1 Kid KIrchen. shown listening to the birdies sing after being kayoed In his middleweight scrap during ' the last armory all-soldier fight card. Referee Pete DeGrasse Is doln the tolling while Klnchen's M.n.t.t.M umiiJ .tart thronrh the roues to set their fallen gladiator. Such are some of the doin s - which can be expected during next Friday night's American Lesion sponsored, party in the nnneh arena. .YArmT Simal Corns photo.) hi i 1 if a ' if the "Who's Who" which participated in the Port land Boosters get-together the other night in the Vaughn Street park is any indication of things to come, Messrs. George Norgan, Bill Klepper, et al, can look forward to one of the most successful seasons ever for the "Lucky Beavers' this year. ' With thanks to George Bertz, sports boss of the Ore gon Journal, for compiling: the list and forwarding same, here's who were on hand at the, shove-off : . Our Governor Earl Snell and Secretary of State Rob ert S. Farrell, jr., Portland's Mayor Earl Riley, Commis sioners Fred Peterson and William Bowes, Chief of Po lice Harry Niles, E. J. Schef ter, the dethroned Beaver boss: Frank Shull, C. C. Brad ley, Tom West, Tommy Luke, -president of the .Boosters or ganization: Frisco Edwards and Tom Kalpm and "Vietorv'': Georee Flaee. Rocky Benevento, Ray Garner, Andy Cook, F. J. Bmington, Milton Klepper, King Bryon, Charles S: Barton, Gust Anderson, George F. Paulson, T. B. Handley, Jack Connors, Johnny -Carpenter, Rollie Truett, Martin Hawkins, D. E. Nickerson, J. Fleming, ' Jim PurceU, W. E. Robson, H. Cox. Frank Sever, G. V. Uhr, Don Kneass, Dr. Melvin Lake. Ted Baum. W. R. McDonald, Lew Wallace, Martin Pratt, Waldo Tooze, G. I. Inman, D. P. Hunter, Captain W. C. Epps, K. K. Kubli, Ralph Gruman, Rudy Lachemeier, Edward N. Wein baum, Charles Olston, M. C. Daum, Wily C Stuart, Jack Marlait, Robert R. McKean, Will R. Lewis, Charles Harding, Mike Moran, Hal Wilson, Rudie Wilhelm, Morris Rogoway, Arthur Leonard, Jack T. Kern, Al Stump, John Lewis, E. L. Casey,; A. D. Stout and Tom Shea, All of which constitutes a considerable klckoff party and dyes the "Lucky Beavers" a running start. WW . 49 Years of Football Complete Fresh off the mill in Spec Keene's lab is the complete and up-to-date history on Willamette university's 49 years of football right from the 1894 season, during which the WU gridders won 1, lost 4 and tied 1 under Coach C. R. "Brick Morse, to last sea son's Northwest conference titlists under Headman Keene. - -During their 49 seasons Willamette's men have won 185, lest 126 and tied 19 against competition ranging from Salem high and the local. YMCA to Pacific Coast conference elevens and the cam with distant U of Hawaii two seasons back.' " - rvMM 4kawuik : 4kWMM it)i went like this: 1894-95, "Brick" Mark Savage, won 2 and tied 1: ' uunu UU VUCil vuc cm o -ww a American - war; 1899, Bert Oliver, 1901. Coach Dietz. won 3. lost 0: tied 1; 1903, Professor Boyer, won 3, lost 2, tied 2; 1904-5-6, Chauncy Bishop, won 11,, lost 8; tied 2; 1907,: Coaches Chase and Nace and Professor Boyer won 2 and lost 4 between them; 1908, Harley E, Klrbr won 1. lost 5: 1909-10-11-12-13, Dr. GJ J. Sweetland, Jr- won 23 while losing onlr 4 and tieing 3: 1915-16-17-18-19-20, R. L. "Matty Mathews won 17, lost 7, for feited 1 and tied 3; 1921-22, Roy L. Rathbun won 5. lost 17 and tied Z. 1 . Keene Record: JP-82, L-51, T-6 I I Keene took over In 1926 and has since' won 82 while losing II and breakinr even in six.' - . ' ' I i Thirty-eight opponents have the years and in games won ana street men made out: i ' Albany college X WU 16; College of Idaho 3. WU 7. tied 1: College of Paret Sound 1. WU 