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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1922)
Oregon Daily Emerald Member Pacific Intercollegiate Press Association Floyd Maxwell Editor Webster Ruble Manager Official publication of the Associated Students of the University of Oregon, issued daily except Sunday and Monday, during the college year.___ NEWS EDITOR ..KENNETH YOUEL 1 Daily News Editors Night Editors Margaret Scott Ruth Austin Earle Voorhies George H. Godfrey Arthur Rudd jonn Anaerson Phil Brogan Sporte Editor .... Edwin Hoyt Sport* Writers—Kenneth Cooper, Harold Shirley, Edwin Fraser, George Stewart. rirm'Bv niciivcj New* Service Editor . Alfred Erickson Exchanges . Eunice Zimmerman | Special Writers..John Dierdorff, Ernest Haycox News Staff—Nancy Wilson, Mabel Gilham, Owen Callaway, Florine Packard, Madalene Logan, Helen King, John Piper, Herbert Larson, Margaret Powers, Genevieve Jewell, Rosalia Keber, Freda Goodrich, Georgiana Gerlinger, Clinton Howard, Elmer Clark, Fremont Byers, Martha Shull, Herbert Powell, Henryetta Lawrence, Geraldine Root, Norma Wilson, Lon Woodward, Mildred Weeks, Howard Bailey, Margaret Sheridan, Thomas Crosthwait, Catherine Spall, Mildred Burke. ___ BUSINESS STAFF Associate Manager .... Advertising Manager Circulation Manager .. Proofreader . Collection Manager ... Advertising Assistants ..Morgan Staton . Lyle Janz . Gibson Wright . Jack High .. Jason McCune Karl Hardenbergh, Leo Munly Entered In the postoffice at Eugene, Oregon aa aecond-elaaa matter. Subscription rates, 9Z.2S per rear. By term. 75c. Advertising rates upon application. Editor *66 fHONES Business Manager 961 Daily New Editor This lira Arthur Bud<3 Night Editor This inue Earle Yoorhies Let’s Roll Our Own Pride in one’s university is a very glorious thing. The American college tradition, founded as far back as the eighteenth century which saw Yale and Harvard proud even as today, has grown until the graduate of each small fresh water college from Indiana to Neva da shouts to the skies the merits of his alma mater. Loyalty is a trait born into the human animal. It is appropriate that it should attach itself to the college or university where four or more of the most im pressionable years, four of the years in the life of a man or a woman whene he or she is most richly responsive and most finely aware, are passed. True it is that there seems sometimes a certain laughable quality, detected especially by graduates of the nation’s larger institutions, to attach itself to men from Umpa college in Iowa or others from Bumpa college in Texas in whose eyes those very slight educational oasis shine in glory that grows even brighter in retrospect. Senior honor society election at Bumpa is quite as important to the loyal Bumpa man as any Bones election ever was to a Yale man. And it should be so; it is in keeping witli our American college tradition which The Emerald believes to be very fine in its fundamentals. i And too, it makes not very much difference to the Bumpa man whether his senior honor society or his sophomore honor group is modeled after organizations at Umpa or at Yale. It makes less differ ence to him, it should make less difference to him, whether either of these outfits is affiliated with one at Umpa or at Yale, whether the bit of gold and enamel which it pins upon his vest front resembles that worn anywhere else. Wlmt should count and what does count is that in many college generations past Bumpa seniors and Bumpa sophomores have been taken into these groups and worn those bits of brass and enamel and gloried in them, that many of these men have gone out into the world and have done things and have come back to Bumpa and talked about the “good old days.” In one word, it is tradition that counts, nothing else. We at Oregon are interested in Washington and California and sometimes in (). A. We should he. We meet them in athletics; we are kindred educational plants; we have ties in certain social groups at these other schools. There lie the large interests; The Emerald can see no more and it believes that there it all stops and it believes too that Oregon should pride itself in its own traditions, that it should attempt to dearly preserve the old ones and create new ones only as they serve Oregon’s own particular needs and only as they advance her distinction and not reduce it to a level with ot hers. There is a tendency in state institutions—the others value too much their own traditions to consider tampering with them—to make one continuous chain ot deadly similar colleges and uni versities. to standardize, as it were. The Emerald