UO Blind Student Gets Scholarship Mark Shoesmith, blind honor student in the University social science department, is now on his way to New York where he will study on a scholarship, according to Mrs. Louise Schroff, instructor in the art department. Shoesmith was offered a scholar ship by the Masters’ Institute of United Arts, in Roerick Museum, recently, although the usual num ber of scholarships hod already been given. The money for his transportation came from a com mission given him by the Eugene Lions’ club for carving a stone lion for their table. Mr. Shoesmith and his wife, the former Marian Jones, are expected to arrive in New York Friday night. They will remain there until June, at which time he may take one of the two other scholarships offered him, to the Perkins Insti tute in Watertown, Massachusetts, or to the New York Institute for Education of the Blind, which is connected with Columbia univer sity. Mr. Shoesmith came to the Uni versity of Oregon in 1932. He has his bachelor of arts degree, and was working on his master of arts degree before receiving the schol arship. Scoreoast Contests Will Continue Three Weeks Only three weeks remain for campus “rail-birds” to forecast football scores in the Philip Mor ris Scorecast, according to word re ceived by Ed Morrow and Zollie Volchock, campus representatives. Last contest will be on the games of the weekend of November 21. Popularity of the contest assures its continuation next year, the campus representatives said. Conference Planners Discuss Likely Theme A dinner was sponsored by the group planning the Seabeck con ference at the YVV bungalow at r>:30, Tuesday evening. Stella Scurlock, regional director of YMCA and YWCA, met with them and discussed leaders and a theme for the conference. Harold Strawn acted as toastmaster. ELECT NEW OFFICER Helen Nickachiou was elected vice-president and social chairman of Orides, independent women’s group, at a meeting Monday eve ning in the AWS room of Gerlin ger hall. Miss Nickachiou is fill ing the vacancy left when Ruth Or rick resigned at the beginning of the term. Faculty Members (Continued from (nor three) Taylor vs. loser of the Washke Ernest match; Dalilberg vs. Moore; Stafford vs. loser of the Thiel mann-Knollin match; Turnbull vs. loser of the Johnson-Ghent match. Pairings are listed on the bulle tin board at the Laurelwood club house, and golfers are asked to make their own arrangements for this week's matches, which should be completed by next Sunday night. All-Campus Ping (Continued from page three) ment has moved into the finals, ; W. Kupfer and Hearn playing Klo- | noff and Elden, Kupfer and Hearn winning three out of four games. M. Moore and B. Blenkinsop i played Stoddard and. Don Coles, Stoddard and Coles winning. In the finals Kupfer and Hearn play Stoddard and Coles for the championship. Send the Emerald to your friends. 1----1 DON’T COUNT ON FISHERMAN'S KICK to find your lost ar ticles. to get that ride to Portland for the game. to see the rest of the students know that you can type out their term papers. . . . USE EMERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR RESULTS As Oregon Untiled the Huskies (Courtesy the Register-Guard) Spirit along' the sidelines daring the Oregon-Washington gridiron classic Saturday is caught graphically In these glimpses of activities which took place during the contest. Upper left, Frances Johnston, mem ber of the University girls’ rally committee, registers a smile that belles the outcome of the game. She is playing host to Oregon’s mascot duck, tipper right, the smart-stepping girl drum major of the Wash ington hand. Tamer left, It. “Sheet” Manerud of Eugene, officiating as timekeeper for the game. Lower right, two deft log-rollers frm Couer d’Alene, pictured during the hetween-halves stunt in front of the grandstand. They are Hill Delyea (facing the camera), representing Oregon, and Harry Wilson, representing Washington. Tre Oregon log-spinner won the contest. Prosli Team (Continued trnm fo/jr three1 being waged between the Smith bovs, Robert. K. and Floyd, for a berth at right half. lnskeep, Ileggs Out Fart of the frosh line is still in tact, but the temporary loss of Russ lnskeep, tackle, amt Lloyd Beggs, guard, has left it weakened. Phe wing posts, occupied by Larry Lance and Vie Reginato, are two Dositions in the forward wall un banned by the injury bugaboo. Er in Jacobsen, center, Elroy Jensen, tackle, and George Jones, guard, ire the other first string linemen. The injuries of lnskeep and Boggs are both slight, and the pair is expected to be back in the thick of things by Saturday afternoon. Two workouts remain for the frosh football squad this week, and the team leaves for Seattle. Seattle, Nov. 3. — (Special! - While the Washington varsity is battling Stanford at Palo Alto, the Husky freshman football team will furnish Seattle fans their weekend gridiron clash, when they meet the Oregon flush Saturday in the Uni versity of Washington stadium. The Washington Babes, fresh from a 13-6 victory over Washing ton State, will be out to hand the Ducklings the same medicine the Husky varsity administered last week at Portland. Coach Tubby Graves will throw his strongest team into the fray, for the game will conclude the 1936 season for the frosh. They were defeated in the season opener by Bellingham Normal, 6-0. The public address system will keep the spectators informed of the progress of the varsity game at 1 Palo Alto. Addresses Scheduled At Westminster House Professor R. H. Dann of the de partment of sociology at Corvallis will give an address on the “Quak er Approach to God,” before the Westminster House association Thursday evening at 7:30. This is the third of a series of addresses presented at Westminster House for all University of Oregon stu