Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 22, 1933)
rVAGPEIGroVLr-tv.???r? ' - . . ?Tha OREGON STATESi :' " r . 1 M'.: - ; i-- Bearcats get 20 First Half And Cliff dwellers 19 In Second Period Someone bad better get a step Udder and ascertain if there are not, at on a certain hilarious oc casion two years ago, fine wires stmng across the east-end basket la the Willamette gymnasium. Saturday night the Willamette Bearcat won a weird game from the Columbia Cliff dwellers, 29 to XI. In the first half Colombia was held to three field goals and a tree throw, and Willamette led at half time 20 to 7: the margin was It to 2 at one time. - Then, in the second half Wil lamette was held to four field goals and a free, throw, Colombia - meanwhile closing the. gap stead ily until, with, two minutes left. It was only one point. But Rieke, Bearcat center, was the center of attraction as he pushed' in 20 of his team's 29 points; but he is to be credited with an excess of hard work rath er than an over-supply of skill. for a good many of his points. were made on second attempts. Eddie Franti shared the limelight by looping the goal that clinched the game for Willamette In the final minute. Bearcat Hesitant At Accepting Gifts Piskol. guard, led the Cliff dwellers in scoring with eight but collected half of them from the foul line. As they have been on many past occasions, the Bear- eats were weak in tossing free throws, getting only three points to Columbia's eight though fouls were nearly even. The retirement of Rossi, Columbia sharpshooter, n personals had something to do with the stopping of the Tisitors' threat near the close of the contest. The discrepancy in scoring be tween the two halres, probably was really due to the fact that Co lumbia sicked a different guard on Rieke in the final period; but the suspicion about that east end basket is heightened by the exper ience of Lin field s reserves and Parker's sport goods hoopsters in the preliminary. Linfleld, with only two regu lars on the floor and they playing only a portion of the game, de feated the sport goods boys 35 to SI in an equally breath-taking game which required an overtime period. Parker's ran up a 15 to 5 score against an all-freshman group ; early in the game Coach Lever then sent in Eckman and Ser geant of his regulars, and reduced the margin at half time to 15-13. Parker's speeded up in the second ' half and kept the lead until there was but a minute to play; then Linfield tied it at 27-all and again at 29-all. Parker's scored i first in the overtime, but Linfleld eame back to garner three field goals. Magee, Nash and Flake all per formed notably for Parker's, while Eckman was most of the show for the Wildcats. Summaries: Willamette (20) FG FT PF O- WILL AID POLICE RADIO FUND r V ' - I r t " V -T y,. .. . ... . - s JiMMB it - - . v i NX: ! 7' 4 i si if - vt iitm ' "i x ... i .x -, ' rf firr - -' ,. "--- IDAHO UPSETS COUGAR QUINT Our old friend Henry JTones. He likes Salem, even though some S 1cm people don't like him. Henry will be one of the contestants in Tuesday night a mat show for the benefit of the police radio fund. He meets a young fellow who has been neither so successful nor so unpopular as a grappler in Salem Dee Anderson. Henry doesn't care a whoop If the fans all pull for Dee Tuesday night; he knows they respect his ability, and that's enough for Henry. Ander son has improved a lot since he made Salem his home, and has hopee of tossing the old 'warrior this time. Vandals get Surprise 40-20 Win; Oregon Beaten by Washington 44-34 - MOSCOW, Idaho, Jan. 21. (AP) Some snapshooting by the University of Idaho Vandals In the second period of a Coast con ference basketball game defeated Washington State college, 40 to 20, here tonight. After a half time acore of 12 to 12 Idaho came back in the sec ond half to hold Washington State to three lone points until two minutes before the final gun when the Cougars broke through to garner fire more. Qrenler, Idaho center, had a big edge over Gordon of the Cou gars and managed to get most of the tipoffs. EUGENE. Ore.. Jan. 21. (AP) The University of Oregon baa- keteers reversed