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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 15, 1946)
Wtt W, gBfB KtfWT.Bara, Eugene, Ore,, BangsT, Pee. 18, IM A 7 ti'-. k r 7 m L , , II High-flying Teddies Drop luge VETERAN KEN BAYS, Oregon's letterman forward-center, l shown here making one of his unusual jumping shots when the Web foots beat Portland University 56-33 at the Igloo Thursday night. Oregon leaves for New York Thursday for a two-game series in Buffalo and New York City, (Kirk Braun photo, Wiltshire engraving.) Unbeaten Oregons Play Niagara University Next Coach Howard Hobson will se-i eastern lect his ten-man traveling squad, that flies to New York Thursday, at a noon press meeting Tues day. The undefeated Webfoots, victors in seven straight contests, meet Niagara University in Buf falo next Saturday night and will conclude their short - schedule Dobbs Unanimous AAAII-Sfar Choice NEW YORK, Dec. 15 UK Seven youngsters, playing their first year of professional football, Saturday made the United Press All-America Conference All-Star team which contained a rookie backfield. Glenn Dobbs of the Brooklyn Dodgers was a unanimous choice. The brilliant passing, running, and punting star was a "one-man-backfield" all season on a club that some of the wags re-nicknamed the Dobbgers." Dobbs, former Tulsa star, who played a halfback position though he directed the team play, was joined in the backfield by two Cleveland players, Quarterback Otto Graham and Fullback Ma rion Motley, and a Yankee star, breakaway runner Orben "Spec" Sanders at halfback. The end position went to Mac Speedie of Cleveland and Alyn Beals of San Francisco. The tackles were Frank "Bruiser" Kinard of the Yankees and Martin Buby of the Dodgers, while the guard posts were held down by William Eadovich of Los Angeles and Bruno Banducci of San Fran cisco. Bob Belson of Los Angeles was the center. Miami Beats Dodgers MIAMI, Dec. 15 (JP) The hap less Miami Seahawks closed their first professional football season here Friday night by trouncing the Brooklyn Dodgers, 31-20, in a thrill-packed All-America Con ference game before a scant 2340 rain-drenched fans in the Orange Bowl stadium. invasion In Madison Square Garden Monday night against New York University's veteran aggregation, Only one other Oregon hoop ag gregation will see action during the coming week. Coach Ted Schopf's Frosh quintet meets Grants Pass and University (Eu gene) High at McArthur Court Friday and Saturday nights, re spectively. The Yearlings have won two games and suffered a lone loss 50-40 to the Oregon J-Vs. Schopf's J-V's are slated to re sume their Eugene City AAU League campaign the following week December 23 against the Richfield Oilers and December 26 against Oregon Lumber Sales Firs. The J-V's lead the circuit with six straight wins plus the triumph over the Frosh. Ed Dick, one-year letterman for ward, continues to pace the Ore gon squad in scoring with 85 points and an average of 12.1 points per game. Ken Hays Is sec ond with 68, and Stan Williamson third with 64. The Webfoots have averaged 68.8 points per game as against 37.8 points for the opposition. Individual squad scoring fol lows: FLOYER Dick, F Hays, r Williamson, Q 7 24 18 Wiley, c 7 23 Poplck, O T 17 a Seeborg O , 7 11 s Lavey. O 7 11 3 Crowell, O 7 10 S Wren. T .7 7 s Rasmtmen, F S 9 0 Berg. O 7 S Wllklns, r, O S 7 0 Duclch, r, C 4 4 3 Amacher, C 7 2 3 ulnars . 3 0 O TG FTM Tt TP Ave. 7 30 7 a 85 12.1 7 2V 10 15 S 12 64 17 55 S 40 5 28 3 28 10 28 11 10 3 IS 4 18 3 14 3 11 6 8 1 4 Oregon Total ..7 201 78 109 480 88.8 Opponenti Total 7 92 II 105 255 37.8 V Baptists Top TBI The National Leaeue nf the YMCA-Church basketball league opened Friday night at the Bap tist cnurcn gym with the Bap tists piling UP a 61-45 victorv over Temple Beth Israel. Portus of the Baptist quintet led the scoring with 17 points followed by his teammate Kenagy with 13. Roosevelt Tips Axemen, 53-37 By DEWEY RAY The Roosevelt High Roughrlders walked off with their gecond lo cal basketball scalp Saturday afternoon by 1 