16. tied 2; Pacific U 16. WU 23, tied 2r Linfield 1. WU 18. tied 1; Whitman 13. WU Hi Oregon 2L WU 3. Ued 1; Oregon State 21. WU 3; Washington 7, WU 6. tied 1; WSC 2. WU 1: Stanford 1. WU 6: California a tie once: 1; Nevada . WU 2; San Jose State 1. WU 4; Santa Barbara SUto t WU 3; IresM SUte 1. WU t. tied 1: Whittier 2. WU 2; San Diego Marines S. WU 9; Maltnomah Athletie clob . WU 4. Ued 1; Chemawa Indian school 3. WU 14. tied 3: Mt. Angel t, WU J; Pacific college 6. WU 3: Seed college .'WU 1; Whitworth 1, WU 1; Oregon Normal 1. WU 9, tied 1; Vanconver Barracks t, WU 3; Southern Oregon 6. WU 1: Fort Stevens WU 1; Hill Military WU 1; Alumni t. WU 7. Ued 2: 8alent YMCA 4. WU . . Ued 1: Salem high school t. land sir base. t. WU j. and V of Hawaii 1. WU 0. 108 to 0 the Worst of Course -1. . ;: Most, memorable and worst shellackings the Methodists dealt opponents were " the 67-0 rout of Whitworth in 1912, the 71-0 un dressing of the Vancouver Barracks the same -year and the 75-0 whopping Whitman took In 1934. -1 ; i ! , ; Hardest entries to write into the books were of course the . Infamous 198 to annihilation the CU took from Washington Huskies in 1925 (maybe one reason for Ruthbun's last; year as coach things like 198-t are Intolerable in the' coach vs. alnmnl business), and the 76-9 beating Oregon State gave 'en ta 1L OSC tapped 'em ta 69-6 and and 67-6 tones .In 1915 and 1902 . . m tVl-Bw. - - - . A A mm oa a. mpCVUVCll mm Wn vsvtvai Jvv m waw mm vw in 1914.:.-: : ' .-;v...- .- 1- ;- , -..:, . , ? Miss Dogwood Cops Phoenix v LOUISVILLE; Ky AprU 1(H Miss Dogwood won the Phoenix handicap by a length and a half Saturday as tise Keeneland racing prosresa" cpened at ChurchJll Dwa witi more than ; 12,000 to attcidar.ee. . , .' . Hiss Dcswood paid $5.80. $3.20 z-. i C33; Ilar-IIel paid $2.80 and 3 tni Three Clovers paid $5,60. ilKridav . Fie M" Frolics ;Mit ' - But Survive' for ?Hext; Card , - GOV. EARL SNELX. Hd&nan, gettin in a lick for Tom Louttit, "Spec' Burke, . rfhOr1nAe? an1 4 Via It moamIi Morse, won 3, lost 6 tied 1; 1896, 1897 - 98, no football due to Spanish- ua v w - .wa.0 iuju 1 uivia a..w ua won 3, lost 3; 1900, no football; 1902, Professor Moser, won 1, lost 4, 1; 1914, O. C Thompson won 2, lost Bonier won 5, lost 9; 1923-25, Guy squared off with the Bearcats over lost wim eacn nere s now tne state WU 1: U of Idaho I. WU I; Port. Par Avion First At Narragansett PAWTUCKET, HI, April UK) Coming from behind to the last eighth of a mile, the ML Desert Sables Par Avion won the $2500 sprint - handicap Saturday as the 1943 NeW England racing season opened before nearly 20,000 free betting race fans at Narragansett park. t i 1- ? - Par Avion completed the six furlongs in 1:12 25, to lear Mrs. W. Renards" Mixer werHhe 'wire with Mrs. W. W. Adams Arthur 1 Murray, Qie favorite, third. r f I ? - , 'i ::.:: v .. ' -A - ttirtViflf-"--'-'J mmmE wj p mmmmmmm mm lriiiV local Beavers Even Frahler Fires 4 to 3 Win to Gain Split EUGENE, Ore.. AprU 10 -(P)-Oregon State college evened the score with Oregon Saturday, de feating the Webfoots in a ten-inning baseball game, 4-3. i Andy Frahler, Oregon State freshman, limited the Webfoots to nine hits and scored the win ning run. He singled, advanced to third base- on a sacrifice and an error and came home on John Mack's single. Oregon downed the Beavers in the season's opening game Friday at Corvallis, 14-1. Oregon SUte 020 016 000 14 9 1 Oregon ... 