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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 11, 1930)
The Emerald ♦ SCORE BOARD By Jack Burke ♦ ENGLISHMAN SAYS MAC HINES BEAT LIPTON— We are disappointed in the Eng lish. We used to think they were Euch good sports and we find the following statement by the Asso ciated Press, attributed to Captain Ted Heard, who commanded Sir Thomas Lipton’s Challenger in this year’s yacht races: “We were beaten by mechanical devices which made the Enterprise the faster boat.” We can't see where they get the idea and hate to think that the some thousand people who at the suggestion of Will Rogers contrib uted to a fund to buy that “sports man” Lipton, a cup will get gypped. * * * KITZ IN SECOND PLACE FOR SCORING— Johnny Kitzmiller's 43 points scored this season place him first rn the coast and second in the country. This is not second in a list of selected players throughout ( the country but is in a list of all the big conferences throughout the j country. ' J. Murphy of Fordham, which by . the way, has won 12 games straight not having suffered an;/ reverses last year, leads the field with 9 touchdowns, or 54 points. It is interesting to note that in the whole territory east of the Mis sissippi only 2 field goals have been scored. Also interesting is the total of Eilert of Syracuse whose whole 11 points were scored in trys-for-point after toucch clowns. CAP McEWAN WINS ANOTHER— Taking the Holy Cross-Frovi- ! dence game as an indication Cap j McEwan is doing well back East. | The McEwan coached Crusaders took the measure of the Friars to the tune of 27 to 0. Offensively speaking the team is as good as the score indicates ; and as the Friars were not allowed a single first down the outfit is all j light defensively. Passes featured the Holy Cross attack as did the Oregon play when Cap was here so to all in tentions the system in use there is about the same. The game was j reported as a display of offensive : power on the part of the Crusad- j ers as one touchdown came after I a sustained drive of 50 yards. j * * * TWO GOOD GAMES ON SCHEDULE TODAY— As far as we can determine there are but two games of any ' significance this week-end consid ering only the Pacific Coast con ference. First, of course, is the Cougar Trojan epic at Pullman. As to this one, much as we would like to see the Washington State team win we believe that the Southern eleven is two touchdowns better than the Northerners. Maybe Holmgberry’s men were above their heads last Saturday and can do it again but we would hate to bet on it. As to the California-St. Marys game we can't see how the Bears can beat the Gaels. That is one of the real games in the South and the California stadium is a sellout already. No matter who wins by what score it is always one of the hardest fought games of the year. Revised Campus Phone Book Coming Out Soon The first real campus telephone directory will be off the press the first of the week, according to R. C. Hall, superintendent of the Uni versity press. The proofs are out for correc tion; and as soon as they are re turned the directory will be print ed. There will be 400 copies, enough for student and faculty use only. Last year's directory was small, and is now definitely obsolete as a result of the installation of the dial system on the campus, accord ing to Mr. Hall. HERE TODAY, BACK NEXT YEAR—MAYBE (Continued from Page One) Anderson, no longer brightens the gloom. The bicycle-riding prof with the deceivingly mild expression—Wal ter Barnes—is gone this year though he will return to the cam pus next fall. And Dr. Wilmoth Osborne, who somewhat awed frosh women in the weekly per sonal hygiene lectures is missing, but she, too, will return next year. And last but not least, the cam pus is quieter with the absence oi the bombastic Dr. John Mez, po litical science prof, who, Allah be Sport Managers Of Girls’s Hockey To Be Appointed Girls Not Knowing Game May Attend Practices And Learn It Class managers for women's in tramural hockey will be chosen Monday evening with the regu lar period for the sport. Many of the girls who were interested in hockey started playing last week, but regular practice didn't begin until last Monday. "There is still time for girls who don't know how to play, to come out for hockey and learn before the teams are chosen,” Miss Mary Wilburn, senior in physical educa tion, who is in charge of the ac tivity announced. Miss Janet Woodruff of the faculty is the ad viser. Teams will be chosen earlier this year, in order to give the girls a better chance to work up team play, Miss