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ee =~ | Let's Con THE WATERFRONT WITH AL PALMER is a trim little is of Correct } ( >» be cap- { i the a E >». The m zi E > is no » either today Taking Soundings The saucy little tug y tooting around the G Company Dock is the C Morrow. Captain L. W. Haye skippering. The C.-J. is one of the tugs that pulled those navy Ships off the sand a few years back. Owned y The Arundel Corporation, the snooty little craft was named after a superintendent of the corporation who died shortly after World War One—when the tug was built. The C. J. is 42 feet with an 11-foot beam. | r¢ She draws four-and-a-half feet. Registered et Baltimore, Md., she has worked on wrecks off Puerto Rico as well as making four trips to Key West. She'll be in action this week taking soundings around thes@ parts. The Shrimping Set: Captain f-the-af- members of were with i E en months to g She has Shrimp Are Hopping The Yucatan left late yes- Bot terday afternoon to join her fleet sister the Key (love that boat!) Largo, currently fishing in local waters. Captain Lloyd Mickler, who skippered the Yucatan out, reports that the shrimp are hopping good around the Tortugas. “They're of fine qual: and there are lots of them. said; to be exact. The shrimpers are get- (the bottc ting 65 to 75 boxes on local grounds, The Yucatan will stay | who sailed out a week—dependiny, of ‘a real blow—and y course, on the weather. 2 t and the heavy e ago, Whict Well Commanded th o! these peranza 15-foot vas built racer ader. The i m mander M and Lt.-€ lock, Jr Irene ( mother-in- lock, III. The party is enroute t Washington after pic the Esperanza at Bradenton. Young Carlock. E all the earmarks in the footsteps of hi ed the ketch knowledge of aworthiness, dimensions, p speeds and behaviour u r various types of weather. There must be so thing fine about the naval tradi- tion that is | from father | to son. In any case it w re- | freshing to meet 4 youngster no sir’s” whose “yes sit’s | were such a pleasant contrast to | lthe “yeah’s” and “naah’s” you hear too often these a The | Esperanza pulled out this “morn- | ing early Citizen Staff Photo CMDR. SHOEMAKER = — —w 3 mo = —T = Se oo ie S = D ee Rese Examinations for —Indefinte | 5 : ( Appointment to the tions of ; ositions }pen Blacksmith, Coppersr Mold- | Ci il S neeeraita er, Shipfitter Shipwright N UV Service have been ar ed by the} Board of U vil Service spelen is Examine! Station AT si . Registers isa re examinations acancies, in occur y West sult of the curre will be used te positions whi these at Rates of pay hipwright our and ¢ and Shipwrigt per hour. Appication forms y be ob tained from the F jer of the Board at Build aval Sta- tion, from the Secre f the {Board of U. S. Civ 1 activities $1.60 per Molder yegin at $1.63 vacancies in may occur \ s in Key West ime hour, ve Equir ine »|Civil Service R eibaniad Georgia Corie ca the Key Build- wright will be accer Recorder, Board of 1, S e Station, Key ae Ithe needs of the ser necks in the | been met. - j adacecceceepipn n= in the Chase United States National ection. They The growing, transportation, dis: were sigi tch merehant | tribution and sale of bananas com: | and wer March, and Sept-! bine to make one of the world’s ember. 1664 leading food industries ' li Best Naval Tradition: ‘Charles-Maxim ‘Ten-Rounder ‘To Be Aired cheduied ten-round ex heavyweight bout between for- mer heavyweight champion Ez- zard Charles and. Joey Maxim, present light heavyweight chaia- pion, at Cow Palace, San Fran- cisco, on Wednesday, will be broadeast over the CBS network. by the makers of Pabst. Blue Ribbon Beer. The bout will be- gin at 10:00 p.m. Charles lost his crown to Joe Walcott 1. what was considered a ma- Since then, he has had ;only one fight—and. that with x Layne in Pittsburgh on Oc: tober 10. He wen an 11th-round 'TKO over Layne, proving. to sports fans that he could hit as box. St in boxi detended his. title sh Bob -Murphy in a Ribbon Bout at Mad- e Garden on August d previously zard Charles in a heavyweight title match on May 30 and lost ae if | by unanimous decision. Citizen Staff Photo | This is another in. the , Wed- nesday night series of Pabst Blue THE ESPERANZA Ribbon Bouts. tae L. H. (Hank) Carlock, TL, aboard. 7 at rey . (See Let’s Cover The Waterfront) | Wants Airing | f SRE —— Stock Transaction | | 1 i Tuesday, December 11, 1951 TRE KEY WEST ¢ At Naval Station; PCS-1380—2. USS Coolbaugh—0. (Forfeit). AUW-—52. A} plonetti, 16. VX-1 (Jack Powell, 17; SubRon-4—63. (John Whitfield, 17; Sam Sa- ee TES Group--56. E ;tinson and Rosie At With the sport of basketball just around the corner for many, the Bench will dig into the and bring you some of the hi lights ‘of the years gone by. The game. of basketball has, come from.a handicapped start to a glorious pinnacle. When it was ‘first introduced, met Ez- | in 1892, by Dr. James A. Nai- a smith; its thventor, it had little body. contact, ‘of the era classi- Sub Crew Donates | Mother Hacked To Rabbis Have Faith 1, WASHINGTON, Dee 4-18- |e aer ee ae | noses. sport by Frank McKinney, the Derno-| and i Sing blood to run from The average. player of this was something of an ail ms: a es ; 7° Fulbright, suggested a public-air-|players;into some rugged pas- Blood Second Time} Death By Son In Authorities In tenet, tee shock Deangtien| aaa ecko aes, F ch econd € in ne OAKLAND, California, Dec. 11 MIAMI BEACH, Dec. 11..