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» Y E— e, —— G— —— T —— SCORES OF BASKETBALL Final scores of leading basketball games last night follows: Crimson Bears 35, Imperials 29. Columbia Lumber 54, Mikes Nite Owls 38. Idaho 48, Idaho State 40. Utah 59, Oregon 39. ‘Wash. State 60, Eastern Wash. 56. Seattle U 84, Willamette 70. Seattle Pacific 67, Linfield 64. Pacific Lutheran 48, Gonzaga 40. Whitman 40, Eastern Oregon 38. BOWLING At the conciusion of last night's team pulled within two games of the top by winning all three games from Royal Cafe. The Harry Race team moved into third place after taking two games from the leading Capitol Theatre team. Next week, Capitol Theatre tangles with the Baranof team. The outcome of this game should decide the winner of the first round. The Harry Race team still has a mathe- matical chance for a tie, however. An individual scoring record again tumbled in last night's rolling. Ann bowling, the Baranof Cigar Stand | Oregon Col. 60, Southern Oregon 55. Warner of the Baranof team set a Oregon Tech 59, Shasta Colleeg 43. new mark for the women’s high Portland U 77, Lewis and Clerk 54.series with a 522. The previous high ‘Wake Forest 66, Clemson 51. |score was held by Florence Holm- Texas A. and M. 40, North Texas 33. | quist with 519 rolled last week. Ann Washington (St. Louis) 65, Missouri | g1so shot the high single game of Mines 33. Kentucky 73, West Texas 43. Lawrence Tech 69, Carnegie Tech 56 Maryland 59, Virginia '57. Davis-Elkins 94, Shenandoah 57. Dickinson (ND) 66, East. Mont. 53. Oklahoma’ 47, SMU 39. Colgate 88, Toronto 43. Harvard 60, MIT 41. Texas Christian 66, Abilene Chris- the evening with 193. Another mem¥er of the sizzling Baranof team, Joe Sevasseur, took the men’s high marks for the night. Both his 524 series and 190 single game were tops. | . Team standings to date follow: Won Lost tian 49 Capitol Theatre 10 ? | i 12 Texas 51, Sam Houston State 44. 1;‘;‘;‘:;“’;35‘" ooty H ‘Western Illinois 60, Simpson 49. 5, Royal Cafe 18 nt. Mines 90, Carroll (Mont) 75. Home Grocery 19 ol State Col. 70, Rocky Moun- |y Fo 15 tain 43. 5 s Alexander Photo 21 UCLA 72, UCLA Alumni 44. | Whing Ding 2 ‘Whittier 59, Occidental 52. Santa Barbara Col. 53, Chapman 51 Pepperdine 81, New Mex. A. & M. 68 Loyola (Los Angeles) 68, Cal Tech Whing Ding 21. | 3. Porter ... 148 123 118— 389 Nevada 53, Chico State 42. P. Matheny ... 144 132 153— 429 Col. of Pacific 59, Cal Aggies 39. | p, Morgan . 114 141 143— 398 San Jose State 76, San Francisco|j, Gormley ... 113 113 113— 339 State 49. |K. Morgan ...... 179 156 148— 483 Western Mont. 52, North. Mont. 50.| Totals ... 698 665 675—2038 Southern California 86, Arizona State (Tempe) 71. Alexander Photo Colo. A&M 67, Colo. State 38. Handicap 24 24 - T Utah State 46, Colorado 43. R. Rudolph ... 119 ;:g 123— 2‘45; P. Lee = Colo. College 80, Adams State 53 f e P R J. Becker 108 109— 294 |D. Kane 148 171— 477 SKI TOW OPERATES " roici " ont oo sosom SUNDAY ON TRAIL ,..,.., 2 |Handicap ... 52 52 52— 156 |F. Wilber ... 149 134 119— 402} The Juneau Ski Club will oper- | B, West ... 122' 106 121— 349 ate the ski tow on the Douglas trail | A, Taylor 131 148 134— 413 Sunday, according to tow operator | O, Winther 133 117 124— 374 Axel Nielsen. C. Rudolph 99 117 110— 328 Although little snow has fallen on | Totals ...... 686 674 660—1920 the slopes since last Sunday a check | up showed that there is enough to __Home Grocery warrant satisfactory skiing. M. Dav}m e 113 147 141— 401 Ski club members wili be pro-|A. Dalzel 168 158 121— 447 vided transportation to Douglas at|M. Burke 137 148 160— 440 10 a.m., Sunday morning following | P. Taylor ....... 111 110 115— 336 a breakfast at 9 am., in the Dog|A. Sorensen ... 141 146 119— 406 House of the Baranof Coffee shop. | Totals .. 670 704 656—2030 Skiers wishing to make use atl the tow are reminded to take tow ~_ Capitol Theatre money, as according to Ski Club | Handicap 1 11— 33 offjcials, ‘We're cracking down this |J. Rusher ... 127 116— 341 year, no money, no tow.” | C. MacLean 97 117— 324 P T T L R ‘T Heyder .. 110 122— 353 'J. Marsh ... 104 147 154— 405 E [] > | L. Hendrickson 163 181 174— 518 S"ma'e 700 Totals ........ 