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  • New book chronicles 1940 hoops state champs

    Bellevue News-Democrat
    October 4, 2007

    Wally Spiers

    New book chronicles 1940 hoops state champs

    "Men of Granite" is the story of how a group of kids who were
    second-class citizens in town helped give Granite City the 1940 state
    high school basketball championship.

    The book, written by Dan Manoyan, a sportswriter for the Milwaukee
    Journal-Sentinel, is scheduled for publication in November and some
    people in Granite City want to make it a bestseller.

    "I'm not doing the book, I'm just trying to hustle it," said Babe
    Champion, former Granite City coach and sports official and community
    activist. He spoke to the Granite City Rotary Club Tuesday about the
    book.

    Champion wants civic clubs and organizations and other groups to buy
    and sell the book as a fundraiser. The book will retail for $24.95.

    "I promised to sell 1,000," he said. "But I hope we do a lot better
    than that."

    The book is the story of the 1940 Granite City High School basketball
    team that won the Illinois state championship, the isolation of the
    immigrants in town and how the team, with seven first-generation
    Americans, came together to win and make a town proud.

    Manoyan said the stories in the book are great, such as future NBA
    star Andy Phillip getting his first pair of sneakers at the Lincoln
    Place Center and they didn't even match.

    "But his wife said he kept them all his life," Manoyan said. "The book
    is not only about the team, it's about how their families happened to
    come to the town, what they left behind, and what they faced when they
    got there."

    Manoyan was a sportswriter for a Waukegan newspaper in 1980 when he
    had time to look through an Illinois High School Association record
    book on a rainy spring night when all the baseball games were
    canceled.

    He came across this team from Granite City with all these immigrant
    names. It attracted him because he is part Armenian.

    But it wasn't until a year and a half ago when he was driving through
    St. Louis and saw the Granite City sign that it clicked in and he made
    time to stop and look around.

    He was able to get in contact with surviving team members Andy
    Hagopian and John Markarian as well as the relatives of some other
    players. He also talked to a lot of Granite City people including
    Champion, who sent him all the newspaper stories about the team and
    other items.

    The team had four Armenians, a Hungarian, a Yugoslavian and a
    Macedonian, Hagopian said. He said they had an advantage on the tip
    offs because he could talk to former center George Gage in Armenian
    without the opponents knowing.

    He also recalled some of the adults who didn't know English listened
    to the game broadcasts with an interpreter at the Lincoln Place
    Center.

    Champion said he couldn't be more impressed with the book.

    "This is something Granite City needs to know about that time in
    Granite City and a lesson for now," Champion said.

    For more information, you can send e-mail to [email protected]
    or write to: Men of Granite, P.O. Box 1493, Granite City, IL 62040.

    Wally Spiers' column runs five days a week. Have a column idea? Call
    Wally at 239-2506 or (800) 642-3878; or e-mail: [email protected]



    http://www.bnd.com/news/spiers/story/144306.html
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