Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Nov. 17, 1949, edition 1 / Page 6
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; frttE SrOlCIS rAUE Of The fyaynesviHe rviOlUiiameer Thursday Afternoon, November 17, 194J Mountaineers Tackle Marion Rippers Promise Stiff Test Chief Ripper Waynesv Ule's Mount.iineers. re membering what thev saw .it Mar ion last I'ridav 1 1 1 1 1 1 . stepped up their practice pact this week to polish t tit ii I'orai for uliaC may be their toughest battle of the season. Tlie II meet Art Dill's Marion Rippers al 7 3D p m Ki ulav at the Way ne-v ilh st.iiliiiiu in their bid for then (itihlh straight victory. At Maiimi. Pill sanl the unde feated .IV 111 -V die rli'lt ll is the "best team We'll f.nc all season. OUtSlde I.. I.oir lull we'll ll slip up oil Illelll Tile Hipper-. uutpl.ied the Le Harriiit; had weather, the inter cont'e! clu e battle will attract an other eap.'cii) eiuAd to the Way lit -' die -1 .id i n i n. And an. on; the most interested spectator nl be Coach Don Hip;)-, who-,. Carton High School griddcrs will le meeting the Mountaineer on the -ame field on Thanksgiving Day. only six days later nnir pnv. el !'mi-i' most of the way betoiv hi-ins. 12-0. a week ago last Kri.l.iv I.a-t Friday ni.nht. Coach Carle tin WY.itherby and n. arly a 1 1 of his rtaulars watched the Rippers edge Canton's Black H.'ars. 6-0. on the strength of an 80-ard touchdown march in the third period. And thev watched both teams very carefull;. . since they also have to get by Canton Ln their return game next Thanksgiving Day be fore they can wind up their season With a record clean of losses. The Mont" air.et i s will be under l:ea pressure considering the fact thes have a clean slate to protect Hi.t beski, , tl,e satisfaction of knockir.-i otr a rugged undefeated opponent. Din's bovs also will be gunning tor the satisfaction of evening the count for the 19-14 licking thev took from the Mountaineer- in the Paper Bowl last' season. The rest of the Marion squad came through tin- Canton game with onlv the usual minor bruises and bump- t -how t,,r their experience " ui'f the .n.nniaiiieei- went throu"h i u.' '. il w.i kouts, the Hiop, r- k.-pt tt,..n contact work ta a minimum J. nkiic and I, Cj ,i, )(,t Ro thtoit.l, anv t ii.,. :,,,ndi stuff. ! ' ai. t take ., c hance on anv nu.ie iiijiuie- i,e Marion eoach said. The M..ui,!.,!i.eep meanwhile. Were r. port'-d in uretty good shape. Quarter ha, k Chaiiie Womaek I Hunting i I If i 5 m f I if i m it u ..ii to1 m rwp-ia i vi .7 a: im . 16 Veterans. Of 1948 Paper Bowl Game To Play In Clash Friday RIGHT ENT- ALVIf RADAR, captains the Marion football squad and is one of its most reli able all-around performers. He was one of Marion's stars in the 1948 Paper Bowl. Marion Guard s- XU't' ITT. former North Caro lina fullback who coaches the I Marion Hipper. s. avs his bos are "oat lo win this one '. He refers to his squad - Friday night bat- j tie wi.ii undefeated, once-lied j U'av ntsville. Most of his boys reim niber the 19-14 upset victory I tlie Mountaineers pinned on them in the 1948 Paper Bowl v.nte His reputation was respect ed enough to get him appointed as couch of the eastern squad for Asheville's 1949 Optimist Bowl Tickets For Marion Game Now On Sale HOWARD WILSON The Marion-Waynesville football game here tomorrow night will look like a replay of last year's Paper Howl game at Canton. Sixtetn of the boys who took part in that thriller that Waynesville won, 19 14, la t fall will be back in action again. Knds Alvni Kadar. now Hie Rip per captain, and Chub McGalliard snagged important passes in Mar ion's lii-t touchdown drive and played a tuiiv.h defen-Jve same all I the way. Hoard Howard Wilson of Marion was another