Frosh Team Rounds Into Game Form Several Portland Boys Listed on Squad Morse, Giesecke, Ticlienor Show Form in Early Season Practice ■ Gradually, as the days roll by, Pi ink Callison, Frosh football mentor, is moulding his boys into quite a formidable looking outfit. By next Friday the first team should be picked and in readiness for the Monmouth super-varsity. Among the leading candidates is “Butch” Morse, all-star Portland k lineman for three years at Benson 'Tech. “Butch” has been playing end up to a late date, but was re cently moved to the backfield at fullback. This is expected to bolster that department. While at Benson, Morse won the Zell trophy, nil U- UUU LV HIV mull »* 11V proves most beneficial to his team. He turned out to be a team in himself, as he would move from his regular post at tackle to full back on the offense, and some times back up the line on defense. Another ex-Portland prep player Who is showing class in early sea son drill is Ted Giesecke, ex-Com merce lineman. He, like Morse, has been moved to the backfield, his position being quarterback. Giesecke also played fullback on the Portland interscholastic cham pionship team, Commerce, in 1930. His line plunges proved quite an asset in winning the coveted title. ' An ex-Jeffersonian, Earl Tiche mor, husky tackle, should also see much service this season. Although rather slow, Tichenor is one of the “big bear” type and rolls them over with great regularity when he feels in the mood. With some sixty men turning out, Callison will have quite a time making his choices, and if these three Portland boys make the j grade on his first eleven, Portland ■jifootball stock will take a decided jump. Dr. Sanborn Receives Carnegie Money Grant Dr. Ethel I. Sanborn, of the botany department, in collabora tion with Dr. Ralph Chaney, of jthe University of California, has :: been conducting some work on 1 fossil plants for the past several -years. Previous work has been carried on through the financial aid of the University Research committee, but Carnegie has fin- i ajly recognized the importance of Dr. Sanborn's work and has given her a grant of money. For four years she and Dr. Chaney have worked together on authorship of a paper on the flora of the Comstock region which is located about 28 miles south of Eugene. Dr. Sanborn hopes to have the Comstock paper ready j by spring. W.A.A. Activity Program To Commence Monday No Experience Is Required to Participate The activity program of the Women’s Athletic association will commence Monday evening with ! practices being held in hockey, j volleyball, and swimming. The! other two sports offered this term, j hiking and horseback riding, will not commence until later. Hockey, which is under the stu- j dent supervision of Thelma Lund, j will hold practices on the open; field south of the women's gym i every afternoon at 4 o'clock. No experience is required, as the first! few weeks (as in all the sports i | will be devoted to lessons in tech-! nique. Swimming, which is conducted I by Dorothy Lou MacMillan, will i have practices every day at 5i o'clock in the women’s pool. The pool will also be open on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at 4 o’clock. Each girl is required to report for three practices a week. Volleyball will hold practices every day in the women’s gym at 5 o’clock. Catharine Duer, who is acting as student manager, has posted cards in the gymnasium upon which gills interested in the sport are to sign up. Hiking and horseback riding, managed by Alice Madsen and Mary Hayes, respectively, will commence soon. The first hike will be held next Saturday and will encompass Hendricks park, Victoria Heights, and surrounding country. Riding, which will be conducted along the order of a1 hunt club, has no definite date set for the first turnout. Paper by Dunn Will be Published as Pamphlet A paper by Professor Dunn, head of the Latin department, which he read before the Ameri can Classical League at Los An geles in June, will be published soon in pamphlet form by the Na tional Education association in New York. HEILIG STARTS SUNDAY! Continuous Show 1:00 Till 11:00 Booth Tarkington' Immortal Story PENROD AND SAM with LEON JANNEY JUNIOR COGHLAN AND THE GANG Play hookey from your troubles! Forget your cares Be a kid again with Penrod and his first long pants Laugh with this trouble-chasing gang of youngsters they'll make you glad to be alive! LAST TIMES TONIGHT Buck Jones in “The Fighting Sheriff” Leader of the Webfeet Captain Irvin Schulz of the University of Oregon team, who leads the Lemon-Yellow against Idaho. Schulz is playing his final year for Doctor Spears at regular guard, and expects a win against the Vandals. Odd Golf Course Described By Don Moe, Golfer-Seaman A golf course on ap abandoned slag heap extending into the sea is one of the features of the city of Juneau, Alaska, said Don Moe, the University of Oregon's own golfer, today. “Due to the moun tainous character of the country,” he said, “there was no other avail able terrain on which to lay out a course, so the government, in conjunction with some wealthy and public-spirited citizens, con verted the peninsula made of waste from a nearby mine into one.” Moe, •who shipped as an ordi nary seaman on the steamship Dorothy Alexander, of the Pacific Steamship company, had the op portunity of visiting some of the Alaskan cities in the course of the two trips he made last summer. “No, I did not get to play any golf during the