021 000 000 0 3 9 6 Frahler and Roelandt; Buba lo and Carlson. Bears Annex Invitational PALO ALTO, Calif., April 10 (P)-A small California track squad scored 51 points and first place against 14 other institutions in the Stanford invitational track meet on Angell field Saturday. Stanford placed second - with 43 45 points. St Mary's Pre flight was third with 23 and San Jose State fourth with 20 points. High individual scorer was Pey ton Jordan, of St. Mary s Pre flight Jordan, a former champion sprinter from the University of Southern California, scored 10 points by winning both the 100 and 200-yard dashes. Dodgers Drop Yankees Again NEW YORK, April 10-P)-The Brooklyn Dodgers . made it two straight over the New York Yank ees Saturday winning 3 to 0 before a shivering crowd of 3492 with Southpaw Max Macon and Right Hander Ed ' Head combining to limit the American league champ ions to five hits. Brooklyn 010 200 003 7 0 New York 000 000 0000 5 1 Macon, Head (6), Bragan (7) and Owen; Bonham, Zuber (6) and Hemsley. . j LA Annihilates San Diego, 21-4 i SAN DIEGO, Calif., April 10(A) Scoring early and often, the Los Angeles Angels buried the San Diego Padres,. 21 to 4, in an exhi bition baseball game here Satur day. The two teams conclude the two-game series Sunday. 1 i ; LA 524 049 21321 22 San Diego 000 002 110 4 12 5 . Osborn, Baker (4), Phipps (7) and Holm, Land C); Lamanske, Merkle (4), Lewis (7) and Bal linrer. ".: :; . .-. . j . Wakefield's WaUop Wins for Tigers, 4-1 V MUNCIE, Jnd April 10 RooUe outfielder Dick Wakefield's triple with the bases loaded in the seventh inning gave the Detroit Tigers a 4 to 1 victory over the Pittsburgh CPirates Saturday for their third triumph in five exhi bition games. . The Pirates got their only run In the first, a homer by Big Jim RusselL Detroit I.O0O 010 300 4 S t Pitts. 1M 000 t0 1 C S : Gorsica, Overmiro (6) sUehards; SeweU, Diets (6) .Lopes. :. .f-': - 'L Move to Dever . I Mr. and Mrs. Orville Sheffield and two sonv who have been' liv ing in the Cooper house north of the - Evangelical church, moved Thursday to a farm to the Dever district - . . Bulldogs. Can't Show; 'Gulls To Meet 415th Winner of Clouting Party Fights Fort Lewis April 23 1 Salem's every-other-Frlday fis tic fiestas,' featuring the soldier swingers of Camp Adair, took a stiff right to the button Saturday, went down for a nine count but got up and shook! itself free and now looks forward to next Friday night's punching party Inside the armory ring. - f-- :'"'.'."' ' Next Friday night was to be . the evening the touted and' un defeated Bulldogs bopped It off with the Seagulls for the right to meet the Fort JLewis Warriors' a week following that night. But Saturday local Legion Com ; mander Ira Pilcher was , in formed that the Builders, a 96th division outfit under the tute lage of Lt. Bob I Barrett,; were undergoing . camp maneuvers this week and would bo unable to appear Friday night. . That was the right to the button Pilcher stayed down for : the nine count, then figured he'd try to remedy the situation by obtain ing the services of another 104th division outfit to meet the 413th regiment Seagulls for the right to fight the Fort Lewisers. As there are numerous fighting teams very anxious to make the Friday night jaunt to our village, Pilcher had no trouble lining up the 415th .regimental team. So come Friday night the two 104 th division belt ing brigades will winner meeting go at it The Fort Lewis a thereby making week following, things as smooth as silk again. The Seagulls got over the Mountaineers, nvi on the last card,) i e bouts to four and boast such gladiators as Eddie "Jitterbug" Collins, Johnny Cruikshank, Lee Surface Hugh Luby, Bob Moses and Enmk - Gracia, all well known to the village fistic fol lowers now. During this week the best the Seagulls have will be matched with the 415th men. Lt. Coyle