Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, January 26, 1954, Page 13, Image 13

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    1 v
Tuesday, Jannary 26, 1954
THK CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Oresron
'WBWW Hurley Finds Out About
Page 13
WTO
9
Not
CnOUOn EnQlish Jimmy Demaret of Kiamisha Lake,
ball into the cup on the 18th green t San Diego, Calif., Open
Golf Tournament. The ball Mopped on the lip of the hole. (UP
Telephoto)
U of W Regents, Gets 'No'
By JACK HEWINS
Associated Press Sports Writer
SEATTLE m It is safe to
assume that Deacon Jack Hurlev
and the University of Washing-
ion Board ol Regents wouldn't
see eye to eye if they were lock-
ea la i telephone booth and
wearing bifocals.
Hurley doesn't dislike any of
the regents individually. He has
enough hate to go around all
seven with Harvey Cassill thrown
in. Mr.1 Hurley will expound at
length on the subject but we
can't quote him directly in a
family newspaper.
As you may have heard at one
time or another, Deacon Jack
manages a boxer whose name is
Harry "Kid" Matthews and Cas
sill manages the university ath
letic plant. Both are well ac
quainted with all the . portraits
on United States money, from
Washington beyond Franklin and
Grant
These two art lovers are not
EOCE Divides
With Nazdrenes
LA GRANDE W Eastern Ore
gon College of Education posted
a 108-85 victory over Northwest
Nazarene Monday night to even a
two-game basketball series.
The Nampa. Idaho, team won
Saturday night's game at Nampa,
94-81.
Ted Sehadewitz, EOCE guard,
was high scorer with 34 points.
Darrel Reisch and Duane Peppley
topped the visitors with 19 each.
Eastern Oregon led 22-19, 46-35
and 74-60 at the quarters.
Blames Dressen a?
pitcher Joe Black (left) and former
Brooklyn manager Chuck Dressen when they posed for this
picture In 1952. Black, appearing at the Hickok Award dinner
in Rochester, N.Y., charged Dressen with being the reason for
his poor pitching performance in 1953. The Giant pitcher said
it was Dressen's experiments with his pitching style, and not
the "sophomore jinx," which "ruined me last season." (UP
Telephoto)
Osburn to Pilot
Spokane Again
SPOKANE (A Don Osburn
notified the Spokane Indians Mon
day he will be back as manager
of the Western International
League baseball club in 1954.
Osburn, manager of the 1953
championship team, said he will
return here Thursday and accom
pany owner Roy Hotchkiss to Lew
iston, Idaho, for the weekend WIL
meeting.
Osburn was returned to the In
dians by the Philadelphia Phillies,
who have a working agreement
with the Spokane club which pro
vides the Phils train and assign
nearly all the Indian players.
Osburn's team last year won the
second-half WIL championship and
defeated Salem in the postseason
playoff.
Seattle Upsets
Oklahoma City
SEATTLE W The second in
stallment of the Seattle University-Arnold
Short basketball series
goes on stage here Tuesday night
with Short and his Oklahoma City
University stable mates gunning
for revenge.
Short, virtually a cinch to make
All-America honors, scored half
of OCU's points Monday night, but
the well-rounded Seattle Univer
sity squad had too much soup for
the Olkahomans and romped to
79-64 victory.
The locals had clear sledding
over OCU, rated the No. 9 team
in the country in the latest As
sociated Press poll, as they
jumped off to a 9-0 lead with only
a shade over two minutes gone in
the game.
EAST LANSING. Mich. - Michi
gan State football players have
done will in the Senior Bowl game
at Montgomery, Ala. Al Dorow was
named "most valuable" in 1952 and
Don Dohoney the "outstanding
linemen" in 1954.
EAST LANSING, Mich. The
all-time home attendance record
for Michigan State basketball was
set in 1947-48, when 88,750 saw ten
home games. Biggest crowd that
season was the 15.384 who witnes
sed the Kentucky game.
ini I
Detroit Stabbing Fatal
Alter Grade Hoop Till
DETROIT 11 - A street fight
between two 12-year-old boys after
a grade school basketball game
ended Monday night in the stab
bing death of one of them.
James Horton, 12, died of a knife
wound in the stomach on arrival
at receiving hospital.
Police held a 12-ycar-old fifth
grade' classmate for investigation
of murder.
Only last week school authori
ties banned all major high school
athletics at night because of the
icepick stabbing of Ross DeBos
key, 17, star basketball player,
after a night baskelbajl game.
DeBoskey was badly hurt.
prone to pass up an opportunity
to add to their i collections, al
though it must be said that Cas
sill is stiictly amateur and his
acquisitions become the property
of the university. Hurley is a pro,
and this basic difference is the
crux of the difficulty.
It was only last summer that
Hurley sifted $97,000 worth of
customers through the turnstiles
at Sick's Stadium to watch Mat
thews and Don Cockell of Lon
don engage in fisticuffs. Now
Mr. Sick's baseball emporium
will seat about 15,000 people and
the university stadium provides
space for nearly four times that
many.
If you have a pencil you can
figure the difference in cold cash
and Hurley doesn't have to both
er with a pencil. He thought it
would be very nice for all con
cerned Mf Matthews and Cockell
could resume their conference
at the university's football pas
ture, which Hurley refers- to as
an arena.
And the Hurley eye noted also
that Edmundson Pavilion is hard
by the aforesaid arena with some
12,500 seats. An indoor show in
the pavilion in the spring and
an outdoor fight in the stadium
should add up to quite a pile
of shekels.
Hurley was thinking the uni
versity might stand to pick pff
about $50,000 and he was about
as speechless as Hurley can get
when Cassill said no. But Cas
sill put the question through the
proper channels to the regents
and their reply came back forth
with and it was no, too.
This was the first time, Hurley
says, that he knew the regents
existed and he was even more
flabbergasted when he found
they were unsalaried. People op
erating a business of that size
should, asserts Hurley, be worth
something.
Then he learned that the gov
ernor appointed the regents, so
he went to see the governor, who
wasn't in. However, he was ad
vised that the state's boss man
could choose 'em, but he couldn't
override 'em. We now tenderly
draw the curtain on the con
fused Deacon.
The university attitude is that
(1) its athletic plant should be
used first and to the utmost by
its own students and (2) the fa
cilities are dedicated to amateur,
non-profit projects.
Plans to Enlarge
Oregon Gridiron,
Court Approved
PORTLAND (A The State
Board of Higher Education ap
proved plans Monday to enlarge
the seating capacity at the basket
ball court and -football field at the
University of Oregon.
The board approved architects'
plans to add 900-seat balconv to
MCArinur court, me balcony and
two exit towers will be on the west
side of the building. Four posts
now there will be removed. The
estimated cost of the project is
$137,000.
tngineers plans for Hayward
Field call for lifting of the east
grandstand 20 feet and addition of
4,700 seats in front of the grand
stand. The seats would be removed
in the spring to clear the cinder
track.
Contracts on both jobs will be
awarded March 8. The work is tn
be completed in time for the next
football and basketball seasons.
PCC Champion
Beaten on Mat
KLAMATH FALLS HI Garv
McClain, Oregon State's Pacific
Coats champion, was pinned in the
opening match as the Staters lost.
19-11, in a wrestling contest with
Oregon Tech Monday night.
OTI's Larry Dryden, 123 pounds,
pinned McClain. OT1 won three
more matches beforo Oregon State
scored.
The OSC Rooks were defeated.
32-9, by Klamath Falls High School
in preliminary matches.
EAST LANSING, Mich. - Mich
igan State hockey defenseman
John Polomsky invented a cold-
weather trigger adapter for the
M-l rifle while with the Marines
in Korea. It was adopted by the
Armed Forces and earned him a
FANFARE
By WALT DITZEN
g
t . "
mi linn l il
Fights Last Night
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BROOKLYN Tommy (Hurri
cane) Jackson, 194 tt, New York,
stopped Rex Laync, 202, Lewiston,
Utah, 6.
NOTTINGHAM. England - Bob
by Dawson, 159, Paris, outpointed
Yolande Pompcy, 162. Trinidad.
10.
MILWAUKEE - Ted Olla, 159
, Milwaukee, outpointed Al And
rews, 151 yt, Superior, Wis., 12.
(Red Top) Davis. 129 hi. Hartford.
outpointed Jose Morell, 131 V,
Puerto Rico, 10.
PROVIDENCE, R. I. Teddy
(Red Top) Davis, 129V4, Hart
ford, outpointed Jose Morell,
131V4, Puerto Rjco, 10.
ST. LOUIS Jesse Turner. 155
i, St. Louis, stopped Henry Hen
derson, 156, Kansas City, 4.
