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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 7, 1956)
2Scc. II) Statesman, Salem ,Ore., Wed., Mar. 7, '56 Wiul fx sirs' Tcuiiiay GUIlt! I Thcyll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo the starting ' lineup who have been to the Mate tourney tvuee before. Lee, who seems to have in stilled that "desire to win" in F.y Dl'STT HOC. I possible to beat the Lions this Statesman Sports Writer (year, and both in turn went down With their sights pointed onito defeat from the M B cham t least is good finish as the pions. Neahkahnie was the first 1953 team, the Jefferson High! to do it and Mill Citv was the Ijons will leave this morning forjother in a league game. But both ' his team, came to Jefferson this Baker and the State Class Bi these losses were erased in later vear from Albany where he was Championship basketball tourn- j games. the assistant track coach. Previ- ament It was in 1953 that the Coach Praises Spirit ous to that he was a coach at Jefferson team pulled several j' what chance does Jefferson Seaside. The 35yearold mentor big surprises as they first won have in this year's tourney at ' piaved junior college basketball the District 2-B tourney and then I Baker? Coach Lee puts it 'this in California. He Rot bachelors went on to place third in the way: i degree from Oregon State and "iJ!n3'i ... . i ., " spirit means anything. our 'h.s masters at the Lniversity of k? I &''ta ' thn verage. . ci a tative of Eu- on . this year, takes his Marion u- . i .w.... ...V sene. t..m.. -u. ;. i we have a lot of desire to win. , . , , .... v.u...j u i . in ,..;, ,ha ! me Lions navr wcutrsun vy ih... Rn cnni. k,o a, in. r,o chartered bus at 8:30 this morn- ,a,s, of the players may come through n& and wil arrive j" l.? on a certain night." i""" w ""; r,u,u w,.tl. ,. j i Baker gym tonight. Their game . J" Srdf iWith Elgin is at 2 p.m. Thursday. . , una mxubm u( ii mv iiiuu a scoring leader but others have taken over whenever the talent ed senior has been held in etieck. Hawkins is an "iron man" of the court game and often plays the full 32 minutes. ' His talents are .not limited to the bouncing round ball sport Hawkins1 was chosen to play in next fall's Class B Shrine foot ball game at Pendleton. He is strong and has great competi tive spirit. About mid-season, he! LOS ANGELES (Special chipped. an ankle bone but never UCLA's front-running Bruins, who! missea a game, a monin lonow ing this accident, he lacerated his finger and needed seven I LOST TWS TKDCy B4CX KWEH ELOPEO KTTH THE KUCE HCSE- SXiyM LISTED THIS IS VEST INTERESTING- LIKE READIES THE TELEPHONE BOOK to the tournament with a 232 record a record that w achieved with a "lot of desire, as Lee explains it. Only two teams have found it Land Places On A-A Team Bruins Eyeing PCC Records In Last Tills NEW YORK (Special)- Paced by giant, 6' 10" Bill Russell of the top-ranked San Francisco Dons, the, Pacific Coast landed three men on the 1955-56 Look Magazine All American Basketball Team, it was announced Tuesday. San Francisco's K. C. Jones, the other half of the one - two punch that sparked U.S.F. on. their record breaking victory string, was also named to the select quad. "Russell and Jones together led the nation's . finest team, a team that is definitely the best ever turned out in the Far West," the Dew issue of Look said in announ cing the selections. Nanlls Ala Picked Willie Naulls of UCLA was also named to the Look squad, which was selected from the ballots of 700 sportswriters and broadcasters. "Naulls," the magazine said, "was strong and smooth, extremely rugged in shooting and rebound ing. " The ten-man All American Squad is again dominated by big men. With five men over 6' 7" tall, the honor squad easily maintains an average height of 6' S". Big Maa Develops ' "Unlike ten yean ago, today's big boys can maneuver and handle the ball and shoot from outside and the comers." Look said. "The ponderous big boys, like the 'goon' of yesteryear, is definitely fin ished. The complete Look AH America quad: Bob Burrow, Kentucky; Robin Freeman, Ohio State; Si hugo Green, Duquesne; Tom Hein- -sohnHoly Crosse. Jot HolupJ. ucvigv n.aiiuigiuu, n. v. nuun, San Francisco; Willie Nanus UCLA; Bill Russell, San Francis co; Ron Shavlik, N.C.. State; and Bill Uhl, Dayton. Taft, Selleck Picked The NCAA District I All Star squad: Bill Russell, San Francis co; K. C Jones, San Francisco; Willie Naulli, VCLA; Morris Taft, UCLA; and George Selleck, Stan ford. The NCAA District 7 All Star aquad: Art Bunte, Utah; Terry Tebbs, Brigham Young; Toby Roy bal. New Mexico; Joe Capua, Wy oming; and Gary Bergen, Utah. f A WE klOl4T?Y DO OU KVOwV '''s( 1 WUV. SWS MJ':hJ m 1LY HUO-ftflr.LF i 1 "n4l r HEW M LLS73NE HIS SISTES UPDMN A lntr UOiNo- V HEi?85 COUSiMSUPEJ4 1 K4!EO US'S:N3 J T1LK!N& J f USED TO GO WTTH lOGY BCVLE.TmE DOCTOR W l OLD If -' V HO0FK45LE BERDRE HS WHO TOOK C4.RE OF "M U Jl 'X ufo kiiuir.. vni 1 ui'iit4Mr au me i THE POLL? 60T MOE IK'- , h KNCW-THSONg P 1 ""1 FYTT1TT1 f 11 1 R WHO PL6VED THE J N YJTT7A Jv-. Tl 1 . SOLOMOHA IV, mouses r iT Tiil. fnT-F V --- ,uy fcv ces S3i UI5TENIN& TO THE i ' WiX I 7TmPy 'r5LSS-: two old C4l r4ls . rTliMT'' Mifl W 7 1' Itv OOC!: CMCimAi omiq Delay Faced By Vancouver VANCOUVER B C J - The I Approximately half the work, the City Council' and the Vancouver I council was told, would have to f,.-.;. f k p.Hk rmd be done .mmediatdy. The rest ! League were told by the Parks could be postponed. IBoard Tuesday the baseball field: Cedric Talhs. general manager i at Capilano Stadium is unplayable of the Mount ies. said he believed at present and may delay opening i "something will be worked out of the PCL schedule here. iwim me my ... . Phil Strovan, parks superintend- Extra Seals Planned ent, said it would cost an esti-i Earlier Tuesday, Tall Is an mated $30,000 to put the surface nounced an extra 2,400 seats, fi of the field in playing condition, nanced under an arrangement with A dozen football matches and the City Council, will be built at generally bad wcathe.-as blamed the stadium. Capacity will be by Stroyan for the condition of the brought close to 10,000 by the ad turf. - - - dition. - ' Field i'ader Water I The seats will cost $34,000 with "The field at present lies one an extra $3,400 for washroom fa third under water and unless im- cilities. The club will pay the cost prove drainage is put in. it will of building but the city wiU waiva not be in condition for PCL games the 5 per cent revenue no them. by April 27. the' opening date,") ' Stroyan said. ! Bill Voisell , who appca,. . 72 Mayor Fred Hume, who agreed International League games tar "something will have to be done," Kicnmona, va., sv season, m added. fwe certainly eani auora puai iur mt iisimaii u to spend $30,000." are expected to shatter a wide assortment of Pacific Coast Con- fAr.nfA u9EAn rofnrAe in h . i r uicDea uaen dui never missea final series this weekend, domi. his call at the center post Other Regular Starters Besides Hawkins, the regular starters are 6-0 Bobby Harris, 6-1 Jerry Gamble, Ml Neil Spencer and 5-9 Gerald Zehner. The reserves are Gary Zehner, Frank Marlatt, Phil Hochspeier, Dave Harry and Frank Garmon. Lee has to look up to even the shortest of his plavers both be cause of their spirit and their height. He stands only 5-5 him self and weighs a husky 160. When he arrived at Jefferson this year, the, prospects didn't look too good as the season opened with only three return ing lettermen. The rest had had only JV experience but how they developed! Co-captains of the team are Hawkins and Spencer, the team's only seniors. The rest are jun iors, except for Hochspeier who ia a sophomore. Elgin First Opponent first foe for Jefferson at Bak er will be Elgin, a team with a reeord similar to Jefferson's. Tallest of the Elgin team is only o-z but they have two players in SPORTSMAH'S HOW-TO FOLLOW SCHOOLED CRAPPIES LARGE, BRIGHT- COLORED OBBCA as l 25' OF 15 LB. TEST V LINE TO BACK OR V FIN OF CWAPPte 9T ZRfsS HOOK CLAMP TO PIM THROUGH VpjV. Smith Claims Infected Ear PHILADELPHIA un - Light weight champion Wallace Bud) Smith laid Tuesday he fought Tony Demarco in Boston Monday night after the Massachusetts Box ing Commission physician refused to give him a physical okay. Smith, who stopped here en route to his home in Cincinnati, said he had a badly infected ear before the fight and went on with Demarco only to protect the train ing camp expenses he had invest ed for the bout. j Demarco, former welterweight champion, scored a technical knockout in the ninth round over Smith. The lightweight king was bleeding badly from his left ear at the end. Both Smith 1 and his handler, Adolph Ri'acco, said the commis sion in Boston .took the fighter to a specialist after the regular com mission physician refused to ac cept responsibility for giving him a physical okay. The specialist said it was all right for the bout to go on. Gark JC Snares State Hoop Crown vA.cuijV.tt, wasn. un Liars junior college copped tne state Conference basketball crown Tues day night in a torrid playoff, de feating Grays Harbor, 103-96. The Harborites topped the league in regular season play. A prelimi nary game gave third place to Olympic of Bremerton, which de feated Yakima, 96-85, in another fast game. Both teams hit hot and often in tl first half and Clark moved away to a 58-44 lead. The locals widened the spread to 68-48 after the rest period and Grays Harbor couldn't get back in the ball game despite a strong surge in the final minutes. In the opener, Yakima fell be lli nd and never caught up. Olympic led 49-41 a. the half and beat off Yakima surge which closed the gap ta I poinst Jerry Hathaway bucketed 32 points fur Olympic. An all-tournament learn was named after play was finished with three Clark players on it. It Included Hathaway; Bui Chronls, Clark, Jack Day, Jim Anderson, Grays Harbor: and Erick Peter sen, dark. Anderson was named outstand- Irg t'rjer of tha tournament m if a school of crappies 13 not ttckinq around known brush shelters only a few are usually caught kforg the school moves awav to an unknown spot, so, if you carefully unhook and make a "captive of thc first fish caught either with a small, sfrin clamp to its fin, or hooked through top of back and release it quickly, it will rejoin school. then, fol low bobbcr course and fish. naied the weekly team statistics released today by the PCC Com missioner's office. UCLA has scored an average of 81.9 points a game in maintaining its scoring lcd. They have 1146 points in 14 games to place them within easy range of the record 1175 points scored by Washington in 1953. The Conference season re cords for most field goals, free throws and rebounds also are with in grasp of the Bruins. Trojans Hold Second Second in total scoring is South ern California with an average of 71.4 points per game while Wash ington has averaged 67.6. Wash ington is the top ranked team defensively, having allowed 59.9 points to 62.7 for Southern Cali fornia and 63.0 for California. ' UCLA has shot 40.4 per cent from the floor to lead in field goal shooting, having hit 403 of 998 at tempts. Southern Cal has shot 39.1 per cent and California 38.7 per cent. Washington leads from the free throw line with 70.7 per cent on 359 points in 508 attempts, fol lowed by UCLA 69.2 per- cent and California, 68.2 per cent. Bruin's Top Rebounders UCLA's rebounding, game has far outdistanced its rivals, the Bruins having picked off 713 re coveries to their opponents' 521 for 57.7 per cent. USC has recovered 53.7 Der cent and California 51.8 Tpertent. Washlhgtohliasnhe "best mark on field goal defense, having held foes to 32,6 per cent or 336 field goals in 1030 attempts. South ern California has a 34 4 per cent mark and Stanford 34.9 per cent. Four traditional series this week end complete the 1956 season. Fri day night: VCLA-l'SC at Los An geles; Stanford " California at Berkeley: Oregon-OSC at Eugene: Idaho-WSC at Moscow: Saturday afternoon: Stanford-Cal at Stan ford (regionally televised); Satur day night: UCLA USC at Los An geles; Oregon-OSC at Corvallis; ldaho-WSC at Pullman. NIT Picks St. Louis . . . Kentucky Handed Spot In NCAA Cage Tourney By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kentucky, a three-time winner of the national collegiate basket ball championship, got the nod Tuesday as Southeastern Conference representative in the 1956 NCAA tournament and St. Louis University, an also-ran in the Missouri Valley Conference, accepted a bid to play in the National Invitation Tourna ment. Bragg Praised By Richards LOS ANGELES UP - The Rev. Bob Richards, a man who should know a great pole vaulter, pre dicted Tuesday that Don Brasg is headed for a 16-foot 3 or 4-inch vault. "Thejjsky's the limit," Richards told a reporter. "The kid is terrif ic. Eventually he should go 16-3 or 4 " Richards earlier had predicted; St. Louis completed the 12-team . that Bragg would break Cornelius NIT field which will compete at ! Warderdam's world mark of 15 Madison Square Garden March 17- j feet. 1 inches within two years. 24. while Kentucky's nomination1 Now he isn't so sure the Villanova left the NCAA with only one of j star won't do it this year, its 25 berths .acant after vansasj Bragg cleared 15 feet 4' inches State claimed the Big Seven cham-jlt Saturday the, .econd highest pionship and an automatic entry to the nationwide playoffs by defeat ing Kansas 79-68 Tuesday night. Possible Tie Ends " The K-State success averted a possible 4-way tie for the Big Sev vault of all time. Richards, now 30. intends ot challenge" Bragg's supremacy Sat urday in the Milwaukee . Indoor Games. The vaulting vicar's all time best is 15 feet 434 inches, en title which would have meant i but he is aiming for . 13 feet 10 a couple of flips of a coin to de- inches this year in his attempt to Iowa, Illini Top All-Stars and runner-up Illinois each gained two berths Tuesday on The Asso ciated Press' 1956 all-Big Ten bas ketball team a squad with the strongest scoring potential in con ference history. Heading the honor lineup, which includes six players for the second straight year, are All-America Robin Freeman of Ohio State and Julius McCoy of Michigan State. Freeman shattered Big Ten scor ing records with a 32.5 average with McCoy his closest rival throughout the campaign. McCoy's sharpshooting clip was 27.2. Iowa placed Bui Logan, it's top scorer, and Carl Cain, rebounding demon. Illinois is represented by Bill Ridley, ball-hawking, play- making guard, and its captain, clutch-shooting Paul Judson. Freeman was the only unani mous choice for the mythical team chosen by 12 sports writers who cover Big Ten games. McCoy missed one first team vote. Total Of fen G TO FT PF Avg. UCLA 14 403 340 Z89 81.9 Southern Cl 14 345 310 3bl 71.4 Washington 16 3B1 35D 2K 67 8 California 14 327 288 240 87.J Stanford 14 m 20 177 66 8 Oregon 14 307 321 2M8 66 8 Wash. Stat 14 2!1 244 261 59 1 Idaho 14 289 246 264 58 8 Oregon State 14 293 223 S3 87.1 Total Defense C FG FT PF Avf . Washington 18 336 287 299 88 9 Southern Cal 14 30.1 272 273 62 7 California 14 300 282 247 83 0 Stanford ' 14 295 93 264 83 1 Oregon Stat 14 335 253 251 66 1 UCLA 14 334 300 290 67.7 Idaho 14 330 303 230 68 7 Oregon ' 14 337 333 303 71 Wash. State r 14 395 265 137 75.4 Keboundi G OWN Opp Net Avg- UCLA 14 713 HI 192 .677 5 1. Southern Cai '14 679 583 6 ,337 California 14 558 821 37 .MS Oregon State 14 633 891 41 .518 Washington 16 681 656 25 .510 Oregon 14 857 623 34 .810 Stanford 14 527 631 -104 .458 ldho 14 482 597 -113 .447 I Wash. Stat 14 826 741 -218 .413 defend his Olympic title. Thorpe's Wife Blasts AAU Solons Start j Ticket Drive (Continued from preceding page), ping' Center, Buddy Smith;' 4, Downtown, Stearns Cushing, Hank Etzel and Arnold Kruger; 5, West Salem, Dave Beckett; 6,i State Of fices, John McElwain; 7, South 12th, Ed Talbott; t, Candalaria, Pete Peterson; 9, South Commer cial, to be assigned; 10, Four Cor ners, Dicky Grogin. Dave Hoss, "Chief Rooter." of the Boosters, served as master of ceremonies and introduced mem bers of the Senator board of direc tors and Booster officials. Out-of-Towners Among the out-of-town guests were Dick Richards, general man ager of the Eugene Emeralds, and Deke Walker, -Emerald business HosePn s . m-w , L0S ANGELES If! - Jin. Pa manaeih-wsting-he-POTt land baseball c ub u . FuDb u' '"""t" "'" '"s Truitt, veteran baseball broadcast er of the Portland Beavers. "There is a revived interest in Beaver baseball in Portland with the 'new deal', the new stadium and the fine operation of the club by general manager Joe Zeigler, Truitt told the group. "What is going on in Portland is going to help Salem, Eugene and Oregon baseball all the way through. The well-known "Heidelberg Harmonaires", Claude Raye and Scot O'Dare, provided the feature entertainment of the evening. The Junior Rootm Tooters, a new benator band made up of South Salem high school students, received an enthusiastic welcome as did the "Senior Rootin' Tooters" led by Curt Ferguson. i 1MGH HYDRO-MAGIC RAZOR termine the league's entry into the NCAA eliminations which get under waj Monday. The Wildcats get a first round bye. St. Louis wound up in- a tie for second in the Missouri Valley Con ference with Oklahoma A 4 M, which was selected for the NIT Monday along with St. Joseph's of Philadelphia and Lafayette. St. Joseph's defeated Lafayette 84-80 Braves to Get GalProfessor Help John Quinn Kills Trade Humor Talk BRADENTON, Fla. I - Gen eral Manager John Quinn of the Milwauke" Braves Tuesday termed rumors that Joe Adcock and Bob Buhl were ticketed for the St. Louis Cardinals in return for Red Scboendienst as "nothing but a pipe dream." "I haven't talked to representa tives of the Cardinals or any other club since .coming to Florida," Quinn said. Players to Study Owners' Reactions TAMPA. Fla. un - The 16 major league player representatives will meet here Wednesday to study the club owners' reaction to tbe play ers' ecent demands. The players have asked for a boost in the minimum salary from $6,000 to. $7,200 and (or a voice in the negotiation of the multi-million dollar contracts for television and radio rights for the World Series and All-Star games. The owners have. yielded little ground on either point. The players also are expected to discuss changes in the pension plan, which would increase bene fits as a result of increased TV and radio receipts. There is a move on to include a players' years in military service: in the pension benefits. At present, a player gets no credit for any time be has spent in the service. Sullivan Favored SYRACUSE, N. Y. ( John L. Sullivan of England Was a slight favorite Tuesday to whip Jackie Labua in their 10-round middleweight bout here Wednes day night High School Y Team Wins Tourney Berth Salem's high school YMCA basketball team defeated Long- view at Longview, M-37, Mon day night, earning them the right to the northwest area tournament at Wenatchee. Wash.. ..March mi. Fenton Lochenour paced the team to the win with 20 points. re MILWAUKEE IB - A pretty lady professor leaves for the south Wednesday to teach Milwaukee Braves farm club players to keep their eyes on the ball and a few other things at the same time. Mrs. Alice Richardson, a pro fessor at the University of Wis consin's Milwaukee campus is a specialist in teaching people to read faster and more accurately. She adapts the same techniques to teaching players to keep their eyes on the ball. Mrs. Anderson will travel to the Braves farm club training camp at Waycross, Ga., and will be gone six weeks. Her husband, C. A. Richardson, an engineer, is going along for a vacation. Second Spring Training This is the second year Mrs. Richardson has held classes in spring training camps. Her chief technique is the use of a projector to flash pictures on a screen for a fraction of a sec ond. The pupil watches and writes down what he believes he saw. When the pupil improves,, he watches while two objects are flashed on the screen in the same Instant. This trains a player for such things as fielding a ball while tracking base runners out of the corner of his eye. Kentucky, after failing to' win the Southeastern Conference title for only the second time since 1944, was picked after champion Ala bama resigned its tournament spot. Alabama's five starting play ers .all are fourth-year men, in eligible under NCAA rules, and Coach Johnny Dee and his play ers decided to yield to Kentucky rather than send a team of sub stitutes. Eighth Appearance This will mark Kentucky's eighth appearance in the NCAA tourna ment The Wildcats won the title in 1948, 1949 and 1951, and reached the Eastern finals in 1942. Last year they were third in the East ern section. & St. Louis has appeared almost as frequently in the NIT, winning the title in 1948 and reaching the quarter finals four out of five oth er years. The Billikens were1 in line for a tie with Houston for their conference title and a pos sible NCAA spot until they were spilled by Oklahoma A 4 M last Saturday Kentucky drew a bye through the first round of the NCAA com petition, which opens with nine games at four locations next Mon day and Tuesday. Iowa, which won the Big Ten championship Mon' day, defending champion - San Francisco, UCLA, Utah, Houston also drew first round byes. Other Pairings Told Other first round NCAA pair Ings; At New York, March 12 Holy Cross vs. Temple and North Carolina State vs. Canisius; March 13 Connecticut v?. Manhattan and Dartmouth vs. West Virginia At Ft. Wayne, March 12 DePaul vs Wayne. At Wichita, Kas., March 13 Oklahoma City vs. Memphis State and Southern Methodist vs, Texas Tech. at Seattle, March 12 Idaho State vs. Seattle University. NIT pairings have not been made. The other learns entered are Duquesne, the defending cham pion;' Seton Hall, Dayton, St. Francis (NY), Xavier (Ohio), Louisville, Marquette and Niagara. Jim Thorpe of all-round athletic greatness, who was stripped of his 1912 Olympic Games medals for professionalism, Tuesday demand ed "the complete abolishment of the AAU." She advocated a new organiza lion subsidized and supported by the United States government, with regular pay for all athletes "What they did to my husband is still a bitter arrow in my side," Mrs. Thorpe declared. Thorpe was relieved of his medals when he ad mitted receiving small sums for playing baseball prior to the 1912 games She said she was stirred up over the suspension of runner Wes San tee. f. - I'ide Tnl.tr Tld lor Taft, Ort goa (ComDiled bv V. a Codrtic urvt, Portland. Ort I 33 a.m. 10 ft p an. 1 18 am. 10 87 p m. 10 18 am. 11.27 pjn. Angels, Riee Unable To Agree on Contract LOS ANGELES iiu - President John Holland of the Los Angeles baseball club said Tuesday the An gels and outfielder Hal