Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 27, 1922)
Oregon Daily Emerald Membor Pacific Intercolloglate Prees Association__j Floyd Maxwell Webster Ruble Editor Manager_ Official publication of the A-ociated Student, of the Uni«r.ity of Orago. i»«»d dMly aseept Sunday and Monday, during the college year.___— Newa Bditor .._Kenneth Touel Associate News Editor —Wilford Alien Daily New* Editor* Margaret Scott Arthur Rudd Ruth Auatin John Anderaon Wanna McKinney Sport* Editor -- Edwin Hoyt Sport* Writer*—Kenneth Cooper, Harold Shirley. Edwin Fraaer. Night Editors Earle Voorhies Marvin Fred Michelaon Blaha George Godfrey Dan Lyons News Service Editor — Exchanges - Statistician - _Alfred Erickson Eunice Zimmerman ... Doris Sikes Special Writer*—Mary Lo« Burton. John Dierdorff. Ernest J. Haycox. •sz zzzzzsz sa KT,i: a3«.W|.r. B=a F~da Ernest.0 Richter)* Don aS.SrtS'H^ ^rence, Geraldine Jtoot._ BUSINESS STAFF Associate Manager - Advertising Managers - Circulation Manager IsirCUJBllUIl .. Assistant Circulation Manager Proofreaders ---- Collections -— Advertising Assistants . ___ Morgan Staton Lot Beatie, Randolph Kuhn __.. Jason McCune Gibson Wright „ . Lawrence Smith, Lawrence Isenbarger Mildred Lauderdale __....... miiuicu > ...7..T. Lyle janz, Karl Hardenburgh, Kelly Branstetter Entered in the post sffice at Eugene Oregon aa second class matter. $2.26 per year. By term. 76c. Advertising rates upon application. Subscription rates, PHONES Business Manager 961 Editor 656 Daily News Hditor This Uta» Velraa Rupert Nteht Editor This laaue Earle Voorhiea A Junior Week-end Solution. The approvul of the proposed plan of inviting Junior week-end guests by the student council is the most progressive step yet taken toward the ultimate solution of the Junior week-end problem. It is certain that the event should not continue as it has in the past, that it should not be a financial burden upon the organizations. Contrari wise, it is sound and rational that the high school students who visit the campus in the spring should be University guests: they should be the type of students which will make Oregon a better university. The new plan provides that only seniors who qualify because of scholarship, athletics and personality be invited. Thus far the idea is excellent. Junior week-end should continue no longer upon its old and inefficient basis. However, there are only two feasible plans for inviting the students 1o the campus, namely - the present private invitation system, and a plan whereby the high school itself selects the students. It, should never do for the Greater Oregon Committee or any other University body, to select the high school students be cause of the adverse criticism it would bring upon the University, The solution is this: allow the Greater Oregon Committee to des ignate the number of guests that is to come from each high school, anc then allow the high school students themselves to send their besl representatives. Make a Junior week-end invitation an honor, as much an honor as being class valedictorian or poet. In this way Ore gon will have as guests the very best that the high schools have t( offer, their scholars, athletes, and good fellows, and yet do awaj with the recriminations, sociul envies and enmities that might arist should the University make the guest selections. Never can this plan succeed unless the absolute and unqualifiei support of every organization in the University is first obtained Hut the students must realize that this spring event cannot continue as present. The apportionment of the number of guests that a higl school may send, and then the selection of these students by the higl school itself will bring a fine group of scholars and athletes, whirl includes the deserable types of young men. 0. A. C. PAPER WILL HELP IN RADIO NEWS PROGRAM Barometer Plans to Take Active Tart In Supplying Wlrolpss Nows for Coast Colleges The Radio dull of the University mul the plan of the Knierald to semi ami receive wireless messages with news for the columns of the paper has re solved a great