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BUSINESS, Poa« C-6-7—AMUSEMENTS, Pogei C-B-9-RADIO-TV, Pages C-10-11—FEATURE PAGE, C-12—CLASSIFI ED ADS, Pages C-12-19 fte Sports C Moore Is 14-5 NotLikelyto Gefi WASHINGTON, D. C., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1958 ToKeep Title

* 'Big' From * Durelle Name' Football - ...... * ; - Coach I Fight Seen Ending in SIME, MURCHISON RETURNING Kayo Tonight Mont Resignation Forced I ft ' ¦¦ i jaWFi'y¦-~ 1 ** ¦ . k <* % IE MONTREAL. Dec. 10 (AP).— Jack Sharkey will referee the ; Morrow's Entry Adds With No Idea of Successor] -Won Durelle light- title fight to- By MERRELL WHITTLESEY night and the general feeling Spice to Bin Stiff Writer here ia that hia main job willi Star Dashes 's successor as football coach at the Uni«i be to count 10. By BILL FUCHS versity of Maryland very likely willbe a fellow-who now is an There ia hardly a person in I Star Staff Writer assistant coach at some other college, or a high school coach* thia zero-weather French- A note of warning sounded Dr. Wilson H. Elkins, Maryland’s president, forced metropolis the Canadian who be- today that the resignation of the chubby-cheeked, yester* JBmw punching | In Texas Dave 36-year-old Mont lieves this expected day, party at the [ Sime-lra Murchison duet in and it is clear that the school has no definite successor* will end The Star Games sprint series is in mind. - in anything but a i . And that goea for 1 in jeopardy. Mont had a three-year record of 11 victories, 18 defeat* ——— 4 the fighters. Bobby Morrow, American and a tie at his alma mater. y _r* JBr The bout will be telecast na- hero of the 1956 Olympic Tommy was a three-sport ath- tee of the Board of Regent* tionally accept applications in the United States * games, has asked to be dealt there, and an assistant will im- lete mediately. They ¦in for the first time. Thus, coach under for will be sub-1 TALE OF THE TAPE the Exchange Club series—7o. five years. mitted to Dr. Elkins. ,|BO and 100 yard dashes—for Job Lacks Appeal MMn Durelle i the fourth straight year stacks AU of Aides Fired *1 Aft 29 People 173% Weight 178 i up as the big headliner the All of Mont’s assistants—Jack close to the so. 1 5-11% Betaht ¦ S-10% night of January 24 in the Hennemier, Whitey Dovell, Ed( situation at Maryland -' 73 ....T— Saet 74 v d '*:/ (Normal) extremely doubtful any %; - •..- : M 42 Chest 38 1 Armory. Fullerton, , Roy that 44. Cheet i“name” coach, or one (ejpjnded) -421^ This will be Morrow’s first Lester, Qene Alderton and j under 22% ::::r::;: t£& .t.v.v.' 24 Fred Layman—were released 'contract, woujd leave any kind c3f- 18% crack at the indoor boards. 16% •_— security Mary- 18% Bleepa 18 Abilene Christian College effective June 30. Mont’s resig-' Jof to come to .... 13% 1 The 13* Forearm effective ! land, where the future of foot- 17 Neck .... 18% nation becomes Janu- v student first crashed into the hall'never has been made quit* Ai national and world sprint pic- an' 31. the 1956 Olympic BOBBY MORROW When Tatum resigned at clear. ture in trials, put emerged top Set for Star Games Maryland three years ago to As one coach it last over the ABC network and in i and hero in the night: “They want Ivy big games Australia he return to North Carolina as an Canada over the Canadian i in as League with Broadcasting 'company’s sprint point. early , head coach, all members of school a Southern hook- scored the first Murchison