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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 8, 1957)
Page 2 Section 2 PCC Bruins Vs. Huskies Bears Vs. Beavers WSC at Stanford, Idaho at USC Tonight By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Basketball battling in the Pa cific Coast Conference gets down to decisive cases Friday night and Saturday with the clash at Scat tie of Washington and UCLA, two of the three top teams. UCLA, with a 6-0 record, seeks Its 23rd consecutive PCC victory, ' a feat that would break the rcc ord established by a Washington 3tcam in 1943-44.' The Huskies, beaten only by -Stanford in PCC play, go into the series with a 7-1 conference mark.' The third learn of the "big three" California plays at Ore gon State. The Bears of Cal have had only one game in 20 days and conch Pete Newell wonders " how the rest will affect his sqund. His injured list Includes forward Don Mcintosh and guard Bernic Simpson. And forward Larry Friend Is recovering from a cold. In other scries, Idnhn is nt Southern California and Washing ' ton State at Stanford. " Most of the interest centers at , Seattle and Corvnllis. . Washington's Huskies have the ! one-two punch of 6-10 Burno Boin and 6-8 Doug Smart. UCLA count- i ers with one of the best balanced ' quintets the loop has seen. In scoring, the Bruins hold slight edge, 71 per game to 6!). 6 for the Huskies. But where Boin with 18 and Smart with 18.6 are the only Washington players aver aging more than 10 points per game, all five UCLA starters have 10 or better. Center Ben Rogers leads Bruin scorers with 12.8. The two top scorers of the con ference, Larry Beck of Washing ton State at 22.9 and Bill Bond of Stanford with 19.9, will meet at Palo Alto. Oregon Slate counts on Dave Gambec, tied for third in the! scoring rncc with Danny lingers ! of USC, to pace the a 1 1 a c k I The" (gjlp Story CHAPTER 29 ;Crime Worse Than The British 'announced the ar rest of Klaus Fuchs, the atomic scientist, on Feb. 3, 150. Julius Rnsenberff came to the Green- glass apartment and asked David to eo for a walk. "You remember the man who came to see you in Albuquer que?" Julius asked. "Well, Fuchs was also one of his contacts." He figured that Harry Gold would be caught next, nnd that Grcenglass had belter leave the country. After Gold's1 arrest, Julius urged David to leave as soon as possible. He gave David travel ing instructions and $5,000 in cash. But Grcenglass didn't go. Grcenglass testified that his wife used $1,000 of the money to pav household hills: $4,000 he sent to his lawyer after his ar rest. Three Indicted Julius and Ethel Rosenberg and David Grcenglnss were in dicted hy a federal grand jury on charges of conspiracy tn com mit csnionncc. Grecm'lass plead ed guilty and received a 15-year prison sentence. Tho Rosenbergs pleaded not guilty. The trial opened on March 8. 1051, in the United States court house in Foley Square, New York. The judge wns Irving Robert Kaufman, who, at 40, was t ho youngest federal in the United Slates. i,,.;,.. Judge Kaufman made it clear,"1' from the first that he was aware of the profound Implications in the case Ihe chances thai pre judices, religious or political, might color a juror's thinking either for or against Ihe defend ants. He questioned prospective jurors closely. Where he noted the slightest doubt of objectivity or any reluctance to serve, the prospect was excused by the judge himself. 