Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 30, 1937, Page Two, Image 2

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    DUCK
TRACKS
By ELBERT HAWKINS
A prognostication percentage of
between .600 and .700 on nation
wide football games isn’t exactly
disastrous, but if is far from being
good enough to qualify you for
syndicate features. However, since
last Saturday, I picked up a little
trick from another proggie, which
should add at least 50 points to the
old percentage.
IVlost of the boys now forget tie
games, and don’t count ’em unless
their guess was also a deadlock.
If you pick 20 winners out of 30
some Saturday, your average is
.666, but if five of those are tics,
the edd percentage zooms up to
.800. Savvy?
This week we'll pick games by
sections, from the coast, East, Mid
west, South, Rocky mountain, and
the Southwest, which should give
a fair sample. Forty-six games is
the total.
a* * %
Three big contests in the Coast
conference are billed for today, all
of them figuring in the champion
ship. Number one In interest finds
California’s undefeated first-place
Golden Bears locking with the
University of California at Los
Angeles. The Bears will remain
unbeaten with a 20 to 6 victory
over UCLA.
In a "natural,” one that might
go cither way, Oregon State’s dan
gerous Beavers face Stanford' at
Palo Alto. Lon Stiner's boys have
been showing brilliant football, but
Stanford is due for a rise. Stan
ford 13, Oregon State 6.
Southern California’s first di
vision Trojans hook up with a
Washington State club which to
dute has failed to surprise experts.
Southern California in a walk, 19
to 0. Too much Schindler.
* * si«
Oregon and Washington arc the
only clubs not playing conference
games, although the Huskies (an
gle with Idaho in a king’s-x affair.
Idaho's Vandals, who made fans
take notice tally this season by
upsetting Oregon State, will put
up a terrific scrap, finally losing,
13 to 7.
Willamette and I’uget Sound
play in a Northwest conference
game, which Spec Keene’s Rear
cats should win, 14 to 0. Albany
college will fall before Pacific uni
versity (Anse Cornell's former pro
teges), 13 to 0. I.infield and Port
land university should put on a
brilliant show, the Pilots finally
edging out, 7 to 6. San Francisco
university 12, Loyola 0. St. Mary’s
13, College of Pacific 6. That com
pletes the western set-up.
East
One of this section's toughest to
pick in the Temple-Holy Cross fra
cas. Pop Warner's Temple lads get
the choice this time, 7 to 6. An
other 7 to 6 prediction is Cornell's
tight squeeze over Columbia.
Dartmouth 1!), Yale 0.
Pittsburgh 20, Carnegie Tech 7.
Harvard 14, Princeton 0.
Navy 2.r>, Pennsylvania 0.
Colgate It, New York IJ. 6.
Boston college 27, North Caro
lina 7.
Tulsa 19, George Washington U.
0.
Rutgers 13, Lehigh 0.
West Virginia 19, West Mary
land 0
Army 20, Virginia Military 0.
Midwest
The fighting Irish of Notre
Ilame haven't fought so much this
season, and will fall before a su
perior Minnesota machine, 26 to 6.
To pick a winner of the North
western - W iseonsin game you’ll
Washington Babes Submerge Frosh 26-0
Mythical Northwest Title
Captured at Portland by
Final Quarter Point Spree
Monkus and Rudy Mucha, Running Mates
From Chicago Pace Winners, Intercept
Passes; Mabee and Stenstrom Star
A first quarter touchdown plus
a wild scoring spree in the final
period gave the Husky Babes of
the University of Washington a
26-0 victory over Honest John
Warren's Oregon frosh under the
lights of Multnomah stadium in
Portland last night. /
The Washington freshmen struck
a vital blow in the opening minutes
of the first period when they
marched to the frosh 6-yard line
on a sustained power drive. Backed
to their goal line, the Warren men
j tightened and held for clowns,
kicking out to the Washington 38
yard stripe immediately.
