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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1954)
3 . f Did n n 1 n n AS Em v Vi ry nrt- . Vr- n . OTSrWGG'Hp KlQ WU's Hoopers Nosed 60-58 Setback Drops Locals Into 2nd Place Tie. KOKTHWEiT CONFEKNC W L PctJ W L Pet L-Clark 7 5 J3 Pacific T .338 WUlim. -34!Uneld T .41? Whitman S 343C. Idaho 4 7 M3 Saturday results: At Linfield1 60. WUlamette 58; At Pacific 77. Whit man 69: At Lewis St Clark 103, CoIL Idaho 93. McMINNVILLE (Special) Reserve Guard Bud Walsh drop pedhi a pair of free throws in the last six seconds Saturday night that enable the Linfield Wildcats to tack a particularly Jainful 60-58 defeat on the Wit imette Bearcats. The loss atrnnruwl th Rnlll nut nf a tie for the Northwest Confer ence lead and into second place knot with Whitman, which bowed to Pacific Saturday night after also previously sharing the top spot Lewis and Clark now stands VU lup wit twuuuiajDi game above Willamette and Whitman, after knocking off College of Idaho two straight The Willamette - Linfield not only was a thriller but also bad a dash of fisticuffs as Wildcats Center Dave Sanford and WU's Bill Colvard were ejected from the ramfi midwav of the third perioj after, a knuckle-throwing session in the wake of a lay-up by Colvard. Coach John Lewis Bearcats led 54-52 going- into the final three minutes of the clash and then had . Linfield free throws beat 'em. A pair of gift shots by the Wildcats Gene Small with 2:05 left tied the count at 58-58 and WU wasn't destined - to get another point A foul committed on Walsh in the last moments gave him the oppor tunity to win it with his brace of foul tosses. Bearcats Lead tt Stops Willamette led at the quar ters 10-7, 29-24 and 4742. The score was tied a number of timet in th contest but the Bearcats managed to keep the upper hand most of the time, up to the concluding seconds. Ray Olson and Milt Krueger led the Linfield scoring with ten apiece, but WU's Colvard was bieh for the game with 14, most of them coming in the first 4 balf. Pete Reed hit 12 for the Bearcats. In the prelim, the Linfield Frosh topped the Willamette yearlings 69-62. The Bearcat varsity leaves early in the week for Walla Walla; where they play Whit man Wednesday night Two more games are slated against College of Idaho at Caldwell Fri day and Saturday nights. Willamette (58) () Linfield fgftpftpt fgftpftp Hoy J 3 2 4 8!Cable.f 3 3 5 8 Redi v 4 4 212;01son.f 4 2 010 Coding 2 5 0 9iSford.c 0 0 3 0 McCler.g 0 3 4 3'Rsmaiug 2 2 1 6 Gufson.g 13 1 7Krger.g 3 4 110 ColvardTf 6 2 314 V Dlni 0 0 10 Cauiie.c 0 1 0 lCavnrJ 2 0 4 Shield 2 0 1 4 Small 2 4 3 8 RKhnnJ 0 0 0 O Diller 3 0 16 r r . j m a Ramg ooio Walsh,! 0 2 3 2 Colini.g 0 0 0 0 Iinofe" 'Cats h'&m Up"Up--Up'They Go for Elusive Ball 1 J A - - a ' V - t V;;r ' - ' i ' : ; - ' J- -t. f L.rt-t - J: 67-59Defeat For Webf oots Oregon's Flag Hopes Take Terrific Jolt NOKTBEKH ttCTOlON ! W t. Pet. WtPct Ore St 10 4 ,714 Wshngta S 9.410 Oregon 0 0 J71 Wash St 110.230 Idaho T Saturday results: At Wash. State 41. Ore. State fa; at Washington SI, Ore gon 59. The action was hot and heavy under the backboards in the weekend Northwest Conference series be tween Willamette's Bearcats and Linfield's Wildcats, as illustrated above. Center Tom Gooding of Willamette (31) sails a rebound oat of the hands of Linfield's Carol Cable (32) and the other man in on the' act is Willamette's Pete Reed (36). Linfield gained a 60-58 win over the Bearcats Satur day night to get i split in the series and knock Willamette front a top place tie in the race. (States- man Sports Photo.) . Paumeo- SeSs F(3A