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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 12, 1955)
- i S jj3MGi)(3 Meet the Beavers, Bill rvn?3 1 ' "fQ - District Final Slated Tonight By DAN-.POLING Statesman Sportswriter Dick Ballantyne's burly South Salem Saxons, still smarting from Thursday night's 52-51 upset at the hands of the Cascade Cougars, turned on their tormentors at the South Salem High Gym with a vengeance Friday night, crushing the ' Cougars, 77-44. The Saxon win- evens the best two-out-of-three series between the clubs at one victory each. The third and deciding game f the series will be played Saturday night at 8 p. m. on the neutral North Salem High floor and -will be a winner-take-all affair, the victor qualify ing as the District 11 entry to the Oregon State High School Tourna ment at Eugene next week. South Salem unveiled an al most air-tight! zone defense, which coupled with the whopping Saxon height i superiority, held the vaunted Cascade speedboys to only eight field goals for the evening, five of which came in the first half.' With the Saxon front line of Phil Burkland, Dale Jones, and Bobby Wulf in com plete command of the rebound department. Cascade's inability to hit from the field proved fatal, as the Cougars were faced with the inescapable fact that they only had one shot to connect on. otherwise one of the Saxons terrific trio would haul in the wayward heave. Saxon Offense Good The host five's offense left little to be desired to the gallery gods, as the Saxons were in the driver's seat from the opening tipoff. Jones opened hostilities, scoring on a fast break with only 15 seconds gone, to give Ballan- never relinquished. Quick Saxon layins by Bruce Patterson, Neil Scheidel and Wulf ran the count to 8-1 and South Salem was off to the races. Gene Winkle finally .broke the Cascade scoring drought with a 35-foot push shot, but Wulf and Burkland dunked consecutive tip ins, and the Saxon die was cast Cascade's Eddie Sproul, hero of Thursday's Cascade win, connect ed on a jumper just before the first-quarter buzzer to cut the lead to 20-8 for South Salem at the rest stop. ' The stratospheric Saxons kept the pressure on throughout the remainder of the first half as Wulf and Burkland hit - for 15 points between them in the sec ond canto, mostly on tip-ins and short hook shots. The first half ended with the Saxon point out put more than doubling that of Cascade, 42-20. Lawrence en Bench The third quarter opened with 6-1 J. D. Lawrence, the only Cas cade regular over 5-10, and the sole Cougar hope to maintain any semblance of equality under the backboards, riding the bench with four personal fouls. With Cascade mentor Cal Hersey having to hold his ace pivotman out of . action, the . Saxons really ran wild, sometimes getting as many as four and five shots before holing out a basket Wulf hit a fadeaway hook -at the 7:30 mark and seconds later Burkland con tributed a tip-is to run the count 46-22. Don Mickey countered for Cas - cade with a. long side shot, but Burkland and : Wulf hit three quick baskets to widen the gap to '54-24. Wulf hit Aven field goals in the third canto and when Ballantyne pulled the big boy with 1:15 remaining in the per iod, Big Bob had bagged a total (Continued en next page) xf rKi feu Ur ; , I - MIT to Open Tournament By HUGH -FULLERTOX JR. NEW YORK ito A lot of famil iar figures will go on display Sat urday when the National Invita- Salem Women Rollers Lead ALBANY (Special) The Lawless Masons of. Salem took over the Class B team lead here Friday in the Woman's State Bowling tournament The Salem five rolled up a 2,364 score to erase the former leading mark of 2,310. i The Masons team was led by the 517 bowled by Ethel Riches. Others rolling for the Salem team were Marion Lienhard 473, Nor ma Lawless 512, Gertie Carr 452, and Dottie Vanderhoff 410. The women's state tourney will wind up next weekend. Portland Toppled By Trojans, 5-1 G LEND ALE, Calif. to The Portland Beavers dropped the first game of their spring training sea son Friday, 5-1, to Southern Cali fornia. The collegians sewed up the game in the first inning when they scored all their runs off rookie Ad Satalich, Portland start er. A home run by Hal Pritchard, Southern Cal second baseman, with the bases loaded was the big DIOW. l i After that