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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (March 5, 1943)
TUm OniGOIf STATESMAN. Saln.Orgoa, TdSar Morolng, KarcS I, i ti - I v. fag- nm Leslie Splits ! City -Miirar ' " ; Hoop Titles With Parrish Whites in 9th, Ducks in 8th Net Victories j Leslie and Parrish Junior highs each took home -a championship in city intramural basketball play yesterday after hoop ins the Ninth and v Eighth grade championships off on the Leslie floor before an other jam-packed gym full of howling kid rooters. ' The Leslie Whites, lopsided winners ever Parrish Beavers in Tuesday's opener, met much stronger apposition from the northerners .yesterday before tucking away the Ninth grade title, 4 S-32. A terrific scoring binge by Herman, Leslie for ward, which was good for 22 points pared the way for the southern champs. Big Neil Wor ley massed 18. for Parrish, bat he and Guard Genunell seemed to be the only two who could . keep vp with the high-scoring Missionaries. Parrish got' her title when the Ducks completely swamped the Leslie Golds for the second time this week, yesterday's score being 41-13. Dick Allison also had a big afternoon pitching in the points for, Parrish, and when he was through had garnered an even 20 The game brought to a close the intramural seasons for both 'schools. All four participants in yesterday's finals were respective winners of intramural leagues conducted at the schools. In no way did either game compare with 'Worth vs. South' get-togethers of old, now banned, excepting In the attendance. The magic touch of "Leslie vs. Parrish" still packs 'em in. t whites f WOLVES Tg Ft Tp . Fg Tp Herman, f 10 2 22 Winger. 110 4 Dowd. f 5 1 11 Boyle, f -1 0 S Harrisdn. c 2 0 4 Worley. . c 9 S IS England, g 1 1 3 Gemmel. g 3 1 7 Parnell. t t 2 Bunnell, g 3 3 Slater. K 0 0 0 Darts, K -0 9 0 Craven, t 0 0 0 I.uras. 1 0 1 Totals 21 6 Totals U 10 31 Big-lOOneMan Hoop Gang "SF r t V I I' ' ' r- ST Y " - x t V vk k, y . - ? j i ANDY PHTlXJtP. tJniversItr of Illinois forward, was one of fou IUlni players named to the Blg-lt All-Star hoop team. In. his last conference game. against the Chicago Maroons, the amazing Andy set Blg-lt records for single game score (48 points), single gamp field goals (16) land season point total (255 In 12 games). The mini won that game 12-25, to clinch their second consecutive con ference tide.' -;. It -----I ' I , , , , i Big-10 Bosses Slate Pow-Wow To Rearrange Grid Schedules P DUCKS Fg Ft Tp Allison, t .S 4 20 Craig, f 2 0 4 Pettit. c 1 1 3- Brown, g 1 0 1 Bacon, g 3 1 S S pence, a 0 1 1 Plank, a 3 0 S ' Paulua, s 0 0 0 Evenson, s 0 0 0 Totals 17 T 41 Officials Guraee - Schwartrkopf. - L GOLDS . Fg Ft Tp Straw, t 1 1 3 CaVnd'r. 0 1 1 Kuhn. c 4 1 9 FTem'g. g 0 0 t zurld n, g o Turner, a 0 0 0 EJsey. a 0 9 Qu's'bry, a 0 0 0 ToUU 8 1 13 yiesher and Herm Oregon City Milwaukie In District tour tmaie OREGON" CITY. Ore Marsh! 4-(fl3,-Oregon City and Mil- waukie fought tnir way into me iinais 01 xne aisxrici;. mgn school basketball tbumament Thursday night with overwhelmirig Victories. J . Oregon City disposed of Co lumbla Prep of Portland, 47 2. and Milwaukie eliminated Woodburn, 59-29, ;l lop-sided contests that gave j the winners opportunity to score ! almost at wilL Oregon City and Milwaukie will clash in the finals Friday night for the right; to represent the dis trict in , the state tournament at Salem next week. 1 Then Goes Barefoot j NEW YORK-P-Mel Ott wll use up his shoe rations playing baseball. He uses three pair of the spiked footwear a year. j By CHARLES DUNKLEY ' CHICAGO, March -VPf-YooU ball coaches and athletic direct ors of the western conference will meet Friday to rearrange gridiron schedules for 1943 in the interest of savins rail mileage and to make room for games with ser-; vice teams. Revision is necessary because the schedules already had been drawn through 1944, limiting each team to; nine games with! a F""i""" of six within the Big Ten. : , m "It is our policy to do whatever the army and navy want," Major John L. Griffith, commissioner of athletics for the conference, said Thursday night. ! "Last snring when the serv- Ice teams requested games, the conference voted to permit a tmtrinngm of ten game, provid ed two were with service teams. That rule still Is In effect. Since the service teams want games. It will be necessary to cancel some engagements with non conference teams, and perhaps i drop certain games within the j conference." In revising the schedules, games with non-conference opponent requiring long travel : probably will be dropped, Griffith said. In that class would fall Michigan's game at Pennsylvania, Missouri's games at Minnesota and Ohio State, Minnesota at Pittsburgh InViiana and Nebraska and Pitts-? burgh at Illinois. v ( Sitting In with the Big Ten ; officials will be Frank Leahy, director and football coach at Notre Dame; Clark Shaughnes sey, newly appointed coach at : i i i ' : SiHf i ! Mm I For Sprins; $C.C3 $7.59 li to i i Sniscribe Tcday Bed Cress ; Pittsburgh: Jimmy Hagan, ath letic director of the Panthers; 14. CoL Bende Blermaa. of the j naval pre-flight school at Iowa i City, and LL Com. J. Russell i Cook of the Great Lakes naval training station. Leahy may be forced to cancel games with Stanford at Palo Alto, Calif., and Southern California at South - Bend. He hopes to go through with the traditional bat tle with the army at New York. WSC Fighters Flay Tonight WASHINGTON STATE COL LEGE, Pullman, March 4-In-spired by the impressive 0 to 2 pounding they handed the Fort George Wright ringmen in Spo kane last weekend, the Washing ton State boxers accompanied by three mittmen from the Univer sity of Idaho, left for Madison, Wis., and a triangular ring battle with the universities of Wiscon sin and Idaho, March 5. Eight boxers are making the trip from the two Inland Empire schools, accompanied by their re spective coaches, Fred Spiegel berg, former Pacific Coast inter collegiate champion at 175 pounds, from WSC and Bob Knox from the border college only eight miles away at Moscow. Fredericksburg, Va.-;p)-James B. Eley of Spotsylvania county received word from his draft board that he had been classified 4-H. How his name got on the selec- Phils to Be Commandos? Boss Cox Sez Club To Be Tough, Speedy 1 By CHIP ROYAL ; AP Features Sports Writer - NEW YORK If the Philadel phia Phils aren't the toughest, speediest, best conditioned team in the National league this season, you; can blame , William r D. Cost, the new lumberman owner. That's the way the six-foot, 2060 pound millionaire wants it. HeU hire what he thinks are the best trainer and , manager; available. HeU give them every: freedom, but he's going to insist that they give him a rip-snorting ball club 1 "If the fans think the eld 'gas ; house gang was tough, wait tn ! they see my ball club, declared Cox. . ! - "I'm going to have the best trainer in the country work on the players. HeU give them a five weeks' toughening up process that they'll never forget. I took it my self, and I couldn't believe it could be so tough.' "Our training camp won't be any place for weaklings,' warned' BUL "It's going to bo a case of running, calisthenics and base ball, and 'running, calisthenics and baseball over and over and over. When we finish our train ing period, in April, the wind, legs and arms of every man wUl be 199 per! cent in condition. f 'Commando9 Bill n VVTLtlAll COX. the Phllltes tUm Tt- tllTn KB tnlMltV tosub-r else. ' ' j Warier to Aim ' At Speaker's Hits Mark i L . - .- t -' - i K ri-: , ,' ' -'.:'. ' j i1 ! - - SARASOTA, Fla. The veteran Paul Waner, who realized a long cherished ambition last season by becoming one of seven -men , In major league baseban history 'to get 3,000 hits, Isn't ready to rest on his laurels yet by any means, and has set his sights on a new goaL - "jr.. . ,'-,';:;;;!, The 40 - year old outfielder, newly signed by the Brooklyn Dodgers after being released by the Boston Braves, hopes to post a record second only to the great Ty Cobb's 4,191 bits before put-, ing away bis bat. J -J ..' h The next i best record j (Trls :a Speaker's 2515) Is more than . 609 below that an I think I" jiave fair chance of moving" Into second place before I have" to call it euits," said the one time .. PitUburgh . elugger . who; three times led the NaUonal j league Jn batting and was voted v 1U moat valuable player back ; fat 1927. Jaclf-Ziyic Bbwl WiU Ring Garden Register but Plenty Jefferson Breaks Even for Season t JEFFERSON Coach Pat Beal's prep cagert have wound up their season with nine wins and nine losses. Four seniors, Gordon Tur nidge, Stanley Miller, Jim Hen derson and Gary B a r n a have wound up their cage careers at Jeff. Only ;two first-stringers will join the reserves as Beal's team next year, j - Jefferson won games from the Alumni (3), Turner (2), Gate Siletz, Albany B and Corvallis B, losing to Aumsville (2), Mill City (2), Stayton (2), Gates, Sa lem B and Corvallis B. Three of the losses were taken after over time periods. tive service list was a mystery. He is 87. .11 n - n ' t By SID ;FEDER : . it - i i( ' ' ' - N3SW YORK, March 4-Cff) ThereH probablybe about bo.OOO in the j Madison i Square Garden cash registers when Fritrie Zivic bumps Into Beau Jack Friday night in their re-, turn go, thereby serving to prove once again that fearless! Fritzie is the fight game's answer j to Morj eenthad.1, '! This time, the c a s h 'customers, Li 9ACK--L a tussle BEAU each Other to contribute to in which the bouncing Befru from Georgia is a 5 to 16 favorite, mind you. and unless Joe Louis or a fan dancer is the attraction, that va riety . of entertainment usually 1 come under the of super-duper pay-days. doesn't heading On top of that. Beau belted Fritzie sound- In perfect accord with present day ecormy and rallying to your conservation efforts, S&N offers you handsomely tail 100 wool suits. Visit our store today and select a suit styled distinctively, yet made for durability, i g-53 $is-CD QUALITY BEOII SE20ES at S Ci U SPOQT COATS .With all the straih of these times a man requires casual clothes for the time devoted to help relax war tension. Choose your relaxa tion I clothes from! Our; handsome assortment of 100 wool spring SPORT COATS. 199 Wool GABAfcDINK TAILOREZr nm Gray Blue and Maroon Colors $U.S5 t4 $17.53 spout $Licns Perfect foil for your good-looking sport thes srhartly tail ored slacks.! They ixe . nade fa fine quahty "-iabrif Jwady to take the hard wear youTI give them. 1- n, 2: I s 11 ;'. rivate Johnny IHiS; a I riemJ 1 1; lust a bor Koine to war wr boy it might havl UcoJ So young; so gallant when left; grinning his good-byes to covet np that tinting feeling deep down under the youthful poise.' - rouV wi It II Til 'V. VF-! ! i ?tm ly the last time; they collided Just a month ago. : i . Altogether in ten fights, j Zivii played to gates totalling roughly $460,000 and his average of $48. 000 per performance is some $15, 000 higher than j that turned In by Ray Robinson, who generally has been rated the "hottest" box office firecracker ' M j - , j j Basketball Scored (District 4 Toorney) j - ' Oregon City-47, .Columbia Prep (Portland) 25. ,! i . . S ,; Milwaukie 50, Woodburn 29. i Citadel S7, South Carolina 1. Davidson! 33, N.C. State! 30. Hamline 58, Sfc Olaf 36 ! Clark 52, Alabama State 30. Creighton 56, ' Kansas 34. : Oklahoma 35 Okla Aggies 31. Montana Mines ,31, Montana Normal 15. ' i' I "-'-1 Georgetown 47, Syracuse 45 (or- ertime).- .. . . 1 Duke 57, VMLt 41. i 2 Thsc boy; leVf cafl him Jbhnnyj i found a new world to fie himself into ; tougit world of drul and orders and coo j formity; Too inexperienced to under j stand, his morale went down; Then ha ; found t friend who won hifcofifidenc . and taught him how to meet the probe 1 lemsfof the $crvicei 1. r:"M ji V?-l A- , ' !;; Thatilled Cross field Director knew ; things from' his long experience about turning youngsters into menj j 3. So Johnny went to wtz, Otf day he found himself m g theChole with a ballet ia his srafinished; he thought:! But when; days tlfterward; they told him what had J J U mA,mm mnA rmmM hlH nullMf Kim rhmumiAUS BA IfflU Johnoygriiined gM&fyrp old fled Crostt-- be said; rstiU pufimg fee eta j .'- r :m k : ;- --IM -:-1 4. Kew problems then tVx.61inny. How . was a man to get along and get mamed " lfTTQ3r maype, wttn one arm goner ? Again be found a ftieni Wxh plana for ichabtaaoa training and a fob and a future in which he could bold big owns All fbtough Jbhnny'g short army life? the Red Gross had marched with htm as ii 'doet with all our boysi It ' i 5. So it's no wonder Johnny!; says that the best jfriend he made in the Army was ! not one person at all but group that extended all the way from training camp to btlrfiW tJid bade homeg-in; I; k -:: ir ' -,k'"v'- k.-. ,,' j. The Red Cross serves oui arraek force wherever pey are, with an rrcr-growuig staff I of devoted men and wome who undecstand rJbc needs of fighting men in heart and : ntind and body; I I. I - The SocotMf ttmi Ctom Wor Fw Your DoIIdrf help r- make possiblt, tho R1CAU3 h? REP i ; f i- v x. $5.G5 $9.45 ; r t . , - This Message Sponsored by n n r77 Qtiorm .-1 lie1 - J 42 LJ lbH-li!Jiiiiiii. s Calen, Ortca WE GIVE GREEN" STAMPS 333 Court SL SaJem, Oregon Jewelers 4 . H :. n "i '4 Sixes 14ft tolT . . - - 1k i ' f . i i-.