sx: 1 (Sec 2) Statesman, Satan. Ore Thunu March 11 1954 I Flip of Coin Ousts Kansas : ; Colorado Gets Berth; -Indiana Faces Irish ( NEW YORK (H The field was completed Wednesday for the see cod round of the national basket ball collegiate championships with the drawing of Colorado as the Big Seven Conference representa tive. Colorado had tied Kansas for the conference championship and the NEW YORK (fl - First round pairings for the four regional NCAA basketball tournaments, Fri day and Saturday: At Philadelphia Navy vs. Cor nell: North Carolina State vs. La Salle. At Iowa City Penn State vs. Louisiana State; Notre Dame vs. Indiana. At Stillwater. Okla. Bradley vs. Colorado; Rice vs. Oklahoma A. M. .AtjCorvallis. Ore. Santa Clara vs. Colorado A&M: Idaho State vs. Southern California. Theyll "Dp It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo Buffaloes won the draw at Kansas City to see which would represent the Big Seven, Colorado will play Bradley in a four - team tournament at Still Water, Okla.. one of four such re gional events to be held Friday and Saturday. The four winners go to Kansas City to battle March 19-20 for the national champion ship won last year by Indiana. Missouri tossed a monkey wrench into the works Tuesday night by upsetting favored Kansas, m. ine aeieai leii nansas wiin a lo-z league record, same as tor Colorado, and not enoueh time for a playoff. Regional tournaments also are scheduled for Philadelphia, Iowa City, and Corvallis, Ore., Friday and Saturday i-x ! In the other game Friday at aiuiwaier, juce, ineaoumwesi Conference champion, meets Okla homa A k M, ruler of the Missouri Vflllpv lnnn Indiana, rated the Nation's No. 2 team in the latest Associated Press poll, meets. Notre Dame, No. 6, in one game at Iowa City, Penn State Dlavs louisiana State in the other. At Philadelphia, Navy plays Cor nell, the Ivy League champion, while North Carolina State, Atlan tic Coast champion, meets - La Salle. Southern California, Pacific Coast Conference champion, plays Idaho State, while Santa Clara tackles Colorado A It M, winner of the Skyline Conference title, Fri day at Corvallis. . TOWN. DEEDED TO PUT IT v5- LET IT CO nSsSSh B - ... , I "My HOUSE IS TOO SMALL FCRf YMAT? ZXtT wgne A rw MiM-arrecr a proo mtrs 1 J they mwa M 1 1 err TO WU AT CD-Meai 1 4 8B3B30M6-4 B4WS-MUST TENUIS COURT TiflrrmJP ltf t5fe BE ON "TUB BEACH -BUT, TfV AND SWVMMie Jl HE WANTS THE jf-WafTl UH-AOGTME CAM FW BSD: RXXWTTH J 4GEMTTODk5 'mmeA BUCXS-THEf? A DEAL R3R ' nTOO?vfl UP FOR A PAL M3U,04tM 6CT TO mPW&m .for so clams -rfr AJi TrrTfxy? V'frT URjTDAn&RTwX mv7r(itA rP MllSirai Jim rtTTbok 4-o tz tarnEi , WTyjjr. i a L fcJTri Holland Given Duck Accolade PORTLAND m Barney Hol land, University of Oregon guard from Coos Bay, Wednesday won the Baker award, presented an nually to the player named by other team members as the out standing senior on the squad. The award was presented at an Oregon, Duck Club luncheon. Leo Casanova, Oregon football coach. und Al Brightman, Seattle University basketball coach) were speakers. Exhibition Games Philadelphia (N) 3 (A) 4 Cincinnati Boston (A) 3. Milwaukee (N) 2 Pittsburgh (N) 8, Detroit (A) 1 New York (A) 4, Washington (A) 3 St Louis (N) 7, Chicago (A) 5 Chicago (N) 1, New York (N) 7 Baltimore (A)2,Cleveland (A) 1 $40 Top Price For Title Bout NEW YORK m Promoter Jim NorrisWednesday set a top price of $40 for the heavyweight title fight between champion Rocky Marciano and ex-titleholder Ez zard Charles at Yankee Stadium, June 17. Other reserved, seat prices are (5. $10, $15. $20 and $30. , The president of the Internation al Boxing Club said no decision has been made yet on whether the bout will be televised into the homes or theaters. Americans Losex. CAIRO (J) Budge Patty of Los Angeles and Wayne Van Voorhees of Palm Beach, Fla., were beaten Wednesday in. the Egyptian Inter national Tennis Championships. Patty, former Wimbledon cham pion, was ousted by Giuseppe Mer- lo of Italy, 64), 64, 1-6, 4-6, 6-1 in a quarter-final match. The American tired badly after the fourth set and went down meekly in the final set. Jaroslav Drobny of Egypt elim inated Van Voorhees in a second round match, 6-1, 6-2. ollege Comments v. By TOM YATES Apologies arc due to Bill Colvard, Willamette Bearcat bouncing forward whom we forgot to salute as a graduating senior in the story on WU's upsetting of the Lewis Clark pennant hopes last Friday night Colvard was the lone senior on Coach John Lewis' 'Cat quint which finished in a tie for fourth in the Northwest Conference, two games behind co-champs Whitman and Pacific In mid-season it didn't look as though the Lewis men were going to suffer much of a loss when Colvard takes his degree, but following his January wed ding Bill suddenly found the inspiration he had lost earlier m the year and began to grab Off rebounds and pour through points as he had in past games. By the time the 'Cats made their eastern swing Colvard was back in the opening lineup ana actually nu wnumette season's high individual etiort wit&.zs counters against wniiman in tat two over-tinle heart-breaker at Walla Walla ... It's a little out of our field of coverage, but we'd like to put in a plug for the State B Tournament opening this after noon in the Willamette gym. The Exchange club of Salem is ' promoting this third Salem presentation of the tourney, with . Les Sparks from Willamette managing the show. We hope the local folks can show their appreciation for bringing the tourney, to town by turning out to see the scrappy small-school fives in action. If you're a true-blue basketball fan it really doesn't mat ter if it's Podunk playing Toonerville as long as the compe tition is rugged, and those B boys really have the old competi tive spirit ... , It's a dnch that the tourney will be well managed with Sparks at the helm. Nobody can boast the experience that Les has at putting nn these hit mixes, and we know that when he sets around to writ ing that book on the history of the Sfate Tournaments and Willam ette athletics it'll be a wow. Fact is, that Sparks has tried his hand. and successfully we might note, at coaching every phase oi the athletic program at the State Street school ... At least two of the competing schools in the B classic will be coached by Northwest Conference i graduates. lone coach Buss DeBohdt took bis degree at Pacific, while Howard Kanff man, Knappa's mentor, also lists the Forest Grove school as his alma mater. And if you want to catch a whole handful of col lege coaches under one roof, just wander ever to the Willamette gym during the tourney action, 'cause those small school smooth ies are really in demand iv. i Kind of disaooointme thatLook Magazine didn't list any hon orable mentions in their All-America basketball layout Hence, the only Westerner to break into the All-SUr lineup was Bob Matheny, California's clever little playmaker, who put in some time with the Oakland Bittners a couple of seasons ago. No doubt the heavy polling nf the eastern cart of the nation is responsible for this great social injustice, but at least the Northwest got Wade Hajbrook on the District 8 team . . . SARASOTA, Fla. Of! A pinch hit slam into centerfield by Billy Goodman drove in two runs in a seventh inning rally Wednesday as the Boston Red Sox topped their former neighbors, the Milwaukee oiavcs j-i. me viwiuiy, uviuic ,- 063 fans, was the fourth straight one run triumph for Boston in the er Len tindborg ana : ouuieioer John Powers. Dahlke had been de tained at Iowa State Teachers Col- ege and Lindborg was condition ing at the Pittsburgh Pirates' Flor ida camp. ST. PETERSBURG Pinch hitter Lew Berbccet's sacrifice fly in the ninth inning sent in the win ning run Wednesday as the New York Yankees edged the Washing ton Senators 4-X.x Catcher Elstoh Howard, first Negro- to play with the Yanks, tripled home two runs as- the champs took a 3-0 lead in the fourth inning. After a seventh inning homer byxPete Runnels clipped the advantage, Washington tied it with a pair in the eighth as Carlos Paula and Jiuo Becquer, Negro rookies, pro duced important hits. . WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. LfV Little Bobby Shantx. served up a home run ball as his first 1954 game pitch Wednesday, . but the Philadelphia Athletics used a squeeze bunt in the 9th inning to edge the Cincinnati Reds, 4-3. LAK ELAND, Fla. (A The De troit Tigers were walloped, a-l. WednesdayNon five home runs by the , Pittsburra. Pirates in an exhibition game. Pittsburgh scored all of its runs on thehomers by Sid Gordon, Frank Thomas. Jerry Lynch, . Jack Shepard anaVBob Skinner. TUCSON, Ariz. Ul Jim Frid ley slammed a homer in the ninth inning Wednesday and broke a tie to give the Baltimore Orioles their fifth -straight exhibition victory. 