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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 8, 1954)
Officers Open" Archery Club's Spanking New Rango I -. The valley's prep cage clans roar into the home stretches of their respective league and dis trict title races this week, with the bulk of the action booked for the usual Tuesday and Friday nights. , $ The collegiates have another busy week before them also, with the major part of it falling on the coming Friday and Saturday nights. League play for the preppers accentuates Tuesday activities. Here's how they'll go about it: WILLAMETTE VALLE? LEAGUE: Silverton at Canby, Sandy at Woodburn, ; Estacada at Dallas, ML Angel at Molalla. , CAPITOL LEAGUE: 'Stayton at Central Hi, Sacred Heart at Cascade, ' Philomath . at Salem Academy. YAWAMA. LEAGUE: Sheri dan at Amity, North Marion at Yamhill, Willamina at Sherwood, Dayton attBanks. ; ; MARlbN COUNTY ! B LEAGUE: JMill CUy at Chemawa. This one is actually a last-round game bejng , played i Tuesday, which is a: night off for all other members fn the schedule. How ever, Sci will be at Shedd, Tuesday night also. ; No Big! Six League clashes are slated for Tuesday, but Sa lem's Vik will be at Lebanon and Eugene at Junction City. Also, Perrydale is atj'Verboort and Eddyville at Falls City. The City League will offer its three-games-a-night fare at Les lie both Tuesday and Wednesday- ! I ' Sublimity Hjgh's Saints play Sacred Heart at the Armory here Wednesday night, and the Ore? gon College Wolves go to Port land the same night for an Ore gon Collegiate - Conference I tilt with Portland State. f r On Friday night Gates is at Gervais, Detroit at Chemawa! St Paul at Jefferson, Mill City at Oregon School for the Deaf and Sublimity at Scio in Marion B games; Amity is at North Mar ion, Sheridan at Yamhill, Sher wood at Dayton and Bank! at Willamina in the Yawama; Cas cade at Central and Salem Acad emy at : Sacred Heart (Armory) in i the i Capitol, and Canby at Sandy, Woodburn at Estacada, Mtj Angel at Dallas and Molalla at i Silverton in the Willamette Valley. H Other Friday games: Ga$tpn at ! Perrydale, Valsetz at Eddy ville,' Albany at Marshfield, Leb anon at Newport and Eugene at Cottage Grove. The Salem Junior High League will add Round No. 9 Friday also. , j On Saturday night Springfield is at Salem for a Big Six Leag uer, ML Angel goes to Colum bia Prep in Portland, Marsh field to Eugene, Lebanon to To ledo and Albany to North Bend. The Stayton Eagles go to Prineville Friday and Saturday nights for a series with thej Cow boys. -,- . . i Willamette U has" a pair of Northwest Conference games with Pacific Friday and Satur day, here on Friday night and there Saturday. Linfield is at Lewis & Clark Friday night, and the Pioneers are at Linfield a night later. Whitman plays at College of Idaho Saturday.! In the Northern Division! Ore gon plays at Idaho Friday and Saturday nights and Washington plays Oregon State at Coryallis. mm Valley Prep Circuits Roar Into Home Stretch W 1 rv HBcpflflSim9 AfldDim: ---. With Jerry Stone n Matthews Back in Action Tuesday). If you took the Smith boys Sam and George out of the St Paul Buckaroos basketball lineup, you'd have a real void. The two make for a neat scoring package and the buckaroos again want it emphasized that though Sam and George may be brothers in' tnirif thevVa tint ct hlnvrl-nri ca f ... The Domaschofsky's of Dal las High are another tough scor ing combine. They ARE broth ers... j : One of the more sane boxing rules in the books is that of New York which calls it an automatic TKO if a ringster is knocked down three times in a single round. That prohibits any (such blood baths of that of a year ago when Tommy Collins was knock ed down ten times in a Boston bout before. a halt was called ... Such a slaughter is great entertainment for a certain breed of people but it's sort of hard on the fighter ... Douglas Hertz, the man with the fabulous bigtime sports pro- DOUGLAS HERTZ motional background and also Bay Area Calls Him onetime owner of the now defunct New Yori football Yankees, no longer is a resident of these parts . . . Hertz, Whose range of talents verged on the fantastic, resided in this neck of the woods little more than a year and in that time made a name for himself as a poultry expert. His big achievement was crossing Australian game cocks with domestic hens to produce a