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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1922)
UNIVERSITY’S CHANCES FOR 1922 TITLE ROOD Dopesters Declare Oregon to Have Material to Defeat California Bears LAST YEAR’S OPENING GAMES UNSUCCESSFUL Coaches Produce Strong Team to Meet Both Aggies and Washington State (Continued from page one) Graduate Manager Benefiel is already laying his plans to get every student to Corvallis for the game and special rates will obtain on the railroads. The Varsity will finish the northern season against the University of Washington in the Seattle Stadium on the last day of November. At present writing it appears that Washington is the team that Oregon will have to beat for the championship of the north and the right to play California a post season game for the coast champion ship. An all Oregon fans are praying for another chance at California on an equal footing. Four Not to Return Four great football players will not answer Head Coach Huntingdon’s roll call next fall. Spike Leslie, one of the great tackles of American football, has played his last game under the Oregon colors and Spike will be missed, for stone-wall proclivities on the de fense, his smash in the attack, his punting ability, and most of all for his sportsmanship and fight. Mart Howard, captain of this year’s crew, is another great player whose place will be hard to fill. Mart put in four years on the Varsity and was always in the game. Billy Reinhart, who al ways played great ball but whose hard luck jinx kept him out of practically all the games last fall, is through and in him Oregon loses a great player. Bark Laughlin, too, is going out. Bark is a great football player and though light for the position of center, was always there, fighting and using his head. The rest of the crew will almost all be back, all of them as far as it is known at present, and with the ma terial available from the freshman crew and the substitutes, Oregon will put a real team in the field next fall. Willamette university will graduate 74 students on June 14. This is the largest graduating class in the history of the university, and bears the dis tinction of holding the highest average cf any organization in school. FROSH QUINTET TAKES 1D GAMES WITH NO LOSSES Rooks Defeated Four Times; Ashland State Title Team Beaten The freshman basketball team this year distinguished themselves by the remarkable record of 10 straight vic tories and no defeats. Prospects at the first of the season looked rather black because of the fact that of the 20 men that Coach Eddie Durno had counted on for his team, only six were eligible. Four of the ten victories were taken from the O. A. C. rooks, the first time for years that such a feat has been accomplished. The team lacked ex perience at the first of the season, but soon gained confidence and grew much better toward the end of the year. First Game with Eugene The first game was played with Eugene high school as a preliminary to the varsity game with Idaho. It was a slow game throughout, the frosh finally pulling through on the long end of a 25 to 21 score. The next two games were with the Chemawa Red skins here, and the frosh had very lit tle trouble in packing off the scalps in both the games. The scores were 49 to 25 and 54 to 16. The four big games of the year came next, the first two being played here against the rooks. They were doped to be close as the rooks had several prep school men with big records, but in both of the mixes the frosh suc ceeded in walking off with the bacon. The other two games with the rooks were played the following week-end at Corvallis and were replicas of the first, as the frosh took them both by safe margins. Second Rook Game Close The last one of the two was the most thrilling of them all, for up to the last five minutes of play the Ag gies were leading. King’s success in eluding his guard several times near the close of the game soon put the frosh ahead. “Chappy” King cer tainly showed his worth in the four meets with the rooks, for he made the most of the frosh points in all of them, although the rooks had two men on him in the last games. The trip to Southern Oregon, on which the team won all three of the games, finished the season. The game against Ashland high school was a close squeeze for the frosh, as they won by only three points, and these were made in the last minute of play. This was the second time that Ash land had ever been beaten on their home floor, and was made the more remarkable by the fact that Ashland later won the state high school cham pionship. The final score of the game was 31 to 28. Two games were won from Medford by good scores, the first being 43 to 23, the second 26 to 31. The outstanding star on the frosh team was the diminutive “Chappy” King, who could always be counted on for a goodly number of points, no mat ter how closely he was guarded. Aim at guard was the fastest man on the team, and with a little more practice j in the shooting end of the game will; make a stiong bid for varsity. Crandall played the other forward position on the team, while Poulson and Jost alternated at center, Haynes and Aim were the twoAguards, while Jones was a utility man who could fit in any place. Some of the men who were ineligible but who should put up a strong fight for varsity po sitions next year, are Shaffer, Spear, Bliss, and Brown. Laun-Dry-Ette . Way is the greatest labor-saving system of washing that has ever been devised. For the Laun-Dry-Ette is both a washer and a dryer. No Wringer to Feed I fte Laun-ury-PAte nas no wringer. Instead of your having to force the clothes through a wringer one or two pieces at a time, the Laun-Dry-Ette whirls them dry in one minute—a whole tubful at a time. No Extra Tubs to Handle The Laun-Dry-Ette washes the clothes quickly and thoroughly with remarkably efficient vacuum cups. Washing, rinsing and bluing are all per formed in turn in the Laun-Dry-Ette. And instead of wringing title clothes after each operation, you merely press a pedal, turn a switch, and the Laun Dry-Ette whirls the clothes wringer-dry. No Buttons to Sew On In seven years no Laun-Dry-Ette has ever broken a button or injured a fastener. This is because the Laun-Dry-Ette system of centrifugal drying makes it impossible to injure the clothes in any way. If you want the greatest labor-saving electrical washer you will buy the Laun-Dry-Ette. Please call, phone or write. SIGWART ELECTRIC CO. 933 Willamette Eugene Phone 718 "If it has a wringer iHsu’t a Laun-Dry-Ette electric washing ma-clrine | WE BUY Everything for the Home With the close of school you will no doubt be interested in disposing of some of the goods that you have accumulated during the school year and do not care to carry home. We are prepared to buy these at a saving to you. See Us Before You Sell Anything WE PAY THE HIGHEST PRICES FOR SECOND-HAND GOODS Call us up and we will quote our prices. Don’t throw things away just because you can’t use them any more this year—they represent money and we are here to pay for them in CASH. CHARLET’S Bargain Store 63-67 W. 8th Street Phone 1 122 TWO WEEKS LEFT What a Grand and Glorious Feeling And then you will start on your vaca tion. The Varsity wishes to extend to the students wishes for a very happy and successful one. Just remember when you return that we are still on the map and the old “hang-out” will be wearing a welcome smile on the win dow. When you drag in after a well spent vacation; thirsty, tired, or hungry, “Follow the Trail to the Varsity.” During the last two weeks of col lege we will still be serving those delicious meals and fountain spe cialties. You know we’ll be glad to have you come in. We’ll miss you when you’re gone.