Satalich and veterans Royce Lint and Dick W a i b e 1 blanked the collegians, but the Coast Leaguers were held to six hits by two pitchers and could score only a single run, that in the second inning. USC 500 000 000-5 6 0 Portland 010 000 0001 6 0 Lapinger, Pausig (7) and Bur- dick; Satalich, Lint (4). Waibel (7) and Rj Bottler, Lundborg. DEDLEGS TROMP ORIOLES DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.i to Cincinnati's Redlegs blasted rookie fireballer Ryne Duren for three runs in the seventh inning to break open a tied exhibition ball game and beat the Baltimore Orioles, 7-5 Friday. Senators Name 50 More Fans Who Have Purchased Tickets Another 50 names of those who have purchased season tickets for the 1935 campaign at Waters Field, were released Friday by the Sa lem Senators. This brings to 300 the total of names now printed in The Statesman sports pages. Names of all those purchasing the season tickets will be printed on a 50-per-oay basis until all are published. The dub's "Family Plan- tick ets are still on sale. A $25 ticket entitles a family of husband, wife and kids up to 19 years of age to attend all home games other than the opener with Eugene April 26. A $15 ticket is for single adults. with same privilege, and a $10 is for students between 19-21. Today's 50 names: E. A. McGlauflin, Vera McMul- len, William Nail, Richard Nel . Week - long Play Today tion Basketball Tournaments opens its 18th annual one-week stand in Madison Square Garden. The NIT, originally the brain chDd 'of the New York basketball writers, is the oldest major col lege tournament; and in recent years it has fallen into a pattern that brings back many of the same teams year after year. The 12-team tournament begins with a double header involving the eight unseeded teams. Man hattan, the only local entry, meets Louisville and Niagara plays La fayette ; in the afternoon twin bill and at night Seton Hall faces St. Francis of Loretto, Pa., and St. Louis plays Connecticut Finals Week Away" j The four seeded teams Du- quesne, Dayton, Holy Cross and Cincinnati will take on the four winners in doubleheaders Monday and Tuesday nights. The semi finals . are scheduled for next Thursday and the finals Saturday. The first round field includes three teams, Manhattan, St. Louis and Seton Hall, which have played in four of the previous 17 invita tion tournaments. Niagara and Louisville will be in for the fourth time. I St. Francis made an auspicious NIT debut last March, due main ly to the fine performance of husky Maurice Stokes. Lafayette and Connecticut are tnis year s new comers. Field Now Weaker The field isn't as strong as it used to be before the National Collegiate A. A. expanded to take all the major conference chonv pions into its tournament, but New York fans seem to like it. The six programs likely will draw more than 60,000 spectators. St. Louis and Seton Hall both are former NIT winners and Coach Eddie Hickey's St Louis Billikens tied Tulsa for the Missduri Valley Conference title this season. Two seeded teams finished among the nation's top ten in The Associated Press ranking poll. Du- quesne, runner-up to Holy Cross last year and winner of the floli days Festival Tournament last De cember, was rated sixth and sec ond-seeded Dayton ninth. Dayton also received an NCAA bid but chose the NIT in an effort to re deem previous poor showings in the garden. In addition to Stokes, a player who brings dreamy looks to the faces of pro coaches, the garden fans will be rooting for such famil- , (Continued on next page) son, Martha Newharth. Minnie Newharth, A. C. Newell, Les New man, Frank B. Nichols, Charles Nielson, Ronald Napp, Reynolds W. Ohroart, Fred Olen, Dr. Harold dinger, G. E. Orcutt, W. L. Os borne, B. R. Osborn, Emil W, Otgen, Ernst Parcher, Fred H. Paulus, Robert C. Pauls, William H. Paulus, George B. Paulus (2) Governor Paul Patterson, G. Paxson, Payless -Drug Store, Wil liam Perlich, Perry Drug Store. Aletha B. K. Perry, Emma Peters, Walter Phillips, W. L. Phillips, Ed Pierce, Claude Post Ken Potts, Bob Pounds, Robert Powell. F. Kenneth Power. Robert W. Price Bob Prince. E. C. Purvine. Sol Quackenbush, -Ed Randle, Wm. J. Rawlins. Bud Ready. Cliff Red fern, Vera Reknan, Robert Reit zer, Don Reitzer. Knappa, Eagles Upset In Overtimer ' Savages, Mustangs In Consolation Wins By TOM