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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 19, 1957)
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL Section 2 Page 1 Willamette Scrapes By Pacific in Overtime, 81-79 Salem, Oregon, Saturday, January 19, 1957 Driver Decides Tilt On 2 Free Throws T? Sportmeter By A. C. JONES, Capitol Journal Sports Editor JERRY McCALLISTER ... to filter Air Forte From the Saturday W'ash One of the fascinating things about the Rose Bowl game movies, shown to the Salem Breakfast club Wednesday, was an as-plain-as-day clipping violation by an Iowa player downfield on Kenny Ploen's 49-yard jolt that scored Iowa's first touchdown. Several viewers said thy saw it, too, although the Oregon State coaches, who poured over the movies several limes, didn't mention it. What is more, the SBC viewers say that a striped-shirt referee ran right by it and didn't notice. Nevertheless, it wasn't called and wilh only 4:16 gone the Beavers had lots of wind knocked out of them. If the Moving Finger hadn't already written and mov ed on, as Omar said, it would be interesting to imagine what the outcome might have been if the run had been called back , . . Not having the right attitude has cost two Oregon State foot ball players dearly. Sometimes it makes us wonder, but we real ize that they are representative of this modern age. Sonny San chez, sophomore guard from San Francisco, earned his letter and went to Pasadena with the gang, although he didn't get to play. He's the one Coach Tommy Pro thrn droDned from the snuad Wednesday "for failure to dovelope normal or reasonable training habits while a playing member of the squad." Awards Lost As a result, the good prospect can't play football anymore for OSC; he didn't get a wrist watch last night as other players did at the Corvallis community banquet; he won't get a PCC champ ionship jacket; and won't even get a letter. He was the only San Francisco prepster ever to make the all-city team three years, but OSC coaches found his attitude Intolerable and they tried all kinds of psychology on him to no avail . . . The other Beaver hard to understand was Phil Kaylor, sophomore third string tackle from Riverside, Calif. He was out with the team all season and after the layoff came back to practice for ihe Rose Bowl. For some strange reason he quit just before the team took off for the Santa Monica training grounds because it was "too tough." Thousands of young men with more or less talent would have jumped at the opportunity. Johnny Eggers, OSC publicity man. says that the color movies of the Rose Bowl were taken by Sports TV firm of Los Angeles, which has taken all of OSC's game films this season and for all PCC schools. They're the ones who provide the highlights shown on TV's "Parade to the Rose Bowl" weekly show . . . Iowa took its own college photographic bureau to take its Rose Bowl movies. Odds, Ends from the Four Winds in million! The District 8 Al "sub-district" which includes Bend, Redmond and Princvillc does not have to play the other part of the district for a chance to enter the stale Class A l basketball tournament. The sub-district winner goes directly to the 16-team event at Eugene, which should make Bend happy, since the Lava Bears almost made it last year for the first time, won the district title but lost out in playoffs which ironically Bend insisted on before the season began. . , . Athletic Director Harold Hauk of South Salem said he still is looking for a football game Nov. 8, final Friday of the season Its tough to find an opponent because only the Eugene and south Ore gon districts have any room outside the district and they appear to be full on that date. "Have tux, will travel," Hauk declares . . . South Salem replaced Redmond Sept. 20 by going to Milwaukie . . . Jerry McCallister, former Willamette university football basketball and baseball player, will go into the Air Force the first of April, re porting to Lacklund AFB at San Antonio. Tex. Right now he is work hTg at Soars. At Lacklund are other ex-Willamette athletes who took