Page 4 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Nov. 29, 1955 All-Big Seven Teams Dominated By OU Oklahoma's Sooners, Big Seven football champions and representative to the Orange Bowl, dominated the first team of the United Press All-Big Seven Conference football team, placing six players. All-America guard Bo Bolinger and halfback Tommy McDonald were near unanimous choices for the first team. Bolinger and McDonald also were near unanimous selections as lineman and back of the year. Other Sooners to make the team were center Jerry Tubbs, tackle Ed Gray, guard Cecil Morris and quarterback Jimmy Harris. Bolinger is the only repeater from last year. Along with the six players from Oklahoma, two players were selected from Nebraska and one each from Kansas State, Missouri, and Colorado. The all-star line averages 202.8 pounds and the backfield 178.5. Every team in the conference placed men on the first two teams except Iowa State and Kansas, Iowa State's best bet was end Harold Potts and Kansas' top vote getter was halfback Ralph Moody. First Team E—Harold Burnine, Missouri E—Jon McWilliams, Nebraska T—Ed Gray, Oklahoma T—Sam Salerno, Colorado G—Bo Bolinger, Oklahoma G—Cecil Morris, Oklahoma C—Jerry Tubbs, Oklahoma QB—Jimmy Harris, Oklahoma HB—Tommy McDonald, Oklahoma HB—Willie Greenlaw, Nebraska FB—Doug Roether, Kansas State Second Team Ends—Joe Mobra, Oklahoma, and Lamar Mever, Colorado. Tackles--Ron Nery, Kansas State, and Al Portney, Missouri. Guards-Jim Martin, Missouri, and Dick Stapp, Colorado. Center - Jim Furey, Kansas State Quartz - Bob B. Whitehead State Lake Halfbacks—Re x Fischer, Nebraska, and Robert Burris, Oklahoma. Fullback—Gene Roll, Missouri. Honorable, Mention. Ends: John Bell, Oklahoma Frank Clarke, Colorado; Jim Rusher, Kansas State; Harold Potts, Iowa State; Wally Merz, Colorado; Jim Letevats and Lynn McCarthy, Kansas. Tackles: Cal Woodworth, Oklahoma; Bill Kucera, Dick Golder and Harry Javernick, Colorado; La Verne Torczon and Jack Fleming, Nebraska; Jim McCaulley and Ray Tweeten, Iowa State, and Frank Rodman, Kansas -State Guards; Jim Murphy, Bill Taylor, and Don Kampe, Nebraska; Dave Jones and Harlan Branby, Colorado; George Remsberg, Kansas; Terry Roberts, Missouri, and Rudy Bletcher, Kansas State. Centers: Don Karnoscak, Colorado; Frank Black and Galen Wahlmeier, Kansas, and Ken Northcourt, Oklahoma. Quarterbacks: Jimmy Hunter Missouri; Donn Lorenzen, Iowa State, and Wally Strauch, Kansas Halfbacks: Clendon Thomas, Oklahoma; Homer Jenkins, Colorado; Don Erway, Nebraska; Dick Blowey, Ted Rohde, Ralph Moody, and John Francisco, Kansas. Fullbacks: Emerson Wilson and John Bayuk, Colorado; Billy Pricer and Dennitt Morris, Oklahoma. Uebel To Play For North MIAMI, Fla. (U.P.)—Fullback Pat Uebel, quarterback Don Holtler and end Ralph Chesnauskas, three Army players who had a big hand in the upset of Navy Saturday, have been named to the North team for the annual Shrine North-South College all-Star football game in the Orange Bowl Dec. 26. Large Crowd Expected DURHAM, N.C. (U.P.)—Athletic director E. M. Cameron said today that about 35,000 fans will turn out for next Saturday's game between the Duke Blue Devils and North Carolina. The game is the last of the season in the area. The location of the nesting grounds of the whooping crane, North America's rarest and tallest bird, is still a mystery despite intensive search by prominent biologists. Five Teams Sign For Winter Games CORTINO D'AMPEZZO, Italy—(U.P.)-Spain, Holland, Turkey, Burgaria, and Romania filed entries in the Winter Olympic Games yesterday only 48 hours before the deadline for national applications. Turkey will be competing for the first time. The U.S. Army Quartermaster school made its home in Fort Lee Va., Oct. 6, 1941. The Pittsburg Gorillas, champions in football and off to a running start in the basketball season with three straight wins, figure as the team to beat in the CIC cage race this winter. CIC Race Is Off To Early Start Rv UNITED PRESS The CIC season gets underway in ernest Thursday night, but Southwestern will make the second opener tonight against Phillips University at Enid, Okla. Pittsburgh opened Nov.21 and in three straight nights won from Oklahoma teams. Fort Hays, figured as the weakest team, opens Thursday night as does St. Benedict's, Emporia State, and Washburn. A safety specialist says 20 days of working time and $40 in a hospital expense can be saved by a farm family each year by eliminating accidents on the farm. COLUMBUS, O. — (U. P.)—The Boston Red Sox became the new owners of the San Francisco Seals of the Pacific Coast League today and cleared the decks for operation there by announcing they will give up Louisville of the American Association. San Francisco Seals Bought By Red Sox The Red Sox bought the Seals last night in what could be a $370,000 "package"—paying off the Seals' $220,000 in back debts, plus another reported $150,000 to the league. Sox officials said they plan to build up the Seals' roster with top-flight talent, and that's why they will give up Louisville—long their No. 1 farm club. They said they just do not have enough suitable players to man two high classification minor league teams. Boston officials said already they have two bidders for Louisville, one of them a major-league team. The Sox did not identify the bidders. With Boston now in possession of a franchise in the valuable San Francisco area, movement of the American League into this section could be greatly eased—whether by transfer of the Red Sox themselves or by moving or addition of some other team. KO Is Predicted—Maybe GREENWOOD LAKE. N.Y. (U.P.) —Veteran trainer Dan Florio predicted today that Sugar Ray Robinson will regain his middleweight title from Carl "Bobo" Olson "maybe by a knockout" when they meet at Chicago Dec. 9. Robinson will box today and tomorrow and then leave for the site of the fight on Thursday night. FOLKS USED TO BUY refrigeration in fifty pound pieces. Frozen foods were unheard of . . . ice cubes an impossibility . . . and that drip pan under the ice box always seemed to be overflowing. Today, a silent, white-enameled ice man stands in millions of kitchens. But to mass produce millions of refrigerators, manufacturers must be able to sell them by the millions. Only by advertising can a manufacturer talk to millions of people at one time. ADVERTISING TELLS the story of new refrigerators . . . and helps sell them. The more it sells, the more must be made — keeping the production lines and the jobs going. The result: newer, better appliances at prices more people can afford to pay. Advertising helped make the difference — in refrigerators, and in our American way of life.