Daily Emerald! RAYMOND E. VEST Manager. Intercollegiate Press Association. .Lyle Bryson News Editor.Charles E. Gratke AsaoHate Editor Dorris Sikes Assistant News Editors Velma Rupert Sport* Editor .Floyd Maxwell X,. Sport Writers Stead, Eugene Kelty, Edwin Hoyt | Night Editors [Stanley C. Ejsman Carlton K. Logon Read Moore. News Service Editor... k Jacob Jacobson Assistant .Eunice Zimmerman SpecfcM Writers: Mary Loii Barton, Frances Quisenberry, Elisabeth J. Whitehouse NfcWs Stttff:-*-Harold Moore. Fred Guyon, Inez King, Margaret Scott, Ken neth Uouel, Owen Calloway, .lolyi Anderson, Martha Westwood, Jean Strachan, OantM’e Crate, Doris Parker, Margaret Carter^ Phil Brogan, Florence Skinner, EmPy Houston. Barry Ellis, John Dierdorff, Pauline Coad, Howard Bailey, Rae ford Bailor Arfhur Rudd, Ruth Austin, Clarence Anderson, Mabel Gilliam, Jes ^ 'Thompson, Hugh Starkweather, Jennie Perkins. Associate Manager ..Webster Ruble Advertising Managers .George McIntyre, A1 Woertebdyke l.... Circulation Manager.Ogden Johnson Office Assistant ...MftriOn Weiss Collections . ,.T. Warren Kays Stiff Assistants:—Randal Jones, Eugene Miller, Lyle Johnson, Jason McCune, ■ Itnogene Letcher, Ben Reed. »«*■ ■' ■■■■■- —-— --;-— -■ ■■■■ Official publication of the Associated Students of the University of Oregon, issued dally except Sunday and Monday, during the college year. ' Etrtered in the post office at Eugene, Oregon, as second class matter. Sub acriptioh fates $2.25 per year. By term, 75c. Advertising rates upon application. - .... PHONES: Downtown office—1200. IT’S UP TO YOU! The paramount question on the campus today is: “Shall Oregon have a comic magazine?” That question is now up to yott, and the results of the Lemon Punch subscription oam piRigfi today and tomorrow' will be an accurate prediction of ftie Will of the campus on this question. % few men have spent a great deal of time and more or less money so far in gathering together material for the first issue of the proposed magazine, until it is now well on its way to completion. These men have done this Work, not with the ^bought of material gain, nor as a means of bringing their own names before the campus spotlight. They have done it be efctise they believed a comic magazine was necessary on the Ofegbn catnptis, and that Oregon should hot go down in his tory with its campus humor unheralded. They believe they tire doing something for Oregon, and they ask the rest of the student body to join them. : Oregon needs this comic magazine. The very fact that tbe publication will be sent to some fifty other universities and colleges in the country is ah item that will add to the Rome of ohr school. Parts of the magazine will likely be cfUoted in prominent national publications. A good comic nft££azine, such as Lemou Punch, will be as good a means of advertising Oregon as a champion football eleven. > Alumni of Oregon are waiting for Lemon Punch. They expert Oregon to advance as it grows, and they think Lemon Punch will be an advance. You will not disappoint these graduates and eX-students by failing to get behind the m&ga zine at the honr of its greatest need. 1 There is no question but what the magazine will be worth while and trulv representative of Oregon. But it needs and rtitiist have the hacking of every student if .it is to be a success. One thousand subscriptions will assure a sucoessful year, but if every student in the University would take it upon them selves to subscribe, they would have the pleasure of assuring Lemon Punch that its welcome will he genuine, that its need is felt, rtnd that the campus has faith in it. Not only must a few organizations report a hundred ppr cent Subscription among its members, but so must the entire campus. An especial appeal is directed to those students liv ing outside campus, living outside organizations, for those are the ones Who will be most directly benefited bv an individ haiRhbScription. if yon want Oregon to have a comic magazine, a magazine dt the type of Washington’s Sundodgor, Stanford’s Vhnp nnreM, and California’s Pelican, today is the time to speak. The fate of Lemon Punch hangs on the result of today’s cam paign. Bom ember, it’s up to you! "IT'S UP TO YOU” IS Slogan of magazine (Continued from Pago 1.) sited tomorrow. A list of subscribers will be made, and these will be checked off as they are issued. Manager Ellsworth uxfes, however, that ench subscriber keep bta receipt in ' order to avoid any complications. The “It’s up to you” campaign com mittee, which expects to secure 1000 Lemon Punch subscriptions today and tomorrow, is as follows: ClatMia Gratton, Ho Nichols, Mario Anderson, Ruth Flegel. iCenc Barrett, Pauline Ooad, Gertrude Smith. Blanche Wickland, Martha Westwood, Lenore Crum, Ruth Austin. Laura Rand, Caro line Canon, Mildred Apperson, Frances Moore, Hachael Husband, Johanna John-1 son, Pelmu Freeland, Luoile Branstetter, Don Feenaugbty, Charles Huggins, Fnyi Clark, Guy Sacre, lion Youcl. Harr* Ellis, Wilbur Hoyt, Barney (JunVtt. KeitJj Riggins. Car! Licbe, Guy Ko-epp, Ployd Maxwell. Ben Reed. Ogden TJobo ftou, Wesley Sbattuek, Tom Wyatt, Nor tou Wlnnard, Carlton Logan. "LOBOS” CHOSEN AS. SOBRIQUET. The University of New Mexico 1ms found a new name for its athletes •_ they are called ”Lobos” This name mas picked, they say, because a lobo is notted for hi* cunning, feared for his strengijh. and dreaded for his, endurance. -!_---..rsaa. STEERS AND LESLIE NAMED ON OFFICIAL (Continued from Page 1.) a number of sport authorities and writ ers throughout the northwest, both Steers and Leslie appearing to be an almost unanimous choice from the Oregon play ers for positions on the (all star teams. Portland sport writers gi\V a position to Leslie, Steers and Muntz In one ease and to Staters, Leslie, Muntz nnd Howard in another. ! Ooadi “Shy” Huntington of the Ore gon team bus expressed himself as not wishiug to uttjempt to select an all star coast team. would be hard to improve on the one which Varnell has selected and uceordlhtg to his system which is to’ get h team selected by most of the eojiehes and the nselect the ones who re ceive the insist mention for the line-ups. ' This about answers the purpose. EX-STUDENT AND WIFE HERE. Mr. and Mrs. John Kennedy, who were married Thanksgiving day are spending a few days visiting with friends on ‘the campus, after a short outing at Nimrod Mrs. Kennedy was formerly Miss Mildred Briggs of Portland and John Kennedy a member of the class of ’21. is now manager of the Commercial Advertising company of Portland. The couple were dinner guests of Phi Delta Theta Tues day evening. They will leave today for theie home in Portland. *——-— — -* Announcements ♦-—■--—* Oregon Club.—Hi/ stag mixer, men*« •#?m. Saturday. December 4. S p .in. Assembly.—Villard haU, Thursday, 11 a. m. President P. L. Campbell will speak upon his recent trip east. Faculty.—Meeting today in Guild hall, four o’clock. Girts—Interested in a Kitropean trip planned by Miss Fox and Miss Burgess are invited to a meeting Thursday even ing at 7 o’clock in Dean Straub’s of fice. State Aid. — All state aid men must file their November attendance report and expense statement at window 19 in the Administration building.on or before December 7. 0regatta Pictures. — All pictures for the Oregana must be taken as soon as accommodations can be secured at the three studios, Tollman’s Sunbeam and McKune’s, and proofs returned imme diately in order that the work of mount ing may begin right away. These pic tures include those of juniors, seniors and all organizations which are listed in each studio. ♦ ♦ ♦ WHAT THE OLD GRADS ♦ » ARE DOING. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦# *#♦♦♦♦♦♦ Merle R. Chessman, a member of Beta Theta Phi and a graduate of Oregon with the class of 1909, is now manager and | editor of the Astoria Evening Budget. He proved his ability while still on the campus, being associate editor of the j Oregon Weekly one year and assistant manager the next. He was manager of I the Glee club for two years and managed the Junior Prom, he was a Failing Beak Tian orator, a member of the University ' Press club, was Junior orator and won on the track team in 191#. Immediately after graduation he was given the position of telegraph editor of the East Oregonian and soon became city editor. During the war he was adjutant | ;n the Umatilla County Guard and ohair j man of the U. S. Public Service Reserve, campaign manager for various war drives, assistant food iudministrator, sec retary of Loyalty Committee, secretary of the Umatilla Comity Patriotic Service League in Pendletou, and chairman of the Council of Defense. Only last year he was given tlie position in Astoria. He is married to Daphne Leasure who attended both the University of Oregon and University of Washington. »♦♦♦♦♦♦*•♦♦♦♦♦♦* P THE « ♦ RANDOM REPORTER. ♦ ♦ (Dally Questions and fheir Answers) ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ I (Every day a reporter from the Emer ild staff is given a question to ask the first person he meets.) Today's Question:—“Why did you come ;o college?” Don Davis, '21:—“Because it was the •orrcct thing to do.” Jennie Perkins, ’22:—“I was so afraid 1 might become a school teacher that 1 ■ame to college to learn something else.” Russell Kaufman, ’23:—"To learn to oe a doctor.” Jane Campbell, ’24:—“1 lived so close f couldn’t get out of it.” Harold Moore, ’23:—“Frankly, I gotj ,ired of working from early morning un-j ;il late at night—now I don’t go to bed] ; at all.” Ceelle Barnes, ’21:—“To be able to do something worth while.” F. Q. SCIENTISTS VISIT 0. A. C. | dreflon Represented at Meeting of West ern Society of Naturalists. At tlie meeting of the Western So ciety of Naturalists, held at Corvallis last Friday and Saturday, the Univer sity of Oregon was represented by I)r. E. I.. Packard, Dr. II. 15. Yocom, Pro fessor A. It. Hweetser, Miss Ethel San born, and Miss Catherine Beekley. Fri day afternoon, a session for reading re search papers and the transaction of business, was held. This was followed by a dinner at 6:30 in Waldo hall. Saturday was spent in visiting labora tories, orefiards and other things of in terest in Corvallis. .___ BOTANY BOOKLET OUT. Professor Albert K. Sweetser of the department of botany has recently is sued a pamphlet, “Toadstools aid Mush rooms of Oregon.” which ontains uomh valuable information for those interest ed in the fungus growths of the state. Professor Sweetser has lately been ii ,-coiummiich.tiou with various commercial bodies throughout the state offering the use of the pamphlet and any other infor mation they may desire concerning tin subject of which it treats. NtiBono Corsets, Cleaning and Repair ng. Mrs. A. True Lundy, lf>o Fast Ninth Street. Phone 230. tf nD HIS w WHICH WONT BURN Specimen of Sub - Shungite Brought Here Prom Canada The organization and failure of a min ing company, and tlic sending of a ship to sea with coal which wouldn’t burn arc some of the interesting features of a story recalled by a specimen of sub shungite which Professor Packard ob tained in northern British Columbia last summer for the University geological museum. Shungite is a very rare substance simi lar in appearance and composition to coal, but it will not burn. Its position on the ladder representing the succes sive steps in the formation of the vari ous materials classed by science with coal, which begins with a vegetable pro duct and continues through peat, ligmite bituminous and anthracite coal, and graphite, and ends up with the diamond, is somewhere between anthracite coal and grapitc. Which is to say that nature has developed it a little more than an thracite coal, but not quite so much as graphite. In this development she has taken from it. those gases which make coal inflamable. Sub-shungite is not quite so fnr along in its development as the real shungite. In Queen Charlotte islands in north ern British Columbia an outcrop of this sub-shungite was foi”id in 1857. On the assumption that it was coal a mining company was formed, stocks were sold. ! a tramway was built mining was begun, and some of the substance was placed on a ship to be used as fuel. When the ship got to sea and an attempt was made to burn this coal it would not burn. Professor Packard was traveling in British Columbia last summer and dur um: bis travels visited the plaee where this mine was situated. He brought some of the ore home with him, and will place a part of it in the geological museum. Ho far as he knows this mine is the only plaee on the American continent whore this substance is found. There is a considerable deposit of shungite in Siberia, but it is practically unknown throughout the rest of the world. RED CROSS DRIVE STARTS. Delta Theta Pi i» the first house to report 100 per pent in the fourth an nual Red Cross roll eall membership drive, according to Miss Mozella Hair, who is in charge of the campus cam paign. CHARLEY’S PLACE 982 Willamette Roasted Peanuts Mother’s Candy Buttered Popcorn Office 408-9 Pacific Telephones: C. &. W. Bldg. ~ Office 613-J; Res. 613-L DR. JOHN SIMONS OSTEOPATHIC Physician and Surgeon Osteopathy Stands for the Truth Wherever It Is Truthfully Proven. DR. ROBERT M. GRAVES Dentistry 774 Willamette St. Phone 65 EUGENE, OREGON Phone 425 DR. W. B. JLiEE Dentistry 404 0. & W. Bldg. HASTINGS SISTERS Hair Dressing Parlors Register Building. 485'/, Willamette Telephone 1009 _EUGENE, OREGON Face and Scalp Treatments a specialty MADAME SCHAFFER HAIR DRESSING PARLORS Manicuring for Ladles and Gentlemen 774 Willamette St. Phone 888 WILLAMETTE HOSPITAL 938 Willamette Street Phone 2 or 3 Bartle—Neal—Donahue NEW DORM OPENS SOON Applications for Reservations in Susan Campbell Hall Now In Order. The residents list for Susan Campbell Hall is now open in Dean Fox’s office. All students wishing reservations should see I)eau Fox this week or Kuth Eng stroin thereafter. It is impossible to announce a defi nite date for the opening of the new hall, but Miss Fox states that it will prob ably be some time between the middle of January and the first of February. It will accommodate approximately one hundred and eight students. A deposit of ten dollars at the business office will be required from students who wish to live in the new building next term. - ■ - ° /GIRLS AVOID POST LIST Men Outnumber’ women Twenty to On on Delinquency Sheet. * That the Oregon girls have a higher scholistic standing than the men—jnso far as they manage to keep their names clear of the ptfst list—is indicated by the very few feminine nairfes to be f0„nj| among the large number of post slips on file at the registries office. Members of the smart sex are outnumbered by the men twenty to one <>n this lenghty list of ,delinquent students. Within a few days the faculty proba tion committee will hold a special meet' iug to take action on certain of the more pressing cases and indications are that the probation group will be materially increased. MAYER and McCROSKEY’S I Exclusive College Dance Saturday, Dec. 4, 1920 OLD ARMORY BUILDING Orchestra will feature— “Anytime, Any day, Anywhere” “Yearning and Waiting” “San” and “Sweet September” Get your Suit Pressed where it can be delivered to your door. We push things through in rapid order. “A Good Job Done On Every Suit.” Visualize the Past Keep an accurate account of your college career try pictures A. C. Read Students’ Rebate We wish to announce that beginning today we will give you a rebate of 10 Per Cent on all purchases of note books, fillers, station ery and other school supplies amounting to one dollar. University Book Store If. 1?. TAYLOR Phone 229-.T . Eleventh and Alder THE UNIVERSITY COMPANY —Presents— PRUNELLA THURSDAY and SATURDAY, Dec. 2 and 4 8:30 p. m. GUILD THEATRE, U. of 0. Tickets on Sale at Guild Theatre Box Office on days of performance—50c and 75c