is boxing boss of the newcomer out fit and Bud Gorman, a 147 pound er who once hailed from Califor nia as a topnotch amateur, is list ed as the 415th'S trainer as well as its No. 1 battler. A few more of the Incomplet ed 415th team are Vinnie Fasio of New York, a 130 pounder with fonr years amateur exper ience; Henry Gntirez, also of New York, a 135 pounder with two years experience, and Hank Hannem, a 155 North Carolina pounder from who has had three years experience In the ring. Completed roster and who fights who will be announced later on in the week, Commander Pilcher announces. ABC Elects Unmaclit Boss MILWAUKEE, April 10 -VPh- Martin G. Unmacht of Dubuaue. Ia., was reelected president of the American Bowling Congress Sat urday as executive directors brushed precedent aside and re tained all active officers. - Only new name on the slate was that of John L.I Sullivan, Louis ville, who was elected eighth vice- president after Jerry Ameling, St. Louis, resigned. Ameling was sec and vice-president, but other of ficials were moved up. , Husky-Kansas State Go Off MANHATAN, Kas, AprU 10-UP) M. F. Ahearn, director of athletics at Kansas State college Saturday announced the cancellation of the football game with the University ox Washington at Seattle Septem oer. ana posiponement ox a game with Indiana at Bloomington November 13, "to some future year." . j Ahearn said Washington and In diana had requested the action. Trojans Trip Bears BERKELEY, Calif, April lOUPi University of Southern California defeated California. S to 4. in . a tennis, meet at the Berkeley ten nis club Saturday. Stanford's Cashin Smashes Three World Swim Records : "PALQ ALTO, Calit, April lOrVThree world IntercoUegi ate swiinming jrnarks were Lettered Saturday by Zmmett Cashin, of Stanfordt, as his university nosed, out the College of the Pacific, 37-37, in a meet at Stanford. Be swam the; 200 yard breast stroke event In 2 minutes and It seconds. That bettered the mark set by Dick Hough, of Princeton, ia 1937 of 2:22. Ca shin's time .of . two': minutes and 33.7 - seconds for 'the 200 meters and 220 yards, similar dis tances but considered as separate Apache, With Regards Shoiv 1942 Form in Godwin gallops By ORLO. ROBERTSON NEW YOftK, AprU lHh A pair of colts that did right well by themselves three Saturday year-olds last year showed' that -they ' lost none of their , van n i e d speed during the winter mo n I h s, . when - W II- 1 11am Wood-, - ward's? Apa- -che and Mrs. Joseph! n e . G rimes t i fi APACHE With Regards split the honors In the two divisions of the" Pan- Multnomah Mer . ; . In National A AU : Swim: Four Stat A Quartet of swimming stars who tmmmm mmmmmmmmmm mm m, mm, wmmm I - . - f iV- swimming meet In Chicago this weekend are (left to right) Suzanne : Zimmerman of Portland, Ore.; Ruth Lemmermeyer of New York; Nancy Merki of Portland, and Catherine Wernert of New York. Bear Speedster pussuMtBjr' vxa- -sy ywx- V5" '-1 v. jpsmnunsssssnmnunn ' S-.r."4-" .X- . .: ' : ' v ' vi ::::: : . .. 1 1 Ir:: j A ri-"- i J V-iirmf.V.-AMuciSmmmmmmm Grover Klemmer, -University of California runner, whose times for the 400-meter and 440-yard ' races equal or better all exist ing world records for. the two events, gets of f to a fast start In his specialty as he opens 1943 training at Berkeley. Lucky Beaver9 Nine Defeats Lucky Lagers SAN JOSE, Calif., April , 10- The Portland team of the Pacific Coast baseball league defeated the Lucky Lager nine of San Fran cisco, 11-4, in an exhibition jame here Saturday. Forrest Orrell, Wayne Osborne and Joe Pieretti divided the pitch ing for the Beavers and in all gave up nine hits. Rugger Ardi zoia. New York Yankee farmhand with Kansas City last season and now awaiting call to the army, hurled for the beer men and was touched for 11 hits. ; Lagers . 