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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 27, 1950)
o O ooo o o . o o Mdrshfield Gains PCC Grid Squads Finish Pirates Mac Hi Team By 19-0 Score By Th AMOcUUd PrM Marshfield Pirate! of Coos By powered to 19 to 0 victory over Milton-Freewater Saturday night to gain the Clin A high school football r.Ute finals. Ihey will meet tne ocienaing. champion Grant General" next Saturday ifternoon in Porlland'i Multnomah lUdium. In other1 -weekend lemi-final play the Pilot Rock nix-nun team loosed a second half scoring spree to over whelm Talent 56 to 22 and gain the finals against Triangle Lake. Finalists for the Class B title Bagdon and Union had been de termined earlier last week. Pliyotf sites ind dates for the six-man and "B" school chimpinn ahips will be set this week, per haps today, by officials of the Ore gon High School Activities associ ation. Larsung, Rabins Score Halfbacks John Lorsung and Ron Kobiis delivered the touchdowns for Mirshfield in the first, third and fourth quarters while fullback Tommy Crab'.ree proved the un doing of Milton-Freewater's pass ing ice Jerry Crimmins. Three minutes after the kirkoff, the Pirates had their first score. They moved to a first down and then Iorsung snapped out frem behind bis line and raced 70 yards for his first one. Robins plunged tc convert the extra point. A fumble recovery set up Marsh field's next good thrust. The Pir ates got the ball on the Pioneers' 4.1. They moved downfield with Robins driving over on fourth down. In the drive Lorsung had picked tip SO yards to the S and the Pirates then bulled a savage Milton-Free-water line to gain the final one in three plavs. Stolen Ball Trick The fourth quarter touchdown eame after stolen bill maneuver by, Marshtield guard Keith Hill Strom. MiHon-r reewiter n d Pave Collins had received a pass from Crimmins for a 10 yard gain I COMING! Ill ICARSTENS GENERAL ELECTRIC a" aSk at if I I I (1 M I These Hew tOICHEH VALUES &s&;actnomu n " f --f i'i irfiTiiTil-rn Jlere waiting for you art Rotary Corner lata Cabintt Flour Bin lata Cabinet Now lata What-Nott Now contours, die-made ireel comtruction New Maple Cutting lea re Cabinet Top Come in doon. Or phone to! ay! They'll thrill you! Thirieea lu wry Yoiingitowa Kitrhrni Cabinet Sinki. Tope of one pipe, arid -remit in porrrlain- namelrd atl. "No-tip" drain board. Ihe-made lini rnnitrurtton. Youngntown kitrhenl Food Waste Diipoaer raaily inntalWf. M" lM.iite Twin tbowa, your for at little 220 95 irrarniiri.-flfiii i o SPORTS V j 6 Th Ncwt-Ravitw, Roteburg, Or. Mon., Nov. 27, 1950 Indians, Pelicans To Vie In Initial Basketball Series j The Roseburg Indiam will open ! up their basketball win this Fri- day ,nd Siturdiy aiainst the Klamath Falls Pelicans. Both sames will be played on the high r school court beginning at I p.m. The Pelicans came in second last The thud league is lor men. year in the southern district behind j Another feature, duplicated from the powerful Urants Pass Cave-: last year, will be a basketball men, who were runners up in the tournament. "Y" officials have slate. The Pelicans have Ihree asked that all men be present at returning lettermen in Bill Toole, the Thursday meeting to formulate loin Scnubert and Jerry Overton, more specific plans on the league Also out for an Indam scalp are ; and tournament, since orfnmza some outstanding boys up from tion should get underway immcdi last year's Jayvees, ately. The i'elicans should have a def- inite advantage under the boards since all Ihree men in the center and forward positions are well over six feet. Tentative starters for the Pel- j icins are: forwards. Hay Bell and Tom Schubert; center Ralph Car roll and guards, Bill loole and Jerry Overon. Coach Jack Newby of the Indians has not chosen starters yet for the initiil aeries. when Ilillstrom .snitched the bill away and downed it on the Mac