a. . Ritinzi throufh camel of January M 1 40 National. Leaders Holy Crow 82.4 Bflolt 71.4 LaSalle 78.3 Wvomina 71.4 CCNY -...77.7 Bradley 71.1 Kansai State ..77.5 Cornell 71.0 Duquesne 75.3 Ok a. A&M ...Jl.O Wisconsin 74.6 Washington .,..70.3 Long Island ....74.5 Caulsius 70.3 Minnesota 74.5 Michigan 70.2 Ohio State ....74.5 Toledo 70.1 Ky. State ..74.4 Kentuckv 69. fl Bowling Green .74.3 BrlRham Young 69.4 Illinois 73.8 Marshall 69.3 Vlllanova 72.8 Syracuse 69.3 N. C. Stat 72.6 6. California, ...69.1 Notre Dame 12 i Ha nuns ftfl.O St. John's. NY 72,4 Wstminstr., Pa. 69.0 Cincinnati 72.0 Colorado SB. 8 Indiana 72.0 Oklahoma 68.6 S. Francisco .. .72.0 Wash Kr.ate .6R.3 UCLA 71.6 Hamllne 68.0 Ineach listing hlnw th Imm An th left has established Itself as the favorite by compiling a higher rating to date than Its opponent. For example, a 50.0 team has been 10 points stronger, per game, than a 40.0 team. home team Probable Probable Winners Losers MONDAY. JANUARY 30 East Buffalo '52.5 vs Fredonia St. ... fi S uornam m vs Keene St 9.9 Bt. BonaVture es.OvsTex. Wesleyan 81.4 Vlllanova 72.8 vs Seton Hall ...57.2 Midwest Detroit 65.5 vs Marquette ....47.9 Duluth Br. ...MS.lvsSt. John. Minn. 38.0 Illinois St. '67.1 vs C'cordia. Mo. ..10.7 Kansas '69.0 vs Drake 59.6 n.an. state .. .77.5 vs Nebraska Ohio State ....74.5 vs Purdue '64.6 ukir Adcfil ...71.0 vs Loyola. 111. ...'67.8 Okla. City '60.6 vs Wichita 51.6 Platteville St. '40.1 vs Oshkosh St. ..40.0 Hemmed In University of San Francisco forward Jerry Hickey crouches low. nonderinr which way to turn as University of Southern California's Joe White guards the basket in the closing minutes of the USF-USC game in San Francisco's Cow Palace. Waiting for Hickey to make up his mind are USC center Stan Christie (26) and USF's John Hanley (14). USF won, 55-41. (Acme Telephoto.) 1 5-Year Old Girl Crowds Jones as Golfing Legend By OSCAR FRALEY (United Press Sporta Writer) New York, Jan. 30 U.R Mar lene (she's got lovely legs, too!) Bauer, a slick 15-year-old chick who can really belt a golf ball, was crowding Bobby Jones to day for honors as golf's youngest legend. Just in case you hadn't no ticed, marvelous Marlene took a 4 and 3 shellacking from Polly Riley in the finals of the Helen Lee Doherty tournament at Mi ami this past weekend. The tip off, however, is that Marlene is news anymore when she finishes second! Certainly, Marlene already is to. women's golf what Jones was to the men's game and maybee more. Jones didn't break 80 until he was 10 years old. Miss Bauer did it at 10. The Jones worshippers will tell you that equipment and teaching methods have im proved since then. Well, I'll bet Marlene is prettier, any how. And she can play her fair share of competitive golf, too. At 15, she was named the 1949 woman golfer of the year by the Official Golf Guide. It was an honor she had been working to ward ever since her father, Dave, a golf pro, started her swinging a club before she was lour. "She quit playing with dolls when she was five and cried because I wouldn't let her en ter a tournament," her father laughed. "The reason was that most opponents would think that a five-year-old was a nui sance and would resent her playing. But even at that age she was proud of her ability to count correctly and knew her golf etiquette." Which is more than can' be aid for some 10-cents-a-hole adults. By the time she was eight, Marlehe made the tournament grade, qualifying in the first 16 In the South Dakota state cham pionship. She played in the west ern open at nine and then the family moved from Aberdeen, S. D., to Long Beach, Calif. At 12, Marlene really start ed to travel. She was the youngest person ever to quali fy for the trans-Mississippi and, in 1947, at 13, she shot a TO which erased Babe Did rlckson Zaharias' competitive course record at Palm Springs as she won that tournament and the Los Angeles city crown. In 1948, now a matured 14 year-old, Marlene copped the Indio, Calif., invitational by 13 strokes her worst round being better than any other player's best. On one nine she had a 35, one under men s par, with birdie four on the 502-yard ninth. Last .year the tousle-haired youngster kept right on rolling, She reached the semi-final of the women's natio nal amateur, youngest ever to accomplish this feat; beat Mrs. Zaharias in 21-hole marathon at Fort Smith. Ark., and copped the medal in the Texas women's open with a 34-37 71. There were some pretty fair gal golf ers in that one, too, belters like the Babe, Patty Berg, Bettye Mims White and Betty Jameson, Marlene is one of Dave's two beautiful belting Bauers. Her sister, Alice, now 22, for merly could handle Marlene. But not anymore. The reason is that Marlene is a female Ben Hogan, small but amazingly long and accurate, Also ala Hogan, she is quiet, de termined, seldom smiles on the course and concentrates with such intensity that even ii large gallery she seems to be off by herself. Her ambition is to be the best and her methods are the same as Hogan's, practice and more practice. Maybe she won t make them forget Jones, but it ! double-dyed cinch she's going to make them remember Bauer, She has the shots and the deter mination and she could give that other Marlene a run for her money, too! Beneficiation is any process by which the yield of metal from ore is increased. Dick Dunkel, College Basketball Power Index EXPLANATION The Power Index provides direct comparison of the -ela(lve strength of any two teams for this season to date. Thus, a 50.0 team has been 10 scoring points stron: r than a 40.0 team on their comparative records, in vhich scoring margin has been weighed against strength of opposition. This does not necessarily mean that a 50.0 team should defeat a 40.0 team by exactly 10 points In the uture. Teams rarely follow past performance that closely. Furthermore, the ratings are not adjusted for such fac tors as home court, Injuries and ineligibilities. The Dunkel system correlates records of all college teams and was started in 1929. River Falls .. .53.7 ve Lacrosse Bt. . .44.1 C'cordia, Mo. St. Cloud St. ..46.3 v Winona St. ...36.7 Thorn at ...54.0vG. AdoIphUi .'35.2 So. Dakota . . .'47.9 v AURUstana, 8D 30.2 Springfield St. S4. va Pittsburg St. .521 Warrenbg. St. 4B.7 v Mississippi ...48.6 South Auburn 55.9 vs Mississippi ...48.6 Elon '32.0 va W. Carotins St. 27.1 Furman 42.3 vs Charleston. . . . ."28.8 Kentucky 69.9 vs Vanderbllt .... 60.0 LSU 58.6 vt Miss. State ...'51.1 Marshall 69.3 vs Ky. Wesleyan .44.6 Mor i Harvey 57.8 vs Wheaton S3. J No. Carolina . 56. 7 vs Citadel 30.0 NW La. St. ..55.8 vs Loyola, La. ..41.4 Oklahoma 68.6 vs Texas 5R.4 Tulane 63.7 vs Tennessee ,...53.2 Union. Ky. . . . ;42.6 va Milligan '34.0 Virginia 48.5 vs Roanoke 40.7 W. Ky. State . .74.4 vs Tampa 50.6 Far West 64.7 vs Santa Clara ...62.6 '69.4 vs Utah 59.9 '54.9 vs Whitman 43.6 52.3vsSta. Barbara .52.0 71.4 va Utah St 61.0 Arizona Brig. Young Oonzaga ... Loyoia. cai. Wyoming . . . home team TUESDAY, JANUARY 31 East American U. 49.4 vs Mexico 18.7 Blmsburgh St. '42.9 vs Kind's. Pa. ...37.1 Clarion St. ,. .34.2 vs Alliance 18.5 Duauesne ....75.3 vs Baldwin-Wal. .63.7 Holy Cross 82.4 vs Springfield ...51.6 Loyola. Md. ..57.3 vs W. Maryland -37.2 Montclalr St. ,42.8 vs Panzer 40.4 N. Britain St. -51.4 va BrldneDort .... St. John's. NY 72.4 vs Manhattan S6.9 Siena '64.3 vs St. Francis, Pa, 60.5 Sllp'ry Rock . .41.2 vs Indiana, Pa. .'36.0 Thlel ' 37.0 vs Kent, Canton 16.4 Midwest Akron 59.4 va Mexico 18.7 Calvin 35.7 vs Olivet 17.4 Central, Mo. . .52.9s Culv. Stockton 43.6 39.7 vs Quincy 32.1 Dayton ae.i vs uerea .... Detroit Tech. '21.9 vs Assumption Findlay M0.4 vs Cedarvllle 40.3 Ft. Hays