Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 05, 1955, Page Four, Image 4

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    Tribe, SC Top
Cinder Marks
Stanford and Southern Califor
nia dominated the list of out
standing track and field per
formances of the Pacific Coast
Conference as released by the
PCC Commissioner's office Wed
nesday.
Southern California boasted
the best marks in six events.
Stanford had the top marks in
Webfoots Leave
For Six Games
In Eight Days
‘‘We must win five of six
games to remain in contention."
That was the word of baseball
Coach Don Kirsch Wednesday
as the Ducks prepared to depart
on a six games in eight days
jaunt to the Inland Empire and
Seattle.
The team left by chartered
bus at 5 p.m. Wednesday for
Pullman. Wash., where they will
meet Washington State Friday
and Satuiday. From there they
move the nine miles to Moscow.
Idaho, for games with Idaho on
Monday and Tuesday. Wednes
day will be spent traveling to
Seattle where the Ducks will
challenge Washington on Thurs
day and Friday.
Pennant Formula
In the past the pennant for
mula has been for a team to
“win all its home games and
split on the road." At present
WSC has a 4-0 record, and Ore
gon and OSC are 3-0.
But Washington State has the
advantage in playing all home
games from here on, but for a
single road encounter against
Idaho.
“Ordinarily, we would only
have to win four, and maybe
three." Kirsch stated. “But
WSC's rained out road games
against Oregon and Oregon
State make it necessary that we
win five to stay in the race.”
Hurlers Tough
“The Cougars have the best
pitching in the league in Ron
Webb. West Stock and Jerry
Bartow, and are always tough to
beat at home. Washington and
Idaho are also likely to give us
plenty of trouble,” the coach
continued.
As for Oregon pitching, Kirsch
said he would probably use Ter
ry Maddox in the first WSC
game and Bill Blodgett in the
second. He intends to follow
them up with Bill Garner. John
Lundell and Pete Williams.
The complete 17 man traveling
team follows: pitchers — Bill
Blodgett, Bill Garner, Jim Lehl.
Terry Maddox and John Lun
dell; catchers—Neal M a r 1 e 11,
Tom Bowen; infielders — Dick
Schlosstein, Jim Johnson, Pete
Williams and John Keller; and
outfielders—George Shaw, Jer
ry Ross, Norm Forbes, Bernie
Averill, Bob Wagner and Jim
Pingree.
Lundell and Shaw can both be
moved to the infield, and Mad
dox can play outfield.
Reds Bid for Games
With Big Expenditures
LONDON (AP)—The Soviet
Union, in an apparent bid for
the 1960 or 1964 Olympics, an
nounced Wednesday it is spend
ing $62,000,000 this year to ex
pand athletic facilities in Mos
cow.
Sports Staff
Desk Editor: Jack Wilson.
Staff: A1 Johnson, Buzz Nel
son, Jerry Claussen.
five events and shared in a sixth.
UCLA and Oregon each contrib
uted one top mark and shared
another, and Washington State
was the joint possessor of one
mark.
Best marks through May 1:
100 9.7 : Keith Brownslierger and Jim
Saras. Stanford; Boh Clary. WSC; 9.8:
Howard Bugbee. I SC'; 9.9; Bert Korn
burst. CCLA; Bruce Springbett. Oregon;
Pat Coyle, CSC; 10.0: Boh l.adhcitei.
Washington; Don Molloy. CCI-A.
220 21.1 : Keith Brow ti-bcrger. Stan
ford; 21.3: Howard Bugl»ee. I SC: 21.4:
Bruce Springbett. Oregon; 21.5: Bob Gary,
WSl*; 21 o: Pat Coyle, t’SC; 21.7: Don
Molloy . CCLA; Larry Spicer. Stanford;
21.8; Bert Kornhor-t and Bob Dahgnry.
CCI.A; Jim Saras, Stanford.
440 47.7 : Walt Garrett, Stanford; 47.8:
Mike I<arrabee. CSC; 48.0; Russ Kilts.
I'CLA; 48.5: Bob Warwick. Cal.: 48 8:
Larry Spicer, Stanford; 49.4; K,»gti Nor
greti. CCLA; 49.5; Bill Knick, Cal.;
Charles luce, Stanford; 49.0: Myron Hol
lister. Stanford; 49.9: Jack Daile>. ITT?A.
880 l :53.7. Jim Bailey. Oregon; 1 :54.7,
Bob Came and Bob Seaman. I'CLA;
1:54.8: Russ Kllis. CCI.A: 1:54.9: Kd
Hersh. Cal ; 1 :55.1. Marshall ('lark. CSC;
1:55.5: Al Carbon. Cal. ; 1:55.6: Gary
Clayton, Washington: 1 :5 5.7 : Bill Taylor.
CSC; 1:56.1. Will King, Stanfurd.
Mile 4:10.7, Bob Seaman. CCI.A;
4:11.7; Sid Wing. CSC; 4 15.3: Marty
Montgomer>. CSC; 4.17: Bill Dellinger.
Oregon ; 4:18: Dick Adams. CSC ; 4 :18.4 :
Will King. Stanford; 4:18.5: Bob Hunt.
I’CLA; 4:19.4; Al Baeta. Cab; George
Holland. CCLA; 4:21.8. Pat Delgado.
CCI.A
Two mile 9:11.1: Fernando Ledesma.
CSC; 9:12.5: Bob Hunt. CCLA: 9 20.4.
Ken Reiser. Oregon; 9:20.6. B *b Seaman.
CCLA; 9:21.7: Bill Dellinger. Oregon;
9:25.1: Charles Strong. Stanford; 9:33.9,
Will King. Stanford; 9;38: Jim Maddox.
Cab: 9:41.7: Dave Bungay. CSC; 9:4o:
Jerr> Larson. DSC.
120 high hurdles 14.4. Berme Nelson.
Stanford: 14.5. Jim Ball. CCLA; 14.6.
Dave Rosellini. CCLA; 14.7. John Morgan
and Floyd Jeter. CSC; 14 8. Jim Luttrell,
Stanford : Al Torgerson, WSC; 15.0. Hal
Smith. C( LA; 15.1. Dean Singer. Wash
ington; 15.2. Doug Basham. Oregon.^
220 low hurdle- 23.7. Jim I uttrell. Stan
ford ; 23 8. Leon Clarke’ CSC; 23.9, Jim
Pics.-as. Cal.; Charles Holloway and Dave
Rosellini. CCLA; 24. ». John Morgan.
CSC: Al Torgerson. W'SC: 24.1. Bob
Leadbetter. Washington ; 24.4. Benue Nel
son, Stanford; 24.5. Bill Sorsby. Oregon.
Broad jump - 24 ft. 1 in.. Charles Hollo
way. CCLA; Martin Pedigo. Oregon;
23 it. 10*4 ins.. Frank Hermann. Stanford;
23 ft. 4 7-8 ins.. Jon Arnett. CSC; 23 ft.
3J_* in-.. Wilbur Gary. Idaho; 23 ft. 1V*
ins.. Kd Freutnow. Stanford; 22 ft. 8*i in-.,
Dick Richard-. I’SC; *i}2 ft. 6 7-8 ins..
Mar-hall Ccle-tin. Cab; 22 ft. 4% in-..
Morris Taft. CCLA; 22 ft. 3ins., Ken
Brown. DSC.
High jump—-6 it. 1U uts., Ernie >heiton,
rsc ; 6 ft. 8 ins.. Floyd Jeter. I'SC; 0 it.
: 6a4, Nick Dyer. UCLA; 0 it. 6 in*.. Phil
Fehlen. Stanfords 6 ft. 5 ins.. Norm Jilc
and John Stewart. Stanford; 6 ft. 21 _■ in-..
Hal Miller. UCLA; 6 ft. 2 ius.. Jack Find
ley. USC; Dean Singer. Washington.
Pole vault 14 ft. 1 in.. Walt Levack.
USC; 14 ft.. Have Seed, Cal.; Ronnie
Morris, USC; 13 ft. 10 ins.. Have Hill,
UCLA; 13 ft. 8 ins.. Bill Flint. Stanford;
13 ft. 6*4 ins.. Jim Hilton. Wa-hingt< n ;
13 ft. 6 ins.. Twig Chambers. I SC; 13 ft.
534 ins.. J*»n Mitcneil. UCLA; 13 ft. 4 ins..
Bob Reid. Oregon; Jerry Kenaston. WSC.
Shot put—36 ft. ] 2 in.. Ray Martin.
USC; 53 ft. 2 in-.. Don Vick. UCLA;
54 ft. 7*4 in*.. John Kahnert, Cal.; 54 ft.
[3$6 in-.. Clyde Wetter. UCLA; 53 ft. 5
in-.. John Stellern, Cal. ; 52 ft. 4\ 's ins.. A1
Cheney. Stanford; 32 ft. 3-8 in.. Burl
i Grinois, WSC; 51 ft. 10VS in-.. Phil Bra
hyn, Stanford; 51 ft. 6 in-.. Cliarh-- Clrif
fith. USC; 51 ft. x'4 in., Charles Kimball,
Stanford.
Discus—168 ft. 10*2 in*-. He- Kr»ch.
USC; 168 ft. 3-8 in.. Don Vick. UCLA;
167 ft.. Ron Drummond. UCLA; 157 ft.
3-8 in., Eric Murray, Cal.; 137 ft.. Howard
Smith. USC; 131 ft. 8 5-8 ins.. Burl
(irinols, WSC; 148 ft.. Ray Martin. USC;
146 ft. 8 ins., Terry Strom. Washington;
145 ft. lYz ins.. Jim Truher, Stanford;
145 ft. 3*4 ins.. Charles Kimball. Stanford.
Javelin 219 ft. 2 in-.. Charles Kimball.
Stanford; 217 ft. 6W ins., John Rugge,
Stanford; 212 ft. 6*4 ins., Jerry Church,
OSC; 24)5 ft. 10 ins.. Boh Voiles, USC;
204 ft. 5 ins., Ed Bingham. Oregon; 202 ft.
3*4 ins.. Des Koch, USC; 201 ft. 9% ins.,
Henry Roldan. Stanford; 200 ft. 9 ins.,
Hal XOrris. Cab; 195 ft. 11 ins., Paul
Hanson, Idaho; 191 ft. 111/2 ins., Ron
Drummond, UCLA.
Mile relav 3:14.5, Southern California;
3:17. UCLA; 3:17.1. Stanford; 3:19.2,
California; 3:26.1, Washington; 3:28.3,
Oregon.
Frosh Tie Rooks
In Divot Meeting
Oregon's Frosh golf team and
the OSC Rooks proved evenly
matched Tuesday as the two
freshman divot teams battled to
a 0 9 tie on the Corvallis coun
try club course.
Earlier in the season the Frosh
beat the Rooks in a three-way
match at the Eugene country
club. But the Rooks picked up
playing on their own course and
pulled out a tie.
Keith Gubrud and Don Ana
wait, two ex-Eugene high school
aces, tied for low score on the
Frosh team with three-over-par
75’s. First man Bob Prall, Salem,
had a 76 for the Duckling team.
Washington’s tennis team
scored a perfect sweep in the
1953 Northern Division tennis
tournament by racking up 20
points. The Huskies won both
the singles and doubles titles.
Ducklings Bill
Season Opener
Against Rooks
Another season's opener for
Bob Basich's Frosh baseballers
is scheduled for Howe field this
afternoon and chances are good
that the Ducklings will finally
get to play it. Rain has stymied
all previous efforts to get the
season under way. but this
week's “bluebird weather" makes
is probable that today's three
o’clock tilt with the OSC Rooks
will go off as scheduled.
The Rooks opened their sea
son Tuesday with a 2-1 win over
Linfield's jayvees, and the Stat
ers managed only two hits in
their squeaky victory. Dave
Gambee, the Ducklings' unstop
pable nemisis in basketball, was
on the mound for the Rooks for
five innings.
Basich will lead with his stand
out lefty, Don Lane, who blanked
the varsity in three innings dur
ing a Monday scrimmage.
The Ducklings will face Clark
JC's Penguins, undefeated de
fending champs of their southern
Washington junior college
league, in single games Friday
and Saturday. Basich plans to
start Ron Whittaker in the first
game and Don Delbon in the
second, with John McCall. Jim
Sittser and Don Beck available
for relief duty. .
IM Golf Enters
Second Round
Intramural golf entered its sec
ond round of play this week as
| eight teams won matches to join
[ eight others in the battle for
quarter-*!nal position?.
The four-man teams from
living organizations had a little
difficulty in getting first-round
matches finished because of
rain. Spring sunshine has ap
parently arrived, however, and
play should wind up on sched
ule.
The final match is slated for
Tuesday, May 17. when the two
surviving teams from an orig
inal field of 24 will play for the
championship at Oakway golf
course. Phi Delta Theta is de
fending champion.
Three forfeits were produced
among first-round matches orig
inally scheduled. Delta Upsilon
won a forfeit victory from
i Cherney hall. Sigma Alpha Ep
i silon won over Straub Frosh,
land Pi Kappa Alpha got an easy
j win from Gamma hall.
In the five matches played,
Phi Kappa Psi defeated Sigma
Phi Epsilon, t’hi Psi topped
Sigma Nu, Sigma Chi beat
Kappa Sigma, Delta Tau Delta
trounced Tau Kappa Epsilon
and Hale Kane downed French
hall.
Gaining byes in the second
round golf action were Phi Delta
Theta, Beta Theta Pi, Campbell
club. Phi Gamma Delta, Legal
Eagles, Theta Chi, Phi Kappa
Sigma and Alpha Tau Omega.