607 673 694—1974 Harry Race | F. Holmquist .. 125 191 140— 456 P. Hagerup 121 128 139— 388 om om s | T. Flint 88 107— 332 M. Flint . 137 137— 411 " L. Holmquist 133 145— 426 S'otkplled Totals 677 668—2013 Royal Cafe Handicap 4 4 4— 12 NEW YORK, Dec. 2—®—Ameri- |\ Funk 134 139 129— 402 ca now has a stockpile of about 700 V. Powers 137 121 }52— 410 atomic bombs, Look Magazine es- |w, pay 104 104 312 Guliater. | A, Nielson 123 116 102— 341 The magazine sald it also believes |p pypzpatrick .. 139 132 116— 387 there are only doubtful chances of Totals 616 607—1864 | ; Success in making the hydrogen bomb. Baranof Cigar Stand The 700 A-bomb estimate is quite | A. Warner 177 152 193— 522 a bit higher than any previously |L. Nicholson ... 129 171 150— 450 published guesses—which have plac- |C. Folta . 113 113 113— 339 ed the stockpile between 200 to 400. |S. Chantry 133 141 126— 400 . The article, which appears in|J. Levasseur ... 169 165 190— 524 next Tuesday’s issue, was written Totals .. 721 742 T72—2235 by Stephen White, a former sci- ence writer for the New York Herald Tribune. White witnessed the Bikini atom bomb tests, knew many of the leading atomic scientists, and re- cently had been to Europe, where he received some information on America’s atomic production 'rate. White said the figure of 700 is not meant to be exact. But is “of the right order of magnitude’—a scientist’s educated = guess. AND BABY MAKES THREE FOR THE MITCHELL FAMILY Mr. and Mrs. Merritt Mitchell are now “three.” Sheila, 7 pounds and 12 ounces, joined the family at 4 o'clock this morning at St. Ann's hospital. Mr. Mitchell is a sanitary engi- neer with the Department of Health here and is a graduate of the Uni- versity of Alaska. Mrs. Mitchell is from Naknek. Her mother, Mrs. Elsa Lundgren, is here visiting her for two weeks. The Mitchells have been living here since August. WANT ADS BRING RESULTS | Team and individual scores last night are as follows: FIGHT DOPE Results of fights last night are as follows: At New York — Ray Famechon, 127%, France, stopped Archie De- vino, 129, Newark, N.J., 7. At Duluth, Minn, — Genn Flana- gan, 127, St. Paul, outpointed Louis Ramos, 129, Puerto Rico, 10. At West Palm Beach, Fla.—Hum- berto Sierra, 138, Cuba, outpointed Ozzie Andrews, 140, New Haven, Conn., 10. At Hollywood — Enrique Bolanos, 137, Los Angeles, stopped Manuel Madrid, 137%, Los Angeles, 6. HOCKEY GAMES Final scores of Pacific Northwest hockey games last night are: Seattle 4, Portlahd 2. Tacoma 2, Vancouver 2. REBEKAH DRILL TEAM . Practice Mondays December 4 and 11 at 8 o'clock p.m., L.O.OF. Hall. All members requested to come. §71-3t BEARS WALLOP IMPS AS COLUMBIANS GET NITE OWLS, 54 - 38i The pattern of the City League iSI beginning to assume a more definite | shape after last night's games| :wherein Juneau’s Columbians took | Mike’s Nite Owls from Douglas 54| {to 38 in the first game and Ju-| neau High's Crimson Bears wal-| | Joped the Imps 35 to 29 in the sec- | | ond. ! snapped out of their coma and may | again dominate the local loop if | they continue to exhibit the savage aggressiveness and flawless floor- work seen in yester-eve's contest. | Bear pivot-man Ninnis and for- ward Dave Graves sank shot after | saw the Imp’'s 4 point lead smoth- ered and overcome as a tight de- fensive barricade restricted them to thirteen points. Box scores follow: First Game Nite Owls Russo . Merritt Rude Vuille Sey . McCormick Floberg vill Blanchard ‘Tyvol N 1 Total personal fouls—13. Free Throws missed—11. Comb ML L LD NoOCOOWR R BT coomurmmoooR Columbians | Smithberg | Bonnett i Scott W—— Manning ... Asp . Kelly Hogins . Forrest Powers - Total personal fouls—18. tp 7] 12; 3 covovoNGw Hroowo oMM MR ESswsro Free Throws missed—8. Second Game 1 Crimson Bears fg ft tp Engstrom 0 0 [ Graves b . 00 Martin 2 0 4! Ninnis 8 i a5 Wade 0 0 0 Forrest [J 0 [J i Carlson 2 0 4 McKinnon [ 0 [ Treffers 0. -0 0 Wilson ... 