M Dolp Leads in
Initial Round
Of Medal Plaj
\arsity ami Frosh Golfers
Reach Half-Way Mark
In Tryouts
Par 72 Is Low Score; Will
Is Second, Gruenig
Ranks Third
The 1931 edition of the Webfoot
golf squad opened its season at
the Eugene Country club yester
day. Long-hitting Captain Vince
k Dolp set an example for the com
peting mashie-wielders with a
sparkling 72, even par for the Eu
gene course.
Close on Dolp’s heels came
George Will, former captain of the
team. Will stroked the 18 holes
for a good 73. Perhaps the most
sensational golf of the afternoon
was played by Chuck Gruenig, a
sophomore. Gruenig required 42
strokes for the first nine. He then
proceeded to make three birdies
and an eagle on the incoming nine
for a nice 33.
Frosh Play Good Game
Next came Harry Kincaid and
Frank Shafer with 77's. Ken
Swan, with a 78, was the only
other varsity man to break 80.
Bob Adelsperger scored an even
80, Bill Grigsby of last year’s frosh
team and Wilson Johnston had 81
each, and Bob Near took 82
strokes.
The halfway mark finds only six
varsity men under 80. Were it not
for the several scores in the low
seventies, the varsity would be
overshadowed by the frosh. Six
yearlings managed to keep under
80. Bill Manning, clinging to the
middle of the fairway, stroked the
course for 76. Tied at 77 each
Follow
Through
Swing clean and make the
green below par. Take
the new nine holes plus
this wonderful spring
weather . . . will give you
the thrill of the season.
L
were Heinie Jayne and Bob Stev
ens. Wally Hug, a southpaw-, and
Don Olson had 80's. Tom Em
mers scored 79.
Better Golf Expected Today
The qualifying test is only at
the halfway point now and today's
scores will probably bring out a
better showing.
Varsity scores follow:
Bob Adelsperger . 80
Bill Grigsby . 81
Bob Near . 82
Harrison Kincaid . 77
Elmer Zeller . 86
Bob Hammond . 88
Wilson Johnston . 81
George Will . 73
Vince Dolp . 72
Frank Shafer . 77
Ken Swan . 78
Trev Jones . 87
Charles Gruenig . 75
Frosh Scores
Jo Sax . 86
Don Olson . 78
Dick Near . 80
Bob Stevens. 77
V. Mapes . 80
W. Aetzel . 82
Phil Mulder ..f. 84
Bud Meyer . 84
Hal Rushton . 89
Tom Emmers . 79
Bob Sleeter . 83
Wally Hug . 78
Bill Manning . 76
Henry Jayne . 77
Ball Team Slated
To Play Bearcats
At Salem Today j
Willamette To Come Here ^
Tomorrow; Frosh Vie
This Afternoon
The Oregon varsity baseball
team will play its first practice
game of the season this afternoon
against the Willamette nine at \
Salem. Reinhart will leave with
his squad of men at 11 o’clock this
morning.
A return game with the Bear
I cats is scheduled here for tomor
row- afternoon.
The Webfoots, not even having
appeared as yet in public, are in
a formational stage. Just what i
the lineup will be is unsettled, ex- i
cept as to how it might be between
Coach Reinhart and himself. Any- 1
way, it won't make much differ
ence as without doubt most of the
men who make the trip will be
tried out during the game.
The batteries for Oregon today
will probably include Scales, or
Bloom, or Hughes, as pitcher and
either King or Shaneman at the
receiving end.
The frosh will play a game with
Eugene high school this afternoon
on the local field.
Measuring Device for
High Degrees Received
A device known as an optical!
pyrometer and to be used in read- I
ing temperature ranges on an elec
tric furnace has just been received
here by the physic department.
A unique method of guaging
temperatures is employed in this
device for the color of light inside
the furnace indicates the heat. !
for unusual service....
Call on Us
Clarke Electric Co.