Hi 26. Three plays later, the Pi rales had their final score, I,or sung plunging over from the six. Crabtree had broken up Crim mins passing came all night and kept the Pioneers from penetriting beyond the 27-yard stripe. The Mac Hi ice was sble to complete but four of his 16 pisses and had Ihree intercepted. The Pilot Rock victory saw Brent Horn score five touchdowns t o psce the Rockets in the six-man semi-final at Pendleton. Talent had held the Rockets to a two-point edge 18-18 at the halftime, but from there in the game was all I Pilot Rock's. bran FRIDAY, DEC. 1 I 1 i-nesr kilrlirn units: CM State Y Basketball Leagues To Organize Thursday Organization of the YMCA bas ketball Jfagues will get underway this Thursday ale' 5 p. m. in the "Y" room of the armory. The "Y" is planning to form three leagues to include tery age group. Tentative plans are I have a lea gue lor members oi the high ' school a?e group and a second for th Urartu t.hru.U Tt.s. t.,,11 k the grade schools. These will be sponsored by the various churches. Pro Bears Take NFL League Lead ii i? t By muUlinQ KCiiTiS NEW YORK - M The Chi cago, Bears, a ruthless gang of gridiron killers, are on the loose again! Once more the "Monsters of the miuway are starting open war- iare on National football league learns, "they ve brutally smashed threw a mighty scare into the big ball stadia to the maple court to their way to the top of the National ; Bears. California w as 13'i point I day as Northern division, Pacific conference section of the league, favorite to whip a Stanford team j Coast conference basketball made Playing their finest game of the ! that ha 1 lost lu 1(1 A Washington j a fasl-hrpalt bin fur micnlinn season, ine Bears stomped on ls niiKcifs, 10 is, yesieraay, and eimen ine nuns six-game winning i BllCM. Giants Upset Eagles ; J he American conference battle i also continued to rage as the New . York Giants upset the Philadelphia j hagles, 7 to 3, . nc v icti-iuiui a , inie nrowns lor tne lead. A pair , u, pnuiu . iiimnes are in ine maK ing. The Rams 183) concluded (heir season against Green Bay Sunday, while the Bears (8-2) still have the Chicago Cardinals and Detroit I.ions left. So the l.os Angeles cause is not completely hopeless. It's much the same wilh the Giants and Browns, both sporting 8-2 records with two games to play. Philadelphia gets that loin awaited crack at the Brownies in Cleve land Sunday, while the Giants en- tertain their cross - town rivals, the Yankees. Then the Giants play , the Kaglcs in Philadelphia and the I Browns visit Washington. Kami Set Record In other games yesterday, which had no hearing on the divisional races, the Green Bay Packers edged San Francisco, 25-21, and Washington outlasted Baltimore. 38-28. The Rams, however, had one con soliation. Bob Wuterfield and Nor man Van Brocklin combined for. 2t3 aerial yards, setting a new lea gue standard of 3.3.V8 yards for one season. The old record was 3,325, set by Washington in 1947. I WOOD FOR SALE 16" Core Wood $8.00 per load Split Log Ends not to exceed 16" 8.00 per load Unsplit Log Ends 4.00 per load Extra charge for any load more than six miles from the plant. The Martin Brothers Box Co.1 Oakland, Oregon 3 Finals; Season Beavers Slap Vebfoots,14-2 In "Civil War' By RUSS NEWLAND AMOctalad Prw SporUMrrtttr College football, with a few strag gling exceptions, was all over but for the shouthig today in (fee far west. California appeared to be in as the coast conlerence reoresen- tative in the Rose bowl for the third ofacoa ....... 