2-1 triumph over the Cleveland In dians.. .... ANAHEIM, Calif. Ufi The big question in the Hollywood spring camp Wednesday night was the whereabouts of Ted Beard. The hard-bitting southpaw out- , fielder is the sole player who isn't ala are.infielder Don Dahlke, pitch- FULLERTON. Calif, if) Los Angeles got only half as many hits as UCLA Wednesday but beat the Bruins, 6-5, in an exhibition game. It was the first win of the grape fruit season for manager Stan Hack's men. It was the third game in a row in which Dixie Upright has hit homers. Wednesday s was a big one, coming with the bases loaded in the fifth, when the Angels "got all their runs. WU Gals' Badminton Team in Tourney Win Willamette university women's badminton team swept both single and double events at the annual district tournament of the Willamette Valley Collegiate League this week. Four colleges participated in the meet at New- berg. They were Oregon College of Education, Linfield, George Fox and Willamette, i The two Willamette doubles teams were represented by Donna Brandt and Sophia Polales, both of Salem, and Charlene Miner and Margaret Knochenhauer, both of San Mateo, Calif. Miss Brandt and Miss Polales also were winners in the singles division. The Willamette bad minton team is coached by Mrs. Ollie Williams. i L MESA, Ariz. Ml Ralph Kiner hit two home runs, one with the bases loaded, as the Chicago Cubs snapped a four-game losing streak with a 10-7 exhibition i game vic tory Nver the New York Giants Wednesday. 5 . . SANTA CRtk. Calif . I The Sacramento Solons suffered their first injury of 1954 pacific Coast League spring training Wednesday when a foul ball brushed third baseman Tommy GlavianoV foot Glaviano. purchased from the Philadelphia Phillies, is expected to be out of i action a week. is. i MO ONTARIO. Calif. UP) Manager Lefty O Doul nominated Bui Thorn- ason, who played bail in Mexico this winter, to start for San Diego in its Pacific Coast League exhibi tion game against Seattle here Thursday. 5 J ". Simps NTEREY, Calif. 1 Herb l, rookie outfielder from Al- buquerque. smashed a three run homer oveothe right field fence Wednesday toNdve the Oakland Oaks a 9-7 PaclficsCoast League training victory over fh San Fran cisco Seals. s - MIAMI. Fla. Wl Shutout until the eight, the Brooklyn Dodgem scored six times to tie the score and 4hen pushed over a run in the 11th to beat the Philadelphia signed and in camp. Latest arriv-J Phillies, 74, in their exhibition game Wednesday night, OKLAHOMA CITY WINNER OKLAHOMA CITY (A Okla homa- City, fresh from Tuesday night's 61- 55 NtAA basketball elimination at the hands of Brad ley, took it out on Tulsa Wednes day night, 71-53. i ; Bratton Gets Fined $3,000 PHILADELPHIA l Former welterweight champion cham pion Johnny Bratton was fined $3,- 000 Wednesday, by the Pennsylvan ia State Athletic Commission for "not putting forth his best efforts' in a 10-round losing fight with John ny Saxton last Feb. 24. Murray A. Frank, general coun sel fori the International Boxing Managers Guild of New York, who represented Bratton, said the action would be taken to court to "test the validity of the commis- Frank called tne move capri cious and arbitrary" and charged that Bratton's "constitutional rights had been violated by the severity of the penalty. The fine is to be deducted from Bratton's share of his $4,770 purse which had been held the day after the fight The commission's sus pension of Bratton' remained in ef fect , j . gating Conimittee CodeDevised WASHINGTON (H - The Senate Republican Policy Committee Wed nesday suggested " a seven-point code ior conducting committee in vestigations; but Included no pro vision for enforcing it , Six of the seven' points provided for full committee or subcommit tee action in initiating br carrying on investigations, and seemed to be aimed at elimination of one- man operations of the type fre quently conducted by Sen. 