SWarfs &err s ripI 1 1 i llLead Widened C0ffl InlexasPlay Totals 18 22 15 58! Total 20 20 23 80 Free throws missed: Will. 15, Lia, '"otfidals: Mandie and Reed. ' WiU. 1 7 58 Unl. 7 2 48 60 EOCElces Title.. . j Wolves Lose 100-90 Fray T.a nnANDE (SDecial) The Eastern Oregon Mountaineers and the OCE Wolves combuied for one f the bieeest aggregate scoring totals in Oregon Collegiate Confer ence history Saturday night and . when the dust had settled the Mountaineers had a 100-90 point , crazy win gave EOCE a sweep 'of ' the two-game series with OCE. the count Fridav night being 87-67. Three EOCE players hit at least 20 points in the wild tilt. Larry Pryse and Ted SchadewiU had 24 , each and ken westenssow goi si. Frank Grove topped OCE with! 23 and Bobby Frantz chipped in with 17. The Mountaineers galloped to a 29-23 first-period edge, led 59-44 at the half and were on top 78-65 at the end of the third quarter. OCK (S0 - (W0) OC Ja-ltoftB fxltnttp Grove J 9 5 5 23 WtokwilO 0 2 20 ChbrlnJ 4 3 3 11 Pryse J 9 0 3 24 rr.ntir 1 1 0 11 Adrian.e 1 .4 4 Pinion J 4 S SISShdwx.g 10 4 3 14 M Knzi.g 5 4 4 14 Burton 4 3 S 11 Stanly4 m o o savages l Wilon,l 0 0 0 0 BaumJ 0 3 3 Hubrd.e 111 3 L.Savag 233 Harris 1 2 2 4 Kern 10 0 " Davis 3 0 2 4 - Bowmaat 0 0 0 0 1 Totals 34 2220 00 Totals 392222100 Free throws missed: OCE u, eoce 12. J " I OCK . i 23 44 SS 90 yXOCZ 29 59 78 100 COLLEGE i j Linfield 69, Willamette 58 Ore. State 62, Wasjt. State 41 Washington 167. Oregon 39 EOCE 10O. OCE 90 Lewis & Clark 103. Coll. Idaho 93 Pacific 77i Whitman 69 UCLA 88 J Stanford 80 So. Calif 62, Calif. 56 Gonzaga Bl- Portland 76 Humboldt! St. 74. Ore. Tech 7 Whitworth 15, Cent. Wash. 67 CPS 69, East Wash. 65 Kentucky 7t. DePaul 61 LaSalle 78. St. Joseph's 64 San Diego State 110. Cal Poly 96 Western State 68, Colorado Mines 48 f Colorado : State 56, Colorado Col lege 50 it Montana State 70. Idaho State CO LSU 77, Auburn 59 Holy Cross 88, Canisius 76 Colorado AiM 64. Regis SI Montana 60, Denver 62 St. Louis 7L Wyoming 55 Western Kentucky 108, Tennessee Tech 63 ' Kansas 78. Iowa State 70 Missouri 66, Oklahoma 51 Rice 76. Arkansas 62 Fordham M, Iona 47 Penn 56, Dartmouth 48 Syracuse 171, Penn State 69 Rutgers 79 Lehigh 65 Washington: (St. Louis) 78. Indiana State 60 ; Oklahoma A & M 79, Detroit 58 Indiana 63. Michigan State 61 Ohio States 84. Minnesota 73 Notre Dame 84, Navy 72 NYU 7L:Army 67 Richmond 78, Washington and Lee 13 M Zaharias Earns Share of Lead MIAMI BEACH. Fla. Ul Babe Zaharias, still fighting to regain her old power off the tees after her battle with cancer, tied men i par at th Bayshore Golf Course Saturday to pull up into a tiewih Patty Berg for the lead in the $5,000 Serbia Women i tournament. y.i a it w Gettysburg 75, BuclcneU 51 r I Princeton 59. Harvard 56 t St. John's 72, Temple 67 r Cornell 66, Columbia 57 . i Northwestern 90. Purdue 72 -Washington JV's 71. Seaattle Pa cific 50 '15 Illinois 74, Iowa 51 f Manhattan 82. Loyola (Chicago) 81 N. Y. , san antOiMO. Tex. w jonn ny Palmer of Charlotte. N. C, shot a seven-under-par 64 to set an all-time PGA record for 54 holes at 191 Saturday and take a long lead in the $12,500 Texas Open despite a record-tying 60 turned m by Ted Kroll of New Hartford West. Michigan 79. Ohio U. 72 - I Palmer holds a five-stroke lead WLJS wmiam 'nd f7 as the field of 90 turns toward Furman 66, South Carolina 50 i North Carolina St. 113. Clemson 59 Presbyterian 106. The OUdel 73 Duke 67. North Carolina 3 : e Niagara 69. Georgtown 56 Utah State 65, New Mexico 55 : Drake 81. Bradley 14 ! i Colorado S3. Nebraska 58 Louisville 88. Marquete 79 f Utah 70, Brigham Young 64 : TCU 76, Texas A&M 51 Mississippi SUte 70. Tlorida 66 I Tulane 54, Alabama 50 : J Texas 78, Baylor 53 Ft Mississippi BO. Georgia 66 West Texas 79. Arizona 71 I HIGH SCHOOL Cascade 48, Jefferson 41 Central 68. Elmira 55 Grants Pass 45. Medford 41 Cent Cath. 51. Concordia 41 Gresham 45, Tillamook 40 The Dalles 68rPendleton 62 Neahkahnie 52. Taft 49 La Grande 67. Vale 49 I Weiscr (Idah.) 70. Baker 69 Port. Frosh 75. Condon 55 Marshfield 84. North Bend 64 Corvallis 65. Bend 55 . Malin 60. ChUoquin 49 i' Favored Duke9 s Lea Licked $131,900 Anita Derby Captured by Determine the final 18 holes Sunday. Kroll's 60 was registered in ear ly afternoon and it looked for time as if Palmer might break that He did the first nine in 30 strokes but ran into trouble on the second nine and had 34. It was the greatest day for rec ords this 6,400-yard Brackenridge Park Course has ever known. Pal mer's 191 broke the mark set in 1945 by Byron Nelson at Seattle by two strokes and it was seven strokes under the Texas Open rec ord set by Jack Burke in 1952. Kroll s great round tied the all time PGA record for 18 holes set by Al Brosch of Garden City, N. Y, here in 1951 and tied by Bill Nary of Los Angeles at El Paso in 1952. Little Ted might have broken the record if a 6-foot putt had dropped on the 18th green. The ball barely missed the hole. In a tie for second place at the 54-hole mark with 196 were Chan dler Harper of Chattanooga. Tenn. and Lionel Hebert of Erie, Pa. Harper had a 63 Saturday while Hebert shot a 66. By JACK HEWLNS d)resotij statesman 6 (Sc 1) Statatamcm, Salom, Onw Suzu. Fob. 21. 1954 Staters Slab Goug ars 62441 SEATTLE UR Sophomore Karl Voegtlin'g sharp shooting from the corners paced Washington to a 35- 28 halftime lead over Oregon Sat urday sight and the Huskies fought off every challenge of the Web- ooti in the second half to hold on for a 67-59 Pacific Coast Confer ence basketball victory. It was Washington s only victory of the season over Oregon, which broke a . long-standing jinx last night by trouncing the Huskies 63- 59, the first Oregon victory on the Washington court since 1947. Sat urday night's defeat made it neces sary for Oregon to whip Oregon State twice in their final series next week to gain a tie for the Northern Division title. Oregon didn't get ahead once in Saturday night's tussle, trailing from the time Voegtlin canned a free throw to open Washington's scoring after a slow start Clapping- on a tight defense. Washington held Oregon to three points while running up a dozen of its own, then romped on to an 18-8 lead at the end of the first quarter. The winners got their wi dest margin late in the second per iod when Voegtlin canned his 14th point to make it 34-23. Husky Margin Melts ! The Webfoots came boiling back in the second half with a great display of long-range shooting that chipped the margin down to a sin gle point at 42-41 halfway through the third period. Then Jim Coshow added a Washington point and burly Dean; Parsons went on a one-man scoring rampage to tally seven more before the quarter ended with the count at 50-45. Oregon failed to crack the Wash ington defense for a field goal in the fourth quarter until Bob Hawes connected after six minutes had gone by. By that time Washington had a lead of eight points and finished without another field goal. collecting au the rest of its points on Oregon's fouls. Biggest blow to the Oregon hopes came when veteran forward Ed Halberg fouled out near the end of the third quarter while the Web-, foots still had an excellent chance for victory.!; Voegtlin s 20 points were high for the evening and Parsons tacked on 18 more1 for the Huskies, who rank fourth in the division stand ings. Halberg led Oregon with 11 and Max Anderson and Barney Holland picked up nine each. Orcioa (19) : ((7) Washington GFPT GFPT Halbrgi 5 1 511 Vogtlln S 4 320 Ross.f 2 4 2 8 Coshow,f4 3 111 Andrsn.c 3 3 2 9 Parsns.c 3 12 4 IS Hollnd.g 3 3 4 9 Patnoe,g 17 2 9 Page.g 2 0 3 4 Perkns.g 10 4 2 BeU.f 2 2 4 6 Tripp J 0 111 Stoutf 0 0 2 0 Johnsn 0 3 13 Hawes. 