000 020 020 4 . 9 4 Portland 503 000 03011 11 t j Ardlzoia and Young. Orrell, Osborne (4), FleretU (7) and Eastwood, Redmond (7). Giants Fold Against 1st Major Loop Nine NEW YORK, April 10-(ff)-The New York Giants, meeting major league opposition for the first time this spring, found their hitters sty mied by Ken Chase and Anton Karl Saturday and dropped a 4-0 decision to the Boston Red Sox at the Polo Grounds. - - Boston 010 210 0004 I I NY i U-000 009 0000 4 Z i Chase, Karl (f ) and Bremer; Melton. WKUr (4). Sayles ) and Poland. Grant High Wins PORTLAND, April 10 .-(fly-Grant Hiah school won. the Port land high school, relay meet Sat urday topping both A and B di visions. . . events, bettered the mark of 2:37.2 for the two events set -by ' Jack Kasley, of Michigan, in 1835.; ; - Three official timers were at Saturday's meet and Cashln's marks wCl be offered for offl- . eial recognition. . . monox handieap at Jamaica. : While 29,909 fans packing ev ery corner of the Long Island racing plant and sent $1,743,370 through the mntael machines for the second million dollar day since: the New V York season opened Thursday, "Apache and With, Regards ' came through with head decisions after; stir ring stretch dnels. "" " Apache's ,vletory ; . was -". the " more, popular, since he was the public's choice' at 4.70 to SC With: Regards,'.-on . the other hand,- was. lightly regarded . In the betting-' that. - made. - Mrs. Payne Whitney's ; Devil , Diver the red-hot favorite.1 With The Diver refusing - to- ran. back to Paddlers in Gals? are making a big splash. In the L : . -. . .-.r - . -I, Golfers Co Qualifying For Spring - :; Qualifying rounds for the annual Spring Handicap tourna ment, held on the Salem Golf club layout, got under way Satur day, but according .to tourney committeeman Ross Coppock, very, few turned in scores for the day. , jj . . "All those who are planning to participate in the tournament should be getting In their qualifying scores as soon as possible," Coppock announced Saturday night. - jj "We hope to get the tournament started a week from next Sunday, April 25, and those who haven't established handicaps should be getting In as many scores as possible so they can go ahead with their qualifying round," he added!. More 'qualifying trounds are expected to be turned in today and possibly every day from now until tournament take-off time. Coppock also said that Just what would transpire during next Thursday's edition, of the weekly novelty meets would be an nounced later this week. I Wonder Man jj " ; One-Armed Outfielder P. Gray Doing Okeh, With Athletics t LANCASTER, Pa, April lMPete Gray lost his "good arm" when he was a boy, but the" Philadelphia Athletics will agree that he's doing all right with the other. And they can't help wondering what he'd do with both. The Toronto Maple Leafs' outfield candidate, who. batted .311 for Three - Rivers in the Can-Am league last year, dem onstrated - how a one - armed outfielder - makes a catch and throw when he nipped speedy JeJo White off second base ear ly In the first of a three-game . series between .' the . Leafs and ' the Athletics. . . In addition - he. laid - down a bunt, and beat it out with a phe nomenal burst of speed, and then stole second: standing up. '. To catch a fly. Gray slides his gieved hand across his: chest and under his riant arm- pit. The ball rolls back on his wrist and drops into his hand. . as ho . pulls lt back quickly, leaving the glove tacked under his . He uses