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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 5, 1931)
^ Oregon Golf Teams Sweep O.S.C. In Meet Finch Only Beaver Golfer To Score in Complete Varsity Landslide Frosh Divqt Artists Score Nearly as Impressive A Triumph Oregon varsity and freshmen golfers swamped their foes of Ore gon State college by scores of 20 to 1 and 16 to 2, respectively. The five-man varsity team was host to the Orangemen at Eugene Coun try club on Saturday. Though lacking the services of Captain Vince Dolp, the varsity team clearly outclassed the visitors, let ting them down with one solitary point for their efforts. Bob Finch of the Beaver team was the only visitor fortunate enough to win a point. He took this point at the expense of Bob Adlesperger, who came back to take the remaining two points. The rest of the team, George Will, number one; Frank Shafer, num ber two; Harrison Kincaid, number three, and Bob Hammond, number five, made a clean sweep, each winning all three points in the twosomes. Oregon Foursomes Win In the foursomes, the Oregon players took a total of six points. Will and Kincaid of Oregon trimmed Hawkins and Boagart of O. S. C., while Shafer and Adels perger of Oregon defeated McCook and Finch. George Will had a medal round of 73 in the morning. He is play ing consistently good golf lately and will bear watching in the coming Northwest division play offs next week-end. Vince Dolp will be on deck after having had some trouble with his hand. Frosh Come Through The frosh did their bit though their score was not quite so im pressing as was the varsity’s. Dick Near took three points, as did Bill Manning and Henry Jayne. Don Olson dropped one point to Beards ley of the rooks but saved the other two. In the foursomes, the frosh teams of Near and Manning and Olson and Jayne each returned with 21/, points. lu • Again! Southern Pacific DOLLAR DAYS $1 FOR EACH IOO MILES* Cent-a-mile for roundtrips over Mothers' Day MAY 8 and 9 FRIDAY 6* SATURDAY Good on all trains. Be back by midnight following Thursday. No better opportunity for a family reunion than Mothers’ Day — May 10 ... no better time to visit friends and relatives than right now. "Dollar Day” tickets are again on sale to all places on our Pacific Lines. Chil dren from 5 to 11 ride at half the Dollar Day fares. Children under 5, free. EXAMPLES Portland -.$ 2.30 Salem. 1-40 Marshfield.3.55 Klamath Falls. 4.95 Medford. 4.45 San Francisco.13.50 Los Angeles.21.90 •k Approximate Southern Pacific Buv tickets now — at anv Southern Pacific ticket office. Webfoot Tennis Squads Depart to Seattle for Play The varsity and frosh tennis I teams leave for Seattle this morn ing at 8:15 by auto. The teams j will play the University of Wash : ington net squads on May 6 and j may play in the Northwest play ! offs on May 8 and 9. The varsity players making the trip are Joe Kalisky, Jack Rhine, Ray Adams, and Tom Mountain. The frosh netmen leaving are Bob Johnson, 1 Don Lewis, Dick Goldthwaite, and I Jim Edmiston. Some of the play ers left yesterday for Portland to have their rackets repaired. . Zeta Hall Defeats Yeomen To Clinch Net Championship Victors Make Clean Sweep From Runners-Up; One Match Defaulted — Zeta hall is the winner of the intramural tennis tournament by virtue of winning all of their matches against the Yeomen yes terday, one of them by default. In the singles tilt, Reed of Zeta hall trounced Buel of the Yeomen, 6- 0, 6-3. Reed was too steady for | the Yeoman player, who was sub | stituting for Ahern, the regular Yeomen singles contestant. In the first doubles match, Smith and Hauge of Zeta defeated Thom and Kjosness of the Yeomen. 