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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 4, 1954)
f - , , is ! ' - ; ' i r ' . ; J I " 1 ' ! - ,; - i . ' - " : . .-;:;. -v ' Their irctery Season a; Success in 2953 s 7 no i NCA A Plans to PutWeivSTeeth' in Regulations .These members of the Salem Jabberwalkles Archery Club were; among those who. bagged deer with k HnHnr th lass season, and because of it deemed the campaign a whopping suc cess. Front l(l-r) Andyi Foster, Archie Bronson,! Ronald) Lee, Verne Springer, Chock Anglin and iwit Johnson. Back (1-rL Gene Hoxsev. Bill Hunt Wayne poughton, Clair Alderson, Skeeter , Balrd. Bad prnsiss. Other club members Bob Norton, Ike Epperly, Steven Dawson, Cecil Newber ry, Allen Campbell, Hugh Staley, Gil Mather ana BiU uammona aiso oaggea aeer via arcnery. , goivmen's Hunting Treks Successful 'I The Jabberyalkie Field Arch ers of Salem jenjoyed a success ful hunting season in 1953, a fi nal anaylsis reveals. About one fourth of the ihembersiiip bagged leer during the season. ; Members bringing down! deer with bow and farrow were Lewis Johnson, Bill iunt, Steven Daw son, Verne Springer, Clair Aider son, Ike Epperly, Cecil Newberry, Allen Campbell, Archie Bronson, Hugh Staley, Skeeter Baird, Bud Prusiss, Gilbert Mather, Wayne Doughton, Bob Norton; Chuck Anglin, Ronald Lee, Andy Foster, Bill Hammond and Gene Hpx sey. The latter also bagged! a bobcat ! . Oregon arehers had seven hunt ing areas during the 1953 season; The Hart Mountain, I Canyon Creek and Mt Emily areas n Eastern Oregon, and the Tilla mook Burn, Cow Creek, White River and McDonald Forest areas nBaDEnim9 Mnmi! With Jerry Stone i - ' Oklahoma; knocks off No. 1 Maryland in the Orange Bowl and immediately Notre Dame ! adherents cry that this development clinches the No. 1 argument for the Irish and at the same time the Okies themselves shout, "How about us! Didn't we beat what was supposed to be the kingpin!' E i ( . , . And so the battle of words continues long after the final ' tackle has been made. The idea ,of a nation-wide f.?. NCAA grid playoff amng the i. top college elevens ala basket : . .j f.ii, v.. ft 5' OJ ViUlUUS iUU BUUUIJT lUUk UUl p- it has had no more chance for consideration khan a snowball in a melting poti. . . Th "fathers' would have some i wuuv4 t"Wiri- sigatuA auvu playoff such as: Keeping the boys away from their books; rais- 3 Mtr'Jisi in Western Oregon were- availa ble to archers. Although the hunters were per mitted to kill either buck or doe, 13 kills were bucks, and only 6 were does. The deer were hit at distances ranging from 10 feet to 120 yards. The majority dropped when hit, but some were known to travel as far as 400 yards after ward. The successful hunters used composite bows with from 48 to 65-pound pulls. Nine deer were killed in the Hart Mountain area, seven in McDonald Forest and three in Tillamook Murn. Pins are to be awarded the successful hunters by the Jabber walkies Club. Other outstanding accomplish ments by club members during the year included the winning of the Oregon State Free Style Broadhead Trophy by Ike Epper ly during the tournament at Med- i "S ford in July. Epperly made more hits on 100 animal targets at dis tances from five feet to 90 yards than any other competing archer. Also, Marge Anglin won top hon ors in the Interstate Tourney here in August, taking the Women's Freestyle championship. i By HUGH FULLERTON Jr. 5 CINCINNATI The .National Collegiate Athletic Assn., which nearly fell apart a few years ago because of an effort to put "teeth into its regulations, will try to sprout a few new incisors this week. ''".)"' - The big ! collegiate organization. numbering some 400 colleges and universities, will consider several important bits of legislation at its 48th annual convention this week. And several of them are de signed to give more power to the national group, rather than the individual conferences and institu