846 Olive St.
Phone 514
HEILIG
Where you’ll meet th’ gang”
TODAY
and
WED. ONLY
Be a kid again . . . meet"
Skinny . . . ’n’ Bed . . . ’n
Fat . . . ’n’ all the old bunch
. . . in—
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A picture tor everyone who
likes kids . . . and has done all
^the things kids do. . . Mischief
ain’t nothin’
W////M
AND
THURSDAY
ONLY
‘Atlantic’
and
Friday
Only
‘CODE OF
HONOR’
and
Saturday
Only
“NIGHT
W ATCH” I
AND
THURSDAY—FRIDAY
and SATURDAY
ON THE STAGE
“VIRGIL”
America’s great magician
—with 3 complete changes
of show s!
EACH NIGHT
DIFFERENT
PERFORMANCE
S.A.E., Phi Delts,
Take Honors in
Intramural Races
Two Cups Each Taken b)
Relay Teams; Alpha
Upsilon Wins
Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Ph
Delta Theta each won two of th<
five trophies offered in the annua:
I intramural relays held last Satur
day on Hayward field to take all
honors. The Alpha Upsilon quar
tet won the mile relay to take the
fifth cup.
The S. A. E. team which ran in
both races constated of Cap Rob
! erts, Mason McCoy, Bob Voegtly,
I and Frank Anderson. They won
! the sprint medley in 1:42 and the
880-yard relay in 1:43. The Phi
Delt 440-yard relay team consist
ing of Sherwood Burr, Merrill
Stoddard, Bob Vaughn, and Dolp
Siegrist, took that event in .45:8,
while their distance medley team,
with Burr, Siegrist, Bob Hunter,
and Jack Hammond running, won
in 3:57.
The Alpha Upsilon mile quartet,
consisting of Will Arant, Gerald
Gray, Harold Carver, and Chuck
Dolloff, took that race in 3:46:2.
If the meet were figured on the
number of points won, the Phi
Delts could claim honors for they
also took a second in the mile-re
lay. The Kappa Sigs took two sec
onds in the 440 and sprint medley.
The Yeomen also copped two sec
onds, in the distance medley and
the 880-yard races.
I
PHILOSRAMS • ♦
SPOT DOPE ON n ...
port news By Phil Cogswell
Schedule Changed——
The baseball schedule for the
northern teams has been revised
to include the Huskies. Not re
vised exactly either, just reverted
back to the original one drawn up
last winter before Washington
withdrew from the league, con
templating a trip to the rice fields
of the Orient. Just before the ship
they were billed to leave on took
up the gangplank, the Huskies be
came worried over the state of
business depression that might
have hit the rice growers, so they
unpacked their bags, stayed at
home, and have been admitted to
the northern family again.
Opens This Week—
Now' the baseball business is
getting serious. The schedule sets
the season up almost two w’eeks.
The opening contest will be played
here this coming Friday and the
guests will be the O. S. C. Beavers.
This hurrying up of things won’t
help the Webfoots any for the
squad is just beginning to get in
shape. Bad weather has kept the
men inside until recently, and the
intermittent sunshine, wind, etc.,
has caused a lot of sore arms. The
pitching staff, which is going to
be such an important factor this
season, is hardly ready to start the
grind at any rate.
Cross-Country Goes—
Cross-country as a major sport
has been abolished by the execu
tive council because there has been
little interest shown in it from all
standpoints. Cross-country was
given major ranking three years
ago during a period of athletic
prosperity here. Five letters were
given each season. Probably it is
justifiable to abolish the long dis
tance race, but it is to be regret
ted just the same. No longer will
we see the boys come struggling
in to the finish in the traditional
grind before the football game
with the Staters.
* * *
Mow to Track—
The failure of cross-country to
maintain itself will undoubtedly af
fect the track team. It has been
a great developing sport for the
distance men. Ralph Hill gives it I
credit for helping him a lot. There
being no reward now, there will be
little incentive for the track men
to train in the fall.
However, there was not much
enthusiasm this last season when
letters were to be earned. Coach ,
Hayward was hardly able to find
10 men necessary to fill the team.
If is lamentable, though, that any
thing must happen to discourage
Oregon’s track for Hayward ex
periences enough difficulty under
most favorable conditions. j
i
Revised Northern Baseball Schedule
Date
April 24
April 25
April 29
April 30
May 1
May 2
May 4
May 5
May 6
May 7
May 8
May 9
May 11
May 12
May 15
May 16
May 18
May 19
May 20
May 21
May 22
May 27
May 28
May 29
May 30
Wash.
w. s. c.
w. s. c.
Idaho
Idaho
Oregon*
Oregon*
O. S. C.*
O. S. C.*
Oregon
Oregon
O. S. C.
O. S. C.
Idaho*
Idaho*
W. S. C.*
W. S. C.*
\v. s. c.
Idaho
Idaho*
Wash.*
Wash.*
Ore.*
Ore.*
O. S. C*
O. S. C*
Idaho
Idaho*
O. S. C.
O. S. C.
Oregon
Oregon
Wash.
Wash.
Oregon
O. s. c.
o. s. c.*
Idaho
'Idaho
W. S. C.
w. s. c.
Wash.
Wash.
Wash.*
Wash.*
Idaho*
Idaho*
W. S. C.*
W. S. C.*
O. S. C.
O. S. C.*
*Stars indicate teams at top of column travels.
o. s. c.
Oregon*
Oregon
Idaho
Idaho
W. S. C.
W. S. C.
Wash.
Wash.
Idaho*
Idaho*
W. S. C.*
W. S. C.*
Wash.*
Wash.*
Oregon*
Oregon
Idaho
w. s. c.*
V/. s. c.
Oregon*
Oregon*
O. S. C.*
O. S. C.*
Wash.*
Wash.*
W. S. C*
W. S. C.
o. s. c.
o. s. c.
Oregon
Oregon
Wash.
Wash.
Final Donut Archery
Call Issued to Girls
Today will be the last day for
anyone interested in intramural
archery to sign up for it or to turn
out for practice, according to
Kathryn Kjosness. This decision
was necessitated because of the
coming inter-collegiate archery
meet which makes the assignment
of equipment and the commencing
of hard practice necessary.
About 30 girls have signed up
for archery and are now entered
in preparation for the big meet
which is being sponsored by the
University of Wisconsin, winners
of the meet last year in which
Oregon came out second. No ex
perience is necessary, however,
any girl having a knowledge of
archery is urged to turn out today
before it is too late.
Starting this week practices
will be counted by the number of
ends shots, instead of by turnouts.
The new hours for archery are, 5
o’clock on Monday, Wednesday,
and Friday; 4 o’clock on Tuesday,
and 11 o’clock on Saturday. Kath
ryn Kjosness will have charge of
the shootings on Monday, Tues
day and Thursday; Evelyn Hamil
ton will have charge on Wednes
Now Is
The Time
To get your
Oregon Seal
Book-ends
or
Memory Book
We are having a
10% reduction
See Us
UNIVERSITY
PHARMACY
11th and Aldei
day, and Dorothy Illidge, president
of the Archery club, will have
charge of the Saturday morning
practices.
Two Seniors Honored
By Journalism Award
Rex Tussing and Beatrice Ben
nett, both seniors in journalism,
were awarded the Sigma Delta Chi
honorary emblem for high schol
astic work at the University, ac
cording to information received
yesterday.
The award is made annually up
on recommendation of the dean to
those journalism majors who have
done superior work not only in
journalism subjects but in a gen
eral journalism course, and whose j
grade average is in the upper
tenth of the graduating class.
The award is the privilege of
wearing the honor emblem which
is something of a Phi Beta Kappa
of journalism, according to Dean
Allen.
“Sigma Delta Chi has been en
gaged, for several years, in a cam
paign to raise the scholarship of
journalism students whether they
are members of Sigma Delta Chi
or not,” Dean Allen said. “The
work of these two students has
been very good and the signifi
cance of the award which they re
ceived is recognized throughout
the country.”
Rex Tussing is now associate
editor of the Emerald and he has
been an editorial writer all this
year. During previous years he
has been reporter and chief night
editor. Beatrice Bennett worked
! as reporter and assistant night edi
; tor during her sophomore year and
was night editor during her junior
I year.
Five Abstract Copies
Ordered by Council
At the last meeting of the Grad
uate Council it was decided that
applicants for maste.r’s degrees
must file five copies of their ab
, stract along with their thesis with
the council, in order that each
member of the board may have a
copy for reference.
The graduate council meets Wed
nesday at 4 o'clock in the graduate
office.
Mothers To Receive
Pins From Students
Sons and daughters at the Uni
versity of Oregon will have an op
portunity of expressing their love
in an appropriate way by the pre
sentation of Mother’s pins on Moth
er’s day, May 9. The pins, which
are made of gold in an attractive
design, may be purchased for $1
from the office of the president
any time between now and Moth
er’s day.
A special program is being
planned for that day, which is part
of the Junior Week-end festivities,
when hundreds of mothers are ex
pected here from all over the state.
A correction has been announced
in the donors for the cups which
will be presented to the men’s and
women’s organizations having the
most mothers present for the oc
casion. Mrs. Charles Hall, of
Marshfield, will give one, while
Mrs. Frank Heitkemper, of Port
land, will be the donor of the oth
er, instead of Mrs. W. M. Cook,
as formerly announced.
A banquet honoring the moth
ers and their University children
will be the feature of the week
end, which will be held at Gerling
er hall, preceding the Junior Prom.
Other events will include a mass
meeting, teas, and a special ves
pers service, as well as attendance
at the regular junior week-end fes
tivities.
MORTAR BOARD BALL
TICKETS NOW ON SALE
(Continued from Faye One)
pie; Alpha Omicron Pi, Elizabeth
Plummer; Alpha Phi, Adele Wede
meyer; Alpha Xi Delta, Helen
Chaney; Beta Phi Alpha, Maida
Ehler; Chi Omega, Betty Jones; j
Delta Delta Delta, Ardis Ulrich.
Hendricks hall, Laura Porcells
and Betty Zimmerman; Kappa
Kappa Gamma, Elizabeth Strain,
Phi Mu, Mary Ellen Bradford; Pi
Beta Phi, Barbara Tucker; Sigma
Kappa, Marjorie Needham; Delta
Gamma, Louise Ansley; Delta
Zeta, Jessie Judd; Gamma Phi
Beta, Louise Webber; Kappa Al- j
pha Theta, Carol Werschkul; Kap- [
pa Delta, Beth Solway; Susan
Campbell hall, Dorothy Johnson;
Zeta Tau Alpha, Eleanor Jane Bal
lantyne. |
Phi Belt Wins
Close Contest
By 1-0 Score
Sigma Pi Tans Fail To
Make Slugging and
Pitching Count
Betas Turn Puff Ball Game
Into Rout; Yeomen
Win Again
BASEBALL TODAY
4:00
Sigma Nu vs. Gamma hall.
Phi Delt vs. Pi Kap.
By ED GOODNOLGH
Phi Delts, hitless wonders of the
intramural leagues, played an up
hill game yesterday agaipst a Sig
ma Pi Tau squad that out hit and
outpitched them to win by their
usual score of 1-0. It was a tough
break for Ken Potts, Sigma PI Tau
chucker, who fanned 16 men while
his mates found Steve Fletcher for
five lusty blows, only to toss their
chances away.
Don Lewis constituted the Phi
Delt offense. He doubled in the
first inning, which turned out to
be the sum total of Phi Delt hits,
and drew a walk in the sixth. He
profited by this latter opportunity,
pilfering second and third, and
thence scoring on an outfielder’s
attempt at Steve Fletcher’s diffi
cult fly back of second.
Fletcher Gets in Bad
Fletcher started the game in
fine shape and didn’t yield a blow
until the third. Hornbeck got on
base in the second due to an in
field boot, but Amy Lawrence’s
peg nipped him in an attempted
steal. Another bobble gave Dins
more life in the third but he also
fell foul of Lawrence’s whip to
second. Cogswell walked at this
point and Hegdahl dumped a sin
gle into right, but Fletcher recov
ered and fanned two to end the
inning.
The Sigma Pi Taus threw the
game away in the sixth. A Phi
Delt boot put Mitchelson on first
and he stole second. Short knocked
out a scratch hit to right that
Mitchelson endeavored to get home
on. He was only out a matter of
20 feet or so, Short going to sec
Perfect
Tennis
Weather
Requires
Perfect
Tennis
Equipment
Rackets—Balls
Presses—Shoes
Expert Stringing
Workmanship guaranteed
the
ond on the play. Marlatt came
through with a nicely placed
smash past second that should
have scored Short. However, he
got a slow start and was also an
easy out at the plate.
Rally Falls
Horhbeck and Dinsmore clicked
out singles in the seventh, but
Fletcher succeeded in stifling the
rally. Amy Lawrence’s defensive
play rivaled Lewis's offensive
work while Emmett and Marlatt
gave Potts nice support.
Beta made a track meet out of
their puff ball clash with Delt,
slamming out 22 runs while Gun
ther held the Delts to one tally.
Friendly barely took Alpha 11-10,
Sig Ep won from Bachelordon
13-6, while the Yeomen received
a forfeited game from Chi Psi.
GRAND JURY SYSTEM
CRITICIZED BY MORSE
(Continued from Page One)
who would speed up the adminis
tration of criminal law justice.
The Law Review contains also
an editorial in memory of the late
Judge Robert S. Bean. Students
who have contributed to the Note
and Comment section of this issue
are Francis Coad, Theodore Conn,
Roy L. Herndon, and Forrest E.
Cooper. Students who have con
tributed to recent case notes are
Thomas T. Chave Jr., C. F. Shim
anek, Joe McKeown, William Kuy
kendall, and H. E. Green.
Book reviews were contributed
by Charles E. Carpenter, dean of
the school of law, and Professor
Morse. Charles G. Howard, pro
fessor of law, is editor of the Law
Review.
Yearling Tennis
Squad Takes All
Opening Matches
Coach Steve Smith’s frosh ten
nis squad opened their 1931 season
last Saturday with a complete
sweep of singles and doubles
matches against Albany high
school. The matches were played
on the campus courts.
The yearlings took five singles
and two doubles matches. In the
singles Don Lewis defeated Bik
man of the preppers, 6-0, 7-5; Bob
Johnson defeated Callister, 6-0,
6-0; Jim Edmiston defeated Ben
nett, 6-0, 6-1; Bob Hauge defeated
Pollack, 6-3, 10-8; and Ed Gordin
ier defeated Senders, 6-3, 6-1.
Johnson and Edmiston paired to
gether to defeat Bikman and Cal
lister in the doubles, 6-0, 6-4, and
Goodall and Gordinier teamed up
to defeat Sender and Bennett, 6-3,
6-3.
The frosh open hostilities against
the Oregon State rook squad next
Saturday morning at Corvallis.
Home Made
Pastry
Nothing like good pastry
to finish off a good meal.
. . . Our home-made pastry
will please you.
ELECTRIC TOASTWICH
SHOPPE
786 E. 11th Street
VDOVill)
D/jrcrfioh FOX WEST COAST THEATRES.
She has
taken the
campus by
storm—
TODAY IS
YOUIt LAST
'CHANCE TO SEE
The screen’s most fascinating star—
tlissa
‘Z* LAND I
in Fox Movietone drama
BOD^SOUL
With CHARLES FARRELL
HUMPHREY BOGART
MYRNA LOY
Start
Laughing
TOMORROW
No. 2
of the “Big 8”
A FOX
MOVIETONE
CLASSIC
LAUGH till it hurts!
WILL ROGERS
in Mark. *lruain's
"CONNECTICUT YANKEE
, . MAURHN O'SUIUVAN MYRNA LOY
wl,h FRANK ALBERTSON WILLIAM FARNUM
Dlractad by
David Bullar
Again—he's sweeping your clouds away! The man
who makes the whole world happy!
Vw.
U Pnraminmt 1
me iune
TODAY
FRI. & SAT.
OF
PAR\*
FRANCESDEE
COLONIAL 25c