highly palatable fowl ... Hertz Saga Makes Scripts Look Tame Now the 70-year-old Hertz, always an idea" man. has headed south for San Francisco to plunge into another project And we wager hell be heard from, too . . . Doug Hertz career makes a movie script look pale British cavalry officer, one instrumental in getting Joe Walcott started up the fistic ladder, pro football mogul, operator of one of Gotham's biggest dock tracks, promoter in sports and entertainment fields and almost everything else imaginable, a champion horseman and now in his late years a poultry expert That's four lifetimes in one and we hear that Hollywood has displaced interest in doing uu saga ... : We're sorry to see Doug leave our community . . . Marilyn Monroe never saw a eame of organized ball until sh. ran into Joe DiMag. Now will make up for lost time, no doubL But then again maybe Joe will be spending less time at the ball parks . . . Colliers has pictorial piece on ex-Husky Bob Houbregs, carting Bob's hook the greatest shot in all: of basketbalL Clair Bee. the former famed coach of Long Island! U and now mentor of the Baltimore Bullets of which Houbregs is a member, is quoted as saying be never saw anything like the Houbregs, type shot . . . What impresses 'em all is the long distances at which the '53 Washington Ail-American can hit 'em . . . f Funny Brand of Thanks for Key Irish Aide Joe McArdle was quite an important guy in Notre Dame's great 1953 football season and out of it all Frank Leahy's line chief has reaped a harvest not exactly bountiful In fact Joe finds himself out on his ear as young Terry Brennan, the new Irish head man, cuts a big swath among the men who aided Leahy . . . Mc Ardle, a Fordham graduate, fashioned those magnificent Irish for ward walls and also ably filled Leahy's role n several games last season when the .Notre Dame maestro was indisposed . . It's highly possible McArdle didn't gef Leahy's job simply because ne was not a Notre Dame graduate . . It won't be too long before Brennaa jhas opportunity to NEW YORK l Billy pea cock, the North American bantam champion, defends his title Mon day night at Brooklyn's Eastern Death Claims Nelson, Great Ring Champion show whether he is another Leahy or not And a thousand other less fortunate coaches will sound off about how can Notre Dame coaches miss with the material (hey always have . . . i The. impression grows stronger aU the time that Branch Mc cracken's Indiana Hoosiers are going to repeat as NCAA champs and that because Kentucky and Duquesne won't be around to bother 'em . . . Kentucky apparently is out of it because of that NCAA rule making three Wildcat stars ineligible. Duquesne indicates it'll again throw in with the National Invitational Tourney, passng up a sure berth in the NCAA playoffs ... SO circumstances teem mighty kind to McCracken and his Indianans .1. . . i i Salem High's prestige cant help but take a terrrifie climb after the surprising doable win over Grants Pass Cavemen. Consider that the Cavemen earlier split with No. 2 Marshfield, which later soundly whacked the Vikings twice . . . Incidentally, both Grants Pass-Marshfield tilts were decided by one flimsy point . . . The sport of basketball is' becoming more nnpredictable aU the time f Willamette's Bearcats got not service with! a smile but Servas In a bitter dose the past weekend. Lewis and Clark's Ken Servas whipped in 47 points as the two teams split their important North west Conference series ... The Bearcats still art in the top spot. but there arc treacherous seas ahead North American Bantam Title on Line Tonight CHICAGO Ufi Oscar (Battling) Nelson, one of the greatest world's lightweight boxing champions, pied Sunday of lung cancer at Chicago State Hospital He was 71. ) Nelson was committed to 1 the hospital by court order Jan. 1 4 when, after the death of his Wife, week previous, he was found to be suffering from "an incurable senile dementia." f f Nelson was born in Denmark and! came to this country as an infant He ruled as lightweight champion from 1908 when he knocked out Joe Gans, until 1910, when in a historic 40-round fight. Ad iWoIgast battered him irto helplessness. 