Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, January 14, 1925, Page 4, Image 4

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    Ill LtGISLATUHE
Many Members are Frorr
Various Colleges
OREGON QUOTA LEADS
Senate Claims Four While
House Has Nine
Many members of the 1925 Ore
gon legislature are college graduates
according to information in the cur
rent issue of the Oregon Voter
which is largely devoted to o
“Who’s Who’’ of the present lino
up at Salem. Of the colleges rep
resented with graduates the Univer
sity leads in both the house and
senate.
Among the total of 30 senators
22 are college graduates, while
among the total of 60 representa
tives, 31 are college graduates.
Nineteen colleges are represented by
graduates in the senate, and 24 are
represented in the house.
Pour In Senate
The University has four grad
uates in the senate, with the Uni
versity of Michigan coming next
with three. Other Oregon schools
are represented with one graduate
each. They are Oregon Agricultural
college, Willamette University, Pa
cific University, Weston Normal.
Graduates of Portland business col
leges number two. Oregon’s repre
sentatives in the senate are W. W.
Banks, Portland; George W. Bunn,
’86, Ashland; Fred L. Fisk, '97, Eu
gene, and Jay H. Upton, '02, Bend.
House Has Nine
In the house Oregon is represent
ed with nine graduates, against the
second in lino, Willamette Univer
sity’s seven. Oregon Agricultural
college has five, Pacific two, Wes
ton Normal one, Milton Academy
one, Oregon State Normal one and
business colleges of Portland five.
Schools outside of Oregon with the
greatest representation are Univer
sity of Iowa and Harvard, each hav
ing two graduates.
Graduates of the University in
the house are Andrew M. Collie^
’13, Klamath Falls; Walter S
Fisher, ’13, Iioseburg; Philip Ham
.mond, ’12, Oregon City; Dal M
King, ’14, Myrtle Point; James W
Mott, Astoria; Ivan E. Oakes, On
tario; Albert 8. Roberts, The Dalles
Charles J. Shelton, ’15, Baker.
PRESIDENT’S OFFICE
ANNOUNCES CONTESTS
Notices of various contests open
to college students, have been re
ceived by the president’s office.
The Anti-Saloon League of Ore
gon has announced an educational
campaign among college and univer
sity students, in connection with
which an essay contest will be held.
The topics offered arm: “The
Benefits of Prohibition in Oregon”
or “How Can Prohibition Best be
En forcedf ”
Prir.es are: first, $200; second,
$100; third, $50; fourth, $25; fifth,
$25. Further information on the
contest may be received from W. J.
Herwig, superintendent of the
league, SOS Broadway building,
Portland.
Tho Teachers College of Colum
bia University has announced a
prize offer for the best essay or
treatise on “The Promotion of
Scholarship in the Teachers of tile j
Secondary Schools of the United ,
States. ’ ’
A prize of $1,000 from the Julia j
and Rosa Sachs Endowment fund
is offered for the winning entry.
The essays must be in the hands
of the dean of the college before,
February 1, 1920, and the winner j
will lie announced in June of that
year. Information concerning rules I
governing the competition mav be :
received from James F. Bussell, j
Bean of the Teachers College. 505'
West 120th street, New York Citv
RECALCITRANT FRESHMEN
BIBBED WITH DOG COLLARS
Columbia University — A group* of
Mack-robed sophs led recalcitrant
freshmen to instruments of torture
of the Fascisti or of medical in
quisitors. Part of the erring frosh
were seated in a huge black box and
the two parts of the top were
drawn together, leaving only the ,
guilty heads exposed to the hooting
populace. The rest were provided
with dog collars from which were
suspended signs of a highly descrip I
five character, such as “I am Smart
—I’ll break Freshman Rules” and
below “Offense—No Cap. Poor At
titude.”
JOBS FOR STUDENTS
SCARCER THIS TERM
Employment conditions for Uni
versity students continue most un
satisfactory; the number of requests
for work are exceedingly numerous,
I while the scarcity of jobs is unusu
ally acute, reports Mrs. Charlotte
R. Donnelly, employment secretary
of the campus Y. M. C. A.
the general adverse labor con
ditions of last summer are reflected
in the present disparity between
the demand for work and the calls
for men, the secretary believes.
Many men who depend upon the
summer season for opportunities to
earn money for the following school
year were unable to find steady
employment last summer, and are
now running short of funds. Many
j are now seeking local part-time
work.