7- 5, 1-6, 9-7. The score of the match, especially in the last set, was teetering back and forth con tinually, but the Zeta hall players eked out a victory mainly through their lobbying tactics. The second doubles match was defaulted by the Yeomen to the Zeta hall team consisting of Se horn and DeGraff. SPRING DRAMA WILL OPEN ON GUILD STAGE (Continued from Page One) pose. The reliving of a childhood j experience explains peculiarities in the character as first presented to the audience and often helps that character to readjust himself to the conditions of his present life, j In stage technique the device may be compared to the movie “flash black.” This has seldom been tried in the legitimate theatre and nev er before without a change of scene. In “Hotel Universe” the shift to past time and setting is made only in the imaginations of the charac ter and the audience, the physical ! scene remains the same, the ter race of an old hotel of which the character Lily says, “It is fantas tic, this terrace, it just hangs , here; some day it will float off into ! space and anchor there like an is i land in time.” Shadows of a Great Eventl ILLICIT WILLIAM < POWELL defense KAY FRANCIS ^JU• And a Laurel Find Hardy “ANOTHER FINE MESS” « Colonial 25c TUES.—WED. CHAMP NUTS OF UNIVERSE NUTTIER ’N EVER . . . WffiffiSSW | Betas Become ! Cushion Ball Title Holders jl). Siegmnnd and Rinehart Provide Punch in 5 to 1 Win — Lewis and Scliectinan Star In Field; Director Also Present By ED GOODNOUGH Hank Levoff of S. A. M. la bored through six gruelling in nings to hold the Betas to their slimmest scoring spree of the sea son, but he faltered in the seventh and the Betas walked away with a 5-1 victory and the soft ball championship. Don Siegmund and Rinehart were the slugging stars of the fray, driving in four runs by smashing Levoff's offerings for a two-bagger apiece. Stymie Dolp was invulnerable throughout while Levoff’s mates backed him up nicely to send the contest into the third inning be fore a score was made. Here Lev off walked Chapman, and Ahearn smashed a grounder to Hal Lewis. Lewis relayed to second to catch Chapman, but Rubenstein dropped the ball. Don Siegmund landed on a change of pace pitch to rifle a double past second, scoring both runners. Dour Slegmund Hits Rinehart hit to Lewis and again the little third baseman fired to Ruby for a forceout. Ruby held onto the peg this time but forgot to stand on the base. Dotp wal loped out another smash at Lewis that the latter fielded perfectly, stepped on third, and fired to Ruby for a double play. Beta threat ened again in the fourth but made the mistake of slamming their shots at Lewis, who turned pros pective hits into forceouts at sec ond. Hal was also responsible for the lone Sammie marker. First up in the fourth, he caught one of Dolp’s speed balls for a single to left. Sol Director dumped a Texas leaguer back of second which sent Lewis to third. Levoff came through with a long sacrifice fly that scored Lewis in spite of Catcher Ed Siegmund’s efforts. Ruby Stages Comeback Both teams were held helpless until the Sammie half of the sixth when Rubenstein redeemed him self with a clean single to center and managed to reach third before his mates died with bats on their shoulders. Beta kept driving the ball down in Lewis’s territory, where the Sammie third baseman fielded everything he got his hands on. A h e a r n slapped a burning grounder at Rubenstein in the sev PHILOGRAMS * * SpobxDnews°n By Phil Cogswell W at-a-game— What a ball game that one yes terday turned out to be. The fight ing, never-give-up playing gets re warded as least once in a while. Coach Bill Reinhart has such an aggressive spirit himself, if he gets | the right kind of men together, j they are bound to assimilate it from him. Tying the score in the j eighth, getting two runs behind in the ninth and then coming out and scoring three more to win, certain ly adds a thrill to the game. But this kind of a rail was not alto gether a surprise. In the majority of games so far the team has been off to a bad start right at first, but has kept pegging away with anything but a beaten attitude. * * * Cougars Robbed— | “Just like picking a man’s pock ets,” was Buck Bailey’s comment on the game last night. Buck is the big, popular, Cougar baseball mentor, who was initiated into the distinguished club of baseball fans, the boys that wear the white l milking caps, here