Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 01, 1926, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Women’s Teams
Announced For
Hocky Games
Nine Inter-Class Bouts Are
Arranged; O. A. C. to
Come May 22
Elevens Will Participate in
Play Day Event
Class competition in another ma
jor sport for the women will begin
next Monday, following the choos
ing of the hockey teams last night.
One game will be played each Mon
day, Wednesday and Thursday af
ternoon at 4 o’clock on the field
west of the Administration build
ing. Nine games are scheduled.
Teams have been announced by
Edna Murphy, head of the sport,
and Miss Emma Waterman, coach,
as follows: senior: Devault, center
forward; Wood, left inside; Dale,
left wing; Evans, right inside; Mur
phy, right wing; Knips, center half;
Tiiton, left half; Pyritz, right half;
Stone, left full; Lewis, right full;
Mobley, goal; Pierce, substitute.
Junior team: Horton, right inside;
Mast, center forward; Morgan, right
wing; Scholl, left inside; Ilatten,
left wing; Fargher, center [half;
Best, left half; Butler, right half;
Schnell, left full; Meek, right full;
Bristol, goal.
Sophomore team: Osborn, center
forward; Daniels, loft insido; An
derson, left wing; Zimmer, right in
side; Hobson, left wing; Rasor, cen
ter half; Marvin, left half; Scott,
right half; Saunders, left full;
Fransen, right full; Groves, goal;
KingslcjC, substitute.
Freshman first team: Smith, cen
ter forward; Perozzi, left inside;
Hildebrand, right inside; Hannah,
left wing; Ralston, right wing; Lan
dru, center half; Fay, left half;
Durkeo, right half; Gropp, loft full;
Barthel, right full; Maude Moore
goal.
Freshman second team: Ager, cen
ter forward; Hensley, left inside;
Hiloman, right inside; Mae Mooro,
left wing; Burcliam, right wing;
Newman, center half; Collings, loft
half; Bowden, right half; Metzen,
left full; Eyre, right full; Reeder,
goal.
The game schedule is: Monday,
May 3, sophomore vs. senior; Wed
nesday, May 5, junior vs freshman;
Thursday, May 6, second freshman
vs sophomore; Monday, May 10,
freshman vs. sophomore; Wednes
day, May 12, junior vs. senior; '
Thursday, May 13, second freshman
vs. first freshman; Monday, May
17, senior vs. freshman; Wednesday,
May 19 , junior vs. sophomore;
Thursday, May 20, second freshman
vs. junior.
On Saturday, May 22, eleven girls
picked from these teams will mix
with eleven girls from O. A. 0. to
play hockey ns a part of tho Play
Day program.
W.A.A. Promises
To Present Gala
Affair Tuesday
Preparations for tlio liig nil -
campus Strawberry social being
sponsored by \V. A. A. for next
Tuesday evening are virtually com
pleted. The place is the tennis
(courts; the time the, hour and
11 half from (1 to 7:30 o'clock.
There will be dancing with music
furnished by the Oregon Aggravat
■ors. Ton may dance as often as
you like nt a jitney a throw; nor
is the music to be abbreviated just
because the price is only a nickle a
fling.
Strawberry ice cream sundaes will
be on hand in plentiful quantities at
the tennis cottage and every one1
•who dances and everybody who i
idoesn t is welcome to bring some
extra change along for this delicacy, i
This tennis court dance is being
staged by the members of W. A. A.
to raise funds to put across the big
Play Day with the O. A. 0. girls 1
on May 22.
Track
(Continued from pope one)
are: Obertauffer, starter; Virgil
Karl, referee; Dave Evans, Jeffr.es,
Snyder and Ager, judges of the fin
ish; Kby, Flannigan, Wetzel, Gard
ner, Gooding and Sherman, field
lodges; judges on the turns, Don
Peek, Ralph Staley, Tom Holder
and Neidermeir; clerk of the
course, Don Parks; announcer, Bob
Mautz; scorer, Bill Peek; press
steward, Web Jones; timers, kiddie
Abercrombie, Ken Stephenson and
Ray Moser.
■Eugene high school will enter a
four man team in the meet. The
entries from Corvallis high school
include; Cameron, Harlan, Hanna
man, Bryant, Hinton, Jones, Bai
ler, Bradshaw, Johnson, Webb, Bu
clianan, Lund, Oscliner, Daly, Sau
sen, Hogue, Heitsnuv Sexton, Car
penter, Miller, Turner, Davis, Kirks
and Stuinperhouse. Four out of
the six will be picked for the
relay team. W. C. Bleamaster is
coach of the Corvallis high team.