Husky Pups I let urn
Undaunted the Husky pup came
snarling back, and on six plays
planted the oval back of the Ore
gon goal line, Monkie Monkus, big
fullback, who played the leading
role in the Babe’s attack, going
over for the score with Vani, con
verting.
The count stood until early
in the final session when the Babe
ground offensive began clicking.
Monkus and Rudy Mucha, running
mates from Chicago, took turns
i tinning the ball down the field,
marching 63 yards to the Frosh
two where McAdam dove to pay
dirt, Vani again converting.
Take In Air
Trailing 14-0, the frosh opened
up with an overhead attack in an
have to Hip a coin. Northwestern
wins out liy a 7 to 6 count. Mis
souri should eke out a 6 to 0 vic
tory over Iowa State in another
thriller.
Nebraska 13, Indiana 0.
Oklahoma 6, Kansas State 0.
Drake 33, (irinnell 0.
Iowa 14, Purdue 7.
I Illinois H), Michigan 6.
Detroit I I, Villanova 0.
Ohio State 38, Chicago 0.
South
Fordham and North Carolina
are about a toss-up. The Rams
should blossom a little brighter
than North Carolina, beating
them, 14 to 12, in a scoring melee.
Maryland and Florida are due for
a donneybrook, the former tri
umphing, 7 to 6. Mississippi will
sneak off with a 6 to 0 win over
Tularie.
Vanderbilt 19, Georgia Tech 0.
Centenary 12, Mississippi State
0.
Duke 26, Washington and Lee 0.
Alabama 20, Kentucky 7.
Ilorkics
There’ll be a couple of routs in
the mountain section. Colorado
will humiliate Colorado Mines, 40
to 0, and Utah State will crawl all
over Colorado State, 35 to 0.
Southwest
From the good old Southwest,
where upsets are plentiful, another
Saturday of close games is on tap.
Another good old-fashioned toss
up brings together Texas and
Southern Methodist. I'll stay with
Southern Methodist this time, 7 to
6.
Baylor It, Texas Christian 0.
Arkansas 6, Texas A & M o.
Auburn 20. Rice 0.
Texas Tech 13, Oklahoma A ..<•
M 0.
A Flying Mallet Felled Her
Miss Barbara Worth is shown aboce being assisted by a teammate
after a mallet hart cracked tier face, stunning her anil opening a deep
gash o\er one eye. it was a match of the National Women’s I’olo
association tourney at San i'ranclsco. She continued play.
Last Night’s Lineups
FROSH
Hendershott .LE • McDowell
Crcager .LT McKeown
Blaisdell .LG Holmes
Samuelson .C Gordon
Reams .jRG Greenwood
Stuart .RT. Coonan
Conaway .RE .v Maxx
Hall ski .Q Dorman
Isberg .Lfl McAdams
Hawke .RH. Mucha
Stenstrom .F. Monkus
Score by periods:
Frosh .0 0 0 0—0
Babes.7 0 0 19—20
Officials: Eldon Jenne, ref
eree; Lt. L. Nave, umpire; Tom
Shea, head linesman; Jerry
Buckley, field judge.
attempt to score, but the game ef
fort of the Oregon yearlings back
fired when pass interceptions in
quick succession gave the Seattle
ites two more scores.
The final Babe tally was made
by Harmon, sub fullback, who
snagged a Duckling pass and ran
fO yards to score.
The Washington Babes rolled up
L6 first downs to the Frosh’s 4.
Fullback Stenstrom was the of
fensive star for the Ducklings
while Halfback Mabee and Center
Samuelson stood out on defense,
California Bears
Face UCLA Bruin
In Important Tilt
Oregon State Meets
Indians; Trojans to
Face Cougars
California's undefeated Golden
Bears, and the twice beaten and :
mce tied Bruins of UCLA, will '
tangle Saturday In the feature 1
jame of the Pacific coast confer- 1
nice schedule.