dents. Kev. Herbert Higginbotham of the local Unitarian church will give the next address in the series on November 12. The Firing Line (Continued from pnoe three) Stanford, Auburn, and San Fran cisco. Portland and San Jose State were soft touches. An Associated Press poll which ranks the Broncs ninth mi the nation has it about right. You have to consider ached ules as well as scores. * * * Tots of the wise boys back east are figuring Minnesota a better CONVERTS BEGINNERS CONVINCES VETERANS!. _ SOMETHING WONDERFUL GOES ON INSI£^ SjulhA, *1 cobuo MEDICO TH PIPES, CIGARETTE A CIGAR HOIOERS FINEST BRIAR MONEY CAN BUY THE only patented "CELLOPHANE”■ SEALED FILTER-IT REALLY FILTERS ^eiui the Emerald to your friends. Subscriptions only $3.00 per year. club than Northwestern, even though the Wildcats clawed through the mud of Dyche stadium to upset the Golden Gophers. Be that as it may, Bernie Bierman's mighties have fallen from their pedestal. Twenty-one straight tri umphs and 28 games without a setback ought to put Tutor Bier man in clover for years to come. But it won't. Wolves go after Go phers, too. Notre Dame will probably be Northwestern's hardest foe, for the Irish of South Bend always put up a bitter battle against the Wild cats. Wisconsin and Michigan should be easier. Both teams have been in ami out all year, however, and might hit Northwestern on an “in” day. Marquette must face Creighton, Mississippi, and Duquesne before claiming any national honors. The latter two are certain to be tough. And, speaking of Santa Clara, the Broncs could do worse than lose to Loyola. St. Mary's, Loyola, Texas Christian yessir, the Bron cos saved the hardest until last. Pledges’ Perfect Crime Baffles Fiji Brothers By JANE HOOT Bn it known that the impossible has been accomplished! In short, the perfect crime was perpetrated! The only way the story got out was—well, somebody squealed! Here’s the story, exclusive with this sheet. Read it, Phi Gamma Delta brothers, and weep! The flight was cold and drear and ripe for murder. It seems the j Fiji pledges, too, weie ripe for a sneak. Following their annual quaint j 15 Stone Heads Now Hang High On New Library Pick ’em out if you can! Aristotle, Locke, Michelangelo, Darwin, Jefferson, Shakespeare, Beethoven, and eight other fam ous men are seen gazing down on the University students from their place on the panels of the new li brary. Some of them are found not just once but three times as parts of the design repeats itself on the va rious sides of the building. Guess who? That one is Thucy dides — remember him at open house? Well, maybe it was New ton he’s there too. Others of in-J terest whose heads hang high arc j Buddha and Christ. Identification tests are popular now—take your best girl out and let her guess—there are benches in front of the library, too, that might prove handy. Varsity Sketches (Continued from finqc three) speed, to make a swell guard. “I think little Davie Davis of the Southern Cal Trojans is the best backfield man Oregon has met yet with Bayne of the Cougars a close second,” Estes said as he started to dress for practice yes terday. "We didn’t get to see much of the famous Ed G >ddard in the game with Washington State so wo don't know what kind of a back he is. He must be good from w'hat all the papers say about him. ‘ ’Davis is something like the great ‘Cotton’ Warburton of a few years back. He has picked up the trick from Warburton of driving up to the line, stopping, and then whisking through the hole when it opens. But he doesn’t compare with the ‘Cotton’. Davis besides his deception in his broken field running has plenty of drive and plays smart football in the quarter back position.” Send the Emerald to your friends. Subscriptions only $3.00 per year. little Hallowe en custom, the bro- l thers in the bond deposited pledge Hoy Stone on the spacious ver anda of that brick abode popularly known as the Tri Delt house. Tied hand and foot and rolled in his own treasured mattress, said an onymous victim had not a leg to stand on (he was lying down). Not content, those nasty boys then made a side trip to the oft sung Mill race, there to dunk Bill Hutchinson an obstreperous fresh man in cold, murky waters, thus proving to the uninitiated that crime doesn’t pay! Aha! But the night was yet young and still ripe for scandal. Lusting for revenge, a dozen stal wart males, pledges of Phi Gamma Delta, finangled quietly out the back window of the revered chap ter house and hied themselves to the above-mentioned Delta Delta Delta, etc., residence. Diplomatically these pajama clad scoundrels persuaded a reluc tant house-mother to admit them and their disgraced brother, Stone, the outraged victim whom they found tied helpless on the Delta ditto ditto porch. Virtue was tri umphant, and the daring Fijis soon found themselves comfortably es conced in the sorority parlor, where they cooled their slippered heels in the charming presence of the Tri Delts and rested their bath robe-covered frames on the soror ity davenports. Followed a touching little home scene of song and revelry. The boys, the rascals, heard the Tri Delt repertory of melodies, in re turn for which they yodelled their famous “Fiji wanderer” song and other heart-stirring ballads. Then the black knaves snuck back to their happy home, climbed in as they had climbed out and noiselessly slid back into their beds. And they do allege as how the upper-class brothers are to this day none the wiser. “SIMPSON FOR QUEEN!” Regardless of who is in the White House Reed college students want Mrs. Simpson in Buckingham palace! They want her so badly they staged a “Simpson for Queen’.' demonstration recently. TAYLOR-made hamburgers.—adv. Clearance of ODDS and ENDS S O Cl A L STATIONERY Bond stationery, correspondence cards, bond papers—lii