defeating the de fending state champion- Eugene Axemen S3-37 at McArthur Court. Friday night Roosevelt barely edged out Springfield 42-41 and last week beat Eugene in roruana, also by a 16-polnt margin. Basketball was sacrificed for rough and tumble scrapping most of the same and superior back board work and straight shooting provided the Roosevelt winning margin. The Axemen , showed a few spurts of form but never displayed the smooth teamwork that carried them to a state championsmp jasi year. A comparison wiwi mi Springfield performance against Roosevelt Friday gave an indica tion that the Eugene club may not have too easy a time of H in the district race. Plentv of Foull Kueene was charged with . S3 personal fouls but Jim Winters of Roosevelt was tne only piayer to collect enough fouls to be ousted from the game. He was banished with about a minute and a half left to play. The Teddies showed a well-bar anced attack with Guard Don Peterson rjacine the attack with 16 Doints. Center Jackson Winters collected 11' and Forward Dick Robertson got 10. Gene Miner led the Eugene attack with eight points. Eugene's only lead of the game was in tne first minute 01 piay after Dick Garrett laid one in under the basket for the first score of the game. John Chaney pivoted and flipped in an overhead two hander to tie it up for Coach Rol He Rourke's crew and Robertson out the Teddies ahead to stay. Jack Winters scored a freethrow, field goal and another freethrow 1 give the Portlanders an 8-2 lead. The scoring see-sawed back and forth until the quarter enaea with Eugene trailing 10-18; Eu gene pulled up to within four points at 22-26 at the halfway mark. Peterson and Malcolm Bolin led a spirited attack in the third Quar ter that increased the Roosevelt lead , to 41-27 at the end of the period. The fourth quarter was a wild affair with lots of knees, el bows and hips. Roosevelt managed to increase its lead, however, and the final margin was the biggest of the game. The center, position continued to be the unKnown factor tor Eugene, witn jonn Banns getting tne start ing call against Roosevelt. Coach Henry Kuchera used a total of 17 men for the contest. Eugene reserve strength failed to tell against Roosevelt as the Teddies offset the fast-breaking speed of the Axemen by taking most of the rebounds off the back-boards. nea ns lor Second Hoop l( QUARTERBACK DUCK IVERSEN, voted the most outstanding member of the 1946 University of Oregon varsity football squad by his teammates, Is shown here receiving the 5th Hoffman Football Award, a 21-Jewel Bullova wrist watch, from Vernon Hoffman, local jeweler, donor and a former Oregon swimming team letterman. (Wiltshire photo, engraving). Today HIGHLIGHTS By DEWEY RAY S7) EUGENE Bum 0, Garrett Barnes .. 8. Miner - 5, wuae BOOSEVELT (S3) Chaney, S T Robertson. 10 F Jack winter, 11 C Peterson, 16 G Bolin. 5 G- Substitution! Roosevelt Jim winters, Hansen. Neffendorf 8. Blanehard. Bar bour. Eugene Campbell 4. Ankarberg. Welch 3; Hubbard 4, Smith 2, Wolf, Frolen. Crakes, Rider 3, Lassen, Under 2, Murray. Officials: Hugh Hartman and Chuck Schmidt, Parker, Mulloy Show Fine Form in Practice MELBOURNE, Dee. 15 OP) Fank Parker of Los Angeles and Gardnar Mulloy of ' Miami, Fla., looked more than ever like the potential U.S. Davis' Cup doubles team Saturday as they again beat the former U.S. doubles cham pions, Californian - Jack Kramer and Ted Schroeder, in two sets, 6-3, 7-5. The California-Florida combin ation whipped Kramer and Schroeder in another practice ses sion, taking three out of four sets. Kramer, top-ranking American player and slated for No. 1 duties in the cup singles matches, Dec. 26, continued badly off form in the tandem play but displayed sparkling tennis in the - singles. Schroeder has been giving a good account of himself and. the latest! indications are that he will take over the No. 2 role in the singles against Australia. Both the Australian and Amer ican squads will be named Mon day but it appears a foregone con clusion that the Cup defenders will select Jack Bromwich, Dinny Pails, Adrian