Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, February 18, 1928, Page 3, Image 3

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Football Men
Will Receive
Trojan Awards
Freshmen Athletes To
Get Awards With
Varsity Players
Student Union Building
To Be Dedicated
LOS ANGELES, Feb. 17.—(P.I.P.)
A total of G1 awards earned by
University of Southern California
| athletes during the 1927 football
season will be distributed at ex
ercises marking the opening of the
recently completed $400,000 Student
Union building on the Trojan cam
pus on the evening of Saturday,
March 3.
The following 19 varsity football
players completed the requisite 146
minutes of play and will be award
ed the football “S. C.”: Captain
Morley Drury, All-American quar
terback; Captain-elect Jesse Ilibbs,
All-American tackle; Frank An
thony, Nathan Barrager, Chiles
Boren, Harry Edelson, Howard El
liot, Clarke Galloway, Bert Hciser,
Cecil Hoff, Lowry McCaslin, James
Moser, Don Moses, Bussell Saunders,
Albert Schcving, Tony Steponovitcli,
Francis Tappaan, Lloyd Thomas and
Don Williams. The 1927 schedule
was composed of 10 games, nine of
the full 60 minutes find one of 44
minutes. According to the athletic
code of the University, an athlete
must have played one-fourth of the
^ total possible time to reeeivo a
letter.
Sixteen members of the Spartan
football team, the outfit that scraps
llio varsity every night, will also
receive awards March 3. These men
are: Allen Bleemers, Henry Dar
ling, Bill Seitz, James Jonas, James
Hand, George Newberry, Francis
Norton, George Williamson, C.
Berry, Howard Failor, Bichard
'riitsch, Bob Scofield, Arthur Mc
Cann, Ward Bond, Jack llovcy and
William Jennoy.
Freshman players who will re
ceive their numerals are: Marger
Apsit, Nelson Barry, Lyman Beards
ley, Henry Becker, Everett Brown,
Eugene , Clark, George , Decker,
Vaughan Deranien, Marshall Duf
field, Harvey Durkee, William Jen
kins, Harold Larson, Harold Mit
chell, John Dunn, Hershel Oldham,
Stewart Philip, Donald Bieke, La
Vere Sellen, Jesse Shaw, James
Snyder, Clifford Thiede, Ealpli Wil
cox and Cecil Zaun.
Manager’s letters will bo award
r cd B. W. Blanchard, Jr., varsity
manager, and Henry Grossman,
freshman manager.
Watercress Added
To Physician’s List
Of Healthful Foods
(Science Service Correspondence)
LONDON, Feb. 18—The list of
foods the doctor says you should
eat has been augmented by a new
one—watercress.
This familiar garnish for meat and
salad is a remarkably rich source of
the vitamin necessary for growth
and of the scurvy-preventing vita
min C, Dr. Katherine H. Coward
and P. Egglcton of the University
of London have found. It boasts
of small quantities of' vitamin D as
well in its small green lea veil
The green shows considerable sea
sonal variation, however, in its
growth promoting properties, the
investigators have found, being
more effective with laboratory ani
mals in this respect in spring and
summer than 'in winter.
Fifteen Men Lost '
When Oil Explodes
On Chile Steamship
(By United Press)
SAN PEDRO, Cal., Feb. 17.—
Fifteen members of the crew
were lost t^hen the steamship
Chuekv, owned by the Cfliilo Steam
ship Company of New York, sank
after it was ripped asunder by a
terrific explosion of (35,000 barrels
of oil off the coast of Japan
Wednesday, according to reports
reaching here tonight. •
Twcntv-one members of the crew
who leaped into the sea and clung
to wreckage were picked up by a
Japanese fishing vessel and taken
to Uachijoshima Island, it was said.
Those who were killed were
either blown to pieces or burned by
the fire which followed the ex
plosion.
Federal Troops Slay
55 Mexican Bandits
(By United Press)
MEXICO CITY, Mexico, Feb. 17.
