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FRIDAY. OCTOBER 12, 1945 GRIDIRON FORECAST By HAROLD CLAASSEN (Associated Press Grid Expe NEW YORK, Oct least embarrassed by having picked Georgia Tech to defeat Notre Dame (final score: Notre Dame 40, Geor- gia Tech T) a we prognosticator returns for another whirl with seasonal average of 813 or 91 correct picks in 112 chances. Michigan-Army: Army’s veteran starting backfield will average 194 pounds, Michigan's freshman line only 186. After that weighty debate, Army. Penn State-Navy: tructed backfield to be s good as the one which hamnfered Duke a week ago. Navy. Dartmouth-Notre Dame: Dart- mouth, still smarting from that 64 to 0 drubbing of a year ago, is un- fortunate in meeting Notre Dame with Capt. Meryll Frost, the East- erner’s chief back, handicapped by a broken finger. Notre Dame. Duke-Wake Forest: The Blue Devils couldn't stop Navy and the Deacons couldn’t halt Army a week ago, but Duke lcoked the better in cefeat. Duke California-UCLA: Southern Cali- fornia scored twice on each with the UCLANS punching over one of their own while the Bears register- a gafety. UCLA. Wisconsin-Ohio State: Even with All-American Bill Hackett lost to the | Buck because of injuries suf- in a traffic accident, the Qhio- ans have the answers. Ohio State. Towa-Purdue: Iowa cern crop each year, ball team once each decade. isn’t the year. Purdue. ESoutkern California-San Diego Navy: The Sailors are loaded but tcamwork and condition should pull through. Southern SEALS MOVE T0 FRONT IN COAST PLAYOFF SERIES Sheridan's—H;m er Puts Dimmer on Hal Turpin and Seattle Rainiers SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 12.—San Francisco's Seals unlimbered their long-range batting guns again last night to defeat the Seattle Rain- iers 7-4, taking a 3-2 edge in the Pacific ‘Coast Governors' Cup play- off finals. With the score knotted at four- all in the last of the ninth, right- fislder Neil Sheridan blasted a three-run homer to give the Seal: their second straight vlclory on their home grounds. The sixth game of the seven-tilt series m\l be pl.x;od tomgm "MR. GOlF" NELSON FINDS SEATTLE'S BROADMOOR "SOFT" SEATTLE, Oct. 12.—The long=~ striding gentleman from Toledo, By- rcn Nelson, played the kind of golf yesterday to which he anpl thji2 world have become ¢ accustomed; prying the lid off Broadmoor’s par 79 and losing it in the fog, as he scored a 31-31—62 in the $10,250 Seattle Open Tournament As the second round of the 72- event cpened today, Toledo's Mr. Golf was so far, in front of the rest of the touring professionals, they needed bloodhounds to learn which way he had gone. An amateur playing on his own Leme course, Harry Givan, was sec- ond at 66, and down in those under- far regions the conditions were not crowded. Ray Mangrum of Los Angeles was close at 67, Ed Furgol of Detreit and Chuck Congdon of Tacoma, Wash., had 68’s and Jimmy Hines of Chicago started the day with 69. Navy's recon- a good foot- This the Collegians California. “cuth Carglina-Alabama: Hurling y Gilmer to pitch the Crimson! to an easy triumph. Alabama ithern Methodist-Oklahoma A | M: The Mustangs haven't got encugh to stop Bob Fenimore. Okla- homa A & M. Yale-Columbia: In all their long ceries, the Lions have defeated Yale only four times. They get victory {No. 5 Saturd l;l' Columbia. 4P SPORTS ROUNDUP By HUGH FULLERTON, Jr. ‘W YORK, Oct. 12—Have you | ed how many centers are being ballyhooed this football season? .. . It could be that the guy in the middle can get attention more easily than other linemen, but so far we've heard of Navy's Dick Scott, current “lineman of the week;” Red Wheeler who drew high ¢ coach; Glen Ro: of Clemson, of says: “I don’t D Sporl Shor!s NEW YORK Oct. 12—Allie Stolz, Newark lightweight, seeks the seventh straight win of his current comeback campaign, when he battles Pedro Firpo, of Camden, N. J, in the 10-round main event at St. Nicholas Arena tonizht. A shot at big ring warfare is stake for