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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (March 6, 1925)
VOLUME XXVI UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, FRIDAY. MARCH 6. 1925 NUMBER 92 THETA CHI WILL INSTALL TODAY Phi Sigma Pi to Become Alpha Sigma Chapter 0f National Fraternity MEMBERSHIP TOTALS 67 Elaborate Program Planned For Entertainment of Installation Committee The Alpha Sigma chapter of the Theta Chi national fraternity, for merly the Phi Sigma Pi local, will be installed on the Oregon campus this week-end. The first part of the formal installation ceremonies will be held in the chamber of commerce hall today between 1:00 and 4:00 p. m. will be conducted by an installation committee headed by J. E. H. Simpson Jr. of Portland, a member of Sigma chapter. A smoker “in which a bunch of the boys will whoop it up at the Malamute Saloon” will be held at the College Side Inn this evening at 9 o’clock, as the second feature on the program for the week-end. Banquet to be Saturday On Saturday morning at ten o’clock the active members of the newly chartered fraternity, ■ the in stalling committee, and the alumni of Phi Sigma Pi will assemble in the chamber of commerce reception hall, where the latter will be of ficially Tecognized as alumni of Theta Chi. A banquet Saturday evening at the Osburn hotel, at 6:30, and a reception at the Crafts men club in honor of the visiting installation committee, Sunday af ternoon, at 4:00 p. m., will complete the ceremony. ytn bigma Pi was organized No vember 11, 1920, as a local organi zation with 16 charter members. At the present time there is a total membership of 67, both active and alumni, not including four pledges who are yet to be initiated. Pres ent officers of the organization are: Hue Mowrey, president; George Boss, vice-president; Milton Peter son, corresponding secretary; Prank lioggan, recording secretary; Emer son Haggerty, treasurer; and Lewis Beeson, manager. Officers to serve under the new Theta Chi charter will be elected Saturday afternoon, national 68 Years Old Theta Chi national fraternity, of which the local Alpha Sigma will be the 41st chapter, was organized at Norwich university, Vermont, 68 years ago, and has chapters in many of the leading colleges and univer sities in this country, and boasts of a total membership of over 6,000 men. Extensive preparations for the in stallation ceremonies which will commence today, have been made by the local chapter, and an elab orate program of entertainment for the installation committee planned. Members of the committee who will conduct the ceremonies of tomor row are: J. E. H. Simpson Jr., chairman, Portland; Bernard A. Mcllhaney, Nu, travelling secre (Continued cm page three) Frosh Glee Dance At 8:30 Saturday To Be Semi-formal , As has been the precedent in former years the Freshman Glee will be a semi-formal affair. The women will be asked to come for mally attired and it will be op tional with the men of the upper classes. Work is progressing rapidly on the elaborate decorative scheme, and daily the assurance of a most successful evening grows. The green cappers again an nounce that they are to be the hosts to the other classes and the dance is without charge. A most novel and appropriate feature is promised. The chair man of this feature committee most emphatically states that it will be entirely different than anything ever before seen on the campus and that it will be very difficult to surpass this feature in uniqueness and brilliance. Del bert Faust, very prominent in the entertainment line on the cam pus, will be featured in this act, and with his professional and finished talent he has promised to surpass himself in it. ARISTOTLE’S DOCTRINE SUBJECT (IF PAPER J. E. A. Johnstone Addresses Philosophy Club By interpretation of Aristotle’s doctrine of the mean, we arrive at the conclusion that beauty consists in harmony, J. E. Ainsworth John stone brought out in his paper, read before the Philosophy club, Wed nesday night. Virtue lies in unity, blending the qualities of soul. The condition of the soul is rational and systematic, existing in proportion to the highest good. Virtue, Mr. Johnstone continued, is a mean between the two ex tremes. Virtue is not tepid, for it includes enthusiasm. Every act is an act of the whole personality. Preception and truth are not a for mula. Aristotle’s doctrine of means has undergone a number of changes by the various world powers. It was reduced by the Greeks, popularized by the Roman romaniticists, and finally, mutilated by middle age historians. Following the delivery of the paper, club members and guests discussed the subject for the remainder of the evening. GLEE CLUB MANAGER TAKES BUSINESS TRIP James Leake, glee club manager, left yesterday morning on a four day’s trip to arrange dates for ap pearances of the Men’s and Wo men’s glee club and the Univer sity orchestra, during spring vaca tion. He will visit Albany, Salem, Portland, Longview, St. Helens, and Astoria. The glee clubs will probably sing at Albany and Salem, while the or chestra, it is expected, will appear, at Longview, St. Helens, and As toria. OPPORTUNITIES NOT GRASPED BY OREGON STUDENT IS CLAIM “The students on this campus do not take their opportunities for leadership; at least, if they do, they never make the most of them,” declared Katherine Butterfield, graduate assistant in the school of sociology, in a recent interview. She was setting forth some of her impressions regarding this campus and Northwestern university, which she attended on a scholarship and from which she graduated. “Students stress social affairs much more