Friday, February 7, 2014

2/3/1955

EAST FAREWELL NEWS

Thursday, February 3, 1955   Vol. C628

LOCAL NEWS

SNOW SCULPTURES TAKES OVER LAKEFRONT PLAZA

East Farewell – The extended cold spell has turned shivers into smiles on Lakefront Plaza this week. The record snow amounts and prolonged freeze has left a huge surplus of snow all over town. Disposal has become a bit of a problem for the town. Large piles have built up around town with the largest on the open space on the Lakefront Plaza.  In years past most of the snow was dumped in the lake but the lake is frozen this year and that cannot be done. Hauling it away is impractical due to the costs involved. More snow is in the forecast and the cold weather seems here to stay. What is the town going to do? That question was proposed at the last Council Meeting two weeks ago. A novel idea was thrown out by local restaurateur, Charles Wenz. He proposed the town hold a Snow Sculpture and Ice Carving Event on the Plaza. How would this alleviate the snow problem? Wentz reasoned that by carving and forming the piles it would disperse a large amount in small quantities that could be spread out around the area. And it would offer an opportunity to local artists to show off their talents.
            The Council was somewhat dubious about the idea but decided to give it a try. They sent out invitations to all the registered artists in the area and passed the word through the schools and asked the local clergy to alert their respective flocks. A total of fifteen artists responded and the plan was put into action. On Tuesday the artists descended on Lakefront Plaza with an assortment of tools and visions in their heads.  By Wednesday night the piles on the Plaza had been transformed into a giant locomotive and a bust of King Frost, very impressive, indeed.
            The huge sculptures attracted large numbers of spectators and also created a bit of a winter wonderland during the evenings. The restaurants near the Plaza put out tables and extended service to the area completing the frosty, festive scene.


Lakefront Plaza with Snow Sculptures


SPORTS

COUGARS WIN IN OVERTIME

East Farewell – The most exciting basketball game of the season was played on Wednesday in the Regional High Gymnasium. The Cougars battled a tenacious Southport Hawks team where no score was easy and every possession was contested. It looked like the game was going to be a low scoring affair at first with neither team scoring in the first five minutes but then the Cougars got into rhythm and rattled of six straight before the Hawks were able to score.  Cougar’s center, Michael Watson, was able to gain control of the lane and that gave the outside guards, Welch and Green a chance to open up. By the end of the first period the Cougars were ahead by eight. The Hawks had played tough defense but their offense could not get in gear. In the second period, the Hawks offense shifted into a higher gear. The Cougars played tight defense but the Hawks forwards were hot from midrange. Hawks forward Joe Denny hit five straight before the Cougars were able to shut him down. In spite of all the scoring spurts the first half ended in a tie, 26 apiece.
            The second half started with rock solid defense on both sides. Neither team was able to get the ball inside and the outside shots weren’t falling. The centers, Watson and Fillapone for the Hawks, fought a very tough and sometimes physical game that can only be said ended in a draw. Both sides tried to press but were only marginally successful. The game stayed close right to the end and in the fourth period the lead was never more than one point. With only 10 seconds left Watson wrestled a rebound away from Fillapone and ached a long down court pass to Timmy Green who was able to lay it up and put the Cougars ahead by two 47-45. The Hawks had 3 seconds to inbound and score. They faked a long pass and inbounded underneath to speedy guard, Danny Dimaio.   He raced across midcourt and fired a very long shot from just across the midline. The shot sailed through the air and swished right through the net to tie the game and drive it into overtime.
            The overtime was just as sharp as the game and both teams played fiercely and the defenses were unforgiving. During the overtime the centers took the spotlight and both displayed an amazing poise for high school players. Watson was able to get the upper hand with about fifteen seconds. He grabbed an offensive rebound, backed into Fillapone, faked left and spun right, leaning in to the hoop he laid it up and in. The Cougars went ahead 52-51. The final overtime seconds ticked away as Dimaio tried one last long shot but it bounce off the rim and fell away. The Cougars won in overtime, 52-51. A hard fought victory that was enjoyed by everyone, players and spectators included.
            The next game is against the Slate Mountain Miners at Slate Mountain. It will be on Wednesday at 4:00PM.

 NATIONAL NEWS

TORNADOES HIT ARKANSAS, MISSISSIPPI, ALABAMA 35 DEAD – SABRE JETS BATTLE MIGS OVER FORMOSA – DIOR GOES TO A LINE – NIXON IN CUBA –
RCA SHOWS OFF SYNTHESIZER

Tornadoes roar across Arkansas, Mississippi and Alabama leaving a 60-mile swath of death of destruction. Up to 35 may be dead

In the biggest air battle since the Korean War, American F-86 Sabre jets shot down two Russian-built MIG 15’s that attacked a U.S. Air Force reconnaissance patrol over the Yellow sea, west of Korea.  American and Nationalist Chinese fleets put to sea to evacuate the Tachen Islands, 15 miles off Red China’s coast following orders from President Eisenhower.

Vice-President Nixon lands in Havana in the first stop of his Caribbean tour.

Fashion Designer Christian Dior switches from the “it” to the “A” line in which he banishes the bosom by day and all but bared it by night.

RCA introduces the RCA Electronic Music Synthesizer – an electronic machine that can produce any sound the mind can imagine and the ear can hear. It can match the sound of any instrument or ensemble and it can evoke the human voice. The machine is kept under lock and key in a laboratory at the research center.


No comments:

Post a Comment