took the team.” up. The province of , since Jesse Owens in 1936. his staff were interviewed and football thunder winning the 70. but ’ Mont, however, will be blacked out of Morrow got his third gold Mont was hired. But no mem- who never has known __ Sime took the other two. bers business other than football, the telecast. ( will be anchor man on flash- ¦ of Mont’s staff expect to a i medal as a . hopes stay coaching. Ha shown WMAL-TV, Chan- record-breaking 400-meter ing to an incredible 76 clock- be interviewed, and all will* to in over re- ; assignment Washington at 10 lay team. Murchison also ing in the 80 and winning the , start looking for jobs. Hen- still has an on hi* nel 7, in i was schedule, as defensive coach p.m.>. on that team. nemier and Dovell reportedly of 100 in an eased-up , 9.7. are headed south. Dovell Don Faurot’s Gray team in the All three—Morrow, was 7th Title- Defense New Prominence Murch- - on the long-distance phone last Blue-Gray game December 27 ison and Sime—have night. ;at Montgomery, Ala. He will Moore, , Sime. strapping redhaired been i who now lives in San clocked in 9.3 seconds Cobey, leave for Montgomery Decem- WHAT CAN WE SAY, COACH?— (left) and DoveU Diego, is making his Duke athlete, and Murchison, for the t Bill director of ath- Whitev seventh t 100-yard dash outdoors. letics, visibly ber 19. (right), two of Tommy Mont’s assistants at Maryland, appear glufemer defense of 175-pound short, stocky Negro from West- That’s i who was shaken' j his divi- the record, originally set by Mel at news; Coun- Tommy, an extremely like- than their boss after Tommy resigned last night.—Star Staff Photo. sion crown. He remained a ,em Michigan College, have 1 the the Athletic j Patton in 1948. eil and Athletic See MARYLAND,Page solid 14 to 5 favorite to whip , jazzed up the sprints to the No. the Commmit- -1 C-4 ... - - ¦ - - . - ¦ - ¦ ¦ ——— the 29-year-old fighting fish- 1 spot on a packed program of erman from the Bale Bte. Ann, dazzling invitation events. Nor- New Brunswick. mally relegated to a position of Durelle, a dock-fighting type , importance behind the mile Terps with a minimum of finesse, said 1 , the dashes vaulted into Favored “one of us will go by the 11th i new prominence along with or 12th round. I’m going to , Sime three years ago. WIN, LOSE OR win, or they’re going to carry That was the night the New Virginia me out.” Jersey baseball aspirant set a I Over If they don’t lug him out on i world record in the indoor 100 DRAW By FRANCIS STANN his shield, it will go down as i in 9.5 seconds, tied the mark in one of the great upsets in fistic : the 80 and 70 in a super sweep Here Tonight annals. Moore, who will cele- 1 that won for him his first brate his 42d, 45th qjc 49th i national acclaim. days Maryland is expected to score i birthday anniversary three Sime Wins Two : from now, has big edge A Debt to Mickey Finn its first basketball vietory of a on nearly ; in everything but the | Murchison, a foot ONE OF TRIS SPEAKER'S favorite stories in his later the season tonight when it Yvon Sime, arrived Virginia , shorter than on takes on thrice-beaten calendar. the scene the following year. days was the tale of how the once left him College at Park at 8:15. Can He reputation Rock, Ark., for during Terps, defending Take Punch came with al- in Little as payment use of a field The cham- ready made. As aGI in Ger- pions the Coast box, spring training. in Atlantic Ancient Archie