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“ TUESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1950 KENTUCKY 15 AT TOP, CAGE POLL NEW YORK, Dec. 19—{P—It looks as if Kentucky has a 24-carat bas- ketball team to match its new $4,- 000,000 field house. At least, the nation’s sports writ- ers and sportscasters think so. Yes- m-y they voted the unbeaten ‘Wildcats the No. 1 position in the first weekly Associated Press poll. Kentucky was given 93 of 165 first 3 BIG GAMES ARE SET FOR PLAY TONIGHT Three northern division Pacific Coast conference basketball teams test their wares against non-league foes tonight. Washington and Idaho each en- tertain an intersectional opponent, and Huskies carrying a four-game | victory streak against Pittsburgh and Idaho engaging Colorado A. and M. The night's other contest, which East-West Lining Up, Big Game SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 19—#— Football squads of the Shrine East- West charity game Dec. 30 were to | assemble here today for official check-in. Seventeen Eastern stars and 12| Western players had arrived by last‘ night, with the rest to come in by | train and plane today. They will be entertained until Thursday, when they will go into training quarters, the West at Stanford and the East at Santa Clara. HILL PRINCE IS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA SLOT MACHINE BAN COMING WASHINGTON, Dec. 19 — ® — The Sénate today approved By a i voice vote a bill to ban the inter- | state shipment of slot nmachines, except to states that pass special laws. The measure, endorsed by the Department of Justice and other law enforcement agencies as a hlow at organized gambling and crime, now goes to the House. | Foes of the measure, led by Sena- tor Malone (R-Nev), had denounced (it as an invasion of states’ rights. Senator Taft (R-Ohio) raised a | question whether the measure ‘would also ban interstate shipment of pari-mutuel betting devices, de- spite assurances of its backers that i'“ wuuld not. Malone insisted it HORSE OF YEAR PAGE THREE No Information, Cease-Fire Issue‘ (By Associated Press) ‘ United Nations diplomats are | staying close to their telephones and radios, hoping for some word from the Chinese Reds. Specifically, they hope the Peiping regime will not close the door on more Korean cease-fire negotiations. Red China representative Wu Hsiu Chuan is scheduled to leave the United States for home today. 8ut the U.N. cease-fire commission hopes Wu may be directed by his zovernment either to stay in the United States for talks or to invite the commission to Peiping. Wu so 1{ has rejecied cease-fire pro- posals, »d (ommuters Lafe; Traffic Is Tied Up (By Associated Press) \GEORGE WASH. U Of India Giving | GLEE CLUB TAKES Views, Cease-Fire TOUR OF ALASKA | WASHINGTON Dec. 19 — (B — Indian government officials in' TWenty-six members of the George | New Delhi indicated today they be- Washington University glee club lieve the United States must revise Will leave Friday for an 11-day con- its Far Eastern policy if a cease- Cert tour of military installations fire order is to be obtained in Ko- i Alaska and the Aleutian Islands. rea. They added that the Indian A et government still feels there is some JOKE ON THIEVES hope for peace through negotia- tions. CHICAGO, Dec .19—(M—Thieves broke a window in Ned Rosin’s au- Govl. Officials (By Associated Press) tomobile and stole a large,. gaily HolD "DEAD MA“S rlmnl ited Christmas box. guess whover took it dilin't ", DIES slu}l to find out what he had,” Ro- | Inside the bulky package, he VANCOUVER, B.O, Dec. 1P |Said, Were ashes. Rosin carrried William Holman, 63, looked at his| them in -in case he got voker hand last night and slumped stalled on icy roads ver the table. | He held the traditional Chisholm | Cattle Trail “dead man's hand"—| place votes for 1,451 points. Bmdley"mav turn out to be the evening’s winner of last season’s final po“"Donanrook pairs Oregon State’s placed second with 20 top b“"“‘s‘slx -game losing streak against in- and 1,302 points. |dependent Portland University and North Carolina State was third, ‘I'fi nine-game all-winning squad. BALTIMORE, Dec. 19—®—The polls, at least, made it unanimous today that Hill Prince was the best race horse racing in 1950. The 3-year-old owned by Chris- topher T. Chenery of Virginia ran away with balloting in the 15th an- nual Turf and Sports Digest maga- zine poll. It is the third such poll for the | 7ear’s best thoroughbreds. The daily racing form and the Thoroughbred Racing Associations previously had dicked Hill Prince as horse of the | year. WILLIAMS IS EASY WINNER, CRUZ BOUT PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 19—®— sightweight Champion Ike Williams f Trenton, N.J., won a unanimous iecision over Rudy Cruz of Los Angeles, last night, pounding him it will in a 10-round non-title bout it the arena. Williams weighed 144, Cruz 138, 310,000 FREE LIFE INS. FOR ARMED SERVICES IS PASSED, HOUSE TODAY WASHINGTON, Dec. 19—(P—A bill giving each member of the Armed Services a $10,000 free life ‘nsurance policy has been passed 7y the House without a dissenting vote. The measure now goes to the senate. It would make the insurance ‘etroactive to June 27 to cover those vho have died in the Korea War. BEARS ARE NOT 50 STRONG, SAYS COACH WALDOR! SAN BERNARDINO, Calif., Dec 19—M—“Well, here we go again”’ sighed Coach Pappy Waldorf as | he set about conditioning his Cali- | fornia Bears for their Rose Bowl | encounter with Michigan. Holding open house for the press today at the Orange Show Stadium training ground, Waldorf was his usual pessimistic self in delivering himself of the following: “I can't see how W< could be figured as strong this year.” CLAIM MANGOANG | (CMMIE MEMBER; TESTIMONY GIVEN SEATTLE, Dec. 19—{(®—Three witnesses identified Ernesto Man- gaoang yesterday as a former Com- munist who was a party member in Portland during 1938 and 1939. The testimony was given as the government reopened its deporta- tion hearing against the Filipino cannery union leader. Witnesses were Claudio Cendena, Pilar Sori- ano and G. Dumlao. Mangaoang, business agent for Local 7 of thé Alaska Cannery Workers Union, was arrested in Oc- tober during the nation-wide round- up of alleged Communist aliens. Chrisimas Special 10% Discoun Until ¢ $4.00 Plastic f on Ski Bools hristmas Base Wax Job at only $3.25 > Gregg and Clulllrel s v Darimouth Ski Ouflfls Some 40,000 commuters were late n getting to their jobs in New York ’ity this morning when the main ine of the New Haven railroad and 'n important commuter branch of he New York Central were blocked v a trailer truck. The truck ! prawled across all four tracks after BETHEL VISITOR } rashing down from an embank- Mrs. Phola J. Hetfield of Bethel, nent. is stopping at the Baranof Hotel. three eights and a pair of aces. He died a few hours later in a hospital. | The winning hand was worth $30.62. ‘ FLY UNITED’S 4-engine AIR COACH from Seattle to CALIFORNIA! « Only $31.00, plus tax, to SAN FRANCISCO—just 4 hrs, 35 min. « $40.95, plus tax to LOS ANGELES—only 7 hrs. * 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 Yancouver: Call Marine 5353 or, see your travel agent {neau attorney, FROM SAN FRANCISCO R. E. Robertson, prominent Ju- returned on the Baranof. He has. been in San Fran- cisco where he represented clients in a case before the Circuit Court of Appeals, Plumbing Telephone Blue 737 ADJUSTMENT and you wi Phone 477 for appointment. FOR THE YEARS AHEAD — Its always SMOOT New Automatic Ride Control Harri Machine Shop, Inc. 12th and E Street Better lleal_th Is Yours Remove nerve pressure WIth correct CHIROPRACTIC Russian Embassy Now in Bad with Organlzgd Labo: . (By Associated Press) Fire hoses are being installed in the Russian Embassy in Washing- ton and one theory is that the Rus- sians who live there are afraid of bomb attack. This, of course, could only be an attack by their own bombers. Union members are up in arms because the job of installing fire hoses went to a plumbing contracto who employ mon-union help Labor leader James Carey of the CIO says this shows the Russians professed interest in working peo- ple is strictly phoney. Refrigeration Service Radio Repairs Guaranteed Work Reasonable Prices Days 987—Nites Red 868 Arctic Refrigeration ® Healing Oil Burners Nights-Red 730 ill have HEALTH. CHRONIC and ACUTE CONDITIONS respond rapidly thru CHIROPRACTIC METHODS DR. G. M. CALDWELL s e e s o s ) ) —wrlh 43 new"Look Ahead" feofum New Key-Turn Starting _place votes, and 1,105/ Only one division team saw ac- :«::um’l‘fl‘q:tepwere the only teams | | tion last night, Washington State time in three road tilts by an 84-69 In order, the rest of the top 10 margin at the hands of tiny Beloit CCNY, Long Island, Missouri, UCLA ! and Toledo. took over 12th place with four first place votes. Washington State, IAlKING ABOU]’ versity and Idaho also recelved‘ voes - MIAMI CONTES! brought his Kentucky squad a long’ MIAMI, Fla., Dec. 19—(P—Coach way since that lopsided 89-50 10sS|Herman Hickman of Yale, who i Tournament last March. The Wild- | shrine’s North-South All-Star foot- cats. have chalked up five straight pall game in the Orange Bow! romp over Kansas last Saturday. why three of his Army players are ‘nissing. {with the South team but Army | backs Gil Stephenson, Jim Cain anc | Jack Martin have not arrived. “How come those Army® players man, when the Navy boys are al- ready here,” someone asked. NEW YORK, Dec. 19—®—The plied. “The Navy hasn't been tc major league meetings ended last school since it licked the Army 2 week, but there was enough baseball | news yesterday to start another was the Tommy Henrich, one of the great fielders. An injured knee forced the B ASKETB All 34-year-old veteran to hang up one of the game's most respected gloves. | Tommy will act as coach With the| pee o1 the final scores of im- nother brilliant career—that of last night: n:n; Marion’s — may have been |Beloit 84, Washington State 69. extended. The new St. Louis Card olo. A and M 62, East. Wash. 61 inals skipper had an operation yes |'Whitworth 84, College of Idaho 47 said it was a success, and that | Col. of Pacific 61, Willamette 45. Marion should be in condition to|St. Martin's 50, Pacific U. 41. play shortstop next spring. | Stanford 62, Colorado 60. So. with the knee mended, Marion’s worries would be | Mont. State 63, Pacific Lutheran 62 eased more if his big batting Bertha, San Francisco 65, Baylor 53. 'Long Island 90, Cortland (NY) 51. Ed Stanky of the New York Giants |Duquesne 67, South Car. 64 (over- 1951 contract. The New York Daily iNorth Carolina State 65, Michigan News said the scrappy second base- | ' 62 (overtime). 430,000, an increase of $10,000 over | Louisville 79, Georgia Tech 57. last year. | Clemson 70, Georgia 69. of Stanky's teammates — pitchers Jim Hearn and Sal Maglie—took moundsmen. Hearn hung up a smart 449 earned run average, While percentage, .518 with his 18-4 re- cord. figure in any pitching records last year—said last night he was “com- !roaklyn Dodgers “because I was In gel earning 1,000 or more points. ‘takmg its lumps for the second was Indiana, Oklahoma A. and M.,}Cullege, Washington’s undefeated Huskxes‘(oA(H H(KMAN ‘Whitworth of Spokane, Seattle Uni- Coach Adolph Rupp obviously has | to CCNY in the National Invitation drilling the NortH squad for Miami’s victories, including a stunning 68-39 Christmas 'night, today explained i Navy players already are on hand ! “Ews Now won't get here until Friday, Her- “Why, heck,” the Yale coach re- convention. The most significant development | official retirement of all-time New York Yankee out-| world ehampions in 1951. | portant basketball games playec terday on his knee—and doctors |Central Wash. 55, Whitman 44. p,ohamHWyoming 74, New Mexico 56. 8tan Musial, would come to terms. |Syracuse 77, Niagara 70. was reported to have signed his| time). man inked a pact calling for |West Virginia 69, Wake Forest 63. Official figures showed that tWo | Hamline 58, Emporia (Kans) 51. top honors among National League Maglie posted the highest winning * And Branch Rickey—who didn’t pelled” to sell his stock in the Fights last night resulted as fol- lows: At Providence,. R1—Rocky Mar- clano, 190%, Brockton, Mass., stop- ped Bill Wilson, 229%, Charlotte, NG, 1. At Philadelphia — Ike Williams, 144, Trenton, N.J., outpointed Rudy Crug, 138, Los Angeles, 10 (non- title). At Salt Lake City — Jack Nelson, 162, Toele, Utah, knocked out Sonny Otrock, 202, Spokane, 5. DOUBLEHEADER GAME TONIGHT AT 7:30 IN JUNEAU HiGH GYM Play in the Olsunenu Channel League swings back to the Juneau side of the channel tonight with a doubleheader. First game time is 7:30 and sees thé Juneau High Crimson Bears play the Columbia Lumbermen. Sec- ond game is between Mike's Nite Owls and the Arctics. Kansas State 77, Wisconsin 58. Missouri 54, Arkansas 32, Iowa 63, Notre Dame 60. (By Associated Press) The big freeze continues in the midwest states and in much of the eastern half of the country. At Wasau, Wisconsin, this morning the mercury dipped to 12 below. It's been snowing in the upper Missis- ;sippi valleY 1 W b g 'Wilson Figure and Hockey Skates DEAN’S SKI INN Associated with Skinner’s Gun Shop on 2nd Street J June TON BASKETBALL JUNEAU HIGH vs, COLUMBIA LUMBER ARCTICS vs. MIKES au Gym IGHT December 19—7:30 o’Clock X Advanced " Hydra-C " Front Sprlnql, new Variable-Rate Rear Spring Suspension and "Viscous-Control” Shock Absorbers adjust the ride to any road automatically. Automatic Mileage Maker It squeezes the last ounce of power out of every drop of gas. And Ford's Waterproof Ignition System gives you sure starts in You just turn the key and the engine startsl No reaching for buttons or stretching for @ starter pedal. . New "Luxury Lounge” Interlors It's a new system of harmonizing interior and exterior colors—the metal, the hetide lining, the new Fordcraft Fabrics. And naw posture control ' seats “spell ' long-lasting wettest weatherl comfort, too. * 1T REALLY 1RONS OUT" "YEARS AND YEARS OF / BEAUTY IN THOSE BRILLIANT BAKED ON COLORS!" WHEN YOU BUY FOR THE FUTURE JUNEAU MOTOR CO. THE BumMPS!* \ BUY THE '