delensive bulwark in I lie losing cause Joe Jenkins and Jiiiiinv (libbs each played a whale of a game at the tackle posts, and Greene a a reserve end. Wiii-baek Cilberl Packett, who saw plenty of action in the Paper Bowl bailie, will watch tomorrow's contest from the sidelines, how ever, lie broke a leg early in the season. Kight Mountaineers who saw a lot of action in last year's thriller I will set' more tomorrow night. ; There will be Quarterback Charlie Womack. called the best ; back on 'he field in the Bowl game, ! calling signals again for the Mount-. 'aimvrs. linh Davis, who broke the back of one Marion offensive am was one of the biggest of the Waynes : ville stars, will be at right halfback. Bob Seizor, one of the most de I pendable defensive performers last I year, is back again at his tackle (position and is rated tougher than ! ever, and 204-pound Howard Me- jhaHey will start at the guard spot Tickets for the W'aynesviUc Maiic.n fiio.hj!1 game here Fri day nisht are now on sale at all Waynrsville di us stores. Ameri- l.niiv.. .-in .Tnii t hi me SLiai tl .Jui can Fruit Stand, and Charlie's, j u. K.(1 (1()WI, so cornpetentlv in the Tl... ir:Ai...tr : i i.. i ,.i ...... . Mtnu,. is Liieu uitu ior M'aoer Bow Clash Waynesville Marion Records Waynesville's undefeated," once tied Mountaineers, on Ihe face of the comparative records, should have a wide edge over Marion, beaten five times iji nine games. But it rates as a close contest in consideration of the fact that the Rippers have nlaved Ihe too of the Western Conference, the Blue Ridge Conference, and a couple of th best non-conference teams in the state and eastern Tennessee. Marion started the season by walloping a good Olympia High School team from Columbia. S C, 21-7. Then I hey dropped a close 12-6 decision to Hickory , which has lost only to Lenoir so far this season. They walloped Shelby, 25-7, then fell, 19-6, to powerful Morganlon. The next weekend they were edged, 12-7, by perennially tough Erwin. Tennessee, then were bat- ereu, o- Dy Liiariolte lech, a roving powerhouse that plays in no conference. They walloped by 31-0 a Hen dersonville team that Waynesville had barely beaten, 28-20, the previ ous weekend. After that, they lost, 12-0, to once-beaten Lenoir, and then edged Canton, 6-0. Waynesville opened with a 6-6 HereFriday '""'ball o ' Tha, Ws"5 ..fl- U,e '"Wiikejl ; U By FRANK ECK AP Newsfeatures Sports Kdilor Coach George Salter of Navy smiled only one.. -,t was when his Annapolis team tied unbeaten Army at v. Midshipmen lost their first eight games. This season things are looUin- up for S.iuer. the I,, eiacn. lie was all smites as early a second game of 'i' K 7:30 p m. guard and co-captain, is one of the key players in Marion's light but fast, hard-hitting line. Waynesville fans saw a lot of him in last year's Paper Bowl ganie at Can Ion They'll see mole tomoriow night. Valiant Is The Word For Crippled Coy PufTballs are an edible member of the mushroom family. Some reach a size of more than 10 pounds. who polled in th,- A.-heViil, Week. I id Uet,e e into Lap. ,,.,d huam. nl in his leg ie Sehool game the ST. P.UT. . I Pi A 4 11 club calf that wasn't good enough for the state junior livestock show and a club boy stricken with tubeicu losis is the story behind a iaoo giit to Gillette Stale Hospital for Crip pled Children. Robert Wright. 