deplores this tendency. I he Emerald would like to see Oregon continue to create its own institutions and to maintain them. Let Washington go its way. let California go hers. We are neither California nor Washington, nor Vale, nor Harvard. But we are Oregon ami Oregon has graduated many hundreds of men and women who dearliy love its traditions, who surely desire to see Oregon keep her own distinctive, whatever it is that makes her beloved by them, and The Emerald feels sure that they would look not a little askance at the prevalent tendency to nationalize everything worthy to bear a name and distribute a vest decoration. I hi Mu Alpha and Mu I’hi Epsilon by their concerts yesterday and by past performances have very surely established their places on ihe Oregon campus. To develop talents is commendable; to share them doubly so. Announce a Mu t»hi and a l’hi Mu assembly and everybody turns out. There's a reason. HAYRACK RIDE IS PLANNED Spanish Club Schedules Trip to Soavey Ferry and Picnic for May 12 Members c.f the Spanish club will in 'lulpc in n hayrack ride and picnic on Friday, May 12, if present plans of leaders of that organisation eeme through. According to club officers, the present intentions are for a hav ride with Seavey s Ferry as the desti nation, but whether this kind of an affair is adopted and the date of it, depend upon the desires ef the members. Aeeordiiijflv it is reipiested that all members who desire to go on the hav raek ride give their names to Hubert Sohonc k or Helen 11 o f o r, or sign on Hio list posted lor tho purpose in tho v- w Bungalow before May 1. riio manor will bo definitely decided at tho Spanish olub meeting April L'ti, at which it is tho request that all members at tend. JUNIOR GIRLS MEET Junior ({iris hold a meeting yesterday afternoon to dismiss backing tho junior • " ' > will work nil day Sat nr la\ , • the bleachers which are being hurt for tho oanoe teto. It was derided that the girls would servo the men with a luncheon. All girls were urged to take part in the junior lottery tonight. BULLETIN BOARD Notices will be printed in this column for two issues only. Copy must be in the office by 4:30 o'clock of the day on which it is to be published and must be limited to 25 words. All men of the class of 1920 are urged to meet in room 101 Commerce build ing Tuesday, April 25, to arrange for a class get-together. Life Service Club—Meeting Monday afternoon at 5 o’clock, Y. W. C. A. Bungalow. All members requested to attend. Eugene riliplno Club—Special meeting in Dean Straub’s room Friday, April 21, at regular time in the evening. Congregational Ladies—Food sale anil bazaar Saturday, April 22, in the Sanford, 625 Willamette street. Newman Club—Social hour Friday from 4 to 6. Newman club orchestra will play. Phi Mu Alpha meets Sunday, 2:15 p. m., Music building. SOPHOMORES WILL HOLD ANNUAL DANCE TONIGHT Class Members Who Have Failed to| Make Dates Asked to Phone Members of Committee Sophomores who have not been able to make dates for the lottery tonight are expected to communicate with the committee in order that partners may be arranged for, according to Jimmy Meek, general chairman of the affair. He announces that except for the fact that a number of the class members have been unable to find partners, things are going finely. The dance, which is an annual affair, will be a hard times party and will be held in the men’s gym. Not only are dancers expected to wear hard times clothes, but they are urged to appear in costume. There are to be a number of Paul Joneses. White collars will not be tolerated unless they are in keeping with the costume. Those on the committee with their telephone numbers are: Jean Bailey, 851; Margaret Alexander, 204; Eddie Edlunds, 550; Hildegarde Repinen, 835; Carmel Sheasgreen, 729; Jack Myers 107. FAIRBANKS STARTS WORK AGAIN ON ‘THE DOUGHBOY’ Sculptor Has Been Working on Figure for Months and Expects to Send Plaster Cast East in May Avard Fairbanks, professor of sculp ture in the school of architecture and allied arts, has begun work on “The Doughboy” again and is making a plas ter cast of the figure, from which the mold for the final cast will be chiseled for the bronze casting in New York. Mr. Fairbanks expects to complete the plaster cast this month and will send it east after the final .jury day in the school of architecture and allied arts, May L’<). “The Doughboy” lias been in the process of modeling for a number of months and represents the typical American overseas man during the re cent war. As Mr. Fairbanks presents him he has just repelled one onslaught and stands prepared to meet another on the battlefield. According to some of the greatest sculptors in the country, the work is a remarkably lifelike and representative figure. BETTER RELATIONS OBJECT (Continued from page one) tween the two schools, while none the less keen, is nevertheless on a higher plane than ever before, said Bartholo mew. Student Move Favored Speaking of the student movement throughout the United States. Bartholo mew said, “This impulse for cooperation between the two larger state institu tions seems to be only a part of the 1 unifying spirit which has grown up among the schools of the Pacific coast, exemplified by the Pacific Association of Student Body Presidents, and the Pacific Intercollegiate Press associa tion. The movement is indeed national, as we have only recently found from a little bulletin on our desk which tells of a Middle Western Student Officers’ association desiring the cooperation of the Pacific Coast association. The Middle Western association is meeting in Kentucky this year." SCENIC WONDERLAND (Continued from page onel cooked tln'ir meals ovor the hot post's issuing from holes in the earth. The National tleographic Magazine for September, 19-1. devotes nearlv 900 pages to a Inscription of the volcanic ruins left when Katmai blew off its 1 utire top, and terms the Valiev of Ten Thousand Smokes Aineriea's greatest national monument. Mr. Jones' colored photographs are used to illustrate this article. Members of the Condon club say that their meeting next Wednesday evening in the “Y" hut will be the most notable of the year, and are preparing for mans visitors from Eugene, as well as the I’niversitv students. No admission will be charged. More th.au 400 people at tended the illustrated lecture given bv Mr. Jones in Albany recently. i Wright & Ditson Balls Ug! Ug! TENNIS Pennsylvania Balls The Spring Sport—the Sport Supreme Get Your RACKETS Wright & Ditson Spalding RACKETS Join in the Fun Spalding Balls Co-op Racket Presses Ready Ruffle Garter Ribbon Two-tone colors 59c yard Women’s Handkerchiefs in dainty embroidered de signs, special 19c COTTONS IN SPRINGTIME COLORINGS vi^miuicb, fi.w zu.—ixew, crisp ana loveiy, have just arrived. The genuine, imported quality; permanent finish. Lovely pastel shades. The yard, $1.00 Incomparable Tissue Ginghams, 69c Yard and 75c Yard.—Beautiful plaids in the season’s finest color combinations, reds, blues, browns, tans, rose, lavender, greens, the yard, 60c-75c. French Ginghams, 75c Yd. — Execeptional. Here is the nicest assortment of patterns in the finest quality ginghams made. Many original plaids are offered for the first time. The yard, 75c. Cotton Repps, 50c Yd.—A superior quality in this fine spring fabric. Particularly good for kiddies’ dresses, and mothers,’ too. All colors, the yard, 50c. Jap Crepes, owe Yd.—Heavy quality, in every color imaginable. The best and largest assortment we have ever shown. Popular again for spring, street or house dresses. Figured Batistes.—The most favored spring and summer fabric. Fast colors, checks, flower designs and fancies, 40 inches wide. Yard, 39c. Beach Suiting, 45c.—A splendid array of colors in this popular wash fabric for dresses, boys’ suits, children’s dresses, etc. Every wanted color can be found here; 36-inch. The yard, 45c. 32-inch Fine Ginghams, 30c Yd.—Dainty checks and colorful plaids are to be found in a varied selection in this group. Far better looking than ever before at this price. The yard, 30c. THE NEW IN WOMEN'S HOSIERY vvuivixiiiM o riMA BJXiiV xlUSilj, Hoc FAlrt. New greys and nude shades. Just receiv ed a large shipment of these popular colors in every size. A fine quality fibre silk. Lisle heels, toes and tops. We advise your selec tion early. The pair, 85c. WOMEN’S SILK AND LISLE HOSE, $1.25. New heather shades. Beautiful lavenders, blues, browns, blacks, and plain grey and mode. Richelieu ribbed, one of the smartest of new fashions. All sizes, $1.25 pr. Club Barber Shop The Old Reliable 814 Willamette Geo. St. Blair SPECIAL Curling Irons. .$3.50 to $4.50 Marcel Wavers. $8.00 Toasters.$6.00 Grill Stoves . . . $2.95 Bailey Electric Co. 1)40 Willamette Phone 234 Your Satisfaction in groceries depends upon the quality of the goods and the service of the store. You will find these here. Seasonable spring vegetables and fruits for your table. Matlock’s Grocery “It’s a Good Place to Trade” 5 7 9th Avenue East Phone 60 Two Years Ago You couldn’t get the kind of milk shakes that make the Campa Shoppe famous. Two big glasses thick and creamy for the price of one. Don’t forget the Sunday night MUSICALE Additional booth tables provided. Ye Campa Shoppe