Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 01, 1939, Page Two, Image 2

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    DUCK
TRACKS
■DiiiiimimiiimiiiiiiiiniiuiiiiiiHiuiiiniiimimimiuimimiiiunmiiminiiimiiituiii
By ELBERT HAWKINS
Co-Sports Editor
Oregon Daily Emerald
If any college football coach in
the country thinks dame fortune!
handed him worries on the platter
he ought to hear of one Stuart
Marsee who coaches Waldport high
in Lincoln county. Or he might
look up several other mentors of
teams in that coast town’s area.
After graduating from Oregon
last spring, red-thatched Mr. Mar
sec accepted a job of teaching at
Waldport, with coaching among
his duties, and he's found out what
it is to teach football from the
ground up.
He found out that a turnout of
16 men there is tremendous.
Only three of his boys had ever
played football before.
The team went into its first
game with only 12 hours of ex
perience behind it, and that was
three weeks after school started.
Let’s let Stu analyze it: “I of
ten wondered why it was necessary
for varsity coaches to spend so
much time on fundamentals, and
why so few small town boys made
good ii) football. I think I have the
answer in part.
He Sees ’Em Anyway
"In most of the union schools
of Lincoln county, and I believe
the state as a whole, the last pe
riod (45 minutes) or possibly two
periods are devoted to football and
gym, supposedly under the leader
ship of one instructor. By the time
my boys are dressed and on the
field which is one-fourth of a mile
from the gym it is 3 o'clock. This
gives from 30 to 40 minutes on tt)e
field and then the boys must re
turn and dress to leave on the
school bus at 4.”
“. . . no wonder the college coach
sheds tears when he gets a likely
looking farm youth only to find he
doesn't know a darn thing about
football. He doesn't know what a
good cry is.”
Don't write Coach Stuart Mar
see down as a moaner though for
he’s really a cheerful chap and al
ways looking out for the other guy.
Stuart speaks well of Nello Gio
vanini, Webfoot guard of last
year, who is a rival coach in Lin
coln county at Toledo high.
"Nello uses Tex Oliver's style
to good advantage and has the
only truly first rate team I have
seen over here.” It might interest
you to know that Nello's team is
unbeaten and untied and has
bowled over everything in sight.
Jackie’s a Wow!
Jackie Robinson danced and pin
wheeled and scampered his way to
two touchdowns against Oregon
Saturday—enough to end any Rose
Bowl talk in Bugene, And he made
such trained observers as Bruce
Hamby, the team’s publicity man,
declare “he’s the speediest and
trickiest back 1 ever saw.” But a
lot of the Oregonians who saw Lhe
UCLA Bruins slicker Oregon, 16
to 6, in a game of left-handed foot
ball, claim he's not as valuable a
man as Kenny Washington, the
other negro baekfield ace.
Kenny, it seems, is more of an
all around man, blocking, passing,
tackling, etc., while Jackie is what
they term a trackman playing
football. You put speed with some
of the greatest, shiftiest hip swing
Something to
Cheer About!
-■0'±~ var"—
‘UniwrrssUu
»»0 U »WT OIK
J5#ckici
Xtttsnr\v«sY*m
Bold, dashing colors and
designs that will “star” at
the games. Perfect mates
for your sports clothes.
,2 pairs Sl— “f»
Wee Scotch Lassie Rates
As One of Best Golfers
In Pacific Northwest
Oregon's Margaret Crosbie Helped
Represent Portland in Women's
National Amateur Play
By NANCY IJ AVIS
Fore! my lads and lassies. Here’s a wee might of a Scotch lass who
has dominated feminine golfing circles at the University for the
past two years. Margaret Crosbie is one of the ranking golfers of the
Pacific northwest.
Thus summer she had planned on a trip to Scotland, but the condi
tions abroad were so threatening that to substitute for her vacation,
Betas, Fijis,
ATOs Win
Water Polo
Gamma Hall, SPEs
Chi Psis Lose Out
In Tournament
By JIM SCHIIXKK
Alpha Tan Omega, Beta Theta
Pi, and Phi Gamma Delta marched
into the third round of the intra
| mural water polo tournament when
I yesterday they respectively defeat
ed the Chi Psi, Gamma hall, and
1 Sigma Phi Epsilon teams.
The most impressive team of the
| day was the Betas, who were led
| by Varsity Swimmers Jack Dallas
and Sherm Wetmore. Dallas alone
chalked up three points with his
fast traveling long shots. The
Betas had control of the ball prac
tically the whole time, but the
Gamma boys put up a grim fight.