14, of llonip, Minn., bought a beef calf i.i,t tall ast. was rounding to be fattened for competition at peeled to be the show. Last Januarv. Robert ready to: the Marion game. went to the Gillette hospital with Lnle - -omeone gets hurt in the tuberculosis and he's been there rerna.nmg pi at lire sessions, the ever since. Mountameei- regular starters will Robert's parents didn't forget line up tor th- kickoff the calf and saw that it god the ror the fir--t tlaie thi- season, tight feed and that 4-H record: they will have the weight edge on ' were kept. their opponent-, hut the margin When the show finally ctaite.l. won't be too obviou however, the calf was unable to To make up for their disadvant- make the grade. Only nine calves age in bulk, however, the Rippers could go from Clay Countv and have a couple of fine line-backers Robert's placed tenth, in Halfback Bruce McXeely and I sla County 4-H clubs heard the Greene, a big. rangy end. They also ' story and chipped in to buy the devised a defense that stopped j animal for S500. Canton's Robby Moore and Neil Robert gave the money to the Rhymer several rimes in critical hospital for crippled children, moments. . As for both the remaining op- thev did ours last month '' ponetits. Weatherby indicated that McCall twisted a knee and Tackle nis Mountaineers would have a Joe Jerkins reinjurt d -the ankle he ruugn time the rest of the season, hurt just before the I.-noir game ...o.. Ereat improve- rrie weekend before mem last Friday night over their McCall may see onlv limited ac- performance against us last Octo- tion. Dill said: He 'l'plav some " Per, he observed after the game Jenkins is expected to be ready , , " of, -antons most depend- for the Mountaineers bv kifkofT able regulars didn't play the game time. Win ' f'1UlLbatk S;,m c"n and ; However. Wingbaek Gilbert iVi ' f"' K C"'r " "'vlin both were Packett, the Riopers' dangerous he t 1 l1itn!'S ,hey sustainf-d running and pass-snagging ac who the weekend be-fore broke his leg in the second gam, vvhinh r- , , pe:f"rmantt- over of the season, definitely won t plav vvhich Canton last weekend showed the Marion coach said' great improvement." the Bears ""It would be too big a gamble Played a considerable part of the and we don't want to take it He Wav'ne m n,ain"er tWrit0r- CUt' and 'f h J r!n on LST f" Wi" re" may g,ve again, end he'd cTrT c o ,h M,OL,nV,,1neers wn brlrtt back w here he started." "ga neH r n t .1 U:UChdWn 5l"on that Packed might of the " 20 rt'COndS aCtin ar'" Uhn Ditt slid fl.lv ,f, m. k..... l".rf,'rme.n ,h- U,ri"n 'neh. Clfonne": "We" Ut l ""e P ' "'r the Home i , , coming Day pictures that were tak Harried through most of the en that afternoon and hinted season by injuries, the Ripper, may to keep it on during the gam just l1 '" "P saPe by Friday to get the feel of ,t again M nteht. But they will be dangerou.. 1 explaintd. td last' inU'i Particu,ar'y ltne in'I'ortant mem,,r of ,he iq laM weekend s performances by J Marion squad won t he able to Marias fleet fullback, Wilburn make the trip. . VHfc danus run- -He g,s only to the home fJ?, "BUback n McCall. games," Ditt explained 'McCali s runnintr mntid.n.. n ,...: . . i.i, -- inni ,i to lomrnv nut tr Lt uTiT h:nA Han,-taEe 20 rnon,hs- ,Pam s o"W.i men set up the tourhrtnum u.i.i. mun LI It. j...",. . . " - II N'ew York I Worhl which oo all.- S. F. High School Produces: GREATS F i By JIM BERN'S A 1 ' New feat ma S ritN( ISCO The big Mick of Yai kee thiid sacker Bobby Brown in Sotn-s hi nigs to iiiind a high school hen has i.i ..(iin-ed a good share of the nation' . I let. Blown js one of the latest in a more- Galileo High School greats. He illoVi oil! si hits in 12 limes at bat in the idem eues Hi . si x hUs came in his last ei ;hl irips to the plate. In the Yankees' Series win over Brook lyn in 1'J47. he appealed three itines as a pinch hit ter and hit safely each time. Broun giaduated from the Noith Beach School in 1941 nd then went to Stanford. But Galileo's top-notcliers didn't '-tait with Bi ow n. ""''' ; ""' athletic "who's who" of the 'chool in the pa t two two decades; Vrs.i - Law