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About Oregon emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1909-1920 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 22, 1919)
BILL PASSES SENATE Measure Provides for High Schools and Colleges; Col. Leader in Charge. Universal military training in the high Schools and colleges of Oregon is made compulsory under the terms of a bill by Senator Hurley of Malheur county, which passed the senate yesterday afternoon by a vote of 10 to 14. Colonel John Leader, who for the past year has been in charge of the officers’ training camps at the University, will continue in that capacity and will also systematize the military training in the high schools if the bill becomes a law. Senator Pierce attacked the bill, mainly because Colonel Leader is to have charge of the mi lit a; y work, lie also demanded that the officers* training camp, which the bill provides shall be located at. Eu gene, be changed to Corvallis. The camps were located at Eugene by the national military training eamp nsKoeialhfn under the direction of the United States war department. Senator Pierce is a member of the board of regents of the Agricultural col lege. CLASS MEETINGS FIXED Will Tako Placo of Assembly; Mrs. Thompson Not Coming. Assembly hour Wednesday will lie de voted to class meetings, it was announc ed todny by Karl Outback, secretary to President Campbell. < sea will meet in the following rooms: Sr. us, beady; ju niors, Professor Howe’s room in Villard; sophomores, Guild hall; freshmen, Villard hall. Mrs. Alexander Thompson, of Ilood River, a member of the lower house and the only woman in the slate legislature, had been invited to address th« e.^eembly next Wednesday. Owing to the extension of the legislative session into next 6cek, Mrs. Thompson will he unable to conic at that time; hut, according to her tele gram to the president’s office received today, she expects to lie aide to visit the University at some future date. MEN URGED TO JOIN Y. M. Election of Association Officors to ho Held Noxt Wooh. Y. M. C. A. membership cards are be ing circulated on the campus this week. The nu*n are being urged to sign up anil get in I o the V. M. work, There are Ho dues connected with the Y this year, us the work of the local hut is being conducted by the war work council. l'lection of officers will probably be field next week and it is neeessar,\ that u studc<at be a member of the Y. M. be fore lie is allowed to Vote. Representa tives of the i. M. cabinet are in every bouse and there is a special group ban ning tlic members of the Oregon t'liih. Anyone who is not reached by some member of the cabinet shonild not feel offended, but come to the but and get one of the cards so that be may vote at the election. WOMEN TO SWIM TUESDAY Interclass Teams Chosen According to Preliminary Points Won. The women's inter-class swimming tneet will In: held in the pool id’ the men's gymnasium, next Tuesday evening at i :dO. Tuo seniors and freshmen have Ihosen the following girls to act a. tligir captains uud managers respectively: Marion Colley for the seniors and Helen Nelson and Dorothy Heed, Irishmen. The sophomore and junior girls will choose theii managers and eaptains at an early dale. ! The teams to participate have not h*eu picked, Miss t allnuiue Winslow, Instructor, announced today. There will jie four girls on each team, however, who will in chosen according to the mini her of points they won in the prelim luary meets. There will he two entries from each Buss in the follow m events: plunge for distance, swimming free style one length Id tank, free style two lengths, breast Stroke one length, hack stroke one length. Strokes for form Breast, hack, side and trawl -dues. la the relay race 1 ur girls will participate, out girl from each team. John O. Almack, director of the Uni versity extras.on division, spoke at Har risburg Friday evening on "t'onsolida jtion,” at a meeting for the discus*m »of consolidation of school distrl < ueigh ’•.Hiring llarrishurg. FHOTCKiK A1M1S Satisfaction guar Inteed. HOMANK STL DIO. CAMPUS ACTIVITIES Guests from all over the state are on the campus to attend the Colonial As sembly tonight. About fifty of the guests come at the invitation of the University and many of the houses are entertaining for mothers and friends. The Colonial Assembly is the most , important of all University functions which has occurred this year. Washington’s Birthday is to be fittingly celebrated. Chi