can ; many, he did a world-record Conference, punch punch have had narrow and absorb a tar ; 10.1 seconds in the 100 meters story absurdity of tough , Trls didn’t tell the to illustrate the losses to two teams. better than the crude, awkward ailing challenger and shut out Sime. with the happenstance, but merely to bring a chuckle and to North Carolina Btate and > and strong who ' upset stomach, by sweeping Northwestern, and should find an remind his listeners that baseball has become far more i holds the Canadian and British ! the series here. the Cavaliers more to their light - heavyweight prosaic than it was back in 1908, when Tris was a rookie Empire last year, the stage was set liking. crowns. ,* in the Red pox’s camp. Even the name of the No. 2 principal Virginia has a fairly good expected pattern , for another Sime-Murchison The of the ; battle and they didn’t dlsap- Involved was bizarre—Mickey Finn. team, one that may improve on i fight, too, should appeal to the Men'. lAO RUUERS-! 99 ( “Finn owned the Little Rock baseball club of the South- last season's 6-8 conference rec- crafty veteran. work shoes manning hardly ® ern League,” was telling a gathering a ord, but the Cavaliers Durelle knows he has to close t-ty PIASTIC AA. 80WMAN VWLilf/ Tris can be expected to defeat the the opening £m:~ raincoats ... SSC years ago, his When 1 in on Archie from .77 w few “and the Red Sox used field. it Terps on their own floor. bell in an attempt to wear down 1 SEE-TRY-BUY 3__ there was ) Kg hooded *1 IQQ Vd" ELECTRIC Wi came time to break camp and head North, a hotel The Cavaliers have bowed to 1 his venerable rival. Moore, a 1 ( lane wearing shoe. MMmKS FABKAS, (new) “IWW mj bill and rental of Finn’s park to pay. The Boston baseball Virginia Tech. Richmond and sharpshooter with either hand, IMPORTED Hearn games 1 ) line Will- AO. club had little cash. Obviously a ballplayer couldn’t do North Carolina in road 1 likes nothing better than for an «le. end heel.. INOTON BOOTS DRILLB^B\lfc»- opening at home ( All tieu a hotel any good, so the Red Sox paid the innkeeper and after an win opponent to come td him. MORETTI In .tack ‘ Mary. } Soy.' Hooded SWEAT « AA fle . over William and Archie, pointing Virgil gave me to Mickey Finn to square the other bill.” to *«IRTS - law lIV3 Coach Bud Millikan is mak- backfiring pre- | f Custom-Built j tottottmtHtotott Akins’ recent ™ “ Mr. Finn got his money back—it was only a matter of ing one change in the Terps’ diction, put Coupe-Sedan-Sport SPFCIAIT Man' l Nougo'lle JACKETS, leek. won’t himself out t 1 | mm and wear, even better. 2,000 R.P.M., Lock profited more. starting lineup tonight. BUI WwAajMrl,n Switch a few hundred dollars—but he might have on any limb in a flat prophecy. . \ More quality for the price 1 Client Qw>l *4. Won't .cuff AAC The 20-year-old Speaker was so sensational in the South- Murphy, a 6-foot-3 But he has given the lmpres- ¦ J than you can imagine. I SUCDE or tear 9a99 +??????»???»?»