last year. And did you notice that he put on one of the caps again ? Mr. Bailey cer tainly tried hard to win that game yesterday. He had all the re sources of his club in the contest before it was over, but he couldn’t stop that rain of nine hits, the Webfoots clouted out in the last three innings. * * * Jones Fails— Oscar Jones, the big boy who went in to pitch for the Cougars in the ninth, and on which Oregon scored the three needed runs, is IWashington State’s leading pitcher. Jones, a speedball man, has hurled winning ball for the Cou gars, for two years previous to this one. He was also a member of that famous football team up there last fall. It should have been all over for the Webfoots when he took the mound job, but his repu tation failed to stick by him. * * * Play Again Today— Washington State has one of the best baseball teams in the league this year, and they looked as good as they were supposed to yester day. They played almost errorless ball in the field, contributed two double plays, and 10 hits. Their hurling corps is strong, too. Ore gon can expect to face a southpaw today, named Nelson, who is said to be pretty fair. If things start going wrong for the visitors Buck Bailey may have to be held by force from going out himself and pitching. cnth which caromed off Ruby into the outfield and went for a double. Levoff weakened and walked Kitz miller and Munholland. Ahearn scored on a fielder’s choice of Siegmund’s grounder and Rinehart duplicated Siegmund’s feat of driv ing in two runs with a swat into left field. Levoff singled to right in the same inning but was caught at the plate when he endeavored to score on Kitz’s muff of Lewis's fly. Kitz made a perfect throw to catch the sliding runner. Junior-Senior Girls Breakfast Plans Made Plans are now being made for the annual junior-senior breakfast which will be held Sunday morn ing, May 17, at 8:30 o’clock. Ac cording to Louise Weber, the gen eral chairman, the place of the j breakfast is still undecided and i will be announced later. All junior girls are urged to in vite senior girls and sign up at once with Miss Dorothy Thomas at the Y. W. C. A. bungalow for tickets. They will be 75 cents. Chairmen of the various com mittees are as follows: tickets, Bet ty Jones; attendance, Janet Os born; programs and decorations, Margaret Hunt; and service, Helen Hallowell. ! WEBFOOTS WIN OVER COUGARS IN BIG RALLY into the game just long enough to take the defeat on the chin. Using a tantalizing sidearm de livery, Fiscus kept the Webfoot sluggers subdued until the sev enth, letting Reinhart’s boys down with two hits. A pair of double killings by the Cougar infield helped him out of bad spots. With the Webfoots popping up easy flies, Washington State was plugging along steadily. The Cou gars put over one tally in the first and two more in the fourth. Al though Lee Chester made a nice running catch of a foul fly and Johnny Londahl snagged a low liner that was tagged as a sure single, errors figured largely in the Cougar scoring. Webfoots Hit in Seventh Dave Bloom’s fast one was slip ping past the batters, but they plunked his curve which was com ing over too high to be effective. Washington State added another in the seventh when Art McLar ney’s double drove Lee home from the keystone sack. With a 4-to-0 score staring them in the face, the Webfoots suddenly threw a hot coal in the dynamite barrel. Four singles in a row shook the confidence of the Cou gar pitcher. Shaneman opened with a Texas leaguer. Chester poked one off the end of his bat that found a hole between first and second. King squeezed a bunt along the third-base line that went for a safe hit. Londahl cracked out the fourth single, scoring both Shaneman and Chester. There the bombardment ceased as suddenly as it began. Bloom Hits in Pinch Again in the eighth the Web foots combed Fiscus. Following Brian Mimnaugh’s hit, Chester made first when the Cougar left fielder dropped his fly after a hard run. King went out via short With Johnny Londahl at the plate the Cougars tried some politics b> walking Johnny to get at Bloom. I This made Dave so mad that h( leaned against the horsehide on the first good pitch. The ball streaked into center field where Holsten stopped it and heaved it | in the general direction of the catcher. As the peg crossed the diamond midway between third and home, the Cougar infielders stood and watched it roll to the screen while Mimnaugh, Chester, and Londahl cast anchor at the plate. Cliff Potter’s grounder set tled things until the hectic ninth. The two teams battle again to day at 4 o'clock on Reinhart field. Ken Scales will be on the hill for Oregon. The score: W. S. C. (T) AB R H PO A E Olmo, 3b . 5 Dahlen, rf . 4 McLarney, ss .... 5 Ellingsen, lb .... 4 Holsten, m . 5 Mitchell, c . 4 Cooney, If . 4 Lee, 2b . 2 Koster, 2b . 1 Fiscus, p . 2 Jones, p . 0 0 10 2 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 3 0 4 0 1 1 12 0 0 ,114 0 1 0 12 0 0 0 0 10 1 2 0 4 3 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 12 0 1 0 0 0 0 7 10 24*11 2 Totals .36 *None out when winning run scored. Oregon (8) AB R H PO A E Potter, 3b . 5 0 110 1 Barnes, m . 4 Stevens, ss . 3 Mimnaugh, rf.... 5 Shaneman, c .... 4 Chester, lb . 3 King, If . 2 0 Londahl, 2b . 3 1 Bloom, p . 4 0 1 3 1 2 2 1 2 3 0 1 6 0 0 0 0 0 1 10 0 1 1 1 1 6 1 0 0 1 1 1 4 0 Totals .33 8 11 27 11 5 Score by innings: W. S. C.— Hits . 200 211 103—10 Runs . 100 200 103— 7 Oregon— Hits . 001 001 423—11 Runs . 000 000 233— 8 Summary—Two-base hits, Mc Larney, Barnes. Double plays, McLarney to Lee to Ellingsen 2. Sacrifice hit, Fiscus. Hits off Fis cus 8, Jones 3. Bases on balls, off Bloom 1, off Jones 1, off Fiscus 6. Struck out, by Bloom 3, by Fiscus 1. Wild pitch, Bloom. Los ing pitcher, Jones. Stolen base, Dahlen. Time, 1:45. Umpire, Frisco Edwards. Former Oregon Man Get;* Car Up. MeKenzie Prince Helfrich, junior in geol ogy in the University last year, drove his automobile past the sum mit of Deadhorsc grade on the McKenzie highway Thursday, the Eugene Register-Guard was told yesterday. Helfrich, accompanied by Dale Burns, went 70 miles up the high way, reporting that snow was go ing eff rapidly and that the pass might be opened by plows without much difficulty. Ann Baum Returns From A.W.S. Conclave Ann Baum, president-elect of A. W. S., returned last night on the 11 o’clock train from the East, where she has been attending the A. W. S. conference. Margaret Cummings, president of the association, did not come back with Miss Baum, but will return at a later date. Gamma Phi Beta, Clii Omega Meet On Field Today Four Gaines Scheduled for Week in Women’s Baseball The women’s intramural base ball teams, started as an experi ment, are rapidly swinging into a real kittenball tournament, with teams in 20 living organizations, three games already played, and four games scheduled for this week, according to Caryl Hollings worth, manager of baseball. This afternoon at 4 o’clock, the Chi Omegas will meet a picked nine from the Gamma Phi Beta house on the diamond south of Condon hall. On Wednesday the Thetas will play the Tri Delts, at 4 o’clock; on Thursday at 4 the Alpha O’s will play Alpha Xi Delta, and at 6 o’clock Sigma Kappa will play Alpha Gamma Delta. Miss Margaret Duncan will referee. Kappa Delta and Susan Camp bell hall, and Zeta Tau Alpha and Alpha Delta Pi will play games some time next week, the dates as yet undecided. Organizations hav ing teams but no games sched uled are Kappa Kappa Gamma, Pi Beta Phi, Alpha Chi Omega, Beta Phi Alpha, Delta Zeta, Phi Mu, and Independent. Commencing next week, a round robin tourna ment will be run off, and is in the process of being arranged, now, by Caryl Hollingsworth and Doris Payne. Arrangements of hours and playing dates can be made by calling 3234-W. Intramural Archery Co-eds Will Practice All girls who have signed up for intramural archery are requested to turn out for practices this week, Tuesday and Thursday at 4, and Monday at 5, in order to be come accustomed to longer range shooting, according to Kathryn Kjossness, student manager of