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MONDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1949 NOIRE DAME GETS SCARE ON SATURDAY { S 200 3 R } p o G e - o DOUBLEHEADER. CAGE GAMES ON | WEEK'S SCHEDULE There will be two doubleheader Lasketball games this week. Thugs- Seaffle Loses fo (anutks The visiting Vancouver Cunuck< nung a 5-2 defeat on Seattle last night in the only scheduled game in the Pacific Coast Hockey league. | The defeat left Seattle tied \\l(l’ll New Westminster for the northern | div n lead in the league. 1 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA FRIGID CLIME (CHANGES B-36 CONSTRUCTION Range from North Enables Ship fo Reach Eurasian Fields of Russna day and Friday, according to| Ivan Wilson banged in three goals | —_ schgdule. ; | for a hat trick for the Canucks. far- rlym;: B-36 b DA!._ALAS‘.‘ Dec. sfm_Notre Thyrsday night the Columbia, vancouver goalie Lucien Deschene, going some changes, sugg Dame's gridiron champions are onllumber cagers will take on thelreceipted for a bump in the head ! two years of cold weather the way home toasting the greatest Mocse and the other game will be|off a shot by Pete Kalipaca early to cnal hem to oparate 'from four-year record in fighting Irish history—but take it from Coach Frank Leahy, they accomplished it in the nick of time. Next year, laments that rugged individual, his team can't hope tc be half as strong as the 1949 o fit which he called “the grvntel team I ever coached.” Happy that they were able to finish four seasons without defeat while winning 36 games and tying two, the Irish still are talking about the thunderous game they had here Saturday when it required every ounce of drive and fight to turn back Southern Methodist 27-20. FErom this year's team—voted No 1.in the nation—Leahy loses nine and one-hplf stdrters. And from the remainder of his first string 10 more depart. That one-half starter comes about in this manner: Bob Lally and Fred Wallner divided time at cne guard position. Lally is through but Wallner has another year. Notre Dame is swept clean ot All-Americas. End Leon Hart, tackle Jim Martin, and fullback Emi (six-yard) Sitko, all are due tc graduate. “We will lose five games next year,” Leahy laments. ROUNDUP OF CAGE GAMES By MILO FARNETI NEW YORK, Dec. £ '—Coiiege kasketiall goes into its first full week of the season tonight anc already one national champion dropped an early contest. But another nationa started out the cage se titleholder on in its ,usual style—with a victory. The deflated five is the Univer- sity of San Francisco. Playing with virutally the same team that wor the National Invitational title last March, the Dons dropped a clcs( on to fan Jose, 43 to 38. It will take more doing to down Kentucky, National Collegiate Ath- letic Astociation champ. With four first-team men gradu- ated to the professional Indianapolis Olympians, the Wildeats still had enough left to drub Indiana Cen- tral 84 to 61. Lefty Jim Line dropped in 37 points, one short of the school re- cord held ty the great Alex Groza Then little Siena College, Lon- donville, N.Y., one of the good small school quintets knocked down a fa- vored Manhattan five, 48 to 33, in Madison Square Garden. Hank Iba’'s Oklahomans, NCAA finalists and second team in the Associated Press poll last season, cpened with a victory over Ar- kansas, 43 to 41. Loyola of Chicago, National In- vitational finalist, lost to Minne- sota, 55 to 51. North Carolina State, defending Southern . Conferénce champion, orened with a.victory over Wash- lugton and Lee, 67 to 47. Ohio State stumbled before strong DePaul, 70 to 68; Utah of the Skyline Six showed strength in drubbing Oregon, 61-46, and Southern California, 65-44; Tli- nois, defending Western Conference champ, scraped by Butler, 60-56; Vanderbilt upset New York Uni- versity, 65 to 59 and City College of New York, rated the stronzest New York City five, trounced La- fayette, 76-44, in the Garden for its second vicmry BOISE JCU WINS IN POTATO BOWL BAKERSFIELD, Calif.,, Dec. 5— (P—Boise, Ida., Junior College’s football squad was on its way home teday after drubbing Taft Junior Ccllege Dy 25 to 7 Saturday night in the second annual Potato Bowl game, It was Boise's 29th straight victory over a -three year period and its 10th straight this year Buy Christmas Seals Help Stamp Ovt TB etween the Storis and Arctic. On Friday night Caslers and the Juneau Hi and Douglas Hi will meet for the first | i Hime this season. (OLLEGE PACIFIC, BAYLOR MAY PLAY ° IN HARBOR BOWL SAN DIEGO, Calif., Dec. 5—P— College of the Pacific and Baylor may play in the Harbor Bowl! ere Dec. 31. | Durlin Flagg, bowl chairman, says | | hat the two teams, which are raving difficulties obtaining a sta-| ium, will reach a decision late to- | jay and he quoted President Wal- | Iter Knox of COP as saying: “There’s better than a fifty hance that COP and Baylor clay in, the Harbor Bowl Dec. 31.” Knox told Flagg, however, that 10 contract will be signed until 5] m,, today. JEAVER HURLING | STAFF WILL LOSE | TWO STALWARTS BALTIMORE, Dec. 5—®—Two| talwarts of the Po*(lnnd Beaver staff may be among the issing when the Pacif Coast | cball league season gets under 7 t spr General Manager Mulligan said re. i The Portiand ¢ boss an- wcunced that Tomizy Bridges had sked permission to deal for him- | €lf and admitted that talks have. been held with - the New York! Giants regarding Prince Hal Saltz- | fifty will i & ¢ 31 nan, 2 | PRISCN FOOTBALL | LOSERS T0 DONATE , T0 BLOOD BANK. WALLA WALLA, Wash., Dec. 5— (P—is there a doctor in the house? { Losers in weekend games of the state penitentiary’s inlra-murali football league were pledged to, donate one pint of blood a player | to the prison’s Red Cross blood bank. MIRROR CAFE lin the first frame. T Mikes meets| ¢ Now open 11 am. to 3 am. 63-5t! game was | repairs to | back to | eld up ten minutes for e, | Desche but he mg aves. Saturday night, Tacoma knm-kedg off Fresno, 13-2, and set a new | league ing record. The old re- cord—12—was held jointly ty Ta- mms and New Westminster. Doug m, Tacoma forward, led the coring with five tallies. New Westminster achieved its st place tie with Seattle by beat- ing the Ironmen, 4-0. | At Portland, Al Kuntz scored a late third period goal to give Van- couver a 2-2 tie with Portland. Los , Angeles’ TIke Hildebrand arae through with a second perioc came goal for Los Angeles to give the Monarchs a 4-3 victory over San Diego. H San Francisco spotted Oakland a7 -0 lead and then went on to win 2. ASKETBALL Foesulls Final scores of Pacific Northwest )usketball games over the weekend erz as follo Idaho 69, Portiard U. 38. Canisius 58, Oregon State 45. Washington State 58, Whitworth ashington 56, British Columbia 41, Utah 61, Oregon 46. Eastern Washington 60, Northern aho 50, hington State Frosh 57, Gon- caga H.S. 28. Seattle Pacific 55, Lewis & Clark Oregon College 62, Clark J.C. 42. Southern Oregon 45, Or Tech 39. Victoria YMCA 60, Western Washington 49. Pacific Lutheran 52, St. Martin’s 29, WILLIAMS WILL MEET DAWSOH IN FIGHT, CHICAGO PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 5—(P—Ike Williams, with everything to lose and very little to gain, defends his lightweight boxing chamipionship tonight in a 15-rounder with Chi- cago’'s Freddy Dawson. Wwilliams is risking his crown against a guy he already has licked twice in non-title engage- ments and for a share of the cheap- est priced title fight in récent years. frigid ba Arctic. From the ch ol the 12,300 e inte ..(mm- ental Lomber ¢ deep «down into t! mass. In t repcrted atomi rfave cver t world. TOPPING OFF An Air Force official, testifying last summer before a Congressional committee, mentioned that “af typical polar operation might in-} volve aircrait taking off Irom United States air bases, the staging or topping off of these aircraft at a forward base in northern Canada, Greenland, or even the polar ice cap.” OLviously involved in this plan- ning is the use of the aerial re- tueling system, by which medium Lombers of the B-29 and B-30 type are given extended range through a fill-up of their fuel system from “tanker” planes meeting them at rendezvous points. Thus, targets in Eurasia would within reach of either the B-36 or i B-50 types. 5 to a reporter’s quesiions cperation of B-36s in the Air Force said this about Arctic, day: te- EXTREME CONDITIONS 1. The big bomber has ‘per- formed satisfaclorily under extreme weather conditior both in the experimental climatic hangar ' at Eglin Air Base, Fla, and under cold weather conditions in Alaska, where B-36's have Leen sent for the last two winters. 2. As was anticipated with a plane so huge and complex as the B-36, “numeérous operating prob- lems occasioned by extreme low temperatures have been encoun- tered.” The solution of the prob- lems has esulted in changes in the B-36," but the Air Force de- clined to indicate what they in volved. 3. The cold weather testing prob- lem is still not completed and “tests will continue for an indefi- nite period.” The percentage of Americans who own_ life insurance increases as the income increases, with 45 per- cent of those earning under $1,000 2 year owning policies and 91 per- cent of those earning $7,500 or over owning them, The state flower of Arizona is the sahuaro cactus. The tang of fall ! | | | i l 2 l in the air...an early start with your dog and gun...the dawn and the birds. Then home— to a refreshing glass of light Olympia. These are among the good things of life. Beer, the Light Refreshment Beverage of Millions of Temperate People OLYMPIA BREWING COMPANY, OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON, U. 5. A. be | the | Fishery Board §. E. Distrid Details Given The detailed, exhaustive report | f recommendations made by the| Fisheries Board were made | tod in which each section | 1iing regulations promulgated Fish and Wildlife Service is and either recommended g changes ) reman is” asked I | curd ct oard cemy or of were br eted wecks t were changss believed ought out as the its meetiny here o, but details ot eral h d t at that time mrossitle to gis cd report was made to P e FW? and to al in nerth by the 2ries Divector C. L. ouch too lensthy to publish 1o ecommen- | Alaska: ommenda- t omitted.) . | (1) Proposal of FWS to with- draw Yakutat area and set up with | edjacent districts “in interest ol cod management”; power boat: should Le allowed, and troling opened 2) salmon trolling from no mini- silver June 25 to September 20, mum size limit. (3) Chinook trolling open March 15-October 30, with winter fishing cn inside legal as in past. ! (4 FWS quota on herring ac I cepted for 1950, | (5) In suggestions for opening jon July 31 for a shorter salmor week, to run until September 1 three and five days open, the boarc | has this to say: “In order to make this plan successful some further | 1estrictions must be made on trap fishing, especially ‘the manner of ng traps during periods closed fishing. Present regulations call removal from the water all types of fixed gear. | | zic to for | other €0 involved that 3 “\ L] LIFT 50 FEET “This it is recognjzed would not e practical for traps but the pre- cent method of lowering 25 feet st the heart walls on each side of the pot is not satisfactory from e'ther the escapement or enforce- ment angle. It is a well known foct that under present methods ot closure there is a definite holdup of salmon at each and every trap, which may vary from a few minutes to several hours, depending | on tidal conditions. Where there tare a number of traps in the mi- | gratory path of the salmon this { cumulative holdup m1y be enough ow th | feet | heart. Only by is the finest b arker to destroy the entire value of ‘the weekend closure, “It is therefore suggested that in addition to the openings in the heart walls now required by law, it hould be mandatory to lift the| ide wall of the pot at least 50 of the lead adjacent to the this or some other method can the salmon through equivalent be assured of free passage the maze of traps during the closed | periods.™ b These added regulations would | ring enforcement problems to the fore, the board said, but pointed | out that the l{w% its willingness \n ¢ rut more of its own men in the, field to help. Thirty territorial em- | 2 GUEST LECTURES classes this week will be conducted Alaska instructor who is giving the | in locat'ng them THIS WEEK FOR | CLASS IN MINING Two of the five mining extension to | ot | according University y guest speakers, ames A. Williams, Howard Fowler of the Bepartment of Mines Ik on radio-active minerals nd the use of the Geiger counter | Fowler conducted rloyees would be available, the 2 o ‘oard pointed out, 10 more than % similar course here last year. 15t season. ! The other guest program will be | “AVOID 1049 MISTAKES" Henry Roden, Territorial T ! Returning to the proposed longer | SUrer and the author of “Alaska Jmon season, the board pointed|Mining Laws He had practical ut that “every effort must be| Perience in early Gold Rush 1:de to avoid the mistakes of | Da¥s. Roden’s talk on mining law 19 They said many stream scheduled for Wednesday. ere were overpopulated with pinks Willlams invites interested per- hereas if wused, 1951 prosp ns to attend any or all the lec- ould possibly be betters A .| tures, for which there is no fee. idedly inferior” product resulted | Classes are held in the High School & some districts because of open- [ “tudy at 7 pm, Monday ng late, they said, with a repeti- hrough Friday ) on to be feared for next year it ¥ men and women now are ‘redictions hold true, nroiled in the class, their profes- “Biologically speaking,” the bLoard | “IOn3 and other interests showing Honest Injun, lady, if' e truth! how great the neral interest is haandiest “it would seem much more teady ason tated, dvantageous to have a fa eeding throughout a long in mning. Wunams lists these vnlvgm’lcs. han an oversupply Lefore or after | represented by the adult students: \ short season.” cngineer, carpenter, painter, For- sead The answer would seem to be aest Service, building inspector, NOW At eturn to a longer season, they \ erocery clerk, Civil Aeronautics Ad- aid ministration, housewife, eguipment a'l‘a “It is realized,” they continued,|operator, mechanic, putlic roads, Al mm'ic that an immediate return under | secretary, Coast Guard, Merit Sys-| - : he old regulations might be dis-|lem, logger, *Veterans' Administra- | lllgh! & POWOI’ trous, but by a gradual process | lion, teacher, chef and hotel clerk. and by proper changes in the regu-|{ = = ———— cump.ny ations a long sel should again | SCHWI BIKES AT MADSEN'S. e .possible.” AMERICAN LEGION MEMORIAL SERVICE T0 BE HELD TONIGHT The “Post Everlasting” memorigl service will ke held tonight for Martin Guthrie at the American Legion meeting. The meeting begins at 8 pm. at the Legion Dugout. The executive committee will meet immediately following the regular meeting. - MEETING TONIGHT The American Legion at 8 o'Clock IN THE LEGION DUGOUT Visiting Veterans Invited ROBERT N. DRUXMAN, Post Commander JOHN PARMENTER, Adjutant All Legionnaires are urged to be present to take part in the ccrc-l mony. TENDER ELLAMAR SAT.8 i The Ellamar, cannery tender of the Ellamar Packing Co,, cn Prince William Sound, tied up at Dock this morning and sails this afternoon for Seattle. Skipper is Leo Swift with a crew of five under him, Texas has 15,662 miles of rafl-v Wi a) more than any other U.S. state. e newest y far ol Plumbing ® Healing OilBurners - Telephone-319 Nights-Hed 730 Harri Machine Shop, Inc. New Foto-Fill Filler + New Visible ink Supply » New Pi-Glass Reservoir » Ne: Exclusive Ink Flow Governor » New Hi-Flite Leak Prevention « New Writing Mileage... plus 8 other great advances! ® You’ve never owned such a pen! 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