7A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 2017 ‘Tall Firs’: Anet, Johansen were lifelong teammates, childhood buddies Continued from Page 1A Fast-forward 78 years, and take a look at Oregon’s ros- ter: Players from Montreal, Quebec; Brampton and Mis- sissauga, Ontario; London, England; Ashdod, Israel … big city players from Chicago and Seattle; Sacramento, Irvine, Long Beach, Los Angeles and Santa Ana, California; Tempe, Arizona; and the lone player from Oregon, freshman Pay- ton Pritchard of West Linn. Quite the difference from 1938-39, when — other than a couple of Portlanders — the Webfoots sported players from smaller towns like The Dalles, Ashland, Oakridge, Longview and Raymond, Washington … and fi ve from Astoria. Conference of Champions The Pac-12 had four teams in this year’s fi eld of 64 (and three in the Sweet 16). If you listened to players on that 1938-39 Oregon squad, not much has changed. Almost to a man, the play- ers for the 1939 national championship team from Ore- gon agreed that the balance of power in college basketball was in the Pacifi c Coast Con- ference (later the Pac-8, Pac- 10 and currently the Pac-12). Lauren “Laddie” Gale, from Oakridge, was one of three All-Americans who played for the 1938-39 Webfoots. In a 1995 interview, Gale said, “We felt afterwards, talking it over, that the Pacifi c Coast teams were superior to the rest of the country. The teams we played in the play- offs — Texas and Oklahoma — weren’t as good; and Ohio State, the team we played (and beat, 46-33) in the fi nal, wasn’t very strong at all. “We never felt threatened” in the fi nal against the Buck- eyes, Gale said. “Our biggest competition was within our own conference. The Eastern teams were still using the two- handed set shot. They hadn’t adopted the one-handed shot yet. They were calling those ‘hope shots.’” Oregon coach How- ard Hobson’s team averaged fewer than 50 points a game in 1938-39, but they featured three All-Americans — Gale, Urgel “Slim” Wintermute of Longview, Washington , and Bobby Anet, from Astoria. Hobson brought ’em all together and made them winners. “Hobby was one of the best,” said Gale, who — along with Hobson — were the fi rst Astoria High School Astoria Fishermen boys basketball team from the 1930s included three future national championship players for the Oregon “Tall Firs” — Bobby Anet (first row, far left), Ted Sarpola (second from right) and Wally Johansen (far right). two Webfoots enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame. Hob- son died in 1991, Gale passed away in 1996. “In those years,” Gale said in 1995, Hobson “was way ahead of the rest of the coaches. We had a lot of fi re- power, as far as the guards were concerned.” Those guards were seniors Anet and Wally Johansen, life- long teammates and childhood buddies from Astoria. “They had played all the way through junior high, and they went through Astoria High School together,” Gale said. “We were a fast-break team.” Anet and Johansen had both won state titles at Astoria before heading to the University of Oregon, along with high school teammates Earl Sandness and Ted Sar- pola, a sophomore and junior, with the 1938-39 Oregon team. Johansen was later a sports editor at the Evening Asto- ria-Budget and died of a heart attack in 1971 while on a fi sh- ing trip with his family on the Rogue River; Anet lived in Lake Oswego and died in 1980. After serving in the Korean War, Sandness was a teacher and coach in Anchorage, Alaska, taught and coached in Portland until 1979, then moved to Ilwaco, Washington , where he owned and operated a tourist charter boat. He died of cancer in 1984. Sarpola served in the U.S. Coast Guard, and from 1965 to 1981, taught various subjects at schools, including Knappa High School. He died in 1985. The late Toivo Piippo was the fi fth Astoria High graduate on the 1938-39 Oregon team, but by the time of the national championship game, Piippo had suffered a season-ending leg injury. Piippo piloted B-26 bomb- ers in World War II, and was later awarded a Distinguished Flying Cross . He taught and coached in Marysville and Richland, Washington , and died in 2003. ria players end up at Oregon? That story was told by Wally Palmberg, an Astoria High School grad who played for the Fishermen (and later Oregon State). In a 2001 interview, Palm- berg said Hobson wanted the Astorians “real badly. So the Oregon people approached John Warren (then a coach at Astoria High School), and told him, ‘if you bring all those Astoria kids to Oregon, we’ll hire you as freshman coach. “And it worked. The whole party, en masse, went to Ore- gon, and it paid off for ’em. Five years later, they won the national title with those kids.” Warren later coached var- sity basketball and football at Oregon. John Dick of The Dalles was one of the last surviving members of the Tall Firs, until his death in 2011 at age 92. He remembers “the road to the Final Four” in 1939 being a lot different than today’s heav- ily-commercialized version. In the 1939 post season, the Webfoots fi rst had to play a best two-of-three series with California at Mac Court. It was scheduled for a Thursday, Friday and Saturday, with the winner advancing to the West- ern Regionals the following Monday in San Francisco. In a 1996 interview, Dick said, “we fi gured we’d bet- ter win those fi rst two games if we wanted to get any rest. So we did manage to beat Cal in two games on Thursday and Friday, we spent the night (in Eugene), and we got to San Francisco Sunday afternoon.” In the Western Regionals, Oregon defeated Texas and Oklahoma