their procedure of last night and let the Univer sity of Washington Huskies do their best playing in the final half to score an. impressive 44-to-34 win for Washington's second straight win of the two-game ser ies, in the final eontest here tonight. The strong squad from the north displayed an evident super iority except for a short time In the first half. The half ended 22 to 17 in the Huskies' favor. Washington (44) FG FT Fuller, F 2 Hanover, F 1 Galer, F 2 P. Antonlch, C .... . . S Lee, G I Heaman, G 2 gills Major League Mo Most of Salary Tilts to Date; Ex-Kickers Sign up . By ALAN" GOULD . NEW YORK, Jan. 21 (AP) It remains to be seen whether the alacrity of the Athletes to reach for their fountain pent so far Is merely a bit of stage business, calculated to put fear Into the more recalcitrant players, but it is a fact the magnates, within the first week, hare carried most of their objectives in the annual ma jor league salary campaign. ' Not even the holdout tactics of so formidable a pair as Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig, or the apparent rift between George Earnshaw and the Athletics, have obscured the rapidity with which elnb own- era 'have collected signed eon tracts. Conspicuously in the fold are Babe Herman, Heinle Melne, Goose Goslin, Charley Gehrlnger, Joe Vosmik, Lefty O'Doul, Glenn Wright, Bill Terry and the Waner brothers, among them a number of last 'year's loudest salary kickers. The world champion Yankees, la good times or bad, can depend upon the ballyhoo for a debate with Rath, although it la unusual for Gehrig to hare any salary dif ferences with his employeu. Nei ther ease is serious. The Babe baa already pointed the way to a com promise by expressing willingness to take as much aa a IK per cent or 111,000 cnt and probably will sign Jor a mere 92.500. Gehrig failed to reach an agreement over the size of his "cut" at a confer ence today with Secretary Ed Bar row but, be, too, ean be depended upon to come to terms shortly. Pennant challengers such as the Washington Senators and Pittsburgh Pirates appear to have avoided or minimized salary dis putes by the simple expedients of not trimming too heavily or granting raises to only a favored few. The Waners and Larry French, two promising young sters, benefitted from the pirate policy' of liberality, predicated an on high hopes of a drive to the top o? the National league. 6ERVA1S GIRLS Oil n on M EM QUITS IH END COACHIlie ROW 5 4 0 I 0 0 PF t 1 1 0 2 2 Totals II Oregon (84) Watts, F 2 dinger, F 2 Kunkle, F 0 Rotfinberg, F-G ... 1 Roberts, C 3 Simons. G 4 Stevens, G 2 Terjeson, G 4 Totals IS 12 10 1 S 0 1 0 0 4 0 8 13 CHH DEFEATS mm Burdette, F 0 1 0 Northrup, F 2 0 3 Rieke. C 9 2 2 Hartley, G 0 0 0 Kaiser, G 1 0 2 Leramon. F 0 0 1 Griffith. F 0 0 1 Franti, G 1 0 2 Paul, G 0 0 2 ' Totals 13 3 13 Columbia (26) Rossi, F 3 1 4 McCarthy, F 2 1 2 Meyertholen, C 0 0 1 Piskol, G 2 4 2 Nehl, G 1 1 3 Leinweber, C 1 1 0 Totals 9 8 12 Referee, Decuman. Parker's (31) FG FT PF Magee, F 5 0 2 Nasb, F 5 0 0 Flake, C . . .'. 4 0 1 Mafr, G 1 0 4 Foreman, G 0 1 0 Ward, G 0 0 2 Totals .. 15 1 9 Linfield (33) Brostrom, F 1 0 0 Neely, F . . . . 1 2 4 Durham, C 3 0 0 Voll, G 1 3 2 Ariss, G 0 0 1 Sergeant, F 1 1 0 Eckman, G 1 0 R. Helser, O 10 0 Totals 14 7 7 CHEMAWA, Jan. 21 The Che mawa All-Stars defeated the Mo lalla town basketball team 50 to 47 here tonight. Hatfield led the winners in scoring with 14 points, but was nosed out by Miller of Molalla who got 16. Chemawa led 21 to 12 at half time but the visitors closed up the gap after the vest period. Summary: Chemawa Hatfield 14. Matt 6 Horn 4 . . . . Vivette 12. . James 4 . . . . Writrignt 9. Franklin 1 . . F . .F. . C. . .G. . .G. . S . S Molalla . 4 Courter ..16 Miller 14 Conklin 12 Horless . . . 