0 [ 0 Total personal fouls—T7. | Free Throws missed—8. | tp | 13 2 | { Imps Rohrberg | Pasquan Weed Neilsen Ihle Moore Brown - Kearney ... Total personal fouls—9. Free Throws Missed—S5. cococcococom® | LEAGUE STANDINGS | Team et | Columbians 1.000 | Crimson Bears Nite Owls Arctics Imps Huskies 300 000 | ormmmng -1 ol The next league play will be Tues- day, December 5, in the Juneau| High School Gymnasium, Juneau | High School vs Columbians nnd} Mikes vs Arctics. Start Action For Powerful Civil Defense WASHINGTON, Dec. 2 — (& — Without waiting for Congress to grease the wheels, President Tru- man has pressed the starter on civil defense machinery geared to| go in the event of an attack on the United States. Just 24 hours after handing the lawmakers a plan to put civil de- fense under a single powerful ad- ministrator responsible only to him- self, Mr. Truman yesterday issued an executive order which: 1. Set up a new federal civil de- fense administration (FCDA), and| 2. Named former Florida Gover- nor, Millard F. Caldwell, Jr., as its $17,500 a year administrator. * The President acted while law-! makers maneuvered for control of the bill he proposed Thursday to create an FCDA and give its ad- ministrator far more power than now is available. BPW WILL HEAR O’BRIEN ON TOPIC OF CLUB LUNCHES Chief item to come before the Business and Professional Women at their meeting on the Baranof Terrace Monday noon will be a talk by John O'Brien, manager of the Baranof Hotel. who will talk to the club women on the very im- portant subject of their club lunch- eons, The meeting Monday will be a business session, according to Betty McCormick. Mrs. Kate Smith is| President of the club. SCHWINN BIKES AT MADSEN’S 3 It seems the Bears have flnnllyj B shot in a scond half rally which| THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA Joe DiMaggio, slugging star of the ) York Yand | blackout in Anchorage were pos-| | trained medical personnel di: 0). ested crowd of young Japancse “Lefty’ O'Doul (behind DiMa tour of Far Fast troop eamps and hesp ! hopefuls Franci (™ Wirephoto. REPORT EXCELLENT " .. o v cc o . PASTOR APPOINTED, Washington, D. C. En- to his home office, he at- 0“ A“(HORAGE ('V". i :‘vm. a ru.nfflrencc in Chicago of DEFENSE EXER(ISEsimnmn defense personnel. Wational Security m’“wEEK’S EXPOSURE IM sources Board, Washington, D. C,| and Col. Joseph D. Alexander, ter-, ritorial director of Civilian Defense, have returned from observing the first practice blackout held in An- chorage in the present emergency. | .CALGARY, Alta, Dec, 2 — (# — Both report that the blackout|gi o one vear-old Mike Winters of Wwas{ approximately §5 percent ef-|ciio0ry was in g hospital today af- fective. Blackout failures were| o7 o iving Privstigl e ) business houses that were closed| oo .oy R Y e o at the time of the alert Saturd: and had left lights on. It w: not the lack of cooperation on the part of the business houses, Tilley, but the correction essary and recognized. “Ihe three-day exercises covered M | Bruce 1day by a motor Stuart-Murray of C y | who noticed the man moving in the now 10 feet from the Banff High- 50 miles west of here. Dr. . Murray mistook the crawling sibly the only ones of this Hature | B e il held in states with which'T am| <8 4 | fortunately stopped to check. familiar. The area with which T| winier jery Calgary a week ago and | am famillar in civillan defense | vongay for a lozging camp and work is the western U. S}"“suid|, ... " b became lost. Tilley. The temperature, time, was below 2 most of the The exercises were held in con- junction with the Air Force base near Anchorage. There wa$ a| simulated bridge destruction with | the local civil defense engineers | getting the traffic snarl open. A | fire was also simulated with the| fire equipment moved in on it. Equipment not needed was dis- persed throughout the city to save it from possible simulated destruc- tion. The two way radio system for the civil defense had its sta- tion in the fire department, A 0. IHDUSTRIES IN 0.5, EASY MARK, (By Associated Press) pro-Communist ces, illustrates bis famous batting grip to an inter- n Tokyo's Korakuen Stadium, co Seal manager who is accompanying DiMaggio on a SUB-ZERO WEATHER| | ATOMIC BOMBING newspaper in Police and auxili police or | Hongkeng quotes a Chinese physic- block wardens were used N jst as saying the United States is the exercises. Pedestrians were