The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 30, 1951, Page 3

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[FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1951 PLAYING RULES IN BASKETBALL CHANGED NOW MINNEAPOLIS, March 29 —(®— The joint committee on basketball rules has decided future college, [AAU and YMCA games should be played in 10-minute quarters instead of 20-minute halves. This was the only change in the basketball code voted by the group which controls the playing of the [game in both the United States and Canada. The rules committee in- cludes representatives from NCAA, or collegiate phase of the game, the AAU, YMCA, high schools and of Canada. WW® THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA Championship Frm High schools will continue playing eight-minute quarters. The lawmakers said the Pacific Coast conference will play some games under an experimental rule which will prohibit waiving of the free throw. All personal fouls in the final three minutes will call for twc shots. BOWLI In Thursday night bowling on the Elks alleys, Pacific Northern lost all three points to Caro Transfer, Alaska Coastal won two from Pan American, Alaska Light and Power came up from behind to trim Sweeney's Bar three points anc Casler’'s won two from Juneal Drug, to tie for first place witk Sweeney’s Bar. 3 High game of 200 was rolled by Ken Loken. John Estes rolled 19¢ and Matt Gormley 192. High series bowlers were Mike Fenster 499, Lou Tibbetts 491, Johr Estes 495. Team Standings Sweeney's Bar Casler’s . £ Alaska Light and Power Pacific Northern ... Alaska Coastal ........... Caro Transfer Juneau Drug Pan American ‘Team and individual scores fol- lows: Alaska Light and Power, W. Hellan ... 136 166 150 8. Taylor . 114 124 146 E. Peyton . 140 88 116 D. Moore 159 159 159 J. Rolison .. . 146 146 Totals 43 Sweeney’s Bar S. Sheldon 160 138 P. Schneider ... 119 123 B. Kivland 141 165 B. Sweeney 124" 128 E. Johnson . 152 133 Totals ..... 696 687 452 334 344 477 438 2173 436 411 428 390 452 138 169 122 138 167 Juneau Drug ‘W. Moore . 118 E. Page 158 M. Holm 151 A. Hedges 126 C. Jones . 149 Totals 735 Casler’s 135 116 130 . 139 199 157 147 144 132 667 714 643 162 134 159 124 748 135 115 104 G. Taylor . L. West E. Arnold ....... J. Estes J. Wilber . Totals 171 125 104 Pacific Northern 96 138 185 200 R. Krsul W. Ludtke R. Pheasant K. Loken . C. Porter ¥ 136 Totals ..... 67 Caro Transfer 135 146 129 121 144 158 . 125 184 . 147 181 680 1788 B. Davis ......... P. Fitzpatrick.. C. Oldham L. Tibbitts 1. Cahail Totals Alaska Coastal . 172 157 148 148 130 121 95 159 M. Fenster J. Leighton C. Bloomquist G. Straiger ... 170 148 124 119 NG || Ferward John Gibson (21) of Kansas State found a lot of Kentucky hands in the way as he tried to snag a rebound during the NCAA championship hasketball game at Minneapolis, Minn. The Ken- tuckians, winners of the 1951 NCAA play are Bill Spivey (77) and Frank Ramsey (30). Fi § Wirephoto. YHIBITION B..B. GAMES exhibition | would “get a tremendous bang out of seeing the umps on the horses.” | He recommended that new contracts [be drawn up to force the umpires [to carry out the idea. “Personally, I think the idea a great one,” Cochran wrote. THESE DAYS By GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY is Scores in gam| St. Louis N, 6, New York N, 2. Philadelphta N, 5, Boston N, 0. New York A, 7, Chicago N, 5. Pittsburgh N, 15, Cleveland 4, 12.| Cincinnati N, 15, Detroit A, 9. (10| ¢ innings). | ‘Washington A, 8, Boston A, 7. vision screen before the Kefauver Chicago A, 7, St. Louis A, 6. |committee, my mind could not Philadelphia A, 5, West Palm |avoid goihg back to the days of Beach FIL, 3, (night). | prohibition, the jazz age, the hip- e | pocket flask, Al Capone, Waxey . | Gordon, Legs Diamond, and the | jackers, rum-runners and general Last night’s results in hockey|scoundrels that filled our world games: National league Detroit 0 (three overtimes) —(Mon- of the 1920’s. And the question naturally arose treal leads best-of-seven series, 2-0), Pacific Coast league — Victoria |as to what price a nation pays for |its abnegation of morals and when 4, Portland 3, (Victoria leads best- of-seven semi-final, 3-2) |is the price to be collected? For yesterday The Price We Pay I watched these curious char- s, Frank Costello, 1 Hill, pass across the tele- As Montreal 1, i lation of moral law. It is an interesting phenomenon |how these go together. Prohibition | encouraged the lie, but the lie did t I what we, the people who permit- ted the prohibition hoodlums to e over us did was to make pop- the violation of civil law; the effect was to encourage the vio- IN SPORIS not stop with bathtub gin. Lying - | became a way of life, just as the pragmatic idea that anything you N ED‘could get away with was right be- | came a way of life. The test of right was not moral law, which is the product of the whole of human ex- GLENDALE, Calif., March 30 — | perience over thousands of years, (#—The old-time manner of bally-|pyut what anybody could get away hooing baseball games by announc- | ity y ers riding the streets on horseback | oy recall all the jokes about may be revived in Pacific Coast|cpastity and virginity. They were League cities, Sports Editor Russ|gunnv weren't they? We all Cochran of the Glendale News-|jaughed. But today we see the con- Press said today. | sequences of our laughter in the Umpires, in fact, may be asked to | violent increase in divorce, in teen- pfxt on the act, Cochran wrote in age crimes, in juvenile pregnancies his column. The sins of the fathers are hitting He said he had learned from “an [ the grandchildren and hitting them exclusive and authoritative source | parq 1t is no longer a joke. It that Pacific Coast League team|comes right back at us in broken owners will soon be approached by | homes, in disrespectful children, in one of their clan with a plea that | gisregard of proprieties in corrup- clubs return to the days of parades, | tjon in public life. bands and the era of ‘Foghorn’| just think of Virginia Hill's bra- 161 T3 B. Brown 146 738 Pan American J. Wood .. K. Morgan J. Winther 167 735 128 137 121 2186 413 371 431 Murphy in an effort to get some color back into the game and stir up new interest on the part of the dwindling fans.” Murphy was an announcer famed for his daily appearances astride a zen testimony. Where did she get { all the money she spent? From the | men she went out with. Then she | added that lots of girls get money from the men they go out with. | We used to have a name for that J. Machia ... M. Gormley Totals ... WYOMING, UTAH MEET TONIGHT IN CAGE TOURNEY PEORIA, Ill, March 30 —@— Wyoming and Utah, most impres- sive in the first round of Bradley’s National Campus Basketball tourna- ment, tonight shoot for an all- Skyline conference windup. ‘Wyoming, hitting 512 in the first half to trounce DuQuesne 78-61 in the first round, goes against host Bradley. The Braves downed West- ern Kentucky 75-71 to advance. Utah meets solid and methodical Syracuse after out-gunning favored Villanova 67-65. Syracuse moved up with a 69-52 count over Toledo. Wyoming and Bradley tangle in tonight’s semi-final game. The finals are tomorrow night. 146 130 662 393 463 2087 —EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY— white horse in San Francisco years ago. He was not an umpire. Cochran said he thought the fans [s - . | and those who pursued such a vo- | cation were not encouraged to 'mingle with other folks. The des- B.P. 0. ELKS Ladies’ Night At the Elks’ Ballroom Saturday, March 3lst Dancing starts at 10 o'clock For Elks and Their Ladies Only quite subject in the club car of Chief” said that government pr made the point that those who are engaged in a conspiracy to corrupt was an cription is Virginia Hill's not mine. Senator Tobey, who is the moral conscience of the committee, must have suffered for his country when this young lady made so light of human decency. It was an astound- ing performance of vulgar impu- lence. I wonder whether our people rasp the foulness of all this. We got into an argument on, this “The and one who was present he did not believe in the ng into the private uffairs of its citizens, but when I Ma Mr Feerc. Embar for Vancouver: Mr.| ar Mrs. Willlam K. McFarlane and son; A. Legge, Mr. .and Mrs H. Arnholt Strand and two chil- | dren, Mr. and Mrs. George Kuhnz, | Major and Mrs. Eric Newbould, Mr. A total 64 passengers were carried on Thursday flights by and Mrs. William Bentler, Mr. and ~ .| Mrs. B. D. Stewart, Lt. Ruth Bass, Alaska Coastal lines with 30 de- Capt. and Mrs. Charles Newton,| parting, L4 arriy and 10 on inter- | post. Capt. and Mrs. George Lloyd, R St ancault, W. Fedio, Mr. and Mrs. | Pt - 9 Skomedal and two children. ' lexander e For Seattle: Rev. H. S. Beyer, 2 Rev. Haffie, Flore; Juanita Mrs Stevenson Mary Doogan, William 64 CARRIED ON ALASKA COASTAL | THURSDAY TRIPS and of Tom Nally, arvin Atkin: er Riley, Leon r w our land can have no private af- he wondered. He could not realize that these criminals opera- ted a dual form of government hey operating separately from the law | Yet, this same man would favor | investigation of Communists who | Prueher; engage in conspiracy but he can |Sehoonover: for Haines: C. E. Rich- not altogether recognize how dope | ter; peddlers could subvert hard for him to entire nation can be¢ harmed, | when agencies are at work delib-| erately to break down the morals of a people. Teaching children to} take dope cam, in time, produce a | body of subversive adults. | The fact is that Al Capone's regime credted social and political conditions from which we need now | to rescue our country. The real | harm these men did was not in | their bribing police; it was and is | in their ability to contribute to| political parties “under the table,” | as the expression goes, by this means to participate in the choice of candidates, even of judicial can- didates applied to nothing could be more destructive of our nation. Politicians have always had to seek funds to promote their cam- paigns, but in this situation the evidence shows that those who are actually engaged in crime have been building a super-government, a powerful, nationwide control over the structure of law and authority in the United State: It is impossible to take this situ- ation too seriously. The danger is that it will prove a seven days' wonder and the corruption will go on as before. The Kefauver com- mittee should continue its investi- gation until the entire pattern is clear. NO WAR IIf IN THREE YEARS, SAYS STASSEN CHICAGO, March 30 —(M—Har- old E. Stassen said today that the odds are against a World War in the next three years. The president of the University of Pennsylvania told the Executives Club of Chicago in a prepared speech: “Careful study convinces me that if the Soviet Union starts a war to- morrow or at any time in the next three years Russia will be destroyed at home by American air and atomic strength and will face a counter-revolution of many millions of people now imprisoned in her empire. “The Kremlin leaders know this, a nation. It | realize that | land therefore I place the emphasis national levels, | N, Trefford, Dr. I Whiteside, J. R. Morris, for Ketchikan: Geneva Hubbard, C. G. Peterson, Lt. E. S e o v e, Carol MacKenzie For Petersbur Bob Bean, Woodland, Alfred § A Ketchikan on Sat. H. Bobe. Hoonah: Hilda | and Mrs. R. M. MacKenzie of announced today that Tulsequah: Lee the ma ge of their daughter, Miss Alfred E. Pilking-| Carol MacKenzie, to Mr. John James N. Tref- Christopher will take place Satur- Berry, Mrs. Trudy|day, March 31. The ceremony will n; from Skag- be performed at the Methodist nford, Jimmie J.| church in Ketchikan at 4 o'clock. Cooper; from Point Retreat: Alfred| Miss MacKenzie, who was in P. Ya Catherine Yates. | Juneau several months last summer From Gustavus: Arthur J. Lappi; ; as an employee of the B. M. Beh- from Vank Island: Louis Unrait;!rends Bank, made many friends from Petersburg: Linn Forrest, here who will be interefted in the Webb Trimble, Rose Haube, Alfred | announcement. Boberg, Ricardo Haube, Les Flor-| Dr. MacKenzie is First Division ence; from Ketchikan: Hugh Stod-| Senator in the Territorial Legisla- dard, E. H. Cowan ture. From Sitka: Bistop John Zlobin, | W. Bettz, B, Hadley. Robert, e For Victoria: Knoll, F. C Bob Hadley Mary Delores. Mr. Boyle, Sister for for for Skagway: D. M. Ward, Robert Bruger, Mr. and Mrs, John | Fox, Tim Case arl Forsythe; for| Tulsequah Hofiman, John R.| McDonald Arriving from Hing, Lee Gar, ton; fr ford, Mis. Hebert, J way: Brooks I Dr. Ketchikan \OFFICERS ELECTED BY LEAGUE WOMEN VOTERS 41N, 32 OUT ON PRINCESS NORAH | Officers for the ensuing year were | Four passengers arrived on the | elected at a meeting of the Juneau Princess Norah from Skagway this| League of Women Voters Thurs- morning while 32 embarked for day evening. Vancouver, Victoria and Seattle. | The new officers are: Mrs. Simon | Green, { office of the H. Miller, secretary, Evans, treasurer. Elected to the Mrs. Leonard board of control were Mrs. G. E. Cleveland, Mrs Ernest Gruening and Mrs. Charles Burdick. On the nominating com- mittee the following were chosen Mrs. O. Johnson, Mrs. Henry and Mrs. Earle Hunter Mrs., L. B. Avrit continutes as vice president and Mrs. Frank Met- calf is held over on the board of control. MRS, KATE SMITH IN INTERVIEW IN HAWAI Mrs. Kate dent of the Business and ional Womens' Club who was re- cently transferred from the Juneau Alaska Native Service to North Dakota for the Indian Service, was the subject of the following feature story in the Hon- olulu Advertiser Mrs Kate M ol Smith, former presi- Profes- Smith holds probably the unique distinction of having seen both of America’s territorial legislatures open their sessions this year, Mrs. Smith was in Juneou Jan- uary 24 for the opening of the Al- askan legislature, and in Honolulu last week for the opening of the Hawaiian legislature. She has just completed five years as a social worker with the Alaska Native Service, and is ending a short vacation in Honolulu before going to North Dakota where she will be with the Indian service. She will be at Fernhurst, the YWCA residence for women, until March 1, “We had no flowers, or leis, or hula dancers at our opening,” she laughs, “but we had plenty of snow and ice.” As in Hawali, the crowd at the opening overflowed the-gallery into the surrounding halls. The Alaskan legislature meets in modern quar- ters in the federal building in Ju- neau. Mrs. Smith was especially inter- ested in the makeup of the Ha- Arriving from Skagway: Sister | Hellenthal, president, Mrs. Donald waiian legislature both as to race Good. | Old timers know their whisky. That’s why Philadelphia has been favored by generations of men who know quality. on no World War in the next three years.” L FAMOUS SINCE 1894 ALASKA LINE { ARE GOOD CUSTOMERS Awnona my best customers are my fxiends and neigh- bors who work for The Alaska Line fhere in the Terri- ! tory. And there’s a good reason. Last year they — and "their co-workers throughout Alaska — received over a million dollars for providing services and supplies for The Alaska Line. Longshoremen alone received more than $818,000 in wages. The major part of this money is spent right here — in the stores of hundreds of small ! businessmen like me. This means more jobs . . . more « paychecks , , . more progress for all of us here in Alaska. ALASKA STEAMSHIP COMPANY Serving All Alaska PAGE THREE ex. The A thre and to include: Indians, members. Her work in over the te the size of has visited ern settleme: Pribilof Islanc and Adak which ther west than H acterizes Alask y people and Herselt i blood, sh She 11 social ifornia in Ber and t the T work FATRBANKS G FROM & and M g Cove are Hotel Juneau charge of the CAA Rent a new car, dr it @s your own. Spes cial rates by day, wook, month. WRITE US YOUPR PLANS FOR FULL DETAILS 1413 SEVENTH AN EVANS-U-DRI MERTZ SYSTEM IN SEATY Refreshingly yours... from the land of sky blue waters® BEER Y o NaM M pREWING(BINPAS Al over America friends are telling friends about the refreshe ing personality of Hamm's Beer —its crisp, clean-cut taste, with smoothness aged in. Try a Hamm’s! Tonight! America’s Most Refreshing Beer *Minnesota—Land of 10,000 lakes heo. Hamm Brewing Co., St. Paul, Minn,

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