DETROIT - Allie Gronik. 152.
Detroit, outpointed Bill Suddeth,
149, Topcka, Kan.. 8.
MONTREAL - Armand Savole.
137, Montreal, outpointed Hous
ton Brown, 136 New York, 10.
HOLYOKE", Mass. Sammv
Walker. 159. Springfield, stopped
Willie Coleman, 154, Atlantic City.
7.
1 116 DQD6 DUCK Babe ' ZaharIas one of the greatest
women athletes of all time, checks her
starting time in the Tampa women's open golf tournament
with M (-Henry Bolesta, pro at the Palma Ceia Club, In Tampa,
Ft., shortly after she blasted the Ladies PGA, resigned from
It and said she planed to set up her own group. She changed
her mind the next day. (AP Wirephoto) , -
gs !
az 1 1) w U
UfjWn tf) jtflV Danny Nardico (right), who almost landed
1 vii 1 1 iw rfiMj a bout chan)pi0I1 Rocky jiarciano.
goes down for the seventh time after a bard left from Charley
Norkus of Jersey City. The referee stopped the bout after
this flooring in the ninth round at Miami Beach. Nardico suf
fered one of the biggest apsets of the year as 'Norkus was
awarded a TKO.
awd yflteE GOING TOOTW THERE UNTIL fCXi CHANGE
Church League
Champions Win
Three first-half league champ
ions opened the second half with
victories last night in the Salem
Church Basketball league.
However, two of the champions
which were moved to a higher
league found the going tougher
and lost.
Champions winning were First
Christian in the Senior league,
Englcwood EUB in Intermediate
"B" and Nazarene in Junior "A".
Suffering a loss in a higher classi
fication was Evangelistic Temple,
with an 8-0 record in Intermedi
ate "B" but losing 25-24 to St.
Mark Lutheran (4-4 In Intermedi
ate "A"). Calvary Baptist of
Junior "B" moved up and lost.
Results last night:
Bntnr lfuufl Flrat ChrUtlui 41. Ftm
Wtthwllft 47; Ctlmry Rptlt 41. Nan
rriw 38, Mm TrKhlwrUn 45, riril EUB
17.
lntermtdlftt A" Kncl'wood ETJB 14.
Pint Methodlit 4S; Pint BplWt . Pint
Contrrfstlonal 17: 8t. Mark Lutheran 16,
EVkniellitlc Tempts 34.
Intermediate "B" Natftrena 41. Pint
Prenbyterlta 31: KelKer Community 4S.
Writ Salem BaDtlil 31; Halbert Memor
ial 47. South Balrm Prlenda 11.
Juolor "A" Naearene 36, Knalewood
EUB 17: rint Baplut is, Calrarr Bap
tut 30.
Pitcher Frank Sullivan, Boston
Red Sox rookie up from Albany
of the Eastern League, is W4
and weighs 215.
Monte Irvin of the New York
Giants has a lifetime batting av
erage of .309. His 1953 mark of
.329 was his best in five big
league seasons.
In 50 American Bowling Con
gress tournaments, 409 bowlers
have scored a 1900 all-events to
tal. But only 46 have hit the 211
plus average more than once.
JOE PALOOKA
By Ham Fisher
PHlOOHA
CAUGHT
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FEARFUL
RIGHT
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In this hectic, turbulent, fast-moving world'-" j J j I?,' I-, f" J
rme things remain constant and dear, l-J ir Lf - I t- 4
the hamburger sandwich, I i f"- i. xj- J
the baseball bat V 1 ' 't t i'f'1!
' and the taste of Olympia Beer. 1 1 , If J f ( wfil
If . yv -
t- r? .f; '-re:---- .
1 JtSRv..:.; j .
So if you're distressed with the changing times,
The "sensational," "different" and "new" .
' and you look for a name
that's always the same,
Just ask for Olympia Brew.
It's sparkling and bright, delidous and light.
And always tastes like K should.
it's the hops and the grains
and the brewer's great pains...'
"It's the Water" that makes it so good.
It's the Water" that flows in those underground streams
That has given Olympia fame,
that brings out the flavor
that so many savor
and always remains just the same,
40
77
mm
OLYMPIC
BEER
?,i.
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'e Water
ye
Visitor wtlcoma to "One of America's Exceptional Breweries,"
Olympia Brswtng Comparry, Olympia, Wash,, U. $. A.
9:30 to 4:30 every day
W, . , A-.
IP
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