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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 6, 1922)
SECRETARIAL COURSE TO BE CIVEN IN MARCH Eugene Chamber of Commerce Makes Request BENEFITS ARE PROMISED President Campbell Tells of Excellent Results A short course for commercial club secretaries will be offered here by the University during Easter vacation from March 27 to April 1, according to an announcement made at the office of the school of business administration. The course was given for the first time last year and met with such success that the visiting secretaries passed reso lutions requesting the University to make it an annual affair. At a recent meeting of the Eugene Chamber of Commerce, also, it was asked of Presi dent Cumpbell that the course be given again. Although the program will not be out for about a month, the courses offered will be similar to those given last year, according to the announcement. Besides classes in public speaking, com merce, journalism, sociology, and physi cal education, thore will be a number of round table discussions on topics of interest and of value to the visiting secretaries. President Campbell, when he spoke yesterday before the members of the Chamber of Commerce at their regular Thursday luncheon, announced the in tention to give the course again, point ing out the benefit derived from it by the secretaries last year. He also em phasised the value of commercial clubs, and told of the number of men study ing in the University school of business administration for that sort of work. He mentioned Barney Garret, of the class of '21, ns one of those trained in the University, for a secretarial posi tion and his success as the present sec retary of the McMinnville Chamber of Commerce. About 15 secretaries were enrolled last year und it is oxpcctod that oven a larger number will take advantage of the course this March Y. W. HAS BIBLE COURSE Houses to State Preference of Time and Type of Study Beginning next week, the Y. W. C. A. will give its annual six weeks Bible course for University women. Plans for the course were discussed at Y. W. Cabinet meeting on Wednesday and a Bible study committee, of which Mary Evans is chairman, was np pointed. The committee will secure from each of the women’s organizations on the campus, their preference as to the time of meeting, type of study and leader and these preferences will be followed as nearly as possible. Leaders are usually faculty members or wives of faculty members. HAMMER AND COFFIN ELECT Beatrice Morrow 1b Honorary Member; Ray Betbers AIbo Honored The Lemon Punch chapter of Ham mer ami Coffin last night elected ltay Bothers to membership, and Beatrice Morrow to honorary membership of the society. One girl who does exception ally good work on the Punch is each year elected ns an honorary member of the organization. Bee Morrow has been doing good art work for the publication during the preceding issues. Bothers, who entered from O. A. C. has been one of the Punch’s leading artists this year, doing much work on covers. The next issue of the magazine will appear early in February and will be called the ''Inevitable Number." SIGMA CHI LEADS (Continued from one) Woods, tStrune, Kavs, ami Kockhoy each scored in 11 flat. In tin* dash. Hock he v was first. L’~ ii fi seconds, Oberteuffer second, *J‘J I Yirdcn, tbird, *J3 seconds, anti Iduntou fo\trt li, I'd t r» seconds JaIo Palmer swimming 100 yards in 1 minute s seconds, won the swim miug meet. Hazard, 1:10 took second; Erickson, 1:10. third; and Horsetail, 1:30, was fourth. TELLS OF SCHOOLS IN EAST Mrs. frame pays Tribute to Excellent Work of Chinese University Girls “Although Oriental college women speak with a different accent than that of American college girls, they talk the same language t'er the> have the same ideals and in the end accomplish the CLASSIFIED ADS Minimum chHrjrr. \ time. .‘5c time*. 4ft,- 5 t met., fl Must tM* limited to ft line*, over thi» limit, 6c per line Thom 9ft l. or It-Hvo copy with Hu*ine*» office of Kmkr.m it. it- linivemity IV-m* Payment in tdvnmt' Office h-*ur*. 1 to 4 |». m FOR RENT Two fine rooms for bo\ students. Call 670 East 9th or phone 1220. 57 JO. FOR RENT Two rooms with bath for students only. Enquire at Campa Shoppe. 5S-J6. same thing,” said Mrs. Alice Brown Frame, in telling of the great amount of good that college girls of the Far Hast, without any intellectual back ground, have already accomplished. She spoke in Villard hall at 5 o’clock yesterday afternoon Mrs. Frame told of the three colleges i for women in India, the Madras Col ! lege in Madras, the Isabella Thoburn 'College in Lucknow, and Vellore Col lege, which is a women’s medical col lege founded by Ida Scudder, daughter of an English missionary in India. “Japanese women have only very re cently had the opportunity to grow and develop” Mrs. Frame said in describing the work of the Christian College in Tokyo. Telling of the sincerity and eager ness of the comparatively few women in China who receive a higher educa tion, Mrs. Frame characterized them : as being filled with “passionate na i tionalism.” “All is for China, and i daughters of the wealthy families are preparing to be physicians, teachers, social workers and Y. W. secretaries. Mrs. Frame’s lecture was filled with vivid pictures of the life of an Oriental college girl, the community, playground and social service work the girls ac complish while they are yet in college and the enormous opportunities that are open to them. Mrs- Frame has spent 14 years in China and was acting president of Yenching College in Peking. She came to Eugene under the auspices of the American Association of College Wo men. Proceeding the lecture, Beulah Clark, Lora Teschner, Helen Harper and Eloise McPherson played a flute, cello and violin quartette. Y. M. PLANS RUSTIC FROLIC Event to Take Place On Same Evening As Student-Body Dance A “Rustic Frolic" to be staged Sat urday evening is being planned by the Y. M. C. A. as a Y. M.