Air ROTC at the Salem school . . . Hon Holt. Willamette senior athlete, became a husband during the Christmas holidays. His bride is a nurse (rom Portland, now serving at Salem Memorial hospital . . . This seems to be Ihe year for assistant coaches to move to head coaching Jobs. In fact, being an assistant is the best way to get a promotion these day.. Look at the Missouri assistant who moved up into Don Faurofs place; the Nebraska aide who took over Pee Elliott's place; James Myers, L'CLA line coach, got the Iowa State head job: Jimmy Owens, Texas A & M assistant, may get the Uni versity of Washington position; and there's our Tommy I rotnro of OSC, who was an aide at L'CLA two years ago . . . We Bow to the Truth The Springfield high school principal. Dale P. Parncll. writes us lhat "the cry in this end of the valley is for the old Big Six to be revived in some fashion." We heartily agree and wish that the OSAA h,Hn't invented the districting that broke up the hot Big Six rivalry. Springfield. Parnell writes, has travel problems because of the -a .... f It. Hidriel uhir-h reniiircs BOing 130 miles to play Marshficld and North Bend, and to Medford and Klamath Falls to Pick up opponents. "So here we are in the position of having schools that we can play within a radius of 70 miles and yet we are forded to go further because of district problems . . . We wish the OSAA would make a COMPLETE study ol the district problem in all divi sions, and possibly come up wilh a five year plan based on projected school enrollments, something solid that would not be easily changed. I would even go so far as to recommend a Metropolitan division in Linfield Defeats Pioneers Machamer Scores 27 in 'Upset'; C of I Wins Everybody Wants In on the Floor Show By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Linlield upended league-leading Lewis and Clark and College of Idaho thumped Whitman Friday night "upset light" in North west Conference basketball. With Bill Machamer bucketing 27 points Linfield rolled to an 81 69 victory over Le,wis and Clark at McMinnville. College of Idaho came from behind in the closing minutes to beat Whitman, 69-G5, at Walla Walla. The win lifted the Coyotes out of the conference cellar. Willamette edged Pacific Uni versity, 81-79 in overtime, in a third league game flayed at Sa lem. Linfield and Lewis and Clark were knotted, 38-38 at halftime. Linfield made its move after the intermission and pulled steadily away in the second half. Accuracy at the free throw line gave College of Idaho the win ning margin over Whitman. Each team hit 22 field goals, but the Idahoans picked up the winning points at the foul line. Don Moore dropped in 21 points for the win ners to take scoring honors. (Sl) Linfield (271 Mauhamer UH Kortord (121 Hanea 141 Rilev (C) Brown f-M 4" Mil --.j - - --- a-""-.. .if f i -w. ll,r,to. Guard Becomes Hero After Buzzer at End of Extra Period; 2nd Game Tonight at Forest Grove By A. C. JONES Capital Journal Snorts Kdllor Keith Driver packs a lot of action into a short time, a lot of namito in a small trame, and shoots his free throws with every bit his abundant talents. In fact, he has hit 100 per cent of his 14 free rows this season and the Willamette university guard was the perfect one lor racinc 10 .out nere lasi night at the tail end of the over time. The sophomore from Hubbard was the unmitigated hero of Wil lamette's 81-79 victory and yet he Players hit the deck all over the Willamette university gym last night as Pacific and Willamette battled to an overtime vic tory for the Bearcats, 81-79. At right Vic Backlund makes a lunge at the ball which Jerry Kalapus of Pacific tries to contain. Back lund getting floor burns as a result. Also on the hardwood at Irft are Jim Thompson, freshman forward (32) and Don Adnms. Pacific guard. Standing at left li Eddie Grossenbacher of Willamette. (Capital Journal Photo) I.ewli-clark (9 Ward (9) F Shelton (2) F Michelson i7) C Boutin (21 i Bndv 120) G Subs: Lewis and Clark Stemple 6. Gerlt 6. Johnson 11. Haller 6. Linfield Woods 5. Hughey 12, Hug gins 4. COI (69) Merrill 