The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 21, 1955, Page 14, Image 14

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    2-(Sec. II) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Mon., Nov. 21, "55
Selection Set
In PCC Today
Rose Bowl Plana "
.Certain foivUCLA
(Continued from preceding page)
he booted his second, a placement
that traveled 29 yards.
Also against Washington, passing
star Ronnie Knox broke a bone in
his leg. Saturday the Bruins passed
only twice, both times by halfback
Sara Brown and both completed,
one for 21 yards and the other for
29. Both kept scoring drives roll
ing. ;. , . ";. I;-.;-Browa
Rons Wild j
Brown also had a field day run
ning against the big Trojan de
fenders.. He gained 150 yards mak
ing his 10-game total 829 for a
new school record.
Sanders had troubles at the start
of this season. 'He's lost nine of
11 starters from j his 'undefeated
1934 outfit including the line, the
blocking back and the tailback, the
latter being the fellow largely re
sponsible for . making the single
Wing move. !
Brown filled that slot and Hill
says, with" some regret, "he can
run rings around Primo Villanue
va." Primo was last season's all-
conference tailback.
Davenport Powerful
Sanders also has fullback Bob
Davenport, - a hard , runner and
blocker . who knocks ends on their
ends so Brown can continue his
travels.1, . i
JJCLAu iopksr now " for revenge
against Michigan State on Jan. 2.
The Bruins lost 28-20 to the Spar
tans two years ago: and the rule
that says no team can go to the
bowl two years straight, kept them
out last Jan. 1. ;
It's the same rule that keeps
Ohio State, the repeater Big 10
champions, home for the Christ
inas holidays this .year.'
This week, the only. PCC action
finds USC playing host to Notre
Dame. ,
TheyTl Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo
HoWCUMpOht GOOD-WEATUER
D4V5.TVI5 PASSEH6ER FUK'ES T4XI .
BIGHT UP TO THE WttmMG ROOM DOOR-
But es Twsffs A cloudsussttws
R4SSEN6CRS U4VE TO WALK FURTHS?
WIL8URAND ORVJLLE FLEW
Laiisse Faces Fullmer
Contenders Bisk Win
Streaks in Top louts
By JACK HAND
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS , - A
Eduardo Lausse, fourth-ranking middleweight contender, puts
Ms 29-fight winning streak on the line Friday night at. Madison
Square Garden against Gene Cyclone Fullmer in one of the top
bouts on a busy holiday week program.
Vince Martinez, the No. 4 wel
Students Take
Part in Test
McMINNVILLE (Special) Sue
Marion county men students at
Unfield ' College are among 70
participating in an experiment on
conditioning and training for the
mile run. - . . . : '
They are Harvey Page, son of
Harvey Page, 3225 Fisher Road;
Richard Aufranc, son: of Mr. and
Mrs Emile F. ! Aufranc, 3707
Stale SI; Gil Stewart, son of Mr.
and: Mrs Morse Stewart, ,265 W.
Wilson St., and Gerald Minifie,
son of John D. Minifie, 2248 Mill
St, all "of Salem;: Robert Higgens,
son of Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Hig
fins, 475 Brown St., Woodburn,
and "Sam Wallen, son of Mr. and
UrSv Ll E. "Wallen, Mehama.
Prof. Harold Smith of the Lin-
field physical education depart
ment is carrying on his experi
ment under the advisoryship of
Dr. H. Harrison Clarke, depart
ment of physical education,- Uni
versity of Oregon.
Purpose of the study is to In
vestigate the effects of training
and conditioning for the mile run
upon the physical condition of
college students who are non-letter
winners in high school and
with no track training in college.
Wallen is a member of the
control group which only takes
conditioning tests. The others are
in the experimental group which
actually runs the mile as well as
takes conditioning tests.
Detroit Grade KiJ
Box, Wrestle for PTA
DETROIT (Special) Grade
school boxers and wrestlers got
a1 good workout in recent bouts
during a program sponsored by
the Detroit PTA. ,
Boxing matches were: first
grade, Vaughn Everly drew with
Cecil Johnson; second grade.
Craig Sorseth drew with Richard
Stewart, Jimmie Davidson drew
i with Phillip Slater; fourth grade,
-Richard Smith .defeated Henry
Storey; sixth grade, Bill Smith
.lost decision to -Steve Storey.
In the wrestling match. Boh
Gordon won a narrow decision
from Myron Williams.
ter ; contender, also risks his long
streak of 17 victories in a' Wednes
day bout with Chris Christensen of
Denmark at St. Louis. J
A pair of ranking welters meet
at j lis Angeles Thursday night
when Ronton Fuentes (No. 5) of
Los Angeles boxes Joe Miceli (No.
7)of New York in a 10-round bout.
Ralph DuPas of New Orleans,
the, No. 3 lightweight contender,
boxes at San Jose, Calif., Monday
night against Star Gony of Manila
ana Cisco Andrade of Compton,
Calif., the No. 5 lightweight, faces
Kenny Davis of Los Angeles at
Hollywood, 'Calif. Tuesday. Z -. r
The Monday TV (DuMont show
from St. Nicholas Arena in. New
York sends Rinzi Nocero against
Carmine Fiore. in an all-Brooklyn
welterweight battle.
Fiore,. a solid left hooker, hasn't
fought in over a year since he was
stopped by Martinez, Oct. 29. 1954.
Nocero has won three of five this
year. - -.Lausse
returns from his native
Argentina to resume his drive to
ward the 160-pound title in an in-1
terestmg match with. Fullmer. The !
scowling left-hooker hasn't lost
since Kid Gavilan outpointed him,
Sent. 13, 1952. He beat Gavilan 5a
his latest fight, Sept. 3 at Buenos
Aires.
In his last U.S. start, Lausse won
over Tiger Jones in a bloody con
test at the Garden, May 13. Full
mer, No. 9 among. Bobo Olson's
contenders, has won six of eight
this year. He broke even in to
furious brawls with Gil Turner and
lost his last outing, Sept. 28 to
Bobby Boyd at Chicago.
The Lausse-Fullmer match will
be carried on NBC radio and TV
and the Martinez-Christensen bout
will be seen and heard on ABC
radio and TV.
This will be Martinez' fifth start
of the year and his second since
he made peace with Bill Daly
and signed a new five-year con
tract with the manager he ac
cused of "grounding" him for the
first six months of the year. Chris
tensen lost to Tiger Jones, Sept.
23 in his most recent bout.
SPORTSAWS
DIGESTS
EXPERIMENT FOR
LEAD ALLOWANCE
MSU Invited
To Rose Bowl
(Continued from preceding page
New Year's Day of 1954. UCLA
will be the Pacific Coast Confer
ence representative again ' this
time.
Sunday's vote was regarded as
a formality. Michigan State, with
a .5-1 record in the Big Ten and an
8-1 season recordbest In- the con
ferenceclinched the r Rose Bowl
trip when Michigan lost Saturday
to. Ohio State. . ,
Spartans Gala, Stride "
The Spartans. 14-7 loser to Mich
igan early in the season, regained
their winning stride against the
West Coast's Stanford. 38-14. .
Gathering momentum in a 21-7
victory over Notre Dame the only
loss of the year for the Irish, Mich
igan State whipped through the
remainder of a schedule -that in
cluded Illinois .Wisconsin, Purdue
and Minnesota. They thumped non
conference Marquette Saturday,
33-0. Indiana a .the .Spartans'
first victim of the season.
r
mm
HOW FAR ' s
AHEAD?
, ii jKim in
DK6INNERS
USUALLY ASK :
EXPERIENCED
SHOOTERSHOW .,
FAR AHEAD OF A "
MOMMA TARGfcT '
DO YOU SHOOT? WHEN ANSWERS
VAPOt, Mir THE GUNNERS SCORE
rr FftovES.THEy used dentcai.
LEADS BUT CALLED THEM CHF-
FEREfmy oue to each man's
UUPQCMENT OF THE LEAD USED.
A K6INNER SHOULD REMEMBER
TO INCREASE LEAD ON DISTANT x
OR FAST-MOVING TARGETS, AND
MOT STOP IMS SWINGING GUN AS
HE SHOOTS. THE LATTER S.THEi
COMMON MISTAKE OF BEGINNERS.