Wilburn said. Whether it rains or shines the girls are out on the field five days a week from 4- till 5 o’clock. In order to be eli gible for the team a member is re quired to practice three days a week. There are 11 girls on a hockey team, with those making the first team winning 100 W. A. A. points, counting toward a letter. The sec ond team members receive 75 points and each of the third team group receive 50 points. Last year considerable interest was added to hockey, when the United States hockey team visited the campus and gave a hockey demonstration. A squad of hockey players was chosen from the Ore gon girls and they participated with the U. S. hockey team at Cor vallis, because of the weather pre venting play on the local field. praised, will return next term and once again give the campus all sorts of auditory entertainment ranging from funny stories and “econ" lectures to fiddling on a big viol. President Hall Finishes Tour of Cities in State Dr. Arnold Bennett Hall, presi dent of the University, will return today from a tour of various cities in the state where he visited and addressed the mothers’ and dads’ clubs. The tour was made at the lequest of both organizations, and Dr. Hall was accompanied by of ficials of the University and heads of the clubs. The party visited Baker, Pen dleton, La Grande, Heppner, Prine ville, Bend, Klamath Falls, Ash land, Medford, Grants Pass, and Roseburg. Will you wear a ’mum to the game?—Adv. I 1 a I 1 i I i Sending Your Laundry Home Is Bother for you and your mother. When there are studies to do, dances to go to, and pood times to be had, you should not be bothered with mailing clothes home. Mother, too, will appreci ate the extra time. Just Call 825 We Do the Rest. New SERVICE Laundry 839 High Street E 0 -IS ^mrnrar^raramrarararamrarararamrararatarararararatKlfraratHifiafiiirainilniniilriifiai An Ocean For a Hazard "iwwwqpw—awagwoBUM—ww—8 WMP^W»^BWH»BiaaB8Bg«8S8BBBi Here we have Don Moe, Oregon’s famous golfer, doing his stuff in a new way. Don, who sailed recently on the S.S. Presi dent Cleveland as a cadet officer, will make a tour of the Orient, playing on many courses with Eastern nobility. Famous Jazz Band Gets Start in Old Gy in ANN ARBOR, Mich.— (IP) — Waring’s Pennsylvanians got their start at a university, and it wasn’t Pennsylvania either. It came to light here just re cently that the famous jazz or chestra was so broke back in 1921 that the members decided to bust up, and would have done so, had not Fred Waring been invited to come up and play at the Univer sity of Michigan. Here's how it happened: One of the boys went to Ann Arbor, where a friend told him that the University of Michigan committee was looking for a small band to play in an old gym for the overflow crowd at the an nual Jay Hop. The committee al ready had two famous bands for the main dance. The orchestra member telegraphed to Fred, Fred wired the committee and the band assembled. “That wds the greatest night ever,” Fred tells the story him self. “We stole the crowd right away from under the Eig Names. All our success started in that old gym. And we didn't even have hotel money. A fraternity put us up on condition that we play free for their house party the next night.” From there the band went to a Detroit theater and radio station and after one night they, got an eight-week stage contract. They’ve been going ever since. Professor Completes Study Ol Girls as Class Leaders NEW YORK—Here’s bad news for fat girls—and for thin girls, too. Dr. George C. Bellingrath of Teachers college, Columbia univer sity, has completed a study in which he discovered that girls who THE BEST COFFEE AT Taylor’s Telephone 585 Across from Condon Paddle Your Own Canoe —Instruction Free— at the Ameliorate Race it a ij Colored Lights For Dances We will rent spot or flood lights—including gelatine—75c up. Colored lamps and w iring equipment. BAILEY ELECTRIC CO. Authorized Spartan Radio Dealers T. A. STOCKER M. B. CASTELLOE Charley Horses And Hurts Make Hayward Hustle Spears To Watch Huskies Play Against Idaho At Seattle Several varsity gridmen were nursing minor injuries last night. Steve Fletcher and Tiny Marion Hall had a team of Charley horses between them; George Currie's back was sprained, and a few an kles were slightly wrenched, ac cording to Colonel Bill Hayward, I trainer. “Taken as a whole, the team is in great physical condition,” Bill said. “We’re keeping our eye on the men who have anything at all wrong with them.” No scrimmage was held last night. The teams went through an hour of stiff signal drill, and 1 polished up on fundamentals. Lon