Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, March 06, 1925, Page 4, Image 4

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    APRIL RADIO LECTURE
PROGRAM COMPLETED
Oregon-Stanford Debate to
Be Held March 25
Extension division radio lectures
have been booked through the
month of April, according to an an
nouncement made by Alfred
Powers, who is in charge of the
radio activities. The bookings in
clude everything from a radio de
UitkC tu pupuint ICl/kUl
tension division’s radio lecture ser
vice will continue until school lets
out in June. There are possibilities
that some of the members of the
summer school faculty will be called
on to radio-cast occasional lectures.
With the exception of the radio
debate all the lectures will be
broadcast on Friday evenings at 8
o’clock.
On Friday, March 20, Professor
Fergus Reddie, of the department
of drama and speech arts will give
a reading. His subject has not
been announced. “His reading on
Huckleberry Finn, given last year
to th# radio world, proved so popu
lar that the extension division finds
it well worth while to repeat an
other of Professor Reddie’s lec
tures,” said Powers.
The radio debate between the
University of Oregon and Stanford
university will be held on Wednes
day, March 25. The northern team
will assemble at KGW, while the
southern team will assemble ,at
KLX.
“Mathematics at Work and at
Play,” is the title of Professor E.
E. DeCou’s lecture to be broadcast
March 27. On April 3, Professor
Tanner, of the chemistry depart
ment, will radio-cast a lecture on
the microscope.
The subjects for the following
three programs have not been an
nounced: April 10, Professor A. R.
Sweetser of the botany department;
April 17, Professor Hugh E. Rosson,
debate coach; April 24, Dean Eric
W. Allen, of the school of journal
ism.
The lecture for Friday, March 13,
is still pending.
tennisHtsTilled
BY CAPACITY CROWDS
Ono week of spring has boon
enough to fill the now tennis courts
on Emerald street with players
practically every day. In the
words of the caretaker, the place is
“swamped.” The courts are open
from 6 a. m. to 6:110 p. m. every
day except Sunday, when they aro
open from 2:15 to 6:50. Tho largest
pnrt of the rush comes in tho af
ternoon between the hours of 3 and
6. Yesterday morning, however,
four girls made their appearance
at 6 o’clock; this is the earliest
that the courts have been in use
this year.
During the winter the courts were
practically in disuse on account of
the continued rainy weather. Tho
nets were taken down at night
and only a few were put up during
the more moderate days. Last Sun
dny was a record breaker, how
ever, with 124 players registered
between the hours of 2 and 6.
Monday, for some unknown reason,
is the poorest day of the week for
good attendance on the courts. In
spite of this fact, there was a regis
tration of 36 last Monday, followed
by 75 on Tuesday.
Such an increase in attendance
necessitates strict adherence to the
time regulations. Hereafter, play
ers will be allowed to play until the
hour in the forenoons and until a
quarter after in the afternoons just
as University classes are regulated.
Next term will see still further
increase, since tennis will be one
of the sports in spring athletics.
A few varsity players are busy on
the courts now getting into shape
for the coming season.
FUNERAL OF MRS. O. M. HALE
WILL BE HELD SATURDAY
Dean William G. Hale and his
family will leave Eugene today for
Hillsboro where they wil attend the
funeral of Mr. Hale’s mother, Mrs.
G. N. Hale, who died here Thurs
day morning. The services will be
held Saturday forenoon. Dean
Hale’s parents were pioneer resi
dents of Hillsboro.
Good Defense Playing
Shown by Both Teams
In Yesterday's Contest
(Continued from pace one)
shot on recovery rush.
5:12—Baker misses long shot, and
Oregon takes ball.
5:12—Okerberg rushes Steele to
Oregon basket, takes ball on jump,
and scores. Score, Oregon 4, O.
A. C. 0.
5:13—Westergren barely misses
CHURCH DESIGNED BY WILLCOX
SUGGESTIVE OF OLD CATHEDRAL
Stained Glass Windbws, Wooden Beams, and Tarnished
Copper Lamps Contribute to Medieval Note
By M. C.
I The new First Congregational
| church on Thirteenth avenue and
j Ferry street, which will be dedi
cated next Sunday evening, owes
its striking beauty and charm to
W. R. B. Willcox, professor of
architecture on the campus, who
drew the plans, designed the church
and personally supervised the en
| tire process of its construction. A
i number of architecture students
! have been associated with him in
: this work.
Toward the end of an afternoon,
the glory of the sunset, caught in
the cathedral glass of the windows,
spreads mellowness and age over
gray walls, tiled roof, and copper
eaves. The shade of an occasional
tree contributes to this elusive at
mosphere of ancient grandeur. It
achieves that personification of the
spirit of worship rarely found ex
cept in the cathedrals of the Old
World.
In the main chapel and adjoin
ing the Condon memorial to be dedi
cated to Thomas Condon, at one
time head of the University geology
department, is found a suggestion
of the Italian gothic in the treat
ment of the stenciled wooden beams
overhead. The stenciling is re
markable for its varying scheme of
related tones in which no stencil
repeats itself in the exquisite col
oring of any other stencil in the
room.
A carved skirting on the wall be
hind the choir loft repeats elu
sively the blended coloring of the
stenciled wood. The keynote of
simplicity and grace is extended
to the simply carved panels on the
pulpit and the Greek crosses carved
upon the ends of the pews. Carved
posts, barring the tall amber win
dows, and tarnished copper lamps
hanging from the beams by slender
irons, add a medieval note to the
surroundings. Light descends up
on the pews in an ever shifting play
of colors and moods.
None of this exquisite composi
tion just happened so. The glaring
newness of the copper lights was
dimmed and mellowed by special
process after they arrived. The
carved posts in the windows were
especially designed to achieve the
unusual lighting effect Professoi
Willcox has brought about. The
windows of cathedral glass were
imported from London to fulfill
their particular part in the gene
ral plan. The plaster used in these
two rooms received special treat
ment in its preparation and appli
cation in order to produce the rug
ged appearance desired.
The church exhibits the use of
great care and forethought in the
planning of even the most trivial
detail. Concealed ; lighting / will
be found in the walls of the choir
loft, individual coils extend into
each pew; a cabinet is built in an
odd corner of the wall for the mu
sic of the choir.
The structure is built around
three sides of an open court at the
rear. This is wired for the lan
terns of garden fetes and out-door
social functions. It will also serve
as an outdoor playground for young
er members of the church. On the
ground floor, special quarters are
provided for the activities of the
women of the church, the girls, the
boys, and kindergarten divisions.
A kitchenette is built within con
venient reach of all these rooms.
The church office opening directly
upon the side street is also on this
floor. Upstairs in this parish house
division of the mother church, is
a community room which, when
divided into compartments by ac
cordian doors will be used for the
Sunday school headquarters. Ad
joining this is the most modern of
large well-furnished kitchens re
sembling in its efficiency and de
tail, the cuisine of a modern hotel.
An office in the front is reserved
for the Sunday school secretary.
Over the choir loft and pipe or
gan is a two-room apartment for
the caretaker of the church.
long shot, to be followed by score
from floor by Baker. Score, Ore
gon 4, O. A. 0. 2.
1>: 13—Time out, Oregon.
Only one field goal each has been
scored during the first ten minutes
of the initial period. Both teams
are playing a strictly defensive
game, contont to take the breaks.
5:15—Play resumed, with O. A.
0. taking ball, Stoddard misses first
shot.
5:15—Okerberg fouls Steele, who
converts. Scoro, Oregon 4, O. A. C.
3.
5:16—Hidings scores long shot
from floor. Score, Oregon 4, O. A.
C. 5. Oregon now takes ball,
works it up to basket, but West.er
gren loses ball by too many steps.
5:17—Jost fouls Ridings, who
misses. Gowans gets ball on jump,
and Oregon has the ball. Okerberg
misses long chance shot. Oregon re
covers ball, and works it up to
striking distance, but Brown cuts
in, only to lose on too many steps.
Oregon again in possession of ball,
but loses it to O. A. C.
5:19—Ridings scores from field.
Oregon 4, O. A. C. 7.
5:20—Stoddard fouls Hobson, who
misses shot. Oregon recovers, on
held ball, but Ridings gets ball, to
lose on too many steps. Hold ball,
O. A. C. recovers. Steele gets away
for long dribble but misses.
5:20;—Ridings fouls Westergren,
who misses. O. A. 0. gets ball, and
starts series of short passes, that
net little. Wetergron knocks ball
from Steele.
5:21—Stoddard fouls Hobson, who
misses. Oregon has ball. ,Held by
Steele and Okerberg, Oregon re
covering. O. A. C. out, and rush
nets field goal by Stoddard. Score,
Oregon 4, O. A. 0. 9
5:23—Hobson scores difficult shot
from side. Score, Oregon 6, O. A.
0. 9. O. A. C. takes ball on jump.
O. A. C. recovers, and Stoddard just
misses basket. Oregon recovers.
5:24—Steele fouls Okerberg, two
shots, converts first, misses second.
Score, Oregon 7, O. A. C. 9. Rid
ings barely misses shot.
5:25—Brown fouls Okerberg, who
misses. O. A. C. runs ball to basket,
but misses, and Oregon gets ball.
Half ends. Score, Oregon 7, O.
A. C. 9.
The game is the tightest ever
seen on 'the floor, and the first
half score is the smallest yet regis
tered for any one period. Both
teams are guarding close, neither
taking the aggressive, except dur
ing breaks.
Summary of first half: Oregon
scoring, field goals, Hobson, 1;
Okerberg, 1. O. A. C., Ridings, 2;
Baker, 1; Stoddard, 1. Free throws,
Oregon, Gowans, 2; Okerberg, 1.
O. A. 0., Steele, 1.
Second half starts, 5:36.
O. A. C. takes ball, but Hobson
and Okerberg immediately rush it
down, to lose to O. A. C. who lay
back and pass short. Steele throws
ball outside, and Oregon takes ball,
held by Hobson, Steele. O. A. C.
gets ball.
5:38—Brown shoots from floor,
Score, Oregon 7, O. A. C. 11. Gow
ans misses long shot, but Otegon
m
Presenting Saturday
a Sale of
New Spring Hats
New Materials—New Trimming
New Colors
Bringing to you clever new models
for immediate wear
$6.95
Good looking hats, so lovely and such
unusual values, you will probably
want two or three of them.
Eugene Millinery Co.
694 WILLAMETTE STREET
keeps ball. Gowans again misses
O. A. C. gets ball, rushes basket
. but misses. Oregon recovers, fum
; bles, and O. A. C. gets ball out ol
founds. Stoddard misses long shot
I Hobson gets ball on jump, held
again, Brown gets ball, passes tc
Stoddard, who misses. Gowans gets
ball.
j 5:40—Jost fouls Hidings, whc
| misses.. Held ball. Oregon ball,
l O. A. C. gets ball under Oregon bas
j ket. Ball changes hands several
j times under O. A. C. basket, but 0,
| A. C. finally gets possession. Rid
i ings misses shot, Steele misses long
shot. Oregon gets ball. Hobson
misses. Held ball, O. A. C. recovers.
5:43—Ball outside, O. A. C. pos
session. Oregon ball from out side.
7:54—Westergren scores from
field. Score, Oregon 9, O. A. C. 11.
5:44—Westergren scores from
Baker. Westergren misses first
shot, misses again. O. A. C. gets
ball, rushes to goal, but Brown mis
ses, as does Baker. Oregon gets
ball, and Gowans narrowly misses
long shot. Held ball recovered by
Stoddard.
5:47—Westergren drops in goal
from field tying score. Oregon 11,
O. A. C. 11. Oregon has ball, but
loses it in far corner to O. A. C.
Oregon again gets ball, but loses on
ball out. Hobson misses long shot,
O. A. C. gets ball, but Oregon re
covers. O. A. C. gets ball, but
shoots wild. Oregon in, two Ore
gon shots miss, and ball is held.
Oregon recovers, but loses on out
of bounds. Held ball, O. A. C. gets
ball. Recovered by Okerberg.
5:51—Steele takes ball down for
goal. Score, O. A. C. 13, Oregon 11.
O. A. C. gets ball again, but Brown
misses. Held ball. Westergren
misses shot for goal, and O. A. 0.
gets ball. Ridings scores on long
shot. Score, Oregon 11, O. A. C.
15. Time out, O. A. C.
5:55—Game resumed. O. A. C.
takes bali but loses it, regains it
again, and rushes. Steele misses
long shot. Gowans misses long
shot. Steele dribbles down, but
cannot shoot. O. A. C. rushes down
again, but Ridings and Baker both
miss. Oregon rushes in, but O. A.
0. intercepts. Gowans misses shot.
Gowans fouls Brown, who misses
first, and second. Stoddard charges
Westergren, who converts. Score,
Oregon 12, O. A. C. 15. Ball now
under Oregon basket, but Oregon
unable to score. Game over. Final
score, Oregon 12, O. A. C. 15.
The game was the closest ever
seen here, and the smallest score of
year.
Oregon now has two games to
win in order to represent the north
ern division of the Pacific Coast
conference in the title games with
California. The battle Saturday
night will be even more terrific
than the one lost to the O. A. C.
quintet last night, 15 to 12.
Both the Oregon and Aggie teams
fought yesterday afternoon as they
never fought before. The game
started fast, with both teams Work
ing hard. The outstanding feature
was the close checking by both
sides—so close that seldom did a
player get a chance to cast for the
basket unhampered by one or more
men. Skiller passing rushes, speedy
floor-length dribbles, came to
naught under the stonewall defense
thrown out by both quintets.
Oregon Takes Lead
Oregon took the lead, with two
fouls converted by Gowans, and a
field goal by Okerberg, but before
the half was over, the Aggies had
forged ahead. The first half ended
nine to seven for the visitors. The
second half was Oregon’s for a
time, Westergren’s field goal tying
the score at 11 each. O. A. C. Tan
their .total up to 15, while Oregon
was able to score but a single ad
ditional point, a foul converted by
Westergren.
Teamwork Remarkable
Ridings, Aggie forward, was high
point man of the game with three
field baskets, while Westergren was
next with two field goals and a con
verted foul. No man was outstand
ing on the Oregon team, for every
qne played close, hard ball. The
teamwork of both fives was re
markable, and by far the best ever
seen on a Eugene court.
Lineup and summary:
Oregon (12) O. A. C. (15)
Hobson.F. Ridings
Gowans.F. Baker
Okerberg.C. Brown
Westergren.G...... Steele
Jost.G..... Stoddard
Oregon scoring: Field goals, Hob
son 1, Okerberg 1, Westergren .2.
Free throws, Gowans 2, Wester
gren 1, Okerberg 1.
O. A. C. scoring: Ridings 3, Bak
er 1, Brown 1, Stoddard 1, Steele 1.
Free throws, Steele 1.
Officials: Vincent Borleske, of
Whitman, referee. Bill Mulligan,
of Gonzaga, umpire.
Rex Shine Parlor
The Only Place to Get
Your Shoes Shined
Oh Boy!
Look Who’s Here
Genuine Mexican Dishes
Enchilades Del Heavo
Enchiledes Del Maize
Tortico Del Maize
Chicken Tamales
Texas Tamales (Hot)
Chile Con Carne
Chile Mack
Spanish Chicken Pies
Frijoles
“AND YES”
Chinese Chicken Noodles
Chinese Pork Noodles
All Above Dishes Made in Our Kitchen
IMPERIAL LUNCH
727 WILLAMETTE STREET
MEN!
Let us help you in your spring buying.
These Prices are sure to please
Spring shirts with collars attached
$1.25 to $2.95
Felt Hats in the latest spring shades
$2.85 to $3.95
Cords, with wide bottoms, at—$5.45
Silk socks in varied colors—50c to 85c
Hiking boots, 16-in. Pacs at. $8.50
C. J. BRIER
6TH AND WILLAMETTE STREETS
Shown in the new pendaline
braid combined with lace and
fabric for afternoon and street
wear.
Burlingame Sport
In Costallion, Goblin Terripin, Johnquil and all
the new wanted shades for sport wear.
Leon Jenkins
Upstairs over new Laraway Building
Victoria Booth Demareet
—of Paris, France—
Will give her famous lecture on
‘Love and Marriage’
Mrs. Demarest will discuss the problems of the
Modern Woman, Flirtation, Courtship, Marriage,
Divorce, “The Woman and the Poodle,” etc.
— TO WOMEN ONLY —
Given in many of the larger cities in the
United States, fit>m coast to coast
3 p. m.—MARCH 6—at the
ARMORY
No Admission Charge Silver Offering Taken
Do You Play Billiards?
—If You Do—Come Down and Visit—
Eugene’s New Billiard Parlor
12 Tables - Pool - Snooker - Billards
. 1
—in the basement of the new Laraway Building—
to be OPENED, SATURDAY, MARCH 7th I
Barber Shop, Fountain, Cigar Stand, Shining Parlor in connection
962 Willamette St. (downstairs)
A. D. FORD GEO. A. SULLIVAN