prime target for atomic att: told to take cover and was stopped with car remaining under cover. A first aid station w set up and it was revealed that it needs enlarging by training of volunteers and the recruiting of auxiliary all traffic occupants, for wholesale destruction by atom bomb. ’ The scientist in question recently was arrested by U.S. military police in Japan. He was temporarily de- tained while on his way home ¢ Communist China. The Anchorage civilian defense organization obtained the Iinfor-| mation it was seeking and found there were gaps to be flled. The control center is to be changed from the fire department building and the auxiliary firemen, police- men and medical personnel are to be expanded. A more intensive training program is ‘scheduled. The report on the Fairbanks par- ticipation in the exercises showed that an excellent job was per- WINNIPEG—(®—A drowsy air en- veloped the committee room at the City Hall. The public work’s com- mittee still had a long way to sc on its 80-item agenda. A gen'le s rose from the end of takle followed by a loud cr Rising with dignity the alderman picked up his chair and remarked o e G e S L WANTED - FOUNTAIN GIRL Experience unnecessary if wilh:ng to learn. Steady employment — evening shift. Top Union Wages. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS WANTED PERCY’S FOR Knotty White Pine Red Cedar Shingles Also Lumber of all species JINLY ONE QUALITY - THE BEST Write 'Vanconver Lumber Co. (.1931) Limited Vancouver, British Columbia PAGE THREB MINISTERS T0 CONFER TODAY IN LONDON LONDON, Dec, Ministers of disc d the tion today Mini. President 2—{M—The Prime Britain and France critical world the tlee's fli Truman situa- Priv meet eve of to ter sht Although it w rea Chiefs of 8 I the crisis in Ko- 1 meeting of the Attlee and remies Rene Pleven also i defense and vrgent Frenct taked German re i re present at the meeting but offi- clals both countrie ther headed by British T Ernest Bevin and French Minister Robert Schuman core Foreign Joint French-British policy would ions with Mr. 10Wn Truman. differences between ce and Britain on the one hand and the United Statés on the other include a proposal to appease the attacking Chinese Communists by g a buffer zone on the Ko- rean-Manchurian frontier. (By Ascociated Press) National Safety Council says toll of deaths on American cet 1 highways has risen the 1ith month in a r In a reporv icsn Chicago, the Safewy Council sawd traffic fatalit- les in Octcber were 3 And that this loss of lives has raised the 10 month total for 1950° to more 000, than 28, NASH SALES and SERVICE CHRISTENSEN BROS. ‘909 12th Phone Green 279 e [ STUFZEL-WELLER DISTILLERY, INC., Loolsville, My 1] | | ! 9i06 strengthen Attlee’s hand in the dis- HE'S HAPPY! All Ray Hope wanted from Santa Claus was two good legs. He came back on them, walked into the store, and is happy to welcome all his old friends. Hope's Second Hand Store Open for Business 10 to 6 With Joe is Frank (METHODIST CHURCH ‘Word has been received from the {Rev. Gordon P. Gould, Superinten- | !dent of Methodist Churches in { Alaska, of the appointment by | Bishop Gerald Kennedy, of the Rev. Fred McGinnis as pastor of the local thodist church. i8S INSURED TO $10,000 SAVIN The Rev. Metinnis comes to Ju- neau from Quincy, Ohio, where he! has been serving as pastor of the | Methodist church. He, together with | his family, are now enroute to Ju-| neau and are expected to } here on Dcember 16 on the steamer Princess Louise. He will assume his duties as pastor immediately upon arrival, and will occupy the pulpit for the first time in the local church on Sunday, December 17. ‘ WANIT' ADS BRING RESULTS We have never paid LESS than 2%% on Savings - Alaska Federal Savings & Loan | Association OF JUNEAU i KENTUCKY STRAIGHT EOURBON WHISKEY BONDED 100 PROOF 119 Seward street Juneau, Alaska+ Distributea tnrougrout Alaska SAVINGS INSURED TO $10,000 by ODOM COMPANY W 2 Too Lo / ROEBUCK AND CO. YOU CAN STILL DO LAST MINUTE XMAS SHOPPING AT SEARS ORDER OFFICE ; 2nd and Seward Phone 233 N § Men with gift problems are wel- come! We'll help you find just the right gift. Three big catalogs to choose from.