dahl and Kitzmiller acted as key men behind the lines. Spears Goes North Doctor Spears left the field 1 early in order to catch a train for Seattle, where he will observe Washington in action against Idaho this afternoon. It is not considered probable that the Van dals will make Phelan's Huskies j open up and show what they are holding for the Ducks next Satur day. However, if there are any weak spots in the Washington ag gregation, the Doctor intends to find them and talk it over with his own team at a meeting which will be held in McArthur court Sunday night. are of either extreme cannot ever become leaders of their classes. The leadership doesn't apply to studies, however. The professor found that it does n't make any difference what a hoy weighs, he can be a leader if ether things point that way. Girls, to be class leaders, must be- of moderate height, and must come from prominent and well-to do families. Boys who are leaders can come | from any sort of family, and can ' be any size or shape. Largest Map in World Now Under Construction WELLESLEY, Mass. — What is to be the largest map in the world, io cost more than two million dol lars, is under construction here. It will measure 63 feet from east to west and 46 feet from north to south. The map was begun about five years ago, and is expected to take 50 years more to complete. When finished it will be a perfect like ness of the country which makes n $C.30 Portland and Return via OREGON ELECTRIC RAILWAY Tickets on sale Friday, Satur day or Sunday. Return limit Monday. REDUCED FARES BETWEEN ALL OREGON ELECTRIC STATIONS O. K. Trains leave Eugene 7:15 A. M. and 2:30 I’. M. Arriving in Portland 10:45 A. M. and 5:50 P. M. F. S. APPKLMAN, Agent. PHONE 140 General Agent Portland L. F. KNOWLTON OREGON ELECTRIC RAILWAY Oldest Trumpet Arthur Witcomb, cornet soloist of the United States Marine band, i-. slimvn playing possibly the oUl : si instrument of its kind in exist ence. It is a siide trumpet, first introduced by the Spartan bard Tyrtaeus about 700 15. C. Mr. YVit eoinb will be featured on liis own instrument, the cornet, when the Marine band plays at McArthur court next Tuesday. up the United States and Canada. A gallery, 15 feet high, will en circle the map. and viewed from this any section reproduced on the work will appear iust about as it would if actually seen from an air plane at a height of 12 miles. ir Fox ftlPDonajd Last Times ^ Today— BUDDY ROGERS and Helen Kano FOX REX TODAY' and SUNDAY— MJitk CHARLES BICKFORD RAQUEL TORRES j NILS ASTHER GEORGE F. MARION I Underwater Thrills and 1 Tropical Romance . . Twins’ Mimls Run In Identical Channels JONESBORO, Ark.—(IP)—Two j co-eds at the Arkansas State col lege here, who happen to be twins, recently presented the United States Civil Service department a perplexing problem, which was ironed out only when the co-eds’ professors came to their support. The twins, Letha and Leton Adams, took a civil service exam ination. When their papers were graded there came back from Uncle Sam •a letter, stating that there was “obvious evidence of copying in the examination papers,’’ and that the twins were barred forever from again taking a civil service examination. The girls reported the matter to college authorities, who immedi ately filed a protest with the civil service authorities. Their profes sors reported that there was not a possible chance that the girls had cheated. The instructors said that the girls’ minds just naturally run in the same channels; that as one thinks, the other thinks. In col lege examinations, they said, the girls turn in almost identical pa pers. Therefore, it w»s contended, Uncle Sam shouldn’t bar the twins just because they think alike. CLASSIFIED ADS CAREFUL hand laundry, lowest rates in town. Mrs. Margaret Dietz, 1433 Patterson. 2453-R. FOUND—A pair of horn-rimmed glasses. Owner call for Larry Jackson at Emerald business office. L & R Beauty Specializing in PERMANENT WAVING MARCELS FINGER WAVES Phone 1784 957 Willamette Dine and Dance AT THE MIDWAY Sunday Night at 7 Dancing five with dollar dinner or order seventy-five cent luncli to cover minimum charge. Music by Leo’s Varsitarians The Pep Band STATE THEATRE ■' HEIGH! HEIGH! FOLKS! Date Your Sweetie for the Mammoth Midnite j Preview TONITE! \ aJourneys End” Doors Open at 1 1:45 Admission 25c * COME ALONG!! *1hv BOOP-OOPA-DOOP Girl makes I TIIE “BIO SHOT” OP HOWLS! ('on tin nous Sunday 2 to 11 Matinees—20c Nights—25c COLONIAL —Plays— SUN. MON. TUES. <~witrL HELEN KANE' VICTOR MOORE STUART ERWIN JAMES HALL FRANK MORGAN —Tod&y ZANE GREY’S Greatest Picture “BORDER LEGION”