UCLA is given little chance to 1
ipset the hard-charging Bears, but 1
iports fans still remember the dif- ’
ficult time California has had in 1
mbduing their "little brother,” and *
the game is expected to attract
me of the largest throngs of the 1
■season through the gates of the *
I
Los Angeles coliseum.
Slaters riay Stanford
Oregon State’s rejuvenated 1
Beavers will travel to Palo Alto 1
today to take on the Stanford In- 1
dians in an attempt to win their *
first games from the Beavers, in
twelve starts. After a slow start
the Orangemen are now showing 1
the form which gave them the ;
darkhorse rating in the pre-season '
prognostication.
Up at Pullman the always hard 1
to beat Cougars of Washington 1
State will take on an invading
squad of Trojans who are expected
to shoot the works as they rebound
from their disastrous defeat at the
hands of California. Cougar fans
still remember the last Pullman
invasion of the Trojan horde, when
a fighting band of Cougars led by
such stellar men as Mel Hein, Turk
Edwards, and Elmer Swartz, upset
a heavily favored USC team.
Washington's Huskies, smarting
from their Stanford defeat, will at
tempt a comeback at the hands of
Idaho, one of the conference's two
king's-x members. The other
king’s-x member, the undefeated
Crizzlies of Montana, will take on
Montana State.
Malty Mathews
Picks Waskowitz
rOHTLANO. Oct. 29. (Special)
The best passer on the coast ?
If you ask M itty Mathews, vet
eran University of Portland men
tor, it's Captain l*Titz Waskowitz
of Washington by quite a margin
Mathews, ineuientaliy, ought to
know. He has specialized in aeriel
offensives for years atul developed
tlie great Skippy Stivers, who led
Idaho to its spectacular victories of
the 1920’s.
Send the Emerald home to Pad
every morning. He will like to read
the University happenings.
Troubled with insomnia? Sub
scribe to the Oregon Daily Emerald.
Center, Quarterback Among the Unbeaten
»aaai.<if>cnOT •
These boys back up the line today for California’s undefeated Golden Bears in their clash against the
I clans. Boti Herwig, left, is rated one of the conference’s top pivotmen, while John Meek plays quarter
hack and calls signals. Two weeks from today you’ll see these boys in action against Oregon in Portland.
Slugger Joe Gordon
Reaches Pinnacle of
Yankee Farm Chain
Former Wefofoot Second Baseman Is Ready
To Step Into Shoes of Tony Lazzeri; With
Present World Champs
By GEORGE PASERO
When the murderous New York Yankees trot out on the diamond in
St. Petersburg, Florida, next spring to loosen up muscles cramped by
a winter of idleness, a new figure, unfamiliar to big league fans, will
step up to the platter and whale away for the fences.
He will be Joe Gordon, the University of Oregon’s contribution to
big league baseball, and he will
make the jump to the midst of the
Yankee Murderer’s Row hailed by
ivery baseball scout from here to
the Three-Eye league and every
sports scribe from Portland to
Newark as the next Joe McCarthy
rookie sensation.
Yankee Scouts Nab Him
Gordon has been tabbed as Yank
material ever since he cavorted on
;he Duck campus, the Yankee
icouts keeping close track of his
■xploits in college, and then grab
>ing him off in 1935 and sending
lim to Oakland for seasoning.
But the story of Joe Gordon’s
ise to baseball prominence dates
lack farther than that. About six
■ears ago he was a promising kid
in the Jefferson high nine of Port
and.
At the same time on another
’ortland high school club (Frank
in by name i a big kid that handled
limself like a coming ball player
ras carving a name for himself in
Portland interscholastic baseball,
le was Ray Koch, and for the next
hree years his name was destined
o be linked with that of Gordon's.
Caine to Oregon
Both of these kids came to the
Jniversity of Oregon campus
coining offers to turn pro, and
fter a year on the frosh diamond
ggregat ion, they formed the spear
lead of an Oregon drive that
nought the Webfoots champion
(1’Iease him In page three)
Harriers Will Have
Chance at Awards
With minor letters definitely
assured Oregon runners finishing
in the first half of the field at the
annual Hill Military Thanksgiving
cross-country run, Bill Hayward's
harriers, coached by Sam Me
Gaughey, settled down this week to
strenuous training.
Hayward's announcement of the
award of letters has injected new
life and spirit into McGaughey’s
contingent of varsity prospects
which number around the thirty
mark.
This is the first time that the
minor "O" has been given for
cross-country work.
Crawford Lyle, Oregon’s fastest
pacer last year, will form the nu
cleus of this year's squad which
will invade the Rose City the latter
part of this month.
The surprising mid-season form
of Kermin Storli, former Benson
star of Portland, has bolstered
hopes for an Oregon victory.
Other hill and dalers who have
begun to reach top conditions are
Bob Neese, long-winded two-miler,
Wayne Mackin, Bob Mitchell and
Jim Schriver.
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Ducks Travel
To Rose City
For Next Tilt
Babe Hollingbery's
Cougars to Furnish
Oregon's Webfoots
With Opposition
Oregon’s recently grounded
Ducks travel to Portland to do
battle with Babe Hollingberry's
WSC Cougar’s next Saturday for
their first Rose City appearance
since they held the Washington
Rose Bowl team to a one touch
down victory last November.
Since last November, Prink Cal
lison has acquired two sophomore
transfers, Ted Gebhardt, halfback,
and Rod Speetzen, end, in addition
to a multitude of pass-crazy sopho
mores.
Colorful Ducks Now
It is these sophomores, led by
Bob Smith, Jay Graybeal, Paul
, Rowe, and Steve Anderson, who
have made Oregon’s coast confer
ence representative one of the most
colorful in the business.
The Smith to Graybeal combina
tion is expected to be Oregon's
most potent weapon when the time
comes for the Duck's attempts to
score on the tough defensive line
that Buck Bailey has turned out.
Except for a game with Califor
nia’s most recent edition of their
wonder teams, the Cougar line has
been crossed only once all season.
That was by the malemutes from
Seattle in their game at Pullman
which ended up in a 7 to 7 tie.
Washington Leads Bruins
UCLA with the brilliant Kenny
Washington showing the way scor
ed 26 points on the Ducks' medi
ocre defense, but Washington's
flashy runs and accurate passes
were more than nullified by the
accurate toe of Joe Sienko, star
righthander on the Cougar baseball
(Please turn to page three)
Troubled with insomnia? Sub
scribe to the Oregon Daily Emerald.
gWWWWWillWIIIWMW'Wl'MilMlIililgj
l NO DANCE 1
jj or music at the ^ ;
ik ANCHORAGE |
|g Sunday evening j| j
*4! a i V I I B '■i:i!i»l!H; : I'! n K?
Sunday's Skirmish
To Be Bloody Battle
Participants Put Out
Usual Long-Winded
Statements
Woe be unto anyone who crosses
the dividing line between the train
ing and equipment rooms of the
Igloo without first making known
his identity and mission.
Years ago a couple of guys
named Mason and Dixon ran a line
across the United States to sep
arate two dissenting sections, and
now a cuple of guys named Bob
Officer and Leo Marlantes have
called that strip in the center of
the athletic department in the
basement of the Igloo the “forbid
den land.”
And all of this is because Bill
Hayward's Trainers and Prink Cal
lison’s Managers have severed dip
lomatic relations and are now in
the throes of a "bloody” civil war.
The warring factions will have it
out Sunday morning when they
clash in a touch football game at
10:15 on the practice field back of
the Igloo, and until that time all
strangers wishing to remain in ex
uberant health keep away from the
Igloo.
A pre-game statement from Leo
Marlantes, cocky captain quarter
back of the Mauling Managers
seems to indicate that the score
will be about 100-0 for Frink’s pro
teges.