YATES Statesman Sports writer Malin and Knappa moved into the championship finals of the stat a r Basketball Tournament at Willamette University with a pair of hair-breadth , vie - tories. Malin edged Powers by j a 53 to 43 margin in the evening opener, and - Knappa pulled out a sensational 56 to 51 overtime win over the defending cham pions from Harrisburg. The championship will be de cided in Saturday night's nine o'clock finale, with third place being decided in a Powers-Har-risburg match starting at 7:30. An afternoon single game will find Enterprise and Heppner battling it out at 2:30 for the consolation crown. Enterprise downed Mill City 65 to 41 Friday afternoon, while Heppner follow ed with a 57-34 lacing of Prairie City. ! The Malin Mustangs parlayed , a heads-up defense with smooth ! passing to upset the favored i Tt fl I TV.. P.i.Ipin' ! cause was hurt considerably by an ankle injury to their 6-4 cen ter, Dick Spitznass, in the first period. The Powers squad led at the end of the opening canto 18 to 11, but with Spitznass out of there in the second eight min utes the Mustangs had better con trol of the boards and rolled to a 25-24 intermission lead. The big Cruiser post man re turned in the second half, but played at less than full speed. The last two quarters were nip-and-tuck all the way, with the confident Ponies never letting up. The count was tied at the start of the final chapter, 36-ajl. After ties at 38, 42 and 44 Norm Oliva put the winners on top for good with a pair from the foul line with 3:35 remaining, 46-44. The Cruisers kept hot on Malin's trail until, with 35 seconds left Glen Steyskal tallied on a short jumper for the Mustangs off of a fine feeding pass by Guard Ray Johnson. That gave the . finalists a 51 to 48 advantage. Free throw conversions by Oliva and Johnson closed out the scoring. As was the case Thursday Pow ers presented an even balance in scoring, all five starters hitting for four fielders. Gary Brady was high for the losers with 12, fol lowed by Spitznass ten. Oliva was top, scorer., for the game with 14, while "Johnson " was close behind with 13. Powers had the advantage in field goals, 21 to 18, but Malin tossed in 17 charity throws to the Cruisers' six. j In the second evening game the Harrisburg Eagles also, were up- continued on next page) Giants Repeat Over Indians PHOENIX to The New York Giants, opening their spring ex hibition campaign, met the Cleve land Indians Friday for the first ime since the World Series and it was the same old story. The Giants, who swept the series in four straight games, won again, 8-3, before a standing-room-only crowd of 6,263 in sunny, 7-degree weather. Home runs by Willie Mays and rookie outfielder Eric Rodin pow ered a nine-hit Giant attack, but the batting hero for the world champions was Alvin Dark, their shortstop and captain, who went three-for-three before retiring m the fifth inning. Two of Dark's hits were doubles. Miami. Fla. ito Henry Aaron's two-run homer in the sixth proved the telling blow as the Milwaukee Braves beat the Brooklyn Dodg ers, 4-2, to even their spring senes at one victory each before 7,447 fans Friday night Cards Win Second ST PFTTERSBURG UPI The SL Louis Cardinals won their second straight exhibition baseball game from the New York Yankees Fri day, 3-1, although they got only three safeties. After being held scoreless by 21-year-old John Kucks in the first three innings, the Cards scored a run on rookie Steve Kraly in the fifth and two more off W ally Bur nette in the seventh. ST. MYERS, Fla. m The Pitts burgh Pirates squeezed out an 8-7 exhibition victory over the Wash ington Senators Friday on Reno Debenedetti's run-scoring single in the ninth inning. i Tigers Top Bosox SARASOTA, Fla. to Three De troit pitchers allowed one hit each Friday as the Tigers defeated the Boston Red Sox 4-1 in a loosely played Grapefruit League game before 2,473 fans. CLEARWATER, Fla. Lfl Bob by Morgan doubled home Jim Westlake to give the Philadelphia Phillies a 4-3 victory over the Chi cago White Sox here Friday in an exhibition baseball game. MESA, Ariz, m Big Hank Sauer shook off his batting slump Friday with a home run in an in- tersquad game in which the Leon ards beat the Blades, 3-L Malin in fill Hftro n ft n o - U&KYnN Kin Atom i Mitixmin a aim. ur . MturAJV. JViArrn i . lys-iMe. . i i l w-w-ww.w---r v.wr w . w- r " v w i iKentUCky Ousted . 