Page 10 Pucjjuesne' Kludges Indianans Still Hold To Third By HUGH KUU.ERTON JR NEW YORK (P) Duquesne'f . jnbcatcn Dukes, profiting at the ; expense of Indiana and the Oklahoma Aggies, ousted the other unbeaten major college team, Kentucky, from the top place in the national basketball rankings today. After occupying a threatening position for several . weeks, the Dukes moved into the lead in the weekly. Associated Press poll of sports writers and sportscasters. The margin was 814 points to 761, on the usual basis of 10 points for a first-place vote, nine for second, etc. Earn 24 Firsts Duquesne and Kentucky each polled 24 first-place votes out of 104 ballots, but, just like last week, the Dukes scored heavily on those ballots where they were placed third or lower. Nothing in (he performances of these two teams accounted fur the switch in sentiment, but indica ; tions were that the backers of In- diana and Oklahoma A&M. swung '. toward Duquesne after their fa vorites were beaten. The Hoosiers and the Aggies boll were beaten for the second time this season during the past week and their point totals fell off. Indiana retained third place with (WO points, in spite of a loss to low-ranking Northwestern. But the ; Aggies, beaten by their bitter ! neighborhood rival Oklahoma, ! dropped to fifth behind Western Kentucky. Iowa, which tied Indiana Satur day for the Big Ten conference lead, made a surprise appearance in 10th place, edging out Maryland by a single point. The votes were tabulated before last night, when 1 Ohio State upset Iowa 77-69 while Indiana swamped Purdue 86-50. The La Salle Explorers, whose 11-game winning streak was end ed by Temple, lost their place in the top 10, skidding clear down to 12th while Seattle and George Washington, a pair of onetime los- eis, improved their ratings. Alter the first five came Notre Dame, George Washington, Holy Cross and Iowa in that order. George Washington registered the big gain, bouncing from 10th place to eighth. The leading teams on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis (first-place votes in parentheses): 1. Duquesne (24) 814 2. Kentucky (24) 761 1 S.Indiana (7) 6501 4. Western Kentucky (5) ...6S0 5. Oklahoma A&M (5) 468 a. Notre Dame (2)..... 308 7. Seattle (6).: 280 8. George Washington (11).. 273 9. Holy Cross (6) 2.r.5 10. Iowa (1) 205 11. Maryland (9) 204 12. La Salle . , 179 13. Louisiana State 124 14. Duke (1) 84 15. Wichita (1) .79 16. Oklahoma City 71 - , ! 17. Dayton . . . . (.2 , Ifl MinnAKntn m : 18. Minnesota 19. Colorado A&M (2) 31 20. Navy . 28 UP Poll Puts Dukes on Top Tv NORMAN Mil, 1. 1 It NEW YORK (UP) Reper cussions of the upset earthquake which shook college basketball last weekend shot undefeated Duquesne to the top of the Unit ed Press ratings today and lifted Iowa, Louisiana State and Kan sas among the first 10 teams. Indiana, which had taken over the No. 1 rating last week from Kentucky, was leading victim nf a succession of upheavals that claimed five of last week's top 1 . teams. Oklahoma A and M, Minnesota, California and La Salle also were beaten This was the third straight week that a different team topped the United Press ratings. Indiana had taken over the lead last week from Kentucky, which had led for six weeks in a row. The lions iers had been ranked tops for the first two weeks of this season. Team Poinls 1. Duquesne, 1H (11)0) ;t5 2. Kentucky, 12 ( IH-0) ... 3. Indiana, 6 ( 15 2) ... 279 4. Oklahoma A&M (202) 18!) r. Western Kentucky (Jill) y . Holy Cross (171) lli:i 7. Iowa ( 14-3) Kid 8. Nitfe Dame, I ( 13-2) i; 9. Louisiana Slate ( 15 2 ti'2 10. Kansas (11-4) . 54 Second 10 teams: 11, l.aS.ille. 42: 12, Minnesota, 37; 13 (tie), Duke and California, 35 each: 15, George Washington, 22; IB, Sent- t on. IT Irfl A in. in f,.l.. radn AAM, 15: If), Wichita, 13; 20. North Carolina Slate. 12. Others: Maryland, 10; Rice and Dayton, 8 each; Wyoming, 7: Ore gon Stale and Louisville, 6 each. TIDE TABLE TMtM fr 11t, Omnn lLfhriirT. 1"M f'nmnll(l h (' n. (ot A fimitfll Surret, PnrlUnil. Ott i It 1 J Hi m 5 5 3 30 a m. 11 14 a m. 7 0 Slip m 17 i; 41 a m S (1 0 a m. II Ml i m ft R . p m. It 1 H1 a in. b 9 S 11 I in. i.' i! V hi. 7 1 P tn. It I 14 i m. I 1 .1 l m. 1 1H p m 6 9 1 44 p in. 20 2 (( am, fl 2 I 0t a m. 1 f v in 5 t t 10 P. id It 2 117 a m ll 2 Ml m. 2 J9 v m. fv 4 llllp m 32 2Miin HI t H a m, ) p in. SO Ofl p m 2J 27 a m 1 in 31 a m. i 20 p m 4 5 I 'm pin 34 4 rn m a ii:ift a m. 5 3 P m, 4 3 1ft -1 ft p m 31 MM m. A3 13 2.1 P m. Itlptn. 40 11:07 Pm 3 1 0 1 3 4 Swede Holds Record With CORVALLIS Oregon State's towering sophomore center, Wade (Swede) Halbrnok, moved closer to the Northern division scoring championship last week end, tallying 34 points against Washington, as the Beavers and the Huskies split. Playing in all 12 games for the Orangemen this year, Halbrook has dunked 2(i7 pointsj for an av erage of 22.3 points per game. Although held to only 14 in last Saturday's contest with Washing NORTHERN DIVISION F(iA PO Prt. 8-;Hf Halbrona. C ..1J IBS 4 .174 147 7 537 14 U.J J J7 Tony VlantHlr-a, 1 ...11 101 37 ..18 3.1 1 40 34 3.1 14 0 TfX Whitman, t .... 13 5 J .400 29 1 .1121 SO 42 111 70 Hon HoblllN. a 11 e 2 .377 12 a .1187 18 1 8 22 80 llrxalf llalllaan, I ..II 80 20 .333 It 14 .737 48 4.4 25 Jay Dean, 1 8 38 13 .301 2D 24 .828 62 7 8 22 50 Johnny Jarboe 12 49 14 .388 32 15 489 21 2 3 30 43 Hill Toolr, a 12 43 10 .233 35 18 .457 15 1.3 32 38 Jtrry CninmlllJI. r ... 5 12 4 .333 8 5 .558 4 08 2 13 Hon FumllllKHlund, I 7 37 6 .135 8 2 .350 11 1.8 8 12 'left Kumailcjll, I ...12 3U 4 .150 12 8 .500 17 1.4 12 12 l.atry 1'aillul. I 8 6 0 .000 3 1 .333 5 0 8 5 1 CMC TOTALS 12 884 352 ,368 !60 304 .587 438 38.3 325 708 Opponent 13 808 210 .314 321 200 .658 300 30.8 222 628 TOTAL SKAKON HI OKINIi ('."! Camel) Wall 10, Loll 1 (I KOA HI Prt. PTA Pr Pet. Heb. Ave. PP TP BWBde Halbrook, 0 ..22 375 175 .459 271 154 .556 290 13 8 64 604 Tony Vlanteltca, f ,..20 231 75 .339 49 37 .551 73 3.7 34 177 TFX Wllllaman, f ...22 151 59 .391 65 34 .523 128 3 9 37 152 Rill Toolr. ( 32 110 34 .309 83 43 .518 39 1 7 65 111 Ron Robbing a 20 146 44 .301 35 21 .600 25 3.3 41 109 Jjhnny Jarboe. K ...22 111 35 .315 72 37 .514. 79 3.8 60 107 Heaale Hantaan, f ...18 72 23 . 