Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 22, 1953)
Linfield Star Goes for Two-Pointer n 1 Cr3 . ..... u ft ft ft ft ft. ft ft' t 3 - I J 6(BWQ Hoy Connects UWRacIfsMh ri: l . . Tall Ted McKee, 6-5 Linfield Wildcats scoring- ace eat around Willamette's Pet Reed (hand outstretch cd) for a basket In this bit of action last night at Willamette in the Northwest Conference clash. But it did Linfield little coed, as the Bearcats grabbed the Important win. Looking on In the background is Linfield's Ad Rutschmann. .: v.v: ' ttogeiroe ;nne itiix Decided 55-53 EUGENE (Special) Salem High's Vikings saw their Big Six League title hopes virtually blast ed Saturday night as the Eugene Axemen posted a 55-53 victory in a hotly contested and thrilling overtime contest at McArthur Court- .." . The count was knotted 48-48 at the end of regular playing time, with Forward Bill Johnson knot ting it up for the Viks in the dy :... umnHi A ftfr the buzzer end- ing regular -time. Eugene Forwardl vene oujii nau iw that might have ended it right there, but he missed both. In the overtime Stott, Bob Wil Intiirhv and Don Moran hit the points that gave Hank Kuchera's Axemen the margin tney neeaea Vlks Go Ahead Eucrene rolled to a 12-10 first nuarter lead, but Harold Hauks Viks went ahead 21-20 at the half and held on for a 35-32 margin a th third neriod finished Then the Axemen, led by Wll- loughby, who totalled 22 points for the night, zoomed ahead In the final period only to have John son knot it up at the end of reg ular time. Johnson and Guard Jim Knapp each hit 13 points to pace Salem and Center Jack Bishop had 11. Bishop exited on fouls late In the third period to nun me vm cause and Johnson went out the same war Just after hitting his eame-tieinff . bucket. In the prelim the Eugene JVs topped the Salem Sophs Sales Sepbs 3S) Whltmire (1) F- BurkUnd 110) i.. F Wulf ( C. Scheldel (8) nhvna I SI G f Euzene JVs S Ruberg .. (II) lACKtT ( Lindsey (4) Anaerson (3 King Reserves scoring: Sophs - Zeh X. T jih-r- a? Zufcnc Hushes X. Hickm 3. Hill 6. Meyers S. Halftime: Eugene 28. Salem 18. Salsm (53) (55) Kugene ig rt pt tp fgttpf tp 8 6 8 9 Pickens .f 1 1 rohnsonj 6 1 Bishops S 1 aPP4t 7 7obb4f 3 ie4 13 .tler 11 8 S 8 13 AingeJE Stott.f 11 S3 811 313 Willoby 6 IO 3 33 1 6 3 T Rasor. M. 0 7!Henkel 3 4 3 8 9 6 1 11 2 4 4 aiTutUeJ -3 SIMoran ' : IRoblnsn .1 8 2 Totals 19 IS 2S 53 .Totals 14 3734 SS tr'tm 10 31 35 48 53 , & gene , -, , , .' 12 20 32 48 55 Free throws missed: Salem 23, Eu j team 12. f SB A Trounced i ByGincordia PORTLAND ; (Special) The Salem Academy Crusaders trailed all the way Saturday night as they dropped a 76-44 decision to Con cordia In a non-league scrap. Ron Ehlers tossed in 31 points to lead the winners , and teammate Don Dietz helped with 25 markers. Concordia led at the stops 18-8, 45-15 and 66-28. Don Wyant with 13 and Kenton Thielen with 12 paced the Salem crew. The Academy Bees won the prelim 42-38. SaL Aeades fg Pfaui 1 ShrederJ! 1 Tiipvintx: 1 MJdnrt 1 V.Fdnrt4t 8 Thielen 4 "Wyant 3 Gunthr , 0 SaL Acad -. Coacordia . (74) Coacordia. fg ft pf tp ft pf tp 1 8 31 Dietz J 12 1 325 1 SLindmrkJ 1 4 5 Ehlers,c 12 4 2!KriefaU,g 1 2 7iKebmn 0 112Shramm, 1 013iTrouunn 1 0 0i Vesper, 1 IBrandt.g 3 6 15 . 18 43 0 3 3 31 2 3 8 1 0 3 1 3 1 2 8 6 3 44 66 ,76 MOTORCYCLE MEET SET The Salem Motorcycle Club will hold a Field Meet and picnic Sun day at- Ocean Lake, it has been announced by Dave Scott. Riders will leave Salem at 9:30 and will meet at Ocean Lake at 11 ajn. All cyclists are invited to. partici pate. , . Joflfts Woks9 rflpes COLLEGE ' Willamette TT. Linfield TS " Washington B, Oregon 7S Wash. St. 64. Ore. St. 60 OCE 88. EOCE 68 Lewis 8c Clark g9. Whitman ft Pacific M. Coll. Idaho S3 Portland T7. Gonzaga 73 Calif. 71. South. Calif. 