2 Slyter Whitman Beats Pacific Again; Leads All Way WALLA WALLA, Wash. Jan. 21 (AP) The Whitman Mis sionaries made a clean sweep of the two-game series with Pacific university here tonight, winning 39 to 33 victory after leading all the way. The score at half time was 22 to 12. Bobby Irving, Whitman guard, was high scorer with 13 points. Whitman won last night, 42 to 3S. Referee, Quiring. Snell to Discuss State Problems At Chamber Meet Speaker -Earl W. Snell of the house of representatives will ad dress the chamber of commerce noon luncheon gathering tomor row. He will discuss state prob lems. An eastern .Oregon newspaper publisher, Snell is past president of the Arlington chamber of com merce and past commander of the American Legion , post there. iT HCOPSTERS WIN A picked team from the Salem T. II. G. . A, defeated a team of nigh school boys from Wood- burn ;lu fast basketball game yesterday afternoon by a 2 6-1 8 "core; r. ' ' i''".' '' Temple's irjt ' ganjo ' under Tod" Warnef next season will be gainst the South Carolina Game eoeka. who will lose, but two men from . the 1831 .rarsitr aflnad by graduation. Vv--a'-, -.-?.', COOPER, RUN Y AX TIED PHOENIX, Ariz., Jan. 21. AP) Harry Cooper of Chicago and Paul Runyan of White Plains, N. Y., were tied for first place with 138s at the end of the first two rounds of the Arizona open golf championship here today.- 1 cajDW MOMENTS BERKELEY, Cal., Jan. .21. (AP) University of California's basketball team broke through a stout Stanford university defense in the second half of their Pacific Coast conference contest here to night to score a 37-to-22 victory. WORCESTER. Mass.. Jan. 21 (AP) Holy Cross college found the way clear to select a head football coach from a list of 76 applicants today when the suspended Captain John J. Mc Ewan tendered his resignation on the ere of his reinstatement ac tion hearing In superior court. The former coach, who served at West Point where be was an all-Amerlcan center in his cadet days and at Oregon before com ing to Holy Cross, was barred from the Crusaders' gridiron af ter his team met its first defeat of the 1112 season in a game with Brown. During that contest, McEwan became involved in an argument with his trainer, Bart Sullivan for more than 20 yeara coach of the Holy Cross track team, over substitutions. Sullivan contended the head coach's unnecessary re placements drew the penalties that enabled Brown to sweep on to the touchdown that resulted la Its 10 to 7 victory. A few days after this game, McEwan charged Sullivan with mutiny" and college authorities rushed to the track coach's de fense and ordered McEwan to torn over the football team to Bunny" Corcoran, one of bis as aiatanta. Dallas Juniors Defeat L H. S. Frosh, 14 to 6 INDEPENDENCE. Jan. 21. The high school Frosh basketball team was defeated by Dallas jun ior high Thursday, 14 to 6. The game was hard fought through out, and lacked much scoring. Lineups: MT. ANGEL, Jan. 21 ML Angel Academy added another victory, to Its record, when Its hoopsters defeated the Gervais girla 2 S to 12 hero Friday night. The game waa fast and interest ing throughout and excitement ran high near the end of the second half when the acore stood g to 8. Both sides worked hard to break the tie until a shot by Schledler sent the academy score up two points. From then on the academy girls piled up a big lead. Leona, Schledler, aca demy forward, was high abot player, making all but three of the baskets made by the local team. Both sides used several substitutes. Joe Wachter ia coach for the academy. Lineups: Academy Gervais Schledler F. . Ferachweiler Keber F. ...... Susee Saalfeld...... JC....J.. Jensen ZoHner. .. . . ..RC DuRette Grosjacques. . , .G Bernlng Welton .G A. Colby Referee, Faaf Relling. At. SL Marya grade school Friday afternoon the Midgets and Wildcats battled to decide which team waa to receive the school's consolation price. The teams were pretty well matched but the Mid gets came out the winners. Final score was 2 to 0. Midgets Appleby F. McDonald F. Koppes ....... C. F. Wrenner. . . .G. Walker G. PDinnrnniin unn OIIIUULIIU HIUIIUl! IE TO.VTJ RELIEF FUuDS Wildcats . . Hassing A. Wrenner . Fenimore . . . Bittler .... Webb Frosh Pomeroy Busby . . Carey .. Mattl&in Young . . Komoto e e e 0 e o i O o O ' I O e e fleeee 8 Dallas . Schaefer Weideman .. Blakely . . Marten , Roblnette . Robinson . . .. Jones Referee, McEldowney. en ties Ralph Hill, distance runner who brought Oregon practically Its only honors In the Olympic