Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 17, 1931, Page 3, Image 3

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    Fiji, Beta, and
S.A.E. Garner
Hoop Games
Beta Squad Winner of
Title in League I
Zeta Hall, Omega Hall, and
Kappa Sigma Losers
V esterday
TODAY’S SCHEDULE
3 P. M.
Phi Delt vs. Gamma hall
3:45 P. M.
Phi Psi vs. Alpha Upsilon
4:30 P. M.
Sigma hall vs. Sigma Chi
5:15 P. M.
Sigma Nu vs. Fiji
Phi Gamma Delta, Sigma Alpha
Epsilon, and Beta Theta Pi cap
tured tilts yesterday in the intra
mural basketball tournament.
The Fiji quintet took a close
contest from Zeta hall, 14 to 10.
Roland Rourke starred for the vic
tors and tallied 10 points to lead
the scoring parade. For the hall
squad, James Smith garnered sev
en points.
The S. A. E. team took the Ome
ga hall aggregation in stride and
won easily, 31 to 9. Ted Hansen
BERT
LRHR
CHRRLOTTB
^GREENWOOD
l KfiTHRYN
ICRRUIFORD
PUT
O'BRIEN
SAsk anyone who saw it.
They will tell you it’s a
panic. Loads of good
laughs!
TENSE!
TERRIFYING!
--
MIGHTY!
You’ll be stunned
by its dramatic
strength— shock- 0
ed by its terrific '
truth — and yet
charmed by its
human appeal!
ANOTHER BIG
HEILIG HIT!!
^RULING
VOICE |
LAST TIMES TONIGHT 1
HEILIG
A story of
har dues*
itself — a
m a n with
but one soft
spot — his
'daughter:
RAIN
may take that shine off
—like this . . .
But watch us bring it
back
—like this . . .
U. of O.
Shine Parlor
4
| and Paul Bale hit the noop for 10 '
; points apiece for the winners.
The Betas clinched the flag in
League I and won the right to en
| ter the playoffs to determine the
' donut champion hoop squad by
winning over Kappa Sig, 15 to 8.
I Wilson Siegmund captured 10
points for the Beta casaba chasers.
Phi Gamma Delta-Zeta Hall
Fiji (14)—Rourke (10), f; Hess,
f; Chester (2), c; McCormach, g;
Laurence (2), g.
Zeta hall (10)—Smith (7), f;
Thompson, f: Conroy (1), c; Eagle
(2) , g; Kostka, g; Juma, s; Wade, ,
s. !
Sigma Alpha Epsilon-Omega Hall
S. A. E. (31)—B. Hansen (6), f;
Bale (10), f; T. Hansen (10), c;
Robertson, g; Gearhart (1), g; j
Walton (4), s; Gram, s; Voegtly,s. !
Omega hall (9)—Kafoury (2), f;
Bolds (4), f; Greenough, c; Wade
(3) , g; Taylor, g; Glaisyer, s;
Thompson, s.
Beta Theta Pi-Kappa Sigma
Beta (15)—D. Siegmund (1), f;
Scales (1), f; W. Siegmund (10),
c; Chapman (3), g; Near, g; E.
Siegmund, s; Thomas, s; Berg, s.
Kappa Sig (8)—Terjeson (1), f;
Watts (3), f; Woodin (2), c; Ol
sen (2), g; Garnet, g. !
Idaho Hoopsters
Start Work With
10 Lettermen Out
Last Year’s Freshman Stars
Will Add Strength to
Vandal Five
UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO, Mos
cow, Nov. 16.—For the past week
25 Vandal basketball candidates
have been working out daily under
the direction of Harold Stowell,
| former Idaho star and all-coast
j forward. - Coach Rich Fox has been
j handling freshman football but
| will take charge of the varsity
i hoop squad the first of next week.
The first week’s work was lim
| ited to limbering up exercises and
fundamentals with hours of prac
tice shooting and set-up plays
claiming much of the time.