1 i ..U ! r. - - l. successive year. Michigan prob ably will provide the other half of the colorful gridiron battle it Pasadena, New Year's day. The Bears of California won the 1950 confrence title with five wins, no defeats and one tie. Washington finished second with 6-1 record, beaten only by the Bears, 14-7. Indians Tie Bears The league season ran out Satur day. Staniurd end California, fight ing to a 7-7 tie before 81,000 fans at Berkeley, provided the climac tic thriller of the day. rOKFEKKN'CI FINAL Trl. 1 noo .857 .714 .SO(l .SMI .no ,2M .000 California Wjifehinglun VCl.A Stanford Idaho Wah. 8131 .. Orrfon Stat !xutrirn wal. j r' Br Tn. Aaaociaud p. , Underdog Stanford's Indians and Army and had been held to a tie by Southern California. California scored on the ground, 1 , . , m luuLiiiiuwii lull uy naif back Pete Schabarum in the third period. Staniurd tallied So the fourth, from the five-yard line on , wi(e pass from quarterback Gary kprknruin In hn fhai-lr Rnvrf Rpn. Botn teams failed on other fT ,7 h! Sr! 1 s4''re Garden and New York unni-37-yaid u-ld goal y by Stanford s Th u ? ,h B star enf. Bill Mctoll. m ,'. , m,d,t si;ng which Portly, usually placid Lynn Wal- take them against Bradlev, Illinois dord of California worked himself, and Indiana on successive nights. into a small dither during the Stan- Oregon opens play Friday night ford game. It was too close j ii Salt Lake City against Utah. for comlort. Big stakes rode on i Utah State will be. the Saturday the outcome. Hukta)t Rate Svcond Only two teams scored more (hao seven points against Califor nia this season. They were Santa Clara, W'th a .touchdown and safety in the openin same which' Call . fornia won, 27-9 and St. Mary's, I ith four touchdowns while losing 1 25-40. However, practically every player on the California bench, got a chance in the St Mary's contest. - Washington, runner-up in the conference standings, closed out its season with a resounding 52 21 victory over Washington Stale. It was made possible by the brilliant passing of quarterback Don llein rich and the running of Hugh Mc Klhenny. I'CI.A, finishing third In the lea gue, chalked up its greatest win of the year by trouncing cross town rival, Southern California, 39 0. Oregon State topped off i t s schedule with a 14-2 over Oregon, which ended up in the conference celler, no wins and seven losses. The ninth member of the circuit, Idaho, closed up shop by taking a 21-48 whipping from a strong Ari zona State college of Tempe club, Yale football teams have scored more than 100 points in four games, three of them against Wesley an- it--v ill inro, no-v ill iooi anti ifis-o in num. The fourth was a 11.10 scalping of Dartmouth in 18S4. Phone 2211 and 2212 Need Cash To Meet That List Of Holiday Expenses V Com in or phont for a loan! Moke your list . . '. find our how much cash you need ... let ui know! You'll find our service courteous, quick and confidential- i . - I.-) '7... PRACTICE Working at Still man's Gymnasium, on New York's upper west side, Nick Barone is (jetting used to being surrounded by gloves. The Syracuse light-heavy tackle: Kzzard Charles, world heavy weight champion, in Cincinnati, Nuv. 28. College Cagers To Open Season Sports fans turned from the foot Neither Oregon nor Oregon State will waste any time on the seasonal changeover. Both embark on road ii lus mis wtri-Rriiu ji ruu iiiuvnig into Utah and the Bejtvers swinging into the Midwest and East. Oregon State gets under way Thursday with their initial road jaunt scheduled for Saturday night ! 'tl v"",, ' opponent. Returning north, the Ducks will play Portland in the Rose city Dec. 5 and open the Eugene season with a Dec. 8 ap pearance against IJCI.A's defend ing Pacific Coast conference ti tlists. At Seattle. . where Coach' Tippy Dye is intrMl'uciag a new system, the University of Washington Hus kies get off to a slower start. The Huskies will make their initial game appearance against Ne braska Dec. 8 9. New Marks Set By Husky Aces By JACK HEWINS SPOKANE, Wash.- i,V) The marks on Spokane's new Memorial stadium might look today like mere cleat tracks to a stranger, but to Ihe 30,000 people who sat there Saturday' they spelled this mes sage: "Heinrich and McElhenny came Ihiouih here in the fall of 1950." In a game touched by tragedy and jammed with drama, the rec ord wrecking Washington Huskies blasted the- Washington State col lege Cougars 52 to 21, to wind up their season in second place in the Pacific coast conference. Alotig the way quarterback Don ,Ieinrjn broke 0i n,lional , d -one conference passing record and Hugh McElhenny wiped out a eon- i ference rushing standard. H e i n-: rich now holds all the circuit's pass ins marks. Washington even gave away a touchdown to get its hands on the ball in the final minute for the last record outburst. Heinrich t neeaea one completion ana nicci- henny ncciled a couple ot yarns. Don flipped to senior Rollie Kirkby to make it 134 for the season, breaking by one the national com pletion record set in 1947 by Chuck Conerly of Die Miss. And then with the play at fourth down and 12 to so, he fed the ball to McElhenny and llurryin' Hugh got all the yards he needed, going 84 strides down the sidelines to a touchdown his filth of the game. The big. bouncing fullback piled up 2 net yards in the game to make his season's total 1.107. com pared to the record 1,010 set in 1948. But the cold figures and cold facts are two stones. Just before the game the Washington State team learned that the brother of center Lavern Tor.eson had been asphvxiated while .-lecping in a car in which the motor was running. Torgeson was so shaken he did not attempt to play. Crystal Ball Gazers Miss The Boat On '50 Grid Year NEW YORH (IP) What a difference two months can make! Remember the start vf the col lege football season at the end of September? . Notre Dime was going to rule the roost nationally. , . . Cornell was to take the Ivy league champ ionship. . . . Stanford was the (lass of the west coast. Now that the season is practically over, it doesn't seem possible that anyone could see the picture that way. Some of the early season pre dictions did come true, though. Michigan was thought to be the best team in the Big 10. It was a mighty close squeak, but the Wolverines made it and today were expected to be tapped officially for the trip to the Rose bowl. Bears Underestimated On the west coast, the champ ion California Bears were regarded as also-rans behind Stanford and Southern California. But Pappy Waldorf Is not a man to take the experts seriously, so his team too, is expected to be tapped today for the Rose bowl. Texas was loaded and everybody knew it. The Ixinghorns did not disappoint. Even though Southern Methodist went to the top of the heap in the early stages of the season. But now, after losing three of their last four games, the Mus tangs are just about out of the running for any bowl consideration. And who would have thought Princeton would finish its season unbeaten and untied? The Tigers won the Ivy league championship and there is a suspicion in many quarters that they could give any team in the nation a battle. Before hostilities started. Ten nessee was regarded behind only Notre Dame, Army and Michigan. Kentucky was way down the list. The Vols were all but forgotten until Kentucky sold them short Saturday. The moral of that one is never let Bob Neyland's team get a lead on you. . Cotton Bowl Invitations Well, that's how it went right down the line. . . . High pre-season empectations ground into the turf . . . . teams that were expected to do nothing, rising into the clouds. With only a smattering of games left next Saturday, four major teams remained unbeaten and un tied Princeton, Oklahoma, Wy TRAILER AXLES With Wheels and Springs Standard $M00 Sixes iU DOYLE'S Sales & Service Hiehwey 99 at GerJa V.lt.y PHONI 611 DON'T MAKE AMOVE 'til you see F L EG E L Transfer and Storage Phone 935 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ON THE NEW 1951 STUDEBAKER THREE-QUARTER & ONE-HALF TON PICK-UPS! Delivered in Roseburg . . . Vs-Ton $1530 - -Tcn $1649 Also available with overdrive or 4-speed transmission at additional cost. 