3 2 18 Olseni 10 0 2 Wegnrj 1 2 5 4 Bryan.g Olll Totals 21 17 28 59 Totals 18 31 18 67 Oregon L 8 18 19 14 59 Washington 18 17 13 17 67 Tree throws missed: Halberg 3. Bell, Anderson 3. Holland. Wegner, Voegt lin 4. Coshow 2. Tripp. Olsen 2. Far sons 2. Patnoe 3, Johnson 2. Officials: Lightner and Williams. 12 Clubs in Florida . . . iulajoi' leaguers Start Training Camp Brills ST4 PETERSBURG, Fla. Wl It's a new season but the same old headaches for the major league managers as all 16 teams swing into their annual spring training drills next week. Twelve teams, one more than Spe&ker f v ; i j - v - PAUL DURHAM Has SBC Date last year, are training in Florida while the other four are condition ing in Arizona. The Pittsburgh Pi rates and St Louis Cardinals beat. the gun, getting under way this week. The Pirates, who switched their camp from Havana to Fort Pierce, Fla., went into action last Monday. The St Louis Cardinals opened their St Petersburg camp Friday. Washington and Philadelphia start Sunday at Orlando and Clear water, Fla., respectively. Nine clubs Baltimore, Boston. Chicago, Detroit, New York in the American League and Chicago, Milwaukee. New York and Philadelphia in the National, will pitch camp on Mon day. Cleveland and Brooklyn will follow the next day. Cincinnati, the last club to start conditioning, will get under way Wednesday. SBC to Hear Linfield Men Two prominent members of the state's sporting circles, Coaches Roy Helser and Paul Durham of Linfield College, will be the speak ers at Monday morning s meeting of the Salem Breakfast Club at the Senator Hotel. Helser, Linfield basketball men tor and former star pitcher with the Portland Beavers, will talk on the Northwest Conference cage race and also is expected to relate some of his diamond experiences. Durham, Wildcat athletic director and head football coach, will among other things discuss the chaces of his outstanding grid star. Ad Rutschman, in cracking pro football. The 7:30 Monday meeting !s open to the general public. 34-to-l Shot Snares Rich Hialeah Event MIAMI. Fla. ID James Cox Brady's Landlocked, rank outsider at 34-1, was first out of the gate and first across the finish line Sat urday to win the $139,400 Widener Handicap at' Hialeah Park before a whopping crowd of 31,699. Landlocked had to battle Apbeim Stable s Quiet Step all the way. but the speedy 4-year-old gelding had enough left to win by a head. Time for the mile and a quarter was 2:03 1-5 over a fast track. Greentree Stable's Straight Face and Mrs. J. R. Thouron's Royal Vale, co-favorites in the race, nev er threatened and finished out ol the money. Landlocked paid $70, $35.80 and $1920. Quiet Step returned $28.30 and $14.70 while the show price on Andre was $4-80. Brady picked up the winner's share of $102,200 richest in 17 run nings of the Widener to make Landlock s earnings $221,050. i MacLaren Quint Tops jWashingtons WOODBURN (Special) The MacLaren Boys School cage team returned Saturday from Cheha lis. Wash.; where it won a pair of games from Washington State Reformatory by 58-50 and 70-56 scores. It was the first time in five years that MacLaren had beaten the Washington school MacLaren's center took scoring honors with 19 in one game and 43 in another. In prelims to the two games, MacLaren's JVs dropped 43-38 and 60-41 deci sions. ; Cascade Tops Lions. 4841 CASCADE HIGH SCHOOL (Special) The Cascade Cou gars rolled to a 17-10 first-period lead and went on to a 4841 vic tory over Jefferson's Lions Sat urday night in a non-league con test Howard Speer tossed in 19 points to spark Coach Lyle King's Cougars, while George Marlatt was tops for Ted John son's Lions with 14. It was 28-22 for Cascade at the half and the Cougars had a 38 29 margin at the close of the third period. Cascade also won the JV preliminary 48-40. Jefferson (41) Marlatt (14) . Oalton (1) Wright 8) Meyers (21 Cot man (0) T, - n d (48) Cascade (19) Speer (10) Sproul (0) Kinion (6) Brown (9) Winkle Bjf BOB MYERS ARCADIA. Calif. Ifv Determine, a Kentucky bred colt held off a belated challenge by the favored Duke s Lea and wheeled on home to win the $131,900 Santa Anita Derby by three and a half lengths Saturday: J Determine, a gray son of All- bbai. got a masterly ride from lit tle Ray York and settled the issue a 100 yards from the finish wire as Eddie Arcaro and -his Calumet Star, Duke's Lea. got up too late to seriously challenge the victor. Travertine, owned by Max Kol- mer's New York Dormar Stable, finished third in the field of eleven 3-year-olds. rMermine equalled the derby time for a mile and one-eighth 1.48 4-5,' carrying the derby weight of 118 pounds. The winner paid $7.70, $3.50 and $3.10 as I the runner up choice: Duke's 'Lea $3.60 and $2.90. and Travertine, with Johnny Longden aboard.' S4.00.' t Determine is owned by Andrew J. Crevolin of nearby Alhambra. A crowd of 53,000, about 2,000 less than witnessed the derby a year ago, turned out for the 17th running of the race. The weather was bright and the track was fast Kentucky Winner CHICAGO (l Although two of their stars, Lou Tsioropoulos and Frank Ramsey, fouled out mid way in the last half, Kentucky s I undefeated Wildcats surged to thoi 91 ct fraicrht rtsclrotHan , vif. Calumet. SeeKing ItS t Ulira ,ftrw of th aenn Sntnrrlaw nierhf . . . . .U J 1 t: I " - " j B--r, sxaigni victory in uie uervyuere, trimming DePaul 76-61. sent the running mate of Duke s Lea, Indian Red, out on the early! Jack McAuliffe held the light- pace, and the colt bung on to the weight title from 1886 until his lead for the first half mile. I retirement in 1896. He was un- York kept Determine back, but I defeated throughout his boxing never too far, and made his move career which started in 1884. soon after the half-mile point. I Travertine, too, was making a strong bid for an upset while Duke's Lea was held far behind dead last at one stage going down the back stretch. Determine the stretch. f b Rut TWormino hanr rm win ning his linn stakes is trips to OPPDAL, Norway Wl Stein e post would not yield. : i Eriksen of Norway, and Sarah Indians Wins, Iowai Defeated EAST LANSING, Mich. UP Indiana continued on its drive to repeat as Big Ten basketball champion i by waiting out the clock during the last minute Saturday night and then sinking the ' win ning basket in the last two sec onds for; a 63-61 victory over Michigan State. Reserves scoring: Jefferson Tieske 1. Hopkins 10. Henion 3. Neal 1: Cas cadeMickey 1. Wipper 3. Officials: Mull and Sirnio. Jefferson 10 XX 19 41 Cascade 17 28 3 48 IOWA CITY. Iowa Red hot Illinois blighted Iowa's Big Ten basketball title aspirations and avenged an earlier defeat by whipping the Hawkeyes 74-51 here Saturday! night Norway, Sweden, Austria Nab idTdenSg, Honors in Holmenhollen Meet The victory was worth $84,800 to Thomasson of Sweden, hrtkc the wealthy automobile dealer, through Austria's domination of vrevoun. 