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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (April 17, 1924)
DANCE DRAMA IS WEDNESDAY Orchestra to Participate in Joint Program SEATS TO BE RESERVED Performers Will Portray “Cycle of the Hours” The University symphony or chestra will give the first half of the two-part Dance Drama, which is to be presented in a joint program with 30 girls from the dancing classes of the women’s physical education department, at the Heilig theater next Wednesday evening at 8:15. Tickets for this performance are to be purchased directly from mem bers of the orchestra, the dancers, or Mrs. Margaret B. Goodall at the University high, and Miss Anna Nielsen at the Eugene high school. All seats (arlp reserved, and ,the tickets will bo exchanged at the Heilig or the Co-op on the 22nd of this month. Don Park, who is managing the sale, says, “people wishing to attend should make the exchanges early as possible to avoid the last minute rush.” Orchestra Program Given The orchestra program is as fol lows: 1. Overture—Poet and Peasant . Suppe 2. Solos for Violoncello— Hymn to the Sun . . Bimsky-Korsakow Scherzo . Von Goens Lora Tescliner 3. Air for the G string . Bach Stringed orchestra 4. Dance of the Hours .... Ponchielli The second half of tho program will be a portrayal of “Wedgewood China,” which will represent the coming to lifo of figures in a frieze, and “Tho Cycle of tho Hours,” which traces tho hours through the day. Students Have Tickets Students taking part in tho dance who will liavo the selling of tickets are: Crete Gray, Deloris Person, Margaret Hughes, Mildred LeCompte, Adah Darkness, Harriot Howells, Maude Graham, Helen Newland, Nellie Bowland, Irene Buoklrty, Neva Service, Mildred Crain, Katherine Sartain, Dorothy Cushman, Gertrude Hill, May Agile Barr, Margaret Do very, Bernice Lamb, Maurino Buchana, Kay Bald, Margaret Stahl, Kate Lambert, La Verno Spitzenborger, Elizabeth Lewis, Cccilo Johnson, Edith Pierce, Marian Smith, Alone Lari mer, Doris Parker and Dorothy Mc Koo. DRIVE WORKERS MEET AT VILLARD TONIGHT (Continued from page ono) both Kerr, Mary Bartholomew, Alice Aldrich. Men’s Group Listed Mon: Edward Sox, chairman. Team 4—‘Charles .Tost, captain; Alva Adkiuson, Bussell Burton, William Caldwell, Dick Carruthers, Jack Day, Balplv Hamilton, James Harding, Loo Hoskins, Harry Skin ner, Warren Ulrich. Team 5- Milton Brown, captain; Melvin Anderson, William Peel#, Bobert Vrankson, Harry Meyer, James Bogers, Clyde Zeller, Gene Kelley, Balph Austen, Karl Hur.. donburgh, Ed Miller. Team 6—Tod Gillenwater, cap tain; Elan Amstntz, Basil Burke, Harold Burkitt, Donald Cook, John Eberhardt, Harold Hoflicli, Don Johnson, Willard Marshall, Enroll Murphey, Harold Box. Seniors Lined Up Women: Henryetta Lawrence, chairman. Team 1—Velma Farnliam, cap tain; Miriam Swartz, Dorothy Ostrander, Emmy Lou Douglass, Esther Christensen, Alice Baker, Virginia West, Margaret Seymour, Kao Peterson, Helen Burfield and Grace Murpliin. Team 2—Adah Darkness, cap tain; Helen Ball, Jane Campbell, CLASSIFIED APS Minimum dumie, 1 time, HRfl; I tlnw», *5c ; 8 times, 60c; 1 week, tl.SS. Must lie limited to 6 lines ; over till* limit 6e per line, l'hone 861. or leeve copy with Business efflce of Kmereld, In University Press. Offioe hours, 1 to 4 p. m. l‘A Y AAUI IN ABVAHC* ONLY XiOst—Gold Elgin watch, initial M on back, with chain and lockot. Finder call 1338. A-17 Wanted—Two men students for good room and good board, i>07 Hillyard street. Phono 797-Ij. A 17 Be a Newspaper Correspondent— With the Heacook Plan and earn a good income while learning; we show yon how; begin actual work at once; all or spare time; experi enee unnecessary; no canvassing; •end fer particulars. Newswriters Training Bureau, Buffalo, N. Y. F 12-tf COM MUNITY ’GROWTH _ WILL BE STIMULATED School of Sociology Will Record District Development, Using Filing System Eighty communities of Oregon, through their teachers, have entered into the community development plan which is being conducted by the sociology school of the University, and have sent in descriptions of their respective communities. This is the first step in a statewide project which proposes to collect data on all Oregon communities with a view to stimu late community growth, and estab lish the foundation for future his tory of the state. The arrival of community scbne cards, from the federal depart ment of citizenship training, will aid greatly in collecting the required