The entries from Franklin high
school include Elle, Parron, Scales,
Larkin, Charles, Shinizu, Sisson,
Baigley, Sneed, Snyder-man, Rade
macher, Sears, Meyer, Hare, Kretz
mir, O’Connell, and Hinkle. Coltin
'Meek is the coach of Franklin high.
Jefferson sent their list of en
tries also. The squad that will rep
resent Jefferson is: Jennings, Hei
berg, George, Parker, Lowry, Duf
field, Bodey, Brennen, Lane, Lillie,
Hall, Wilcke, Emmons, Hill, Dig
man, Greb, O’Donnell, Williams,
Baker, Mensinger, McClure, Graep
er, R. Jennings, Foth and Wood.
Martin V. Nelson as the coach.
New Immigrant
Topic of Article
Written by Young
Industrial Psychology for
March Publishes Techni
cal Data
“First, there is evidence that
Europe is giving u3 peoples from
her lower economic and intellectual
levels. Secondly, this is related to
the fact that American industry is
fostering by its demand this class
of labor. This means, in the third
instance, that ultimately industrial
organization of society will depress
the general level of the population
because of the immense demands
for common and semi-skilled labor,
unless, of course, industry turns to
other types of organization or meth
ods than the present.”
Thus Kimball Young of the soci
ology department summlarizes the
second half of his article, “The
New Immigrant and American In
dustrial Society,” which appeared
in Industrial Psychology for March.
“There are marked differences
in average intellectual ability as
measured by our tests between the
new immigration and the native Am
erican populatio'n,” says Professor
Young. “Howovor, the variability
of all groups is very large and the
overlapping indicates persons of
high as well as low ability in all
the groups compared.”
The intelligence standards of va
rious occupations in this country
vary considerably. The average in
telligence of the American popula
tion computed both from the Sy
monds estimates and from the Army
data would seem to be about 13
years mental ago or 83 I. Q. on
the Stanford-Binet scale of intelli
gence, says Professor Young.
“There is considerable change in
vocation of the immigrant when he
comes to this country. Also, the
new immigrant fits, in great part,
into the unskilled and semi-skilled
occupations. Ilis intelligence cor
responds roughly to tho standards
for tlieso occupations,” asserts Pro
fessor Young.
“From these reasons it. is evident
that our new immigration is contri
buting to the lower social-economic
strata of our own population.”
Later in the article, Professor
Young says that tho attitudes in a
modern democracy must be more
consciously formulated than in pri
mary groups; they must arise out
of much more conscious choice of
occupation and social relation.
“Hence, the problem of stable social
attitudes which is basic to citizen
ship is increasingly more bound up
with degree of intelligence. Wo
have long recognized this matter
in another form by our insistence
upon a common school education
for our citizenry. And this, ns wo
noted in the previous section, de
pends, in turn, upon the posession
of sufficient intellectual capacity
to acquire this education.”
Senator Praises State
Educational Systems
Tlio educational systems of Ore
gon are highly praised by Robert
X. Stanfield, United States senator
from Oregon, along with the scen
ery and natural resources of the
state, in his article entitled, “'Ore
gon of Today,” which appears in
the May number of Outdoors Pic
torial.
Mr. Stanfield in this article tells
why the people of Oregon are proud
of their state. Cities, highways, in
dustries, natural resources and cli
mate are all described. Several
photographs of scenic wonders in
the state are printed with the ar
ticle. Among them are pictures of
Crater Lake, Mt. llood and several
views along the Columbia river
highway.
Latin Instructor to Talk
At Marshfield Meeting
Professor Frederic S. Dunn, head
of the Latin department, will leave
today for Marshfield where he will
speak before the Men’s club, an
organization sponsored by the Pres
byterian church in that city, on the
topic ‘‘The Early Centuries of
Christianity.” This is his (third
talk before the group.
Baseball Finals
Will be Played
Monday Night
Sophomore and Junior
Tilt Expected to be
Close Contest
Women’s baseball for the season
will be wound up Monday night
when the sophomore first and jun
ior teams cross bats and the senior
girls meet the freshman first string
aggregation. The big game of the
series will be the sophomore-junior
one Monday, as these two teams
stand at the head of the list. The
second-year women have traveled
through the season with a clean
slate while the juniors hooked up
a surprise tie-game with the fresh
man first team. The sophomores,
with Nellie Johns and Harriet Os
borne doing the hot work, are ex
pected to pull a victory, but there
may be surprises.
The dope was upset in one of the
two games last evening, when the
sophomore second team slipped four
extra over the freshmlan first girls
and made the score 20 to 16. The
losers played with only half of their
regular line-up on the field and
seemed safe with an 11-run lead in
the first inning. But the sophs did
their stuff in the next cantos.