a light, slender bat and swings from the first, base sidej of the batter's box, with a full follow-through. His boosters say he can pole a tremendous 'drive, and doesn't depend on bunts and scratch hits for. his fat average. Gray was a right-hander by. ; birth but his right. arm was amputated at the shoulder aft-, er he fell from a track In Nan- . - tleoke, Pa when bo was six. ' years old. Despite his handicap, he made the high school team , and got a Job with Three Riv ers in the old Can-Am leagne. Then he went with ' the Bush wicks in Brooklyn for several sea sons, to earn more money, but rer turned ' to -the- Can-Am' when lt became a recognized professional league, because be - wanted to get a start in organized ban. s Less Pheasants, Says Co mill ission PORTLAND,' April lO-0P-Pro-duction of pheasants on state game farms this year will be curtailed feKhalf-last, season's .63,000 birds, the game commission ruled Satur day. ' ; z'- '-i Unused portions' of game farms will be sown to crops or leased to farmers on shares, the commission saJd.--. :,V;- 4 -An appropriation ox woo was made: for 'opening the Canfield riffle -on the Rogue river near Gold j ful " bid by 'the collegiate grunt-Beach- to .enable salmon- to reach I and-groaners from Michigan State spawning grounds. . ( and Cornell, his sensational workouts and finishing fifth in the field of nine. With v- Regards - returned $15.90 for a $2 straight jdxtczU -Both: winners , carried ; the same weight, 126 pounds but Apache was caught in 'the faster time for the six furlongs. Un der Jimmy Stout's guidance, the son of Alcazar stepped the distance In .' 1:12 flat while 'Johnny - Longden brought the - Colorado-owned With -Regards home in 112 1-5. Since : there were two more- starters In. With Regards' section, - Mrs. Grimes and her trainer-husband, picked up $8,100 as compared with the ' 55,900 earned by Apache for the master, of the Bel Air stud, - AAU Meet National AAU- Senior Women s 11 II! ce . - -Rounds npourney Legion Starts Ball Rolling INDIANAPOLIS, April 10 JP) The American Legion Saturday is sued its annual call for 500,000 baseball players not to fill de pleted major league ranks but to take part In j the Legion's 18th an nual, junior 'baseball program. Partly financed by a $20,000 gift from the two' major leagues, the program: calls for an organiza tion of 20,000, teams of boys under 17 years of age. The Legion esti mates 500,000 players will be need ed for tryouts in which the teams will be selected. Each team is al lowed. 15- players. - Nation-wide competition begins June 30. Bulldogs Blasts Mt. Angel NW " il " ' :L ."' WOODBURN With ' the of four walks: and three help hits, Woodburn high's' defending base ball - champs i blasted across five runs in the'eighth inning Friday to trip Mt Anngel 9-2 in a Dur ation league game hT-e. . " Woodburn jwas leading 4-2 when the uprising came. r - Homann, Bulldog flinger, turned back the Angels with five hits and fannecL 10. Bielmeler and - Smith fallowed Woodburn seven hits between them . and fanned 11 but issued 15 free tickets.- - . , j - , - . .ML-Angel J60 0 01. 000-2 J 1 Woodburn 4.002 200 05 f 1 t .Bielmeler, Smith and Bern : ing; Homann and Pelts.