'McCar thy (R-Wis). Among them was a suggested I requirement that at least one majority member and one minority member bt present at every hearing. Sidestep Issue . Sen. Ferguson (RMich, Policy Committee: chairman, sidestepped questions on whether the sugges tions were aimed at McCarthy, chairman of the" Senate investiga tions subcommittee. He also de clined to say whether any pres sure would be brought against any Republican committee head who ignores the suggestions. ' Here is i the policy committee's code, drawn up in a form sug gested for adoption by the various Senate committees: 'L An investigating subcommit tee of any committee may be au thorized only by the action of a majority of the committee. Majority Vote '2. No investigating committee or subcommittee is authorized to hold a hearing to hear subpoenaed witnesses or take sworn testimony unless a majority of the members of the committee or subcommittee are present; provided, however, that the committee may authorize the presence of a majority and a minority member to constitute a quorum, f' '3. An investigating committee or subcommittee may not delegate its authority to issue subpoenas except by a vote of the commit tee or subcommittee. '4. No hearing shall be initiated unless the' investigating committee or subcommittee has specifically authorized such hearing. Place of Hearings ' "5. No hearing of an investigat ing committee or subcommittee shall be scheduled outside oi tne District of Columbia except by the majority Vote of the committee or subcommittee. "6. No confidenHal testimony taken or confidential material pre sented in an executive hearing of an investigating committee or sub committee or any report of the proceedings of such an executive hearing-shall be made public, ei ther in whole or in part or by way of summary, unless author ized by a majority of the member$ of the committee or subcommit tee. '7. Any witness summoned to a public or executive hearing may be accompanied by counsel of bis own choosine who snail be permit ted while4 the witness is testifying to advise him of his legal rights, :vv 4 - ,xt -vv . . - . -r - ' 1 ,- ! I V i -j-- . J '.i- . ... , . - ' A . '7-1 ' x v I ' " ; i K ' 1 N, EftAVTD FIRE TO SAVE SON Mrs. Charlene Chaves of Los Angeles holds her 2-xnonth-old son. Randy, after the baby had been treated for burns on the head, face, arms and hands. Mrs. Chavez reached through a wall of fire to rescue Randy after his blankets caught fire from a heater near bis crib. Reporter Compares TV Interviews to Hot Seat By A. ROBERT SMITH Statesman Correspondent WASHINGTON Stepping into the backstage wonderland of television last Sunday for the first time, I found answers to ques tions that had cropped up in my mind many times such as: Are TV programs in which reporters quiz politicians unrehears ed? i Why is TV such an expensive medium compared with radio? Is TV educational, or enter U.S. Expected To Reassure ; South Korea WASHINGTON to The United States, is expected to give South f. Korea; assurances soon that there will be no "sellout" of its vital interests at the forthcoming Gen eva Conference on Far Eastern peace. . , - At ' the same time, informed sources here said, the united States is due to invite. the Syng man Rhee government to assign a representative to consult with t American officials on policies to be followed in dealing with Com- tnunist governments in the Geneva meeting. - 1. , - President Rhee indicated at Seoul Wednesday that he will send a delegation to Geneva for the. con ference opening April 26, but ho said he wants assurances and clar ification on the American position regarding Korean negotiations there. The Geneva Conference was agreed upon by Russia and ' the Western powers at the Big Four meeting in. Berlin last month. It will actually be two conferences, one concerned with negotiating a permanent settlement in divided Korea and the other aimed at ne gotiating peace in Indochina. Planning for the policies and tac tics to be followed by the free na ; tlons in these meetings will go