Games, has hung up his spiked shoes for good; and there are intimations that his attitude right now is that well, the glory is all right, and worth the effort, but it butters no parsnips. M0ULLA,44T014 SILVERTON, Jan. 21. In a rough-and-tumble game Friday night Silverton'a first string bas ketball team took an easy victory from Molalla here, 44 to 14. The Sllverton second string won 22 to 12. Silverton's city team from Mill City overwhelmingly, 52 to 12. Next Friday night will be the big game of the season, to be played here when Sllverton meets Chemawa. Chemawa is the only team which has defeated Silver ton this season. Junior Church Hoop League to Open Play Soon Adopting the idea from the ol der boys, the Junior members of the Salem Y. M. C. A. are or ganlsing a Junior Sunday school basketball league. First games will be played next Saturday af ternoon and once each week following until the schedule Is played. Teams entered ia the league are: First Baptist. Highland Friends, United Brethren, Pres byteiian. Jason Lee, First Metho dist. Knight Memorial, Calvary Baptist and Evangelical. 1 Lindy and the Pirates -By BURNLEY. Fact is Hill, having graduated from U. of O. a year ago last June, has ambitions to be a teach er, and his running prowess hasn't even enabled him to win in the race for a job at the bottom of that modest profession. You'd think Klamath Falls, which her aided his return, from the games much as New York welcomed undbergn, would see to u teat rT.JL J T1 T Ralph found something he liked tlUDDaTU. 1 3K6S to do. O But the level head which en abled Hill to qualify as perhaps the most thorough sportsman at the Xth Olympiad, now recog nizes that sport as a vocation is suitable only for juveniles and professionals. We know s good many feUows who have never grown up in this respect; they cling to the schedule of values that school days Inculcated, at the expense of their success in adult pursuits. Others throw their youthful interests bodily out of the window. We don't know which is worse1. The Acquisition of LlMDSTROM SHOULD MAKE TME PITTSBURGH OUTFIELD JUST ABOUT THE BEST IAI BASEBALL NEXT season r MERMAID 4-3.' 7 c: J f 3 : ' i t i v " i J': : . $ - - v h What the well-dressed bather win. wear ia charmingly demonstrated by Miss Jaoe Emery, of. Chicago, who ia a member oi the younger set gathered at Palm Beach, Fbk, for the faahienable Winter season. Mias Emery ia wearing Hawaiian trunks wita a brewn-Jersey top. The outfit intantiad- for nrim mln rattier than for beach orna ment.; but it serves both pnrpoaes. We sometimes wonder whether Salem wrestling fans appreciate what high class bouts are provided for them here not all the time. not so frequently in the recent past, probably more frequently in the immediate future but we have had a good many of them The circumstance which prompts this thought, is a brief item on yesterday's front page, in the late sports." Wildcat Pete and Des Anderson figured in a main event in the big weekly ahow at Seattle. Both of them have ap peared many times. Pete won that one by putting Dee out for the rest of the bout when he tossed him out of the rtnsr with an airplane spin, so the result doesn't aa? anything much as to their relative abili ties. And it's Jnst possible that these same two men may meet here sometime, ? in - the due course of events. Practically all of the bis; shots wh have ap peared in the northwest, have visited Salem even, with the exception of Strangier Lewis, most of the heavyweights, though Salem has n taken to the big boys to any great ex tent. Easy Contest From Gervais HUBBARD, Jan. 21 Hub bard defeated Gervais In a league basketball game at Hubbard Fri day night, by a score of 21 to S.I Both schools played a good game although several fouls were call ed on both teams. Moomaw was high point man with Hendry second, and Bev- ens third. In a preliminary game between the second teams Hub bard won by a score of 20 to 4. The lineup: Gervais Hubbard Potts F MeKee Kuhn . . .F 2 Hlgg'nboth'm Lemery 2 C 2 Carl Colby O ft Hendry DeJardin O... 7 Moomaw Jemen 2 8 . . . . 