1 the nlacines m the slalom events Second, third and fourth place at the three-dav Holmenhollen Ski finishers collected $20,000, $15,000 Festival Saturday but the mid and $10,000. i f Europeans took virtually all the Crevolin. in the winner's circle, honors. - u promptly announced that Deter-1 Eriksen was the winner of the mine would be pointed to run in the men's event and was followed hv Kentucky Derby, and very likely four Austrians. In sixth place Was wiu oe uown to rioriaa nerore tnaxi Wallace Werner of Steamboat to race in a $100,000 race at Gulf- Springs, Colo., 17-year-old winner stream. v of Friday s downhill race. He was followed by Brooks Dodge of Pink- (Resmtts f Big iMeet ra Page Z.) Six WresUiaf I ham Notch. N. H. Miss Thomasson had to share first place in the women's com petition with Trude Klecker of Aus tria. In ! this race, U. S. forces also took sixth place. Katy Rodolph of Hayden. Colo., who was linked romantically with Encksen during the "1932 winter Olympics, was eight-tenths of a second behind the two winners. j ' Other finishers in the women's race included Jannette Burr, Se attle, 10th and : Imogene Opton, North Conway, N. IL, 26th. The Holmenkolleri events this year are a prelude lo the world championships at Are. Sweden, next week- Central Whips Elmira Quintet CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL (Sepcial) Central's Panthers led almost all the way Saturday night for a 68-55 decision over Elmira High's cagemen in a non- league basketball mix. Scores it the quarters favored the Pan thers 17-13, 33-27 and 51-40. Gordy Brunk with 15, Mare Nelson with 14 and Larry John son with 13 points, sparked Cen tral. Lionel Gray led Elmira with 15. Central's JVs won the preliminary mix 59-49. Pioneers Nab 103-93 Game PORTLAND Ufi Lewis and Clark advanced to first place in Northwest Conference standings Saturday night, defeating College of Idaho 103-93. R. C. Owens, the conference scoring leader, sank 14 field goals and 14 free throws for 42 points high for the game. Ken Servas'of Lewis and Clark had 39. Lewis and Clark led 51-42 at the half. But College of Idaho rallied in the third quarter and cut the margin to 73-70. Lewis and Clark surged in the final quarter to win. t t , -. OSC Cagemen Assured Of at Least Toga Tie PULLMAN, Wash, ai i- The Oregon State Beavers strengthened their Northern Division ? Pacific Coast Conference title hopes, with . an easy ez-u win Saturday nignt that gave them a clean sweep of . their four-game basketball series with Washington State. ! ! Tex Wruteman s field soal from the key gave the Beavers a 4-3 ead with 2 minutes and 45 seconds of the game gone, and from there on OSC steadily widened the gap. The Beavers passed well against the Cougar zone defense and made good on a respectable 38 per cent i of their tries from the floor. i The Cougars, on the other hand. foiled at every turn, sank the ball on only eight of their 47 tries from the field for a .170 percentage. and had to count on free throws to stay in the game, j WSC was blanked completely from the floor during' the third period, while racking up five points on free throws. Meantime, the Beavers, with the help of White- man's fine rebounding. 