????? had good game made by Italian 1 Giants, senior who a ' sion that expects to own the « I Hand ' ern League that the Pirates and Senators tried to he # JACKETS acquire him. against Northwestern before all-time knockout record all byr 1 Craftsmen and outitand- "STZ VS&g Quilt«d fouling out, goes with the first evening is ; f ing. Brass exhaust system \ FMSL ** * * himself when the five in place of Jim Halleck, over. Right now he and the , 1 and air-cooled aluminum / INSULATED # discerning peo- I O™ WHILE HE NOW OWNED Speaker outright, Finn re- another senior letterman who late Young Stribling are tied[ brakes. For w S2,55 hasn't been hitting consistently. \ pie who desire extra value I UNDERWEAR promised the Red Sox a chance to ' for the kayo mark at 128. Beautiful, wft ~NMEN'S0 AXIFLANNEL SFOCT « AA WHIftnIfSHU membered that he had , / h a small car far very A * Murphy has averaged 11 If the fight go the •yada in all SHIRTS Ae39 c> buy the young Texan if he showed promise. Finn should ' I moderate coat. I •trot. wmmg MB back points for the two games on a limit, scoring will A terrific a paltry SSOO. 15-round the Chri.lma. .pe- *Wn'. 4.»u,k1. and Zipper AK- O. / I sold him to Boston for team that far has had the * so ; be handled by three judges. ~a" "« w Ww

scoring well spread. Jerry - X It is interesting to speculate on what might have Sharkey, the former world 199 ’ Bechtle, junior from Elizabeth, »??????????????????. V ' WmJa any . . Boy.' - happened if the Giants, Pirates or other National heavyweight champion from ~ . - COMBAT BOOTS. Sice. 10-4 „ .. N. J., who is expected to de- 1 ‘ ((lann j Derby Guoronteed in ibit aa Small, KFOfVj winter m Speaker. There would have Boston who was selected for s *^ *’ 77 League club had obtained velop into a star this season, . # Quality TL i favorite 3.99 it bids his job last night, will not score Belter Trade, a Service Ci I harm f4' i iarJ"** TapT ff been no to thwart Speaker’s almost perennial is tops with a 13.5 average, a I 1J aa. cold a F > V- 4800 Wiscaniin Ava. N.W. I ,r“" »! «>• l««" Broadcloth i quality for M batting a for of Charlie McNeil, the fight. The judges will be IIIIAPAtIIP.A /Ir?\ for the title, and it would have meant place ahead / EMerton 3-4*oo Free Farkinf % announced at ringside tonight t i . a National Leaguer in just about everybody’s all-time another junior with high po- 2.M tential, who has a 12.5 average. See FIGHT, Page C-2 UNDERWEARsr. outfield of , Cobb and Speaker. $10.95 When Speaker was at his peak, so was Cobb, and no 1.44 jnsnu r- 99c Ty matter how much Tris seemed to , the fiery did Just J “«*« a bit better. Only in 1916, the year he was traded to Cleve- | STYIE land, did Speaker lead the American League. Tris batted coldest weather. ue.lShorts V i*"t Canon winter Aja ladUPVA Weight shirt a DRAWtRsIeW * .386 to Cobb’s .371. and drawers. \ JfiniltT^ ¦AAattfyfee. hand A ** * * reeaaaaa warmer 1.29AA ASSUMING THAT SPEAKER would have hit National Mtn i 111 q| fit League pitching with the same ease as the American ¦ FAMOUS & TANKER /'TO League brand, tris would have won eight titles. More, if JACKETS Intported f hadn’t come along. When MICROSCOPE Navy, (1910), Helnte Zimmerman (1912), (1913-4), (H jewdfiik. | Sties 36-52 in Special! ¦¦ _ (1916), (1917) 'Woman'll Brown and Charcoal (1915), - Mens’ “VITALON” IjFjm winter Hue, IvJjß Speaker $5.00 TOPBR/UH * AAAAaAAAAAAAAAAAAAd and Hornsby (1920) won the National League titles, BlnhC'.JvUtL berggtn you m • * “TOLEX” er LEATHER . h v •>«•'> outbatted then! all. LEATHER WALLET* . r mmMamM n* c , We»r It Here’, the perfect M p Roy Over the years there have been efforts to dislodge lubqaqe • 0.:r,M c.