Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, January 20, 1950, Page 9, Image 9

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Swimming on Snowy Mountain tttot
I pool at the foot of Aspen mountain, Colorado, where world
ski ehampiomhipi will be held In February.
New Football Rules Fail
To Alter Platoon Style
Flnohurat, N.C., Jan. 20 (If).
College football, 1950 version.
will not be changed drastically
as far as the man in the stands
is concerned, but coaches and
players will note some differ
ences in .the fall.
The football rules committee
of the National Collegiate Ath
letic association came up with
two rather important changes
and several lesser ones last night
as it concluded three days of
deliberations.
A substitution and offensive
blocking rules were the two
topics receiving the most atten
tion. In following the leads of
the Coaches' association which
last week recommended both
changes, the committee indi
cated that it believes the two
platoon style of play Is more
than a passing fancy. In addi
tion It moved to curb the ille
gal use of elbows.
The number of free timeouts
allowed a team was raised from
four to five for each half. In
addition, free timeouts are now
available to substitutions from
the bench. Such changes may
be made without penalty while
SCORES in
(CvmpltU
University Alleys
COMMERCIAL LEAGUE NO. 1
first National Bink (31 DrlBB 907,
Kottkt 400. Marchall 434, Mirr 477, Mor
rU 465. V. r. W. 1 WhlU 458, Miller
too. Ptrkei 170, Wodzewoda, 399, Sub
tltuU 390.
AN Clotbien H Rick 411, Barker
471, Uiiellhaupt BW, Kaneakl 474. Nnsley
481. Cnablnt- Union Station (3) Peaae 476.
Parley 840, Stone 408, cott 471, Coma toe It
IM.
Waataro Paper (4) Oadach 403, An
teraon 443, J. Kuebler 0, Luke 446. L.
Kubltr 458. Dyer Sons (0) Bchocher
483, Cherrlnilon 434, Brouaht 404, Plant
454, Pennan 4B1.
Jadaon'a Flamblnr (3 Aosova 444,
Bronaon 401. B. Judsoo 355, Little 380,
Jtopflnaer 466. Interstate Traetor (1)
MorrU 307, Smith 306, Bhackman 404,
Tantuery 375, Pearl 868.
Pinlllte (0) Elwood 400, Bolier 399,
therWan 455, Kelly 438. Duncan 498.
mlph John ion (4) Prank 398, R. Bell
103, Schlappenbaeh 401, RUlerlck 655, A.
11 '470.
Naval Air PaeUltr (J) Ha worth 401,
Knedler 477, Hloman 477, Baal 317,
Brown 491. lailti 3 Pete-won D49, Reld
461, Rltaman 489, Pero 805, Zeller 504.
Mlfh Individual aerlti: Conutock, 888.
Hlth Individual tame: Pearl, 243.
SJlgh ttwn aeries: Cuahint Union Berv-
sWh team same: Ralph Johnson, MB.
COMMERCIAL LEAGUE NO.
Smith Auto Farts (D K. Clark 383.
XdminUUr 363. Schuetz 434, Lemon 488,
to 818. Knlfhts f Pythias (3) Deca
tur 513, Judson 503, Schledel 436, Maerr
441, Tachlda 493.
Momyer Chevron (3) Momyer 571,
Odermatt 416, Covert 409, Martin 382, Llnd
474. 5 h rock Motors (1) White 410, Grl
ua 410, Meyers 436, Shuck 343, Wluer 447.
Zeeba Used Cars 4 T. Zeeb 472, B.
Carr 431, A. Zeeb B55. 8. Zeeb 459, P.
Peterson 462. Vans Parkins Bta. (0) Vleck
488, Barnes 450, Morlsky 378, Robot 490,
McDanlels 493.
McDonald Candy Nlchola 413, dem
eU 406, Scott 426, Bryant 462, Baxter
459. K.O.C.O. (1) Ransom 453. McElroy
449, Cherrlniton 484, SulM 376, Thorpe
378.
Hlsh Individual game and series: Mom
yer. 230 and 671.
High Warn aerie: Xettaa Vsd Oars: 3030.
