The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, January 16, 1952, Page 9, Image 9

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Kairassis Mdltils Mainrew'Lesudl Sou F
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u' Salem. Orw WoxjnsttdaT. Jcaraarr 18. 1852 9
DAILY AND SUNDAY!
in .ill
Your Home NevrspapeV'
Theyll Do It Every Time
By Jimmy Hatlo
in
4
The Nation's Top Comics
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r-LYWS OFFERS? If f&gS8$ II "ZSfPV
I MORE A WEEK WVTHA tiSJig. s " MRS
I v5cfS-St5TmM i T1 WINTER J f B&XR THE A
J( lets opk rr BmiimMjlUlUi 1 ( no weu Cut up
. OUT WITH eTLVtXfc7 PEMAINiNC
N(PEAL APPttS , TWJE APPLES
in THIS PPOBuEM J-y-Zl lYr? r S N HALVES
ELEVEN APPLES ' Jl0i-E J 7
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7 ) x ' its no use-- -rnrjrSv
to cut Tuese wav to oo rr to make -
KAJ.VE9 IN J V J ( piFCjuPw, j -
Duquesne Gains
Most Ground
Dukes Now in 7 lb;
Huskies Ranked 8th
NEW YORK JP) Duquesne'i
fast improving and unbeaten bas
ketball team moved into the Top
Ten for the first time this season
in the Associated Press poll as
Kansas held on to its No. 1 rank
ing by narrow margin over Il
linois. Duquesna 11-0, Kansas 11-0,
Illinois 11-0, Iawo 11-0 and St
Bona venture 9-0 are the only ma
jor college teams still able to boast
perfect records. All five are in the
top test as Duquesne jumped from
16th to seventh place.
The law of averages caught up
with previously undefeated Indi
ana ' and Seton Hall during the
week. Indiana was beaten by both
Ohio State and Iowa while Siena
knocked off Seton Hall. Indiana
dropped from 4th place to 14th and
Seton Hall slipped from 9th to 12th.
West Virginia Climbs
West Virginia edged into the first
ten, -advancing from llht to 10th
by beating Pittsburgh and Wake
Forest.
There were some -other shuf
flings and the first ten wound up
like this:
1 Kansas, 2 Illinois, 3 Ken
tucky, 4 Iowa, 5 SL Louis, 6
St. Bonaventure. 7 Duquesne, 8
Washington, 9 Kansas State, 10
West Virginia.
Illinois actually received more
first place votes than Kansas this
week, 23 to 22, but the Kansans
accumulated enough second and
third place votes from the sports
writers and sports casters to nose
out the Illini, 790 to 773. Points
are based on 10 for first, nine for
second, eight for third and so on.
Kentucky still nestled in the No.
S spot with a 11-2 record.
Sports' No. 1
Trend Noted
(Continued from preceding page)
football were the following:
"It is an attempt to settle col
lege football into a more common
sense operation and remove the
stigma of subsidization."
"Unfortunately the trend was
toward one of suspicion, also a
clamor for greater restrictions.
"Moral rot and corruption. Driv
ing of outstanding men from the
coaching field by infantile win-or-else
alumni wolves."
"Outstanding "trend was too
much talk on de-emphasis, not
only by educators but by rank out
siders, who would "cure the mange
by killing the dog.
Speaking of the basketball scan
dals and consequent convictions,
one sports editor declared they
were "better than anything Broad
way ever produced on the stage."
Sheridan Triumphs
SHERIDAN (Special)-Sheridan
climbed into a second place tie in
the Vawama League cage chase
Tuesday night, whipping Yam
hill SS-xf with the help of a 21-
Bint performance by Dale Stuck,
a'ftime favored Sheridan 24-23.
The Sheridan Jayvees won the
prelim 29-10.
TAMHItX. (M)
Thldes ( T
Sprincer (1) T
Wade (T) C
Hermans (IS) O
Reynolds (St G
(94) 8 HE K ID AN
(21) Stuck
(10) Hulett
(6) Brandt
(7) Shaw
(4) Smith
Reserves coring': Barae 2. BurtJUc S.
