^Huskies Drop Ducks in Dual Meet in North Rain and Wind Mar First Stiff Competition For Webfoots Ed Moeller Tosses Discus 155 Feet To Lead Hayward’s Team Running in a cold, hard west wind, intermittent downpours of rain and even a blinding hailstorm at one time, the University of Ore gon track squad picked a rather ypoor day to open their 1931 track season and took it on the chin from the competition-seasoned Huskies, 83% to 47%, last Satur day at Seattle. While Coach Hayward and his athletes made no attempts to alibi their defeat, there is no doubt that they were seriously handicapped by their lack of stiff conference competition. The Huskies, on the other hand, have participated in several meets—with Stanford, Cal ifornia and Oregon State. Only in the field events, where they are admittedly weakest, did the Web foots come through in hoped-for style. Times Are Slow The poor track weather made it ^impossible for any fast times, al though the performances of Clar ence Bledsoe and Eddie Genung in the 100-yard dash and the half mile were exceptional under the circumstances. Bledsoe took the 100 in 9:8 seconds. He was fol lowed closely by Pendleton, his teammate, and Virgil Scheiber, Oregon. Genung, who is national A. A. U. champion, copped the 880 in 1 minute 55.1 seconds. He was fol lowed by Tom Moran of Oregon and Bracken of Washington. Ed Moeller^ turned in what was perhaps the most surprising result of the meet. Hindered by a bad leg, Moeller tossed the discus 155 feet 514 inches to win by more than 20 feet over Ramstedt, the Huskies’ best. Robinson Takes Vault Another of Oregon’s crippled athletes, Bobby Robinson, had no competition in the pole vault and only had to go up to 12 feet 1 inch to take first place. Ed Siegmund, 7 Duck hurdler, entered and tied for third place with a vault of only 9 feet. The next meet for the Web foots will be the annual Oregon State encounter next Saturday on Hayward field. The Orangemen SENIORS ALL WHO ORDERED Commencement Announcements before MAY 13th may have them by calling at the “CO-OP” ____ New Service Laundry EUGENE’S FINEST LAUNDRY SERVICE * ' • * Phone 825 or 826 —For— LAUNDRY DRY CLEANING r_ had a little better week-end than the Ducks, losing a close meet to the Cougars, 69 2-5 to 61 3-5. The same weather conditions prevailed at Pullman, so two marks set there were nullified due to the strong wind. Elle of Oregon State tied the northern division record in the 220-yard dash with a mark of 21.6. Homer Hein, Cougar ace, tossed the javelin 196 feet 10 3-4 inches to break the existing record of 195 feet 5 3-5 inches. Plans Rushed for Ad Conference on Campus Saturday _ • Advertising Honoraries in Charge of Details For Conclave Final plans in preparation for the annual advertising conference to be held in Eugene this coming Saturday are being enthusiastical ly rushed. All members of the local adver tising honoraries, Alpha Delta Sig ma and Gamma Alpha Chi, are actively engaged in working for the success of the conclave. At a joint meeting last night of the two groups reports indicated that the affair would be well attended by advertising men of the state. Harry Tonkon, president of Al pha Delta Sigma, and Anton Peter son will make a trip to Portland tomorrow to personally issue an in vitation before the Portland Ad vertising club for its members to attend the convention. Harold Leonard, in charge of sending written invitations to ad vertising men, announced that he had'sent out over 60 letters. He had a staff of eight girls typing yesterday afternoon, getting the last documents in the mail. Bob Holmes and Harriette Hof mann are arranging for the enter tainment which will be given at the banquet Saturday night. The dinner will start at 6:30 and all students interested are invited to attend. There will be dynamic speeches given by nationally known men. MATHEMATICS CLUB TO GET NATIONAL CHARTER (Continued from l’ayc One) ter, Donald Saunders, Lucille Ter rill, Dalton Shinn, Elsie McNa mara, Alfred Andrews, Kathryn Kjosness, Morris Lyman, Carl Mc Dowell, Leon Samke, Francis Shi manek, all of Eugene; Ralph Hill, Klamath Falls; Howard Minturn, Salem; Rebekah Van Nuys, San Francisco; George Bailey, Grants Pass. Gome Out and Play . . . out over the greenest fairways . . . rolling hills ... a course you will eujoy. Laurel idoo33 McNaughton Takes Coast Golf Trophy Warner Edmonds Is Victim In All-Stanford Finals George Will Is Eliminated By Vince Dolp in First Round Malcolm McNaughton and his Stanford Cardinal golfers avenged themselves partially for the loss of the conference team champion ship in the medal play of last Fri day when they came back to win the individual honors. Mr. Mc Naughton, a Portland boy who made good down on the “farm,” is now the Pacific Coast confer ence golf champion. A post mortem of Oregon's fail ure to place a man in the finals reveals the misfortune of the draw. Vince Dolp eliminated his teammate George Will in the first round. Warner Edmonds then won from Vince and placed himself in the finals. Will Has Bad Luck George Will had some real tough luck in not winning the champion ship. His score of 149 for 36 holes