Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 24, 1933, Dad's Day Edition, Page 4, Image 4

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    Malcolm Bauer, Editor - - - Bob Avison, Ass’t Editor
Don Olds, Dan Clark, George Jones, Julius Scruggs,
Ted Blank, Emerson Stickles, Jack Miller, Tom
Dimmiek, Don Brooke, Randolph Pooley, Clair John
son, Jim Quinn, Bill Aetzel
Women’s Sports Editor.Betty Shoemaker
SPORTS
THE athletic activities of the University of Oregon,
its competitive teams and otherwise, should be _the
concern of each and every student on the campus. Keep
abreast of the sport news of your University if you are
not actively a participant.
VOLUME XXXV
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1933
Page 4
Our Side of It
By MALCOLM BAUER
All-American Trojans j
Play in Heaver Suits
In Portland Grid Tilt
44/^OME and see the all-Ameri
*-4 cans!”
More than 20,000 Portlanders j
Howard Jones
ana luuiuau i
from the North
west at largej
heard this cry
last Saturday
and made their
way to Multno
mah stadium in
the Rose City.
Why? Because
Howard Jones
was presenting
his one and only
Southern Califor
__ all. I
liliX Xiujauo, XM.M. I--* —
Americans, one and all. Incident
ally, the big shots from Los An
geles were to show their gridiron
prowess by being allowed to run
over and around a crowd of or
ange jerseyed footballers who were
to be very accommodating.
But Mr. “Dopewise” Football
Fan did not give a whoop who the
orange-jerseyed fellows were just
so long as they made it possible
for him to see a real live all
American in action. He gets so
little chance to do this up here in
the Northwest, you know. Who
ever heard of an all-American,
even a potential all-American, hid
ing himself away here in the land
of the pines and cheeses ?
* * *
All right. Mr. Fan is in his seat
on the 50-yard line, and comfort
able in the belief that he will get
his desire ... to see an ail Ameri
can football player that isn't on a
aci’een. He wanted to see just
what had to be done to be chosen
on the exclusive eleven.
* # *
Yes, there was the chubby
Mr. Griffith over there. He
was named on the top-notch
outfit yast year, you know.
And out there arching his eye
brows and tossing the ball
around was “Cotton” YVarhur
ton, who alternates with Grif
fith in thrilling the paid-up
customers. Also trotting up
and down the field to warm
up and smiling at the recep
tive co-eds in the Beaver root
ing section, was Captain Ford
Palmer . . . the handsome dev
il. Over talking things over
with the boys and displaying
his “three foot” shoulders was
hulking Mr. Bosenburg, an
other “all-American.”
The stage was set, and at the
whistle Lon Stiner obediently trot
ted his eleven puppets onto the
field so that Mr. Fan could see his
heroes work. But then things
went nil wrong. Somebody must
have got things crossed up, be
cause all of the all-Americans sud
denly turned out to be in orange
jerseys. On the very first play
the Corvallis lads rudely smacked
a play right through Mr. Rosen
berg for 12 yards and a first down.
This wasn't right. It couldn't last.
But it did last, and the all-stars
remained in the orange jerseys.
All-American Ford Palmer
was doing tilings In a great
way for the Beavers aiul
would answer to either the
name of Curtain or Josliu.
All-American Warburton was
at his best attired in an or
ange uniform and answering
to the name of Franklin. All
McDonald
- NOW PI.WING -
Double Bill
You’ll Die
Laughing! !
WALLACE BEERY
GEORGE RAFT
JACKIE COOPER
FAY WRAY & PERT KELTON
™E BOWERY
also
and
Col. Stoopnagle and Bud
in
“STOOl’NOCItACY”
?A’ Basketball
Tourney Will
Begin Today
Three Gaines Slateil for
This Afternoon
Beta Quintet Appears Strong;
Yeomen Lose Several Good
Players
Today’s Basketball Games
4 :00 Phi Kappa Psi “A” vs.
International House “A.”
