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Pa Ly THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Thursday, Jenvery 17, 1952 CAGE SQUAD TAKES TO ROAD Conchs; Miami * Frosh To Meet In Miami Friday Key West High will go on the} road again this Friday when| they meet the University of Mi- | ami Freshmen at the Coliseum in the preliminary game to the Mi- ami University and Tampa U. game. The boys will more than have their hands full as the Miami | Freshman are still undefeated this season as well as having several inches in height on the Conchs. Sure to give the Conchs *- = Boatmen Bombing Area North Of Flagrant Are Disregarding Danger Marquesas Violations Have 100 Units Are | Approved For island City Been Reported 4 At) Dry Tortugas trouble is Willie Schawoitz, last year’s all-state center at Miami : : me Jackson High. However the lo- Captain Of The Port cal squad is out to atone for their | ines to Sout) Browacd Tuesday Clem Pearson today issued | night°and if their shooting eye|two warnings to riners | is anywhere near top form, they may give the Freshmen a tough night. Saturday night, the Conchs re- turn home for the first time in two weeks when they meet an- other. undefeated team, Redlands that must be heeded or else severe penalties will be is- sued. 1. Boatmen are need- les High of Homestead in a returnjamd vessel by passing | game. Redlands edged the/through the danger bomb-| Gonehs by one: point in their ing area, north of Mar-) first game at Redlands and have gone on to defeat nine other op- ponents including Miami High, Edison, Jackson and other strong teams. Redlands has an all veteran team who will be playing their sixth year together and are led in the scoring by Underwood a 6-3, 200 Ib. center who makes a spe-j cialty of grabbing rebounds for scores, Also making their third appearance here will be the Mos- ly twins, Capt. Friar, Williams and Engel. Redlands holds the lead in the District and a win for the Conchs by a decisive margin would help their chances greatly, come the tournament in March as well as advance their chances for a top seeded position. The up and coming junior var- sity who are making a fine come- back after a slow start, are slat- ed to meet the Redlands Junior Varsity in the preliminary at 7:15. Shuffleboarders ‘To Meet Monthly Last night the “Southernmost Shuffleboard Club” held its or- ganizational meeting at the Tru- man Elementary.. School. Club officers elected were: Mr. Albert H. Carey—president, Mr. F. S. Elbertson — vice-president, Mr. Don Jaeschke—secretary-treas- urer, and Mr. William W. War- ner—publicity chairman. Mem- bers of the Board of Directors include Mr. Paul G. Albury, Mr. weitzer, and Mr. W. S. iklin. Among those present, ineluding-the above mentioned. wetés-Mr. F. S. Elebertson, and Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Suider. This organizational meeting was wed, by the Education mmittee of the Lions Club. ‘The club will meet at 7:00 on the second Wednesday of each mopth in the Truman Elemen- tary School, and all interested persons, local residents and visi ors alike, are urged to attend Shuffleboard courts and equip- ment will be made available Mondays through Saturdays at Bayview Park. Club members will hold priority on courts Mon- day, Wednesday, and Friday nights. Tuesday night is “Begin- ners Night” and club members will be on hand to teach and play with all newcomers to the ame. § For additional information call 1969-X-R. Following | Through Pedro Aguilar | | | * The I City Baseball League voted at a meeting last | night to give two playing dates | for the benefit of the March of | and Dimes. On Friday night, the Strand Theater and the Gulf- stream Food Store will cross bats. Manager Sterling is ex-} pected to use Greenwood as his} starting pitcher with Mays be-!/ hind the plate. Skipper Valdez of | the Strand is expected to pitch! Vidi. Valdez in an effort to break | into the win column. The game | is scheduled for 45. On Sunday afternoon, at 2:30 pam. the Brooks’ Stars will tan- gle with Benny's Cafeteria. Ben- my’s have both of their two starts in this half of the pennant race. The Brooks’, who are playing .500 stand a chance of a two way tie for the first position if they can ice this one. Batteries for Brooks’ will be Gallagher and McIntoch, with won Kaki Rodriguez hurling for Ben-! ny’s and Henriqu behind the ptate. All proceeds of these games will go to the March of, aanies |were preferred against | Springs, treasurer quesas Key. Those enter- ing this danger area do so at their own risk. 2. Some captains of ves- Roosevelt Blvd. Corp. To Build 98; risking their crew) (, B, Harvey Other Two James A. Adkinson, dis- trict director of the Fed- jeral Housing Administra- |tion Miami Insuring office sels are violating the Dry |today announced the names Inner Harbor. allowed in the harbor ex-} cept in