Omega entertained at the Osburn Hotel last night with a delightful dance in honor of several guests from Portland. Alpha Phi undcrelassmen, too, were host esses to a number of boys at a charming dinner party last evening. -Tomorrow several of the houses enter taining at informal dinner parties in honor of house guests. * * * Mrs. P. L. Campbell, Mrs. F. L. Cham bers, Mrs. John Leader and Dean Louise Ehrmann were the hostesses at an in formal tea given thin afternoon at the home of Mrs. Chambers on East Elev ! (nth street, in honor of the visitors of the University who are here for the week end, to attend the Colonial Assembly. Daffodils and iaurestine were very effect ive decorations about the rooms. Mrs. F. C. Hendricks. Mrs. W. II. C. Bowen, Mrs. F. M. Wilkins and Mrs. P. E. Snodgrass presided at the tea table during the after noon. Several University girls assisted the hostesses. * * * Edgar J?. Piper, editor of the Oregon ian, was honor guest at n hnaeheon given by the members of the editing class in (he School of Journalism, Wednesday noon at the Osburn hotel. The guests be sides Mr. Piper were: President (’amp hell, Eric W. Allen, dean of the School of Journalism, George Turnbull, profes sor in the School of Journalism, Mrs. W. O. Osburn of the Osburn hotel, who some years ago was a special writer for the Oregonian, and the members of the edit ing class: Tracy Myers, Douglas Mullar ky, Erma Zimmerman, Adelaide Lake, Mess Dolman, Elizabeth Aumiller, Fran ces Mlurock and Helen McDonald. « * * The gnosis expected from Port kind for the Colonial Assembly, Feb. 22 have been apportioned to the following ho»<es fm l he week-end: Mrs. ltobert Stanfield, Gamma Phi Me ta; Mrs. L. Gerlinger, Kappa Alpha The ta; Mrs. hi. C. Grelle, Alpha Phi; Mis. Esther Jobes, Osburn Hotel; Mrs. Clar ence Jacobson, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Mrs. ('. W. King, Kappa Alpha Theta; Mrs. John Keating, Chi Omega; Mrs. J. Otis Wight, Alpha Phi! Mre. Everett Ames,, Pi Meta Phi; Mrs. <’. M. Swift, Delta Delta Delta; Mrs. Russell Haw kins, Delta Gamma; Mrs. Frank Rob ertson, Hendricks Hull; Mrs. Manville, Hotel Osburn; Mrs. Gill, Kappa Alpha Theta; Miss Hyatt, Kappa Alpha Theta; Mrs. S. M. McCoIlister, Dean Ehrmann. * * * Miss Celia linger and Miss Elizabeth llogg were dinner guests of Delta Gam ma Tuesday evening. * * * Joe Trowbridge spent last week-end in Portland. » * * Arthur McKeown and Tom Mennett, attorneys, of Marshfield, were dinner guests of Sigma Chi Wednesday eve ning. Mennett is a Sigma Clii from Stan ford. • * * Gamma Phi Meta entertained Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Faguy-Cote, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. (!. Timelier, Mr. and Mrs. M. F. McClain, and Martha Tinker at dinner Wednesday evening. • * * Miss Premia I’raneklyn, Dean Louise Ehrmann, Mrs. M. F. McClain and Mrs. A. 11. Sehroff were Tuesday luncheon guests of Kappa Kappa Gamma. * * • Mrs. W. Sanford ’Peed (Lillian Mohn soul, is the house guest of Mrs. Kather ine Johnson at Hendricks hall. Mrs. Johnson spent tho week-end in Portland and brought Mrs. Teed back with her. Mrs, Teed graduated in June, 1018, and w • a major in Romance languages. Mr. T<>ed is still in the service but expects to be discharged after which Mr. and Mrs. Teed will make their home in Port land. Miss Uremia Vrumklyn loft yesterday nfter spending a low days on the cam pus. i11* hero this Inst fimo she was the house guest of Hendricks hall. • * • ('hi Omega girls wore hostesses at one of the most delightful of the season’s dames at the Oshurn Hotel last night. Th.e decorations were oriental in every detail, the palm room being decorated j as the interior of an oriental home and the dining room as the ivuirt. In the court, punch was served from an oasis while a sphinx kept guard over the danc ers. The programs were in keeping with the list of the decorations. The guests of (.'hi Omega at this 1 artnir... dance were: I.onore lllaesing, Trail es 1 ,..w usher: \. Helen ('atria. He at rice Ueno. (lene Mdeod and T/UCile M- ('1 uI■•:. a 11 of I'ortland: and Vincent 1 JacvAvb-rger, Kay Moores, 1'atil Span gler, Ham Lehman, Walter Cofoid, Itos coc Hemenway, William Holmes, How ard Staub, George LaRoche, John Ken nedy, Ogden Johnson, James Harbke, Morris Giickman, Leslie Schwering, Stanley Anderson, Everett Pixley, Mau rice Mann. Merle Marge son, Roger Plinmrner, Don McDonald, Eugene Kel ty, Paul Farrington and Arthur Ritter PHOTOGRAPHS—Satisfaction guar anteed. ROMANE STUDIO. SI HD SETS ON EXTENSION WORK Activities of Division Rea.'h From Philippines to France. The sun never sets on the activities of the University of Oregon extension division. While Miss Mary Trowbridge, formerly of Medford, now in the Philiu pines, was finishing up her correspond ence course in short story, Carl Nygren, an artilleryman with the American forc es in France, was perfecting himself jn trigonometry, also by the mailed-lesson method. After Mr. Nygren’s transfer from the 54th artillery to the 65th, the division headquarters here did not hear from him; but Miss Trowbridge sent a letter which arrived only a few days ago from Untanzas, in the Philippine archi pelago. She has been in the islund since last summer. “We are kept busy here,” she writes, “which is a good tiling, as it keeps us from getting lonely. We have had to es tablish a mess, buy furniture, hire cooks and boys, of whom we have had about one a month.” Another far distant member of the Oregon student body is Sergeant ,T. E. Petite, of the army, who is doing cor respondence work in English while at Fort Lisoum, Alaska. Letters come in almost daily from students in widely sep" nrated part^of the earth who are send- j ing in the results of their work and ask ing for more. PHOTOGRAPHS—Satisfaction guar anteed. ItOMANE STUDIO. The CLUB for pool and billiards. Si 1 Wiliamet e Sr Wallace’s Cigar Store, S04 Willamette. Complete line Cigars and Cigarettes, tf ATHLETICS TO BE TOPIC Faculty Colloquium Will Hear Dean Wal ker and Dr. W. D. Smith. College athletics will be the general subject for discussion at a meeting of the faculty colloquium in Dean Straub's room at 7:45 o’clock next Tuesday eve ning. Dean H. Walker, in charge of the men’s gymnasium, -will present the plans for the department of physical education for the development of intramural sports, and Dr. Warren D. Smith will speak on “The Trend of Opinion in the United States with IU'gard to Intercollegiate Athletics.” The CLUB for pool and billiards. S14 Willamette St. PHOTOGRAPHS—Satisfaction guar anteed. ROM AXE STUDIO. DR. LLOYD L. BAKER Dentist Instructors Diploma, N. S. V. D. Chicago C. and W. Bldg. Schwering & Lindley BARBERS. 12 East Ninth. DANCING Fox Trots, One Steps, Waltzes, Three Step, all the New Steps. Learn ’Em at ALEXANDER’S DANCING SCHOOL. Over The Oregon Theater. ADVANCED CLASS every Tuesday Night at 7:30. DANCING 9 TO 12. Good Music. Class for Beginners every Thursday, 8:30 P. M. Private Lessons any time. Call at School or Phone Hotel Osburn. FOR THOSE SUNDAY CHICKEN DINNERS Try the “Grotto KRODEKS BROTHERS. Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Fresh, Corned and Srftoked Meats. 80 W. 8th St. Eugene, Oregon. Phone 40. m " i - - - - - .... - - — -- - C. L. Bartholomew. F. M. Porterfield. THE BEST TIRE MADE THE GOODRICH WE SELL ’EM. B. & M. TIRE AND VULCANIZING CO. ANY MAKE OF TIRE YOU WANT. Backed by Eleven Years’ Experience. 848 Olive Street. Eugene, Oregon. Just Received 11)19 stock of Baseballs, Gloves, Bats and Shoes, Tennis Rackets, Cases, Nets, Balls and Shoes, Running Suits, Spikes, Hand Balls and Gloves. HAUSER BROS. Outfitters to Sportsmen and Athletes. Everything to Help Your Game. i I How About Those Films We Sell ’Em—We Print ’Em. Prompt Developing of Films and Packs. Work left one day ready at 5:00 P. M. the next. GIVE US A TRIAL. University Pharmacy CORNER CAMPUS. PHONE 229. y Phone—ONE—TWO—THREE. \ Satisfactory service—Sanitary conditions. West Eighth Street. Eugene. Look in Your Mirror ARE THERE ANY LINES between your eyes? Many people have a constant scowl caused solely by eye strain. yu»^0igr ’"Mooily’a Deep-Cnrvt Kjyptok Leases An Bsstcr in most cases me scowl can De smootnea out by proper ly fitted glasses. Your eyes are your bread-winners. Do not trust to chance about them. SAVE YOUR EYES. Complete Lens Grinding Outfit on the Premises. SHERMAN W. MOODY Bring Your Prescriptions Here. EYE SIGHT SPECIALIST AND OPTICIAN — - -T ;? 881 Willamette Street factory on Premises, The Best Fruit Flavors A drop of flavor is a small tiling, but it makes a great difference in the tasted Ice Cream. That's why our Ice Cream is in such demand, because every dish we serve is flavored with the very in every dish we serve is flavored with the very pervision, by delicious CRUSHED FRUITS Which we use every care to insure its being fresh and ripe. Phone us your Ice Cream order. The Home of Pure Milk Eugene F armers Creamery'"* Phone 638.