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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1923)
Oregon Daily Emerald VOLUME XXIV. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1923 f NUMBER 90 Senior Women’s Honorary Will Get First Charter Given to Pacific Coast LOCAL ACTIVE SINCE 1910 Scholarship, Leadership, and Service Are'Emphasized by National The petition of Scroll and Script, senior women’s honorary society, to Mortar Board has been granted, ac cording to a telegram received yester day morning by LeLaine West, presi dent of the campus organization. By grant of the petition, the University of Oregon has the first chapter on the Pacific coast. Mortar Board was organized in 1918 for the purpose of promoting three ideals—service to the University, schol arship, and leadership. At present there are 18 chapters among the leading universities and colleges of the country, and there are many more interested in petitioning. Scroll and Script’s petition was submitted at a national convention of Mortar Board held the week-end of February 2 at the University of Michigan. Scroll and Script was founded at the University of Oregon, June 3, 1910, by Ruth Dunniway, Mae Sage, Juliet Cross. Helen Beach, Mary DeBar, Olive Donnell, and Lilah Prosser. The organ ization in earlier years required for membership a scholarship average of II, together with one major and two minor activities. Before the last election of members this basis was somewhat changed to confirm to that of Mortar Board, and now those girls who have | a standing of a high III and who are j outstanding in campus activities are el- j ected to membership. Pledging Is Tradition The pledging to Scroll and Script at the campus luncheon during Junior Week-end is one of the traditions of the University. At that time members of the society who are back on the campus march through the crowds in the caps and gowns and pledge new members with ribbons and flowers. Among campus activities undertaken by the organization each year is to take over a meeting of the practical ethics class and explain the meaning and purpose of Scroll and Script to the members of the class, who are usually all freshman women. Honorary and associate members of the Oregon University faculty are Dean Elizabeth Fox DeCou, Miss Grace Edg ington, Mrs. Anna Landsbury Beck, Miss Ida V. Turney, Mrs. Norma D. Solve, Miss Lois Laughlin, Miss Anne Hardy, Miss Mildred Hawes, and Miss Marian Taylor. Miss Lillian Stupp, who is a member of the chapter of Mortar Board at Washington Univer sity at St. Louis, is also a member of Scroll and Script. Five Members Are Active Active members of Scroll and Script are LeLaine West, president; Emily Veazie, secretary; Helen Addison, treas urer; Alice Tomkins; Helen Hoefer; Felicia Perkins; Bernice Altstock; Inez King, and Margaret Jackson. The ,une for the installation of Mor tar Board on the campus has not yet been announced, as the local group has to be inspected before affiliation. DEBATE QUESTION CHOSEN BY WOMEN UNIFORM DIVORCE LAWS TO BE SUBJECT DISCUSSED Oregon and Washington Teams to Meet March 7; Team Selected After O. A. C. Contest The question for the debate on March 7 between the women’s varsity debate teams of the Universities of Oregon and Washington has been chosen, but as yet the exact wording has not been decided. It will be on the subject of uniform divorce laws in the United States. The University of Washington would like the question to be on mak ing a epnstitutional amendment rather than a law. The dual contest will be held March 7, but as yet the Oregon teams have not been selected, and will not be chosen until after the debate with O. A. C. Seven girls are now working on the subject for the debate with Washington. No further details are known regard ing the Peace oratorical contest, to be held sometime in the spring. Very few are signed up for the tryouts which come sometime in February. May Fen no and John Gavin are the only ones who have signified their intention to try out. The contest was started in 1917 and all orations must be on and about peace. It is a state-wide activity and the reward is a cash prize. IS STAFFORD’S TOPIC Chemistry Head Will Describe Research at Assembly Professor Orin Stafford, head of the chemistry department of the University will be the speaker at the regular as sembly on Thursday morning in Villard hall. His topic will be “Scientific Re search and Public Service,” and he will discuss the value of the research re cently conducted in the chemistry de partment on the campus which resulted in the addition to the sum of industrial knowledge of a new process for conserv ing waste wood. This