Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 07, 1939, Page Two, Image 2

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    DUCK
TRACKS
By ELBEBT HAWKINS
Sports Publicity Man Bruce
Hamby was in a quandary recent
ly after collecting a poll of all
opponent choices for the season by
members of Oregon’s national
championship basketball squad.
You see, Bruce got one all-star
tabulation which road: Forwards,
Laddie Gale and John Dick; ren
ter, Slim Wintermute; Guards,
Wally Johansen and Bobby Anet.
The worried Mr. Hamby set out
t.o find out who was joking and to
get the culprit’s real all-opponent
choice. It turned out to be Earl
Sandness, sophomore Astorian, who
was a reserve for Coach Hobson.
But Fdarl wasn’t joking about his
choice, he really meant it. His
leasoning went about like this:
I’ve played against those five in
practice all year. Gosh, they’re the
toughest I've played against.
* * *
Butch Morse, University of Ore
gon’s all-American end of not so
many seasons ago, now in profes
sional football, recently told the
press of a University of Pittsburgh
athlete who claimed to have taken
a “cut” when he went from col
lege football to the pro game, but
that little joke was a bit of irony
to University of Idaho.
Idaho last fall had ils most suc
cessful season in games won and
lost in 11 seasons yet went ap
proximately $3200 in the “red.”
Sports (Editor Bill McGowan, of
the Idaho Argonaut, pretty well
summarized it when he wrote,
“Little left there to split with the
players.” Out of this week’s meet
ing of the athletic board came of
ficial word that Oregon's 1988
football season had been a loser,
too, which might shock some of
the railbirds. Anse Cornell, the
business-minded athletic manager,
offered a pretty sound reason last
fall why the season couldn’t “he
a very moneyed one.” The reason:
Oregon didn’t play any games in
Los Angeles during the 1988 cam
paign, and that’s where the north
west teams do make money. Win
or lose they’re a eincli to draw at
least 25,000 in Los Angeles for
any kind of a game, and such a
turnout in Eugene, Corvallis, Port
land, Pullman, Moscow, or Seattle
. is too rare to even look forward
;to.
* * *
. Where one squad is weak the
pother is strong. That's the situa
tion with Colonel Bill Hayward's
.Oregon cinder team and Hec Kd
- mundson’s University of Washing
. ton Huskies. Colonel Bill bemoans
*u lack of weight men and jumpers,
whereas Hec has big Leon Bjork
land who is throwing the discus 145
* feet, and Chuck Bechtol, a shot put
* veteran.
* Hec Edmundson sees a big hole
in the ranks of his sprinters and
" distance men, having lost Marion
. Hay, veteran speedster, and John
'Swap, a 4:19 miler. Bill Hayward
„lost his Mack Robinson, but Jim
'Buck, Bob Dicz, and Bob Keene
■>are competent for the shorter
^events, and Kirman Storli, one of
.the country's top half-milers, is
, 1'eady for his biggest season. I’ush
-ing the conference's top milers this
"spring will be Don Barker and
*Bub Mitchell, who are vets.
* George Stovel has one of the
school’s most promising frosh cin
der squads in many seasons, too.
„ll includes three ex-Oregon stat■>
high school champs, and the one
«,and two men in individual scoring
'from last year's prep meet.
« Former Student Prow Rib
hchult/. s lit tie brother Francis is
"here from Forest Grove mill an
imposing prep record. The Husky
"freshman took top honors (ID,
Oregon Nine Swamps Portland Baseballers, 12 to 2
Pilot Infielders Help;
Contribute Nine Boots
Southpaw Jack Jasper Twirls lor
Webfoots; Both Clubs Get Five Hits;
G. Smith, Mullen Hit Extra Basers
By ELBERT HAWKINS
The Webfoot baseballers and Portland university each col
lected five hits yesterday but Father Lane’s Pilots booted and
foozled the ball all over Howe field and handed Oregon a 12 to 2
victory.
The jittery Portlanders chalked up exactly nine miscues for
eight innings in the field, five of them by Third Baseman An
duiza who handled the ball only six times. His only perfect play
was a catch of Gale Smith’s fly in the fifth inning.
Jack Jasper, the sunshine hoy
from California, southpawed eight
innings on the mound for Oregon,
yielding only two runs on Port
land’s five hits. A1 Linn pitched
the ninth for the Webfoots, set
ting Portland down in one-two
three order.
