Beavers arid Bears Picked To Take Traditional Games By HAL WOOD (Unuto Prru Sporu Writer) ' San Francisco, Not. 17 un 'The final week of the major 1949 pigskin battles foes on the gridirons Saturday in a rash of traditional tilts that in past sea sons have resulted In an attitude of "anybody can win." With that in mind, we ll offer these predictions in a topsy turvy football season that has resulted in 161 wins and 46 ties for an over-all mark of .789. California over Stanford the old saying is ride with a champion until he falls, and we haven't seen anyone knocking those big bad Bears around any this season. However, even when Stanford has a weak team it usually gives gives Cal a bad time in the "big" game. We'll string along with California on the strength of experience by a aingle point USC over UCLA been pick ing those pesky Bruins to lose all season and they've been win ning. But just on the hunch that ' usual Trojan power will assert itself for this one big game, we'll go with Coach Jeff Cravath. By 13. Oregon State over Oregon our upset special of the kfU -cratcheJ By FRED ZIMMERMAN, Capital Journal Sports Editor CONDITIONS CHANGE One does not have to have a memory like that credited to the the elephant to recall the time when the athletic department of Oregon State discouraged attendance at its basketball games. It was a downright painful procedure but one that was necessary due to the limited accommodations. Now, all that has changed and Spec Keene, Irvin Harris and company are scurrying around in their efforts to locate all the welcome mats that can be found. In other words the huge new $1,300,000 "Gill Court" can ac commodate at least 10,000 fans. The joint should be jammed for the opening session December 16 when Slats Gill's Beavers will meet the University of Utah in the first of a two game series. PROPERLY NAMED A leaflet containing information concerning the new basket ball plant such as the schedule, prices of admission, etc. bears the legend "Gill Pavilion" at the bottom. Such a desig nation may not meet with the rpproval of the board of higher education, but it certainly Is appropriate. The pre conference season will include two game series with Utah and Indiana and single sessions against Minnesota and Stew art Chevrolet of San Francisco. The conference season opens January 3 and 4 against the University of Washington and closes February 24 with the University of Oregon providing the competition. While here on a tour of duty, Irvin Harris, O. S. C. publicity director, confided that the athletic depart ment hopes to sell at least 500 season tickets in Salem for the conference season. Such tickets will be sold at $12 each, a sum that includes Uncle Sam's cut HOBSON IN PRINT After an extended discourse on the zone defense, Howard Hobson. basketball coach at Yale, in a recent edition of "Con verse year book" suggests "perhaps we need a rule in basket ball that would make it mandatory for the offensive team to shoot at the basket within 10 seconds or lose the game." At least this would give the game action and scoring which have been the factors that have popularized basketball and would elimin at stalling problems. Football requires the ball be put in play within 30 seconds. If It were not for this rule, the team ahead would stall indefinitely. Even in baseball, the pitcher must make his delivery within 20 seconds or an automatic "ball" may be called. BADGERS LOOK GOOD Coach Chester Stackhouse of Willamette has scouted the ' Pacific Badgers in two games and reached the conclusion that Paul Stagg has probably the best balanced organization in the Northwest conference. However, "Stack" gave no evidence of being downhearted over the Willamette-Pacific game of Friday night on Sweetland field. Even though comparisons In every department of the game favor Pacific by a considerable margin the contest could develop into an Interesting affair, particularly so if the Bearcats made up their minds to make the most of their skills. The Badgers have an excellent offense, having mastered Stagg's brand of football, and are strong on defense. As for the Bearcats the game will be the last for 10 of them; Charles Patterson, Al bert Blade, Cere Conner, Roy Harrington, Pete Hoar, John Slanchik, Bob Warren, Al Fedje ar-d Bob White. Howard Lorenz, the hard luck kid of the past few years, has had to sit out his entire senior season due to injuries. WEBFOOTS MISFORTUNES v "Fumbles, intercepted passes and failure to cash in on scoring opportunities have been costly," comments Dick Strite of the Eugene Register-Guard as he mulls over the Webfoot season to date. "Defensive mental lapses by the Webfoots would cause most coaches to become hermits. Where will it all end? It will end in a completely disastrous season if the Webfoots fail to beat Oregon State despite the fact that the Beavers are riding the crest of Saturday's 