was probably the best score for two rounds made by any of the contestants, but did him no good personally other than helping the Oregon team's cause. Previously George had qualified for the right to represent the Northwest against a man from the southern division. A change in the ruling took from him the hard-earned advantage, and his previous work went for naught. Will had been playing very good golf since the begin ning of the season and a natural let-down seemed to come at the worst possible time. Season Successful Oregon can point to a successful golf season in the one just passed. A conference championship and an undefeated team were the contri butions of the divot-diggers. Next year’s team will miss George Will, but new material is abundant enough to insure that Oregon will have another good golf season. E. McKittrick Elected Head of Condon Club _ Ernest McKitrick was elected president, and Lloyd Ruff secre tary-treasurer of the Condon club, local chapter of the Geological and j Mining Society of American Uni versities, at the* spring meeting of the group held yesterday. Profes sor W. D. Wilkinson and Mrs. Wil kinson were both elected to hon orary membership in tfie organiza tion. Plans for the annual Condon club picnic, to be held May 28, and to which all geology majors are invited, were formulated. Dean Powers’ Book To Be Read on Radio Selections from "Marooned in Crater Lake,” a book of adventure tales written by Alfred Powers, dean of the extension division of the University of Oregon, will be read over KOAC, according to word received from W. L. Kad derly, program director. This is one of a series of read ings on a “Book Companions” pro gram, consisting of half-hour pe riods in which members of the Oregon State college library staff will read extracts from outstand ing books. I ' __' PHILOGRAMS * - SPOT DOPE ON _ ^ .. port news By Phil Cogswell Huskies Supreme— Washington beat the Webfoots in the track fracas at Seattle in a way that wasn’t even close. Still, | some of the individual perform iances of the Oregon men as well as those of the Huskies were ex ceptionally good, and were made ; despite terrible weather conditions, i Too bade a gale and a cold rain had to hit Seattle on exactly the same day as the dual meet was scheduled, for in warm sunshine there might have been some rec I ords broken. * * * Hill an Example— Ralph Hill came through as ex pected and won a thrilling mile race in the fast time of 4 minutes, 22 seconds. Hill, greatest of col lege milers, is one of these men that are handy to point to when want to take the wind out of the arguments of the “over-emphasis” propagandists. Ralph was elected to Phi Beta Kappa the other day, which is proof that an athlete does n’t necessarily become dumber as he develops into a world champion. * * * Moeller Sails Discuss— Oregon won four other first places in the Washington meet. Bob Robinson took the pole-vault. Bob Hall, a sophomore won the two-mile, Star was victorious in the 220, and Ed Moeller was un matched in the discus. When a man throws the platter over 150 feet, he's good. Moehler tossed it 155 feet and a half, 24 feet farther than the best Washington man did. The Cougars triumphe dover the Beavers won their meet and the Trojans walked away with every ing in the California championship meet. * $ * Unfortunate Pairing— How unfortunate it was that George Will and Vince Dolp. Ore gon's two best golfers had to play each other in the first round of the championship tourney for the in dividual coast title. Dolp eliminat ed Will Saturday morning, and turned around and lost to Warner Edmunds of Stanford in the after noon. This took the championship match out of the Webfoot ranks entirely, and the interest that would have prevailed had one of them gotten to the finals, was ab sent entirely. 1 * * * One Championship— Anyhow, Oregon won the team golf championship of the Pacific coast, even if the individual laurels went south. This is the only cham pionship the Webfoots have won during the year, and there aren't any prospects of them winning any others before school is out. George Will has ended his college golf ca reer, and it has been a good one, too. Vince Dolp still has another year as have the other members of the squad. Pete Prehistoric Airs Views On College and Companions Have you ever met Pete ? He re sides in a show case'down in the depths of Condon hall. His last name is Prehistoric, and there real ly isn’t much of him left, only his head. Some of his brothers in the good old Cave Men’s fraternity are represented—-but only by jaws or parts of skulls. • Ever wonder how it feels to be the lower jaw of Pete Prehistoric ? There he sits in this little case with the remnants of some of his other brothers, and tiny skulls of some of his cousins—the monkey. I’ll bet he resents being classified with those lowly creations. Pete Prehistoric has a most remarkable brother. Meet him—his head meas ures nearly a foot from the back to the protruding teeth. From the eye socket to the teeth the slope is unusual and at an acute angle. From the eye socket back is like the back of a fish, notably that of | sword-fish, and the level of the back is much lower than the eye socket. Yesterday as I was passing by the case, Pete yawned. I looked down startled and he said, “I'm so tired of being a wall flower. Every once in a while some funny people go by, and never look at me. They really don’t appreciate all the knowledge that I have gathered in the past million years.” “Well,” I said, “that sounds like it's worth an interview. Tell me something about some of these things around you.” “O. K.,” said Pete. “You see I picked up that expression from these eds and co-eds, I’m really quite observing, you know. , “Some of those rocks and Ore gon minerals down there are real ly very pretty. Pastel colored rocks about like this—yellow sulphur crystals, green copper sulphate, white calcite, pink manganese car bonate, blue lazerite, and the or ange orpimint and realgar. Stick ers for names, aren't they ? I got those names from the old alchem ists, you know. “Oh, my, I'm sleepy,” and so Pete Prehistoric dropped off to sleep for another hundred years or so. Art Work of Students Exhibited in Portland An exhibition of water-color paintings and other art work by senior students of the University of Oregon art school is being shown at the Burlington House galleries in the Meier & Frank department store in Portland this week. This exhibition, which is sponsored by the Oregon Society of Artists, is being shown jointly with a collection of portraits in sculpture by Laurence Fraley. Paintings of farm scenes by Nellie Best, Lucia Wiley, and Dor othy Derleth are among the out standing works in the University exhibition. Showings will continue until Saturday. ASUO SECRETARY LIKES TRAVEL, BOOKS, SPORTS (Continued from I’eifjc One) proud of the success she has achieved. Miss Logan is a major in music and plays the pipe organ and piano. She intends to teach mu sic upon graduation. Besides her major she likes travel, books, and sports. A graduate of Jefferson high school, Portland, Miss Logan has always beep interested in secre tarial work, serving last sun?mer as secretary to the chairman of the Greater Oregon committee. In addition to her position as A. S. U. O. secretary, she is presi dent of the Oregon chapter of Delta Delta Delta. 28 Make Phi Bete Twenty-eight students of the University of California at Los An geles have been elected to mem bership in Phi Beta Kappa, nation al scholarship honor society, be cause of their outstanding work as students of the institution. The list includes seven juniors, the others being members of the senior class. Law School Officers Installed in Mill-Race Following a strenuous campaign by the several parties, Sam Van Vactor was elected president of the law school student body asso ciation, at a meeting Thursday. Bill Bartle is the new secretary and Francis Cheney, the new treas urer. Informal installation of the new officers took place on the bank and also in the mill-race, im mediately after the election. A banquet at the Anchorage next Thursday night will be given by the association. Judge Brand of Marshfield will be the speaker. A final banquet at the end of the year for the graduating class in law will be the organization’s last activity for the term. Francis Coad, Ted Conn, and Winsor Calkins are the retiring of ficers. I Betas Capture Final Contest Of Ball Series I)olp and Rinehart Factors In Victory; Benson Hurls Well j Gilhuugh, Edwards, McKim And Whiteside Star For Losers j __ Vince Dolp hurled a steady brand of ball yesterday to hold the i A. T. O. nine in check while his j mates amassed a 9-3 score. The j victory gives Beta 16 additional l points on the intramural all-year chart and ends donut play for the school year. Beta manufactured one run in the fii’st on hits by Don Siegmund and Rinehart, and clumped two hits and three A. T. O. errors in the second to run the score up to 4-0. Gunther singled to center and the center fielder let the ball roll through him for a home run. Jen sen was safe on an error at sec ond and Ed Siegmund pounded out a clean hit. Ahearn profited by another error, but Don Siegmund flied out to end the scoring. Dolp walked Edwards in the A. T. O. half and two overthrows scored him. Beta added another in the third on Rinehart’s single and sacrifice grounders by Dolp and Hill. Whiteside collected one of the few blows made off Dolp in the third but was left stranded. Beta ended their scoring by wal loping out four runs in the fifth. Don Siegmund walked and the hard-hitting Mr. Rinehart leveled a double into right field. Dolp golfed out a hard infield single and Pahl fumbled Hill's grounder. Jensen was safe on another error at second, Shearer walked, and Ahearn’s grounder was misplayed at third. With four runs in and the bases full, Benson finally sti fled the outburst. Dolp opened the sixth by walk ing Benson, and Hill aided the A. T. O. cause by missing Sherrill’s grounder. An overthrow brought Benson home and Sherrill scored on an infield out. A. T. O. threat ened in the seventh. Whiteside was barely nabbed at first and Jimmy Gilbaugh rapped out a long single to center. Ed Siegmund pocketed Proctor’s fly for the final out. Thetas Trad at