The Key West Citizen Newspaper, April 7, 1952, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

h School Tennis Squads Victorious In Miami , jor League Hitters Are ida |Suspecting Someone Is Golf Crown | Bringing Back ‘Dead’ Balls Girls’ Team Wins Over ’ Miami Jackson By 5-1 Score squads returned unscathed from their venture into the | 1 romped easily Miami Jackson, 5-1. Frank Hernan- playing his first matches of season, was the FRye 8 5 for a player who been out of competition for boys doubles boys showing won all four lost by the girls by “Poochie” Fernan- losing “Poochie” play- the best set of her She happened to e top junior girls Betty Bertoni and goes to her perform- api best victory for was won by June Yates illate in doubles. the powerful ofthe same Betty Ann Tankerly. jUS JACKSON lo (J) d. Leo Carey inson (J) d. Frank Rob- 6-3, 7-5, : Peter Knight (KW) 4. Dennis Saley 4-6, 6-4, 6-3. Tony Dopp (KW) d. Richard Cunningham 6-2, 6-3. Frank Hernandez (KW) d. Rob- ert Carlile 4-6, 6-2, 6-4. Carey-Roberts (KW) d. Mer- Cado-Saley 6-4, 6-0. Knight-Dopp (KW) 4. Robin- son-Cunningham 6-2, 6-4, BOYS VERSUS TECH Carey (KW) d. Craig Bardell 8-0, 6-0. a foberts (KW) d. Ed Clark 6-2, fu Gaffan (T) d. Knight 6-0, Bill Knowles (T) d. Dopp 6-3, ‘7-9, 6-0. Hernandez (KW) d. George Car- roll 6-1, 6-1. Carey-Roberts (KW) d. Gaffan- Bardwell 6-4, 6-3. Knight-Hernandez (KW) 4. Knowles-Carroll 6-1, 9-7. GIRLS VERSUS JACKSON Betty Bertoni (J) d. Diana Fer- mandez 6-4, 6-2. June Yates (KW) d. Ann Tank- erly 6-1, 6-3. Dolores Villate (KW) d. Joyce Potter 6-2, 6-1, Vita Barroso (KW) 4d. Delores Leonardy 8-6, 6-3 Lynn Sellers (KW) d Bmith 9-7, 6-1, Yates-Villate (KW) d? Bertoni- Tankerly 6-1, 7-5. Sellers Fernandez Smith-Potter 6-6, ness. Tonight at 7 p.m. the West Tennis Club me strong Concordia College tenn: team from St. Louis, This team is a powerhouse Myra (KW) ti calied, dark- | »| SECOND GAME * Florida International League Baseball Season Tuesday Opens Night In Saint with and eight:team loop starts “he Sl ho wasps ami Beach in 1950, is at ‘in Tampa this year and Gerald a 3 Pedro Aguilas Dave King, City Manager, was Bp the ball game last week ‘and he seemed to enjoy the games} and he showed lots of interest when the Jr. league played and promised that in the future he , will personally see to it that the lights went on, on schedule. Good for Mr. King and may we all shout, “Long live King.” JR, BASEBALL LEAGUE | The Jr. Baseball League, spon- {sored by the American Legion, got off with a bang last Wednes- day and in the opening game the Evans Enterprises ran into a few difficulties before they final- ly won, and Pepe’s Cafe also has a very good club, and that first game is not a game where we can judge the players, all we: neryous and in a few moi games ve will see some real ball. In that first game, little Joe Diaz had four chances at } second without an error, walked ; twice and stole a base, “Mockingbird” to his | sriends, played a great game be- thind the plate and Watson at |first, looked good for Bvans, Santana was the first Jr. leaguer to hit one over the left field wall, although it bounced, it went over just the same .... Pita pitched a good game and started out a little shaky, but he only was in trouble in the fifth, when Pepe's sluggers touched him for 5 hits including a walk and an error for 6 runs. (driguez featured a triple and a |single, and in the eighth, fanned with a man on third. L. Rodri- ed in the last frame 2g run on third and caught a nice game and A Leon fed good. he second game played ht, the Evans Enter- For Pepe’s the hitting of E. Ro- | ithe winning on second. E. Mire} |at first and Bazo in center look- | STILL UNAFRAID Easter bunny, old Patricia Ann Bryan Kerr | many) an Fernandez hit a doul |ta tripled, Macias seventh, a walk, two | Alvarez’ triple gaye t lruns, and Old religble | Sweeting fanned jeighth and a walk, two and gn error gave three earned in Key West scored two was earned, and in | Brown tri error and pled and two them the two 5 ¥ ed the next four and allow one run in the sixth, i 5 sibiie 3 ee seal ; i geeag? iy Bul in H 5 H g Dub P; Wins TE, fi ne Be i al leis Hd Ft i Ez E zeit By RALPH RODEN Press Sports Writer Major League hitters are begin- ning to that some one is sabotaging the official league base- Could it be that som e“dead ’ ‘famous in grand pappy’s , have found their way into the ugual batch of “rabbit” balls? Warren Spahn and Ernie John- $en of the Boston Braves are the itekers to lend support to 's belief. and Johnson teamed up the Braves to a 1-0 no- » | hit vietory over the Brooklyn Dod- g at Chattanooga, Tenn., Sun- . The masterpieee, before 9,- fans, was the third no - hit Ro - run game of the spring, an unprecedented feat. From 1939 un- fil this season only five no-hitters in Grapefruit League arn and Monte Kennedy New York Giants pitched first no - hitter, beating the Cubs, 10-0, on March 17. Rookie Righthander Steve Rid- the Philadelphia Phillies the second gem, downing Louis Cardinals, 3-0, last toiled the first seven in- and allowed only one Dod- , Campanella, who valked in the fifth, to get on hase. Dick through an error, was Brook to reach base dur- johnson’s two innings. hitting featured the ma- jority of the other games. Service ~ bound Ted Williams Plan To Give Congress. More |Effective Check On Federal Spending Comes Before Senate By JOE HALL WASHINGTON @—The Senate today takes up a bill designed to ve Congress a more effective | on federal spending. Measure ,sponsored by Sen. McClellan (D.