25-20 upset over Michigan State. There is no room for alibis. A team that has so much and has done , so little can hardly be patted on the back and be told that they are great fellows who could have won if the breaks had gone the other way. A good football team cannot have that many bad breaks, and its only reasonable to believe that the opposition has made those breaks which spelled defeat for Oregon. The great front runners must be charged with carelessness; with lack of poise; with the absence of a fighting spirit that is so necessary to make a comeback instead of bowing so graciously to the opposition. There is no such thing as a good loser." No 7cfcets Left For Duck-Bevo Annual Civil War Eugene, Nov. 17 P) The Oregon-Oregon State football game here Saturday It as expected a sell-out. No tick ets are left for sale. Oregon Coach Jim Aiken had few lineup shifts In yes terday' scrimmage. Hale Pax ton was at defensive left end, replacing Chuck Missfelt, tide lined with Jaw fracture, and Bob Anderson was at the of fensive left end position, giv ing Dan-ell Robinson a rest Bob Sanders, however, showed no trace of the leg Injury that had slowed up his fullback work. Over at Corvallis, the Stat ers had only light drills on tap today and tomorrow. Fit teen of the orange will be playing their final game. week. The Beavers have been coming along fast as their Michigan State victory proved. On the other hand, Oregon is in the midst of a four-game losing streak. Beavers by seven with Ken Carpenter the margin. ' Washington over Washington State the Huskies Sophomores aren't going to get pushed around much any more during the next two years of competi tion. By 14. Montana over Brigham Young Grizzlies aren't much in the PCC, but they are better than the second division Rocky mountain teams. By 9. Also: Portland over Lewis & Clark: College of Puget Sound over Pacific Lutheran: Eastern Washington over St. Martin's; Willamette over Pacific; East ern Oregon over Whitman: Ore gon College over Humboldt State. LIONS TO TOUR New York, (IP) Columbia Uni versity's basketball team will make its first cross - country tour this season, playing six games during the Christmas re cess. - THi fMtNDLY NA1IQN WIDt BUS SERVICE 'Cats Cast as Underdogs For Pacific College Game Less than a decade ago, Wil lamette university's Bearcats had few worries concerning their annual engagement with the Pacific Badgers. They usu ally won by a comfortable mar gin. Since the arrival of Coach Paul Stagg on the Forest Grove campus this situation has been changed to a considerable de gree. Friday night Stagg and company are scheduled to show their strength on Sweetland field and this time it is the vis iting squad that is pretty sure of the outcome. They have a feeling that this one can be taken in stride. Well spiked with veterans, the Badgers constitute one of the best clubs in the North LOCAL UNITED PRESS Capital Journal, Sets New Record Flying T " ... lV''.iiTK.'lik - - -v .1 i. .- jr. . " world record at Jamaica race track, N. Y., in winning the $20,000 added Daingerfield handicap, sixth race feature on final program of 196-day New York season. Running second Is First Nighter (2), Conn McCreary riding. Natural (right) ridden by Billy Boland crossed the line third but was dis qualified for interference. Blue Hills (second from right), Ovie Scurlock up, running fourth, was given show money. Winner was timed at 3:32.4 for the two-mile and one-sixteentb run. (AP Wirephoto) See Your Congressman for Ducats to Army-Navy Game Annapolis, Md., Nov. 17 W More people can't get tickets for the Army-Navy football game this year than couldn't get them ever before. You may have the $6 asking price, but you nave w Know more than a friend of a friend to lay hands on a ticket. The "demand Is greater than I ever recall it," a navy spokesman said today. Annapolis officers said they understood West Point is un dergoing the same deluge. The game will be played No vember 26 in Philadelphia's cavernous Municipal stadium, which holds 102,000 fans. Thej "ticket capacity," after deduct- inff concessionaires. fiuards.lvl ', wsvs unci a ushers, sports writers and pho tographers, is about 99.000. President Truman and members of congress are in Buckcroos Meet Banks in Playoff St. Paul The St. Paul fool ball team, winners of district 2, will meet the Banks high school Braves, district one champions, at Pacific university field in For est Grove Friday night at 8 o'clock. Both teams are in B leagues. Ntw tctodifta ond Trailwayt' exdutiv direct rout East now tavM you atony hovri on trips to BEND, BOISE, TWIN FALLS, OSDEN, SALT LAKE and oft pomtt South ond Eott. DEPARTURES: 9:05 A.M. - 2:43 P.M. - 4:05 P.M. west conference. Their over whelming defeat of College of Idaho last Saturday night ver ifies that statement. The Pacific offense has been termed the "Winged T" by Coach