The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 01.04.1944, Blaðsíða 7

The White Falcon - 01.04.1944, Blaðsíða 7
Eagles Lose Close Ones In Concluding ETO Tour The Air Corps Eagles, first half champs of the IBC basketball [ace* concluded their tour of Eng- aad this week with a record of wins and four losses, two 0 the latter coming by the two- P°int margin in old-fashioned heart-breakers. In their last start the Eagles ost a 36-34 thriller to an all S ^ Skyscraper quintet when Pvt. A1 Pajonas of Platts- heg, N.Y., former hoopster for ertheastern U., of Boston, drop- ped in a goal from under the bask- et 'with only ten seconds left of Play. Their previous loss was even cugher to take. In a nip and tuck ? lair in which the lead changed ands 11 times during the last hit, the Eagles lost, 42-40, to the c ampions of a Yank Paratroop °htfit at a Ninth Air Force base ter a three-minute overtime Session. The Paratroopers held a 19-16 advantage at half time, but paced hy little “Dynamite” Cwiczynsld, he Eagles came back to he the later came score three and from then minutes on the game turned into a nightmare. Wiczynski, the little Eagle for- ward, had the GI audience roll- 'hg in thp aisles as he scurried °ut like a homesick sailor on eave in th old home town. Of e twelve points he scored, ten came in the hectic last half. When the gun barked, the eams were in a 40-40 deadlock. 20 seconds of the overtime, Wards of the Paratroopers °Ped one in from the corner 22^1he and his mates held the ^Urnor Moving Novikoff To Reds ,Hay Starr, pitcher for the Cin- C|Puati Reds, may be headed for a Perth with the Chicago Cubs, Recording to strong rumors in e baseball underground in the ed s training camp at Bloom- ‘Pgton, Ind. , ^Wr may be traded for Lou ad Russian” Novikoff, screw- ^iioutfielder. advantage until the end. It was by far the wildest game the Eagl- es have played to date, either in Iceland or England. Tippy Larkin TKO Winner Over Stolz Tippy Larkin, 137-pound Gar- field, N.J., hard-hitting light- weight, registered a three round TKO over Allie Stolz in a sched- uled ten round bout at Madison Square Garden this week. Stolz, after giving Larkin a box- ing lesson in the first two rounds, tried to exchange blows with the heavy puncher from Jersey. He hit the deck three times. A light- ning right cross put Stolz down for the first count; he went down the seeond time for a seven count as a result of another of Larkin’s Sunday rights. Larkin put him down again, but the bell sound- ed at the count of two. Referee Arthur Donovan exa- mined Stolz during the rest peri- od and declared Larkin the win- ner on a TKO. IBC Boxer Meets Old Boss In Icelend S/Sgt. Frankie Albano, IBC heavyweight champ now in Eng- land with the boxing team from here, had a special rooter in the stands when he fought at Rain- bow Corner in London the other night. The one man cheering sec- tion was Pvt. Joseph Regis, 34, of New York, Albano’s brother- in-law now serving as a para- trooper in England. It was their first meeting in six years. Regis, who Was a contender for the bantamweight title in 1935, is the lad who trained Frankie and in his ring days fought under the name of “Brown Boy” Regis. He mixed it with such men as Johnny Fitzpatrick and Mike Belloise. P.S. For his old boss, our Fran- kie went out there and boxed his opponent’s' ears off! GRAND SLAM EDDIE By Jack Sords AeCARoS aAOUaKS ' Foaowefcs of 11 ARCARoWee& ANA? eeWARDEp fUpee pailV POiJBt.eS 1/4 FOUR. DAYS — Fes. 28, MARC/4 I AaSDMABcM z AViC-foCV 1 ' i/4 the- KE/4ruc«y >' peresy wn-u put MiM AU)/4e St OS- OF S'A/JpE A/4p MURPHY AS Yge> 0/4 P/ CLASSIC ■riMes &oo\e RCARO, -IfIe Mu?ACpe MAM 0/4 a eAce Mis eece-MT YicYorY oM Foue freedoms ,14 YM£ M/ideMER MAMcacAP A Wee s< AFTER BoaTMCr sYir Up Rome iM-tAe- flamiaJeo stakes, was -tme second Mialeam "pooeL-e"iiA success^ for MiM . Me swept tme w featjres w/iTM eeouesrep amp tmb (rhymer. B.C., Syracuse Back In Gridiron Picture Officials at Boston College and Syracuse have announced that those schools will be back in the big-time collegiate football wars this fall. Syracuse, hasn’t fielded a team since ’41 and B.C. played only an informal schedule last year. Spring practice for B.C. starts today. In announcing this, the school’s athletic manager said that the game is being revived “to prepare students physically for the armed services. “Whether Syracuse will go through with its schedule de- pends entirely on the result of spring drills,” Coach Ossie Solem declared. IBC Postal Clerk Dreams Of Horses, Horses, Horses ed ^Jlen a feller needs a friend!” .... That seems to fit in with the picture above, left. Back- UP against the ropes and absorbing a face full of leather is Able Seaman Johnny Biggs of Qfe Royal Navy, while the pitcher is Leading Cook Thomas Bostock. Right, Sgt. Jimmy South the Engineers hag just missed with a right, in his horrid scrap with Leading Air- raftsman Les JJvans of Scotland. South was the winner. Churchill Downs, Pimlico, and the New Orleans Fairgrounds are names that bring back exciting memories to Cpl. Walter P. Neeb, 24-year-old mail clerk at the Base Post Office here. Neeb used to be a jockey, and before the Army got him seven years ago he led many of the nation’s fi- nest horses over the finish line at those places. Still within riding weight at 108 pounds, Neeb is one of the most diminutive soldiers on the island. He has ridden ponies and hor- ses in his native Kentucky since he was “big enough to walk.” He has owned them, bred them and raced them—yet he states that he never had any desire to join the Cavalry. For reasons perhaps better known to himself, he declines to enlarge upon this. Originally a “30-year man”— by intent—Neeb has since chang- Anyway, He Got A Pass Having been informed that his wife had just given birth to quad- ruplets, Sgt. Gordon H. Blue, sta- tioned at Camp Edwards, Mass., was handed a twenty-five dollar congratulatory gift and a three day pass to visit the scene of the event at his home in Interlaken, N.Y. However, when Blue arriv- ed he found his wife not only without offspring — but not even expecting any. Although he re- turned the money, it is not re- ported what he did witji the three day* pass. ed his mind and now hopes to return to the racetrack as soon as the war has finished. His home town is Louisville. Coming Up —- One Dish Of Woodpulp Food rationing was shown to be of rather a trivial importance recently when an “all-syntlictic” dinner was served in Switzer- land. The menu consisted of ap- petizers made of chemically treated cellulose flavored with coal-tar by-products — along with a “meat course” made of woodpulp and garnished with synthetic gravy. Those who par- took of the meal are not repo, t- ed to have been wild with ent- husiasm. Judge Would Give Prisoners Chance To Join Army If a proposal made recently by Superior Court Judge Clay Allen of Seattle, Wash., is adopted, men with criminal pasts will be given a chance to don “OD’s.” Judge Allen urges the formation of an American fighting unit patterned after the French Foreign Legion. “My idea,” he stated, “would be to segregate these men into special training units and let them serve in Alaska or on for- eign fronts. Most of them would ingke good soldiers,” 4* /

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The White Falcon

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