Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, November 11, 1949, Page 8, Image 8

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    Salem Eugene GameTakes
1. H Art !.X . ... ;.t
I 7 tv I
XX I
(" f- v - a jut
'faf farf pr Chuck Bowe, 185 pound guard from Park
VUI JIUIII! ia)e 0re gchetuied l0 stai.t with the Bear
cats against the Whitman college Missionaries Friday night
on Sweetland field.
Bearcats, Mission Men
Primed for Night Test
Two teams, each involved in
the discouragements of learning
new systems under new coaches,
should be primed for a test of
strength on Sweetland field Fri
day night at 8 o'clock.
The contenders will be Whit
man and Willamette, currently
tied for the Northwest confer
ence basement. The Missionaries
showed a flash of strength re
cently by holding the highly
considered Pacific Badgers to a
close score. Willamette will meet
the Badgers the night of Nov. 18.
In addition to the opportun
ity of keeping out of the con
ference cellar, the game wilt
decide whether Willamette
will continue in possession of
the "Big Axe" or whether it
will be transferred to the
campus at Walla Walla. The
Bearcats have had charge of
this Paul Bunyan Instrument
ever since it was put up as a
Whitman-Willamette trophy.
Reports from Coach Archie
Kodros are to the effect that the
Missionaries came through the
recent College of Idaho tilt in
good shape. The line which av
erages 182 pounds will probably
Include Drew Miller and Ken
Meyer, ends; Gene Golden and
Ted Murray, tackles; Jim Salzer
and Dave Gaiscr, guards, and
Ed McGovern, center. The back-
Parrish Grays Snare Junior High
Title with 27-0 Win over Blues
The finale of the Salem Junior
high school gridiron circuit was
fought Tuesday night on Leslie
field with the Parrish Grays de
feating the Leslie Blues, 27-0, to
win the pennant.
In an afternoon clash, Bill
Hanauska's West Salem Giants
tromped over the Leslie Golds,
20-fi, to take a second place tic
In the standings with the Blues.
The main event of the day
was under the lights when Coach
Clay Egglcston's Parrish Greys
crushed the Leslie Blues to re
main undefeated.
Big Denny Garland started the
cqring in the second quarter,
and was followed by Murray
Jensen in the third period and
Bob Joy scored twice in the fi
nal stanza. Garland traveled 70
yards.for hi, and Jensen romp-
d 20.
A Jim Rice to Garland pass
let up the play for Joy to buck
over his Initial tally. Joy fol
lowed with a 10-yard run to
pay dirt later. Garland, Joy
and Jensen each tallied a conver
sion point. The Blues threat-
Fishermen!
HEAR
Don Harger
give his version of the fishing
this week-end on the "Fish
caster" program.
K.O.C.O.
6:30 P.M.
SPONSORS:
HERRALL OWENS CO.
and
SALEM BOAT HOUSt
field will include Cal Boycs,
John Baxter, Charles Smith and
Tom Smith. The ends are par
ticularly on the light side, Miller
weighing 155 and Meyer 165.
Coach Stackhousc will prob
ably field the following 11 men:
Johnson and Fedje, ends;
Kukahiko and Hosford, tackles;
Bowe and Nee, guards; Mar
kowskie, center; Conner, quar
terback; Sperry and Ewaliko,
halfbacks; and Clabaugh, full
back. The Willamette line will av
erage 190 pounds and the back-
field 194.
Local Talent Gets Top
Spot on Boxing Program
Local talent will get the top
prize money in next Wednes
day night's Veterans of For
eign Wars boxing card at the
armory, Matchmaker Tex Sal
keld announces.
He has named Joe Pete of
Salem and Joey Ortega of
Portland for the 10-round main
event. Pete, prominent in Che
mawa Indian school athletics,
Is a favorite with fistic fans
because of his willingness to
mix matters. This will be his
ened only once when they reach-1
cd the Parrish 10 yard stripe. Bud Flesher again took the
Left Half Bud Flesher openedi'eariing role in a march by run-
scoring in the afternoon game
by romping B5 yards to pay dirt
for the Giants in the early min
utes of play. In the second pe
riod Don Burk hurled across
from the one yard stripe for an-
Grid Broadcasts
FRIDAY
8 p.m. Salem vs. Eugene,
KOt'O.
SATl'RDA Y
1:45 p.m Oregon vs. Califor
nia, KOIN.
1:4.1 p.m. OSC vs. Michigan
State, KSLM.
Nyu BQARD ACCpTS HEAD
GRID COACH RESIGNATION
New York, Nov. 11 (It New
York university's board of ath
letic control has accepted the
resignation, effective afler this
season, of head football coach
Edward (Hooks) Mylin.
DUCK PIN
Students Under 18 Yean
Saturday Only, from 1 to 6
FREE Instruction
We have openings for Men and Women in Ladics'-Men'i
Mixed Leagues now being organized Beginners Welcome.
You will enjoy League Bowling once you start and get
acquainted.
FRKE INSTRITTION GIVEN NEW ROWl.t.RS
BOWL FOR FI N RECREATION HEALTH
Alleys Rrservrd for Partiel
B & B BOWLING COURT
SflftS Portland Road - Tom Wood, Owner Ph. 14431
13 Alleys The Finest in the Northwest
Spotlight Amid Confusion
By th AaRoelftted Presil
Eight more trams will march extra victory through the Cor
onto gridirons over the state to-vallis forfeit, and given a Sa
night to decide the remaining j lem loss would rank first on
district titlists In Oregon prep paper.
competition.
A revenge match, a cinch
game, and a fairly close contest
are all on the bill. But it s a bat
tle which may not even decide
(anything that takes the big spot
light.
That is the Eugene-Salem
contest, climaxing yesterday's
Oregon School Activities asso
ciation decision to forfeit all
C'orvallls games because stu
dents misbehaved with some
paint.
Salem, which shot to the top
of District 4 standings when its
loss to Corvallis was wiped out,
could become the undisputed
district leader by a victory over
the Eugene Axemen.
But a Kugene victory would
throw the district title into a
free-for-all, to be decided on
ly by the vote of member
schools Saturday morning.
Eugene has served warning
that it will expect the champion
ship if Salem is knocked out.
But that claim is disputed by
LOCAL UNITED PRESS ASSOCIATED PRESS NEWS AND FEATURES
Page 8
Wood burn Golf
Banquet Planned
Sunday Night
Woodburn The annual ban
quet of the Woodburn golf club
will be held Sunday, November
13, at 7 p.m. at the new Amer
ican Legion building on the high
way. Trophies will be awarded
for tournaments during the past
year and golfing motion pic
tures will be shown. Willard
Thompson will provide enter
tainment. Men's trophies to be presented
will be for the Woodburn Inde
pendent handicap tournament
and for all flights in the recent
club championship tourney.
Awards will also be made to
winners in the women's and
boys' championship tournaments.
first 10 round engagement and
a bit of concern is felt in
some quarters as to whether
he can go the distance.
Another Salem scrapper
Mel Eagleman, has been se
lected for the six-round semi
final. His opponent has not
been selected by Salkeld.
The 17 teams in the new Na
tional Basketball association are
playing a 557-game schedule
during the 1949-50 season.
other West Salem TD.
ning 60 yards for the final West
Salem score. Burk's pass to Bill
McCormack was good for one
conversion and Sam Triplctt
romped over for the other.
Jack Cobb scored the lone
Gold touchdown of the game via
a 60 yard gallop on a double re
verse play.
The Leslie Golds and Parrish
Cards share the league cellar as
each has 1 win and 3 losses
standing.
FIN Al. JI'NIoa
HUiH STANDINGS
4 0 1.0(10
PnrrlAh Orm 4
RlilfA 1
WrM Salrm 2
l.r.lr Gold , 1
Parruh Cftrdji 1
MASSACHUSETTS JOINS
NATIONAL RING GROUP
Boston, Nov. U (fl The
Massachusetts stale boxing com
mission announced yesterday it
has Joined the National Boxing
association the last state to en
ter the NBA except New York.
BOWLING
P.M.
Per Line
15c
.Lebanon, which also gained an
And Just to complicate the
situation, Salem, if it lost,
would still have a higher per
centage record than Eugene:
three victories and a defeat, to
Eugene's four victories, one
loss, and one tie.
The battles in the rest of Ore
gon tonight are clean-cut af
fairs. Scappoose and Central Catho
lic of Portland, which battled
to a scoreless tie in last year's
District 7 final, meet again to
night, with Scappoose aiming at
revenge for its defeat on a first
down basis last season.
Milwaukie, the top team in
the northern area, and Estaca
da, which won the Willamette
Valley league crown Tuesday
night, will compete for the
District 5 title at Milwaukie.
The home team, which boasts
a bigger school, is favored.
La Grande is an overwhelm
ing favorite to clinch the Dis
trict 1 championship in the re
Salem, Ore., Friday, November
Coaches Favor 'Elbow'
Rule, Ask Enforcement
New York, Nov 11 m Col
lege coaches not only like the
new football rule restricting
elbow blocking but most of them
want it more rigidly enforced.
"If there's any hollering about
the increase in penalties the
coaches brought in on them
selves," said Lou Little of Col
umbia, chairman of the coaches
rules committee, today, "They
were all for it."
"In fact, we sent letters to
the various conference com
missioners requesting strict
enforcement. We feel it's a
fine rule and will cut down
rough play and injuries."
The rule stipulates that when
an offensive players uses a hand
or forearm in blocking the hand
must stay in contact with the
body.
Once the blocker could lock
his hands and flail away, rooster
fashion. The locked hands were
barred last year and the regu
lations were changed to say the
hands should stay "near the
body.
Now there must be contact
all the way. If the hand slips
and it is detected, it's a 15-yard
penalty.
Penalties are on the rise and
the emphasis on horn-tooting
has brought beefs from some of
Mt. Angel Ends
With Molcllas
Mt. Angel The Mt. Angel
Preps, winners of their last four
contests, will close out the 1949
Willamette Valley league grid
season here Friday night at 8
o'clock. They play the Molalla
Indians.
The Preps lost their first two
starts, then hit a winning stride
to beat Silverton, Canby, Dal
las and Sandy.
OREGON FROSH FAVORED
IN CLASH WITH ROOKS
Corvallis, Nov. 11 (IP) The
University of Oregon Frosh will
be heavily favored when they
meet the Oregon State Rooks
in the final football game of the
season for both teams here to
morrow.
Sponsor Shoot
The West Salem American
Legion post will hold a trap shoot
at the Salem Trapshooters club
Sunday, beginning at 9.30. A
variety of prizes will be distri
buted to the best shooters.
Don't apologize for the looks
of your car let us bring it
back to its former fine state
by our expert metal work and
repairs. We have best facil
ities and long experience.
SERVICE
4S Tenter St. Ph. 34119
(BODY REPAIRS
maining top contest tonight. The
opponent is Baker, at the bot
tom of Blue Mountain standings.
Portland's Grant high school
won the city and district foot
ball titles last night with a
19-7 win over Roosevelt. The
two teams went into the game
undefeated.
It was Grant's seventh Port
land city title. And the team now
is in the quarter-finals tor its
fourth state crown it won in
1943, 1945, and 1946.