4 Bevens Riggs 4 S . . Hershberger S Patten Liberty Winner North End Hoop Tourney, Report LIBERTY, Jan. 21 Liberty I grade boys won the northern Marion county district champion ship when they wen Friday night from Aurlra there,' 22 to 20.1 They will play the south dis trict . champs to decide county honors in three games February 10. 14 and IT. Liberty girls won 4 to 2 from Aurora girls Friday. Cuttle poisom and bio iWJPfe BROTHER , PAUC- 'AREA-' PAIR OF TRULr! GREAT IlilfyVeW OUTFIELDERS! " WVft , -, 'I bray- Vmm$mm AiP tlAJDSTROM. II i J -LIAJDX, ff f V WILL PLAY TicAvL W f ALOAJGSlDE tyS "5. WE WANER Vtfl l&T Bys ,M E JF?J OUTFIELD! NEW YORK, Jan. 21 (AP) Because one of the "homo town boys' played football at Franklin field, Philadelphia, December 1 or sat on the Army or Navy bench there, charity in , some 80 cities and towns in the United States will benefit by $100 each this winter. The. two service academies to day announced that one-third of the proceeds of the annual ser vice classic estimated to total around $15,000, was being dis tributed to charity and the home towna of the players on both teams would share. West Point listed 29 places to receive $100 each, and Navy said about 40 towns were on its list making a total of some $8000 to be distri buted in that manner. The remainder of the chari- tablo donation goes to the Navy Relief society, the Army Relief society and "for local relief In places and for charities tn which the services are specially Inter ested." Navy announced that Philadelphia would receive some of its share. ROOKS FROM 0 .5. C. m w .u. FROSH The Oregon State college Rooks, starring Bergs trom and Palmberg , all-state high school hoopsters from Astoria high. romped over the Willamette Frosh Saturday afternoon on the Willamette floor, 44 to 17. Coach Roy Lamb of the Rooks sent 14 men onto the floor, none of whom showed much promise as future varsity material aside from the two "bergs" and Makela, also from Astoria: but the CorvaU lis boys' teamwork waa good and their defense tight. Willamette'a Frosh held the visitors practically even In the first period, and gave indication that they might have put ap stronger opposition had they not played & hard game against Salem high the night before. Summary: W. U. Frosh O. 8. C. Rooks Hagemann 5 ... .F. . 11 Palmberg Eckmaa 3 F. . . . Durland McKerrow 1...C Blacker Williams 2 O.K Berg trom Pemberton 4. . . .0 2 JoMin Quiring 2 S....1 Hopkins S 4 Aldridge 8 2 Moe S....2 Oriswold Referee, Adams. PICK TO MEET WEST PROS TODAY SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 21. (AP) With Harold "Red" Grange and Ernie Nevers as spe cial attractions, the final football game of the 1932-33 fall and win ter season will be played here to morrow in a charity contest pit ting the Green Bay P?ckers against the Pacific Coast All- Stars. Grange, drafted for this game by the Packers, will play with the team he opposed many times last year as a member of the Chicago Bears. Nevers, former AU-Ameri-can at Stanford, will be fullback for the All-Stars, a team he lined up and coached and of which he la captain. Grange will hold down left halfback duties. The Packers squad, intact from the pro season, will line up as strong favorites to defeat the coast players, who have practiced but two weeks. The game ia sponsored by the Knights of Columbus. rP LlMDSTROM. HT5UP To. HIS NORfw. STANDARD -TillS YEAR?' THE PIRATES ULLT HAVE A FORMIDABLE 'BATTING yUHCH! Kay Mills Loses To Scotts Mills Scotts Mills town basketball team nosed out the Kay Woolen Mills quintet of Salem 29 to 21 at Scotts Mills Saturday night. St T a a I rage iea me wooien mius ooys I OUnS IsOrueiL vlth - U points and Marquam i acwiTru a, vr arcviifi. 