Page 10 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL. Salem. Oresron Friday, January 22, 1954 Vaides' Boss Wants Rule To Force Champ to Fight By MURRAY ROSE (For Gayle Talbol) NEW YORK OH - Jack Demp ey'$ suggestion that an elimina tion tournament be held to w cover a "real" challenger for Rocky Marciano is a worthy Idea but Bobby Gleason thinks he has something better to offer. "Make the champion fight the No. 1 challenger within six months or take away his title," says the fiery little manager of Cuban heavyweight champion Nino Vai des. "That's the way they do it in Europe. If the European cham pion doesn't meet No. 1, he's tossed out on his ear by the Euro- Dean Boxing Federation. "Otherwise, what good is it to rank fighters? Or have a No. 1 contender? You can't eat a rank ing." Bobby, of course, is not entirely unselfish in advocating the adop tion of the European system. Fol lowing a decision victory over Ez zard Charles and a four-round knockout over Heinz Ncuhaus, the European king, Vaides was named the No. 1 contender by Ring mag azine. 1 The National Boxing Assn. In its latest rankings a few weeks back listed no logical contenders for Marcinno among the big boys. Ez zard Charles, the former champ, headed the list of "outstanding boxers," followed by Vaides, Dan Bucceroni and Roland LaStarza. Dcmpsey suggested that Charles, Vaides, Buceroni and Nardico fight it out in an elimination tour ney. Gleason is willing to have Vaides fight Charles but he wants a pay' day" this time. He's willing to give Ole Ez a return fight but he wants $30,000 if Vaides wins and $40,000 if Charles evens the score. Actually, the whole thing is acad' emic. The heavyweight champion rather his manager, in this case Al Weill calls the tune. And of the moment, Weill doesn't look too kindly on any eliminations among the contend ers. His reasoning is that his Rocky will taKe care ol all tne eliminating himself in due course. If the con tenders knock each other off, then the champion is liable to run out of opponents. And opponents are scarce. JOE PALOOKA Shoendienst, Haddix St7 Sit on Pacts By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The St. Louis Cardinals, in the midst of a rebuilding program, still have two big salary prob lemsRed Schoendienst and Har vey Haddix to tackle before they can go full speed ahead with their plans for 1954. Schoendienst, runner-up to Na tional League batting champion Carl Kurillo last season and Had dix, a 20-game winner, are far from satisfied with the contracts they've been tendered for the up coming campaign. Both Schoendienst and Haddix are reportedly asking $10,000 more than they received in 1953. Jled Is season and Eaddix $8,000. The Cardinals bagged their big gest catch of the contract signing season Thursday Stan Musiol. The six-time National League batting king put his signature on a pact calling for a reported $80,000 tops in the senior loop. Eddie Mathews, another of the National League's foremost slug gers, also signed his contract Thursday. Best guess was that Eddie's sal ary for next season will be around $25,000. Detroit, Chicago Bowlers Leading National Event CHICAGO in A couple of tournament veterans, Buzz Fazio of Detroit and Mrs. Shirley Garms of Chicago, led the National All Star Bowling Tournament Friday as match play moved into the sec ond day of competition. Fazio, captain of the Detroit Strohs, national match game champions, won 13 of the 16 games Thursday and topped 3,351 pins for a total of 80.01 Petersen points, based on games won and pins toppled. Bill Lillard of Chicago was in second place with 11 wins and 5 losses, a record of 3,391 pins xnocxea aown ana 78.4: points. Mrs. Garms, a 29-year-old sec retary, paced the 16-woman field with 38.22 points after the first lowed by June Krislof, also of Chi-1 a... I LI cago, who had 37.02. Each, how- VUffDOy nOnurS ever, won six games and lost two DENVER W - Bill Lindcrman in opening matches. Madelaine ! of Red Lodge, Mont., was awarded Davies of Seattle was fourth at $1,600 in cash and other prizes The announcer has intr0duc60 jack mmpsey, gene tunney. BARNEY ROSS, JlMMV bram70ck, etc. ..all great former Champs, the place has been rocking with cheers. paiooha AND Mc FARLANE BOTH RECEIVED ROARING OVATIONS AS THEY WERE INTRODUCED , THE JUDGES ARE ARTIE AROELO... HARRY,. , By Ham Fisher F- ' """l" IJ"7T.. 