r. II) luu b-M, Oir.. Moii., Jan. U, V I),:;:;, Flyers Continue Pace O.I.rr Kitil.nl Oulu Ttl Hoop DrfralA (fonlmued from preceding ige u( f UmUul4 MtfuM of first place in th iMiulticni Cuivfuf em siamlings, (;trg Wanning (tin now ia tld with Vit Virginia with 41 records, while unrdict lilt Hkhmond hI II Iragu )irk. lows Stat, which won II Bit 7 holiday tournament, tailed drt'-at In Its fine lagu contest of th mum. Th victory at iwt re venge lor Kanas State's Wildcats, who lost to th Cyclone la Iht preseason tourney, Only (wo ether members at the (rf 10 hesidet Diytrm Vanrierhllt No i. and Kentucky, No. s-wnn, Ninth-ranked Illinois and Ohio Milt, the natlon'i No. 10 tram, Mh wer Idle, Vanderbilt biUH up an early Vd and (hen coasted to an tuy aurresi over Tennessee 14 57 In a Southeastern Conference gam. It wu (ha Commodoret' ninth vic tory In 10 ttarti. Kaatarkjr Rapt Tech Ktntorky overwhelmed Georgia Tech 104 51 In another EEC fam lo veng a pair of aetbacks hy tht Yellow Jackets last season. Besides Dukt, other members of the second 10 to pout victories Sat urday were Indiana, No, 11. Holy Crosi , No. 14;! Alabama, No. 17; Rice, No. II and Michigan Stale, No. . Indiana came from behind in the final seven minutes to tdfe Wis consin 7V71. KolyCroaa put on an effective freeze In the last five minutes to turn back Fordham 5 S3. Alabama atavad off last-ditch Mississippi surge for IMI ver dict , Jtlc broke boat from a tight Texas AIM tone defense to down the Aggie I9-77. Julius McCoy's pair of free throwi and winning basket in the final two minutes five Michigan Stat eS-4 deci sion over Iowa i defending Big 10 champions, , ' DetraJt tip Tats Fifteenth-ranked Tulsa, defend ing co-champion of th Missouri Valley Conference, bowed lo De troit 10-73 and Wast Virginia, No. II. waa upset by La Salla tt-S. Memphis State, No. 12, and Temple. NO. II, were Idle. All-America Darrell Floyd, of Furman took over the major col lege scoring lead as the Palladins walloped Newberry 102-53. Floyd tallied It point! and boosted bis average to S3 1 eolnta nor tame. going ahead of Ohio State's Robin Freeman, who baa 32.1 mark. SPORTSMAN'S DIGEST 'x-M UCtinOTH tVC!JTO Lire UP TARGET Whin A MUMTisi ut axms vat-Mi v tmw uw "rue onmt (tm tCoe-i fiaXT) wrm mw TAnatT mo otm v tv on 7Arr ir UlOtft TO iWt UP tWTI AND au oa tast w wn (imowh ). m rrt a core it M TIV It 101 T PlNOtM TAM4T m rrt vi aw, aV jr. owy oeryii utao, AUNf W)HT Ut rAMT OP TAmrr iotTiMa, momr om iaiscxt) mo it aiowa m District, Loop Games Slated (Continued from preceding page) at Canby and Eatacada at Mt. Angel, - along with Alsea at Val seti. Willamette University completes Its road trip tonight with a single at Walla Walla with Whitman, and then 'doesn't play again until Sat urday night when the Llnfield Wildcat come here for 1be North west Conference claah. Portland State's Vikings open the OCE Wolfpack'f Oregon Col legiate Conference schedule Tues day night at Monmouth. Another Tuesday tighter non-leaguer aeeg thf Washington Huskies play the Oregon Ducks- at Eugene. Darks, Beavers Flay Friday-Saturday Coast Confer ence games: Oregon Stata at Southern California, UCLA at Washington State, Idaho at Stan ford and California at Oregon. Whitman is at Pacific University and College of Idaho is at Lewis and Clark for Friday-Saturday Northwest Conference engage menu, and in the Oregon Collegi ate Conference the same nights Oregon Tech is at Eastern' Oregon and Southern Oregon is at OCE In Monmouth. ' Another interesting Friday-Saturday pair will see the Portland U Pilots open their four-game series with the Seattle University Chieftains, at Seattle. Bruins Spurt ToPCCLead (Continued from preceding pagt) and the players from tha rain of pennies which pelted down from the California stands Said the of ficial: Far Sale el lalety "I wai thinking not only of my personal safety but also of the players on the floor who might also have beeB hit rr might have atepped on on of those pennies, slipped and fallen and broken a kg. Llghtner himself was hit la the eye by a coin. California took the series open er. U II. Washington State tripped Ore gon State, M 52. after losing 40 59. Center Dav Gtmbee hit for 11 potnte each night for Oregon .... Oregon defeated Portland Uni versity, C141, in a Doncorderenc tuneup. Hawaiians Get Hula Victory . (Continued from preceding page) passed to Hardy for a 41 yard touchdown play. The Collegians didn't score un til midway in the third period when quarterback Fred Wyant of urt Virginia hit UCLA end Rom- ml Loudd on tlyard pas play The same combination Korea gain for M yards in the dying minutes of the game. Brtwa Kaees for TO I Halfback Sam Brown of UCLA pulled the biggest surprise when he faked a punt and -raced II yards for tha Collegians' second touchdown. But the pros came right back with surprise of their own. Half back Hugh McElheiuiy of the 49eri took. Jhe kickoffjm hisown three ni iiarutai tha hall" nil a rVrta fo Hardy who went all the way. The Collegian running atuc was ineffective against the Hawaii AD-Star defensive unit made up mostly of local Marin and Navy stars. , It was Tittle's 21 completioni out of 27 passes, good for 310 yards, that pleased the crowd. He was voted the toost valuable Hawaii All-Star player. Fullback Bob Davenport of UCLA was voted the Collegians' most valuable player for his hard running. , Hawaii All-Start t 14 1481 Colls All-SUra IS 110 Hawaii Ail-Star tearing; Touch down, Hlrtch I (71, Baas-run from Tlttl; n, Oatt-run from TMtta; t. paw-run from Tittlt). Hardy S (41. paw-run from Tittle: 97. run: 41, past-run from Tittll, Walker IS, past from Tittle! . Converalona. Walk er 7. Safety. Tarr (Uckia4 ia end zone by Jacobi). College All-Start tcorlnf Touch downs, Loudd S IS, pnu from Wy ant; 81 paM-run from Wyant), Brown (61, run). Convcrtioni, Plan um I. Auslrinn Ski 3 Clul, NakWin Olvmplf Favorite Itrauha Iinliralr Wll.NGI X Swiiwrland -Austrian akU-rt (nred the flrt fit I'lui-i in (he tlnl'Hn ewnl of the big Inlrrnalional Wfngan fckl Tmirnsmcnt SumUy, Tbrlr times, logelhtr with swap f four of the first live places la (He downhill rc Sa'ur tiny, made tit powerful Austrian Alpine squad odds -on favorites to rapturt the two alalom vent and the downhill rare In th H34 Olympic Winter Games. the winter games opm at Cor tina 'Amrto, lily, on January Th 13-natlon tournament here, In th heart of (he Alps, (ngether with a twin meet at neighboring (irmdrUiild for women aklers from 17 nations, gave two other Olympic Indicators; Swiss Cat Favored 1. Twenly-two-year-old Madeh-ln Berthod of Switzerland, a rugiied mounUln girl who tends her fam ily's cattle in summer on a high powered motorbike, emerged th on to beat in th women's downhill and two slalom tvents. Mrs. Andrea Mead Lawrence of Parshall, Colo., who wilt defend her (wo 1932 Olympic slalom titles, trailed Berthod at Crlndelwkld, Mrs. Lawrence, mother of three since the last Olympics, has been improving ateadiiy. however, and cannot b counted out. She ranked third In the combined classifica tion at th Grindt'lwald meet. Russia Gala Threat t. Russian women tkieri, al though they may get som oppo sition from Finland, are heavy fa vorites to run off with the 10 km (about I mil) endurance event nd th 15 km relay (about I I I miles), Thy raced away from th field at Grlndelwald. But Russian downhill aklers, men and women making their first appearance In European com petition seem unlikely to make dent In th Olympic scoring list This Is Russia's first appearance in th Olympic Winter Games. Th twin meets her and lit on that follow at Kitibuhel, Aus tria, ar th major pro-Olympic trials. Mrs. Lawrence and Ralph Miller, of Hanover, N.H., th world apeed champion on skis, have looked best on th U.S. Olympic ski quad, a expected. But based on their showing thus far, they will have to improve to win an Olympic vent. Navy Man Improve Navy Lieutenant Thomas Corco ran of Westfieki, N.J., and 19-year-old Wallace Werner of Steamboat Springs, Colo., have also shown promise on th American equad, although-Warner has had bad luck with falls. Xaty Rodolph of Reno, Kev ranks as another U.S. hopeful, judging by her Grlndelwald per formances. MlUon In 26th position, scored highest for th U.S. team in th slalom Sunday wn'ruaa of 11.2 and 70.6. A five-second penalty was in flicted on the second run for faulty gate-passing to glv him a total of 136.7. , Other Americana finished at fol lows: 33. William Beck Jr.. of Kingston, R.I., 65.4, 73.1 139.2;, 40. Marvin Moriarty of Stow, Vt (They'll Do It I'very Time . a,-..'.. vjjy Jimmy Ihtlo I;.. . .rtfwfM&te.::-- - ' 'iaiissMtaii iiawaptiiiTsMiit I. iith, -! CST5 TlllS RZTRAlti WttzH Hi TK.CS TO "- V ii rvr m KOI lDOrtHf'O TOOtAHLYwiHllH ION 714 CvrV f vi ' ivrvH sMritUnV W,!rf Tiff C,!L4Wn IS C01X1 TH4SJ 4 rtN'ois r4.frs, Am C2TS Wis- ivt,ui'p c r in T4i.LtTt P MD- Y ( YM Kl TOO UTII I I TmI WiNTH IS I jutr a,m7 Mnl A wKy.rri4LMoir rirle TaSI- tides ron, TArr, ontcow REVIEWOF THE YEAR-By Alan Maver MARCH M . yv-v few -sr , 1 i 1 If OHIO TAT fWMMKf M 01$ rgtf TfAM Ting FO 7r YEAA ffi A ROW ALSO Mti H.C.A.A, CHAMPtOfcHlP At1 d 4- r at W aril 1 ' II 1 i j 1 IS t 1 JOHNNY LONODLh fiiP$ HIS 4$OQ m SOtCHAK COHTflUi9 7AK19 rtoirorf opeff. 100 JOl Mr fit pom.? too serf & KSC0P9 Of Olff. 4 A 0 9. W' lb Of 22 tWlt t mum tttm$fM eAtKHTPAU, n ANP TAKg Mr j A Mil fox n'S VfA$T TIME. (71.4, 67.2 - 141.1) and 17. James Mitchell of Ogden, Utah. (69.7, 79.1 - 154.8). Miller topped his American team mates by finishing 12th in the Al pine combination with a score of 11.33 points, based on his results over th last two days. Other American standings in the combi nation were: 40. Beck 20.31, and SO. Moriarty 27.24. ' . (Compiled by V. S. Coatt and Caodetlo Survey, Portland. Or.) Hlt-h Watert Low Watert January Tim Htm S tJn. 7 0 1140 p.m. 4S 10 U a m. 7 0 e lime mm :U a.m. S IS 1J 55 a.m. 11:30 a m. 1:77 a.m. I2:0R p.m. 1 :M a.m. 12 42 p.m. I ll a m. l is p.m. 1:51 a.m. 1:01 p.m. 3 21 a m. - 1 43 p.m. 3 '4 a.m. 3:30 p m. 1:00 p m. -01 4:07 a.m. 3.1 1:39 p m. -0 4 1:38 a.m. 11 S 47 p.m. -01 1:20 a.m. I S T1S p.m. -OS 154 a.m. I S 7:4S p.m. -0 3 7:37 a.m. 17 S:7 p.m. -0 1 S IS a m. I I S:4S p.m. 1:03 a.m. S p m. S 5S a.m. S S4 p.m. Mangrura Has Lead in Open 'Continued from preceding page) John Barnum, who was just four shots back of Mangrum Sunday morning, faded with 72 to 201 and tie with E. J. (Dutch) Har rison, who shot a 70 Littkr known Don Fairfield of Casey, JU , had H for 309, while on of th pre-tournament favor ites, big Mike Souchak, soared to an II for 221. Others who figured prominently lo th first two rounds also began a fade-out. Bill Casper, San Diego, took 73 for 211; Marty Furgol a 73 and Cecil Harris a 74 for 212. Littler Iheeia T3 And Gen Littler, the 1!S win ner, had to content himself with 71 for 213. Mangrum'i even 200 la new record for three rounds In this event. Jimmy Demaret, who inci dentally carded nice 74 tor t respectabl 217, finished M holes with score of 203 In 1939 and Jimmy Thomson had th earn score In 1931. both at Griffith Park another municipal course here. Andrea Just Doesn't Let Kids Stop Her GR1NDELWALD, Switzerland W Three month ago Wednesday Andrea Mead Lawrence had baby, her third in less than three yeari. This ordinarily would not b a spoilt Hem. . But It is, becaua in three week she .will do lend her 1952 winter Olympic championship in th women's sla lom event. Her two victories of four years ago accounted for half the gold medals won by the United States. In the past few days the gal skier hai been competing in the iM-aVJU 14UJy-V-Cofcora iDUX-ilay JnUrMUonaJL journa- Look and Learn By A. C GORDON ment at Grindelwald. She has not been showing the form that brought her those gold medals but she has been a leader la the American division. A lot of mothers and maybe som sports fans would like to kndw how she does it. Th 23-year-old Andrea says Its easy. She always hat been an ac tive sports enthusiast and aays she sees no reason w hy having baby should make any difference. "I skied all the time - though much of the time I was pregnant," she said. "I certainly wouldn't recom mend that a pregnant woman or th mother of nev baby take up skiing if she hadn't skied be fore. But if she has led an active life, there it no reason why ah should give up skiing." Mrt. Lawrence has been skiing since she was : just "over three, learning her first schust on the slopes of Vermont's Pico Peak. i In the last year, especially, she oi has not had to look far for out-' " door diversion. She and her hus- i J band, David Lawrence, bought a is ranch at Parshall, Colorado, in: 1 1954. They are within reach of , such good ski spots as Aspen, Win ter Park and Rapalce Basin. i I She and David met in Montana) when both were training for the I United States national ski meet in 1949. They were married in 1951. They decided on the ranch after he graduated from Dartmouth "be- we decided that was the Flyweight Risks Title . Satterfield to Battle Holman in Heavy Bout By JACK HAND TRK AIIOCIATKO frSI Bob Satterfield and Johnny Holman, two ranking heavyweights, meet Wednesdsy night at Chicago and lightweights perforin Monday and Friday on th week's boxing program that also Includes fly weight title match at Buenos Aires Wednesday between champion Pascual Perei of Argentina and Leo Espinosa of Manila, Although Satterfield hat been beaten 19 times, 11 by knockouts, there has been tome talk of him as t possible opponent for Rocky Marclano because of his booming punch. Of his 40 victories. 31 have com by knockout. II cither knocks you flat or gets stopped. Satterfield atopped Holman twice in 19&4 at Miami Beach and Chi cago. However. Holman rot in th ratingt last year by TKO over Eoard Charles. H lost decision to th former champ in rematch. Satterfield Rinks 4th In th latest ring ratings. Sat terfield wai No. 4 among Marci ano's challengers, behind Archie Moor, Bob Baker and Hurricane Jackson. Hit record for 12 ttarti is 40-19-1 and Holman'i for 40 fights is 21-1 l-l. Ludwig Lightburn. the young lightweight from British Honduras who upset Ralph DuPas In New York; Dec. II, boxes Joey Lopes of Sacramento, Calif., at San Francisco Friday in a remitch of rated 133-pounders. Lightburn won seven of nine list year and Lopes took seven of 10 including a non-title de cision over featherweight champ Sandy Saddler. Ligbthurn's rec ord la 36-6 and lopes' 32 9 2. Moaday at St Nkk's ' ' V Th Monday night fights from St. Nicholas Arena in New York, perhaps the last of the series from that arena, features an unbeaten 19-year-old lightweight, Carlos Or tiz of Puerto Rico against Ray Portllla of New York. Because of Ortii' age, th bout H limited toilhtpf I vi a ww. Vina ia ia-v aim lie Talk Refused By Johnston (Continued from preceding page) fRIcht now. The newt it wonder ful." Apparently Ii wasn't wonderful to Johnston. "I don't know what's going on back there " he said. "There's a meeting Monday in New York th board of governors of the New York guild. I'm not going to have anything to tiy until 1 set what they do.". Comment Refuted Johnston, her to handle Sandy Saddler In his featherweight cham pionship fight at th Cow Palace Jan. 18, (till refused comment though he listened with Interest when told other managers, Includ ing Hymle Wallman. Bobby Gles son and Eddie Walker were fol lowing the Weill lead, and that on had said: ."Weill has the heavyweight champion; he's the bell-cow. There'll b wholesale break for the doors now. The back of th or ganization ia broken." V t-- ' Y.--7. No. Carolina Signs Tatum turned pro last February. PortU li s record it 14-1-2. Th Satterfield-Holman match will be carried on network radio and TV (ABO, Lightburn-Lopes on NBC and Ortiz-Portilla on DuMont, all at 7 p.m. PST). . The flyweight title match In Ar gentina was set back twice on the advice of Perez physician. Perez defended twice In 1953 knocking out Alberto Barenghl in Buenos Aires and ex-champ Yoshio Shirai in Tokyo. Toronto has a heavyweight match Monday between James J. Parker of Toronto and Johnny Ar thur of South Africa that originally was billed for th British Emnirc heavyweight crown until the Brit ish board objected. Paddy DeMarco, former light weight champ, boxes Jackie Blair of Dallas. Texas, in Providence, R.I., Monday. , , ny football coach life tenure In his job. . Tatum. who wai getting $18,200 year at Maryland, said he didn't think it fair to say how much he would be paid at North Carolina, but added: Tw Jobt Th Much "I'm not going down there at athletic director and coach, only aa coach. You ought to get som idea from that that Carolina can't afford to pay m as much at Maryland wai." He said on of the major factors in his decision to leave was that he found that holding down two jobs at Maryland was too much. "Every time I catch up on my coaching job I find myself burled in athletic director work," he said. At North Carolina, h aaid, with just the football team to worry about, be would "have some time to play golf, fish and go hunting." 1. What is the favorite flavor of ice cream in the U. S.7 2. On what continent was the cause ancient city of Carthage? ilife for us," said Andrea. 3. Why does a glass crack "when The Lawrence children are tort you pour boiling wtter into it? landt, a boy. who will be three 4. What great American city on Jan. 7, Matthew, who will be is built on three islands? two next May 12, and Deirdre, a 5. What dog is the result of girl born last Oct. 4. - -crossing the mastiff and the grey-. Andrea was out of competition hound? ANSWERS 1. Vanilla, followed by choco late and strawberry. 2. Africa. sine the 1952 winter, Olympic at Oslo until the last winter season, when she competed at Stowe, Vt., and at the U.S. Olympic tryouts at North Conway. N. H., last 9 Vtaiia 4k Ailleiri nt the March. She won the-slalom and glass does not expand so quickly i downhill vent at North Conway) IS the inside. no Iliusnea arconu m uruy oiui 4. New4 York City, on Manhat-jof Norwich, Vt., in th giant tla tan. Staten and Long Island. lorn. Then th took to th aid ' 8. Th Great Dane. lines to have her baby. THE BIG OlirS C0f! Wait for BISHOP'S IKDOOH KOUIUHE-BAMPiiBJ-WinR WILL ROT YOUR HOME! HOMIOWNIRS CORONET MAG. TERMS HUMIDITY NO. 1 ENEMY v Blu look Say CONDENSATION CAN REDUCE YOUR HOME SEVERI DAMACI FOUND IN HOMES LESS THAN 1 YEAR OLD FROM MOISTURE VALUE BY THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS Chock That Conditions In Your Horn In Spaces Previded snd Mall Ad Sweating Window Q Rotting Sash 8111s Water en Sills Excessive Fuel BiUl Wet Spots Wall Presence of Mildew Cold, Clammy Floor Wet Wallpaper Paint Feeling Floor Buckling Mail This Advrlsmnt for Como-Ut FREE INFORMATION on How You Can Halt Humidity and . SAVE YOUR HOME! YITH CLEARVIEW BREATHERS SIMPLE-EFFECTIVE-ECONOMICAl EVERGREEN BUILDERS SUPPLY CO. 7327 N. I. Sandy Blvd. Portland II, Or. Fcrlrcs Infcmsficn cn Mctoe - Nam ....... Addre ..i......Age f Hem . City . .. . ...................Stat ........... l(aAA ICqiorls Grid Fnlaililicj Now Less, Finances Increase 1 OH ANGFI.KS fTi- Koutball filsllllri snd financial Halemenla hired IniareH nm.ng the m Hon s atliletir iilmlnutrstou fcunday ia th eve of th National ( ollsiiiale Athletic Amn NCAA tonvrntlna opining. wiln lUrliiuird to football In- Light tier Returns, Not Hurt Juries dropped to 10 Uit year and finances Iwreani-d dutlng tl, year, tin tatntlrslly m I n d 1 4 spurumen discovered, Two grani wer in biwlnena sum. Thl television committi. beaded by KL. mirk Romney, commlMinner of th Mountain States Conferer, and th NCAA council held rloaed mtetrhgt, - . TV rian Kiplres Th TV commute supposedly t Continued from preceding page) I was discussing recommenaatinni when I found out that th t" LV V'lK. iZ. t.,. .T. wa hurt I chased lh boy, But hi bf U,r llllVTZt lJ ot aaav in tha ero. 1. P,aB h,fh mM lht IWI got aay in in crow , i. ...i.iiu .a n. ... ject wai not i pinny but . terlei JTLZZ" of lei cream wrappers folded tn. seiner and with something hard inside. I did not see the other object! which wer thrown,' "It was penny that hit me, not lc cream wrappers." Llghtner answered when questioned about th story, A similar one on th cop't report wis In thl Oakland Trlbnn too. Qnestle Artie After reading over Ihi Ice cream wrapper itory, this reporter won dered how any policeman could watch "12 or 14 year old" fold something hard In a bunch of wrappen and heav It without realizing that aomaon might very well get injured. It would seem that if hi (th cop wai obiervant enough lo lee th "something hard" folded into th wrtppers, he should alto hive been abl to glv a description of the kid right down to whether hi had dirty fin gernails or not. Llghtner explained Sunday that he Hopped th gam "not only for my own tafcty but because of th safety of th players on the floor. They could hav been seriously hurt by slipping on th pennies while running possibly falling and breaking t leg." Llghtaer Get Backing The gam wai forfeited to I'SC because th pennies anrj tr 0(v ject teemed to come from th area of th California rooting sec tion. Not everyone was leveling a blast against Llghtner tn Califor nia. From thl Chronicle comes this: "Most of California'! official family seemed annoyed by the ac tions of th Cal rooting section yesterday but th man who lev- lied the severest criticism wa. Ron Allbee, th head yell leader. I m ashamed of them " Allbee laid, referring to th rooting sec tion s wild antics during the Csl- USC game In Berkley's men'! gymnasium." The cheer leader goet on to lay in th Chronjcle: Behav Like Kids "They behaved like kids, always hooting th officials and the visit ing pliyeri and throwing things around. I admire Llghtner for for feiting the gam." From , story written by -Bob Brachman in th San Francisco Examiner, It appears that the penny throwing wai not just sudden idea for th weekend games. Brachman'i story said: "Cause of it all (the forfeit) wai revival of an old gymnasium cus tom, penny throwing, and, more particular, one unerring i hot which hil-v the Salem." Oregon," of-ficial-newspapermtn In his 1 right' ey and temporarily blinded him."' 154 IS AVERAGE V If vou bowl 134 you ar Amer ica's average bowler! Th American Bowling Con gress says it has 2,008,687 mem bers and that half of them aver age less than 155, . Only 1,692 members avenge 200 or better. The 155-139 aver age class has the greatest num ber of bowlen in the ABC 236,865. tented regionally, expired with lh tnd of IN season. i Th committee ha prepared resolution suggesting that contrail be continued, but th full convert. tion will not ct upon it befor midweek, Th American Football Coachet Assn., meeting In conjunction with th Nf AA, Issued Its annual report on gridiron fatalities. Ten playeri died ai a direct result of compe tition during games In I'M, th report said. Fatality Number 'Small Th total waa sharp decree from tht annual avenge of 17.1 deaths sine th yearly surveys i wer begun In 1931. Actually, said Dr. Floyd R. Fait wood of Los Angeles State Colleg nd chilrman of th fatalities , committee, an "American youth I 11 times safer playing eompeti- tlv football than h it driving an utomoblle.' Dr. Eastwood said that seven of last fall'i deathi occurred in regu lation high school or college ; garnet. Two reiulted from landlot contests and th other from col lege intramural touch football game. - Four recommendations to de crease deathi further wer mad bf association members. They askid that tpedal research be conducted on improvement of. hebneti. that coachet develop training exercises to strengthen ' neck and shoulder musclei. that players be required to warm tip thoroughly befor entering a gam and that a "concentrated study of head Injuries be initiated." ORC Big Money Maker Th financial plctur of th NCAA, governing body of inter collegiate tporti lo th;natlon, was bright. ' The seven tournament! spon sored annually basketball, base ball, boxing, track and field,' wres-" tllng. swimming and ice hockey ' brought In nearly 143.000 moroy than in 1954, the annual report re " vealed. Basketball, to the surprise " of no one, yielded nearly $175,000 1 of the $181,131 total. Top money maker of the four regional cage tournaments Last winter was at Oregon State Col lege when total net receipt were . 42,737, , " i .r ' ' HIGH ntf ICOREM ; " V; JOHNSTOWN. Pa. Hi-Jimmy.' Cox. 17-year-old lix footer from Collingdale High near Philadel-: ( phia, led Pennsylvania scholastic football scorers during 1953 wit't 207 points, reports statistician Steve Semu.tCox, tenior, made 32 touchdowns and 13 extra ooints. Cor made 42 point tn r one gime.f' Vie1 Jones, I feet 1 from unbeaten ;. and . untied Clearfield High In wes tern Pennsylvania, was the runner up with 184 point oo 2 touch-' downs and 10 extra points. He had -a slngl gam Ugh of II point. . Corner State A High ft - . " tA I . ft , 4 J i , , t i I ' 'T '-. ..;-',,; X? " Jf I Evirshirp-Jchick't ixcluitv cutting sngli is designed t glvi you closer, isfer thsvesl ........... . . . ( The secret of smooth, safe shaving is in the angle ef th blade. Th modem Eversharp-Schirk locks lb Usd at th en tor reet angle . , , shaves scientifically cles without scraping oS tender face skin. Yes, Av your tcAiaWi not your ftc witk an Eversharp-Sehick Injector Baser I All-oew, MrHfl grip tn)ectof kirof that thsnfet blades automatically . , , elus 12 scalpel-sharp blades sad handy travel cas. All for only , . . EVEnsnAnp-scciicci iruzcTon RAzen