Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 03, 1924, Page 2, Image 2

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    OREGON DAILY EMERALD
Member of Pacific Intercollegiate Press Association
Official publication of tha Associated Students of the University of Oregon, issued
except Monday, during the college year.
ARTHUR 8. RUDD ___;_ EDITOR
Editorial Board •
Managing Editor__—__ Don Woodward
Associate Editor _ John W. Piper
Associate Managing Editor....... Ted Janes
Daily News Editors
Margaret Morrison Rosalia Keber
Marian Lowry Frances Simpson
Leon Byrne Norma Wilson
Night Editors
Bnpert Bullivant Walter Coover
Jalmar Johnson Douglas Wilson
Jack Burleson George Belknap
P. I. N. S. Editor-Pauline Bondurant
Assistants ____
-Josephine Ulrich, Louis Dam mas ch
Sports Staff
Sports Editor ___Monte Byera
Sports Writers:
Bill Akers. Ward Cook, Wilbur Wester
Upper News Staff
Catherine Spall Mary Clerin
Leonard Lerwilg Margaret Skavlan
Georgians Gerlinger Kathrine Kressmann
Ed Miller
w-wir t w *“Vf” JXC4C" ^veynoios, tester lurnbauKh, Thelma Hamrick,
Und^Vl»TarrC-1 i-Vl"^SJ*' Ph|f*Ii9 Coplan, Frances Sanford, Eugenia Strick
JrS/nhTc n|M_ rr v 1 Wllson- Margaret Kressmann, Ned French, Ed Robbins.
nRIt ’fC -ff0rdAiZehrSn,r’ Pet0 La,,r!,■ Lillian Baker, Mary West, Emily
Houston, Beth lanss, Alan Button, Clate Meredith, James Case, Elizabeth Cady.
MO P. J. MUNLY___
MANAGER
Associate Manager
Business Staff
Lot Beatie
Foreign Advertising
MuacCT-James Leake
A»’t Manager - Walter Pearson
Alva Vernon
Specialty Advertising
VMma Farnham William James
Ase’t Manager
Circulation
-. Kenneth Stephenson
-James Manning
Upper Business Staff
Advertising Manager — Maurice Warnock
Aee t Adv. Manager — Karl Hardenbergfa
Advertising Salesmen
Sale* Manager - Frank Loggan
Assistants
Lester Wade
Edgar Wrightman
Chester Coon
Frank De Spain
Phones
sailor
655
| Manager ___ 951
Wi*¥ New■ Editor This luuc
Marian Lowry
Night Editor This Ti^mh
Jack Burleson
Assistant .Lester T. Talbot
The Kick-Off
c- ^ 1-j
The student body will raise funds for the Student Union.
The students will kick off the $5,000,000 gift campaign. They
have been entrusted with the task of inoculating the public
with the spirit of giving. The first manifestation of philan
thropy must be at home. To get help, the University must first
help itself. And the maneuvers for a great drive are now in
order.
lhe alumni, with that benign feeling toward their Alma
Mater which can have only one form of expression, have
pledged $1,000,000. This will build a men’s gymnasium, a lib
rary and a memorial court. Leading citizens of the city of Eu
gene have accepted the proposal that the community raise
$500,000 for a great auditorium. And now the students are
to step in before anything else is done and do their share by
building the long-needed Student Union.
Theirs is a signal responsibility. Success or failure may
mean the spread or check of state-wide interest in the Uuivcr
sit.y Gift Campaign. With the money raised and the Union
built and the alumni and the city both would find the going
easier. It will be seen that when the students can afford to sac
rifice for the cause of education, others should be able to give
more willingly.
lhe advisability of the scheme has been agreed upon. Ore
gon students have never really had a center of academic, admin
istrative and social activity. There have never been adequate
quarters for student offices. The graduate manager has been
shifted from pillar to post, always uncertain of his next destin
ation. There has been no stability in the location of student
government, student records, chronicles, archives and histories.
There are needed a banquet hall, a lounge, a campus hearth to
supplant the nicotine tree. A cafeteria "would be a convenience.
There are ever so many uses to which a building exclusively for
student affairs could be put.
The feasibility of the plan is certain. Students in other in
stitutions have raised remarkable sums for union projects which
have proved indisputably successful. In fact, the oracles tell
that not many years hence a university without a union will
be like a dinner without food, there just won’t be anything there.
Today the union is an absolute necessity. Tomorrow it will be
an asset and a convenience.
The campaign for the Student Union will begin within the
month. The entire campus will organize to attain the goal in
sight. The quicker the money is secured, the sooner the build
ing will be erected, and the greater impetus will be given to
the campaign as a whole. The Student Union idea should be
like a germ, it should be contagious. It should multiply and
bring us many other and more magnificient buildings.
The students have an opportunity. They have only to suc
ceed in doing their little part in establishing the Greater Uni
versity. The rest will follow.
CASTLE
“The eternal triangle,” that fa
vorite device of the modern author.
fadeH into insignificance when com
pared with the plot of “Lilies of
the Field,” a First National pic
ture which, opens today at the
Castle, for its story involves seven
women and four men in a circle of
intricate love affairs.
It is the second time within re
cent. months that C'orinne Griffith
ami Conway Tearle have had the
leading roles in a picture, having
appeared together in “Black Oxen.”
which created such a sensation.
REX
Johnny Hines, whose name stands
for pep, effervescent punch and
sparkling comedy, stars in “Little
Johnny Jones,” the screen adapta
tion of the George M. Cohan popu
lar stage success, which opened with
great eclat at the Rex theater yes
terday, where it plays again today.
There is more intrigue, plot and
thrills in “Little Johnny Jones”
than can bo found in a half-dozen
similar plays everywhere it bears
the unmistakable stamp of the
great producer, playwright and
actor, George M. Cohan.
<b--—--♦
Campus Bulletin
Notices will be printed in this column
for two issues only. Copy most be
in this office by S :80 on the day
before it is to be published, and most
= be limited to 20 words.
<!»-♦
Senior Cla/ss—Meets in Villard
hall, this evening at 7:30.
Women’s .. League — Executive
council meeting tonight.
Gra-Kos—Important meeting this
noon at College Side Inn.
Mu Phi Epsilon—Business meet
ing, 1:30 p. m.. April 5, Music
building.
Women’s Forum — Meetings at
7:30 tonight, in the Woman’s
building.
Ad Club—Special luncheon to
morrow noon. John Kennedy of
Portland will be present.
Girls’ Volleyball — Hours have
been changed to Monday, Wednes
day and Friday at 3:00.
Girls’ Blfle Team—Preliminary
and record firing for girls’ rifle
team all during week ending April
5.
Women Students—Invited to tea
this afternoon from 4 until 6 with
Mrs. Virginia Judy Esterly, 667
East 12th.
Junior Week-end Committees—
Meeting this afternoon at 5 o’clock,
in Condon hall, Administration
building. Meeting is for entire
group.
Education — Students desiring
supervised teaching, “Education
107,” during 1924-25, make applica
tion this week with Mr. Hughes,
Education building.
ZIEGFELD’S “SALLY”
COMES MONDAY NIGHT
Ziegfeld’s “Sally,” which is
scheduled for next Monday night
at the Hoilig and which the manage
ment of that theater promise will
bo the great theatrical event of
the year, is atrtacting considerable
attention on the campus and W. B.
McDonald, manager, reports that,
although prices are high, due to
the quality of the attraction, that
students will make up a largo part
of the audience.
Gallery rushing, always a popular
method of seeing the big shows,
will not be in vogue this time,
however, “Mac” says, on account
of the fact that every seat in the
house is reserved.
The latest word is that several
of the largo cast have friends on
the campus. A number of campus
organizations are planning to enter
tain one or more of the main peo
ple in thet cast. The company will
arrivo early Monday morning.
ZETA KAPPA PSI PLEDGES
TO STAGE STUNT TONIGHT
Tonight at 7:30, in the corrective^
room of the women’s gymnasium,
the pledges of Zeta Kappa Psi, na
tional honorary debating society for
women, will stage a somewhat im
promptu performance in the form
of a pre-initiation stunt. No in
formation has been divulged as to
the nature of the entertainment,
Imt it is thought that it will be
worth the while of any women stu
dents who wish to attend. Tho af
fair is open to all women of the
U niversity.
All the tingling suspense
of the East
All the glorious thrill of i
the West
The NIGHT HAWK
Friday The REX 1
_l
WORLD PEACE THEME
OF ORATORICAL MEET
Six Schools Will Contest
on Friday Evening
'The colleges that have definitely
signified their intention of entering
contestants in the Btato peace orator
ical contest which is scheduled to be;
held in Villard hall on Friday even
ing at 8 o’clock are: Pacific uni
versity, Pacific college, Willamette
university, Eugene Bible university,
Oregon Agricultural college, Linfield
college and the University of Ore
gon.
Two prizes of $75 and $50 will be
awarded for the best orations on the
subject of peace. A national organ-'
ization which has for its purpose the j
promotion of international peace, is |
sponsoring this contest.
The titles of the orations to be de
livered by students from the various
colleges are as follows: “Peace Or
ation,” “International Mind,” “It
Must Not Be Again,” “A Nation’s
Soul,” “The New Peace,” “Ameri
ca’s Sacred Trust,” and “The Wag
ing War Against War.” The ora
tions must not exceed 1,500 words in
length.
The judges who will award the
prizes are to be divided into two
groups, namely, those who will judge
from the standpoint of thought and
composition, and those who will judge
from the standpoint of delivery. The
men who will judge on the basis of
thought and composition are William
O. Moore from Iowa State college,
Charles A. Marsh, national president
of Pi Kappa Delta, national forensic
fraternity and instructor at the Uni
versity of California, southern
branch, and Edwin Dubois Sliurter
from the Southern Methodist univer
sity of Dallas, Texas. The other set
of judges will be announced tomor
row.
There will be no more contests af
ter this until May. 22, when the North
west oratorical meet will be held be
tween Washington, Idaho and Ore
gon.
Rose La Vogue Beauty Shop
Manicuring, Scalp and Face
Treatments. Marcelling
13th and Kincaid
V An EQUITABLE Polic>
takes the
IF
lout of
lIFe
’rotects your family if you die.
Provides for your own future if
you live.
rHE EQUITABLE
LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY
ol the
UNITED STATES
IOBERT W. EARL
Jistrict Mgr. Phone 1197-Y j
THE SCHOOL OF
CHEMICAL ENGINEERING PRACTICE
OF THE MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
A Graduate School offering a course of study lead
ing to the degree of Master of Science, with held stations
in the plants of six different companies. These com
panies produce steel, pulp, paper, caustic soda, chlorine,
heavy acids and salts, sugar, gas, ammonia, benzol, etc.
The more important unit operations of chemical
engineering are studied systematically by means of tests
and experimental work on full scale plant apparatus.
The work is wholly educational and independent of
control by the plant managements. The attention of the
student is directed exclusively to the study of Chemical
Engineering.
The total number admitted to the school is limited
and the students, studying and experimenting in small
groups, receive individual instruction from resident pro
fessors. For entrance requirements and details address
R. T. Haslam, Director, School of Chemical Engineering
Practice.
MASSACHUSETTS
INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
CAMBRIDGE MASSACHUSETTS
5=^
Coming Events
TODAY
11:00 a. m.—Assembly. Vlllard
hall.
9-4 p. m.—Y. M. C. A. election
of officers. Hot.
4-6 p m.—Dean Esterly’p tea, 667
East 12th street.
FRIDAY, APRIL 4
8:00 p. m.—Oratorical contest.
Villard hall.
SATURDAY, APRIL 5
April Frolic—Woman’s building.
Men’s Smoker—Men’s gymna
sium.
ANNOUNCEMENT!
LESLIE MACK ELECTRIC CO.
Wishes to announce that is is now open for business at
79 6th Avenue West
All kinds of wiring, repairing, installing.
Satisfaction guaranteed. Work and materials
Leslie Mack Electric Co.
Just outside high rent district.
Store phone 1135-L Residence phone 764-Y
HEIJ-IG
TODAY
Friday — Saturday
A Romance of the Heart and Soul of New York
One of the Big, Worth-While Pictures of the Year
Carl
Laemmle
MARY
PHILBIN
STAR OF
MERRY GO ROUND
in
HER GREATEST SUCCeSS,
HIGHWAY
BASED ON CW&i KILDARES AMAZING LIFE SIDCY
"MY MAMIE ROSE*
dhsckdot ibmmo cummmg's
'UNIVERSAL
JEWEL
A romance of New York—cf its bowery days 30 years ago—its truei soul bared
to the world—here in gripping pictures is the story of one of its daughters,
Mamie Rose from the tenements, rising through love and sacrifice to a life
One of the most unusual and amazing pictures the Heilig has
News
Comedy
Prices Matinee .20c
for This Production Night, Floor .30c
Only Balcony, usual price.20c
All FLORSHEIM
Shoes and Oxfords
Values Up to $12, Go at
$8.85
During This Sensational
9 DAY SALE at the
MOPELSHOE STORE