tions which compose the NCAA membership. i Even before the opening of the convention; which gets under way Wednesday following meetings of several allied organizations, the NCAA has been on the receiving end of one blast from pe Pacific Coast Conference. . j T Jlhe West Coast colleges, pick ing out one proposed constitutional amendment which would set up a nationwide .standard of eligibil ity; for athletes, announced its op position on the: grounds this would H77 J Til west nay JACK HURLEY Talking Again ing" eain Tritht the New Year's bowls and just generally swinging the tide back-to overt emphasis on the grid sport. ... ! But for the obsessed! football fan, for the practical-minded cuss Who likes to fee a clean-cut solution to all things, how satisfying such a playoff . . . But then if there were a genuine national champ, what "would guys have to argue about? ... I if. ; Silence Ends on thp Hurley Front We made, mention the other day about the curious lack of noise from the Harry Matthews boxing camp and particularly from Man ager Jack Hurley. . . . The ink was barely dry when Hurley broke , loose with one of his typical tantrums and lambasted the latest rat-! mgs oFRing ?nag. with special emphasis on the basement spot; to which Matthews had been assigned. ... So there's life in the old boy yet, but the only way he can get Matthews back up the ladder is push him in a ring and' soon. ... I Four dollars will get you only one that Indiana won't re- ; peat as national champ this season. That close sqeak by Michi i gan, one of the lowest clubs in the Big Ten a year ago plus, of ! course, their tough time it the hands of Oregon State, indicates ; the Boosters may not have enough to go all the way. ... 0CE Quintet Hosts Badger Club Tonight MONMOUTH (Special) The Oregon College Wolves at tempt to avenge an earlier loss here Monday night in an eight o'clock basketbalt game with the Pacific University Badgers of Forest Grove. The rangy Badgers downed OCE by a 60-50 score -in their first meeting December ! i at Forest Grove.: ft -Statesman, Salm, Oraaon. Monday January 4, 1954 1 I : ( - " create "a super-national confer ence i a dictatorship." ' In his annual, ."briefing" session for newspapermen Sunday, Walter Byers.-iNCAA executive director, took notice of this stand when he said the NCAA is I'not a - master organization run byiia few 'bureau crats at the top," hut an associa tion of ; colleges; which decide by ballots what matters should be regulated.' If ! A few years! ago the NCAA adopted ' the controversial "sanity code," which imposed stern re strictions and gav? the parent body regulatory ; powers. This was dropped when many institutions rebelled; at "outside" control I of their athetic practices, (Cont'd Nexl Page) V team wil be again favored in the local mix, for it will have a tre mendous, height advantage over the wee Wolfpack. Center Clint Agee at 6-7, Roy Deshler at 6-5, Wjllard Gibbs, Dan French and Vinee Halverson, all at 6-2, are bigger than any of the OCE play ers. Starters for Dr. Bob Livings- That should be quite a hoop-fest on the 14th Street floor Tues-1 ton s olves will be Bobby ers Draw Praise j . Passing of Garrett Rated Chief Factor SAN FRANCISCO W Football filberts, their faith in pre-game dope entirely gone, were still talk ing Sunday about what a talented passer named Bob Garrett, a handful of Texas slickers and a sadly underrated line did Satur day to those cracked-up Eastern-f ers in the Shrine East-West classic. 