Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, February 21, 1951, Page Four, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Sigma Chi Lads
Take42-20Win
In Track Meet
Sigma Chi topped Lambda Chi!
Alpha 42-20 in hn intramural track j
meet Tuesday. Scheduled meets
for the near future are as follows:
Wednesday. Kappa Sigma vs. Al
pha Tau Omega: Thursday, Sigma
Alpha Epsilon vs. Sherry Ross:
Monday. Nestor vs. Sherry Ross:
Monday, Nestor vs. Phi Delta
Theta.
Performances for the Sigma Chi
Lambda Chi meet were as follows:
Shot put Davis of Sigma Chi
won with a toss of 3G'6", followed
by Beers and Ruzicka of Lambda
Chi.
Broad Jump—Caldemvood of Sig
ma Chi paced the field with a leap
of 18'3". Sloan and Fagg of Sigma
Chi finished second and third to
give the Sigs all nine points.
High Jump—Calderwood of Sig
ma Chi and Hay of Lambda Chi
tied for first with a jump of 5'3".
Young of Sigma Chi was third.
Pole Vault Schwann of Lamb
da Chi won with a 10-foot effort,
followed by Kremmel of Lambda
Chi and Richardson of Sigma Chi.
who were tied for second.
Hurdles—Fagg of Sigma Chi won
with a time of 5.9, trailed by Hall
of Lambda Chi.
40-yard dash- Edwards of Sig
ma Chi won 4.7, followed by Sloan
of the same team, and Lawton of
Lambda Chi.
Three-quarter-mile run Turner
and Cuffel of Sigma Chi were first
and second, while Oison of Lambda
Chi was third.
Relay—Sigma Chi won in 17.1.
Team members were Smith, Sloan, i
Miller. Richardson.
The story of last Thursday's
ATO-Stan Ray track meet was
omitted from the Emerald because
space was not available, but it
should be noted that Jerry Shaw of
ATO broke the intramural shotput
record as he hurled the-shot 42'1 ".
The former 16 lb. shot record was
set last year at 41T0” by Chet Noe
of Kappa Sigma. ATO won 47-21.
NIT Prospects Dimmed
NEW YORK—UP) — Two major
basketball teams — Bradley and
George Washington — have pulled
out of Madison Square Garden for j
the present because of the latest
betting scandal.
Bradley players voted unani
mously last night not to accept a
bid to the National Invitation Tour
nament, scheduled for the Garden
next month.
At the same time, Max Farring
ton, director of athletics at George
Washington, said that “we would
n't be interested in accepting an in
vitation to play a New York team in
the Garden for some time.”
a— - ~ ~ - ■■ - ----
BOB PETERSON, Oregon forward, will start fo rthe Ducks against
the Washington Huskies Friday night. Peterson, a transfer from San
Mateo Junior College in California, is one of the outstanding hark hoard
performers on the Oregon squad.
Kentucky Quint Stays on Top
In Latest AP Hoop Standings
NEW YORK -(.Pi - For the
fifth straight week, Kentucky is
the leading basketball team in the
country. The Wildcats, sporting a
16-game winning streak, again
edged out Oklahoma A & M in the
weekly Associated Press Poll.
Columbia, the only major un
beaten team left, moved up to
third place, replacing Kansas
State, which slipped to fifth.
Indiana also advanced, from
sixth to fourth place, but that was
before the Hoosiers dropped a 71
65 decision to Illinois Monday
night. Illinois, now a heavy favorite
in the Western Conference, moved
from 11th place into the select
group with a 10th place finish.
The rest of the top ten consists
of St. Louis (6). Bradley (7), St.
John's of Brooklyn (8), and North
Carolina State (9).
Western teams again were
blanked in the top ten, but four
westerners, including the Univer
sity of Washington, placed in the
second ten.
In this group were:
Arizona (11), Brigham Young
;(12 >, Southern California (13).
Dayton (14), Villanova (15), LIU
(16), Oklahoma (17), Cincinnati
(18), Washington (19), and Beloit
(20),
Seattle University, ranked 20th
nationally last week, was an also
ran.
Il
♦
• Going into the Service?
• HERE'S THE CAMERA TO TAKE
AND WHY:
♦ ..SMALL ENOUGH YOU CAN CARRY IT
♦ FILMS UNIVERSALLY AVAILABLE
♦ EXTREMELY ELAT & EASY TO USE
♦ RUGGED—CLOSES UP TO PROTECT
ITSELF
♦ BUILT-IN DOUBLE EXPOSURE
PREVENTION
• GKKMAX HUILT MKAXS 1'IXK
QUALITV. THE35MM
VOIGHANDER VITO II
$49.50
atCOBURN'S
FILM SHOP
698 Willamette Ph. 4-8241
PhiDelt"A" Squad
Drops Nestor Hall
In Hoop Skirmish
I’lii I)elta Theta clinched a spot in tin* A" basketball finals as
they downed a stubborn Nestor team 52 12 in the feature game o£
Tuesday's playoff tilts. t ...
'I'he other "A” game was a hard-fought 35 32 victory for Sig
ma Aloha Mu over Pi Kappa Alpha The Sammies must defeat
Minturn Hall today to qualify as final opponents for the Phi
1 The two first-round games plav ended in a 54-21 rout of Stan
Ping Pong Play
Plans Prepared,
Partners Picked
First-round matches In the an
nual all-campus table tennis tour
nament, sponsored by the YMCA,
must be completed by 5 p.m. Fri
day. February 23, according to Bob
Holloway.
The scores should be reported to
the YMCA office in Room 318 of the
Student Union. If the score is not
reported by the deadline Friday,
both contestants will forfeit their
matches.
A playoff chart is posted in the
basement of the Student Union. The
second round of tourney play must
be completed by 5 p.m. March 1,
the third round by 5 p.m. March 6,
and the fourth round by 5 p.m.
March 1*. The times for the quarter
finals, semi-finals, and finals will
be set later.
First-round pairings include the
following: Bob Ridderbusch-Bill
Nelson: George Guldager-Frank
Fairly: Tom MacDonald-Wah Chun:
Cameron Thom-Curt Barclay; Dick
Kremmel-Martin Mugi; Don Mc
Clure-Hal Webb; Bill Bottler-Karl
Averill; and Cbuck Corgan-L.es
Howatt.
Others include Jim Losoutoff-Al
an Wakinokona; Dick Thompson
Si Anderson; Jim Ekstrom-Jim
Vranizan; Walter Probert-Finn Sa
gilo; Byron Bourns-Jim Calder
wood; Dick Still-Arnett Johnson;
Ken Torgeson-Joe Eoff; Dave
Swanson-Al Kiasanovsky; A. L.
Clay-Don Noyes; Hon Lowell-Low
ell Swanson; Jim Hoggs-Mel Wein
stein; and Roe Jensen-Diek Blenk
insop.
The list also includes Art Shep
herd-Stan Ruzicka; J. Cyrus Hunt
Krnie Baldini; Sid Mills-Don Mc
Clure (Cherney); Ed Brady-Don
Lawrence; Hank Morschik-Jerry
Bo roc; Jim Anthony-Bob Maxwell;
Dick Nelson-Don Kalberer; Dick
Chambers-Richard Cum pston; j
Clarence Naapi-Bob Dekoning; and j
Ken Eaton-Victor Kakhai.
Additional details can be obtain
ed by calling the campus YMCA.
New USC Strategy?
14000-Man Teams?
LOS ANGELES (/Pi Oh, the
football fancies that bloom in the
spring, tra la!
“Come next fall,” Dr. Fred Fagg,
Jr., Southern California president
told alumni Monday, "we’ll all be
marching one way together to
ward the Stanford and California
goal posts.”
The new Trojan coach Jess Hill,
who was being honored at a ban
quet, was admonished by fellow
alumni pot to overlook UCLA. The
Trojans fell before their traditional
tivals, 39 to 0, last year.
SPORTS STAFF
Bill Gurney
l’hll Johnson
REMEMBER THE RALLY
Hay t»y tnc I’m ueus aim a
verdict for Sigma Nu over Theta
Chi.
I'hi Delta Start Slowly
The PhKDelt "A” machine wan
Blow to start and trailed 9-7 at the
end of the flrnt quarter. Their
vaunted funt break plus backboard
control was the key to an 18-point
second period, and they led 25-17
at the half. Nestor had two capable
workmen in Jinf Jolly, who finish
ed with 10 points, and ex-varsity
basketed- Art Shepherd, who had
eight. ^
The Phi Delta wetc forced to bus
tle to get their 33-2.1 third quarter
lead and their final margin at 52
•12 Wayne Johnson and Bob Tag
gesell, two big Phi Delta, led game
scoring with 15 and 12 points ie
spectively.
The Sammie-PllvA game was
close and hotly-contested all Un
way with the score tied at 9-9 after
the first quarter, PIKA out front
19-18 at the half, and the Sammies
ahead 27-25 after the third canto
The Sammies came through with
accurate clutch-shooting to win 35
32 after the count was knotted 30
all with four minutes to play
Quarters in playoff action are seven
minutes long rather than the usual
five.
Sammy FM Artzt checked in with
12 points, followed by teamtnale
Jerry Glnzberg with 11. Dutch
Reich also garnered 11 for PiKA.
Play Spirited
The Phi Delt “B" entry bids fair
to earn another final spot for that
house on the basis of a 54-21 Hi k
ing amnisitered to a spirited Stan
Kay club. The winners had too
much height for Stan Kay and
coasted to a 22-10 halftime lead
and a 10-11 third quarter margin.
Rod Slade hit twelve for the Phi
Delta, followed by teammate Jim
Livcsay with 11. John Frost led
Stan Ray with seven counters.
Sigma Nu and Theta Chi both
played aggressive basketball, both
committed their share of fouls, and
at times feeling ran high. The fir.sL<
half scoring was low with Sigma Nu -
leaning 11-8. They surged ahead to
a 23-17 third-quarter margin and
won 33-29. Big Carl Slebers of Sig
ma Nu earned 17 points to lead his
team. Stan Anne of Theta Chi also
had a hot afternoon with 15 points.
Ducks Prepared
For Husky Tilts
For the first time this season,
Coach John Warren's Oregon
Ducks will not be bothered by in
juries when they battle the power
ful Washington Huskies Friday
night in McArthur Court, Univer
sity of Oregon Athletic Director
Art. Litchman stated Tuesday night.
The Ducks will start the same
lineup that has carried them to
their present first-place deadlock in
Northern Division PCC standings.
Starting guards for Oregon will be
two seniors from Portland, Jack
Keller and Mel Krause.
Coach John Warren plans to
start Jim Losculoff at center and
Curt Barclay and Bob Peterson at
the forward positions. "Loscutoff is
a junior, while Barclay and Peter
son are sophomores.