'AMBER,BREAK,WHEN I SAY BREAK... I I r ( SHAKE HANDS AND RETURN TO VOC'R CORNERS' Mikan Thinks Pro All-Star Tilt Greatest NEW YORK lifl - George Mikan says the 1954 National Basketball Assn. all star game was the great est ever played anywhere. George ought to know. He was picked as the outstanding basket ball player of the last half century in The Associated Press poll. He starred in College ball at De Paul and has been the mainstay of the Minneapolis Lakers, National pro champions for seven seasons, Thursday night Mikan was on the losing team. The East squeezed past the West 98 - 93 in overtime at Madison Square Gar den. Mikan personally extended the game the extra five minutes. With the East leading 84-82 and the clock showing absolutely no time left big George shot, missed and drew a foul giving him two free throws. Mikan bounced the ball half a dozen times, then sent it swishing through the nets twice in a row. Bob Cousy of Boston, whose one hander had given the East the lead with two seconds to play, stole the show in the extra period, scoring 10 points for a game total of 20 and controlling the ball almost constantly with his tremendous dribbling. The display won him the most valuable player award. Linderman Gets LIAS German Takes Slalom in Austria KUTZBUEHEL, Austria (fl Mirl Buchner, 29-year-old German Olympic skier from Garmisch Partenklrchen, won the ladies giant slalom Friday as the third international alpine ski festival opened a day later. The race was postponed Thursday because of rain. Only one of four American girls finished in the first 20 out of a field of 37 stars from nine nations. Jannette. Burr of Seattle tied with Frieda Daenzcr of Switzerland for lflth place with a time of one minute, 23.8 seconds for the tricky 1,500 meter course. Miss Buchner had an official lime of 1:18.7 for the difficult winding descent through 32 gates. 36.11 points Seattle Pockets No. 15, 80 to,74 SEATTLE IM Seattle Univer sity rubbed out a half time halftime deficit- Thursday night and went on to defeat Colorado A&M 80-74 in an intersectional basketball game here. It was the Chiefs 15th straight victory. beattle s tall Joe Pehamck was held to 6 points in the first half, which ended with Colorado leading 40-33, but dropped in 20 in the last two quarters to lead the scor ing. Dennis Steuhm was high for the Coloradoans with 18. Colorado lost five men via the personal foul route. ' The teams play again Friday night. Thursday as the Rodeo Cowboys' Assn. named him the all-around cowboy c' 1953. Speciality awarded included: Saddle bronc riding: Casey Imbs, Fort Pierre, S.D, Bareback bronc riding: Eddy Calf roping: Don McLaughlin. amilhlicld, Tex. Steer wrestling: Ross Dollar hide, Lakcview, Ore. Team roping: Ben Johnson, Sun valley, ualif. Sports in Brief 7-Foot Shadoin Starts for Rooks CORVALLIS (fl Oregon State, hoping to groom another 7-footor for the varsity basketball lineup next year, will start Phil Shadoin at forward when the Rooks play the Oregon Frosh at Eugene Fri day night. The hope is that Shadoin, who is 7 feet tall, will develop enough agility to be able to play along side 7-3 Wade "Swede" Halbrook, the OSC sophomore center, next season. Shadoin tins not had much success so far. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS RASEBALL ST. LOUIS - Stan Musiol of the St. Louis Cardinals signed his contract for a reported $ao,ooo. GOLK RANCIIO SANTA FE. Calif. - WHltWOrfh LoP Rill Ogden posted a 3.1-33-4W tol nifWOrrn 1U56S lend the first round of the San , uierjo imen tournament. TAMPA. Fla lSctsv Hauls I HONOLULU I l.ltllo Whil. ALBANY, Ore. Lfl The Oregon! (75). Pnllv Itilev 'I77. Ralic Za. worth Collece of Knnknne Wnh State Bowling Association's annual i harias 77 and Jnckie Pung 77 ! suflorcd its second straight loss tournament will open here Sattir-; ,ho ed the way through the first here Thursday night, bowing 79 day. ! round of the Tampa Open. 59 to Universal Motors before 500 mere arc 304. learns registered,! TRACK fans at Hue Auditorium. Wichita (16-1) Making Big Splash in US Basketball By BEN OLAN .Grande edged Findlay 74-71. But NEW YORK WV This was the the big man relinquished high year they said the University of scoring honors for a change. Ron Wichita wou d have to make the nie Marnneiio . k,7 . j big splash in the Missouri Valley Sad arquetle' Findlay fwd. rnnfcrunra A nH Vl'lfhit n faooral are doing just that. True, last night's 102-50 wallop- K ing of little Fort Hays State didn't add much stature to Wichita's No. 11 ranking in the latest Associated Press poll. But it underlined the threat the Shockers are making j to the Oklahoma Aggies and St. I Louis, the conference big wigs. j Up to this season, it was a case i oi me Aggies winning me conier ence crown most of the time and the Billikens the rest. But boasting a 4-0 record in league play and an over-all 16-1 mark, the surprising Shockers are making a run for national recogni tion. A victory over St. Louis Sat urday would put them right up there. Last night's victory was Wichi ta's 14th straight. Its only loss came at the hands of Seattle Dec. 4, after having defeated the West Coast club the previous evening. George Washington's loth-ranked