62.000 saw the debacle. The final score was West 31, East 7 and that wasn't at all the way the script prepared by those mysterious characters who figure these post-season affairs in advance, would have had you be lieve. To them it seemed certain the East with its Big Ten stars and Notre Dame's Johnny Lattner, would win in a breeze. But they conservatively gave the East an edge of only seven points. The West line stopped Lattner and company cold and the East had , virtually no passing attack. They never got going. From al most the start, the West took command.! Working with as fine a collec tion of ends as have ever ap peared in this annual charity game nearly all the proceeds go for crippled kids West quar terbacks i Garrett and Baylor's Cotton Davidson passed the East erners silly. East Line Ripped Backs like Veryl Switzer of Kan sas. State,! Jerry Coody of Baylor, Jerry Norton of Southern Meth odist and several others ripped the East line to shreds. - The yardage they- made' was just about what the pre-game dopesters had expected from Latt ner. Gene Filipski of Villanova, Steve Meilinger of Kentucky and the other aces from the East. The script got mixed somewhere right after the kickoff. Garrett's passing, perhaps more than any single factor, did the East in. The Stanford passing star completed 10 of 17 for 152 yards. Davidson,! who played only a short Coach Harv Roloffs visiting j time, gave the East the business wun some more compieiea passes. a crushing field goal and an all- round fine performance. When it was all ovej:, Garrett was yoted the outstanding player in the game. Carlton Massey, the U. of Texas end, was voted the finest lineman. Are the Boys Playing Dice or Football? SAN FRANCISCO It-looks like a dice game going on here, but it's just a couple of East-West - . . 9a fAa 1 1 1 S a? 1 11T..1 footbal players looking (or a lumoiea oau. veryi swuier, nansas owie omcm. piaying ior toe nr (left) has just fumbled after being hit by Jerry Hilgenberg of Iowa, center for the East (right). The ball was declared dead because whistle blew before the fumble. It was first period action in the game which the Wests won, 31-7. (AP Wire photo to The Statesman) He and Rochne Changed the Game . . . Death Calls I Gus Dorais, ! j . Pass Forivard nvenfor Final Gun day night as two unbeaten teams clash in person of Salem's Viks and Milwaukie's aspiring 'cagers. The winner should be eyed for strong future possibilities. . . . Oregon's Ducks appear to have the mak ings of a pretty fair court machine, so the more astonishment that Bill Borcher's men should be so thoroughly flattened in their en gagements with UCLA and Stanford. The Webfoots collectively must have been atlthe bottom of their game i i i i : Much Made of ..Sport. Speetl -and oir True I j The speed of Michigan State's backfield was written up ; aplenty and how true. Those pony backs snapped through the UCLA line; like coiled springs in the great second half come back at Pasadena Friday. Biggie Munn must have really wound 'em up at halftime. . . He played for Kansas State, not a top ; football power, so he didn't have the play-up in the press that - ethers do. But nonetheless you will see few better running backs than Veryt Switzer, one of the chief reasons the Wests shet-: , lacked the Easts Sunday. ... ; . Such "sleeper" whines as Switzer are one reason the pros neV(r rely simply on All-America labels in rounding up their prize pros pects. . r . A lot of guys like Switzer may not be festooned with All America trimmings, but they've still got it lots of it. . . . j Maybe the name of Alabama's Tommv Leu-is won't long live on hisF&bilitjr as a football player, hut it's bonnd to be re membered nto the deep recesses of the future because of that celebrated tackle from the sidelines he made on Ric'i Dicky Moegle in the Cotton Bowl . . . Call Lewis a "goat" if you wilL but be now has more chance for immortality than his comrades who stuck to the conventional. ... ' S ! i - Bearcat Player Did It Once. Too . I : . i j I. That off-Color tackle recalls the instance some four years ago when Willamette's Paul Jewell did the very same thing in a game against Lewi and Clark atffortland. Jewell, excited and at a high emotional pitch, charged from the sideline and knocked Vown a Pioneer ball packer in the clear and heading for a touchdown. After the "tackle," Ihe TD was, of course, automatically awarded L-C. j 4 . Just as with the Lewis episode, Jewell's tackle had no great effect on tne outcome 01 the game. . Pity the poor kids.-though, if their submission to emotion HAD given. the other side the winning touchdown. . , . Franti, Frank Grove, Charlie Pin ion, Larry Chamberlain and Don McKenzie. The Wolves go on the road Fri day and Saturday to Ashland for games with Southern Oregon, j Gonzales Nabs Pro Net Start lj L NEW YORK Ufi Pancho Gon zales, the ex-national ( amateur champion making a comeback at 25, outlasted ( Australia's Frank Sedgman. 5-, 11-9. 13-11 Sunday as Jack Kramer's . professional tennis troupe I opened operations for 1954. '-, j - Little Pancho Segura of Ecua dor ground out an effortless 6-4, 8-2 victory oVer the aging Don Budge . in the I preliminary r match before a slim Madison Square Garden turnout of sis. . ! Gonzales, a j rangy swinger - who Student Manager Plays, Gets Big Thrill of Life PITTSBURGH Len Jef freys who collected all of his col lege basketball experience as stu dent manager for Duquesne Uni versity broke into the lineup of the nation's No. 2 team Saturday night and said "Boy! It (was a thrill among thrflls." Coach Dudey Moore called on his student manager to play the last eight minutes against Mexico University. Still elated Sunday, Jeffreys said: "The Dukes were just so far ahead that it didn t matter any more. Coach Moore knew I al ways wanted to play and so he gave me a chance." Duquesne won the game 99-33. Jeffreys contributed four points. Jeffreys scored with a set shot seconds after he entered the game, then picked up another two points with a jump shot a few minutes before the game ended, "Sure, I'm saving all the news paper clippings and a copy of the official score book." be told class mates. "That's i something Tve dreamed of since I was a fresh man, but never expected to hap pen. depends on bis cannonball service, was dropped from the j tour . last year in favor of Ken McGregor of Australia but Pancho is back and from the looks of things j he should rule the favorite to win the $4,000 jackpot over Segura Monday night. ' j Sedgman. who lost . one of the 1949 Davis Cup matches to Gon zales, . couldn't handle J Pancho's service after the first set. Goo zales slipped in many an ace that t rank could only wave his rac quet at. Cats. Whits To Open Race r Their pre-conference warfare at a close,' Willamette's hoop Bearcats prepare this week for the opening of the Northwest Conference race against Whit man's strong Missionaries here this Friday and Saturday nights. Coach John Lewis, still encum bered with ths flu bug, hopes to be back soon at the task of han dling his men's drills but in the meantime Aide Jerry Frei will be in charge. The Bearcats ended pre-loop play by splitting with Central Washington in a weekend series. That brought their record to four wins and six losses. Other conference openers next weekend find College of Idaho against Linfield at McMinnville and Pacific facing Lewis and Clark in a home-and-home pair. 'a VJ r a 1 fir 'iV- 6 BIRMINGHAM, Mich, on Charles E. "Gus" Dorais,, whose changed the game of football and started Notre Dame on the path to gridiron greatness died Sun day. He was 62. Death came to Dotfais in his home. He had been ailing with a circulatory disorder. It was DoraLs and. the immortal Knute Rockne who discovered in 1913 the forward pass could be used as a lethal weapon in foot-; sing and back to the college camp- ball warfare ; ,us where students; staged another They came east in 1913 with 1 noisy demonstration. Notre Dame, ; a comparatively un-j Coach Biggie Mvjnn, who stayed known Midwestern school, to en- over for the Eastj-West game, is gage a powerful Army team It ; returning Monday;. Line Coach was supposed to.be nothing more i Hugh (Duffy) Daugjherty, reported than a warmup for the Cadets, i ly slated to be the next MSC coach But when the afternoon sun had j when Munn moves up to athletic