Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, January 29, 1931, Page 3, Image 3

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    The Emerald ♦
SCORE
BOARD
By Phil Cogswell
Attitude Toward
Football Men Changes
It used to be a popular notion
that football warriors of a college
were to be treated as men apart.
It was considered that the toil
they put in learning the game, and
the risk they ran to life and limb,
playing it, made them martyrs.
• They did so much for the school
^ it was taken as a matter of course
that the school owed them a
standing debt of gratitude.
But times have changed and the
weight of obligation has shifted
now to rest on the shoulders of
the players. A school such as the
University of Oregon offers its
football men many things. It of
fers them training under a famous
coach so that after his playing
is over he will have a good recom
mendation for gaining a coaching
job himself. Offers him travel, as
for instance next year the team
will travel 12,000 miles. Offers to
help him finatice his way through
school. Expends, according to
Hugh Rosson, about $1000 on each
man. Gives him rewards of merit
^ to cherish through life.
Spears Glail
No One Killed
In return the University has the
right to expect and demand that
each football player work hard
and conscientiously with the ulti
mate aim being perfection of the
team.
Spears has said that the foot
ball players can’t see a national
championship, all they can see is
winning a few games around here.
He has said that he has been ac
cused of overworking the boys
when about every man on the
squad gained eight or more pounds
of weight during the season. He
said Tuesday night with great sar
casm that he was pleased to get
through the season without actu
ally killing anyone off. He de
clared that in 15 years of coaching
his hands were really bloodless.
►
Football practice is going to
start again soon. It will be spring
training wherein there is not much
fun but a lot of sweat. It would
seem best that if a man didn't
feel any obligations towards the
school and the coach, he had bet
ter not go out.
Ducks Work
For Struggle
With Staters
Game Saturday Night Has
Dope Favoring Men
At Corvallis
O.S.C. Victory Over Husky
Booms Stock; Local
Five Inconsistent
The Webfoot hoop team, ugly
duckling of the Northern division
conference, is being groomed by
Bill Reinhart, coach, for the hos
tilities it will take up Saturday
night with the tough Beaver out
fit, jubilant conquerors of the
champion Huskies.
Over at Corvallis, Slats Gill,
who is always urging his Oregon
Staters to do big things, seems to
have the edge and everything else
in his favor for the feud.
Oregon’s threat will depend
largely on the showing of Vince
Dolp and Kerm Stevens, as com
pared with the sharp-shooting of
Ballard and Lyman, and upon the
way Eberhart, Levoff, and Rob
erts stack up against Fagan,
Grayson, and Merrill, distinguished
Oregon Staters.
Against the Washington aggre
gation in the first game the
Staters looked nearly as bad as
Oregon, but in the second game,
Gill's boys flashed an offensive en
tirely unprecedented this year and
wilted the Huskies right off the
floor.
If Reinhart’s squad does any
thing in the way of winning Sat
urday night it will have to show
considerable more improvement in
the way of consistency than it
has yet. Seemingly, the Ducks’
inability to prolong a rally and
carry their good playing through
out the entire game has been their
downfall. When the opponents
got ahead they played keep away,
dragged the Oregon defense out to
the rhiddle of the floor and then
scored faster than ever. Since the
Staters have a tall outfit, they
will have an advantage and, if
they pile up a lead, they can be
expected to stall.
DATES FOR SCHOOL OF
CHAMBER MEN ARE SET
(Continued from Pape One)
Harold Crary, publicity director of
the Boeing Air Transport company
of Seattle, will be asked to lead a
discussion on “Aviation as an Ad
vertising Medium for the Cham
n
Oregon Pharmacy
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ber.” E. G. Harlan, assistant man
ager of the Oregon State cham
ber of commerce, will have charge
of the technical discussions, ac
cording to the tentative program.
Aviation Discussion Set
“Who Will Settle Matters on
Chamber of Policy" is the subject
of a discussion to be directed by
H. E. Cully, of the United States
National bank of Portland. This
subject is expected to arouse much
interest since it will involve the
degree of latitude to be assumed
by the secretaries as against the
other chamber officials. President
Gilkey will have charge of the top
ic, "Promotion of Wider Use of
Oregon Products.” An active par
ticipant in this discussion will be
Dan E. Freeman, secretary of the
Oregon Manufacturers’ associa
tion.