into high gear when Secretary of Stat Dulles returns next weekend from the Inter - American Conference which he is now attending at Ca racas, Venezuela. - Gen. McCarty In Portland tainment, wearing an academic falseface? My experience was in partici pating in a program called "Man oi the week" A. K Smith Missing Man Returns to , CivUization FRIDAY HARBOR. Wash. W-A 36-yea'r-old Deer Harbor man. miss ing and presumed drowned since Feb. 22, turned up alive Wednesday after paddling his 12-foot canoe from Orcas Island to Vancouver, B i Deputy! Sheriff M.A. McDuffy said Lawrence Answych telephoned the sheriff's office here and asked that the searehfor his "body" be called off. "It took him two weeks to get there," McDuffy said. "He stopped over at Waldron and "Pender Islands " X The deputy quoted Answych as saying "he had a pretty rough trip." , ! "I had a sail up and would pad dle at the same time," the officer quoted him. A Coast Guard plane and patrol boat searched for Answych after his disappearance. He had left a note saying "I went fishing." Authorities were alerted when he failed to return. ' McDuffy said Answych was pretty lucky to get there", through recent rough water conditions that gave trouble to' much larger craft. The Orcas-Vancouver distance is about 100 miles. , ' (Continued from preceding page) river: George Bayer, six-toot, six-men and 240-pound former pro gridder with the Washington Redskins, recently shot a 10-under par 62 on a tough Pasadena course. He used a three wood for his tee shot on the 335-yard first hole because, as he put it, 1 always drive pver the green and land in that ditch behind it if I don V . . . Sick ening, thass what .vj j ( - '.:' ? How utterly ridiculous these all-star athletie selections can often be is again bared by the fact that Forrest Twogood's Southern Cal Trojans are Coast Conference basketball champ Ions, and yet placed i absolutely nobody on any of the All America, All-Coast pr' All-Division teams. Why? Because the lads were named to those mythical squads before the Trojans started their big drive toward the pennant A big gyp for players like Roy Irvin and Dick Welsh ... Interesting sidelight on the Friday nigh t Southern Cal- " Idaho State NCAA mix at Corvallii: When Trojan coach For . rest Twogood was mentoring at the University of Idaho years ago his captain and No. 1 boy on the Vandals team was Steve Belko, who how coaches the Idaho State crew. So it will be a. father vs. son touch for the Friday night Opener. , jncidentally, the very first gent to reach Belko with a con gratulatory handshake Tuesday night when the Bengals upset Se attle U ilKtheir overtime thriller was Twogood. He almost broke a leg getting H, his former star player, and wis so tickled over his i success that he dang near kissed bia - " Spiith Oregon Wreck Fatal GRANTS PASS UH Mrs. Helen Cooley. 31, Cave Junction, died in a hospital Wednesday from injuries suffered' when two pick-up trucks sideswiped in the rain south of here Monday. ' X'.-. She was one of six persons hurt in the accident. One of them, her husband, Edwin Cooley, 52. still was in critical condition. The other four remained in the hospital, but none is m critical condition. sustained by the CBS net work as its an swer to NBC's "Meet the Press." William H. Lawrence of the New York Times, George Bookman of Time magazine and I quizzed Sen. Henry M. Jackson (D- Wash.) for a national TV audience in 52 cities and a radio audience in countless other cities with stations hooked into the CBS network. Entirely Unrehearsed It was entirely unrehearsed. Arriving about half hour before air .time, we kicked around the subjects that seemed most timely to touch upon in the fast-moving question and answer period but no actual questions were framed for Jackson in advanbe. Since Jackson is a member of the-Mc Carthy committee, appearing at tne end ox quite a week in which Sen. Joseph McCarthy figured heavily, that was the obvious topic. , ' Moderator Ron Cochran warned only that we should not devote the entire show to Mc Carthy questions, and so we agreed that economic conditions, statehood and western resource development were other ' likely topics. We were