discovery will play an important part in the lumber industry of the coun try and will be of great benefit to lum bermen in Oregon particularly. Since it was through Professor Stafford’s ef forts that this process was perfected, he is well fitted to tell the University students of the relation of all research to public service and to explain the utilitarian value of laboratory process es which affect all branches of indus try. Professor Stafford will illustrate his address with a number of slides which show the actual methods of research in laboratories. Since the announcement of Professor Stafford’s process a great deal of com ment has been made on the value of his discovery. The Portland Oregonian describes it as “the most outstanding contribution to science yet made by a University of Oregon man.” So great a quantity of eheap waste wood mater ial is available in the Northwest that the. possibility of commercial savings through the use of this new method is a boon to many mills in this vicinity as well as all over the country. It will now be possible to utilize mill waste in the carbonization and wood distillation industries since a fine grade of charcoal can be obtained from this material by means of the Stafford process, in. addi tion to the usual by-products obtained. This will mean a salvage of practically all of the waste material in modern lumber mills and seems entirely prac ticable from a financial point of view, according to a number of lumbermen who will be affected by the new process. Fast Faculty Five Flays Foxy Journalists in Jumping Joust In a basketball game which was a combination of lacrosse, blind man’s buff, water polo, and ice skating, Har ry ’s Husky Hoopers romped on Youel’s dumping Yournalists. In other words the faculty horsed the journalist quin tet 29-19. The game was a revelation to the spectators. Each team revealed some thing in the line of cleverness. Youel’s gang unlimbered an uncanny two hand ed pass which usually passed the ball into the hands of one of Harry Scott’s knights of the maple court. The fac ulty, on the other hand, have absorbed some of Coach Bohler’s pivot playing and kept the newshounds clawing the air in the approved hunt and peck sys tem. The game was clean throughout, only 15 fouls being called, two of them be ing unethical blunders by Captain Scott, Cossman, big guard of the victors, got track and the hoop game mixed up when he tried to use Mungo Fraser’s neck for a hammer handle, for same which Referee Altstock was required I to call a foul on him. Altstock dis played. rare judgment in calling fouls, not doing so until the man with the ! ball was being trampled by his oppon ■ ent. The faculty scored first when a triple pass, Ringle to Barnes to Scott, went for a counter. The journalists retalia ted five and two-fifths minutes later | when Touel hjeltied the ball into the basket after a melee underneath. For the faculty Scott and Fairbanks | bore the brunt of the scoring, with Ringle doing a “Stonewall Jackson” under the basket. Scott, Ringle, Barnes. Fairbanks, Cook and Oossman formed j the faculty squad. Fraser was the outstanding star for the newsgatherers. Hoyt, Touel, Shir ley and Anderson formed the vanguard of the journalistic attack. In the sec ond half General Hoyt whispered to Captain Touel that they needed re-en foreements, and three huskies, Rudd, Akers, and Cooper, steamed onto the floor in an attempt to stem the faculty tide. OREGON FIVE ENOS NOME PLAY; TRIP TO SHOT FRIDAY Five Remaining Webfoot Tilts Scheduled to Be Played in Hostile Haunts VARSITY TIED WITH IDAHO Vandals and Huskies Conceded Best Chance to Grab Off Conference Honors The last home game of the year for the Varsity basketeers was the 38 to 29 win over the Aggies here Saturday night, and all the remaining contests will be played in hostile territory. The team will leave Friday for a tour of the Northwest during which they will tangle with Idaho at Moscow, Washington at Seattle, Washington State at Pullman, Whitman at Walla Walla, and Willamette at Salem. The Varsity lost to Washington and Wash ington State on the home floor, so both these games promise to be hotly contest ed. Oregon is tied with Idaho for third place in the Conference standings now, with Washington and the Oregon Ag gies tied for first place, as Washington lost to Idaho on the Moscow floor Fri day night while the Aggies were get ting the same medicine here from the Lemon-Yellow. Huskies Look Like Champs Washington seemingly has the best chance to cop off the Conference honors at present, as the rest of her games are on their home floor, while the Ore gon Aggies still have their trip ahead of them, and will have to play superior ball if they can tour through the North west and get off without losing any games. Idaho with only three loses against her still has a fine chance in the pen nant race, as all the rest of her games are on her own floor, and most of the other teams concede her a victory on those conditions. Unless Washington or O. A. C. can finish the season with out another loss it seems that they will come out tied with Idaho, for since the Vandals have lost only three con ference games so far, they still have a remarkably good chance to come in with the winners. Varsity Chances Slim Oregon’s bad slump, during which she lost a counting game to both the Aggies and Washington State, was practically fatal to any championship hopes, as it is a practical impossibility to win all the games to be played on the trip. The loss to Washington State was un expected and but for the sickness of Latham, Zimmerman, and Gowans would never have happened. The Oregon Aggies nave a poorer chance of taking the bacon than either Washington or Idaho, for they have lost two games already, one to Idaho on the Corvallis floor, and one to Oregon here Friday night. The. Aggies still have their trip ahead of them, and since they lost to Idaho at Corvallis, it is hard to see how they can expect to beat the Vandals on the Moscow floor. The game with Washington at Seattle is also a hard one to predict the score of, as both teams will be out for a win at all costs, and the Aggies, were just barely able to nose out the Huskies at Corvallis in the last game the Washing ton team played on its trip. The championship of the Southern de partment of the league is not quite as involved, and at present it looks as if the winner of the Northwest scramble will' mix it with the Stanford Cards for Pacific Coast honors. DR. C. U. CLARK ELECTED TO COSMOPOLITAN CLUB Noted Lecturer Honored at Conclusion of Talk in Guild Hall; WiU Write to Organization Dr. Charles Upson Clark, noted lec turer and historian, who had been giv ing some interesting talks on some phases of the European problems to students last week, was made an hon orary member of the Cosmopolitan club by a unanimous vote of the society last Friday afternoon in Guild hall after his address on “What We Can Learn from Foreign Elements.” “In view of the fact that Dr. Clark has traveled many countries and is a man of cosmopolitan ideals,” said C. S. Pil, president of the club, in nomin ating Dr. Clark an honorary member, “it is appropriate for this club to con fer upon him the honorary membership of this organization.” Henry Dirkson seconded the nomination, which was passed unanimously. Dr. Clark was warmly applauded by the audience and expressed his appre ciation of the honor conferred upon him. SEMESTER PLAN GOES BY BOARD MASK AND BUSKIN CAST WILL 'COME OBI OF KITCHEN' Clever Comedy to Be Put on in Heilig, Coached by . Claire Keeney MISS COOLIDGE IN LEAD Dramatic Talent of Campus Combed to Make Most of Thomas Play Aristocratic southerners masquerad ing as cooks, butlers, and maids; a poet poked into a cupboard with a negro wench; a rich lawyer caught making love to a saucy Irish servant; spicy love plots and counterplots; these are but hints of the rapid action, the ab sorbing interest in “Come Out of the Kitchen,” which will be staged by Mask and Buskin, dramatic society, at the Heilig Thursday night, February 15. “Come Out or the Kitchen” needs only a well-chosen cast to make it suc cessful from every point of view, and Claire Keeney, well-known dramatic student, who is coaching the production, is confident that every character in the play is carried by capable campus dra matists. The vehicle is admittedly the best A. E. Thomas has ever written. Parental Affection Motif Not only is the comedy introduced cleverly, but the length to which par ental affection will cause children to go is also forcibly depicted. The real soul of the play, which is borne along on the current of delightful comic situations, is in the struggle of carefully reared southern children to turn mercenary and provide funds to aid their ailing father. Lorna Coolidge portrays the part of “Olivia Dangerfield,” who later be comes “Jane Ellen,” the saucy Irish cook. Around the brains and versatil ity of this character the entire story hinges. Miss Coolidge has taken prom inent parts in campus productions for the past three years, and as “Olivia,” and “Jane Ellen” she is amply able to demonstrate the ability that has creat ed her popularity in dramatic circles. A typical northern Yankee, bored by his riches, is Vern Fudge. Quest for excitement and adventure leads him as Burtin Crane, to the South, and his every