21. Fields to Meet , OAKLAND. CaL. Jan (AP) Jack Kearna today signed for a title tight for Jackie Fields, the welterweight champion, With Yonnc Corbett. of Fresno. , The fight is. scheduled for 10 rounds in the San Francisco baseball park on the afternoon of February 22 "More than 12.000 photographs of famous art works are In. the collections of the University ef Michigan- fine arts library,. . eight.: : Dough Boys'Five, Beaten fig Hebb -.. The Hebo town. basketball .team defeated the Cherry City Biking company Dough Boya 34 to 24 at Hebo . Saturday, night. . Owens' of Hebo scored IX- points and Hutch-1 ens led the Dough Boys with 1 PITTSBURGH fans are al ready nursing fond pennant hopes for the coming Fastball season and if a all because ef Fred die Lindstrom. The Pirates got Freddls from the Giants last month in a three-cornered deal which also involved the Phillies, and it cer tainly looks as if Gawge Gibson's crew got all the best of it when they acquired the hard-hitting: Swede in exchange for two such players as Doras and Spencer. - Ererycne seems te think that with lindstrom playing alongside the Waner boys in the outfield the Pirates will shape up as a very for midable contender for the National League gonfalon In 1933. Certainly there is no better trio of rardeners ht either league than the present - Pittsburgh . triumvirate of Lindy and tha two Waners. Even sow the - Pirate fans are eompsrinr their 1 1933 outfield -with the exeat Pitts " burgn ontnelds ox the past; calling op memories of Tommy Leach and Chief WOsnat shade af Fred Clarke. JJamrr Sebrtnc and Gar- Beaumont: Max Carav -nA KXkl Coyler and good old Clyde Barnhart. And it mar be that this year Freddie and Peewee and Paul vui make 'am Xorget an about those glorious garden guardians of old. Manaxrer Gibson orineed hla kirh opinion of Lindstrom when ho an nounced his tentative outfield ar rangements far 1933, atsirning lindstrom Peewee Waners old cen ter field post and moving Peewee nuo wo isn pasture.'. That gesture was quite tribute to the former Giant star moving the greatest center fielder in the league Into an other position to make way for Lindy. , - The Pirates' now pet didnt hh np to his normal standard with the Giants last season, stamping be neath, the .800 mark: but iVs no secret that Freddie wasn't happy trader Bill Terry and his poor hit tinf reflected bis discontent. Lind strom and Terry ased to be bosom pals they roomed together when Old lfan ilcGraw was st&l bossdnsr tb,Jtnt but afta .Terras mm. pointment to the managerial post he stopped rooming with Lindy, ap parenuy nguring that tt didnt be fit his dignity as manager. Rela tions between the pair, formerlj such dose buddies, cooled notice aory during the latter part of th 1932 season, and it was iueritabh that the erstwhile third saekei would be shifted to new pastures. Terry has been criticized asmr ly for trading Lindstrom to a dan gerous club like the Pirates, thus strengthening an already menaeina pennant contender; however, BQ) rtallr had no other path open te hha in this case. He tried to send Freddie to the Beds or to the Brares but eoaldnt srranre suit able terms with either club. Just the same, Terry will be in a tough spot if the Giants fail to click next season, as the N. Y. fans are al ready "on him because of his win- -ter . tmdin setrvities. llean while the fans out Pittsburgh-way just larf and larf errr tho whole jolly besinesst ? - - . III 11. 111. v Wranglers Beat Statehouse Five By 33-21 Score Cadwell's Wranglers defeated the newly formed Statehouse quintet S3 to 21 in a hard fought game on the Y. M. C. A. floor Thursday night. The sport goods salesmen were ahead throughout the game but never managed to gain"" a substantial margin. Arnameier led in the Wrang lers' attack and Walgren mads the best showing for the stats employes. Summary: Wranglers . 8tathoas W. Herberger t.F. . . 2 Eldridgs J. Herbergsr a. .F 3 Wood N. Gleason 4.... C... Walgren Hendrle .... G. . . 3 Johnson ArnsmeJer 1ft . . Q Kelly O. Gleason 2 .... 8 . . 3 Batch well Gardner 2 8 ft Stone Referee, Browne. Gillette 9 Kaufman 8 ' Eyre 2 Morehouse .1" -O- -Q- 3- Medics Defeat Church Quintet By Large Score Hoopsters of tho medical de tachment of the 249 C. A. C. won a loosely played game from the Highland Friends Friday evening, at tho armory.- Tho half ended with the score standing 14 to 1ft in tbo medics' favor. In tho sec ond half the medics started clock ing and ran tho final score ap 41 to 13. -:-v - Medics r HIghlaad Clntter't .' ; ; FJ. Lindstrom Utter ' v - - v cree .1 Tovcea JL..2 Sebera 4 Chapman 1 Becker - t-"' " -Rora. fierick. V-' ;f .2 1 V i t - :