both boxers. Stolz favored over his younger foe. MEXICO CITY Oct. Pan-American Tennis enters its semi-final round here teday. The American champion, Frankie Parker, is pitted against Alejo Russell of Argentina. Bob Falkenburg of Los Angeles, will play Pancho Segura of Ecuador. NEW YORK, Oct. 12—Promoter Mike Jacobs is offering Bruce Woodcock, the British Empire champion, a match with Light- heavyweight Champ Gus Lesnevich in December or January. e DRINK Kll\h BLACK at is 12 The Tournament se from his Ralph Jenkins believe there is a better center, offensively, in the countr as well as Alabama’s Vaughn®Mancha and Tulsa’s Felto Prewitt, who are carrying on with LABEL! reputaticns they established last TOP O’ THE °°TANK TEXTURE IS THE DIFFERENCE YOU ENJOY The light, smooth, sparkling tex- ture so many enjoy in Columbia Ale results from a distinctly ferent “‘tank-top'’ method of fer- mentation. You'll enjoy it, too! Try it once and you'll be among the fhousands who prefer it always, °k ago, this pigskin every bit| has a goody of Arkansas, | whom one observer | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRL —JUNEAU, ALASK Indiciments Specal USO i | Agains! Nazis Then ther sub at Penn State but pos- the nation’s highest-scoring so far He intercepted to touchdown Muhlenberg and recovered fumble for one against Colgate. year Just a sibly center a pass gootd against a THEY LOVE 'EM Rabid baseball fans of turned out in full force last at a victory banquet to pay ute to their beloved Tigers, the world champs. More than 1,200 fans attended the banquet at, $10 a plate, to shower gifts on all the Detroit players. The luckiest player at the banquet last night | turned out to be Rookie Ed Mier- | A&M at Oklahoma City. |kowicz who won a drawing for a, Utah at Denve new automobile, the gift of a fan,| Henry Ewald Infielder Eddie Mayo and Pitcher Hal Newhouser (East) were presented most valuable| Army vs. Michigan at New York | player awards, offered by the base- City. ball newspaper, the Sporting News.| Coast Guard Academy at Renssel- ANTI-CLIMAX DEPT Bec: he led the Detroit Tige to triumph in the world series, Manager Steve O'Neill has been appointed Honorary Police Chief of Scranton, Pa., Mayor Howard J Snowden announce: . O'Neill is a native of nearby Minooka, Pa. Here ars major football clashes scheduled throughout the nation for this weekend GAMES TONIGHT New York U. at Boston (day game) Bucknell at Tchple. Merchant Marine at Maryland. West Virginia at Syracuse. Washburn at Kansas. Southwest Methodist vs. Oklahoma Detroit night trib- College SATURDAY GAMES tte at Colgate. at Columbia. neceton at Cornell State at Navy. North Carolina at Pennsylvania. Michigan State at Pittsburgh. (Midwest) Nebraska at Indiana. Iowa at Purdue. ri at Towa State. s State at Marquette (night) Dartmouth at Notre Dame. Wisconsin at Ohio Sta (South) Eouth Carolina at Alabama. Pensacola NAS at Clemson. Duke at Wake Forest. Vanderbilt at Florida Georgia at Kentucky. Texas A&M at Louisana (night) Louisiana Tech at Mississippi. Detroit U. at Mississippi State. V.M.I at N. Carolina State (night) Chattanooga at Tennessee. William and M at V.P.I (Southwest) Arkansas at Baylor. Tulane at Rice. Oklahoma at Texas. Tulsa at Texas Tech (Rocky Mountain) Mexico at Colorado College. U. at Colorado A&M. (Far West) California at UCLA Cregon at Oregon State. St. Ma at College of Pacifie. USC at San Diego NTS. Wachington State at Washington (Service Teams) Transport Command at Training Command Jacksonville NAS at Navy. The discharged serviceman is a better football player, better stu- dent and a More mature individual !when he to college, sa Temple sity Coach Ray Morrisen “Service has fat- tened the boys up, made them |tougher, more rugged,” Morrison | 1l get better foo ball because we'll have stron | better men—but the ga ‘bv rougher.” | - ;Wrangell Narrows - Workfo Be Staried In Spring of 1946 HIAI)QUI\RI'LRS ALASKAN | DEPARTMENT, Oct. 12.—The Civil | Works division of lh United States Army Engineers begin work | in the spring of 1946 on Wrangell Narrows to the extent of $2,731,000, it is announced by the War Depart- ment . g Part of a nationwide provements and flood control meas- |ures for rivers and harbors, the | Wrangell Narrows plan is included |in a list of many possible projects { for the spring of 1946 in the entire | United States, the over-all cstimated | cost of which is I of the projects thorized by Con ‘Iu gin when the necessary funds |have been appropriated. At ihe " present time the Engineer deficiency | estimates are in the hands of the | Bureau of the Budget and will be | submitted to the Congress soon. The | rand me will not New Colorado plan of im- AAF Ft. Pierce SUNDAY GAMES Villanova at Holy Cross. First Air Force at AAF nel Dist. Comd. E. Training Command at Second Person- > been au- work will | Force at Cherry Pt. Preflight at Fourth All e SUN RISES — SETS ® o @ Octocber 13, 15245 LR 7:28 a. m. 6:00 p. m. e e 000000 00 > - WEATHER REPORT (U. 5. WEATHER BUREAU) Temperatures for 24-Hour Perlod Ending 6:30 0'Clock This Morning e o o In Juneau—Maximum, 54; minimum, 49. At Airport—Maximum, 52; minimum, 40. Air Force. Third Air Marines. t. Mary's Force. Kesler Field at Ft. Benning. | mual request of the Engineers will s ach Congress early in Januar; | The Wrangell project is the on: l‘ cne for this Territory scheduled on\ {the current Tist. All projects have | been selected on the grounds of | urgent need, readiness for starting erations and for geographical re this in order that the work | 3 may be scattered throughout the | ! | United States to as great an extent | . % as pessible. | BERLIN, Oct. 12.—Confiscation by | the Allies of the great I. G. Farben | industrial empire, one of Germany's | Reindeer Mea’ lo ‘ | most important war making sources, \ms announcad today by Lt. Gen Appear on Menus iz 2. Clay said paxt of 1. G. Farben's| [} 1300 plants would be dismantled and o' GI s in Alaska taken by the Allies as“reparations, \and the part devoted entirely to | HEADQUARTERS, ALASKAN| L’:gfi‘;’;‘e‘g" SRS e ol he | DEPARTMENT, Oct. 12. — G.I'S| Some of them, which turned out throughout the Alaskan Department | non-war products, will be left in will receive a new treat on the‘”(}ermany for manufacture of “H]_ { menus soon, when reindeer meat | jan goods, he said. makes its appearance on the srmy‘ | bill-of-fare. Announcement was made today‘ 0 0 0 0 ¢ by Lt. General Delos C. Emmons, e Commanding General of the Alaskan | e Department, of the purchase of a e quantity of fresh frozen relndeer‘o meat by the Army from the Depart- | o ment of the Interior at Nunivak e Island, Alaska. ‘o Shipments to stations throughout ' ¢ the Territory will be made from Dutch Harbor during October and | will approximate four servings per | man for each station. The meat will be substituted for any meat ttem on the Alaskan Department Master Menu No. 4, with issue being made on the basis of 75 pounds pu’ | 100 men. .- VIOLATOR FINED Peter Martin, Kake native, ar-| rested on a game violation charge,! has been fined $75 by U. S. Com- missioner Felix Gray. Three deer and a rifle, in his possession when apprehended, were confiscated. | > | © 0 000000 00 WEATHER FORECAST (Juneau and Vicinity) e o o Southeasterly winds, 25 to 30 miles per hour, slowly decf®asing to 15 miles per hour Saturday. Rain tonight and Saturday. FIRE CALL Waste afire in the filing room ac the Juneau Lumber Mills this af- ternoen, at 3:10 o'clock, called t,he L4 Juneau Vclunteer Fire Depsxtmem » down South Franklin Street. The|® blaze was extinguished without any ® damage to mill properties, ® 0 0 0 0 00 0 0 ecevovscscssscsescseco -a.o..;. BE dic He ag the International Ber It trial 2 Nuernberg diplom Go S vor | Crime det mination of millions to the w murder die pot Belgium of Piracy wh neu the cou def T wel ' C were then cha | with \I\r secret <. RACE PREJUDICE DECRIED;TRUMAN, V der day lin the | refi her The Sco C pro the Mrs. givi Da lut The sympathetic