Colonials ran into unexpected trouble last night before finally subduing eighl-times-beaten Vir ginia 73-71. Bevo Outscored The Colonials, playing without star guard Elliott Karver, won their 12th game against one loss (to Maryland) on the contributions of the Holup brothers, Joe and John. Joe had 25 points and John chipped in with 19. Even Bevo Francis had his troubles. The much-heralded high scorer tallied 32 points as Rio Whitman Knocks Coyotes Again WALLA WALLA Wl - K. C. Owens of College of Idaho cap tured 27 rebounds and scored 25 points Thursday night but his team lost to Whitman for the sec ond straight night 96-91 in a North west Conference basketball game. Dan Parker was high for the Mis sionaries with 23. Perry, Richardson Win at Sydney SYDNEY, Australia Lfl Bob Perry of Los Angeles and Ham ilton Richardson of Baton Rouge, La., won their first round matches Friday in the Australian National Tennis to Turn To TV for Fans NEW YORK 0J.BTennis will turn to television in an attempt to build up its popularity, if 10 of the nation's top amateur players can get approval of their plans Tennis Championships at the from the hig officials of the White City courts. Bill Talbert ol ; game. New York was eliminated. Perry came from behind to whip Billy Knight, the British junior ardson polished off Australian Ced ric Mason in straight sets, 6-0, 7-5, 6-4. Talbert, non-playing captain of the losing U.S. Davis Cup team, fell before Bill Gilmour, the Aus tralian junior champion, 6-3, 8-6, 6-1. Minnie Minoso of the White Sox grounded into the most double plavs in the major leagues during 1953. IT'S GREEN'S SPORTING SHOP FOB... EVINRUDE 1201 So. Commercial The tennis players league, com posed of most of the top stars an nounced it is asking the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association for ap proval of a plan for a round robin championship among the nation's 10 top players in a series of tele vised matches. For the fourth consecutive sea son Bobby Hoernschemeyer top ped the Detroit Lions in rush ing. The 1953 averages show that Bob gained 482 yards on 101 carries for a 4.8 figure. For the Best In FUEL OIL GEORGE CADWELL OIL COMPANY 25th md Waft St. Phone 2-7431 1.11 DAY SCORES In the Alleys Albany to Open Bowling Tourney Again in Hawaii second only to the record reoislrn- MELBOURNE John l.nndv tion of last year. Officials said , ran the fifth fastest mile on rcc some Oregon teams have entered j0rd. 4 02 4. tno national tournament hi neattio. and will be unable to go to both tourneys. Ted KluszewRki of the TtetlloRs hit 23 homers at Croslcy Field in 1053. This is the most ever hit there in a single season by a National Lewie hatter. Al Pastel, former Oregon State pivov man, sparked Universal with 17 points. Ton performer for Whitworth was Roy Beach, who poured in 23 Honey i$rV00 easily won the Lai points on 10 field goals and three Ccntincla Stakes on a muddy track ! charity tosses, at Santa Anita. I RACING AKLAD1 A. Calif. Sweet as Luis Firpo was the first Argen tinian ever to fight or the world's heavyweight championship. I heavyweight championship. .. - ,,,,..,. . , . . , mmmmrimtmS. 7 )'- '. Franklin Coach Stipac Resigns PORTLAND i - The resigns tion of Mike Slinnc as football Mlinach nl Franklin llich School was reported norp inurstlny. Mipnr. former Sunnysidr, Wash and Aberdeen I.AIIIKS' C1TV LEAGUE MKN Furniture (0) Curtis 3S8 Smith 385. Loken 41S. Ade 340. Doerl- Irr 420; Chuck'i Sink Home (41 rtrejci 4.to, uurry ou, nelson 401. Clark 460. Garbarlno n. Iiaak'i Realty (I) Stettin- .HI. Iv ans 417, Blensly ZDS, Black 450, Blind 414: Cupboard Cafe () Vlttone 443, Halsey 357, Dyer 361, Peau 3S1, Glodt 453. 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Protect Your Safety - Why Be Satisfied with Less Than the Best -Especially at Savings of and On Blackwalls U On While Sidewalk Hurry in Today - Quantities Limited 23 $H?$--H!! Dunns the off season Sid Car- Idaho, hmh school don. now of thp Pittshurch Pi. coatn, sain nc will continue to, rates, works as a salesman in a teach at Franklin and will help clothing store. with the track team. - Stipae's font ball teams won five1 liames and lost nine dunnc his two years as Franklin coach. H T "" I McGregor SPORT SHIRTS at SHRVOCK'S MEN'S WEAR Capitol Shopping Centrr fASTCowh Reliefj rreomulsion spreads comforting ; him over throat memhranes. gives ! relating aid, helps epel closing ' rhif im. goes into the bronchial sys tem for still greater comfort and relief. ' CREOMULSION ninir.1 Ccihi, cst.l Csles, Acts Irmtkitu i Commissioned Olympic Drciithlun Champion Itnh Math- lai became I commissioned officer in the US. Marine Corps. Reserve at Fresno, Calif., as he is sworn in by Capt. Kdward V. 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