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Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York • Page 24

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Binghamton, New York
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24
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

EINGHAMTON TRESS 25 NYU Trips Syracuse; Bonas Top I ate Fri Feb. 8, 1952 yiurray St limit on TV Sassone's 21 Paces Olfcm Team to 15lh Over-Rated Orange Bow At Garden Links Downs Ansco, 5146, In Overtime Vejar Heavy Favorite To Defeat DeFazio New York (U.R) Manager Pat Amato will set out of jail long enough tonight to second welterweight Johnny iRed) DeFazio in his 10-round fight with classy Chico Vejar at Madison Square Garden. ring apparance will not offend the Marquis of Evniigolicnl riiiircli Lcngiip mm K.iiiiiuii.iii jimum.mim. iiihmi yun.imMi ii emii'iva mmmmmimmifm 1. 1 1 mm i mi i uu i mimn.

1 i 1 1 in 1 I 1 1a b. 4 i fj -v. fv ni i i i i ifc. i Links tallied seven points in overtime last night to beat 51-46, in the Industrial League at the YMCA. In other games.

General Electric defeated Ozalid, and EJAA walloped The 56-25. Trailing 33-28 at the end of the! third period, Ansco rallied to tie! the game at 44-all at the end ot, regulation Ttffie. Chet Lobacz tossed in 15 points for Links, while Houlihan had 12. GE led all the way as John Ludka scored 19 points to pace his team. The Press, as usual, was an easy foe for EJAA as the winners led 11-2 at the first period and 25-10 at halftime.

EJAA B1NG. PRESS FG FT TPl FO FT TP Miller.rf 1 11 Case if (10 0 Leako.lf 1 0 3 Nevlon If 3 1 1 Stephneski 3 3 Tiffany rg 3 1 5 Sadowlcz.rg 0 1 1 Schlauder 3 0 6 Poodiak.lg 4 3 II Kenn.rutt.lg 3 1 7 Burge 1 ll'Yudin 0 Evanek 19 HromalUt 3 0 Ackley 4 fr Totala 34 Ml Totals 11 3 25 EJAA 11 14 15 18-56 Bmg Presa 3 8 3 1225 GENERAL ELFC. OZALID FG FT FG FT TP1 Kemlham 0 0 0 White 4 3 Kurey.f Ludka. 19 Steen.c 14 Solak 3 Stummer.g 0 Minnow 4-O'Neal 3 Krch Roorl.g Mazzle VanGorrier Monsipapa Totals 19 11 49 Totals 11 15 Ti General Electric 15 13 1249 Oralld 3 12 14 837 LINKS ANSCO FG FT TP FG FT TP i Lobacz. 4 7 15 Lacaua 2 3ft Lawson.f 3 4 10 Wittamore I 5 0 10 Barrett.

3 2 a Charskv.c 2 2 0 Kurbanic 0 0 0 Smith. 3 0 4 Benza 3 15 Houlihan. 5 3 12 Blakesle 3 1 7Regm 2 0 4 Megelich 0 0 0 Stimlk 10 2 Deyo 3 0 0 Hnyko 0 0 0 IBerrish 10 2 Total 18 15 Si! Totals 20 Links 11 It II II 7-SI Ansco 10 9 8 It 246 Vestal Wrestlers Travel to Ithaea The Vestal wrestling team will travel to Ithaca tonight to face a squad that has been undefeated in its last 47 matches. The match was originally sched uled Saturday, but had been moved up to tonight at Ithaca's request. The varsity match will start at 8 p.

and the JV match at 7. Chnstenberry nor other members! of the boxing commission, for Amato is head of the guard at the Hudson County (N. jail. However, the odds-makers indicated Amato must bring the rest of the guard with him to give De-Fazio of Bayonne, N. a rhance against vigorous Vejar of Stamford, Conn.

They made Chico the favorite at 4-1. $9,000 PRIZE The winner of tonight's television bout will get another Garden video shot on Feb. 29 in a 10-rounder with Paddy DcMarco of Brooklyn, top lightweight con tender. To either DeFazio or Vejar the DeMarco bout would be worth about $9,000 pay for a youngster. a good night's' Vejar is 20; DeFazio, 21.

Black-haired, stream-lined Vejar was a lop-sided favorite to beat his red-haired, somewhat chunky opponent because of his record, skill and punch. While winning 38 of his 39 professional bouts, Chico registered 23 knock outs. He is an upright, aggressive boxer who has an unusually solid left jab and a coma-encouraging right. Chico. now a freshman student of dramatic arts at New York University, suffered his only defeat last Sept.