Have Big Seventh
Hobby Hobson’s Oregonians
managed .to accumulate a 7 to 1
lead after six innings, but Port
land's defense crumpled in c< llosal
fashion in the next frame when
the Webfoots batted around once
completely and collected five runs
cn only one base hit, that a single
bj V.'impy Quinn, hive e~rms did
the damage.
It went like this: Lead-off hitter
Tommy Cox got life when Second
Sacker Pete Peterson dropped his
pop fly. Then An luiaa, the unlucky
Pilot third baseman, tossed one
away on Jack Shimshak’s hit, and
the two Webfoots pulled up at sec
ond aid third. Ford Mull.v rolled
one down to second base and on
a fielder’s choice Peterson threw
iale to the plate, Cox scoring and
Shimshak pulling up at laird.
Five Miscues
Busher Smith, Oregon's hard
hitting first baseman, lifted a high
sacrifice fly into left field to drive
Shimshak home. Then came Wimpy
Quinn’s lone hit of the game which
drove Mullen across the plate.
This made it three runs for the
inning with only one m?n out. An
duiza complied by booting succes
sive hits by Elmer Mallory and
Jimmie Nicholson, and Catcher
Philip helped out with a fizzle to
make Portland’s miseries total five
for the inning.
Gale Smith smacked out one of
the game's two extra basers in
the third inning with Cox on base,
his line drive breezing by Curran
in left field for a home run.
Oregon “million dollar infield’’
Mallory to Mullen to Smith
turned up with two flashy double
plays during the game. A third
Oregon twin killing was engineered
by Jasper who caught a line drive
in pitcher’s box and relayed the
ball to Ford Mullen who was cover
ing first. Despite their backward
fielding gigantics, the Portlanders
got a double play, too, in the first
inning when Wimp Quinn smacked
a liner to Jack Friedhoff at short
stop Who relayed it to first, doub
ling Gale Smith off the base by a
proverbial mile.
Two Kim* In First
Hobby’s Ducks led off with two
runs in the first inning on a ring
ing double by Second Baseman
Ford Mullen, a walk and an error
at shortstop which allowed the
two unearned tallies to cross the
plate.
Bill O'Donnell, Portland univer
sity’s high-scoring basket e e r,
started on the mound and was re
lieved in the seventh inning by big
Jack Shaw who was victimized in
Oregon's big inning which came as
a gift by the sieve-like Pilot in
field.
The Wcbfoots play Oregon nor
mal in Monmouth today at .'1 o'
clock with Righthanders A1 Finn
and Pete Iguc slated by Coach
Hobson for duty. Oregon moves to
Portland for a return game at 2:30
Saturday afternoon with the Pilots.
Hobby has nominated Bob Creigh
ton to pitch that game.
point*) in tlio state moot last
spring li\ "tinting tlio mu aim
\aril dashes, placing second hi
tlio liroud jump, anil running ou
tIn' fiftli plaoo rcla.v tram. \n
oUht Km tiling, Uu\ Dickson of
Bund, nas Francis' main compel i
lor for laurels uitli a first in the
•'road jump and seconds on the
Ion and high hurdles. \ third out
standing Duckling to nus"cr Sto
m I's call I hi* spring is I lu,\ Klein
fuldl, Bend iniler, m Iio is pushing
t olorci mil s \arsit) tuns. nay
"on his third consecutive blue rih
l*on at tJio stale meet last spring.
I
Hollins college has been given
100 acres of Florida jungle-land to
add to its campus.
BOX SCORE
Summary:
PORTLAND
Feterson, 2 ....
Curran, 1 .
Bouer, r .
Korhonen, m
Anduiza, 3 .
Stepavich, lb
Friedhoff, s
Pilip, c .
O’Donnell, p
Shaw, p .
B R H O A E
0 0
0 1
1 1
0 0
1 1
0 1
0 0
0 0
0 0 0
0 1
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 5
0 0
4 2
0 1
3 0
0 10 0 0
Totals .
OREGON
Cox, 1 .
Shimshak, r ....
Mullen, 2
G. Smith, lb
Quinn, 3.
Mallory, s .
Nicholson, m .
Moore, c .
Jasper, p .
Linn, p.
W. Smith, 1 .
Yerby, r .
White, m .
Walden, c
Hardy* .
31 2
B R
5 24
H O
0 0
0 1
1 4
1 10
1 2
7 9
A E
0 0
0 0
0
0 0
2 0
4 0
0 0
1 1
2 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
10 0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
0 0
10 0 0
0 0
0 0
Totals 35 12 5 27 13
11 Batted for Cox in 8th inning.
Score by innings:
Portland
Hits
Oi egon
Hits
010 000 100 - 2
010 000 220— 0
213 001 50*—12
.101 002 10*— 5
Home runs, G. Smith. Two-base
hits, Mullen. Winning pitcher, Jas
per. Losing pitcher, O'Donnell
Innings pitched, by O'Donnell 0,
Shaw 2, Jasper 8 ,Linn 1. At bat,
off O'Donnell 22, Shaw 13, Jasper
28, Linn 3. Four hits and 7 runs
off O’Donnell, 5 hits and 2 runs
off Jasper. Struck out, by O’Don
nell 2, Shaw 2, Jasper 4, Linn 1.
Bases on balls, off O’Donnell 2,
Shaw 1, Jasper 1. Hit by pitched
ball, by Jasper (Peterson). Balk,
Jasper. Left on bases, Portland 5,
Oregon 4. Runs batted in, Mul
len 1, G. Smith 3, Quinn 1, Nichol
son 1, Moore 1, Walden 1, Kor
honen 1. Double plays, Jasper to
Mullen, Mallory to Mullen to G.
Smith 2, Friedhoff to Stepavich.
Time, 1:57. Umpire, Don Husband.
Physical Education
Not Science, Says
Professor Jameson
Dr. Samuel Jameson, professor
of sociology, discussed the possi
bility of having a broader and more
intelligent relationship between
physical education and the social
sciences at the recent northwest
district convention of the Ameri
can Association for Health, Physi
1 “1 Education, and Recreation,
Professor Jameson questioned
tin1 right of physical education
classifying as science until such
a time as it departs from such
limitations as athleticism and ex
hibitionism. He also discussed phy
sa-al education in the light of so
cial sciences.
l’iiiisi' ill our counter
I (i r v u ii r refresh
•iiients:
Milkshakes
Sa odwiches
Siberrian Cones
Luncheons
Light Dinners
^ I 1 . lu'IlKMullfT
our iri'i' campus dc
Ii\ cries.
SCOTT’S
sberrim
SHOP
i'lt (■:. uni. rh. -j'i.-j
Warren's Men
Schedule Tough
Baseball Nines
Frosh to Play
Rooks, Lincoln,
Jeff, Woodburn
Fourteen games remain on the
Duckling baseball schedule and an
imposing array of talented clubs
will be met during the season.
Eight of the fourteen games will
be played on foreign grounds.
Foremost among the opposing
clubs to be faced are the Oregon
State rooks. The first clash be
tween the Rooks and the Frosh
will take place at Corvallis, Friday,
May 12. Judging by pre-season
records these two teams are even
ly matched and, as always, there
will be fireworks aplenty when
these rivals meet.
Three of the best high school
clubs in the state—Lincoln and
Jefferson of Portland and Wood
burn—are on the Duckling sched
ule. Postoffice Pharmacy, winner
of the Northwest Junior Legion
championship last season, was
composed mostly of Lincoln high
players. Jefferson, Portland inter
scholastic champions last year,
have already defeated the frosh,
but John Warren’s men have their
eyes set on revenge. Woodburn
was undefeated in high school
competition last year and is con
sidered to be equally strong this
season.
Coach John Warren stated that
Kap Sigs, Sigma Chi Vie
Monday for Intramural
Swimming Championship
Yeomen and Phi Psis Are Nosed Out in
Semi-Finals; Jerry MacDonald Betters
Pacific Coast Record in Free Style
By PAUL McCAJiTV
Another championship and the conclusion of one of the final chap
ters in the spring intramural sports program came near reality yester
day as Kappa Sigma eliminated the Yeomen, 26 to 23, and Sigma Chi
defeated Phi Kappa Psi, 28 to 21, in the semifinals of intramural
swimming.
