PAGE FOUR ■ft Groat Duke's Douile ! fI&AN^ASKETa^tA^MGHT % t "t* vXvif\ v B v f* ♦ SIB ■■■Hr x H ■-{ 11111111 < S 3 *£■■». li‘M p jßMmb*. • WMk& &-«Kl ■ J| ■«l| M 1I W M 1/ . '■ 7 'll/ I i m4BTw^ HHHI IWHH^ .' ■H l » V ?i ! iHH; WM 9b/iLjK:' u M j&*tos by pt i( - HHHHI K±j GREAT-A top collegiate baseball player (top photo), right I *§W Wek't big concern it botketbcll (lower jhtt). The chop chatting < the Blue Devil sloth it Eyrfft m/nSt" i£niii* Hv wm yunr old washer/ Bh'n MOW fora —* Ml fmity Size! | H^y jJft ’" pP ; J U IjtWwFJ ’*'*'■ ms k Bk JB MB »£ ■ -. JH gp m m >r*n -i ■"»’— . -... BASEBALL FUTURE By WALTER L. JOHNS Central Pna Sports Editor , DURHAM, N. C. Richard Mor row Groat, whose activities on the basketball floor and the baseball diamond . rates him as America’s only double All-American athlete, sat in a history class on the beau tiful Duke campus here one day : as his professor fumbled among pa pers on Ids desk. ! Richard, called Dick by everyone ! and “The Great" by Duke's athletic tub-thumper Ted Mann, watched with interest as the proof finally found what he was looking for but showed amazement at what the prof had to say after finding it. “You know,” he said, “I’ve been a history professor for many years and I’ve written five books. I’ve I never received any attention from | my family in all those years but I when I take this roll call book home and show my daughters, that Dick Groat is in my class I’ll be I famous and a hero.” | Dick Groat is THAT FAMOUS i here on the Blue Devil campus and throughout the state. He’s current ly averaging better than 25 points a game in basketball and is rated among the greatest baseball pros pects to come off the Duke campus since Billy Werber made the leap to the New York Yankees in one afternoon. Dick made both the basketball and baseball AH-American tea oft last year and is considered a natu ral for future stardom in the dia mond sport when he graduates in June. • * * IN BASEBALL he’s a shortstop and one of the slickest glove men seen in collegiate circles. He’s a fine hitter, too, batting .386 last season. A native of Swissvale, Pa., (a Pittsburgh suburb) Dick is being eyed especially by the Pittsburgh ' Pirates although he has had touch es from the Yanks, New York Giants. Boston Braves and other clubs. He worked out with the Pi rates and Giants and reportedly is in line for a bonus estimated at anywhere from *35,000 to $10(1,000. Die* told this reporter in an in terview here that he has never talked money with any of the major league baseball people but that he will go to the team which will give him -the biggest bonus and a real chance to play. The Pirates, it is said, wanted him last summer and indicated that if he signed he’d be playing shortstop the next day. Dick told us he likes Lep Duro cher as a manager and one of his close Jttwads is Whltey Lockman so the indication is that tfe Giants may have something to say about his future. The thing that impresses', you MANY THANKS— For The Grand Reception Ml You Wonderful Feilu Gave Us On Our Big Opening. We Sincerely Appreciate AH The Nice Things You Said And Bid - - ■ And We Nope We May Be Able To Serve Yeu Real Seen. i j 88881 r < ■ ALL fYKS OF FARM SUPPLIES . '' .... , ?- „ , |- g whL CbTfuL 5 fcrtilizT^ ly* I-' * r - 4#fif I*? wm V ’ ' *&&&£ Lav,!' >;A v f. -zA&Z- *r V- ’ - «* .. ■ . .. •" ’ ' -5* , 'f *• HIS DAILY RECORD. BUNN. N. a I most as you visit and talk with I Dick is hie unimpressiveness. He doesn’t look like a star ath lete. In basketball he has the dis advantage of height, standing on actual A. feet lOH inches but it Is his speed and ability to Mop and maneuver the ether fellow bat bf position that him bo “great.