21, when he lost a split and widely disputed decision to Eddie Compo of New Haven at the Garden. He won 15 other bouts in 1951, eight by knockouts. And he won two this year- a decision over Enrique Bolanos and an eighth-round kayo over Roy Wirt on Jan. 25. That was his latest scrap.

'51 RECORD POOR DeFazio, a bobber-weaver who specializes in whamming an opponent's midriff, has had nearly twice the professional experience of Vejar; but his record is very spotty. In 66 pro bouts, he won 42, lost 18 and had six draws. He was stopped four times: by Jimmy Dockery, Lew Jenkins, Joe Miceli and Vince Martinez. And he belted out but eight. DeFazio's record for 1951 was deplorable.

He lost five of his seven bouts. He had one draw. He won one decision. FIRST CHRISTIAN PARK AV BAPTIST FG FT TP FG FT TP Weiss Parre 1 Goei liz Phipps a Winters 4 II CmikM.f ll in I Holmes 0 Weeks. 3 mikei 3 Turk 3 Phelps AdsM.g R.

Phelps, Tolais 9 24 First Park Av-nne Baptist Totals 20 0 54 0 HI 24 13 SO Official-. Gifcko. Adams BIBLE SCHOOL VESTAL PVC MEM I FG FT TP i FGFTTP Arnold 1 II Woolever 0 0 0' Knauss 2 3 7 Kreesge.f 4 cibert-' 1 2 4 Little I 0 2 1 5 Tallon.c 4 1 1 Fredenci 10 2 18 Brooker.g 1 1 1 15 Brisco 0 jward.g 1 (Anderson. 0 Dunn.g Seafned Klmgler.g Totals 19 10 48 Totals 20 Practical Bible School 14 10 14 Vestal Park Memorial 12 8 20 Officials Adams it Bishaia. 8 4A 10-48 646 calvary baptist w.

point baptist FG FT TP FG FT TP i.yies Guth.c Pla't Castei ton.g Pape.g lie 1 1 8 2 14 Root 0 0 0 5 1 1 Bowman 21 Hayes O'Uevert 2 Saunders Totals Calvary WhitneV Pr Officials CALVARY 5 5( Totals 12 17 Baptist 9 10 ecko 8i Bishaia BAPTIST FIRST CHRISTIAN FG FT TP FG FT TP 1 3 5 Washburn 3 2 8 Grlppin 10 25 Taibox 3 0 8 2 Carrol 3 4 8 0 burn.c 7 1 15 lAiLake.g 0 0 0 i.Di'tw.l 0 0 0 0 4 Diener.c Roemish.g Mci rill Barnes Buckland Bieber 10 Totals 27 13 87 1 Totals 15 7 37 Calvary baptist I'' 18 16 2167 Firn Ch.istian 11 8 11 737 Referee C. Reavis. TEMPLE I BIBLE SCHOOL FG FT TP R.Harvey, 8 24 'Johnson. 1 3 Hibbard 0 0 Shaw.f 1 5 OverdorfT 0 3 15 Ruch.g 0 6 Thomas 0 Silvernail.g Donheim Belles. I T.Harvey Barber.

1 19 0 12 MacDonald i Zvhch.g Eriegs.g McGill Totals 20 13 531 Totals 25 4 54 I Temple 14 14 15 Pr.Trtlral Bible School 10 11 11 2254 Referee C. Reavis. UP TELEPHOTO. LAY-UP SHOT Bill Schyman (13) of DePaul, goes in for driving lay-up in game with Manhattan at the Garden last night. Looking on are Bill Claire (second from left) and Willard Doran (47) of Manhattan, and an unidentified eager.

DePaul, won 66-65. By JOt FOX Binghamton Press Sports Writer New York NYU moved In on a post -season tourney bid and fenced Syracuse permanently out of one as the Violet turned the Orange crimson with a 95-78 victory in Madison Square Garden. It was the most points ever scored on a Syracuse, team and about the poorest excuse for major league basketball ever suffered by 8,123 fans. The nightcap was little worse than the first game, in which De-I'aul, which somehow or other heat Illinois and has a 17-4 record io show the tournament-makers, staggered past Manhattan, 66-65. VIOLETS TAKE LEAD NYU had things completely its way after the first four minutes, a short briefing period in which Syracuse galloped to a 14-8 lead.

At that point, the 15-3 New Yorkers scored 19 of the next 21 points to go ahead 27-16. Syracuse never got closer than six points after that as coach Marc Guley's team, whose early-season rating was the most inflated since Confederate money, lost its fifth in its last six. Like Pitt, Penn State, Duquesne and Holy Cross, NYU found they could drive at will against the Orange defense and meanwhile concentrate its own defenses around the loop since Guley hasn't a man who's a threat from outside. The earlv-season "twin terrors" big Ed Miller and little Bucky Roche were the most ineffective of the Orangemen, losing the ball, lardy on defense and generally suffering Gardenitis. a common Syracuse affliction down through the years.

