The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 29, 1948, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

MO\JDAY NOVEMBER 29 1948 GUARD L UNIV.oF CAL . LAURIE NIEMI Tackee WASH. STATE DICK WILKINS END UNIV.oF ORE. E.WILLIAMS cwvp SANTA CLARA Tke University of California, was runnerup with three. Ends: Ellery Williams, § Rod Franz, University ¢f C: fornia. Right Hzlfbeak: Jack as follows: ; Dick Wilkins, Ui t emstad, University of Was University of C ineup is Clar: rnia; 4 Swaner, KMY, NAVY Lk o wov FIGHT 0UT s QK; r%“?%m TIE GAME. gy \i 3 PHILANELPHIA, Nov. 2 L maligned 9nd battered Navy footzalil The team strick with all its fury Saturday tc tie mighty 21 to 21, in a game toat ke .)i Pres 9 o'cl perscnnel of the 7 follows: nds: B. Haynes, P. le o'clock Behr: ), E P. McGill, R cent Truman and 102,000 ot pe: i | tators on their feet most oi t Sullivan al quarter J B. Smith, N Each team goi a touc in : thoae T Ts e : P, Hagerup, A. Jobn- H was so exciting that the Pre ““»‘f”’“‘il"'» T | ed to the very end instead of! of the 9 o'clock teams { ving before tinal gun as :s i | Five: J. Baxter, A. Winth- | out for al-' ¢ deon, - | e injury x: J. Haley, L. Blanton, ot the!© gar. s Seven: J. Merritt, A, Par- . Lavenik. Eizk A. Dalziel, M. : ., T. Retallick | Red McGill says s " wrious teams will | | i 1sors of the announced strinz of de- d 13 and ninz game: ended a had rea | Aimi’s row of all-v was stopped at nine. Navy got its first touchdown in| | tr very first quarter with Pete| | Williams contributing 59 yards 1. | one jaun! Amoll Galiffa pitched tv i B G S( came in the third when Hawkins | wen' over ucm the three. ' NEW YORK, Nov. 20.—P—Fred | Weundt of Texas Mines scored 4 FOOTBALL - - i it be later. s in the next period. A: touchdown came in the Four \ canto when the same Galiffa spun around his ‘own right end for ten yards and the score. T e Middies second touchdown points—Thanksgiving Day, WO’ up second to Ted Scown oi Sul Ress (Tex.) State in the season’s . ‘ | s‘ ORES national football scoring race. ‘ Scown, who ended his season a | =*_ week ago. was high man in the Final scores of football games played durinz the weekend are as follows Nebrask: Penn 8. T; Micnigan $.21; Oklahomza 19; Okla. country with 144 points in 10 games. “Wfindt fin'shed with 134 points in nine games. Dan Towler of Washington and | Jetferson, who also played his final igame a week ago, was third with (133 i2; Oregon St. 28. Washinzton 8. 0. Santa Clara 21. A-M 15. Clemson 7; Auburn 6. | — e 4 Detrcit 26; Tulsa 22. | Texas Christian 7; SMU 7. | ‘ Tennessee 6; Vanderbilt 28. | oc e "amfis Wm. and Mary' 9; Arkansas 0. W Tulane 46; Louisiana State O. Florida 28; Alabama 34. Washington 27; Louisville 12. Fo:dham 26; New York U 0. ryldnd 14; W. Virginia 16. Villanova 21; W. Virginia 16. Washington 0; Notre Dame 46. | Gegrzia Tech 13; Georgia 21. ‘ Scores of hockey games piaved in ‘Lhe Pacific Coast League cicr the | weekend are as follows: SUNDAY £an Diege 3; Oaklard 2. New Westminster 5; Seattle 5, tic. Tacoma-Portland, postponed. ‘I Holy Cross 20; Boston College 21. SATURDAY'S S~ORES N. Carolina 34; Virginia 12. Oakland 2; 'Los - seles 1 Mics. State 7; N sippi 34 San Francisco 7; Fresno 5. Rice 7; Baylor 7 - Tacoma 6; Seattle 3, New Westminster 3; Vancouver 2. e e 000000 000 e £ i ATTENTION TIDE TABLE ®| The regular business meeting of @ | the Juneau Woman's Club will be NOVEMBER 30 ® beld at the Gold Room of the Hizh tide, 1:30 am., 164 ft. ®| Baranof Hotel, Wednesday, De- Low tide, 7:12 am. 2.7 {t. ® cember first, at 12 o'clock noon. High tide, 13:16 p.m., 195 ft. Low tide, 19:54 p.m., -2.8 ft. ® | For reservations phone Mrs. John @@ Brillhart. Blue 459. 53 2t . Mrs. Elizabeth Peratrovich. Recording Secretary, JWC eP® 000 cOoe vee AP ALL COAST FOOTBALL TEAM IS ROD FRANZ the West's Rose Bowl selection, wen four places on the annual Associated Press All Coast foctball team announced today. y of Oregon. Quarterback: Norman Van Bereklin, University of Oregon. ¢ pect THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRERJUNEAU ALASKA ANNOUNCED FOR 1948 BRAD ECKLUND CENTER UNIV.oF OREGON " JACK JENSEN FULLBACK. UNIV. oF CAL. PANBAER JIM TURNER TACKLE UNIV. oF CAL. J. SWANER RIGHT HALF UNIV.oF CAL. DON DOLL cEFT HALF 'QUARTERBACK UNIV. oF SO. CAL. UNIV.oF ORE The University of Oregon Laurie Neimi, Washington Stat> College; Jim Turner, University of California. Guards: University of Orezon. Left Halfback: Don Doll, University of Southern Cali- Fullback: Jack Jensen, lni\'ors",y of California.. feam for Annual January GRID STARS kirst Sowl Games Are Now IN CONTESTS Being Chosen: Hol Contesis AT WEEKEND Tackles: Center: Brad Ecklund, gton. GRIMSLEY) (By WILL cessful year by trouncing Tennes- (By The Assoo ssful yea 'y ouncing S soclated Press) NEW YORK, Nov. 29.—®—W:ith ' P see, 28-6. e 8 ed exceptions, the MYTI8 0] fue Sugar Bowl rivals won their| . Told. Gellfta, Arm d one | € sugar W 5_Wo YT touch@own, tiree pacses good for cculd start printing programs ; and begin bragzinz about who roing to serve the best football ales to c: most sim- rds into the New Orleans rth Carolina defeated Vir- to wind up w.th nine and a tie. Oklahoma d past Oklahoma A. and M., 5, to finish with nine triumphs ° and a single defeat. | and 40 yards to cet up two oth- ers n 21-21 tie with Navy. Hawkins, two s nndmv block- defensive job in tie with ebate the outsianting son at on is bound to * wax hotter than usual because six of the ten top teams in last week over orta Laroiina— ran 80 anc 47 yards for touchdowns next to the last Associ:ted F Tie Oklihoma Aggies were named FEA 814 roll ave to square "* .= three of to play Willilam and Mary in the £d 40 7131 yards for tWo e g £ e whcowns in team's 34-121 se annual fixtures, slta Bov) ab Meuiphs, W.and M. i, iSuer viaitnia i S vew Orleans won over Arkansas, 7-0. X = e cused .or puffing out, In an intersectional joust, Penn. .- : f g en eered 99-yard drive chest a little farther than the State barcly edged out Washington . 2 : minute and 41 seconds of game to because it landed the No. 4 State, 7-0 L ANSWERED LAST BELL plon. , N. ¥, Nov. 2 mizht its with Texes Christian; passed for 77 in ran 22 yards touchdown | Toe papa of the Jan. 1 extrava- ganzas—the Rose at Pasadena— counters ne of the two un- blemished powers in Bowl action,, ifth ranked California, and North- western, No. 7. ank ‘Tripucka, Notre Dame—! three touchdown passes as| shut out Washington, 46-0. Ray Mathews, of Clemson—threw ard pass, then bucked line cne for touchdown late Cotton Bowl at Dallas match- , former 12ht seriod to give team 7-6 victory over | thod st University, Loxing champlon the Ayhurn, t AP poll, and Ore- dird Saturday at home pwiry Cooney, Penn Stat&‘cap-r in a rural area near here. ped with 17 yard A seven'h member of the select Dejanev, 48, won the light heavy wn to give Penn' ninth-rark>d Clemson. al- tjtle hy outpointing Paul Berlenbach “tate 7 0 verdict over Washinzton | and untied-will meet a4 New York, July 17, 1926. He giate Mrwmn in the ’'Gator Bowl at moved into the heavyweight ranks Barney Poole, Mississ'ppi—caught Jackso! . in 1927, In 1928 he retired. two touchdown passes in 34-7 victory Miami's Orange Bowl reached e over M inishes sev- | n to pick Georgla from the No. REBEKAHS ATTENTION i vears leze play at Misss- onsors haven't named an sippi and Army. (B Sk ere " expectll to- | Ahpibsval requested to Sy B0a i, P ud the cntertainment given L record of seven victorles, two de-) ..y, 044 Petlows on Tuesday, heon 11:30 am. to 1:30 pm. feats and one t'e has falled to tring o 90 ot 8:30 p.m. 53 3t Tea 2:00 pam. to 5:00 pm. it into the first twenty teams. S8 £ Sewing Booth 1i:30 am. Dana X. Bikle, athletic director of | -\ sp5 priiG RESULTS! Wed., Dec. 1. Lutheran Church 3 8t s, acknowledzed that 2 ing considered for the i bid and he left little douit ut the team’s accepmnc E ;‘ L i :.')-' ‘\ l if l; l N E s BAILY TRIPS JUITEAU TO KETCHIKAN iz Peiersburg and Wrangell The national chamj bhave Leen rem With connections to Craig, Klawock and Hydaburg. Convenient afternoon departures, at 2:30 P. M. Bowl events, so the boys can go FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 612 ahead and argue t out. Michican, the No. 1 team in Lhe nation, can't compete under a West- ern Conference ruliny forbidding re- tuin trips to Facadena, Notre Dame, | No. 2, and Army, No. 3, trad.tionally shuv the extracurricular activity. | The Wolverines finshed their campaign without tarnish, extend- ing a two-year winning streak. Notre Dame is expected to do like- wise Saturday in its finale against “outhern Calfornia. Army hag its perfect season spoil- ed in the annual service game spec- tacle at Philadelphia Saturday by a hattered Navy team that sledge- hammered its way to a 21-21 draw. Tris was one of the football sbockers of all time—a first slip- up for the West Pointers, whose precisionist platoons had stormed all’ ooposiiion, and a moral victory for the lowly midshipmen, who had lIcst 13 straight. Notre Dame and Clemscn scored 1irmphe to keep their slates clean. The spportunist Irish, converting fumgles into touchdowns, stormed cver Washington, 46-0. Clems tripped Auburn, 7-6, and now must play The Citadel. Crange Becwl-bound Ge clinched the Southeastern Cer cnce crown by humtling its state rival, Georgia Tech, 21-13. Tulane fopped Louisiana State 46-0, ond Missiseippi trimmed Mississippi State 34-7, for runnerup honors. Vander- Lilt, which grew in strength as the seafon progressed, finished a sue- Alaska Coastal Airlines enables you to arrange —through your local ticket agent—your passage 1o the States on Pan American, and then fo any spot on the globe! And for you who buy fickets in Sitka, Hoonah, Tenakse, Skagway, Haines and similar communities, ACA reserves a special block of seats so that its passengers share equal priority with those who buy fickets in Juneau! nmsnm%* Y ewing Southeas: ko Gil Johnson, Southern Methodist | in last! Sonthern Method'st 7-7 tie| in final . PAGE lHl@ sday P yp on T nIgh( December 'l. Y(OND]"ONS CITY BAND TO HAVE .. "'ci"%: e sienaa suppore 3 1 siven the band at its recent con- 1 SPE(!AL pRA(II(E cert, Dicector Shofner believes all | Landsmen will gladly attend the OF WEAIHER | practice tomorrow night for its ap- ON IUESDAY NIGHT e nlmser's —os — AlASKA prs WILCOX 76 FAIRBANKS ¢ Juneau City Band has been gad 4 i L] by Director Joseph Shoi- ‘,,-'".