The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 18, 1950, Page 3

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MONDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1950, Seattle Univ. Beat Nevada's Touring Pack | SEATTLE, Dec. 18 — (B — The| point-crazy Seattle University Chieftains are also topnotch ball hawks. They proved it last night| with a 17-minute stall to defeat] the University of Nevada's touring wolf pack 47-39. Only seven points were scored by both teams in the final period a the restless crowd chanted Christ- mas carols and popular songs. Coach Al Brightman ordered the freeze to stop Neyada center Ted Johnson, whose 21 first half poin threatened to snap Seattle’s bid for its 11th straight victory. The Chief- tains, who twice this season have gone over the 100-mark, led at the intermission 42-37. FOOTBALL ODDITIES NEW YORK, Dec. 18—{#—The most amazing thing that occurred on any gridiron during the recent football season took place the frigid afternoon of Nov. 25 at Columbus, Ohio, when Michigan defeated Ohiot State, 9-3, and won a trip to the Rose Bowl. That is the considered opinion of a majority of the nation’s sports writers and radio casters who par- ticipated in the annual Associated Press poll. No other game or inci- dent ran even close second to the grotesque affair in which the pl ers wore gloves to avoid frostbite. a windriven snow blinded the spec- tators and an oil fire was kept roaring on the sideline to thaw out the ball. Michigan won without making first down and without making yard through the air. { | Running a distant, though d tinguished, second in the memorie of the experts was the occasion when the Iowa eleven, tied at 14-14 with Notre Dame, went into a hud- dle with 25 seconds remaining’ to play. The Hawkeyes still were hud- dling vigorously when the game ended. West coast observers cast a tout vote for the act of the Washington Huskies in deliberately giving Wash- | ington State a touchdown in the final 50 seconds so they could ge! possession of the ball and give All- America Don Heinrich a chance to break the record for pass comple- tions in one season. DAMS, BROWNS T0 MEET NEXT SUNDAY (By the Assoclated Press) It will be Los Angeles Rams of- fense against the Cleveland Browns defense when they clash in Cleve- land Sunday for the National Fcot- esterday’s div nai playoffs, 5 won the National Con- | nce title by whipping the Chi 0 LCears, 24-14, before 83,501 cus-‘ tomers basking +in 92-degree heat at Los Angeles. It was the other extreme at Cleveland where, in 17- cdegree frigidity, the Browns cap- tured the American conference ero with an 8-3 triu5h over Lhe New York Giants. Loth teams wore sneakers at nd to get’a better grip on the hard, frozen field. This con- test drew 23,054 shivering fans. v eet for both win- Rams had lost their two eason clashes with the had the Browns to ‘he ts. Cleveland, four-time cham- | pion of the defunct All-America | Conference, now seeks a fifth straight league title. ATTENTION LEGION AUXIL. Regular meeting Tues. Dec. 19. LEONA LINCOLN, Pres.| ASBURN LEADER IN NATL. LEAGUE FOR 3-BASE HITS NEW YORK, Dec. 18—P—Richie Ashburn, who once played in An- chorage, Alaska, but now performs for Philadelphia’s Whiz Kids, led the National League this year in the production of three-base hits. He nammered 14. Stan Musial of St. Louis won the batting title with an average of .346. It was his fourth clouting and he became the first left hander to win the championship many times. Johnny Hopp of Pittsburgh was second at .340. Del Ennis, Philadelphia, led in batting in runs with 126. Seattle’s Earl Torgeson of the Boston Braves topped the scorers with 120 runs. Ralph Kiner, Pittsburgh, was the home run king with 47 and Red Schoendienst led in doubles with 43. SCORES OF BASKETBALL Here are final scores of important basketball games played over the weekend: Seattle U 47, Nevada 39. Washington 64, California 49. Washington State 70, Buffalo 49. Phillips Oilers 56, Oregon State 46. St. Martin’s 41, Lewis & Clark 35. 50 Ida. 47, Denver Chevrolet (AAU) 44, Portland 45, Nevada 43. West. Washington 83, Carroll 44. South. Oregon 63, Oregon Tech 40. Northwest Nazarene 55, Eastern Oregon 54. Mont. State 54, Whitworth 47. South. Cal. 71, Santa Barbara 49. Montana U 64, Col. of Idaho 68, North. Idaho 56. Colo. Col. 85, Colo. A & M 82 (over: time). Santa Clara 62, Loyola (La) 60 (tw overtimes). UCLA“82, San Jose State 59. Linfield 73, Seattle Pacific 65. Dartmouth 59, Amherst 49. Williams 57, Massachusetts 39. Coast Guard 53, Wesleyan 42. Bucknell 80, Rhode Island State €8. Canisius 49, Utah 43. Villanova 79, Louisville 69. Sina 62, Lafayette 46. Columbia 73, Rutgers 53. St. Johns (Bkn) 51, Holy Cross 49. Cornell Yale 45. North Carolina State 83, Temple 6 Manhattan 47, Texas 46. Wake Forest 68, Virginia Military 60 Mississippi 72, Louisiana State 67. Tulane 74, Miss. State 52. ‘Kemucky 68, Kansas 39. West Virginia 64, South Carolina 55. Duke 97, Washington and Lee 69. Florida State 86, Florida South. 55. Alabama 60, Georgia 39. Tennessee 60, Florida 54. Navy 68, Harvard 50. 1. 'Bradley 85, Georgia Tech 55. Illinois 69, DePaul 68. Marquette 61, Wisconsin 58. Minnesota 72, Pitt 43. | Ind. State 73, Missouri Central 72 Michigan 58, Butler 37. Indiana 58, Kansas State 52. St. Louis 62, Texas Christian 52. Notre Dame 82, Northwestern 76. Hamline 55, Oklahoma City 47. ¢ Oklahoma A&M 51, SMU 45. Arizona 68, San Diego State 38. HOCKEY GAMES (By Associated Press) | That growling noise you hear |from the Pacific Coast Hockey ‘Leaguc is the Seattle Ironmen get- | ting ready to erupt from the cir- cuit’s cellar. They picked up three more points | over the weekend, tying the league- | leading New Westminster Royals 13-3 Saturday and whipping Van- | couver 5-2 last night. The latter was | the Canucks first loss in 11 starts. The surging Seattle team has lost |only one game in its last 10 starts. In other weekend encounters, Portland emerged from a fistic | flurry with a 3-3 knot against Vie- toria last night after dropping a 2-0 decision Saturday to Tacoma. HOME CAFE—DOUGLAS Closed Every Monday. (—— e e “The thinkin Calls a g fellow YELLOW* .AW@,, ks PHONE 22 OR 14 FOR A YELLOW CAB cific Lutheran 51. | THE DAILY ALASKA EM CORDINER REPLACES WILSON AS GE HEAD HUSKIES HIT WIN STREAKS (By the Associated Press) The sophomore-powered Wash- ington Huskies shoot for their fifth and sixth ctories of the pre- season basketball campaign this week, entertaining the Pittsburgh Panthers in a Tuesday-Wednesday highlight to northern division Pa- cific Coast conference activity. Washington retained its unde- feated status with a 64-49 victory jover California at Berkeley Satur- !day night, its second conquest of | the Bears in as many nights. Washington State College, which got its season record ta a 5-2 with ia 70-49 triumph over the strong Buffalo quintet Saturday, moves its road show into Wisconsin against | the Beloit College five tonight. New Jersey Oregon State dropped their sixth| Beginning 1y, the |straight Saturday to Phillips' Na-|tee plans to s five tional AAU titlists 56-46. ik in Chicago on wha | The hot-and-cold Idaho Vandals|gons these day had one of their better nights Sat- | jata ¢ e Al Capone’s gang | urday, downing the Denver Chev- o, {rolets 47-44 to bring their season mark to 5-2. | R NEW YORK, Dec. 18—(@—Ralp | J. Cordiner has been elected Pre- i sident of the General Electric Com- pany to succeed Charles E. Wilson who resigned to head the new De- fense Mobilization Board. Cordiner worked his way througl Whitman College in Walla Walla Wash,, by selling electrical” appli ances. Geenral Electric, which h now heads, does a $2,000,000,00¢ business yearly. He was born in Walla Walla Crime in Chicago To Be Ij!esliga!e ‘ (By Associated Press) Senate crime investigators arc looking toward Chicago after tv days of probing into gambling at racketeering activities in norther commi day to the | CHEE HERMANN TO ENJOY CHRISTMAS IN NEW YORK Mrs. Mildred Hermann has fe- | ceived word from her son Russell | (Chee), a student at George Wash- OF HE{NRI(H !S gton University, Washington, D.C ‘ Ithat he will spend the Chrisir S“ll UNBEAIEH.MHM\\ with his aunt, Mr Hermann and his cousin Bonnie Hermann in New York City. He i !looking forward to talks with his cousin Bonnie, now a student of the (vionn, who was his childhood play- | mate and whom he has not seen| |since they were both eight years old i | HONOLULU, Dec. 18— The University of Washington’s All- America quarterback, Don Heinrich, still had his national ing record {today. Utah's Dave Cunningham couldn’t make the grade. The Utes rolled up four touch- downs in-the final six minutes Sat- | urday night to defeat the Univer |sity of Hawaii 40-28 but Cunning- |ham, who needed 16 completions to top Heinrich’s national comple- tions record, coufd pick up only 13 in 20 trie | Miss Jane Hawkins, assistant to | | Curator of the Territorial Museum and Library, has gone to Seatlte for vacation trip. She will spend the Christmas holidays with and Mrs. Thomas Marshall. | Mrs. Marshall is the former Barbara | Hermann of Juneau. ROUNDUP OF " CAGE GAMES FOR SALF | AGE CLUF¥ | | Starting t the Teen Age| Club will 1 Christmas trees. | They may be obtained any after- n after 3 ock or on Tuesdd$ y and Saturday nights. The teen zers will be glad to deliver trees on phone orde said Zach Gordon, Club director y. “But since many persons like to select their own tree: suggest that they may pref come down to the clubhouse pick out the ones they like among | those we will have.” BEMIS { F. H. Bemis, CAA fire marshal | with headquarters at Anchorage, left today for Annette after inspec- tion of ‘fire equipment at the Ju- neau airport. He has placed a re- quisition for additional modification features for the 450-gallon fire truck ‘to make it more efficient, he said. CHRISTMAS AT THE TE (By the Associated Press) ne What happened to Kansas? { They're still asking that question | today in college basketball circles | following Kentucky’s surprising 63 | to 39 victory over the Jayhawks Sat- jurday night.” Kentucky was an | eight-point fdvorite, but Kansas, | with 6-9 Clyde Lovellette was given |a very good chance. No one ex- | pected a rout. Phog Allen, Kansas coach, gave the best answer: | “Kentucky has a great team Bil Spivey, Kentucky’s seven-foot junior, “wouldn’t let us get the ball to Loveliette and when we did he | missed,” Allen said. Kentucky invades Madison Square | Garden this Saturday to play St. |Johns of Brooklyn. Eastern cage | fans remember the 89-50 licking | Kentucky took from CCNY in the National Invitation tourney last | March. | Bradley, Oklahoma A. and M., | North Carolina State, UCLA and | Notre Dame kept pace with Ken- |tucky by winning over the weekend. | Bradley dunked Georgia Tech 85-55; | the Aggies took Southern Methodist |51-45; N. C. State swamped Temple, ‘83-61; UCLA walloped San Jose | State 82-50 and Notxe Dame bumped | Northwestern, 82-76. Oklahoma, another unbeaten | major team, invades the east this week along with UCLA and Ken- | her sister, a brother and her mother, ! tucky. Oklahoma A. and M. goes to | Mrs. Bessie Jund. | the west coast for games with Cali-| Mrs. Jund, who has visited in {fornia and Southern California. Juneau several times, has many Bradley and N.C. State are at friends here who will wish her a home, with the Peoria Braves meet- succesful recovery from serious ing UCLA, Centenary and Duke, |illness in the past several months. and State entertaining Michigan| Miss Jund plans to return to her and Villanova. ! office in Juneau about \ | | | | FAMILY REUNION FOR CHRISTMAS HOLIDAYS Miss Lois Jund, Public Health Administration Director for the Alaska Department of Health, left | Juneau Sunday on the Pan Ameri- can Clipper enroute to Westgrove, , Penn., to join a Christmas reunion of the members of her family at the home of her sister, Mrs. Marlay Smith at “The Windfall” near West- ! grove. Members' of her immediate family to join in the reunion will be DR. TED OBERMAN Optometrist- EYES EXAMINED ‘VISUAL TRAININDG TELEPHONE 266 BIMPSON BLDG. JUNEAU FLY UNITE_D’S 4-engine AIR COACH from seattle to CALIFORNIA'! * Only $27.50, plus tax, to SAN FRANCISCO—ijust 4 hrs., 35 min. ® $37.45, plus tax to LOS ANGELES—only 7 hrs. PIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA o o At least five persons, members of ing Chinese Communists huddle and atop all their possessions ti between iwo box cars ai numbed by the cold fell from the train and were killed. porallel trains reached the 38th a security meas £ LAST TOUCHES — kat sculptress, finishes a wax. head of for Centennial Exposition of California Journalism at San Di AT HOTEL JUNEAU Mr. nd Mrs. T. E. Hargraves of Seattle are stopping at the Hotel Juneau, * Fast, standard-fare DC-6 flights to Chi- cago, New York and “all the East." Fares and times from Seattle. UNITED AIR LINES Seattle: Call Elliot 3700 Vancouver: Call Marine 5353 or, see your travel agent udweiser BREWED, AGED AND BOTTLED BY (ramped Accormodaions Sinmak, HALD] WITH ALASKA AC FEDERAL SEC N JRITY MATTERS | Dr. Jack C. Haldeman, U. S. Public Health Service, who was recently appointed as Deputy Re- | gional Director of the Federal Se- curity Agency in Alaska, arrived in ¥ Juneau Friday to consult with Mrs A¥ % A8 . | Katherine Nordale, Administrative §y istant, in the Juneau office and attended to business of Grant-in- | Aid Agencies with his offices. This business included - routine matters to be taken up with the Alaska | Department of Health and the De- | partment of Public Welfare. | Haldeman returned Sunday to his Anchorage headquarters. STURMS SOUTH TO SPEND MAS IN PORTLAND Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Sturm and | their two children, Leslie and Kath- leen, left on Sunday's Pan Ameri- can Clipper for Seattle on a months’ vacation visit in the northwest. They fwill visit with Mrs. Sturm’s par- ' ents in Tacoma and plan to spend : the Christmas holidays “with Mr. 'i Sturm’s parents in Portland, Ore. NUNAMAKERS SOUTH Mr. and Mrs. Lew Nunamaker,| . well known Juneau residents, left | on the Denali for Seattle on their i way to Oregon to spend the Christ- #: mas holidays. They plan to visit et chiefly in Grants P; MRS. KNUDSON RETURNS FROM CALIFORNIA TRIP | Mrs. Grace Knudson, office staff member of the Warner Machine Shop, returned to Juneau Saturday evening on the Princess Norah after a vacation trip of several weeks in the states. She visited chiefly in Piedmont, Calif. one family, fleeing before advanc- against the cold under a blanket y could carry, nestled dangerously North Korea. Many persons When the taken off HERE ON LEAVE Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Converse arrived in Juneau on Saturday's Pan American plane to spend the holi- days with Mr. Converse's parents and relatives and to visit in Ju- |neau while he is on leave. Converse |is with the U.S. Armed Forces s iuoned at San Francisco. the refugees (M Wirephoto. were as TO KETCHIKAN Mrs. Steve Sheldon and her daughters, Lesley and Coralie, left |on the Denali for Ketchikan to spend the Christmas holidays with Mrs. Sheldon's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Duncan. Mr. Sheldon will #0 by plane from Juneau the day before Christmas to join the family gathering in Ketchikan. NEW JERSEY VISITOR D. W. Hunt of Red Bank, N.J., arrived yesterday via PNA from Anchorage and is stopping at the Baranof Hotel, WASHINGTON — A final govern- ment survey confirmed previous forecasts today that crop produc- tion this year — with the single exception of cotton—was abundant. ——m | Refrigeration Service Radio Repairs R herine Stubergh, Los Angeles a western characler, one of 36 50, Guaranteed Work Reasonable Prices ARKANSAS TRAVELERS Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Hazard cf Little Rock, Ark., are stopping u«t the Baranof Hotel. Days 987—Nites Red 858 Arctic Refrigeration Why? Because BUD means BUDWEISER...and that n the distinctive, delicious of the world's most famous beer. There's nothing like it absolutely nothing LAGER BEER PAGE THREE BULLETINS WASHINGTON — The United States has frozen all assets of Red China in this country and bar- red American ships and planes from calling at Communist Chinese ports. NEW YORK - A rush of en- ‘istees, unusual ior a pre-Christmas week, was reported by Army, Air Force and Navy recruiting offices today. NEW YORK Alfred Bergdoll, 23-year-old son of the widely pub- licized “No. 1 Slacker” of World War 1, pleaded guilty today to a two- count draft dodging charge. | | In Seatile, It's Paul R. Geriz and Co. for Homes, Lots, Farms, Business Opportunities and Insurance Write or Call Konrad Eriksson, Sales Mgr. 7111 Woodlawn VErmont 7710 P e DS Ap Beware Coughs From Common Colds That HANG ON Creomulsion relieves proraptly because hfiufifl:ttothamoflhmul to help loosen and expel germ laden B:fim and aid nature to soothe and raw, tender, inflamed leuoh“ puhlnl = membranes. Guaranteed to There’s an easier way to send season’s greetings this way STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC....ST. LOUIS, MO., U.S.A.

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