W. S. C. Kappa Alpha Theta, national so rority, with an average of 86.92, heads the group scholarship list at Washington State college for last semester, according to figures com piled by the registrar. The pre vious semester the group ranked seventh. Last semester’s leader, Erenata club, men’s society placed second this semester with an average of S6.80. The greatest gain was made by Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, which jumped from 31st to 5th, with an average of 86.03. DUART Croquinole Ringlet-end Push Wave $6.50 COMPLETE PHONE 2362 MODEL Beauty Shoppe Over Lee Duke’s Webfoot Players Oppose Whitman Net men at 2 P;M. 4 — Tennis fans here will have an opportunity to see Oregon netmen perform against outside competi tion today beginning at 2 p. m. on the library courts, when the Webfoots play three matches against Whitman tennis players. The first match to get under way will be the singles tilt be tween Jack Rhine, Oregon varsity star, and Worth Oswald, Mission ary flash. The only doubles match to be played will follow, with Bob Johnson and Don Lewis, Oregon frosh who make a great doubles team, pitted against Oswald and Wes Hartman of Whitman. Fol lowing the doubles contest, Joe Kalisky of the Webfoot varsity squad will lock horns with Hart man in the second singles battle. Brand To Address Law Student Body Following Dinner Subject To Concern Court Room Ethics; Speaker From Marshfield Judge James T. Brand, of Marsh field, judge of the circuit court of | Coos and Curry counties, will ad j dress the law student body follow ; ing a dinner to be given at the An | chorage at 6 o’clock, Thursday evening. His topic, as announced by j Charles E. Carpenter, dean of the I school of law, is "Professional Eth ! ics in the Court Room.” “Judge Brand is coming to be i recognized as one of the finest trial [ judges in the state," Dean Carpen j ter said. “He is a great student of the administration of law and is an unsually able lawyer. He has considerable skill in getting at the truth of issues in the trial of cases.” Judge Brand is a graduate of Oberlin college and Harvard law school. He was appointed judge of the circuit bench by Governor Pat terson and has been trying cases since that time in Coos and Curry counties, as well as in Multnomah, Lane, and other counties of the state. W. S. C. Slates Lectures World famous figures and groups of entertainers are listed dn the W. S. C. 1931-1932 program, according to Loyd Bury, assistant graduate manager in charge of lectures and entertainments. The United States Marine band, Pershing’s own, is slated for an early appearance on the campus. The Rt. Hon. Winston Churchill, famous British statesman and author, will lecture. Major Gen eral Smedley D. Butler, former di rector of public safety for the city of Philadelphia, is also listed on the lecture program. Expert Cleaning Phone 123 Eugene Laundry J Intercollegiate I Archery Meet To Commence Today — | Rules Given by Association For Procedure In Shoot I _ The second annual women's in | tercollegiate spring archery tour ! nament will be run off this week in telegraphic fashion, with Ore gon entered to duplicate and bet [ ter her record of second place ob tained in last year’s meet. The shoots will be held on Tues 1 day and Thursday on the archery range. On Tuesday, Dorothy 11 lidge will captain the field, and on Thursday Kathryn Kjosness will have charge. Anyone having had i experience in archery is urged to turn out at 4 o’clock on either of the dates to shoot in the meet. The University of Wisconsin, which is sponsoring the meet, has sent out definite rules for compe . tition, which will be posted. These I rules comprise the following im portant points: Shooting shall be completed dur ing May 17-24. Teams rV. 11 consist of eight I archers, undergraduate women in ! the university. As many teams I may be entered as desired with members not indicated before shooting but selected as results of scores are made. The Columbia round shall be j shot, although the whole round need not be shot at one session. One range must be completed at one time, however, with no more than six practice arrows preceding the official shoot. There will be no practice arrows if more than one range is shot at one time. Only one full Columbia round shall bo counted as official, and shall be counted upon competitors’ indica tion. No shooting shall be considered official unless under the direct supervision of an instructor or an authorized student head of arch ery. Either an instructor or stu dent head must check and sign all score sheets. Each contestant in tomorrow’s shoot is required to furnish someone to score and re trieve arrows for her. PLEDGING ANNOUNCEMENT Sigma Alpha Epsilon announces the pledging of George Bishop of Eugene. 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 (JUILD THEATRE Administration Building ALL SEATS 50c he!0g STARTS TODAY! j Gripped B’way Stage for Two j Solid Seasons! I A. A. Milne’s Sensationalg^ Mystery U Drama ■ Thrills With Almost Unbelievable S e n s a - | tions . . . Mightiest I Mystery Ever Penned >: Now Sends Shudders 1 Down Spine of the i I Screen! Wk d mm liUMl