pewerless policy. Subsequently, | graphed that invitation rels controversy “Artistic clusive or Po' “One racy and {to race or essful totalitarian racial pol “One by | power was to forbid the public ap- pearance of whose satisfactory il PAGE THREE Bitdwell said I'm not sore sn't anyone’s fault xious to get home.” marriage to Jack Wichita, Kas., the after Birdwell b here, ROWELL HOME; i very "1@ HAVE "SECOND HONEYMOON" NOW - today awaited Letterman Genera Hospital so he ecap return Kansas City, Mo, and ccond heneymoon™ with his 19, who married hi wad - a prisoncry She, had been he was dead. Birdwe all of was annulled vered id Dance tvent AreDrawnlp OnSalurday night's da nple is 1 in henor 1\«! 1s disc Birdwell sa furlcuth will first honeym; We were married two years ago while I ¥ « furlough and didn’t .o RUMMAQGY 5AN FRAN: in reality be r Birdwell, from Oct Gene n release Tommory tish Rite Te USO Club rort and Headquarters Althcugh the affair pecial (ribute t two outfits, all e v tomorrow s the guest The student of Juneau and ce-hosts with the D g will bey in, of en b, 1e local Companic uncle the to mans, Together with Crimes Are Listad SERLIN ve of these led believe are Oct inst allen Nazi im ain: “too miked when of th s of th Dougl tmen riarchy listing t all hum German peopl detail and will be handed to the four-power Court in I bly next Monday will form the basis of the against 24 leading Nazis a this winter—Nazi ruler and militarists such Bormann, von Papen Keitel and Jodl crime is listed chamber extol Age and s been drawn GRAY MARINE ENGINE Juneau Welding and Machine Shop S lin, pro nate of lime ering, 1 Ribbentrop, after from in ail, [ ton 150 surrendered and armed American trcops in ato patch at Five Points during the winter battle the Ardennes. on the of Sanitary MeatCo. Two Free Deliveries Phones 49 and 13 high s in ich neutral ships were sunk and utral 1i were lost is amony its charged against the endants. hey are indicted inuividually 1 as collectively. joering, - whose loosed against Rotterdam and arged with these offenses helping father the Gest German police - GIVE THE FAMILY A TREAT WITH THE BEST OF MEATS AT PRICES YOU CAN AFTORD! Gwr Success Is Pleasing You HICKENS ncy Sewers first cities bombers Polish London, . ralsO1 67 w07 47 Pound .47 SANITARY MEAT C0. oy WIFE STATE T VASHINGTON, Oct. 12—Presi- it and Mrs. Truman joined to- in decrying race discrimination artistic field after the DAR used use of its Cons e to artist tt, wife of N Powell (D-N.Y who address ‘(' tests to both the Pres and Lady. He asl that Truman boycott a tea being en here this afternoon the ughters of the American Revo- ion a y ir 310 Rep. b; ot ] ) wr e arred LEG 0’ I.AMB %ung-!ender - VEAL ROAST Shoulder Culs - LITTLE PIGS For Delicious Breakfast We Deliver President wrote Powell vein, but said he interfere with in wa to DAR Mrs. Truman tele- her acceptance of an the tea was without the “merits” of the surrounding uses of stitution Hall. talent property the to to Pound ation is not the of any one President race group,” wrote well. the marks of a de willingness to resg talent without regard origin “We have just brought to a suc conclusion a war against countries which made crimination their state of is its reward dis lic of the first the Nazis when taken to steps they came . artists and musicians religion or origin was un- to ‘the Master Race’.” e e 00000000 00 . TIDES TOMORROW ¢ ® o o October 13, 1945 © ® o .‘ Low 0:05a.m., 24 ft. e High 6:25a.m, 120 ft. e Low 12:06 p.m., 06 ft. e High 17:57 p.m., 13.7 ft. 1 e ® 0 0. 0.0 0.0 0 0 o | More thanever...: More {lights than ever . . . more service than ever . more comfort than ever — for the people of Alaska from the Alaska Airlines. Now, with DC-3 aircraft, your flight is a pleasant one:frem the moment you sit down in the com- fortable, reclining seats of this modern airplane until the time you arrive at your destination. Rates are lower, too. TICKET OFFICE PHONE 667 FOR FULL INFORMATION ON ALL FLIGHT! AIRLINES