NYU looked a much better team than in our first look it, partly because slashing Dick Bunt is hack in the lineup and partly because St. Louis University, the earlier foe, was no patsy on defense. NO DEFENSE The Violet Is still no defensive giant but has well-distributed scoring. The man who hurt Syracuse most was Mark Solomon, who has the appearance of a dray-hprse but who runs both boards, ahead of taller teammates and opponents. After Solomon and Bunt had done the first-half damage, little-men Jim Brasco and Ralph Nai-moli took over in the second, Brasco getting 20 of his 24 and N'aimoli 15 of his 19.

NYU hit for 44 per cent with Brasco ll-for-22. Naimoli 9-for-16 and Solomon 7-for-16. Syracuse was credited, generously perhaps. with 37 per cent, mainly because co-captain Tom Muggins went 8-for-11 and sophomore Mel Besdin, its best performer, 7-for-13. Binghamton's Roche was 4-for-15.

He scored after 20 seconds of each half, matching first blood by Brasco. KELLOGG GETS 2G In the first game, Ron Feierei-sel, the over-voweled DePaul forward got only 23 points to 26 by Manhattan's 6-8 Junius Kellngg. But Feiereisel's twenty-third point came on a free throw with five seconds left and the score tied. Manhattan is only 7-7 for the season but it led the Demons by as much as eight in the early go ing and by one with less than a minute to go. DePaul was the superior team all right, but must have shown more the night it beat Illinois.

If one player captured the evening, it probably was neither Solomon, Brasco. Feiereisel or Kellogg but rather Stevie Kaplan. Kaplan, a 3-1 playmaker from Newark, was the youngest man ever to play in the Garden. He is 4. In the be-tween-halves biddy game, he was given his free throws from the dotted line rather than the foul line.

He still couldn't quite hit the rim but his dribbling made up for it. NYU I SYRACUSE FGfTTP! FG FT TV Olean U.P St. Bonaventure, one of the two remaining unbeaten major basketball Ufams in the nation, chalked up its fifteenth win of the season last night by beating Murray State of Kentucky, 73-64, as Bob Sassona showed the way with 21 points. The Bonnies must meet on other team, Cincinnati, on Saturday before clashing with the other unbeaten team, Duquesne. in a long-awaited battle next Monday night in Pittsburgh.

But, despite Sassone's performance and a half-time lead of 40 to 30, the Bonnies got a scare in the third period as Murray staged a determined rally and cut the New Yorkers' margin to four points at 59-55 with 10 minute left in the game. Murray's Charley Lampley tallied on a rebound to open the fourth period, slicing the lead to two points, but then Leo Corkery of the Bonnies started blazing and clinched the game. He sank 'a free throw and tapped in a rebound to take the pressure off. All told, Corkery score'd seven points during the fourth quarter as the Bonnies played possession ball, five times waiving frca throws. It was the sixth loss in 22 gamel for Murray.

ST. BONAVENTURE MURRAY STATE FG FT TP FG FT TP; Kenvillf 4 19 Glpe.f 0 0 0 Davies. 4 0 8 Beshear.f 10 1 21 Corkfiv.f 7 HGottf 8 2 14 3 0 8 Deweese 1 1 3 Gorman, 0 0 0 Lamplcy.g 3 3 7 Sassone 7 7 21 Purcell 8 8 18 Solmsky 4 1 9 Hussimg 0 0 0 Nolan 2 0 4 Jeflery.g 1 0 3 Ba)Ie 0 Tola's 31 12 74 Bonaventuie Totals 85 13 83 25 IS 19 1V-14 Murray 15 15 55 8-M Officials Lyl- Garnish and Ken Patrick. 7. Aspirin.

Is Soolt Hamilton (VP) Seventy-five applicants want to step into Paul Bixler's shoes as head football coach at Colgate University. Bixler resigned Jan. 14. Tha university announced yesterday that 75 had applied for the coaching job and would be screened by a committee of five former Red Raider players. D.

Belford West of Buffalo heads the committee appointed by William S. Murray of Utica, chairman of the athletic council. FINGERS! Unlike old-fashioned brush lather or brushless cream, thia new, miracle shaving lather instantly rinsei off your razor, hands end face. Givet you smoother, cleaner, closer, longer-lasting shaves every time! 1 1 I if, Bonus to Face Final Hurdle Before 'Big Tilt By the United Press Cincinnati University, already a St. Bonaventure victim, today was the last stumbling block for the Brown Indians to hurdle in order to enter Monday's long anticipated battle with Duquesne University on equal footing unbeaten.