'Sordid, llirtv Work' The jury found the Rosenbergs cuillv of violating the Fsnionncc statute, which provided that those found puilty "shall be pun ished bv death or bv imprison men! for not more than 'M), v e ft t ." The courtroom was j hushed r-fl (he day .Indue Kanf-1 man was In pass fentenre April 5, lflftl. M. . . Kspionayc, as viewed here Inday, ... is rather a sordid, dirty work however idealistic are the rationaliraliotu of the persons who encaued in it with but one paramount theme,1 the betrayal nf one's own coun try ... I consider vour crime . worse than murder. Plain delib erate civnlemphted murder is dwfrfed in magnitude hy com parison with the crime you have, committed. j Long Deliberation ! "What 1 am about to snv is not easy for me. I have deliber ated for hours, days and nights. I have earefullv welphed the evi dence. ... I have searched the records! have searched mv ennseience to find some reason for merry, . . . "It is not in my power, Julius and Klbel It (.-sen herd, to forgive you. Only the I.nrd can find mercy for what you have done . . . you are hcrebv sentenced to the punishment of r.cath. . . ." Before the Rosenbergs died as Uailori in Sing Sing Pnson'ii Schedules Decisive Hoop Series This Weekend against California. And Cat's Wew ell expects trouble, saying: "UCLA has its best balanced team in years, but OSC played well against the Bruins Saturday night after switching to a zone de- tense. With their height and their home co u r t, they'll be plenty tough. Newell is expected to alternate F.'v McKcnn, a 6-3 junior," and Jack Grout, a 6-5 sophomore, In the forward position usually filled by Mcintosh. Sophomore Joe Knnp, the football quarterback, will probably spell Friend. March of Dimes Colfers to Play Against Mason Early finishers in the March of Dimes benefit at the Salem Golf course were giving club pro Bunny Mason some tough scores to heat. Headed by Ed Both with a net 65, II golfers had notched scores 'of 68 or better in the annual sweepstakes tourney. The golfers arc matching their net scores gross minus handicap against the gross round Mason will fire Inter. All golfers who de feat Mason will win prizes, as 13 did last year. To date 31 golfers have signed up for the special match nnd addi tional players may register and play their rounds through Sunday of this week. Kntry fee proceeds will be turned over to the March of Dimes campaign. Golfers who posted 67s In the sweepstakes were Jerrv Peck. 73 6: Paul Hicks, 84-17; Henry Hoh weisner, 79-12: Hunt Clark, 80-13: Howard Wicklund, 82-15; and Vern McMullcn, 73-6. Scoring net 68s were Otis Berry, 73-5; Jerry Carson, 72-4: Lloyd Mason, 81-13; and John R. Wood, 72-4. SPORTS CARS RACE DAYTONA BHACH, Flo. IUP)- Somc 100 of the fastest American and European sports cars were scheduled to roar down the live- mile sand straightaway today in "flying mile" time trials. 'electric chair, their case wag to be given one of the most carc- lul and thorough reviews of any ease in American criminal his tory. It was reviewed 18 differ ent times, on various points, hy the U.S. district court. There were seven appeals to the U.S. circuit court of appeals; seven petitions for review to the U.S. Supreme Court and two applica tions to the President of the United States for executive clem ency. 