Quist and Colin Long as their foursome. - s Cornell Has Troubles With Grid Slate USC Balks; Independent Foe For October 4 Schedule-maker Anson B. Cornell, the University of Ore gon's graduate manager of ath letics, returned to his desk at McArthur Court still shaking his head while Southern Cali fornia and California remained off the Webfoot's 1947 football schedule. Cornell treked to Pasadena, earlier than necessary, hoping to get the machinery working that would give Oregon an at tractive slate especially to get the VSC Trojans to come north next fall, lie not only couldn't persuade high and mighty Troy to move out of the southland, but failed to book the club that usually provides the Webfoots with a big hunk of their .".nnual grid budget cash. Southern California did offer to play Oregon in Los Angeles October 4, but that would be tho week after the Oregon open er against Texas and the week prior to tha Oregon-UCLA tarn in Los Angeles, necessitating two trips to Los Angeles in as many weeks or a, sojourn of some 10 days In the south even with air travel. The game against UCLA's champions ap peared more lucrative than a JJSC contract USC did indicate the Trojans would come north . to play Oregon in 1948. Cornell said that Oregon will consider booking an independent opponent for the October 4 date. In the past Oregon has met such comparatively neighborhood schools as Utah, Goniaga, San ta Clara, St. Mary's and Port land (formerly Columbia.) In three meetings against Utah, Oregon has always been the victor. Against Goniaga the Webfoots have won 5 and lost 1. Both meetings against Santa Clara have been victories. St. Mary's has won 6 of 7 meetings, and Oregon has won 5 of 6 meetings from Portland (Columbia.) Utah is a possibility for a date In Eugene. Goniaga may not re sume football next fall. Santa Clara Is the most likely, but the Broncos played in the north last and may wish to play at home, St. Mary's has a date with Cal ifornia. That leaves Portland as a possibility. Speaking of the proposed Northern - Southern division baseball playoff next spring, Cornell said that it appeared unlikely that the southern schools would agree to a Coast Conference playoff in view of the baseball setup In the south. USC and UCLA play in a league with Cal Tech, Occiden tal and Pepnerdlne. California and Stanford play in a north ern division with St. Mary's, Santa Clara and St. Mary's. Cornell predicted that the only possibility would be to arrange an NCAA coast playoff, provld ir; the Independent schools were members ac tha NCAA Chris Arnold I versen. with the increased DODuIaritv of "T" formation football, might well be classed as one of the "forgotten men" of the gridiron. But the abilitv of the 205- pound, 26-year-old blocking back from Petaluma. Calif., did not go unnoticed by his University of Oregon teammates dur ing the current season. They accorded Duke's blocking and auit-wavAiiig auiiitjr wiuruic Heaviest vine in lusiory ior ne coveiea jtioiiman f oot Dan Award. The ex-U. S. Marine sergeant was given the first-place vote of every member of the squad and the only thing that prevented a unanimous ballot was Duke's own vote... . . By winning the honor as the most outstanding senior member of the 1946 Oregon football squad Iversen was presented with a handsome 21-jewel Bulova wrist watch by Vernon Hoffman, local jeweler and a former University of Oregon swimming team letterman. The gold watch, with a very good looking face, Is suitably engraved. Duke has had a colorful and lengthy football- career. He played for four years at Petaluma High, from 1935 to 1938, and was all conference fullback the final three years. He was also a four-year baseball catcher and handled the football throw (which replaced the javelin) for the track team. His best toss of 205 feet was only 12 feet under the conference record set by Vic Botteri of Vallejo High, who later starred at California, MAIL-A-BUCK , After graduating from high school, Ted Gebhart, a former star Oregon back,, and the late Guy Kennedy, father of Oregon's Don Kennedy and a Webfoot grldman about 1914, interested Duke in Oregon. He arrived on the campus in the fall of 1939 and immediately won the regular fullback berth on the Frosh team under John Warren. In 1940, his first varsity season under Tex Oliver, Duke was under study to Chet Haliski .... and, incidentally, Haliski, and Iversen are rated the greatest blocking backs in recent Oregon football history. In 1941 Duke was regular varsity blocking quarterback, but the next year he entered the marines and for two seasons was a member of the Jacksonville, Fla., Air Station eleven as quarterback. In 1943 he was selected on the all-southeastern service all-star team. In 1944 Duke coached and played with the small Kinston, N. C. naval air base, playing five of a ten-game schedule before being shipped overseas, virtually overnight. He also caught for the Columbia, S. C. marine baseball team. He coached a football team on Okinawa and was discharged from the marines in March of 1946. He returned to Eugene late in the spring and took up football where he had left off five years previously and was the most consistent performer. Tex Oliver, Duke's coach who is in Los Angeles until after the first of the year, wired his congratulations and said, "Duke has earned and well deserves his honor. His teammates and the West team should also be congratulated for their good judgement. There is no better man in the league.", . MAlXi-A-BUUK. When Duke rjlavs with the West team in the annual Shrine East- West classlo at Kezar Stadium in San Francisco New Year's Day, it may not mark the finish of his gridiron career. ... We understand several professional clubs are interested, but Duke hasn't made up his mind whether to take a fling at the pro game or help his brother run the Iversen poultry and sheep ranch near Petaluma. The New York Giants, who use a single-wing formation, are in terested in Duke because of his blocking ability .... and he figures that's what Lon Stiner will use with the West team "or I don't see hour t .niilri hffln 'em much." Duke says. He urobably hasn't carried the ball more than a half dozen times for the Oregon varsity in his three years of competition. ,. .. Duke joined good company when chosen for the Fifth Hoffman Football Award. . . . The first such honor went to "Bullet Bob smith, a halfback in 1939. Dick Home, an end, took the honors in 1940, followed by Halfback Curt Mecnam m imi ana "juara rioya "Scrappy" Rhea in 1942. . . . There was no football here in 1943 and 1944, and there were no eligible seniors last year. " Tk. ,Q cnm cnnfiieinn rf?arriin& the VOtinB this SCaSOn. Duke, uvm,'. Harris. Tackle Chuck Elliott End Tony Crish and Half back Bob Reynolds were the only seniors in eligibility. . . . But at least two others, Fullback Bob Koch and Halfback Jake Leicht, expect to graduate before another season eliminating them from further competition. ... So, in the voting, Leicht second highest, Elliott and Harris tied for third, followed by Koch, Reynolds, Crish, Jim New quist, Dick Brown, and Brad Ecklund, in that order. . . . Regardless of Duke's decision to run the ranch or play pro foot ball, we expect to see him often. . . . Three years ago in Jacksonville he married Elizabeth Ann Jessen, a Eugene girl. - Vernon Annexes Batting Title CHICAGO, Dec. 14 W James B "Mickey" Vernon, spidery first baseman for the Washington Sena tors, formally was named the 1946 American League batting cham pion in official statistics released at league -headquarters Saturday. Vernon thumped a nifty .353, which topped George Stirnweiss comparatively anemic 1945 win ning mark of .309 by 44 percentage points and further demonstrated that the wartime honeymoon defr initely was over for junior circuit pitchers. Vernon finished 11 points ahead of another eminent ex-serviceman, Boston's tremendous Ted Wil liams, who- batted .342 for the runnerup spot and otherwise was terrific with the bat. A rousing late season comeback gave Detroit's Hank Greenberg the home run crbwn with 44, topping by three his winning total in 1940 before he entered service. Vernon, whose specialty was spanking the ball down the base lines, led in two-baggers with 51. Galloping George Case of Cleve land recaptured his stolen base laurels with 28, dethroning Stirn weiss who had 18 after leading with 55 in 1945. Bears, Giants Clash For NFL Crown NEW YORK, Dec. 14 OP) The Chicago Bears -and the New York Giants, professional football's two "winningest" clubs down through the years, collide in the Polo Grounds Sunday in the National League's World Series, and a lot of folks will be surprised no end if the Bears don't bring home the pot of honey. The greatest crowd and the gaudiest gate in' the 14-year his tory of this annual championship playoff already were a cinch when the box offices shut down Saturday night and the sellout sign was dusted off, as far as re served seats were concerned. As a result it was' just about a money-back guarantee that more than 55,000 customers would chiD in to a $250,000 melon to sit in on the moleskin mayhem. Former Westerners in the op posing lineups include Magnanl, St. Marys, and Hugh Gallarneau, Stanford, in the Chicago back field, and Len Younce, (Oregon State), at right guard for New York. Ray Robinson to Get Crack at Welter Title NEW YORK, Dec. 15 (U.R)--Aft- er a five-year ride on the "merry-go-round," Ray "Sugar" Robinson finally gets his shot at the world welterweight championship Friday night. The stream-lined Negro, "un crowned king of the welters" since his first victory over Fritzie Zivlc In 1941, will fight Tommy Bell of Youngstown, O., for. the vacant 147-pound title at Madison Square Garden. Robinson will be a heavy favor ite before his 15-round bout with brown-skinned Bell, whom he outpointed at Cleveland in 10 rounds in January, 1945. The bet ting price favored Robinson at 3V4 to 1. - . I District Hoop TeninslS: Heavy Activity This Weei District 6 hish school hnsWhoii , . District 6 high school basketball teams swing into a final strenuous week of pre-season campaigning this week before a partial lay-off for the holidays. All district teams will see ac tion at least once during the week with a heavy schedule of games on- tap locally. Tuesday night at Springfield the Millers will open their District 6 campaign against the Elmira Falcons in the only game of the week which will count in district play. The Falcons lost a district game to Eugene two weeks ago. Other Tuesday night clashes City AAU Basketball Schedule Revised EUGENE AAU BASKETBALL LEAGUE BUndlnfi W L Pel. Oregon J-V ; S 0 1.000 Oregon Lumber Sales 4 - a .sss Coos Bay Pirates 3 S .500 Eagles Lodse ,. u3 3' .900 Outdoor Store 1 5 ,M Rlchileld Ollera ...1 t lis? Examinations and Christmas va cations of University of Oregon players have caused a revision in the Eugene City AAU Basketball League schedule, moving the opening' of the second-half sched ule from January 6 to January 13. Next league games will be play ed Thursday, December 19, in stead of December 17, as originally scheduled. Palmer King of the Outdoor Store and Dale Warberg of the Rich field Oilers are individual scorine leaders of the circuit, each with points ior an average of 10.3 points per game. Howie Apple gate of the Eagles is next with 60 points and a 10-point average, followed by Chuch Taylor of the Eagles with 58 and' 9.7, and Chuck Stamper and George Huggins of the Coos Bay Pirates, each with 54 points and nine-point averages. The ten leading league scorers and the revised schedule follow: Dee. IS 8 p.m., Eagles vs. Oregon Firs; 9 p.m., Outdoor Store vs. Richfield. Dec. 23 S p.m. Richfield vs. Pirates; p.m.. Outdoor Store vs. Oregon Krs. Jan. 1 7 p.m., Richfield vs. Oregon J-Va; 8 p.m., Eagles vs. Outdoor Store; 9 p.m., Oregon Firs vs. Pirates. Jan. 2 7 p.m.. Outdoor Store vs. Pi rates; 8 p.m., Oregon Firs vs. Oregon J-V's; 9 p.m., Richfield vs. Eagles. Jan. 68 p.m., Eagles vs. Oiegon J-V's. Jan. 9 8p.m., Oregon J-Va vs. Pirates. SECOND-BALF SCHEDULE Jan. 13 7 p.m.. Richfield vs. Oregon Firs; 8 p.m., Eagles vs. Pirates; 9 p.m., J-Va vs. Outdoor Store. Jan. 157 p.m., Eagles vs. J-V's; 8 p.m.. Oregon Firs