son Little, national amateur golf f'hanip:,,:! in ism and '35, and national open title hold, r in 1940. He also won the British amateur in Bob Owen, who played a whale of a game at end. will be back at his favorite spot at kickoff time. Wingbaek Howard Liner and Fullback Winston Ensley, who led the scoring that memorable day, are gone. But Davis has been filling Liner's shoes capably, and Ensley has been replaced by two fullbacks Don Whisenhunt and J. C. Deweese. Both have been good for about four yards each at a clio. Whisenhunt nrnhahl v will ctopt and Deweese will relieve him fre quently. ' loll M GALILEO hall star from 1934 through 1937, who held nation al intei collegiate four-year scoring record and often ha:, been called the greatest collegiate player the game has seen. 1934 Dominic DiMaggio of the Boston Red Sox - star cotter lidding brother of Yankee Joe. 193(1 Larry Dee, who twice won the national intercollegiate doubles tennis title while al Stanford he partnered with James Wade in 1940 and Davi. Cup ace Ted Schroder in 1942 for the tandem crow n. 1939 Grover Klemmer, who tied the world rec ord of 46.4 for the 440-yard run while at the Univer sity of California in 1941. 1947 Patsy F.lsener, a member of the last Olympic women's diving team, and third place win ner at London. 1948 -Grant Butcher, 194S winner of the Nation al AAU light heavyweight boxing title. It seems Galileo has a top claim to the most con sistent high school production of outstanding athletes. Six Stars from San Francisco' Galileo high school galaxy. " " - ,, Wltll nto pile-driving dashes through the ujte ., . - Th. Bears rushed the Rippers off their feet throughout the first half, anJ barely missed pulling an upeet , . , . . iBut the "driving Marion linemen stood up- conaistentlr when their bJcJu were to the wail. Last Monday, Canton's Coach Boo Hipp aid: '..,;..., Waynesville wonf be able to riin 1 through the Marlon line the way The probable starting lineups: wametville Marion iJSYarborough McGalliard LT Setzer t - fCIIJLlIISI LO McCracken . H. Wilson Co-C ,ya Owensby HG Mehaffev n usu. 1 RTAtkiiMo Gibbs kk uwens Co-C Radar, C) QB Womack, (Co-C Atkins LH-Carrett ct, RH Davis ...... McCall nr Mni. I FB Whisenhunt Hammett ' n iiiui 0,1, f 'tianKi Luisetti, Stanford basket- 1 I - - V DIMAGGIO rCW V ... HANK lUiSETTI T. L,j, - JtL l y i I f 1 'nUN LITTLE 1 W V r x L 111. ' 55 1 Middies had beaten Princeton. And one of the big weapons on the at-' tack was his .sophomore quarter back, Bob Zastrow. Zastrow completed only five of 14 forward passes against Prince ton but two of his aerials went for touchdowns. Sauer feels he has the best attack in his short ' tenure at the Naval Academv and that Zastrow is one of the big reasons. i A 209-pounder, Zastrow comes from Algoma, Wis. He is 20, stands one inch less than six feet and prepared at the Adm Fan-ami Academy. What's important to Sauer, though, is that Zastrow will have two more seasons with ! Navy. ' j Out around South Bend, the Irish have come up with another brilliant T quarterback to match some of the greats of the past lew years like Angelo Bertelli, Johnny Lujack and George Ratterman. The Noire Dame passer getting the attention now is Bob Williams, junior from Baltimore, Md. Coach Frank Leahv SrlW ;i flit ii ra in Williams last season when Frunir Tripucka's understudy completed 8 of the 14 passes he threw. He is 19, weighs 180 pounds and stands one inch over six feet. In some mid-western quarters.lhe feeling exists that Williams will outdo some of his predecessors be fore he finishes his studies in the school of arts and letters. i ml ' BOB ZASTROW d lit..-, :n . Ii ua a ml -v "id h.. u. l'll"- tllH u-..!"l nl. , i "B! ." . ""f ant -"SWIH-Ill 10 i "v '"ftfti niyht 1-1,. 'iis alter 31 the Cui night. ' I'faisHiiJ at(M hi-l Fnd, , Thl' .Marion .p rating lnlh(i ,a! ,hl' Siate i t iri'fiisboro Center Pig Polishes P For Festiv Thf residents o! ';11,,,'1 Miss Vela thi'ir ooirimunitfr. tlio finlesi 0r J Wui'en when thr Thl,.v also seletl kcndall. Charlie R,llll"s and Hani cimimitlee lo mik fur Ihe rommuriiti rt'Mival parade The Center Piled organized their J proRram. electing specific activities Mrs. Robert Justi to head the girls' and her husband It er Pigeon boys' sqj .Mrs Larry Bib lt'ctcd as handimi t'liariie llenson and! hi't'iv tarielv do Mi- l-t Deavn BOB WILLIAMS Horse Opry Immune To Television HOLLYWOOD (UP) There's there'll always be the bad guys who not a chance that even the eomine of television will upset the formula for horse operas. Or, as Forrest Tucker says, there'll always be the bad guy who get the lead and the good guys who get the gals. "The heroes may land the girl in the last reel," the long-time west ern villian said, "but they both suffer the same tortures in the rest of the movie." Casualties on the sets usually strike actors o'n both sides nf the law with impartial force, and high screen ideals are no protection against broken bones. Saddle sores and sundry mayhem. After 10 years playing villains, the lanky ex-menace graduated to a hero's role in Republic's "Rock Island Trail." "It's no cinch, thouah." the rou ged former Army boxer said. "I go through just as many fights as ever, and a lot of the cVad in the picture isn't catsup." He rehearsed three days with Bruce Cabot, the villain, for an a'l out fight scene that led off the pro duction schedule. No So Easy "We should have run through that batch of haymakers, ducking, rolling and grappling Iik. duck soup," he says. But here's what h Tucker skinned his ri?ht hand nearjy to the bone when he acci dentally landed a powerho. on a log against which he'd pinned Cabot. Then Cabot added a rcalp wound to the hero's Injuries when he slammed him against a tree Finally, Tucker tossed the bad Buy Into a creek and fell In the process, throwing his sacroiliac out of Joint and gashing his face In gravel. Tucker it the favorite, go It Isn't tlckiling leaders. Me Mae Shan Mr- HaviKind Dutl Mele.ili. .mil Mis El jkej. -:r!liim ra 1 Chin les De.uer ml I Siiit'leliiii ihiTkers Mr- Ittil.eil JustnJ j Mil Nev Helps In X-ra ROCHESTER. H chesiei- doctors are seasickness drug M sickness. Tin. new dm uncovered early thJ .nice-nil w- motio even recorded what happened to Cabot durini; the i in ir;. The haltered he-imm added that he confines his hattlin". -luetic to movie rets. "The last lime I mixed in an off stage brawl," he sa.vs. "was when I saw a woman beinu mauled by a man. "ck i ,,i .,,.,1 i, ,i,wi Uv inntonis .jij t Lii.iii u in on mi ,i i in n ii.i n ii . I Vrj iicaiini'" I I)uniammeasM sec- puis and results ;,d Vell.'iit in 25 per H and pond m a"0" mo vent "!' 'f ship- or planes. Dmlois said mm., for Ihe neH ,,f a similariiy uhicli li the tar out of me. South Omaha. Nth., is tin nnd birtfesl livestock market meat packing center in the world. '"'fATSY1 ELSENEJt W tie With Svlva.. thtn unnt the schedule like this: Tryon, 33-6; Ellzabethton, Tenn., 7-0; Canton, fl-fl- iti,ni1n,nn,,iii. 2B-20; Christ School, 28-0; Bryson MOVING UP - -.. j,,.,,; .old cm MARLS NE Vv PJrfJ BAUER, OF KVV U2' 5 LOS ANSELB VC3m$tii UHO CONTINUES Wf gvf TO GVE PROMISE Cr BECOMING THE ff Yi 1 Boaey jomes of t ' she 'won rue NATIONAL 6IRI-Z TtTLe lli AU6UST, BECAIAE me vourtGesr SEMI -FINALIST IN THE HISTORY OF THE WOMEN'S A At AT PUR III na Asnevui0 School. 20-0. , - . . , a '
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Nov. 17, 1949, edition 1
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