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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1932)
Nobody’s Business ▼ T - Ey BRUCE HAMBY - TjrHAT a week-end for upsets! ” Wonder how many dollars were dropped when the Trojans smashed Pop Warner’s lads all over the Palo Al to stadium to win 13 to 0. The battered Califor nia Bears finally won a conference game. With a ? second - st r i n g j halfback, Arleigh | Williams, leading i the way the! Bears came Hal Moe through with a sparkling 7 to 6 victory over Washington at Seat tle, Oregon State couldn’t muster enough punch near the goal line and the Cougars won (heir second conference encounter by the mar gin of a successful goal kick, 7 to 6. Oregon had a field day in 'Mos cow. Mark Temple and Pepper Pepelnjak had a great time show ing Idaho fans how to make touch downs in a hurry as the Webfoots rolled up 32 points to the Vandals 0. * * * Down in Los Angeles the U. C. L. A. Bruins snowed under Cali fornia Tech in a breather game 51 to 0. The Bruins had little op position and kept most of their tricks under cover in anticipation of the Stanford-U. C. L. A. con-1 test next Saturday. * * * The old crystal ball came I through in fine style for last j Saturday's predictions. A 100 j per cent score was the result. Here’s how we picked them: U. S. C. to take Stanford 14 to 7 . . . Warner’s men couldn't j come through -with that one | score. Oregon 14, Idaho 0 . . . Temple put one over on the old seer. California 7, Washington 0 ! hit that one on the nose. Washington State 7, Oregon State 0 . . . under-rated the Bea vers a bit. U. C. L. A. 24, Cal. Tech . . . over-rated Tech. Wisconsin 13, Coe 0 . . . Doc must have gotten mad. Army 16, Yale 6 . . . final re sult 20 lu 0 tor the West Point ers. Notre Dame 27, Carnegie Tech 0 . . . the Ramblers score nothing less than 42 points. * * * The Oregon State-WashingtoD State game at Corvallis was the Northwest's best game to date. Both elovens showed worlds of power on a muddy Bell field. The Beavers are going to give the Webfoots plenty of trouble on No vember 8, and don't forget that. u * # Coach Schiasler has a potential powerhouse over there in Corval lis and if the Staters are on when the Webfoots visit the farm, some one is going to take a beating. Keith Davis, veteran Beaver end, gave one of the finest exhibitions of punting with a wet ball the writer has ever seen. From the start of the game until the final whistle he muffed only one. Most of his spirals were good for from 0 to 55 yards. George Sander, Cougar triple-threat back, kept up with Davis for the first few kicks, but couldn't stand the pace. Watch out for Norman Frank lin, Hal Moe, Curly Miller, Johnny Biancone when the Bea vers play host to Oregon. Miller played a whale of a game in the line and the other three kept the small crowd of 4000 on its feet throughout the game with sparkling runs and punt returns. * * » The chief fault displayed by Schissler's eleven was poor tack ling and blocking. With the ex ception of Hal Moe, the Staters showed little ability in taking out men on the offense. Moe, inci dentally, gave one of the finest examples of blocking seen in many moons when he took out two Cou gar backs at one clip on a punt return by Biancone. Hal is certain of all-coast mention this year. K'lEJBlSJSJDJfilSJBlfiJiPiSfiSltsij'fiiaJSEJEEJSErfiiii Get a S “Super Shine” at the Campus Shoe Shine 13th St. !