Final score was t> to 1.
Superior defense play by Stan
Buck and offensive play by Boone
and Fugit was largely responsible
(Please turn to page three)
Deadline Set
For All-Campus
The deadline for all second round
matches in the all-campus intra
mural tennis and golf tournaments
has been extended until Friday,
November 11, according to Rollie
Dickie, head of the intramural
sports program.
The original date for the com
pletion of these games had been
October 30, but the time limit has
been put back several days so that
the participants might take ad
vantage of the good weather and
got their matches played.
Ping pong, handball, and bowl
ing players will also be given a lit
tle more time to play their match
ing seen in a coast back for years
and that's a description of Jackie
Robinson. On most scrimmage
plays he’s used as a decoy or man
in motion rather than as a blocker,
but hearsay has it he didn’t take
any rusher out when the Bruins
were in punt formation. Jim Stu
art blocked one buck by running
right over Jackie’s blocking posi
tion.
Bob Writes, Plays
Some of the Duck routers who
migrated to Los Angeles declare
Bob (Lefty) Smith turned in one
of the best backfield performances
in his career, despite a fumble on
the Bruin goal line. We'd like to
add that Bob is probably the first
Kmerald sportswriter who ever
took time out from his journalis
tic duties to play first string var
sity football (applause). If you
didn’t read his pie-game inside
story from the California front
which appeared in Saturday's pa
per better look it up. The Oregon
ian's writing stylist, L. H. Greg
ory, read Bob’s literary gem yes
terday afternoon and pronounced
it "good stuff.”
Bill Morgan, who was captain
and all-coast tackle for Oregon
back in the days of Johnny Kitz
millcr and other Webfoot football
greats, dropped through Kugenc
yesterday and had a good look at
the 1939 Ducks . . . Bill is a sales
man these days and looking a lot
"heavier” than he did back in
those days when the name Morgan
meant a yardage deficit to the op
position ... )
ing in such hard-luck fashion to
UCLA would break the spirit "t .
Tex Oliver's boys, but it. hasn't '
. . . they are out there now think
mg about whipping a. team named
'•.’arhiiigt.in lit ate and Hit jn.t. a,
a closed bool..
I
she whipped off to Noroton, Con
necticut, to play in the National
Amateur Women’s Golf champion
ship.
Now that's not a tournament
any can enter. First one must have
an eight handicap, receive the ap
proval of one’s country club, and
then obtain an OK from the wo- I
men's state golf association. Mar
garet helped Nancy Hurst and
Marion McDougal represent Port
land and Oregon with the cream
of the feminine golf world.
Best Is 77
This is fair warning before you
challenge her to a golf game. She
has an eight handicap, plays con
sistently in the low eighties at
Alderwood Country club, her home
course, and 77 is her best score.
Margie comes from a long lino
of golfers. Her father and mother,
who came directly from the land
where the royal game of golf was
originated, can still hold their own
on the fairways. Margaret's bro
thers, both Phi Delts from Oregon,
shoot in the seventies.
She gives her reason for switch- i
ing from tennis to golf at the age
I of 11 as self defense.
“If your family talked golf from
morning till night, you would just
have to learn to play, or forever
hold your peace,’’ she exclaimed.
Petty Pleases Her
When you speak of art, you are
batting right down her fairway,
too. She is a second-yeatt art ma
jor and would like to be a maga
zine illustrator after she is gradu
ated. "Petty is my favorite artist,
but we don't speak of him above
a whisper around the art school,”
Margaret confides.
Margie is active in University
affairs, holding down the co-chair
manship of the decoration commit
tee for the Sophomore informal
and is a member of Alpha Chi
Omega’s sophisticated quartet.
Now back to golf. Margie played
on Grant high school’s golf team.
She was a three-year letterman
and captained her team last year.
Junior Champ
in 11137 she was crowned Oregon
state junior girls champion, and
although she holds no other title,
she is always a potential headache
to other contestants in major Ore
gon tournaments.
This divot digger is very inter
ested in organizing a women's golf
team on the campus.
(1‘lease turn to pane three)
Tackier
George Hooper ... a tackle for
Syracuse is shown ready to cut
the enemy down.
All-Campus
Sports Play
Advances
Ping Pong Singles
Tourney Trails
In Completion
The all-campus sports program
is slowly but surely progressing
with most of the sports having
reached at least to the quarter
final stage.
The schedule for the golf doubles
is the nearest to completion with
George Pasero and Elbert Hawkins
to face Chet Keller and Chuck
Stafford in the finals. Pasero and
Hawkins advanced to the finals by
virtue of a win over Hope Dondero
and Wilbur Colwell. Keller and
Stafford advanced by way of a
default from Dick Hanen and Ned
Huckleberry.
Tennis Advances
In the tennis singles, the upper
and lower brackets have each ad
canced to the semi-finals. Law
rence Key is the semi-finalist in
the upper bracket and McEachern
in the lower. Several quarter-final
matches still remain to be played.
The tennis doubles has also
reached the point of having a
semifinalist in each bracket. The
Don Lewis and Dan Trask team is
the semifinalist in the upper brack
et, and the team of Steve Fouchek
and Frank Baker is the semifinal
ist in tlie lower.
The Anderson-Patton team has
advanced to the semifinals in the
upper bracket of tire pingpong dou
bles. In the lower bracket the team
of Baker and Fouchek lias ad
Timt
1:00
1:15
TODAY S TOUCH FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
' Field Teams
1 Omega hall vs. Beta Theta Pi
2 Delta Upsilon vs. Sigma Phi Epsilon
t Alpha hall vs. Canard club
2 (’hi Psi vs. Phi Gamma Delta
III.
* Quick Starting for m
Winter h
B
B Ktm-iluwn battery '.' Phone ®
B SO for quick, efficient re- ■
charging service ami avoid w
v winter starting trouble. ■
" Clark Battery &
Electric Co. B
W IOIl' Oak 1‘lione 8(1 B
1 SHORTHAND TYPING 1
If ®
Sl’KGI Ah
f
Eugene
'■;!
i Business College
Miner Bldg.
3
tj Day ;uiil Nitrht ('lassos
rsfSMSEjpysjssMSi
CAMPUS SUPER CREAM SHOP
ENJOY OUR LUCIOUS
FROSTED MALTS
for only 10c
ami
« Beverages
• Sandwiches
m Salads
• Sundaes
0 Milk Shakes
SURER CREAMED ICE CREAM
Kappa Sigma
Posts 19 to O
Donut Win
Delta Tau Delta
And Sigma Nu
Victors; One Tie
Kappa Sigma’a touch football
nine passed and ran to 19 to 0 vic
tory over Kirkwood co-op yester
day afternoon to chalk up their
second successive intramural grid
iron triumph. The Kappas defeat
ed Sherry Ross hall last Friday,
12 to 0.
Three other games saw Delta
Tau Delta defeat Sherry Ross, 7
to 0, Sigma Nu down the Yeomen,
6 to 0, and Pi Kappa Alpha fight
Theta Chi to a scoreless tie.
Bob McAuliffe, Daryl Evans, and
Harold Knutson scored Kappa Sig
touchdowns against the Kirkwood
squacf. The initial six points came
on the first scrimmage play of the
game when McAuliffe, playing
“dead man,” caught a long pass in
the clear and raced into pay dirt.
Delts Score Late
Delta Tau Delta really pulled
their game out of the fire against
Sherry Ross hall. The Delts scored
in the last three minutes of play
on two passes, one to Bob Hanson
and the other to Lloyd Selfridge.
Selfridge made the score. The loss
was the second straight for Sherry
Ross.
Don McCormick and John Buba
lo paced Sigma Nu to a 6 to 0 win
over the Yeomen. McCormick
scored his team's only touchdown
of the contest on a pass from Stan
Short. Bubalo, a fullback, provided
a great deal of spark for the Sig
ma Nu attack.
The Theta Chis outplayed Pi
Kappa Alpha, although their game
ended in a scoreless tie. Theta Chi
play lacked necessary scoring
drive once in Pi Kappa territory.
Whiz White and Joe Wicks led the
Theta‘Chi team.
vanced to the semifinals.
The schedule for the golf singles,
handball doubles, handball singles,
and bowling singles has not yet
passed the quarterfinal stage.
The schedule for the pingpong
singles is the farthest behind. The
large list of preliminary matches
had retarded its progress.
i
V
COLDER
WEATHER
means
Top
Coats
for the cold morn
ings and evenings.
1 hen you’ll want a
good looking coat
for
HOMECOMING
DeNeffe’s
Have a wonderful
showing this sea
son of Camel Hair,
Tweeds, Coverts,
Harris I weeds,
Cavalry Twills and
F leeces all beauti
fully tailored and
styled according to
the fabric.
T he Bal Model is
still a strong favor
ite. However, you
just can t "go
wrong” in any se
lection that you
may make. Sizes 34
to 44. Priced
$19.50 to $35
And Remember
HOMECOMING
is dress up t i me,
and the place is
DeNeffe’s
Your Down Town
Campus Shop
3IcDomJd Th.s.j.ttf Bid*.
Kicker
m. is : ™
Ben Kish . . . Pittsburgh quar
terback is shown in action.
Visit University
Annual Visit of
Chuck Taylor Is
November 22
Chuck Taylor with his hoop clin
ic will return to Eugene on No
vember 22 for his annual visit to
McArthur court for a demonstra
tion of the whys and hows of bas
ketball. The nationally known for
mer professional player and stylist
comes under the sponsorship of
the R. A. Babb hardware com
pany.
Taylor plans to use members of
the 1939 and 1940 University bas
ketball squads in demonstrating
for his clinic. He'll also show mov
ing pictures to present interesting
examples of types of play in other
sections of the country.
He annually chooses one of the
country’s outstanding all-Ameri
can collegiate fives and it is sig
nificant that Center Slim Winter
mute and Guard Bobby Anet were
on his last season's selection.
The Man About Town
DAVID COMPTON
NCE AGAIN WE bring you
gleanings from our weekly
trip through Eugene stores. With
fall weather here in earnest in
spite of bright sunny days, local
merchants are displaying merchan
dise intended to keep Oregon stu
dents warm when the frost starts
to settle on the campus.
Clinic to
with
STROLLING THROUGH DE
NEFFE'S store for men we
had to stop and admire their wide
selection of topcoats in all the new
shades and materials. You can
have your choice of gabardine, co
vert cloth, camel-hair, or tweed
in both raglan and balmaccan
styles. Top off that new homecom
ing outfit with one of these nifties.
HART LARSEN’S store for men
and boys is now featuring
the new University .socks by Inter
woven. They go swell with the new
antique shoes and woolen ties that
everyone is wearing these days.
Plaids, stripes, and plain styles are
to be found in all colors. Wake up
the guy that sleeps next to you in
your 8 o’clock with an assortment
of these loud numbers.
©
■ UST THE THING for crisp days
** are the natty McGregor all
wool plaid shirts being shown by
BYROM AND KNEELAXP, THE
MAN'S SHOP. Match your slacks
with these warm, roomy shirts.
Wear them to the game, the barn
dance, to classes, or even to bed if
you’re that cold. All colors and
sizes, and every one a thorough
bred.
* * *
KAMPUS KIX," sold by POW
ELL-EDBLOM FOOTWEAR,
are just what the name implies—
a genuine hand-sewn moccasin
which is acclaimed by Oregon stu
dents as the ideal campus foot
gear. They are the easiest thin
oh. the fe.t v,e kao.v of. outride- or
iUppers.
to
Webfoofcs Indulge
In Snappy Drill
Frosh Regulars and Varsity Reserves
Move to Hayward Field for Practice
Game; Len Isberg Shines
By RAY FOSTER
Slam bang football was the dish for the second night in a row for
varsity second-strings and frosh regulars, who held a miniature game
on Hayward field yesterday afternoon before empty stands.
After 10 minutes of standstill ball, the varsity opened up on the
first year men, and scored a couple cf touchdowns in quick succession.
The backfield combination of Chet Haliski, Len Isberg, Don Maoee, and
Steve Fowler was shoved backwards about 20 yards before it could
find holes through the much im
proved freshman line.
Isberg started firing passes after
the line plays had bogged, and
tossed a winning one to Ted Home,
who made a spectacular runnin
catch over the head of the fros
right half and scampered to pay
territory. The play was good for
S' CfQ
about 60 yards all told.
Isberg Looks Good
Len was the big gun going
through the line, too, for he made
another touchdown on fancy step
ping around right end after elud
ing several potential freshman
(Please turn to page three)
JW MEDICO*
PIPES, CIGARETTE & CIGAR HOLDERS
ONLY filter combining 66 baffle
interior and cellophane exte
rior, keeps nicotine, juices, flakes
out of mouth. No breaking in.
No tongue bite.
I Breaks up hot
smoke stream,
resulting in
mild, healthy
i®®5JgSSf.
MEDICO FILTERED SMOKING.
FINEST BRIA
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CAN BUY |
11
GENUINE FILTERS
FOR MEDICO PIPES
PACKED ONLY IN THIS
RED & BLACK BOX
Most beautiful new styles—unheard-of-value
McGregor All Wool
SPORT SHIRTS
Plaid—All Colors
“THE MAN'S SHOP’’
BYROM & KNEELAND
32 E. 10th Street Phone 364
CLASSIFIED
ADS.
Phone 3300 Local 354
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
RATES
First day .2c per word
Subsequent days ..lc per word
Three consecutive times 4c per word and
a fourth time FREE with cash
payment.
Minimum ad ten words.
Ads will be taken over the telephone
on a charge basis if the advertiser is a
subscriber to the phone.
Mailed advertisements must have suf
ficient remittance enclosed to cover defi
nite number of insertions.
Ads must be in Emerald business of
fice not later than 6:00 p.m. prior to the
day of insertion.
Arrangements for monthly rates will
be made upon application.
• For Sale
r37 OLDSMOBILE sedan, excellent
condition, best offer over $500.
Call 294-W.
TUXEDO IN PERFECT condition
for sale. Size 30 or 37. Phone
537.
® Used Tires
FENN'S USED TIRE SHOP. Odd
sizes a specialty. Phone 2096-W.
674 Olive.
• Film Developing
FREE 5x7 enlargement with each
roll of films. Free developing—
3c each print, 1 day service.
Complete line Barbara Gould,
Dorothy Perkins, Elmo, Evening
in Paris cosmetics. Penny Wise
Drug, 40 E. Brdwy.
® Orchestra
ELTON DALITS- ORCHESTRA.
Phone 221S-J—239.
0 Flowers
KIRKLAND FLOWER CO. Cor
sages a specialty. Pick up your
flowers on the way to the park.
Springfield Junction. Free De
livery. Ph. Spr. 4.
® Lost
WALLET. Finder return to Ker
man Storli, ATO. Reward.
LEATHER COIN PURSE eontairT
ing keys, near Chi Omega. Phone
1614 or 2S126. Miss Berger. Re
ward.
SHEAFFER LIFE-TIME pen.
Black and white. Reward. Jack
Saltzman. Call 2898.
PAIR TAN pig .kin gloves. Lost .
at Gerlinger. Reward. Cali
1446-U'.
TEXT GEXEFA L ADVERTISING.
Return to George Luorua.
• Shoe Shine
SOMEBODY-SAYS, if~I~can~do
that job nobody else can. But 1
say, if nobody else can, bring it
to CAMPUS SHOE SHINE.
Across from Sigma Chi.
• Barber
THE VARSITY BARBER-Shop.
Stylish haircuts 35c. 11th and
Alder.
• Found
2 trench coats
2 rain jackets
topcoat
10 umbrellas
Shaeffer Evcrsharp
sorority pin AXO 1935
3 pens
2 pair eyeglasses
lighter
pair shoes
BOOKS—
2 Problems and Prose
Creative Writing
Botany
Design for Living
Elements of Comp.
French Grammar
Acc. Fundamentals
3 notebooks
European History
2 British Poetry and Prose
Song book
Designs for Writing
Logic
There is a 5c charge made for the
return of any articles.
• Drugs, Supplies
CIGARETTES
Camels, Luckies
Chesterfields
Raleighs
Pack 12c
Carton $1.15
EVERYBODY'S DRUG
986 Willamette