With experience, a shooter ,
feels" it mien he's fight. ;
Hardin-Simmons Nips
Trinity With Rally
SANs ANTONIO tf) Hardin
Simmons' Cowboys, roped and
faogtied for three periods by an
aggressive Trinity defense, snap
ped the shackles in the fourth
quarter tonight to score two touch
downs and hand the Tigers a 14-0
defeat. - r
It was an 80-yard gallop by Dan
Villarreal, a chunky five foot nine
Inch halfback, that broke the
Tigers, who were fighting far their
third straight win over the Cow
boys and their sixth victory in
row this season.
Look and Learn
By A. C. GORDON f
Navy Claims
Invasion9 of
WestPoint
Jamboree Set
For Mill City
MILL CITY-(Special)-The Mill
City Timberwolves will be host club
for the Class B 'schools basketball
jamboree on December 2, and will
open regular play for the season
on Saturday night, December 3,
with the Gervais High Cougars
here.
Coach Buton Burroughs has five
lettermen on the Timberwolves
team. They are 6-0 Lloyd Ross,
6-3 Eddie Gregory, -6-1 Don Lemke,
6-3 Don 'Ellingson and 5-10 Dick
Crook. Others on the squad at
present are Maurice Bassett. Chuck
huhlman, Gary Bevier. Amis Jack
son, Ken Epperson, Terry Muir,
Harold Kliewer, Bruce Thomas and
Dale Walczak.
3 Lettermen
Back at Gates
Browns Roll
Over Steelers
. . . -. ; ,'
Bean Trip Lions; j
Rams, Colts in Tie
, .
(Continued from preceding page)
edging the San Francisco 49ers27-21.-,
- rf- ?
In posting jtheir seventh victory
in nine-games, the Browns broke
open a. close game in the last half
on a great .display of passing by
Otto -Graham and George Ratter
man 'and some flashy running; by
Curly Morrison,.- . f
Harlott Hill, an elusive, end. from
little known Florence Teachers Col
lege of Alabama, twice fooled De
troit pass defenders in the third
quarter as the Bears moved into
first place. - '
Hill Sceres Twice
He picked off tosses of 20 and 40
yards from Ed Brown for his sev
enth .and eighth touchdowns of the
season to bring the Bears from a
14-10. halftime deficit.
Two long passes from Bobby
Layne accounted for Detroit s two
touchdowns. The first went to Doak
Walker and covered 70 yards and
the second to Dave Middleton. It
was good for 77.
Graham, although knocked for
a 52-yard loss on attempted pass
plays, tossed two touchdown aeri
als to Dante Lavelli, one for 6
yards- and another, for 41, and
scored another, himself on an end
TUn. ; " : -J
Other Cleveland, touchdowns
came on a 15-yard pass Intercep
tion return by Ken Konz, a 3-yard
plunge by Ed Modxelewski " and
5-yard plunge by Maurice Bassett.
But Lou Grofca s string' of Consec
utive conversions was halted at
29 , when his fourth attempt was
blocked. . ; . J r
Shaw Star,. Goat
The 'Steelers. who trailed only
21-14 at the half, first tallied on a
16-yard pass from Jim Finks to
Elbie Nickel and again on a, 30
yarder from Ted. Marchibroda to
Nickel; Both were set up by Gra-
nam tumbles. ;
George Shaw, rookie Baltimore
quarterback, was alternately the
star and the goat in the tie with
Los Angeles. His 28-yard pass to
Jim Mutscheller in the last quar
ter put thr Colts ahead 17-10. But
then be fumbled on his 16 and the
Rams wen tf or the tying touch
down. -
The Giants, leading only 10-7 at
the half,, poured . acros three
touchdowns in the third period
against the Ragles as . they held
Philadelphia's, vaunted attack to
almost' a complete standstill.
Philadelphia completed only 15
of 37 - passes and the . Eagles'
ground attack was limited to 54
yards. The Giants intercepted six
Eagle passes and set up their first
touchdown with a recovered fum
ble, . ;
Past Returned for TD
Bert Zager's 55-yard return of a
punt for a touchdown the first time
Washington had possession sent the
Redskins off. on the right foot
against the Cardinals.
The Packers tallied 14 points In
Graham Makes Gain Against Steelers
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CLEVELAND OtU Graham, Cleveland Browns quarterback, rounds left end for a six yard gala la
the first quarter f game acre ! Sunday with tne ntttbnrgn Steelers. Graham was unable t locat
a pass 'receiver and elected to !ru the balL Ha is being tackled by Willie McClung and Jack
BnUer. Browns woa, 4MC (A? WirephoU)
Cotton, Sugar Bowl Teams Still Undecided
GATES (Special) Listing 6-1
Vernon Chance, 5-10 Rex Herron
and Dave Moore as his lettermen.
Coach Con McQuskey is getting!. v. f;Qt s tr.
the Gates High PU-ates Teady !JbebJnd,triumph over the 49ers. To
me commg ;imiBa bin Rote set up the deciding touch
Gates opens regular" play Dec- down by taking a lateral from
ember 9 at Mill City' - Breezy Reid and carrying the ball
First home game" will bf with 49 yards to the 49ers' 6. Howie Fer
Oregon School for the Deaf on guson went over irom mere to set
(Continued from preceding page)
vy classic at Philadelphia, Notre
Dame-Southern Cal at Los Angeles
and scattered Dixie battles which
should clarify the bowl setup. f
! Mississippi, leading the South
eastern Conference with only one
defeat, closes with Mississippi
State. Georgia Tech (7-1-1) meets
Georgia, Auburn (7-1-1) plays Ala
bama and Vanderbilt (7-2) takes
on Tennessee, which was pushed
out of the bowl picture by Ken
tucky 23-0. .
Dizzy Saturday
It was a dizzy Saturday. Snow
blanketed the East and Middle
West and . a player named Polar
Bear scored a touchdown for Rut
gers in beating Columbia 12-6. The
bitter Michigan-Ohio State battle
ended in a near riot. i
At Los Angeles, Southern Cal's
Jon Arnett saw his 97-yard run
with the opening kickoff cancelled
by a penalty. And in the Purdue-
Indiana game, won by Purdue 6-4,
a water pipe burst and sent
geyser spraying1 over hundreds of
fans.
Notre Dame beat Iowa 17-14 on
a field goal ia the last three min
utes but not before the Irish were
penalized 15 yards because a kick
ing tee was thrown onto the field
coach. Bill Glassford. Mary- f Methodist Saturday. The ' Aggies
land .downed George Washington can clinch the league title. but TCU
.In the involved Southeastern Con
ference, the incubator of bowl tal
ent, Vanderbilt continued its la(e
season surge by smashing Flori
da 21-6. Auburn i played non-conference
Clemson and won 21-0
while Louisiana State upset the
south west's Arkansas 13-7.
Bawl Possibilities '
The East produced a pair of
bowl possibilities in Pittsburgh,
which added Pens. State to its im
posing list . of victims 20-0. and
Syracuse, which . gave West Vir
ginia a second straight setback 20-
Pitt, which has lost to Oklahoma.
Navy and Miami, halted the win
ning streaks of both Duke, and west
Virginia. Syracuse's main claim to
fame is a victory over Army.
Princeton reclaimed the Ivy
League title aften four years by
slushing to a 6-3 win over Dart
mouth in the snow. Yale had to be
content with runnerup honors aft
er beating Harvard 21-7. .
Thanksgiving Game
In the Southwest, Texas AIM'S
comeback kids, sweating out a
years probation, close with a
goes to the bowl, regardless.
Dallas sponsors hope ' to land
Navy, a Sugar Bowl participant a
year ago, for the Cotton Bowl but
might settle for Georgia Tech or
Auburn should Mississippi land at -
New Orleans. t Pitt is an outside
possibility. '
December 13.
Others on the Gates varsity
squad at present include 5-9 Allen
Haywood. 5-4 Errol McWhirk, 5-6
David Riddle, 5-S John Schaer,
5-6 Rodney Schaer, - 5-8 Rodney
Stubbs, 5-7 Walt Thomas,
tie the issue.
Rote also had a hand in two oth
er Green Bay touchdowns.
Thanksgiving Day game against
Ohio State, playing what CoachlTc hUe TCU meets .Southern
precision 1
DasKeinaii uiiiciais
Meeting Postponed
There will be no meeting of the
high school basketball officials for
their clinic and examination ' to
night, at North Salem High. The
meeting-has teen postponed until
Thursday night, December .: 1, at
which time Oden . Hawes, Oregon
Schools Activities Association sec
retary will be here to administer
th! clinic and extm. - ...
The Salem Basketball Officials
Aauiiduuu u iu uuiu us in M Hirel
ing next Monday night, November
28, at the YMCA at 7:30-o'clock,
and it is open to all who aspire to
become officials. -
r l M 1L. C.I T--Tt
- mcinwuue, uic oaiein r uoioau
Officials Association wilt hold its
annual banquet tonight, as sched
uled. ...
WIN STREAK ENDS
ABILENE. Tex., t McMur
5-11 ened Missouri Valley's winning
Irvin Tucker and 6-0 David Vail.
Tide Table ,
TIDES TPS TArT. CSECO!
(Comoiled bv V. S. Ceast and
Geodetic Survey,. Portland. Ore.)
NOVEMBER
Loir Waters
Tim Height
10 49 a.m. 31
11:17 p.m.
12:04 p.m.
21
Dick Kazmaier, Princeton AH
American halfback of 1951, is
the most accurate passer in Ivy
League history. He completed 172
of 289 passes, 33 going for touch
downs.
High Water
Time Height
5:49 a.m. 53
4:22 p.m.
a.m.
p.m.
a.m.
p.m.
am.
p.m.
streak at 17 games Saturday night,
beating the iMssourians 14-6 with
and awesome ground, attack. Mis
souri Valley has already accepted
a bid to play in the Mineral Water
Bowl at Excelsoir, Mo. The Vik
ings had won nine straight this
season going into Saturday night's
game. '
Woody Haves called
footbalT." ' wdn Its first game at 1
Ann Arbor. Mich., since 1937 with
two touchdowns, a field goal, a
safety and a brilliant performance
by Howard (Hopalong) Cassady.
Tap Pair Nab Wins
Southern Cal was fired to an up
set pitch until the bad break on
Arnett's opening run. Then , the
Trojans' seemed to sag and Coach
Red Sanders' well-drilled troops
marched to a decisive victory.
Oklahoma and Maryland, who
met in the Orange Bowl two years
ago with Oklahoma the victor 7-0,
kept their records intact with easy
victories.
Oklahoma rolled to its 28th
straight victory, beating Nebraska
41-0 in the last game for Nebraa-
iiiwiiin i b riuun i, i i i jib 7 r, nil
OTHER DAY5 9:30 A. M. to 5:30 P. M.
6:32
531
7:13
6:51
1:50
8:11
8:29
9:25
9:0S
10:30
p.m.
a.m.
p.m.
:49 a.m.
11:28 p m.
10 .33 a jn.
uTzV'a.in.
11:18 ajn.
1:13 a.m.
12:06 p.m.
5.4
5.5
3 0
12:04 a.m.
1:17 p.m.
12:53 am.
2:22 p.m.
1 42 a.m.
. 3:17 p.m.
2:32 ajn.
4:08 pjn.
1:23 am.
4:55 p.m.
4:12 a.m.
3:42 p.m.
5:02 a.m.
6:28 pm.
5 54 a.m.
7:15 p m.
-1. What one thing prevents
any machine irom ever being 100
per cent efficient?
2. If you were taking a course
In philology;! what branch of
Study would you be pursuing? -
3. Which 1 is covered more
thickly with ice, the North or
South Pole? i
. 4. Among ordinary foodstuffs,
What is the rarest vitamin?
3. How many standard cups of
granulated sugar are there in
. one pound? I
'.'Answers :
i: Friction.; t c r,
2. The science of words.
. S. The South Pole. ; :
' 4. Vttamin D. .;. ,
J ' sVTwo. I - - ' :
WEST POINT. N. Y. Ofv-Seven
navy midshipmen claimed trium-j
phant invasion early Sunday of this i
mighty military academy in a
salty propaganda prelude to the
annual army-navy football game.
Stony silence was the sole reac
tion of West Point officials at least
for the time being, j
The Annapolis midshipmen, from
a "sanctuary" in Connecticut,
claimed, they performed the follow
ing in connection with next Sat
urday's game.