2 Perkins (13) Makina (121 D. Moore (21) G. Moore (4) Scoring suds' (65) Whitman Wolves Smack EOCE, 71-56 Miller Leads OCE Win; Portland Slate Tops Raiders, 76-70 C (fit Chnsinan G (15)Becker G 1 61 Beck COI Ackerman A; Whilman Green 3, Karison 7, Max Seachris 4. State Bowling Meet Resumes One doubles team and one class C five-man squad will compete from Salem in this weekend's round of the men's State Bowling tourney at the Cherry City bowl ing alley on Pacific highway. In all 128 doubles squads and 64 teams will post their scores in the eight-week bowloff. Three flights of teams will bowl Saturday night. Sunday's shooting starling at 8:00 a.m. will be exclusively doubles and singles and will represent no Salem bowlers. Tally of all event leaders posted by Vcn Turner, state secretary, at midweek showed a change in all events leaders in class C and D. James Dcagcn, W'oodburn, with 1629 pins for nine games, was high in C. Dick Hale, Rockaway, with lfi21 total pins, now leads class D. Salem bowlers ranked in all events include Don Cushing, 3rd, class C; Jim Brown. 4th. class C; Chet Boyce, 6lh. class A; Wcs Blewett. 6th, class B. and Vic Reno, 6th. class D. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Oregon Collegiate Confer ence basketball race 'grew tighter Friday nicht as Oregon College i12' Jhn".n 'of Education unset leading East- (tti oreaoie - - That threw Eastern Oregon into a tie with idle Oregon Tech. Each has a 3-2 record. Portland State pulled into a tie with Southern Oregon for second place by spilling the Red Raiders at Portland. 76-70. Ced Aichele, 6-3 center, ran up 26 points in leading the Portland crs to the victory. Bill Hollings- worth, leading conference scorer, had 20 for Southern Oregon. At Monmouth OCE moved into a 38-35 halftime lead and then added to the advantage through the second period. Cece Miller led OCE with 17 points. Earl Smith had the same total for Eastern Oregon. The teams will meet again Sat urday night. Boivls 'Em Over, Gets 5th Foul EOCE (56) Wrst Smith Bnxter Howard Quinn O'Conn'H Coat os G F P T 4 3 1 11 Rogers 7 3 2 17 Woolsey 4 0 3 8 Adams fi 0 1 12 Miller 4 0 2 8 Girod 0 0 10 Hov 0 0 3 0 YnunK (7i ocr G F P T 4 2 .1 10 6 0 0 12 5 3 1 13 8 5 1 17 4 2 0 10 0 0 0 0 3 3 0 9 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 Persine'r 0 0 0 0 Kcnvon Storkard 0 0 0 0 Smith Df Mast us 0 0 0 0 Totals 2S 6 12 56 Totals 28 15 8 71 Frre throws missed: EOC 7. OCE A. Officials: Al Wickert and Al Light, ner. RACING ARCADIA, Calif. Count of Honor ($3.90) won the 7-furlong feature at Santa Anita. Washington Loses To Indians, 70-63 First Husky Loss; Oregon Trounced By Vandals By THE ASSOCIATED rR"SS the lop rung of the Pacific Coast ifW'" Saturday night and Idaho Webfoots did rally and finally cut the margin to 45-40, hut there after Idaho went to ball control and worked back into a decisive margin. Bill Wilson, Idaho guard, was high scorer with 20 points. He made 14 of 17 free throw at tempts. Stanford plays Washington Mainlv though, Parncll wanted to answer our column of last week , Conference ladder Friday night 'aces Oregon, in which we mentioned that Springfield had cancelled a game at; with a 70-63 basketball triumph ,d,h0 i hon nf lark of transportation funds, then played the same that lelt California ana uli.a tne c r P T ljii,,.,u " I , AlK..n.. nnj nnl.. ..nkMlH tnime in in lanoito - Vwnv - NOHTIUYKST CONFERENCE STANDINGS W Willamette'! Don Hoy, In while, drives down the middle to try a set-up early In the second half here last night but was called for charging into Pacific's Bob Gehrts (13). It was Hoy's fifth foul and he left the game with 16 minutes left. No. 21 at left Is Don Adams. Pacific guard, and at right Is Jerry Kalapus, Pacific center. (Capital Journal Photo) Tabori in Debut At Boston Meet BOSTON, Ifl Hungary's I.as zlo Tabori, a refugee shoemaker rated as one of the world's great- (fi) nr.Kon'est distance runners, makes his firPTll! S riehut against stiff comoeti- ght at Corvallis. The same assertion appeared in the Albany and only unbeaten teams in the league, i """J-' J J 5 5 Jioo Saturday night in the 31st wvallis caDers J'nor to the meeting with the , Mr,REwn c' t 2 , 6 oumx l J s i Knights of Columbus track meet wiUon.i in 1 20 HMnis.t 2 o ?.':at the Boston Garden. Corvallis papers. Parnell explains that a year ago Lebanon had to cancel a game at Springfield because of weather conditions and signed a contract for only one game. Jan. 8. at Springfield, and a return game at Lebanon In 1958. "We couldn't play Lebanon two games because we already had 21 scheduled and only room for one more," the principal writes in straightening us out. "The student bodv of Springfield, backed by the Board of Education has a standard policy of sending our athletic teams first class and completely fulfilling all obligations." he concluded. We regret th. misrepresentation. Some day we'll learn. Third-Ranked SMU Dumped; PCC STANDINGS W L California 5 0 UCLA 4 0 Washington 4 1 OSC 2 2 USC 2 2 Stanford 2 2 WSC 1 4 Idaho 1 S Oregon 0 3 t naay reruns: aianiorn .!67 noo Waih- initon 63; Idaho 64, Oreion 46. Colemn a 2 3 1 7 Kykdll.g 4 2 5 10 Dmnflno.f 2 2 1 fi Rnqulo.f 12 0 4 Shaffer. f 2 0 3 2 Moore. f 0 2 3 2 Prestel.c 0 0 10 Morgn.c 1113 Sather 0 3 1 3 Tchrdt.c 0 0 0 0 Thomm.f 2 1 2 5McHih.l 10 3 2 0 4 0 4 vimne.g o o i u Lndell.ff 0 0 0 0 Pet. 1 000 1.000 .BOO 5ffl .Ve.iey.g .500 Totals 13 34 21 K4 Totals 17 12 26 48 Iriho W 34-M Oregon ... IS 3ft 46 Officials: Lou Baimaie. Jonn Man- The 25-year-old Tabori, who never has competed on boards in a smoke-filled arena, will et his initial test in the Larrivce two mile run after the appearance of four 19."6 Olympic gold medal win ners and a handful of other Olym pians. Althouth the indoor season is die. just starling. Tabori figures to be llr .. . . , i i J extended to the limit by f Hi uncnt Indians, Washington, picked by waihinsion m ;u"r$ Horace Ashcnfelter, little Fred many as the team to carry off i Srnar( f ;5jJBondf si 32 s Dwyer and young Jim Realty of the conference crown, had been;s.ady, 2 1 l SPfiugr.i 0 J 1 2 th trniviritv nf North Carolina. it the top Tuft f 0 0 1 oHann.r 1 3 0 m ""- U 1 v nKiar.i 1 u ' 1 nn. a j ti uimmm n n n n i the Huskies into third place. i Do'r'md.f 1022 L.onrd c 0 0 1 0 ;oLF Br ORLO ROBERTSON action but there was plenty of ac i Most Team, Idle 'Suni. , . i 1 2 i.c..c 3iiij T1JL.ANA Moxico Paul Har- The Associated Press I tivity among other major outfitsj The only other came played Prh,uf , , , jwtiwrj I 1 0 3 nfy fired a 7-under par S for 135 Nothing is certain in Texas lulane cnamca un i .S" " '""-"- , '" JJJ J and a one stroke lead over uoug - si TT ' nart nf a three-wav tie OtllPr IjPaderS Grab W inS the heap.. The 'defeat dropped gr-erf v ' - - - - - lxti, mu5k Joe Francis Beaver MVP CORVAMXS fl'P) Joe Kran cls, vetpran tailback on the Ore gon State football tram and star for the Rcavrrs In the Kom Howl gamp this yrar. last night was named the team's hi out valuable player. Announcement of the award was made at the Oregon State football banquet honoring the Pacific Coast Conference cham pions. Francis was a consistent threat In the Oregon Slate sin-glr-wlng nlfensp last season. The Honolulu junior gninrd nearly 1000 yard for the Bea vers during the season. Woodhurn Names Golf Directors WOODBURN (SpeciaD-William Merriott and Robert Hurst were elected directors (or a three year term of the Woodburn golf club stockholders at a meeting held re cently in the Woodburn library club rooms. They succeed O. .1. : Adkiason and John Sen mid. Offi cers will be elected for the com ing year at a meeting to be held in the near future. Holdover members of the board are Dean Bishoprick, Wlnton Hunt. Kenneth Hagg. Tom OeAr mond and Mrs. Lcland Plank. layed only the last 42 seconds of (lie overtime as a part of Coach John Lewis strategy. The net re- ult wa.s (o keep the Bearcats in the thick of the Northwest conference race. At Pacific Tonight Tonight the scene shifts to Forest rove, where Pacific hopes famil- arity with ils own baskets will even Ihe series. Driver hadn't missed a free throw in 10 attempts up to game I me and he made good on all four