'Dignity and Decorum' Before tiic jury relumed its verdict, Julius Rosenberg's at torney ,E. H. Bloeh. had seemed satisfied. Bloch told the judge and jury: "... I would like to say to the court on behalf of all defense counsel that . . . wc feci that the trial has heen conduct ed .. . with that dignity and de corum mat bents an American trial." But two years Inter, Bloch seemed tn have forgotten these words. At the Rosenbergs' fun eral, he stormed: ". . . This was an act ot cold iicniiernie mur der 1 place the murder of the Rosenbergs at the door of President Fiscnhower, Ally. Gen. Browncll and J. Fdgur Hoover . . . These sweet, tender, cultured people have heen killed . . . In snnilv. irrationality bnrbnrism ; nnci iminier secui in u- iui 1 1 m , I the feeling of those who rule: What had happened between , l!).rl nnd 11)53? I The Communist press had been silent throughout Ihe entire Ro senberg trial. There was onlv bare mention of their conviction. I'rameup Charged The FBI delected in mid-Aug ust of 1051 the first small warn nx ol what whs to romo wnrn the left-wing Mtllonai (iiimnian unofficial weekly niiuliealinn nf the lYnfirrssivp Party, said, in part. . . there nre strong nn.nl.s for .Mispeclmt: the Ros enbergs are vielims nf an out- "'!"111 Pliijfnl framnip." Five months later, the Com munist organized National ('cm mittce to Secure Justice in the Rosenberg Case opened head quarters in New York City. The committee's first press re lease, on Jan. 3. l!)52, said: "It is sivnificant that none of the jurnis was Jewish " The Communist Dailv Worker iomed the campaign with "The ed at Sing Sinn Prison at 8 OA Hosenherg case is a ghasttv po- p.m., June 9, Ift.Vl. Kthel Itosen lilical frntneup. It was aiianced berg was executed 10 minutes to provide blood victims to the later. witch hunters, to open the door That was the end of the trail, to new violence. anti-Semitism,1 (Tomorrow: The Sum I'p ) Eleventh Annual Pacific Coait Rtqionol Aberdeen Angus Show and Sale 12 Rti lull!, 30 ft. Ftmali Rangi lulti Commirciali Paul Carlian, G. foil Judqt Si Williami, Ptndlften - Aucl, Spontertd by Pacific Coait Abtfdtan Angut Atiaciafien lni! Ntw, Hatt4 Artna Feb. 16, Klamath Falls, Ore. JOE PALOOKA H-HUH? CAN-1 I'M rVIUIN'TSIVE VOU st eve A QUARTER Or A MILLION BUCKS FOR OUR sieve palooha's CONTRACT,. KNOBBY Boxer Relates Charge of Fix LOS ANGELES (Al "Go down and stay down in the fourth." Those were his instructions from Art Aragon, third-ranking welterweight, prior to ' a- bout scheduled for Dec. 18, in San An tonio, Tex., boxer Dick Goldstein tcstilied Thursday. Aragon, the golden boy of Los Angeles fight circles, is charged with fight fixing. The bout never came off. Aragon, 29, cancelled out on the day of the fight be cause of a fever. Goldstein, 26, of told a jury of six women Thursday Los Angeles, men and six that Aragon summoned him to his North Holly wood home Dec. 8. "He told me that only on one condition would I get the fight that I go down in the fourth," he testified. "I was to come out and box the first round, take a knockdown in the second and go down and slay down in the fourth." Goldstein, who formerly boxed out of Seattle under the name Dick Sizbetle, said that his end of the purse for the San Antonio fight was to be $750, and that Aragon promised to give him ad ditional money. Aragon has denied asking Gold stein to take a dive. As the trial began he told newsmen: "I wol come this chance to be publicly exonerated. Australians finished one two three in the. lOOmolcr freestyle swim at the l!rer Olympics. Murder' and court lynchings of peach ad vocates and Marxists as 'spies.' " '(enoclilal Attacks The C o m m u n i st-l'ront Civil Rights Congress chimed in: "The lynching of these two innocent American Jews, unless stopped by the American people, will serve as a signal for a wave of Hitler-like gcnocidal attacks against the Jewish people throughout the United States . ." Now the "Save the Rosen borgs" drive was in high gear. There were mass rallies, parades, and picketing at the While House. Responsible Jewish organiza tions tried to stem the tide of Communist propaganda. The Bul letin of the Anti-Defamation league of R'nai B'rith said blunt ly: "The Communists aren't in terested in the Rosenbergs as Jews. They arc not concerned with the welfare of the Jewish community. They're yelling anti Semitism for their own, partisan purpose." I'.inotlonal Intensity Judge Knufinan and two of the government's attorneys, Irving Miypoi anu uoy ai. toon, were Jews. Lucy S. Dnwidowicz, in the July, li!.r2, issue of Commentary reported: "A check of 1511 names impaneled . . . reveals that 15 names were obviously Jewish. Of iikm-, iu wvw cm um-ii hv the Court for personal reason four were challenged bv the uclense lin, nnc. Was challenged bv the ei vcrninenl. There were nrobn- ,v other Jews on this panel, hut onlv these 15 names were clear ly Jewish." The campaign achieved such emnlinn.il intensity that many honest men and women through out the free world were disturb- C(- tho line hcramt hlurrrrt tween anneals for elemenev and " protests acainst the trial itself hs ailraeted nenrly KH) mnntcur as a frame-up fighters from Oregon, Washing- The man on whose shoulders ; Ion. Idaho and Hntish Columbia, these pressures fell most fear- Klimination bouts Kriday night fully was Judge Kaufman. Hut and Saturday afternoon will pre he would not bend. cede the Saturday night cham- And neither would President pionships. Kisenbnwer. The President said: ". . . The execution two hu- pitcher Tom Acker of the Tin man beings is a grac matter, ' cinnati HcdU-gs is 6 fect-4. but even Braver is the thought!- of the millions of dead whose death mav be directlv attributa- m ble to what these spies have done Julius lloscnbert! was cxectit- LOOK HERE, WHAT f NO CONTRACT. AIN'T SIVIN' EH? DO VOU MIND up... B'Sioes- FIND OUT HOW STEVE FEELS ABOUT THIS ? CONTRACT'S HANOSHAW'tlLI Macliamer In Northwest Loop Lin field Ace Has 25.8 Average; Riley 2nd Bill "Hinges" Machamer, al though limited to 3fi points by Pa cific in his two latest games, re mains far ahead of all other .North west conference basketball scor ers. In eight starts, Machamer has poured in 206 points, an average of 25.8. He has connected on 39 of 103 field, goals attempts and on GO of 81 free throws. For the entire season, Macha mer now possesses 407 points in 16 games. Still runnersup to Machamer In conference scoring is his pint-sized teammate, Jack Riley, with 147 points in eight Linfield games, an IE. 5 average. Bourgeois Third Tom Bourgeois of Pacific has advanced to third place with 15.8 average, on 142 points in nine games. Duane Brady, LC, stands fourth, with 15.1, on 136 in nine. Dick Brown, Linfield, has the No. 1 field shooting percentage among regulars .529, on 18 field goals in 34 tries. Bourgeois has .515, on 53 for 103. At the free throw line, six play ers own perfect records lor a few attempts. Gary Moore, College of Idaho, has an .856 average, on six for seven. The real lenders, how ever, arc Don Hoy, Willamette. Trotter Foe W ' Tadtly Song, forward for t h c Honolulu Siirfridcrs, (above) will be on the team (ers, rhn will play at South Salem Tuesday night. The attraction also features half time musical and other en tertainment. Hoodoo Howl Skiing Kcporl Tolnt snow 7t Incites. Four Inches new powder snow. Temp erature nt 8 a.m. Friday 30 de grees, wllh snow flurries, Ski ing reported good. Packed snow on highway. Jun ior Chamber