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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1950)
6 The News-Review, Rosebuig, Or Tum., Nov. 21, If 50 Sooners Finally Gain Top Ranking In AP Grid Poll Kentucky Moves To Third ly JOHN CHANDLER NEW YORK IAPI The Universify of Oklhom, knock, ing en the front door in the w,kly Associated Press football pell ell season, finally got into the living room today et the nation'i No. I teem. Now tho question it: can tha rampaging Soonari of Coach Bud Wilkinson rttain that lofty parch until tha and of this un pradictabla season, and bacoma tha firtt mambar of tha Big Seven confsranca to cop thit mythical football crown? Okla homa wai votad tha No. 2 taam lait yaar whan Notra Dama ndad tha taaion at tha No. I club. In addition to Culifornia, which I finished fourth, three tar west votes, held its fourth place rating teams occupied berths in the j for tha second week in a row with nation'i second ten. Wyoming washing points. The Golden Bears also 12th, Washinijton moved from 19ih i overcame San Francisco in tha to lSth, and l-nyola of I.os Angeles I mud, 13-7. ratad No. 20. Taias Rated Fifth Unlike recent years, when 'jenai moved from sixth to fifth, a mighty Notre Dame, Michigan I as the Iinghorns trimmed Texas or Army team led the poll week christian, 21-7. while Illinois, eighth after week through the long fall. a week ago. advanced to sixth hy Oklahoma is the fifth outfit to hold ; defeating Ohio Stale. 14-7 The the No. 1 spot this season. Texas victory assured a Cotton Oklahoma, which blasted Mis- bowl berth as well as the South- ieuri last week 41 7, to run us , unbeaten string to 20 straight, re placed Ohio State. The Buckeyes, who lost to Illinois, fell from first to eighth place. Third Four Times In seven previous polls thit fall, Oklahoma was voted third four timet at the nation'! tportswriters and sportscaslers put the finger on other teams. The Soonert were rated No. 2 twice, and No. 5 in i the tirst poll Oct. z. Wilkinson was almost apeechieti when advised his team had been voted No. 1 with a total of 2.964 points. This was 528 better than Army. Oklahoma, voted No. 1 with 2.964 points, polled 173 first place votes, compared with 36 for Army, and S5 for Kentucky, which moved in to third for the first time this year. Army, winner over Stanford in the rain and mud, 7-0, recieved 2.4.18 points and Kentucky, which walloped helpless North Dakota, 83-0, got 2.346. Kentucky was fifth a week ago, California-, with 20 first place FALL'S LOVELY BUT IT'S KIIPPYTOO, OUR OIL MAKES COZV HOME'S TOR YOU Somt of these foil doyt can be very uncomfortable, un lets you or prepared with fuel oil. Phone ut to fill tha tank. IImiX Wkiskii Prill. Iti striif.it Kkiskiis in 4 tun ir lid Hi 37!4 Jt,IHhtrl5kirt2 eiitfil spirits stille Iim trm. 15 strir'Ht wtiiskir 4 ir (14. Istnilit irkiskir S fins ill : jitrn,kt bisks) I run Hi 'iww. Gild al Yonfalla W XT llll 1,1, jS Oakland al Drain tfuTln lTl HaT ' "ll0n B Jty - 'ILL1 Ynnralla at Klkton.' P, Drain at C.hdV ! Oakland B. IAV, U Drain al Ynnralla Oakland at Elkton. Ulida By. irn, Yonralla at Oakland. - i Flklnn at Gild. tiiMtiaiatsstsssssssssiaaMa.aisstsssssssss...Hia..ia.ia.H.HJ Drain R. Sit: rrttTf i west conference title. Princeton hung on to seventh place, lashing Vale, 47-12. In ninth and tenth places am Tennessee and Michigan Stale, which held the same ranking last week. Army, rests now until the Navy game, Dec. 2. Kentucky gets the acid test against Tennessee, Cali fornia tackles Stanford, Illinois plays Northwestern, Princeton pavs Dartmouth. Ohio Stale meett Michigan. These garnet are Satur day. Texat playt Texas A. at M. Nov. 30. and L. S. U. Dec. 9. Tcnnes.see hat another game after Kentucky, meeting Vanderbilt Dec. 2. Michigan Stale't schedule it complete. B League Hoop Schedule Listed For North Half The bsketball schedule for 1950- M hat been released for the north half of the district by Douglaa county B-lea?ue Secretary Lee Hoy Hansen. The north half Includes Sutherlin, Klkton, Glide, Oakland and Yon calla. It is a 40 game schedule with each team playing 8. Kach team will have two byes. According to Hansen the county B-leagtie tourna ment will be held at Kiddle this year on the weekend of March 2. The season will open this year with a jamboree Dec. 1, hut will get underway officially Dec. 15 when Klkton plays Drain and Glide playt Oakland. THK ac'HKbrl.r: lKC. IS Klktrni .1 Drain Gilds at Oik land Yonralla Ba Imm. B 1 Yonralla at mm.. Drain at Oakland Elklon Ba Elkton al Yonralla ;!! al lirain uakland B. 9 JM. II Yonralla al Dram i Rlkinn at Oakland CUd B I mv. : Oakland al Yoncalla Old at Elk tan Drain Bja JAN. It Drain at Klklnn Oakland at (.ltd Yoncalla B Slnil!i for knT a fogs ii lOSTON UNIVERSITY'S Bob I catch a pass in the first quarter of the B.U. -Idaho game, played at Boston, Mass. Ball hit the ground before Capuano could gather it in for a completed pass. In the foreground is Bill An derson 1171 of Idaho. Idaho INEA telephotol. PAPPY NERVOUS Waldorf, Schwartz Get Out Crying Towels; Each Says Other Team Tops By RUSS NEWLAND SAN FRANCISCO (API Memos from tha football coaches: Lynn "Pappy" Waldorf, California: "Left not talk about the Rota bowl, it makes me a little nervous. Anything can happen in the Stanford game. It is a traditional game. The outcome can swing either way, depending on the breaks. I call it a 50- SU attair. I "I'm concerned with the possible ; condition of the field. Kain and mud are tough to buck. A dry field is what we want. Stanford hat a rugged line. My tcoutt tell me. Rust i'omeroy it the best line backer on the coast and Bill Mc Coll it tecond best. There isn't a I better pa.-s receiver than McColl. Abrahamson began to prepare for Stanford ! backs also are good re- hoop wars for the coming season. I ceivers. After a week of cutting, 26 remain. I "Stanford has a fine past attack.! "lv thre le'llermen were back. It hat developed strength at full-1 '"om last years tquad. They are i back, ltt greatest development. I l)on GiU'spi. Bob gilder and Dick however, hat been in defense. All KonlP- Wlth ,hl dearth of exper-1 of our playera will be in good lcm'''1 k'ys a coach would have shape" ; enough to worry about, but Abra-1 Mar'chieSchwarU, Stanford:'Tmi!"l"su"1sa"1 '? T'u I'D 'Is0 1 convinced California hat ila bvt , !..' h,n1l,c,pP by lal'k f he'ht- ' team in the ten yeart I have been coaching out here Our SciMt i Kehring tay. thi, i, the best California team he has ever seen. I think Jim Monachinn, Pete ern , j , mo i.cninn, reie ; Schabarum and John Olszewski are i ; c " " " ' --"'"ft i ana tormulating plant lor ettective i team in the country. I quintets. Outstanding in practices j California t defensive team lsiloda i, a Mapleion high school ! even stronger than the offensive transfer named Neil Tester, who team The linebackers, Us Hich-jh pruVed ' to be extremely fasti lor, Ray Solarl and Dick Groger, I an clever. are outstanding. The line charge is j The junior varsitv will be coached ! excellent. California's rushing of-! bv Corkv an Urn this vr arrnrd. I fense is so sound that in the tougher I game it has won on brute strength. "Our big problem is to bring the team up to the same mental pitch it had against Army last week. Their1 showing in holding Armv to I a 70 win boosted our players' I morale." I Dirk Gallagher, Santa Clara: ! "I predict a close game between ' California and Stanford, (Santa llara lost to ( alilorma, 9 27 and at the Portland auditorium when' to Stanford 13-23.) When we played ' he matches gloves with Oakland California in the first came nf theitiillv Smith. I season, 1 wasn t impressed with its line. It has improved tremen dously. But after watching Stanford against Army, I think it will give California a tough game." TURNESA NAMED CAPTAIN NEW YOKK (P) Willie Tur nesa nf Klmslord, N. V, will rap tain the United States Walker Cup team when it meets the British golfers in Kngland next year. I ne v. s. t,oll association sain the It. S. team for the match at the Birkdale golf club, Southport, I Kngland, May 11-12, would be an-1 nounced at the annual meeting i n , New York, Jan. 27. I FOR CHRISTMAS plO you KNW " one ooiiah to rrvi "V-Kwy any ortKl, i , ,,, VVn i 1 !' U03J V 1V.CCBI.1M CKCGON O FOR . . . SERVICE ... EXPERIENCE. . . CO-OPERATION . . . fiivfstigafe the services goffered by your "Home owned. Home-operated'o bonk Money left on deposit with uj rema.ns in DOUGLAS COUNTY. All facilities available for your individual needs. Douglas County State Bank Member Federal Deposit Imuranee Corp. Caouano (foreoroundl. learjs to went on to win tha game, 26-19. y;, Dr Lkall w inssij Hujac i wvaii Squad Cut To 26 Some 40 turned out basketball prospect last week at Myrtle reek hih tchool at Coach Bob , ; . ." ' " , . " , S. ,cel 10 ,mhe nd only tw0 ot 1 e ,?"",e 26 r"'"n uver six feet. In the process of practice. Ab- r,mson ha, been cuUin the noop hr.,uls to a more workanle size jrig to Ahrahamson. . p- c;,c c, ck raTn figrifS for 5HOr At Coast CrOWrl Tonight Rusty Payne, who won an easy. knockout victory over I'once De I.eon recently at the Koseburg armory, will run into a somewhat more formidable opponent tonight The bout will mean a lot to both fighters. There's been some talk, according to a release from the National Boxing club, that the win ner will be paired against Willie Bean Dec. 5 for the Pacific, Coast heavyweight championship. The Portland Boxing commission has withdrawn its recognition of Joe Kahut since his retirement. The Washington and California ring bodies recognize Bean as title- holder. Both fighters are good punchers and few believe the match will go i the full ten rounds. The present odds rate the match at even ! money, but some boxing observers I feel (hat on his record, the high-; c :.t. -I u i- - idiiMiiK oiiiiui siiuuiu tuie a 51lgll favorite. Coach Priming Cougars For Upset Over Huskies rrt.I.MAX f.n Coach For est Kvashevski bee ins today the t.ik of priming his Wahinton State cojU'Ke ouyrs for Saturday'-game with Washington. i'ndprriom hy 20 points in (he bettinjf, a Cougar victory would be one of the biggest up.ets at the coast conference season but not an i in possibility. Nothing is impos sible in the traditional rivalry be tween the two cross-state schools. WSO worked out in sweat .clothes yesterday with the emphasis on several new oifensive patterns. la if leans tne naiinn witn lour iiMiinau teams inai were unscorea upon. Dates Announced For Semi-Finals PORTLAND (.? Semi-final football games in the state high school championship playoff will be held at Kugene and Coos Bay next weekend, the Oregon Schools Activities association decide Mon day. The association board of control scheduled the Ku?ene - Grant of Portland game for the University of Oregon's llayward field at 2 p. m., Friday. Mclaughlin high of Milton Free water will play Marshfield at Coos Bay at p.m., Saturday. The board also arranged Class B semi-finals. Garibaldi will meet Bandon at North Bend at 8 p. m., Friday, and Maupin will play Union at I.a Gifinde at 1:30 p. m., thanks giving day. fcix-man semi final contests were not settled. Preliminary talk was for Westport to meet Triangle Lake at Junction City Thursday, and Talent to play Pilot Rock at Pendle ton Friday. 64 Bowlers Roll For Eight Turkeys In Annual "Shoot" A record breaking 64 bowlers turned out en masse Sunday aft ernoon, but this time instead of competing in the respective bowl ing leagues, Thanksgiving dinners were at stake. It was the annual "Turkey Shoot" at the Koseburg bowling alley with eight of the gobblers at stake. Manager Floyd Baughman noted that the birds were practically given away as the keglers won on surprisingly low scores. I It was a teriet handicap session j in three classes for men and one j for women. Harold Duncan won the class A event with a S70 on I a 9 pin handicap per game. Johnny j Donovan won the class B event j with the highest score of the aft ernoon, a 607 with a 12 pin handi-i cap per game. Ellen Campbell was tops for the women. She bowled a j 590 with a 39 per game handicap.' Doctor M. C. Mix tied up the other end of the scores with a 460 series. His trophy, sometimes, called the "Booby prize." wat a two-pound white Cockrell chicken. TURKEY WINNERS Oast Score Hdp 27 M 42 117 123 84 117 123 Harold Duncan 570 fM4 599 M7 598 587 590 581 Johnny Donovan .. Don Hanson Clayton Greenlee Joe Nordling Joe Strickling Kllen Campbell ... Helen Bittner Boudreau Mulling Several Offers CHICAGO -J.Pt Lou Boudreau. cut adrift as the Cleveland Indians' shortstop-manager, said he has several baseball offers to mull over before making up his mind where he will land in 1951. The Washington Senators and Pittsburgh Pirates are known to be in hot pursuit of his Services, and the 'Chicago White Sox also ozle him. Boudreau and Sox Genera! Manager Frank Lane have only reached the "telephone conversa tion" stage. "There was no mention of any price by Lane or me," Boudreau said. "I have other offers, of course, and right now 1 would not consider going with the White Sox as one of the better ones. "It is possible that my going to the White Sox might be tough on Paul Richards (the newly ap pointed manager) and I have no desire to put anybody on the spot. II something went wrong, some people might be wondering how I would have done it and the result could be embarrassing to both Paul and myself." 