1 J NCAA Victories Posted By La Salle, illarcjuef te By The Associated Press La Salle, the powerful defending champion, eased into the re gional final of the NCAA basketball tournament Friday night with an effortless 73-46 victory over Ivy League champion Princeton, but Kentucky, the second-ranked team in the country, was stunned by Top Man TOM GO LA ; Paces LaSalle to win. Berg Leading At Half Mark AUGUSTA, Ga. ito Patty Berg fired a record-shattering 68 Fri day four under men's par and took the driver's seat at the half- j way mark in her quest for an un precedented sixth Women's Title holders golf crown. The veteran redhead, who plays out of St. Andrews, 111., beat the best previous Titleholders round by two strokes in fashioning, a 76-68-144 for a one-stroke lead aft er 36 of the 72 holes over the chal lenging 6,270-yard Augusta Country Club course. " ; . .. .; , Betsy Cracks Record : j Betsy Rawls of Spartanburg, S. C, staging a fierce comeback aft Thursday's so-so 77, also cracked the old record with a 69 for 146 and third place behind Mary Lena Faulk of Thomasville, Ga. Miss Faulk, a freshman profes sional, clung to the runnerup spot with a fine 72-73-145. ' Babe Falls Babe Babe Zaharias, the veteran champion whose recent illness has cost her dearly in this $5,000, pres tige-laden tourney, matched her 75 of Thursday for 150 and eighth place. I Ahead of her at, the 36-hole mark were two beauties, Marlene Bauer of Sarasota, Fla., and. low! ama teur Pat Lesser of Seattle with 149. Miss Lesser, the striking brunette Seattle University student, added a 74 to her first round 75. Goodwin, Vitt In Pep Talks ONTARIO. Calif, ttr' Instead of a spring training game with Los Angeles, the San Diego Pad res got pep talks from Claire Good win, Pacific Coast League presi dent, and his righthand man, Os car Vitt Friday. The game with the Angeles was called off because of wet grounds. Portland is scheduled to come here for a game Saturday. j uooawin saia Baseball is on the rebound on the West Coast and hustle will be the Coast -League slogan this year." Vitt urged the players to speed up games, say ing: -The fans don't want to stav in tne park all night. Sutherland Named As Huskies' Aide BERKELEY. Calif, to i Jim Sutherland. assistant football coach at the University of Califor nia the past two seasons, resigned Friday to become backfield coach at the University of Washington. Sutherland, 39, came to Cal aft er nine years as head grid coach a'. Santa Monica High! School where he won eight Bay League championships. He is a 1937 grad uate of the University of Southern California and a veteran of three years Navy service. Athletic Director Brutus Hamil ton said no plans had been made to select a successor for bis spot on Head Coach Lyn (Pappy) Wal dorf's staff. IU2GV ... this special SUSSEPH ASPIRIN Fca ckildreh ized aspirin for children is mads to best lit chii- drua v.- . . . - . . : -y- BBSIBBS B Finals Marquette 79-71 in a torrid battle of court goliaths. La Salle will meet Canisius, which eked out a 73-71 victory 'over Villanova, in the other half of the Philadelphia twin bill in the East- ' ern finale Saturday. night. Marquette s rival at Evanston. 111., will be Iowa, which turned back '' Penn State, 82-73. In the doubleheader at Manhattan, Kan., Colorado polished off Tulsa, 69-59, while Bradley shaded Southern Methodist, 81-79. The two winners will meet Saturday night, too. In the Pacific Coast competition, Oregon State, the ruler of the con ference, blasted Seattle, 83-71. Winners Gain Semis' San Francisco, the nation's No. 1 team, walloped Utah, Skyline Conference champs 178-59, in the second half of the Corvallis, Ore., doubleheader. " j All of Friday night's winners will gain, spots in the semi-finals next Friday at Kansas City. La Salle had no trouble at all coasting to its triumph over Princeton, which won the Ivy title the hard way in; a playoff. As usual, talented Tom! Gola, led the Philadelphia crew. The three-time Ail-American hit for 24 points be fore being removed with 6 min utes to play. Kentucky, the champion of the Southeastern Conference, went down, but the Wildcats went down ike champions. Tight Game Played The score was tied 16 times and the lead changed hands 25 times before Marquette moved