skt school operat ing, new classes to open Feb. 2:t.' All Mils nnd tows operating, plus IndRc and coffee shop. (nlilen C loves Event To Open al I'ortlanil PORTLAND i.fi -Portland's an- he-;,,Urt' ";" vmnrs noxms imirn nment which opens Friday nifiht : OPEN SUNDAY; IX! Ttlnl 1983 N. CAPITOL STREET From 9 lo 6 P. M. OTHER DAYS 9 TO 9 1983 N. Capitol Hollywood District Phone EM-45007 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL UH...W-WELL-NO...TALK TO IF HIM.' HE'S OUT IN ASK. ME YER W-WASTIN' YER T-TIWE .' Unpushed NORTHWEST CONFERENCE STANDINGS W L Pet. PP PA Linfield 5 3 .825 661 6.15 Pacific S 4 .556 675 657 Willamette 3 3 .500 424 421 Collrse ot Idaho 2 2 .500 245 250 Lewis and Clark 4 5 .444 575 son Whitman 1 3 .250 268 270 with .840, on 21 for 25, and Lin- field's Brown, wilh .828, on 24 for 29. Neil Causbic, Willamette, leads in rebounds, with an average of 15.3 per game, on 92 in six starts. Lorcn Michelsen, I. C, follows with a 13.9 average. Michelsen's total of 125 in nine games is high est. This weekend will mark the first of two western invasions by Whit man and College of Idaho. The Missionaries meet Linfield at McMinnville Friday and Salur day.and Willamette at Salem Mon day. College of Idaho goes to Wil lamette Friday and Saturday, to Linfield Monday. Pacific enter tains Lewis and Clark Saturday. TOTAL SCORING C TP AV Machamer. Linfield 8 206 25.8 Riley. Linfield 8 147 18.5 Bourgeois, Pacific 9 142 15.8 eraay. Lewis Sc Clarlc 9 136 15.1 Kalapus, Pacific A 134 14.9 Becker. Whitman 4 59 14 8 Barendsc. Pacific 9 128 14.2 Moore. College of Idaho 4 53 '13.3 lienrts. I'ariflc 9 115 12.8 Hoy. Willamette 6 77 12.8 Johnson. Whitman 4 49 12.3 Ml,.w.lu..n t A..,, . rlnPt. n ni n C.iUFbio. Wil'lnrnrltr 6 70 ll.l Perkins, Collcne of Idaho 4 41 lo:i i'arncr, wnitman 4 41 10!3 FIELD GOALS fe 1 9 34 Caldwell. Pacific l..n-a. College of Idaho Brown. Linfield Bourgeois. Pacific .5211 .515 .467 .482 .459 .412 .436 .439 .492 103 Maklni. College of Idaho 30 Taylor, Willamette 13 KalRpus, Pacific loft Machamer, Linfield 165 noy, Willamette 64 Moore. College of Idaho 4i Ackerman, Col, of Idaho 21 FREE THROWS fta Driver, Willamette 4 Braun. Pacific 4 Perkins. Pacific 2 Pet. 1.900 l.ooo l.nnn l.ooo l.ooo l.ooo .flr-fi .840 Caldwell. Pacltlc 2 Merrill. College of Idaho 2 Seachrls. Whitman 2 Moore. College of Idaho 7 Hoy, Willamette 25 nEHOUNDS No. Nelt Catisbie. Willamette 92 Loren Mlcheisen. L A- C 125 Ave. 15.3 139 13.7 13 3 12 3 Jerry Kalapus. Pacltlc 123 tton Perkins, cm. or Idaho 54 Max Johnson. Whitman 79 SCORKS In the Alleys CIIKRRV CITY BOWL Slate House Nn. 2 I..isui: PUr 4 Veterans' Affairs 0; UtRhway Right W ny A. Forestry Maniierment O! Prison Officers 4. HiRhwav Short Or Office EtiRineers 3. Oregon National Guard 1; LrRal Faelrs .1. Eridse F.n fttnerrs 1. Traffic Knj-inecrs No. 2 .1, ren Miiployees . HiRh team series: Prison Officers 28'i; hich team eamr: Prison Officers 10L0: hith in- dividual series: Rill niegler of PUC 22 201-2H-S05: high individual mine: Trd Honk of Budge Knginccrs !:t2. Other hich scores: LeToureiiv .W2.2U-207. Barker 570-210. Sacrc 5S7, l.aod 5B7, D.i vc Hlnalnnd SH4-201-21I1, unite oU2. Wcngcr 5111, James 21.'