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About Oregon emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1909-1920 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1919)
WOMEN’S GLEE CLUB IN m flRFliilN TOWN!! Program Arranged for Southern Tour; 23 Members Will Make Trip Final preparations are now under way for the University Girls’ Glee club trip which will be made by the club during the latter part of Christ mas vacation. Extra rehearsals have been held this week and any number are scheduled to take place between examination periods next week. The club members are planning to return to Eugene December 29, giving them one day before starting south on the concert tour. Dean Elizabeth Fox will accom pany the club and Leland A. Coon, director, will be on the job in all the towns to see that things go off just right. The first concert will be given ‘ in Cottage Grove on the night of Dec. 30. From there the club will go south ' to Roseburg, Dec. 31; Grants Pass, > Jan. 1; Medford, Jan. 2; Ashland, * Jan. 3, and Klamath Falls, Jan. 5. » This will give the girls Sunday in Kla , math Falls, where the townspeople have promised to give them a trip |* around the Lakes. \» There are 23 members who will make the trip. Following is the list: !* First soprano—Beulah Keagy, Port '* land; Adah McMurphey, Eugene; '* Alice Gohlky, Portland; Genevieve • Clancy, Portland; Jeanette Crosfield, Wasco; Florence Garrett, Hillsboro. Second soprano—Joy Judkins, Eu , gene; Arbelyn Healy, Baker; Lois Muir, Portland; Gladys Ellsworth, * Emily Spaeth, Portland; Marjorie Hol * man, Dallas. , First alto—Marvel Skeels, Coquille; Margaret Phelps, Pendleton; Mildred • Bettinger, The Dalles; Laura Rand, Portland; Bernice Alstock, Portland. Second alto—Mrs. Minnie Johnston, ♦ Portland; Gladys Lane, Heppner; Hat tie Mitchell, Salem; Margaret Wells, * Hillsboro; Kate Chatburn, Bandon; • Helen Manning, Portland. • Accompanist — Patty French, Port land. . OREGON DELEGATION TO LEAVE DECEMBER 28 .Continued from page 1. Stanford Anderson, president of the , associated student body, is unable to attend the convention on account of 1 the Pasadena game on New Year’s day, and Don Newbury, also elected as a delegate, will be unable to go. Each delegate will have to furnish $25 to make the -trip, the rest of the money to send the delegation having been raised through the campaign on the campus and the money sent in from the churches of Portland, Eu gene, The Dalles, Prineville and Was , co. “It would have been impossible for Oregon to have sent 15 delegates if the churches of the state had not made a canvass of the people of their towns and raised as many subscrip tions and donations as they did,” said Miss Urith Dailey, “and we now have sufficient money to send the 15 dele gates, and if more money comes in an addition may be added . tp the > list.” Portland Starting Point The group will leave from Portland on December 28 and go by the most direct route to the convention, which will be over by January 4. The dele gates will then return to the campus. “Roy Veatch, a sophomore in the University and a Eugene boy, is chairman of the committee, and it is through his efforts that Oregon has been able to make this movement a success,” said Miss Dailey this morn ing, “and he should be credited for doing an awfully lot of hard work.” When asked of her personal view on the subject Miss Dailey said, “In one way it is too bad that Oregon could not send 20 delegates, but in view of the fact that expenses have gone up so much since the campaign started on account of the coal shortage, the higher Pullman rates than we expect ed to*have to pay and the delay in getting any rates at all, I think it is mighty fine that Oregon can send as many as 15 delegates to this conven tion.” Pullmans Not Available Another drawback along the expense line is the fact that the delegates will have to live at a hotel while in ' Des Moines, instead of in their spe . cial Pullman car as they had planned for, which adds considerably to the expenses of the trip. > “The World Student Conference only meets every four years,” con ' tinued Miss Dailey, “and in face of’ the money necessary to raise it is ' wonderful that we can be so well represented at this convention. It " was due to the churches that we were . able to raise the necessary money for I this trip.” (HARVARD COMES TO DEFEND CROWN (Continued from page 11 ! season. Several of the members of the squad who have been kept.out of some of the main contests of the . year are now in excellent shape and will be able to battle against the Crimson. The Leslie brothers, the unfortunate of the season, are now in the “pink,” as are “Baz” Wil liams, Captai nBrandenburg- ancS “Bill” Steers. The rest which the men have had since the Multnomah contest on Thanksgiving day has done more for them than anything that could have happened. Crimson Reported Powerful. The Harvard eleven is the strong est that has represented the ancient institution for many years. If Ore gon can down it, she will earn the greatest honor that any western team has ever gained on the grid iron. The Crimson has, since she dragged Yale from the proud posi tion, been looked upon as the college of colleges on the gridiron, and it has not been until recent years that the followers of Walter Camp have considered any team outside the “Big Three,” namely Harvard, Princeton and Yale, as an important factor in football circles. Two of the Crimson’s men have been picked by most of the eastern sport critics as members of the mythical All-American. Casey, who has made a wonderful reputation for himself this year, is an almost unan imous choice of the eastern sport writers. He has starred in nearly every contest that Harvard has played and is a human battering ram at halfback. Sedgwick, guard, is the other member of the eleven that stands head and shoulders over the other eastern linemen. Shy Would Strike Casey Out. Having the notables of this cali bre pitted against the varsity takes one back to the Oregon-Penn game of January 1, 1917. Howard Berry, who had been fairly tearing the soil of the gridirons of the east, was hardly even noticed in the Pasadena classic of that year. Whether or not the same thing will happen in the case of Casey remains to be seen, but it certain that Coach Hunt ington will do his utmost to have | the team see that the mighty Casey ; “strikes out." Just how many men will be taken south is not as yet certain. Man ager M. F. McClain is communicat ing with the southern people and expects to be able to take a large squad along. If arrangements can be made, at least two full teams will be taken south in order that prac tice may be held in earnest. Team to Entrain Friday. The squad will probably leave on Friday, the 19th. Coach Hunting ton is anxious to leave at the earli est possible moment, but some of the members of the tearii have ex aminations on Friday, and it is al most certain that they will not be able to leave prior to that time The team will journey by a special car direct to Pasadena, arriving there about two days before Christy mas and will begin training in ear nest immediately. This will leave a period of more than a week in which to get in condition and with the aid of Trainer “Bill” Hayward the team should be able to round into form nicely. Harvard Brings Thirty. The Harvard team, consisting of some 30 players, plus half a dozen or more coaches and trainers, is planning on reaching the western city about the same time as the Ore gon squad, so no alibi as to lack of condition can be advanced in case Oregon should win. Great interest is being manifest in the west over the greatest inter sectional classic that has ever been arranged, and a number of western ers are making preparations to be in the southland on New Year’s. WOODSTOCK TYPEWRITERS National Portable Type. Special terms and discounts to students on all machines. 63 Ninth Ave. W. VALLEY SALES AGENCY Phone 148 Central Church Pre-Xmas Services 10:30 5:00 University Polks Welcomed Choice Flowers For All Occasions Special Rates to Students Organizations. Decorative Plants to rent. THE UNIVERSITY FLORIST Phone 654 993 Hilyard St. THIS IS OUR LAST' Appearance Before Xmas REMEMBER OUR STORE IS FILLED WITH APPROPRIATE GIFTS FOR MEN AND BOYS Safety Razors, Auto Gloves, Thermos Bottles, Purses, Knives, Wal lets, Flashlights, Ingersoll Watches, Hunting Coats, Military Brushes, Sweaters and Jerseys, Boxing Gloves, Footballs, Baseball Gloves, Roller Skates, Bicycles, Air .Rifles, Water Pistols and Caps, Outing’ and Athletic Supplies. WE WISH YOU A JOYOUS HOLIDAY SEASON Hauser Bros. Eugene Salem Albany Corvallis Everything for the Sportsman and Outdoor Sports. Copyright 1919, Hart Schaffner&Marx On his Plate at breakfast Christmas morning—a gift certificate for one of these Hart Schaffner & Marx suits. You’ll make it the best Christmas he ever had ^4 Christmas gift suggestion from Wade Bros THE CLUB Home of the Students 814 Willamette Street. Patronize Emerald advertisers. W. R. (OBAK) WALLACE CIGARS, CANDY, SODA, BILLIARDS AND PIPES FOR COLLEGE MEN. 804 Willamette St. Eugene, Ore. Phone 48. The Koh-I-Noor We specialise on lunchions and dinners which appeals to the tastes of discrim inating college people. Your Patronage is Appreciated HENRY STILGER, Prop.