Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, March 08, 1935, Page 5, Image 5

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    Xed Simpson, Editor__ Don Casciuto, Nipht Editor This Issue
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1935
Beavers Rest
Before Series
With Trojans
Winners of Southern
Title Take First
Workout
Defensive vs. Offensive to
Deeitle Outcome
CORVALLIS. Ore., March 7.—
f (AP)—The Oregon State college
basketball team rested today from
the stiff campaign it waged to go
into the coast conference cham
A- pionship play-off here Friday and
Saturday nfghts.
The University of Southern Cali
fornia team, southern division
champion, planned to dash onto
the court and limber up today fol
lowing their arrival from Los An
geles.
Coach Gill, who in his playing
days for Oregon State college was
all-coast guard one year and all
coast forward another, has drilled
all his players intensively in both
offensive and defensive tactics.
Without any one outstanding point
maker, all the Beaver players
whether regulars or substitutes
play an important part in the scor
ing.
The main defensive problem for
the Beavers will be to check Lee
Guttero, Southern California's sen
sationally rubber-legged center who
hovers around the basket dropping
in shots with either hand.
While Southern California has
the highest scoring combination in
the coast, Oregon State has the
most effective defense if records
iu the two divisions of the confer
ence are criterion.
Several special reserved seats in
the OSC-USC basketball champion
ship game tonight are still avail
able at the office of the graduate
manager in McArthur court, it was
announced last night by Thomas
Stoddard, assistant graduate man
ager.
Admission, for reserved seats,
will be $1.
You can always got
a good hair cut.
VARSITY
BARBER SHOP
Corner lltli and Alder
; Sharpshooter
Makes Nearly
Perfect Record
Earl Thomson scores 198
In Hearst Shoot
Earl Thomson, captain of the
University of Oregon rifle team,
wrote a blazing finis on a colorful
four-year career yesterday when
he fired one of the highest scores
ever made in an American in
tercollegiate rifle match. Sergeant
Harvey Blythe believes that Thom
son’s score will top all individual
scores which will be handed in this
year in the Hearst five-man na
tional championships.
Thomson placed 18 of his 20
shots within the eighth inch bulls
eye at a distance of fifty feet, from
four positions. His marks were
perfect in the prone, kneeling and
sitting positions, while three of his
five standing shots were bullseyes
and the other two were inside the
second ring.
High Team Score
Following the fine eample set
by Captain Thomson, the rifle
team turned in phenomenal scores
yesterday for a total of 965 which
Sergeant Harvey Blythe, coach, be
lieves will probably sweep aside
all opposition in the. Hearst Tro
phy, the national five-man shoot.
Although the scores of the sec
ond team were not exceptional,
Captain Thomson, with 198, Ken
BeLieu and W. R. Rice, 193, Norris
Perkins, 191, and B. J. Cross, 190,
scored eight points more yran the
University of Washington score
which took the shoot last year.
PLANTATION NIGHTS
Tomorrow night, Oregon stu
dents will be treated to sights and
sounds of unusual quality. The
Senior ball, presented at Gerlinger
hall, presents the rich, mellow fla
vor of the old South. The music
is of national pi'ominence. The
night is promising.
Send the Emerald to your friends
Subscription rates $2.50 a year.
Ijdu ma#
PUT THE SHOT
in the tab burns «P energy too. Von «e
nourishing, easyto-digcsl food.
Try a bool of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes for
7 You’ll like these
breakfast tomorrow. You
crunchy, golden flakes. And you 11
better during the day. y
They’re right, too, for that snack before
von retire. After a dance, or a long sessio
„i,h the books. They help you sleep,
cause they digest so easily.
Alwaysfre.lt a»d crisp, in the inner *AX.
XITE bag. Made by Kellogg in Battle Crc .