!. Ladies' Cltv I.cnsur rnultr The Corral t'nfe ti. Marshall's 4; Kay's 4. LnrirT M.nkft 0; Hob I.nwlo-is Ma sons 0, finod Housekeeping 4: l huck's Slenk House 4. tronnte 0: key's Drive In ;i, Karr's 1: Port d Road Lumber Co. 4. Hollywood nnt'i s 0. Hiith team sei ies: Chuck' Steak House L'TliO; high team g;ime: K.iv s vi.; high i ml series and eries- Pin His Cutrv bIQ ami 2.111 of "huck's Sleak House Other high corrv Tiula Kennedy Ml nrm.i l.avles 57 and 205. Cnsste Bain F07 540. Chiirlotte Posschl Kay Kreici 52fl Alma Penny 509. (lloria Hrennan S;t9, Jewel Carter .KH. Onriilie. stdlts. etr : Ethel Rich es picked tip 6-7-10 split. I'NIVKRSITY HOWI. Commercial No. I League results: Anderson's, Sporting Goods I. John son's Meats .1: Portland Rd. Lor. Co., 1. Opitol City Glass Co 3; PumllUe Block and Sup Co y Western Paper Conv. Co. 1: Fran Bread 1. Mvers Glove Co .1; Lee s turd Cars 3, Gideon Ston Co I; Vallev Oil Co.. .1. Ha den's Capitol Cltv Printers I. High team series: Vallev Oil Co. :'S.'fl. htsh team game: Vajtev Oil Co. 104.1: high individual series: Rnv Anderson S!Vl' htg'i indtvid'iai game Lee Morns 2.14. Other huh scores: Phil Arte 210 ,Vt2. Lee Morn 57 S Deane Cuiti 208 5M. Wavne Dome 201 Ml. Orroll Moirls 192 IW2 Orv ShutUe 221-.1M. Claude Case 212 5S9 Bud Clark 224-572. T By Ham Fisher C DON'T VOU fOXRV, V'il C, uLcoj M0M...I GOT FAITH K YER HEART, f IN STEVE.'.' J-TT?'JL' w'0BBy. .I I Switch Lead Boxer to Be On TV Bout NEW YORK Utl Imagine the confusion among batters if Don Newcombe would throw one pitch righthanded and the next left handed? That's how opponents of Isidro Martinez feel when the featherweight from Panama starts switching styles. Bobby Courchosne, a rough and ready young man from Holyoke, Mass., will try to solve Martinez' bewildering moves Friday night in a 10-round match at Madison Square' Garden. The 22-year-old switch hitter from the Canal Zone puzzled Ike Chestnut, a ranking featherweight to win a unanimous decision at Washington, Jan. 4. The fight came just in time for Martinez whose manager, Manuel Alfaro, had been sheltering him since September without a fight. He was ready to send him back home when the break came. Alfaro says Martinez e-,en mix es 'em up at the dinner (able, and writes his name lefthanded one time and rightie the next. Courchesne never could be called a ring stylist. He wades in, winging away, willing to take on to land one. It could be that Mar tinez' style won't bother him at all. Bobby will have to pair down to make the weight for the match as he has been up around 135 pounds for recent starts and Mar tinez is a 127-pounder. Tide Tnltle TIDICS FOR T A FT, OltF.fiON (Compiled by U. S. Coast A- fifouetlc Survey, Portland. Ore.) lEBHUAKY 1957 HIGH WATERS LOW WATERS Time Height Time Height 6:04 a.m. 6.7 1:28 p.m. 0.8 . :43 p.m. 7:02 a.m. 9:03 p.m. 8:03 a.m. 10:05 p.m. 9:04 a.m. 10:53 p.m. 10:02 a.m. 11:38 p.m. 10:57 a.m. 4 2 6.9 4.5 7.2 4.9 7.4 12:21 a.m. 2:34 p.m. 1:35 a.m. 3:31 p.m. 2:48 a.m. 4:21 p.m. -0.6 3:54 a.m. 2.4 5:09 p.m. -0.9 4:33 a.m. 2.1) 5:54 p.m. -1.0 5:48 a.m. 1.5 fi:3fl p.m. 10.9 6:42 a.m. 1.1 7:17 p.m. -0.7 T :.14 a.m (5) 11 9:114 a.m. 7.4 2:4Ha.m. 2.7 10:53 p.m. 5.3 4 :2i p.m. -0.6 lem court. i Phone EM 4-677 1 560 State 12 10:02 a.m. 7.6 3:54 a.m. 2 4 11:36 p.m. 5.8 5:09 p.m. -0.9 , . . . , Xill(f5 ' 13 10:57 i.m. 7.7 4:3:i a.m. 2.0 Cal Ermer is the dean of South- &Sh7 5:54 p.m. -i.o cm Assn. managers. This year ft'" IVUtm 77 3pm' io'9 nwks his sixth season as pilot of . TIKHUMii: 15 12:57 a.m. 6 it 6:42 a m. I I the Chattanooga Lookouts, No. 1 v, gl 16 ",;S!:S: 11 ' liiJSS: t, ' " Washington Sen- 1:35 p.m. 7.0 7:58 p.m. -0.2 . ators. Jjl SJ.iofccr Champion 4 door Sedan. One o8 ntu modcltT j 1 111 Stutlebakcrs world-famous economy really proves itself on steep grades. No III Hill other car puts its power to work so cfTiciciUly that's why Studebaker has won H nearly twice as many economy run "Firsts" as any other car made. Try it yourself! ' ! 