4:40 Phi Sigma Kappa “A”
vs. Sherry Ross “A.”
5:20 Phi Delta Theta "A”
vs. Chi Psi “A.”
With three games slated for to
day’s donut program the 1933 bas
ketball tournament will get under
way. The opening contest will be
played between Phi Kappa Psi
and the International House. Phi
Sigma Kappa will meet Sherry
Ross hall, and Phi Delta Theta
will tangle with Chi Psi in the
other two games on schedule.
This year’s league will be split
into two sectors with each living
organization being allowed to en
ter an “A” and "B" team. Any
player who plays with an "A”
team will be ineligible for “B"
competition.
Each house is expected to have
a strong combination entered in
botli tournaments. Beta Theta Pi
looms up as the outstanding con
tender for this year’s donut crown.
The Beta lineup will include such
stars as “Wee Willie” and Bud
Jones, mainstays cf Howard Hob
son’s Ashland Normal quintet
which decisively trounced the Ore
gon varsity in several pre-season
contests last year.
Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Al
pha Mu are also expected to enter
strong quintets in this year’s tour
ney. The Yeomen, last year’s
champions, have lost several out
standing stars, but they are count
ed on to win their share of the
games.
American R osenberg had
somehow got mixed up with
Harold Joslin, and was play
ing with his number behind
the Beaver line. All-American
Griffith was slightly freckled,
and the Oregon State rooters
hulled him as Hal Bangle.
* * #
Of course, Mr. Fan was a bit
puzzled at first. But soon things
began to clear. Why, of course,
you could see that the field an
nouncer had just mixed things up,
and that the gridstcr he referred
to as Norman Franklin was real
ly "Cotton” Warburton. They
were just trying to fool the specta
tors, but he couldn’t be fooled. He
was seeing all-Americans.
Yes, Webfooters, these Orange
men looked like all-Americans, all
eleven of them. They may never
look so good again. It is certain
they Jiave never looked so good
before. Yes, perhaps the statistics
do show that the Trojans “should”
have won. But the statistics didn’t
show "fight," and those eleven
Beavers scored 60 minutes of this
| to none for the "all-Americans."
* # *
But remember, Mr. Beaver,
have all of your fun before No
vember II.
Knrollmct Decrease Slight
Andrew Vincent, head of the di
vision of drawing and painting in
the department of art and archi
tecture, lias 225 students enrolled
in classes. This shows a decrease
of 14 students.
Co
MOMe OWHfO • CUCtNti OWN |
LON I A L
II f*. AlOCK urn
LAST TIMES TONHJHT
What do they mean by "Spinach”?
You'll roar when you see
SUM SUMMERVILLE
and
/AsI’ PITTS
in
“LOVE, HONOR, AND
OH BA1IY!”
ADDED
Walt Disney's Technicolor Silly
Symphony
“Santa’s Toyshop"
UNIVERSITY
PHARMACY
(Near Colonial Theatre)
FACULTY
AND
STUDENTS
We Have
3 ex Oregon Students
To Serve You
-%-—
They Shackled the Trojan Horse
These three Orange linemen were among the eleven Beavers who rose to stardom Saturday when
they held Southern California’s national grid champs from scoring through four quarters of hard foot
hall at Multnomah stadium in Portland. From the left, they,are Ade Schwammel, husky tackle, Vic
Curtin, spark plug end, and Harry Field, tackle.
Football Spotlight Focused
On Several Dope Reversals
At last the old guard is falling.
With the coming of the new deal
and the N. R. A. the football spot
light is turning away from its
fixed position of the last two
years and penetrating the dark
ness to find new and greater foot
ball machines coming to the front.
In what may well be called one
of the most surprising upsets of
this season of devastating dope
reversals, the fighting Oregon
Staters stemmed the mighty El
Trojan Saturday at Portland to
check Troy’jj unequalled streak of
25 consecutive wins with a 0-to-0
tie.
Bucket Unset
In the east other upsets have
sent the experts and football
orophets to cover. Notre Dame,
mother of the old guard that have
oeen dominating the gridiron for
:he past two or three years,
bowed its head in defeat to How
mi Harpster’s up and coming
Carnegie Tech eleven. The score
ivas 7-0.
The only teams to save the
lopesters from utter ruin were the
mighty Wolverines from Michigan
and the Nebraska steam roller.
The former humbled Ohio State
13-0, while the Cornhuskers turned
back Kansas State 9-0.
Reversals Repeat
Just when the nation’s football
population was settling down and
the experts had finished making
excuses over the blasting of
Northwestern by Iowa and the
Northwestern-Stanford tie the sec
ond explosion occurred. Washing
ton State, coming up out of the
cellar, threw out the Bears from
California 6-6 and saved the Pull
man field from sustaining a Cou
gar loss upon it in the last eight
years. An inspired Army team
ran wild over Illinois' best and
came out on top 6-0. Princeton,
after many years of mediocrity,
jumped back in the running with
Women’s
Athletics
By BETTY SHOEMAKER
W. A. A. council meeting to
night nt 7:15 in social room of
Gerlinger.
* * *
Open hour at woman's swim
ming pool every clay from 4 to 5
p. m. Towels and suits furnished.
Volley ball schedule for this
week is given below. Teams be
sure to be present.
Tuesday, Oct. 25, 5 p. m.: Chi
Omega vs. Gamma Phi; Alpha
Omicron Pi vs. Zeta Tail Alpha
and Susan Campbell hall.
Wednesday, Oct. 26. 5 p. m.:
Hendricks hall vs. Gamma Phi;
Alpha Omicron Pi vs. Independ
ents; Zeta Tan Alpha and Susan
Campbell vs. Kappa Delta.
Thursday, Oct. 27, 5 p. m.:Phi
Mu vs. Chi Omega; Alpha Omicron
Pi vs. Zeta Tail Alpha and Susan
"ampbell; Alpha Delta Pi vs. In
dependents.
* * *
Intramural volleyball practice
on scheduled nights as well as
house games. Get in form for
those class games!
a brilliant 20-0 victory over the
highly touted Columbia eleven.
Dartmouth and Yale came to the
front with victories over strong
opponents, as did Colgate and
Purdue. In the South, Alabama
sent out notices that they had
their eye on another Rose Bowl
tilt with a victory over the strong
Tennessee outfit.
Oregon on Top on Coast
And so over the nation we find
new faces replacing many of the
old ones at the top of the gridiron
ladder. On the Pacific Coast,
Oregon rests at the top of the
race. The Colorado Aggies domi
nate the Rocky Mountains. A
number of new favorites and two
old ones prevail in the mid-west
and the southwest.
The leaders, as taken from the
undefeated and untied major elev
ens in the country, are:
Team
Davis-Elkins
Duquesne .
Oregon .
Army .
Dartmouth .
Duke .
Ford ham .
Georgia .
Holy Cross .
Carnegie Tech
Colgate .
Iowa .
Princeton .
Nebraska .
Syracuse .
Yale .
Michigan .
Won
.... 6
.... 6
.... 5
4
.... 4
.... 4
.... 4
.... 4
.... 4
.... 3
.... 3
.... 3
. 3
. 3
. 3
. 3
. 3
Book at Library
Published in 1822
Unique in the library of the
University of Oregon is an old
volume of “The Constitution of
England” by J. L. De Lolme. The
book was published in London in
1822.
But it is not the age of the book.
| its subject matter, its author, or
! even its handsome binding that is
its chief interest. A fore-edge
I painting is the feature that makes
this book stand out in the library's
I collection.
The painting, which appears to
be in water color, is a picturesque
water front scene executed so that
, it is visible only when the edges
of the leaves are properly spread.
| When the book is closed, it ap
pears to be an ordinary gilt-edged
book.
Since the subject of the picture
has nothing to do with the subject
of the book itself, and there is no
reference to the fore-edge inside,
it may be assumed that the paint
ing was done after the book was
published.
Huff alter Cites School
Emergency Program
P’-. C. L. Huffaker, of the school
of education, spoke on the present
emergency in Oregon schools at
an open meeting of Phi Delta
Kappa. Monday at S o'clock in the
men's lounge at Gerlinger hall. He
! presented a program for the rem
edy of the situation.
Junior, senior and graduate men
were invited to attend, particu
larly those interested in education.
Utah Game to Feature
Homecoming; Tickets
To Go on Sale at Co-op
Tickets for the Oregon-Utah
football game, a feature of the
annual Homecoming day, Sat
urday, November 4, go on sale
Wednesday. Those planning to
attend may obtain tickets at
the A. S. U. O. ticket office in
McArthur court, the Co-op, or
the Club cigar store in down
town Eugene.
Since the game will be an
inter-sectional one, tickets will
be in great demand, Tom
Stoddard, assistant graduate
manager, said yesterday.
SEVENTH ANNUAL DAD’S
DAY IS HAILED SUCCESS
(Continued from Page One)
ble, president of the Oregon
Mothers, spoke for her organiza
tion, and pledged cooperation to
the “Dads” and others \yorking for
the institution.
The banquet was attended by
more than 500 students and dads.
“Patronize Emerald advertisers.”
Roget’s
Thesaurus
A New and Revised
Edition
A REAL
BARGAIN
1
The
‘CO-OP’
Oregon State
Ties Trojans
In Grid Upset
Orangemen Spoil U.S.C.
Victory Record
Norman Franklin and Two Joslins
Furnish Fireworks in
Portland Game
MULTNOMAH CIVIC STA
DIUM, Portland, Oct. 23.—(Spe
cial)—“O. S. C., our hats are off
to you!”
At last the words of the Beaver
victory song have come true. For
Saturday the underrated Orange
men surprised thousands of grid
fans throughout the country and
held the great Southern California
Trojans, unbeaten and untied in
25 games, to a scoreless tie in a
game that made football history.
Football fans of the country take
off their hats to Lon Stiner, who
is acting as head coach fof the
first time this year, and his eleven
“ironmen” of the gridiron.
Orange Defense Stubborn
Showing a% stubborn defense sec
ond to none in the history of the
modern college football game the
Orangemeif "stopped the highly
touted would be all-Americans of
Troy. Warburton, Griffith, Wot
kyns, McNeish, and other heralded
all-stars were stopped many times
for large losses.
Several times the “Thundering
Herd” got within the very shad
ows of the goal posts but those
fighting Beavers held, and held
well. Norman “Red” Franklin,
whose home is in the very shadows
of the Trojan lair, was the hero
of the day. This speedy 165
pound halfback stopped everything
that Howard Jones had to offer.
Joslin Brothers Star
But the credit for the great
game can not be given to the lit
tle Long Beach speedster alone.
The two Joslin brothers, Hal and
Woody, the captain for the game,
Vic Curtin and in fact the whole
team came through playing heads
up football throughout the entire
conflict.
Although outplayed, Lon Stiner
and his boys won a great moral
victory from the team the “ex
perts” said were unbeatable.
Southern California gained 236
yards from scrimmage to only 69
for. the Staters. They gained 21
yards on passes to 12 for the
Beavers. The mighty . Trojans
made 12 first downs to 2 for Sti
ner’s eleven. But the Orangemen
held when the time came to hold
and showed El Trojan that it could
be stopped.
“Paganize Emerald advertisers.'
DANCE
PROGRAMS .
▼
Are a highly spe
c i a 1 i z e d form of
printing which must
be carefully planned
as well as printed
to secure the de
sired effects. As
such work should
not be rushed, let
us know your dance
motif early and we
will work out an
original program.
VALLEY
PRINTING CO.
STATIONERS
Phone 470—76 VV. Broadway
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tiiSiaf3/SIS,'3S/SHS/SJS,r2I3f3/S13®3I3ISJ3(r313I3/aiSia[BiaiBiB(3/3/aiaf3(afSlSOHBEIS/3iai^.