St. ..'56.1 vs Washburn 56.0 Hamllne 68.0 vs St. Oiaf Ind. Central . .52 2 vs Huntington Mankato St. ,.52.6 vs AiiRsburg .... .wary vine bi. . .a.v vs KUKSviue ai. vauey ,..10.01 wm. Jewell . nion 46.1 vs Hiram Neb. Wesleyan 46.4vsDoane Notre Dame ..72.4 vs Butler O. Northern .46.7 vs Wilmington , Okla. City ,...60.6 Vs Tulsa Otterbein 47.1 vs Drnison St. Ambrose . . .46.9 vs Central. Ia. . St. M'ry, Min. 41.0 vs Macalcster ,, Taylor 42.9 vs Ind. Tech. Wabash 53.0 vs Canterbury Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Monday, January 80, 1950 9 Is Pro Basketball More Rugged? Wash. W'stm'tr. Xavler. 46.8 29.2 49.5 38.7 26.7 34.9 30.8 58.6 31.3 56.9 29.0 18.5 40.9 '14.5 41.0 59.4 vs Creidhton 54.9 44.0 vs C. Girardeau 36.0 63.4 vs Miami, O. South Alt. Christian 25.6 vs Oglethorpe Elon "32.0 vs W. Caro. Fairmont St. .33.6 vs California, High Point . ..'48. 6 vs Appalachian ...48.5 Howard. Ala. . .41.6 vs Btrm. South. 37.2 Lenoir-Rhyne .43.9 vs Ouilford Milligan 34.fl vs Carson-New'n Mor's Harvav .57.8 Vs Glenville St. , Potomac St. . .'31.1 vs Blueflrld 25.0 So. Carolina . .49.5 vs Davidson 45.8 6 W La. Inst. . .46.7 vs Loyola. La. ..41.4 Tampa 50.6 vs Stetson 37.3 TCU 56.5 vsE. Texas Bt. .'39.7 Union. Ky. . . .42.6 vs Tusculum ....15.8 Va. Tech "54.6 vs Richmond 50.0 Wake Foreit .54.9 v s Citadel 30.0 W. Va. Wsly'n 42.4 v s Bethany 38.5 Far West Fresno St. . . .52.4 vs St. MBry, Cal. 50.7 Oonraga '54.9 vs Whitman 43.6 Llnfleld '30.5 vs Oregon CE ..21.2 Pepperdine ... .58.6 vs Whittier 46.1 Portland 58.6vsLew. St Clark 35.3 8n. Diego St. '57.4 vs Occidental 48.4 By HUGH FUUERTON, JR. New York, Jan. 30 fl) The other day George Mikan ad- ?7.6lvansed the argument that pro uiisaciuiiu is luugucr man wic college game because "you never play eight games in ten nights in college like we're doing right now." ... By way of rebuttal, Max Keiffer points out that In 1938 the Central Missouri State Mules of Warrensburg played five straight nights in the NAIB tournament, spent the sixth driv ing 645 miles from Kansas City to Denver, then played three more days in the AAU tourna ment before they -were elmin ated . . . Sign of spring: the ar rival of the first major league spring training roster from the Pittsburgh Pirates . . . Word re layed from Washington quotes Howie Odell thus: "Seattle Is my home territory now. I'm not looking for any other job any where. I'm interested in Iowa only because that's my home state." .43.9 35.3 .26.8 ,42.8 when he sank a field goal while lying flat on his back. Naturally the boys called it a "sleeper shot . . . Terry Sawchuck, sensa tional sub goalie of the Detroit Red Wings, led the Manitoba senior baseball league in hitting two years ago . . . Chief Boston, New Hampshire grid coach, still is puzzled about one of his fresh man tackles who complained he was losing too much weight. The scales showed the kid had dropped from 261 to 255. Old Pro Golfer Finds Modern Game Is Better (ap NewsftturM) .beat the great Harry Vardon Dallas William R. (Bill) and Ted Ray in the 1913 Na- MacKenzie, who has gone tional Open. through all the eras of golf, says Baseball's Dream Batting Nine '- V-IIUI lyVfV"' A N.wilwl.. I - ' f liSV !-3 These nint major leaguers yithf.ffBjT "X 1 would moke up a dream JssiM I I 1 offensive team for any man- f : , os I : ; fS! I i ager. They are the players J 7 1 '' &M: I vfha led ihit hittiirt at math r: ..MNM' I IaI V no.llinn In 10 JO Si an , s I ' I- a ,.-.-- . jpv tsr w TED WILLIAMS M ' 3 jW STAN MUSIAL Red Sox .3427 J 45 f "C"'S 338-i GEORGE KELL VIC LOMBARDI JACK ROBINSON Tigers .342? Piraf .347 Dodgers .342 r ' "r . ' : nmmwmmmmmmmmTmvmmTBtmmmwmm r - .. l,liiiinn)1 ! Hitting the Blood Line A couple of real sleepers turn ed up in the National Football league draft when Detroit named John Karras of Illinois and the Giants took Ebert Van Buren of Louisiana State . . . Seems no body else knew their "original' classes graduate this year . . It was the latter choice which caused .George Halas to exclaim to the Eagles' Greasy Neale; "You let them get Steve Van Buren's brother. Why, any time see a fellow who vaguely re sembles George McAfee, let alone having McAfee's blood, I'm going to nab him." Sportsmention Earl Hilligan, the American League publicitor, points out that Ted Williams is No. 1 on the list of American Leaguers who have lifetime batting averages over .300, but Ted's .352 leaves him behind Ty Cobb, Rogers Hornsby and Joe Jackson on the all-time list. We'll take Luke Appling, with .311 for 20 years . . . Query from the V. of South Carolina: How about a plug for Chuck Prezioso, who was first string football fullback, first string basketball guard probably will play No. 1 on the golf team? . . . When Bud (coach of the year) Wilkinson was line coach at Syracuse U., he also served as head eoach of hockey and golf . . The boys around the International Boxing club are moaning about lack of co-operation. Seems when Jim Norris' nag Nell K. won at Hialeah the other day, nobody knew she was starting. Quote, Unquote Bill Veeck: "I understand Steve O'Neill is going to do a little scouting. I guess he'll have to do it from memory. He cer tainly didn t see any athletes last year when he was coaching at third base for our club." Weak End Notes Scotty Perkins, Georgia Teachers College basketballer, pulled one for the book recently the present one is the stuff. Mackenzie, a professional for 41 years, compares the golfers of today with those when he first broke in and finds much to be happy about. Getting intoxicated back yonder was an established ritual for most players at a tournament. "They got drunk each night and they did it be cause each knew that since his opponent was doing the same thing there would be no advantage for anyone," Mac kenzie says. Purses were not big enough to worry about and in the second place there were four country clubs for each professional and if his club didn t like his actions he would move on without bat ting an eye, the veteran Dallas Country Club pro explains, If those guys hadn t been playing golf, liquor would have killed them," he grins. "They could work away the effects by playing 38 holes of golf a day." Tournaments paid only about $1,000 then with $500 to the first place winner. Today first place in any tournament draws more than $1,000. And there are many more tournaments. Mackenzie figures the new order in golf really started when Francis Ouimet, a youngster, "That's when the youngsters started thinking about golf." Mackenzie declares. "Until then it was considered an old man's game." Today there are free children's classes at country clubs like the Dallas layout. There are good golfers everywhere you go. Mackenzie was born at Montrose, Scotland, and be came a pro at the age of 19. He came to America in 1909 and got his first job as an as sistant pro at Nassau Country Club at Glen Cove, N. Y. He came to the Dallas Country Club In 1918 and except for seven years at another Dallas course, has been there ever since. "Golf is a sport you can play no matter how old you are," he says, "and it is a sport you can play alone. A good golf game is a good asset in business. I know young fellows who get pros pects into golf games and make all kinds of sales right out there on the golf course." Willamina to Play Willamina The Willamina Bulldogs will be hosts to the Dayton Pirates on the local court Tuesday and to the Tilla mook Cheesemakers Friday. Special Sale! Through Tuesday, Jan. 31 The TH0S. KAY WOOLEN MILL 260 South 12th St. 1 F M sS ff t- i ' m mmr - J" -K- t-' PnnOn HllOOn Lovely Wanda Smith, queen of the 10th IWUCU UUCCII annual Palm Springs rodeo. "Rides and shoots almost as well ss Annie Oakley," says Trav Rogers, ehairman of the affair. LUKE APPLING While Sox .301 ROY CAMPANELLA Dodgers .287 TED KLUSZEWSKI Reds .30? Ski Tow Installed to Promote Lebanon Sports Beirut, Lebanon Picturesque Lebanon, which wants to be come the Switzerland of the middle east, is installing the first ski tow in this part of the world. Construction of the mile and half - long tow will continue through the mild winter. The tow will have 150 chairs and a capacity of 240 skiers an hour, and will cost about $70,000. The tow is being erected on the slopes of the Kornet Es Saouda, about 10,000 feet high, highest peak in the coun try. It is just Inland from the Mediterranean port of Tripoli and in the vicinity of Lebanon's famous cedars on nearby Dahr EI-Kadib. The purpose is to attract more winter tourists to this pleasant land, crowded with remnants of ancient Phoenicians, Roman and Greek civilizations. The tourist business an important segment of the national economy has not been very good since the fighting in neighboring Pales tine. Another step In the plan is to build more tourist accom modations especially for skiers. Hotels would be In adequate If any great stream f tourist headed this way. Right now, the slopes of the Lebanese mountains are just the place for skiers who want to enjoy the sport without distrac tion of large crowds. The sea son, opened in late December, lasts through March. Some snow fields remain through May. If the skier wants to vary his activities, he can drive in a few hours to the bathing beaches of Bierut. The sea remains warm enough for swimming the year round. The mountains, dotted with old monasteries, tiny villages and laboriously - built terraces for grape vines and olive trees, were once covered with great cedar forests. These cedars supplied the wood for the galleys of the Phoe nicians, for the temple of Sol omon and for various structures of the Egyptian pharaohs. Now there are only a few remaining. Fair Remembers United States as Grand Paradise (AP Nawirtiturul By BEN PHLEGAR Brighton, Eng. -One-time boxer Tommy Farr, now owner of a thriving pub and director In WILL OFFER "QUALITY" 100 MEN'S SUITS 2 for the PRICE of fl Plus $10.00 I (All suits regularly $50.00 during (his sale get two for $60.00) Open All Day Saturdays a prosperous bookmaking bus iness, is as "happy as I could be anywhere outside America." Farr, now 36, was the first man to fight Joe Louis after Louis won the heavyweight title in 1937. The1 fight went 15 rounds to a decision, something that happened only three times in Louis' 25 title defenses. Troubled by a lung condition dust damaged his lungs when was a miner Fan settled in this sea coast town in 1939. He quit the ring a year later and hasn't had a glove on since. He isn't sorry. "I love boxing," he says "but when you get a family you've got to think about other things." Today he is in top physical condition, just four pounds over his best fighting weight of 207. He keeps that way with long walks and horseback riding. "I don't mind," replies Tommy when asked if his two sons are going to be fighters. "It looks like nothing can stop them from being heavyweights, though. "I wouldn't sell my memories of those three years in the United States for any kind of money. I've always said that if there is such a thing as reincar nation, that's where I want to come back." A "hungry" fighter who slept on London's rat-infested docks while waiting for his big break, Farr saved his money when he hit boxing's big time. From all fixed now. u.,,ui.-.. . . to be sipping on top of the world "Dear Seagram," writes a friend from Ohio, "there's only one way to describe the enoy ment from each smooth taste of 7 Crown Cm tipping on lop of Ih world I" Sure Sesgram's 7 Crown. BLENDED WHISKEY. 86.8 Prod. 65 Grain Neutral Spirits. Seagram-Distillers Corp., Chrysler Building. N. V.