Thursday, March 31, 2022

3/27/1952

                                       EAST FAREWELL NEWS


Thursday, March 27, 1952   Vol. C354


LOCAL NEWS


A TOUCH OF SPRING IN THE AIR


East Farewell – It has been a long cold winter but last week everyone got a little taste of spring when temperatures climbed to near 70 degrees. A warm front settled in over the Lake Charles valley and Sunday and Monday were delightful. The afternoon temperatures reached 67 on Sunday and 69 on Monday afternoon. The sun was bright both days and almost all the snow that was still on the ground disappeared. Lake Charles started to thaw causing great cracks in the surface and forcing most of the ice hut owners to pull up stakes on their huts and drag them back to the shore. The huge snow plies on the Lakefront Plaza, some of which had been sculpted into different snowmen and snowwomen, became mere piles of snow. The streets and sidewalks were completely clear much the relief of many pedestrians.

            It turns out the spring fling was just that, a bit of a tease. By Wednesday night the temperatures had plummeted back down to 42 and the wind had picked up. The forecast is for the chill to hang around for at least another few weeks. The lake may solidify again but the ice fishermen and women probably won’t move there huts back out. Everyone remembers what happened to Earnest Reese just a year ago when his hut went down through the ice after a warm spell in early March of 1951. “I am not going to let that happen again,” said Earnest beside his hut that had been safely stashed on the shore, “I’m not anybody’s fool. Ice fishing is great but there is always an end to every season. I look forward to the spring and summer and winter will be back, you bet your tail, and I will be back on the ice then. It’s a wonderful life.”

            The weather has been fairly predictable for the past several years but there have been quirks in the patterns and folks have experienced some good fortune like last week but also have had to endure some very difficult times like the prolonged freeze of ’49 and the incredible heat wave in the summer 0f ’50. 

Spring Flowers by Lake Charles


SPORTS


COUGARS PUT ON AN EXCITING SHOW


Capital City – The #12 seated Regional High Cougars faced off with the #5 Southern Aces in a surprising, exciting and explosive semi-final matchup in the State finals on Saturday. The upstart Cougars played like they had nothing to lose, which they didn’t, and were able to defeat the very talented Aces, 60-58 in a game that no one thought would be played. The Cougars by any right had no place being in the game and the Aces should have been placed higher in the rankings. But they met on the floor on Saturday and the game was well played by both teams and one would have thought the two teams had been matched up many times in the season by the way they read each other’s offense and defense’s. Both teams showed a game awareness that is uncommon in this level of competition. Both teams used exacting play execution and very tenacious defense to stymie their opponent.

            The game matched up two of the best centers in the league, Bill Donahue from the Cougars and Franklin Smith from the Aces, and their play was a beautiful battled that was a classic matchup. While Smith ended up with more points Donahue ended up with more rebounds and assists. They both ended with four fouls. Smith was high scorer with 26 points followed by his point guard, Sammy Davis, with 24. The Cougars high scorer was forward Franny Warner with 22.

            From the tip off the game was a contest. The ball was knocked to the floor by Smith after Donahue and Smith had collided in the jump. The ball was controlled by Ted Fitzgerald and he quickly passed to a darting Warner who went in for the first basket. The tempo was established and it kept up for the entire game. By the end of the first half both teams had shot far more shots than in any previous game and had a very high percentage of made shot at 30% by the Aces and 29% by the Cougars. The first half ended with the Aces in the lead by 2, 28-26.

            The second half was similar to the first but the Cougars tightened up their defense and the Aces committed three very rare turnovers that led to the Cougars gaining a slight lead, 54-50, with only three minutes left.  Smith was able to use a well-practiced turn away jumper to best Donahue to even the score at 58 with only 20 seconds left. The Cougars were able eat up 15 seconds with some splendid back court showmanship by both Fitzgerald and Welch and with only five seconds left Welch faked a pass into Donahue and bounced a pass to a wide open Warner who turned and shot with one second left. Thwe coolness displayed by Warner under incredibly tense moments was astounding, he turned and tossed the ball up as if he was in his backyard playing with friends and the ball swished through the hoop for the win.

            The two team, who had never played each other before showed great mutual respect for each other as they shook hands after the game. One would have thought they were old time rivals and friends the way they lingered on the court. “It was a great game. They played a great game but we were one basket better today. I think the boys learned a lot today not just about basketball but about how to play the game,” said Coach Wilson after the game.

            Next week the face the Capitol City Stars in an unexpected playoff match up. The Stars are the number one seed in the whole tournament and the Cougars are number 12. The Stars present a very formidable foe for the Cougars but all bets are off. No one expected the Cougars to make it this far and there is no telling how far they can go. The game is next Saturday in the Capitol City Arena. It will begin at 1:00.


 NATIONAL NEWS


TRUMAN FIRES MCGRATH –– NEW US ACE FRANCIS GABRESKI BLASTS 6 MIGS – STALIN ASSURES NEWSMEN WWW III NO NEARER THAN BEFORE – FCC TO LIFT TELEVISION LICENSE FREEZE – AT THE MOVIES


President Truman fires Attorney General Howard McGrath and Newbolli Morris - the Truman administration’s corruption investigator in a one-two punch. Morris was fired because he had tried to delve into the finances of McGrath and other high officials. Truman announced McGrath’s departure, calling it a resignation. McGrath said in a statement that it was a “penalty” for opposing Morris’ efforts to delve into the personal financial affairs of government officials, including him.

Korean War - American Sabre jet pilots blast six MIGs out of the skies over North Korea, creating a new American jet ace. Col Francis Gabreski of Giltown, PA, bagged his fifth MIG for a total kill of five and a half to become an ace.

Prime Minister Stalin assures a group of newspaper editors and radiomen that World War III is no nearer than it was in 1949 or 1950. His views were sent via telegram dispatched in response to four questions sent to him March 24.

FCC Chairman Paul Walker says that the 3 1/2 year freeze on television licenses will be lifted in two weeks. After the lifting, the commission probably will allow three months for the filing of applications. Walker says he expects over 1000 applicants by July. Right now, there are 108 stations on the air. Fifteen states don’t even have one television station operating. The new master plan provides for at least 2000 stations, including opening 70 new channels in the UHF spectrum as well as the existing 12 VHF channels.

At the movies –

Ma and Pa Kettle at the Fair - Marjorie Main, Percy Kilbride, Lori Nelson, James Best

Death of a Salesman - Fredric March, Mildred Dunnock, Kevin McCarthy Camaron Mitchell

Lady Possessed - James Mason, June Havoc

The Wild North - Stewart Granger, Wendell Corey, Cyd Charisse

Zapata! - Marlon Brando, Jean Peters

Scandal Sheet - Broderick Crawford, Donna Reed, John Derek

The First Time - Robert Cummings, Donna Reed

A Streetcar Named Desire - Vivien Leigh, Marlon Brando

The Greatest Show On Earth - Cornell Wilde

Jack and the Beanstalk - Abbot and Costello

5 Fingers - James Mason, Danielle Darrieux, Michael Rennie

When World’s Collide - William Holden, Nancy Olson, William Bendix

The Marrying Kind – Judy Holiday, Aldo Ray

Room For One More - Cary Grant, Betsy Drake

Walt Disney’s “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs


Many, many thanks to www.mrpopculture.com for contributing to this section of the East Farewell News.




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