Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, December 06, 1930, Page 3, Image 3

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    The Emerald ♦
SCORE
BOARD
By Bruce Hamby
THE NEW YORK SUN
PICKS AN ALL-STAR—
Now that most of the all-coast
football elevens have been picket!
it is about time for the various
all-American choices to make their
appearance. Several have been
published, but the one that seems
to be the most complete and best,
to our mind at least, is the one
appearing in the New York Sun.
To those who believe that most
all-Americans picked by Eastern
writers are unfair because they
completely ignore Western grid
aces, let it be said that this one
has only two Easterners on the
first eleven. It was made after
three prominent football critics
had toured the entire country,
drawing comparisons and confer
ring with local correspondents, re
gional scouts, and coaches.
Their all - American included
Frank Baker of Northwestern and
Wes Fesler of Ohio State as ends;
Glenn Edwards of Washington
State and Fred Sington of Ala
bama, as tackles; Bart Koch of
Baylor (Texas) and John Baker
oi u. s. u. as guards, anti lien
Ticknor of Harvard as center. The
backfielti consisted of Carideo and
Schwartz of Notre Dame, Pinckert
of U. S. C., and Macaluso of Col
gate.
Western players on the second
eleven were Mel Hein of Washing
ton State as center, Garrett Ar
belbide of U. •S. C. as left end, and
Duffield of U. S. C. as left half
back.
Johnny Kjtzmiller, Webfoot ace,
was given the honor of all-Amer
ican rating. In speaking of him,
the Sun said: “Kitzmiller of Ore
gon and Hufford of Washington
flashed spasmodically, though
handicapped by injuries.” Austin
Colbert was also rated as an all
American among the guards. Both
will receive bronze medallions.
* * #
CARIDEO OF NOTRE DAME
PRAISED liY SCRIBE—
In comments on their choices
the Sun ran two full pages, one
of pictures, the other solid with
print. Nearly half a column was
devoted to Frank Carideo, signal
caller on Knute Rockne’s rampant
Ramblers. They said:
Greatest
Air Romance
the. World Has^
Ever Known
Doug
Fairbanks, Jr.
Veil Hamilton
* *
From “The
Flight Com
mander’’ by
J. H. Saunders
MIDNIGHT
MATINEE
TONIGHT!
11:00 P. M.—25c
SMOKING
PRIVILEGES!
A Flock of
Viiaphone Acts
and Comedies.
I
“With Carideo directing the at
tack. Rockne can take a nap on
the bench if he is so disposed. It's
just like having a coach on the
field.
“Carideo is more than a master
strategist, more than a spiritual
! tonic to his team, more than a hu
man icicle, whose poise under pres
: sure is blandly irritating to rivals.
This hard-bitten Italian boy is one
of the greatest blockers to tickle
a coach’s heart ... he consistently
takes out the defensive end unas
sisted. Do you realize what this
statement means ? It means that
Notre Dame has an extra inter
ferer available to mow down the
secondaries. It means the differ
I ence between a slight gain and a
possible touchdown. It may mean
a national championship—and not
so mythical either — for Notre
; Dame.”
PAV YOUR MONEY
AND TAKE YOUR CHOICE—
And speaking of Notre Dame
and the national championship—
today will tell the tale. More than
85,000 fans will be in Los Angeles
this afternoon to witness the epic
struggle between the Trojans and
the Ramblers.. Who will win?
Experts all agree on this point.
U. S. C. will take it sure unless
Notre Dame wins. Rather silly,
but the truth nevertheless. We'd
hate to bet on this game. Here’s
one Joe who will have his ear
glued to the crystal set this after
noon.
* * *
UALL11SS—\.> V TIME—
ANY PLACE—AND HOW!
After reading a copy of the |
Daily Trojan, the U. S. C. student;
paper, we can easily understand j
why that school is so popular. One
look at their rally program for
the game today and we're hot for
dear old Southern Cal. Last night
their new 575,000 gym was dedi
cated with a huge football dinner.
Music for the affair was furnished j
by Earl Burtnett and his orches
tra. Rockne and Jones were the
principal speakers. To top that
off a huge rally dance was held,
at the Biltmore hotel, with Gus
Arnheim and his music, and with
Bert Wheeler and Eddie Cantor as
master of ceremonies. N i
A list of the prominent movie
stars to be present read like a
Hollywood studio roster. And as
a night-cap a stag smoker was on
the program with Joe E. Brown
as master of ceremonies, Norma
Shearer, Benny Rubin, Cliff Ed
wards, Winnie Lightner, etc., etc.,
putting on acts. Personally, that
sounds good to us. This may read
more like a society item, but it
sounded too good to keep.