Stagg. combining the best ! of the popular "T" formation with those of the single wing. During the week Coach Ches ter Stackhouse, while not ne glecting offensive maneuvers has stressed defense in the hope of checking Pacific running at tack and gumming up the Badg ers' well known alternate run or pass performance. This is engineered by Stan Russell, 190 pound halfback from Aumsville, now serving his senior year. Game time will be 8 o'clock and a win for Pacific would split ASSOCIATED PRESS NEWS AND FEATURES Salem, Ore., Thursday, Nov. Missel (left) with Eddie Ar- the happiest spot of all. Every year the president has an al lotment "which he purchases," the naval academy explained in a notiqc to disappointed thousands. Both West Point and Annapolis also provide each senator and representa tive with eipht pasteboards, as long as he fills out a form and encloses the money. Midshipmen and cadets are entitled to four. So are alumni members of the respective ath letic associations. Chemawa Faculty A I D.. i. .--a.- - mJ )f W"SI R Ir. . Breakfast will be served at 7:30 Friday morning at Nohl gren's when a number of faculty members and boys from the Che- mawa Indian school will be guests of the Salem Breakfast club. A few members of this year's Chemawa football squad will be present as well as Superintend ent Russell Kelly, Coach Bill Patterson, Rube Saunders and others. This will mark the first time the Indian school has been given recognition by the Breakfast I club. Cliff Parker will preside. ON YOUR NEXT TRIP EAST VIA THE Santiam Highway I 520 N. Highj -3815 M I I L Northwest championship hon ors between the Badgers, Lewis & Clark and College of Idaho. Webfoot Frosh Ace Returns to Deny Pilot Deal Eugene, Ore., Nov. 17 U.P Jake Williams, University of Oregon's star freshman foot ball end, was back on the campus today with a denial that he had enrolled at Port land university. He said he decided "a long time ago" that he wanted to be a Webfoot and that he had vis ited Portland only to see a former schoolmate, Len Kroll, from Boys Town, Neb. 17, 194917 NEW CAGE LOOP Hempstead, N.Y. VP) The re cently formed Greater New York Collegiate Conference in cludes eight basketball teams. They are Hofstra, Cooper Union, Wagner, Adelphi, Kings Point, Brooklyn Poly, Pratt and Queens. A 28-game schedule has been announced by John B. MacDon ald, president of the conference and athletic director at Hofstra college. Each team plays each other once. The campaign opens December 3 ancf ends March 4. Wolves On Road Monmouth OCE's Little Ail- American candidate Robin Lee will lead the Wolves into their final football test of the season Saturday afternoon when the Wolves trade blows with Hum boldt State. Game time is set for 2 p.m. Both teams will engage in their final game of the season and the Monmouth crew will be out to keep their unblemished slate clean. The Wolves, are the only collegiate team in the north west with an unbeaten and untied record, and they'll be CTB?OWS JETrTRAI SnLKTED t BLENDED - I.. i 5 A whiskey of truly rare qunlity. J No more need be said than this: ! mixed or straight, "8 is (Trent.!" JUl gys en mm tMm I NEUTRAL SPIRITS ClbSOH DCTUUNU COMPANY. NEW YORK. N. Y. Comeback Nick Wall, 41 winner of two Santa Anita handicaps, is back at Tanforan track, Calif. He suffered twelve broken ribs and punctured lungs in a 1946 spill. Maple Purchase Plan for Solons Ends Sans Sale Nego 1 1 a 1 1 o n s between a group of Salem business men headed by Howard Maple and Bill Mulligan have been con cluded and the Portland Beav ers still own the Salem Sena tors and Geo. E. Waters base ball park. Maple and Mulligan broke off conversations in Portland Wednesday with the best of feelings on both sides. The local group expressed the opinion that the venture would not be a profitable one from a financial standpoint. While Mulligan has made no public statement concern ing Portland's plans for Salem Senators operations, it is an ticipated the Beavers will take part In WIL competition in 1950. Independence to End M-P Season With Dallas Team Independence Plav in the Marion-Polk league for the sea son will end for the Indepen dence high school Friday night when the Hopsters meet the Dal las Dragons in the hop bowl at 7:30 o clock. Independence plac ed second in the Willamette val ley circuit this year. Coach John Matins has been drilling the Hop siers to stop the tossing com bination of Ron Griffin to Wes Ediger of the Dragons. Face Last to Perfect Year gunning for number 9 opposite Humboldt's Lumerjacks. Robin Lee, currently pacing Pacific Coast scorers with his 84 points, is expected to carry much of the educators' running attack on his potent frame. Lee has exploded for a total of 14 touchdowns this season. Coach Bill McArlhur is very pleased with the play of sen ior Marv Heibert in the last two contests. Heibert scored twice in the Chico go