—Fifty-five rebels have been killed
in the lust few days, mostly in the
Jalisco region, according to dis
patches received today. Military
authorities at Amatlan telegraphed
that a group of rebels preparing to
attack the town of Cimatlin were
defeated by federals and twenty
fire rebels were killed. Seven others
who were captured, were immediate
ly executed. Reports of federal
successes at several points is be
lieved here to indicate the govern
ment is winning its campaign to
exterminate the rebels, _
r
Maddox
(Continued from page one)
conciliation and the arbitration
clauses, and if this is so, it is a
retrogade step. Enlightenment is
needed here to clear up an ambig
uity.
And lastly, the new treaty largely
defeats itself as did the Hoot en
gagement, in. providing that in any
particular dispute, the special con
sent of the senate will be required
before the use of the pence machin
ery- What the senate may do, no
one can ever tell, not even the sen
ate.
If the now treaty is of any
value, it is merely in recording a
belief in the spirit of peaceful set
tlement, but in its particulars, it is
j a genuine disappointment to many
who had been led to believe that
somefhing “real” was afopt.
Guild Actors To
Give a Comedy
| By Oscar Wiide
Drama Tournament for
High Schools Coming
Early in May
“Lady Windemere’s Fan,” which
will be given February 23 and 24,
is the second undertaking of the
drama students for the winter term,
to be followed by “Spoon River
Anthology” and “Shall We Join
With the Ladies?”
The Oscar Wilde play of next
week is being presented by mem
bers of the dramatic interpretation
class, where, according to Miss
Florence Wilbur, director of drama,
there is plenty of talent, to care for
.some of the vacancies to be left in
[the department at the end of this
year.
An unusually heavy program has
been undertake* by the drama de
partment this' term. The early
part of May will bring representa
tives from various high schools of
the state- for the drama tourna
ment, which was held last year.
Miss Wilbur reports .that k many
high schools .Jiave already written,
asking about the tournament. Since
there is a limit to the number of
contestants, interested schools have
written for all data on the contest.
A prize is offered to the high
school giving the best 0110-act play
staged, acted, and directed bjfc the
students.
Salesmen of Realsdk
Attend Portland Meet
Calvin Bryan, Ralph Gyer, Wen
doll Gray, Earl Raess and John
Clapp, live campus representatives of
the Realsillc Hosiery company, were
in Portland Thursday evening at
tending a sales meeting which
launched their spring drive.
According to Raess, campus .or
ganizer for the company, the men
had an opportunity to meet the na- '
tional sales manager as well as the
head of the Pacific coast section,
and the sales meeting was well
worth the dj’ivc to Portland.
Trinidad Mayor Killed
By Sandino’s Forces
(By United Press)
MANAGUA, Nicaragua, Feb. 17.
—Several Nicaraguans have been
killed iy the past few days by the
forces of General Augustino Sandino,
it was announced tonight. Among
the victims was the mayor of the)
town of Trinidad.
i Campus Scenes
To Be featured
By ‘Old Oregon"
V olcanos and Philosophers
Among Subjects in
Alumni Magazine
Many original photographs of
campus personalities and scenes
"ill be an interesting feature of
Old Oregon, alumni magazine, when
it comes off the press the first of
the week, according to Jeannette
Calkins, editor.
The frontispiece is entitled
“Around the Campus with the
Staff Photographer” and shows fa
miliar scenes.
President Hall’s report *o the
last meeting of the board of re
gents is given in detail in the
magazine for the. benefit of alumni
scattered throughout the world who
did not read the newspaper ac
counts.
George Godfrey, assistant in
journalism and director of the Uni
versity news bureau, has written an
interesting article from his own ob
servation called “Hawaiian Vol
canos in Action.”
“Philosophers Laughing and Ser
ious” is the title of the section in
which S. Stephenson Smith, instruc
tor of English, reviews current
books.
“Pathfinders,” a poem by Alice
Henson Ernst, who is now studying
playwriting in the East, appears in
the Back-A-Bit section.
An amusing letter by Walter L.
Whittlesey, ’01, who is now pro
fessor of politics at Princeton and
who has taught at the summer ses
sions here, appears in the Campus
Mail. It is a clover bit of sarcasm
in reply to the description of the
Gay Nineties given in the last is
sue of 'Old Oregon.
Pictures of Burt Brown Barker,
vice president of the University,
Mrs. Barker, and James H. Gilbert,
dean of the college of science, lit
erature and the. arts, taken by Mar
garet Boyer, staff photographer, are
in ths number of the magazine.
Myers Denies Charge
. Of Falsp XestjniQfly
Befojpe Senate Group
(By United Press)
WASHINGTON, D. C. Feb. 17 —
Abram S. Myers, a member of the
Federal Trade Commission, issued
a statement tonight denying charges
of false testimony before a senate
judiciary sub-committee in eonnee
.tion with the same “Bread Trust”
case of 192(5.
Judge Morris, a sopor of Balti
more, told the committee late toddy
that Myers had misrepresented cor
respondence between them concern
ing a part each played in dismis
sing anti-trust proceedings against
the Ward Baking company.
City Superintendents
Visit Education School
Superintendent H. E. In low of
Pdndelton And Superintendent R.
A. McClure of Clatskanie were vis
itors Friday at the appointment bu
reau of the University. They in
terviewed prospective teachers for
the vacancies in their schools for
the coming year.
LOS ANGELES, Feb. 17.—P. I. P.
—Spring sports schedule at the Uni
versity of Southern California here
includes IS events, in basketball,
baseball and track. The schedule is’
February 17-23-25, basketball, U.
L. A., Olympic auditorium; March
3. track, Occidental College, at Oe
SEE
Rainier Coal Co.
FOU
COAL AND BRIQUETTES
15 E. 7th St. Phone 412
Offices—831 Miner Building, East Broadway Street
Our success lies in giving good' optical service
doing it a little bit better.
and
(Di. S&ztman WWloodu
EVESIGHT SPEC'/U.!'.
Suite 831 Miner Building
Telephone 362
I
ciclental; March 12-13, baseball, San
ta Clara, Bovard Field; March 19
20, baseball, California, Bovard
Field; March 30-31, baseball, Stan
ford, Bovard Field; March 31, track,
Stanford, L. A. Coliseum; April 7,
track, University of Illinois, L. A.
Coliseum; April 20-21, baseball, St.
Mary’s, Bovard Field; April 25,
baseball, U. C. L. A., Bovard Field;
May, 5 track, L. A. A. C., L. A.
Coliseum.
University Hi Hopes To
Compete in State Meet
With two more games to be
played before the state high school
tournament starts at Salem, Uni
versity High School’s basketball
team has visions of the sectional
championship and competition in
the state meet. Thus far six games
have been won and one lost, the de
jfoat being at the bands of Salem,
which is out of the district.
Included in the wins of Coach Hoy
Okorberg \s proteges was a 30 to 17
triumph over Corvallis High and a
30 to 10 victory over Eugene High.
The two remaining games arc re
turn games with the above named |
quintets. University High will
play at Corvallis February 21 and
will play Eugene High February 21.
Ferry Boat Sinks in
San Francisco Bay;
Lost Still Unknown
(By United Press)
. SAN FEAN CISCO, Cal., Feb. 17.
-—Late Friday as police boats pa
troled tlie waters of San Francisco
Hay where a score or more of pas
sengers were thrown or jumped from
a ferry boat, without finding traces
'of bodies, it became apparent that
the “missing persons” files of the
bay district police stations may be
the only means of determining whe
ther there was loss of life.
Hour's after the accident, which
occurred when the overloaded ferry
listed forward and sunk its bow
under water, there was no organized
collection of details.
Some passengers (insisted there
were as higji as 60 or more persons
in the water. Others thought there
were only about 20. There were 600
person^ on board. ’
Vacation Courses in
France Are Popular
Summer vacation courses at
French universities are® becoming
quite popular to the American stu
dent. At the Soybonne, at Grenoble,
in Caen, and at Tours there are ex
cellently arranged systems of in
struction.
They Tell Us—
that the students trade at
the stores that advertise in
the Emerald. Oh well,
we’ll see!
Buster Love’s
832 \Vih- St.
Baseball Coach
Leaves Orange
Grove for Team
‘Walioo Sam’ Crawford
To Go With Trojans
To Orient
LOS ANGELES, Fob. 13.—P. I. 1'.
—Today marks the annual transition
of Samuel E. Crawford, orange
grower, of Rivera. Calif., to .“Old
Wislioo Sam” Crawford, energetic
coach of the University of Southern
California baseball team. Every
year at about tins time, Crawford
decides that his beloved oranges will
have to do without him for a while,
packs his bat and a clean collar into
his handbag, and comes down to Los
Angeles for his yearly baseball spree
with the Trojan team.
Crawford, who used to cavort
about the diamond as a member of
the Cincinnati and Detroit clubs in
tl:e big league and as a member of
the Los Angeles club in the Pacific
Coast league, seems to get younger
every year. His stay away from
Rivera will be longer than usual this
season, for he will accompany the
Trojan team on their 12,000-mile
baseball trek to Japan and Manchur
ia this summer.
It' Crawford’s teams bust the op
position fences in the California
collegiate league the way he used
to bust his league fences, the Tro
jans will have very little to worry
about. Crawford’s lifetime batting
average, stretched out over a period
of almost a quarter century, is .310,
and ho still holds the -major league
record for triples, having cracked
out 312 of them.
In 1011, he had his best year, bat
ting for an average of .37.S, the
same year Ty Cobb batted .4 20. IT is
total bases are 4473, lie played in
472 consecutive games and was at
bat more than 523 times a year for
15 successive seasons. From that
record it would seem that Crawford
speaks with authority of baseball.
More than 100 candidates', headed
by Calpt. Coney Galiiulio 'of San
Diego, second baseman, reported to
Crawford on his first day this year.
It would seem that this year’s Tro
jan schedule is something like the
cnes Sam used to play, a game a
Lest You |
Forget Again
We know that Val
entine’s Day slip
ped your mind but
Washington’s
Birthday is soon
coming up.
If she’s still re
proachful, appease
her with home
made candy on this
holiday.
Otto’s
70S Willamette
Phone 56
Ail Immortal Love Story!
The Greatest Spectacle
of Stage or Screen!
frith a cast of %
thousands headed by
HA MON NOVARRO
Betty Bronson
May McAvoy
Carmel Myers
Francis X. Bushman
STARTS
MONDAY
For One Mighty
Week!
HEIJLIG
Against the background of mighty drama,
thrills such as you wouldn’t think possible, is
played the Romance of Romances—the love
story of Ben-Hur and Esther.
This has been hailed as the greatest picture
the screen has ever seen! Stupendous in its
power and magnificence, it will sweep you off
your feet by its sheer drama! Four years in
the making, $4,000,000 to make it!
day. Fifteen games will be played
in the California Collegiate league,
niul about 45 have already been ar
langed for the Japan-Manchuria
trip. With the practice games that
will undoubtedly bo played before
the league opening game with Santa
Clara March 111, this year’s South
ern California baseball varsity will
play approximately 70 games.
Crawford, after leaving Detroit in
1917, played for Los Angeles in the
Pacific Coast league for several
years. He was an outfielder.
LOS ANGELES, Feb. 17.—P. I. P.
i—Jimmy Smith of Long Beach was
I elected captain of the University
■ of Southern California water polo
j team last week, after his Trojan
| tubmen had defeated the Hollywood
Athletic club team, 54. Tins was
the first victory tlio Trojans had
been able to score over tlio strong
club team, who had defeated the
Southern California men twice be
fore.
Dance
Tonite
SPANISH
BALL ROOM
NEWT ACTUALLY FUSSES
OVER YOUR CLOTHES
He takes individual pride in each piece and doesn’t rush
your laundry through too fast. When it comes back it’s
washed even better than mother can do.
Phone 252
The Domestic Laundry
Monday
and
Tuesday
3&J63S
*
Monday
and
Tuesday
‘■Red
10
REX PRICES
Matinee - - - 20e
Night ----- 35c
Children - - - - 10c
4^