St. Bonaventure's great clutch 'strengthen their hold on the top club refused to crack under pres-; position with a repeat victory over Yale "when the Eli invade Barton ysjr. sr tf. -w OF sure again last night against well-j regarded Murray Stale. Leading by a scant, 62-60 margin with eight minutes remaining, the Bonnies quickly whipped 12 points through the net while Murray was being held to a single free throw.

St. Bonaventure's final margin was 74-63. The stretch shooting of regular forward Leo Corkery and reserves Paul Nolan and -Roger Davies gave the winners the needed lift when their lead was in jeopardy. Game scoring honors were di vided by St. Bonaventure's Bob Sassone and Murray's Garret Be-shears, each of whom tallied 21 points.

Now coach Eddie Melvin's charges travel to Cincinnati, where they hope to rack up their sixteenth straight win tomorrow i night. In a game in Buffalo earlier 1 1 his season, St. Bonaventure drubbed the Ohio quintet. 77-58. Cornell's Big Red, pace setters of the Ivy League, will be out to mm Army Reversed Itself on tyO MESSY BRUSH! NO GREASY Curt Simmons Expects June, July Discharge Goeppingen, Germany (U.R) Sgt.

Curt Simmons, the "bonus baby" who helped pitch the Philadelphia Phillies to the National League crown in 1950, said today that he expects to be discharged from the Army in June or July, in the middle of the 1952 pennant race. "But, it's going to be 1 tough job getting into shape just when other pitchers are reaching top form," Simmons told the L'nited Press. "Those boys are really sharp by mid-summer." Simmons, a National Guard volunteer, was called to duty in September, 1950, just as the Phils were neck-and-neck with the Brooklyn Dodgers in the National League flag race. His 17-8 record then was Simmons' best mark in three seasons in the majors. The Phils had corralled the schoolboy sensation in 1947 with a $60,000 bonus.

Since November Simmons has been stationed in Germany as director of athletics of the 28th Infantry Division. Firing Blaik football players; that the whole Blaik program, adopted in 1941 tinder the aegis of Uncle Bob Eichelberger, lieutenant general, retired, will remain in force. Robert Daru, counsel for the committee on justice of the New York Criminal and Civil Bar Association, called General Irving's statement "triple talk." "This is one more equivocation," said Daru, "like previous Army reversal three times on whether ousted cadets may be reappointed. "After trying to fool the pub-lice and Congress that great reforms are in progress to stave off a congressional investigation, and. after needling Blaik, hoping he would resign, and discovering he could not be high-pressured like the young cadets, they do not dare fire Blaik.

"Only a congressional hearing under oath can put a stop to this endless triple talk and give the public the real truth in this scapegoat mess." Blaik is still loyal to the young cadets, one of them his son Bob, who were fired for a peccadillo. His great crime, however, In the eyes of the Pentagon and its West Point Hermes, Is that he has on the wall of his office a picture of Gen. Douglas MacAr-thur, leader of the minority or Billy Mitchell Memorial branch of the Army. Blaik, right or wrong, considers General Mac-Arthur the greatest living American. MacArthur, friend, adviser and sponsor of Blaik for 30 years, probably will deliver the keynote speech at the Republican presidential convention.

Brnro 11 1 24 Hugginj Solomon 7 5 18 FeddouM noherty.l 0 9 0 Stark. Seaman. 1 Narhamkin.e 1 1 Thaw.f NatmoU.f 1 19 Kline Buntu 4 17 Welti 1 Rochr Etber 0 0-0 Manillas Carnllo.g 0 0 0 Brdin iLamed.f Total 37 II 5i Totals NYU 2S Syracuse 14 Hall tomorrow night. A pair of "surprise" teams Buffalo and Rochester universities also have a date to face one another on the latter's home court the same evening. Tomorrow night's' doubleheader in Buffalo's Memorial Auditorium will feature two New York City quintets St.

John's of Brooklyn and Manhattan against Niagara and Canisius, respectively. In other major contests tomorrow night, Colgate tangles with Holy. Cross in Boston, Siena hosts Fordham. and Syracuse visits Temple University. larkson Tech will return to action tomorrow after a two-week rest, serving as home club against Kings Point, while Hobart will be out to avenge a 50-45 defeat at the hands of Alfred at Alfred, and i Rensselaer will seek its third win of the campaign against visiting Providence.

holds must be divided. There must never again be special privileges for football players. (Permission to be 20 minutes late for mess.) In the middle of the Pentagon-Irving-Baldwin to-do, Blaik, who had done only what he was supposed to do and who held a contract for four more years, said in effect: "Nuts! They are not going to push E. H. Blaik around!" He went away for a month's vacation and paid no more attention to Army football.

