Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 16, 1931, Page 3, Image 3

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    ' Webfoot Spuad Faces Washington Today in Dual Track and Field Meet at Seattle
--- *-. ' ---
Oregon Stars
Crippled F or
Annual Fray
Three Prominent Webfoots
May Be Hindered by
Minor Injuries
Huskies Conceded Slight
Edge by Dopesters
On Eve of Clash
^ University of Oregon track
squad will make their opening bid
for Pacific Northwest track and
field honors {his afternoon when
they meet Hec Edmundson’s Hus
kies in Seattle. Last year Oregon
barely edged out Washington in a
thrilling contest.
According to Coach Bill Hay
ward, Oregon will be seriously
handicapped by injuries to Moeller,
Robinson, and Edwards. While all
three are to compete today, none
are in first-class condition and will
not be able to perform at their
best.
Oregon’s chances for a victory
are rather slim, Hayward stated
upon leaving last night, but he
conceded that his athletes would
V be more than able to make things
interesting for the Huskies. Some
close figuring by Hayward and
others wise in the lore and fine
points of track resulted in the con
sensus that Washington would
win by one point. Still others
claim that it is impossible to con
cede victory to either team, and
perhaps they are right. How close
they figured remains to be seen.
Nineteen Make Trip "
Nineteen men, accompanied by
Hayward and Manager Fred Reid,
made the trip. They left last
night at 6:30 and arrived in Seat
tle this morning. This is the first
of two trips they will make to the
northern school. The next will be
May 29 and 30, for the Northwest
conference meet.
)
•iSr ;
Ice Cream :
Treat
Fresh Strawberry
Sundae
15c
Delicious, cool, refreshing. ;
What’s better than ice •
cream for a boiling after- 1
noon ? ;
Or a Real
Lunch
Lunches
That are different . . .
dainty . . . delicious ... •
for only 1
25c
Dinner 35c
EVERYTHING
for the
Springtime Hunger
The Cottage j
E. M. WHITE, Manager :
:
Events in which Oregon is given
the odds to take first places are
the 220-yard dash, mile run, two
mile run, discus, pole-vault, and
perhaps the shot-put. The lack of
men who can win second and third
places may cost Oregon the meet,
Hayward stated yesterday.
Virgil Scheiber, who has been
held back by an injured leg all
season, and Paul Starr and Paul
Bale will compete in the 100-yard
dash. Their opponents will most
likely be Pendleton, Bledsoe, and
Hufford.
Bale, Starr To Run 220
In the 220, Bale and Starr will
again run, against the same op
ponents. Johnny Marrs and Chuck
Dolloff will oppose Talbot Hart
ley, Husky captain, in the quarter
mile.
Tom Moran, who won the half
mile against Washington last year,
will run again in that event along
with Art Holman, a sophomore.
Ralph Hill will meet Rhuddy, sen
sational Husky miler, this year.
In last year’s meet, Hill beat out
another noted Washington miler,
Rufus Kiser, setting a new inter
collegiate record in doing so.
The two-milers will be Bob Hall
and Len Steele. Allen and Sieg
mund will enter the high hurdles,
and Holman and Siegmund the low
hurdles. Siegmund finished sec
ond in the high sticks in 1930, but
did not compete in the lows.
Ducks Weak in High Jump
Washington should take all
three places in the high jump for
Everts, two-year letterman, has
been out with an injured knee and
could not make the trip. Bill Pal
mer, a sophomore, will be Ore
gon’s only entrant. Art Holman
pulled a surprise in practice last
Wednesday by jumping nearly 22
feet in the broad jump and, along
with Hubert Allen, will compete
in that event.
Ed Moeller and Jack Zane should
be able to win points in the discus
and if Bun Stadelman and Moeller
are at their best, Oregon should
profit in the shot.
Bill Palmer will carry Oregon’s
only chances in the javelin unless
Edwards recovers. Palmer has
never thrown the stick before, but
has been showing up well in prac
tice. Marrs, Dolloff, Holman, and
Roll wage — all sophomores — will
form the mile-relay team.