Plenty Touchy
“Our plays are so tricky they
even fool us. We’ve only got five,
but every time we pull one it’s
good for a touchdown. Why, I
don’t think we’ll even try for the
extra point.”
Bob Officer, leader of the “Rub
bergorkies, remains silent about
his team’s prospects. “I ain’t say
in’,” says he.
Lineups from the front: Miser
able managers: Jim “Slasher” Da
vey, half; R. L. Stephenson, poet
and end; Larry “How” Straight,
end; A1 “Slicker” Simpson, full;
Bob “Rattler” Snoke, guard; Egg
bert “Dutch” Robwer, center; Bob
“Zeigenfuss” Engelke, tackle; EJ
“Tomboy” Thomas, half; Leo the
Lamb, Marlantes, quarter.
Terrible Trainers: Elmer Kos
kelo, the flying Finn, plays both
tackles; Kat Cadanessa, ’both cen
ter and guard, and maybe tackle;
Hubcap Hubard Kuokka, guard
and blocking back; Jim (Bring ’em
back alive i Buck; Kermit the Her
mit Storli, half; Squeak “The
Mouse" Lloyd, full; Bob "Flatfoot"
Officer, quarter.
Referees—Dennis O’Brien, Jack
rabbit Graybeal and all of the rest.
Potential Stars
Fall in Campus
TennisTourney
Eddie Hearn Drops
Bob Street, Kupfer^
Also Loses
The elimination of last year's
singles champion and the Portland
city champion featured the first
round of the all-campus tennis
tournament which was finished
early this week.
Wally Kupfer, last year’s winter
term singles champion was elimin
ated for the tournament by Harold
Faunt in a hard fought match.
Kupfer teamed with Ronnie Husk
last year to take part of the glory
in the doubles championship.
Street Loses
Bob Street, city champion of the
Rose city was unexpectedly drop
ped by Eddie Hearn, singles cham
pion two years ago, and veteran of
three all-campus tournaments.
Other potential champions
who survived the first round play ^
were Les Werschkul, fall term
singles champ last year, and Karl
Mann and Pete Klonoff, tourna
ment veterans. Bob Horning who
blows a mean trumpet in Babe Bin
ford’s is also adept to equally
swinging a ping pong paddle, and
will probably give some of the title
contenders a good race.
Quarter-finals Soon
Second round matches were list
ed to have been completed by last
Wednesday and all participants are •
requested to contact their oppo
nents and play off the matches as
soon as possible.
Quarter-final matches should be
completed by November 3.
The semi-finals have been reach
ed in the doubles competition with
two favored teams still in the run
ning. Dick Phillipi and Ken Ship
ley of the Phi Delts are slated to
oppose C. Smith and L. Eaton,
ATO duct, and B. Campbell and
Coats tangle with Wally Kupfer
and Eddie Hearn, the SAE base
ment team.
It is requested by the intramural
board that all participants regis
ter their scores on the intramural
bulletin board in the men’s gym.
Send the Emerald home to Dad
every morning. He will like to read
the University happenings.
itns 'mi" ira : isn ira'Pitiw "iru 'itHoum
Hallowe’en
Is Here
Dave’s luscious . . . golden-brown . . . pumpkin pies
are the sure fire favorites for Hallowe’en occasions.
AND THE WISE HOSTESS
will not overlook the varied selection of “goodies
and “snacks" which is making Dave’s a “guy” word
when parties are mentioned.
LET DAVE DO YOUR WORRYING
Dave’s Pie Shop
130 1 1th E. Ph. 1476
Biteni
nuns: i i k Eiis mmmwttm
^\gain we say, the floor will be
SMOOTHER ’N
GLASS
CAN YOU TRUCK ....
PECK. OR DO THE BIO APPLE?
YOU WILL LEARN IT ALL AT
J.R. — S.R.
HARLEM
DANCE
■ Admission:
McArthur Court
Class Card
Sat, Oct. 30, ’37