- . - ., Neiv York YMCA ; Best Grapplers ' JEW YORK, April 10-(ff- The local: west side YMCA - grapplers were more-at home rolling around their own gym floor than the oth er guys Saturday . night and romped off with the national AMU team wrestling championship,- but only after, turning back a power- Apache - outlasted Harold Clark's four-year-old ! star of the New Orleans meeting-, Riv erland. to win by a head, with Mrs. Dodge Sloane's Mettlesome four lengths away In third place. -His ; triumph marked ' the fifth Faumonox , winner saddled by Trainer Fltuimmons In the Last half-dozen years. It also was the third for Owner Woodward. Doublrab, sprint see of 1913, was seventh and last under top weight of 130 pounds. I ' - , With Regards held on with fine -courage -to score ; his head'; decision over Donald P. Ross New Orleans .sprint star. Pom plon. Boy y, owned and trained by- Tom Heard, was third, three, lengths back.' , . Team tiling Session 'Kids! Retain Relay a . Merki Beaten By CHARLES CHA1IBERLAIN CHICAGO, April 10-ff)-iJune and - Joan Fogle, ' the ' sensational " swimming sisters of Indianapolis' ' Riviera club,' won two champion- ships in' the second round of, the ' national . AAU women's Indoor ; meet Saturday night to give the Hoosier. organization 21 points to 28 for the Multnomah club of Port land, Ore., in the team-title com petition. V ' , : ' . ' Joan, only li years old. pulled the meet's biggest upset by win ning the 440-yard freestyle race with 35 feet to spare over Mult- n omah's 16-year-old Nancy Merki, who had captured the indoor ribbon for j three straight years. ., j . The three-day splash, will con-, elude Sunday with the 300-yard medley relay;' the 220-yard free style, in which the older Indian apolis sister, June, will, get her chance against the favored Miss Merki; the 100-yard breast stroke, with Joan probably taking her turn again; and "the three-meter diving, which Ann Ross, of Brook lyn's Dragon club will attempt to ; win after winning the one-meter low board crown. .Joan's freestyle distance vic tory Saturday night gave her a "double", for she annexed the 300-yard individual medley championship Friday. Suzanne Zimmerman of Multnomah also collected a "double" by winning the 100-yard backstroke title, to go with her 100-yard free style ' - championship of Friday.' Multnomah counted 18 points for the team crown, Saturday night, gathering five,, n j Miss Zimmerr man's backstroke victory 10 by. repeating as the 400 yard freestyle relay champion, and three oj Miss Merki's second In the 440 free style, f ' . t; - Riviera banked nine in the 230-yard breaststroke as June finished first and her teammates, Patty "Asplnwall and Pat Bro gan came In second and fourth, " respectively; five In Joan's 440 win; and two when "Iron Girl" . Joan grabbed a third in the - backstroke...; . . t.- Third In team standings was' the women's swimming association oi New York with 1L points. Last -year, the New York club won the title with 39 and Multnomah was second with 22. Multnomah's time was. :15.5 J in the relay, compared with its record of 4:12.4 set last year. On ly new members of this season's group was Miss Hansen, who re . placed Joyce MaeRae. Miss Han- sea kepi even with New York's ' Catherine' Wernert fat the first ' 100 yards and then watched the . more 'seasoned trio of Zimmer man. Merki and Helser gradually pile up a comfortable lead to win! Whits, WSC it Again PULLMAN, April 10.-(tf Scoring all four of its runs inth second Inning, the Washington State college baseball ; team de feated Whitman college 4: to 3 in the second . game r of ; double header Saturday after Whitman had taken ,the first 9 to 7 in a battle featured by four -homers. -- Honors were even for circuit smashes, with Don Aries and Bob Dau connecting for WSC : and Harlan Somerville and Reg Thompson for . Whitman. " ' Whitman .112 002 l- 10 S . WSC --.00t 104 t 1- t t Thompson- and Rimmel; Rockey, Basch and Cranston. Whitman w.021 000 03 1 WSC . :-L.040 000 4 4 - Somerville a a d K 1 m m e 1; Radke and Cranston. j ' S & N : Clothiers' 451 State Kslent Spl IH!:ry ;