® Gonzaga '11’ P aces Oregon Next Saturday Last Eugene Appearance Of Team Slated Bulldogs Expected To Provide Tough Competition in .Von-Conferenee Tilt Saturday will be the last occa sion Eugene fans will have to view Prink Callison’s 1932 Webfoots in action on Hayward field. The pow erful Bulldogs of Gonzaga univer sity will provide the opposition, and the Webfoots expect a tough battle. The Bulldogs' sparkling 20 to 7 victory over Idaho, combined with their splendid showing against the Washington Huskies and Beavers from O. S. C., serve as a warning that the Gonzagans will be no pushover. The fact that Capt. Bill Morgan and Mike Mikulak proba bly will not see action in Satur day’s contest does not enhance the Webfoots chances of an easy victory. Bulldogs Get Eyeful/ Last Saturday, while the Web-' foots were subduing the Idaho j Vandals 32 to 0, the entire Bull-' dog team sat in the stands and got first hand information on the , strength and weakness of the | Oregon eleven. In the opinion of the Gonzaga players, the Webfoots will be a tougher proposition than either the Huskies or the Beavers, for | the Lemon and Green team showed a greater variation of plays than S did the other two teams. Gene Shields, line coach, who has scouted the Bulldogs in their three conference games, is high in his praise of their power. The Gonzagans will be in excellent condition, with Max Krause, star fullback, the only probable casual- 1 ty. Krause swallowed a pin the \ other day, and it is still uncertain ! whether lie will have to be oper ated on or not. Bulldogs Play Wide-Open The Gonzaga team plays a wide 1 open type of ball and makes no j bones about it. A wet field will slow them down somewhat, but nevertheless they have a couple of 200-pound backs who are great line plungers and to whom a little wetness means not a thing. The Bulldogs use the lateral and forward pass to great advantage, and promise Oregon fans a wide open game Saturday. Suiters To Face West Coast Army Friday Evening OREGON STATE COLLEGE, Corvallis, Oct. 24. Oregon State will meet West Coast Army here Friday night ai 7:30 o’clock in a non-Conference game. This year’s Army team, coming from San Francisco, is reputed to be one of the best ever put out on the coast and promises to give the Orange men a hard fight. Although many dopesters figure the Army-Oregon State to be a "breather" for the Beavers the Army men have a good team and are a threat at any time during the game. They are somewhat handicapped, however, by the rul ing that only one officer can be in the lineup at a time. The game iji expected to be a good conditioner for the Orange men as they meet Oregon here November 5 in the homecoming battle. Boxers Warned To Be in Shape Intramural boxers should start getting into condition, according to an announcement made by the donut board yesterday. The box ing tournament will start in De cember. Only students passing a high physical rating will be al lowed to participate. Another announcement of equal importance released yesterday was to the effect that intramural bas ketball will start this coming Mon day, with both A and B leagues opening competition. Doxie Moore, Purdue right half back. never played football in high school at Delphi, Ind., but ; was one of the state's flashiest basketball guards. S*»rts Thursday BELA SI (MACULA) ft j V' w*.wu«/ iiUGOSli The Thrill of I lit' Veal! Entire I’rojfrani 1'IHST lilM! A Silent Man From the West Is Charles (Sphinx) Wishard, who plays left end for the Oregon Wehfoots. lie is the sphinx of the North Dakota deserts, and he comes from a place known as VVaterton. His teammates say you can get a pretty fair glimpse of it if you look out of the right side of the train when you go by. Foothull Results 0 -—-—— PACIFIC COAST U. S. C. 13, Stanford 0. California 7, Washington 6. W. S. C. 7, O. S .C. 6. Oregon 32, Idaho 0. Montana State 10, Montana 7. Whitman 14, Pacific 0. U. C. L. A. 51, California Tech 0. Columbia 19, Linfield 7. Eastern Oregon Normal 39, Al bion Normal 0. EAST Amherst 6, Wesleyan 0. Michigan State 19, Fordham 13. New Hampshire 22, Vermont 7. Princeton 0, Navy 0. Army 20, Yale 0. Columbia 46, Williams 0. Colgate 14, N. Y. U. 0. Maine 0, Bates 0. Penn 33, Lehigh 0. .Harvard 10, Dartmouth 7. Pittsburgh 0, Ohio State 0. Brown ll,»Tufts 0. Villanova 31, Loyola 7. Bucknell 14, Lafayette 6. Holy Cross 6, Rutgers 0. Syracuse 12, Penn State 6. Geneva 39, Boston 6. SOUTH Georgia Tech 43, North Carolina 14. V. P. I. 7, Kentucky 0. V. M. I. 6, Virginia 4. Tennessee 60, Maryville 0. Auburn 19, Tulane 7. Louisiana State 14, Arkansas 0. N. C. State 17. Florida 6. Alabama 24, Mississippi 13. William and Mary 7, Washing ton and Lee 0. Springfield 13, Delawara 6. Vanderbilt 12, Georgia 6. WEST Oklahoma 20, Kansas Aggies 13. Michigan 32, Illinois 0. Missouri 0, Iowa State 0. Notre Dame 42, Carnegie Tech 0. Minnesota 21, Iowa 6. Nebraska 20, Kansas 6. Marquette 13, Boston college 0. Miami 16, Ohio U. 0. Purdue 7, Northwestern 7. Wisconsin 39, Coe 0. ... Chicago 13, Indiana 7. South Dakota State 0, South Da kota U. 0. Marquette Teachers 10, North land 0. N. Dakota State 7, N. Dakota 6. Washington U. 14, Grinnell 7. SOUTHWEST Texas 18, Rice 6. Texas Aggies 0, Baylor 0. St. Edwards college 7, Daniel Baker 7. Louisiana college 12, University 1 of Mexico 0. New Mexico 0, New Mexico Ag gies 0. Texas Christian 68. Austin 0. ROCKY MOUNTAIN Brigham Young 20, Colorado Teachers 2. Wyoming 6. Colorado College 15. Colorado Aggies 7, Colorado 6. j Western State 13, Idaho tSouth ern branch i 7. Texas Tech 21, Colorado Mines 0. HIGH SCHOOL Beaverton 18. Tigard 0. Medford 7, Grants Pass 6. John Rogers IS, Lewiston 6. Baker 6, Pendleton 0. Columbia Prep 20, St. Helens 20. Mark Temple in Lead for Coast Scoring Honors Palmer, IJSC Eml, Second; Pepelnjak Tied for Third Place Mark Temple’s three touch downs as Moscow Saturday after noon nlus a successful conversion Geo. Pepelnjul put him in the lead for individ ual scoring- hon ors in the coast conference for the week. He has a total of 19 points. Only one point behind is Ford Palmer, Trojan end. Palmer add ed six points in the Stanford en UUllIlLt-'r. liru iui umu iav,c five players, Smith of Idaho, Cad del of Stanford, Stansberry of Montana, Pepelnjak of Oregon and Griffin of U. S. C. Each has 12 points to his credit. The -scoring records for confer ence contests this year follow: Td. Tp. Fg. Ttl. Temple, Oregon .3 1 0 '19 Palmer, S. Cal. .3 0 0 Pepelftjak, Oregon 2 W. Smith, Idaho Gaddel, Stanford Stansberry, Mont Griffith, S. Cal. E. Smith, S. Cal.. Walker, Stanford Sim, Stanford .... Keeble, Ucla Wolcott, Wash. ... Ahonen, Wash. .. Sohn, Wash.1 Meader, Wash.1 Vikerman, Mont. Warburton, S. Cal. 1 Arbelbide, W. S. C. 1 Geraghty, Idaho .. .1 Berry, Ucla . Livesay, Ucla Colburn, W.S.C. Biancor.e, O.S.C. j Pozzo, Ore.1 j Williams, Cal. | W. Smith, Wash. ! Corbus, Stanford 1 Giesecke, Ore. 1 Eubanks, W.S.C. ! Sanson, Wash. ! Hornbeak, Wash. I Hileman, Mont. I Sander, W.S.C. ... j Moser, Idaho . Castro, Cal.0 ! Safety, Cal.0 .1 .1 0 0 . 0 .0 . 0 .0 .0 .0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 3 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 18 12 12 12 12 12 7 Egad! Babe Stars At Football, Too DALLAS, Tex. — (API— Babe Didrikson. girl athlete and Olym pic star, can handle a football al most as skillfully as a baseball. Dressed in a regulation football uniform, she tossed and caught numerous passes in an exhibition with Southern Methodist players here. The squad, aided by Babe, demonstrated scoring plays which worked against Army, Navy and other strong teams. G,,u,n, BEN NET Ul, ALL FUN! DIME NITE ,\nv Seat, 10c Doors Open, 6:30 with m«niBnv^1 BtN LYON$ J>AVI[)MANNtat anmaEs Four Teams Score Wins InWaterPolo Thela Chi. A. T. O. Squads Advance by Default ( hi I’si and Kappa Sig Victorious In Only Meets of Opening i Competition Today's Water Polo Schedule, S. A. E. vs. Phi Delt, 4:00 o’clpck. Yeomen vs. S. P. E., 4:30 o'clock. Beta vs. Sigma Chi, 5:00 o'clock. Phi Psi vs. Alpha Ilpsilon, 5:30 o'clock. In yesterday’s initial water polo games Chi Psi defeated Friendly hall by a score of G to 3, Kappa Sig beat Sigma Pi Tau in an over time game by a score of 2 to 1, and both Theta Chi and A. T. O. won their games by defaults from Omega hall and Delta Tau Delta. The first game between Chi Psi and Friendly was a hectic affair with Reissmuller starring for the Chi Psis and Catlou duplicating for Friendly. Reissmuller made some sensational shots from the center of the tank and was the high-point man for his side. Cat lou made all the points for Friendly. The second contest, between Sigma Pi Tau and Kappa Sig was well-played with neither side hav ing any advantage until the final minutes of the contest, \yhen Heg dahl made a one-handed shot just out of Favier’s reach. However, Kappa Sig came right back and tied up the score when Zehtbauer whizzed a fast one past Humph ries of S. P. T. Kappa Sig won in an overtime, period. Theta Chi and A. T. O. both en tered the next bracket by virtue of defaults from Omega hall and Delta Tau Delta. Line-ups: Chi Psi (6) Friendly hall (3) Travis .RF. Kahn Reissmuller LF. Catlou Here’s One Gent SureTo See 1936 Olympic Games BERLIN — (AP) — Although the next Olympiad will not be gin until 1936, first applications for admission tickets have been received by the federal athletic committee. Norman N. Rankow of the United States, being the very first applicant, put in a reser vation for his family and him self for seats facing the finish. The second application for 100 tickets came in a few hours later from an American univer sity. Grady .CF. Anthony Connell .RG. Henry Jewett .LG. Conway McCall .CB. Comstock Jorgensen .Goal. Weitz Schloth .S. Wilkensen Sigma Pi Tail (1) Kappa Sig (3) Tuck .RF. Wright George .LF. White Hegdahl .CF. Newport Carley .RG. Beckhold Schenk .LG. Zehtbauer Temple .CB. Favier Humphries .Goal. Newman Ballard .S Olsen Golf King Of Country Club Don Olsen, junior in business administration, became club cham pion of the Eugene country club triumphed over Bob Hammond 2 and 1 in 18 holes. Olsen ’toured the country club course in 76, four over par, while Hammond took a 78. ■o-—-o SUNDAY’S GAMES -$>--—---o Southern Cal. All-Stars 7, West Coast Navy 15. San Francisco Teachers 6, San ta Rosa Jr. Coll. 13. West Coast Army 7, West Seat tle A. C. 7. San Francisco Univ. 16, Olympic Club 0. . DePaul of Chicago 19, St. Mary’s 0. Seven Squads In Race For ° | Grid Honors Field Narrowed After Five Weeks of Competition Notre Dame, U. S. C., Tennessee Michigan, Colombia, Auburn And Colgate Left Seven undefeated and untied elevens stand out as contenders for the mythical national grid Hank Andersoi title at the end of the fifth week of intensive com petition. They are Notre Dame. Southern Cali fornia, Michigan, Columbia, A u - burn, Tennessee, and Colgate. These seven are not the only outstanding ele vens, but on the basis of present 1 accomn lishments loom as favorites to end with an undefeated record. What a Powerhouse! The Notre Dame Ramblers came through with another over whelming victory this week as they downed Carnegie Tech, 42 to 0. While the Spartans