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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 25, 1923)
Oregon Daily Emerald Member of Pacific Inercolleglate Press Association " Official publication of the Associated Students of the University of Oregon, issued daily except Monday, during the college year. _ KT.TrN-r.TTr YOUEL __-.-.—EDITOR Editorial Board Managing Editor ....Phil Brogan Associate Editors __Ep Hoyt, Inez King Associate Managing Editor Copy Supervisor . ..Art Budd .Jessie Thompson Daily News Editors John Piper Freda Goodrich Ted Janes Ben Maxwell Don Woodward Leon Byrne Taylor Huston Night Editors Edward Carleton Junior Seton Leonard LerwiU Sports Editor .....Edwin Fraser Sports Writers: Alfred Erickson, Kenneth Cooper. News Service Editor-Rachel Chezem 1 Information Chief: Rosalia Keber; As- I sistants: Maybelle King. Pauline Bondurant. Features F. I. N. S. Editor .....Monte Bren Packard Dramatics ■ - .--Katherine Watson Music_Margaret Sheridan News staff: Clinton Howard. Genevieve JeweU, Anna Jerzyk, GeralfTne Root, Margaret Skavlan, Norma Wilson. Henryetta I.awrence, Jeanne Gay, George Stewart, Kathenne Spall, Lester Turnbaugh, Florence Walsh, Marian Lowry, Morion Lay, Mary Jane Dustin, George ianna Gerlinger, Agnes Driscoll, Webster Jones. Margaret Vincent, Margaret Morrison. George Belknap, Phyllis Coplan, Eugenia Strickland, Herbert Powell, Helen Reynolds. Business Staff T.'VT.T! JANZ .....-.-..MANAGER ASSOCIATE MANAGER -----LEO , MUNLY Advertising Service Editor -----—Randolp“ Kuhn Circulation Manager ----—---—.-...9,^2? Wright Assistant Circulation Manager ......Kenneth Stephenson Adv. Assistants...Maurice Warnock, Lester Wade, James Leake, Herman Blaesing Entered in the postoffice at Eugene, Oregon as second-class matter. Subscription rates, fZ.26 per year. By term, 76c. Advertising rates upon application. Phones — Business Manager .951 Editor Daily News Editor Tnia isaue Theodore Janes JNight Editor rniB issue Leonard Lerwill A Real Excuse for Existence Yesterday two honorary fraternities brought forth more evidence which shows that they have a real right to exist. Phi Theta Kappa and Beta Gamma Sigma, women’s and men’s national honorary com merce fraternities, in announcing their awards in recognition of high scholarship prove that they are not organizations which merely meet, elect officers and new members, and adjourn. During the past year there has been considerable agitation favor ing the elimination of organizations which have filled no place in university life, and which have contributed nothing, except perhaps a little social enjoyment and slight distinction, to the individual members. Phi Theta Kappa and Beta Gamma Sigma cannot be classed among the ineffectuals. Through their every day influence, and, more con cretely, through their annual awards, they are promoting scholastic achievement, a very worth while undertaking. Shoulders square, head erect, eyes front, heels together! The efforts of Women’s League should be rewarded by postures which would be envied by the maidens of ancient Greece! The political season is all but closed—the last class officer has been chosen. Buy a Poppy. MILITARY MEN RECEIVE VACCINE INNOCULATION R. O. T. C. Men Planning to go to Camp Lewis; Given Treatment to Guard Against Disease Germs Addicts of tiie sorrow-killing needle, converted to the use of the instrument by order of the war department, through the R. O. T. C., are drooping about the campus these days keeping a watchful guard over the strong, right arm. Over at the dispensary, nurses are shining up the injection implements preparing for the next warrior to come around for his “shot” that will keep away all ravenous little bugs which might gnaw their way into his organs and cause him to take to the blankets with smallpox or typhoid fever during the six weeks of intensive training at Camp Lewis during the summer. All those of military temperament taking the advanced course at the R. O. T. C. must spend at least one sum mer vacation at. the Washington en campment in order to obtain their re serve commissions and be graduated from the University. The maneuvers at the camp this year commence on June 14 and all cadets must report for training within ten days of the open ing date. That will make some of the boys step lively to finish examinations on the campus and arrive in Camp Lew is before the last day of grace. There will be about 25 from the Uni versity who will attend the camp this year, according to estimates of the mil itary department. Of these about ten will be sophomores, most of whom will atend the basic or first year camp. FAMOUS ACTOR DELAYED Leo Ditriehstein Will Not Be in Eugene Monday Due to Tunnel Cave in Student play goers and theatre pat-1 runs of Kugene will be greatly disap pointed in the announcement that Leo Ditriehstein, probably one of the great est emotional actors on the American stage today, will not appear in Eugene, Monda\ night in “The Purple Mask,” as has been advertised. The sudden cancellation of the local appearances, avoiding to Manager Me Kee, of the lleilig, who received a telegram today from the business mana ger of the Ditriehstein company, is due to the railroad trouble in a long tunnel on the Southern Pacific main line in northern California where a fire recent ly broke out and caused parts of the tunnel to cave in, stopping all traffic for an estimated period of teu days. Mr. McKee stated however that the company was endeavoring to get their equipment around the tunnel by truck and would more than likely be able to oi)eu /their engagement at the Ileilig theatre in Portland on time. Y. W. CONSTITUTION REVISED In order that the constitution of the University Y. W. C. A. may comply with the newly organized departmental sys tem used in the campus association, a committee of three is revising the con stitution. As there will be no more meetings of the Y. W. C. A. for this term, the revised constitution will be presented for membership vote next fall. Members of the committee who are drawing up tho constitution are Edna Largent, Florence Buck, Eliza beth Phelps and Dorothy Collier as ad viser. CAMPUS BULLETIN Notices will be printed in this column for two issues only. Copy must be in this >ffice by 4:80 on the day before it is to be published and must be limited to U words. Newman Club dinner Saturday even ing at 6:30. All members are invited) to attend. Ibespian Society—Meeting today at 5| o’clock in the Gift Campaign build-: ing. Very important. Phi Mu Alpha—All Phi Mu Alpha members and pledges must be at the Music building by 8:30 Sunday morn ing. Very important. All Oregon Club Girls—and girls living in town who are interested in get ting a sweater turn in their class points to Miss Carson, in the Wo man ’s building by Friday. University Professors—The local chap ter of the American Association of University Professors will meet Mon day night at 6:00 o’clock at the An chorage. Papers will be read by Dr. Milne and Dean Hale. Dean Sheldon’s Classes—Because of the absence of Dean Sheldon, classes in American Education and American Civilization will be discontinued for the rest of the week. The World his tory classes will meet as usual. EXHIBIT OF CLOTHING TO DISPLAY WORK OF TERM General Public Invited to View Work of Sewing Classes for First Time in Household Arts Building For the first time on the campus a clothing exhibit for the general pub lic will be given, when the clothing department of the household arts de partment holds an exhibit on Friday, June 1. The exhibit will be held in the two clothing rooms on the second floor of the household arts building and in one of the rooms on the first floor of thg same building. It will be open from 1 to 5:30 p. m., and tea or punch will probably be served to those who attend the affair. A number of persons have wanted tp attend the clothing classes, espe cially on the days when the students gave class criticism, according to Miss Hazel Hauck, who is directing the work, but at such times it was thought necessary to bar the public in order to give the students enrolled in the work a chance to express their opin ions and ideas more freely. Because of this situation the department de cided to hold the show. The latest problems worked out by the students in the sewing classes will be shown, and will include coats, jack ets and capes. Some of last term’s work will also be shown. It is planned not to show the best work only, but to make the exhibit as representative as possible of the whole clothing depart ment. The seventh and eighth grade classes of the University high school will also have some displays in the exhibit. The members of these classes have been using the machines in the University household arts department. It is hoped by faculty members of the department that the exhibit may be come an annual event. All University students and townspeople are invited to come. BUNGALOW TEA PLANNED Faculty and Students Will be Served from one to six in Afternoon The Bungalow is to be turned into a cleverly decorated tea room, Thursday, Eat More A DISH A DAY KEEPS THE DOCTOR AWAY ESPECIALLY IF IT S BLUE BELL ICE CREAM In Brick and Bulk Phone 638 Eugene Farmers Creamery 568 Olive Street THE SHOE DOCTOR It's the sole of the people we 'keep in view, for I am a doctor of the boot and the shoe. I serve the living, not the dead—use the best leather, wax and thread. I will stitch on a sole or nail it fast—do a good job, and guarantee it to last. I will give you a gift along in life—not only you, but your family and wife. So many patients come to my door, all run down and feeling so sore. I don't use poultices, plasters or pills, but I can cure you of all your shoe ills. W. T. SHOULTS 31 East Ninth _Eugene, Oregon May 31, when the campus Y. W. C. A. will entertain University students and faculty members. The tea is to be held from 1 to 6 p. m. Tables are to be placed on the porch of the Bungalow as well as inside, and both places will be attractively decorated, according to Florence Buck, who is in charge of arrangements for the affair. Several delicious things are to be served in cluding sundaes iced tea