Archery Tournament
Will End on Saturday
The women's archery tourna
ment being held this week, will be
completed this morning at 11
o’clock. Dorothy Illidge, president
of the Archery club, and Kathryn
Kjosness, head of women’s archery,
are managing the rounds.
The intercollegiate meet, in
which Oregon ranked second last
year, will be run off in telegraphic
rounds commencing Monday.
Practices have been held in tourna
ment form during the past weeks
to widen the contestants’ expe
rience. Mr. “Flight” Daily, world
famous archer, has been lending
his practical experience to the girls
entering the contest.
tome uut
and Play
. . . out over the greenest
fairways . . . rolling hills
. . . a course you will
enjoy.
LamreltDooD
Harper Leads
A.T.O. Squad
To 12-7 Score
Caroling Center-Gardener
Captivates Audience
With Personality
Athletes Take Background
Due to Class Shown
By ‘Sing’
In another ragged game of a
useless play-off series yesterday,
A. T. O. walloped Beta, 12-7, and
thereby saved some of their dig
nity as baseball champions. Beta,
soft ball champs, lost all of theirs
Thursday when they allowed the
baseball nine to nearly trim them
at soft ball. The teams will clash
again Monday in a soft ball con
test to decide the winner of a
somewhat mythical title.
After Os Edwards had whiffed
three in a row to start the game
right, Benson walked and Edwards
brought him in with a long fly to
center that was swirled by the
wind into deep right for a triple.
They added three more runs in the
second. Rinehart, backing up to
take Proctor’s fly, tripped, and
Whiteside cuffed a grounder to
Don Siegmund. After the Betas
threw the ball around for a while,
Proctor scored. Harper walked
and scored with Whiteside when
Rinehart fumbled Sherrill’s smash.
A. T. O. Runs Up Score
Stoehr popped an infield fly to
short in the third that Benson was
too tired to run up on. Rinehart
slashed a neat single to center
then, to score the first Beta run.
The hill nine also enjoyed a bat
ting spree in the third and, before
Wally Shearer could halt the bar
rage, the score was 9-1. . Edwards
opened the rally by singling to
center and circling the bases when
Jensen nearly scared the ball out
of the lot.
Pahl singled to short and after
two were down Harper followed
with a hit to the same spot, scor
ing Pahl. Shearer aided the cause
by heaving wildly on Welch’s
grounder and Sing ambled across
the pan. Sherrill bounced one
through Hill for another score and
Whitely grounded to Shearer for
the final out.
Edwards took one of his wild
streaks in the fourth and placed
Shearer and Jensen on the bags,
where Hug scored them on an in
field single. Pahl’s walk and Proc
tor’s single in the same period
netted A. T. O. a run and gave
them a 10-3 lead.
Betas Rally Too Late
Both teams scored via the error
route in the fifth. Pratt was safe
on Benson’s overthrow of first,
Rinehart walked, and Welch bob
bled Shearer’s grounder. In the
A. T. O. half, Harper bounced one
out of Bob Near's glove and Sher
rill maced a long double to left
field. Edwards took advantage of
his lead to ease up, and the Betas
pushed two more tallies across in
the sixth on Hug’s double, Proc
tor’s error, and some weird infield.
A. T. O. scored their usual
marker also. Pahl walked and the
Zeta hall Merriwell, Paul White
side, slapped a single into left
field. Sing Harper frightened* the
third baseman into missing his
grounder and another run was in
the bag. Jensen scored the final
Beta tally in the seventh. After
forcing Shearer at second, he stole
and went to third on an over
throw. Long’s infield out scored
him. Hill singled, but Hug fanned
to end the game.