-Ark.), has strong support in both major parties and is to win approval easily. hi mittee on budget and give it Fa of J, Edgar Hooyer and the ; declared McGranery had boys, tome hosily io the the 1945 Amerasia magazine , which he handled as an as- int attorney general. added that FBI files “are bulging with information of | misconduct’ by government em- Ployes and that the difficulty is alttibutable to reluctance of pre- vious attorneys general ‘to take vigorous action on the information at hand.” Three Republican memibers of | the Senate Judiciary Committee— Sens. Watkins (Utah), Ferguson (Mich.) and Hendrickson (N. J.)— have indicated they want to ques- McGranery at some length about the Amerasia case. It inyolved some 1,600 govern- ment documents, many of them geeret, which were found in a raid an the magazine's New York of- fices in 1945. Six persons were ar- tested, three of them indicted. Two paid fines and charges against the third were dropped. Amerasia was a magazine, now would set up an 18-| member joint congressional com- | These are running eight to 10 times hostility to the FBI} |tions Committee, headed by Me- | Monday, Apefi 7, 1952 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Page © and Walt Dropo socked a pair of | homers apiece to lead the Boston Red Sox to an 84 triumph over Oklahoma City of the Texas League at Oklahoma City. The Pittsburgh Pirates pounded out 15 hits including home runs by Ted Beard and Ralph Kiner to bury the Chicago Cubs, 13-1, at New Orleans. Howie Pollet limited the Cubs to two hits over the first six innings. Cliff Fannin, supported by the St. Louis Browns’ 17-hit attack, had no trouble turning back the San Antonio Missions of the Texas League, 18-5, in the Alamo City. dim Busby peunded out a two- tun homer and Chico Carrasquel one with the bases empty to lead the Chicago White Sox to a 4-1 decision over Fort Worth of the Texas League in Fort Werth. Outfielder Vie- Wertz. drove in three runs on a pair of homers to spark the Detroit Tigers to a 5-4 victory over Birmingham of the | Southern Association. Home runs highlighted the Phil- adeiphia Phils’ 9-8 triumph over the Cardinals at Columbia, S. C. Del Ennis and Forrest Burgess conneeted for the Phil sand Solly Hemus, Enos Slaughter and Pea- nuts Lowrey for the Cards. In qther games, Cleveland trounced the Giants, 9-4; the Yan- kees nipped Atlanta, 5-4; the Cin- cinnati Reds edged Washington, 3- 2, at Charlotte, N. C., and the} Philadelphia Athletics and -Balti- | more Orioles battled to a 4-4, ten- inning tie at Baltimore. a staff similar to the highly-trained | technical group which now works | for the Senate and House tax-writ-| ing committees. On the joint committee would he | five members each from the Sen- ate and House Approfiriations Com- | mittees, and four each from the Government Operations Commit- | tees. } Sponsors of the hill contend the Appropriations Committees do not | now have the time or the staff to | check on the tremendous federal | Explosive Civil Rights Issue Comes Up In Congress Again In Presidential Race .y By MARVIN L. ARROWSMITH Must Pledge Loyalty. (®) Wirephoto THE. U.S. SUPREME COURT has ruled that Edmund Blair (above), “Pell . City, Ala, a weekly newspaper publisher, must Sign a Democratic. nation- al. “loyalty” pledge in order to qualify as an . Alabama presi- dential elector candidate in the party’s May 6, primary. Blair, a States Rights leader, had said he would not vete for-Truman, or-any other candidate advo- cating a strong civil rights pro- gram. Casualty List No. 557 Reported WASHINGTON. (M— The De- fense Department today identified | 45 more battle casualties in Korea in a new list (No. 537) that re- ported 13 killed, 31 wounded and one injured. It also listed egiht dead who were previously report- ed ‘wounded. budgets benig sent to Congress. | the size of pre - world war two) budgets. | The: Senate Government Opera- Clellan, said: “The result is that many mil- | lions of dollars have been appro- priated in excess of the actual re. quirements and needs to properly carry on the functions of the fed- eral government. “These excesses have made worse the large recurring deficits which must be passed on in the form of new taxes to the already overburdened taxpayers, and tn- less stopped may eventually lead to national bankruptcy.” Congress, the committee said, is “confronted with imposing and creasing threats to the n economy because of ever spending pressures both from in- ternal sources and from abroad.” The staff of the joint committee on the budget would have the duty kin ¢ of all fe 1 to give the a ittees dat a | “so that they may eliminate waste- ful practices and correct devia- tions from programs authorized by the Congress.” 