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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 1, 1929)
- i PAGEr TWELVE The OREGON STATESMAN. Saleci, Oregon, Friday Morning, November 1, 1929 Hawks Maftclked WMi Akers in Main if Willamette's old grads will be back In town today and tomorrow to see how things are being done at their alma mater. Most ol tbem will be interested , in seeing bow football is done. They can see that Jfl,?wr2!Fans"wai See Torrid Bout StVSK ln Ring at Armory Next on the campus. est editloujol the university cata logue. . . .?""', "TreebniHti class Normal, In ' that it f inuly believes AVillain etteV history dates from Us ar ' rival on the campus, not from j. prayer meeting on the good -iRhip Lausanne, 90 years ago. Think nothing of it if they Ignore your presence. Grandstand It's on the north tide of the gridiron, so alumni may acquire Bun tan at the same time -that they thrill at spectac ular fumbles, penalties and times out i Thrill of floor breaking through and plunge In mUlracS de nied ovf storm of bitter protest. Numerals on grandstand " Banished after last Forward - movement, when university be came sufficiently solvent to buy paint for grandstand roof. " Green caps Banished after campus lawn became really green .(Dean Clark having hired addi tional help) in order to provide more contrast. Freshmen now dis guised in headgear that look like rooters' caps. Mill race Last time we were in it was just as fold as ever, improving your suspicions that collegians are pampered these days. r Songs You won't recognize any of them it you graduate prior to 23. Undertaker song, which would have been especially appropriate Saturday, banished (we think) as too dignified. , Literary societies Banished when frats took over politics. Since then, sororities have sto len political helm from frats. Social functions Banished when students became too sophis ticated to dance Virginia reel and were forbidden to dance. Bonfires Banished when freshmen became too lazy to dean .up afterward. Chapel Not banished. Some times nowadays they vary the opening ode. Professors Still think students have spare time. Classes prior to 21 will still find Matthews. Sher man, Alden, Kirk, Peck and Rich i .1 ards-somewhere, but Franklin is Itoo busy tinkering new car. Fu swing Banished when co eds became self-supporting. Cows in chapel Banished when Bew ideas. of journalism provided Collegian with news of other sorts. I Sudents Same as ever, de spite external appearances. Like you, they don't dance on the cam pus nor smoke cigarettes on the . streets. I Phil Scott Will Fight Von Porat NEW, YORK, Oct. 31. (AP) Phil Scott, the British heavy weight champion, was matched - today for a 12-round bout with Otto Von Porat of Norway at Vadison Square Garden, Decern ber It will be the feature of - the Christmas fund now conduct ed by a New York newspaper. Read the Classif ied Ads. Here Are ThenlaTen ntctnred here are xt Notre Dame; right, Marstcrs, v--; V.v l , -r- r vj;ft . i - -h:-?-: 5?- r - y . fP;yxt ----I vT ' - SS- CHIP ISSEGNED HERE Thursday Night Johnny Hawks, Junior light weight champion of the north west, was signed up Thursday by Matchmaker Harry Plant, fora main event here next Wednesday night against Art Akers, speedy local southpaw. The matchmaker has been try ing for several weeks ever since Akers won from Ted Fox on a foul and demonstrated that he could hold his own with the In-, dependence mauler to get some body In the ring against Akers, but everybody seemed to be busy or going out of town or some thing. So Plant had to go farther away to get an opponent for him. Hawks, now a resident of Se attle, has scored 29 knockouts in 66 fights. He is 21 years old. He has twice defeated Phil Bayes. and has also won from Eddie Thomas and a lot of other scrappers whose reputations are known to local fans. Matchmaker Plant has not yet announced any of the other bouts on the card for Wednesday night, but is practically! certain that he will make use of some of the promising heavyweights who have been developed on recent pro grams. Akers recently opened a gash over his eye while sparring with Jackie Woods,' and for this reason was unable to fight Jack Ken't worth at Valset'z Tuesday night. The scar over his eye will have healed up by next Wednesday night, and he will be ready to give his best. Several other local fighters wese, billed to fight at Valsetz, but the crowd was so small the match maker had nothing to pay prelim inary boys, so the main event was the only event. Kentworth won a technical knockout over Tery Ki leen of Independence. EFFORTS YET IDE -I K WASHINGTON. Oct. 31. (AP) Hope may be dim but