tries. His chance for the tie-breaking pair after the overtime found him taking a little more time than usual but he came through bril liantly, was mobbed by teammates after the first and clinching one, then hit the second when the ref erees cleared the floor. Oddie Cirossenbacher, freshman whiz of a guard, performed a heroic feat to get Willamette into the overtime by whooshing a 35 foot shot with 10 seconds remain ing to make it 72-72. He tied with Neil Causbie at 17 points for Wil lamette's best and Vic Backlund was next with 16 big ones. Tied In Last 2 Seconds Here is how the tense overtime developed and how the foul by Don Brennemun came, which surprised most fans because it was lost in the noise and confusion that ac companied Pacific's ticing tip-in by Bob ut'hrts with two seconds left in the five-minute bonus period: Kon Barendse fouled Grossen bacher, who hit his first and it was 73-72 for WU to open the overtime. Gehrts fouled Dick Hartley, who hit his second one, 74-72, then Backlund sank a basket but fouled out and Dick Smith his one free throw to make it 76-73 with 2:15 gone. Jerry Kalapus sank a follow-up. 76-75, but fouled Causbie and the 6-7 center made good on both with 2:10 remaining. Hon Holt stole the ball but missed his lay-in and Don Adams of Pacific used a fast break wilh l:io left to make it 78-77 for Willamette. Calls Time Out Barendse fouled Causbie with :03 left, he missed his first free throw and hit Ihe second for an important twupoint bulge. So with 42 seconds to go, Lewis called lime out for a conference with his eager Bearcats. In went Driver, joining the rapid moving guards Masa Wal nnahe and Grossenbacher, Ihe idea being to keep (he ball mov ing until Ihe clock ran out. Smith of Pacific tied Watannhe up with 15 seconds to go, got the jump on Ihe litlle fellow but Wil lamette got the ball out of bounds on a violation. At mid-court, Gehrts intercepted a pass, re layed to the left side to a team mate who missed his shot, then followed up expertly for the bas ket that deadlocked the score at 79 79 in Ihe last two seconds. The sharp eyes of referee Doc Archer delected that Brenneman had fouled Driver as everyone scrambled for the rebound at ap proximately the same time as the buzzer ended the overtime. It couldn't have happened to a nicer free throw shooter. Willamette Linfield Lewis and Clark College ot Idaho Panfir Whitman Kriciav n-sultsr Willamette SI. Pa cific 7l; l.infwld Rl. Lews and Clark Bfi; College or Idaho 6!l. Whitman 63. Pet. .6S7 .667 .cm .300 AM cits twice to stay in the game. Finding the Pacific switching man-to-man defense frustrating, the 'Cats fell behind 16-28 mid way through the first half, then made 16 in a row in the next four minutes to go ahead 32-28 and led at halftime 42-41. Bad passing and inability to get rebounds hurt Willamette and it got no better as the visiting Bad gers piled up a 66-50 lead half way through the second half. No body would have given a wooden nickel for Willamette's chances then. Grossenbacher got to hitting long shots, Jim Thompson cam in to hit a couple and Dick Hart Icy two more and with four min utes left Pacific led only 70-88. Bill Caldwell added two free throws for Pacific wilh 1:05 left then fouled Causbie, who made both charities with 50 seconds remaining to set the stage for Grosscnbacher's tieing swisher. This was made possible only be cause a Pacific pass went wide and out of bounds with 22 seconds left. Willamette jayvecs won their prelim handily from Pacific'i Badgcrlings, 78-54. Willamette (SI) Is It pi tp (19) Ptrlfle Lewis' Bearcats overcame k It nl tp tfl it pt IP Bcklnd.t 4 4 3 18 Rrndse.f 5 10 3 20 Hoy.f 5 2 3 12 tlreous.f 4 4 5 12 Cnshie.c 3 11 0 17 KalpaB.c 3 0 3 10 Urbiir.u 1 3 1 n AUHnis.B w i o .Rlmn.K 1 0 2 2 Gehrts, 8 6 2 21 Thpsn.g 3 0 3 0 Brnemn 112 3 JOIHIS.C U Z al L.1IPS W V 1 V Driver,! 