1, boomed ahead with 19 points that quarter. The smooth passing of Jay Dean was a big factor in the Oregon State win. He set up numerous baskets for the Beavers' sharp shooter Wade Halbrook.. f Halbrook tied with Ron Bennink of WSC for the night's scoring hon ors with 17 points. Bennink was held to only one field 'goal, how ever. Halbrook got seven. The Cougars staged a brief rally in the fourth period that closed the gap a bit as Bennink hit seven straight foul shots. Tony Vlaste- lica's fine hook shots highlighted the Beavers slow moving attack in the final period. ; ? Beaver Coach Slats Gill substi tuted freely as OSC coasted in with the victory. Al Perry and Bennink; sent the Cougars off to a fast start in the first period with a field goal and a free throw, but by the end of the quarter they were trailing 134. In the second period Bill Rehder scored twice from the floor and Bennink once for the Cougars as the Beavers moved out to a 28-18 halftime lead. Bob Klock missed six successive free throw chances during that period. ! ; Then came the disastrous third period that ended the WSC hopes. Oregon SUte 2) ' (41) WSC GFPT GFPT Whtmn4 2 5 14 Bennlk 1 15 3 IT Dean.f 1111 PerryX 2 2 0 Halbrk,c 7 3 317 Behder.c 3 13 7 Robins. 3 14 7 Klock.f 3 1 S Fdgsld. 19 4 2 Swnsn.f 10 3 3 RomsU 0 0 3 9 Kiehn.l O i l 1 Vlstlca.c 14 18 Lodge.! 2 1 Paulus,f 0 1 Hanksi 0 2 12 Hallitn.f l 0 1 Unrwdx 1111 Jarboe. 1 0 0 4 Foisy O O 0 0 Crtmni 0 0 0 Totals 2513 24 82 Totals " 3515 41 Oregon SUte 13 IS It IS S3 wsc a 10 s 18 41 Free throws missed: OSC White man, Bobins. Halbrook 2, Vlastellca 3. WSC-Bennick. 2. Kiehn. Perry. Lodge 3, Klock 7, . Swan son 3. Officials: McCultouch and Touts. Miceli Takes Kayo Victory CINCINNATI itil Joe Miceli of New York. 147, knocked out Wallace (Bud) Smith, of Cincin nati. 141. in 1 minute and 19 sec onds of the fifth round of. a sched uled 10-round fight here Saturday night II A vicious left hook flush to the chin sent Smith, No. 1 challenger for the lightweight title, down for ine iuu count, j ; It was the . third successive knockout this year for Miceli, Wolgamott f5' Nabs 4th Slot TOLEDO (Special) The Wolgamott's Service Station quint of Salem' whipped Eddy ville 62-46' Saturday night to cap ture fourth place in the Toledo AAU Invitational Tourney. Don Nims with 20 points' and Dick Norton with 18, led Wolgamott's, which had a 35-26 margin at the. half. '! i The Salem team had advanced with a 60-40 win over the Toledo Ghostwriters Friday : night. Pacific Subdues Whitman 77-69 f i- - FOREST GROVE 1 Pacific University evened its Northwest Conference basketball series with Whitman Saturday night, defeat ing the Missionaries 77-69. Whitman, which went into the game tied for first place in con ference standings, now is tied with Willamette for second. Norm Hubert of Pacific was high scorer with 23 points, j Center Rex Gwinn led the losers with- 16. Elmira (SS) Bowlsby () Gray 15) Ward (4) Heily (13) ..F -C -G.. G () Central (13) Johnson (13) Brunk - (8) Freeman (14) Nelson (8) Fratzke Gutman (1) Reserves scoring: Elmira Mc Kin ney 1. Lindblom 1, Buehler 3, Cool ey 8: Central Loy 1. Bartel 3. Ha- germaa 4. Alsip I. Haveman 3. of ficials: Nelson and Bates. Elmira - , 13 37 40 S3 Central .. 17 S3 51 II Trojans Smash Cal Club Again LOS ANGELES (ii Southern California handed . California its second setback in as many nights, whipping the Golden Bears, 63-56, Saturday . night ; and setting: the stage for the Trojans climax ser ies here next week with UCLA in their battle for the Pacific Coast Conference Southern Division bas If IBBB-BBBb'bbbi H HiHiBBBBh; : jg gssqp "Daddy says all the men at General Finance Corp. ; went to school here. That's why they . H CONSOLIDATE debts m well:'' If yea're worried about a pile of bills, the quickest way to forget them Is to consolidate them with a loan front 136 & Commercial Street! GGiiGnni FinnncE conp. ! j license Not. $-131 M-33S if ; 136 SOi tOMMIRCIAL ST. PHONS 3.91 61 ketball championship. I - if If t f