attempts will be continued to bring about a resumption of the annual Army Navy football clash. Discussing the failure of the conference between the superin tendents of the military and naval academies to effect an athletic re conciliation. Secretary Good said today he would continue his ef forts in that direction. He did not know whether they would take the form of conferences with Secre tary Adams. Meanwhile on Capitol Hill, Chairman Britten of the house na val affairs committee censured the position taken by the West Point authorities Of not changing their rules of athletic eligibility of not adhering to the three-year rule of participations and expressed hope mat- me government pinciais would direct West Point to get together with Annapolis and reach a compromise on the regulations for the participation of athletes." He added that under the pres ent rules the Navy .academy was "handicapped" In it athletic con tests with West Point. The position of Major General William R. Smith, superintendent of the military academy, in main taining the previous conditions of eligibility was characterzed by the house naval committee head as "showing that West Point Is afraid, to meet Annapolis unless W W Some of Season's Chi ef Gridiron Stars .Jet, '-X7t It ! ' ' considered the stars of the present pX Dartmouth. Lower row, left to Uses 'Em! y:twwi" .h in..!,". n.ij.i.mgy fmjyn'n r Til CV',"' Keith Jones, Salem boy who Is big help to Coach Spec Keene at Willamette. He plays tackle, and do you notice how be carries his hands? On defense, they land hard on whatever is in front of them. Jones was hurt in the Idsho game, but not badly enough to keep him oat of the affair with Pacific here Saturday. given a favorable handicap." Britten said that, if West Point maintained Its present position, it would mean there would Jbe no winter or spring sports competi tion between the two academies. Parrish junior high school's light but scrappy football team V7ill make its third start of the season against a heavier high school eleven, this afternoon at 3:3,0 o'clock on Olinger field, the Stayton high team which defeated Leslie junior;, high 52 to 0 last Friday furnishing the opposition. For this game Coach Aubrey Fletcher of Parrish has shifted his lineup materially, placing the two small lads who have been put ting np a fighting game at guard, on the ends and making other changes. He announced his starting line up Thursday as follows: Holgate and Quesseth ends; Moody and Peters, tackles; Fisher and Brownell, guards; Edwards, center; Kelly, quarter; Houghton, full; Nicholson and Sugai, halves. Stayton's lineup will probably be Pendleton and Darby, ends; Bowman and Neil, tackles; Heater and Porter, guards; Grady, cen ter; Phiips, quarter; Siegmund, fullback; Thoma and Lesley, halves. OUT FOR PRACTICE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eugene, Oct. 31. (Special) The first basketball practice of the season was called at Oregon this week by Bill Reinhart, head coach. Only two last year veterans, Jean Eberhart and Cliff Horner, will be available for the 1929-30 team. Several holdovers from last year's reserve teams and members of the frosh team will be counted on to furnish material to replace the regulars lost thfough graduation. Oregon lost 1 Gordon Ridings, leading scorer on the coast, Scott Milligan, Joe Bally, Mervain Chaa- taln, Dave Epps, Ray Edwards and Don McCormack. Harold Olinger of Salem is ex pected to be a leading candidate Tor a guard position. eaaon ma& are: Upper left, Karcls, ri ChtCwc. West. Points Booth, HSU TEAM TO NET STUM 11 Pacific Invades Salem With Fast Scrappy 11 OREGOr EXPECTS TO .CIS. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eugene. Oct. 31. (Special) Al though confident of winning the Ui. C. L. A. game which will be slaved here Saturday as the out standing events of the university's Dads' day program, Captain John J. McEwan, head coach, has de clared himself mystified as to a plan of attack for the compara tively unknown team from Los Angeles. Last year, after entering the game with U. C. L. A. in the south a heavy favorite, Oregon was scored on in the first half, but managed to win 26 to 6 fol lowing a hard up-hill battle. The Southern Bruins have the same line which threw such a scare Into the Wedfoots at Laos An geles last year, but their back field is new and green. The only real veteran back is Buddy Forst er, a flashy 140-pound quarter back, who last year ran 97 yards through- the Stanford team lor a touchdown. BUI Spaulding is coaching his fifth year at U. C. U A. and with in those years he has brought the U. C. L. A. S. from a minor con ference to membership in the Pac ific coast circuit. Five seasons ago the Bruins were consistently kick ed abqnt by members of the Southern California conference, but the years just preceding its admittance into the Pacific coast league, Bill Spaulding had coached his team to the leadership. TJ. C. L. A. has lost only the Stanford and to U. S. C, the lead ers on the coast, and has won from strong southern teams, in cluding Caltech, Fresno State and Pomona. The game with Oregon At Eugene will be U. C. L. A.'s on ly appearance outside of Los An geles yiis season. S NEW YORK, Oct. 31. (AP) -Carnegie foundation's already famous "Bulletin No. 23" on col lege athletics will be followed be fore the first of the year by "Bul letin No. 24," a second voluminous report on the same general sub ject, Dr. Howard J. Savage, staff member of the foundation, an nounced today. Entitled "The Literature of American School and College Ath letics," the new bulletin will ap proach in bulk" the 383-page vol ume which caused a stir in the college world a week ago with its charges of widespread recruiting and subsidizing of athletes. Its contents, however, are not expect. ed to prove so sensational. Bulletin No. 24, now being pre pared for the presses will contain excerpts from 1030 articles on col lege athletics, some of which have not hitherto appeared in print. It will comprise a digest of all that has been written on the subject over a long period of years and will contain a preface by Dr. Henry S. Pritchett, president of the foundation, whose preface to Bulletin No. 23 aroused consid erable comment. The new bulletin ! the work of W. Carson Ryan, Jr., professor of education at Swarthmore col lege and represents more' than three years of research undertak- en at the behest of the founda tion as a part of its exhaustive tudy of college sport. of Carnegie Tech; center, Mulllna, of Tnle, and Wood, of Harvard. IMU OB EE ROUP TO HEM ET Speed and Deception Are Chief Features of Badger Offense, Reports Indicate With an enviable record of up hill victories behind it this sea son the scrappiest eleven that Pa cific university has developed in recent years will appear on Sweet land field Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock to present a formidable threat to the Northwest confer ence title hopes of the Willamette Bearcats. Twice this year Coach Leo Frank's boys from Forest Grove have come from behind in the sec ond half, each time scoring the two touchdowns needed to win. The first achievement of this des cription was against Albany col lege, and the second last Saturday at Portland against College of Pu get Sound. Winning twice against odds of that magnitude has not diminish ed the fight and confidence of the Badger eleven, and reports reach ing Salem indicate plainly that Coach Frank has oeen pointing his men for this affair. That, on top of the natural rivaly between Ore gon's oldest and strongest, athlet ically speaking, independent col lege, means that the squad from Pacific will be boiling hot before the referee's whistle sounds to start the fray Saturday afternoon. The Bearcats, on the other hand were pointed for last Friday s game with College of Idaho, and Coach Spec Keene hasn't made any special effort to hop the boys up for this game, serious threat as it is. It's practically impossible for any team to be keyed up to the limit two weeks In succession, and If it had been possible Keene wouldn't do it because he has to save something for the Whitman game Thanksgiving day. So Saturday's game will be taken in stride" by the cardinal and gold eleven. This Pacific team which comes here Saturday, has practically the same backfield which battled the Bearcats at Forest Grove a year ago. Pacific winning on that oc casion 6 to 0. Miller, quarterback; Charlton, full, and Shriver, left The Western Auto Supply team set a new team series record in the Business Men's bowling league Thursday night, 2496, rolling also a score of 869 in one game and inning three straight from the Oregon Packing company quintet. The Capitol Dairies team of youngsters took two out of three front the Roth Purity Grocers, despite the fact that "Dad" Vail of that team set a season record for Individual series, 611. Scores were: CAPITOL DAIBIZS Lcbeld 151 155 128 434 Rentier 163 158 116 ' w 34 Robbinr 194 16 178 641 Shy ; 153 144 188 480 Bassett 138 800 147 469 1358 412 443 487 611 Total 483 823 758 KOTH OEOCEET O. Sot 154 111 147 Hoie L 116 149 177 Klrink 11 160 168 n 21T 203 191 Cttrti 91 142 149 Totals 69T 755 832 2284 WE8TBKH AUTO Shamler 183 137 203 623 King 141 143 785 469 Lwit .. 