Grandson Follows Grandfather
Philip M. Brett, of New York,
has been appointed acting presi
dent of Rutgers university.
His great - great grandfather,
Rev. Philip Milledoler, was presi
dent of Rutgers college from 1825
to 1840.
MARY ASTOR... ROBERT AMES
EDWARD EVERETT HORTON
HEODA HOPPER
STARTS
SUNDAY
For 3 Days—
“HOLIDAY”
Is the most unusual pic
ture of 1930 . . . and brings
to the screen its most ra
diant personality . . . ANN
HARDING ... in her first
great characterization.
LAST TIMES TONIGHT
HEX
' JM
Oi,rtrO»fQX W»5T COAST THIATRIS.
Now Playing
BUCK JONES
in
“The Dawn Trail”
Boxers Waiting
| For Opening Gong
At 4:15 Monday
Football Men Swell Total
Competing in Annual
Tourney to 20
When the deadline on the boxing
tourney was reached yesterday at
16 o’clock, 20 boxers were duly
' signed and will commence flinging
gloves on Monday afternoon at
4:15. Two husky football men,
Howard Bobbitt and Bill Bower
man, were the latest additions to
the fold.
After the preliminaries have
been run off Monday, the semi
finals will be the next stage of the
program on Tuesday, and the fin
als will be held Thursday. All
bouts are to be held on the main
floor of the gym in the new ring, i
which will be installed today. All
students, including co-eds, are in
vited to see the bouts and are in- j
sured of seeing some spirited ac
tion.
As the weighing in starts today :
the boxers have not yet been di
vided into their respective classes.
The complete list of battlers is as
follows: Harry Smith, George Mc
Farland, Don Weed, Benny Pasion, |
Sid Cowin, Howard Bobbitt, Bern
ie Hughes, Max Pulido, Jack Bry
ant, Bill Bowerman, Houston Dun
away, Thornton Gale, Ray Ander-1
son, Don Thomas, Sterling Bailey,
Gail Holzapfel, Jesse Bradley,
Harry Siegel, Don Beeson, and Ce
cil Buckingham. Of that number
Pasion, Cowin, MacFarland, Bai
ley, Siegel, Hughes, Anderson, and
Holzapfel have shown exceptional
skill.
The matches will be judged,
mainHfcn the skill and form shown
by th^boxers rather than their hit
ting power. If some of the bouts
show a tendency to be one-sided,
the referee has the • privilege of
stopping the fight when he ob
serves this fact. The fans are ex
pected to take this into considera
tion because amateur boxing sets !
a different standard from the pro
fessional game.
Swimming Squad
Divided by Hewitt
Rosson Works for Coast
Swim Conference
—
Due to the large turnout of frosh !
and varsity swimmers and the dif- j
ficulty in coaching such a large
number at the same time, Jack
Hewitt, varsity swimming coach,
has divided the group into squads
which will practice at different
hours.
All freshman and varsity divers
will meet in one group for prac
tices at the women’s pool on Mon
days, Wednesdays, and Fridays at
5:45 p. m. and on Tuesdays and
Thursdays at the men's gym at
5 p. m.
The varsity swimmers have been
divided into groups A and B. Both j
groups will practice at the same \
time on Mondays, Wednesdays, j
and Fridays at 4:30 p. m. and on
Saturdays at 4 p. m.
The frosh have been cut into
three groups, A. B. and C. Groups
A and B will practice together on
Tuesdays and Thursdays at 4 p. m.
and on Saturdays at 3 p. m. Group
C will practice on Tuesdays and
Thursdays at 3 o’clock and on Sat
urdays at 2 o’clock.
Hugh E. Rosson, graduate man
ager, who is attending a Pacific
coast conference meeting in Cali
fornia is expected home soon. Ros
son has been working for a coast
swimming conference, and the de
cision was to be reached at this
meeting.
Seybolt Will Read
‘Green Pastures’
Program Slated Thursday
At Guild Theatre
In recognition of the Christmas
season, a special program will be
given next Thursday night in
Guild theatre. Mrs. Ottilie Sey
bolt, director of the drama division,
will read the 1930 Pulitzer play,
“The Green Pastures,” by Marc
Connelly. Special music will be
arranged. The program will begin
at 8 o’clock.
