Sfianti peHAxmaUty. Dr. George Guldager: Physician, friendand Fan By BOB HUMPHREYS During any home game, football, basketball, baseball, or track, sit ting on the University of Oregon bench is a man who guards the fu ture of the players more than any one else. This man is the team physician, Dr. George Guldager. During the football season. Dr. Guldager not only sits on the bench at home games but travels with the team whenever he can. He follows the other teams as much as possible. He accompanied the basketball team on their trip to the Midwest -earlier this season. He had a special interest in one of those games. That was the game with Loyola. Dr. Gul dager is a graduate of both Oregon and Loyola. He sat for half of the game on tire Loyola bench and the other half on the Or egon bench. “Dr. Guldager is an ideal ath letic physician,” Tom Hughes, athletic trainer, said, “because of bis sports background.” He played basketball here at the University while taking his pre Hied training-. "Dr. Guldager not only attends all home games and follows the teams as much as possible,” Hughes said, “but he is also available at all times in case an athlete gets hurt in a scrimmage or even going to class.” Ur. Guldager works as a sort of confident for the team, Hughes continued, helping in more ways than just setting dislocated joints. "Doc goes beyond bis athletic du ties with many of the players," Hughes said. "He is the family doc tor for the married athletics. Tak ing care of their wives and children as well as the players themselves is all part of the doctor's work.” Hughes believes that Dr. Gul dager’s experience as a basketball player is the factor that makes him 'B' League Tilts Start Today in IM Courts TOD AY’S SCHEDULE Basketball 3:50 Sigma Clii B vs. Stan Bay B 4:35 Phi Gumma Delta B vs. Mer rick B 5:15 Theta Clii B vs. Sherry Ross B Handball 4:00 Phi Kappa Sigma vs. Phi Kappa Psi With a full round of "A" league basketball already completed, six ' B" quintets will open action in in tramurals today. Except for a split schedule Friday, B division crews will gain the daily limelight this week. At the end of the first round with si\ games of the second round gone, only five A division teams have 2-0 win-loss records. They are Phi Delta Theta, Chi Psi, lotinhda Chi, Sigma Clii, and Phi Kappa Sigma. Minturn, Delta Tail Delta, Phi Sigma Kappa. Sigma Phi Epsilon, MrChesney. Nestor, Sigma Nil, Sigma Alpha Mu, Stan Ray, Pi Kappa Alpha, Beta Theta Pi, and } ippa Sigma each have one win against no losses. First round winners in handball v. re Alpha Tail Omega. Theta Clii. phi Delta Theta, and Omega Hall. Two people we expct to know everything about our church: the clmrch secretary and the ministers wife. so valuable to the University as an athletic physician. “He knows just how’ far a pla er can go when he’s playing with an injury,” Highes said. “He al so knows how much endurance each player has, so he can tell the coaches when he should take the player out of the game.” Hughes told of one time when it proved valuable to have the doctor around during a game. It was the opening game in the 1948 football season with Santa Barbara. Woodley Lewis, star halfback, dislocated his elbow. The doctor took over and re-set the elbow im mediately. Lewis was able to play some ball in the next game and nearly full time in the next game. “If Doc hadn’t been on hand,” Hughes pointed out, ' “Lewis might have been out half the season.” Although Dr. Guldager goes on all the football trips, he has a pri vate practice in Eugene to keep him from going on all of the basket ball and baseball trips, Hughes con tinued. Further athletic duties are giv ing physical examinations for all the hopefuls turning out for sports at the University. “He’s a very congenial, well liked man,” Hughes said, “I don’t know how we could do better.-’ Besides being a confident for players, a family doctor, athletic physician, and an ardent sports fan, Dr. Guldager is also a kind of big brother for all the coaches, Hughes said. “He’s ideal lor the job only be cause of this training and parts background," Hughes continued, “but because he would he at all the home games even if iie didn’t have a job there.” The feeling may go deeper than just wanting to look after the play er’s future, Highes implied, because Dr. Guldager knows well what a sports injury can mean. He had to quit playing basketball at the Uni versity of Oregon because of an in putted knee. New Look Tilt In] Igloo Toe. A new style of basketball will be tried out in McArthur Court Tues day night. Assistant Coach Don Kirscli has arranged two games which may give fans a look at “basketball of the