The freshman second took the
other game with little remonstrance
on the part of their opponents, the
yearlings third sphere-hounds. The
score was 21 to 8. These losers like
wise played without a full team.
Baylig and Frank worked hard as
the battery for the third team girls
and Hoover and Seydel slung the
balls over for the winners.
Y.W.C.A. Convention
Abolishes Sectarian
Voting Qualification
A majority of 1147 to 119 carried
the vote to abolish the sectarian
lines under which the Young Wo
man’s Christian Association has ex
isted for fifty years, at the bien
nial convention now in session in
Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Affiliation
with protestant evangelical churches
will no longer be necessary for vot
ing and holding office in the asso
ciation. Any woman over 18, who
subscribes to the following declara
tion, will be qualified for those pri
vileges:
“I declare to enter the Christian
fellowship of the association. I will
loyally endeavor to uphold the pur
pose in my own life and through
my membership in the association.”
This decision ends a long contro
versy that began six years ago over
the matter. Arguments were stated
on both sides, but the vote shows a
decisive stand.
Rooks
(Continued from page one)
three safe blows out of five trips
to the plate. His one blow was for
a home run. Jamison, who relieved
Epps in the second inning, drove out!
two safe bingles in three times up.
Woodio looked good at catcher.
Hendron playing the keystone sack
had a very bad day and got chalked
up for five errors.
This afternoon at 3:30. tho fresh
man and the Books mix in the sec
ond game of the series on the new
varsity diamond. Emmons and!
Woodio will form the battery for.
the freshmen.
R H E |
9 12'
10 31
Oregon Fresh
Aggie Rooks
19
Junior
(Continued from pope one)
garet Bunn, Annie Monde Watkins,
Marion Shepard, Hermiue Franz,
Frances Plimpton; table number
three, Harriet Ross, chairman, Fran
ce'; Burton, Katherine Reid, Nancy
Peterson, Mary Clark, Alice McClel
lan. KUznbeth Blanchard, Virginia
Horens, Janice Larson; table num
ber four, V)elia Sherwood, chairman,
Maude Moore, Ruth Corey, Helen
Snari, Bora Williams, Wilma More
land, Virginia Bailey, Dorothy Bas
sett, Elizabeth Latham; table num
ber five, Audrey Lundy, chairman,
Elizabeth Talbot, Helen Webster,
Ruth Helms, Hazel Hilberg, Virginia
Lee Richardson, Ena McKeown,
Josephine Dundon, Gertrude Koch.
NIMROD INN
on the mckenzie river
Good Food-Correct Service — Pleas
ant Surroundings.
Your friends will be glad you sug
gested Nimrod for that dinner par
ty or for the week-er.d trip.
Phone or write for reservations to
A. L. Parkhurst, Vida, Oregon.
Psi Kappa Accepts
Lawyers’ Challenge
To Game Monday
In the top floor of the Oregon
building, hidden among rows of
dusty volumes, Oregon’s future bar
risters hold forth. Little is heard
of them until the spring weather
plays magic with their legal mlinds
and turns them from books to base
ball. Last year the Oregon lawyer
nine claimed the championship of
the University.
Yesterday this little epistle of
fear drifted into the Emerald of
fice, the purported purpose being
to bring fear to the hearts of the
strongest legal minds:
To the Law School of the Uni
versity of Oregon:
Subject matter—Baseball, facts—
The Psi Kappa fraternity of the
University of Oregon accepts the
challenge to a game of baseball to
be played on the Kincaid diamond
on the third day of May in the
year of our Lord 1926 A.D., at the
hour of four in the afternoon on
the said day. Game to be played
under the Blackstone rules and reg
ulations. Pre-season training gives
the Psi Kappa nine a decided ad
vantage over the undefeated cham
pions of 1925.
The Oregon Law School challenge
has been accepted. Let’s see your
hand!
Turtle Languishes
In Captivity of Deady
Zoology Laboratory
Padding noselessly along under
chairs and tables looking to right
and left for some familiar object it
stopped suddenly when attacked by
an instructor in the biology labora
tory who grasped it by its hard
shelled back and placed it care
fully behind a door where a small
crack offers slight chance of escape,
This full grown reptile, common
ly termed mud turtle, was recently
presented to Mrs. Harry B. Yocom,
of the zoology department, by Al
ford Downs, freshman pre-medical
student in the University. It was
captured with one of its brothers
near the portage. The student kept
them as bodyguards until he de
cided that he would get along with
one playmate.