expectation is fulfilled. Fudge has taken part in Reading campus pro ductions for three years, and he# drops naturally into the spirit of this one. Kate Pinneo In Character A jolly, verbose, negro mammy, of extra-liberal proportions, is the old ser vant “Mandy,” played by Kate Pinneo. Long experience in similar eccentric roles has enabled Miss Pinneo to make the most of this many-sided and mirth provoking character. Darrel Larsen is aptly described as “a lawyer first, and a gourmand after wards,” and with inborn ability, makes a fizzle of Ills amorous advances to the cook. The real estate agent, “a south ern gentleman minus the southern pol ish” is played by Virgil Mulkey, a pro fessional theatrical man who has left the stage for a two-years’ training in the University dramatic department. Elizabeth Robinson, who is “Mrs. Falk ner,” was the leading dramatic star at O. A. C. last year. Others in Cast Other experienced members of the I cast are Star Norton, as “Cora Falk ner,” Alfred Meyers as “Charles Dan gerfield,” Ted Baker as “Paul Danger 1 field,” and Ted Larson as the poetical i “Mr. Lefferts.” Mask and Buskin, the Oregon chap ter of Associated University Players, is the official dramatic organization of the University, and admits to member ■ ship only students who have proved I acting ability. Its annual production is always looked forward to by towns people as well as University folk. TCT’.T.T.TiMK HOLDS MEETINGS Jesse Kellenis, a prominent evangelist and a graduate of the University, has for the past week held meetings at the First Christian church of Eugene. Mr. Kellems is perhaps the best known ev angelist of the Christian denomination in the United States. He received his B.A. degree at the University and the i degree of D.D. from the Eugene Bible I University. While in Eugene, Mr. Kel i lems is visiting his mother, Mrs. Louise 1 Kellems, of this city. RADIO SET PROVIDES MUSIC FOR FRIENDLY _ i Ed Robbins Installs Outfit in Hall; | Unfavorable Weather Makes ! Receiving Difficult hitting at a table with a pair of “phonos” over one's head, and listen ing to the strains of music from a Los Angeles orchestra, or to a sermon by a minister in Sail Francisco is the latest diversion among the students at Friend ly hall since the installation of a Wost inghouse Senior peanut tube radio set by Edward Bobbins, a freshman living at the hall. The set was installed last Saturday and since then, several programs have been received through it, most of them from the broadcasting stations KFI, at Los Angeles, and KTO at San Fran cisco. The atmospheric conditions have not been very good for transmitting radio messages, which has caused them to be rather faint, but under favorable conditions it is expected that concerts and lectures from San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Portland will be heard plainly. The set has no amplifier, the instal lation of which would greatly add to the clearness of the sounds. The aerial which intercepts the radio waves is a copper wire approximately 120 feet long and is strung from the roof of Friendly hall to the top of one of the fir trees between that building and the library. Another wire strung to one of the other nearby trees, forming a Y shaped aerial, is planned, to increase the receiving capacity of the set. KAPPA THETA CHI WILL . GET PHI PSI CHARTER Formal Ceremony in Charge of Portland Alumni Group The installation of Kappa Theta Chi, local fraternity, as the forty-eighth chapter of Phi Kappa Psi will be held this week-end. The local chapter will be known as Oregon Alpha. The port land alumni association of Phi Kappa Psi will have charge of the installation program and the details of the affair. Reservations have been made for ap proximately one hundred and fifty vis iting Phi Pais, among whom are in cluded John L. Porter of Philadelphia, ' personal representative of the national president of the fraternity; Shirley Mo serve of San Francisco, national vice president, and Dan G. Swanuell, last grand president of the fraternity, who will come from Champaign, Illinois, for the installation exercises and will ar rive here Friday. Representatives from the Stanford and California chapters will be in attendance, as well as mem bers of the Washington chapter. Among the Portland alumni who will attend are Dr. William Wallace Youngson, president of the Portland alumni asso ciation; A. B. Winfree, H. G. Effinger, E. T. Sturgeon, and Judge E. T. Bro naugh. Friday evening the formal initiation and installation of the fraternity will take place in the Odd Fellows hall. Saturday morning the national officors will visit the local fraternity Omega Upsilon at O. A. C., which is petition ing Phi Kappa Psi. Saturday after noon there will be a reception at the Woman’s building in honor of the of ficers and in the evening a banquet at the Osburn hotel will conclude the for mal events of the installation. EX-ART EDITOR OF LEMON PUNCH IS MINE REPORTER “Bunk” Short Says He Must Go Under Ground to Get News for His Paper Work Exciting According to word received by Dean | Eric W. Allen, of the school of jour I iialisin, Eugene Short, ex-’22, is in Oat i man, Arizona, reporting mining news for the Oatman Mining News. When on the campus, Mr. Short, more famil iarly known as “Bunk,” was art editor i of the Lemon Punch and it was his I prolific pen that created the little comic character of “Lemmy.” “Reporting mining news,” says the ! letter received by Dean Allen, “is a little different from other reporting as ! the reporter generally has to go down in the mines and see for himself and the news is of a technical sort. Fre quent visits to the different mines, how ever, makes the work interesting.” Short plans to return to school in the spring. He is a member of Alpha Tau Omega. FACULTY DEFEATS CHANGE IN TERM ST5TEM 38 TO 31 Instructors and Departmental Heads Numbering 73 Vote; Three Not Listed REFERENDUM IS BY MAIL Ballots Counted Yesterday; Several Change Sides, Is Belief Expressed Voting 38 to 31 in favor of the term plan the referendum ballot taken by mail last week and yesterday, the fac ulty has given its final decision on what is considered one of the most im portant issues arising in the University for a number of years. Out of the 75 eligible to vote, only three failed to cast a ballot, namely, Earl Kilpatrick, Ira Richardson and Carlton E. Spencer. The change of faculty majority in favor of the present system is due, according to those counting the votes, more to the members who swung over to vote for the term plan than to the larger vote cast. The second clause of the ballot insert ed to determine the date of going into effect of the semester plan, if adopted, likewise showed a large majority in favor of putting off the change as long as possible. Out of 67 voting, 45 were in favor of 1924 and only 22 desired to make the change at the beginning of next school year. Students Oppose Plan ,As far as the campus in general was concerned, the beginning of the agita tion relative to the proposed reverting to the old system of dividing the school year into two parts began when the faculty announced their decision by a narrow majority in favor of the change. The Emerald, opposed to the change, at once determined to ascertain student opinion on the proposal, and sponsored a student straw vote. The results of this vote showed approximately 98 per cent of the students voting favored the term plan. The discussion did not end when the results of the straw vote were known, neither among the students nor among the faculty. With the assurance of President Campbell that the results of the straw vote would be awaited with interest, and would have weight with the faculty, reaction of such an over whelming majority of the students in favor of the term plan on the faculty was awaited with interest. Members of the faculty, desiring the present system, asserted that enough members in sympathy with their side were not present at tho meeting. Others thought the absentees evenly divided on the issue. Medics for Term Basis Members of the medical school fac ulty in Portland felt they ought to be considered in the matter, too. An ad visory vote was taken and submitted to the resident faculty. This vote show ed the Portland professors in favor of retaining tho present system. When the referendum ballots were sent out last week following the faculty meeting, there was a great deal of uncertainty among the faculty and stu dents as to which side would gain tho victory. Neither side was certain of its majority and only yesterday’s count would settle the matter. ALUMNI VISIT CAMPUS Former Emerald Staff Members Now Engaged in Journalistic Work Jay Allen, former member of the editorial staff of the Emerald and a ) member of Sigma Delta Chi, is visiting the campus. Mr. Allen is now working on the Portland Oregonian. Ruth Austin, who worked on the Em i orald staff last year and is now employ ed on the Capitol Journal at Salem, ; is another alumni visitor on the earn pus. Miss Austin is a member of | Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and Theta Sigma Phi honorary journalistic | fraternity. ' l’hebe Gage, member of the class of ! ’22 and former vice-president of the | Y. W. C. A. cabinet, is another alumni visiting here. Miss Gage is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and Kwama.