Ric are too far apart on terms of his 1956 contract and that Rice has been given authority to make a deal forhhnself, Ricd came to the Angels from the Cubs last year. He hit IS hom ers and knocked in 78 runs while batting .262. He played, in 142 games. ' 7 clacmi automatically outomaticallyr r-t yr Date Changed For Gym Show The annual YMCA gym show "Gymkhana" will be held, on March 22 instead of March 29 as previously announced, Harry Manning, general chairman, re ported Tuesday. This year's performance is to have a circus theme with action going on in three different rings at all times. Included in the show will be the five boys' and three girls classes doing .simple exer cises, tumbling, trampoline, pyra mids and wand drills. . Exhibitions will be given judo, wrestling, fencing and body building. Specialties for the night include presentation of free gym nasties, flying rings, baton twirl ing, lighted Indian club work, in ternattonal folk dancing, tots playlet and a living tableau by the Junior Leaders. 88 80 8 8S I II 141 am. ,. 8 48 p.m. I in a m. 4 29 p.m. 4 IS am. I US p re. LOPES STOPS SMITH " SACRAMENTO, Calif. ID - Joey Lopes, 134, Sacramento, stopped Reuben Smith. 132 Los Angeles. J Tuesday night with two sixth round T L- I. J l . J J j g j fcnmfcuuwiu ana was awaruea a J i technical knockout 1 minute and (j 1 4 seconds after tht round started. UNIVERSITY BOWL Ladies Classic League team re sults: Roberts Bros. 3, Osko In surance Agency 1. Tbe .Triangle (won by forfeit) 4, Smoke Shop 0. Adler's 1. Tele-Treat J. China City Cafe 3, Simmons Insurance Agency 1.- - - High team series, Roberts Bros. 2486. High team game, The Tri angle 896. High Individual series, Dot Allbright of Roberts Bros., 547. High individual game, June Lloyd of The Triangle, 233. Other high scores: Madge Rieke S2S, Dot Allbright 203-547. June Lloyd 235 506, Ginny Garbarino 202, Phyllis Curry 201, Mary Pol lnsky 203-514. Results Tuesday in the BIB lea gue games: Les Newman 4, Loder Bros. 0; Davis Oil 4, Hick's Sun dry 0; Mick's Sign 2. Ramages 2; Dyer Insurance 3, Kaye TV 1. High team game by Dyer with 747. High team series by Ramages with 2099. High individual game and series hy Mel Jacober with 204 and 529. when you buy two 98 packs of "Gold" blades... 1 48 blades and Injector razor... a J28Z value. ..now only Hera's America's favorite shaving combination! Th all-Dew Eversharp-Scbick Hydro-magic Razor pi us EversharpScbJck's new Hydro-magic "Gold" blades double-honed and triple-stropped to a scientifically perfect thinner shaving edgel Start enjoying smoother closer, safer shaves today. Detroit Athletic Director Resigns -..4-7., DETROIT W - Miffed by what he claimed were administrative moves to make him a mere figure head, Ray E. Null Tuesday night submitted his resignation as ath letic director at the University of Detroit. Null, who is Detroit's third ath letic boss in five years, mad his resignation effective Aug. 31. He said he planned to seek a similar post at another school. Null has been at loggerheads for some time with the Rev.. Celestin J. StcLer, S.J., U. of D. president, over, certain of the school's ath letic policies. 7th Day Adventists Take Volleyball Title Results Tuesday night In the Men's Church Volleyball league: Kingwood Bible over First Chris tian. 15-4, 4-15, 15-13. After winning six straight and drawing a bye for the final night of play, the Seventh Day Adven tists won the league crown Tues day night. Members of the win ning team are L. N, Young. Ver mont Stepper, Morris-Yaw, Gary Kucbler, Richard Van Santen. Dr. Boyd Van S s n 1 1 n and Wiley Young. ' 1 ,, I ""Trn iii mi,. Look for t3fiiS.SBSJSI I I I on display """" rwo4oiIO, mrwiux I 1 at your MIIW. '"dT"J ISSMa'""VMM"' '' I "Shm your whiskers- not your face!" 'IllJECTOn' RAZORS A!!D BLADES a