last week on laterals from Hank Decker. "Heib" has played 50 minutes each in the Wolves' last two en VlllSKEY PROOF 6 GRAIN Bevo End 'Overwhelmed' By Lineman Honor Vote Corvallis, Ore.. Nov. 17 ) Curley-haired Stan McGuire said, "I'm overwhelmed." Told that he had been named lineman of the week in the As- t: artaftfcJ'i M sociated Press poll today for ' his spark ling work Saturday J in Oregon State's 25-20 upset foot- f ball win over I Michigan State, uie -year-old sua Mtcmr. right end said, "I just did what the coaches taught me." What they taught him, ap parently, was how to kick field goals (one), how to convert (two), how tp block kicks (one for a safety), how to snag passes (one paved the way for a touch down) and assorted other infor mation to the discomfiture of Michigan State. A full-time five foot 11 inch, 192-pound player who backs up the line on defense, McGuire was the spark in OSC's surpris ing win. But Head Coach Kip Taylor said he wasn't particul- Bowl Selection System for PCC Told by Schmidt Los Angeles, Nov. 17 U.R) Pacific Coast Conference Com missioner Victor O. Schmidt to day clarified the method of pick ing the PCC representative in the New Year's day Rose Bowl football game. The team is selected by vote of "All 10 member schools at the end of the conference sea son, he said. The balloting alone determines the bowl contender with no regard to statistics, be cause there is no official PCC champion. "In the case of a tie vole," Schmidt said, "the team or teams most recently i n the Rose Bowl . . . are excluded, and the other team is automatically elected." Girls Show Boys How to Wn Touch Football Contest Seattle, Nov. 17 (P) A dim inutive coed with experience at breaking up huddles wrig gled through a flying wedge at the University of Washington campus yesterday. When she touched the run ner, the game was over. Delta Gamma sorority claimed a 14 7 touch football win over the Alpha Delta Phi fraternity. It was a clean game. The lone penalties were called against the boys. One was for Illegal use of the hands, the second for offensive holding. Hurdle counters. He is the Wolves' top pass defender and is no "ringer" on offense. Six other seniors will be playing their final game of the season Saturday: Cole Davis, first string guard for four years; Bruce Hamilton, a top-notch de fensive end: Bob McKeever, a tackle of the better quality; Bob Ncilsen, defensive guard who played a whale of a game at Chico; Abe Johnson, reg ular quarterback; and "Corky" Van I. oo. Lee's touchdown twin. J CHEVROLET NEWS FLASH Do you know! this is the first time in four years that some model Chevrolets are available for immediate de livery in Salem? 3104 Chev. Vi Ton Pickup $1428.75 3604 Chev. Va Ton Pickup $1569.75 3609 Chev. Va Ton Stake $1 632.75 3803 Chev. 1-Ton Chassis & Cab $1544.75 4103 Chev. 1 Vi Ton Chassis & Cab $1678.50 'Optional equipment at additional cost Also Some Passenger Cars See us before you buy. DOUGLAS McKAY CHEVROLET CO. 510 North Commercial Salem Phone I-J175 larly surprised. "McGuire hasn't turned in a bad game all year. He does a workmanlike Job on both of fense and defense," Taylor said. "He's good at everything he does. He isn't the country's greatest pass receiver and he isn't the greatest defensive player but for all-around work, on both of fense and defense, he's one of the best there is." McGuire sandwiched in his military service after a year's 194S football as a freshman. He played last year and has another season of eligibility. He has been playing 55 to 60 minutes a game a rarity in platoon football. A business administration ma jor who has a 2.8 grade average (B minus), he speaks softly and says being lineman of the week "is the greatest thing that ever happened to me." "It couldn't have happened to a nicer guy," said Taylor. Grid Broadcasts FRIDAY 8 p.m. Willamette vs. Paci fic, KOCO. SATURDAY 1:45 p.m. Oregon vs. O.S.C., KSLM. 1:45 p.m. California vs. Stanford, KOIN. 1:45 p.m. Portland vs. Lewis & Clark, KUJJ. Give Him Something to Remember You By! a irtdtmaS What could be more won derful than a new Fall Suit, Topcoat, fine fur Felt Hat, Sport Coat, Slacks or an extra pair of Suit Pants? Use Joe's Layaway Plan . . . Pay a little each week and pick it up before Christmas. Open Friday night till 9 o'clock. Get more, pay less for the best in men's and young men's finest quality clothes. Walk up stairs to Joe's and save $10 to $15 on a new Fall Suit or Topcoat. Save 25 on super quality slacks, extra suit pants, sport coats and fine fur felt hats. The best dressed men are wearing Joe's top quality clothes. Fol low these smart men, and you too will come back again, and again, to buy more of Joe's fine quality clothes at great money saving prices. Joe's Upstairs Clothes Shop 442 State St. Above Morris Optical Co. Look for the electric flashing sign, "Save 10". Open Friday Night Till 9