Sanders X. Halftime score: Sheridan 14.
Yamhill XX Officials: Pe tenon and
Poia.
PI8H THINNED OUT
PORTLAND (tfV Catfish and
yellow perch are being thinned
out at Tenmile Lake on the Ore
gon coast near Coos Bay, the State
Game Commission said Tuesday.
Up to 75 tons of fish will be
caught in nets and sold on fish
markets or ground up and re
turned to the lake as natural fer
tilizer, the commission said.
Table of Coastal Tides
Tides Cor Taft. Ore foil. January.
VtSX tc aUed by U.S Coast and Geo
detic lam;, PorUad. Ore ).
ractflc Standard Time
HIGH WATERS LOW WATERS
Jan. TtaM Ht. Tims Ht.
U M ajn. Sa 9:01 ajn. a
2: mm 0 t-JO pjn. .T
IT M ajn. :M SJn. 1.7
1:H mja. iJS 1:15 pjn. 1.1
IS SO ajn. J) 10:54 ajn. 1J
4:t pjn. 4 10:24 pjn. 1.S
U 5 :M axa. 93 12 00 noon 18
S JS pjn. 4jI 11:02 pjn. 1J
Joe Given Special Cleaijince
Louis Victor in Fight
For Spot in PSA fifleef
SAN DIEGO UPi The Profes
sional Golfers Association Tues
day cleared the way for Joe Louis
to play as in invited amateur in
the San Diego Open Tournament
Thursday.
PGA President Horton Smith
aid that the organization's by
law ban against non-Caucasians
would apply however in the ease
of another Negro, Professional Bill
Spiller.
He said Louis secretary had in
formed bJsa that the former heavy
weight boxing champion would
play vader the conditions an
nounced. Levis thus won the right to play
in the tournament the first Ne
gro ever to do so in a PGA c
spowored event but apparently
failed at least for the present in
his aanovaced effort to gain equal
rights act he links for all Negroes.
Smith explained that Louis en
try was approved as cot of 10
allowed the local sponsors for in
vited amateurs exempt from qual-ifV-j
i
More Teeth Put in Rules
KICM Group Gives Jab
To Gridiron toughness
WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W. Va. (iTVCollege football rule
makers tried to make it clear Tuesday they want unnecessary rough
ness stopped.
The NCAA rules committee reworded the regulation to get across
the idea it wants flagrant viola- i
tions of roughing rules thrown
out of the game.
It also I acted to charge a team
with a time out for sending in a
player just to punt. This is the
only change made in the substi
tution rules which are the basis
of . the two-platoon system.
Under the new wording a play
er may be banned from the game
and -his team penalized IS yards
fpr striking with the forearms,
elbows qr locked hands. Before,
15 yards only was the penalty.
The rules committee also sub
stituted the word "shall" for
"may in making a flagrant vio
lator of : the personal foul rules
subject to disqualification.
Made Mandatory
' "This hnakes it mandatory in
stead of discretionay,,, explained
IfTitB Crisler, chairman of the
committee. 'It also will impress
dn feotS Officials and coaches that
the penalty is meant to be se
vere." The committee left unchanged
the rule; making mandatory the
ejection iof a player who strikes
an opponent with the fist or knee.
The rdlemakers also revised the
sections on clipping and piling on.
The fobner definition of a clip,
hitting at player anywhere on the
back, was restored. Since 1949, it
has been! illegal to block from be
hind only from the waste down.
Piling ion was made Illegal as
soon as the ball becomes dead.
The penalty for illegal defens
ive holding also will be more
severe, 15 yards instead of 3.
This is! aimed particularly at
holding eligible pass receivers be
cause some teams were willing to
gamble a 5-yard penalty against
a long completed pass," reported
Tad Wieman, committee secretary.
Look and Learn
fey A. C Gardoa
1. What South American coun
try is named for its geographical
location?!
2. What actor and actress won
the 1951 (Motion Picture Academy
Awards?!
