Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 05, 1937, Page Three, Image 3

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    Cleats Dig Into New Hayward Turf as Ducks Strive for Triumph Over Stanford's Indians
Today's
Teletype Talk
By STAN HOBSON
Justice Takes Post
Russians Cross Styx
Green Blasts Lewis
Free Beer Denied
G O.P.’s Make Plans
Action Postponed
On Black Eligibility
WASHINGTON—With all the
solemnity befitting a supremo
court judge, Justice Hugo L. Black
yesterday took his place behind
the great mahogany bench with
his “eight old men” bedfellows and
listened, among other things, to a
pair of motions designed to unseat
him.
Both motions were based on con
stitutional grounds, with no refer
ence being made to his former or
present Klan status. A capacity
crowd listened in the court cham
bers as his colleagues postponed
action on the question.
Coffin Trade Jumps
In Soviet Russia
MOSCOW—Executions, arrests,
and! dismissals of Soviet Russian
officials continued at a brisk pace
yesterday as Reds strived to main
tain their quota of subjects for
wooden overcoats. Preceded by a
period of comparative calm, the
past two weeks have seen 114
“comrades” receive the death pen
alty.
Trial offenses ranged from such
genuine outlawry as grain destruc
tion, for which 28 grain trust em
ployees died in Moscow and Irk
utsk, down to maltreatment of zoo
animals. Two men were jailed for
scaring the animals bad enough to
give them ailments.
CIO Chief Charged
With Ulterior Motive
DENVER — Accusing John L.
Lewis of using the CIO as a tool
with which he hopes to eventually
gain the presidency of the United
States, the A. F. of L.’s William
Green again lashed the adversary
with a bitter denunciation at the
Federation’s 97th annual conven
tion. Yesterday he pledged his fol
lowers to destroy the CIO.
Green: ‘‘I appeal to the Ameri
can people and the organized work
ers of America to choose between
the unselfish, common sense politi
cal policy of labor and one dictat
ed by unreasoning personal ambi
tion, doomed from the outset to
failure.”
“Beer Bust” Assumes
Somber Attitude
CHAMBERSBURG, Pa.—A re
tail beer distributor’s picnic turned
sour yesterday when a wide-awake
liquor control board agent ap
peared on the scene.
Noticing that free beer was to be
given with a $1 ticket to the affair,
he informed eager guzzlers that it
was against the law. Accordingly,
case after case of soda pop was
rushed to the picnic grounds and a
perfectly good “beer bust” turned
into a carbonated water tinge.
Republicans Eye
1940 Campaign
CHICAGO — Republicans start
ed the ball rolling for the 1940
presidential elections yesterday in
Chicago when Herbert Hoover and
_ * -. _ .
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at the Biy Street Clock
Jimmy Nicholson, top left, heads for terra firma as a pair of Stanford huskies cut down his advance.
In the center is a front view of what Oregon’s winning conversion looked like. At the right, Halo
Lasselie drops at the end of a 15-yard gain as a Stanfordite climbs his back. Above, Jay Graybeai
grabs a pass early in the fourth, quarter.
Colonel Frank Knox got together
with plans for a 1938 convention.
Hoover urged a “positive” and
“courageous” draft of policies .by
a committee of “distinguished Re
publicans” to meet “the crisis in
the party and in the country.’
Young Republicans were encour
aged to voice their opinions in par
ty matters by both Hoover and
Knox.
Oregon Profs View
(Continued from page one)
consul that I had better leave at
6 o’clock on the last guaranteed
train out of Peking. It was after
four when I got the message, bdt
I was on the train shortly after
five and got the last seat. It was
crowded with Japanese women who
were trying to escape from Peking
while departure was still possible.
“We reached Tientsin all right,
although the track had been'torn
up two days previously. A half
hour after we reached Tientsin,
there was a fight between Japanese
and Chinese at the East station
where we had landed. A week later,
the East station was fired upon
and partially destroyed.”
Gage Leaves Peking
“I left Peking July 16,” Dr. Gage
says, “and although there was a
great deal of tension and barri
cades had been thrown up on all
the streets, the thought of war
was still an unreality. The 30-foot
wall with its 100 foot towers was
heavily guarded and no one was
allowed to leave the city for fear
that they might not be able to get
back inside the walls.
“Back in Tientsin there was
more confusion. The Japanese were
moving troop trains in from Man
churia to Korea. Finally allowed
a ticket through Manchuria, I was
the only white man on the train,
which was loaded with Japanese
who were anxious to learn a for
eigner’s opinion on their activities
in North China. Japanese officers
put a spotter on my trail in an
attempt to get information. I
counted ten troop trains which we
passed before an officer ordered
my window curtain pulled. All
during the night we met trains
headed for the hostilities.”
Fears Air llaids
Professor Bowen also had a hard
time getting out of north China
without making the long trip back
to Shanghai, he says:
“On the way from Tientsin to
Mukden my train was delayed for
long periods by the large number
of Japanese troop trains rushing
into the area. We reached Mukden
at 3 o'clock in the morning to find
the city in total darkness because
of fear of air raids. Foreign ho
tels were filled and I finally had
to grope my way to a room in a
Japanese hotel. I left Mukden for
Japan the next day as there would
have been no transportation for
some time after that. I reached
Japan without trouble and spent
three weeks there before I left for
America August 8.”
Tinder Box Cities
Both men report that none of
the people they encountered hai
any idea of the war which the
north China incident propagated
However, both did find the feeling
of intense fear of Russia in Japan
"I was in Japan during their air
protection maneuvers,” says Mr
Gage. “Tlieir cities are like tmtfei
boxes with the houses flimsy and
close together on very narrow
streets. A few incendiary bombs
would touch them off like a stack
of cigar boxes. They darken the
towns at night while the home
guard instructs the people on how
to act in case of attack. To add
realism to the maneuvers, they
have squadrons of airplanes dron
ing overhead and batteries of anti
aircraft guns firing continuously.
On the final day they lay down a
smoke screen, meant to cover the
strategic spots of the towns.”
Fear of Russia
"I met one man who knew from
inside knowledge that, though Jap
anese troops were being moved
from Manchuria into north China,
troops from Japan are being rushed
to the Russian border in case of
intervention from the Soviets. The
Japanese also in fear that shpuld
Russia enter the conflict, the Ko
reans will attempt to throw off
their recent conquerors."
Possibility of Blockade
‘‘If Japan can enforce her block
ade of China, she may be able to
starve the defenders into submis
sion,” Mr. Gage thinks. “I found
much poverty in Japan but not
nearly on the large scale that it
runs in China.
"Whatever happens in China,
however, I believe that we who
were in Shanghai this year saw
that city at its height of white
domination. It will either return
to Chinese scale or become a sec
ond Tokio. I think that white su
periority there is on the wane ”
Professor Bowen was struck by
the indifference of the Chinese
people in the farming areas to
ward the invading Japanese, he ex
claims. He thinks that the Japan
ese people as a nation regret the
war because of the high taxes they
know it will impose upon them.
Visitors at Delta Upsilon over
the week-end were Jimmy Fergu
son, Stan Smith, Tommy Briody,
Ray Hackenbury, Bob Hirstel and
Lowell O’Connell.
Jerry Kestly has been appointed
slave driver at Beta Theta Pi.
Super Varsity
—. _ . ..
(Continued from fane tuv)
Oregon’s net loss from the game
was Larry Lance, rapidly improv
ing sophomore end, who suffered a |
dislocated shoulder in the last play
of the first half. It is believed that
Larry will return to the team in
three or four weeks at the earliest.
Backs Graybeal, Smith, Dale
Lasselle, Arleigh Bentley, Hank
Nilsen, and Ted Gebhardt, all en
joyed comparative rests in reward
for their work Saturday. Most of
the linesmen who saw action in
the game, also rested yesterday,
while the rest of the squad was put
in action against John Warren's
frosh.