archery. The targets, which formerly were placed at a range of 30 feet, are now at 40 and 50 feet, and practice is necessary to offset the new distance. With the beginning of next week a tournament will be started with the resulting best scoring shooters to appear in the intercollegiate shoot May 17. Frosh Take Practice Game From U.H.S. 3-0 The Webfoot frosh defeated the University high school baseball team yesterday, 3 to 0 on the frosh diamond. The game was ab breviated to seven innings. Ike Donin pitched for the yearlings while Mike Balkovich received him. Hits by Donin, McCall, Norval, and Olsen accounted for the runs. Several more practice games are scheduled between the two teams for this week. MISS EDMUNDSON NEW Y. W. C. A. SECRETARY (Continued from Page One) the past four years, will do full time study and research at Chi cago. Summer quarter she will enter the graduate school of social service administration to continue her studies in the field of psychia tric social work. "I regret very much leaving mj wor k here,” Miss Thomas said yes terday, “but I cannot resist suet a wonderftil opportunity.” Come Out and Play . . . out over the greenest fairways . . . rolling hills . . . a course you will enjoy. iLmarel udooIO ! I Psych Golf Team Takes Business Adders for Win “At last our offer to meet any four-man faculty-graduate stu dent golf team in the University has been answered,” said Dr. Rob ert H. Seashore, assistant profes sor of psychology, yesterday. "We played the business ad team Satur urday, and beat them, of course. “Golf is a game you can't learn in a day, so we have no fear of an answer from the geologists. But we would like to hear from the English men, the chemists, the edu cators, the biologists, the econo mists. "We are going to play the archi tecture team this coming Satur day, and will be ready to meet all comers at their convenience after that date.” Dr. Taylor made special men tion of the fact that the school of education, while claiming to have the best faculty golfer on the cam pus, has not yet accepted the chal lenge of the psychology depart ment. The terms of the challenge state that at least one man of the four-man team must be a member of the faculty, and at least one of the four must be a graduate stu dent. The other two may be either faculty members or graduate stu dents. Order of O Members To Be ‘Shot’ Tonight The respective and respectable members of the Order of the O will meet tonight at the Beta house at 6:15 to have their pictures taken. Kermit Stevens, new president, re quested that all the lett.ermen be on hand with their sweaters on, and in condition otherwise, to •stand before Sam Wilderman’s camera. QUEEN ELEANOR WILL RIDE ROCKET SHIP (Continued from Vuge One) bor Shawcross; Mary K. Fenton, flowers; Elizabeth Scruggs, Louise Webber, Lucille Krau, Julianne Benton, and Elizabeth Fletcher, costuming assistants. Psych Golfers Defeat Business Ad’s Teami The psychology department golf team defeated the business ad team Saturday in a match charac terized by Harry Hawkins, of tha losers, as "very close, very close.” Dr. Robert H. Seashore, Dr. Howard R. Taylor, Sig Seashore, and Donald Swanson composed tha psychology team. Dean Davtd'E. Faville, Professor Harry Hawkins, De Rycke, and Leslie NewhOusa played for the business aders. The losers have asked for a re turn game. It has been granted. her arms Couldn’t hold the bou-j quet! But just a few fresh, fragrt%t blooms on Mother’s Day will'tell her the message she longs to hear' —that you haven’t forgotten! Say it with FLOWERS on <JMother’s ‘Day MAY TENTH UNIVERSITY ... FLORIST PHONE 654 598 13th Ave. East Member Florist Telegraph Delivery Association Tomorrow The premier showing in Lane county of the original road show pro duction will take place. \K Metro-(/oWn/y/i-Maijer 7U MIRACLE First Showing at Regular Prices i NO. 6 OF THE BIG “8” i LAST TIMES TODAY! The woman who is all woman in her newest Von Stern berg production. VICTOR MARLENE DIETRICH Ui A1)U£I>— Johnny Farrell In the third golf reel— •THE CHIP SHOT”