Capitol Alleys
LADIES CITY LEAGUE
T.W.C.A. (0) Oardner 396, Schuassler
116, Schwab 337, Mackey 235, Tlbbets 331.
Om HMStkeoplnr (3) Albrich 414, Ol
ney 451, Duncan 416, Jones 444, Pouehl
106.
Senator Baanlr Shop (3) Cllne 380,
cott 368, Rodakowskl 394, McClaln 392,
Adolph 449. Qulaenbcrrys CD McElhaney
438, Evans 432, Black 318, Kennedy 487.
Wlllard Art Tilt (2) Lawless 417, Wain
wrlght 363, Wlllard 442, Cosman 442. Cap
ital City Laandry (1) Bain 436. Doer
flar 306, LeTournaur 401, Blllman 301,
Bay 344.
Cupboard Oafa (!) Thompson 427,
Valaey 600. Pease 380, Glodt 338, Boyce
409. Kerlettet (0 Forfeit Dawson 409,
Anderson 401, Wherley 454.
Golden Pheasant (2) Clark 482, Thrush
170, Muellhaupt 457, Laird 441. Oarbar
kio 438, Aekllns Bootery (1) Wilder 317,
token 368, Whlttaker 346, Vlttone 340,
Archer 460.
Klch team Mriaa: Oood Housekeeping,
El
CASH LOANS Auto
'100 1. '1000 si..
COMMERCIAL
CREDIT PLAN
INCORPORATE!
2)
the clock is running until a
team's allotted five free timeouts
are exhausted. This will permit
insertion into the lineups of spe
cialists, such as kickers, which
last year called for a five-yard
penalty.
To speed up play, however,
the clock will be started when
the ball is "spotted" for play by
the officials rather than when
snapped as before.
Retiring Chairman William
J. Bingham of Harvard said the
offensive block rule was a result
of a unanimous demand by the
committee for such legislation.
Under the new rule if a hand
or forearm is used in blocking
an opponent it must be kept be
low the shoulder of the man
blocked and in contact with the
blocker's body throughout the
block. Just what will happen
when the man opposing the
blocker charges in low affording
the small target below the shoul
ders remains to be seen.
Bingham acknowledged that
it Is a "tough" rule. "Sure it
is tough," he said. "We want
it that way. We want to eli
minate the tendency toward
visciousness which has no
place In the game."
the ALLEYS
Bttalli)
High individual series: Charlotte Pw
sehl, 506.
High Individual game: Charlotte Possehl,
193.
SEARS MEN'S LEAGUE
Craftsmen ( Kraus 417, Morris 489,
Jones 432. Klein 360: Ken more (1) Wen-
ger 369, Adams 478, Hutmaker 386, Car
ver 342.
Horaart (8) Forbes 494. Roach 630. Coo
per 392. Isaalcson 431: Coldspot (0 Sohrt
374, Patton 345, sevens 7, waiiey .
Allstate (3) Clark 360, Rlehl 485. Ma-
guire 440, Ollser 438: Pilgrim 1 Jenien
503, Poratrom 427, Chrlstlanson 316, Cough
455.
High lnd. game and series. Roach, 217
and 630: high team game and aeries. Ho
mart, 636 and 1647.
Duck Pin
COMMERCIAL LEAGUE
Willamette Amusement (2) Clarence
Applegata 385, Roy Robinson 382, Wilfred
Wilier 381, Howard Mills 418, Glen Blan
ton 441. Gleason's Bakery (2) Harold
Bonner 498, Marlon Gleaaon 463, Bill
Moad 431, B. Wulff 368, Ken Maguren
Quality Used Cars (S) Royal Pawley
476, Bill Campbell 610, B. B. Snelgrove
484, Mose Van Dell 409, Emll Scholz 440.
A. L. Cummlnva Heatlna (1) Howard
Smith 454, Lester Woods 382, Lea Dolge
463. By 408, Bye 378.
Marlon Electric (21 AI Hakanson 462,
Arlo Young 394, Bob Griffith 350. We
Goodrich 314, John Wood 307. Willam
ette Valley Bank (31 Keith Kayc 471,
Bob Jungllng 363, Camel Waldlng 368,
Bye 342, Bye 360.
Tweedle Fuel Oil (3) Duane Frank 461,
Ira Short 421, Emery Alderman 555, Bye
360, Bye 369. G. M. C. Truck Co. (It
Darby Sermon 377, John Fullenwider
366, Joe Brooks 416, Darwin Sermon 350,
Milt Thomas 455.
High team series: Quality. 2319.
High team game: Tweedle, 828.
High individual series and game: Emery
Alderman (Tweedle) 555 and 218.
Juran's Matmen
To Meet Tigers
Coach Hank Juran's Salem
high school grapplers tangle with
the Newberg Tiger wrestling
team Monday in an 8:15 p. m.
match.
Exhibition matches will take
place for a preliminary preceding
the main events. Thus far,
Juran's team has toppled Albany
and Molalla. Following the New
berg tilt the grapplers then take
on Albany, Springfield, Klamath
Falls, Newberg, Molalla.
February 23-24 the annual Big
Six wrestling tournament will be
held in Salem this year.
Al Severance is in his 14th
season as head coach of basket
ball at Villanovs.
Personal ncJJTrrW1' ir7Tl
f ioo "WTTT J
Cardinals Meet
Hopster Caaers
At Independence
Sacred Heart Cardinals will
return to Marion-Polk County
league competition Friday night
when they tangle with Indepen
dence on the Hopsters' court. In
dependence has suffered two
straight league defeats while the
Cardinals dropped their only
game of the season.
Salem Bible Academy, with
two straight wins, travels to
Stayton for a contest with the
Eagles, also undefeated.
The Monmouth Wolverines
drew a bye in M-P league play.
High Stuff
T" 7 ' j--. . TA
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it ui
itain' liininr A
Johnson takes to a step ladder to do the job with team man
ager Shine Jones. The tape's verdict is six feet 11 inches.
Yacht 'Tornado'
Sails for Olympics
London A sleek new type
of small racing yacht with a
down to earth price may find
its way into the 1950 Olympics.
Designed to be fast as well as
cheap the new craft has been
named the "Tornado".
It's a two man job which came
off the drawing boards of Uffa
Fox, Britain's premier designer
of racing yachts. Tests on Euro
pean lakes have proved its
worth.
The International Yacht Rac
ing Union accepted the new de
sign at its annual meeting here.
Jan Loeff of Holland sponsored
it at the union conference.
WANTED
ALL GRADES
WALNUT MEATS
We Pay Top Market Prices
Can Use Any Amount Bring in All You Have
AT ONCE
WILLAMETTE GROCERY CO
305 So. Cottage St. Phone 34146
BUYING HOURS 8 a.m. to 1 2 noon 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.; Saturday 9 a.m. to 1 1 a.m.
Hi-Y Hoop Teams
Await Opening
Of Third Round
The Junior Hi-Y Basketball
league will enter its third round
of competition Saturday after
noon. The six clubs involved are
named for men who are promi
nent or have been prominent in
Hl-Y circles.
The Doggett club has won two
games and lost none as has the
Gardner quint. Saturday's
schedule, starting at 1 p.m., in
cludes: Strong vs. Edwards, Will
iams vs. Gardner, Doggett vs.
Ostrander. Play will be on the
YMCA court.
The five-club Senior Hi-Y
league will open play Saturday
afternoon at 2:45: Arthur Cotton
team vs. A. A. Stagg, Harrison
Elliott vs. Claude Kells, Abel
Gregg bye.
GERVAIS-JEFFERSON
GAME IS DROPPED
Jefferson The basketball
game between the Gervais Cou
gars and the Jefferson Lions
scheduled for the local floor Fri
day night has been cancelled.
Lew Andreas is directing Syr
acuse's basketball team for the
25th season during 1949-50.
From Clown to
Court Colossus
By DEL BOOTH
(AMOCUled Pi Newtleaturea)
Columbia,
Slaughter, the University oi
South Carolina's gangling six
foot, 11 inch center, is gaining
recognition as one of the south's
outstanding basketball players.
If the Roanoke, Va. junior con-
Jim Slaughter, South Carolina's high-scoring
plvotman, gets measured. Coach Frank
The Tornado met with such
a warm welcome that the dele
gates put it on the list of Olym
pic possibilities for the 1952
Helsinki games.
The union makes the official
recommendation as to the classes
of Yachts to be used in the Olym
pics. It selected the six meter, 5.5
meter, dragon and Scandinavian
dinghy classes and said the fifth
class would be either the new
tornado or the American favor
ite, the star.
Designer Fox claims a top
speed of 15 knots for the Tor
nado. His specifications call for
an overall length of slightly more
than 18 feet, a five foot beam
carrying 150 square foot of sail,
and a minimum weight of 275
pounds. He figures the present
cost at about $560.
-.l"l. uu,' in.wi.il 1.', .i..jhji.ii.-'.,'. w,IH"l'"l i Ml...-,, ..I .I..4...H- ..II
Bowling 'Veteran'
Four
bowling half his life and is regarded as a "boy wonder" 'by
top bowlers In this area. Jimmy has rolled three strikes
in a row and also has chalked up three spares In a row. High
game for him is 89. He rolls with a special eight-pound ball
half the weight of a regulation pellet. (AF Newsfeatures)
tlnues his present improvement
nace. he could wind up among
the top aces of the court, offen
sively and detenslveiy.
About all Slaughter pro
vided his freshman year, when
Southern Conference rules
permitted him to play on the
varsity, was comic relief.
He was anything but comic
relief this season to high-rank
ing Duke University's quintet
when he popped in 30 points in
54-44 South Carolina win.
His all over the place defense
under the basket limited Duke's
fast-breaking and usually high
scorers to pop shots from far
out.
Awkward as Freshman
Slaughter's awkwardness
a freshman was embarrassing at
times. He tripped over his own
feet at crucial points and foul
ed out of games so fast that
his name was hardly more than
a courtesy gesture.
A shower of criticism soak
ed Coach Frank Johnson for
putting up with the beanpole
19-year-old. But Johnson, a
University of Georgia star
guard in the 1930's, fended off
the attacks and worked un
tiringly with Slaughter.
Dividends began to roll in
last year. Slaughter was the
reason South Carolina squeezed
into the conference tournament
despite an otherwise notorious
ly weak team. He racked up
381 points in 22 games for a
17.3 average.
The team he's working with
this year is a little stronger
more height and speed, but light
on experience.
Slaughter bucketed 80
points in four games this sea
son before the close of the
holidays.
He has grown two inches and
put on 20 pounds, to scale an
even 200, since coming to the
university.
More important, he has gained
in confidence and stamina. He
has played an average of all but
five minutes of every game both
this season and last.
Shoots With Either Hand
The tall center shoots from
a 180-degree pivot, right or left
handed, with about 70 percent
accuracy. He was only about
30 percent accurate as a year
ling. Johnson rates Slaughter's
value as a defensive player
greater than the sky boy's scor
ing potential.
"He's quick and he anti
cipates his opponents," John
son says. That's unusual in
so lanky a player. He's a whiz
of a table tennis player and
It's that game that helps him
keep his quick reflexes and
sharp eye In training."
Slaughter is an average slu
I .11,
- year - old Jimmy Cappolino,
Jamestown, N. Y., has been
Game Commission to Plant
Salmon in Landlocked Lake
The Oregon state game com
mission has received some
300,000 landlocked sockeye
salmon eggs for hatching and
eventual liberation in Odell
lake. They will be reared at
the Willamette fish hatchery
near Oakrldge and liberated
in Odell lake following the ice
break-up in the spring.
Sportsmen have been favor
ably Impressed with the fish
ing provided by the Odell lake
sockeye which feed extensive
ly In the surface waters dur
Lebanon Elks to
FSay Ghost Team
Lebanon Fisher's Ghosts are
scheduled to meet the Lebanon
Elks on the high school maple at
8 p.m., Saturday, January 21.
The Ghosts, one of the nation's
top professional teams, have met
the Elks in two previous years
winning all games, each night a
double header. Saturday will
be a one night stand.
Jack Walton, coaching the
Elks, plans on starting at for
ward Jim Mechals and Chet
Simpson. George Van Pelt will
hold down his center spot and
Ron Cox and Don Mechals will
be at guard.
A preliminary at 7 p.m. be
tween the Lebanon VFW and
some outside team is planned.
dent who has no trouble keep
ing up with his books.
He played basketball for two
years at Jefferson high in his
hometown of Roanoke, then sea
soned his game for a year at
Augusta Military School at Fort
Defiance, Va.
His homestate folks get a
chance to see how their one
time schoolboy phenonomenon
has developed when the uni
versity meets Richmond at
Richmond, Va., Feb. 11.
There's something so distinctive and urrasuat about
En' K ' ' )' v the delightfully mild flavor of Bohemian Club PALE
ijf e " ' that arway6 lures you to want just one more glass . . .
f V f ' ',, i i and still another. It's the ONE beer everybody likes.
I -' ' So. be sure there's enough to go around when you
(j& VSJS . aerve your guests. And when you invite them . . .
vSTv itrtttS toy "BOHEMIAN"
Capital Journal, Salem, Ore.,
Beavers Face Stiff
Test in Inland Games
Corvallis, Jan !0 After win
ning two out of Its first three
conference games at home, Ore
gon .State's .defending . PCC
championship basketball team
championship basketball team
faces Its stiffest test of the
campaign the gruelling four-games-in
five-nights Invasion of
the Inland Empire.
The Beavers, who looked by
far their sharpest of the winter
in whipping Oregon, 65-49, here
last Friday, open their road trip
with a return series against pow
erful Washington State at Pull
man Friday and Saturday. From
Pullman, Coach Slats Gill and
his men will move over to
nearby Moscow for the Initial
series against Idaho next Mon
day and Tuesday nights.
Gill was highly pleased
with the showing of his team
against Oregon. He used a
starting lineup with three
guards that proved blazingly
fast. Tommy Holman, nor
mally a guard he's only 5
10 was moved to forward
to team with Bob Payne. Len
ing the spring. Most of the
sockeye, also known as yanks
or bluebacks, In Odell lake
mature every four years,
states Dr. John Rayner, chief
of operations for the fisheries
division of the game commis
sion. At maturity they spawn
and die, completing their life
cycle.
It is the hope of the commis
sion to establish a sockeye
population In Odell that will
bring fish into maturity ecah
year.
FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP
AUTO TRUCK FIRE
Savings without Service 1 false econo
my. That is why we place Service as our
first requisite towards YOUR satisfac
tion Save up to 80.
BILL OSKO
466 Court St.
Phono 3-5661
Want Better Heat? Let as show
you how your home can have real
'Winter Ait Condkionmg" with a
Deko-Heat Oil-Fired Coodkionaif !
SALEM HEATING &
SHEET METAL CO.
I
V
Dial 3-8555 1085
Friday, January 20, 19509
Rinearson and Ray Snyder
alternated at center and Dick
Ballantyne and Bill Harper
spearheaded the attack from
their guard slots. Whether
Gill will stick with this com
paratively short q n 1 n t e t
against the tall Cougars re
mains to be seen.
After three stiff workouts at
home, the Beavers left for the
Palouse country Wednesday
night, arriving Thursday in time
for a practice session on the
Cougar's court.
Linesman Figures Army
Stake at $88,200
Sgt. 1st Class Vernon Sauisbury
knows a good thing when he sees
it. What he saw at war's end was
the chance for a good Job and un
equalled security in the U. 8. Army.
That's why at age 49 Vernon can re
tire as a Master Sgt. with a month
ly Income of $220.50 for life. For that
size annuity, a civilian would have
to Invest (88,2001
"I learned my trade in the Army,"
says Vernon, "and today I could step
into a good paying civilian Job. But
I've thought It all over pay, pro
motion, security and the Army
wins hands down. I'm staying in."
For full information on what the
Army offers you, see your nearest
Recruiting Office today. In Salem
go to Room 211, Post Office Bldg.
BILL OSKO
Dlst. Mgr.
Broadway
si. lei. i"ljrojl