Oregon Men Gain
Finals of Eugene
Golf Tournament
Completing the semi-final round
of the annual City Golf Tourna
ment held on the Laurelwood
course, Phil Mulder will meet Rob
3rt Prescott, Eugene business man,
aither today or tomorrow.
Sid Milligan and Don Olsen,
both Eugene boys, fought an in
teresting battle last Saturday with
Milligan entering the finals of the
tournament with a 2 and 1 victory.
Mulder, who hails from Oswego,
Oregon, and both Eugene boys
who entered the semi-finals are
all University men affiliated with
the Phi Delta Theta house.
The finals of the tournament
will, according to present plans,
be played sometime the latter part
of this week or next Sunday.
Betas Defeat Phi
Belts* to Advance
In Donut Tourney
ml
Kappa Sigma, Phi Gamma Delta
Are Victorious in Other
Scheduled Games
Today’s Water Polo Schedule
4:00—Alpha Tau Omega vs.
Sigma Phi Epsilon.
4:40—Phi Gamma Delta vs.
Sigma Chi.
5:20 — Beta Theta Pi vs.
Kappa Sigma.
Beta Theta Pi advanced a notch
closer toward their second consec
utive aquatic title yesterday aft
ernoon with an impressive 3-2 vic
tory over" a strong Phi Delt
water-polo team. Jim Reed, clever
Beta forward, tossed the winning
goal in an overtime period. Deaver
and Cross played an outstanding
game for Phi Delta Theta, as each
man scored once during the en
counter.
Phi Gamma Delta blanked the
Theta Chi water aggregation 4-0.
The Fijis displayed a powerful at
tack, and should have little trou
ble advancing to the semi-final
round.
Kappa Sigma upset the strong
Chi Psi water artists 1-0 in the
final match of the afternoon.
Newport, Kappa Sig forward,
Scored the only counter just be
fore the first half was over.
“Patronize Emerald advertisers.”
Teachers to
Play Duckling
Grid Eleven
Contest Is Scheduled for
Klamath Falls
Hobson Will Have Strong Lineup;
Yearling Coaches Speed
lip Offensive
With the news of the Sons’ 39
to 0 victory over the .rooks, the
University of Oregon freshmen
Elmer Brown
buckled to a hard
week of work in
preparation for
their game with
Hobson’s teach
ers at Klamath
Falls Saturday.
Led by Lancas
ter and Brown,
former Universi
of Oregon foot
ball players, and
by Beach, the
Southern Oregon
Normal scnooi team
series of laterals and spinners
that proved too much for the Or
ange babes Friday. The rooks ef
forts at touchdowns via the air
were met by interceptions on the
part of Hobson’s team.
Coaches Optimistic
In spite of the comparative
scores, the frosh beat the rooks 7
to 3, Bill Reinhart and Irv Schul$,
frosh coaches, are almost optimis
tic. The yearlings are developing
a speedier offense, that should
make them more formidible than
they appeared against the rook3.
Reinhart promises “something
potent’’ in the way of an offense
next Saturday and prophesied that
the Sons would have an interesting
afternoon.
The reserves are pushing the
regulars hard and some new faces
may be seen in the game. Murray
has been playing both end and
tackle. If he is shifted to tackle
Adams will probably take his place
on the wing post.
Farrar at Center
Farrar is still holding down the
center position, although Barry
and Caller are showing some prom
ise in that department. The rest
of the team showed little change
over the week-end. Konopka is
still unable to play, but injuries
have not increased.
Last night was the first of a se
ries of heavy workouts, with new
plays, kicking and passing being
1 stressed.
L'lliimililHilillHBlIIIIHIIIHIliilKlIililHIIIIIIlHlllllHIlMBIIl'IBillilHIlilHIIII
i
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a \v!
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EDITORIALS ON CCRRENT EVENTS
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