data. Those are booklets containing numerous questions relative to the size, business »rganizations, pUbJlic institutions, communtiy clubs and oth er lines of development of the com munity. At first a questionnaire is sent to a teacher in the community, asking the names of the public insti tutions, and whether the community would be interested in the develop ment project. If so, a map of the community is sent to them, and also one of the score cards, which enters the subject much more deeply, and obtains moro specific information on the district. This data will be compiled and kept in a filing system at the Uni versity, and duplicate filing systems are to be kept in the various com munities.. Prom time to time, further reports will be made by each com munity, and added to the file, so that an accurate account of the develop ment and growth of the districts can be obtained up to date. This plan, when well under way, will be of great benefit, not only to the communities themselves, but also to economists and historians. It will show the communities the tendencies of their own growth and will give them an opportunity to com pare their progress with that of other districts. Economists* and historians will be able, in the future, to put their hands immediately, on any dis trict in Oregon, obtain its complete history and development from the present time, together with the num erous other points of interest the data might contain. Acting on this hypothesis, Dean F. G. Young, head of the school of sociology, who is in charge of the project, is endeavoring to enlist the aid of the Oregon his torical society, and is practically certain that his request will be granted. Oregon is the first state of the union to commence such a de velopment project, Dean Young said, and will probably be followed by oth er states in the near future. If the plans work out as they are expected, maf>s of the communities will be made at intervals, by aero plane, thus giving the community in compact form. State conventions will probably be held at the University or at other places, where delegates from the communities will gather to dis cuss topics of importance to commun ity development. Loona Gregory, Teka Haynes, Har riot Howells, Mildred LeCompte, Virginia Pearson, Lynetta Quinlan, Elizabeth Strowbridge. Team 3—Rosalia Kober, captain; Lurline Coulter, Freda Goodrich, Elizabeth Griggs, Dorothy McKee, Ruth Powell, Beulah Clarke, Ger trudo McIntyre, Katherine Pinneo, Chrystal West. Men Have Three Teams Men: Earlo Shafer, chairman. Team 4—Lot Beatie, captain; Bill Hopkins, Ben Reed, Andy Karpenstein, Lylo Janz, Knut Digerness, Lester Turnbaugh, War ner Fuller, Lloyd LaLond, Chick Rosenberg, Ralph Spearow. Team 5—Taul Sayre, captain; Jason McCune, Jimmy King, Ed Haney, Frances Altstock, Marion Dickey, Hally Berry, George Hors fall, Francis Linklater, Vic Risloy, Eddie Edlund. Team (5—Russell Gowans, cap tain; Lylo Palmer, Ed Kirtloy, Ray Harlan, Frank Carter, Jack Boyd, Ivan Houston, Pat Irelan, Hugh McColl, Ray MeKeown and Ken Burton. STUDENT LIFE IS TOPIC OF WOMEN’S LEAGUE (Continued from page one) tion with the faculty was discussod and Dean May Jost, of Stanford university, spoke on “The Univer sity as a Community.” She stres sed particularly the fact that stu dents in the university were no longer high school students and as college students, should concede to the faculty and the faculty to the students, for the studeuts should have some control. Means of making the unsocial girl a part of the campus were dis cussed, and many methods of get ting acquainted were advanced. Some of the smaller colleges hold initiations for all freshman women, while most of the colleges hold an nual pageants, stunt shows, and masquerades for the women stu dents. In some schools a point system is kept through a card in dex of activities and girls are urged to go out for the things in which they are interested. 'Honor societies wore discussed and the concensus of opinion was in favor of departmental societies which foster the work of the de partments, and senior houoraries, but underclass honorary societies were considered a matter for the individual colleges and were disap poved of by some schools. Resolutions passed at the confer ence were that: 1. The big sister little sister or ganizations be directed by Wom en’s leagues in all colleges. 2. The conference go on record as disapproving of smoking for women on the campus. All women's leagues sponsor the establishment of honor systems. Resolutions suggested by the conference of deans and adopted by the conference are: LEMON “O” BARBER SHOP (5 chairs) Give Us a Trial 833 Willamette Street BERT VINCENT, Proprietor 1. That the coming convention include participation of college women in the establishment of world peace. 2. The program for the next con ference be arranged as early as possible. The invitation of the Women’s league of the University of Oregon to hold the conference at Eugene in 1925 was accepted. The Asso ciated Women students of the United States are divided into throe sections, and the next conference will includo delegates from the two sections west of the Appala chian mountains. W. A. A. GIRLS TO HIKE TO PISGAH MOUNTAIN The trip to Pisgah mountain, near Goshen, will be the first W. A. A. hike of the term and will take plaeo on Sunday, April 27. All girls interested in this sport may attend. “The hike is not a hard one,” said Janet Wood, head of hiking, “amd is pretty all the way, with a wonderful place to eat.” It is about eleven miles long. The girls aro to bring their own lunches and cups, and five cents if they desire coffee. Points towards winning an athletic letter or sweater in W. A. A. aro awarded to girls who make 50 miles in one term. CATALOGUE FOR SUMMER SESSION NOW AVAILABLE The summer school session cata logue, fully describing the 150 courses given in Portland and Eugene from June 23 to August 1, will be off the press aud ready for distribution this week. Those desiring copies should get them this week for they will be avail able for only a short time. FIRST CLASS Shoe Repairing at RIGHT PRICES BILLY’S SHOE HOSPITAL W. T. Shoults, Prop. 31 East 8th Avenue TWENTY-SIX PERSONS HERE AT CONVENTION Secretaries Come From All Over Oegon Commercial secretaries from many parts of the state, totaling almost thirty in number, to date, are regis tered in the fourth annual short course that is being offered by the school of business administration of the University and the state as sociation of commercial secretaries all this week. The complete list of secretaries follows: W. A. Reid, Corvallis; J. G. Eckman, McMinnville; Lynn Sabin, Klamath Falls; Mrs. J. I. Beard, Albany; J. Neilson Barry, Portland; C. G. Morris, Toledo; H. C. Edgar, Oregon City; W. D. B. Dodson, Portland; R. T. Spaulding, Marshfield; C. E. Wilson, Salem; William P Allen, Hood River; Tom E Holbern, Roseburg; Earl Rey nolds, La Grande; L. Antles, Bend; A. M. Simons, Grants Pass; E. Eu gene Chadwick, Eugene; J. H. Ful ler, Ashland; F. B. Barnes, western district of “Nation’s Business”; Jake D. Allen, San Francisco; A. S. Dudley, Portland; Irving E. Vin ing, Portland; Robert Case, Port land; W. G. Ide, Portland; H. C. Ethell, Springfield; E. E. Turrell, Portland; George Miller, Eugene; II. O. Frohbac'h, Medford. MR. WHITTLESEY SAYS HOW TO RAISE FUNDS (Continued from page one) plan whereby they cud raise money for a Stoodent Yoonian, without payin’ a cent of cash. D’you reckon as how it might be done?” “I doesn’t reckon nothin’ else, Mr. Johnsing,” came from the minstrel addressed as he ostenta tiously unwound ;his elongated limbs and drew a ripple of laugh, ter over the house. “Jes cogitate a seccund, I asks you Mistah Interlocutor. Heah we have two hund’ed thousan’ dollahs to raise and fo’ days to raise it. Now the whole case organizes itself ’round only one centripetal proposition. In other words, to raise or not to raise, that’s the “quod erat demon. stradus” of the whole hellavamuss.” “To continue, if we raise the funds, we don’t get the money, cause everybuddy’s broke. They ain’t a cent can be taken away from our grandiloquous audience now. I reckon as how they’ll be things flyin’ about our ears when this performance is over, cause the students have paid their sheckels for such outrageous perfidiosity. “But to conclude with my ori ginal peroration, O, Mistah Inter, locutor, that coin can be got only business and social asset. STACOMB makes the hair stay combed in any style you like even after it haa just been washed. STACOMB—lie erifinal—has been used for years by stars of stage and screen—leaders of style. Write today for free trial tube. / , Tube*—35c ~ Jan—75c Intis! on STACOMB—in the black, yellow and gold package. For sale at your druggist or wherever toilet goods are sold. Standard Laboratories, Inc. , Its West 18th Street, New York City Send coupon for Free Trial Tube. STANDARD LABORATORIES. lac. lit West Kth St„ New York City. Dept. 1 raw eeed me tree trial take. Neam - Addreee Easter Shoe Sale Three Big Selling Days THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY LADIES’ novelty strap pumps and sandals, all eo lore $4.85 to $6.85 MEN'S shoes and oxfords, brown and black, all new styles $4.85 to $5.85 WE SELL FOR LESS Newway Shoe Shop at Hampton’s 841—WILLAMETTE STREET—841 by not askin ’ for coin now. Ask for pledges and collect later. Thus you have what you thought you didn’t have when you started and I hereby petitions for my credit in your prescribed course. Since my thesis is writ, and my song is sung.” The mob howled; there we^e cheers, as fresh Italian vegetables were hurled at Mistah Whittlesey, who disappeared in the wings like the proverbial Arabian Night. The cry of “pledge it now and collect later,” rent the air, and i a relieved little voice squeaked, “now I see how’it can be done.” LIFE-SAVING TESTS WILL BE APRIL 25-6 Rudolph Fahl to Conduct Aquatic Examinations The American Bed Cross life i saving tests will be given April 25 at 4 o’clock and April 28 at 10 in the morning, by Budolph Fahl, local examiner. The tests are given in two part* becamse they are very strenuous. The objeet of the test, Mr. Fahl said,, is to form a University Bed Cross life-saving corps, and also to teach the proper method of life saving. Those who can make a grade of 95 will be made examiners and 80 is the passing grade. Those that are successful will be awarded a Bed Cross emblem. All those who desire to take the test should sign a blank which is in the physical education office. Many are intending to take the test and have started to get into condition. The test is composed of: Carry ing a person own weight 240 feet; by head carry 60 feet; cross chest carry 60 feet; two point carry 60 feet; tired swimmers carry 60 feet; breaking four grips; resuscitation (practice) 1 Ya minutes; float 1 min ute; tread water 30 seconds; dis robe and swim 100 yards; support a person fully clothed for 1 min ute; fire carry from waist deep in water; saddle back carry from waist deep in water; method of taking person out of tank onto float unassisted; and correct ap proach for drowning person. Get the Classified Ad habit. $60 in a Day STUDENTS! Chamberlain earned this, you can do the same selling JIFFY EMERGENCY MUD CHAINS— during your vacation. Every automobile owner is a prospect. You don’t have to jack or pry your car to put them on. A woman or child can do it. THEY ABE NEW AND SELL ON SIGHT. Sample chain and sales kit $1.30. Write Jiffy Auto Chain Corp. Manufacturers, Woolworth Bldg. Watertown, New York Charles Norton Will Go to Meet at Pullman Charles Norton, stunt duke of the Oregon Knight chapter of the Inter collegiate Knights, was elected in the meeting last night as the chapter’s delegate to the national convention to be held in Pullman, Washington, on May 2 and 3. This is the first con vention of the intercollegiate knights. Haddon Kockhey, general chairman of the student loan drive, gave a spir ited talk on the benefits of the or ganization to the campus at last night’s meeting. He briefly gave the high points of the part the Oregon Knights will play in the approaching student loan drive. The weekly paddle sessions on the library steps for breakers of Oregon traditions will be continued until the freshmen get rid of their green lids on Junior Week-end. Closer checking will be done—and unruly freshmen will be punished by thg library steps route. a young man can makt 'When opportunity begins to do a I little picking, she chooses men with enthusiasm and brains, backed by a little cash. A practical plan for accumolating a snug sum by small payments, whether you wish to use it in business, travel, or to provide an income in old ago is furnished by means of an EQUITABLE POLICY THE EQUITABLE LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY; of the UNITED STATES ROBERT W. EARL District Mgr. Phone 1197-Y GZ* Ift/ujofoous Beauties rUePIot t&*Downfa// •T Th TODAY and FRIDAY SHEPHER KING' A rapturous romance of the Ages brought to the screen by the same man who made— “The QUEEN of SHEBA” • Prologue JOHANNA JAMES Soprano Supreme —at 7:10 and 9:15 p. m. • EOSNEB’S MUSIC fhone 87 SCARAMOUCHE LECTURE on Christian Science by John C. Lathrop,C. S. B. of BROOKLINE, MASSACHUSETTS (Member of the Board of Lectureship of th*e Mother Church, Hie First Church of Christian Scientist, in Boston, Mass.) ' ARMORY Friday Evening, Apr. 18 at 8 o’Clock The Public Is Cordially Invited