-Y. W. affair for the students who do not attend the student-body dance on that date. A hard times party with all the fixings is promised, and the dope on costumes will be disclosed on Friday afternoon. Eight o’clock is the time set for the frolic, which will not be in competition with the student-body affair, according THE WEDDING GUEST” NEW DRAMATIC EFFORT Professor Reddie Praises Barrie Production The dramatic department has started work on three plays. The first one, Barrie’s “The Wedding Guest,” will be seen on the campus the 25 and 26 of January. This play is considered by Professor Reddie to be the best play Barrie has written. It is unknown to a great many people as it has never been published in book form and has been produced very little. It is, however, a tense problem play and is likely one of the best plays of the kind that has ever been produced by the department. The second play produced during the winter term will be “Belinda” a light comedy by A. A. Milne. George B. Shaw’s “Caesar and Cleopatra” will be given sometime in March. In April the campus will have the opportunity of seeing “The Great Galeoto” by Jose Echeghary Eizaguirre and the com mencement play this year will likely be “Othello.” During the fall term the dramatic department produced two plays: “Why Marry” which was the work of the senior company and “Swanwhite,” a fairy fantasy written by Strindberg given just before the Christmas holi days. This play was a little out of the ordinary and was well received on the campus. Besides the two company plays the department repeated Shaw’s “Pygmalion” in the Eugene theatre. “Pygmalion” had been given a year ago and with a slight change of cast was produced under the auspices of the Elks to help fill their Christmas cheer fund. FBOSH TAKE EXAM Of the five students who took the freshman examinations in English com position Tuesday afternoon, but one was exempt from signing up for the subject. According to Miss Perkins of the English department, many students prefer taking the subject, to taking the examination. to the Y. M. A fee of ten cents for both men and women will be charged. WE’RE GLAD TO SEE YOU BACK We Welcome You Back With what we feel to be a promise of Better Service and Better Food The Grotto 7 1 2 Willamette The Eugene Packing Company Incorporated. We Patronize Homo Industries. Plume d> FRESH AND CURED MEATS 675 Willamette St. Sueeessors to the Wing Market. Phone 1480 COLLEGE ICE CREAM Eugene Fruit Growers Association Eighth and Ferry $600 SCHOLARSHIP OPEN Missouri University Announces Awards i Open to Graduate Students The University of Missouri has sent an announcement to the University of the fellowships and scholarships it of fers to students of other schools. The fellowships, bearing a stipend of $600 each, are accessible to students who have successfully completed at least one year of graduate study. To promising graduates of standard universities and colleges a larger num ber of scholarships, bearing an annual stipend of $300 are available. These fellowships and scholarships are awarded to the best qualified ap plicants in Biological and Physical sciences, Mathematics and Engineering, Philosophy, Education, Journalism, and the Social Sciences, Languages, Litera ture and Art, Agriculture and Medical Science, and Home Economics. Application blanks and information may be obtained from the dean of the Graduate School, at the University of Misouri, at Columbia, Missouri. Appli cations for fellowships or scholarships must be in the hands of the dean of the Graduate Faculty not later than March 1, 1922. Students read the el&uifUd ads; try using them. Loose-Leaf Note Books FRATERNITY STATIONERY DESK SETS Party favors — Dance Programs 1 YOUR BOY—every boy—wants to grow up to be a business man of power and influence in the community. Ten or twenty years from now the boys and girls of today will be our most influential citizens—doing the work now on the shoulders of their fathers and mothers. Give your boy or girl one or more of our 8 per cent Gold Notes, which we are now of fering to customers and employes on payments of only $5.00 a month, so that now—in his youth—he may have the kind of financial and business training that will better prepare him for success later on. Have Your Boy Make The Payments of $5 Per Month as they come due every month. Give him the money, but let him handle the matter him self. getting the receipts and keeping them. He'll learn something of business this way— he’ll learn what securities are —what interest is—he’ll take a personal interest in saving and investments. In later years this knowledge will be a decided advantage to him. 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