The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 21, 1951, Page 6

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PAGE SIX AP Poll Shows Foothall Stars NEW YORK, Dec. 21—#—An Associated Press survey of All-Am- erica football players and teams showed today r stars are better than dents—contrary to the ger Notable among the headliners who o shine in the classroom are Dick Kazmaier of Princeton, Hank Lau- ricella of Tennessee, Bill McColl of Stanford, Jim Weatherall of OKkla- homa, Joe Palumbo of Vireinia, De- wey McCoennell of Wyoming, and Bob Ward of Maryland—all first team All-America. | The fact is that the modern| collegiate game has become so fast that the slow, dumb type of athlete can't make the grade. Tennessee’s team, top ranked na- tionally, averaged 2.52 against a perfect academic score of 4.00, which would be all A. The university erage for all male students was 2.10. Lauricella averaged 2.6 and made the honor roll in two out of three quarters. Fullback Andy Ko- zar made 2.8. | Bill McColl, Stanford’s towering | end, has a B-plus average and is a pre-medical student. Dick Kazmaier, the Princeton | glamor back of the year, is a major psychology with a 3-plus average which is just below Phi Beta Kappa rating. Weatherall, the Oklahoma two-| time All-America tackle, majors in| business administration and has a| B average. Scores af Basketbal: By the Associated Press Final scores of last night’s basket-/ ball games are: | Utah 69, Los Angeles Loyola 57. Wichita 72, San Diego State 63. Memphis State 79, Eastern Oregon 63. Gonzaga 74, Eastern Washington 64. Illinois 86, North Carolina 66. Penn 68, Michigan 63. Towa 59, Oklahoma 46. | Bradley 66, Colorado 58. .fwwx Mathodistr+60; Texas 'ch 48. ! Texas Christian 58, Nebraska 57. Arkansas 49, Missouri 43. St. Mary’s (Calif) 71, Arizona 64. NYU 87, Holy Cross 78. Canisius 62, Dartmouth 48. Colgate 67, Buffalo 60. i Cornell 51, Tulane 50. Vanderbilt 65, Rice 56. Georgetown (DC) 84, Princeton| 62. West Virginia 87, Wm. and Mary | 66. | i Your Luck Is In, It's Still Deubtful if You Will Win i i What are your chances of win- | ning, losing, getting killed in an| auto accident, or of giving birth| to a left-handed son who is six| feet tall? Folks with a mathematical mind | and plenty of time on their hands | figure these things to a high degree | of accuracy. To settle a thousand ! arguments which pop up during a| year (most of them referred to a| harrassed sports editor) we are| printing some of the odds on >pur(sl events and other subjects: i Chances that a pitcher will ach- | ieve a no-hit game are 1 in 2577.| When you stack up against a| one-armed bandit, the odds are . 3,000 to 1 against hittjng the jack- | pot in the slot machine. | An auto racer faces odds of 2- | 700 to 1 that he will be killed on the track. | The gamblers quote you odds of 100 to 1 that you can’t pick 10 winners out of 10 football games— but the actual chances against the feat are 1,023 to 1. Baseball fans who pull for the home team have a 5 to 4 chance of going home happy; the home team wins five out of every nine games. When you are driving at the speced of 42 miles an hour, the chances are 7 to 1 gredter that you will be involved in an accident than if you were traveling at 25. In writing a book, chances are that, you will use the letter “e” (the most frequently utilized let- ter) 120 times while using the “z” twice. If you want your unborn son to be a left-handed baseball “pitcher, chances are 12 to 1 you will be dis- appointed, that being the ratio of right-handers to southpaws. Chances are 13 to 1 against your boy being a 6-footer so that he can make the basketball team. P. S—Chances that you and I will be broke the day after Christ- | mas, one million to one. | MILK NOTICE ‘ . No milk delivery on December 25. #Wm. Flint—Juneau Dairy Products. 995-3t { and Tllinois, Big Ten titlists, streng- THE DAILY ALASKA EMP Members of the Illirois football squad and their coa'h, Ray Eliot (wearing hat, center), are welcomed by Queen Nancy Thorne (next to Eliot) of the Tounament of Roses and her Princesses upon their ar- rival at Pasadena, Calif., for the Rose Bowl game on New Year's Day agninst Stanford. One of the fostball players is using his camera to turn the ta bles on news photographers. ® Witephoto. Kentucky, | llinois Look Good in Wins NEW YORK, Dec. 21—P—Ken- tucky, defending NCCA champion: thened their claim to topnotech Na- tional basketball ranking with de- cisive victories over DePaul and North Carolina last night Kentucky, ranked 2nd in this week’s Associated Press poll, (a ranking determined before the Wild- cats walloped St. John's the current No.l club) set a new scoring re- cord in the Lexington, Ky., Mem- orial Coliseum by thrashing DePaul, 98-60 z Illinois, ranked 3rd, ran North Carolina of the Southern Conference ragged to win easily, 86-66, at Champaign. It was the 4th straight triumph for the unbeaten Illini. Unbeaten Pennsylvania and Towa edged into the national picture with victories over Michigan and Okla- homa. North Carplina State, South- ern Conference champs and cur- rently ranked 9th, was upset by Manhattan and in a battle of un- beaten teams New York University, No. 11, tumbled Holy Cross, No. 17. NYU’s §i-4s iriumph was ine vio- lets’ 10th straight and was the fea- ture of a twin bill before 7,096 fans in Madison Square Garden. Man- hattan held the favored N. C. State team to a 26-26 halftime tie, then pulled away to win the first game 69-50. As they did Wednesday night| against Pitt, Penn came from be- | hind to beat Michigan at Ann Ar- | bor, 68-63. Iowa, playing at home, whipped the Sooners, 59-46, as| Chuck Darling flipped in 30 points | for the Hawkeyes. It was Iowa’s fifth | in a row. A Dallas doublheader turnout of | 1,500 saw two overtime frays with| Texas Christian nipping Nebraska, | 58-57 and Southern Methodist tak-| ing Texas Tech, 50-48. | In other major games Cornell nipped Tulane, 51-50; Georgetown trounced Princeton, 84-62; Bradley Leat Colorado, Vanderbilt conguered ; Arkanss humbled Missouri, 49-43; West Vi ginia walloped Willlam and M 87-66; Utah took Los Angeles, 69-57; Boston College made it 7 in a row by downing Harvard, 76-63; and St. Mary's (Calif) defeated Arizona, T1-64. Ezzard Charles, | Joe Kahut Clash , 3 PORTLAND, Ore. Dec, 21—®— | Ezzard Charles, former world heavy- | weight champion, will fight an Ore-‘ gon farm boy in a scheduled 12-| round boxing ch here tonight. The Oregonian is Joe Kahut who | hopes his overhand right—which | in the past has served him well—will make up for his lack of boxing skill. Charles, at 190 pounds, seemed un- worried as he went through light roadwork here yesterday. Sports in Brief ~ Maxim-Matihews By the Associated Press PARIS—Charles Humez, European welterweight champion, ngreed to meet champion Kid Gavilan for welterweight title in New York March 28 if terms can be worked out. NEW YORK-—International Box- ing Club announced champion Joey Maxim willing to give Harry Mat- thews of S Bout Lining Up CLEVELAND, Dec. 21—(®-—Joey Maxim says that if he defends his light heavyweight title against Ha- ry Matthews, he would rather fight in New York than in San Francisco, He explained he didn’t “like the thick ring mat called for by Calif- tle title bout Feb. 22, | ornia law. I depend a lot on fast possibly in New York or San Fran- | footwork, you know,; and that type cisco. SAN FRANCISCO—Coach Joé Kuharich of San Francisco Univer- sity resigned effective Jan. 15, and Chicago Cardinals of National Foot- ball League said he is being con- sidered along with others to fill coaching vacancy with the profes- sional club. BOISE his offer still goes: He'll guarantee light heavyweight champion Joe Maxim $60,000 if he will meet Harry Matthews in a title bout here next summer. NEW YORK—(Sunnyside Gar- den)—Bobby Lloyd, 146, Wilkes, Be Pa., stopped Charley Wil- 148, MNewark, N. J., 6 last Civil Defense Program For Children on Radio Safurday Aiternoon The federal civil defense admin- istration has developed several in- formation items to teach the prin- ciples of self-protection to elemen- tary school children. A 16-page picture booklet for children titled “Duck and Cover” will be mailed out to all Civil De- fense directors shortly. “Bert the Turtle” is the character selected to teach the youngsters how important | it really is to duck and cover in cases of emergency. Boys and girls will have their first introduction to “Bert the Turtle” at 3:30 p.m. Saturday over radio station KINY. "Yak-Yak Yak-Yuk' Party Given oy Alaska National Guard Outfit A “Yak-Yak Yuk-Yuk” Christ- mas party was held by Headquar- ters, Headquarters and ' Service Company of the 208th Infantry Battalion, Alaska National Guard, Thursday evening at the Baranof Hotel, for all guardsmen, Coast Guard personnel and service men in the channel area. This was the first annual hol- iday party by the guard. Refresh- ments and food were served with the party running until the small hours of the morning. “Yak-Yak Yuk-Yuk” words for the party. Wi e pass NOTICE 1 will not be responsible for any debts contracted by anyone other than myself. Signed—John E. Dap- cevich. 994-4t — EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY — P D T B T Y D Y D T D e e Announ We will be closed for starting cement a Holiday vacation, SATURDAY - DECEMBER 22 o WATCH for 0 AFTER THE UR OPENING ANNOUNCEMENT HOLIDAYS THE MAMZELLE sHoP 310 S. Franklin Juneau . PO OO T T SR O 0 Promoter Tex Hager says | | eye with IBC’s policies, esps i 1 'ed yesterday by | Stars’ board of strategy as contact of mat slows me up.” He offered yesterday to meet the Seattle boxer Feb. 28. Both New York and San Francisco were men- tioned as possible sites. Al Weill, International Boxing Club matchmaker, wired the offer to Jack Hurley Matthew’s manager. Hurley has not been seeing eye to ially on television. Matthews beat Bob Murphy in New York. Maxim, who won, the title by knocking out Freddie Mills in London in 1950, has defended it once by beating Murphy last August. Offensive Affack Is Planned for East-West Game SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 21—&— An offensive attack built around a| man who wasn’t there was formulat- the Eastern All work began for the Dec. 29 East- West Shrine charity football classic for crippled children. Coaches Biggie Munn of Michigan and T McLaughry, Dartmouth, named a tentative attacking back- field and listed Vic Janowicz of Ohio State in the fullback spot. Jano- wicz, whose arrival has been delay- ed by eastern storms, will be the spinning back, a role that won him All America acclaim and the Heis- man trophy in 1950. The rest of the single wing back- field has Dick Kazmaier, Princeton | All America, at tailback, his blocking teammate, Richard Pivirotto at right half and Al Dorow of Michigan State at quarterback. HOME FOR HOLIDAYS Rosemary Theile, daughter of Mrs. Karl Theile, arrived here yesterday from Eugene, Ore., where she is a freshman at the University of Ore- gon. She is majoring in business administration and was graduated from Juneau High School last spring. — EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY — IRE—JUNEAU, ALASKA FRIDAY, DECEMRER 21, 1951 Communist Party leader Found | tuna situation and to see whether they can do something about it. What they are aiming at is a 45 percent tariff on all tuna imports | to the United States. [ Cne of E(hrislmas (arols ‘\Add Yuletide Air {he main speakers at |the Seatite meeting was Fred Wol-| oy, 1To Juneau Area leson, who for many years trolled | (5 FFEsd C g p] e S 'for salmon in Southeast Alask hflfl?!?v giien | e which was heard where he was widely known as R y lover 1y originated from < % Yakima Kid.” NEW YORK, Dec. 21—P —GUS| two_places—the Methodist Church 1 st summer, during the meets o, one of ‘the: cotiviched Ouins | | the marquee of the Twen- < | I munist party leaders, was found | building. |ing for the signing of the J quilty in Federal Court today of | by the Rotary Club, the ese peace treaty, Wolloson criminal contempt for Ifnlhm to | mu: wili be heard through the zed a nstration off | surrender to begin a five helidays. Records are being furn- G car pris for’ violation of {i hed by the Record Shop. Jerry Colt he €mith Ac 7 did the electrical wiring, . {tun® flcet. The ¢ |3 |to call attention to the er his five | an Fred McGionis, of the | protecting Americ fishermen, iMmhr\:" church has the “disc but like the memorials of the Al-| pay gormer Ohio state secretary ! Legislabure, it went unheed-| o the Communist party and one- | most part dur S Rl for e in its most recent session, mMem-| . o) western Semators and |the 11 party lead in | yeturn from work. s A orlalized the President and thejo . o iipives have promised to |1949 of conspiring to teach to R A Department of State concerning | o ciuse for the fisher- [advocate overthrow of the i — EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY — the protection of Alaska's fisher-| == "0 Luv over a tariff. It |ment by force and violence. He was fes from encroachment by foreign | ., p. eumed that this program |caught in Mexico: nationals. ~|will have little support from our | 5 Specifically, ~the memorials | g o popartment, which in and trappers are watchinz to scé prayed ‘“that the Department OIiy ars has been consistel it may have on their State take immediate steps to se- 2. rather than incre » cure an effective agreement With |, .jeec o0 foreign impo Japan that will assure the United | | If the publicity continues, the | ‘ States that no Japanese fishing, e | trapp the mink ranchers ar | vessels will be permittted to en-| Mink coats and the wearers and | the rest of the fur industry m gage in the fisheries of the Pncmcl]‘ urors theireof 2 been get- have to put on an advertising Coast of North America and (hat}lin*: a lot of publicity cut of Wash- | campaign to make the mink coat no peace treaty be concluded with |ington, D. C., the past ycar or so, a respectable ment . once’ ate: Japan that does not contain such a provision.” Those memorials seems to have | = = been worth less than the paper | | tiioy were mimeographed on. At | . ° | AI.ASI(A ! any rate, the peace treaty with | as 1hé 5 STEAMSHIP COMPANY Japan was signed at San Francis- | and it did co in Septembe not | > & contain a provision to protect ' % A the Alaska coastal fisheries. i lrs |n a es H I’assenger Service The State Department is now ' in the process of negotiating a ¥ fO,\IlTHBOUND fisheries treaty with Japan and,| More people like the taste SANGEL . DENAUL as has happened all too frequently | . 1 l‘ ! Dec. 23 Sun. Dec. 30 in recent negotiations with foreign Of SChhtz t any other beer' | chikan Petersburg governments, we do not appear to | How do we know? Ceattle Wrangell . be getting the best of the bargain. | . tehi The Japanese have demanded, | Sales figures prove it. iy {for one thing, that they be al-| So many people like the taste T lowed to fish in “the Aleutian | < i NORTHBOUND Sea” The exact location and | of Schlitz that it’s . . . | y S.5. BARANOF boundaries of this “sea” have not |been reported, but it begins to R ey The largest-selling beer in the world | 1,52 i lanese fishing vessels may again | i | | be operating in Bering Sea one/ lof these days, as they did before | | World War 11 : | The fisheries of Japan have al- | \ready damaged American, and Al-/ 'askan, fishermen to an extent | Ithat is difficult to assay precisely. | The damage has been done by | imports of Japanese-caught fish, | particularly tuna. | Imports of foreign fishery pro- | ducts to the United States have in- | |creased to a startling extent in, |the past few years. For example, foreign fish made up about eight | percent of the total fish sold on | the United tSates market in 1948, | In 1949, foreign fish had climbed ‘to 13 percent of total sales in the {United States and in 1950 it was up to 29 percent, according to Dr. ‘Wilbert Chapman, research dir- {ector of the American Tunaboat | Association. | It is only occasionally, of course, ;that tuna are caught in quantities | !in or even nrear Alaskan waters. !But many Alaska fishing vessels jand fishermen have journeyed to | Washington, Oregon and Califor- nia waters to engagz in tuna fishing. F réighler Service | From Seattle | December 21 i | FLEMISH KNOT ‘Wrangell, Petersburg, Juneau Kefchikan, e e () For Information Phones 2 and 4 } Juneau ' H. E. GREEN, Agent ALASKA STEAMSHIP COMPANY Lot # The Beer that mae Milwavukee Famou opyright 1951, Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wia, o Tki; season there were very !heavy imports of Japanese tuna jand the price offered the Ameri- can fishermen for their domestic catches were so low that many of them tied up their boats. In addition to the direct effect on the tuna price, all fishery pro- ducts sold in this country, whether they are produced here or shipped in from abroad, are in competi- ition with Alaska's ‘fishery pro- ducts. Imports of substantial quanti- ties of low-priced foreign fish is bound, in the long runm, to depress the market for Alaska’s Salmon and -halibut. Some 200 ermen met in Se- attle not lonz ago to discuss the NADINE THOMPSON. Public Stenographer Office, Alaska Credit Bureau First National Bank Building FOR Can hé Benled 6th Floor g L2 TS SR Available January 1, 1952 Tofal of 2208 Sq. ~OR” in Separate Seclions OF 682 Sq. Ft. - 798 Sq. F1. ~728 Sq. F1. . Located Street Level in Downiown Juneau Ideal Local for Stores - Office Space FOR INFORMATION Inquire 20th Century Theatre Office Building e Office Phone 819 eI ' Siarton S " - T bostin, bowillon akishiy <3 4 stakn B o N dow g A} i BOURBON4sdy s AND BOTTLED BT oisneLED AND ‘;:zcourr\-\“'i‘ L i e 4y a4t S F1. Floor Space Phone Black 91 THE AMERIGAN DISTILLING COMPANY NC., PEKIN, ILLINOIS

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