3. Recommend cutbacks in goy- ernment programs ‘when in the publie interest,” 4, Put a price - tag on all spend- ing programs authorized hy Con- gress. WASHINGTON W&— The po- litically - explosive civil rights is- sue came up for fresh attention in’ Congress today against the background of the presidentia. nomination races. It is being brought up by a Sen- ate labor subcommittee headed Sen. Humphrey (D.-Minn.), who in. 1948 led the drive wi i a strong civil rights plank The subcommittee aranged hear ings on the hotiy.- disputed pro posal to create a fair employmen: practices commission (FEPC) witl. power to enforce its rulings in jot. discrimination cases. The opening sessions simply wil lay the groundwork, with iedera otiicials scheduled to tell about th manpower situation generally an. to report on an anti - discrimina tion program which President Tru man pur mito eftect by executiw order. The President's order deal. oniy with jobs under defense con tracts let by the government, Legislation to set up a compu! sory FEPC with jurisdiction ove Private industry ha. been opposed by Soui Congress more vigorously than an; kino phase of hig pelo civ. ri program. wmaker have biocked dction on part of the program through or marathon debate. for any action beyond the com mittee level at this Bu. ae obviously has dec’ jue needs airing again in presidential election year. ‘the political implications are a| parent. For one to @ com| F fined to South — Richard B, Russell, Georgia ocrat, the only presidential hope ful opposed to it, For exampie, oen. Robert A. i of Ohio, a candidate for the Re publican presidential nominatio.: ag a member of the Humphre. against a compulsory + Taft has backed opposition A calling for a commission withou enforcement powers, with the mai reliance on educational processe to eliminate job discrimination, The sybcommittee has before i two basically similar campulsor: bilis, one sponsored by Humphre: gmt te other by Sen. Ives (R,- Ives is backing Gen. Dwight D Eisenhower for the GOP presider tial nomination, Some of the ger eral’s political opponents hav been calling on him to make hi positioa known regarding such is sues as FEPC, but his weak r don’t look for him to J in any detail while he is i uniform. THREE HOTELS IN Located in the MIAMI Heart of the City neasownnte ROMS sr Rebesvhtions with BATH end TELEPHONE . Ritz Hotel 132 E Flagler St. 102 Rooms Elevator Solarium Hotel is KE Ist Ave. 229 ia Ave. Elevator Heated Rooms Elevator Piaget jan infield out, the i ed was In the | Roberts hit one to | board and under it for at-| homer. So each club scored , |runs that were eatned. Roberts, | ly twice, |Brewn and Pazo starred for the ; }locals in the field and Mier, Gal- jban Alvarez and Valdez for the| Rep. visitors. Bubber Peat — Jed to 9 batters, fanned 3) sipility and walked twa aiar being idle | ar pecmas for over a year. giz oe g | defunct, specializing in Far East- | ern affairs. The case has been sub | ject of congressional and grand | jury investigations with disputes y . . - SS hes sit still raging about handling of pros- ecution. “UNCOAST SEAFOODS FOOT OF ELIZABETH & GREENE Phone 1077 P WE DELIVER / f CK f to HEY ; FOR YOUR EASTER PASS- : [A OVER HOLIDAYS WE HAVE PREPARED FOR YOU THE FRESHEST AND FINEST IN SEAFOOD CAUGHT IN QUR LOCAL WATERS. i section of the countr touring the South in p: for its coming tennis se year Concord 3 BLOCES FROM UNION BUS STATION ii 1. It also would i ettt the a § f : ? 8 i a & . fiscal pr Watkins said he would insist that | hold expe MecGranery “give a fu na- | imum.” | tion of his part” in the Amerasia! 2. Make recommendations | case. Proper congressional commi Key West players * um safely as follows: h we hits were ones by £ J. Santana. The Le- y one earned run, in ‘our walked to the plate. The ice in the a& passed zg i In doubles — gon, 2. Van-Jack Remini | On April 2, 1980, the Cul lost to U. S$, Naval Air Station a ll to 10 seore after 1¢ of patting. In the Mth Kaki Spans Destroyed SWIFT CURRENT wan @—Ice jams swept four middle spans of a t across the Saskatchewan miles north of here S eut off the northern section Province The million - doll ® @oncrete structure, co year ago after two y struction, formed land link with the Nox ewan Premier T. ¢ the structure “within three month ed and two gf Saskat | : E iH iL i : i : aS | score Kaki with be the winning run, boys came back in won the game. B | He ii Th i & ; zZ City LOAN é ty : j z ae 3 tly | two singles. For Rodriguez hit a ingles, Castro hit ¢ and Robert S. F. Se: singles, Ce. [ Ha ; De 3 H Ly A :

Other pages from this issue: