The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 20, 1950, Page 3

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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1950 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA PAGE THREE ROUNDUP, | HOCKEVGAMES | == & === | Handig: F A e 12 FRrms ' iy & e oioee|| ELLIS AIR LINES | y $25 includes round trip transpore 1a19 e FOOIB AI.I. PORTLAND, Oct, 0—in—A wia Wond - 18 6 S S8 ation from suneay; ceine lodging DAILY TRIPS JUNEAU TO KETCHIKAN four-goal second period carri he |~ 1% g meals, fishing and sightseeing trips, . ‘ b ! Portiand Eagles to & 63 vicior U QS o 101G 167 05| Phone 202 for reservations, SBé-t via Petershurg and Wrangell i ! over the Seattle Ironmen last night | ™ ;. "7 " gog nog 763—2210 | N RS With eonnections to Craig, Klawock and Hydaburg | In a Pacific Coast Hockey Leaguc { Convenient afternoon departures, at 2:30 P. M. ’ | NEW VORI, Cab 50-.08-This 1y | eficoumter. SCHWINN BIXES AT MADSEN'S GRID LINEUP ON [PCL'SSEASONIS |- st s i s o gy o s o | 2 4 FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE o12 ] college football teams in the coun- | ©2Ch racked up solo tallies In the 'y ploomquist . 129 180 116— 375 : = - —— ; (0“]‘ SA'I'“RDAY (u 'I'o 112 GAMES- try—Army and Oklahoma. If either | Sécond period uprising. M. Fenster 146 188 141— 475 ¥ ; (] of the powerhouses loses tomorrow, R. Stewart 168 132 153— 443 Who 18 — it would be as big a bombshell as J. Leighton 140 ' 127 . 101— 368 | Purdue beating Notre Dame two weeks ago. By BOB MYERS fiiot) Totals ........ 121 750 6586—2129 | GOOD LOS ANGELES, Oct. 20—#—To- morrow may prove a day of reck-| OAKLAND, Calif, Oct. 20—A— But each figures to triumph almost as it pleases. Top-rated Army, fresh Pacific Northern (et e 51" G088 ; ific | Pacific Coast League bas s | o ok ‘Wi | Wil Bay 172 guinse next yes, a| SN SMIE AN HI e Moy L O gy & g | e i T JOE AVAILABLE IN Rl : e od i fthe 200 secb inao] TEDC A tine IAVRASK the: vk t the end of the first round of R. Krsul . . 136 137 148— 421/ ? 'NEW P INENT now basking in the Associated Press | contrasted to the 200 game 1950 f; .00 g0 5 tussle with Harvard,|bowling Thursday night on the|W. Ludtke ... 134 137 142 413 | 32 Volt or N ER,M_“ 5§ ! l the nation. ; Stanford, voted No. six in last weeks AP poll by the country’s grid ' jaunt on another plane. ~ in { schedule. i . , - Bonar $oll e Lis. £op 440, togmme 13 Directors of the AAA 1 have | 0ne Of the weak sisters of the loop, | Elks Alleys, Casler’s came out on|R. Pheasant ... 150 119 108— 377 " 110 Volt System VLR 6 o ; l]C 2 eague have | o qambridge, Mass. itop with 13 won and 8 lost. Alaska K. Loken 168 167 167— 502 L 4 BT o “S““ ey March | “irpe Oklahoma Sooners, sporting!cuast‘a‘ is only one game behind C. Porter 168 133 152— 463 || 5 ose it Sept. 9. This year with 12 won and 9 lost. Totals 789 726 7502265 experts, gets its first major test of the season against UCLA here and risks not only its national prestige but also its Rose Bowl chances. Washington’s Huskies from Se- attle collide with Illinois at Cham- paign in a non-conference game that rates as a togs-up out here They gained 10th place, just ahead of Notre Dame, in the poll. California’s Golden Bears, ranked No. five, should have little trouble protecting its unblemished record They play Oregon State’s beaten team at Berkeley. Some observers out here believe Washington actually should be rated higher than either California or Stanford on the basis that the Huskies’ victims represented more of a challenge. Coach Red Sanders of UCLA, whose team lost close decisions to Washington and Illinois, leans slightly to the Illini because of its line. He concedes Heinrich might make the difference, however. Stanford’s way is rough from now on out—UCLA, Washington, snuth-l ern California, then its big int,er-! sectional with Army and finally its traditional foe, California. Southern Cal goes against Navy at Baltimore tomorrow in a game that promises more pomp than import- ance. Anothef non-conference tilcl includes Oregon and St. Mary’s at Eugene, while two other )eaguel members, Washington State and Idaho, take a holiday. Of the major independents, big-} gest war involves Loyola and Col- lege of the Pacific at Stockton to- morrow night. HUSKIES READY 10 | thrice- . MEET ILLINI SAT. CHAMPAIGN, TIl, Oct. 20—®— Midwest football fans get a good look tomororw at a University of Washington backfield ranked as | one of the country’s best. The| Huskies from Seattle play Illinois | in an intersectional game before an { expected crowd of 40,000, i Coach Howie Odell’s team in scor- ing four victories to date, posted an average of four to game. Despite the Huskies’ impressive! record, the Illini are rated slight favorites. This is mostly on the basis of a defense rated by the National the season ran until Oct. 8. Attendance, none too good, drop- ped sharply after the football sea- son opened a month earlier. Post-season Governor’s Cup play- ffs were reinstated in abbrevi- ated form. Semifinals will be on a two out of three basis and finals m three out of five games. Spring training will open March 1 Directors cut the team roster limit o0 23, saving each club about $10,000 1 year. BADMINTON (LUB TO START TOURNAMENT; DOUBLES, MEN, WOMEN The Juneau Badminton Club will tart the womens and mens mixed ioubles tournament next Monday 1ight, October 23. The following pairs have been natched to play one another in the first round of play: A. Thornborrow. N. Ahlstrom vs B. Merritt, R. Beck- ar; M. Wentworth, B. Boochever vs 3. Sneesby, S. Freeman; A. Burns, J. Vuille vs V. Dapcevich, B. Secrist; K. Kearney, E. Hall vs B. Kearney, T. Powers; S. Becker, E. Chester vs D. Wanberg, M. Johnson; D. John- son, F. Statts vs C. Ahlstrom, J. Nielsen; and G. Treffers, E. Scott drew a bye for the first round. Everyone is urged to play their match as soon as possible; so as not to let the tournament drag and ‘ose it’s interest. Remember, next Monday night at 7 o'clock. WHITE SOX SIGN CRAMER AS COACH CHICAGO, Oct. 20—(®—The Chi- cago White Sox announce the sign- ing of Roger (Doc) Cramer, former American League outfielder, as coach for 1951. Cramer coached under the new White Sox Manager, Paul Richards, at Seattle this year and at Buffalo in 1949. Cramer, 44, ‘ended his active play- ing career at Detroit in 1948. He uchdowns a |had been with the Tigers since 1942. | His major league career began in 1929. COFFEE AND LUNCHEON Sale .tomorrow, Oct. 21, 2 to 6 Collegiate Athletic Bureau as the{PM. at Memorial Presbyterian nation’s third best. Church, For Church budget bene- fit. 637-1t Both teams will go into tomor- row’s game below strength. Washington will be without the services of defensive fullback Dick Sprague and possibly tackle Jim Mangan, each a first string per- former. Mangan, nursing an injured leg, was not included in the Husky traveling squad but may still see action inasmuch as he made the Illinois injured are Capt. Bill Vohaska, a center, and Bill Tate, second string fullback. SKINNER’S GUN SHOP Now in new location at 211 Sec- cond Street. “Alaska’s Complite Gunsmith Service.” 32-5t October Day 21 — T7:17 am. to 4:37 pm. 22 — 7:19 am. to 4:35 pm. 23 — 7:22 am, to 4:32 pm. 24 — 7:24 am. to 4:30 pm. 25 — 7:26 am. to 4:27 pm. 26 — 7:30 am. to 4:2¢ pm. 27 — 7:31 am. to 4:22 p.m. to to to to 3 SCHWINN B5i AT MADSEN'S the longest winning streak in college | football—24 games—entertains Kan-y sas State of the Big Seven. Th:s,l too, should provide easy pickings. Southern Methodist, the No. 2‘ outfit, however, could run into trouble. Moanin’ Rusty Russell leads his band to Houston, Tex. for a battle with Rice that could decide he eventual winner of the South- vest Conference race. That 56-0 triumph Southern Methodist scored over Oklahoma A. wmd M. last week, apparently isn’t azing Ride in the least. Rice came ut with a 41-27 decision last year. Notre Dame, dumped to the No 11 spot in the national ranking akes on Indiana. The last major untouched goal ine was crossed yesterday when Clemson played a 14-14 tie with South Carolina at Columbia, S.C Clemson had won its first three ames without yielding a score. Most of the conferences have im- yortant frays on tap Saturday. Be- sides the SMU-Rice affair in the Southwest, there is Texas-Arkansas at Austin and Texas A. and M.- Texas Christian at College Station. In the Big Ten, Wisconsin, the surprise leader, faces }Michigan, which last week bowed to Army. Ohio State, No. 9 in the country, and Rose Bowl champion, will play Minnesota at Minneapolis. California is favored over Oregon State at Berkeley, while Stanford 3rates over UCLA at Los Angeles. FIGHY DOPE | Here are results of fights las:‘ night: At Minneapolis — Del Flanagan.] 139, St. Paul, outpointed Johnny De Fazio, 140, Bayonne, N.J., 10. At Portland, Me. — Bob Stecher, 164, Portland, knocked out Wilhel Taylor, 169, Bridgeport, Conn., 2. i For a Real Fit-Made-To Measur2 suits at Caslers. 634-tf High game was J. Wilber's High series were Wilber 561, C. Old 1 ham 503, and M. Gormley, 503. Team Standings Casler’s Alaska Coastal Pacific Northern Caro Transfer . Alaska Light Juneau Drug Pan American Sweeney’s Bar . 1 10 10 11 10 11 10 1 9 12 9 12 Following are the team and in- dividual scoring last night: Casler’s J. Estes ... 140 133 E. Arnold . 123 148 L. West .. 195 140 G. Taylor 139 120 J. Wilber .. Totals 75 Sweeney’s Bar Handicap Y 15 15 S. Sheldon ...... 179 125 E. Oswald 127 127 B. Sweeney 174 127 E. Johnson 123 132 J. Werner ... 158 148 Totals ..... 716 674 Alaska Light A. Hedges . 152 142 ‘W. Hellan ... 127 104 E. Peyton .. . 113 105 S. Taylor .. 123 144 D. Moore .. 181 136 Totals .......... 696 631 Juneau -Drug Handicap .. 38 38 W. Moore 140 118 M. Penrod ... 103 103 E. Page 150 122 C. Jones 169 118 R. Brust . 124 140 Totals .. 724 639 Caro Transfer B. Davis . 117 132 P. Hawkins ... 101 145 C. Oldham ....... 188 144 L. Tibbitts . 143 157 1. Cahail .. 141 190 Totals ......... 690 768 159— 432 118— 389 136— 471 149— 408 160— 561 722—2261 | 16— 4 134— 438 127— 381 153— 454 108— 363 126— 421 662—2112 150— 414 1572420 i 138— 387 114— 360 | 171— 503 | 158— 458 155— 486 736—2194 i | Telephone Blue 737 12th and Plumbing ® Healing 0il Burners Nighis-Red 730 | E Street Harri Machine Shop, Inc. am. am. a.m. a.m. am. a.m. am. am. am. a.m. 5 | L L R e L R R R g ey 8888885885888 85885888888888°%8 ReBUBERRLEEEB8R283888ER 28 — 7:3¢ am, 4:19 p.m. 29 — 7:37 am, 4:16 pm. 30 — 7:39 am. 4:14 pm. 2 31 — 7:41 am. 4:11 pm. November 1 — T7:44 am. 3 .m. 2 — T:46 am. o .m. 3 - am. 2 .m. 4 — T a.m. H .m. 5 — T am. ¥ .m. 6 — T am, H .m. 7 — 7:58 am. H 8 — 8: am. H .m. 9 — 8:02 am. E s 10 — 8:05 am. B .m. s0X6 T A S B S ST, either way. 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