When Coach Fox rounds the
team into shape he will be greeted
by ten lettermen and five new
additions from last year’s fresh
man team. Christians, Hall, Bar
rett, Parks, Hale, Aukett, Wicks,
Hurley, and Lacey are the return
ing lettermen. All of the first five
men from the last year freshman
team will be pushing the regulars
for places on the team. Herman,
Geraghty, Grenier, Carlson, and
Squance are the new eligibles.
The squad will be materially
strengthened by the addition of
the new candidates. Grenier at
center will give the varsity letter
men a struggle for the pivot posi- j
tion, and Carlson and Geraghty
are both fast and accurate shoot
ers.
The squad will have a month’s
practice before the first games'
which are scheduled with Ellens
burg normal, December 11 and 12.
'
Wife of President
Recovering from
Pneumonia Attack
'J’HE condition of Mrs. Arnold
Bennett Hall, w h o was
stricken with pneumonia last
Friday evening after returning
home from an engagement, has
been reported as being consid
erably improved.
“Mrs. Hall is doing very
well,” stated Dr. Fred N. Miller,
University physician.
“It will probably be a week
or so before she will be allowed
to leave the house. A conva
lescent with pneumonia, always
a dangerous disease, has to be
given the most careful atten
tion,” concluded Dr. Miller.
Wandering Ducks
Prepare for Trip
To Sunny South
Squad Leaves Wednesday
For Games With UCLA
And St. Mary’s
The Webfeet are taking to the
| rails again. After giving local
grid fans a chance to watch them
in action against Oregon State,
Coach Spears and his wandering
footballers are preparing to take
up the trail once more. This time
they are bound for the sunny
South.
Next Saturday they meet the
up-and-coming Bruins from the
University of California at Los
Angeles. Thanksgiving, St. Mary’s
will form the opposition at Kezar
stadium in San Francisco. The
post-season charity game with
Utah was awarded to Oregon State
by a committee of Portland sport
ing editors due to the hard sched
ule still to be faced by Oregon.
Orville Bailey, end, was the only
Webfoot casualty in Saturday’s
game. He suffered a broken nose
when Frank Little used a little
too much elbow in blocking him
out of a play. He reported for
practice yesterday and will finish
the season out.
Scrimmage against the fresh
man squad on defense against U.
C. L. A. and St. Mary’s plays will
furnish the training schedule for i
the next three days. The team i
will leave Eugene for Los Angeles
Wednesday noon, returning after
the St. Mary’s contest.
NEVADA SELECTED AS
PIP A CONCLAVE SITE |
(Continued from Page One)
desk room in the Journalism build
ing. In “Trial by City Desk,” Tug- j
man told various incidents where
newspaper men have taken the
course of justice into their own
hands and administered it through
the weapon of public opinion which
they influence. Sigma Delta Chi,
national journalism professional
fraternity, sponsored the luncheon.
In the afternoon the delegates
were guests of the University at
the Oregon-Oregon State football
game.
RIFLE match ends today
Because of lack of time to fin
ish shooting the first elimination
in the campus intramural rifle
match last Thursday the time lim
it for teams to complete their first
rounds of firing has been extended
to 5 o'clock today.
STEP LIVELY—TONIGHT IS
DIME NITE
What a break for the ol’ sock!
Love—Laffs—
Lovely Ladies
And what
a Cast!
NORMAN FOSTER
C AROLE LOMBARD
SHEETS GALLAGHER
ST FART ERWIN
LILLIAN TASHMAN
•JOYCE COMPTON
Tomorrow—Regular Prices
—
1
A 50-50 Date For
VOD-VIL
Uclans Are No
Longer "Baby”
Of Conference
St. Mary’s Victory First
Big Win for Bruins
Coach Spaulding Pointing
For Webfoot Tilt
Next Saturday
_
By STUART HELLS,
; Sports Editor, Daily Bruin
LOS ANGELES, Calif., Nov. 16.
i—(Exclusive to the Emerald.) —
.The Baby has grown up fast!
I The U. C. L. A. Bruins from
Westwood, once condescendingly
termed “The Babies of the Con
ference” by their stronger rivals,
have suddenly emerged from in
fancy and are now challenging the
positions of those who, two or
three years back, merely smiled
when U. C. L. A. was mentioned.
The Bruins have made great
strides since their entrance into
the Pacific Coast conference in
1928. This current season is the
culmination of many years of hard
work, and constitutes a period of
major athletic transition for West
wood.
Starting off the season slowly,
the Bruins were held to a 0-0 tie
by the strong little Southern con
ference college, .Occidental. Fol
lowing this, the Westwood team
journeyed to Pullman, Washing
ton, to take it on the nose, 13-0,
after a hard-fought battle. The
Northwestern game two weeks
later found the Californians in
fighting mood back in Evanston,
Illinois, where the powerful North
Oregon Mothers
Will Convene at
Portland briday
^HE Portland group of Ore
gon Mothers will hold a tea
Friday, according to word re
ceived yesterday from Mrs.
Horace B. Fenton, president of
the group.
The tea will be held from 3 to
> at the home of Mrs. O. \Y.
Mieike, at 630 Knott street.
Mrs. Fenton requests that all
students write their mothers
and inform them of the meet
ing. urging them to be present.
I
western Purple was held to 19
points.
Bruins Improve Fast
Following an easy 46-0 victory
over Pomona college, Spaulding
sent his men against Stanford,
then undefeated. The Bruins scored
first in the second quarter, were
tie dearly in the third, but man
aged to hang on to a deadlock
until the last 18 seconds of play,
when the Reds went to the air and ,
pulled the game out of the fire
with a completed pass over the
goal line.
Then came St. Mary's, defeated
by the Olympic club, it was true,
but still powerful and strong
enough to be the match for the
best that the coast had to offer.
In two quick decisive thrusts, the
Bruins defeated those Gaels from
Moraga, beat them decisively after
first demoralizing them with a su
perior offensive attack that left
the Gaels gasping. It was almost
a rout, and it has been a long,
long time indeed since any team
routed “Slip” Madigan’s crew from
Mc-raga Valley.
|
Two Games Left To Play
The victory over St. Mary’s
IN THE PRESS BOX
with Walt Baker ========
REGON and Oregon State have their private feud
off their respective chests for another year, and
with the final decision last Saturday turning out to
be nothing decisive on the score sheet for either
team, both schools are where they started from be
fore the game was played.
After watching the game, it would seem that
both schools played the most conservative football
that either has produced all season not particu
larly gentle football, because there were the usual
choosings and mudslinging going on—but perhaps
both Spears and Schissl^r were rather cautious about treading upon
one another’s toes in the way of opening up anything that might look
like a long scoring chauce—a gamble that would either win or lose
the little old ball game. Generally in this traditional battle somebody
uncorks a prize long-shot play—one of those kind in the closing min
utes of play that either make or break the score. Last Saturday the
final gun went off on a comparatively peaceful scene in midfield.
PLENTY OF FIGHT
But let it not be said that there wasn't any fight shown out there.
What was probably one of the fieriest games seen on Hayward field
in a long time came off last Saturday—witness the fact that the com
parative yardage gained from scrimmage plays for the two teams was
held down to the least possible point. Both lines were practically on
a par with the Oregon line having the edge. Schulz, Bailey and j
Morgan in particular, with Mikulak backing them up, were perhaps
the most outstanding barriers that the Orangemen failed to get !
inrough. For Oregon State, Miller, Byington, K.
Davis, and Cox, with Hal Moe in Mikulak’s role as
idefensive back, stopped most of the Oregon plays
dhat threatened to get away. Yes, it was just one
of those games. If such a thing were possible, Ore
gon won a “moral victory,” as it was- termed in
some papers in the Sunday writeups—going into the
affair the under-dogs and charging- the O. S. C. for
ward wall back on their heels through the whole first
half of the game. But 0-0 was the score and that’s
the way it will be entered upon the roll of the tra
!" ual"M0E. i,t*lllonal Beaver-Duck football meetings.
lL"-‘'THE USUAL CRY
X wonder if Bobby Morris, head linesman, isn’t getting just a little
bit blind or perhaps he went through the game with a little Hayward
field mud in his eyes. Certainly he couldn’t have gon ethroughout
that game with all his ocular facilities functioning properly and over
looked the glaring offenses of off-side and backfield motion that were
so apparent in the press-box. The long pass in the last half, from
Davis to Rust, that netted the Beavers around 40 yards and very
nearly changed the tide of the struggle, was a good example The
backfield and line came out of the huddle and up to the ball, and by
the time it was snapped Vic Curtin, Beaver end, was in the Oregon
backfield and Rust was two good yards on his trip down the field to
receive the pass—a lot of yards to be ignored in calling off-side.
It also looked like none of the officials synchronized their two
second count to the halt in the Beaver shift before the ball was
snapped. Every time we did it, the play was half over at the end
of the time allowed for the halt—maybe they were calling them ac
cording to the 3932 rules that haven’t come out yet.
Some time ago we read in the Corvallis town paper a column that
goes by the moniker of Orange Peelin's in which was a censure of
this same Morris and George Varnell for never giving Oregon State
the breaks in the games at which they officiated. After taking a look
at that shift, we can hardly see just how the Orangemen got off a
play which they could possibly have called legal and not have tacked
on the usual five-yard penalty. There should be no more crying from
that sector about “breaks" and “unfavorable officiating for Oregon
To be read only
by those girls who have a Bill or a Bob tor whom to buy
a Christmas gift.
lii a handy and reasonable studio down town you will
find the quaintest, daintiest French miniature* frames
they blend in beautifully with this season’s “Eugenie”
iroek. and—Bomane's has the reputation of taking ver)
flattering and lovely pictures.
ROMANE STUDIO
992 Willamette St.
' establishes U. C. L. A. as a team
of major category one whole year
sooner than expected. In other
! words, the Bruins have arrived, an
event that has been anticipated in
! these parts—sick of Troy donii
• nance for some tim.e.
Two games are left on the Bruin
1 schedule, games which the U. C.
|L. A. team desires to take to com
plete a successful season. The
bigger of these two games is the
Homecoming clash with Oregon
next Saturday in the Los Angeles
Olympic stadium.
The Oregon game should be a
colorful one. All of the old grads
will be there as well as a huge
Bruin following swelled by the re
cent victory over St. Mary’s.
Oregon’s Strength Unknown
Oregon is rather an enigma here.
Defeated 53-0 by U. S. C„ the
Webfeet went back to New York
and trounced the New York U.
team, 14-6. Now nobody knows
how to figure the Ducks, and any
thing may happen Saturday.
Bill Spaulding, however, is ready
for that “anything.” With the
Bruins firmly established in the
win column. Spaulding will not
jeopardize his team's prestige with
any let-down in practice, and will
prepare for the Ducks in the same
manner as he has prepared for oth
er foes through the season.
EMERALD
The... A SR
"Peace Prospects in Manchuria”
will be the subject of Dr. Harold
J. Noble, of the history depart
ment, when he speaks this after
noon at 4 :15 during the Emerald of
the Air period over station KORE.
An authoritative interpretation
of the Oriental situation as it
stands at present, according to the
radio director, will be given. Dr.
Noble has spent many years in the
Far East, and he is well acquainted
with the late historical background
and reasons for the more recent
developments in the relations
between Japan, Russia, and China
as they are being conducted in
Manchuria.
FROSH GRIDS TEES ILL
Two of the frosh football play
ers, Earl Parker and Jack Chase,
are confined to the infirmary. Fred
Staver is also ill.
The smoke
you like... is
the smoke she
likes for you!
"I like to see a man smoke a pipe!’*
You’ve heard your own girl say it,
perhaps. You’re sure to hear it wherever
girls get together.
They puff away
at our cigarettes.
But they like to see
us have a go at the
“strong, silentman’s
smoke”—a com
panionable, time- |
proven pipe.
r r I here is some*
\ She like* you to amoko tiling satisfying
“1>lpe alxmt a pipe. It’s a
slow, reflective, hard-thinking smoke
—or a calm, relaxing, restful smoke.
The hunter’s smoke, the fisherman’s
smoke, the engineer’s smoke—a man’s
smoke, through and through.
And pipe smokers who know their
fine tobaccos tell you there’s no blend
quite like the line
6elected hurleys of
Edgeworth — the
favorite tobacco in
42 out of 50 leading
colleges.
Do try Edge- \
worth. Per- jj|j
haps you will
I iiKeitaswellas *
most men seem A pipe u
i to. Edgeworth is at your dealer’s. Or
send for free sample if you wish. Ad
j dress Larus & liro. Co., 105 ij. 22d
Street. Richmond, Va.
EDGEWORTH
SMOKING TOBACCO
Edgeworth is a blend of fine old hurleys,
with its natural savor enhanced by Edge
worth’s distinctive
and exclusive elev
enth process. Buy
Edgeworth any
where in two forms
—Edgewo rth Ready
Rubbed and Edge
worth Plug Slice. All
sizes, 15^ pocket
package to #1.50
pound humidor tin.
1
Frosh Forensic
Tryout Date Set
For December 3
Six Debates on Enlarged
Schedule of First
Year Orators
Tryouts for freshmen debate
will be held in Villard hall Thurs
day evening, December 3. The
question for debate will be “Re
solved: That the federal govern
ment should provide for a system
of cooperative controlled industry
to supplant our present system.”
All members of the frosh class
are eligible and ar.e asked to see
Robert Oliver, graduate assistant
of speech, as soon as possible, if
they wish to compete. He will be
in his office Thursday for that
purpose from 10 until 12 o'clock
in the forenoon and from 1 until 3
o'clock in the afternoon. Anyone
not seeing him at that time will
find him at his regular office
hours.
Contestants should be prepared
to speak 10 minutes on either the
affirmative or the negative of the
question.
Freshman debate Will be more
extensive this year than last and
so far a tentative schedule has
been arranged for six debates.
Their policy will also be to speak
before clubs, high schools, and
such groups where they can get
Students Warned
At Mid-term Must
Consult Advisors
jyjID-IEBM warnings sent out
to those students whose
work at mid-term was not sat
isfactory are not being returned
very rapidly, according to Karl
W. On thank. He urges students,
to see their advisers as soon as
possible and have a conference
with them. Warnings were sent
to all students low in one or
more courses.
If students are unable to find
their advisers in during their of
fice hours, they should report
to the dean of men or the dean
oi women.
a large enough audience. The same
question will be used as is used in
the tryouts.
Daly Group Entertains
Guests at Homecoming
The Daly club entertained mem
bers of the Oregon State Daly club
and Lakeview visitors for home
coming at a luncheon at the Green
Lantern Saturday. Fred Reynolds,
chairman of the board of trustees
of the Daly fund, gave a brief talk.
Linton Mushen, president of the
O. S. C. club, spoke for that group.
LAST DAYS! LAST CUTS!
LAST CALL
TOMORROW
We cut loose again with still greater
reductions for the
FINAL DRIVE TO CLOSE OUT
SURPLUS STOCKS
One big lot of
MEN’S SUITS and OVERCOATS
now going at
HALF PRICE
WADE BROS.
_ EUGENE . OREGON _
Fumbles Are Costly
Don’t fumble along with handwriting.
Use a Typewriter
You will get better grades with no extra work.
ALL MAKES —PORTABLE OR STANDARD
All the Bent Applied on Sale
Office Machinery & Supply Co.
Willamette Street side of Ward’s Phone 148
for the ST. MARYS GAME
ROUND TRIP TO
San Franciscos
JCeave Nov. 24, 25 OV 26
Be back by midnight, Dec, 3
"Dollar Day” rates for the Oregon-St. Marys
game in San Francisco on Thanksgiving Day!
This fare is good on all trams, including the
de luxe "Cascade” (extra fare).
Similar ccnt-a-mile roundtrips to all stations
on our Pacilk Lines.
Southern Pacific
FRANK O. LEWIS, Ticket Agent
TELEPHONE 2200