“Green Pastures” has aroused
more interest during the last two
seasons than has any play in a
great many years. It is an-extra
ordinary combination of whimsical
humor and truly sincere religious
feeling and carries a message pe
culiarly appropriate to the Christ
mas season," said Mrs. Seybolt.
The New York production which
opened February 26, 1930, is still
continuing with an ever-increasing
demand for seats. Unfortunately,
the cast is so very large that the
chance of the play being sent on
I the road is extremely slight.
Barbara Barker Describes
Beaux Arts College Side’
Descending a steep, crooked
flight of stone stairs from the
; courtyard of the oldest church in
Paris, Barbara Barker, daughter
, of Burt Brown Barker, vice-presi
dent of the University, and presi
dent of the French club, entered
a low, barrel-vaulted stone room.
Against the farthest wall was an
old, wheezing pump-organ. Sing
ers, dressed in medieval French
costumes, were singing the old.
old French folk songs. People,
sitting around and eating brandicd
cherries, joined in on the choruses.
This was the “College Side’’ of
the Beaux Arts students of Paris.
It is called the “Oubliette Rouge."
Miss Barker visited this place
the first time with her cousin, who
is a student at the Beaux Arts.
This summer she visited it a sec
ond time, taking with her Anne
Kistner, who was traveling with
hc-r in Europe, and several other
American girls.
"The Oubliette Rouge is a much
more amusing place than the Col
lege Side,” Miss Barker said, and
told the history of the place.
In the days of the French kings,
certain political enemies were in
veigled to the Louvre to attend a
large ball. In the course of the
evening one such man would be
whisked away to the basement of
the palace, and through a long,
winding underground passage,
which goes beneath the Seine to
the group of little stone rooms.
At the threshold of the largest of
these—the one that today is used
as a little restaurant and student
meeting place—the victim would
step, all unaware, upon a turning
stone. As the stone tipped he
would fall into a deep hole in
which were sharp knifelike blades.
The slashed body then fell into the
Seine and was carried away.
“It's full of atmosphere and is
a perfectly charming place!” Miss
Barker exclaimed. “On the walls
are markings of the prisoners.
Between some of the rooms are
heavy iron gates. Remnants still
exist between others. These gates
are made of horizontal bars of
heavy iron and vertical bars cross
ing them. In some rooms one
can find the iron hoops with which
the prisoners were bound.”
One of the interesting facts
brought to light by the discoveries
of underground p'assages under
the Seine is that the subway be
neath the Hudson river in New
York is not the first time, as it
was formerly thought, that the
feat has been accomplished, ac
cording to Miss Barker.
"Across the city and almost at
the top of Montmarte are the
places where the French bourgeois
go. They never go to the night
clubs the Americans .know so much
about. They don’t know anything
about them,” she said. “The Paris
night clubs we hear about are op
erated solely for the Americans
and other foreigners.”
Miss Barker described the places
where the French working class
go for entertainment as old houses
“THE GRAND
OLD MAN
OF THE
SCREEN”
HEI
Shows at
WARNER’BI
that have been turned into restau
rants or eating places, with floor
space left clear for dancing and
for the entertainments.
Red and white checked cloths
covered the tables lighted with
candles and set with a bottle of
wine and a “meter" of bread, at
"Le Lapin Agile," which Miss Bar
ker visited.
“Wc were the only Americans
there and the people certainly did
stare.
"The men wear no coats and
have kerchiefs tied around their
necks. They can’t be bothered by
collars," she explained.
“The music is very fast and the
dancing, which is fast and jerky,
looks a lot like the rat-racing that
we sometimes do around here,"
Miss Barker asserted.
Junior First Team
W ins Aquatic Meet
Freshmen Defeated; Four
Squads Compete
The junior first team defeated
the freshman second team, and the
sophomore second and junior sec
ond contest was tied last night in
the sixth meet of women's intra
mural swimming.
The meet, which was run off
with all four teams competing at
once, dropped first places to the
following natators: ctawl, Edith
Jessop, junior first; free style, Lois
Nelson, junior first; plunge, Ida
Montague, freshman second; breast
stroke, junior first by default; and
diving, junior first by default.
Fanny Vick-Pierce, head of wo
men's intramural swimming, man
aged the meet last night during
the absence of Miss Ernestine Troe
mel, coach, who is attending the
Washington-Oregon physical edu
cation conference at Longview,
Washington. Juanita assisted her. |
Honorary Initiates Five
At Meeting Held Friday
Five new members of the French
honorary, Pi Delta Phi, were init
iated yesterday afternoon at a
meeting held at the Alpha Chi
Omega house at 4 o’clock.