44 UCLA M. Stanford 88 Seton Hall 52. Loyola 40 Denver 60. Mont. 62 Rice 76. TCU M Iowa 67, Illinois jgm st.moujhojn. Mich. St. 68. Purdue 87 Wisconsin 74. Michigan U Fordham 78. NYtJ 63 Princeton 76. Yale 59 Georgia 75. Miss. St. 61 Indiana St. Ohio St. 67 Series Squared MONMOUTH (Special) Bob their Oregon Collegiate Conference Mountaineers Saturday night with Toiirney Soon In District 8 DALLAS (Special) Tho Dis trict 8-A - basketball tournament gets under way next Friday and Saturday at the McMinnville Ar mory with the following pairings: Friday night, McMinnville , va. Sheridan and Salem Academy vs. Dayton. Saturday night, Dallas vs. Central Union and -Willamina vs. Newberg. . Winners will advance to the semi-finals and finals March 6-7 in the single elimination playoffs. Dallas is the Willamette valley League champion, Willamina, Dayton and Sheridan finished as the powers of the Ytwami League, McMinville and Newberg were . second divisioners In' the TYV : League i and - both Salem Academy and Central Union had rather dismal seasons. - Winner of the McMinnville tourney qualifies for the state tournament at Eugene. Seattle to Host Ninety Skaters SEATTLE UP) Ninety skaters from four states will compete here Feb. 26-28 in the Pacific Coast Figure Skating Championships, winners qualifying for' the nation als next month in Hershey, Pa. Victors in the California cham pionships this week will come di nn7 n won V. Then Call, ' ' - LESTER DoLAP? .. V02 1112 DUST'fn J-IOVtllGt f 1115 tl Commercial St. rhena 2-1730, 3-?54 . , "(Asnts For lyon) a t. ft i scorns- Tenn. 76, Alabama 67 Holy Cross 84. Brown OS Kansas St. 81. Colo. 86 Drake 76. Detroit 66 Dartmouth 65. Penn 68 Idaho St. 90. Mont. St. 84 BYU 73. Utah SO Notre Dame 83. Northwest. 9T Cornell 76, Columbia 74 HIGH SCHOOL Eugene 53, Salem 83 (Over.) Eugene JVs 47. Salem Sophs 88 Concordia 76, Salem Acad. 44 PrineviUe 64. Burns 66 ConraUls 60, Bend 41 Lebanon 89, Toledo 42 The Dalles 86, ' Wy-East 84 TUlamook 58. Cent Cath. 84 Pendleton 61, Hood River 48 -Welser (Ida.) 47. Baker 46 . . , Livingston's OCE Wolves squared hoop series with the leading EOCE an 86-68 win. The outcome tight- EOCE now has a 7-3 circuit rec- ord. The Wolves lumped off to 21-15 first quarter lead over the visitors and never were headed. It was 45-33 for OCE at the half and - 64-48 at the finish of th third period, n ' VH; ; 'sj : ; . Forward Frank Grove and Cen-' ter Bobby Fr&ntz were the ' big guns for the wolves with 25 and 22 points respectively. Larry Pryse led OCE Wltft 18. In the prelim the . OCE Frosh topped the Woodburn .All-Stars 62-51. OCX (86) fgftpftp (68) SOCK fgftpftp Kofford 13 3 4 Prysejt 8 S 418 Adrian.c 6 S 315 Wstnsko I I 211 Poyser s S 8 2 S Lowti o .l 1 suinvan,x a hi Grovel K 3 St5 Prantx 19 S 222! Pinion. 2 0 2 4 Bushnelg 4 6 214 MillerJ- 0 t-t 1 M KcnzlJ O O 9 0trox.e 3 1 3 5 LewlM 0 ;1' O 1 Paimqstg 2 11,5 savage II 1 3 Burdn.g 2 116 Keveren 0 9 9 0 Totals 84 18 14 84 EOCE i. Totals 28122068 , 15 33 . 48 68 OCK 21 45 64 86 Free throws missed: EOCE 11.; OCX i. umciais: sinuo ana axia. rect to Seattle for the coast finals. Other entrants will be here from Oregon, Montana and Washington. The first two days will be given over largely to 'skating "of school figures and events for the juniors. Dance fials. fre skaig . and the pairs and - fours competition will wind up the program Feb. 28. Timothy Brown 1 Glendora.1 Calif... will be the only national cnampion in action. The 14 year old Caiifomian : holds the men s novice title. - , ..;,,.:; ; Vith Winner WtT Only Half Game Out of First' Place NORTHWEST CONTEXZNCX w t. rot W LPet. L-Clark 4 JR67 Whitman : T . .538 Willamette 8 .615 Pacific - T .538 C-Idaho T .462 Unfjeld S 11 J14 Saturday results: At Willametto 77, Linfield 78V At Lewis At Clark 88, Whitman 99. At Pacific 94. College of loano 83. By AL LIGHTNER " Statesman Sport Editor - Willamette's Bearcats cut loose a dazzling display of hustle and determination in the late stages of their Northwest Conference bas ketball dash with Linfield in the WU Gym last night, and coupled with a needle-threading shot- by Red-headed Dick Hoy . with only seconds left ' to play made the combination pay-off with a 77 to 76 victory over the Wildcats. - The WU's needed the victory, badly. A loss could nave been dis astrous to their hope for a fifth straight conference championship, for the circuit leading Lewis it Clark Pioneers also won last night over Whitman. As things now stand the Pioneers lead the Bearcats by half a game, and Willamette plays Lewis St Clark next weekend in two' final games. Meanwhile . the Pioneers have a Monday night clash with capable College of Idaho. It's been a long time since WU Gym patrons have seen an end ing to a game such as the one of last night. And it's apt to be twice as long before they'll again see another its equal. Linfield decided to stall things out with, almost six minutes .left to play with a six-point lead. Johnny Lewis ordered his cagers to apply the press, and for the next six minutes the tempo of the battle grew with practically every second. With 3:15 left Willamette was but two' points behind at 73-71, Forward Dick Mase having made good with a shot from the 'side. Mase broke through the Linfield tall with 220 left, swiped the ball and threw in a lay-up to tie the score, but Ad Rutschmann, the Linfield football whiz, follow ed up with a free throw and then a lay-up of his own to push the Wildcats three points ahead. Again Mase and Lefty Duane Shield, the lads who provided the park for the comeback, worked a steal off the Linfield stall and Mase made good with a one-hand- er from the side to .cut it to one point. Linfield had possession of the ball with less than a minute to go, but rather than freeze it out Rutschmann had a chance to go Tor a cripple. How he missed the easy shot perhaps kept him and Coach Roy Helser awake all night, but miss it he did, and Willamette cleared the rebound. By this time the 1,500 customers were on their feet making like crazy, The Bearcats swept down the floor, flipped the sphere to Hoy and he promptly . popped it in with only scant seconds left to play. Linfield had a couple of shots before the final gun, but missea do in. Willamette started out strong despite a Linfield zone defense and had a 17-8 lead before the Wildcats, on some - spectacular shooting by. little Al Tarpenning, began to close in. WU led 24-21 at the quarter. Tarpenning, Ted McKee, Dave Sanford and Carol Cable turned loose a second period scoring bar rage, mostly on fast breaks through the loose WU defense, and Linfield surged ahead at 30-28 to go to a 43-37 halftime bulge. The Wildcats' big trio of McKee. Sanford and Cable were sdomming most of the rebounds. Linfield kept ' right on rolling in the third period and ran up a 17-point lead at 61-44 midway through the stanza. At this point the Bearcats suddenly exploded, and with Hoy, Mase and : Shield taking turns bombing the enemy basket' WU closed the margin to eight points, 60-68, at the end of the third period. Cable helped con siderHi Hy-;fouJInjt out third frame. 1 Then wuca McKee was whistled AS LOW AS MOT . Aero-lork 2-Door Seoit, Lkt Price f. 0. 8. Toledo, Ohio, pivs Federal Taxes, State and Local Taxes, If any. Freight, Delivery and hancMiae Otars Optional Equi patent, LkItsw Ehzz? IZcIcr Go. S52 17. tngh CL 50 18 Th Statesman, Saltan, Ortw Suiadqy, Februgry 22, 1353 DiBicisi Released ; iSailesJ by Sttipper Cub y . Salem Senators General Manager Hugh Luby announced Satur day that he had mailed out 10 player contracts for the. 1953 season, released Pitcher Vince DiBiasi outright, repaired the grandstand screen at Waters Field and was official Western International, League schedule Tuesday morning and the. start of the Senators' spring camp at Callstoga, Calif., Monday,' March 30. Contracts were mailed to Pitch ers Jack Hemphill at Berkeley, CaL, Bob Collins at San Francisco, Bud Francis at Oakland and Wayne Rick at MaUn: Catcher Art Thrasher at Santa Ana, ' CaL, Shortstop Gene Tanselli at Klam ath Falls, Outfielders Bill White and Bill Spaeter at Los Angeles, Outfielder Lester Witherspoon at Deland, Fla and Outfielder Con nie Perez at Matanzas, Cuba. DiBiasi, who Joined the Sena- tors last season following his re lease by tho Portland Beavers, was released by previous agree ment with the veteran flinger. - Now signed by the Salems are Luby himself. Pitcher Bill Bevens who was secured from San Fran cisco in a trade for Ray McNulty, and Rookies Bill Nelson and Lou Scrivens, both of Salem. Catcher Bob Nelson has .been sold, conditionally, to Sacramento First-baseman Dick Bartle has been sold to Edmonton and Pitch er Ted Edmunds to Little Rock. Luby and Groundskeeper Ben Ford will continue to improve the stands and playing area at Waters Field during the next few weeks. out early In the fourth period the Bearcats really dug in. Hoy, Mase and Shield all hit with baskets to cut away the visitors' lead. Then came the last hectic, thriii-iiiiea moments which were climaxed by Hoy's game winner. Hoy had a tremendous night. hitting 27 points. Shield s had 16 and Mase 15. Tarpenning finished with 19 points, 16 of them in the first half. McKee played only about 20 minutes in all but hit 17 markers. His loss via the foul route, as well as the departure of Cable and Tarpenning were major losses for Roy Helser's Wildcats. The game was a 56-fouler, 30 of 'em against Linfield. It wag played In pell-mell fashion throughout and at times was decidedly rough and ragged. i In the prelim Jerry Frer si WU Frosh, stopped the Linfield Frosh Unfleld Froth (ft) Ingram (4) T. (14) WU Froth (11) Pitgerald (11) Gustsfson (10) Patterson (6) Malcobn Rear (3) F- Gauthler IS) Lyle 16) Diner (3) ..G S) Patton Reserves scoring: Linfield Ruark. Rowerton 7, Lum 6, Blum 4. Shaw 3: WU Butler 2. Bradtl 8, Ray 2. Klepp. Chanda 2. Kangas 2. MiUer 3. Rudzlk 5, Harding Jassman 3, Muns X Of ficials: Smith and Oyer. . - j - Unfleld (76) " 'i (77) Wulaaaette fgftpftp - -faftpfto Cable J 6 3 6 131 Mase J . . 6 2.218 Schiewe 1 9 4 21 Hoy.f . 811 827 Sanford .c 3 8 311 Reed, 4 1 3 8 Scriven4 14 3 8 Shield. 7 3 416 Gray 9 9 8 0 ColvarLf 9 19 M'Alistr 1 2 4 4 Trpninc 8 7 8-1SI Krueger o l 4 l 01on.c , 9 19 1 McKeef 7 3 i 17 RtchnuLg 4 4 412 Henslee O 6 3 9 Totals SS 14 SOTS ' Tnbb wnan Linfield 21 22 15' 8 76 Willamette 24 13 23 17 77 Officials: Yerkovich and Wbhlers. Bowling Meet Opens CHICAGO W 'T The record- gress Golden Jubilee Tournament shattering American Bowling Con gress- uoiden Jubille Tournament opened a. 83-day stand Saturday with 40 booster teams, averaging iFS lias to mai abot mumi Yes . . . right now .V. tie. VV. W. ROSENBRAUGH COM PANY sucgests you check thoM oil and water storage tanks. Time and cast may hare damaged your present tank. Or, if yours Is still the) wooden-type, ifa time for a chxmgo to modern metal-fabricated tanks as made by XT. W. ROSEBRAUGH COMPANY. Salem's pioneer In the industry sine 1912. Whatever your need In the way of a tank : be it lor storage) for a truck . . or lor ; whatever purpose you may need, a long-lasting tank . . talk to W. W. ROSEBRAUGH COMPAirr. Past xnasten at the) art of metal-working w!3 assure your getting the finest craftsmanship. And, as always, . if It Is a metal product mads by 7. VI. ROSEBRAUGH COMPANY you are) sure you are getling the most value and quality for a reasonable' cosL Tomorrow . why not talk over your task needs? -.- ' : " . "tncs 1312 . Metal Products That Last" CC3 3. 17th Street . Telephone 3-7CC3 at Otvii Request looking forward to. the release, of the ToHead Cards 'V, ST. LOUIS Angus t A. Bosch -. (above), president of Anheoser- ; Bosch, Ine huge brewer con' 1 eern, will be the new chief of ' the St. Louis Cardinals follow i lng aale of the elnb to the brewery firm by Fred Salgn. (AP Wirepheto to The States- man). Larsen Gains Tennis Semis NEW YORK UP) Crafty Art Larsen of San Leandro, Calif., and killer Kurt Nielsen of Denmark, the top-seeded favorites, followed the script Saturday by stroking their way into the semifinal round of ' . the National Indoor Tennis Championships. The left-handed Larsen, No. 1 In the domestic seedings, gave Dick Sorlien of Philadelphia, a lesson In court generalship as he prevailed at the Seventh Regiment Armory, 6-1, 6-0, 6-1. Nielsen, the Danish and Scandin avian champion who heads the for eign list, was less subtle. He blasted Noel Brown, the former pro from Santa Monica, Calif., out of the way. 6-3, 6-4. 6-4. The Dane's big game was never more awe some. " , Sunday Larsen will oppose Grant Golden of Wilmette, HI., and Niel sen will throw his powerful service and net attack against the veteran Bill Talbert of New York winner of this event in 1948 and 1951. The final is scheduled Monday after noon. . . Salem Girls ; 10 tK Z In AAU Tourney ' SEATTLE UK The Multnomah Athletic Club of Portland . won team honors here Saturday in the 1943 Northwest AAU invitational swimming championships for girls. Eleven teams competed In the meet held at th Washington Ath letic Club pooL The YMCA team from Salem, Ore., placed 10th with six points. 850 pins and less, making the first start. Wm as VWeet Topped Bv JACK nEWTNS ' -t SEATTTLE UB : Hard put for half a game, Washington's already crowned champions ran wild in the final quarter to crush Oregon Sat urday night. 86-72 in a - Northern Division Pacific ; Coast Conference basketball game. V . S. .'. : Forv the second straight night, Oregon put a tight clamp on Wash ington s Bob Houbregs. one of the nation's leading scorers. . holding him to 15 points. And for the second straight .night, lanky Chester Noe 64-50 Setback esOSC PULLMAN, Wash, m The Washington State Cougars dumped Oregon State 64-50 Saturday night In their lively last-minute drive to move out of the Northern Division basketball cellar. It was the Cougars third win over the Beavers against one loss in their four-game series. The Beavers found the basket hard to hit Saturday night and sorely missed the services of their ace scorer Tony Vlastelica, who went out of the game Friday night with a back injury and stayed out Saturday night. The Cougars broke Into s fast lead that kept the Oregonlans pant ing all during the first half. They scored on 44 per cent of their tries from the field as they rolled to a 30-21 first quarter edge and moved out still farther. 41-33 at halftime. MoLuns Sparks - I Pete MuUins, big Cougar cap tain, whipped in 10 first .quarter points and sophomore Guard Ron Bennlnk added six points, on set shots. : - OSC, which managed only 19.3 per cent of its tries from the floor during the first half, speeded up its pace in the second, but still was outscored by WSC. J Ron Robins led the Beaver at tack with his two-handed set shots, scoring on almost one out of every two tries. He was OSCs high scor er with 19 points. 4 To move out of the - Northern Division cellar, the Cougars must clear one more hurdle, a game next week with Idaho. And they must have the help of the Beavers in their last two games with second-place Oregon. Oregon State 64) Wsssu State xa-rt Tf tn ff ftpf tp Whltmn.f 0 8 1 31 Mnlllm 1 8 Sl Edwrdsf 4 410iSwansonJ 8 2 SIS 1 11 8 9 Romnof.c 9 1 OIRehder.e 4 4!Bennink,f 1 ItllfWfe 8 9 4 9 5 1 1 1 9 9 Toole.g S Robins .g 6 Halllean.f O 1 OlUndrwd. Sugrue.e S Jsrboe.f 8 PstselLg 9 Johnstn.g 0 8 Myronx McCants.e Roberts.e 1 9 S 1 4 9 9 9 tiarton.g 1 9 1 S smrtcug i 41 Morgan. .0898 Totals 17 16 20 60 Totals 24 16 19 64 Oregon State 21 12 10 7 90 Wash. State . 