Oregon Daily Emerald HARRY A. SMITH, Editor. RAYMOND E. VESTED, Manager Member Pacific Intercollegiate Press Association. jeociate Editor .Lyle Bryson News Editor .Charles E. Gratke i Assistant News Editors Velma Rupert, Elisabeth Whitehouse John Dierdorff. Sports Editor.Floyd Maxwell Sports Writers lingerie Kelty Harold Shirley Art Rudd Night Editors Wilford C. Allen. . | Carlton K. Logan, Reuel S. Moore, Kenneth Touel. Statistician.Don D. Huntress Feature Writers . E. J. H.. Mary Lou Burton. Frances Quisenberry News Staff—Fred Guyon, Margaret Scott. Pearl Harris. Owen Callaway, Jean Stroehan, Inez King, Lenore Cram. Wanna McKinney. Raymond I). Lawrence, Herbert Scheldt, Florence Skinner. Emily Houston, Mary Truax, Howard Bailey, Ruth Austin, Madalene Logan, Mabel Gilliam, Jessie Thompson, Hugh Stark weather, Jennie Perkins, Claire Beale, Dan Lyons, John Anderson, Maybelle Leavitt, Howard Godfrey, Jacob Jacobs on, Alexander Brown. Associate Manager .Webster Ruble Advertising Manager .George McIntyre Circulation Manager .A1 Krohn Staff Assistants: James Meek, Jnson McCune, Elwyn Craven, Morgan Staton. Official publication of the Associated Students of the University of Oregon, issued dajly except Sunday and Monday, during the college year. Entered in the post office at Eugene, Oregon, as second class matter. Swb acription rates $2.25 per year. By term, 75c. Advertising rates upon application. Campus office—656. PHONES: Downtown office—1200, COLONEL LEADER. Colonel John Leader is an Englishman in England, an Irish man in Ireland, and American in America, and a loyal Oregon ian while on the Oregon campus or anywhere else. It is hard ly probable that his popularity among’ the students of the l ni versity can he surpassed by any other man who has ever been connected with the University. The reception given him at assembly yesterday and during his stay here proves that. Colonel Leader is one of the most picturesque characters most students have ever had the pleasure of meeting. Al though of the class termed the aristocracy in England, here lie is the very embodiment of democracy. Ilis cheery greet ing, his hearty handclasp, his informal wit, his very appear ance, fairly breathes the democracy which Oregon Spirit ex emplifies. While connected with the University, Colonel Leader was one of the biggest drawing cards the University possessed. Me made friends everywhere, as he still does, and those friends become friends of the University because they become satur ated with a part of the loyalty and love of Oregon which the colonel himself possesses. Colonel Leader will always he welcomed here, even after those students who know him best have passed out from col lege. lie is distinctly a. part of Oregon, lie is a tradition. The communication in yesterday’s Emerald which suggest ed the abolishment of Junior Week-end is not the raving of a student with natural bolshevik tendencies. The student who wrote it knew what he was talking about, and his ideas are at least the basis for possible reforms in the Junior Week-end activities fornext year. It is a problem which will he brought more forcibly to the front in the future. What with the senior lottery and a bargain sale dance scheduled for one night, things look as if all the students will have a chance to get on one last spree before the final rush for textbooks commences. The Sigma Nu revelry won’t have any thing on the Men’s Gymnasium bust either, according ot press agents. On with the unconfined joy! The student activities committees have been appended and thev will soon he initiated into the seriousness of their jobs. It is an honor to ho a member of one of these committees be cause it offers an opportunity to do some real work for Oregon. it--—-—-* | The Campus Cynic | ^-* SLEEPING BEAUTIES. Editor: Sunday about midnight as 1 was reposing comfortably on my left rear floating rib, speculating on life, death, and how I was going to secure my quota of bed clothes which were wrapped com pactly around the sleeping cherub by mv side, he suddenly rose bolt upright, hair pointing to the starry vault, and stared at me with a wild light in bis eyes, break ing out into a hysterical cackle. “Ha ha!” he said shrilly, extending his hand, “my name’s Copula. Ua ha! What did you say your’s was? Oh yes, glad to know you—mighty glad to know you old man. Well what do you think of the ! University by now Have you seen our new imported Scotch thorn bearing hush es in front of the library? No? Then l must show them to you--one of the! worth while sights of the school. Guar- ' anteed to look dusty the year around. If! a flower blooms on a single one of them! the gardener would die of a broken heart. ! But he won’t die: they'll never bloom. Coining to the University next fall? (food! Well, mighty glad to have met ! you old man, 1m ha! So long.” Where- j ui>on the poor oaf fell backwards, land ! ing on my third row left spare rib, wrap- ! pmg the blankets nround lam a lit11<> more firmly and daftly removin'; tlie olive drab linen lozenge we eon,jointly use for a pillow. Sliding between the mattress and the springs, I tried lo spend (lie rest of the silly, stilly, eliilly night in profound thought. Shortly afterwards my troub led bed mate turned over suddenly, ilasp ★-* | Announcements | *------¥■ Phi Delta Kappa.—Banquet at (he An chorage Friday night, May 27, “at t o'clock. 0 ° o o. • ; Mask and Buskin.—-Meeting at 5 p. m. Friday, May 2(3, upstairs in tlie library Very important. Presbyterian Students. — A hayracl part.v will be given by the Young Peo ple's Society of the Central Fresbyteriar church. Start from church at 5:20 Satur day. Girls are to bring salads, cakes oi sandwiches; the boys pay for the ic( cream. Presbyterian students especially invited. Advertising Class.—Mr. P. .7. Mac Auley, advertising manager for Meier & Frank Company, of Portland, will ad dress the class in advertising at. 11 o’clock Friday in the .Tournalism “shack.” Visitors will be welcome. Women’s Oregon Club.—-Meeting Mon day evening, 7:20. at the bungalow. Mu Zeta Kappa.—Important meeting today at Anchorage; noon. Cbartei granted. ed the pillow passionately and sokbet brokenly: “Marie darling, don’t you lov< me any more? I couldn’t get to sec yon all day yesterday—the preppers kept mr away, beloved dove.” Whereupon hr turned over once again and parked him self on an additional hnlf dozen of my lung casings. Once in the early hours of the morn, in that witching period when the heavy sleepers sing to the abysmal depths of Lethe and only the faintest echoes oi their audible slumber are heard—ns the faintest rumble of the Los Angeles trem blers reach us—I heard a frosli in an adjoining bunk, who had been sleeping in a vers iibre fashion about the house during the week-end, say delightedly and ecstatically: “Gawd, hut this piano top is getting soft!” Then shortly later I heard him fall out of the top bunk and hit the floor with a resounding thud, Still fast asleep he rolled over, clutched a nearby hunk post and resumed his lung tonsil-and-nose breathing, missing only two deep draughts of ozone to say cheer fully: “Getting better; only fell off once tonight.” At this juncture the house manager, in a far corner, moaned piti fully: “Tell them in the dining room.” lie choked pitifully, “that there is no more gravy.” I withdrew my head under the mat tress, hut not soon enough, for I he res ervoir of affection by my side reached over and kissed me fervidly on the ex posed lobe of my off ear. saying tender ly: “I shall never, never leave you for so long a time again.” 1 gave a wild shriek, leaped out of the hunk and made for the stairs. As I went out I heard someone say sleepily: “If Lizzie wants me on the phone, tell her I’m out. I got a date with another gal.” I went, down and spent the rest of the night in the bathtub. She was a groat old Week-end, and I guess we gave the preppers as much fun as wo received from them. It’s all in the game. But I’m glad it's over. For my hunky is a sensitive soul and his nervous system wouldn’t stand a longer separation from his beloved. And I need a rest. —E. J. II. *-* ! Contemporaries ‘DAD'S DAY’ ADVOCATED With all tlu1 attention that is being given to "Mother’s Day” throughout the country. Ohio State College has voiced i cry for an annual “Dad’s Day,” to be staged in honor of the nation’s paternal ancestors. It advocates that the time he set so that it would come near the heighth of the collegiate football season. Editorially, the Ohio State Lantern says in part: Such a movement should meet with BARS—en’ everything at the PHIL-UP Opposite The Co-op Store STEVENSONS The Kodak Shop Headquarters For Campus Pictures Kodak Finishing, Kodaks and Albums See our big STUNT BOOKS 10th and Willamette Sts. Phone 535. the co-operation and hearty support of every student. The idea is to give the “dads” an opportunity to revel in tli(v activities and "the life they once en joyed, namely, student life; or il he hap pens to l»<> one of many “dads” who were denied the privileges of a college educa tion, the opportunity to see what he has missed and to study the kind of life hr.; boy or girl is living at a University. Also it will give him an opportunity to view at (lose range the daily routine of the greatest Ohio college, typifying the great good being done among the present col lege generation by the colleges of our nation. It has been the custom for years for certain organizations on the campus to celebrate Dads’ Day. hut heretofore no concerted effort has been made to have these celebrations come on the same day. Xo;v. since such a project has been start er. il behooves ('very organization to keep in close touch with it and plan to assist in every way possible to make the scheme —if launched—a success. Other schools have tried the plan and have declared it a huge success. It has become on established custom at the University of Illinois, and those who made the journey to Urbana last fall doubtless remember the thousands of neatly tagged, smiling, rooting "dads” who made up a part of that great crowd which saw the Scarlet and Gray take the I5ig Ten gridiron honors. Dads’ Day can be made a success with very little effort. Co-operation on the part of every student is all that will be needed. Dads’ Day would in no way interfere with alumni reunions or other annual gatherings, as it would he distinct ly a father-and-son event. What “dad” is there who wouldn’t, enjoy hobnobbing for a day with his iioy or girl on the campus? What “dad” wouldn’t enjoy meeting his hoy’s or girl’s chums? What “dad” wouldn’t enjoy making an inspec tion of the University which he helps support? Five Watches Bear Witness to Paddock’s Speed. Los Angelos, May 25.—Five watches, frozen at the fifth-second mark, which denotes the time made by Charles Pad dock when on March 2(5 he finished 220 yards at a Berkeley race in the world’s record time of 20 4-5 seconds, are part of the evidence which will he considered by officers of the A. A. U. in adjudging Paddock’s record as official, according to Robert S. Weaver, of Los Angeles, pres ident of the A. A. U. The watches, with supplemental evi dence substantiating the time, are in the hands of Frederick W. Rubiens, secre tary of the A. A. IT., at 144 Broadway, New York, who, in a telegram to the 20 year-old Californian, a student at the University of Southern California in Los .Angeles, informally announced recently that he “saw no reason why (lie Berkeley meet record should not stand.” This is the first time since 1042 that the A. A. IT. has had to consider allow ing a new world’s record in the 220-yard event, it is said, and before granting rec ognition of a record the necessary steps are many. Following a race, the judges swear to affidavits stating that all con ditions were fair and equal, the timers make signed statements giving the time involved and the watches are chocked at | the points marked by the timers. These men are sent to the secretary ot the A. A. U. in New York, together with all the affidavits, including one from the starter and a special engineer who swears the track was level, the distance exact and physical conditions as required. Received in New York, these are con- . sidered by the secretary, who makes roc- '. ommendations and refers the matter to a ■ special committee. After a few months, 'if favorable consideration results, the . record is “allowed.” If Paddock’s record stands, it will of 1 ficially supersede the three former re-. I cords of 21 1-5 seconds made respective- . ; Jy by Heroic Wafers in 1897, Ralph Craig] in 1910, and E. J. Lippincott in 1912. I We’ll correct th(> tron W*S m Pert, louses—at * not !o,-nto W cost. Be exa’ilined ]11)V || §fecrnianW Mfltifl. 1301} 881 WILLAMETTE ST. EUGENE.OBE. • Jll Swimming Suits i I We are showing The new models in These wonderful Swimming- Suits for Men, women and children. Made of the finest worsted yarns, fast colors and knitted in the patented Jantzen stitch so they will hold their shape for years. NEW WHITE TROUSERS ARE READY Oreew fflerrelll C©>, 713 "Willamette St. One of Eugene’s Best Stores —^— Just what you have been Longing for, Fresh Oregon Strawberry Shortcake with Whipped Cream - - - - 25c Don’l that sound good. Well it is delicious. Come around and trv it vourselL The Campa Shoppe