The new members are: Barbara
Barker, Juanita Demmer, Florence
Kalloway, Mildred Weeks, and Mrs.
George Williamson. Tea was served
after the initiation.
MODERN
DANCE
—Thurston—
SATURDAY, DEC. 6
Auspices of
AMERICAN
LEGION
SUNDAY
MONDAY
and
TUESDAY
lO &T prase:',C
GEORGE
I A Picture
To Live in
Your
Memories!!
The Screen Sensation
of the Year!
. - ■ i^|| u. ^ i.j .. -
//V
« Cngfeh
What a Grand Old I
Sinner He Was
They knew how to sin
in the good old days.
A gentleman wan
judged by the ladies he
loved and the liquor he
drank. And “Old Eng
lish” was a gentleman
of the first rank!
LAST TIMES TONIGHT
“Oh Sailor
Behave”
X
Direct from
its $2.00
run on
Broadway!
Wright To Attend
Three Meetings
During Holidays
Oregon Professor To Read
Papers at Eastern
Conventions
Dr. Leavitt O. Wright, profes
sor in the romance -language de
partment, plans to travel to the
Hast during the Christmas holi
days to take part in three annual
conventions of language groups,
having just received word from the
president’s office of the approval
of the board of higher education.
At Boston on December 26 and
27, Dr. Wright will read a paper
in the general session of the meet
ing of the American Association of
Teachers of Spanish. The title of
the paper is “The Disappearing in
Spanish Verb Form in -EE.” He
will also meet with the executive
council of the association as a
member representing the western
states, and as president of the Ore
gon chapter of the association he
will present a report to the con
vention.
Dr. Wright will attend two meet
ings at Washington, D. C. From
December 29 to 31, he will be pres
ent at the meeting of the Modern
Language Association of America
where he will read a paper on "In
ternal Evidences as to the Author
ship of 'La Estrella de Sevilla.’ ”
Immediately following this meet
ing, Dr. Wright will attend the
conclave of the Linguistic Society
of America, which is being held I
from December 31 to January 1.
“The Earliest Shift of the Span
ish -EA Verb-Form From the In
dicative Function to the Subjunc
tive: 1000-1300 A. D.” is the title
of the paper he will read.
Mud Turlies Win Hockey
Game From Alligators
The “Mud Turtles,” captained
by Thelma Lund, defeated the “Al
ligators,” captained by Lucille
Hill, by the score of 2 to 0 in a
closely fought all-star hockey
game, yesterday afternoon.
Thelma Lund and Mary Wilburn
starred on the Mud Turtle team,
the latter scoring both points. The
Mud Turtle backfield was unusual
ly strong and they showed excep
tional team work.
The game yesterday was played
on a slippery field that seemed
best suited to the mud turtle tem
perament; however, a second game
will be played this morning at 10
o'clock when the field will be dryer
and the action faster.
PAGEANT TO CLIMAX
INTERNATIONAL WEEK
(Continued from Page One)
can native life. Then home again
and a return to the studio of the
artist and his friend.
Music arrangements for the pro
duction are under the direction of
Pale Brown. Marshall Honn is in
charge of the lighting effects.
“The two performances hope to
warrant everyone's seeing the pag
eant.” Markewitz said yesterday.
“It is bigger and more colorful
than last year and it is hoped that
it will present a pleasing picture
of different nations at play. It
•should make a fitting close to this
year's International week.”
Prices are 15 cents for the mat
inee and 25 cents in the evening.
Dine and Dance
Saturday
Night
at
MIDWAY
For Reservations Phone
SPRINGFIELD 194
— $1.50 Per Couple —
Music by Leo’s Varsitarians
COLONIAL]
The Grandest Show of ’Em All
STARTS
SUNDAY
Sec for yourself why folks paid
$6.00 a scat to thrill to the
marvelous showmanship of h'lo
Ziegfcld. Here is the famous
Broadway producer's greatest
show at popular prices. The
are of all comedies with up
roarious Eddie at his merriest.
Contracted Prices as Set
by United Artists Corp.
NIGHTS—50c
MATINEES—35c
Tonitfe
at 11
The Big
Midnite
Preview
RCHNZZIKFEID
xmiiecmm
IN
■ Mr'
Announcing
The First Presentation with “Whoopee”
of the Giant New
Magnascopic Screen
“TRUE AS LIFE”
The Amusement World’s Latest Invention That Endows
the Talking Picture with
COLOR—DEPTH—S WEEP
COME ALONG FOR YOUR BIGGEST THRILL IN THE
SHOW WORLD