Bare floors on which to walk,
only University students as com
panions seem to have made the
turtle unhappy for he refuses to
eat or drink. He has not long to
suffer for as soon as the biology
class completes the study of ver
tebrate animals he will be taken j
back to his native haunts.
The Craftsman club has postponed !
the dance that was scheduled for
May 15 indefinitely on account of
the warm weather and the large
number of social functions at this
time of the year. The action was I
taken by the executive committee!
of the club which met Thursday |
night at the club house.
The Oregon varsity was defeated
by the University of Washington
baseball team at Seattle yesterday, i
by a score of 4 to 3. This was the |
varsity’s first scheduled game.
Palace Shine
Parlor
747 WILLAMETTE ST.
B HATS CLEANED AND
g BLOCKED
n Shoes, Any Kind, Dyed
!v and Cleaned
H PETEK SAKECOS
(Formerly Across From
* Bank of Commerce)
Seers, Friends
Celebrate Amid
Colorful Setting
Affair i's Impressive by
Means of its Pomp
And Gaiety
With a blare of trumpets and a
roll of drums, Olaf IV, the famed
king of Moronia and his queen
opened the festivities at the Seven
Seers ’ Cabaret last night, and were
discovered to be none other than
Jack Seabrook and Philip Sherman.
The Campa Shoppe was gaily
decorated with streamers of con
fetti and there were 200 balloons
distributed among the tables. En
trance to the floor was made by
climbing a ladder and sliding down
a chute.
Wise cracks were evident on pos
ters around the room), such as
“Chicken dinner, 10c—Eugene Feed
Store,” and “Keep your feet off
the pastry.”
Fred Martin, who was to have
given a demonstration of his favor
ite sport—“bullthrowing,” was con
spicuous by his absence. His place
was ably filled by Ted Tamba.
The program:
1. —Formal greeting of Olaf IV,
king of Moronia.
2. —Selections from “No, No, Nan
ette” by Janet Pearce.
3. —Works of Wonder by Ovis
Poli Elkins.
4. —Royal Blues Singer — Madge
Normile.
5. —Tamba, the Matador in “bull
throwing” demonstration.
6. —Len Thompson, soft shoe ar
tist extraordinary.
7. —Crowning of the May Queen
(prettiest girl to be chosen.)
8. —Chatter and Songs by Paul
Peek.
9. -—Earl Tormy, introducing new
popular hits by Al Clark and Bill
Grantham.
10. —Eddie Van Nuice and Ken
Macintosh—The Men with the hot
soles.
11. —Jim DePauli and Jo Ann
Warwick—Wrecked on a Desert
Isle.
Subscribe for the Emerald
MONDAY NIGHT
MAY 3
. THE WORLD’S CREflTEST SHOW
| _ # Y. T/MM3
i GEORGE
'WHITE’S
SCANDALS
OF
*9
24
ORIGINAL PARIS PRODUCTION
INTACT EXACTLY AS PRESENTED FOR
OilEYEARIH MEW TOPI
SMCtiTItS m CHICAGO,
&■ , a
I
SSL- OVERSHADOWS AHT REVUE EVER 'jH
S§ PRODUCED - AIMMLi. Eg
Box Office Seat Sale
OPEN TODAY
Saturday 10 a. m.
Last Times
TODAY
1:00 To 11:30
BETTY COMt»XM
RICARDO COR?EJ
ERNEST TORR6f«C I
WALLACE BEERY
The Most Inspiring rom
ance of the frontier days
ever screened.
EMMEL
at the
ORGAN
COMING
MONDAY!
MSI
1VCMAN
*
CSX
It's a Screen Sensation
DON’T FORGET MOTHER
on
MOTHER’S DAY
Send her snapshots of yourself—They are the most
appreciated of remembrances.
BAKER-BUTTON
Kodak Shop, 7-7th W.
Coming
MONDAY
The National Idol—
RUDOLPH
VALENTINO
in
Trim £
EAGLE’'1
Supportedby\/\LMA 0ANKV
LOUISE DRESSER
Screen story by HANS KRALY
It Surpasses Every Valentino
Production to Date.
LAST
TIMES
TODAY
Rex Beach’s
“WINDS OF
CHANCE”
McDonald
Eugene’s Greater Theatre
The Ancient Phariohs would have traded their
pyramids for these specials—
BRICK
French Peach Ice Cream Walnut Ice Cream
Pineapple Bisque Ice Cream
BULK I
French Peach Ice Cream
Eugene Fruit Growers Ass’n j
Phone 1480
V
Wire Her Flowers
On Mother’s Day. We guarantee satisfactory
service and you can make any selections you
wish. Flowers will please her greatly.
Chase Gardens Florist
Phone 1950, Corner 9th & Oak