0 4 0 4 Cnldwll 12 2 4 llartly.g 2 115 Smith 0 10 1 Wtnbe.g 0 0 0 0 Holt.f 0 0 0 0 Total 27 37 22 HI Total 28 23 23 79 Free throws missed: Willamette 12; Pacific 12. Halftime score: Willam ette 42: Pacific 41. Officials: Howell and Archer. Willamette JV'i 7M i.vnn m r Nelsen ( 1.11 F Weaver ( 10) C Wiilsborn (0) G Tom (Ml G Reserve! i( n r I n (34) Pacific JV's (01 Valuvnk M) Williams (14) Nethhur 2l LaTlu (9i Newman Willamette- Rainsfnrlh 2. Nelson. R. 4. Doma- chof'ky S, Weston fi. WlHiiieham 2, Frrkev 3. Pacific Berke 4. Days 8, Why 11. Officials: Miller and Sif mund. Pilots Stall For Victory POflTLAND m Portland Uni versity went into a stall with four minutes to go Friday nisht to nip a Inst -ditch rally and clinched (10-56 basketball victory over Se attle Pacific. The learns played on even terms from the opening tipoff. Seattle was ahead only once 27-26 in the first half -but was at Port land's heels throughout the game. Loren Anderson led a Seattle rally that brought the Falcons to 58-56 when Portland went into ill stall. Wally Panel added two points for the Pilots on Ire throws in the final seconds. Portland led. 20-27, at the half. JOE PALOOKA r s-"d lore defense succes-tuny inrcai io pace scums and hounding Krebs most of the gir.ia in the Southern Cenference. .l. . . t.. hu 'Bt Virginia has a 5-0 league ( ..me w,t. tw. men. Texas held Gfms ,n (h(. , .norts except the unexpected. straight victory in the soutneasi-, no register us nrsj Ktor. -.. r j,i,i,s Tot.i. amnio Ford and Al Besselink after two , gate since is, was scirnca io Tikp last nicht fo- example, ern Conference, downing uwimmui over urn u wnt. Southern Methodist, the nation's State 66-64 when Stan Stempl drop- nia. UCLA and Southern Califor third ranked basketball team, had ped in a twisting jump shot with n.a were .die because of semes dropped onlv one of its 15 games, six seconds left in an overtime pe- ter examinations, won the Southwest Conference riod. Inability of Washington to pen- holiday tournament and was 4-0 in j Tigers Lead Ivy etrate the tight Stanford defense the conference race. I'nrankedl Princeton s Ivy League paceset-1 late in the game cost the Huskies Texas was headed no place with Iters also made it 4-0 in their cir-j a chance for victory. With only an over-all mark of 8-6 and a 1-3 cuit with a last second goal. Artie five minutes left, Stanford for conference record. Klein, a substitute guard, let loose ward Bill Bond went on a scoring Krebi Held Down with a 45-foot hook shot without : spree and the Indians jumped You guessed it. Texas won - looking to give the Tigers a 61-59 from a 59 57 margin to fa-oj. rather handily too. The score was overtime victory over Dartmouth Bond was high scorer of the 77-68 The Longhorns did it by bot- The Generals of Washington and game with 2., points, while W ash-tl'n- up the Mustangs' high scoring Lee posted an 84-57 triumph over ington's giant center Bruno Bom, 6-8 Jim Krebs Using a sieciallv Geor?e Washinston to remain a had 24. and Husky forward Dnug r gied lore defense succes-lully tnrcat to pace selling oman .a.- muu ... Oregon's defeat was its third in row. Idaho moved out into a toe StfU net ! ' poia. .,. southern Conference 30-16 lead at halftRna :t trtly :te- k.'.booj m c & .n. W-larn and Mary edged alter the secono h;if aUrttd bri BuerntM f ill URM W foiVTa It) 73-. doubled Oreg .r Toi Oregon Froj.li Caplnrc Third Straight Victory EUGENE m The Oregon I Frosh won their third consecutive FOOTBALL basketball game Friday night. NEW YORK - James Myers downjng thc ,cnncn.v0s Pluml. line coach at Lf.l.A. was signed . ... as head coach by Iowa State and an AAU team of Eugene. -Warren Lahar, top man at Col- '4. Chink Rask from Portland coach Houston University. ' again 1 'd Ihe Frosh with 10 pnints. By Ham Fishet rSTK5SSIiES55K" I i goodness' t,s Y whl-dcwt &" oocrot shh scnt ths nubss away, I I r: ' ' " 1-1 11,1 V I Vt THING HAPPENS I ABOUT IT, i55 IWA. KM088V... H SAIO tOU CAN 6ET OUTAld I, . rrs VEIW STRAHSe, KNCeffr- "I V1 lYERYTIME I START OM THE DOCTOR S(S 7 Of MO . 1 W fOU'HE PUVKTIY NORMAL i CASE, MISTER J tWONH IS FINE V , SHE WAS GOWUSS.' ) N0W...Y0U WON'T NEtO A M BUT, J PALOOSA... t HOPE . fV T- f I "5H TH POC WASN'T 1 K o " defi- ( ' Help yourself fo some It ' C B ,reol Bargains white j0Y ft fT I J 1 you help us clear our J K 0 1