ahead for. good with 3 minutes remaimng after two Kentucky's top defensive performers, Ray Mills and Gerry Calvert, had fouled out. - Marquette used only six play ers and five of them hit in double figures. Terry Rand was high with 19, while Gayle Rose was top man for Adolph Rupp's outfit with 20. The Canisius victory over Villa- nova was packed with drama in the last two minutes. With the score tied, John McCarthy dribbled about the floor for: almost the en tire two minutes before he was fouled and sank two free throws for the winning margin Iowa Easv Victor ; Iowa, Big Ten titlist had no trouble beating Penn State, an at large entry. Deacon Davis and Carl Cain combined to score 40 points for the fancy ball-handlers from Iowa-City. Bradley's victory over Southern Methodist was the second time this season the Braves beat the Southwest Conference champs. The official scorer fired the gun end ing the game with 57 seconds left to play and the Braves leading 79-78. Error Discovered i His error was discovered and the game was resumed. The Braves still hung on, although the Mus tangs came on with a rush in the last period. . Big- Seven titleholder Colorado Broke open a close tussle with the Missouri Valley co-champions with five minutes to go. Burdette Haldorson was the big point-maker for the winners with 28. Game Commission Hears Lake Talk CORVALLIS ! The State Game Commission Friday held a hearing here or how to reduce the number of' perch and catfish in Ten Mile Lake on the Oregon Coast. ! A number of spokesmen urged that rotenone be used to kill all the fish in the lake and then that the lake be restocked. . Others urged that the perch be trapped or netted in sufficient numbers to bring : the lake back as an angling area for cutthroat trout and silver salmon. , Delbert Gildersleeve of Baker, chairman of the commission, said after the hearing that a decision will be announced as soon as pos sible. -t ; . .... In 39 night .James during the 1954 season, the Baltimore Ori oles' attendance ws 632,932. USED SHAVERS Thoroughly reconditioned ond Ready to Gov , - m Capitol 447 Ferry Sr. , Oregon State Wallops Seattle In 83-71 Test; San Francisco " Romps Over Utah Club. 78-59 By MATT KRAMER 1 - CORVALLIS JP) San Francisco, the nation's top-rankine teim. stunned Utah in the first four minutes and then breezed to a 73-59 victory in the second game of the NCAA Western regional basket. ball playoffs here Friday night That will send San Francisco, with its 6-10 All-America center. Bill Russell, against Oregon State with its 7-3 center, Wade (Swede) Halbrook, in the finals of the regional playoff Saturday night I uregon Mate scorea an easy uregon state scorea an easy a- 71 win over Seattle "in the first game of Friday night's double- header. San Francisco's darting guards, K. C. Jones and Hal Perry, stole the ball several times at the outset Russell grabbed all the rebounds and San Francisco poured in nine of its first 10 shots. It was 20-6 in four minutes and bewildered Utah never recovered.1 I Utah Gets Frantic Frantic, the Skyline Conference champs began shooting wildly and San Francisco once was ahead by 23 points before halftime. With San Francisco sinking 60 per ; cent of its shots, the halftime margin was 41-20. ; . j . Russell rested most of the sec ond half and with Utah scrapping hard the margin was cut once to eight points. Then .Russell went back in for six minutes until San Francisco got back a 16-point lead. Russell scored 13 points,. 12 in the opening minutes. With cold bothering him, he took it easy after that and Jerry Mullen, 6-5 forward, took over i the i scoring chores, "accounting for 24 points. Utah Club Cold Utah had a cold first' half. shooting only 18 per cent and sinking only six field goals, By the end of the game the losers had 20 field goals but a shootiag aver age of, only 28.6 per cent. San Francisco was far more accurate (Continued on next page) Frankie Ryff Batters Perez NEW , YORK to - Unbeaten Frankie Rvff marfp S srnrlt smear of Danny Jo Perez face Friday night to win his 17th straight with a unanimous 10- round decision over his New York rival at Madison Square j Garden. Ryff, regarded as one of the best lightweight prospects ii years. weighed 140, Perez 139Vi. Ryff opened a cut over Perez' left eye in the first round. His handlers were not able to