1 oming and Army. All have nlni victories except my which has ieght. The season is over for Princeton and Wyoming, while Army still ftiist tangel with Navy Saturday and Oklahoma must get past Oklahoma A and M. In addition to the Rose bowl, the -combatants in only one other mijor bowl the Collon ire selected. They will be Texis and Tennessee. Kentucky has accepted and uivita'i'.i to the Sugar bowl at j New Orleans, but its opponent won't be known until Oklahoma writes finish on the season's busi ness. The Sooners probably will be there come Jan. 1, though. Football Scores ric-mc coat Orvfon Stat 14, Oregon S. Wuhiniton 32. WSC 21. California 1, Stanford 7 UCLA 39. Southern California . San Fruncitto 33, Dtrott 13. Santa Clara 28. Lnvola 26. Rackr Mountain Colorado 14. Colorado ;.M I Wlxfomln 14, Minneota 0. Brig ham Young 28, Fort Hood 14. Wt North wait.? ill 14. Illinois t. Michigan . Ohio Stat 3. Purdue 13, Indiana o Oklahoma 48. Nebraska 33. East Cornell 13. Pennsylvania C. Princeton 13, Dartmouth 7. Yale 14, Harvard 6. Ford ham U NYl'. 0 Penn Slat at Pittsburgh 'postponed!. Colgate at Rutgers icarlled. u South Duke T North Carolina 0 Wak Forest 14. South Carolina T. Tennessee 7, Kentucky 0. Alabama 41, Florida IT Georgia Tch 46, Davidson 14 .William & Mary 34, N. Car. St. 0. Clemon 41, Auburn 0 George Wash 7, Georgetown 6. Tulant 35 Vanderbllt 6. Georgia 40, Auburn 0. Southwest Oklahoma A Ail 41. Kansas St. 0. Baylor 3. Southern Methodist 0. Texas Christian 26. Rice 14. Texas Tech 37. New Mexico 1 J. PRO FOOTBALL Chicago Bears 24, Lo Angeles 14. New York Giants 7, Philadelphia 3. Washington .18, Baltimore 26 Green Bay 23, San Francisco 31. S. W. (BILL) LEVERAGE gives a A trctor has fcot to have power to spare. That's a must. But powr to do the heavy work is not a matter of (rreat size, overweisht, or elurmy operation. How murk and how Jfi eiently power is applied to the imple ment . . . that's what counts. The special ly-desijned overhead rilve engine of the New Ferjruwn Tractor, combined with the m and only Ferguson System of Linkage and Hydraulic Control, provides adequate power fully utilized, , Power properly managed for the wide range oi wortc is tne power principle of the New Ferguson. Power combined with. leveragel Whether you judge tractor performance by how Muy it makes your work, the tint taped, or by how much it lowers your cost1 of production. J , i I T AND riROCION STITIM IMPLEMENTS wH0Pin. LEE MORTENSEN, Inc. mJSSTmj .Toeoma Rockets Knock Off Portland Eagles By Th Aasocittad PrM Tacoma'i Rockets knocked off the first ind iccontl plice teamsQ in the Pacific Coist Hockey lea gue's weekend activity ind were hard on the heels of the runnerup Portland Eagles today. The thirl place Rockets clipped uke Rose city mi 4-1 last night and dumped New Westminster'! pace setters 4 2 Saturday. Doug Adam was the sparkplug; of the Tacoma attack against Fort. Intl, scoring the winning goal and assisting in two other third period tallies. The game was delayed for 15 minutes in the second period while both sides wrangled over a dis puted Portland goal. It was dis allowed but not before Tacoma goalie Doug Stevenson gjew a 10 minute misconduct penally and Portland Coach Tony Hemmerling was penalized for walking across the ice to talk to the goal judges. HAVE YOUR RADIATOR CHECKED TODAY We Do All Types of Radiator Repair From Clean Out To Rout Out. . We Hav Permanent Anti-Freeze Lockwood Motors, Inc. Rote and Oak Phone 1165 MILLER SAYS POWER "PLUS" if Studcbaker ha If ten pickup. A rwe-purjMit unit. if Truck cerryinf capacity, pautnftr cer riding tM. it Powir r 4m tht IcM my 1 jfcltest ell, 4r Built for rud duty. Styled re pit ate tk aye. CALKINS FINANCE OX PHONE 466 307 (3id Floor) Pacific Building ' WE CAN HAKE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY KEEL MOTOH CO. M-337 Stott LicS-264 o phone m 443 N. JACKSON 122 W. Oak Sts Phont 3J8 o 0