and short cake, she says. The money raised from the sale of the refreshments will go towards the loan fund being raised to send Univer sity women to the conference which will be held at Seabeck Washington June 26 to July 6. Other members of the Seabeck committee are assisting plan ning the entertainment for next Thurs day. 0. A. C. SENIORS TO GIVE MEMORIAL TO COLLEGE Tablet Modeled by Avard Fairbanks to be Unveiled at Commencement in Honor of the Soldier Dead A service memorial for the O. A. C. men who were killed in the late war has been modeled by Avard Fairbanks, professor of sculpture, and will be cast tomorrow. The memorial is to be a bronze tablet seven feet high and 33 inches wide. It has been ordered Dy the class of 1923 at Corvallis as a gift to the college. A line drawing and a small clay model were first made by Professor Fairbanks as studies for the composi tion. The work has gone steadily for ward, the casting being postponed from day to day because of some fur ther refinement that the sculptor wished to add. The panel expresses the spirit of sac rifice personified as an angel uphold ing the soldier—a typical service man in his tin helmet, a tired boyish face uplifted, and his gun at rest in his right hand. His left hand holds the symbolical olive branch which he has won by paying the supreme sacrifice. Below the soldier’s extended left arm which the angel supports is a roll to be engraved with the names of the dead. “Around the curved top of the frame will be stars done in gold leaf—one for each of the men whose names are on the roll of honor. Across the foot of the panel, below the sweep of the angel’s wings are small crosses with conventionalized poppies between them suggesting the famous line, beginning: “In Flander’s field the poppies grow Between the crosses row on row That mark our place-” The tablet will be sent to New York to be done in bronze. COMMERCE WOMEN HONORED Members of Phi Theta Kappa, wo men’s honorary commerce fraternity, were joint hostesses with Miss Ethel Gaylord at the latter’s home Tuesday night, in honor of the underclass wo men in the school of business adminis tration. The evening was spent in formally, and ended with an attractive luncheon. Miss Gaylord is a 1919 alumnus, having graduated from the school of business administration. She is now employed as secretary to Donald McDonald, manager of the Castle and Rex theatres in Eugene. “CRASHIN’ THRU,” AT REX Once again local fans are to be treated to a sight of the dashing Harry YOU CAN’T FOOL YOUR WIFE— When you say you’ve been at the club—and she finds two theatre ticket stubs on the floor. r-WIFir-1 LGATR.IC6 JOY NITA NALDI L6UJIS STONE^ *-PAULING GARON-1 Friend.. Husband., loved., to feed Ins baby the bottle. But his was a jazz baby and the bottle didn’t hold milk. COMEDY “WINTER HAS CAME’’ Clever as they make ’em TODAY and Saturday The CASTLE Where prices Don’t vary Carey in the kind of a role that has en- ! I deared him to the hearts of millions. “Crashin’ Thru,” Carey’s latest re lease, which comes to the Rex Theatre ; today is heralded as the biggest and i best" picture of his notable career. It j brings him to the screen in a rollick ing, dashing, rattling part that gives him full play for histrionic ability as , well as for his prowess in horsemanship I and daredevilish ability to register j thrills. What to Do Tonight ? 1 Listen Folks— You’ve heard of fun fests and comedies and maybe you think you’ve seen some, But, if you haven’t seen The Great Broxopp you “ain’t seen nothing yet” Guild Theatre Tonight and Tomorrow Night 50c—75. No Tax. Everyone is asking: “Are you a Broxopp Baby?” - Try Emerald Want Ads After the Dip enjoy the comfort of summer-weight i “unions”. As light as thistle-down. As cool ' as a mountain brook, j Give body freedom for in-door or out-door “sports”. Buy a suit or two today and be on your way to comfort. Hatchway No Button Suits $1.00 to $2.25 What Are Tavern Essentials? fj What is necessary for taverns ? That they be (1) conveniently located; (2) have excellent kitchens. {J Yd Towne Shoppe and Ye Campa Shoppe have gained college fame because they comply with both of these require ments. Whether you spend the evening at the theatre, at the college dance, or cam pus, they are always on hand to serve you. f| After your footsteps have brought you to them the more important function of serving above-par food is delightfully fulfilled. tjj Apply our tests and you too will be come a regular customer. Ye Towne Shoppe DOWN TOWN Ye Campa Shoppe ON THE CAMPUS A A AAAAAAAAAAAAAAA Jfy— Our 35c Merchants’ Lunch and you will come back for your meals regularly. IMPERIAL LUNCH FEED GEROT, Proprietor Phone 579 727 Willamette MEAT Is Wholesome EAT More of It for Health and Vigor Eat Well-Balanced Meals If United States Health Service has stated that a person, in order to keep in the best of health during the warm months, should eat a variety of kinds and cuts of meat. For the best, come to— The Home of Government Inspected Meats D. E. Nebergall Meat Co. Two Phones—36 and 37 66 East Ninth Avenue