Duck Tracks
(Continued froth ftayc two)
Figuring It on the Iwsis of a
once-beaten champion, there are
still eight contenders. This year’s (
Hose Bowl team is very apt to
have one defeat or tie for its seven
game slate, but no more. Two
losses should definitely eliminate
a club.
Some difference this round-robin
schedule, for an eight team con
ference, from that disorganized
group which functioned before
1980. Oregon went to the Hose
Bowl back in 1919 by winning only
three games out of four in a ten
team conference.
Short shots-- Rod Speetzen, Lar
ry Lance, and Leonard Robertson,
all ends on the Webfoot eleven,
were first to arrive on the campus
this fall for work. Tom Hayashi
won the Columbia river swim this
minii
Go Canoeing J
for exercise, adventure B
and pleasure.
There will, only be a,
few nice days left and the
race is prettiest in its fall
colors.
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summer . . . Mike Pecarovich, Gon
zaga coach, scrimmaged his fresh
men against the varsity until 11:30
p.m. before the Washington State
game . . . All of the Duckling
games for this fall are slated for
Friday night.
Jack Walton, Stanford guard,
weighed 280 pounds when he re
ported for duty last season at the
age of only 19 . . . Larry Lance is
out of football for at least a month
with a dislocated shoulder . . .
Oregon draws an open date in two
weeks . . . Practically the whole
coaching staff of the San Diego
Marines was called abroad by war
trouble,
A soccer turnout at Stanford
last week attracted 50 varsity and
30 frosh . . . Indiana students cele
brate their fifty-first anniversary
of football on October 15 . . . In
diana hasn’t downed Illinois on the
gridiron since 1903.
Yes, I Was a Nobody
(Continued from page one)
a white shirt, I will sit and root
for dear old Oregon.”
Happy smiles wreathed the stu
dents’ faces. “Hurrah,” they shout
ed. 'The day is saved.”
Maybe you noticed me up there
in the middle somewhere. I was
too excited to get the colors right,
but at least my white shirt shewed
up beautifully. It certainly should
have anyway. It was one of Pen
ney’s fifty-eight cent specials.
COLLAR BONE BROKEN
John Kennedy, freshman, receiv
ed a broken collar bone in a touch
football game last Sunday. Ken
nedy is now convalescing in the
Sacred Heart hospital.
Sixteen Men Taken
In by Fraternities
- Sixteen men were pledged over
the weekend by fraternities on the
campus.
Lists released from the office of
the dean of men are as follows:
Phi Kappa Psi, Cecil A. Saunders,
Lloyd A. Cummings; Delta Upsi
lon, Ralph Blower, Dwight Nott;
Kappa Sigma, Waldo Canfield;
Theta Chi, Albert Sandness Jr.,
Gordon Lowry and Ford Mullen;
Phi Sigma Kappa, Martin McCor
mick; Pi Kappa Alpha, Howard
Wilson and Orest Houghton.
Alpha Gams Given
Scholarship Cup
Capturing the position of the
sorority with the highest scholas
tic rating during the last school
year, Alpha Gamma Delta sorority
was awarded the Chi Omega schol
arship cup yesterday afternoon.
The Alpha Xi Delta sorority has
held the cup for the past two years.
• CIDER & DONUTS
• OREGON SONGS
• HAL YOUNG
Directing
at
First Gala Meeting
OREGON
MELODY
MEN
TIJES., 7:30, MUSIC BLDG.
i
Added
on your
ASUO Card
Paul Whiteman Concert—Oct. 22
plus
Frances Brockman Concert—Dec. 5
and
OWC Rooks in Portland—Oct. 8.
Emerald delivered to your door
Oregon State in Eugene—Get. 2d.
Emerald delivered to your door
Washington Babes in Portland- -Oct. 2i).
Emerald delivered to your door
Washington State in Portland- Nov. ti.
Emerald delivered to your door
California in Portland—Nov. Id
Emerald delivered to your door
I'u'iv. of Washington in Seattle (fi off)- Nov. 20
Emerald delivered to your door
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Paul Whiteman—Hall Johnson Choir |
Galli Curci — Angna Enters
Two Student Body Dances
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