1 The death of the "durable Dane' ended a stirring rags-to-richeS-to- rags career that saw Nelson rise irom extreme poverty to position as world sports figure with a for tune of half a million dollars, then back to such poverty that in his last -years he was obliged to 1 de pend on the handouts of mends for subsistence. j Nelson weighed 133 pounds in his prime, and it was said 3 by those who saw him, that he was il . . r- i- 1 uie greatest piece oi iignung ma chinery the prize ring had ever known. Parkway in a 12-round match with Nate Brooks of Cleveland, the 1932 Olympic flyweight winner, j 1 The bantam bout is one of the. better pairings on an ordinary box- i ing program this week. The world champ 118-pounder, of course, is Jimmy Carruthers of Australia. Jimmy Carter of New York, the lightweight champion, meets' ; Billy Lauderdale, Miami welterweight, in a 10-round non-title bout at Nas sau, Bahamas, Monday night Joey Giambra of Buffalo, No. 8 challenger to middleweight champ Bobo Olson, boxes j Halo Scortichini of Italy Friday at (Mad ison square Garden (ABC-radio and NBC-TV). Chico Vejar, the Stamford, Conn, welter who now is in the Army, will test collegian Jed Black of Janesville, Wis., Wednesday !( CBS- TV) at the Chicago Stadium. Black, a stablemate of Chuck Davey's, has lost only one of 28 starts. j Harry (Kid . Matthews I goes back to work Tuesday for the first time - since his fight with! Don Cockell. His opponent at Spokane, Wash, is Jack Nelson of Salt; Lake City, Rex Layne's stablemate. ... L- :, -i t ilto Oil- The Salem Jabberwalkie Archery Club's new indoor rang was and WaUy Enbanks, director. The Indoor range will a available opened recently, and officialdom's touch to the opening were each Sunday to interested members of the bow and arrow frater- " the ?bove officers of the club. Left ip right: Burt Bertner, di- nity, with shooting boors from 1 p.m. to p.m. The range is lo- rectorj Dr. L. E. Watson, secretary; Lewis G. Johnson, president cated in the Dickson's Market building near the 12th Street Junction. Wesft 'Eteiriiiickif Less Csip AT Slate Bears', Bruins In Key Series SOUTHERN DIVISION W L Pct.l CaliL S 1 .833! UCLA VSC 3 3 -SOOlS'ford I Wolves Coach ! - ! i ! I Plans Protest MONMOUTH (Special) pri Bob; Livingston, OCE - Wolves basketball coach, . announced Sunday that he win make a for mal protest of Saturday night's losing game with Portland State, played on the latter's floor.; Portland State won the tilt ,54- 52 on a disputed shot by Guard Phil! Hannon that Livingston claims was fired after time had run out in the contest ! Livingston will make the pro- test today through Stephen E. .pier oi jfoniana state, presi dent; of the Oregon Collegiate Conference. i "Si The OCE mentor and numer ous supporters maintain that Hannon let loose with his win? ning shot after the lights blank ed out on the Portland State time dock. Livingston says that an agreement was reached -before the game that the contest would be automatically ended at the time the lights went 'out The official timer was Ray Lind say, i an instructor at Lincoln High School. WHITMAN WINNER WALLA WALLA UFI Whitman ran away from Northwest Naxar ene in the fourth quarter Saturday night to break op a close basketball game and cop a 74-54 victory, w t Pet. 3 3 .500 1 V .167 LOS ANGELES Iff) It's a tough assignment, but UCLA; gets a chance this week to pulll into a Pacific Coast Conference South- tie with era Division basketball the California Bears. The Uclans, already beaten twice this season by the Bears, play host to the Califormans in a two-game set Friday and; Saturday. Meanwhile the University of Southern California, the only team to trip the Bears during thej first half of the conference season, travels northward again to engage the Stanford Indians. California won five and lost! only once in the season s opening j half . UCLA and USC both have 3-3 records. Brennan Keeps 2 Leahy Aides SOUTH BEND, Ind. tf) - Terry Brennan, Notre Dame's new 25-year-old head football coach, be gan reorganization Saturday of the Irish staff by retaining two of re signed Frank Leahy s six assist ants. . : . i ' They are Johnny Druze, 39, end coach, and Bill Earley, 32, back- field assistant Brennan said he has, "two out aide people definitely in mind" to complete his varsity staff and; may pick one other of Leahy's assist- Division Race Nears Stretch Co-Leaders to Face Threats This Weekend NORTHERN DIVISION W L Pct.l W L Pet. Ore. St 7 3 .700'Wsh. 3 5 .378 Oregon 1 3 .70Oi Wn. St. 3 7 .300 Idaho 4 .400! By The Associated Press The hot Northern , Division cage campaign grinds into its