™ NIL °aU Ro^lft *69 !r # they to Values! * Speaker the mythical all-time outfield, but Us $32.95 *«" Wa*.B dar precliion from SK."' W«h*e 0 “d‘e?! ‘rt'Oitt A • ||||DDCI never got very far. New Yorkers touted Joe DiMaggio for One-Suitor 18.88 1 M OB i I A seasons, but there was no Nation-wide rush •Two-Suite, 18.88 Imported Swi„ M rrrjrz UMBRELLft quite a few • C hoKE Companion 18.88 O eoel In th i • bring XL Jfm win micraecepk w/1 T/*UCC to DiMag with Ruth and Cobb. • P W flank - 3-Suitor .24.88 WAILHCJ mmmmmmmmmaMumma^mmumm Ur ')lSiet Ali cpeciment inte pew- eloquently in Tris’ favor. DiMaggio, »»« The records speak l» »H«k- erful facu.. TEMT| | 1,736 games, batting average, .325; Speaker, 2,789 games, batting average, .344. 2-SUITERS ** * * "Euck.kin Jaa" JACKETS, PARRAS. A A 00 - O" SO WONDERFULLY SKILLED was Speaker that his Vi greatest fame was for his fielding. He outhit the late Q’” lifetime, instance, by .344. to a compute op Harry Heilmann over a for we caret line ld<# , tm .342; yet Heilmann became a Hall of Famer almost solely -lEINARD" CAMP PACE FOODS. children. | because of his bat. Speaker was so gifted afield that many hitting ability. people overlooked his B| AkllfE’TC Heavyweight CORDUROY PANTS. Brawn, Navy, _ _ - _ _ Byway of pointing up Speaker’s prowess, Tris was 39 ¦®B-r4™*»mi I 9 or Char. MAA . 7Z7 U. S. LUGGAGE coal in oil »t»o* 4.88 3-Fyelet Rubber supposedly washed up and with no great en- b^ef'case ?O% years old, nylon Up to $24.95 Volin,! * warmth. 10% ¦ M Special playing any longer, when the late Clark L Purchaw. StEFPtNG BAGS. UneeSSmew Baa** thusiasm for • Don't miu thi. bargain. Thom flIHIIIHg BOOTS IT y’ in 18" Overnito Caea 9.88 *. **?! bag. are perfect For all weather Griffith signed him to a Washington contract 1927. *2l" Cnee n year Weekend 9.88 n.BB M grey.*’ 2 for sll Y"*> w- Speaker had been ’s playing the Mrc'fgjfiO *be Luxe Train Cae* 9.88 H 5.77 N#N.9S • m before, and it was at no piddling salary that he played 24" Jr. Pullman Cara 12.88 Fibre BOM • AWCAmme Clan HUNTING PARkAS. „ with game packet, say Tris got $30,000, others guessed M" Mima" Casa- 14.88 G fl ¦ OXFORDS and removAla | n.„l.t.d -f, Some • ¦ Senators. ,nd _ - in AA for the L«k _ hood M.y to .pet 4* rsV 7* iST 29" Overtire Pullman 16.88 i.r! fit aemfert h. the eeld- $50,000. Gr— • M ted and ye«aw 14.99 ¦&—•»# as much as Wardrobe Hangar Casa - 18.8$ «?“£.• .49 Williams, age, AR as/ ott Hwnfinf w—Ni 4 was as if Cal Griffith took on Ted 4 U AUm* It . A er. All Rub- playing Coodyoor Mian JtTSt put in a season’s work, too, wiHi fho f«m#4M kißt TI»o . j salary and all. Speaker Irregular ..*/»174 ill« bor boot is best far mailmen, policemen, codon, DRAWERS, K * good time. But it . first base as best he could a deal of the **¦ “™K” ft. Modal UEEPING (AOS, Fall modal. i was no way to rebuild a broken-down pennant winner, TRAIN CASES I # STAK; The I only one season. however, and so Tris was kept that CASES All Plus Tax Meal 61st Fir Tbt Ladies Luggage Tkormol' * old gaffer nothing for which to apologize. He played COLIMAN CAMP STOVES did ”• hits, 9 bases, batted *“ 141 games, made 171 even stole and 1” w " 10% OFF .327. 5 27-8$ 6* 5 today’s Senators should do so welL I *2O Some of U-jefp vnmmr and omi rrrxs 7/ AUTHORIZED AGENT FOR BttarLPg MKECSANSUI • • • 'wpgMMHUUinMMponPHpnBPOBBHHr-te p TODAY'S SPORTS Sold Lady Socialite Total \ p Bob Chokoles • • • CilkanmMa O 1 H (AP). ON TELEVISION RICHMOND. Dec. 10 • Platt • Cruisairc • Loads * Flaattina • Storfroet Pitcher Bob Chakales has "rllT A Buxine been sold outright to the rl'li vs. Archie Maple Leafs by the • Opea Pally 81e I • Seterdey tlt 7 Moore, WMAL—7, 10 pm. Richmond Virginians.