Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, January 25, 1930, Page 2, Image 2

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    Released Oregon Swimming Schedule Shows Five Meets on List
Outstanding
Trials Made
By Webfoots
University of California
May Come North for
One Contest
Washington State Date Is
Said Tentative
SWIMMING SCHEDULE OF
OREGON
Feb. 8—Multnomah Club at
Portland.
Feb. 15—Oregon State at
Corvallis.
Feb. 22—Washington State
at Pullman.*
March I—Multnomah Club at
Eugene.
March 8—Oregon State at
Eugene.
"The Washington State meet
is tentative. The University of
California may come north and
meet the Webfoots at Eugene
on that date.
More time trials were held last
night for the Oregon swimmers.
Chuck Silverman turned in a 220
yard distance in the time of 2 min
utes 31 seconds, which unofficially
just about equals the Northwest
record. A1 Edwards made the 50
yard dash in 26.4, which was very
good time. Johnny Anderson has
a bad cold and was not in condi
tion to swim.
Other varsity men made the fol
lowing times:
Ron Lewis - 100-yard breast
stroke, 1:19.2; 200-yard breast
stroke, 2:57.2.
Palmer McKim 50-yard dash,
27 seconds flat.
Some of the frosh times were:
James Travis 100-yard breast
stroke, 1:21.
Harrison Spain—100-yard back
stroke, 1:24.3.
Francis Oglesby -50-yard dash,
29.2.
Harrison Loses
Tennis Exhibition
To S. Lockwood
lirokeu Racquets Cause
Handicap; (lame
Called Off
In an exhibition match in Mc
Arthur court last night after the
basketball game, Sherman Lock
wood, first ranking player on the
Oregon varsity tennis team, de
feated Bradshaw Harrison, one of
the stars on last year's srpiad, tt-4.
Lockwood took the advantage
from the start, playing a swift,
steady game. Harrison was han
dicapped by the fact that he broke
both his rackets, and the match
had to be called off at the end
of the first set on that account.
HUSKIES WIN THRILLER;
FROSH SMOTHER ROOKS
(Continued from I’uyc One)
to add to his, and the team’s total
missing the majority of the many
free throws he hail.
By virtue of winning last night,
Washington takes possession of
second place in the Northwest
conference and Oregon is relegat
ed to third place. The golden op
portunity to gain undisputed title
to second place has been lost to
Oregon for a while at least, but
tonight's game offers the chance
to a tie.
The summary:
Wash. (37)
Perry (71
Swanson (71
McClary (14 i
Peterson
Oairney (3).. .
Gritsch (2).
Nelson
Rutherford
West
Jaloff (2).
Schlictlng (2j
Pos.
F
F
C
G
G
a
,s
s
s
s .
s
s
s
(23) Ore.
(6i Keenan
14) Hughes
Eberliart
(11 Fletcher
d> Chastain
t2i Calkins
it) Dickson
(2 i Levofi
11) Horner
(2) Stevens
Dolj:
Rubenstein
Hanley
Referee: A1 French, Portland.
Umpire; Ralph Coleman, Cor
v&Uis.
Cold weather has hit W. S. C
pretty hard. Frost-bite and chil
blains arc among the ailment,
treated at the college hospital.
Matchless cigarettes are the
latest fad at the Oklahoma Agri
cultural college. The co-ed ULt
them very much.
SID E * *
ifarry Van Dine EIN E S
Montana Gets Revenge for Ousting
JS Dr. Clarence W. Spears com
ing to Oregon on a professor
ial basis or isn’t he? That seems
to be the question which is being
debated around the state, with ar
guments pro and con. Dr. Arn
old Bennett Hall was the origina
tor of the term in this part of the
country and he declares that
Spears is to be here on a profes
sorial basis.
* * *
The nom de plume has been
the bane of sports writers up
and down the coast and east
ward. Many of them never
thoroughly understood just
what all the requirements of a
professorial coach were. The
typographers on the newspa
per*, we; * constantly making
errors in the spelling of the
word and frequently set it up
as professional. After reading
some recent stjrtements we,
too, Imve decided that we do
not understand all the intrica
cies of the term.
