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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (June 4, 1921)
Final 1920-21 Edition This Issue 20 Pages VOLUME XXII. UNIVERSITY of OREGON, EUGENE. OREGON. SATURDAY, JUNE 4, 1921. v NO. 146 LEiEBS IF STIFF Five News and Night Editors, One for Each Issue, to [ Be Selected Later DIERDORFF AND GRATKE OFFERED HIGH PLACES Webster Ruble, Manager, to Be Aided by Staton and McCune. A new arrangement will be made in the editorial staff of the next year’s Daily Emerald, when Floyd Maxwell, newly elected editor, takes his place at the head. The change will be chiefly in the positions of news and night editors. Five will be appointed for each place and each will be responsible for their respective duties one day each week, and will be given credit for the paper on that day. John Dierdorff will be at the head of the news editors. Johnny has been one of the news editors on this year’s staff and knows all the ins and outs of the city editor’s job. Charles Gratke, news editor this year, has been appointed associate editor. No other appointments have been announced for the work next year, but will be made before the close of school in most cases. The Daily Emerald has been a suc cess in this, the first year,” said Floyd Maxwell in speaking of his plans for the sheet, “and next year we plan to profit by all the experience of the retiring staff and hope to make a better Emerald, keeping pace with the improvement of the University as a whole, and doing all we can for a Greater Oregon.” Webster Ruble, appointed business manager by the executive council of the student body, was associate manager of the business end of the Emerald this year. He has been a member of the bus iness staff during his two years in the University. Morgan Staton will be asso ciate manager next year and has worked as an assistant on the retiring staff. Uandall Jones will manage the advertis ing. He assisted with this work the first two terms. George McIntyre will he one of his chief aides. Jason McCune. new circulation manager, has worked in that capacity on the Morning Register, as well as assisting on the business staff this year. A large number of reporters and oth er Emerald workers will be on the cam pus again next year and the new editor does not feel that he will have any dif ficulty in securing a staff that will bring the daily up to the best in every detail. 1SI1Y SWIMMERS TO BE PICKED HIT Tryouts Are For Team to, Meet Multnomah Saturday. The seven men wlio will represent the University of Oregon in the dual swim ming meet scheduled with the Multnomah flub, Saturday, June 11, will be chosen this morning at 10 o’clock. The tryout will be held in the swimming tank of the men’s gymnasium and men will be chosen in the following events: Fifty and lOf yard dashes, 220 yard swim, 100 yard back stroke plunge for distance and re Jay. The men will also be chosen with some reference to their ability in play lag water polo as a game is scheduled between the varsity representatives and the Multnomah team. The men who will try out have nil boon making some excellent showings and there is no basis for opinion on who will win the swim this morning. They are Myron It ilsey. Bus Douglas. Hap Hazard. Stoke l’almer. Frenchy DePauw, Mickey Ring b'r. Melvin Murchie, George Neale and 1 red Howard. Wilsey, Douglas and Ringler are well known swimmers, having performed for the Winged-M last year. DePauw' re ceived his experience with the San Diego Hewing club. Fred Howard was a star 011 the A. E. F. water polo team. Hap Hazard was on the team last year. Stoke Palmer is, however, the darkhorse of the meet and is expected to uncork some real stuff this morning. As a speed swim mer, Palmer was developed entirely dur ing the current year, having had no pre Dous experience in race swims. SENIORS’ HIGH MARKS WILL BE RECOGNIZED Faculty Passes Resolution Names of Those With 2.25 For Four Years. to Publish Grades A resolution to give those members <>f the 1021 graduating class honorable mention who have an average grade throughout the course of 2.25 was adopt ed at a meeting of the faculty Thursday afternoon. These names, with those re ceiving honors in general scholarship wdl be printed on the commencement program andjn the University program. At a previous meeting of the faculty it was voted from now on to give a R. A. degree for three years work in other universities and for a fourth year at the Portland medical school. In this way a year at Portland will be recog nized as equivalent to a year of resi dence here in fulfilling the residence re quirements. This win apply to students who are now in school as well as those entering from now on. It was also voted to allow the students who are going to Camp Lewis to take their examinations early. The meeting was short, as most of the year’s work had been cleared up at pre vious meetings. The last meeting of the faculty will he June IS. for the purpose of recommending to the board of regents this year’s seniors for degrees. Tulane, New Orleans, Offers Tempting Position. I rofessor Thomas E. Larremore, of the ITniversity law school, has accepted an offer of a full professorship in the Tulane University, New Orleans. He will take up his work there next fall and (luring the following summer will teach in the summer session of Columbia Uni versity, New York. A number of offers have come to Pro fessor Larremore during the two and a quarter years in which he lias been in the Oregon law school, but this is