00 ooo fBTID Sec ua frt (put "THCRE'S NO PIae LIKE HOME FOR FORD SERVICE" LOCKWOOD MOTORS INC- Roto and Oak Phono 18&S SPORTS NOTES Aiken Eyeing Single-Wing Switchover, Scribe Says ly MATT KRAMER Atociatad Press Staff Writer What's this? Oregon twitching to the (ingle wing in foot. ball? "Well, maybe," said Coach day, He intimated he s thinkina about what the single-wine might do for Oregon whet with ford coming up to the varsity i And maybe, he added, Oregon would use both the T-for- motion and single, wing. After all, he said, he has quarterback Hal Dunham developing fast as a passer for the t-formation j next year. I Maybe he'll make up his mind ; villa as a representative. Prine- atter seeing how his T-formation nra uui against rtip layior s sin- gle wing in the. annual "Big Game" against Oregon State at Portland next Saturday. Redisricting Plan The plan to create a Class AA for the larger high schools is get ling support among the ttate't sports writers. Most have c o m mented favorably. That's the plan to put schools with more than 400 students into Class AA. Those with 150 to 400 would be in Class A. Smaller schools would be irt Class B, at at present. The plan will come ud for discussion at the Oregon School Ac tivities association's annual meet ing in Portland, Dec. 1. There hasn't been a word of pro test on it. but Fred Zimmerman. Capital Journal sports editor, noted that the grouping would put Dallas and Sweet Home into Salem's class. He added, "That might work a hardship on Dallas and Sweet Home, but . , . judging by thit year's results perhaps Salem is the one that should protest . . ." Other sporrs writers commented that it might prevent controversies such as developed in Districts 2 and 6 this year. Unbeaten Grant Pass and Banks were left out of the state playoffs because of voting that gave the nod to Prineville and Oregon City in those districts. Chance at Title The new aystem wouldn't keen the tchool with 150-400 students from getting a crack at the ttate title. Playofft .would narrow the field in each class, then the best of the Class A teams would tackle Clast AA. Many sports editors suggested, too, that team! be compelled to keep an open date for possible dis trict playoffs. And on that District 2 fuss. Al Lightner, sports editor of the Ore gon Statesman, commented, "I,ook out for the Grant! Pass Cavemen in 1951. Coach MH Ingram loses only three regulars from his unde feated and untied eleven of this sea son, and not one of the three is a backfielder or key lineman. This could be one reason why the Cave men were voted down in favor of Prineville this season. The district bosses perhaps figured G-Pass would be in like Mr. Flynn a year hence, so swung over to Prine- The Little baseball leagues have increased their pitchng distance from 40 feet, four inches to 44 feet to equalize conditions between pitcher and batter. Are You SHORT? TALL? THIN? STOUT? You can fie Fitted in ,VCv Hi Ws COLORS W.l.t ly Desert Tan CeXtXV trow Green Tyrol Rt. NV7 tlw OI Set'ca CerWn Hack Aftitatte Hanav tatfa r"rtt GraA rt Gear Pevdef Hue CP Jim Ailen in Eugene the other ingle-wing halfback Jack Morris of Med next year, ville Coach Lee Gustafson loses practically everything but hii OSC award blanket come graduation time next June." NEW ANNUAL FOR FIRE 'ine Fire Insurance Exchange, ft member of the Fannera Insur ance Group, hu announced the most important change In writ ing ftrt insurance in over 100 yeara by issuing ft standard form policy on ft "continuous." or "per petual" annual basis instead of the usual three-year term, re ports the local Farmers Insurance Group agtnL ' Under this new plan policy holders will receive the same rate advantages formerly offered only under ft three-year contract, without having; to pay premiums more than one year at ft time. In other words, it cuts the policy holder's cash outlay by two thirds. This is especially appre ciated by owners of business property and merchants, who can use the money In their own busi ness instead of tying It up in a thre-year policy in order to get ft rate discount. The three-year term policy was designed to match the old three-year term maturity on real estate loans, said the Farmers Insurance agent "With the ad vent of the Federal Housing Ad ministration Into the real estate lending field, real estate loans have been extended for various lengths of time up to, 20 years. The new continuous Fire Insur ance Exchange policy la the first real effort made by the Are In surance Industry to meet the present day needs of property owners and mortgagees." COVERS KNTIRF f.OAV The new policy will cover the entire term of the loan, regard less of maturity date, unless can celled for non-payment of the an nual premium, and then only after ample notice to both the insured and mortgage company. 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