* CORN
flakes
sy
0 CWE*-*SJS"
(5 Fi/c.-ca-HaR"-1
CORN
FLAKES
OVEN-FRESH
Jones Named on
All-North Five
CORVALLIS. Oi., March 7.—
i AP i — Coaches selecting the
northern division coast conference
ali-star basketball team were
unanimous in naming Bob Galer of
University of Washington and
Wally Paimberg of Oregon State
as forwards and George Hibbard
of Oregon State a guard.
The coaches, at a meeting here,
named Willie Jones of University
of Oregon as center while W. Ger
aghty of Idaho and Clyde Wagner
of University of Washington re
ceived the same number of votes
for the other guard position. Earl
Conkling of Oregon State college
end Bishop of University of Wash
ington received scattered votes.
Art Taffe, sports publicity di
rector of Oregon State college, con
ducted the vote.
Students Launch
Anti-war Strike
United action in building a “new
world” was the theme of the Stu
dent Christian council meeting held
at Westminster house yesterday.
The “new world” program includes
re-creation of the individual, home,
church, community, nation and
world. It will probably be launched
on the Oregon campus by a con
certed anti-war strike April 12 at
11 a, m. The Christian council was
unanimous in endorsing the strike
yesterday and further plans will
be laid next week.
25c
Plate Lunch
Best on the campus.
Try it—Always tasty.
5c and 10c Sandwiches.
Fountain service.
THE
COTTAGE
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING
BEAUTY SALONS
Distinctive finger waves, 35c.
Love’s Beauty Salon. Phone 991.
DRESSMAKING
PETITE SHOP
573 13th St. E. Phone 3208.
‘‘Style Right—Price Right”
DRESSMAKING
Designing and remodeling
moderate cost. Mrs. Liston,
1611 Lincoln. Phone 2616-J.
STUDENTS
Have your car serviced before
you leave with Aviation Ethyl
gasoline at Ernie Danner's Ser
vice Station. Unexcelled person
al service. “Smile as you drive
in ’35.” Phone 1765. Corner 10th
and Olive.
FOR SALE
Corona portable for sale. 1239
Alder.
SHOE REPAIRING
First class shoe repairing at
greatly reduced prices. First
class materials used. University
Shoe Shop. Next to College Side.
FOUND
Man’s wrist watch on Uni
versity campus. Owner can have
same by calling for, and paying
for this adv. Phone 409-R.
TYPING
Theses, term papers typed
reasonably, Satisfaction. Write
604 Qunicy, Cottage Grive.
1 time . 10e per line.
'■1 times. 5c per line.
PHONE 3300
EMERALD
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
Dill Pickle Club Gives
Lunch Entertainment
Members of the Dill Pickle club
of the Y. W. C. A. were hostesses
to the Question Mark club
yesterday in the Y. W. C. A.
bungalow. Beverly Leaird, assisted
by Esther Cyrus, arranged the pro
gram, the feature of which was a
pantomime, “The Coquette.” Tak
ing part were Ethel Johnson, Lois
Luvass, Lucille Davis, Helen
Moore, Eileen Donaldson, and
Beverly Beaird. Nearly 50 students
attended the affair.
LAST EMERALD"
This edition ct the Oregon Em
erald is the last to appear this
term. Publication will be resumed
on April 9, at which time the Em
erald will once again offer a thor
ough presentation of the news.
DUNN TALKS TONIGHT
The story of the “Burning cf
Persepolis” by Alexander the
Great will be the topic of a radio
lecture given over KOAC at 8:35
tonight by Frederic S. Dunn, head
of the Latin department.
Stoddard Issues
Call for Varsity
Golf Aspirants
Three Lettermen Return to
Bolster Squad
A call for all varsity golf aspi
rants was issued yesterday by
Thomas Stoddard, coach, to meet
ai McArthur court Saturday after
noon at 1 o’clock.
Rules of competition, the size of
the squad, the explanation of the
schedule, and the drawings for the
qualifying rounds will comprise the
principal business of the meeting.
Initial Rounds Planned
The qualifying rounds have been
scheduled to get underway March
11 and will last until March 16 at
the Eugene Country club. Meets
have been arranged with Washing
ton, Oregon State, and Willamette
university. Mr. Stoddard revealed.
