Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, March 28, 1929, Page 4, Image 4

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    Telegraphic
Golf Meets
Conceived
Don Moo Originates Plan
To Moot Kqsl's Teams;
1 arsity Tryouts Today
By .TOE riGNEY
Science has done :i lot of tilings,
a ml one of tlie most recent develop
ments is the turning of n golf shot
into ticks travel
mg over a
grnpli wire. This
ii i w ‘ Kcient i fie
idea” is a product
of the mind id'
Don Moe, captain
o[' 1 lie (trefoil golf
(eyill. I’m -over.pl
years the \Veti
foots have held
s w i in in i ii <r and
.rifle ..ts by
Don Moo t«• I<-jjrnj,li, but a
telegraphic golf
wort, tentatively arranged for at
present, in soinething entirely new.
Moe, wlio plays golf the way
everyone else would like to play it,
conceived the plan of playing east
ern teams by telegraph. Why not?
Oregon vs. Harvard or Chicago or
Syracuse— the individual competi
t ion still will he thorn blit 1 lie op
ponent will bo invisible. The or
irginality of the soliomo is eom
rnendnblo, and if if can bo worked
out Orpgon will receive some valu
able national publicity, and public
ity seems to be tlie thing these days.
Tin* Oregon golf team is ambi
tiously working toward a goal
through which it hopes to justify
ils recent recognition as a major
sport. The goal is the Pacific coast
intercollegiate championships at
Seattle -May 15 and Hi. *A series of
preliminary meets and several dual
meets with conference golf teams
have been scheduled, but the biggest
chance of the year will pome at the
title matches. •
With a successful showing in the
Pacific coast, championships, it is
probable that the outstanding Well
foot golfers will be sent to the na
tional intercollegiate meet in till'
east next June.
* * *
lion.Moo is not only one of the
favorites for the Paeifie coast title
but also for the national champion
hips. Moe, who is a member of
the Alderwood country club of
Portland, is the present holder of
the Oregon slate amateur champion
ship. II is fame as a first rate golf
or, however, is not confined to the
Pacific coast alone. Moe made ex
cellent, showings ill two of the na
tional tournaments last summer,
winning I lie medal play at the west
ern amateur, and then later placing
well up in the American amateur.
Though Moe is a chaniphnn, lie is
not the only prominent golfer at
CALL
Bailey Electric Company
AVlion in clod l'ical I rouble of miy kind —
No job loo bii-ee and none too small
C40 Willametta
Phone 234
A
Photograph
CARRIES THE MOST
PERSONAL OF ALL
GREETINGS
KENNELL-ELLIS
STUDIOS
AJNTS.
n ! I»• i* wl: : I y nu 'i it |»: i n 1 i11;’ or do(*oin t inyou 'will*
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Now Quick Drying Enamels
In I'- smart culms, vcr\ easy to apply, easy |o wash,
ARTISTIC PICTURE FRAMING
Ludford’s
PAINT WALL PAPER ART GOODS
55 West Broadway Phone 749
Daffodils
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i „ Narcissi Hyacinths
for EASTER
\ SPLENDID EE ESI I OUTDOOR
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W can supply any quantity from one to a
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i Farm thirteen miles east of Eugene on the
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Market Stall 53
Phone 1U88-W
Oregon. Among Hie dozen or so
golfers turning out for the
varsity there are players who have
been prominent in loeal tournaments
throughout the state. The team
whieh will meet Oregon State on
April L’7 and the University of
Washington on May 11 will be se
lected from Francis TIeitkernper,
George Will, Ike Sftiples, Htedman
Shaw, Mike Gray, Tom Chare, Dick
Sehroeiler, Chan Brown, Bob Ham
mond, Dow Stephens, and Nelson
McCook.
An organized method,of picking
the first team will begin today and
continue over Friday and Saturday.
The candidates will play a .'!(’> hole
medal match over the Kugene coun
try club and the eight best scorers
will be placed in a ladder tourna
ment. The men who do not place
in the first eight qualifiers will
have an. opportunity to get, into the
tournament by challenging and de
feating the eighth man on the list.
Members of the ladder ran advance
themselves by challenging two
places above their own position.
Each player will turn in his card,
certified bv his opponent, to Don
Moe, who is in charge of the tour
nament. The candidates for the
varsity ft'ill b<* permitted to play
over the Eugene country (dull course
without cost provided they sign the
guest book at the caddy house. The
rules of the United States golf as
sociation will apply to this medal
tournament.
PLEDGING ANNOUNCEMENT
Sigma Phi Epsilon announces the
pledging of A1 Thompson of Port
land.
ir
p &uyei\e's <")v>\ .fton f r~)
M* MOPIN' £? W/\ff!ElJRNE
PHONE 2700 —
Special
Student
Bridge Lamps
Complete with cord and shade—iron
base with reversible bracket
j
i
$2.00
“Theme” Silk
Hose
Easter Special for
Thursday - F riday - Saturday
3 Pairs For
$5.50
New’colors in one of the finest, yet most de
sirable hose we have ever offered.
ONE SUIT OR OVERCOAT
Special advertising introductory offer
to quickly establish this new line and
acquaint the people with
STERLING QUALITY FABRICS
and tailoring
♦
Offer Ends Saturday
SUITS
or 1 Suit and O’Coat
for the price of. . . .
(JOF |-/\ No Mo
«p09i9U No Les:
Small Deposit Insures Delivery
The Men’s Store
‘'We Soil for Loss”
7-IS Willamette St.
Kugene. Oregon
Club Louder ship New
Course at University
A course in clul> leadership will
be offered this term by the school
of education, -according to Henry
Sheldon, dean. The course, which
has been arranged at the request of
the camp fire girls and other groups,
will be held as a lower division
credit of two hours, on Tuesdays
and Thursdays at 4 o’clock. The
course will begin next Tuesday,
[n'formn tiou regarding registra
tion in {lie coarse mnv lie obtained
:ii tbe s’bool of education, the dean
.'iimoimeed.
During tbe first six weeks tbc
general problem of club leadership
will be taken up, and lectures by
members of education, physical edu
cation, sociology, home economics,
botany and psychology staffs will
be given. Supplementary readings
in adolescent psychology will be rc
fpii red.
lie class will be divided for tbe
last three weeks into groups for
training in the technique of club
work in which tlie student is indi
vidually interested.
DeCou on Com mi! left
Professor K. E. DeCon of the
mathematics department lias been
appointed a member of the program
committee of the Mathematical As
sociaion of America, which will se
lect, six speakers to appear at the
meeting of the association at tho
University of Colorado next August.
'i
Starting a New
“College Side5’ Spirit
35c Business Lunch
50c Dinner
Ask Pat about Pastry and
Punch for that Spring Dance
From now on—
I he best foods and drinks with the best service
in the cleanest place.
A1sO“'m
I he big dance every Friday and Saturday night
featuring “I he College Band.”
■ NEW BANQUET ROOM
FOR SPECIAL LUNCHEONS AND DINNERS
College Side Inn
Pat Scott, new manager
A First Rim
Production at
Colonial
Prices
Children 10c
v THURSDAY
|? FRIDAY
? SATURDAY
gggaaeg—gn
Out of the Carnival of Revolution
a peasant girl emerges as the great
Red Dancer of Moscow—a Private
soldier becomes a Red General and
a Czarist Prince is a pauper.
“The Red Hanoi1'’ is one of the most mag
nifieent things,of its kind whieh I have ever
seen. Xy\v York World (Morning)
We reeomniond the pieture . . . something
you should see for the puneli and variety in it.
—TJie Outlook.
ALSO—
CAMEO COMEDY
PATHE NEWS