160 169 178 607 Fraser 159 157 136 452 D Vault 187 191 167 545 Totals i 830 799 869 J 496 OEEQON PACKING Daoo 171 136 181 188 Eckstein 158 166 179 493 Hites 148 156 486 lhma .., - ,, 164 178 155 497 DavUoa ,, , ., , 169 15S 159 481 Totals .784 781 880 2895 IF Varsity basketball aspirants at Willamette university who are not busy with football are already turning out informally to prac tice for the major . gymnasium sport season, but formal practice will not be started until after Thanksgiving day, when Coach Spec Keene will be able to take charge. For the past! several sea sons practice has been started un? der an assistant coach early In November. MM 1 ESTABLISHED BASKETBALL M MM IM1 Lettermen who are shootings baskets and conditioning them selves Inelude Scales, Adams, Hauk an1 Qlbaon. Cardinal, regu lar center, ror me last two years. and Benjamin, Engebretsen and Steelhammer who played last sea son in some games, wtll turn out after the football season is ended. I There are also some promising men from last, year's exceptional squad, and several new men who may make the varsity squad In their first year. ASHLAXD WORKS OUT The Ashland Normal school , football team will be In Salem to day, working . oat. on Sweetland field this afternoon and remain ing here tonight. It plays Oregon Normal at Monmouth Saturday. iVU' Van 4 fuah ttm aM mUC half, are the ball packing art who have played against Willam- i ette before. Frost, the other halfback, and Bomhoff, a quarterback who has participated in both of Pacific's late spurts, are if anything bet ter than the veterans. Frost buck ed the line for Pacific's- first touchdown against Puget Sound, and Bomhoff made a 35 yard punt return to score the other one. Leo Frank is a versatile men tor. This year he is using an en tirely different system from what he has taught in the past, insofar as offense Is concerned. Quick opening plays are the backbone of his attack, and he has a team which 'executes them in a manner approaching perfection. He is a master of deception, and plenty of it will probably be unfolded when his team opens up on Sweetland Held Saturday. NEW SHIPMENTS ARRIVING DAILY, Direct from the market . . . Fresh and crisp merchandise ... all at Breier's usual low prices. MEN'S WOOL UNIONS Bradford's best 100 wool unions. .Tail ored to fit. A REAL BREIEK frA QC VALUE AT $ltUO BOYS' WOOLEN UNIONS A medium weight wool-garment. A leading buy AT BREIER'S tl OQ LOW PRICE tPl W MEN'S WORK SOX Superior knit, seamless Rockford work sox. A BARGAIN "I A BUY AT ONLY : 1UC ROCKFORD Extra he"avy brown sox, and heel. AT ROCK- BOTTOM PRICE, PAIR BOYS' PRINTED SHIRTS Sizes 12 to 1414. To be smart patterns. 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Today Following a rousing sendoff, which is being planned by the stu dent body, Ooach Hollis Hunt ington and 21 members of the Sa lem high school football squad will board a motor bus shortly aft er noon today, headed for Asto ria, where they will meet the fighting Fishermen with thA rpd and black's most reliable backfield man, Dob Keiiy, on the injured list and not even making the trip. Salem hig's chances against Astoria are de cidedly gloomy in view of the Fishermen's season Tecord. They have won most of their games, and while they lost to Eugene high, 9 to 6, that is scarcely an indi- n h B tmd iioy mil i if ere every ami Coat styles. and weaves BUYS AT MEN'S Wool mixed cial buy. A PRICE AT SOX with white toe . lOl IL 2C WARM had in many QQ 570 C gerie, etc. DEMAND OXFORDS Sizes 212 to 6. $3.98 $2.98 $1.39 j vac yuALixrj ! FOR JUST LL.t DEPT. STORES j IN cation of weakness, as supporters of the Eugene team admit it is the best turned out there In many yecrs. Eugene is so far unde feated. Coach Huntington hus been using "Chinny" Kelly, Hu?. Pei tit and James regularly in th backfield this week, and that will bo the starting combination against Astoria. The line will be Uie same as in the Albany game, although Giesy, tar end, was also injured in th)t battle and may not be able t.j stay in the linup long. Dempsey Stages 2nd Fight Card COLISEUM. Chicago. Oct. 31. (AP) Jack Dempsey broke out in his second successful pco- motion at venture in the Coiseuni last nigni wun Aouy iauzonen. New Yark lightweight-challenger, decisively -defeating -'.Stanislaus Loayza, battle scarred llliean, in a slashing ten round bout. The Oregon Statesman 33.00 one full year by mail anywhere in ' Orgeon Excluding. Salem city. P SHAKER-KNIT MEN'S SWEATERS All wool. Best quality. Coat style. Heavy roll collar. THE BEST TO dQ QC BE HAD AT ....a $0UO MEN'S WpOL-MIXED SWEATERS Sweaters in assorted colors EXCELLENT AO ONLY!... ?cF.7U HEAVY SHIRTS shirts in coat style. 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