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    CHICAGO (AP) ?╟÷ Get a grip on yourselves, girls. America's 1952 champ woman weight shedder was picked Friday arid she admitted she's just as hungry now as when she went on a rigid diet, a year ago. W3^i^ Mrs. Maiga'ret Schmidt, 38, of Milwaukee, has slimmed herself down from 271 to her present 171 ppunds in 12 months and ta shoot-j ing for a streamlined 129-pound figure by the end of the year. Thaisywil" be a 165 - pound drop from the 294 pounds she sealed nu Dec. ,20, 1951. -Mrs. Schmidt, housewife and mo-j ther of two sons, was awarded trophy Friday <f??r being tops among the 2,500 members of TOPS. TOPS stands for "taking off pounds Sensibly." How is it done sensibly?; By fol-j lowing this kind of diet: , Breakfast ?╟÷ One -'haj|f .orange Sometimes a soft -boiled egg Black coffee, no sugar. ..Luncheon ?╟÷ Small serving of plain lettuce. Small serving of vegetable. Three ounces of lean meat. Black coffee, no sugar. I Dinner ?╟÷ Small serving of dry cottage cheese. Plain lettuce. Slice* of sausage or lean meat. Half grapefruit or raw apple. Black coffee, no sugar. Mrs. Schmidt, who is 5 feet 3, says.she is one of those unfortunate persons vflio can get fat on iPoSet most persons need to maintain normal weight. She says she plans to say on a 600-800 calorie a day diet until she hits 129 pounds and then up it to 1,000-1,200 calories for the rest1 of her life. Most reducing diets al- <ow 1,200-1,500 calories. "It takes a lot of will power/' she said, "because it seems just as hard to diet now as it was at the beginning/' She said belonging to the diet club helps a lot because members talk over their weight - losing prowess * and you decide if they can do it, so can I." But the second and third place winners in the contest claimed they weren't having too much trouble with their diets now. The runner-up, Mrs. Irene Repka, 31, of Milwaukee, lost 91% pounds to reach her present 171-pound figure. Mrs. AudreygSchmJdt, 31; Milwaukee th?╜d?^h|fcfp W %efah mo. Nearly 10^ delegates : and pojiles- tants attended me annual pjeeting ?√ß Of TOPS to?^ife headquarteri of the American>. Medical Association. Op. A irequireme^^'ffor' ^jnepabership, 'is that the dieting > be started under a physician's su^e'r^p^^^^p Top of the Morning "vwiWnpHI t Lr~ was^^B^-'^lh trearF Russia hatl/the atomic bomb." His statement followed a new at-, tack on the former president's as- :ertion Monday that he is".not con- need that Russia has the A- b^b. /<-^i^m^^''* Bourke Hickenlooper.>,|f 3$.,.) of Io^lfe said in "a senate speech yesterday that on the 'basis of official reports he personally is convinced, that Russia does have the A-bomb. The senator charged that if. announcements issued by the White House during Truman's administration were untrue or exagger ated, the former president, broke faith with the American people Hickenlooper is a former chairman of the joint, congressional a tomic energy committee. Commenting on Hickenlooper's statement, Truman said: "Those fellows in congress have to say such things just to get in the newspapers." Truman reiterated he had made public his doubt, that Russia had perfected' an A-bomb, in ah ex elusive interview with International News Service because he want-| ed "to set* the record straight." He said he had announced on three occasions that an "atomic explosion" was believed to have been set offtiUiside Russia. But he added that he never said these explosions were caused by atomic bombs. He said he was careful! to state in the announcements that exDlosions^^^ejy^Me^gfeto^. hajga been of "an