** He’s not affected by publicity, and this kid really has had it this year. In addition to newspaper aml mag azine stories he is the subject at a special brochure presenting him to the pruss, a several-hundred dollar brainchild of Mann, who is an old hand at promoting. Dick’s only *0 year old and looks younger. He dresses like mast college kids, lives at the Bigma Chi section and drives a cheap-priced but new car about the campus. I He has a steady “date,” Rachel Cosart of Fuquay Springs. N. C., who is soph at Duke. Bhe watches him fan all his sports activities and he meets her between classes. Dick has strong family 'ties, too, being the youngest of five children. His two older sisters are his great admirers and they, together with his parents, frequently drive to Dur ham to watch him play. It was his jjad end his older brothers who interested him in sports at an early age. In fact they fell the story about Dick as a seven-year-old eager. The father constructed a basketball hoop I on the back porch and placed it at the regulation height. The father noted that young Dick couldn't reach the basket with his shots and asked him if he want ed it lowered. Dick said no, and the basket stayed. As a boy Dick was the only kid In the neighborhood who owned a basketball. So when it came tim to play he always was allowed to participate in neighborhood games because he owned the tmll. A star basketball player in high school, Dick w»s undecided which college to attend. He talked to John ny Michelosen, coach of the Pitts burgh Steelers, and Michelosen sug gested to try Duke because he would. have the advantage of the'famed baseball coaching of old Jack Coombs, still the head man in the diamond sport here. As a eager here Dick set all kinds of records and is still compiling them as the season comes to a close. -He enjoyed his biggest night against George Washington when he potted 46 points, 34 of them in the last .quarter when he hit on' 13 out of 13 shots. | He dominates the game and Is the ■play-maker.? If he makes a-mis take and he makes very few pf them, he has a habit of scratching his head and shaking his hands. He's so serious minded about his play that he generally is sick before the game starts but snaps out of it as he tallies basket after basket. Dick was a bit upset when Duke did not have the chance to enter the National Invitational tourney. “I sure would have liked to playi in that one,” he said. ' ' ——— 77 Tilllir* l »T vAHIrDEUI V*#%wßClww ■ LAN ¥ ■ ItvAAL rlVwfvftE VMIVK IA^wwWPR^I FIVE STARTING CAMELS The boys shown above have carried orange and black ft Cnqighall College through a moat successful cage season. Coach Earl Smith’s boys have loot Wily two regular season college games and two tourney games. These boys are guard Ronald Zeroise of GoMshorn, for ward Sam Frailer of Henderson, guard Smith Langdon of Angler, center Red McDaniel of Kinston, and forward Kelly Bynun of Edenton. These beys face unbeaten Lees-Mcßae tonight in Ratios Creek. (Daily Record photo by T. M. Stewart). 76 Year Old Publicity Man Passes 50 Years Os Service; Made Blade Hawks By ED SAINBBURY (United Press Sports Writer) CHICAGO —(IP)— Joseph C. Far r red, tub thumpber for the Chicago Blackhawks since the team was or ganized recently passed his 50th anniversary as a press agent. Farrell, 76, has been publicity man for the Hawks for 26 years. He joined the team and its princi pal owner, Maj. Frederic Mc- Laughlin, when the game first came to Chicago. "It was a civic proposition,” Far rell said, “and I guess Tex Rick ard is the one who put it over. Teams came to Detroit, New York and Chicago at the same time. Sort of a social proposition, and the Armours and Swifts and Marshall Field and everybody else had stock. “But they lost over *150,000 the first year and interest kind of fell off. But the major kept on with six or eight others, and finally it caught on.” REAL NEAT STUNT Farrell didn't take credit for making the catch, but street] stories have hlamed him for mak-! ing hotkey a Chicago suceess by | giving away free tickets to all comers in the first couple of years. “I didn’t do that,” he said. “What I did was this. I got the i major to give me an introduction •to the heads of some'big companies, i “Then I'd go to their lunchroom, says at Sears-Roebuck, and have ■ the head of the company go with . me. I’d tell them the business men had brought, this game to Chicago and wanted them to see it. It , they just saw it, they’d like it. And the heads of their companies want- 1 ed them to see the game once, as their guests. “If you want to go and take your ; family and friends, line up here , for tickets, but don’t take them it i you don’t want to go.” “I guess some games I gave away 3,000 tickets, but I was right. i 1 It caught on and they made money for the next 13 or 14 years, some years an unbelieveable amount of money.” j • i 35* FOLDED ;] About 350 colleges and schools {abandoned football play due to con-! ■ | ditions created by World War 11, ] a survey shows. Duc|iMKno Coach ttots Mow Contract; Moore Worries About N.I.T. PITTSBURGH Os) Donald “Qu dey” Moore, coach of DuquMne University's top-seeded N»tionsd,Jto vitation tourney-bound Dukes, had a brand new three year MttnSlt in his pocket today, but stHI Was a worried man. Moore, who received a new pact calling for a "substantial raise” yes terday, said he had the customary pre-tournament blues and was a little worried about how his team would do in the NTT. When asked if he thought being seeded No. 1 in the big event had his boys on edge, Moore replied in the negative. “No, I think the team realizes that they rate you up there on your record, and ours, on paper at least, seems to he the most impressive. Afterwall, we’ve only lost qne game in 22 starts and not many people can find much fault in that. jppjfel IMji' Immediate Installation H No Delay-No Major Alterations W _ | For Restaurants, Taverns, Drug Stores, | Oress, Clothing, Shoo or Boouty Shops £***-” i Curtis Packaged Units require only three connections; (l) Electrical, (2) Water Sup- f ■il'Cpt!, • t ply, and (J) Drain. % <§ Call us. Learn more about the famous name H I' of Curtis (95 years of successful manufactur- ■X-- ing). You'll be glad you did because we have I f a superior product and we know how to I i install and service it. JB WE HAVE ALREADY INSTALLED AIR CONDITIONING FOR: THE COMMERCIAL BANK FIRST CITIZENS BANK THE JEWEL BOX OR. EUMUBGE’S OFFICE BLD. DUNN PHARMACY SANITARY BARBER SHOP BUTLER & CARROLL TAYLOR’S INSURANCE AND MANY OTHERS IN DUNN W« now have the contact tp air condition the new Piggly-Wiggly Store and Thomas’ Walgreen Drug Agency. We also igstaflihg air conditioning in the HOCKFTELD HOSIERY SHOP E. BAER & SONS jlrtfoinl bftfiiooss storj&/ .- .v- , jgpH|ip v '■’■.'iTvjsjri r£rJ ♦ IE I tk |M dUII IMRfI JKriR f HfiLfiflo ailrHif oSuai Chicago —M— Is the football huddle disappearing? There were Indications today that it might be. a There’s the case* of Illinois, the last Rose Bowl champion. Coaim Ray Eliot revealed that quarter back Tommy O’donnell called his plays In the huddle—but always had the authority to change the play once the team lined up for the center snap. The quarterback might decide to change the play for a variety of reasons, but usually because pf the defense. Actually, Eliot still pra ters to stick to the play called in the huddle, but he didn’t pound w that into his quarterbacks. One way the quarterbacks kept the opposition continually jumpy ! was the matter of the. number on which the ball would be snapped. *We have quick plays on two or three counts, or the quarterback can call off to the sixth or eighth count if ht wants to,” Eliot said. Stanford’s linemen in the Rose Bowl were caught off balance con tinually as they tried to puess u which way the Illinois play might w go—and when it might go. Other coaches were quite interested in this reaction. They figure that a quick call of signals by numbers without a huddle will keep the op position more off balance than ever. -«q REPEAT PERFORMANCE There was a day that football had no huddle—and, it appears, that day may come again. The one hitch Is that there can’t be any discussion without the secrecy of a huddle.- The T-formation has produced smsMer quarterbacks for busi ness of ducking behind the center for quick and deceptive handoifs after the snap. But again, the treld may be the other way-back to tile larger boys. I This trend comes from the pa®- happy southwest. The idea is Be place the quarterback farther bm* for the newer split T formation, * Under the split T, the line Is spread out more to give pass-catching ends a quicker getaway. By the same token, the quarterback is farther back to give him more tilde to throw. The weather probably will blot out this system in the Midwest and East, even though It might grow in wanner climates. “Ws / used it some last year,” said Elidt, “and I was satisfied. Thp huddle may join the tflyfng wedge, as History. * a