emergency (red| flag will be flying). Only one Key West boat has been involved in the flagrant violation of the Dry Tortugas area harbor; all other viola- tions have been done by non-Key Westers. tional Park Service regula tions can bring a maxi- mum fine of $500 or six months in jail, or both. Refusal to obey the new anchorage regulation which went into effect Decem- ber 28, carries a $100 fine. Dry Tortugas area has told the Captain of the Port Pearson that his orders were recently defied and vessel owners ever refused to show their papers. Lt. Pearson wants to impress boat owners that carried out and no furth warning will be issued. SHERIFF CRITICIZES (Continuea rrom Page One) homes and was called to restore order. The two Negroes who won second trials were being taken from the State Prison to Tavares last Nov ember for a hearing in connection with their cases when Sheriff Mc. Call shot one to death and wounded another. He said they attempted to es cape; the survivor said he shot deliberately. A coroner's jury ex- onerated McCall Hahn pointed out that the sheriff | had saved the Negroes once and added, regarding the shooting “had | | the sheriff been killed he would | |Plan Winter Street Fair have been a dead hero.” Hahn criticized the press for quoting Walter White executive | ‘secretary of the National Associa toin for Advancement of Colored People. White had criticized law enforcement agencies in the a for their handling of the c Hahn said White was man 1,000 miles away.” Two candidates for governor | Braily Odham and Alto Adams also spoke to the sheriffs Odham said he was “deadly ser ous about my determination to help the people of rida throw th commercialized g rack eteers out of our gov and said if elected he nove from office any f or other officer who fails to enforce the law Adams, former Florida Supreme Court justice, said one of his basic policies was to return to the constitutional of state. He id his jevaluating ¢ t }him as governor government cers of the ce in help experier we pu ficials. The sheriffs elected these offic ‘ers: H. J. Youngblood, Fernandina | Beach, president; R. L. Kendricks, Pensacola, director at large: D. B. Pearson, Sarasota, first vice presi- dent; John P. Hall. Gre Cove efield Alex Lit Daytona Beach, se ard Coker, Sebring the Seventh Con Ralph Witt, Lake City Eighth District the National Guard | ions pliea from | the well rental been rental as Roosevelt | nance; 3. Project jand driveways, | capacity to 6,500. ' 5. Cold water, including that} —______ ee |supplied to common rooms, such! ant for the equipment should be las launderies; ‘based upon the purchase price | 6. Insect and rodent exterm-/of the equipment being written} |ination; loff over a period of seven year | 7. Extra equipment, including} 9, Garages—an additional rea- | venetian blinds, telephone and|sonable charge for garage space buzzer equipment in tenant may be approved by the local) units; and furniture, carpets. FHA office, provided the office, jmat stair treads, draperies and | detern ines that such space is{ jrecreation equipment in common , essential jareas, but not including project | Adkisson said, “It is hoped ‘office furniture and other man-!t y construction will be] agement overhead; ‘for g in order to assist in} 8. Cooking range and refri-! all the housing shortage | | gerators -the ch e to the ten- in the area.” | vey WEST ARTISTS MET AT THE STUDIO OF LARRY KARNS nt Pi pis ee 9 at Clintor ane for credit |have been approved for} i construc lighting, the above orders will be | lighting of common hallway er rooms, common recreation areas | restri which Corp., 2220 Fogarty Ave. West, Florida, Location: West.. 98 Units—$85.00. C. B. Harvey, Street. Key West, Florida, but | tenant electricity; | 4. Utilities for tenant jcooking and refrigeration; area, number and Tortugas Area Anchorage | and addresses of the build- » one is ers and sponsors whose ap- exceptions |ed them down tions on of PYO-|for a 4 grammed defense housing | 163, R. C: in the Key West the units allocated price which has Wilful violation of Na-! been approved Boulevard Holding as » Key Key 518 William Loca- tion: Key West. 2 Units—$85.00 Mr. Adkinson pointed out that while the Defense Housing Pro- gram established maximum rent of $85.00 for a two-bedroom unit, | the rent may be increased ac- The Superintendent of|cordingly in certain instances | J \ | g i listed below are furnished by the | his campaign. | ! and tooms, and ‘grourid mainte- including | 7,300 spectators | and excluding,’ stream Park race track ‘will pro: lighting, | ¢. | of have! the| _ Keglers Show ‘Good Form At | Boca Chica The Mr. and Mrs. Bowling League held their regular Sun- day ion on the Boca Chica Slides with all teams top | forr J. Caldwell turned ar 191 game for y series for the jmen and J. Carson = solled up al | 200 marker. G. Mead also knock steadily scoring 180. L. Carson turned in the high game for the ladies with a 149 Holt rolled a aldwell 156 and J.! ‘Jones 153 | Team 4, Mr. and Mrs. Brown, jnow hold down the top position in the league with Team 14, Mr. and Mrs. Holt, a close second | Third t is anchored by ™ and Mrs. Marino, Team 7 | JUNIOR CHAMBER (Continued From Page One) fit of the March of Dimes Polio Campaign, reported that the tertainment arrangements are now complete and that reserva- tions are stacking up rapidly. A | jcapacity crowd is expected for | the affair. It was announced that next | week, Burton Thornall, candi-| jdate for State President of the sees will speak to the local when any or all of the items/organization in the interest of builder: | Following the business meet- . Fuel for heating, including} ing, Kermit Lewin and Frank | the heating of water; Webber, showed two well receiv- 2. Janitor service, including] eq films to the group garbage and gee san’ removal; ates Tes i The site of the University of | Florida's basketball games, Flor- tida Gymnasium, accommodates | New parking grounds at Gulf-; 1,500 additional the over-all j room for thus raising 'vide | i MARTIN THOMAS, 11, son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin 913 Georgia street, polio at the age of five during the epidemic in Key West in 1946. ‘Through the prompt ac- Thomas, contracted tion of the local Chapter of March of Dimes he was hos- pitalized only three weeks. He | is now a student of the 6th ! grade at St. Joseph’s School. H A 5,000-square-mile desert of fro- zen sand has been discovered on the etic Ocean coast of Alaska i | i | will exh | them | that college sports are indeed over- | | majority | scholarships to one | abolish, ; weeks in second place, } again Writers Believe ‘Sports Are Overemphasized NEW YORK (#—Are sports over-empnasized” Most of the men who write about and broadeast them think college emphasized, and they've got al- most as many cures for the situa- jtion as a dog has fleas About 115 of the writers and broadeasters voting in the Asso- ciated Press’ annual year-end poll agreed that there’s too much em- phasis on sports at the college level. Only 83 said there was no | overe mph. Suggested cures by those in the ranged from such mun- matters as subsidization and man’s idea of shooting the spectators. Biggest target of those who would de-emphasize college sports were rah-rah alumni who wave greenbacks as wel! as the old schoc? colors. Thirteen writers sug- gested that colléges clamp down dane }on alumni efforts to improve their school’s athiletic record by offer ing cash assistance to hard-run- ning, halfbacks and sharp-shooting basketball players Nine writers urged that recruit ing, subsidization or proselyting— call it what you will—be outlawed, or at the very ieast, rigidly con trolled Seven votes each were given to the idea of putting sports “back on the campus”’ and to the elimi- nation of both the two-platoon s tem in football and spring practice for the gridders : Athletic scholarships, which the American Council on Education Committee of Presidents wants to also came in for lots of attention from the press box ex perts Some wanted to make them uni- form throughout the country wanted to put ona academic, competitiive basis. ers wanted to reduce thei ber, and a few agreed nem strict oth- num- with the A committee that scholarships | should be banned. The writers who thought there | 'S no over-emphasis had their say, too. Lavelle Strickland of the Bruns- wick . News, put it this way: ere’s too much emphasis on de-emph. ! ‘Kertucky Leads Nation As Top Basketball Team NEW YORK \ — After two Kentucky nation’s college according took over as the No. 1, offensive majer basketball team today | to statistics of the National Col- |legiate Athletic Bur au With 83 points against Xavier of Cincinnati and 99 against Flori- {da, the Wildcats show an average |of 84.3 points a game in conte through Saturd West Virginia is second with 78.8 Behind the leaders are Duke with 7, DePaul and Holy Cross, each | | with 78.3 and Villanova with 77.5 Syracuse, the leader the weeks, nosedived to 14th sult of three defeats In team defense, Oklahoma A & ue _heads the list for the second it week, having allowed the eas an average of 44.2 points a game. Oklahoma City University is second with 46.7 and Maryla st two as a re- third with 47.5 some | Star Of Polio Show MIKE JACOBS, personable Master of Ceremon nights’ March of Dimes show lusty “Rum and Coca Cola.” J Madrid orc Churchill Asks Assist England estra to help boost the Citizen Staff Photo Saturday on Duval street, out with a acobs appeared with the Habana- Polio fund collection. America To In Building Its Defenses Against “Reds” Expects China To Eventually Throw Off Communism ‘Allies Bombed WASHINGTON, (# — The British Prime Minister said,} Kaes Song Zone, American help is nectar if Britain is to meet the de- fense production goals it has set. He deciarea “ii is judge’ how much «aid Britain should receive. But whether the United States “much or little,”” the provides ill declared, of the free world. tor you to Church- British nations | will continue to make a maximum effort to strengthen the defenses ‘Say Gomanies The Accusation Was Made During Today's “e No Progress” Armistice Negotiations MUNSAN, Korea (#—The Com. munists charged today that an Al- Of aid, Churchill said that he/lied plane bombed the Kaesong had come to the United States to ask “not for gold, but for steel, not for favors but for equipment.” , he declared, | recovery, in This is neces not to aid British which he expressed confidence, bu! to assist Britain in building ' defenses. He does not aid, he empha , sized, to “ma life more com fortable” for Britons. Churchill was greeted by thun- when he came be- derous chee fore the legislators. In the packe: galleries were diplomats of many} natio} President Truman, spotlight of the moment entirely to his British visitor, was not pres- Truman was in the ent. But Mrs presidential gallery Tt was the third address ‘Church- | its neutral zone. just six miles from ; the talk site, Panmunjom. The accusation made dur- ing Thursday’s “no progress it | mistice negotiations. It fokowed by two da a Red charge that Allied planes attacked !a North Korean prison camp, kill- ing 15 U. N. prisoners and injur. ing 64 others. Monday the Com munists complained that Allied iplanes flew over cities in North- d!east China A team of U. N Iheaded by Col truce was ar- investigators James C, Murray leaving the | was ordered to Kaesong to check 'on the alleged Kaesong bombing. The city where the truce. talks b- gan las t Jwy is guaranteed from {attack by joint agreement Communist correspondents at ill has delivered to the U. S. Con-|Panmunjom said propeller-driven gr Prime Minister of Brit-| planes were heard circling over ain. He spoke before it twice dur-|the Red truce camp this morning, ing World War Il—on Dec. 26, 1941,/at about the time of the allegel and again on March 19, 1943. | bombing He alluded to this early in his| Both subcommittees working on address, speaking of it as his}armistice terms spent the day “good fortune.” wrangling over issues which have He recalled, too, an address he , deadlocked the talks for weeks made at Fulton, Mo., and requoted An Allied briefing officer said in part the words he spoke then: | that for the delegates discussing “Let no one underrate the abid | Prisoner exchange “it was merely ing power of the British Empire.” ; a matter of ploughing over the He added same old ground with the same “Iam very glad to say the same | resuits—no results to you here today.” | Rear Adm. R. E. Libby asked Churchill spoke of the many {Chinese Col. Tsai Chen-wan for changes in international relation- whom he was speaking We jay ships that have developed since | when’ he dectared angrily that Red World War II. China will “fight to the end” if He noted that some former ene-/any Chinese soldiers in Allied mies now are allies and some for-, hands are repatriated to Chinese allies now are antagonistic Y nalist_ Formosa oaking of Communist Russia in firm control of his tem he said per, gave no direct answer. It is not the fault of the West Libby accused the Communists powers if a great gulf has! of violating the Geneva Convention red between us. , by ling to mark their prisoner Expressing confidence the West-|of war camps. He suggested that rn world can meet any threat, | Safeguards be set up to avoid any he said that if the English-sveak-| future attacks on North Korean ng nations combine their industry | Prison camps and science “there will be no quiv-| North Korean Maj. Gen. Lee ering balance of power to offer Sang Cho said he would think it temptation to aggression. over Churchill noted that the United States had expected China to be one of the “Big Four’’ after the last war, and added “I was always a bit skeptical.” The Prime Minister said that al though Communis now controls the Chinese mainland, eventually expects China to throw off Communism His audience ughed heartily when he quoted a Chinese prov erb: “The tail of China is large and wl not be wagged.” Churchill said “T like that.” Churchill lauded the — States for opposing Commrri=~ * the Far East and the Red Chie i nese aggression in Korea. He Said the United States was nine-tenths or more of in Korea which has nominally as umed Churchill said the Western na tions would not allow Formosa, the island stronghold of the Chi- | Se oN to he taken. ° the ; Political Announcements DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY, MAY 6, 1952 For Clerk of Circuit Court EARL R. ADAMS For County Tax Collector | CLAUDE A. GANDOLFO ANYTHING CONCERNING AUTOMOBILES SEE THe i TWINS 1130 Duvac Sr. PH. 1870-1871 i