vs. Outdoor Store; 9 p.m. Richfield vs. Pirates'. Jan. 207 p.m.. Pirates vs. J-Vs; 8 p.m.. Outdoor Store vs. Richfield; 9 p.m., sagies vs. Oregon Firs. Jan. 237 p.m.. Eagles vs. Outdoor Store; 8 p.m.. Oregon Firs vs. Pirates; 9 p.m., Richfield v. J-Va. . Jan. 27 7 p.m., J-V's vs. Oregon Firs; 8 p.m., Richfield vs. Eagles; 9 p.m., Outdoor Store vs. Pirates. - Jan. 297 p.m., Outdoor Store vs. J-V's; 8 p.m., Richfield vs. Oregon Firs; 9 p.m.. Eagles vs. Pirates'. Feb. 57 p.m., Richfield vs. Pirates; 8 p.m.,' Eagles vs. J-Vs; 9 p.m., Oregon Firs vs. Outdoor Store. Feb. 87 p.m., Plratei vs. J-Vs; 8 p.m., Eagles v. Oregon Firs; 9 p.m., Outdoor Store vs. Richfield. Feb. 127 p.m., Richfield vs. J-V's; 8 P.m., Eagles vs. Outdoor Store; 9 p.m., Oregon Firs vs. Pirates. Feb." 137 p.m., Outdoor Store vs. Pirates; 8 p.m., Oregon Flri vs. J-V'S; 9 p.m., Richfield vs. Eagles. Feb. .18 Championship playoff. , O FG FTA PF TP Ave. KlnfT, Outdoor S 22 38 10 62 10.3 Warberg, Oilers 8 21 34 Applegate. Eaglet 6 23 23 Taylor, Eagles 0 22 20 Stamper, Pirates 8 '19 '28 Huggins, Pirates 8 28 3 Plath, Outdoor ; 20 14 Switzer. J-Vs 6 19 19 Burrls, Fits IT 38 Bonney. Outdoor 8 20 44 Will hrin. Y.,.. C"y, and SJV Grove, s, ff Pleasant Hill ' J U a.in CcuWvJ McKenzie and Thin? the armory L?Ht wnientertlinXfe fiday night tt.M travel to Msn;.,??. Hi6h-3 "imrwur court "l Tne SDrintfi.M , I e ban S."!iJ start the baU League play vm?! "any Friday nMtT'fM Bulldogs. Other FriLf Grove agair Reedsport and Nor4 bPJ Roseburg at RosZ wiU travel to CSU Strange to Manage Bremerton WIL fee, BREMERTON, D J Alan Ct-. . 1 . UCui8l!, lonjg pj Coast League and . 1 w- -uu, Ui4fg baseball player, mumti J of the Western League Friday night bifteW Bill Shepard. ' ) Strange succeeded' Ssn (gJ long-time Pacific Coast JAMOUS AMERICAN SOCKS VViffgfUrbnWiiM cmdpbcMiWvtnjry,, Watmintters, u s Urns sif t or as aa titri divided for someone in the fmfy, are sore to bring thtppi . reward. Find the color, style and pattern HE wants in thr Westminster Christmas collection of Famous American Socks. Cascade Baseball Mid-Winter Meeting ' Booked January 8 ' President ' Bill Greene an nounced Saturday the mid winter meetinr of the Cascade Baseball League, to be held at the Register-Guard offices at 7:30 p. m.i Wednesday, January 8. Possibility of increasing the four-club circuit to six teams, Including Cottage Grove and Koseburg, will be discussed at the January session. A final de cision regarding a $1000 forfeit fee to be posted by each club will also be made at that time. The league Is also Interested In founding long-range build ing program to provide a turf playing field, adequate stands and club rooms on a site of the new city park development in the Amaaon territory, ' Evans Offered Post DETROIT, Dec. 15 W Pres ident Walter O. Briggs announced Saturday that William G. Evans, veteran baseball umpire and head of the Southern Association, has been offered the position of exec utive vice president of the De troit Tigers. Mail-A-Buck Fund Reached $29 Mark . Lane County's Sports Polio campaign for funds has opened impressively with $29 coming into the "Mail-a-Buck" division. Although no definite dates have been scheduled for benefit sports events, the Eugene Outdoor Store basketball team has offered to sponsor a hoop series at McArthur Court between two local inde pendent teams and Fee's and Semler's of Portland either later this month or in mid-January, High schools and other sports organizations have been asked to support the annual drive that pro vided more than $3500 for In fantile Paralysis, Inc., last year. Mail - a - Buck - contributors to date include Red Q. Gates, Father Francis P. Leipzig, Juel Faubion, Al Weinstein, Tommy Hodges, Joe Gordon, Bob McChesney, Dr. George Guldager, Hank Kuchera, Duane Mellem, Herb Nagel, and one anonymous contributor. Contributions for a buck or more will be acceptable by mail ing to the "Highclimber". Sporta Department, Begister-Quti fil 15 S3 10.3 lilU" ' 1 is soio.o ry . . 8 58 9.7 l S S3 . 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