80 11 12 11 64 Free throws missed: Orearon State Whlteman t. Edwards S. Sugrue S. Toole 4. Jarhoe X. Robins S. Johnson 2. Shirtcliff. Washington SUte MuUins 3, swanson s. Mccanu. senninic 3. Kiock The Brooklyn Dodgers scored the most runs (775) in the Na tional League last year but also had the most men left on base (1154), which Is an average of more than seven s game. (you can't miss . . $mooth'fittingf perfectly-tailored Toppl Into Basement Arrow "VOka. Shirts! I Arrow Par 53.95 A style leader! PAR has a smart, soft, widespread col lar '. that looks handsome '. . '.' feels wonderfully com fortable.; Especially' good-, looking with Windsor-knot ties. Tailored of fine "San forized" broadcloth. French ; cuffs. Ask us" for Arrow PAR tomorrow. - , The Arrow Store 121 North 86-72 put on a great- show for the WeK foots, leading all scorers with IJ points and personally conducting the anU-Houbregs campaign, f But for the second straight night, neither effort was enough as Wash, ington romped to its 14th straight division, triumph, its 21st In a roH on the home floor and its 21th In 1J starts this season. Oregon goaway in front on a hook shot by Noe and from there te the halftime recess, the lead changed hands seven times and the count knotted the same num. ber. But Washington moved ahead in the final minute before the mld way gun and was leading 42-2 J when it sounded. The title-wearing Huskies, who have vowed to be the first team t go through the 16-game division war without defeat, remembered their pledge in the second half and never let Oregon get closer than three points. That was late In the third stanza when substitute Bob Hawes canned the third of three long one-handers to pull Oregon up to a 53-50 situation. A ten-point rampage at the start of the fourth quarter, when Hou bregs finally found- the range, boosted the Washington margin to 66-52 and Oregon was out of the picture. The Webfoots lost their two starting ori 1 a rrl nn frails. Tnrw ney Holland going out at the start of the fourth quarter and Ken Wag ner with four minutes left Oregon OO 84) Washington. Pftp s u: 211! 2 23 8 8 8 4 8 81 tm rt pt t Halberr S 4 Farnam 8 1 Noe.c 618 iw ctcnn.r i MClary 10 Houbrgs.s 4 ail 8 21 811 Holland. 8 1 Koon.g 4 Wegner,g 1 Stouts 1 Cipriano4( 4 11 farson.r 8 9- I Bonemn.f 9 9 Of 2 8i 1 0, 1 01 ElUott.g Ward. HaUed Hawes.g 8 Covers ' 9 Pagcg ': 6 Totals 24 24 24 72 Totals 283022 84 Oregon 18 20 12 22 7i Wsshlnglon 22 20 12 31 M Free throws missed: Halberg. Far nam. Noe 2. Bonneman 2. Wegner 8. ' Hawes. McClary, Houbregs X Par sons. Cipriano. Shots attempted: Oregon 70, Waiav Ington 79. - - . Hood Jumping Tourney Today GOVERNMENT CAMP W) Four Norwegians and Billy Olson, runnerup in the national jumping championshios earH- 1s -t Steamboat Springs, Colo - are ex pected to lead the f ieiu . ..- day in the Cascade Ski : Club s Jumping meet at nearby Multor- por. The -Norwegians include liana Biorstad. a former world cham pion from Tronheim, Norway, now a student at Wenatchee Junior College; Arne Hoel of Oslo. Nor. way. who nosed out Blornstad at the Leavenworth jumping meet last month; Anders Woldseth of the University of Portland, two time winner of Norway's top Jump, ing event, the Holmenkollen; and Svein Huse, of Washington State College, defending Pacific North west Ski Association champion. Central U-Drlvo Truck Servicer Corner 12th and State Vans, 8Ukes. P.O. FOR RENT Pheae 2-fOCJ ARROW SHIRTS Features when you wear YOU WILL FIND YOU3 FA VORITE ARROWSHIRT STYLE IN YOUR SIZE AT OUX STORE. i Yes ... we have a complete stock of Arrow Shirts, Ties, Sport Shirts, Underwear and Handkerchiefs. ' IHsh St. m. " 1 ' : d V. 1 - v 'X if iff r 1 I M s-