He had a year's vacation coming, not having taken any time off In eleven years. While he was away everything stopped. No plans were laid. No fine young officer material was scouted for the Army club. When he came back orders from the Pentagon had been reversed.

In a year so vital to the military meat-heads, no fierce uprising in the ness, no congressional investigation could be risked. General Irving, Hermes of the Brass, was instructed to square things with Blaik. They conferred and General Irving announced that Blaik would remain at West Point: that he would continue to hold the offices of athletic director and football coach; that "minor changes" in the times schedule might be necessary to make room for athletic practice." He added, "We sharll endeavor to encourage young men, athletes and non-athletes, who have qualifications to become career officers to compete for entry to the Military Academy." This means will continue that West Point to go out after 1 Goodbya messy thaving brushes, 4 A -ft greasy brushless creams! With this hi new "lather you just press a sxW' button and out comes richer, thicker, fT-W moister lather. Real barber type i I lather that cuts shaving time in halt! if V. if Aw f4 No razor scrape or pull or drag with this amazing new barber-type lather! Just wipe it on then wipe it off with your razor! Shaving's completely painless because your razor rides on a cushion of air! tions.

Get CLEANER, SKIN FEELS Users say news the latest of largest By STANLEY WOODWARD Special Press Sports Writer Can it be that the presidential aspirations of General Ike have been served to call the dogs off the trail of Col. Earl H. Blaik, retired, West Point football coach? Only a few weeks ago the whole Pentagon, which is strictly an Eisenhower kennel, was baying on the trail of the colonel, who is a Mac-Arthur man. "Blaik must go," a fevered Penta i a told Arthur Syl-Washington corre-the Newark News. BLAIK vester, wise spondent of 'We shall get him out.

Though he appears to have been cleared, it is hard to believe he didn't know anything about the cribbing that was going on." (Ninety cadets were cashiered for giving and receiving tips on the nature of examination questions.) The Pentagon and certain members of Congress blazed away at. Blaik. Maj. Gen. Frederick A.

Irving, superintendent of West Point and messenger for the Pentagon mob, made it clear that Blaikism was going to be forever banned from West Point. To Hanson Baldwin, tautological and chairborne military expert of the New York Times, General Irvinr gve an Interview. He said the offices of athletic director and football coach both of which Blaik held and If i r. -1 ftf iff a- Hi 'it IY SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Jfa you'll mever go back to brush I OR BRUSHLESS CREAM AGAIN f' jSZSS SMOOTHER SHAVES AND WONDERFULLY REFRESHED I "RAPID-SHAVE" is the biggest since the safety razor. It and greatest discovery 1J 7 38 95 2ft 7S Solo-Svra-Mll- is Free throws missed: NYU Brasco.

men 7. 3nn, Naimoli 3. Bunt J. ciisc Hugging, Reddout 3, Swanson ler. Hocht 3.

Mantkas. Officlala- Matty Begovich and Howie Bollerman St. Ambrose Wins, 56-29 St. Ambrose boosted its record to 6-6 last night as it defeated Blessed Sacrament, 56-29, in the CYO League. Jerry Hickey was high for St.

Ambrose with 11 points, while George Verdon had 12. Tonight's schedule has St. John's at home to St. Cyril and St. Stanislaus meeting St.

Thomas on the Tommies' court. ST. AMBROSE I B. SACRAMIVT FG FT TP I Shuba.f FG FT TP Eseovar.f Alan.f Hickey Shattuck Khmer Cuddy England I Snmpaon Miner J. Cuddy 3 1 Hubla 11 Hughes Alessi.g 3 Howard 0 Honein 4 Scalis 5 Verdon 4 TotaU It Mi Totali 11 1 St.

Ambrose Blessed Secrament Referee Terenii. 14 13 14 10-39; Colgate-Palmolive-Peet, world'i maker of shaving prepara "rapid-shave today If you don't ogree that RAPID-SHAVE lother is 1 fjr A bttr in vry way than any bruih or I J5s5sf-J brujhless eraam, return unused portion I iS2sS' to Colgate-Palmolive-Peet, Jeney 'V City 2, New Jersey. 79f, plus I -ff i Ml' 0 lux ri. wB BiiiiiiiiMsssssssssWssssssslssWWBill.

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