The secretaries will hold their
meetings in the rooms of the
school of business administration,
while accommodations will be fur
nished them in the new men's dor
mitory, according to present plans.
Fencers Prepare
For Tournament
Thirty Blariesmen Working
Out at Men's Gym
Oregon’s fencing trio, Waggon
er, Winetrout, and Killion, who
captured the Northwest title last
year at Corvallis, are working out
at the gym daily with a sizeable
group of veterans and elementary
swordsmen in preparation for the
annual fencing tourney to be held
sometime in February.
By the completition of the donut
tourneys now running and the all
campus wrestling meet Coach
Warren Powell will have his
bladesmen in excellent condition
for the bouts as he has 30 men
working out daily, 19 of them for
credit. In addition to last year's
team Les Whitehouse and James
Whitman are experienced men on
whom Powell is relying to help re
tain the championship while Mor
ris Porter, Millard Younger, Gor
don Fisher, Sidney Gevurtz, Cur
tis Barnes, and Irwin Hill are be
ginning fencers that show prom
ise.
No outside matches have been
scheduled as yet but Coach Pow
ell is hopeful of meets with O. S.
C. and Heed. Meanwhile the fenc
ers are eyeing the university cham
pionship held by Dick Waggoner,
who is also the individual North
west intercollegiate king.
SPORTS
SHORTS
Gambling, says Marshall Duf
field, U. S. C. quarterback, is the
spectre which hangs menacingly
over intercollegiate football. Bet
ting is on an ever increasing scale.
Unless curtailed he believes it will
cause the downfall of the game.1
. * * *
Coach Ingram, of California,
says, “I believe football, the right
kind of football, is the greatest
thing in college life.”
* * *
Izzy Hoffmann, en route north
with the Oakland baseball team,
lost heavily in a poker game. He
placed a $20 bill on the table and
said, "That’s the last you fellows
will win off me.” A puff of wind
blew the note out the window onto
the prairie.
* * *
Illinois is having a hard time
with basketball officials. In the
games with Northwestern and
Wisconsin, the timer's gun mis
fired and they couldn’t get the
games stopped.
Tea Today for Lore Deja
To Be at Susan Campbell
The tea given by Master Dance
for Lore Deja, famous German
dancer, this afternoon will be held
at Susan Campbell hall instead of
at Alumni hall as previously an
nounced.
The dancer, who has just arrived
from Seattle where she has been
sponsored in various recitals by
the Cornish School of Dance, will
dance Friday evening at Gerlinger
i hall. She is one of the foremost
exponents of the new rhythmic
dances, only arriving in America
‘f^om Europe in November.
Gamma Pi Chosen as New
Name of German Club
Gamma Pi is the new name of
the German club, chosen at the
meeting last night. Nominations
for the office of vice-president
were to have been held, but that
part of the program was postponed
until the next meeting.
Tuesday night at 7:30 the Ger
man club will meet again. An il
| lustrated talk by a prominent
i speaker will be the main feature
of the program, according to Min
nie Heizei, president of the group.
Ducklings Meet
OSC Rooks Here
On Friday Night
Rivalry Will Be Resumed
WThen Yearling Quintets
Clash at Igloo
The Oregon freshmen and the
Oregon State rooks will ^resume
their bitter rivalry which found
them even up at the end of the
grid season, when the two yearling
basketball quintets meet in the
first of a four-game series tomor
row night at the Igloo. A return
game will be played Saturday
night at Corvallis.
Two of last fall’s football aces
will meet again when the two
teams tangle. Joe Lillard, spectac
ular halfback, and Harold Joslin,
who crashed the line so effective
ly for the rooks, will mix. Lillard
holds down the pivot position for
the frosh, while Joslin is a guard.
Reports" from Corvallis indicate
that the rooks have a strong com
bination. Their pre-season record
is very similar to that of the frosh.
They have won one game from
Grant high of Portland and two
from the Willamette university
freshmen, and dropped one each
to Commerce high and Molalla.
The rooks will present a power
ful starting lineup. Julius Len
chitsky, center, is an all-star from
Scranton, Pennsylvania. He is tall
and fast and will prove stiff com- j
petition for Lillard.
Ed Atkinson, from San Francis
co, and Harold Brown, former :
Commerce high star, hold down the !
first string forward berths. Guards j
are Joslin, from Baker high, and !
Jack Richardson, from Lincoln
high.
Coach Prink Callison announced |
last night that La Grande Hough
ton, regular guard, who has been
out with an injured hip, is still
out and may not be able to play
tomorrow. Either Johnny Jeffers 1
or Harold Schechtman may take
his place. Lillard will take over
the center job, Temps!” the other
guard berth, and Wilson and Watts
will start as forwards.
Student-Faculty Forum
Will Meet Tonight at 6
The Student-Faculty Relations
Forum, dealing with the problems
of religious life on the campus,
will hold their third dinner meet
ing tonight at the Faculty club at
6 p. m.
The purpose of these forums is
to discover appropriate policies to
be followed on the campus.
A shelf of recent religious books
has been placed in the main library
for the help in a discussion of the
problems to be considered by the
group.
Oregon Co-ed First Woman
To Do Solo Flight in Eugene
Elizabeth Gull ion Flies
Airplane First Time
Without Aid
“Oh, it's perfectly grand,” ex
ulted Elizabeth Gullion, sopho
more in geology, in describing her
sensation when making her "solo"
airplane flight. Miss Gullion has
the distinction of being the first
woman to “solo” at the Eugene
airport. She is also the first
woman whom her instructor, Har
old Sanders of the Hobi Airways,
has “soloed.”
Miss Gullion made her first
flight alone Tuesday afternoon
after she had been up for a few
minutes with Sanders at the stick.
They had been practicing landing
during the last three or four hours
of training, and following a land
ing Tuesday, Sanders jumped out
of the plane, a Travelair with an
OX-5 motor, and casually turned
the plane over to his protege, or
should we call her "prodigy”?
“Do you think I know enough
to take it up alone?” she asked,
and probably she gasped a little.
Sanders gave her permission, and
away she went. After taking off,
she circled the field and landed,
to be congratulated by all the pi
lots, mechanics, and others who
were at the field.
“Sandy had said that he had
never ‘soloed’ a woman student,
and he admitted he didn’t know
whether he’d ever take the plane
up again after he let me ‘solo’ or
not,” Miss Gullion confessed.
“When I landed I almost overshot
h
the field. When I was about four
feet from the ground, I pulled the
stick back a little too far, point
ing the nose of the plane up
slightly, and then we settled down
to a perfect three-point landing.
I expected that we would bump
some, but we didn’t a bit.”
Miss Gullion has had seven
hours’ total flying time. She
started taking flying lessons at
the Hobi Airways last October un
der the tutelage of Harold Adams,
who flew with her during her first
four hours in the air. He then
became a reserve pilot for the Pa
cific Air Transport. The rest of
her lessons have been with San
ders. She started having 15-min
ute lessons twice a week, but
lately, as the time for her “solo”
flight neared, she has been hav- !
ing more frequent flights.
In addition to actual flying ex
perience, Miss Gullion has been at
tending ground school at Hobi |
Airways. She intends to major in
geography, and is particularly in
terested in meteorology and navi
gation.
“I don’t really know- what I
want to do. I may take business
ad courses and go into the busi
ness end of flying,” Miss Gullion
explained. "But I think that any
one connected with flying in any
way will profit by being able to
fly himself.”
Miss Gullion has been interested ]
in flying, airplanes, and aviation J
since she was a senior in high
school, when she had her first
flight. She is a daughter of Dr.
and Mrs. O. R. Gullion of Eugene,
and a pledge of Delta Gamma.
Opening Saturday
January 31
Of Chet Hemenway Music Shop.
Wo carry the latest and best sheet music and phonograph
records.