homestretch stage with Oregon s Webfoots and the Beavers of Oregon State locked in a tie for the lead after the Staters came through with a sweep of their weekend series with the Wash ington State Cougars. Idaho s ' Vandals, considered a strong title threat at the outset of the season, were all but knocked from the running at Seattle as the underdog Wash ington Huskies came through with a pair of astonishing upset wins. These same Huskies, appar ently one, of the most improved teams in the division, may be a tough test for Oregon State when the two clubs collide in a two game series at Corvallis this Fri day and Saturday nights. The Beavers knocked off the Hus kies in a previous pair at Seattle three weeks ago, but had to scramble to do it Ducks Meet Vandals Bill Borcher's Webfoots also have a sterling test in store for them as they invade the Idaho floor at Moscow this weekend. The Vandals still are rated a dangerous ball club despite their record and they're the tough er on their borne boards. The Ducks and Beavers each currently sport 7-3 division rec ords. The title might well be decided when the two finish out the campaign against each other Feb. 26th and 27th. I? ' ' i all-, .imv ants for a B" assignment or freshman team PUSCAS TRIUMPHS VANCOUVER. B.C. (CP)-Uack Puscas of Eugene, Ore., won a technical knockout over Carl Bran son of Whidby Island, Wash., in the Diamond Belts boxing tourna ment here Saturday. statesman mm taw 8 The Statesman. Salem, Oregon, Monday, Fab. 8, 1954 Wildcat Five Keeps R Playoff Scheduled Today . By BOB MYERS PHOENIX, Ariz. (A -, A capri cious gust of wind blew away the victory chances Sunday of the tournament long-shot Bob Inman of Tulsa, Okla., and Cary Middle coff and veteran Ed Furgol swept Riegger Shoot King RENO. Nev. ( Arnold Rieg ger, Ail-American trapshooter from Seattle, Sunday was declared the over all champion of the Reno four-day; midwinter trapshooting handicap tournament Riegger had a four-day score of 858x700 to, top the field of 209 top flight competitors from 18 states and one Canadian province. Survey Discloses Many Variations in Rules Throughput Land By HUGH FULLERTON JR. NEW YORK Where can a college athlete start playing var sity sports when be s a freshman and still be playing when he's a graduate student? Why, the South eastern Conference.. Where can be play as a fresh man only if his school has a male enroHmeiit of less than 750 and'if it supports teams in eight differ ent sports? Tne ustern i-ouege Athletic Conference. Where can he be declared per manently ineligible if his coach has brought him a dinner in the good restaurant across town in stead of the hash house fay the campus The Pacific Coast Con- f -ence. Such major variations in eligi bility rules were brought to light in an Associated Press survey stenming from the recent mud furore over the University of Ken tucky basketball team.. Kentucky, apparently, just dis covered that its post-graduate stars, still eligible, under South eastern Conference rules, wouldn't be allowed to play in the National CoHesiatft A. A. tournament. And a lot oTpeople just discovered that! the SEC allowed grad students to play. "K I The NCAA, like virtually ecery major conference, limits varsity competition .to three seasons with a five-year tapan. -And. like most of them, it rules out anyon who baa completed his undergraduate work and U eligible for t college degree. 1 The South' three major confer ences the Southeastern, Atlan tic Coast and Southern don t have that last stipulation. If a boy still is; in college ifs okay with them as long as he hasnt used ns his three years of eligibil ity. Of these three, only tne south eastern atil permits freshmen to play on varsity teams, bat mat goes out Sept L Boys now in school who competed as freshmen still will be able to play for the fourth season. Because the 100-college ECAC includes a lot of very small schools, it has a special rule that permits freshmen to play for col leges whose male enrollment is less than soo and for colleges un der 750 if they fusport at least two fall, : three winter and- three spring sports. M The ECAC also includes the;; in fluential Ivy group, which does not allow freshman to play and countr any year of scholastic in eligibility against the three years of competition allowed. I t The Border Conference permits Jhe use of freshmen and a couple of others have minor exceptions