Second-round matches in the
bracket tournament pit Phi Del
ta Theta against Phi Kappa Psi,
Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Beta
Theta Pi, Campbell club vs. Chi
Psi, Delta Upsilon vs. Phi Gam
ma Delta, Legal Eagles vs. Sig
ma Chi, Delta Tau Delta vs.
Theta Chi, Phi Kappa Sigma vs.
Pi Kappa Alpha and Hale Kane
vs. Alpha Tau Omega.
Oregon had four individual
track champions in the 1954
Northern Division meet. Bob
Faucett won the high jump, Bill
Dellinger the mile, Ken Reiser
the two-mile and Fred Jacobs
the 440-yard dash.
Nashua Tops
Derby Picks
By ORIX) ROBERTSON
LOUISVILLE, Ky. <AP>
Without exception and without
hesitation, the trainers of the
leading Kentucky Derby candi
dates Wednesday named Nashua
as the horse to beat when nine,
and perhaps ten. 3-year-olds bat
tle it out in the $123,000 added
turf classic at Churchill Downs
Saturday.
And the seven trainers par
ticipating in the Associated
Press poll almost were unani
mous in the selection of Summer
Tan to finish second and Swaps
third.
Hen- and then*, however, a
few hedged on whether It’ll In
Mr*. John W. (ialbreath's col
ors on Slimmer Tun or the
silk* of Rex Ellsworth on
Swap* In the runner-up spot at
the end of the mile and one
quarter.
Post time is 4:30 p.m. EST
with the broadcast and television
scheduled for 4:15 to 4:45 CBS.
Nashua remained the firm
choice at 4 to 5 to register the
fourth Derby victory for the Bel
air stud. However, it would be
the first for the present master
of the stable, 34-year old William
Woodward Jr. Gallant Fox, Oma
ha and Johnstown won in the
famous white and red polka dot
silks when Woodward’s father
was alive.
Neither was there any shift of
odds on Summer Tan, who has
bowed to Nashua four times in
five clashes with the son of Nas
rullah. Mrs. Galbreath's slim
barrelled colt was held at 2 to 1.
.Swaps, rated by mail) as the
horse of the field off hi* 1 min
ute 10 1-5 seconds for six fur
long* lust Saturday, wa* quot
ed at 0 to 1. The big question
wa* whether the California
owned son of Khaled can carry
hi* *i>eod the full Derby dis
tance.
The three leading candidates
were out for gallops this morning
but trainer Meshach Tenney said
he plans to work Swaps either a
half-mile or five-eights of a mile
Thursday or Friday. Summer
Tan also may ge ta speed test.
Grid Workouts
'Enthusiastic/
Notes Casanova
Oregon’s spring football prac
tice "the most enthusiastic in
years," according to Head Coach
Len Casanova swung Into high
gear this week, pointing for th«
wind-up game scrimmage May
14.
Casanova praised the enthus
iasm of his youthful squad, and
added that the team wns also one
of the roughest in years. .Scrim
mages so far have been mostly
on fundamentals.
Kndn Needed
The search continued this week
for ends to pair with Phil Mc
Hugh. only letterman receiver.
Transfers Bruce Brenn and Bill
Tarr, and J. C. Wheeler and Mel
Flohr up from the Krosh have
shown good blocking ability, but
so fur no one has match-d Mc
Hugh.
The young and light, but
speedy, backfteld could be
stronger than last yeur. Tom
Crabtree has been improving fast
at the quarterback spot, and now
has the edge over veteran Wally
Bussell. Letterman halfback Dick
James has also been working at
quarter but has so far avoided
scrimmages, as his arm is just
out of a cast.
Two freshmen. Jirn Shardey
and LeKoy Phelps, have looked
good at the halfback posts. Both
men are on the stubby side, but
both are fast, rough and tricky.
Chuck Osborn. Jack Brown and
Pete Lopez give the Duck* depth
in that position.
.Morris Back
Jack Morris, back at Oregon
after a stint in the Army, is cur
rently leading the rush for th<
fullback job. Transfer Fred Mlk
lanclc has also looked sharp In
the role of lir.ebuster.
Lcttermen Lon S liner and
Harry Johnson are strongest at
tackle, while Spike Hillstrom and
Keanous Cochrane are the lead
ing guard candidates. At center,
veterans Art Weber and Nick
Markulis and Freshman Norm
Chapman will battle it out.
THE FILTER
YOU'LL REALLY
ENJOY!"
"FOR
EASY■
DRAWING
MILDNESS!"
CIGARETTES
DDERN SIZE
iwAWAWiMWiiiiW»iiw«wt
(»
TOR THE
FLAVOR
OF FIME
TOBACCO!”
:
FILTER TIP TAREYTON
with the Pearl-Gray Activated Charcoal Filter
PRODUCT OF
• •