The two winners, Kappa Sigma and Sigma Chi, will meet for the
interhouse “water-churning” cham
pionship, Monday, April 10. Title
meet was originally scheduled for
today but a two-day rest was
granted by intramural swimming
officials.
MacDonald Betters Record
Jerry MacDonald, the Kappa Sig
swimmer who makes a habit of
breaking records, repeated his us
ual tactics again yesterday by
swimming the 40-yard free style
event in 19 seconds flat to better
the coast record by one-fifth of a
second. MacDonald's performance
of yesterday in this event was a
repetition of one earlier this week
when he bettered the coast rec
ord in the 40-yard free style by
even a greater margin, swimming
the 40 yards in 18.2 seconds.
With the score tied at 21-all, a
victory in the last event, the 120
yard free style relay, gave Kappa
Sigma its win over the Yeomen.
The winning team in this event
was composed of Andrus and Lans
ing who teamed with MacDonald.
Sigma Chi had little difficulty
downing Phi Kappa Psi. The Phi
Psis won the last event but fell
short of the winner’s 28 points.
Yesterday’s results were as fol
lows :
Kappa Sigma 26, Yeomen 23.
40-yard free style — MacDonald
(Kappa Sig) first; Curtis (Yeo
men) second; Jenks (Kappa Sig)
third.
40-yard backstroke — Curtis
(Yeomen) first; Lansing (Kappa
Sig) second; Simpson (Yeomen)
third.
40-yard breast stroke—Andrus
(Kappa Sig) first; Link and Cud
deback (Yeomen) second and third.
120-yard medley—Won by Yeo
men (Link and D. and E. Curtis).
60-yard individual medley—Mac
Donald (Kappa Sig) first; E. Cur
tis (Yeomen) second.
120-yard free style relay Won
by Kappa Sigma (MacDonald, An
drus, and Lansing).
Sigma Chi 28, Phi Kappa Psi 21.
40-yard free style—Bradshaw
(I’lcasc turn to page three)
CLOSE-OUT
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Webfoot Golfers Meet Huskies
First Injury Hits
Frosh Track Squad
The old bugaboo—injury—struck
at George Stovel's frosh track
team leaving Ray Dickson of the
Bend duo on the bench with a
pulled leg muscle.
Dickson was counted on for
points in the high and low hurdles,
broad jump, and the pole vault.
According to Stovel, the ex-Lava
Bear of Bend may be ready for
action in the first of the little civil
wars with the Oregon State rooks
May 5.
Time trials will be held Satur
day to place the squad members.
the present schedule is tentative
and there may be some change in
dates as the season progresses.
The tentative frosh 1939 base
ball schedule is as follows:
April 8—Eugene at Eugene.
April 14—Jefferson at Portland.
April 15—State Penitentiary at
Salem.
April 21—Lincoln at Portland.
April 22—Grant at Portland.
April 29—Milwaukie at Milwau
kie.
May 5—Lincoln at Eugene.
May 6—Lincoln at Eugene.
May 12— Milwaukie at Eugene.
May 13—Rooks at Corvallis.
May 16 — Woodburn at Wood
burn.
May 19—-Rooks at Eugene.
May 20—Rooks at Corvallis.
May 26—Rooks at Eugene.
Divot Opener Will
Be Played Today
At Country Club
By MILTON LEVY
University of Oregon's varsity golf squad will meet the Washington
Huskies, last year’s Northwest conference golf champs, in the first
golf match of the season for Oregon on the Eugene country club course
today.
This is one of the season's big matches as the Huskies, defending
champs, are the team to beat. The conference title is decided by
playoffs, which will be held in Eu
gene this year, and if the Ducks
make a good showing today
against the Huskies they will stand
a good chance of getting back the
championship which they lost last
year when the teams had their
playoffs in Idaho.
Golden Regains Position
Shelby Golden will play in the
No. 1 position for the Ducks. Gol
den was upset during the week by
Fred Davis, No. 2 man, one up.
Friday, Golden challenged Davis
and got his top berth back by de
feating Davis 4 and 2.
The other members of the team
were able to keep their same posi
tions. Benny Hughes successfully
defended his fifth position in a
challenge match with Cliff Smith.
After the finish of the challenge
matches this week the first six
men remained in the same posi
tions that they had after the quali
fying rounds.
Davis will play as No. 2 man.