to the general rule. j There still are a good many ways in which an athlete can stick around for a iuth year to use up bis eligJblity, but nearly every Con ference would frown on deliberate ly failing a coarse if they, could prove it was deliberate. I The Big Ten. for instance, has found that more than 50 per cent of students need more than four years to take a degree so it de fines "satisfactory progress for an athlete as leading to a degree in five years. But any 'flunk" renders an athlete ineligible for sig j xeo , compeuuon. f The Big Seven considers. a four- year coarse as "normal and re quires an athlete to pass 24 semes- ter-hourj of scholastic wort,' ea . i : per cent of it with grades ofj"C" or better, each year to remain eligible. . That figure of 24 semester-hours or 36 quarter-hours seems to be the standard for conferences which set up definite rules i con cerning minimum scholastic I re quirements. But about half the: ma jor circuits leave it to the indivi dual colleges to decide what ; con stitutes "normal progress. j me major conferences are al most tmanimous in requiring (that transfer students put in a year of residence before they're eligi ble for athletics. But only -hej Big Ten applies that rule to junior col lege graduates who eo right into a . four-year school. Several co ferences rule that an athlete Iwho has signed a grant-in-aid agree ment with one institution ' never can be eligible to play for another school in the same circuit The rules on recruiting and fi nancial aid to athletes show! the widest , variations and - usually brings - the - severest -; penalties. Hence the matter of the dinner mentioned previously. t' A customary Pacific Coast Con ference penalty for a recruiting violation is to fine the school and declare the athlete Jnelijzible to compete for the offending institu tion. And it has ruled that en tertainment of a prospect like a dinner must take place on or adjacent to the campus. Leahy Squelches Coaching Rumors SEATTLE (A Frank Leahy stepped from a plane Sunday night and met reporters' queries with a smiling statement that he definite ly is an ex-coach. "No more coaching for me,' Leahy said. Tv had it," .. Ruiuors hare cropped up In sev eral parts of the country that the former Notre Dame head football coach would take a job with some other major school or a pro team. The famous coachhere to ad dress the annual banquet of the Puget Sound Sportswriters and Sportscasters Monday night was high in his praise of Terry Bren nan. tne young coaci wno wui suc ceed him ta head coach it Notre Dame. Middlecoff Furgol Tie For Phoenix Open Title Speaking Role For Casanova One of the Pacific Coast's most highly regarded football coaches, Len Casanova of Oregon, will dis cuss the insides and outs of the gridiron sport as well as Webfoot prospects for next season when he addresses the Salem Breakfast Club, 7:30 this morning at the Senator hoteL It is hoped that a large num ber of Duck alumni will be . on hand to welcome the veteran coach. Casanova's 1954 Oregon team may be rated one of : the top threats in the Coast Conference and he is expected to dwell on that in his talk. Casanova also will show a Webfoot grid film and handle the narration, i The meeting is open to the cen- erai puouc. . ; on from behind to tie for the. $2,- 000 first prize in the $10,000 Phoe nix Open golf tournament Middlecoff, 32-year-old former National Open champion from Memphis, Tenn., shot an even par 71. Furgol, a man who has never won a major tournament and has the handicap of a withered left arm, shot a 68 to go into a tie at 272 strokes with Middlecoff. at the end of the regular 72 holes. The co-leaders will meet Mon day in an 18-hole playoff .a sudden death after that if they are stilt tied. The wind-up was hectic before the largest gallery in the tourna ment s history. Furgol had a chance to win the top money "un contested if he could sink a five- foot putt for a birdie on the 18th green. He missed. But the real drama occurred on the 10th tee when Inman, by all odds the gallery s favorite because of his, spectacular play in previ ous rounds, started to drive. Inman was leading Middlecoff by one stroke after passing the 63rd hole and was two strokes in front of Furgol. (Cont'd, on Next Page) Slat Honors To Idaho Ace GOVERNMENT CAMP. Ore. J Skiers from McCaU, Idaho, won all the honors in the two-day Pa cific Northwest Ski : Association junior championships which ended here Sunday. ; Individual high scorer of the meet was 16-year-old Frank Brown who won both events Sunday the Jumping and cross country to add to his second place in the down hill and third in the slalom Satur day. His point total was 3318., ' Stan Harwood. also of the Pay ette Lakes Ski Club, was runner up. He was second in the jumping and seventh in the cross country event Sunday. He won the down hill and was second in Saturday's slalom. : ; . . .