the first one that was good enough to draw him away. “I am very sorry to leave the Univer sity.” he said. “There are so many things which hold my wife and me here that we are very loathe to go.” Two reasons for accepting the offer were given: The first, the increase in salary, and the sec ond, that. New Orleans is so much nearer the center of things. It will be possible for him to attend the meetings of the Association of American Law Schools which is almost impossible from here, he said. For these reasons he did not think that he could afford to refuse the offer. While on the campus, Mr. Larremore has been quite active both in connection with the law school and in other Univer sity affairs. He had much to do with the introduction of the honor system into the law school. Last summer he did follow-up work of the Carnegie Foundation for the Ad vancement of the Poor. The results of this work are to be published under the name of “Justice and the Poor,” in the next number of the Oregon Law Review, of which he is the editor. Mr. Larremore is a tennis enthusiast. He and Professor Sam B. Warner to gether coached this year’s tennis team which ranks fourth in the Pacific coast conference and first in the state. The University orchestra was another of Mr. 1 Larremore’s activities. He is a member of Crossroads, Phi Delta Phi, and Alpha Delta Phi. . .. , Mrs. Amy Larremore, his wife, has also been very active in campus affairs. She is a member of Theta Sigma 1 hi. Mu Phi Epsilon, and Alpha Phi. R. 0. T. C. WORK CLOSED Uniforms Turned In; Officers to Spend Summer at Camp Lewis. Practically all the work of the Uni versity R. O. T. C. for the past year has been closed. The grades have been com pileft and when the last uniform was Jurned in at 5 o’clock last night there was practically nothing for the officers to do but close up shop and go home. However, home for the R. O T. C. offi cers will be Camp Lewis for this summer at least. The staff expect to leave about June 12 for American Lake, where they will assist in the training of young offi cers at the summer camp. Major Baird is planning' a number of new ideas for the work at the l n.versity next vear. “We expect to have a better . o T C. than ever before.” Emerald Sloan, student major, will be student commander. PHGIIE1G TO BE UNDER DIRECTION BE BB. II. E. CIML Professor of Physics to Have Complete Charge of New Department. COURSE WILL NOT HAVE OWN STAFF Society for Those Interested Is Plan for Future; 50 Now Registered I)r. A. E. Caswell has been selected as head of the new department of pre engineering. Dr. Caswell, who is pro fessor of physics, will be in charge of the newly established work which raises the total of departments in this school of 22. 1 he department of pre-engineering has been created as a means of taking ad ministrative care of the work authorized at the April meeting of the board of higher curricula. As the pre-engineer ing course of study will be made up of a selection of courses from a number of departments, the department of pre engineering will not carry a staff of its own. Dr. Caswell, in fact, will continue his schedule in the department of phy sics, acting as an adviser to those stu dents who expect to go on to technical schools. Dr. Caswell taught engineering phy sics in Purdue University, which has one of the great engineering schools in the country. A year’s leave of absence from the University of Oregon was devoted by him to an engineering problem at Princeton. A society that will comprise all the departments of the now pre-engineering department is being formed by the pre engineering students of the University, according to Huber Rambo, chairman of the committee on organization. The aims of the society, according to Rambo, will be to bring the pre-engi neering students closer together; to en able them to come into closer touch with prominent engineers throughout the state by having frequent addresses given, and to help bring the new department before the people of the state. At present there are over 50 students registered in the pre-engineering classes. Huber said, and with the new work that is now outlined to be given next fall, this course in the University of Oregon will equal any similar course. The new society will be called the “Technical Society,” and will include members from the departments of ge ology, chemical, electrical, mining, struc tural and civil engineering. Those students acting with Rambo on the organization committee are Mat Mc Lean, Alex Andraieff and .Toan Good rich. The faculty members are Prof. A. E. Caswell. Dean C. V. Dyment, Prof. E. H. McAlister and Prof. Percy P. Adams. Recreation Program For Summer Term To Include Everyone, says Dr. Bovard A recreational program that will in clude every student in the University summer school as well ns faculty mem bers, has been planned by I)r John Bo vard. dean of the school of physical edu cation. "Everybody, doing something, every day, is the plan." Dr. Bovard de clares. "People should learn to give some certain time in their day to play, and this recreational work has been plan ned with that end in view,” was the way he expressed it. “Every day at 4:15 until 0 many dif ferent activities will be going on. and if people don’t get in on them it is their own fault.” he continued. “We want people to do things that they want to do so nothing is to be compulsory, and there will be something for everybody.” Each activity will have a competent director, no that the play may be really beneficial. There will be tennis tourna ments, baseball nines, and the privilege of playing golf on the Eugene golf course One very attractive feature will be swim ming classes in the mill race. Over the week-end, hikes and long walks will be staged. In order that thPVe will lie no confusion in the schedule, a program will be print ed and posted each week, stating special features for that week. Instructors who will have charge of the direction of these sports are John F. Bovard, Margaret (’rim, Catharine Winslow, George Bolder, “Shy” Hunt ington, Joe Hedges and Naomi Bobbins. \ nriotts members of the regular summer faculty will also be called upon to help. OHM. I. C. GIRLS TO PUT BALL TIT Varsity Teams to Lineup on Men’s Diamond The women’s varsity swatters are lined up in battle array this morning all leady to show the Oregon Agricultural College team what it. means to be up against “Oregon Fight.” The team was chosen Thursday afternoon from about 40 girls who have been practicing every night this week, and every member has played on both class and doughnut teams this spring. The game will be played on the men’s varsity diamond and the bleach ers are supposed to be filled with rooters to cheer the girls on at 10:30 this morn ing. Ruth Wolff and Emily Perry, the Hen dricks hall battery, will play the same positions on the varsity. Flossie .Tagger plays first base, which she played last year on the varsity. Vernetta Quinlan is lined up for second and Ruth Griffin for third. Charlotte Howells and Helen Glanz will play short. Alice Evans. Helen King and Alice Garret son will take care of the field. Four girls have | been chosen for substitutes. They are Betty Pride. La Verne Spitzerherger, Oletta Pedersen and Pearl Lewis. “The girls arc all good players,” said Miss Waterman, “and I had great, diffi culty in selecting the members of the team which will represent us in our one carsity game.” Although the game last year was won From O. A. C. at Corvallis, the girls are Far from confident thnt victory is theirs The contest, promises to be interesting and the University women hope that a large crowd—men are invited and expect ed—will be out to root at the game this morning. FOREIGN WORK TAKES MISS DIHSMLE 111 Y. W. Secretary Will Soon' Ends Duties On Campus. Miss Tirza Dinsdale, Y. W. O. A. sec retary, will not be on the campus next (rpar, but expects lo return to association ivork in the foreign field. During the ivar Miss Dinsdale was in Y. W. C. A. ,vork in Italy. While her plans are not definite, she expects to Do sent to noutn America. Miss Dinsdale in handing in her resig nation expressed her regret at leaving the University work, but she was certain that an efficient secretary could be se cured for next year to take up the work “I don’t think it will be possible to find anyone who can take the place of Miss Dinsdale in the work here,” declared Mrs. William Moll Case, chairman of the committee to secure a new secretary. “I know that all the students, the advis ory board of the Y. W. C. A., and all of the people have come in contact with her will feel that no one can (piite take her place.” Miss Dinsdale was secretary on the Oregon campus before the war and then returned this year after completing her war work in Italy. While Miss Dinsdale says that she would like to stay in the work here, she feels that she should get into foreign work soon. OLD OU TO GIVE Last Issue of Year will Be Out During Week The last issue of Old Oregon for this year is now on the press and will be out some time during the coining week. This number contains two features of special interest to its readers. One of those is a story giving detailed informa tion about the 48 men from the Univer sity who were killed in action or died while in service. Another article of especial interest gives the completion of the list of all people who have donated gifts to the new Woman’s building. Memorials, gifts from private parties, and honorary societies make up this list. Miss Camilla Leach, architecture li brarian. has written a very interesting story for this final issue of Old Oregon. Miss Leach was formerly the University librarian, coming here in 1887. This story tells of the first three years of her stay at Oregon ami shows the vast changes which have taken place since that time. One of the most important stories in this issue is a story by Carlton Spencer, chairman of the Woman’s building me mori committee. The athletic news has been written up by Fred Michelson. Many J o.urnalism Students Fill Vacation Jobs Emerald work is over for the year, the Oregano is distributed, the last, Lemon I’tinch has made its appearance, and now journalism students are looking for new fields in which to display their journal istic accomplishments. Summer work is the all-absorbing subject under discus sion around the shack. Kouel Moore, a member of the amalga mated order of night editors on the Ore gon Daily Emerald, was the first to leave. He has joined the news force on the Salem Capital Journal which is already represented by three Oregon students, Adelaide Lake ’20, Harry Crane MS. and Paul Farrington ex-’21. Dorris Sikes ex-'22, has been working on the Salem Statesman but will be in Eugene this summer reporting for the Eugene Guard. Harry Smith, retiring editor of the Emerald, and Margaret Scott, a member of the news staff, will be in Pendleton this summer working on (he Pendleton Tribune. The Tribune is owned and ed ited by Harry Kuck, an Oregon graduate, and Leith Abbott and Ariel Dunn, both Oregon students, arc on the staff. Ab bott is telegraph editor. Smith will take the position of city editor. Miss Scott is to be society reporter. Lyle Bryson, associate editor of the Emerald, will continue her work on the Eugene Guard. She has been doing so ciety and women’s clubs but will prob ably have more work this summer. Arne Use will be advertising man for the Reg ister this summer. Mr. Rae has been doing part time work on the paper dur ing the school year. Charles Gratke, news editor of the Emerald, doesn’t know just what he will do, but be is pretty sure it will be news paper work. Gratke’s father has been in the newspaper business and “Chan” is an experienced journalist. Floyd Maxwell is going to cover police news for the Oregonian and then next fall come back to run the Emerald, as editor. Wilford Allen is going to be in Grants Pass and expects to work for the Grants Pass Courier, with which has father is connected. Allen is another member of the amalgamated order of night editors. ENGAGEMENT IS ANNOUNCED. The engagement of Ollie Stoltonbcrg to Clairol Ogle, of the Portland Medical school, was announced by Marjorie TIol nduy at Hendricks hall, Friday night, Miss Stoltenberg is a member of this year’s graduating class and has boon prominent on the campus this year as president of Woman's Athletic Associa tion, and a member of the student coun cil. Mr. Ogle graduated from the Uni versity in ’17 and is a member of Delta Tan Delta and Nu Sigma Nu. 44444444444444441 4 NATIONAL GUARD. NOTICE! ♦ ♦ Members of the National Guard, ♦ 4 ordered to appear in encampment at ♦ ♦ Camp Lewis on Wednesday, June ♦ ♦ 15, or Thursday, Tune 1(5. may so- ♦ ♦ cure permission to remain at the ♦ ♦ University during the final exam- 4 ♦ ination period. June 15, lfi. 17, by ♦ ♦ filing at once their names and the ♦ ♦ organisations to which they belong, ♦ 4 at: the President’s office. 4 Glee Clubs Will Remain Over Week on Campus to Help In Exercises BACCALAUREATE TO BE AT METHODIST CHURCH Marie Loughney to Appear At Recital Sunday in Villard Hall Musio will make up a large part of the commencement exercises this your. The 1 niversity orchestra and the Men’s and Women’s Glee elubs will remain on the campus to give their large share of the music and Miss Marie Loughney, mezzo soprano, who will he in charge of the vocal department of the University school of music summer school, and J. Erwin Mutch, Portland singer, will appear in concert on the afternoon of Baccalau reate Sunday. Madame Hose McGrew, of the I niversity school of music, will be the soloist on commencement day, John Stark Evans, assistant dean of the school ot music, is in charge of commencement music. The baccalaureate service will be held in the Methodist church this year instead of in Villard hall as formerly. The church was chosen for the event because Mr. Evans wished to use the organ and his University choir, composed of the two glee clubs, for the music, and also be cause of the greater capacity of the building. W ith the choir around me and the organ to help, we can make the ser vice seem much more ns it should,” said Mr. Evans. The organ will give an ef fectiveness to the program that would be impossible in Villard. Three Soloists Named. Soloists at, the baccalaureate service will be Genevieve Clancy, Frank Jue, and Geln Morrow. At the recital to be given on Sunday afternoon in Villard hall. Miss Marie Loughney will appear for the first time on the campus. Miss Loughney is the mezzo-soprano who will be guest, in structor in the summer session of the school of music. She sang recently in Portland, receiving high praise from her listeners. She is a student of one of the greatest vocal teachers and he speaks highly of her work. J. Ervin Mutch, who will appear also in the recital, is director of the vocal department of the Ellison White Conservatory of Music in Port land. The Failing-Beekman Orotorical con tesl will be bold this year on Thursday evening instead of on Friday. It was found before that the holding of the con test on the same night as the Flower and Fern Procession caused too much crowding of events. The orchestra and three soloists will furnish the music for the contest. Program In Open Air. The whole Friday evening program will be held in the open air. The Flower and Fern Procession, for which the orchestra will play, will be immediately follow’d! by out-door concerts by the two glee clubs. These events will not have to be rushed through this year ns w’as neces sary last year since the changing of the time of the oratorical contest. Saturday will be devoted to the alumni luncheon, the President’s reception in the afternoon and the senior play. “Dis raeli,” in the evening. The music for these has not ns yet been decided upon. Madame Hose McGrew will be the solo ist at the commencement exercises on Monday morning. The orchestra will furnish the other music for the occasion. NO ASSEMBLY JUNE 9TH Colin V. Dymont, Slated For Address, Unable to Be Present. Free, to each and every student of the University of Oregon. 00 full minutes of precious time in which to cram for the forthcoming examinations. Colin V. Dymont, who was to be the speaker at next week’s assembly, will he out of town, so the “powers that be” have decided to hold no assembly next week, in order to give the students that much more time to prepare for the “strenuous activities” of the following week. Who knows—maybe that one little hour will turn out to be a life-saver for someone, or at least a credit-saver.