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Leo A. Harris (August 6, 1904 – April 22, 1990) was an American college football player and coach, and the first athletic director for the University of Oregon.
[edit] Playing and coaching career
Harris was a fullback and guard at Santa Cruz High School in Santa Cruz, California.[1] He attended Stanford University, where he played offensive tackle for legendary coach "Pop" Warner in 1925 and 1926.[2]
Following his collegiate playing career, Harris was football coach at Fresno State College from 1933 to 1935, winning Far West Conference championships the last two years. Harris also coached Fresno State's basketball program.[1]
[edit] Oregon's first athletic director
In 1947, Harris was named athletic director at the University of Oregon, the first person to hold that title. At that time, Oregon's athletic department was in serious financial trouble.[3] Through fundraising and careful planning, Harris expanded both the quality of the University's athletic programs as well as its facilities.[3] His most significant achievement was the construction of Autzen Stadium, built on land Harris had acquired for the purpose many years earlier, and paid for with money he had saved for the purpose.[1] Harris also oversaw expansion of McArthur Court and improvements to Hayward Field and the baseball team's Howe Field.[1]
Harris was also noted for striking a handshake deal with Walt Disney in 1947 that allowed Oregon to use the likeness of Donald Duck as the University's athletic mascot, The Oregon Duck.[4] When Disney lawyers in the 1970s discovered that no written contract existed, the university produced a photograph of Harris alongside Walt Disney wearing a Donald-emblazoned Oregon jacket as proof that an agreement did exist. From that photo evidence, a formal contract licensing Donald's use by the university was created.[5]
[edit] Legacy
Harris served as Oregon's athletic director for 20 years, stepping down in 1967, shortly before Autzen Stadium was completed. Today, the stadium's address is on Leo Harris Parkway. Harris died at his Carmel, California retirement home in 1990.[1] He was inducted into the University of Oregon Athletic Hall of Fame in 1992,[3] and the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame that same year.[6]
[edit] References