have a weaker team than usual this year, Saturday's defeat was the worst suffered in many years. Hank Anderson’s eleven has scored 177 points in its three games this year. Southern California passed the most difficult obstacle on its way to another coast conference title by downing Stanford, 13 to 0. The Trojans still have to face California, Washington and Ore gon, but are favorites to win all three. Raiders Still Parading Colgate’s “Red Raiders” con tinued their touchdown parade in the East by defeating New York university, 14 to 0. Colum bia maintained its undefeated standing by trouncing Williams, 46 to 0. Cornell remains as the most serious threat to Columbia hopes. Auburn jumped into national Doc Orders Long Scrimmage After Squad Wins, 39*0 MADISON, Wis., Oct. 24—(Spe cial) Doc Spears' Wisconsin Bad gers have proved they can come back. His inexperienced eleven, after losing to Purdue’s champions by the heart-breaking margin of one point two weeks ago, perked up Saturday and smashed Coe's football forces, 39 to 0. The outcome never was in doubt. Wisconsin gained more than 400 yard3 from scrimmage to minus one yaid for Coe. But even this impressive performance did not satisfy the tough Doctor, who scrimmaged his team at Camp Randall after the game was ended. It will be remembered that Doc Spears was just as untiring and hard-boiled at Oregon as he now is at Wisconsin. After the Paci fic game here two years ago he also scrimmaged his men. The re sults were gratifying, the Web foots outclassing Washington's Huskies, 7 to 0, shortly after wards. Democrats on Top In Portland Race Jefferson high school's champion ship football squad continued to lead the Portland interscholastic league at the end of the fourth week of competition. The Demo crats have won three and lost none. Roosevelt, *d oor-mat of the league for years, is tied for first place with two victories and one tie game. Games this week in clude Jefferson vs. Grant, Wash ington vs. Roosevelt, Franklin vs. Lincoln and Benson vs. Commerce. prominence by upsetting the four-year southern champions, 19 to 7. Tennessee took a breather game from Maryville, 60 to 0. The last of the seven, Michigan, handed Illinois a 32-to-0 drubbing and jumped into the lead in Big | Ten standings. The Wolverines still have three tough games, with [ Indiana, Chicago and Minnesota. 1 WITH CLIVE IN INDIA "Nature in the Raw”—as portrayed by the noted artist, Kari Godwin ... inspired by the fierce and bril liant assault by Clive and a hand ful of followers, outnumbered 20 to 1 by savage hordes of bloodthirsty natives, at the Battle ofPlassey—the birth of the British Indian Empire —as described in the famous Henty book, "With Clive in India.” I —and raw tobaccos have no place in cigarettes They are not present in Luckies . . . the mildest cigarette you ever smoked w E buy the finest, the very finest tobaccos in all the world—but that does not explain why folks every where regard Lucky Strike as the mildest cigarette. The fact is, we never overlook the truth that “Nature in the Raw is Seldom Mild”—so these fine tobaccos, after proper aging and mellowing, are then given the benefit of that Lucky Strike purifying process, described by the words—"It’s toasted”.That’s why folks in every city, town and hamlet say that Luckies are such mild cigarettes. “It’s toasted” That package of mild Luckies "If a man write a litter boot, preach a better sermon, or make a better mouse-trap than his neighbor, tho he build bis house in the woods, the world will make a beaten path to his door. ''—RALPH WALDO EMERSON. Docs not this explain the world-wide acceptance and approval of Lucky Strike?