trip, but I did get to see the Juneau course. It was a rather good nine-hole course, and quite popular,” Moe said. “There are probably only three or four courses in Alaska, due to the character of the land. It seems to be all sidehills,” he added. The two trips were made from Seattle through the inside or southeast passage to Ketchikan, Skagway and Juneau, according to Moe. “The most interesting and in spiring sight of the trip,” Moe states, “was the Taku glacier, a river of ice 36 miles long, three to four miles wide and from 50 to 200 feet in depth. It follows a valley that it has cut itself. IN THE PRESS BOX (Continued from Page One) haps some of the more sophisti cated students can profit by their example and show a little fire and “big game” atmosphere in pre contest demonstrations and mani festations. As this issue is to be distributed in Portland, we might say that the football enthusiasm and hospitality show in Portland is at the top of the heap. * * * U. OF W.-OREGON RIVALRY And while we are on the subject of the Washington game, it might be interesting to note that the coming fracas is the second of what promises to be a long series of exchange games between Ore gon and Washington, due to a re cently signed contract between the two schools—a sort of perpetual friendly rivalry, such as exists be tween Oregon and Oregon State. On top of this is the much pub licized meeting of the old mid-West rivals, Coach Jimmy Phelan of Washington and Dr. Clarence W. Spears of Oregon. This factor, i coupled with the expectant follow ing of the football-minded public, promises much in the way of grid iron interest. Each school is as sured of drawing a good crowd in either Seattle or Portland. Port land is assured of at least one ; superlative football game, and the student bodies are assured of a home team big game performance; ; and so everybody is satisfied all | the way round. “When we saw Taku glacier from the ship, it appeared to be bright and blue in color,” says Moe, “and it was very beautiful, but there was an awful feature of it too, and I mean awful in the true sense of the word. It is this: sometimes the vibration of the ship’s whistle is enough to shake loose huge icerbergs from the gla cier. “The cities are quite modern,” Moe declares, “a little more so than I had expected. There is nothing elaborate about them, though. They reminded me in many ways of Astoria, Oregon.” Moe’s two trips, he says, cov ered the period from August 17 to September 16. Washington, Oregon Sign LongContract Ten Year Grid Schedule Starts This Fall Popularity of the Football; Classics Reason for New Agreement UNIVERSITY OF WASHING-j TON, Seattle, Wash., Oct. 2—Ten : years of home-and-home football j games between the Universities of Washington and Oregon are as sured starting with the annual clash between the Huskies and the Ducks at Seattle on October 10. A contract has been signed by Earl F. Campbell, graduate man ager of the A. S. U. W., and Hugh Rosson, graduate manager of the A. S. U. O., which makes certain | of these collegiate classics for an-1 other decade. So popular have the relations between the two Northwest mem bers of the Pacific Coast confer ence become that Campbell and Rosson recently conceived the idea of perpetuating this annual contest. Not alone are the relations of Washington and Oregon's football teams confined to the gridiron. Business leaders of the two cities have become interested in the col orful meeting of the two college elevens and their interest assures packed stands any time the Ducks and Huskies get together. There is every indication that the Huskies’ huge bowl, enlarged to seat some 42,000, will accom modate the largest football audi ence in Northwest history of the 1931 meeting of Husky and Duck on October 10. UNIVERSITY HAS MANY MEN IN SCIENCE GROUP (Continual from Page One) department of geology, and Roger Williams, O. F. Stafford and Fred erick L. Shinn, the department of chemistry. From the psychology department are Dr. E. S. Conklin, Robert H. Seashore and Harold R. Crosland. W. E. Milne and E. E. DeCou were chosen from the mathemat ics department; Arthur R. Moore, general physiology; A. R. Sweet ser, plant biology; William P. Boynton, physics; John F. Bo vard, physical education; Ralph R. Hue, genetics, and Harry B. Yocum, zoology. Webfoot Linemen RoWEmAN EKD jM&iiL Morgan B TACKLE I CEN'fEft, | Newcomers in Oregon Lineup Kay Kelly and Mark Temple,1 halfbacks; Howard Clark, tackle— all sophomores who will doubtless make their first conference ap pearance against Idaho today. New Intramural Sports Booklet Issued to Houses P. E. Department Outlines Program of Games For Year The school of physical education has put out a handbook of intra mural sports for 1931-32. The book, which was sent to each of the men’s organizations on the campus, contains a variety of in formation besides giving rules and regulations which will govern in tramural activities for this school year. It contains an annual calendar for 1931-32, regulations, by-laws, a scoring chart for interhouse competition, and intramural sports report. It gives the names of all campus individual and house champions last year and furnishes much information besides. The intramural compet ition scheduled for the fall term is bas ketball, swimming, and water polo, which will count on the all-year point system. There are also va rious all-campus tournaments for individuals scheduled for this term. The complete calendar for 1931-32 follows: October—Tennis, handball, golf, horseshoes, Sigma Delta Psi trials, swimming, water polo, basket ball. November — Handball, squash, wrestling, swimming, water puio, basketball. January—Basketball, wrestling, boxing, volleyball, handball, swim ming, squash. February — Basketball, volley ball, wrestling, swimming, hand ball, fencing, squash. March — Basketball, wrestling, track, handball, volleyball, fenc ing, squash. April—Soft ball, baseball, golf, horseshoes, tennis. May—Soft ball, baseball, ten nis, horseshoes, golf, archery, Sig ma Delta Psi trials. June—Soft ball, tennis, horse shoes. The intramural program is un der the direction of Paul R. Washke. The supervisor is Earl Boushey, and the assistants are Jack Hewitt, Russell Cutler, Ar thur Ireland, Clair Meisel, and Warren Powell. Classified Ads ANY intelligent person may earn good income corresponding for newspapers; all or spare time; send for free booklet; tells how. Heacock, 418 Dun Bldg., Buf falo, N. Y. BOOKS FOR SALE — Retghhard and Jennings’ "Anatomy of the Cat”; also Walter's "Biology of the Vertebrates.” Practically new; $3.50 each. Phone 3074W. COMFORTABLE, well furnished rooms for men, close to campus, cooking and laundry privileges if desired. 1166 Alder St. DOUBLE room with sleeping porch. Single without. Three i minutes’ walk from University. 1390 Alder. EXCELLENT room, furnace heat, well lighted, single $12, double $18. Phone 2245W. BEAUTY PARLOR work, mar cell, finger wave, shampoo, each 50 cents. Phone 2380J. FOR RENT—Nice room, private bath, between University and downtown. 1130 Pearl St. FIRST class room and board. Spe cial rates for students. 376 E. 11th Ave. Phone 2814M. FOR SALE—1925 Chevrolet road ster, ’32 license, 90 per cent rub ber, motor A-l. Gregg 1920. Dean Lawrence Chosen On Advisory Committee Ellis F. Lawrence, dean of the school of architecture and allied arts, has been named a member of the advisory committee of the United States for the Seventh In ternational Congress on Art Edu cation, it is announced here. The congress will be held in Vienna August 1 to 6, 1932, and Dean Lawrence as member of the advis ory committee from this country, will have an active peft in assist ing with arrangements of the American section . The appointment is regarded as an international recognition, since the Vienna congress will be the outstanding event of this kind in the entire world. It will bring to gether art and art educational ex hibits from all leading countries, as well as leaders in this field. The chairman of the American section is Huger Elliott, director of educational work of the Metro politan Museum of Art, New York, who selected Dean Lawrence as a member of the committee. Northwestern Students Dress More Formally More Freedom Here, New Professor Finds “Students at Northwestern uni versity dress more formally than they do at Oregon, but there is not the aspect of freedom that 1 find here,” said John L. Casteel, new associate professor of speech and English. “The difference,” he said, “is due to the influence of the urban surroundings there. One never sees jackets or sweaters worn in class, and there is a trend toward the metropolitan and artistic. "Northwestern is really two separate campi, each presenting two entirely different types of students and student life. The older, or Evanston, campus repre sents this higher type of social life. Here are the schools of lit erary arts, speech, commerce, and journalism. It is also this campus that furnishes the athletes. | "The second or downtown cam ! pus is known as McKinlock. There you find the professional and i night schools. The students work | in the day and at tend school at night, so that it would be nearly impossible for any relationship ta | exist between the two campi. i “One thing I find that the stu | dents there would like to have in ' common with those here is the ! cooperative store,” Mr. Casteel ! concluded. “There has always i been a fight to obtain one, but as yet nothing has been done.” STARTS SUNDAY /The (most talked of motion picture in history! 'AN AMERICAN TRAGEDY" BW » rfe mm/ THCODORE DREISER PHILLIPS HOLMES SYLVIA SIDNEY vt Vd,wmuinl TUtunj LAST TIMES TODAY WARNER BAXTER in “SQUAW MAN” SPECIAL TAP CLASS —For— IT. OK 0. STUDENTS BEGINNING OCTOBER 5—8 P. M. Vernon — Katherine Dance Studio PRIVATE BALLROOM LESSONS BY APPOINTMENT 110 East Broadway Phone 515 You Have Never K Seen A Pen Von Rlllh. Conk* tin None by nith* ia of the barrel—like tou wind a watch. • «k-pro of, smooth, ta»y nc lion. •imply turni knurled «i Like This Before Voil won't find this In th« ref* •rtncs library—it'* too ntw. you've got to go down ths street to ths most up-to-date supply stores to see the Conklin Nozac » "the pen that winds like a watch." Visible ink section or all* opaque barrel as desired. The visible ink section enables you to look right into the ink compartment at any time and watch the birth of a sentence. The Noxac holds 35% more ink than other pens of the same size because there is no rubber sac in the barrel. Examine the Nozac. Try it. And see if you can get along without one. Depression-proof prices. The pens $6 and $10; pencils to match $3.50 and S5.00. THE CONKLIN PEN COMPANY TOLEDO, OHIO Chlcajo_San FiancWco DEALERS, stock and show the pons that soil. Write for Catalog. r. y«5i there art other Conklins— brand new coJ* ois—new shape*. Theptn*SS!.75lo $8; panei is 4o match $1.00 io $4.50. UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED