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LK 2 te i S WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1951 ~am” an o % . 247 AN 197 GAMES BLACK LIST SCHEDULED, | OFNCAAIS | AMER. LEAG. DISCUSSED CHICAGO, Jan. 10—(®—Ameri- * : ights scheduled | y o A flick on the lights for a fomal’ Collegints | ACBIBLENEEE 197 games in the 1951 season, in-| cluding the first opening nigmisocmuon black list today while the way has been opened for six & i e | ;g:;x.e in the Junior Circuit’s his. ‘ulhers to possibly. escapé getag pn The 1051 schedule released today | T3l f0r violation of the sanify tabs April 16 as the start of the‘cnde [{ovvrmng financial aid . to pennant chase with New York at| ’“fim" Washington for the t:aditional | e powerful 17-man NCAA ball-tossing ceremony by President ““t“’ bighat a‘utho.nly e Thikan: yL NCAA convention itself, hol_ds The following day, Chicago is ap| 'S, first meeting and one of it§ St Lowli, Boston 8t ‘New York, | duties will be to dgtermmevxr four Cleveland at Detroit, and Washing- | |\ oo acholey gtven WEEAES ton at Philadelphia for the league's' “;i’é"flli “l‘,‘:ls';giv‘“fd;'u:;vevz‘;fi first - nogturnal opener. |explained that they had expressed hove of attaining compliance and ml"so“ IS | if they now are found in that cate- | gory will not be brought before the & j ccavention Friday and Saturday. {unnamed, had not expressed hope MEM plAOUE of compliance, and thus they will L] Le subject to suspension by !hel convention, ateoh NEW YORK, Jan. 10—(#—Wel- The Amiz\an Association of terweight Champion Sugar Ray| Ccllege Baseball Coaches called Robinson boasted another prize yesterday for continuance of the possession today — the Edward J. agreement with professional base- Neil Memorial Plaque. ‘Lall prohiibting signing a high Robinson was honored last night | school boy to a contract before at the annual dinner of the New his class graduates. York Boxing Writers Association,| EEERE S L A | receiving the award as the man who | did the most for advancement of the sport during 1950. Joe Louis, an | ORI RE(EIPTS OF . old friend of Robinson’s presented | the plaque as some 300 guests "Y SA( Dnop !N so looked on at the Waldorf Astoria. | The award, presented annually] NEW YORK, Jan. 10—M—Over since 1938, is in memory of Neil, all receipts of the New York State Associated Press boxing writer who ' Athletic Commission in 1950 from was killed while serving as a cor- | boxing, wrestling, licenses, radio, respondent in the Spanish Civil| television and other items totaled ‘War. | $263,445.77, compared with $265,- Robinson recently completed a 520.12 in 1949. ! European tour during which he won| The figures were revealed in a|} five fights. ‘1950 financial report by Eildie Victorious in all 19 starts last| Egan, chairman of the State Ath- year, Sugar Ray fought mostly mid- | letic Commission. dleweights and won the Pennsyl- vania version of the world middle-| weight. fitle by deteating Rovert| GNE GAME THURS., TWO | Villemain at Philadelphia. He de- 4 fended his welter crown for charity FRIDA' l" GAS’"NEAU Sietea to meet Jave Lastotes for tne| - CHANNEL LEAGUE PLAY | middleweight title at Chicago | Fe}l;.e ::;'weight oo il One game is scheduled for tomor- | row night in the Gastineau Chan- Charles received a championship nel League with Douglas High ‘belt and Ring Magazine's medal as “Fighter of the Year” from Ring’s Nat Fleischer. Charles won the Neil ‘award last year. HOCKEY GAMES VANCOUVER, B.C., Jan. 10—®— ‘The Vancouver Canucks moved into fourth place in the Pacific Coast Hockey League last night with a 3-0 'shutout victory over the Portland Eagles. Bill Shill scored twice for the Canucks, bulging the net in the first and second periods. Church Russell twined the third counter in the third canto. Huskies playing the Imperial Imps at Douglas. Game time is 8. Games Friday night are played in, Juneau with the Arctics play- ing the Imperial Imps in the firs} game at 7:30, Second game Friday sees Mikes Nite Owls against the Cclumbia Lumbermen. League leaders are Mikes and Columbia tied for first with each team having six wins and three i losses. Juneau High Bears and Im- perial Imps are tied for second with four wins and three losses each. Arctics are in third place with two wins and six losses and the Douglas High Huskies trail- ing the League with one win and five losses, Portland has now dropped 10 of the last 11 games. COACH CALDWELL SATISFIED WITH PRINCETON J0B DALLAS, Jan. 10—(@®—Charley Caldwell, coach of Princeton, said today he would talk with Duke and Eouthern California officials regarding the opening coaching jobs at thc two schools but that “I am mighty happy where I am.” Caldwell had an undefeated, un- tied team at Princeton last season "REDS" BAGNELL | IS GIVEN AWARD PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 10—®—| The Robert W. Maxwell memorial football club award to 1950's out- standing collegiate football player was presented last night to Francis (Reds) Bagnell, University of Penn- sylvania captain and record-setting halfback. The award was made by Bert Bell, National Football League oresident, Commissioner and Maxwell Club |- TR T A wounded British soldicr, member of a unit of his countrymen wha were isolated by fast-moving Chinese Reds in Seoul’s northern out- skirts, is removed from a rescue helicopter by American troops at the South Korean capital's municipal airport, befort its fall. () Wire- photo. FIGHT DOPE |Joaded many times. Fights last night, with two knock- . outs, are as follows: IwaSh. A“‘Ie"t (Iub At Los Angeles — Harold Jones, | Xames Alaskan fo Bd. 138, Detroit, outpointed Freddie Herman, 139, Los Angeles, 10. | At Chicago — Johnny Bratton, 145%, knocked out Sem Mastreon, | SPATTLE, Jan. 10 — (M — The 147, Pittsburgh, 3. | Washington Athletic Club today At Phoenix — Bob Mitchell, xsa,!‘*‘“"ounmd Fhe election o_f nine resi- Omaha, knocked out Bill McClure, | °0¢ and eight non-resident mem. 151, Minneapolis, 8. ‘bxs to the organization's board of directors. | Plains and the cartridge reprc-— |sented appears to have been re- Non-resident directors include: DISPLAY OF OLD AND | Robert C. Reeve, Anchorage. NEW RIFLECARTRIDGES . .~ ON VIEW AT skiNngRs i Firemen! \Boredom (hanged Everything from the old .45 Sharps | 1 up to the latest 25 Donaldson Al\e\lh Seelng Them cartridges have been mounted co o a board by U. D. Moo They m-(-r INDIANAPOLIS, Jan. 10 — B — on display in Skinner’s Gun Shop. | Firemen at the Broad Ripple Statipn Over a hundred rifle cartridges of | yesterday were just standing arount’ all types are shown representing a|—no fires—when a woman walket! hundred years of cartridge develop- |Past and noticed their boredom. ment. | She stopped at a nearby store Included in the group is Skinners’ | bought a television set, and ordered “17 caliber whammey,” guaranteed |it sent to the fire station. to shoot the “smallest one-shot| She went on her way, yithout group” at 200 yards. ‘giving her name. The old Sharps is the gun of the‘ buffalo hunting days on the Great WANT AVS BRING RESULTS FOUR W FOUR RIDERS—_Perry Mag- noliaf Sr., Cleveland, O., bicycle repairman, makes unicycles as a sideline for his children and their friends. Riding, left to right: David and Perry Magnolia, Anthony Leccisotti, Ronnie Magnolia. His contract expires this year. SCORES OF BASKETBALL Final scores of basketball games played last night are as follows: Holy Cross 67, Dartmouth 52. LIU 74, St. Louis 62. Penn 61, Harvard 47. NYU 76, West Virginia 54. Florida State 63, Mississippi 58. South Carolina 76, Clemson 61. Georgia Tech 56, Georgia 50. Hamline 47, St. Mary’s 41. Ohio Northern 84, Cedarville 56. | "™ FoSter: Notre Dame 78, Loyola (Chicago) 67 Abilene Christian 74, Texas A&I 48 "EI TouR"EY Texas Christian 87, Rice 66. Texas A. -and M. 55, Baylor 53 | (overtime). PORTLAND, Jan. 10—#—Jack Portland 73, Lewis and Clark 59.|Kramer defeated Pancho Segura, East Oregon 83, Oregon Tech 76. |6-2, 6-4, in a professional tennis match here last night. Mrs. Pauline Betz Addie won oter Gussie Moran with a one-set victory, 6-3. MAJOR LEAGUE CLUBS OF (HICAGO LOSING PLAYERS BY DRAFT CHICAGO, Jan. 10—(®—Thirty- two players owned by Chicago’s major league baseball clubs have been called into military service. The White Sox have lost T farmhands and two from their own | squad—Joe Kirrene, $35,000 bonus third baseman from Sacramento, Calif., and outfielder Bill Wilson, a 1950 standout at Memphis. The Cubs have lost 12 from their farm system and three from their ATTENTION REBEKAHS Meeting tonight—8 o'clock. ' Of- ficers practice installation. Jsabelle Jorgenson, Noble Grand, SCHWINNK BIKES AT MADSEN'S j == FISHEWILDLIFE SERVICE ”‘é UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT AL OF THE INTERIOR ALASKA HAS PACKED KING CRABS SINC DERAL SEARCI RADAR-EQUIPPED EXPLORATORY BOATS OF THE FISH & WILD- LIFE SERVICE ARE TRACKING ALBACORE -+~ IN THE PACIFIC ~ TO AID COMMERCIAL RTANT SEA FOOD- 7 THE GULF OF MEXICO IS BEING TUNA~AND SNAPPER GROUNI EXACT INFORMATION ON THE SITE AND TYPE OF GEAR IS FURNISHED TO F/SHERMEN 9 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA MODELS WORLD PLAN ES_Heinz Scharrschm | West Beriin engincer, builds models of many of the world's aic= liners for use by thelr owners in offices and promotion. | “However, the increasing popula- l(mn of Alaska, plus greater empha- ;sis on the territory by the military | and prospects for early developmen |of a birch industry to supply pro- | ducts for export, make it manda- tory to conserve the remaining for- ests.” ALLIES TALK GERMANS IN WEST ARMY BONN, Germany, Jan, 10 — (® — ‘Two Generals of Hitler’s defeated army sat down with Allied officials today for secret talks on putting uniformed Germans in the western force of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower who led the invasion across the Rhine only five years ago. The threat of World War III hung test at Detroit, Mich. | heavily over the Petersberg Hotel perched on a 1,000-foot mountain overlooking the Rhine, where the talks were held. In the same room in 1938 the late British Prime Min- YEARS FOR FIRES Jister, Neville Chamberlain, had ivainly argued with Hitler to avert ALASKA FORESTS | :-c"on In the turn of the wheel, after Germany’s unconditional surrender, the Allies had fallen out with their JEARENGION, Jm_" 20 .~iEn:»Lern partners, the Russians, as Alaska had its worst forest fire season 'fn’ many years in 1950, the the late Joseph Goebbels had pre- Interior Department's Bureau of |dic‘ed—one plece of kowlink s il : = ganda that came true. otk e Sl W B The two German Generals—Hans ‘The year's 248 fires blackened Speidel, once Rommel’s chief of more than 2,225,000 acres. Eight of . staff, and Adolf Heusiner, who he fires, extending over 13,243 acres, helped plan the Russian campaign ‘ccurred aftar the normal fire sea- | _were part of a delegation of five ;mt‘ob: hich customarily ends in|ynich sat down with seven Ameri- C! T, can, French, and British Generals POWERED MODEL— Miss Betty Uren holds a large gas-powered free-flight plane, a competitor in one of the classi of the Summer model plane cone’ Before the Territory inaugurated | fire control work in 1939, annual losses of 3,000,000 or 4,000,000 acres | were common. The losses in recent years: 1949, 17900 acres; 1948, 3,675; 1947, 1,429,900; 1946, 1436,000; 1945, 116,000. “Considering that the bureau has fire-control responsibilities for 80 oercent of Alaska, and that it re- seives for this work less than one mill an acre, it is amazing that fire ‘osses have been held as low as they have,” Bureau Director Marion Clawson said in a prepared state- ment. “About 40,000,000 acres of com- and officials to negotiate technical questions concerning the Allied proposal to raise a German force of 150,000 men for the Atlantic Pact army. AMERICANS GIVEN WARNING T0 GET OUT OF HONG KONG HONG KONG, Jan. 10—(®—Amer- icans in this British crown colony PAGE THREE TS BEARINGS — An cight-day-old nnati, Ohio, Zoological Garden, stays ing its first airing in the zo0 veldt. 4 GETTING | || zebra colt born in the Cin close to its mother d conference no actual emergency is seen but that thé warning “is more or less precautionary.” An official cireular is being put out by the Consulate General to- morrow to the 600 heads of Ameri- can families in the colony. Nearly 1,400 Americans are registered here. The list includes a large number of American citizens of Chinese des- cent. A substantial number of Ameri- cans already has left Hong Kong Dependents of five American com- panies were warned last week tc return home. Some British residents and wealthy Chinese have gone. The official warning came as nc surprise. Americans have beer watching Chinese Red forces on the neighboring mainland swell tc an army of more than 45,000 in the past month. R e Don't delay! C HECK UP today on your fire insurance. Don’t wait until you have a loss to learn that your protec- tion is not adequate . . . that something has been overlooked . . . that your policy does not fit because of an addition to your property or a new mort- Shattuck Agenecy WASHINGTON, Jan. 10 — (B — President Truman sent Congress to- day proposed legislation setting up standards for the states to follow ]m revising Congresional districts to conform with population shifts re- ported in the 1950 census. In a message to the lawmakers, he also asked that “proper redis- tricting be done promptly” and completed not later than the spring of 1952 “so that the Congressional elections of that year may give fair representation to all citizens of our country.” . Phone 249 The seven states which are due to gain House members under the Seward Street * aew census and the number of addi- JUNEAU | tion seats include: California 7, Washington 1. o e 1 )0 ) - THESE ARE ADJUNCTS IN RESTORING OR MAINTAINING YOUR HEALTH @ Chiropractic Adjusiments ® Colon Irrigation : @ Steam Baths @ Fever Therapy DR. G. M. CALDWELL R ——— Fly Now TOS_UIIIIY—% Phone 477 bordering Red Chiua are being warned today to remove their fam- “These stands, if protected, are |ilies because or the worsening situ- large enough to supply local needs ation' in the Orient. until young timber has grown wl U.S. Consul General Walter P. maturity. McConaughy told a special news JOB-PROVED MACHINES INCREASE PROFITS FOR CATERPILLAR OWNERS TOWING WINCHES Increase drawbar pull of tractor 50 fo mercial timber, largely spruce, re- main. ~ MEXICO TION INDUSTRY CONSR GGING Hyster, in developing its trac- tor-mounted equipment, has always made a point of work- ing closely with practical men. 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