319 2 9 21 .724 52 2 9 '31 65 Tfd Romanoir, I ....23 77 25 .325 26 14 .538 78 3.6 38 64 Jay Dran. 1 16 ' 41 16 .390 37 28 .757 75 4 7 26 80 Jrrry Crlmln. a 34 7 .292 14 6 .429 9 1.1 5 20 Ron Flindlnriland, I 12 45 7 .156 8 2 .250 14 1.1 III 16 l.atry Panlua, 1 14 19 3 .158 31 9 .429 30 1 4 35 16 I '-"' Pauma, OKC TOTALS 1.182 502 1263 502 .363 .317 Oppnnanta Pro Golfers Pick Congdon as Chief PORTLAND UP The Northwest Professional Golfers Assn. Monday elected Chuck Congdon of Tacoma as president and named Lloyd Nordstrom, Seattle, as secretary treasurer. Vice presidents elected were Ed die Hogan and Bob McKendrick, Portland: Joe Greer and Jim Rus sell, Walla Walla: and the retir ing president, Ken Tucker of Ev- j eretl The NWPGa announced these tournament sites and times: Northwest pro-amateur, Aug. 12 13, Kugene, Ore.; Hudson Cup matches, Aug. 14-15, tentative Ku gene: Northwest Open, Aug. 2-4, Seattle: Tacoma Open, Aug. 29 31; Banana Belt Open, Oct. 22 24, Sunnyside; NWPGA champion ship and national PGA qualifying May 24. Yakima: Northwest nro- president, April 16, Portland; Ore- gon assistant pro championships, April 14, Tualatin, Ore The NWPGA did not set dates for the British Columbia Open nor for the Northwest assistants' tour ney, Patterson Wins Tenth Straight NEW YORK (UP)-Light heavy- wi-iKiti itiiiirimci r niyu I imcrsun of Brooklyn nafj w Sraight profes- ..... . . . ... . sionai victories untiei ins neu to day, but his latest victim, C'anadi and Yvon Hurdle, was so unim pressed, he said, "any good boxer can beat him." Unbeaten young Patterson won a unanimous eight round decision over rugged, awkward Durclle of Haie St. Ann. N.B., at Brooklyn's Kaslern Parkway Arena Inst night. His performance was far from sen sational, however. Patterson weighed 167',-i pounds; Durelle, 170 3 4. SCORES in Capitol Alleys Capital Allr-y (Ctimmcrrlal No, 1) Jnvson Cltttlllrra (4 1- 11. Heeve 5fi7, It. Summers 516, J. l.rbold 420, C. Hnvc'f 5211, H. Hvan HI4. Marlon Creamery till M. Allen Ml, I.. D.iv ennort 4411. M. I'ckar 479, B. Kind 535. F. Krnynn 4!12 ItaullnMina l.attndiv (41 D. ftlnK- I. inil 5IU, W. Siirlmta '4113. W. Enitllsh 507. 11. Ilvir :.22. II llauten 521; Wnodry Furniture illl-ll, Ollncer a. V. Terry 43,5, I). Woodry 474. C. Frneimm 4:i!l. It Adolpli 478. Wirklum1'4 Sortlip Good (41 W. Walla 523, S. Surrutl 474. U, Hen dile 4B6. H l.nwlesa lit2. II. Hnvn 4!'H; Starr Fond till I. Sheklnrt 510, II. Nltholli Jin. !.. lwf. am, I). Uuflus li !.,im:huir :2 l,.iri.T Awtuie Si-mir i:tl -Y. B.ir-Ix-r 413, K Nehiin :,:'!l. .1 liner tier 4",!'. It. llunn ,v.ii, K ll.ii- 574: Nicks Inn ili-lt. Sli.lliui 4H'i. II. Il.n liniin 511. 1, llieika 515, A WiiKht .v.'l. w Miller 411. (iiililiev ut SiKetlon lill-fl lien 4l. K lunik I'M. r. Ilnua II 4'i... J Heir rn'it. i; II, i,l , ,n yri. Knight 'I r.l,i!ul,u 111 I. Kmittir-. I'iJ. '1' Hi, ,'lrv c l'-;ini;e 4111, M. Ailr 4:tl. H lliealer 541 Nu-hnlvin- ln-nr.inee t2l- 1! Kber "'le 512, F Helton 4IMI. J It.nmev 4:',2. M. Daily JtO. W. Gardner JMt; tirvaW Vned t ars 2 S Kitehen f:Kt. IV I'milin .Vll, (1 I.ania 5.11. It. Wllkrraon 4B7. w. ( line Jr 5H lllail leam same Orval t'sed t'ara, UvtB hull team 4er,ev Wuklunil. llli'h individual tame, Inh Law less nl w ii'k!un,l. 214, l'ii:li tn- mi .,n,r, m' iHm.i.'rM., t., Kitr'irn nt fl of Wit kluilfU, I", ran. rih 1 I ear; f OMMUll IM NtV nurthufi. 1 1 1 V.4n1w.irth HM. .S"'i . AnMiti ifil Hick. 4(R TliP Rnnrlt io ,Tn,nr 17 1 Initi nnA I 4it Willrl 4(1' Ki if. 546 AMal lltui mi M:kkf) if, ltlltt l.nritf 4"... Hrirhni )n i Kit 4-. lljtiin Hio ini si - In 54,(; 2 1 j lUUHI'i, 481 in,,i. 51 l-,n,,,i rp ,, OS - M.IIli.M Ml, H.m-- 4(0. .Mi.tPi-.n 1 t )l,.v,r ..0 On!"