Altered a "beat navy" neon sign
on fortress walls to read "beat a"
by taking down the N, V and Y.
Skate Rink Painted
Painted a huge "beat navy" on
the floor of the West Point skating
rink. .
Placed on a flagpole of the point's
stadium, " an army banner with
the word "beat" added above the
original "army." r
"It does look pretty good up
there," commented one of the middies.
A spokesman for West Point dis
claimed any knowledge of the mid
shipmen's deeds.
The : Middies' described - them
selves as second classmen on week
end leave. ,
Male Escapes Prank "
In civilian clothes, they said, they
got past numerous army' guards
and roamed about the reservation
for two hours.
The Middies principal object, to
kidnap the army mule, was
thwarted. The mule was in a lock
ed pen inside a locked barn, with
two armed guards on duty beside
the pen. -
The seven said they had arranged
to "evacuate" the army mule in a
landing craft on the nearby Hudson
river if it "could have been "?1ib-
LAND SALE
The State Highway Commission
Will sell , at public auction
On the property described below
At 10:00 A.M., December 19, 1955
A parcel of land lying ia Section 3 and 10, Township 4 South,
Range 1 West, WJtL, Marion County, Oregon, the said parcel
being described as follows:
Beginning at ' the Northeast corner of the Amable Arqualt
D.L.C. No. 45, being the northeast corner of that tract con-,
veyed to the State of 'Oregon, by and through its State High
way Commission by deed recorded in Book 455, Page 574,
Marion County Deed Records; thence South 16 30' East 26.94
.chains to the southeast corner of said tract; thence south 73
15' west 22.18 chains to the southwest corner of said tract, be
ing the southeast corner of that tract conveyed to- the State of
Oregon, by and through its State Highway Commission by deed
recorded in Book 455, Page 576; thence south 73 15' west 31.9
chains to the southwest corner of said, last named tract; thence
north 21 30' West 380 feet more or less along the west line of
said last mentioned tract to the west line to a line which is par
allel to and 100 feet southeasterly of the northbound traffic cen
ter line of the Portland-Salem Expressway; thence northeasterly
(Kerth 31 54' East, Highway bearing) 5575 feet more or less
; to the east line of thst tract conveyed to the 'State ef Oregon
by and through its State Highway Commission by deed re
corded in Book 458, Page 259; thence south 4 31' East 2520
feet more or less to the southeast corner ef said last named .
tract, said corner being on the north line of said D.L.C. No. 45;
thence north 73 15' east 245 feet more er less to the place
f beginning, containing 175 acres more or less. ,
The property is part of the former Theodore Welty and Ralph
Racette properties and is located on the east side ef the Port
land Salem Expressway approximately V mile north of Fargo
Road Underpass (Aurora-Donald County Road) and is Proper
ty No. 20284. - " . - i
The minimum price which will be accepted Is $26300.00. Con
veyance will be by Bargain and Sale Deed with complete re
striction of access to the Portland-Salem Expressway but the i
property is served by a frontage road connecting to the!
Aurora Donald County Road. The State will furnish title'
insurance. - i
TERMS OF SALE ARE: Cash at time of sale. The right is
reserved to accept or reject any er all bids.
INFORMATION: C W. Porker : , :
. OREGON STATE HIGHWAY COMMISSION
STATE HIGHWAY. IUILDING I
SALEM, OREGON - '
Thtrt'i A Ditl treitcf In Tvnt-UpsI
A worthwhile tune-up requires special -equipment
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any other motion picture camera today. See it and compare.
B-8 has twin turret; C-8 has single lens mount Both .
cameras feature room-type view finder, speeds from f ' :
lo 64 frames per second, auto-reset footage counter,, ' .
. Morocco leather covering, self-fUming device,'quick, :
" easy loading, superb long-running Swiss motor with.
Instant stop device, single frame, and precision Swiss
mechanism throughout. '
' ' Comes with leather Wrist
strap and cable release.
Other features can be seen ,
-
and appreciated at our store.
Mail and phone orders. Plus g
shipping cost to areas outside B ;
our. .regular '.truck -delivery Ksssa
routes., - , 'Z v ";
Camera Shop
Street Floor .
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