Other week-end games will
see Mac-Hi at Pendleton, Onta
rio at Vale, Hood River at The
Dalles, Redmond at Prineville,
Burns at John Day, Klamath
Falls at Bend, Roseburg at Ash
land, Cottage Grove at Grants
Pass, Myrtle Point at Coquille,
Marshfield at North Bend, Junc
tion City at Willamette, Oak
ridge at Pleasant Hill, Spring
field at St. Mary's, Parkrose at
'r.TPsham. Forest Grove at Ore-
gon City, West Linn at Beaver
ton, Newberg at Hillsboro, Mc
Minnville at Tigard, Vernonia
at Sherwood, Astoria at St. Hel
ens, Columbia Prep at Hill Mili
tary. 11, 1949
the mentors. The stricter block
ing rule is blamed.
But a cross-country sampling
of coaches' opinion by the As
sociated Press today showed
almost everybody for the rule
and a shortage of complaints.
"I think the rule is perfectly
all right," commented Minne
sota's Bernie Bierman. "I don't
think the officials are calling
violations too close and in some
cases are not calling them close
enough."
Lynn Waldorf of California's
Bears said the boys on the
west coast have had no trouble
with it. "I think it's a good
rule and has been administer
ed fairly by the officials here,"
he said.
Marchy Schwartz of Stanford
agreed and added: "We'd have
better blocking if the boys would
concentrate on shoulders and
forget all about hands."
Duck-Bear Grudge Battle
Looms as Top Coast Game
By BOB MYERS
Los Angeles, Nov. 11 (P) A
football game closely akin to be
ing a grudge affair comes off at
Berkeley tomorrow when the
University of Oregon ties into
unbeaten. Rose Bowl bound
California.
It's the top game of the week
in the Pacific Coast conference,
but there's an attractive duel due
here when the Bruins of UCLA,
whipped but once in conference
play and still to be considered a
Rose Bowl factor, meet the sud
d e n 1 y dangerous Washington
Huskies.
Stanford, tied with UCLA for
runner-up honors, entertains
Idaho at Palo Alto and should
overpower the less well equipp
ed visitors from the potato coun
try. The big noise will echo from
Berkeley's strawberry canyon,
however, and re-echoing will
be last year's controversy
which arose when California
and Oregon tied for the con
ference crown and the Bears
gained the Rose Bowl assign
ment by conference vote.
JIM'S SHOE
lu
Coast Leaguers
Slate Marathon
1950 Game Slate
Los Angeles, Nov. 11 P) The
Pacific Coast league aims to re
tain its hold on baseball's mara
thon title. It will play a 200
game schedule in 1950.
The PCL's directors voted yes
terday to:
1. Eliminate the Governor's
Cup playoffs, but add two weeks
to the regular season, making it
200 instead of 186-game card.
2. Raise the player limit from
23 to 25, with no limit on vet
erans or rookies.
3. Distribute $40,000 to the
pennant winning club, with
$20,000, $12,500 and $7500 to
other first division teams in
that order.
4. Press its petition to the ma
jor leagues to be excluded from
the draft law.
Nothing was said for publi
cation, anyway about the pro
posal to put the PCL champion
against the winner of the little
world series. Apparently the
PCL is going to wait until offi
cials of the American associa
tion and International league
hash it over.
Yale Athletic
Director Victim
Of Heart Attack
New Haven, Conn., Nov. 11
(tf) Robert J. H. (Bob) Kip
huth, 59, Yale university's direc
tor of athletics, was in critical
condition today following a heart
attack.
The gray-haired perfectionist.
who piloted United States Olym
pic and Yale swimming teams to
unprecedented heights, suffered
a coronary occlusion yesterday
while playing handball.
The Oregon players shed real
tears when word came that they
had been voted out of the gold
en opportunity. There are many
of the 1948 Webfoots back this
season Bob Sanders, Ed Chro
bot, Sam Nevills, Johnny Mc
Kay, to name a few and re
venge over California would be
priceless, indeed.
Oregon's able coach, Jim
Aiken, isn't one to brood over
such a disappointment not
for more than 10 or 15 years,
anyhow and it's a cast iron
cinch he will drop a casual re
minder or two.
True, too, it seems evident, is
the point that all the profession
al love between Aiken and Cal's
Lynn Waldorf could be stored in
a capsule.
Oregon is clear out of the
running this year, and the
Golden Bears rightly rule hea
vy favorites to hand the Web
foots their fourth conference
defeat. But, in this season of
gigantic upsets, one more re
versal of form needn't prove
too much of a surprise.
The Washington-UCLA con
test looks like a toss-up. Howie
SERVICE
175
N. HIGH
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coach during Friday morning's session of the ham 'n eggers.
Howard Maple, Oregon State alumni, left, and Al Loucks,
president of the club, right.
Irish Praised by Spart
Coach for Breakf asters
Notre Dame was described as
the "finest football team offen
sively I have ever seen" by For
est Evashevski, Michigan State's
backfieid coach as he gave a re
sume of last week's contest be
tween the "Fighting Irish" and
the Spartans for tSie benefit of
Salem Breakfast clubbers Fri
day morning.
'They are rough, nasty and
disgustingly healthy," said Eva
shevski. And, he hastened to ex
plain, the word "nasty" in foot
ball language is a highly com
plimentary one. Notre Dame
plays with a purpose and has the
dexterity necessary to win ball
games, continued the Michigan
State coach.
Evashevski said that al
though the Notre Dame line
was credited with an average
of 230 pounds, he quoted fi
gures to show that they would
top that mark to a consider
able extent. He stated that
Leon Hart, 262 pound, 6 foot
RANDLE OIL WOMEN TOP
MEN'S DUCKPIN SQUAD
The Randle Oil ladies' team
won two out of three games with
a total pin margin of 58 in a spe
cial match Thursday night with
the Heider Radio Men's team at
the duckpin court.
Bowling for the winners were
Ella Scharf, Gladys Wood, Pau
line Osborne, Dee Gauthier, Al
ma Penny while the men were
represented by Les Dolge, Dave
Spalding, Emery Alderman, Paul
Russell and Keith Kaye.
Odell's squad has blossomed in
to a giant killer in recent weeks
and tomorrow's game should be
one of those high scoring en-
gagements that will keep the
fans in an uproar.
Southern California's Trojans
are idle this week, same for
Montana, while Oregon State
asked for and will get a rough
afternoon at home when Michi
gan State drops in,
Elmer Hunter
"the Creole Flash"
TONIGHT
Singing at the
SALEM
SUPPER CLUB
Never a Cover Charge
C Wayne Allen at the Organ
1c0
today's Dlitz
IF
(
teas..!
hears Forest Evashevski (cen-
t. state backfieid
4, end, was a real All Ameri
can. As for Saturday's game with
Oregon State, Evashevski fears
a mental let down on the part
of the Spartans. He said this was
to be expected in view of the
fact that they had necessarily
been "peaked" for every game
so far this season. This was par
ticularly true for the Notre
Dame contest. He feels that the
outcome will depend upon the
question of mental attitude ra
ther than physical differences.
Evashevski expressed appre
ciation for hospitality shown
Michigan State last year and
for the courtesies being exten
ded the Spartans during their
present trip to Oregon,
The Michigan State assistant
coach left Portland at 5:30 a.m.
in order to fill his engagement
here.
ARMISTICE DAY
TURKEY
SHOOT
Friday, Nov. 11 th
Saturday and Sunday .
TURKEYS
HAMS AND BACON
The Sunday shoot will be
sponsored by the American
Legion.
Other shoots to be held Sun
day, Nov. 20th, Dec. 4th, Dec.
18th and January 1st.
Everybody welcome. You do
not have to be a member of
the club to participate. Shells
and lunch on the grounds.
Salem Trapshooters Club
SEATTLE
6 "LIMITEDS" DAILY
Through Strvlct without traiufar
ONE WAY. only,..$4.3S
ROUND TRIP, only. $7.85
Flmt fUtrtt Tarn
There An No Lower hrul
Wcinhard
has it
Distributed by
GIDEON STHLZ
0
THROUGH LIMITED J
I SERVICE JfJ
ciyrck's't. jjj
4