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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 2, 1923)
SPECIAL FEATURES Ideas for Homecoming Stunts Under Consideration LIST OF ROOMS WANTED Women’s Houses Have Paid Tax for Luncheon Special features, serious and frivil ous, of the Homecoming ceremonies, campus luncheon, and the Rousing of the returing grads, were the topics of the Homecoming committee meetings yesterday. The feature committee plans four events. The first of these will be the Order of the O parade at the Home coming game. Old grads who wear the letter, from the white-haired man of fifty or sixty to the boys still in college, will parade around the field before the members of the University to whose athletic fame they have con tributed. Every Oregon letter man is urged to be here for the parade. Come and bring your sweater, is the invi tation of the committee, and of the Oregon student body. Flag Will Be Raised There will be a flag-raising cere mony before the game after the teams have come out on the field. The play ers and the crowd will stand uncovered while the bugle plays and the flag is raised. The band will play the “Star Spangled Banner.” The committee is working on a snappy feature to be staged between halves of the game, immediately after the naturalizing ceremony. They have not yet decided whether this feature will be of a hum orous nature or not. It will be good or it will not be staged, they declare. This year the campus luncheon com mittee is preparing for an increase of 1000 guosts over last year. Then the number at the luncheon was 260. A musical program of seven or eight num bers will be put on during the cam pus luncheon present plans show. Pos sible numbers will be by the band and tho University men’s glee club. This idea of a program is a new thing. The immittee feels it will add greatly to Tax Now Due The 50 cent tax for the luncheon is now duo from every student. All the women’s houses have paid in their quota. The money from the men’s houses is beginning to come in. The menu will be decided upon later. The food will be prepared in the Friendly hall kitchen. The canvass for rooms to house tho guests of the University has begun. Tho committee asks that anyone who can supply a room will phono to Miss Grace Edgington’s office, number 1593, and list the room. There will be a house to house canvas among tho townspeople later, but Mason Dillard, chairman of tho rooms and accommoda tions cominittoe, wants as many as pos sible to list their rooms now. 400 rooms are wanted in all. Another feature of the work of the accommodations committee will bo an in formation desk at the Administration building to be open from Friday noon to 2 p. m. Saturday of Homecoming week-end. All alumni will be brought directly to this desk and registered upon arrival. Here rooms will be as signed and badgos distributed. The committee will also maintain an in formation bureau at the Osburn hotel. CLASSES IN SWEDISH ATTRACT 20 STUDENTS Language Declared Valuable In Liter ary Scope; Professor Studying for Scientific Treatises There are about 20 students en rolled in the Swedish classes under Professor Thorsteuberg of the language department. Those taking this course are, in nearly all cases, of Scandinavian descent. The class in elementary Swedish contains one member of the faculty, Professor Stafford of the chemistry department, who is taking the course in order to be able to read Swedish scientific treatises. Many of the students plan to visit the home land of their parents and desire to be able to speak the language. "We Americans, because of our large country, arc inclined to think that there can be nothing of value or in terest iu leurnisg the language of a smaller nation,” said Professor Thorst enberg, “while in fact wo often find them further advanced along certain lines than ourselves.” This is espec ially true regarding Sweden. Her lit erature is valuable for its scientific treatises as well as for many writers of high literary ability, such as Ibsen Y. W. C. A. TO GIVE TEA AT BUNGALOW TUESDAY Magazines for University Infirmary and Bungalow to Be Obtained from the Proceeds Home made mince and pumpkin pie ice cream sundaes and cinnamon toasl with tea. Such is the menu which tin Y. W. C. A. has planned for Thursday November 8, when the members of th< association will convert the Bungalos ! into a tea room, and entertain the campus from 1 o ’clock until 5. Rea i sonable prices will be asked for the 1 food, and the proceeds are to be used partly fro a fund to secure magazines for the