in two days, then boarded a train for Chicago. Once they arrived in Evan- ston, Illinois — site of the n ational c hampionship — the Webfoots ran all over Ohio State in the title game. “We ended up playing fi ve games in 10 or 11 days, plus we traveled all that distance just to get there,” Dick said. “Ohio State had a whole week to prepare for us, and we were playing on a Big 10 court with Big 10 offi cials.” He agreed with Gale, in that “we were clearly the superior conference. Nobody could challenge the PCC. The toughest games we had were always against Washing- ton and California. The West Coast was clearly ahead of the rest of the country.” For Dick and the rest of the “Tall Firs” — as they were referred to in a column by the Oregonian’s L.H. Greg- ory on March 3, 1938 — the celebration after the n ational c hampionship win was just beginning. The city of The Dalles heard that the team’s train would be passing through town, and the tracks were practically barricaded to get the Union Pacifi c engineer to stop for a celebration. “After we had won the championship, that created a lot of excitement in Oregon,” Dick said. “We got to The Dalles at 5:30 in the morning, and The Dalles, which had about 5,000 or 6,000 people then, roughly half that showed up at the train station.” City offi cials presented Dick with a Hamilton watch (“the Rolex of its day,” he said), and the celebration lasted over 10 minutes. “When word got out what The Dalles had done for me, all the other hometowns with players on the team had to come up with gold watches for their players,” Dick said. “It was the toughest for Asto- ria, which had four guys on the team, so they had to come up with four watches.” Astoria Webfoots Just how did all those Asto- Center: ‘We try to give everyone a chance’ Continued from Page 1A Community comes together The warming center is one of several local shelters serving the county’s growing homeless population. Helping Hands, a non- profi t that helps the local homeless population and pro- vided overnight lodging for some of the warming cen- ter’s overfl ow, saw a roughly 60 percent increase in peo- ple needing services at their facility from 2015 to 2016, CEO Alan Evans said. “We’re having a hard time keeping up with the demand of people needing assis- tance,” Evans said. Though the Astoria Warm- ing Center still relies on doz- ens of active volunteers — who put in a total of 2,620 volunteer hours, not includ- ing work outside hours of operation — the grant fund- ing allowed the center to hire paid staff. “Staffi ng a shelter nightly for 100 nights, all from vol- unteers, is not realistic, and we recognize that,” Coffi n- barger said, “so we hired sev- eral people to come in and work those really challenging overnight hours.” Meanwhile, Astoria Cof- feehouse and Bistro and the North Coast Food Web donated cooked meals. This year, the shelter added cots for most people , giving the room a military barracks look; in the fi rst two years, people slept on foam pads on the fl oor. “I think it’s really inspir- ing the way that the com- Joshua Bessex/The Daily Astorian Volunteers hand out soup and coffee at the warming center at First United Methodist Church in 2015. The soup was to- mato bisque donated from Astoria Coffeehouse and Bistro. munity came together to do this,” Coffi nbarger said. Changing face of homelessness The warming center had planned to operate through mid-March, but state fi re codes permit temporary shel- ters to operate no longer than 90 days straight within a 12-month period. Though the center secured a two-week extension, it closed two weeks earlier than anticipated. Ron Maxted, a warming center volunteer and board member, said some neighbors have complained about the transients’ behavior outside the shelter; though it opens at 8 p.m., people start gathering around 6:30 p.m. “Sometimes they’re loud, and boisterous,” and leave beer cans around, he said. Maxted said the shelter will work on addressing these issues. The shelter accepts people who appear intoxicated, as long as they can enter with- out assistance. “The nature of our shelter being low-barrier is that we try to give every- one a chance,” Coffi nbarger said. But transients struggling with substance abuse make up a decreasing percentage at the shelter . The people who showed up included evicted families, patients discharged from hospitals and domes- tic -violence survivors. “The face of homelessness is changing,” Evans said. “Years ago, it used to be the addicted and the broken and the mentally ill. And now that number’s completely changed: It’s more women and children. It’s more people who can’t afford to stay in an apartment because the rates of apartments have (gone) up.” He added: “The prob- lem’s going to get worse before it gets better. We can’t build affordable housing fast enough. It’s impossible.” Be in the know A colonoscopy may be your best option for cancer screening and prevention. Talk to your doctor and learn more about your options online at www.columbiamemorial.org. 3 Facts for Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month 1. Colorectal cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death in the U.S. Finding it now could save your life. 2. Everyone over the age of 50 should be screened. Ask your doctor if you should be screened sooner. 3. There are several colorectal cancer screening tests, includ- ing affordable, simple, at-home screening options. Call 503-338-4075 now to make an appointment. 2111 Exchange St., Astoria, Oregon • 503-325-4321 www.columbiamemorial.org • A Planetree-Designated Hospital