atoime^or nuclear bfi gin. ' The. first announcement was! made Sept. 23,1949. The others were made Oct. 3, 1951, and Oct. 22, 1951. Truman asserted some congressmen had misinterpreted the announcements to.mean the blasts were atomic bomb explosions anci that they were "trying to scare the people to death with irrespon-] sible statements." The former chief executive also disputed a suggestion made b,y Gen. George^C. Kenney, retired former (ihrnroi U.S. air force op- erationsgphat "we go over the yalu^prver and hit the Commun-; iply center." uman ^said that if the Korean Net" Victojv y TOLEDO, O., Jan. .JOINTS)' ?╟÷ Jack' Kramer defeated Australian Frank Sedgman, 10-8, 4-6; 6-3 tp- night as the professional tennis stars played in Toledo on their North American tour. SATURDAY, JANUARY 31, 1953 "jfnnHmnceflrmm; Weather "was made shortly, after a series of reports from Washington said President Eisenhower may take the wraps'off Chiang Kai-Shek's 5c PER COPY corps department of thV^SIISf and Rear Admiral E. C. Ewen, commander of fleet air at Alameda. NEVADA f 'F|jr s'outh and oc- . \ casional cloudinfsif north portion J Saturday and p$pday. 4 Warmer | northeast portion^ Saturday.* High Saturday 50-60 ami, low Saturday night 20-30 except- in extreme south high 65-75 wm low, 35-45.'"-"..^ SOUTHERN eMiFORNU ?╟÷ f Mostly clear Saturday and Sunday; little change in temperatures; dfcjr northeast winds becoming locally strong 2nd gusty n$ar eanyons. ?╟≤"g*Pg Vegas Cops 69-39 Win The Las Vegas Wildcats came back strong in the third period last night to take a lop-sided 69 to 39 victory over the Needles Mustangs at the local^gh school gym". - Needles put up a stiff fight in the early part of the game and outscrapped the Wildcats to take a 12 to 11 lead at the end of the first frame. Las Vegas settled down in the second period, &fie- Coach Pat Diskin alternated be tween his first and second teams to outscore the Mustangs 18 to seven and take a halftime margin of 29 to 19. Chuck Handley and Jerry Cor ger led an all-out Wildcat attack in the third stanza to give the lor- team 26 points, while the .Cat. defenses held the Needles crew to seven points. Handley connected with 11 points during the spree and Conger tallied nine. The Mustangs began rolling a- gainst the Wildcat reserves in the last period and managed to play on even terms. Handley and Ken Huntsman each hit for 15 points to pace the Cats, while teammate Conger made 12. Charles Gutierrez tallier ten for the losers, while Art Large hit the hoop for eight. In a preliminary game the Las Vegas JV's beat the Needles JV's 41 to 34. Ron Truman led the Las Vegas team with ten points, while Miller scored 11 for the losers, REVIEW'-JOURNAL PHOTO REBOUND ACTION ?╟÷ Lanky Earl Evans, No. 13, center for the Las Vegas Wildcats, grabs the ball away from.Needles' Ken Shepnan* No. 11, and Vernon Medrano, No. 9, in a speedy Mil^roaH^ftmr^^yAd' at -the local high school gymnasium last night before an overflow crowd. The Wildcats, pushed in the first half, eopped a 69 to 39 win. Chuck Handley, high point man for the rampant Cats for the season thus far, stands nearest the camera awaiting a chance to get in the scramble (No. 9.) , j; BASKETBALL Nevada 89, San Francisco St. 68 Marquette 92, Detroit 83 Oklahoma A&M 47, Tulsa 45 North Carolina 73, Davidson 52 Wm. & Mary 91, Virginia Tech 74 Cincinnati 78, Ohio U. 64 Citadel 74, Newberry 64 BYU 91, Montana 56 Utah 75, Utah St. 68. Grinnell 77, Coe 72 Simpson 80, Dubuque 75 Penn St. 71, Michigan St. 42 Syracuse 78, Army 66 3?║?