PAGE FOUR
Ip "* LovellET7& li&tl**
69 r If! z ill r*Jll” :
KANSAS <?e/IJVR
Im 1
• •**»• »» TtX* v.t ~~ jrfti
■■ •. • | inig r^--'"•-•tK'i
r Wjj^ak^P
’ s**
,71
: - t ~ x\ ./■ IHIiIM
4 jf '"’ . u r.
White Defeats Green in
! f Dunn High Squad Game
[ Coach Paul Waggoner trotted his
, boys out on the local athletic field
s :' (ambigous reference) yesterday as
» . ternoon for a full-scale preview of
j. the Greenwave grid team for next
t , ‘ * fall. The coach had the boys divid
™ . ed into, two equal teams with one
’’ to green and one in white. The
coach must have done a good job of
equalizing the two teams since the
final score was White 28, Green 24.
The Green team got off to a big
lead in the first half by scoring
three touchdowns and holding the
Whites to none. E. B. DixonwJ. T.
Jackson, and Don Johnson figured
to the first-half scoring as three
passes accounted for the points.
STARTED THING OFF
Don Johnson pitched to Ebbie
Dixon for 15 yards and the first
scpre'of the game in less than five
minutes after the opening kickoff.
Two scores came to the second
quarter as Dixon hit J. T. Jackson
with a long pass, and Jackson
- L caught the ball in the clear and
ended the 50-yard play. Jackson
~ caught Another toss just Tfsfore
halftime when Don Johnson con
nected with the end for a 20-yard
completion in the left flat.
Aftfk intermission, -the White
team, decided to dEf sbrnething about
the muddy proceedings, so the trail
ing team scored three straight and
took the lead.
Dickie Surles climaxed an open
ing drive with a dash around end
after taking a pitchout from quar-
SABI Mff'lnll EV All *|
WH J
' f ; taj.*mLiiTaCTrf
m 9HI ' '■■VSnfS
: m vHIMNflv# VwwlMlflrlHl
m ' !■
■ ®BF IH |C u
-- X • M II Im //ffi /
; terback Goff. The dash was good
1 for 10 yards. Another third-period
- score came on a sensational dash
‘ by the little fellow whom the coach
; has been waiting for two years.
■ Bobby Godwin, who will enter high
•. school next fall, grabbed a punt
i and sped 80 yards to paymud. Bob
' got some fine blocking on the play
by tackle Jimmy Sills and backs
Dickie Surles and Daley Goff.
BATTLE TO THE WIRE
Things really popped in the last
period when the White team got
another score and took the lead
as Goff faked a pitchout and kept
the ball on a drive over tackle that
netted 8 yards and a TD.
Then the Green team game back
and took the lead again as end
Raymond .West grabbed passer
Daley Goff and caused the ball to
, fly free, and Don Johnson intercep
ted it and ran 90 yards for a rec-
That gave the Green a lead with
less than three minutes remaining
to the game.
Again, an aerial brought about
a touchdown. This time the White
team connected as Goff hit Surles
with a heave that was good for 65
yards, and that was the ball gama,
The "White team mftde all ffcui
extra-paint.. tries .and ,the. Often
boys failed to Convert. Ail attempts
were running plays as the crossbar
was not set up for Spring prac
tice.
The boys showed lots of hustle
and scrap, especially the new can
didates.
, ... . — zsam «-
Master li
I ~ -a" I
Report on Ida for H%iHi
—: — : I V I'l ~ *«4&-roS3iifr.
Eddie Stanky Gives his
out Him When he WrAMUtfik
Takes over a Jdb thatftoHi
Some of
EDITOR'S NOTE: Do iaan4^^MbW^fikg^!||^|aq||MiSf
Or do ball players make
Here are some of the ans^et^lj^efjflßN|PaqßMMfe I Tfell
Is the second of Hx personality mMlfa?flk < lV|MG'*'fo i *lke*n6Z 'tCt|l
of tnajor league Motts.
magazine and is a student 61 %eums.
cmfiWfcHWto
MASTER MINDS OF BASEBALL.
Depressed, lonesome and hothe*
s*ck, Eddie Stanky to the sutfitter
of 1935 sat to his Greenville, Mbs.,
hotel room and wrote his mdtlSer
I a letter. He was disgusted %Hh
I minor league baseball and he aNrad
i her for enough money to rettirn
; home to Philadelphia.
Ten days later he reclvpd a leftly,
i Anxiously he tore open the letter.
No check fell out. Instead, hit
i mother wrote:
“Edward, I have tears to n»y
eyes while I’m telling you this, but
if you do come home,: please do hot
come to 951 East Russell street
(the Stanky resident). We ;&>n HhOt
want quitters to this, family
Eddie rolled over on his bed' and
cried for two hours.