One of the terms of a profes
sorial contract, as originally stat
ed by Dr. Hall was that the coach.,
would be on “an indefinite tenure."
This meant that no contract of a
stated length would be drawn up.
Dr. Spears has a contract for five
years, and we don’t think he is on
n real professorial basis. Student
opinion has been rampant on this
subject.
I
Just What Is a Professorial Contract
A SCHOOL that was not considered powerful enough to offer the
right amount of competition for the other members of the North
west conference has recently risen to unthought of heights and smote
the holder of the top rung in conference basketball standings a mighty
blow on the chin. In other words, we mean that Montana beat Wash
ington State at Pullman, and the Grizzlies did it up in fine fashicm.
Washington State did not take the game too easily, either, and
the Cougars started their regular lineup. The Grizzlies, led by
Chtnske, could not be stopped and their revenge must have been very
sweet. Montana has always been severely handicapped by a very
small student body, and also by being stuck away off the beaten trail
of coast colleges.
If Oregon students will remember back to last year they will
recollect that Montana was a thorn in the side of the Webfoots. The
Grizzlies won both games from the Webfoots and helped to send Coach
Reinhart’s men down in the standings. The Grizzlies have developed
some great individual stars in all lines of sport, and are one of the
hardest fighting outfits on the coast.
Wrestling Squad
Hit by Injuries;
Riehl, Jansa Out
Elliot! Grooming McKey
To Tuke Heavy’s Place;
Hopes Still Held
If accidents continue to happen
to liis best grapplers, Coach Harry
Elliott may have to call for rein
forcements in order to stage the
mat tourney, scheduled for Janu
ary 30-31. Art Riehl, crack 125
pounder, and Joe Jansa ‘have been
the last to join the ranks of the
injured, which already consisted
of Floyd Bowers, promising mid
dleweight.
The loss of Riehl, due to a prob
able shoulder fracture, is a very
serious blow to the squad inasmuch
as the stocky Pacific northwest
amateur champion was counted
on to repeat his successes this
year.
McKey, another ex-West Point
er, is being groomed for Jansa's
place, if the burly 240-pounder
does not recover from a rib injury
in time to enter the coming meet.
There is hope that Jansa and Bow
ers may get into action next week,
but Riehl's injury may keep him
from the mat this year.
Ore liana To Picture
W ives of Presidents |
The Women's section of the
Oregana of this year is devoting
a section to the pictures of the
wives of the various presidents of
the University of Oregon, with a
short sketch of each.
Friends of Dr. Alice Hall Chap
man, wife of C. H. Chapman, sec
ond president of the University of
Oregon, are urged to look for a
picture of Ur. Chapman. Anyone
who will volunteer information as
to Dr. Chapman's present address
or knows someone who might, to
the Oregana staff will be appre
ciated. As the Oregana will go
to press in a few weeks, it is ask
ed that any pictures or informa
tion be handed in before next Wed
nesday, January 2t>.
TALENT DISPLAYED IN
FAUST PRESENTATION
(Continual from Onr>
Pauline Guthrie sang the comic
role of Martha. Rose Simons, as
Siebel, sang the introductory
“Flower song."
Nona Peterson was accompan
ist. Date Cooley had charge of
| the stage setting, and lighting
1 was provided through the cour
tesy of McMorrnn A- Washbume.
The presentation is part of the
• . —ori; in Mad.tm: MvGrt v.'
• C . ui ope:a. *
List of Entries for
Intramural Swim
Competition Ends
Contest Will Be Hel<l Next
Tuesday Evening in
Women’s Tank
The list of entries for the men’s
intramural swimming meet which
will be held in the wtlmen's tank
next Tuesday evening, closed last
night.
Houses to enter men were Sigma
Nu, Phi Sigma Kappa, Phi Delta
Theta, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Al
pha Tau Omega, and Sigma Chi.
The officials for the meet have
been selected as follows: Diving
judges: Don Neer, Len Thompson,
and Joe Brown. Timers: G. L.
Hermanee, Jack Hewitt, and Don
McCormick. Starter: Johnny An
derson. Clerk of the course: Jim
Raley, assistant clerk, Ken Moore.
Judge: Charles Silverman. Scor
er: Harold Fraundorf. Equipment
and arrangements: Bill Hedlund.
Suits will be furnished contest
ants and swimmers will not be al
lowed to use their own suits.
SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM
RECEIVES HIGH PRAISE
(Continued from One)
cific coast men, Mr. Tozier, a Cal
ifornia man, and Mr. Brodie of
Oregon City, recently appointed to
the Unite*! States consular service
to Finland, and father of Made
Ion Jane Brodie, a freshman on
this campus.
Mrs. Weathered attended her
first national press convention
about SO years ago. Her brother
being unable to go, sent her to
represent the Oregon Press asso
ciation at the meeting in New
York City. That was her first
trip to New York and her first ex
perience in journalistic work. Com
ing from such a distance, and a
woman at that, Mrs. Weathered
was treated with a great deal of
respect. They even went so far
as to elect her a member of the
supervisory board, a position
which she held for five years.
One of the southern delegates
to the convention, interested in
coffee production in Hawaii, and
bearing that Mrs. Weathered was
from Portland, which he supposed
to t>e only a short jaunt from the
islands, requested that she write
an article for him on the subject
of coffee raising in Hawaii.
"Hawaii." Mrs, Weathered ex
plain*'*! incidentally, is mispro
nounced by most Americans. Its
real pronunciation has no "w”
sound, but rathci a “v" sound.
To get the article as requested,
she interviewed several steamship
conq'iinics and did some research
in Mu' .Vt— York libraries'
She obtained the material and
Bell Requests
Frosh to Attend
Yearling Game
ALL. freshmen are requested
to lie at the Igloo tonight
at 6:43 for the second Frosh
Rook basketball game, accord
ing to Phil Bell, yearling yell
leader. •
Bell hopes to be able to have
organized rooting and urges
house presidents to require the
attendance of all first-year
men. As this game is a pre
liminary to the varsity game,
with Washington at 8 o’clock,
there should be no reason for
| anyone missing the game, ac
cording to Bell.
i wrote her article, which proved
satisfactory. Since then she has
continued to write all sorts of ar
ticles for newspapers, trade jour
nals and magazines. After mak
ing her bluff, at the convention
she had to make good, she told
the students.
Since that time her work has
been principally in the journalis
tic field or in her more recent vo
cation of selling Oregon history to
I Oregon people. A native of Port
j land, Mrs. Weathered has a great
| state’s development. Now she
| deal of love for the story of the
j spends her time and her mony
j going about the state at the re
quest of various organizations to
lecture and stir up interest in Ore
gon history.
Mrs. Weathered has a wealth of |
interesting tales to tell of exper-.
iences in various parts of the j
country. Unlike the painter who
hurried to get through before he
ran out of paint, as she explained,
she "still had a lot of paint left”
when she finished.
She told of her associations with
many nationally and internation
ally known people. Such women
as Dorothy Dix are included on
her list of friends. Mrs. Weath
ered was interested in learning j
that Dean Allen had talked with !
Dorothy Dix while at the national j
journalistic convention he attend- '
ed recently in the south. She told !
some of the students later that I
she had dancer! five different times i
witfi Theodore Roosevelt. That J
was during the ten years she spent |
in journalistic work in New York.
It has been a decade since Mrs.
Weathered last visited Eugene
and the University. She express
ed interest in the wonderful
growth evidenced here. She was |
a guest of the University at Hen- \
dricks hall Thursday evening. I
Captain McEwan
Leaves Eugene;
Going To Europe
Ex-Coach Wants No More
Long Time Coaching
Contracts
Capt. John J. McEwan, Oregon 1
ex-football coach, who left Eugene I
yesterday noon for New York,•
said that upon arriving in the
eastern city he and his family
would leave at once for Europe.