This is the yearly period of de
pression and no appreciable relief
can be hoped for until toward
spring, according to Mrs. Donnelly.
SIGMA XI MEMBERS
INVITED TO CORVALLIS
Local Chapter Will Give
Evening’s Program
iThe University members of the;
Oregon chapter of Sigma Xi will
go to Corvallis, January 16. The
local chapter received an invita
tion to attend a dinner and meet
ing on that date.
“Wo are going over for dinner,
and will give the program in the
evening,” said Dr. Harry B. Yocum^
of the zoology department. Dr. R.
R. Huostis, of the zoology faculty,
will give a paper on the “Varia
tion in Peromyscus,” and Dr. W.
E. Milne, of the mathematics de
partment, has for his topic “A
Problem in Mathematical Physics.”
“This exchange of meetings was
started when wo had only the sci
encie club, and the eourbeey has
continued since that time,” said Dr.
Yocum. “There are 2.1 active mem
bers on the campus and 18 in the
Portland medical school.”
There are nearly a hundred Sig
m'a Xi members in the state at large.
O. P. Stafford is th© president of
the University chapter; H. B. Yo
cum, secretary; and E. T. Hodge,
treasurer. H. B. Myers of the
medical school is vice-president.
Several members from O. A. C.
attended the last meeting here on
December 16, at which Dr. Harry
G. Miller, of tho Oregon Agricul
tural college, gave ft paper oil
“Mineral Deficiency its Re
lation to Psychological Processes in
the Animal Body.” Professor E. H.
McAlister, of tho department of
mechanics on this campus also de
livered a paper on “A New Case
of Vortex Motion.”
SCHOOL DRAMA THEME
OF EXTENSION MONITOR
■
Tlio latest issue of the Exten
sion Monitor came off of the Uni
versity press yesterday. This is
sue, Voi. 12; No. 12; is devoted to j
high school dramatics.
‘‘ Drama in the High School” is
the featured story of the issue.
Miss Dunlap, the author, is now
teaching in Yakima, Washington,
high school. ‘‘The experiences she
describes in her paper took place
in an Oregon high school,” said
Mozelle Hair, editor. ‘‘ While she
was a student in the University of |
Oregon she took courses in the de- I
pertinent of drama and the speech
arts and appeared in the cast of
several plays.”
t'harlotte Hairfield, instructor in
the drama and speech arts depart
ment, has an article entitled, ‘‘Se
lecting the Play.” Professor Per- ,
gus Reddie, head of the dramatic j
arts department, has an article en- :
titled ‘‘The Staging of High School
Plays.”
‘‘The Operetta in the High
School” is the title of a story car-:
ried in the issue by Anne Lands !
bury Beck, a member of the faculty
if the school of music. ‘‘Plays in
Oregon High Schools,” by Mozclle
Hair, and ‘‘Plays for High
Schools,” by Naomi Williamson
McNeil are the two last articles of :
importance in the publication. The!
ivim of the issue is to reach high j
schools and high school teachers and!
to promote a better work of dramat- ,1
ics in the high schools of Oregon.,'
_ ; i
BIG EASTERN UNIVERSITIES
ORGANIZE CHESS TEAMS
Harvard University—Several of I1
the eastern universities have chess i
teams which compete in inter- i
collegiate matches. Among the in- i
stitutious which have held contests i
arc the University of Pennsylvania, :
Princeton, and Harvard.
AQUATIC GEOLOGY
| IS RADIO TOPIC
! Professor Dunn to Speak
From KGW Friday
LECTURES ARE POPULAR
Service is Regular Function
Of Extension Division
Professor F. S. Dunn, head of the !
University Latin department, will
radio-cast the University extension
division lecture Friday evening at 8
o’clock from station KGW of the
Morning Oregonian. "Aquatic Ge
ology’’ is the title of the lecture to
be transmitted.
Years Program Opens
This opens the extension division’s
radio service for the year of 1925
and starts the third year that the
extension division has been carrying
on this service for the public.
The service started just febout
two years ago when Dr. Sisson, a
professor at Reed college, gave an
address on Abraham Lincoln. This
proved so popular among the radio
fans that the extension division and
the Oregonian were flooded with
letters for more of these educational
lectures. They were a divergence
from the usual musica' radio-cast
irtg, according to the tenor of a ma
jority of the radio fans.
Radio is Popular
In compliance with this pressure
the extension division under the
leadership of Dean Kilpatrick and
Alfred Powers arranged for fur
ther programs. They continued on
through the spring and way into
the summer of 1923. On the fol
lowing fall they were started once
more when Professor A. L. Lomax
j of the school of business adminis- j
tration opened with a series of
more than a dozen lectures.
Last fall the radio-casting was
opened once more and now is prov
ing to become a regular function of
both University extension service
and a part of radio broadcasting
from station KGW. The University
and the Oregonian are pioneers in
this field of radio-casting. In a
radio questionaire sent out by the
Oregonian last fall this educational
feature proved to be, one of the
most popular functions of the radio
work.
INCREASED INTEREST j
SHOWN IN FISTIC ART
Interest in boxing has practically I
doubled with the opening of the j
nejw term, nearly twenty having1
signed up for elective boxing as j
compared to nine Inst term.
Besides the elective boxing class- j
ojs, which are rapidly expanding,
primary instruction classes for
freshmen and sophomores have been
started. Bill Sorsby, who is in
general charge of boxing, is par
ticularly interested in anyone who
has had no experience and. m'ishes
to learn the fundamentals of self
defense.
Frank Riggs and Tug Irving, rep
resenting Oregon in the meet of
January 6, with the Multnomah
Athletic dub, both won itheir
events, and counting Coach Wid
mer’s wrestlers, Oregon athletes
won three out of the fuor events in
the meet.
UNIVERSITY WOMEN DESIRE
CAREERS AS HOUSEWIVES
University of Pittsburg. — The
majority of women seeking higher
.'\lucation in big universities nro
more anxious to get married than to
;et a job with a view to a career,
recording to a recent bulletin by j
lie university of Pittsburg. This
•ondition exists in Pittsburgh and
i census of ttie university women j
ihowed that there are more girls
>y far wanting to be simple house- i
vives than actresses. “In other I
words, they want to got married,”
lays Miss Helen Rush, one of the
leans of the women at Pittsburgh.
3HICKEN POX AND MUMPS
LATEST CAMPUS CASES,
Dr. G, A. Ross is in charge of the!
vork in the health service again, j
laving returned last night from a
msiness trip to Olympia, Wash'ng
on. lie reports ttVat the dispen-!
ary has been especially busy today,
vith the usual largo number of
uses of grippe and colds, and in
iddition, one easel of chicken pox
ind another of mumps. The cases
if colds are being treated by the
ldorine gas machine which was in
roduced here the last part of the
’all term.
PROGRAM OF DEBATES
FOR TERM IS OUTLINED
i -
The next men’s debate this year
will be the triangular meet with
Washington and Idaho, February
12, when Oregon will meet Wash
ington in Seattle and Idaho here.
The question to be used in this con
test is the same as that debated
with O. A. C. last week, that of the
| right of congress to overrule deci
sions of the Supreme court.
The first girls’ debate of the
season will be with Willamette and
| O. A. C., February 19, when the
question of the Japanese exclusion
act will be debated.
A second contest for women
speakers will be the triangular meet
between Oregon, California and
Washington which will take place
March 8.
Oregana Subscription
Drive Commences Today;
Stephenson Gives Plans
(Continued from page one)
have this add to the attractiveness
of the annual. The cover design
has been decided. The art work
promises to be good. It is under
th» charge of Rolf Klep, who held
the position of art editor on the
1923 year book staff. He is working
in connection with the University
art department.
All work on the Oregana is well
under way and it is expected to
have the book come out on sched
uled time. Work on picture mount
ing will start within a week or two,
as soon as Kennell-Ellis finishes the
solios.
Kenneth Stephenson urges that
all house representatives sign up
their members early. To each or
ganization that goes 100 per cent
a 1925 Oregana will be given. Stu
dents who are not in any living or
ganization are asked to sign at the
booth at the library today. It is
hoped to concentrate the campaign
into one day, and leave Thursday
for gathering up loose ends. The
faculty will be solicited for sub
scriptions later in the term.
“All money must be turned in at
the A. 8. U. O. office by Friday
afternoon,” said Kenneth Stephen
son.
The list of representatives in
each living organization for the
Oregana is the following:
Men: Alpha Beta Chi, Karl Hard
enbergh; Alpha Tau Omega, Bufus
Sumner; Bachelordon, Charles Nor
ton; Beta Theta Pi, Junior Seton;
Chi Psi, Harry Skinner; Delta Tau
Delta, Cylbert McClellan; Friendly
hall, Truman Sether; Kappa Delta
Phi, George Bukowsky; Kappa Sig
ma,, Jimmy Johnson; Lambda Psi,
Paul Ager; Phi Delta Theta, Ealph
Staley; Phi Gamma Delta, Biehard
Lyman; Phi Kappa Psi, Jack Hemp
stead; Phi Sigma Pi, George Boss;
Alpha Epsilon, William James; Sig
Psi Kappa, Gerald Wade; Sigma
ma Chi, Chester Coon; Sigma Nu,
Carl Dahl; Sigma Pi Tau, Lowell
Angell.
Women: Alpha Chi Omega, Mary
Jane Dustin; Alpha Delta Pi, Ber
tha Berger; Alpha Phi, Betty
Bauch; Alpha Omicron Pi, Dorothy
f CLASSIFIED ADS I
o-o
LOST—One pair of glasses, be
tween Bible university and library.
In case, covered with pink cloth.
Opticians were Nelson & Gullian.
Call at 659 E. 9th St. 13-14
—
FURNISHED BOOMS for girls,
reasonable, steam heat, one block
from University. 1251 Emerald
street. Telephone 1053-B.
J-10-13-14
LOST—Friday, January 9, a
Waterman Ideal fountain pen, be
tween Emerald street and Co-op.
Beward. Beturn to Emerald office.
J-14-15-16
| tQhe largest selling
quality pencil
Jin the world
Superlative in quality,
the world-famous
ENUS
PENCILS
give best service and
longest wear.
Plain ends, per doz. $1.00
Rubber ends, per doz. 1.20
cAt all dealert
American Lead Pencil Co.
220 Fifth Ave., N. Y.
WE ARE ALWAYS
READY
to supply you with
LUMBER, LATH, SHINGLES
AND
SLABWOOD
Phone 452
BOOTH-KELLY LUMBER CO.
Dodge; Alpha Xi Delta, Hulda
Guild; Chi Omega, Marie Myers;
Delta Delta Delta, Lilian Baker;
Delta Gamma, Catherine Struplere;
Alpha Gamma Delta, Louise Inab
nit; Delta Zeta, Glenna Fisher;
Gamma Phi Beta, Esther Setters;
Kappa Alpha Theta, Virginia Keat
ing; Kappa Kappa Gamma, Imo
gene Lewis; Kappa Omieron, Helen
Kiblan; Pi Beta Phi, Kathryn Ul
rich; Susan Campbell, Wanda
Plinez; Tau Nu, Geraldine Troy v
Hendricks Hall, Anna DeWitt; Sig
ma Beta Phi, Helen Reynolds; That
cher Cottage, Fairy Davis.
TIPS
A Weekly Bulletin Published for House Managers by
The Table Supply Co.
Phone 246 104 9th St. E.
WHY DO WE SHIVER AT
THE PRUNE?
Did you ever stop to won
der why people turn up their
noses at the mention of
prunes? When you go home
and your mother says, “Now
what would you like to eat?’’
why do you say, “Anything
but prunes! ”
It is because you’ve never
been ' fully acquainted with
that nourishing fruit—be
cause you’ve never discover
ed its possibilities. You al
ways think of the brown
breakfast fruit, served over
sweet and lacking a spicy
taste that so few people know
about?. Ask your cook to slice
a lemon in her next “batch’’
of prunes and notice the dif
ference!
Have you ever served a
prune salad? Nothing could
be more delicious than crisp
lettuce, pitted prunes, cottage
cheese and mayonnaise. Even
better is the thick paste of
shredded prunes mixed with
the cheese. This can be serv
ed in cup shapes on lettuce
and with a sprinkling of may
onnaise is as attractive as ap
petizing.
And prune whip with whip
ped creaml Who can deny
the appeal of this soft airy
delicacy?
Prune juice as a base for
punch lends a mysterious
taste that baffles and de
lights. Lets have a prune
week.
Table Supply Co.
104 9th St. E. Phone 246
“The Rum Join Us”
CLASS
a group of young University and Eugene
women will give a dinner at the
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
THURSDAY EVENING at 6 O’CLOCK
Tickets 35c. Please call Miss Newton at
the church* office for reservations.
Phone 686
ORDER
Your 1925
O REG AN A
T O DAY
Don’t Wait Until It Is Too Late
Subscribe at the Library or Through Your House Representative
Deposit $2.00 now and pay the bal
ance next May, when book is de
livered.
All Houses subscribing 100 per
cent will receive a complimen
tary copy.
MAKE THE OREGANA YOUR MEMORY BOOK