settled behind the plains of West director, spoke; fori the team when Point Army was a soundly beaten I he said: team by the score of 35-13 ' and "This is really Wonderful, even the entire football worl3 was talk- greater than the reception we got ing about Dorais and Rockne. I in Southern California. We were Uorais, a small, quick-thinking quarterback, threw the ball over- hand to Rockne. who played end. GUS DORAIS Grid Revolutionary Dies Sport Sh6rt ionship bouts have been fought on July 4, and two on St. Patrick s Day. Weldon Olson, cehter on the Michigan State hockey team, has four brothers who played colle giate'hockey. j . Bob Farris. captairi of the 1954 Army football team,; played one year of varsity football at Van derbilt before enterihg the U. S. Military. Academy, j Michigan State" wrestling coach Fendley Collins wenti through his collegiate wrestling career at Ok lahoma A. & M. without a' defeat. . . .- ; . - ! . Badminton was originally call ed poona" in India where the game was first played. we and other Notre Dame teammates who ran past, befuddled Army here." said team Captain Don Do- players and caught the .hurtling ' honey, "was wheniwe were beaten spheroid. Iby Purdue that tikne. This is an 1st Overhand .Style j even greater one and a much hap- Tbe . forward " pass . had been; pier occasion.' used before this game but the Billy Wells, star 'in the 23-20 vic- ball was thrown in an underhand : tory over UCLA, was not aboard the pryie as he flew to New. York to appear on ; a television show. Scare Handed Hoosier Team I Wolverines Nipped fin Big Ten Opener I By RIP WATSON . I NEW YORK ur College bas ketball teams started down the tournament "trail Saturday night. but two of the leading contenders for championship honors in March almost were detoured. f Indiana, defending NCAA and Big Ten champions, needed a 25 foot set shot by Bob Leonard at the final buzzer to turn back keyed-up Michigan 62-60 in the Hoosiers first conference game of the season. Holy Cross, a leading Eastern independent power, stopped off at Alabama en route home from a Sugar Bowl cham pionship but had to scramble for a 70-68 decision over the Crimson Tide. Not all of the powerhouses in action Saturday night cut it so dose, of course. With top-ranking Kentucky idle, second-ranked Du Quesne took the spotlight by play ing the student manager in a 99-35 rput of the University of Mexico's touring team. Minnesota. No. 6. solidified its position as chief threat to Indiana in the Big Ten by topping Illinois, No. 8, 84-72. I Indiana, ranked third in the cbimtry off a 7-1 record, was favored over Michigan, which had tied for last place in the confer encomiast year. But Michigan led in the final two minutes until Chuck Kraak tied it at 60-60 for Indiana. The Hoosiers got posses sion again and went into a lengthy ffeeze which ended with Leonard's dramatic shot. Jerry Hero (Ronnie Perry played the hero's rble for Holy Cross, stealing a pass and driving the length of the cjourt for a lay-up with only two Seconds left to go. Perry scored 23 points in all. one less than Ala bama's Jerry Harper, in the Cru Saders eighth straight victory. Harper outplayed Holy Cross Togo falazzi, who got only 16 points. - I t'enn, sparked by sophomore Joe Sturgis' 24 points, started de fense of its Ivy League champion ship with an 86-65 thumping of Vale, in a doubleheader at Phila delphia's Palestra. In the other game, North Carolina State, tanked ninth nationally and co favorite with Duke in the Atlantic Coast Conference, needed a late lasket and two free throws by ub Whitey Bell to gain a 69-65 Wctory over Villanova. I Duke, meanwhile, opened its drive for the Atlantic Coast crown $y trouncing Virginia 86-64. i Wake Forest, another Atlantic Coast threat, warmed up for con ference competition with a 71-53 fictory over St. Joseph's at Phil adelphia's Convention Hall. In the other half of the twinbill, La Salle trimmed Temple 77-53. I Other members of the top ten besides Kentucky who were idle Nre Oregon State. No. 4: Okla homa A & M, No. 5; Western Kentucky, No. 7 and Fordham, No. 10. I With school vacations dragging to a close, the last of the bumper irrop of holiday- tournaments fi nally came to an end. Maryland, showing a better defense than the School's football team, limited Kentucky Wesleyan to single field goals in the second and third ouarters for a 54-37 triumph in the finals of the All-American Tourney at Owensboro, Ky. if William Jewell won the Tarkio, ; a 1 a . all geared up for that game. We j f0' 1 , rj . lu"J,f. D.a never doubted we couldn't win- htf college 77-56 and Virginia lust wouldn t i lose. i"": u,t 1 t 1 Spartan pquad Given Mighty Welcome Home EAST LANSING; Mich. Michigan State's triumphant Rose Bowl ! football j team received a thunderous welcome Sunday night as more than 5000lpersons crowd ed the Lansing airport to welcome the squad plane which set down at 8:10 p.m. j Governor Williams and the may ors of Lansing and East Lansing headed a triumphant and noisy motorcade tnrougn ? downtown lan Six world heaweight champ-, metnod Nobo(j had evef th Va laMmA K AAV fAiinrit I . . Shot at Title May Be Earned . j. . FINALS GAINED NEW YORK im H a s h I m Khan, a 37-year-old Pakistan air force officer and Henri Salaun, a 27-year-old Boston amateur, Sat urday, gained the finals of the first U.S. Open Squash Racquets championships.' J Oucceroni Faces German In Week's Ring Feature NEW YORK I Dan Buccer oni. No. ! 4 ranking challenger to heavyweight champion Rocky JMarciano. gets a chance to boost his claim for a February title shot Tuesday night at Milwaukee in a 10-round bout with Hein Ten Hoff of Germany. BEARS TOPPED i HONOLULU (ff) Calif orniVl Golden Bears dropped their first game in their Hawaii tour here as they bowed to the speedy Uni versal Motors quintet, 64-53. The Bears led, 35-31, at the halL With Marciano due to defend at Miami Feb. 24 and Bucceroni's name among those mentioned, the Philadelphia prospect should be shooting the works against the vet eran German, r .1 j This bout will not be -seen od television but the TV customers will have their usual full program, featuring middleweight and welt ers. :-,) - .. - -: . vj Joey GiardeHo of Philadelphia, No. 3 contender for Bobo Olson's middleweight crown, goes against Gart Panter, a strong-jawed cus- tomer from Salt Lake City, in the Friday feature at Madison Square Garden NBC-TV and ABC-radio). ' Joey Giambra. raed fifth among 160-pound contenders,! boxes Bobby Dykes in Dykes home town, Mi ami, Wednesday on f the CBS-TV show. Giambra is a fast-rising Buf falo, N.Y. youngster whose last victim was Jimmy Herring. Welterweight Chicao Vejar of Stamford, Conn, gets away from Army life - for another TV shot (ABC) Saturday at Miami against Pat Manzi of Syracuse.' N.Y. Walter Cartier, strugglmg to get back into the-higher rankings in the .'.middleweigli. i fclass," meets Randy Sandy in an fall-New York battle Monday at Brooklyn's East ern Parkway. . The show will be seen on TV (Dumont) in some sec tions of the country. , ' .. "'. ., . I . likes of Dorais' long, arching overhand tosses. He and Rockne, who later gained fame as coach of the Irish, worked long and hard at perfect ing the forward pass. In the sum mer of 1913, they practiced hours on end .in Sandusky, Ohio with Dorais , throwing his' unorthodox passes j to Rockne . In the years that followed foot ball ' teams ; around the nation slowly but surely, 'began realizing the importance of the overhand forward ,pass It has become such a part of the game that today many term football as "basketball on grass. . -1 . Porais outlived Rockne by 23 years. f'The' Rock" ! was killed March 31, 1931, in a Kansas plane w .a. ineir jegena will Jive for ever. :(.': Gained Coaching Fame In addition to starring on the field. Dorais also gained fame as a collegiate coach at University of Detroit and Gonzaga and in the pro ranks with the Detroit Lions. ' I Gonzaga!.: took .the small Spokane, Wash. Jesuit school of 200 stu dents into a post season game at San Diego against West Virginia on Christmas Day, 1920. Gonzaga lost only 20-13 and earned a place on the athletic map. - He coached at Gonzaga at 14, 000 a year from 1920 to 1924. Spo kane business men got together to increase his salary to $7,000 (Continned on Next Page) ; SHRINE INJURIES WGHT SAN FRANCISCO (JP) The 'ft were only two injuries neither serious in Saturday's East-West Shrine football game, " ! Two East players were hurt in the fourth period. Right half Joe Johnson of Boston College : had the wind knocked out of him. And quarterback Pete Stark of Syra-J CUSe W 'shsVn tin ' hn! knocked down while attempting a pass. . Neither required medical attention. . . . Nine Selected For SkiiTeam The last great reception we got I estival by ediging North Caro- jiua wucgc 01-00 111 me 1 mm. K'iagara Victor I Niagara played its regulars only 14 minutes in trouncing Arizona 79-46 in a doubleheader at Buffalo, and Geo Littleton of Wichita fi lially woke up his teammates for a 88-65 win over Canisius in the other game. Walt Walowae of Marshall led Ihe fast - moving West Virginia Seam to a 93-81 victory over Iona at Madison Square Garden. Big Boris Nachamkin of New York University tallied 31 in NYTTs 82-79 squeaker over Miami of Ohio In the Garden nightcap. Cornell, touted by the league s coaches as Penn's chief Ivy .threat looked good with 73-61 win lover Navy, which had slowed well in the Dixie Classic. I Wisconsin, prepping for a game Monday night at Indiana, won its Big Ten opener over Purdue 66-57. r Elsewhere in the Midwest. Brad ley won its fifth straight by clout- Brigham Young 77-50, 5t. Louis handed the University of Washington its eighth successive loss 73-67 and Bowling Green iroUed over Loyola 79-63. Arkansas scored 10 points in less tha a minute in beating Tulsa -5-49, Louisville led all the way for a 73-6a oecision over Marquette and Stanford romped By HOWARD S BENEDICT ALTA. Utah' OP I Six Olympic skiers. form a firm nucleus for a nine-member ! Alpine., ski team named Sunday to represent the United States in the, world cham pionship ski meet; at Are Sweden, next .month. ; Named to the team of five men and four women which .will com pete in i the Federation Interna-11"? tional de Ski! (FIS) meet were: Men Brooks' Dodge, Tink-I ham Notch, New Hampshire; Bill Beck, Kingston, Rhode Island; Ralph Miller, jHanover, New Hampshire; Vera Goodwin. Pitts- field, i Mass., and; Doug Burden, New iYork City, j Women, lmogene Opton, North Tic iii Ski Meet . , 1 . --1- s- , ROSSLAND, B.C. Tiny Wenatchee Junior ! College finished in. a first - place! upset deadlock with I heavilyavored Washington SUte College in the two-day Triple Eye Ski: Meet here Saturday and Sunday. I Wenatchee's extct finish with Washington SUte f at 331.7 points each I nielted! defending-champion WSCi hold on the priied Jeldness Trophy. They'll share Joint owner ship1 for: a year., j ..!..!... I Conway.l New Hampshire: Jean- fver St. Mary s 63-M in other top nett Burr. Seattle: Katv RodolDh. Bgames. Hayden, Colo.; and Skeeter Wern er. Steamboat! Springs. Colo. Dodge,: Beck, Goodwin, Miss Op ton, Miss Burr and Miss Rodolph were on the ! U.S. 1952 Olympic squad Dodge, 1 Miss Burr and Missl Rodolph, also; are veteran r is skiers. AH competed in the. 1830 meet: fa Aspen, r Fullman Captures Hood Ski Race GOVERNMENT CAMP ;3Carl ' Fullman flashed down the scant two-mile course on Mt. mod Sunday in three minutes " 41 and eight-tenths seconds to win the men's class A even in the Port land Day Trail ski races. g uui unway won ine ciass d I title and Jack Schwartz, the class C championship. All winners are from Portland. GONZAGA BOWS SPOKANE OP) The Whit worth Pirates posted their second straight basketball win over Gon zaga Saturday night, leading ? the way to beat the Bulldogs 80-61 i