McEwan declared before leaving
that he had had enough of long
contracts. He said, "I may ac
cept a position as a college coach
again sometime, but not for longer i
than three months at a time.” j
When he returns from Europe'
the Captain said he intended to!
conduct a coaching school in New ^
York. He will feature line work j
and feature plays.
The science department of the
University of Washington will
float to Hawaii this summer for
a session of study in the islands.
Rooter Lids
AND
Green Lids
“We Give Green Trading
Stamps ’ ’
University
• Pharmacy
“The Students’ Drug
Store”
Campus Filipinos Regret Riots
Race Trouble Is Believed Temporary
“We regret it.” I
This is the sentftnent of the
Filipinos of the University in re- i
gard to race riots which resulted
in the death of one Filipino and
the stabbing of an American
youth in California yesterday, ac
cording to Antonio Jimenev, pres
ident of Casa Filipina, campus liv
ing group.
“It is a matter of struggle for
existence,” Jimenev said, when
asked what he considered the;
cause of the trouble. “The im
migration question is part of it.
There are so many Filipinos on
the Pacific coast that they are
taking the Americans' places as
workers on the farms."
The Filipinos should be pro
tected by the government until the
trouble blows over, Jimenev be
lieves. “I think the Americans
were on the aggressive,” he said,
“but I feel certain that the riot
ing will soon die out.”
Carnegie Group
Gives Honor to
Local Professor
Dr. Ethel Sanborn Invited
To Join Expedition
Into Tropics
Coming as a national recognition
of her research in plant biology,
Dr. Ethel I. Sanborn, of the Uni
versity of Oregon, has been invit
ed by the Carnegie Institution of
Washington, D. C., to join its ex
pedition this spring into the trop
ics for the purpose of studying an
cient and modern flora.
Dr. Sanborn has recently com
pleted a study of the flora of Go
shen, Oregon, which has attracted
the notice of scientists all over
the country. The work was done
under the auspices of the Carne
gie Institution, and has revealed
new species of flora which have
not heretofore been found In North"
America, and which show definite
affinities with certain tropical
plants. 1
Since the expedition is to leave
very soon, Dr. Sanborn does not
know definitely whether or not she
can accept the invitation, but if it
is possible to arrange her work
in a satisfactory manner, she plans
to make the trip.
LAW BOOK TO BE
OUT THIS MONTH I
The sixth edition of the “Out
line of Government of Oregon,”
compiled by a committee of pro
fessors of the law school, Oregon
State college, Willamette univer
sity, and Linfield college, accord
ing to James D. Barnett, head of
the department of political sci
ence, will be out this month.
This book is a condensation of
the constitution and statutes re
lating to state government, and
is used in college classes and by
teachers in public schools.
A 10-Year
Tradition
That there is really just one
place to have Sunday night
dinner or ten. That’s
THE
ANCHORAGE
j Honoraries Will
i Discuss Campus
Talent Magazine
|
i Ye Tabard Inn, Pot and
Quill May Put Out
New Publication
Pot and Quill, women’s writing
; honorary, and Ye Tabard Inn,
j men’s writing honorary, will hold
! a joint meeting Tuesday, January
j 28, in the Men's lounge of Gerlin
ger hall, to discuss plans for the
j publication of a campus literary
.
magazine.
Last spring term Ye Tabard Inn
published a magazine of prose and
verse written by the members of
that organization, and called it
Tabard Tales. Not since 1922
have the members of Pot and
Quill published any of their work.
Before that time “Green Ink," a
magazine of short stories, sketch
es and verse was published. Both
of these were successes, hence
plans are under way for a joint
publication, says Joe Brown,
president of Ye Tabard Inn, and
Serena Madsen Scheffer, presi
dent of the women’s writing hon
orary.
DR. J. R. WETHERBEE
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Office Phone 1601
Residence 1280-M
801-2-3 Miner Bldg.
Eugene, Oregon
Baked In
Our Own Shop
For breakfast, dinner and
supper—make our shop your
first and final shopping
place. Priced right!