Bill Watson will be No. 3, Doc
Near No. 4, Benny Hughes No. 5,
and Cliff Smith as No. 6.
Improvement Shown
The team has been playing a lot
of golf this week and they have
gotten kinks out of their system
that bothered them during the
first week. All the six men are ex
pected to be shooting around par
and possibly under.
SEE THESE SHIRTS AT
“THE MAN’S SHOP”
BYROM & KNEELAND
32 E. Tenth
Phone 364
HOW TO TIE A TIE
]# Arrow, makers of famed Arrow shirts
. . . now make neckties. And here tells ■
you how to tie them. First, put the
wide end over and under narrow end
p . . thus . . ,
A I
j mm \ s
2 Then form a preliminary knot, by
bringing wide end over narrow end
and up through opening at collar.
Smooth out the preliminary knot.
3, Next, put the wide end through the
loop—loosely—and smooth out again.
Keeping the knot smooth is important.
k X
Now make a groove lengthwise in the
* wide end by pinching the sides to
gether. This groove—when you pull
the tie tight—forms a dimple beneath
knot. Arrow Ties, because of their rich
fabrics, achieve this drape easily.
The finished job looks like this. Knot
* not too big — and not so tight it
screeches. Tie one of our Arrow Tics
in this manner and you have the last
word in necktie smartness.
A
and $1.50. That’s all Arrow
Ties cost. Fine fabrics. Beautiful
tailoring. They hold their shape
through a resilient feature, tie neatly,
wear long. See your Arrow dealer.
ARROW CRAVATS
Arrow Shirts on the Campus
Campus Shop
Clay Pomeroy Vern Pomeroy
Oregon opened its golf season
here last year by meeting the Hus
kies on the country club course.
The Ducks defeated Washington,
18 to 9, and later fell before the
Huskies at Seattle.
The best ball doubles will begin
about 9 and the singles will start
at 1 o’clock.
The invading Huskies have only
one man on the team that played
here last year. Ernie Johnson, cap
tain and No. 1 man, heads the
Washington squad.
Palmer Smith, Bobby Phillips,
Ward Wortman, Bobby Myers,
and Erwin Standes make up the
rest of the team.
The Duck golfers have sched
uled seven matches for this sea
son. The matches are with Wash
ington, College of Puget Sound,
Idaho, Oregon State, and Washing
ton State. Four of the matches
will be played in Eugene as will
the conference playoffs.
The Duck schedule is:
April 7—Washington Eugene.
April 21—C.P.S.—Tacoma.
April 22—Washington- Seattle.
May 5—Idaho—Eugene.
May 6.—W.S.C.—Eugene.
May 13—O.S.C.—Corvallis.
May 20—O.S.C.-Eugene.
May 27—Conference playoffs—
Eugene.
Softball Leagues Set
For Intramural Plag
Season Opener on
April 17; Playoffs
After May 19
Softball schedules were given to
intramural house managers Thurs
day by Roland Dickie, intramural
sports supervisor. The softball
teams will be divided into five
leagues, the members of which are
as follows:
League one: Delta Upsilon, Can
ard club, Sigma Alpha Epsilon,
Zeta hall, Omega hall, and Alpha
Tau Omega.
League two: Gamma hall, Pi
Kappa Alpha, Chi Psi, Beta Theta
Pi, Phi Kappa Psi, and Phi Delta
Theta.
League three: Phi Sigma Kappa,
Delta Tau Delta, Sigma Nu, Sig
ma Alpha Mu, and Sherry Ross
hall.
League four: Sigma Phi Epsi
lon, Campbell Co-op, Fizzeds, Sig
ma hall, and Kappa Sigma.
League five: Theta Chi, Alpha
hall, Sigma Chi, Yeomen, and Phi
Gamma Delta.
Four games a day are sched
uled with two fields being used.
(Please turn to page three)
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Arrangements for monthly rates will
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• Lost
PAIR of gold-rimmed glasses,
brown leather case. Lost in front £
of Friendly hall. Levelle Wal
strom, phone 2900.
ELGIN WRIST watch, white gold.
Lost at rally Friday. "Jean Clare,
1935’’ on back. REWARD for re
turn to Jean Ramsden, Chi
Omega.
BLACK BILLFOLD lost Week,
containing cards of importance
to myself only. Reward. Fred
Ziegler. Sigma Nu.
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