Pacific Coast Conference Shows Intersection Power New York, Nov. 2 iJ,The lurmally robust soutl. has turn- ed anemic In football this year and mor. of the red corpuscles teem to have escaped to the Pa eific coast. A check of the major confer ences against outside opposition shows the southwest a stout leader and the southern the weakest In the land. The southeastern, a veritable bowl incubator down through the years, is better than holding its own but is not showing the old-time punch. Its bowl candi dates are negligible. On the other hand, the Pa cific coast, an intersectional punching bag since the war, is bouncing back against some chins. As an example, it has won two and tied one of six games in the formidable Big Ten, with which it has a Rose Bowl working agreement. The wide open southwestern rs with Baylor, SMU and Rice In the fore have won 18 games LOCAL UNITED PRESS Salem, Oregon. Pro Boxing Resumes at Armory Wednesday Night Following suspension of a number of weeks, the Veterans of Foreign Wars resume their boxing shows at the armory Wednesday night at 8:30. Matchmaker Tex Salkeld will feature John L. Sullivan and Johnny Jennings, heavyweights in the 10-round main event and Lou Nunes and Al Cliff in the six-round semi-final. Jennings is reported as be ing confident of victory over the highly favored Sullivan and predicts an upset that will make him a popular figure In fight circles throughout the northwest. The first preliminary pits Tony Ortega of Portland against Joe Pack of Salem. Ortega, Stymie Retires To Blue Grass Loafing at Ease New York, Nov. 2 (U.R)Gal- lant old Stymie, who rose from the claiming ranks to become the world's greatest money-win ning throughbred, was retired today to a bluegrass life of ease. And thus was written the cli max of a lusty saga of the turf. Bred on the sprawling King ranch in Texas, Stymie was just an obscure selling plater when he was purchased by Hirsch Jac obs in 1943 for $1,500. He was two years old then. Now eight years old and till under the guidance of Jac obs Stymie leaves the racing scene with an amazing, almost unbelievable, bankroll of $918, 485. A sore right foreleg forced Stymie's retirement. First College Scalp Falls in Stillwater, Okla., Nov. 2 ) The annual parade of college football coaches to the showers was officially under way today with the resignation of Jim Lookabaugh of Oklahoma A&M. Lookabaugh, with the college for 25 years as a student, an alumnus and its coach for the past 11 seasons submitted his Resignation yesterday. It was ac cepted immediately and is effec tive at the end of the present season. Dean C. H. McElroy. cabinet chairman, said a successor pro bably won't be named until af USF Rolls Over Nevada Nevada halfback Paul Stimae (51) rambles for six yards before being thrown out of bounds br I'nlversity of San Francisco halfback Ed Brown (10) at their game played In San Francisco's Ketar Stadium. In to help Brown are Burl Toler (851 and Roy Barni (17). I'SF trimmed 11. (Acmt Telephoto). against outside foes while lnsina only live and tying one. The Ivy league follows with a 16-5 record but these figures are deceiving and aren't a true intersectional barometer. The purist Ivy niemhers dis dain matching punches with the powers of other sectiuns for lush gates and their gaudy mark has been built up main ly at the expense of milder elevens in their own baili wick. The Pacific coast, which car ries on a running battle with the midwest, has won 18 games, lost seven and tied two beyond its own family feuding. Here's the conference breakdown of games outside the league: W L T Pet. Southwest Con. 18 5 1 .783 Ivy Leanue 18 5 0 .762 Pacific Coast Con. 18 7 2 .720 Southeastern Con. 18 10 3 .643 Bib Seven 12 7 1 .632 Bin Ten 10 8 2 .550 Missouri Valley 13 13 2 .500 Skyline Six 9 12 1 .429 Southern Con. 10 31 0 .244 ASSOCIATED PRESS NEWS AND FEATURES Wednesday, November 2, 1949 Page 15 brother of Joey of considerable ring fame, will be making his first professional appearance. Another preliminary brings Bobby Carr and Swede Olsen together in what Salkeld de scribes as a grudge scrap. Jimmy Ogden and Larry Reagan will I square off in the third four rounder. Ramirez Gets Nod Over Rogers in Portland Bout Portland, Ore., Nov. 2 u.R Veteran Boxer Felix Ramirez, 132, of San Jose, Calif., decision ed Newcomer Don Rogers, 134, of Portland Tuesday night in The relatively inexperienced Udell Worries Rogers held Ramirez to even . i r terms for three rounds, but theADOUT WeDlOOTS California fighter took over in the fourth round to lead in points the rest of the way. Ram irez was especially effective when he moved in close to Rog ers and threw most of his blows at the Portlander's head. In the other 10-round match, Woody Winslow, 144. Merced, Calif., deeisioned Dick Wolfe, 148, Portland. Results of the four-round pre liminaries: Jerry Remaud, 130, Portland, deeisioned Joe Pete, 133. Salem, Ore.; Chuck Lyons, 157, Port and, TKO'd Johnny O'Day, 155, Portland in the third round; Chuck Maxson, 186. Corvallis. Ore., knocked out Johnny John son, 180, Aberdeen, Wash., in the first round. Coaching Oklahoma ter the close of the season. Lookabaugh said he is leav ing "for the good of Oklahoma A & M." He signed a five year contract in 1946. H I a salary has not 'been announced. The Aggies won the Missouri ! d vcc1ordav Valley conference title last year. Ru;hIv i500 to 20n0 animals His teams hit the big time dur-;were kjueti in the Methow re ing the war years and won twogion and anolr,er 2500-3000 in bowl games. Itne cheIan area. This season's record is two Perfect weather conditions wins against three losses and aihave aided the hunters during tie. I the special tree-day scas-on in "I am proud." he said, "to go which either buck or does may out with the 1949 varsity." be taken. AW1 ind ,ni-''."'tr"'.' t" - Nevada MM V . . - ' - j - -- We're working up a lather All four of the nation's top teams have success streaks going . . . Notre Dame now has gone 33 games without a defeat, a modern record . . . Army is un beaten in 17 games . . . Okla homa has 16 victories in a skein . . . California has won 17 straight in regular season play . . . But for reverse English streaks you can't top little Tren ton State Teachers College, which hasn't come out on top in 43 games a series of reversals, with four ties dating back to 1938. We're working up a lather about the high - scoring games this year but to Grandpa they would have looked like pitchers battles ... In 1886 Harvard scored 765 points, beating one opponent 158 to 0 . . . In 1904 Minnesota rolled up 725 and Yale had a couple of seasons be fore the turn of the century with totals around the 700 mark. OCE Wolves Face Hard Workouts to Prep for Raiders Monmouth Extensive work outs were in store this week to ready the Wolves for their clash with the Southern Oregon Red Raiders in Ashland Saturday. Both teams turned in week-end victories, OCE over EOCE 33-0, and the Red Raiders over Chico State 21-14. McArthur said drills this week would be rough and long. was displeased with the Wolves second half showing against Eastern Oregon when the Wolves could score only a single touch down after tallying four in the hectic first half. OCE, the only remaining un defeated and untied collegiate football squad in Oregon, will be favored over Coach Al Simpson's Red Raiders. Inside Running Seattle. Nov. 2 MPi Coach Howie Odell worked his Uni versity of Washington gridiron charges against the Oregon in side running attack yesterday during a heavy scrimmage in which the Frosh made like Ducks. The inside attack, spearhead ed by Fullback Bob Senders, has piled up 1.819 yards in seven games for the Du-iks and is fm rowing the Odell brow almost as deeply as the lengibv string of Husky injured did earlier in the year. All but one of the Washington regulars reserve Fullback Hank Tiedemann was on hand for yesterday's workout. Deer Slaughter Reaches 5000 in Two Huntina Days Seattle. Nov. 2 VP' In two days hunters have killed ap proximately 5000 deer in the Chelan-Okanogan areas, the ", O If n ilnlfiafi I nT-' Brs"MMBprr yw") " UTa7'1 ' -- "" '- ""'1 Stackhouse to Point Out 'Car Miscues at Meet The mistakes made by Willa mette's football team during its homecoming game with Lewis and Clark last Saturday will be pointed out by Coach Chester Stackhouse during Friday morn ing's session of the Salem Break fast club. The criticisms will be in the nature of a chalk talk. Motion pictures taken during the ball game will be shown providing the films are suffi ciently clear to warrant their reproduction. Plans for the entertainment of Western International league club owners, directors and newspapermen who will be here for the annual meeting of the organization Nov. 6 and 7, will be reviewed. Lipscomb Teams HeiWith O'Riley to Win Tag Event Jack Lipscomb and Jack O'Ri ley flattened Jack Kiser and Frank Stojack in the tag team event of the weekly wrestling show Tuesday night. However, the "win" was slightly tarnished because Lipscomb entered the ring at a time when he was sup posed to" be on the outside. Dale Kiser downed Bill Mc Euin in a preliminary while Jim Gonzales took straight calls over Carl Myers, one via the foul route. Kip Plans One Lineup Change For Vandal Game Corvallis. Ore., Nov. 2 WPi Only one change is planned in the starting Oregon State college lineup against Idaho Saturday, Coach Kip Taylor said yesterday. That will put Reserve Center Al Gray in for Pete Palmer, regu lar snapper-back. Palmer went to the hospital for observation but, while re leased yesterday, may not be able to play, Taylor said. Nature of Palmer's ailment was not disclosed. Celeri Sets PCC Pace In Total Offense List Los Angeles, Nov. 2 Bob I Celeri. who has quarterbacked California to seven' straight vic tories, continues to set the PCC pace in total oirense, but fig ures released today by the Pa cific coast conference commis sioner's office, showed Southern : California's Jim Powers with a better per game record. Celeri leads the league with 1 929 yards in seven games, which laverages 132.7 yards a game. Powers has 868 yards in six games for an average of 144 7 yards a contest. Oregon's fnllhark. Boh San ders, holds his comr""iding lead in rushing with 569 yards in seven games, and shares the scoring lead with Bill Mar- . oaiNlCWfTH FLAVOR THAT RECAILS Trie mAM I STTEaTH6MpER,ALi YOU W"" Imperial it mad by Hiram Walker. Blended whiskey. 86 proof. '0' ; grsin neutral ipirm. Hirsm Wslkef & Sons Inc . Peons. Illinois Whooping a Whammy the Indians includes three real Redskins. Left to right in a war dance, Rudy Saluskin, Ed Saluskin and Bill Yallup at tempt to put the whammy on an opponent. It worked. Yakima won, 25-14. Linfield Wildcats Hope To Turn Tables on WU Hopes are running high in McMjnnville that Linfield col lege will be able to accomplish next Saturday night some thing that the Wildcats have never achieved since 1926 a win over Willamette univer sity on the football field. The recent comparatively easy victory over Whitman college served as a stimulant to the Wildcats who have been going about their training chores with considerable en thusiasm. On Sweetland field, Coach Chester Stackhouse has been trying to eliminate the mis takes that proved costly in last Saturday's homecoming 20-7 defeat at the hands of Lewis and Clark. The squad is in good physical condition, although a few of the men are nursing the customary bumps and bruises. After Saturday night's en- Joe Gordon to Attend Ham it n Egg Dinner Meet Joe Gordon of Eugene, well known lnfielder of the Cleve land Indians, has agreed to at tend the dinner being spon sored by the Salem Breakfast club at the Marion hotel next Monday night, according to announcement by Al Loucks, president of the ham 'n' en ters. Gordon will be accompanied by Dirk Strite, sports editor of the Eugene Register Guard. The dinner is being held in connection with the meet ing here Nov. 6 and 7 of West ern International league offi cials. Attendance at the dinnrr will be held to 125. tin of I SC. Each has scored nine touchdowns for 54 points. Powers has proved himself the best passer in the league in p Y 4-U li nearly every respect. He has daiem Tourn is completed 62 of 100 attempts for i ; 850 yards, an average of .620.lnJUrY V ICTIm Ten of his passes have gone for 1 1 fc. I I -1, f n touchdowns Chester Daniels of Oregon has relied on his right foot to rank him high, among the Conference scorers, and he holds a big lead in extra point and field goal kicking. Daniels has made 25 of 27 PAT'S good ph has booted four field goals fr 37 joints. of Oregon pass inter - Wooclley Lewis continues to lead i ceptions with seven THAT MA5 J1 6 & zz:t counter, Willamette has two Northwest conference games on the schedule both here. The first, Nov. 11 will be against Whitman, and the sec ond, Nov. 18, will feature Pa cific. Aiken Plans to Give Fell Ball Packing Chores Eugene, Ore., Nov. 2 (At Bill Fell's efforts in the wan ing moments of last Satur day's clash with Iowa may have earned the Oregon ball carrier a more prominent part in the Duck offensive picture, Coach Jim Aiken indicated yesterday. As the Oregon varsity work ed out against a Washington defense in preparation tor this Saturday's tilt at Portland, Fell was being give' p" p portunities to pack the ball. Yanks, Bums Play Second To BoSox in Star Ratings New York, Nov. 2 W The New York Yankees and Brook lyn Dodgers, rivals in the last World Series, each gained two berths on the Associated Press' 1949 major league all-star team. Both, however, were forced to play second fiddle to the Boston Red Sox who led all clubs with three representatives outfield er Ted Williams and pitchers Mel Parncll and Ellis Kinder. The remainder of the dream squad picked by a poll of 116 members of the baseball writ ers' Association of America is composed of one player each from the Detroit Tigers, St. Louis Cardinals and Pitts burgh Pirates. Tommy Henrich. a converted first baseman, and shortstop Phil Rizzuto are the world champion in ncuiusivu vnumc Fremont, Nrnr. The first se rious accident in Midland col lege football and sports in two years hit Edward Meyer, 790 Fairview avenue, Salem, when he was hospitalized with a bro ken leg. Meyer, a star athlrtc in base- iball, basketball, wrestling and , football, was injured near the lend of a game with the Hastings 'college Broncos. FASHIONED !ElL0vVNf out' $3vmh W Viking Jayvee Gridders Smother Corvallis, 27-13 Scoring in every quarter, the Salem high school Junior Var sity Vikings swept over the Cor- vallis Spartan B eleven, 27-1S, Tuesday afternoon on the Spar tan gridiron. In the early minutes of play Salem's Johnny Gundran drove for a TD and Bob Theison place kicked the ball which put Salem out in front 7-0. But the Sparts came right back with a criss Williams Tells Of Iowa Reunion With Men of '99 Never had a better time in my life, ' summed up Fred A. Williams, Salem attorney upon his recent return from the mid dle west where he, with four other survivors of the Univer sity of Iowa football team of 1899 were honor guests for the University of Iowa-Indiana uni versity football game in mid-Oc tober. The five men were extensive ly entertained before and after the homecoming contest, so much so in fact, Williams admits that he was tuckered out long before he headed home. Williams describes the Iowa team as an "explosive outfit" that apparently worries little concerning the opposition as long as the fourth period re mains to be played. He was urg ed to remain for the Iowa-Ore gon tilt but begged off because of the necessity of returning to his office. Of the squad of 50 years ago. of which he was one of the 16 members of the travelling con tingent, the records show that Iowa amassed 257 points to three for the opposition. While Williams was designated as an end and held that position much of the time, it was not unusual to shift to a tackle or a guard. Because of the small squad we had to learn about every posi tion," Williams said. Before returning home Wil liams spent a few days with a sister and her husband in South Dakota where pheasant hunting proved pleasurable and profit able. Bob Grieve, Syracuse Univer sity's track and cross - country coach is a former sprinter and halfback at the University of llinois. Yankees on the squad. Second baseman Jackie Robinson and catcher Roy Campanella are the Dodgers' representatives. Third baseman George Kel, only Tiger on the team, received the most votes. He was named on 113 of the 116 ballots cast. Wil liams was next with 112. Others to hit the century figure were Robinson, 108, and Stan Musial, Cardinals' star flycatcher, 100. Campanella Just missed with 99. Henrirh got 97 votes for first and five in the outfield. Musial got three additional votes, all for first base. The smallest number of votes for a winner went to Ralph Kiner, Pittsburgh's home run slug ger, whose 68 votes won the right field post. Rizzuto won with 83 votes. Only one vote separated the Red Sox pitching twins. The left handed Parnell. who won 25 games and lost only eight, drew 78 votes, one more than the righthanded Kinder, who led all KUMORE CIEANIR TODAY! COMPACT TANK TYPE Reg. 52.7S Now A beauty! New Kenmore tank type cleaner with full set of attachments cleans rugs, draperies, upholstery, dusts woodwork. Powerful h II P motor quickly and easily d.irs the Job for you. Call J-9191 for home demonstration, either day or evening. Shop In Air Conditioned Plenty of Free Parking Comfort m fix motcf Atoi ' JLHwvf cross run on the kick-off good for 70 yards and a Corvallis score. The second Corvallis score came when Salem fumbled the ball on their own 20. Corvallis took over and drove for a touch down. Salem put on the heat with Chuck Rector passing to Dirk Evans to set up another TD. Gary Messing smashed over the final yards and as tha gun sounded the half the score was In a 13-13 deadlock. A Rector to Al Huston pass paved the way for Dwight Ran kin to score in the third period. Bob Theison place kicked tho point which made the score 20- 13 at the end of the third per iod. In the final stanza Johnny Gundran traveled 18 yards to pay dirt for the Viks. Theison again place kicked the ball to make the final score 27-13. Salem's offensive plays were spark-plugged by the trio of Fullback Bob DeWitt, Captain Don Berg and Bud Gregson, guards. The win was Salem's third In league play as against one loss. Thursday afternoon the Jun ior Viks take on the Silverton Foxes' Jayvee team of the Fox gridiron. Fordham Studies Taking Army's Place for Irish New York, Nov. 2 VP) Up- and-coming Fordham may pick up where Army left off as an annual opponent for Notre Dame in New York. Plans for a series between the two big Catholic institutions, be ginning possibly in 1951. was discussed informally during a visit here this week of the Irish athletic director, Ed (Moose) Krause. Krause said Notre Dame is anxious to play a game in New York every year "preferably a New York team." "If Fordham is interested in playing us regularly," he added, "I'd be glad to present the pro posal at a meeting of our ath letic department next week." Jack Coffey, athletic director at Fordham, also said he intend ed to take the matter up with authorities. He said he was "pleased over the idea. American league pitchers with a 28-6 won and lost record. Of the ten men selected, on ly two are holdovers from the 1948 team. The incum bents are Williams and Musial. Williams, in fact, has been named on all four Associated Press teams starting In 1946. Those missing from last year's squad include Johnny Mize. first base; Joe Gordon, second base; Lou Boudreau, shortstop; Bob Elliott, third base; Joe Di maggio, center field; Birdie Teb betts, catcher; and Johnny Sain and Harry Brecheen, pitchers. JvanciA ! Comet Coming Back See the NEW 550 N. Capitol Street Phone 3-9191 46