then instructed to prepare three brief questions to fire at Jackson 1-2-3 to open the show- attention getters de signed to persuade the viewer at home not to switch his dial to another channel. The only other preparations pertained to our appearance. As requested, we showed up at the studio in clothing that did not have sharply contrasting light and dark colors. Three of us had gray suits and blue shirts. ; This is to avoid picture distortion. No makeup " was required on .Law rence and I, but Jackson; and Bookman needed dark beards toned down and v shaving nicks covered. " Realizes Cost Factor Looking over, the maze of equipment cluttering the: big studio, and noting the number of men reauired to man it, I soon realized where the TV cost factor enters in. Over a , dozen persons unseen to the TV audience were involved in the production of that simple unrehearsed show. 5 Four of them "operated the Jthree cameras which moved about to give the viewers- a variety of pic tures during the show; one oper ated an overhead microphone boom; a sixth called signals to the other five from the studio floor to direct their movements. In a control room high above the floor one man watches the three pictures being picked up by the cameras and selects which the audience shall see. The other Old Shoes Look Like New After j A Trip to f ' Jim's Shoe Service 175 ri High Salem four men in the booth tend the many dials to assure listeners good fidelity sound and picture. When this show was first put on by CBS, they paid the man of the week $250 for his appear ance, but apparently they dis covered they could trim costs by depending on him taking his compensation in the publicity value of the program to his ca reer. They continue to pay each of the three guest reporters $100. General Popularity The many question-answer pro grams of this character on TV- radio today apparently attest to their general - popularity, but whether their popularity stems from their entertainment factor or educational value is not easily ascertained. Perhaps because my beat is the capital city and questions on na tional issues are a steady diet, these shows no longer prove par ticularly edifying to me. They are often at best a character study of the man on the hot seat, tor the way he deals with the. questions often tells more about the poli tician than the issues. 'J That in itself is an educational element, but I think It would be a mistake good as these pro grams are for viewers to sup pose that through them they can keep abreast of the great politi cal debates of our time. They are capsule-sized accounts of one man's views which are most in structive when projected against a background of more detailed knowledge obtained through other media. PORTLAND UB The com mander of the 315th Air Division in -Japan is hero at homo for a brief leave. He is Mai. Gen. Chester E. McCarty, in civilian life a Portland attorney. ' He said he might have something to say Saturday night about reports that' ho plans to get into politics when he leaves the Air Force There will be a reunion then for members of the 403d Troop Carrier Wing. McCarty took the group overseas from here in 1952. Death Claims Nels Ashland, Woodburn SUtesmaa Newt Servlct WOODBURN Nels Ashland, 76, early loganberry producer, in the Union district, died Wednes day morning at his home, 638 Young St., following a lengthy ill ness. . i;- He was born at Tin, Norway, Aug. 17, 1877 and came to this country when he was 21. In 1923 he came to Woodburn from Mon tana. He was a member of Im- manuel Lutheran Church, Wood-j burn. - ' - i Surviving are his widow, Anna Ashland; three daughters, .Helen Sinfield. Vancouver. Wash.. Ella Halkinrude, Portland, and Dag ney McCormick, Woodburn; four sons, Kenneth, Harold and Lloyd Ashland, all of Woodburn, and Norman Ashland, Portland, and 17 grandchildren. v Funeral services will be held Friday at 2 p.m. in Ringo Corn well Chapel with' the Rev. J. Wil liam Carlson officiating. Burial will be at Belle Passi Cemetery. - A fence over 1,000 miles Ion has been built across Australia in an effor tto control rabbits, in an effort to control rabbits. 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