3. What is a febrile disease?
4. Whit is considered the
world's most famous "ruins''
5. What famous author is gen
erally conceded to have been the
originator of the historical novel?
j ANSWERS
1. Ecuador, because of Its loca
tion on the Equator.
2. Josej Ferrer and Judy Holli
day. j
3. One- that Is accompanied, by
fever. I
4. The Colosseum, in Rome.
3. Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832).
He declared the PGA by-law
and other quaifi cation rules could
not be waived in the case of Spil
ler except through changes in the
PGA constitution.
"I am ! simply applying the
rules," h said.
Smith, who Louis had called
"another t Hitler" for sticking to
the PGA i rules in the controversy,
said he bore no ill feeling against
the former ring champion. :
. He predicted that the PGA at
its next annual meeting: would con
sider the !non-Caucasion rule with
a view tojits modification or elimi
nation. J :
The present rumpus started
when Louis and Spiller and an
other Lds Angeles professional
Eural Clark, arrived here Sunday
and were told by the local com
mittee that a non-white clause in
the PGA contract would bar them.
Louis opened the challenging
fight by declaring his aim was to
bring thejmattex into the open and
at least put a wedga into the PGA
SMQ-Negroxula.
Wolves Foe
A v
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Aiasaaaaaa,
t - X v Z J
I
MONMOUTH Fred Pearson,
above, la bat one of the namer-
v s barnstorm tnr basketball
stars who will appear here Wed
nesday night ia the game be
tween the OCE Wolves and the
Kansas City Stars in the OCE
Gym.
Kircher Takes
Cougar Berth
(Continued from preceding page)
Evashevski befor making up his
mind.
The loss of Kircher and Stave
ly from Evashevski's football
troupe prompted reports that be
is seeking Oregon State Assist
ants Chalmers Elliott and Leonard
Y ounce to help him at Iowa. The
Oregon Journal said it learned
from an unnamed Pullman source
that Evashevski is also after Pete
Elliott, Bump's brother, who is
now an assistant at Oklahoma.
The Elliotts were backfield stars
at Michigan, Evashevski's alma
mater.
WSC won 7, lost 3 last year,
their best record in 20 years. The
Cougars are regarded by some as
Rose Bowl contenders in 1952.
Evashevski has said Kircher de
serves "50 per cent of the credit
for last year's showing.
Kircher came here with Eva
shevski from Michigan State
where they were both assistants
to Clarence Munn. After Evy an
nounced his resignation Jan. 8 to
go to Iowa, Kircher received more
than; 200 letters and telegrams
from alumni asking him to stay.
He was a great three-sport star
in his college days at MSC and
was head basketball coach at State
before coming West.
Badminton Champions
Slate Title Defenses
SEATTLE (AH7oseph Alston of
Minneapolis and Ethel Marshall of
Buffalo will defend their national
badminton championships here
Match 27-29, Richard O. Yeager
said Tuesday.
The two are men's and women's
singles champions, respectively.
Yeager, local chairman for the
U.S.' amateur tourney, said the
doubles titlists also would be on
hand. They are Alston and Wyrm
Rogers of Arcadia, Calif , who bold
the men's crown, and Dorothy
Harm and Loma Smith, Arcadia,
women's doubles champs. . .. ;
Wolves Slate
Negro Quintet
At Monmouth
OREGON COLLEGE OF EDU
CATION -(Special)- One of the
top treats of the basketball season
will be offered here Wednesday
night when the OCE Wolves play
the barnstorming Kansas City
Stars, a colored team now making
a jaunt through the Northwest
with the Harlem Globetrotters.
Game time will be 8 p.m.
The Stars actually amount to a
"farm" club for the Globetrotters
and the team is made up of many
talented players who will perform
for the Trotter Varsity in the fu
ture. Last season the Stars rang
up a 136-won, 8-lost record.