University infirmary and the Y. W. C. A. Bunglaow. Last June the association gave a j similar function, known as the “Bird I Cage” tea room to raise funds for the Seabeck conference loan fund. This year the decorations will con j form with Thanksgiving time, and com j mittees are actively at work to make ! the affair a most attractive one. Women appointed to take charge of the tea are Virginia Keeney, Margaret Boyer, Catherine Spall, Ardis Welch, Betty Bauch, Phyllis Coplan, Beatrice Morris, Margaret Phillips, Frances Dodds, Meryl Allman, Dorothy Dazell, Buth Coehran, Mary Cogswell, Doloris j Pearson and Beulah Smith. CLUB ENJOYS NOVEL GAME Spanish Organization Meets; President Appoints Committees A game in which each person had a chance to converse to his heart’s con tent in Spanish was a feature of a meeting of the Spanish club, held Wed nesday evening in the Y. W. C. A. Bun galow. Another number on the program was a vocal solo by Virginia West. Standing committees were appointed by the * president, Norma Wilson, and work for the year was begun in earnest. “THUNDERING DAWN” COMES TO HEUiIG THEATRE TODAY “Thundering Dawn” comes to the Hcilig theatre today. Anna Q. Nils son as a Boston society girl is born by the winds of fate to the stormy seas of Java. Tom Santschi also stars in the play. BARTHELMESS STARRING IN PICTURE AT CASTLE Richard Bartlielmess is appearing with Dorothy Mackaill in the John S. Robertson production, “The Fighting Blade,” a First National picture at the Castle today and Saturday. . CLASSIFIED ADS Minimum charge, 1 time 25c; 2 time*, 46« ; 8 times 60c ; 1 week, $1.20. Must be limited to 5 lines; over this limit 5c per line. Phone 951, or leave copy with Bus iness office of Emerald, in University Press. Office hours, 1 to 4 p. m. PAY ABLE IN ADVANCE ONLY. Lost—A purple silk umbrella with crooked handle. Finder call M. Hunter, 1317. Reward. NI-3 Lost—Grey Suede drawing glove on 14th between Hilyard and Alder. Call Miss Porter 108. N-12 Lost—Pair of tortoise Bhell glasses in black leather case. Name 'and ad dress inside. Finder please call 772. Have your term papers, manuscripts, notes, etc., typed by an experienced typist. Reasonable rates, paper furn ished. Phone 396- or Springfield 124-R N 1-4 TODAY and SATURDAY J. Warren Kerrigan Anna Q. Nilsson Tom Santschi in “Thundering Dawn” One of the year’s biggest pictures. A glamorous ro mance of love and adventure set amid the tropics. Mack Sennett’s Latest “DOWN TO THE SEA IN SHOES’’ News - Topics 20 Cents as Usual Advertise! LHEIflNNE TO APPEAR IN CONCERT NOVEMBER 13 Famous Russian Pianist First of Artists to be Heard Josef Lhevinne, noted Russian pian ist, will appear in concert here No vember 13 in the first of the series of concerts to be given this year under the direction of the University music committee. Seven concerts will be given during the college year, and admission will be by student body ticket. Lhevinne is a well known artist who is noted for the excellent technique and brilliant style in his playing. Dur ing this season he has been engaged in a series of successful concerts and recitals with his wife, Madame Rosina Lhevinne, and they have been most successful in their presentation of two piano music programs. Lhevinne studied in Russia, entering the Moscow conservatory at the age of 17. He studied there in class, and because of his brilliant playing won the conservatory gold medal and later the Rubinstein prize at Berlin. He came to America for the first time in 1907, creating a sensation, and until the outbreak of the war, his vis its were yearly events. In 1919 he made a triumphant return to New York before a vast Hippodrome audience. During the season he ap peared as soloist with several leading symphony orchestras, and also gave sev eral recittals in Carnegie hall. Com pleting the season in the east he then toured Mexico and later the north. Josef Lhevinne has many times been lias poetic feeling and imagination held in control by a keen intelligence and ripe musicianship. He occupies a place among the leading pianists of the day as a master interpreter, and his play ing is noted for beauty of tone and called the “pianist of pianists.” He virility. PHILIPPINENSIS GIVING BIG BANQUET TONIGHT Members to Celebrate Anniversary of Flag Day and Hear Talk by Dr. Warren Smith The Oregon Varsity Philippinensis, a Filipino club on the campus, is giving its annual banquet tonight at the Osburn hotel. The occasion is Filipino Flag Day, the anniversary of the first legal displaying of the Filipino flag on October 30, 1919. The