-; , , Jockey Killed : In Turf Mishap TUCSON, Aria. UB Jockey Cur tis Day, 28, Alhambra, CaliL. died here Saturday night three - hours after be was injured in a fall dur ing the running of the ninth race at Rillito Park. As he bit the ground. Day ap pearing stunned tried to lift him self off the track and to safety but riders on the ; last two horses in the field were unable to miss him as they came out of the turn. . Bassett Victor MARSEILLES Percy Bas sett of Philadelphia, interim world featherweight champion, knocked out French champion Mohammed Chickaowi Sunday in . the second minute of the third round of scheduled 10-round fight Chickaoui weighed 116 pounds, Bassett 1154. i 'Skins Ink MeUinger WASHINGTON (A The Wash ington Redskins Sunday signed Steve Mcflinger of Kentucky, their No. 1' draft choice for 1954. The Pennsylvania youth rejected offers from two Canadian clubs to sign op for National Football League play, j : . " ' i' '. ;:- ' The 23-year-old Meilinger : said the two Canadian teams he turned down were Calvary and, Toronto. or .ri so Does Uuquesne; ,v, Selvy Piles itj 40 V ; By SHELDON SAKOWTTZ ; , NEW YORK m . Vestern Ken- tuqky's surprise reversal at the,, hands of traditional, rival Eastern t Kentucky on Saturday left Ken- tucky and Duquesne! as the lone - t remaining major undefeated bas-f. ketball teams in thej nation. :; The Hilltoppers (21-1), rated No. 4 in the last AP potlj were rudely .J jolted from the ranks of the beaten by Eastern Kentucky 63-54 ..- to snap their victory fstring. East- - era had bowed to Western twice." U previously 122-78 and'Sl-TO. t Western Kentucky, trailing by 10-..: points early in the fhird period,,; u, narrowed the margin 'to one point D ore me maroons puuea away, fors good in the. fourth quarter.-"--Tom Marshall, usually one of the ,.., Hilltoppers high scorers, was lim- ited to eight points by the spirited m Eastern defense. :m j Meanwhile, top-ranked Kentucky (16-0) and Duquesne 118-0), No. 2. maintained their unblemished rec- ords Saturday. Kentucky, for the fourth time this season, hit the .'. century mark in crushing Georgia 100-68. All-America ' Cliff Hagan. V performing in his home town ot -Owensboro, Ky., led Ithe way for .,tI the Wildcats with 29; points. ----, Duquesne boosted its stock con-.,fe-- siderably with an impressive 81-68 r suL-vess over suong vuanucp only as an exhibition however and the victory isn t included in the Dukes' won-lost record. Sophomore sensation Si Green topped Du- quesne with 25 points) while Quan-- tico's Paul Arizin, formerly of the. t " Philadelphia WarriorsL was held to . , 12.! ' "M ! '" Both Kentucky and : the Iron Dukes will attempt to keep their ,U spotless records this week. The -Wildcats visit Florida Monday and are host to Mississippi Saturday. Duquesne doesn't figure to be ex tended at Carnegie Tech Wednes day. Sixteen of the top 20 teams saw action last Saturday in collegiate " basketball's busiest . night of , the season with 13 of them scoring victories. Oklahoma A t M (18-1).-"" No. 5, Holy Cross (1B-D. No. 10. Maryland (17-4), No. U and Okla-- ' homa City; (12-4), No. 1 16, were ' idle. . V - I ' : : ... Third-ranked Indiana (14-1) was hard pressed to turn back a stub born Michigan State dub 79-74 for , the; Hossiers' seventh straight Big Ten triumph. Bobby onard and Don Schlundt with 26 and 25 points respectively, . paced last season's .ITJ NCAA champs. ' - - Seattle, No. 6, continued its win- "' ning ways by routing Gonzaga 71 49 for the Chieftains' 22ns conseco . . tive victory after an opening game - KUMU IU ii : ' Seventhiranked Notre Dame (12 2) edged scrappy DePaul 59-53 for its T eighth successive - triumph. Dick Rosenthal was the big gun for i the Fighting Irish with 17 points. i i (Continued Next I Page) 1 U6 Nev Clinic Opening in Capitol j Shopping Center FRIDAY, FEB. 12 , 'Wcteh Thil Popw for Furthtr DetoiIir: '- 4 t