Not unlike the Globetrotters, the
Stars are a highly-entertaining
team as well as one steeped in
strength. The capable one-armed
sensation. Bob Buie, is one of the
Stars players. Others include John
Scott. Oris Hill, Fred Pearson,
Ervell Perry, Henry Singleton,
Tom Smith, Sherman Hawkins and
Tom Gipson, all with remarkable
backgrounds, in the cage sport.
The Stars will perform various
and always-pleasing court antics
along with their appearance here.
Coach Bob Livingston of the
Wolves plans to shoot his regular
starting lineup at the visitors. This
will include Hal Pitcher, Howie
Sullivan or Chuck Pinion as for
wards, Frank Rosenstock at cen
ter and Bob Bushnell and Whitey
Palmquist at guards.
Sutphin, Owl
Star, Dropped
KLAMATH FALLS (iiP) Don
Sutphin, second high scorer in the
Oregon Collegiate Conference last
year and this, was dismissed from
the Oregon Tech basketball squad
Tuesday.
He quit school soon after Coach
Art Kirkland dropped him from
the squad. He was reported headed
for Vanport College, another mem
ber of the conference.
Kirkland gave no reason for the
dismissal of the Myrtle Point play
er except to say "it was for the
good of the team and the school.'
Sutphin, top scorer for the Ore
gon Tech team, was suspended
by Kirkland before the game
against Oregon College of Educa
tion at Monmouth Saturday night.
His dismissal from the squad here
followed.
The answers to everyday
tasaraaea problems
By Sid Bciss
QUESTION: Oar next door
neighbor loaned his ear to a
relative who got involved in a
slight accident and then panell
ed the ether driver in the nose.
I jast wondered If oar neigh
bor's Personal Injury aoUey
woald e4er bim If the other
driver sued.
ANSWER: Ordinarily the poli
cy woald protect year friend
ao long as he luaaaelf was aot
lnvalved ta the fracas.
M yoau aaareaa y
taaaranee questions to this of
fice, well try te give ye the
correct aawwers and there will
be sto charge er obligation f
373 N. Charch
3-9119
Geaeral of
Co.s
BLONDIE
wcw.as police oj6100iah
volTre in posttonto
(MAKE US BOTH OCHCH3U6
BUT SOU VE LOST MXIR
NBDVE.
DICK TRACT
LITTLE ANNIE BOONE1
BUZZ SAWTEB
MICKEY MOUSZ
RIP KZBBT
I
There it goes again,
Nina! You've given me
tv ruriripr - YvArirm.
GASOONE AJLLE1
BASNET GOOGLE
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YE GOT HERE, J-Hw' f ! DOCII
USTEN. SPINNER. DON'T
VvOPDV ABOUT ME. I'VE
COT GLTTS NOU KNOW
TUAT. WUA-TS ON MDUP
MIND?
SURE - THE EOITO KNOWS
EVERYONE IN TOWN WILL
B GLAD TO SEE YOU
WERE -AND WlSW,
XJTM TOP OP
THE MOQK1IN
si
WeH . itt aS riant. I'm
-aaassjsBsssaaak. m
ReaHy,
the man and
have the best
YE WAIT !
iVE BEEN THINKING A0OUT
THE GRAND VOUPE
MOLXNCj IN CUSTOOV
FQOM -rvUST BOSTON
in "
THAT BRAZEN -FACED LITTLE OQPWANS
PlCTUSE IS BACK ON TMG Ff?ONT
AG AIM ! I GET FURIOUS EVERY
TIME I SEE
,HC FACE-
Oh, you should
I should
Mr. importartri
of
SAKE3
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rrm awvsi
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(MUZ soaaethinX
I COULD
WEVE BOTH BEEKl
THINKING ABOUT
TUAT. SPINNEPJ
?now?
AND. Lr5TTN IVE
DECIDED WET
CONG TO DIVIDE :
RAGE"
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fv town- ANtmeonG
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I qet a break. From now oti
Vweigh every SnQlbCTT
OrLLAWSY 1 I WflfT uL TH IxcTLe.
!! NViir? S'rCr
THAU U.uTtU. W I twa
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