“md‘} ‘;;f;.\'?fréz‘:;;pfif Weather conditions and temper- !N @ 8 0 8oc i 5 PublLs Survey Of- at various Alaska pu{nis, chool auditorium. ~ The praceice ;.. rio1q evaminer. Xe had hoped > on the Pacific Const, for 24. ‘1Uld be u short one, perhaps t) return ior T.inksziving, bub our period, ending at 4:30 this ' g i 2o t:ansportation held him 1rnin nd released by the Bl > Weather Bureau, Juneau, follow The practice 5 for. ixg Bt plans to laave tomorrcw anchorage -6—Pt. Cloudy ([ rehearsing 2 shcrt program to be other routine business trip, row -38--Cloar n at an mpertant cublic event to Fairbanks -11-—-Cleur —— rp—— PRI — 12—=Cl 10-—Cloar -20- Pt. Cloudy ro- -Snow 1—Snow port 11--Enow nd M- Bnow Pt. Cloudy Snow Snow -42—Pt. Cloudy L i 23—Snow Missing tha o Snow s JOHN TORVINEN ...gives you delivery of . DASSESAWAYON oo l h g gosanypacemteworl | SUNDAY EVENING John Torvinen, who hau been a iresident of Juneau for over 50 years, passed away on Sunday eve- "hg at St. Ann's Hospital. Mr.' Torvinen, who was 78 years of ! we, had been ill for only a short { lime. He was born in Finland and i ame to Alaska in 1897 | ! and on one Airwaybilll His widow, Hilma Torvinen, ‘me to Alaska in 1396. Mr. and hs Torvinen would have celebrat- their Golden Wedding sary in February. Mr Anni- ‘Toryinen s a tailor by profession, and | swned his own tailoring shop in o 3 | Juneau for over 40 years. He re- @ Clipper Cargo schedules are fast and frequent—in Alaska, (tired in 1940. i to the States, to and from any of the six continents. With Besides his widow, Mr. Torvinen extra low rates on 100-Ibs.-or-more (and on numerous |'s survived by two sons and five o . 2 s commodities) you save money. Pan American delivers more | randchildren. His son, Roy, re- pe : ,sldes in Reno, Nevada, and has cargo to more places than any other airline. Using the four. sons, Jack, Roy Lee, Gene Clippers, you benefit by Pan American's 20 years' experi- !and Gerry. Another son, Albi, is PP 4 4 7 ence in the air-freight business. Just call us at . . . BARANOF HOTEL — PHONE 106 LN AMERICAN L@\ Worio Agwars \. | Clipper, Trade Mark,Pan Ameriian Airways, Ine, in Seattle and has one daughter, Donna Albi Torvinen is cxpected to arrive on the Pan | American plane from Seattle to- !day to be with his mother. \ Mr. Torvinen was a member of [the Pioneers of Alaska. Funeral arrangements will be an- nounced at a later date. WANT ADS BRING RESULTS! y ‘ Here today- and a long tomorrow/ ( Buying your next new car “For keeps”? Here’s a durability story you shouldn’t miss! If you're a value-minded, long-range buyer—here are some quick facts you'll want to keep in mind . . . 1. Of all the Packards built—since 1899—over 50% are still in service. needs of the new Packard Eights are the lowest in Packard's 49 ynnof precision manufacturing! That's just part of the value story behind this sleek new Packard. H 2. It's commonplace for Packards So if you're buying your next npew (many of them in tough, round-the- car “for keeps”, you'll want to hear 1 clock commercial service) to roll up this Packard story in every exciting t more than 400,000 miles apiece before detail. Come in! being retired. 3. Today's new Packards are more durable than eyer. Proof: Periodic service recotds, submitted by all Packard dealers, show that service Packard ASK THE MAN WHO OWNS ONE CAPITAL AUTO SALES] Juneau — Alaska Soidie. 1 .

Other pages from this issue: