Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, February 22, 1924, Page 2, Image 2

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    OREGON DAILY EMERALD
Member of Pacific Intercollegiate Press Association
Official publication of the Associated Students of the University of Oregon, issued
jaflT except Monday, during the college year.
ARTHUR S. RUDD . .. EDITOR
Managing Editor
Associate Editor
Editorial Board
Don Woodward
John W. Piper
Daily News Editors
Margaret Morrison Rosalia Keber
Marian Lowry Velma Farnham
r Leon Byrne Norma Wilson
Frances Simpson
Night Editors
Bapert Bullivant Walter Coover
Ted Baker Douglas Wilson
Jack Burleson George Belknap
JP. I. N. S. Editor __... Pauline Bondurant
, Assistant —--- Louis Dammasch
Sports Staff
Sports Editor .. Kenneth Cooper
Sports Writers:
Monte Byers, Bill Akers, Ward Cook
Wilbur Wester
Upper News Staff
Catherine Spall Mary Clerin
Leonard Lerwill Margaret Skavlan
Georgiana Gerlinger Kathrine Kressmann
Exchange Editor .. Norborne Berkeley
News Staff: Lyle Janz Ed Miller, Helen Reynolds, Lester Turnbaugh, Thelma
Hamrick, Webster Jones, Margaret Vincent, Phyllis Coplan, Frances Sanford,
Kogenia Strickland, Vehna Meredith, Lilian Wilson, Margaret Kressmann, Ned
French, Ed Robbins, Josephine Rice, Clifford Zehrung, Pete Laurs, Lillian Baker.
Mary West, Emily Houston, Beth Fariss, Alan Button, Ed Valitchka, Ben Maxwell.
LEO P. J. MUNLY ...... MANAGER
Associate Manager
Business Staff
Lot Beatie
Foreign Advertising
Manager . James Leake
Aae’t Manager . Walter Pearson
Alva Vernon
Specialty Advertising
Velma Farnham William James
Circulation
Manager ... Kenneth Stephenson
Aaa't Manager .—. James Manning
Upper Business Staff
Advertising Manager _ Maurice Warnock
Asa’t Adv. Manager .... Karl Hardenbergh
Advertising Salesmen
Sales Manager . Frank Loggan
Assistants
Lester Wade Chester Coon
Edgar Wrightman Frank De Spain
Entered
rates, $2.25
in the postoffice at Eugene, Oregon, as second-class matter,
per year. By term, 76c. Advertising rates upon application.
Subscription
Phones
.Editor
655
Manager . 951
DaUr New* Editor Thi* Issue
Marian Lowry
Night Editor This Issue
Walter Coover
Signs of Life
The success which the weekly group discussions, which are
being conducted under the auspices of the campus Y. M. C. A.,
at the various houses on the campus, are having, gives a rather
hopeful outlook to the general campus situation.
There are many indications that University students every
where are interested only in their own petty affairs and even
lack spirit in as small a field as that of the campus. The lack
of discussion on the Bok peace plan is cited as a proof of this
lack of life.
The way students have taken hold of these Tuesday night
talks, led by faculty members, indicates that while Oregon stu
dents may appear to be provincial, some of them do react to
proper stimulus.
Our recent debate successes indicate that both Oregon men
and Oregon women can take up a problem, study it thoroughly
and intelligently, and present their conclusions convincingly.
This ability was evidenced again at the Indianapolis convention.
One of our delegates there, speaking extemporaneously in an
open forum discussion on international relationships and war,
presented his side of the case so convincingly that he was
selected from that group with delegates from more than 125
colleges to represent them at the larger meeting of group
leaders.
So while we are somewhat isolated here on the Pacific Coast,
there is no reason for us to lament the fact and to sit idly by,
watching the current of events flow past without attempting
to modify them or even trying to understand them. Even with
our scholastic standards raised and less time for outside read
ing, there is all the more reason why we should keep our in
formation on world affairs on a par with our scholastic knowl
edge.
The present discussion groups are a step in the right direc
tion. They deserve our support. Faculty members wh0 are
devoting their time to this series of discussions are doing a good
work for Oregon.
Keeping Class Notes
At the end of etn*h term the big furnace which consumes the
tons of waste paper which accumulate annually on a university
campus feeds on great piles of class room and reading notes,
discarded by students, who as they toss away the results of
many hours of what is often painstaking labor, sigh with relief
over the glorious feeling of being through with them.
Years later, when there comes the realization of a university
education as something more than a process of getting by, there
may come a time when notes hurriedly thrown away would come
in handy in locating some bit of information, or in preparing
some paper.
If education is of value at all the notes obtained in the
process should be worth keeping. The ideal way would be to
store all the knowledge with which the, students come into
contact into one’s head. So much material is gone over how
ever that it is impossible to remember more than a part of it.
One never knows what part of his store of knowledge he may
wish to revive. Hence, the moral of this editorial is to take
the kind of notes that are worth keeping—then keep them.
DR. PARSONS TALKS TO
CLUB ON SOCIAL WORK
Dr. P. A. Parsons, director of the
school of social work of the Univer
sity, at Portland, addressed the
Herminn club last night at the
Woman’s building, on the subject
of “Education and Training for
I Social Workers." He traced the de
velopment of social work in the
i United States and told of the or
' cunization of the Portland work.
; The agencies with which they co
I operate were mentioned. An in
formal discussion followed the lee
I ture.
I • .
I ; •* J »,VI »;i
I Travel Courses to be Given
on European Tour
Plans for a series of travel-courses
in the fine and aplied arts during
the summer of 1924 have been an
nounced by the Institute of Interna
tional Education, 522 Fifth avenue,
New York City. The purpose an
nounced by the Institute is to enable
students to make a study of art, ar
chitecture, and design in Europe.
Overlapping courses emphasizing
painting, sculpture, architecture, in
terior decoration, and landscape de
sign will be provided.
Miss Edith R. Abbot, senior in
structor at the Metropolitan Museum
of Art, will give a series of lectures
on shipboard on the history and ap
preciation of painting and sculpture.
John 0. Tidden, of Rice institute,
Houston, Texas, will give instruction
in painting and general lectures,
galleries will be visited at! Rome,
Florence, Milan, Venice, Paris, Bru
ges, Ghent, Brussels, Antwerp, Am
sterdam, Haarlem, The Hague and
Eondon. Optional classes in painting
and sketching will be held at inter
vals.
A study of important buildings and
decorative compositions, the examina
tion of drawings and models made
by designers, and the sketching and
photographing of details of architec
ture and ornament will be in charge
of Professor Albert C. Phelps of the
college of architecture, Cornell uni
versity. Lectur s and field work in
landscape and g. rden architecture
will be in the hands of Professor Ed
ward Lawson, first Fellow in land
scape architecture at the American
Academy in Rome, and now assistant
professor of landscape architecture at
Cornell university. The historical and
technical sides will be taken up by
an examination of the Roman and
Florentine villas, those at Tivoli and
Frascati, the chateaux of the Loire,
and gardens in and near London and
Paris.
The present undertaking is a con
futation of the series of courses be
gun by the Institute four years ago.
Pates of sailing and other details
may be secured from the Institute or
from Tnvin Smith, Times building,
New York City.
Tone year ago todayT
i — i
I Some High Points in Oregon !
| Emerald of February 22, 1923 |
<3>-—---^
“The Three Sins” will be pro
duced by the University company
of players on the nights of Febru
ary 28, March 1 and 2.
The school of business adminis
tration lias been made a chapter
of the Oregon Retailers’ association.
Members of the faculty have been
invited to become honorary mem
bers.
Tlio University of Oregon basket
ball team was defeated by the
Cougars, 40 to 25. Washington
State, flic sports writer for tjhe
Emerald says, “showed an unex
pected burst of strength.”
Fifteen hundred students and
townspeople gathered in the Metho
dist eluireh last night to hear Paul
Althouse, great American tenor.
• •
The average for the varsity rifle
team in the third stage of the meet
is approximately 900 out of a pos
sible 1,000,
Carl Sandberg will read his poetry
in Villard hall tomorrow night.
A program composed of Oregon
songs was given by the Men’s Glee
club quartet at the Rotary club
luncheon in the Osburn hotel Tues
day.
The frosh basketeers will meet
the Salem high quintet today.
DUNN TO GIVE LECTURE
BY RADIO THIS EVENING
"The Portraits of Washington" Is
Subject for Broadcasting
from KGW, Portland
Professor F. D. Dunn of the Latin
department, who will lecture this eve
ning from radio station KGW, of
the Oregonian in Portland, will also
speak at Junction City this morning.
He will stop there on his way to Port
land to address the assembly of the
high school at its celebration of
I Washington’s birthday.
This afternoon in Portland, Pro
' t'essor Dunn will attend the annual
meeting of the Oregon society of the
| Sons of the American Revolution.
| The meeting will be held at the Uni
versity club and one of the features
of the gathering will be the election
of officers of the organization for the
coming year.
The radio lecture is to be given at
9 o'clock this evening, the subject
for which is “The Portraits of Wash
ington.” He has prepared the talk
after considerable study of the numer
ous famous paintings of the “presid
ing genius of America,” as Professor
Dunn describes him.
Since there have been over a score
of painters who have attempted to do
portraits of Washington, it has been
impossible for Professor Dunn to
describe all of them in a limited ad
dress, but he has selected a group of
those which are of special interest
on account of the circumstances which
they portray and his lecture will deal
largely with description and interpre
tation of them.
SHELVES ARRIVE FOR
NEW LIBRARY STACKS
Addition to be Installed Soon Will
Provide More Than Mile
of Shelving Space
Two new tiers of stacks and the
marble slabs for flooring ordered for
the University library have arrived
and work on installing them will
begin soon.
The stacks of bundles unloaded by
the side door of the library contain
1892 shelves, which, if placed end to
end, would make more than a mile
of shelving space. The shelves will
be kept in the basement of the library
and the marble flooring will be stored
in the little hut on the tennis courts
back of the library to protect it from
weather stain.
The new stacks were ordered from
Snead and Company of Jersey City,
Coming Events
TODAY
2-5 p. m.—Art exhibition. Con
don school.
7:30 p. m.—Oregon vs. Whitman.
Armory.
9:00 p. m.—Prof. F. S. Dunn,
“Portraits of George Washing
ton.” Radio.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23
2:30 p. m.—Varsity swimming
team vs. Multnomah, Woman’s
building.
7:30 p. m.—Oregon vs. Idaho.
Armory.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 24
7:00 p. m.—Open forum meeting.
Congregational church.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 27
4-6 p. m.—Women’s League tea.
Woman’s building.
who are sending a man to help in
stall them. It is hoped that they
will be completed by the opening of
the spring term. The new additions
are like the ones already in the
stack room with the exception that
ends or uprights are the colonial or
open-work type instead of the stan
dard solid ends, which will make it
easier to find the books in the
shelves.
G*t the Classified Ad habit.
The man who buys a Stetson be'
cavjse of its style later discovers
the long wearing qualities which
make Stetson the choice of well
dressed men—everywhere.
STETSON HATS
Styled for young men
.O, * ^
GRILLE DANCE
THIS AFTERNOON
Myts Mid-Nite Sons
COMPLETE COMBINATION
ANCHORAGE
A restful cool atmosphere for an afternoon dance.
Dancing 2:30 to 5:30. Cover charge 35c per person.
A New
Hosiery Note
for Spring
CHIFFON—gives you beauty, at
the same time most pronounced
distinctiveness in appearance.
SHADES, in subtle variation,
graduated from maiden's blush
to an athlete’s sunburn brown.
828—Willamette Street—828
Where College Folk Buy Footwear
LOOK FOR THIS
NAME ON THE NECKBAND
• *
)
)
Every feature
about these ties
• appeals to college men
Easiest tying neckwear
you can buy!
Economical
No seams to rip
No lining to wrinkle
Beautiful designs—
many of them
Made by the makers of \
the famous Cheney Silks
For sals by:
EUGENE WOOLEN MILL STORE, 837 Willamete St.
GREEN MERRELL CO., 713 Willamette Street
WADE BROTHERS, 873 Willamette St.
els 3C»
FRATERNITIES
HAVE YOUR NEW HOUSE
Furnished with
Millwork from
The Midgley
Planing Mill Co.
and
BE ASSURED
of
QUALITY and SERVICE
Phone 1059 4th and High
i
E. L. Zimmerman, M. D., Surgeon
C. W. Bobbins, M. D., Director
Western Clinical Laboratories
L. S. Kent, M. D., Women and
Children
304 M. & W. Bldg. Phone 619
DR. WRIGHT B. LEE
Dentistry
404 M. & C. Building
Phone 42 Eugene, Ore.
DR. B. F. SCAIEFE
Physician and Surgeon
203 I. 0. 0. F. Bldg.
Eugene, Ore.
Office 70-J; Residence 70
F. M. DAY, M. D.
Surgeon
119 East 9th Ave.
DR. M. L. HANDSHUH
Foot Specialist
Chiropodist
Corns, callouses removed with-'
out pain. No needles or acids
used. Just scientifically. re
moved without pain. Bunions,
fallen arches, all other foot1
ailments positively cured.
Ground floor.
CIS Willamette St. Phone 303
‘ OLIVE C. WALLER
Osteopathic Physician
ORVILLE WALLER
Physician and Surgeon
M. & W. Bldg. Phone 175
W. E. BUCHANAN
Dentist
Office Phone 390. Res. 1403-L
Suite 211. I. 0. 0. F. Temple
Eugene, Ore.
DR. L. E. GEORGE
Dentist
First National Bank Bldg., Boom 7
Phone 1186 Eugene, Ore.
DR. L. L. BAKER
Eugene, Ore.
Demonstrators diploma Northwfisxens
University Dental School, Chicago.
Gold inlay and bridge work a
specialty.
H. Y. SPENCE, M. D.
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
M. & W. Bldg.
Phone 228
J. F. TITUS, M. D.
Homeopathic Physician and Surgeon
Office, Brown Bldg., 119 9th Aye. E.
Phone 629
Residence, Osbum Hotel, Phone 891
Phone 629
DR. LORAN BOGAN
Practice limited to extraction
Dental Radiography
Diagnosis Oral Surgery
938 Willamette Phone 80f
DR. W. E. MOXLEY
Dentist
Castle Theater Bldg.
Phone 73 Eugene, Oregon
DR. M. M. BULL
Reasonable Prices for Good
Dentistry
M. & W. Bldg. Phone «7
DR, WILIAM H. DALE
Surgery Radium
X-Ray
217 I. 0. 0. F. Bldg. Eugene