Camp Adair Sentry Thursday, April 29,1943. rage Six Timber Wolf Division Nine To Ploy U of O This Afternoon Game 3:30 at Albany High School Diamond Camp Adair SPORTS Sgt. Jack Knott May • r_ Be Starting Pitcher t Catches For Bulldogs Today As The Sentry went to press last night it was revealed that condition of the playing field at Albany would force postpone­ ment of the Timber Wolf-Uni­ versity of Oregon baseball game. Cpl. Albert Nachsin, of the Dead­ eye Division, came through with flying colors in the Oregon State Table Tennis Championships, Fri­ day and Saturday, in the Oregon Athletic club rooms in Portland, when he went to the quarter-finals Sea Embark on where he was upset by an oppon- ent who then went on to win the Big Sports Program men’s singles championship. Cpl. Albert Nachsin played from We might as well warn the other seven in the evening to midnight, teams in the Timber Wolf leagues 1 when the quarter-finals took place, that the Sea Gulls have rounded which may be the result of. his loss up 98 applicants for their baseball to the Cham;» Benvinisti, by scores team, and they are out for blood. 1 of 17-21, 21-18, 21-19, 21-18. Co-coaches Lt.'s Shuck and Nyer j In the Veteran’s singles, it was say that the boys really produced a different story altogether, Cpl. in their first practice session. Nachsin walked off w’ith the crown The Sea Gulls have already ( Saturday evening, started work on seven diamonds, The best attraction took place which (the)' claim) will be fully • Saturday evening when Cpl. Nach- as good as any at the Yankee sin paired with a 15 year old Chi­ Stadium or Ebbets Field. nese youngster went on to the fin­ als of the doubles championship, Softbail Leaders but lost,—better luck next time The softball league has been at Cpl. Nachsin. it for quite some time now, and The 90 and 9, Minus One, Try for Team Gulls CSeries V,nr)» vtanel in I Af+— which it wo- e;-- r-’t of eight con- State’s i eren~® haseb"' I 'rrm leaves Corvallis to- <’ y o- the g ue’linr road trip into Wasb’-v’-n rd Idaho. The Bea- V re irn-t r'ay six contests in a V ->e’- 'r< o«” Washin"-I • n ct^te at Pullman Friday and fitur-move over t<> Moscow -• ,. n frf o-nmps with Id^bo "pvt Monday a-d Tue-dav. and +b®n wind ■’-• th® trin against Washing­ ton at Seattle Ma’’ (i and 7. If you wanta know whether Pvt. Marshall Hawkins could have snared that foul tip. drop over to the Bulldogs' home grounds in the Deadeye Division where, at 5:30 this afternoon. Lt. Bob Barrett’s Bulldogs meet the invading Willamette University nine fror’ -'alem. Havkins is an ex-Piedmont Leaguer, with other half n. I Time of U’e battle is 3:30 p.m. and rbe gar-® "’ill be played on the ' Ibn®y tT'-b School diamond. l'u ’nec.- .”-Pr Sgt. John iK announced. Start”'r n-an was unan­ nounced I: te ’-st evening, though 5* j« r-’-'*-' no ci’bh tb-t Manager Sgt. Jack K-ett. long-time main­ stay in m harms. —i’l start < n the Ft. Dough’“. Utah (CNS) - A golfer drove hi« ball ir to a flo'k , of geese swimming in a water haz- ard. The yell» t “corled" -n® gander and left it flont’-o. unsido down, The gol'er waded m. righted the frird and then it revived and swam away. Eugene. Ore. (CNS) - Thirteen- year-old Frank Collins found a wallet containing $180 and then found the owner. The latter gave him a $5 reward. Then Frank lost the five-spot. By Pfc. Bob Ruskauff Bulletin! We Us^d to Be Helped Like That, in Bistros In Eugene They Do The Darnedest Things Coming Army Champ? Sgt. Tommy Gomez, A r m y heavyweight from Camp Van Dorn, Miss., continued his pugi- istic successes by scoring a tech- nical knockout over Tony Musto of Chicago in 49 seconds of the first round of a scheduled ten- rounder held at Tampa, Fla., re­ cently. The soldier had floored Musto twice before the referee stopped the bout. Musto went nine rounds with Joe Louis in a world heavyweight championship bout at St. Louis two years ago. ¡■ion Boxing title. Boxing will w ind-up the winter sports pro­ gram and leave the field open for summer activities. We Dare Pvt. Marino i Three leagues will operate in softball and in volleyball—Infan­ To Use Mess Hall “Silver” try, Artillery and Special Troops It was just a group around the Leagues, with play-offs for the “Jive Box” in the annex of Club 2. Division title between the winners “Clatter, clatter, clatter” was the of each league in both sports. sound that was accompanying the A baseball league, consisting of Juke music. This “clattering had five teams—Sea Gulls, Mountain-1 a pleasing sound to the ear and eers, Geysers, Artillery and Special soon quite a few were crowding Troops will be operated to decide around the nickelodeon to see who the champion in the national pas-' the entertainer was. time. I He happened to be a kid from Athletic officers should start New York who plays the spoons, team practice immediately, as the His name is Pat Marino. In his leagues will start play in May and civilian days he had a hill-billy early wins may prove to be the band which was aired over Station margin of victory. WOR daily. has already passed the half-way marker on their schedule. Anti­ tank company is now leading the league with four straight wins, but Co. “L” is running them a close second with six wins and one loss. “D” Company is bat­ ting nicely with five wins and one loss. The volley ball championship will soon be decided, when Anti­ tank company and “E” company fight it out beneath the net. This game, although already awarded to company “E,” has been protested, and is to be replayed this week. The winner of this game will de­ finitely be king of the Sea Gull i volleyball loop. The Beach Beckons Great Falls Folks Get Stirred Up Quite a Bit Great Falls, Mont. (CNS) “There’s a time bomb in my yard! an excited woman telephoned the sheriff’s office. Officers investi­ gated and cautiously approached the hedge where the “bomb” lay. It turned out to be a football. Will This Make Chow Taste Better? The Army Air Forces Technical Training Command has ordered all its Training Centers to abolish the term K.P. From now on K.P.’s are Mess Attendants. Headquarters feels that the term K.P. gives the wrong picture of a necessary and honorable military job. I Yeah! and so does this lassie, but Bill, the compositor, threw away everything but her phone number. It’s HAmpton x036. Call her up sometime. ! ! ? ? Ben Hogan, “The Little Giant of the Fairways,” who followed golfdom’s golden trail for earnings of almost $100,000 in six years, is working for Uncle Sam at a salary of $50 a month. The 30-year-old Hogan entered the Army at Dallas, Tex., last week. Mountaineers 'Take Over1 Neoku Tomorrow The Timber Wolf Mountaineers, under direction of Lt. Bob Saunders arr. stt pping out again tomorrow with their traveling vaudeville unit a nd portable boxing troupe, as they will visit Neotsu. a small to vn on the Pacific coast. Lt. Marty Krpan, boxing coach, will have his boys ready for several prize fights, to thrill the locals. Cpl. Bill Siscoe. “Mountain Ear” Sports Editor, will officiate as Referee. < pl. Jimmy Horan will preside over the galaxy of talent—using most of the unit that performed in Corvallis last Saturday night—plus Cpl. Howard Brown, singing sensation of Service < o. It promises to be a field dav for the Mountaineers and another show to help create good will and friendly feelings.