TOUR CORRESPONDENCE
MAKES BIG TYPING JOB
(Continued from Faye One)
took time off from typing a letter
to a school in India, “even though
it does take a lot of time. Letter
writing isn’t a bore when one is
writing to all sorts of interesting
persons in such countries as Siam
or Japan?’’ *•' ^ * ■ •„:7 "v
DANCE
with
John Robinson
and His
Olympic Hotel Brunswick
Recording Orchestra
Friday and
Sunday Nights
MIDWAY
PHILOGRAMS * ♦
Sport news°n By Phil Cogswell
Oregon Wins Golf—
Oregon's golf team pulled a sur
prise by winning the coast cham
pionship from Stanford yesterday,
or was it Stanford that did the
surprising thing by donating much
worse golf than they were ex
pected to? The playing all around
by all hands was good and bad
by spurts. George Will was the
exception to this, making the low
est score by six strokes. He was
fairly steady. After George had
made it possible for Oregon to win,
Bob Hammond, up until yesterday
ranking sixth on the Oregon
string, came through iX'ith the
finest kind of a pinch-hit, and
saved the day for the Webfoots.
* * *
Hammond Saves Day—
Hammond and Heilman of Stan
ford were the last to finish and,
coming into the eighteenth hole,
both knew that the match was
very close and that the champion
ship was probably in the balance,
Close was right, counting up all
the scores of the first four Oregon
men for the 36 holes and those of
the four low Cardinals, which put
the situation just like this. If
Bob Hammond obtained a par five
on the last hole, Oregon would win
the title. Well, Mr. Hammond
wanted to win, but spectacularly
like the story they tell of Ty Cobb
about his waiting till the last mo
ment to run after a fly so he could
make a difficult catch, Bob got
behind a tree on his second shot
and then nonchalantly socked the
ball in a curving arc on to the
green and up to the pin. He took
one putt for a birdie four and the
match.
* » *
Cards Could Have Won—
There's no strength in numbers
after all. Here's something inter
esting. If Stanford hadn’t sent
so many men up here, they would
have defeated Oregon for the team
championship by one stroke. That
may sound funny, but here's the
explanation. If Stanford had sent
her first four ranking players only,
MacNaugliton, Eichelberger, Gold
water, and Edmonds, the total
score of the Cardinals would have
been 629. These men would have
played Oregon's first four ranking
players, who were Will, Dolp, Kin
caid, and Shafer. The aggregate
score of these men was 630.
* * *
Oregon Gains Tiro—
But according to the way the
matches were scored yesterday,
each team entered six men, and
the four lowest were to be counted.
This enabled Hammond of Oregon,
who, under the other way, would
not have played, to slip into Kin
caid’s place with a card of 160
to Kincaid's 165. This lowered
Oregon's total count by five
strokes. Stanford had the same
thing occur in their ranks, too,
when Heilman's score was substi
tuted for Goldwter's, but this low
ered Stanford’s count by only two
strokes. Now Stanford's original
men would have had a one-stroke
advantage. Oregon, under the
final scoring method, gained three
strokes, overcoming the Cards’
single one and winning the title
by two strokes.
Rooks Beat Frosli
In Opening Game
Of Ball Series, 6-5
Rally in Seventh Scores
Four Counters for
Beaver Babes
A four-run rally in the seventh
inning gave the Oregon. State
rooks a large enough margin to
edge out the Webfoot yearlings
yesterday afternoon, 6 to 5, in the
first of their annual four-game se
ries. The two nines meet again
this afternoon at Corvallis in the
second fray.
Up till the fatal seventh, Oregon
led, 3 to 2. In this inning, how
ever, the rooks found Donin, frosh
pitcher, and garnered five hits,
four runs crossing the platter be
fore Hoines struck out. The frosh
tried hard to even up the score,
but outside of a run in their half
of the seventh and another in a
futile rally in the ninth, they were
held down by Boult, rook hurler.
The frosh scored first in the
opening inning when Hallin, Duck
right fielder, crossed the plate on
a rook error. They made two
more in the fifth when Balkovich,
Hallin, and McCall hit safely. The
rooks had scored two runs in the
meantime, making the score 3
to 2.
Ike Donin, frosh hurler, pitched
a steady game for Oregon and,
except for the unlucky seventh,
held the rooks to a few scattered
hits. Boult, pitching for the rooks,
looks like a comer, allowing the
frosh only a minimum of hits, all
well scattered.
