriM Sunday when the New Ydj* Giants play the , Cleveland Brflmg at the Polo Grounds and thajohieafo Sears meet the Green The Giant—Brown series has de wgM into one of the. league’s te# after only four meetings be caMSHW Giant Coach Steve. Owen llßltill it, “We beat thdm twice.” Chly the Giants, San Francisco Forty-Niners and the Los Angeles t>af flf the now-extinct AII - Conference have been jib# to beat the Browns in flve- | 1 I • A Bi( Complete Shop hI ■ Em i >. >■. _ EX-- * ' JtL vUK wVlvlf |MHr vAnJ ■T WW # Ot Mpß mwWJt I Wwlw # GIANTS CLAIM HONOR ■ The Giants, the only club ever to t shut out the Browns or beat them : twice In one season, trail the de ' fending champions Joy half-a-game t in the American Conference. The > Browns have a 6-1 record and the i Giants, a 5-1-1 mark. The Packer—Bear history is the . oldest in the NFL except for the i Bears’ series with their city rivals, the Cardinals. Sunday’s game will be the 67th between the Packers and Sears since 1921. The Bean , have won 38, the Packers 23 and five games ended in ties. The Bears won the first game this season, 31 to 20, and probably will need a triumph Sunday to stay in a first-place tie with the Los Angeles Rams in the National Con ference. ATLANTA —RB— The bowl pres sure is cm in Dixie today, but- the leading “eligibles” have several : more weeks of hard football to ' worry about first. Tennessee, Maryland and evqn thrice-beaten Kentucky are all ; in line for a trip come. Jan. 1, and unbeaten but tied Georgia Tech has already decided to play in . the Orange Bowl. But none of the four Foijel Records, Ignore Rumors; , UNC-HD Will Be Exciting BtfHt Coach Snavely Changes Lineup For Saturday CHAPEL HILL OB Notre Dame, smarting from its worst defeat under Frank Leahy, makes its first invasion of Southern Con ference territory tomorrow to meet North Carolina, a six-times loser. ; The tenure here of Carl Snavely, formerly One of Dixie’s' winningest coaches, may depend on the out- , come. Snavely, who has brusned off i unofficial reports that he is “fin- I ished” despite the outcome of the i Irish encounter, announced that i junior Frank Wissman, six-foot, ' two-inch, hard-running, smooth- . passing back, will be his choice to start at tailback in the singlewing ' formation. l Snavely has said all season that ' all his team needs is a capable, uninjured tailback. “ j Wissman, a Philadelphia native 1 ! s Tied-For-Top Maryland, VMI Battle Conference Opponents W. Forest-Baylor, Duke- W & M Top Southern Bill By ED JOYNER (United Press Sports Writer) RICHMOND, Va. —((f)— Top spot in the Southern Conference football scramble and a top coach’s job may be at stake in games around the Dixie league tomorrow. The current leaders, Maryland and VMI, both with unblemished conference records, put them on the line against North Carolina State and The Citadel. Both the bowl hungry Terrapins and the thrice beaten keydets are favored by good margins. North Carolina State Coach Beat tie Feathers, usually good for one major upset a year with his Tennessee-style single-wing attack, thinks his Wolfpack is capable of beating Maryland but it would be one of the year’s biggest upsets. North Carolina’s Carl Snavely may be finished as Tar Heel coach if -Notre Dam* swamps the UNC eleven as expected at Chapel Hill. Campbell Cagers Lick Sanford Spins 57-55; Langdon, Frazier Lead Again The Campbell College Camels had to come from behind last night to hand the Sanford Spinners their second licking this week. The Spins had a halftime lead of 33-27. but the Camels oame roaring pack to win their second game of the week: score, 57-55. Smith Langdon and Sam Frazier were the leaders for Coach Earl Smith for the second time as Lang-1 don kept up his outstanding de fensive work and scored 14 points too, and Frazier topped the scoring again, this time with 15 points. STEADY PERFORMER Center Bill Clark led the Spin ners for the second time against •the Camels. Clark dropped in 20 points in the first meeting, and he sank 17 points in last night’s con test. There were 32 fouls in the battle as three Sanford players fouled out of the game, but both teams made nine free throws that left no edge there. In the preliminary game, the Campbell JVs worked on the much shorter Benhaven High team by a 68 to 28 score. Lineups for the varsity teams: CAMELS !••••••••••••••••••••• DOUBLE-HEADER BASKETBALLS Sponsored By Dunn P.T.A. 2 fV At Hie armory an Friday, November SO, at 8:00 X MOTHERS vs. FEMALE ffAjdhEfe e also S FATHERS vs. MME TEACHERS • {admission 25 & SO fun for all# Thurman C. Ennis, CPA and Hymld fe. Under, CPA Announce The Formation of « Partnership For the Practice of Accounting Under the Firm Name of Thurman C. Minis & Co, || Certified PuMe Accountants ji II • II ~ With Offices || S „~t, F.jrtfcWle, N. c. I U Turlington Building, Dunn, N. C. 1 - ~ *HB UAH* RECORD, DUNN. N. fc who has been * sub an season, completed 60 yards in 10 tries to set-up North Carolina’s two touch downs against Virginia. POTENT ARRAY . j Running with Wissman In the North Carolina backfteld will be the veterans Bob Gantt, Dick Weiss 1 and Skeet Hesmer. Snavely shifted former backfield mainstay Bud , Wallace to end and likes the re- j suits. The Irish will be greeted by oqe j of the largest crowds in Kehan j Stadium history, most of the 48,000 avid for a Tar Heel victory. The j stadium holds 44,500 officially, and | this game has been a sellout since | June. Notre Dame, a 14-point favorite, : will feature the running of aopho- j more fullback Neil Worden, veteran | John Pettibone and Billy Barrett j “I think we can score on them,” Snavely said. "In fact I wouldn't be surprised to see a lot of I scoring.” A quirk of the record books sur rounds the William and Mary-Duke game at Williamsburg. William and Mary defeated winless Virginia Tech last week, but it’s a fact that ; every team that has beaten the I Gobblers this year has lost its i next game. 1 SCRAMBLE IN THE CELLAR Virginia Tech has probably its best chance to pull out of a losing r streak when the Gobblers entertain : luckless Richmond at Blacksburg. Wake Forest pulls a tough assign ment. The North Carolina Big Four 'champions go outside the confer ence to play highly-ranked Baylor in Waco, Tex. George Washington plays favored Kentucky at Lexington and Wash ington and Lee, last year's confer ence winner, plays Louisville in the Blue Orass state. West Virginia plays its traditional game with Pittsburgh and South Carolina goes against once-beaten Virginia at Charlottesville. Clem son play Furman at Greenville, S .0., and is almost a cinch to win. i Player Fos. • FG FT TP ; feynun, forward 4 0 8 Frdzier, forward 71 15 i McDaniel, center J 4 10 Dsvta center 3 0 6 i Langoon, guard v 3, -, 4 14 : It. Smith, guard 0 0 0 R. Pereise, guard O' 0 0 D. Pereise, guard 0-0 0 Bowen, guard 10 2 i 24 9 57 SPINNERS Player Pm. FG FT TP Sides, forward 4 2 10 Arotto, forward 3 17 Gaster, forward 1 13. Harrington, forward 11 3 . Clark, center 7 3 17 P. Smith, center 2 0 4 Btewart, guard 3 17 ’ Winstead, guard 2 0-4 23 9 55 ’ NON-FtOFIT GAMI MIAMI BEACH (U>) Brandeis 1 University of Waltham, Mass., will 1 play the University of Tampa here ) Dec. 8 in a non-profit post-season * game. ' Tampa is coached by former i University qf Georgia great Frankie Sinkwich. Former Michigan star 1 Bennie'' Friedman coaches the < Brandeis team ' lAIWHI CROWDS WIJLi WATCH 111 ffflF PLAYERS AT CHAPEL MU. 1 EH Li 1 1 f : JH sr”' 1 I 5! i j- Hr ■■ ■ wr f ’. f y""' • _ - y3^~~ ■ POSSIBLE STARS SATURDAY - Frank Wissman and Dick r 3 f? «T* ' Wiess (above), UNC tailback and fullback, and' John Masur and ‘ 'jk?’' " < I John Lattner (left and right), Notre Dame stalwarts, will play WS* TiPSp: a * impirtant roles in the colorful classic at Chapel Hill Tomorrow. Wissman Is a 181' lb. Junior and Wiess Is a 188 lb. senior. Gil McDougald, Willie Mays Win "Most Valuable" Award Both Players Saw World Series Duty BY FRED DOWNS (UP Sports Writer) NEW YORK (ID—Willie Mays of the New York Giants and Gil Mc- Dongald of the New York Yankees, neither of whom were listed on their team's official rosters last spring, today were named National and American League “Rookies of the Year.” Mays, a 20-year-old centerfielder from Fairfield, Ala., easily won the National League award. He receiv ed 18 of the 24 votes cast in the annual poll conducted by the Most Valuable Player Committee of the. Baseball Writers’ Association of America. Voting was much closer in the Amerioan League. McDougald, the Yankees’ 23-year-old infielder, poll ed 13 votes to edge out Orestes. “Minnie” Minoso of the Chioago White Sox. Minoso received 11 votes. Pitcher Chet Nichols of the Bos ton Braves, who was named on four ballots, and pitcher Clem Labine of the Brooklyn Dodgers, who re ceived two votes, were the other players who figured In the Nation al League voting. SLOW BEGINNING Mays gqt only one hit in his first 96 times at hat when he came up to the Giants in May from their Minneapolis farm club in the Amer ioan Association. He also had his troubles in the World Series against Yankee pitching, getting four hits in 22 times at bat. but he was one of the main factors |n the Giants’ late season drive to the Pennant. He finished the season a 275 batting average and with 88 runs battfed in. McDougald never faltered after Winners Picked For This Week's Gomes By KEN OHENDERCATE (Dally Record Predictor) Baylor over Wake Forest Navy ever Columbia ElUnois over Ohio State Tennessee over Mississippi Pexaa over T. C. U. Ikrmy over Pehn Other Big Games: Wisconsin over lowa 3eorgta Tech over Alabama Texas A&M over Rice 301. of Pacific over San Fran Auburn over Georgia W & L over Louisville Kentucky over Geo. Washington Jallfortiia over Oregon i j* *■ U. over Miss. StaCe * *• M - V■ over Arkansas Maryland over N. C. State E*»ke over William Sc Mary r. M. I. over The Citadel Cornell over Dartmouth Florida over Miami J. C. L. A. over Washington Vanderbilt over Tulane Bemson over Furman Jotre Dame over N. Carolina Stanford over Oregon State ’rinceton over Yale mitoova over Boston Col. Michigan St. over Indiana Marquete over Detroit Virginia ever S. Carolina ntteburgh over West Fir. (Ist win) over Minnesota Irown over Harvard Mdahoma over lowa state *£ %**' • v 1 i A J IML4Uw hr jumping from farm hand to reg ular during the spring training grind. He played both second and third base during the Yankees’ drive to their third-straight pennant and was the only Yankee regular to hit over 206 far the campaign. He finished with a' 206 average. McDougald didn’t let down in the World Series either. He be- I t Super C has pw//-power to Sxygy t artrr -j txm> handle 2-row, 2-plow I heavy loads oq 1 J' • WV no, *« Sop« c to rowwgou * 1 ii. .mi ,1, wntTiAV AirrUftWWHT %t4%%rtOBUOt ifet I 1 “—' wUlffi slAifS —***- 1 came the first rookie ever to Ijit ■ a bases-loaded series homer and that drive, which came to the fifth game, was one of the most im portant hits in the Yankee triumph over the Giants. Both Mays and McDougald were named “Rookies of the Year” in the United Press poll of baseball writ ers last month. \ ! • Pairings And Odds INTERSECTIONALS: Baylor* 13 over Wake Forest; and Notoe Dame 14 over North etruHna. MIDWEST: Cincinnati seven ovqf Xavier; Michigan State 17 WK er Indiana; Oklahoma 27 qfl lowa State; Wisconsin If over log*; Missouri 14 over Kansas State; Kan sas 13 over Oklahoma A&M; Mich igan 13 over Northwestern; and Purdue seven over Minnesota. SOUTH: Georgia Tech stx over Alabama; Georgie (seven over Au burn.; Stoke and Wffliam and Ma<7 even; Miami seven bver florid*; Mississippi .State abd Loutsiant State even; Maryland 26 over Ncxjt Carolina State; Tenneeeee 14 ovdr Mississippi; and Vanderbilt gev% over T