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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (June 2, 1922)
18 STUDENTS APPOINTED GRADUATE ASSISTANT! Four from Outside College: Listed to Come Here Eighteen graduates, 14 from Oregoi and the remaining four from outsid institutions, have received the approva of the graduate council and will b appointed as graduate assistants 01 the faculty for next year, subject ti the action of the Board of Regents according to an announcement madi by Dean Rebec of the graduate schoo yesterday. Two students, who havi been graduate assistants this year, Nor man Byrne and Ralph Hoeber, hav< been recommended as part time in structors for next year. Graduate assistantships are awardei each year to students who show market ability in the various departments ol the University, as well as other uni versities, and who desire to do ad vanced work in preparation for the at tainment of a master’s degree. They art required to act as assistant instructors for a certain period, while the rest oi their time they may devote to theii studies. These students receive a sal ary of $500 for their first appointment and $600 for a reappointment. Nc student is appointed for more than two successive years, which is the time required for the granting of a master’s degree. New Plan Approved The part time instructor is a new category of the administration, rec ommended by the graduate council and approved by the Board of Regents. The graduate who achieves this posi tion is more advanced than the gradu ate assistant, devotes more time to teaching and less to study, and receives a larger stipend. Of the two recent appointees as part time instructors. Ralph Hoeber is a graduate in eco nomics with the class of 1921. He has been acting as graduate assistant this year and will probably receive his master’s degree at the end of next year’s fall term. Byrne graduated in 1921 and has been an assistant this year. He is a major in philosophy and intends to achieve his master’s degree by attending the coming summer ses sion. Graduate Assistants Named The graduate assistants announced yesterday and the colleges from which they graduated, are: Botany, Philip E. White, University of Montana; chem istry, Hugo A. Keed and Ford E Wil son, both of whom will graduate from Oregon this year; English, Arthur Hicks, ’22, Mildred Hawes, ’21, Lois Laughlin, ’19, Eemey Cox, ’22 (Ore gon), and L. B. Shumaker, University of Iowa; geology, Hubert Sehenck, ’22 (Oregon); German, Mrs. Marguerite Kohse Clark, ’21 (Oregon); history, Harry H. Savage, Willamette univer sity; Latin, Mathilda Matliisen, ’21 (Oregon); mechanics and astronomy, W. Howard Wise, ’21 (Oregon); psy chology, Thomas Cutsforth, ’18, and Florence Biddle, ’22, both of Oregon; Eomance languages, Germaine Dew, ’22 (Oregon); education, Marjory Gilbert and Walter Belt, both of Oregon. Of this number, Wise, Cutsforth, Miss Hawes and Mrs. Clark are reap pointees. Other appointments are be ing considered and will be announced soon, according to Dean Bebec. LAWRENCE TO VISIT HAWAII Dean Will be on Jury to Decide on Design for Honolulu Memorial Ellis F. Lawrence, dean of the school of architecture and allied arts at the University, will sail June 7 from San Francisco for Honolulu where he will serve on a jury of prominent architects who are to judge a number of designs which have been submitted for a war memorial in that city. Dean Lawrence is a member of a jury of three men who have been selected as leading architects of the Pacific coast for this work by the Territorial War commis sion of Hawaii. Bernard Maybeck of Berkeley, who designed the Fine Arts building at the San Francisco exposi tion in 1915, and W. E. B. Wilcox of Seattle, formerly vice-president of the American Association of Architects, are the other two members of the jury. These men were elected out of five nominees for the work by the repre sentative of the war commission in San Francisco. They expect to be gone several weeks in the Islands. BULLETIN TO BE PUBLISHED A bulletin on junior high schools, which has been compiled by H. E. Douglass and F. L. Stetson, professors in the school of education, at the re quest of J. A. Churchill, state superin tendent, is to be issued by the state department of education. The bulle tin contains about 48 pages and out lines suggestions for the organization, administration, purposes, courses of study, and standards of junior high schools for the use of high schools in the state. EUROPEAN TRIP WILL BE MADE Miss Amy Dunn, Delta Gamma house mother, Helen Hall, ’21, and Lois Hall, '22, left Wednesday morning for a tour east by way of the Canadian Pacific. Their trip will include all points of interest and will terminate at the na tional Delta Gamma convention to be held at Spring Lake, New Jersey, from June 26 to 30. From there Miss Dunn and Helen Hall will sail for Europe with Dean John J. Landsbury’s party. They will return about October 1. SLIDES USED IN LECTURE i ’ Views of Glacier National Park Shown | Samara Club and Botany Class The set of 50 colored slides of views j | in Glacier National Park, that has been received by the visual instruction de partment of the extension division from the Great Northern railway, was 1j used for the first time by Miss Louise > Nauerth, instructor in the botany de-, 1 partment, who is taking Professor ? Sweetser's place while he is collecting i specimens in southern Oregon, in her > lecture before the Samara club and the j , freshman botany class. ■ Miss Nauerth, who was a guide in l Glacier National Park last summer, i ■ knows the park well and was able to ! | use the slides to the best advantage. | Among other additions that have ! | been made recently to the equipment ! of the visual instruction department j ; are a set of 40 slides on “The Three Wise Men” and 21 slides on the flags 1 of different countries. MULKEY MAGIC CO. ORGANIZES Virgil Mulkey, a student in the de partment of drama, has organized the. Mulkey Magic company, and will open ! his theatrical season at Wendling to-; night. Mulkey, who has devoted his1 life to the study of magic and mystery illusions, plans to tour several cities this summer. Mulkey is a member of the company, and was recently initi ated into Mask and Buskin. PHI MU ALPHA ELECTS OFFICERS Glen Morrow was elected president of Phi Mu Alpha, national honorary musical fraternity, at an election of officers held yesterday noon. Other officers installed were Ralph Poston, first vice-president; Wilson Gailey, second vice-president; Ransom McAr thur, secretary; John Anderson, treas urer; and Arthur Johnson, historian. DEPARTMENT WANTS BALL BATS A call has been sent out from the women’s gymnasium in search of three baseball bats which have disappeared since Saturday. “It is quite probable that they were borrowed by picnic parties,” says Miss Waterman, “and if that is the case we would appreciate their return at once.” i DOMESTIC LAUNDRY “We Return Everything But the Dirt” 143 Seventh Ave. W. PHONE 252 Eugene, Oregon Lots of Nice Things at LUCKEY’S Jewelry Store Gifts bring joy to the receiver and at the same time offer much pleasure to the giver. Now is the time to be thinking about gifts for graduation. We have a large assortment to choose from. Come in if only to look at them. LUCKEY’S Jewelry Store From Fifth Avenue to the Golden Gate is a trail filled with unusual and nbcuinding interest. It is dotted with varied attractions The traveler is not long on the journey before he is impressed with the number of J. C. Penney Co. department stores he encounters. There are 312 of them; 58 new stores will be added in the Fall. They constitute a series of shaping or trading posts where the traveler can enter and always “feel at home.” Thousands upon thousands of “tourists” at this time of year keenly appreciate the help afforded them by our Nation-wide service. Travelers’ needs are here in large variety. REX i Soiled, muddy shoes? That’s where you lose, appearances will tell. Here in this chair I’ll put a glare upon them something swell. I’ll also fix those yellow kicks and make them black as night; No acids used, no shoes abused, with black I treat you white! Each pair I shine is right in line with patent - leathers, pard! Selected stock that none can knock, so keep this little card— It points the way to the only kinds: They are the Right way Real. Peter Sarecos John Papas _Rex Theatre Building Club Barber Shop The Old Reliable 814 Willamette Qeo. St. Blair H. L. Lee Coffee Co. Choice Coffees Teas, Spices and Extracts. Give us a call. 31 East Ninth Street CLEANING, PRESSING and REPAIRING Phone 342 Special prices to Students Hotel Osburn Cleaners Phone 342. 8th and Pearl I ! r i i Orange Crush That soothing drink that you will smack your lips over regardless of the temperature. Oregana Students’ Shop I i Spring Flowers "//s For Commencement ^ Sweet Peas Carnations Show her your love with flowers. Do you keep flowers on your tablet Nothing could be more effective and beautiful than flowers. REX FLORAL With acknowledgment! to K. C. B. I/ucky? Why, man, Im the Human Horseshoe! I CERTAINLY fu born. UNDER A lucky star. FOR IN8TANCE the tlma. I HOCKED my bonds. TO PLAY the market. ON A sure thing Up. o • • • - AND BOUGHT Slippery Ellon AT 8EVENTY-TWO. FOR A healthy rise. AND FOR seven days. I HUGGED tbe Ucker. AND COULDN’T sleep. ONCE IT Jumped two points, AND I walked on air. AND THAT very day. I SAW a sign. IN A cigar stand. THAT 8AID "Satisfy* IT GAVE me a hunch. TO BE satisfied. WITH WHAT I’d got. AND NOT hog the deaL 80 I phoned my broker. TO SELL me out. AND THE very next day. SLIPPERY ELLUM slipped. TO FIFTY-FIVE. 80 NOW I’ve gotten. BACK MY bonds. AND BABY’S got new shoes. AND NOW my regular smokes ARE THE cigarettes. THAT “SATISFY.* • • * WHENEVER you get that “Satisfy” hunch, play it Steer straight for the nearest stand and invest in Chester fields. This combination of fine Turkish tobaccos, blended with Burley and other Domestic leaf, will give you a new measure of cigarette enjoyment. You’re in luck from that day on.