stop the crimson flow and Danny s face was smeared with red! the rest of the way. I I Ryff, the 1954 Rookie of the Year, simply had too much class for Perez and it was reflected in the voting of the officials. Both Judge Harold Barnes and Referee Ruby Goldstein gave it Ryff, 9-1. Judge Artie Aidala called it 8-1-1. The Associated Pjess saw it as 9-1. .if NAU Teams i Enter Finals KANSAS CITY UB The East Texas State Lions of Commerce, on j top at the opening basket, defeated- Arkansas Tech 81-66 Fri day night ot join Southeastern Ok lahoma as finalist in the National Intercollegiate Basketball Tourna ment. Southeastern Oklahoma's Sav ages cooled off from their sizzling shooting in earlier games but had the stuff for a solid 68-6t victory over top-seeded Western Illinois. Oakland Topples Rainiers5to4 EL CENTRO, Calif, to The Seattle Rainiers fell short in a six-inning rally Friday and dropped a 5-4 baseball decision to the Oakland Acorns. . The Oaks started off with a 4-0 lead but saw it melt away as the Rainiers scored once in the sec ond inning and three times in the rally that tied up the score. Oakland clinched it in the eighth when Joe Brovia walked and eventually reached home on a sharp single to center by Spider Jorgensen. Seattle 010 003 000-4 11 1 Oakland 400 000 01x-5 6 1 Kelly, Hall (2), Lovrich (7) and Ginsberg, Jenny (5); Van Cuypk, Goetz (4), Herrera (7) and Lan ding r McGill Again Named To Boxing Commission PORTLAND to Mayor Fred Peterson Friday re-appointed Dr. Clinton S. McGill to the Portland Boxing Commission. No action was taken to re-appoint or replace the four other members whose terms expired last Wednesday. They , will con tinue to serve until re-appointed or relieved. ' f x Cutlery Co. Ph. 47464 In .- I - 83 - 71 win over Seattle in the firjt COLLEGE NCAA Regional Playoff ' , Canisius 73, Villanova 71. ' . ! Bradley 81. Southern Methodist 79. I Marquette 79. Kentucky 71. 1 LaSalle 73. Princeton 46. i I Oregon State 83. Seattle 71. Colorado 69. Tulsa 5S. Iowa 82. Penn State 53. San Francisco 78. Utah 59. HIGH SCHOOL State B Tournament Enterprise 65. Mill City 41. Heppner 57. Prairie City 34. Malin 53, Powers 48. Knappa 55, Harrisburg SI (over time). District 11 Playoffs South Salem 77. Cascade 44.1 Cleveland Gels Pan-Am Games By TED SMITS ' MEXICO CITY Lfl The Pan American Congress awarded the 1939 Pan - American Games to Cleveland Friday, ending a three day wrangle over the site : and clearing the way1 for Saturday'av gala opening of this year's game?. The decision to hold the Olymw pics of the Western Hemisphere in,' the Ohio city was made unanU mous when Brazil, Chile and Guat-' emala withdrew their bids and Ar gentina threw its weight .behind Cleveland. Other cities which had been considered were Rio de Ja neiro, Santiago de Chilei Guate mala City and Houston, Tex.! United States Favored : J Saturday's opening of the sec ond Pan-American Games finds' the United States heavily favored to dominate the competition. The North American team of 350 men and women is the strongest, ever assembled, except : possibly, the squad sent, to the Helsinki Olympics in 1952. The United States is expected to sweep track and field, swimming and basketball, which are the blue ribbon sports in these games. In addition, the North Americans! should win' many gold medals in, boxing, weight lifting; rowing, wa-' ter polo and possibly baseball and tennis. f 2,000 to Parade -. Saturday's opening ceremony, following Olympic protocol, will send a parade of 2,000 athletes from 22 nations and territories be-1 fore President Adolfo , Ruiz Cor tines. : The Congress also voted to add polo and women's gymnastics to the games program. Badminton, roller hockey ' and ront ; tennis, a form of tennis in which the ball is hit against a backwall. were re jected. Bear Pact Okelied By 'Sam Mitchell . "YAKIMA to Sam Mitchell, former University of .Washington , football and baseball player, FrW day signed to play with the Yaki ma Valley Bears of the Class B Northwest Baseball League. Mitchell has had one year t professional experience with Terr Haute of the Three-I League, aten class B, in 1953. His manager at Terre Haute was Hub Kittle, pr$ ent Bear pilot. , ... I I Guaranteed Work Z By Brake Experts Budget Terms i GOODVEAQ: TIRE HEADQUARTERS 365 N. Commercial -Ph. 3-4163 Green Stamps SW i