>/>* TCU 57, SMU 34 Idaho 69, Washington St. 51 Santa Clara 81, Stanford 71 College Puget Sound 75, Whitworth | 73 ' Seattle U 89, Loyola (Los Angeles) 82 YMI (San Francisco) 68, San Fr?╜- Cisco U. 59 Parks AFB 81, Beale AFB 45 Oregon St. 67, Oregon 65 Castle AFB 71, Stead AFB 52 Murray St. 69, Miami 65 " ho St. 76, College of Idaho 63 David Lipscomb 82, Birmingham Southern 62 Tex- College 66, Butler 64 Ball St. 80, Indiana St. 61 Wayne U. 80, St. Norberts 59 Wiley 62, Prairie View 61 Marquette 92, Detroit 83 St. Benedicts 70, Washburn 56 Adelphia 92, Fairfield 72 Lemoyne 64, Boston College 59 Augustana (III.) 64, Elmhurst 58 Gettysburg 75, Wagner 71 Norwich 76, Hamilton 65 South Dakota 66, Augustana (S.D.) 55 North Dakota 94, Morningside 74 Miss. Southern 76, La. Tech 67 Alabama St. 74, Tuskegee Inst. 52 USC 74, Santa Barbara 48 Whittier 96, La Verne 45 UCLA 77, San Diego St. 48 Pepperdine 85, Cal Poly 72 Pasadena Nazarene 87, Chico St. 7$ California 60, St. Mary's 55 BULLETIN NEW YORK, Jan. 30 (INS) Vince Martinez of Paterson, N. J., boxing's rookie of the year in 1952, belted his way to his 26th victory in 27 fights tonight with a unanimous ten-round decteiott^pvCT^ Cannin|k M$*$.>.?·j$: gBroekfyn^. at MadJSl^^i^l^'^arde^^F^ Martinez, ahead 9-1 and 8-2 on the cards of Judges Harold Barnes and Frank Forbes and given a 7-2-1 edge by Referee Ruby Goldstein, found Fiore an open target for his sharp jabs. Youth Admits He Killed Mother PORTLAND,"Ore. Jan. 20?╟÷(INS) A young man, who identified himself as Robert H. Matlock, walkec into police headquarters today and said he had just killed his mother. Matlock, about 26 years old, said he had stabbed, slugged and kicked her "many times". His hands were covered with blood and he appeared bewildered. He told the startled desk sergeant and detectives the killing oc- curred^ffiiiiR tourist cabin on the iOUt^nWof Portland. A police car dispatched to that address found a woman's body there. ^j^p?½?║ When questioned by detectives as to whjt he killed his mother, the youth replied: "It's my first chance?╟÷and my last ehance." ?╟÷NE?· Teteohoto HERO'S WELCOME-Cpi. Rod- ert von Kuznick, the soldier who went AWOL from Sort Knox, Ky., to Korea to fight, gets a hero's welcome from his fiancee, Shirley Taylor, in Los Angeles. They're Mr. and Mrs. now. (Copyright, Los Angeles Mirror.) May Deport Purple Heart Polish Vet CAMP CARSON* Colo., Jan. 30 1 ?╟÷(INS)?╟÷ An..army sergeant who fought Communists at* the age ofg 15 and holds the purple heart for action in Korea today faced deportation and possible death at the hands of the reds. Sgt. Janusz Plucinski, 24, a native of Warsaw, Poland, is charged by immigration officials with entering the- United States illegally three years ago.. Plucinski admitted he "jumped ship" in New York harbor aft.gr fleeing Poland ittflf% as a sailor. He said, however-j^^- voluntarily reported to immigra$j|& service officials in New Jersj^lg^^ing the ship. ?√ßjffP He was drafted^fetQ/^th^.^r^ from MameJB 1951%&^e|#ed.2| mofths in KotfeaAlt was the seeona tinj Plucinski fought^agairx^the real. In 1344ihe efought. w^^ihe Po|sh 8th,brigade, an underground groUP injpforld War H. He was captured fy the Russians, but managed to escape. ^e sergeant, who wears two batSe stars for. ! combat service witM_t% U. S. army, served.. 21 moflfcs?Σ≤ with the '7th regiment he^# tank "company in Korea. , :^Hew4jirned to the United States sevemhibnths ago. P^umnlki's plight; was brought to public%i%ention by .Camp Carson officer^ who said immigration "ofr ficials were seeking to deport the GI to his native Poland. The sergeant saidf he believes he would be killed if deported to Poland.