future.” The first game, to be between the Oregon ErOsh and the Oregon Lumber Sales team, will feature a new set-up on penalities for fouling. Each team will be allowed a total of 15 fouls, instead of the usual five per man. When a team has collec tively committed 15 fouls, the other team will ■ thereafter get a bonus shot for each infraction. In the Other game, to be played between the Oregon “Junior Var sity" and Oregon College of Edu cation Wolves, the timer’s watch will be thrown out the window. Instead of using seconds and minutes, the officials will end the game when one team has amassed 00 points. Half-time will be declared when One team has run up 25 points. The Junior Varsity will be made up ot Jack Loomis, Hal Webb, Hick I nis, Bob Gilbert, Paul Cooper, Ernie Huldini, Jim ( alderwood, and possibly other members of the varsity. No admission will be charged for the game, but all fans will be asked to contribute 50 cents to the March of Dimes campaign. Beavers Batter Ducks, 65-49 In 1950 Civil War Opener BILL HARPER, speedy little OSC guard, who canned 15 points Friday niglit to lead all Beaver scorers in defeating Oregon, 65 49. Harper will be seen in McAr thur Court Feb. 10. Eugene*^ Axemen Lose** f toT Frosh 1 In FridaytGame By JACK LANDRUD Oregon’s Frosh hoopmen, paced by G foot, 7 inch, Chet Noe, outran Eugene High School's Axemen, 53 36, in a loosely timed, unofficial scrimmage Friday afternoon in Mc Arthur Court. Noe, hook-shot specialist who handles the pivot spot for the Ducklings, led all scorers with 18 points. Sam Conchetti of the Frosh and Dean Parsons, 6’-6”, star Axeman center shared sec ond place honors with 12 count ers apiece. Both Coach Don Kirsch of Ore gon and Hank Kuchera, Eugene mentor, substituted freely in an at tempt to find the best working combinations. Kirsch expressed dissatisfaction with the Duckling defense in the first half of which ended at a 33-32 score in the Green men’s favor after a nip-and-tuck 16-14 first period. However, definite improvement was displayed in the second half as the prepsters were held to a single point in the final quarter while the Frosh garnered 13. Notably absent from the Ore gon lineup were Bud Covey and Nieh Schmer, guards, and Hank Bonnemann, high scoring for ward, all of whom journeyed to Corvallis to “scout” the Oregon State Rooks in their weekend games. The Duckling's meet the Rooks in a two-game series next weekend. Laddie Gale Owner Of Own Station Laddie Gale, member of the 1939 National Champion Tall Timber Webfoot basketball team, now owns and operates his own service station at Church and State streets in Salem. According to Lyle Nelson, Uni versity information director, Gale especially welcomes any Webfoot customers on their way through Salem. “In fact," Nelson said, “He'd probably be willing to pump gas for them since. I understand, he sel dom refuses a sale." Oregon State’s Beavers overran the Oregon Webfoots, 65-49, Friday night in the first meeting of the teams in 1950. It was the first of the “Civil War” series to be played in new OSC Gill Coliseum, claimed to be one of the biggest and best hoop palaces in the nation. Beaver Coach Slats Gill threw a band of hot shooting, hard guarding players at the Ducks, an dthe score stood even only onCe—2-2 in the first minutes after Webfoot Center Jim Vran izan canned an underhand jump shot to match two free throws by OSC. OSC made 27 points on free throws, and these from 32 trips to the gift line. Oregon garnered 19 points on free throws from 25 tries. For the Beavers, it was Bill Har per. Dick Ballantyne, and a hot de fense on Oregon’s end of the floor. Harper canned 15 points and Ballantyne followed with 14. Most of these came from either free throws or fast break-ins on floor plays near the hoop. Oregon’s Will Urban and Mel Krause matched for high honors on the Webfoot team with 11 counters each. Paul Sowers, the Duck scor ing threat, was bottled up by OSC throughout the game and gathered only 4 points. Oregon State opened the game with the traditional Slats Gill weave in front of the key hole, breaking in to shoot from under or near the basket. Also fairly effective for the Bea vers was an unexpected fast break which was held in check by the OS C guards at some points in favor of the weave, but which nevertheless proved a constant scoring threat. Gill’s men shot a percentage mark of .372 on field goals, as compared with Oregon’s .300 bat ting mark. The zone defense which fans thought last week Gill might use against Oregon did not material ize. But it wasn’t needed. The regular man-to-man ball-snatch ing tactics kept Oregon from scoring a single field goal in the last 10