11 S r',at 8 dilTcrenCe Craf'manshiP makes -drive a Studebaker at your If (I i Studebaker-Packard I ft V J CORPORATION I USC Hires End Coach Clark To Succeed Hill as Head Man , , a a in mm hack to USC by i not disclosed. Earl Bolton, univer. LOS ANGELES (A A year's Isuaded to come back to i presid(.nti sajd he (uy search for a football coach at the Hill. . ,t,iniir officials ' expects Clark to become "one of University of Southern California I That Trojan ?euc , uslanding young coach , ho. ...nt, i ho ci.iM.i nn of have confidence in uarn . Don Rex Clark, an assistant to is evidenced by "e lour-year con Jess Hill for the last six years. I tract he was given. The sawrywas Hill advances to-the post of ath letic director this summer. Clark is 33 and is assuming a head coaching job for the first time. He was a first rate guard for the Trojans, served with the 99th Divisiin in World War II, won a battlefield commission in the Battle of the Bulge, played two years of pro football with the San Francisco '49ers, was drafted by Eddie Erdelatz of the Navy to design defense patterns, then per- Trojan Boss A i5 Don Clark, above, 33, line coach at the Universi ty of Southern California for six ' years, was named head football coach at the school last night. He and Airs. Clark are parents of six children. (AP Wircphoto) Sax Sophs Nip Cascade Jayvccs Slipping by the Cascade jayvccs, M-34, the South Salem sophomores boosted their season record to six wins and three losses Thursday al the South Salem gym. Whitey Brunkel canned 17 points lo lead the victors. High for Cas cade was Tom Hankel with nine. Next game for the South sophs will be against the North sopho mores Tuesday on the South Sa lem court. , BONKS TE KIJE SAU & UlTic :$70X. Church St. n Salem. Oregon, Friday, February 8, 1957 Wulf Becomes First to Win 3 Saxon Letters Bruce H'uH became the first three-year lelterman at Souln Salem Thursday when he was presented with his third swim ming award by Coach Del Rams dell. Wull was captain of Inis year's team. Receiving their first award were Spike Bronnell, Ron Cren shaw, Jim Davenport, Dennis Glasgow, Tom Huenke, Bob Lar son, Gordon Oske. Larry Stein, manager Jeff Bodenwelser. Bud Chappelle, Dick Fisher, Jarry Hagcn and Clay Newell were awarded their tniro iciht, this winter rbk. mail ' By Mail. ' ; as usual, WW'.) f Salem Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n. ,, the nation. Most of the talent from last year s team is gone and Clark will have to develop reserves to augment what seems to be a fair ly good first team, although there are no tried and tested backs. Church League Senior A League Silverton Christian 42, Independ ence Baptist 23. First Nazarene 45, First Christian Jason Lee Methodist 89, First Bap. list ib. . Intermediate A League First Presbyterian 28, Enclewood EUB 20. South Salem Friends 24, Knight Memorial 21. Intermediate B League Fruitiand EUB 29, Middlegrovt EUB 23. Latter Day Saints 15, Court St, Christian 13. Junior B League Oregon Deaf School 2, First Christ O ian 0. (forfeit). Free Methodist 2, First EUB 0 (for feit). Keep out of the) ' cold rain and snow Save By Mail! So con venient . . . and time-saving, too, when you Save Your savings will go right on but you needn't even turn 1 i finger . . . except to press a postage stamp! You receive our above-average earn ings whether you Save By Mail or in person. P.S. Be sure lo include your name and address in your Save By Mail envelop Opp. Courthouse w'i r. alciM, Ore.