- !S"2 ft t Hriiiik. I hp Hp til i .1) r 4tf 17 Haitllt Win , itil I It L.r n l . I3ilktl 441 l I.hp llftriiri-atlnf. id I ft i H I..k MM' Ii l i.hf I4i 1) i.uKt 4M: 1.7 ltd! I nk i- V I ukr 4'-K 1ft Thr JrwPl a Mi Cum Ml Urti. 23; ftiiver S-N-f NrUon j:1 1 on M4 !l .vp 1 4 sl Marv Ttrtn iliSoimi u: : k.. 9 ft ppr 41- WyiMur M:!;t:t Hoi 1 4 , com .VU Id; II nil iPr1 I tnaiup i r t Km 47 '. 1 1 RirBlrr l'r IIp'-p t'S rrt 4: Hi mi 3 .1 i 5. (iaotliPB .MiritPt i.') Rcpipi 499, OSC Season 504 Points ton, Swede ran his season total to 504 points in 22 games, setting a new mark for an Oregon State player in one season. The old mark was set by all-American Cliff Crandall, who marked up 4fl3 points for the Beavers in 1949, though needing 36 games to do it. The league-leading Beavers will invade Pullman this week end to meet Washington State. The Beavers took both ends of the series here two weeks ago. IIS Clamf,) Won . I.oi 4 PTA rv rci. urn. rtvp. . rr TP Ave. 23.3 59.0 02.4 22.9 8.9 j j 1.1 83.8 663 111 675 .56.1 98.1 40.1 44.1 .65 7 889 30. 431 1400 1336 j Prepsters Overcome Handicaps, Undefeated INWOOD, W. Va., Iff) -Mussel-man High School has its problems when it comes to playing basket ball. The team has no gymnasium and has to work out in the cramped, unheated quarters of an abandoned church. For its home games, the squad has to travel 10 miles to nearby Martinsburg. But Coach Kenny Waldeck Is holding his head high these days. His team despite all its prob lems is the only undefeated scholastic basketball club in West Virginia, having won 11 straight games. District 6 Mat Tourney Slated District wrestling tournament plans are being shaped here (or the Feb. 25 event which will qualify two from each weight for the state tourney. Athletic Director Vern Gilmore of Salem high school said that Salem, Corvallis, , Dallas, Jeffer son and Cascade are eligible to enter from District 6. Matches will begin at 3:45 and continue through the semi-finals. Finals will start at 7:30 p.m. CITY LEAGUE STANDINGS W. YMCA 8 Marion Motors 8 Aumsville 7 Wolgamott's 6 St. Paul . 4 Naval Reserve r. . 2 Nampa Sophs 1 Marine Reserve 0 Pet, .889 .889 .778 .750 .444 .222 .111 .000 PREI'STERS HOWL SIIA'ERTON Coach Murl Anderson is introducing a new sport, bowling for the high school boys at Silver Bowl. the ALLEYS BiaMllrr 473; Ooodl 4 JR; Wi-nsfwrolh 4SU; PlilPli Ml Htih tram imr, Mrv Tntpril, t?4: hlih trftm nf r Mar (In Urn. Neon Ami), 2fibfl; hUh lnd. itaiT. nl mrlf. Hnnifr Wtdswoith o( Woodburn, 2M nd University Alleys I,rtlpi Minor I.mKur I' -Howl Krrbs ai-Krpt)s :toa, Mm.iHhl .14.1 Smith 410. Morn ,'ItiS. Mp;i(tnw lirst K-kstroni ;)49, Kurrcr 3, Blind Arthur i2Q. Johni-im'ji CD I.inj! .T'W, J)llnon M2, Nkholls Lancr 421; Mulrnliv 4.13, Sti ader 2, KAiidle .111. Cif Wrtcrn I'aprr (in-Kirbv afi;t, Hall 374. Cuttwcll ;117. Penison a15H Nrhi Mi V. C-annon 331. fnllcn .1S5. J. (liinnon :t!U, Hiltlrrlh 4tu I'flv l.vs t)i u s (ill- D. V.iJdr IhiN 3M. N. Valdf 3:':j. W V.ddc ;t'H. S.ilr n HuiUUmji SunpK ! il't M H uitis 4:U. Kvvne Kid link .!.', I'.ii.n ,i;4. ' Itmh HHtiVHhi.il t:aiiif. !t i u! -rtik. VM, huh iinilvi.itiil scries, C.it oln Hilfln-ilt. 4t-0. team jeii'iir, I Kii'l)-, -tH; lu;t. lrm nrrir-., Svhi, j 15.7. Knlli-t OH ( t.lt MRUon 447: Ttil tptlir. 4Hii, trTouri.r.. .4, Voimt M0. 1 PriHlontf 574 rr (III . ill Mr j Curt MS; Jack l.-How M)3; .Tim t.)pn(. ' 4s.V WIlknItK 40; Corniatorit $12 fttrbn purllnf (itudti c.M Valdff 4(1(1. ; Prl S; Vnlluprk 4U: Hois 4Kd. I TUrtfrrM A.m rnli' Ptorturp i'!. , TlHim.i-on 4AI : Hnimrti Junld 44(1 rHllfT Mi;, .!r.'t(M)l Mfl ( iifilitiitiil rfp tot mnueht 4?. 4 . Ut ifr :-ft Il'innoil 4'(1. Hniiipr-.'i. V! fiii.n SfiS f.lf m lUrrln rr ( I I'licr'p Ciirill Sfil. MnrrU 4fi. rcf 411 Itallwjit (iff CH- thton 5(i t: Kite ivilipr M. Mt Null MS; Hirlirs Sfl.li l.uif p Salrm Murhinpr ( . 1 1 r.fni M; Prlrf 544; BMnrt 4'l Mm KJitlniir MVS. Htmw 11 H.vlt h'hp ami jipfirn Traiiwuv C.tr v: find 37V(.. tNr huh mmr !or .ft tif . Hlfh lnd iiir I'm k Thc.lf .M' llardaatp- 7'6 MiJh uni trir, W'i J.u iVmiii t Fi .tttli'i KrwlHff i l.ii(l Duck Pins 1I'CK PIN. A HAM ltow.nu mil CJ llltiiptlp a IIp Hank . 1 1 BhiupU tl..' Uiolifti ,1.'7 lUv IUi-lu. Slfi JiPi ii ii r tin 'hp 2n; . CntiTPi .(12 Mattpr Itipad :i lUinfii l,.i i ip i JNU. V.ti.iv Di, TtifilAdP Jl. MitstitEP JUS ItandlP Oil i.'i K.nii;p j.tf Hf.iKli 3K8. fh-.tt W.'od JKf (laulh-pr IflO UniH.rnllp'. Hnn Hhop . ) W t t.tr 3-: Hli'har(on 21; Archff .14 H Kirnkl 325 Rntipr ;JI Huh mi' aanip .ipn Muti'rr IM. huh in-l ifiift. ,u,n, Wivv "Hf huh tram hut and aptip. Mttlrr Prfart. fiJd and 1!. THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem. Oregon ECesitucky Out off First m AP Pol Vandals to Play Cougars Tonight MOSCOW, Idaho I - The Uni versity of Idaho Vandals, presea son co-favorites with Oregon State to win the Northern Division Pa cific Coast Conference basketball title, will try to warm their few remaining pennant hopes Tuesday night in a meeting with Washing ton State. Still holding a mathematical chance of catching the pace-setting Corvallis Beavers, the Vandals will be shooting for their seventh win in 13 conference starts against a team that has won only three of 10 league contests. The Idaho veterans started the season with a dark horse rating and appeared to be set to battle OSC down to the wire for the flag. Midseason setbacks includ ing upset losses to Washington Feb. 5-6 all but knocked them out of the race but they bounced back last week with two surprise wins I over Oregon. the Vandal-Cougar game here Tuesday night is the only one scheduled in the division until the weekend when Washington State hosts Oregon State at Pullman and Washington entertains Oregon at Seattle. OTI WRESTLERS WIN KLAMATH FALLS tin - Oregon Tech ran its wrestling victory rec ord to 6-1 here Monday night as it ucn:uvi;u me umvet any Ul urcKUU varsuy za-a. Only Bob Shirley, who took a 5-2 decision over Vic Schweitz in the 147-pound class, kept Oregon from a whitewashing. This is OTI's first year of wrestl ing as an intercollegiate sport. and th -- I ;....;,:.."-- T p;-h---. j It's Fun! It's Easy to Enter! Take in the greatest Dodge car No time In waste' Vi'stt'rday's ronttvit is over, today's is RiiiltK on, toinorrmv's is rnming soon. Kvery day you ran win n wontlerfiil urand iri?.