Breads Pastries
Cakes Biscuits
WILLIAMS
BAKERY
Phone 914-J — 1760 13th E.
®ENi;
WATCHES^
^ Beauty and color-fire .. .
a fine Diamond has both
The supreme jewel — a dia
mond—would be her choice,
should you consult her ....
And certainly no other gift
expresses so completely your
deeper sentiments . Promi
nent among our wide assort
ment of fine diamond mount
ings and jewelry arc new
'Gruen diamond-set w ristlets.
Those celebrated w atches arc
Ixnh dependable timepieces
and beautiful ornaments—at
a most reasonable cost.
Diamond Rings
in u u ide choice
cf designs
$:5-9*0-9t00
SETH LARA WAY
Diamond Merchant and Jeweler
Science Bringing
Northland Nearer,
Is Agent’s Report
Letter to Dean Rebec Tells
Of Advancement of Great
Slave Lake Lands
That the far north will soon be
no longer far, but just a little
more north than the rest of the
continent, is to be expected in the
very near future, if conditions in
the region of Great Slave lake,
Northwest territory, Canada, are
characteristic of all of northern
Canada. In a letter to Dr. George
Rebec, dean of the graduate
school, C. Bourget, the Indian
agent at Resolution on Great
Slave lake, whom Dean Rebec
met while on his canoe trip with
Amos Burg this summer, tells of
the latest inroads which civiliza
tion has made there.
The coming of mining companies
into the territory is a most con
vincing sign of the approach of
modern civilization, according to
the letter, and airplanes are so
numerous that the Indians don’t
even bother to look at them when
they fly over. The agent has a
radio, receives news bulletins from
the wireless station, gets his mag
azines and papers once a week —
quite an innovation for that part i
of the country. And what is more, |
his mail comes by air.
Comments on the weather in M. j
Bourget’s letter are particularly
apropos at this time. He says, 1
"The weather has been exceeding- i
ly mild until New Year, with an j
average of 10 to 20 above zero, i
Since then we had a week of 40 !
below, and even now it has been
around zero for nearly a week."
PADILLA SLATED
TO LEAD TALKS
At the meeting of the Indus
trial study group, Monday night
at 8:30 in the Y. W. Bungalow,
Iceland Fryer and Eugenio Padilla
will lead a talk on the "Wage
Theory.” The facts of the ques
tion will be presented first and a
general, informal discussion will
follow.
“The meeting is open to anyone >
interested, particularly to profes
sors on the campus," said Ann
Baum, chairman of the group, in
announcing the meeting.
A
Barbecue!
A nice, big fat,
juicy barbecue
sandwich
The m M Lunch
Phone 2952-W
Girls Are Awfully Impractical . . .
AND that is probably the reason we are so fond of
them. But . . . they would rather ride in anything
than get those silver kid slippers ruined. So why
not invest in a “campus crate” . . . one that will
really run. “The girl” will like you so much better.
Sold at prices ranging from cheap-cheaper-cheapest
... at the
MORRIS CHEVROLET CO.
Phone 1020 Louis Dammasch
or (127
r1
January 24, 1UJ0.
Dear Friends:
This snow is beautiful all right, but speaking from
experience it’s tough on a fellow who lives on a corner
lot. All corner lot dwellers in Eugene have my
sympathy.
So lias the fellow who lias to get up early these
, winter mornings.
He has more than my sympathy—he has my sug
gestion. Get one of these Big Ben Alarm (’locks in
here at Skeio's store and start the day out rigfot.
They come at only $3.2'), and they're on the job
day or night.
TICK.
.J
Geologists—
Botanists—
Biologists—
AND ALL USERS OF
LENSES
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED A SHIPMENT OF
IMPORTED CODDINGTONS
ALL PAR-EXCELLENT MAGNIFIERS
RANGING IN PRICE FROM
$1.75 to $3.25
OUR OTHER HIGH-GRADE LENSES HAVE BEEN
REDUCED TO CONFORM TO THESE NEW PRICES.
the
UNIVERSITY “CO-OP”
>