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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 11, 1952)
'1 eJ2 Football Season f- jl8 Roseburg gainst tuge flt . iiflllnmHIC. El- i Mnnroc. 'A.feld t Lebanon. c;Lo.i.t"'"- r,!?2?., with 10 Lane I itt nils Rose- Friday B' Kcdcr s rfhasoneof c I" VT "l..t nn club Will DC ' i e hones. Ln III P.UUI.IIV ' boast a uib .- j ninntv nf hard- touchdowns ; last weekend Berlin 39-12 in a jamboree I i, expected to rely hcavl TlLe attack, led by ;.r,i Henkcl. with smlt to add diver- ,1m attack. Lineman Ron and Fullback Bob Morfian, Li.fl last Saturday's jam- hcause of injuries, are cx to be ready for the Rose- (fjtfSt. mtest promises 10 db a of the Axemen s umneu strength both in the line idd. As the aciense guts Eugene's title hopes. . ield, meanwhile, opens its Lebanon Friday nigni. . . 1 u or! wno snowca mui-u iln the jamboree, are rated itover the Warriors in this fact tangfe. Radio Station Jill broadcast the game, (It 6:45 p.m. on FM and at ;AM. ill Grove, a possible "sur fcam this fall, hosts St. I in a no-count clash on the . field Friday night. Max ft hard-charging lads are I (o take the nod over the (ted and out-manned Saints. nity also takes to a for id Friday night, when the love to Mt. Angel. This ffl provide a good indication Jfs strength for the coming B, as the Tide has only toning starters from last District 5-A-2 champions, ii AT HOME ir, 2 p.m., sees Willamette bost to Suthcrlin in an-liar-district game. The Wol i. ) with much unseasoned 11 are expected to face a fponent In the Douglas seven. it travels to Oakridgc for Tjnlght Valley League tus :host Warriors, who dis ritrong running attack in bree.will likely be without Halfback Bill DuMont,yho aVcrnie Clark will he ready 4 a cracked rib. However, 'Iravels to Drain Friday ilanother Valley League wine umira tackles Mon- Jlattcr's field in an after clist rict clash. City and Pleasant Hill open weekends. '1 4 ',,! i ". 8 i . V '17 M f , If fjI, -5 i ' V-s 'r . ' - '' ' - " . , ... I ' 1 ' ' ' ' v ' I (Wolrott photo. Wiltshire ennrnvine) EUREwK BAlKl'lti.li si-uuusT&K Anion llirisicnsen, senior halfback, is expected to be in the Axemen's starting lineup Friday at Civic Stndiiim when Eugene tangles with Roseburg in a District 5-A-l contest. Christcnscn was the district 100 and 220 sprint champion last spring, and his speed is being utilized In Eugene's T-formation attack. WSC OffGnSlVe Machine Fcg'5tcr-Gard, Eugene, Ore,, Thu., Sept., 11. 1952 Page 2 V, Has Size, Speed, Know-How NBA to Back Las Vegas Bout Details of Battle Still Not Decided MONTREAL Wl The Nntinn.nl Boxing Association, in a iag.cnd:minuc(iineiaai-s explosive squaa . .!., , as backfield mentor, sums up his ..(....nun vi.auift it.-, annum tilllVL'll- tion, decided Wednesday to sup- PULLMAN, Wash, an Wash ington Slate College fields a dy namic football team this fall that could go all the way, or, with a few bad breaks, fail dismally. Coach Al Kireher, who master- port a world championship fight at Las Vegas, Nev., about this time next year. The bout the weight division to be determined later will be held in conjunction with the associa tion's 34th annual convention in Las Vegas with the purpose of showing that title fights can be staged in the Western United States as well as in the East. M. T. T. Howard, representative of the Nevada State Athletic Com mission, was assured that every thing possible would be done to hold a bout in Las Vegas. Meantime, as delegates headed home, N.B.A. officials said they will work out later the details of a proposal to set up a four-man international board to pick chal lengers for title crowns in the vari ous weights. The proposal came from the British Boxing Board of Control and was adopted by convention delegates. Under the plan, the British board, the European Boxing As sociation, the N.B.A. and the New York State Athletic Commission would nominate representatives to the international body. Their job would be to name contenders and challengers to meet champions in the various divisions. The aim would be a more work manlike and systematic method of determining world championships. team's chances as ably as anyone: "We could lose every game on our schedule, but by the same j token we could win any given 'game on any given day." I The nature of WSC's material I and schedule makes that conclu sion sane, if a bit evasive. The Cougars, who ended up tied with Purdue for 15th place in the 1951 United Press ratings of the na tion's best teams, have nearly the full team back. But their sched ule is the toughest in history. The first offensive eleven big, fast and experienced will be one of the best in the Pacific Coast' Conference. But Kireher must go begging for reserve strength of the same caliber. An injury to a key man would be costly. "Right now," he says, "our man power seems mighty thin to play seven teams rated in the top 10 of the nation at one time or an other last season." The rugged ar ray is USC, Stanford, Baylor, Ohio : State, Oregon State, California and Washington. Other games are against Oregon, Idaho and Okla homa A & M. Kireher, not a man to show his hand, has hinted his Cougars will I play a more wide-open brand of1 ball, making them even more dan gerous at moments than in 1951. The Cougars will use a new ver sion of the Michigan single wing with an added-T. Whether the scheme produces or fizzles will depend largely upon the effectiveness of the pass com bination of quarterback Bob Burk hart to end Ed Barker, the 210 pound candidate for Ail-American honors. Nineteen other lettermen will be spelled by more than a dozen former all-staters up from a fine frosh squad. i Capt. Don Steinbrunner, a 225 pound end, will play both offense and defense. Other individual standouts are offensive tackles El mer Messenger and Hal Loskovsek, both 210 pounds; and Jim Head, another 210-pounder shifted from fullback to left half because of his speed and power. 1 :-5i&gT DUAL SETS Ford, Merc, Chev., Ply. Stude., Olds., Dodge., Cad. More pow er, more mileage $19 95 TO $36 30 Dual Carburetor MANIFOLD Ford, Merc, Chev., Ply., Dodge $0150 41 Lowering enney Winner hy Tournament Mcy won Class 4 hnn. day in a putting tourney "i uaiway women's Eva Culn finished A division. Evelyn Ca--C laurels and . I Dorothv Hills fciw. l)M's club will hold a Mil foursome this Sun wards going for long P. act and pm irii. Ll p."o. liiyii- f'.ws will tee off at hole players at 4;30 i'cu l0 everyone. .JCKOOTg 'BK-Harry L5San. .t'i, nn,rs i ' ut in aim... siiii aval ti22L"?Ji8hL..gar store. Mrs. F. Coen ins Wrestlers Vie In Title Bout COMPLETE PROGRAM Main Event Andy Trcmaine, world champ, vs. Jack Kiser, coast champ. World's light heavyweight champion. Seml-Final All Bey vs. Dale Kiser. Opener Gordon Hessell vs. Ace Abbott. Referee Harry Elliott. Two of the greatest light- heavyweight wrestlers ever to ap pear here will vie for the world's light-heavyweight wrestling cham pionship at the Armory arena Sat urday. Andy Trcmaine, the Texan who has held the world title for nearly three years, will defend his title against the challenge of Jack Kiser, the Portlander who copped the coast crown several months ago by defeating Frenchie Roy. Attracting nearly as much atten tion among grappling fans of this area will be the local debut of Ai: T.. , U- UlnUI., n-,.l.;cl. matman who has been headlining ,jmn. m tj n. Mrs. Frank Coen captured the Western Women's Golf Assoc. tro phy at the Eugene Country Club Wednesday when the sixth play in the competition was completed with the winner posting a net 338 for her best four rounds. Mrs. Mike Marlatt was second with 344 strokes. Only winner among the Eugene golfers in the Southern Oregon Willamette Valley tourney at Rose burg Tuesday was Mrs. Bill Mc Crackcn in class "B". In a circle tourney Wednesday. Mrs. Art Richardson won in class ."A" with 18 points, followed by Airs. Max Rietman in class "B" with 16 and Mrs. Earl Thompson in class "C" with 24. Nine-hole winners were Mrs. C. H. Michel in group I, Mrs. Bob Davis, Mrs. J. F. Roadman and Mrs. Thomas Kar rens tied in eroun II. and Mrs. Ted Jones won in group III. I First-round results in the fall nine-hole tournament were Mrs. Karren, 1-up over Mrs. Guy Har- cards in the East and Southwest for several years. He meets Dale Kiser, young Portlander and Jack's brother, in the semi-final attraction. Opening the card at 8:30 p.m. will be Cowboy Ace Abbott, the erstwhile "Black Prince", and Gordon Hessell, the "hoy bandit" from Albuquerque, N.M. Jack Kiser won the right to the title match last week by defeating Abbott-Black Prince. The Port lander, who first won the title some 12 years ago at the age of 26, is' given a fair-to-middlin' chance of upsetting Tremaine. It will be one of the finest scientific matches of tho year. Bey, who carries 195 pounds on a a-toot, 4-inch frame, Is consid ered a great defensive grappler be cause of his size and the bald headed Turk usually performs on all fours, which makes him a tough target. Kiser, showing steady im provement, was selected as the "trial horse" because of his com parative smallness. . The Saturday show is expected to attract a near-record crowd, but ringside reserved seat tickets are still available at Luckey's Club ci- lor 3-2 over Mrs. Mrs. Michel 1-up Bosse. ' Pat Fury, and over Mrs, Jack lit mm i T' ap to Mank ??I,8"'n (right) of Australia "Iter Maurcen "Little M rAnn f a Bills, N v MKlhclr Na,,onal " ten" Both posted U. S.-Wlmblcdon grand If, British Boat Racer Says He Hit 200 MPH INVERNESS, Scotland Wl John Cobb, British speed racer, claimed he exceeded the water speed record of 178 miles per hour in his jet boat Crusader , on Loch Ness Wednesday. On one run alone, Cobb said, the needle "flickered around 200 mph." No record could be claimed, how ever, as Cobb was only making a trial run and official timekeepers were not present. The present water speed record is held by Stanley Sayres, an American who piloted Slo-Mo-Shun IV at Seattle, Wash., last July 7. With the wind, Sayres covered Lake Washington at 185 mph and on the return at 171. Average of both laps was accepted as official time. Weather conditions on Loch Ness were perfect Wednesday, while the Lake Washington surface was choppy when Sayres set his record. lr JATERFILL RAZIER O SMOOTH jCf KENTUCKY l bunded mjTTfifaK WHISKEY ft.!s3Ktlf $2.35 IW52 U PROOF 70t GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS Cast Iron HEADERS Ply., Dodge, Chev. $ 27 50 ts I ALL ill lfel 'CAMS 30 Exehanae MhSisassrsvifS jfjfiP 1 r 098 1 1 1 I WW chrome I gMBBQ) W 3D.rP nMmif CARBURETORS m ' OUTDOOR LI 4rP jq.f CHROME m &enqmaut shoes ft Dr.P 498 g$ FUEl pumps I PRESSMAN'S MEN'S SHOP fl J : j 782 Willamette Open Friday til 9 P.M. Nj CHROME n Water Pumps S Wire Looms CHROME nii - iE.Fii15 HIGH COMPRESSION l;fl REAR DECK ucxne J 0W LATCH KITS ?d L ue LJ Electric or Manual Ford "ld MerC gemmte EM(K1LIM IBMdDCTIE I feu a Y OU'RE II Sillfe fcL1 j 269 89c 1 ' IS ... at hurclvs ' . El Hollywood HERE IT r .'ilii x-', TIJ Chech these features an tallied by England's finest shoemaker Water Resisting Zug Grain Heavy Double Sole Full Leather Lined Full Waterproof Weir Steel Heel Plate Toughest shoe leather known , . yet, always loft and pliable for over 22 years . . . Eugene's Leading Shoe Store 244 W. FIRST In Albany 1060 WILLAMETTE in Eugene I ftM LUwi FOR THE TRADE-MARK JsJ " OfclCiNAl L ON EVERY MUFFLER less Back Pressure! More Power! Dual exhausts for Ford and Mercury. Single replacement Mufflers and Exhaust Accessories for all cars. ALL COLORS Inner Control SEAL BEAM 360 Turn 1195 l dm Thru the Door Or Thru the Post Cad Type TAIL FINS SAVE YOUR TOPI -sS! Ford, Chev., m Pontlac HEADER SETS $(100 Ford, Mercury, Chev, Plymouth. J Pacific Auto Supply SAVES YOU HONEY Direct Factory Buying We Sell for Cash 57 West 10th YOUR DOLLAR Wne. 1370 Main GOES FARTHER SprtaalMa