That tofcident marked the first
and most important crisis to
Stanky’s career. Stanky-has neter
forgotten his mother’s "letter.. It
has been an illuminated cftdo for
this ever-battling bantam through
out l\ seasons. He has moved con
clusively he Is ho quHtir
This'spring Stanky faces' another
crisis. He has undertaken ope of
the toughest Jobs in'baseball
martaging. As pilot for theßt. Louis
Cards, Eddie must create small
miracles. Be must prciject'fnto'tfie
.gff !iay e n y?T!?v?r»7
team wmcn iinttnea trurd in 19&\
inti
You don’t have to -jfettdeh vw.
far into the records to ddfeetn that
THE DAILY RECORD, DUNN, N. C.
i
i ?*****-#
lose patience with a player, as
many managers do; three—Ed re
' members things he learned because
1 he- Ittight - too bird to learn them
• right.- '.j.:,' 1 --. ■ j
’ Stanky Wlll iflrid the ' maMltr's
ouUook.differentlfmn the player’s.
Bill McKenchie, who won pennants
atidcin-
I about
the penant, you "worry *abput tfie
fly
rid
TO MSsBT TONIGHT.r
--* Bill ' iJL yfKr
— Z : -T—£ ZSnmZ 1H
ijPj, , *• ?> j f n fin iii in if ‘f __ *w | * lyr* _,■ * j
JICftTHSm UPSETS 7f/M7O/3
PMHNIii fm&Rmsas For Crown Taman l
*!
the- fey nian in
began
M
) con
f<»fe On top by six at
points
each. Zawoluk went to
tryout* at‘Kansas City,
The I«er will meet LaSalle. Na
tional Invitation champions, at New
Totk Jittuiday.
f WE’RE IJWIMfi 4
f THE UME / .
• , f l,.**-*
V>-e J ; ' - ;, - ;i •
' . ' . 1 : r’jv) ■ K
'
/ their electricity directlv from Carolina Power &
I || Trfijtit to petty \xr i
V IM. | |ll 1 If ill t I .« V,
I WwlupGa-jMq>ier«XQ|m IOWu 1H
the Qf nrtipeUtion prior to April 1 1952 9\Thil
f
« poMUWd your tovn may pE qdjiidgti
v ? - IS - ST*.'*’ r..-dr^
: - TTiiffWfflmMr li wa
k & ‘ -X - * . p d ’ • " m?
f-. \ . /
VJA
I■/ I') 1 11 11 ■ l ll llllll ■
jWfwVWtv
■ ni ’Ajoifimissioner
lßKWltMk%y^Hone
on conference
a^tofos^U 00 6
Tfis -policy statement lias made
in a letter to athletic directors and
faculty iepresentatlves after the
-trtnfaenie meeting with the
"Council of • 10,” composed Os the
presidents of the member institu
tions, ~ March' 16.
The interpretation means that
the members can contact prospec
tive athletes in the future only by
mail, or when the boy visits the
.Obviously the institutions cannot
refuse to conduct telephone con
versations with athletes who might
paU the school, but they were in
structed to break off such contacts
as quickly as possible. They were
also Instructed that they could not
accept collect balls.
Last summer, it was under
stood, some-standout wthietes were
besieged by phone calls from var
ious coaching staffs.
'
WIUINIjiSDAi Al* IfiiRWUUK, MAltlli *o, 299
;r- - - "V -■
■ ■ V dm>m||. * . V A
AIKEN, a C. (UI - Lean Sam
Snead made up today most of the
money-he lost by forfeiting a play
off for Lre Jacksonville Open title.
Snead tied Doug Ford of Harris
son. N. Y„ for the »2,oQoJlrst prize
at Jacksonville, Fla.. Monday but
decided to accept the $i;4M second
money hatause of an out-of-bounds
technicality in the second,round.
Be came here and won $4450 first
money to the' one-day Aiken Pro-
Amateur tourrtament with a record
breaking, slf-under-par 95.
Ford shot 09 to earn sls tor a
seven-way split of eighth place.
Ben Hogan, warming up to de
fend his Masters title next week
at Augusta, Oa., shot a 67' to tie
three others for second as 19 pros,
bettered the Palmetto course's par
71.
-EarLStewart Jr„ of DUla, Tex.,
Ted Kroll of New Hartford. N. Y„
and Jerry Barber of, Pasadena,
Cahf., each matched Hogan's 67.
Hogan teamed with amateur
Robert Goodyear to capture pro
amteur honors 'with a Score of 61.
NCAA TOURNAMENT
St. Eastern
SuL
Kansas 74 Santa Clara 66 Wea-,
■ , 1 ■ ■ ■ H- 1 A.i n.. I. irama. —■
Am bul rave Swvit#
fp'hbne YoJ* °
CROWtARTIE FUNERAL DOME
• DUNN, N. C.
.===^s=Hb-
~ -1
i'
\m
: TrfJw|*‘. iT [lf?
CQMFtTINO "til 'the North ai
Brtuth womeifs amatmr
ps« at PtheftofaL N. CL. me tl
&£is3®i£ , &£
. froin behind to defeat the defen
tog champion, Pat O’SulUvan,
and " L and-climb into the tspbr
'ipriqhii f/ufiiMmuas
- ■- --