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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 14, 1940)
Scholarship Winners Named Awards Granted Sixty-Six High School Graduates Sixty-six high school gradu ates who plan to enter the Uni versity of Oregon next fall will receive fee scholarships for the 1940-41 school year, E. B. Lemon, chairman of the state system committee on high school rela tions, has announced. Those granted awards are: Portland — Leonard Hurwitt Barde and Donald E. Selby, Ben sou Polytechnic high school; Acfele Riggs, Franklin high school; Marjorie Thoreen, Gills’ Polytechnic high school; Marietta McManigal and Margaret Sprin kle, Grant high school; Jeanette Eddy and Grover Ramsey, Jeffer son. high school; Edna Lee Mont gomery, Lincoln high school; Mary Jean Robinson, Roosevelt high school; Curti3 YV. Cutsforth and Elizabeth Durbin, Washing ton high school, and Elizabeth Crd.es from Moscow, Idaho, high school. WendeU E. Gronso and Ardys Alexander, Albany; Genevieve Speelman, Baker; William Mo shofsky, Beaverton; Wayne Gifu nning, Blue River; James Thayer, Carlton; Mary Jane Duun, Coquille; Nathan Edwards of University high school, Phyl lis Gray, Neil Koch and Charles Roffe, Eugene; Dorothy Mosdahl, Goble; Dennis C. Bakewell, Al ice Rae Cox and Emma Gene Hoffmaster, Grants Pas3. Betty Miller, Gresham; Paul Wilson, Halfway; Robert Jack son, Hermiston; John Arens, Hood River; Thelma Nelson, lone; Pauline Wagner, Joseph; Lloyd Courady and Charles Foster, Klamath Falls; Charmion Miller and Richard Owen, Lebanon; Ma rianne Bieukinsop, Martin Con lin and Helen Holden, McMinn ville; Marilyn Rightmeier, Ma lm; Jean M. Peters and Alvin Wi iner, Medford. King- Martin. Milwalkie; Wy man French, Moro; Robert J. Blaine, Molalla; Benjamin Schaad, Newberg: Phyllis Bro dic, North Bend; Elaine Worthen, Oakland; James McLarrin, Oak rtdge; Paul Merrick, Oswego; Elaine Quinn, Prineville; Francis Girt, Rainier; Emogene Russell, Salem; James Wilson, Seaside; Helen Johnson, Sheridan; Beryl Robertson, Springfield; Marilyn Cronewald, The Dalles; Ulric Do raK Tigard; Arietha Wagner, Toledo; Bonnie Townsend, Trout dale; Joaune Nichols, Vernonia; Peggy Kline, Willows. Cal.; James Nequfist, Camas, Wash., anu Scott Witt. Longview, Wash. Ten miles of radiators supply lie d, to 152 campus buildings at the University of Wisconsin. University of South, Sewanee, Teem., campaigned for a sustain ing fund of $500,000 and received $500,685. SPECIAL i Big Jumbo ! Ice Cream ' Cone ! 5c Jeff’s Place E. 13th English-Elite, Slang Included inNew Book “Vocabulary and mechanics of English usage, and plain garden variety of communication” will be contained in an embryonic freshman English book in the field of communication being written by L. K. Shumaker, di rector of the lower division ad visory committee, and S. Ste phenson Smith, former professor of English here who is now a traveling agent for ASCAP, the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers. Henry Holt, head of a nation ally known publishing firm in New York, has contracted for the book. According to Mr. Shu maker, it will be finished some time this summer, and if present plans work out, will be printed around the first of next January. “Never before has anyone at tempted anything of this exact variety,” said Mr. Shumaker. The book is aimed at adult education, and will make use of the re sources of the vocabularies of both Mr. Smith and Mr. Shu maker. Duck Tracks (Continued from page five) the mile when Mitchell couldn’t show. Russ Cutler, the man who coached Oregon's crack 1940 swimming and tennis team, won’t be back next year. You bet genial Russ will be missed! He has that knack of getting the best out of his athletes, just as Hayward has. Also, like Colonel Bill, he can look at an athlete once and tell him what he’s doing wrong and what to do to correct the fault. Leave of Absence Cutler will be away from Ore gon just one year, however. He's taking a sabbatical leave to work toward his doctor’s degree . . . probably at the University of Iowa. Taking Cutler’s place as tenni3 coach will be Paul VVashke. the man Cutler succeeded. Waslike .has been on a leave of absence. It is rumored also that Mike Hoy man, popular Oregon swim coach who has been in the east studying the past two years, will be back next fall . . . so-this clears up the situation for next year. Silverton’s baseball manage ment is not giving out jobs to young ball players this year, so those kids who pitched and tossed the Red Sox to national recogni tion last year are shifting for themselves . . . Stew Fredricks will play for Albany’s power packed outfit . . . and Dick Whit man and Don lvirsch may also be with this club. Ducks to Medford John Bubalo is set to go to Bend, and Bill Hamel, who played with Edward’s Furniture last summer, is headed Medford way, as are Virgil Haynes, Billy Cal vert. and Arba Ager. Bob Bonney and Glenn Elliott, OSC aces, are also reported ready to report to Albany, the team which just recently signed Red Mliler, ex-Portland Beaver. Don Cawley, one of the school’s top golfers, and Jack Lansing tell me that a Portland sporting edi tor was wrong when he said Laurie Heath, Washington Husky pitcher, did not play high school baseball. Heath, according to Seattle-ite Cawley, played for Garfield high school, and once pitched an extra inning game a gainst Freddy Hutchinson. Detroit’s touted rookie. Hutch's team won, 2 to 1, with big Freddy, himself, provid ing the punch. Freddy, it seems, hit a triple to knot the score and then blasted a home run to win. Clubs Don’t Help Young; Heath, incidentally, is a brother of Cleveland's deft' Heath. Laurie has often pitched to Bro ther Jeff, but he’s never struck him out ... at least this is the story that’s told. Jett played foot ball and baseball in high school at Seattle, and Oregon gridsters, Kill Kach and Hymie Harris, re member him ds a “real iuun.M No. 1 man for the University of British Columbia golf team which lost to Oregon's masliie swingers was Hans Swinton4, an Austrian • » » i » I ' 1 » * t*' • • t » ’ * who has been in America only a year. . . . What’s more, the clubs he used were those with which Henry Cotton, great English pro fessional, won the British open a couple of years back. It seems Swinton took lessons from and played with Cotton quite a bit last summer. The clubs' didn’t help Swinton, however, for he bowed to Oregon’s Doc Near, 2 to 1. Buck, Storli Lead (Continued from page four) 100-yard dash—Won by Buck, Oregon; Graves, Oregon State, second; Rider, Oregon, third. Time, :10.1. Javelin—Won by Brown, Ore gon (213 feet 9 inches); Wood cock, Oregon State, second (179 feet 2 inches); Lowery, Oregon State, third (160 feet 11 inches). High jump—Won by Wood cock. Oregon State; Harris, Ore gon, second; McKee, Oregon, third. Height, 6 feet 4 inches. (New meet record; old record held by Ackerson, Oregon State, 6 feet 3 inches, in 1937). High hurdles—Won by Miller, Oregon State; Holloway, Oregon State, second; Dickson, Oregon, third. Time, :15.1. 880-yard run—Won by K. Stor li, Oregon; Gilpin, Oregon State, second; Hammack, Oregon State, third. Time, 1:55.8. (New meet record; old record held by Ray Dodge, Oregon State, 1924). Discus—Won by Blackledge, Oregon State (139 feet); Schultz, Oregon State, second (132 feet); Regner, Oregon, third (130 feet 3 5-S inches). SPRINGTIME IS TIME FOR WHITES! Springtime with all its activities—tennis, swim ming. dancing, and the host of other sports—re quires dean white clothes. White clothes require fre quent and expert laun dering . . . that is what the New Service is for. Phone 825 today and keep your “whites" in top con dition with the New Ser vice way. New Service Laundry Phone 825 220-yard dash—Won by Buck, Oregon; Graves, Oregon State, second; Rogers, Oregon State, third. Time. :22.4. Two-mile—Won by Mitchell, Oregon; Vaillancourt, Oregon State, second; Nelson, Oregon State, third. Time, 9:47.8. Pole vault—Won by Hansen. Oregon (13 feet 3 inches); Hen dershott, Oregon, second) (12 feet 9 inches); Dudrey, Oregon State, third (12 feet 3 inches). 220 low hurdles—Won by Buck, Oregon; Miller, Oregon State, second; Holloway, Oregon State, third. Time, :24.7. Broad jump—Won by Reber, Oregon (21 feet 8 5-8 inches); Glease, Oregon State, second (21 feet 3 3-8 inches); Dickson, Ore gon, third (21 feet 3% inches). Mile relay- -Won by Oregon State (Hampton, Niblock, Smith, Blair). Time, 3:23.6. Phi Beta Announces Award Winners Winners for 1940 of the annual scholarship awards given by Phi Beta, women’s music and drama honorary, are three girl students of the University of Oregon, it was revealed yesterday by Mrs, John Jay Rogers of Eugene, as sociate member and head of the scholarship committee. Recipients are Leone LaDuke, Portland, piano student of George Hopkins; Phyllis Gray, Eugene, piano student of Aurora Potter Underwood, and Elizabeth Walk er, Milton, student of Rex Un derwood. 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