( vat-alion (or two by discover ing the wonderful things nbout the new '54 Dotlue. PROVED ECONOMy WINNER-HmlKe topped nil 8's in the famou Moliilgaa. Kconmny Run. PROVEO PERFORMaNCE WINNER-I)(lt;e shattered more AAA records fur ai'i't-leratitin ant) performance than any other Amf'ncaii car in history. KKK PROVED ENDURANCE WINNER-Doilee set more marks for endurance and stamina than anv American car in history. JOE PALOOKA WMAT...YA MEAN WHERE NUTHIN'... JUST FIGURED T HMM...W-E-L-I. ... -I; WS SUCK UV' M X IM AS 'ti fTIruAT-eTAT.naA THEM SAVAGES WAS... MIGHT BE WORTH SOME-) I WAS FIGURE CH Wl J SSPESE RT UP YER WB Lms 5m 25-2ft fT'V WAITAMI-JITE...WHAT THIN' SOME PAY... W SAME THING... AUTRAUA...SHH H M . J', larn ( VTr VA GOT UP VER. FERGET IT... I JUST... f rVAIT...LEMME TALK THIS 16 A BRILLIANT I HU SK BALL...HEH, HEH Santee Still Not Satisfied With 4:04.9 Indoor Mile By ROBERT E. VOCES EAST LANSING, Mich. (tfl-Wes Santee, the self-confident Kansas cowboy, has coralled the second fastest competitive indoor mile in history, but he still isn't satisfied. He loped around the eight-lap Michigan State College dirt track in 4:9'I 9 last night as the feature of a triangular meet among Kan sas, Illinois and Michigan State. The cocky Kansas said after wards he's sure he can go a faster mile on a board track. He ex pressed confidence that some day he will crack the four-minute bar rier. Cunningham Still Tops His time will stand as the world indoor record for a dirt track. Only Glenn Cunningham's sensational 4:04.4 of 1938 on a board track- Hurry! Hurry! Hurry! A Grand Prize A Day Is Being Given Away I Head For Your Dodge Dealer Right Nowl us oi an Elegant New '54 Dodge) Your Friendly Dodge Tout Ffienjly DoJje .Plymouth Otalet Biitiis Tog-Djnny Ttionias, ABC-TV. Bert Puks in "Break Tin STAN BAKER MOTORS o 525 exceeds Santee's performance in indoor competition. . So now there are three separate indoor mile records: 1. Cunningham, 4:04.4 6 ',i -lap board track. 2. Santee, 4:05.9, .eight-lap dirt track. 3. Gil Dodds, 4:05.3, 11-lap board track. Dodds set his record at Madison Square Garden in 1948. Cunning ham set his at Dartmouth College in a handicap race. Both were on board tracks, but the number of laps varied. Differences in the conditions of all three aro relevant. "We have to list, them separably because some places don't have board tracks and others don't, have dirt tracks," explained Dan Ferris, 1 Your "Vacation Preview Drive" in 40 great Dodge years Look at these "Vacation Feature." NEW! Codes PoiFIi tglly-milninaiic transmission NEW! 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Commercial te4lfl PfS 'Pf O I 40 Grand Prizes TO CELEBRATE 40 GREAT YEARS OF DODGE DEPENDABILITY! (A GRAND PRIZE A DAY FOR 40 DAYS) k 1 weeka' vocation for two onywharn in th U.S. A. I it AII-expemo paid meol, holtli, reiorti, air or train transportation! if Nw '54 Dodgo at your diipoial Iht whole limtil if Dodgo doubai your pay for lh two weskil (At load $300.00) it An additional $500.00 "fun momy" lo ipand or aavo at you ploaaol PLUS... IOOO cash prizes 25 a day! Win! See Him Today! Bink," ABC-TV. Roy Rojeis, NBC Radio. Medallion TheaUt, CBS-TV Chemeketa Street Tuesday, February 16, 1954 By Ham Fisher ENTER N.C.A.A. SKIING RENO, Nev. I The Univer sity of Washington and Seattle Uni versity are among the 17 colleges invited to enter the NCAA-sponsored ski championships to be held near here March 4-7. Bill Winfrey, trainer of the famed Native Dancer, broke into horse racing at Hialeah in 1932 as a jockey. SHELL Heating Oils Larmer Transfer And Storage 889 N. Liberty Ph. 33131 u SiS