The frosh lineup: Donin, pitcher;
Balkovich, catcher; McCall, first
base; Vail, second base; Gold
t h w a i t e, shortstop; Robertson,
third base; Olson, left field; Van
Dine, center field; Hallin, right
field.
MOTHS
Those Clothes
Wreckers
Secure fabric mothproofer
for your suits and coats.
When winter coats and
clothing are discarded, it
is time to think of moths. .
For the closet, nothing is
better than moth cakes.
These prevent any de
struction that might oc
cur during the summer
months.
For your trunk try di
cldoricide, anil be assured
of protection.
UNIVERSITY
PHARMACY
11th and Alder
CAMPUS ♦
ALENDAR
Prose anil Poetry group will meet
at 2:30, Westminster house on Sun
day afternoon. Open meeting.
Women hikers will take a jaunt
to the foot of Mt. Baldy tomorrow
at 3, meeting at Gerlinger build
ing. Bring lunches.
Luthern Student associations of
Eugene, Corvallis, and Monmouth
will hold a joint picnic at Benton
Lane park Sunday afternoon. Cars
will leave the Y hut at 2:30 p.m.
All Lutheran students are cordial
ly invited to attend.
Boots and Spurs club members
will hold a rodeo at Christiansen’s
ranch Sunday at 2 p. m. Open to
all students on campus.
Newswriting (2 o’clock section)
—Assignment 8, due May 22, 10 p.
m.: Get an inierview on one of the
following questions: (1) Should
married women be employed when
single men and women are out of
work, as in the current depres
sion? (2) Are survey courses com
bining related subjects (such as
sociology, history, and economics)
of any advantage to freshmen in
relating to the various fields of
study or in choosing future special
ization ?
Colonial
COMES TOMORROW
1
I
LEAVES TON HE
Oregon U. Net
Men Will Vie
With Whitman
Matches To Be Played Next
Tuesday on Library
Tennis Courts
Rhine, Kalisky, Lewis, and
Johnson Are Oregon
Representatives
By JOE SASLAVSKY
Oregon tennis players will meet
Whitman netmen on next Tues
day, May 19, in non-conference
matches, which will probably be
played on the library courts. There
will be two singles and one dou
bles tilts.
Whitman is sending a two-man
team here, Worth Oswald and Wes
Hartman. Each will play a sin
gles match, both playing in the
doubles. Oswald, No. 1 Whitman
player, will oppose Jack Rhine, No.
1 man on the Oregon varsity, in
one singles match; Hartman will
play Joe Kalisky, No. 2 on the
Webfoot varsity tennis squad, in
the other. In the doubles match,
Oswald and Hartman will prob
ably do battle with the No. 1 team
of the Oregon frosh squad. Bob
Johnson and Don Lewis, who are
eligible for non-conference play.
The Whitman No. 1 netman,
Worth Oswald, has achieved an
enviable record. He has never
been defeated in intercollegiate
competition. He is Atlantic states
champion, Idaho state champion,
Eastern Oregon champion, and has
won numerous minor titles. He
has beaten Cliff Sutter, Fritz
Mercur, Julius Seligson, and Nor
ris Williams, all ranking players
in this country, Williams having
been a former singles champion
of the United States. Oswald has
also carried Frank Hunter, Bill
Tilden’s partner, to three sets in
competition. Together with Jack
Ahearn, who has played in intra
mural competition on the campus
here, he has won numerous dou
bles titles, among them being the
Idaho state doubles championship.
Nothing is known here of the play
ing record of the other Whitman
player, Wes Hartman.
WALT EVANS TELLS OF
STUDENT AFFAIRS AIMS
(Continued from Page One)
carry an open mind on the subject
since he makes no claim to being
an authority on the matter.
Evans considers particularly for
tunate the victory of a complete
ticket in the recent campus elec
tion, because it gives an opportun
ity to people who are able to work
together. There is less reason, he
believes, for dissension between of
ficers of the student government,
and if such dissension does arise,
more opportunity for straightening
it without detriment to student
policies.
Some of the reforms that Evans
is working on, in connection with
the rest of the administration, in
clude the elimination of ballyhoo
pamphlets put out by rival parties.
He advocates a pamphlet similar
to the Oregon Voter, that would
outline the various candidate’s pol
icies, and messages. Each candi
date would pay a filing fee to help
offset the expense of the pamphlet.
Another reform that the vice
president favors is changing the
date of the election of the Co-op
board. Under the present system,
he believes too much politics enters
into the election of these officers,
who should be chosen primarily on
their merits.
Since entering the University,
Evans has been prominent in stu
dent activities. He was chairman
of features for Homecoming, chair
man of the canoe fete, and is a
varsity debater. His home is in
Portland.
_
WILL OF OREGON SETS
PACE IN MEDAL PLAY
(Continued from 1'agc One)
hitting Harry Eichelberger in the
first round. Stanford aces, Ed
munds and Heilman, meet in the
lower bracket.
Harry Kincaid and Bob Adels
perger of Oregon failed to qualify
as did Goldwater and Stuart Haw
ley of Stanford.
Yesterday’s scores:
Stanford
MacNaughton . 79 76—155
Edmunds . 81 75—156
Eichelberger . 78 79—157
Hollman . 78 81—160
Total . 627
Oregon
Will . 74 75—149
Dolp . 79 79—158
Shafer . 77 81—158
Hammond . 78 82—160
Total . 625
The four who failed to qualify
scored as follows:
Goldwater, Stanford. .. 80 81—161
Hawley, Stanford . 84 78—162
Kincaid, Oregon . 83 82—165
Adelsperger, Oregon 88 92—180
OPENING TONIGHT!
The most significant play of the
last season In New York.
Hotel Universe
By PHILIP BARKY,
Author of “Holiday”
May 16, 18, 20
Curtain at 8:30
GUILD THEATRE
Administration Building
ALL SEATS 50c
Fish and Feel Fit
HENDERSHOTT’S
FISHERMEN’S HEADQUARTERS
770 WILLAMETTE PHONE 151
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A cab will get you there quickly and
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10c anywhere on the campus—with five passengers
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PHONE 340
CHECKER CAB CO.
■
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»
Freshmen Tennis
Players Defeated
Again by Varsity
A varsity tennis doubles team,
consisting of Jack Rhine and Joe
Kaiisky, won its second straight
match in two days from a frosh
duo, Don Lewis and Bob Johnson,
0-6, 6-3, 7-5, yesterday in an exhi-*
bition match on the library courts.
The frosh netmen swept Rhine
and Kaiisky off their feet to win
the first set easily. The high wind
blowing across the courts seemed
to disturb the game of the varsity
players mgre than that of the
freshmen. In addition, the varsity
netmen were off their game, and
their timing was poor.
Dr. Ella C. Meade
OPTOMETRIST
"Orthogon soft light lenses
eliminate glare and
distortion.”
PHONE 330
14 West Eighth
BARGAIN SUMMER BRICES
Matinee 20c — Nights 30c
Saturday Si Sunduy—20c Till 2
JACKIE COOPER
QOQEOT COOGAN
MIT7J GREEN
LAST
TIMES
TODAY
You can never
forget it, for here
is a picture . so
human, so true,
that it stands out
as one of the
finest c o n trilni
tlons to the
screen.
COMING
SUNDAY
For 3 Days
I
Starring
WALLACE
BEERY
JEAN HARLOW
LEWIS STONE
MARJORIE KAMBEAU
JOHNNY MACK BROWN
“Me Scorpio . . . Poaches my
moll . . . Blondie, the vamp,
and the rest of my inoh are in
town with you ... to give you
the biggest thrill you’ve ever
had . . . and more action than
you’ve seen . . . Remember . . .
L-B-C-N-U.”
HEILIG
ENDING TONIGHT
“KISMET”
SUNDAY!
The Scream of
Screams!
‘Laugh and
Get Rich’
EDNA MAY OLIVER
HUGH HERBERT
DOROTHY LEE