banquet is set for November 2 instead of October 30 because the latter fell on a school da^. The purpose of this club is to bring j together socially the Filipino students j of the campus, and to promote better understanding between Filipino and American students and citizens. The club was organized last year and has been steadily growing in size and in fluence since then. Its members par ticipated in forensic work, last year having a strong debating team which took the honors from the O. A. C. Filipino society. They also intend to go out for do-nut tennis this year. Three new students were taken into the club since school opened this term. Dr. Warren D. Smith, of the geology department and adviser for the Filipino students, will be the chief speaker at the banquet. His subject will be ‘‘"Present Filipino-American Relations,” on which subject Mt. Filipe Gamboa, president of the club, feels he is veryi able to speak', as Dr. Smith has spent 14 years in the Philippine islands and is sympathetic with the ideals and aims of their people. The guests will also be entertained by vocal solos by John B. Siefert, piano solos by Ronald Reid, and selection by the Filipino stringed orchestra, composed of boys on the campus. BOTANY SOCIETY ENTERTAINS .. MEMBERS AT NOVEL DINNER Samara honorary botany society en tertained with a dinner in a trans-! formed botany laboratory in Deady hall Tuesday night in honor of majors in As Mark Twain Said: “There’s more real ro mance in the South than in all the rest of the world—’’ Here’s the Tarkington drama of the Good Old Steamboat days when gen tlemen fought for honor— and women were queens of virtue— And Last Showing of OREGON - IDAHO Football Films COMEDY ROSNER on the ORGAN TODAY and SATURDAY Continuous 1 to 11 P. M. Another Remarkable Sale Trimmed Hats Panne Velvet Hats Lyons Velvet Hats Metallic Effects Duvetyn and Felts Hats formerly priced from $10 to $15, offered at one price $6.50 Eugene Millinery Co. 694 Willamette Street ■um—WMP'y Walnuts— fresh and brown from the har vest, are now here. Plum pudding, nut bread, home made candies, are not “quite right” without them. Walnuts will complete your “guest din • » ner. PHONE 1480 Eugene Fruit Growers Association the department. Thirty persons were present; including Dr. Albert Sweetser, Mrs. Sweetser, and some town alumni. A fall color scheme was carried out. A novel feature was the use of beaker dishes and instruments that are used in the laboratory. FOOTBALL GAME PICTURES ARE FEATURE AT REX TODAY A special feature in addition to one of Tarkington’s greatest stage sue cesses, “Cameo Kirby”—is a film of the Oregon-Idaho game. This film 'will be shown at the Rex theatre for the last time today. John Gilbert is starring in “Cameo Kirby” with Gertrude Olmsted in the supporting role. The picture is said to be one of the most exciting and enter taining dramas that this popular star has produced. Bead the Classified Ad column. inniuniiiiimuiniii!i«!!iitHmmininHiii[tHnHiDiHiiu«imniitBiiiiimiiiniiiuHninHimiiiiHiii«!inniiti; Pumpkin and Lemon Pie with real coffee <=- you couldn’t want anything better. The rich flaky crust overflowing with de licious pumpkin or lemon filling. Doesn’t it sound good?-It is— Than any you ever tasted before. We are proud of the fact and we want everyone to know about these tasty delicacies. Remember, you have never eaten pumpkin or lemon pie until you have tasted ours. Ye Campa Shoppe HERSCH TAYLOR, Proprietor mimiMIMMIIIMUWBtlllMIIIHBIlUMIllMilUMilllMIIIIIMIllMilllMllllHIIIIMIIIUMIIIMIIIIMmilHHIlBlllllMIlllMlIIIM Make the “Work Organizer” Your Secretary €f The work organizer is just a § neat compact folder that lies flat 1 on your desk. A good looking file f which takes the place of a secre tary. Tuck away your personal correspondence, scholastic, cam pus, or financial papers and notes, and you will always know exactly where to find them. Once used you will wonder how you did without .it. Come in and let us show you. THREE PRICES $2.00 $4.00 $3.00 FILES PAPER BOOK ENDS Koke-Tiffany Co. 878 Willamette Street Phene 1052 Better Fuzzy Wuzzy Rugs The Genuine Fluff Rugs MADE FROM OLD CARPETS Economical and Durable On and after October 22 the price will be reduced to $2.00 per yard on all sizes. Odd widths extra. Repairing, sizing and cleaning specialties. Rag* Rugs. Fluff Rug Co. Phone 401 1635 Jefferson Street Free Delivery to All Parts of City REMARKABLE OFFER This coupon is worth 25c on each yard of carpet. Limit to five yards. Time expires November 30, 1923. Get Your Order in Early No. of Yds Name ... Address