—”.— cratic national chairman: ek i ated |——i.—Police say a 16-year-old Oak: | Te rabbis of Miami Beach, Flori Ibright said “The. good . of : ; Red |land high school boy has admitted 42> Say they have copfidence in the party” reauires an explana~ hacking his mother to death with | 4Uthorities—and are horrified at the 7 hou: nd dollars of stock and dea of the Jewis! ar veterans |) } a idea: of ewish war veterans | tater resale of it for 68-thousand quote ve uel Hut- | Suarding sy gues with arms, | dol »| chins as giving jon: “She | Fifty Jewish ex-G.I.'s were de McKinney bawled me out for pl putized to act as guards after re-. 't Was in no way a shady venture. Fifty-one year old Mrs ae = duaenne a a > tye tthe eatohineg, a weclihy cent dynamitings damaged a Jew Iceland was an independent. re- Sro hous- | public from 930 to 1262 when it join- ons. her basement ing project in the Miami area ed with Norway a. 100 par-| tractors’ wife, was fo ish synagogue and a } Associated Press 1951 Offensive All-Southern 1951 OFFENSIVE * IMODZELEWSK)) ee : w. pre 3 Associated Press Photo | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 1951 All-Southern Offensive team, first seam, follows: Ends—Robert Thomas, Washington & Lee, and Jack Lewis, Wake Forest; Tackles—Bill George, Wake Forest, and James (Tank) Lawrence, Duke; Guards—Robert Ward, Mary- d Sam Lupo, William & Mary; Center—Ted Filer, William & Mary; Backs—Gil Bocetti, Washington & Lee, Ed Mod-. wski, Maryland, Steve Wadiak, South Carolina, and Billy Hair, Clemson. Make Associated Press 1951 Defensive All-Southern guard; Elmer Costa, North Carolina State tackle; Dick Modzejewski, Maryland tackle, and Dickie Davis, Wake Forest sa Cc rs on the team are: Ends—George Norris, North Carolina, and James Gibson, Duke; Guard—Robert Ward, Maryland, whe was also selected on the offensive first team; Linebackers Dave Cianelli, Maryland, Harry Jabbusch, South Carolina; and-Half- backs Joe Petruzzo, Maryland, and Robert Bickel, Duke. f McKinney’s purchase ‘of around athlete. He had the bene- fit of ‘discipline training. Instead of taking to sitle doors; he made his exits, through the front, met speed ‘which is. vital for good | pennant—and how play, the high caliber of sports- manship; and the grueling na- ture ‘of. contest has lifted it from/see of the few, souped-up Gulf- a-sneeréd-at-sport, of the 1890's,|stream. nine, The foodeteria yesterday. that) ali jeering by-standers, and rare- ly Jost, a fight. As a result,, he beciime a very respected citizen, even. though he still was accused . of leaning. toward the effeminate! Key West, not to mention a in his choice of indoor sports. Since then, along through the years;, basketball has gained the day players the charge of a ~\Mady-like wards, 14), Loop. TiZEN Page 3 Floyd Aus- oT tad USS Sarstield—32. : (Frank Harding, 8; Don Bd- joe Kelly, USS Gilmore—83. (Pepe Gonzales, 32; John Ear-- ly, 19). It looks like anybody's ball: axa “sissy game.” As ajileague around the Island City _ “The Strand. Theater entry, gen: erally eonsidered the hot shots: {of the group, has dropped. th cluding catcher and a: pitther ; h youngsters fell into | last three games and are es ing the first 16 bars of Berigan’s “I Can't Get Started.” . The tray toters who bear the” title “Benny's Cafeteria” are. still blowing hot and cold. Cur- rently they’re hot faucet and, the to the amazing popularity among ath- to give the Lastfes bro’ jetes around the world. The!support they need to they a it, their first op- Fans will have portunity tonight to get to the No.1 spot in, ranking. of | will face. the N: spectator games. Barney Ain, one of America’s outstanding basketball authori- ties; pointed out, that basketball was devised “as an old man's something to intrigue the middle-aged, and those be- yond. For that reason, the rules were very strict as to body col- lision. But the game was not fancied by the group for which it was intended, instead, it was taken up bythe youths, which was, in'a way surprising, since inals at Wickers' Tomorrow o'clock, Roy president, and members % various teams’ brain. trusts wall gather in Hamlin's office oft the remainder of ule. Chicago Corpus Christi TEMPERATURES ; AT 7:30 A.M., EST from ‘the surprise of all concerned ‘n+ one and-a-half games behind. the league-leading Strandees. Gulfstream, long the weak sis-, ter of the circuit, did her Christ: mas shopping early signing up a” catcher, two pitchers, two -out- fielders and a short stop from . othe: a