Lettermen returning from last
season are Jack Mulder, Ed Labbe
and Robert Miller. The return of
Leonard Anderson to the team will
materially bolster the hopes of Uk|
Oregon squad. Outstanding sopho- j
mores expected to turn out are:
Sid Milligan, Ford Young, Kenneth
BeLieu, and Arthur Ballah.
Subscription rates $2.50 a year.
The Following
Books ONLY
are wanted at the
‘CO - OP
Do not bring other titles
—we cannot buy
them now.
25 Munro: Governments of
Kurope (1931 edition).
18 Powers & 11 hi: Psycholog
ical Principles of Educa
tion.
8 Snyder & Snyder: A Book
of Amercian Literature.
20 Butterweck X Secger: An
Orientation Course in Edu
cation.
5 Ward: What Is English.
20 MeCloskey: Handbook of
Business Correspondence.
35 Conklin: Principles of Ab
normal Psychology.
7 Williamson: Speaking in
Public.
ICE CREAM
is the perfect finish for a
delightful meal.
Gold Medal ice cream is
delicious and uniformly good
every time you eat it.
We wish you a
pleasant vacation.
Medo-Land Creamery
675 Charnelton
Phone 393
i
A FEW CLASSY BAGS
for sports or werk-cnti in
either black or brown
leather with handy zipper
fastener.
GEAT BARGAINS
What Course Are You Taking?
LAW OR LITERATURE, ARCHITECTURE OR ANTHROPOLOGY, PHIL
OSOPHY OR PHYSICS, BUSINESS AD OR BIOLOGY; NO MATTER WHAT
THE COURSE WE HAVE THE CORRECT SUPPLIES AT PRICES THAT
ARE RIGHT
WE WORK IN CLOSE CO OPERATION WITH THE FACULTY IN AN
EFFORT TO HAVE ON HAND AT ALL TIMES JUST THE BOOKS AND
SUPPLIES THAT WILL BE NEEDED IN THE MANY CAMPUS COURSES.
ALL TEXT BOOKS ARE SOLD at
PUBLISHERS’ LIST PRICES
OREGON STUDENTS BUY BOOKS AT THE SAME PRICES AS DO STUDENTS AT
COLUMBIA, HARVARD AND OTHER EASTERN UNIVERSITIES
BE BEADY FOR
3. HOSE EXAMS
We offer some outstanding
bargains in Fountain Pens
^ 1.00 pens .69c
$.'>.()() Vacuum Fill
Parker’s.$3.35
$7.r>0 Vacuum Fill
Parker’s.$5.00
YOU CAN’T BEAT OUR PAPER PRICES
OUR 10c NOTEBOOK FILLERS OF GOOD QUALITY WATER-MARKED BOND CONTAIN
AS MANY SHEETS (and in many cases more) AS OTHER STORES OFFER OF FAR INFER
IOR PAPER. WE INVITE COMPARISON.
TYPING PAPER 65c REAM (500 Sheets) 75 Sheets 10c 100-Sheet Pads 15c
Jerry Henson is
doing expert racket
stringing for us.
Armours and
Victor gut
used.
DOLLAR BOOKS
HUNDREDS OF TITLES IN STOCK
BOTH FICTION AND NON-FICTION
Our Rental
Library is stocked
with the latest
and best fiction,
biography, drama
mystery.
BOOKS FOR FRATERNITY LIBRARIES
ELIZABETH AND ESSEX, by Lytton
Strachey
A. vivid partrait of the people and times
by a distinguished biographer.
GENGHIS KAHN, by Harold Lamb.
A biography of the terrorist of the an
cient world.
GOETHE, by Emil Ludwig
The astonishing life of Germany's pre
eminent man of letters.
HENRY THE EIGHTH, by Francis Harg
ett
Absorbing biography of the King of
many wives.
LENIN, by Leon Trotsky
Lenin, as seen by his War Minister who
worked with him through the Revolution
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF REM
BRANDT, R. V. R. by Hendrik Wil
lem Van Loon
A masterly panorama of seventeenth
century life.
THE LIFE OF SAMUEL JOHNSON, by
James Boswell
Generally considered the best biography
in the English language.
THE FOUNTAIN, by Charles Morgan
The brilliant English novel has a back
ground of the war and of Holland. Tnere
is a touch of mysicism in the handling
of a passionate love story.
CHIME ANI» PUNISHMENT, by Fedor
Dostoevsky
The great story of three brothers who
represent three aspects of Russian life.
WUTHEKING HEIGHTS, by Emily Bronte
A gruesome, yet fascinating story of
tragically warped lives in an English
household.
THE RETURN OF THE NATIVE, by
Thomas Hardy
Hardy’s great tragic novel of the Eng
lish countryside.
ROMANCE OF LEONARDO DA VINCI,
by Dmitri Merejkowski
The spirit of the renaissance is depicted
in the famous historical novel.
SOUTH WIND, by Norman Douglas
A satirical masterpiece.
THE BEST KNOWN WORKS OF IBSEN
Eleven complete plays in one volume.
VANITY FAIR, by William Makepeace
Thaoheray
A great English satirical novel which
gives a powerful and realistic portrayal
of life as it is, of the foibles and weak
nesses of mankind.
WAR AND PEACE, by Leo Tolstoy
A tremendous novel of Napoleonic times
France as a symbol of great social
dealing with the war between Russia and
forces.
TIIK WAY OF AIX FLESH, by Samuel
Butler
An autobiographical novel, by one of the
first and most virulent of the anti-Vic
torians, in which he strongly attacks
the smugness of that self-satisfied era.
THE COMPLETE NOVELS OF JANE
AUSTEN
Including among others, "Pride and Pre
judice,” "Mansfield Park,” “Emma,”
"Northanger Abbey.”
(•KEEN MANSIONS, by W. H. Hudson
The beauty of its descriptions have made
this strange love story of the South
American wilds justly famous.
COMPLETE POEMS OF HEATS AND
SHELLEY
All the poems of the two early nine
teenth century poets who both died at an
early age, within a year of each other.
COMPLETE WOKKS of SHAKESPEARE
Every known work of the great Eliza
bethan poems, sonnets and tragedies.
Also the famous Temple Notes by Gol
lancz. 1420 pages.
THE POEMS AND PLAYS OF ROBERT
BROWNING
Incuding all of Browning's lyric and dra
matic poetry, "The Ring and the Book,”
and his famous plays, narrative poems,
idyls and tragedies. Over 1200 pages.
THE STANDARD BOOK OF BRITISH
AND AMERICAN VERSE, ed. by
Nella Braddy
A comprehensive anthology of classic
and modern poetry, with a preface by
Christopher Morloy.
THE EDUCATION OF HENRY ADAMS,
by Henry Adams
T he autobiography of a man born in the
New England environment of intellect
uality, whose education was his life.
MICROBE HUNTERS, by Fail! de Kruif
The amazing story of man’s fight
against disease.
THE MIND IN THE MARINO, by Janies
Harvey Robinson
A significant history of Lhc development
of the human mind.
THE MYSTERIOUS UNIVERSE, by Sir
James Jeans
A distinguished English scientist reviews
the religious implications of the scien
tific discoveries of today.
DEVILS, DRUGS AND DOCTORS, by
Howard W. Haggard
A history of healing from medicine men
to doctors.
THE HUMAN BODY, by Logan Clendcn
ing, M.D.
Common sense about weight, diet, habits,
nerves and fads.
THE ART of BEING a WOMAN, by
Olga Knopf
A famous Viennese psychiatrist des
cribes the pathway and goal toward
which women must strive.
W FREES Pen Filling Station FREE! Lighter Fluid FREE! Blotters FREE! Paper Punching
a
895 13th Avenue East
(at campus entrance) — Student Owned