Wo also carry musical instruments and music accessories.
You are welcome to make libs your downtown head
quarters. Miss Dorothy Gordon will have charge
of the shop.
CHET. HEMENWAY MUSIC SHOP
712 Willamette Street Phone 1008
Dri ve-y our-self
:
It saves time and money
For all of the campus doings
call Taylors for the best cars
in town - - - and at reason
able prices.
Taylor’s Garage
Between the Two Hotels
A.T.O. To Oppose
Beta Handballers
This Afternoon
Johnson May Meet Harvey
Benson in Main
Singles Duel
TODAY'S GAMES
Handball
4:20
A. T. O.-Beta.
Volleyball
4:00
Alpha liall-Sherry Ross.
Sigma N«-Phi Delt.
5:00
La Casa Filipina-Chi Psi.
Beta-Sigma Chi.
The intramural handball cham
pionship is at stake today with
A. T. O. opposing Beta at 4:20.
No favorite has been established
Decause it is uncertain how the
Dlayers will line up.
If Harvey Benson of A. T. O.
Dpposes Les Johnson in the singles
Lhe outcome of their duel should
decide the team winner because
Whitely would be favored over
Barendrick of Beta in the No. 2
singles while Jensen and Epps of
Beta are regarded as a steadier
doubles combination than Leedy
and Harper. The latter pair al
ready have one defeat chalked up
against them at the hands of the
Independents. However, it is un- ,
certain whether the best singles
players, Benson and Johnson, will ,
be pitted against each other. In |
this case the singles would be di
vided and Beta favored to triumph
in the doubles.
The volleyball games were of
the usual caliber, A. B. C. winning
from Gamma hall, S. A. M. cap
turing two straight from Friendly
hall by the close scores 16-14,
15-11, and Sigma Pi Tau winning
from Zeta hall in another tight en
counter 15-13, 15-10. Smith’s In
HEILIG
Shows at I—!$—5—-7—i)
LAS! TIMES TODAY
SALLY STARR
JOHNNY ARTHUR
“Personality”
FRL—SAT.
Marines on a rampage in
the grass-skirt belt!
STATE
Today and Friday
One of the most sensational
stories that ever came out
of the underworld.
MAMA
Meeting guns with guile. Play
ing the sweet mama of a
racketeer and saving her real
sweetheart's life!
ALL TALKING
COMEDY
NEWS - - - - PREVIEW
25c
dependents played with a make
shift lineup, the main cogs falling
to appear, and International house
did not have to extend themselves
to win ir>-13, 15-6, Allen, varsity
track star, led the International
group to victory.
Me/.' Frieml Elevated to
Peerage in Great Britain
A significant sign of the greater
appreciation by modern govern
ments of individual cooperation is
the elevation to the peerage of
Norman Angell, M. P., famous
British author on international
economics and political subjects,
j according to Dr. John R. Mez, pro
i fessor of political science, who has
just received a letter from Mr.
Angell, telling of the honor which
| has just been conferred on him.
Mr. Angell is a personal friend
; of Dr. Mez', who acted as his in
terpreter, when Mr. Angell made
a lecture tour of Germany before
the war. Mr. Angell is the author
of a number of outstanding politi
cal science books, among which
are "The Great Illusion,’’ "The
Story of Money,” "The Fruits of
Victory,”* anti others. That such
an outspoken opponent of war and
militarism should be so honored,
is exceptionally significant,
Fox West Coast Theaters
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manure
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ADOLPHE MENJOU
Dogville Comedy—"Flip” Cartoon—News
the LAW
UNIVERSAL
PICTURE.
MARY NOLAN
OWEN MOORE • • * EDWARD ROBJNJON
In high society or the underworld - - -
ever that eternal battle between two
men for a girl. All astounding melo
dramatic thriller.
COMING FRIDAY—
Buck Jones
in
“Desert Vengeance”
5 FREE PASSES
BEST NAME F.OR OUR _
New
Orchestra
PLAYING FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
$1.00 Per Couple
Phone Springfield 194 for Reservations
DANCE at MIDWAY
Carl Collins Playing Sunday