deal of favorable and optimistic comment in several schools on the coast The O. A. 0. Barometer carried a story of the plan yesterday morning and predicted the success of the plan. The following is the story which was run: “Intercollegiate wireless news ser vice may be a reality on the coast if the present plans of the various college radio clubs materialize. In a general call sent out by the \T. of O. radio dub the O. A. 0. club has been asked to cooperate in this service- To this end Walter Olsen, president of the t). A. (', club, urges that everyone interested in wireless attend a special meeting of the dub in Apperson hall, Wednesday evening at 7:30. The University of Washington was the sponsor of the idea, but due to the lack of equipment in the other schools the news service has failed to material! e The colleges are now well equipped for the work and are almost without exception, signifying their de sire for such a service,” The receiving instruments were in stalled yesterday and the operators have picked up several messages. Thev stated however that it would be impossible to communicate or to receive any news until the sending apparatus is in or der. This will probably be about the first week in February. ___ HANKER HEADS TRACK TEAM Stanford University, Stanford, Cal . .Ian P. T N. S.I “Flint” Han j ner, holder of the StanfordCalifornia j record for the javelin throw, will can ' tain Stanford's track team this vear in | the absence of former captain Kennv . Wright, who graduated last quarter. KNIGHT IS CLUB PRESIDENT Washington Students Reorganize and Plan for Future Tex Knight was yesterday elected president of the Washington club to fill tin' vacancy made when Wayne Meek, president last year, did not re turn to sehool in the fall. The other officers chosen were LeLuine West, vice president; Lloyd Heed, treasurer; and Janet West, secretary. The club members made plans for a lottery dance to be held in the future and the details for this will be an nounced later. Regular meetings have been scheduled for the first and third Tuesdays of each month. Five students were elected to mem bership Thursday afternoon. They are KUa Morrison, Geraldine Troy, Flor once Morrison, Helen Keeney, and Ruth Roberta. RICHARDSON BUYS PAPER Kart Richardson, a graduate with the class of 1!>'20 and former member of the Emerald staff has purchased the “Chief,” a weekly newspaper pub lished at Clatskanie in Columbia coun ty. After graduating from the Uni versitv, Richardson worked on the Cot tage Grove Sentinel and later served a year on the general staff of the Portland Oregonian. He will take charge of his new position early in February. PLAN TO EXCHANGE GLEE CLUBS Whitman College, Walla, Walla. Wash., Jan L'th (P. T. N. S.'l—The University of Idaho. Washington State College, and Whitman College may ex change women’s glee club concerts next spring, if plans now being discussed arc successful PLPTHERIA AT U S C. University of Southern California. Los Angeles, Jan ?fi. 1\ I. N. S' Twentv women living at the Univer sitv dormitory are under a diptheria quarantine and were nnable to take the final examinations at U. S. C. Get ths Classified Ad UUt BULLETIN BOARD Notice* will be printed in tki* cefcun for two iuue* only. Copy mint be in the office by 4 :*• o'clock of the day on which It i* to be published and must be limited to 26 word*. Mail—Students whose names begin with the following letters would do well to call promptly for their mail at the University post-office; B, C, E, G, P, B, T, W. Students, when ever possible, should direct corres pondents to street address, and not simply to University of Oregon or to their fraternity house. Methodist Students—The Methodist Bible classes are giving a pot-lunch supper at the Methodist church, to night, January 27th at 6 p. m. All Methodist students are cordially in vited. Just bring one article of food such as sandwiches, cookies, can of baked beans, pickles, etc. Congregational Vesper Service—Sun day at 4:30 p. m. Special music by Joanna James, Mrs. Whitton, Helen Harper, Ralph Hoeber, Reuben Gof freire, Arthur Johnson. Service fol lowed by social hour for young peo I pie. University Hike—Faculty, administra tion, and students catch College Crest car leaving 11th and Willamette at 10:05 a. m. Saturday. Bring lunch, [ car fare, and 5 cents for coffee. John F. Bovard, leader. European Belief—Today, for relief of European students. Cash gifts or 1 pledges. Any amount will help. | Hon’t forget. Filipino Club—Last meeting of the month on Friday evening, 7:30, in regular meeting place. Make Reservations—For that trip to Portland this week-end now at the Y Hut. See Mrs. Donnelly.—Adv. VACHEL LINDSAY HAS (Continued from page one} neighborhood echoes- He gets on well with everybody, particularly those who know the way to the nearest icebox. He is a glorious guest. He will play ! games on the floor with the children, give a hand in the dishwashing, y'ell with laughter, and talk Oriental phil osophy by the fireside until dawn.” “Queer flights does his imagination sometimes take. In “I Know All This When Gipsy Fiddles Cry,” which is on reserve on the main reading room desk at the library with his other writing, he strikes a most unusual note. Per haps there is a strain of Romany in the man who can sing like this: “Oh, gipsies, proud and stiff-necked and perverse, Saying: We tell the fortunes of the nations, And revel in the deep palm of the world. The head-line is the road we choose for trade. The love-line is the lane wherein we camp. The life-line is the road we wander on. Mount Venus, Jupiter, and all the rest Are finger-tips of ranges clasping round And holding up the Romany’s wide sky.” ; They will all go back some day to India whence they came thinks this poet, himself of the road, when he hears the wild sobbing of their fiddles. Whole tribes of them will move east ward, always eastward, some day. “Fiddling for ocean liners, while the dance sweeps through the decks, your brown tribes all will go.” * * * \ “For they have heard a singing from the Ganges, And cries from orioles,—from the tem ple caves,— I And Bengal’s oldest, humblest villages, i They smell the supper smokes of Amrit sar. Green monkeys cry in Sanskrit to their souls. From lofty bamboo trees of hot Madras. * ' ’ ;“What music will be blended with the wind When gipsy fiddles, nearing that old | land, Bring tunes from all the world to Brahma’s house! Passing the Indus, winding poisonous forests, Blowing soft flutes at scandalous tem ple girls, 1 Filling the highways with their magpie i loot, What brass from my Chicago will they heap, What gems from Walla Walla, Omaha, I Will they pile near the Bohdi tree and i laugh?” ELECTION IS ANNOUNCED Hermian Club announces the election of Dorcas Snook and Grace Snook. Students read the classified ada; try using them. Free Free Th person who guesses nearest to the num ber of beans in the jar in my window will re ceive absolutely free the large framed picture “Pot of Basil”. ■ Month End Specials U. of 0. Stamped tablets.15c Derby Cloth Paper . 65c box Antique Oak Paper . 65c box Highland Linen Paper .45c box Orneco' Paper .35c box Dexter Linen Paper .30c box All box papers reduced. Special Prices on all stand frames, framed pictures and novelties during balance of mouth. A. C. Read Campus Art and Stationery Shop Home of the Big Campus Memory Book i "FOLLOW TEE TRAIL*f % 4 TRY OUR Individual Chocolates Music 5 to 8 P. M. F riday Saturday Sunday W. A. Edwards J. W. Sheahan Bell’s Cafeteria Open 6 A. M. till 8 P. M. Daily 757 Willamette St. Eugene, Oregon WALTER BELL “It’s the Cook’s” WILLIAM WILSON Table Decora tions. Corsage Bouquets a Specialty © a Che (RexFloralGx1 EXCLUSIVE EUGENE MEMBER .FLORIST TELEGRAPHIC DELIVERY Give Your Complexion Care You should have four croams on your dressing table. Arbutus Complexion Cream a day cream, 60c Violet Dulce Cold Cream a cleansing cream, 50c Harmony Cocoa Butter Cream, a night cream, 60c Rexall Cream Almonds as a hand lotion, 35c W. A. Kuykendall Inc. THE REXALL STORE W vw ‘At Your Service’ ◄ 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4