here, and yet they do not take as great an interest in ac tivities, such as Y. W. and Y. M. and Women’s League. I do not know why it is, but here, if you ask someone if they are going to the Women’s League meeting or the Y. W. meeting, they say “no”; they have no intentions of doing so. At Northwestern, these groups have their buildings on the campus and there are always many at the meet ings.” Although Northwestern is a much larger school the spirit among the students is as great there as here, said Miss Butterfield. There this spirit may not be so evident, she said, since this campus is more cen tralized than that of Northwestern. There the campus is divided, many of the schools being in Chicago, making it impossible for the stu dents to get together as they do here. Each school, or group of schools, has its own assembly. Chapel is held three times a week for half an hour in the morning at Northwestern, and this custom, Miss Butterfield thinks, makes it possible for the students to get to gether in an easier and more con venient manner than that used at Oregon. Each student is required to attend chapel once a week, and the other two periods prove very (Continued am page three) AMERICAN POET Edgar Lee Masters to Read Selections of Own Poem ‘Spoon River Anthology’ PROGRAM TO BE AT 8 P.M. * _ Characters of Chief Work Constructed on Names Taken From Tombstones The fourth of American poets will appear on the campus Monday night. Edgar Lee Masters, poet and lawyer, will read selections from his “Spoon Eiver Anthology” and will discuss American poetry and American poets. Mr. Masters is, in his own opin ion, a lawyer first, a poet second. He has none of the flair and bo hemian characteristics which are usually associated with one whose tendencies turn to poetry. Mr. Mas ters, in appearance, is in harmony with his legal profession. He is# a short man, prone to wear coats whose length accentuate his brevity of height. His face is round, and in a caricature in the Bookman of August, 1922, one may j notice a suggestion of rotundity of person. His high forehead is bulbuous, hair growing well back from his fore head. Glasses intensify his modest reserve and calm aloofness and car ry out the efficient business-like mood. Masters Unlike Sandburg Masters, though he has lived in Chicago, is not of the literary school of the middle western me tropolis. He has held himself aloof from the tendencies of such as Carl Sandburg and Vachel Lindsay whom Chicago claims as her own. “Only Masters exists, a magnifi cent solitary, marooned in a desert of the arts. If Masters is aware of the feasts and gambols of the Society of Midland authors, he watches them, dike Orusoe, from concealment, shocked to the soul at the barbaric pastimes of these literarv savatres.” Work Original in Subject “Spoon River Anthology” is a book of epitaphic brevities in verse. It is an original contribu tion to American literature, and the numerous imitations pay homage to the volume. The people whose names Masters secured from the tombstones of a cemetery near his home and whom he has made live again by his vi gor of style are characters of any small town. The village loafer, the romantic school teacher, the re turned hero, the drab housewife, are dramatized and humanized into compelling pictures of realism. Tickets on Sale at Co-op The lecture will be at the Wo man’s building at eight o’clock Monday night. The committee in charge states that the hour was made late in order that Mr. Mas ter’s appearance would not inter fere with house-meetings. Tickets are being sold at the houses, the Co-op and at Laraway’s Music shop. GEOLOGY DEPARTMENT TO STUDY FIRE CLAYS The department of geology may co-operate with the chamber of commerce in procuring data con cerning the economic importance of certain clays in Lane county, ac cording to Professor Warren I). Smith. The chamber of commerce is now showing samples of tile, flower pots and fire-brick made from Lane county clay by J. L. Hoffman, of Richmond, California. The class in non-metallie ore de posits visited 'the collection of clavware at the chamber of com merce Tuesday afternoon previous to a field trip to study the clay deposits at the Cook place, about ; three miles west of Eugene. Seve ! ral of the samples of fire brick and tile shown at the chamber of com j merce were made from clay taken I from the Cook farm. This property I is owned by the father of Paul Cook, a former geology major. OREGON LOSES FIRST GAME TO AGGIES BY 15-12 SCORE Women’s Smoking Will Be Discussed By Y.W.C.A. Group “Shall the women be allowed to smoke on this campus?” This question will be thoroughly thrashed out at the meeting of Miss Grace Louks’ discussion gr«up today at 5 o’clock. She is an expert on T. W. C. A. dis cussion group work. Miss Louks’ real purpose in holding the dis cussion is to give the girls point ers on how a discussion should be led. Having done research work in discussion groups at Columbia university, and led such organizations in many parts of the country in her travels, Miss Louks has many new things to tell the Oregon women. “A cordial invitation is ex tended to any one who is inter ested in the topic, even if they do not belong to the group,” said Ellen McClellan, chairman of the World Eellowship committee. FIIIE EX-STUDENTS NOW TEACH IN CHINA Canton Christian College Sends Copy of Paper Five former Oregon men and wo men are now teaching at the Can ton Christian college in Canton, China, according to a letter re ceived by the Emerald from Miss Ida Himes, assistant secretary of the college. Mrs. Ivan H. Ware, formerly Miss Helen Hall, and Miss Amy Dunn, formerly housemother of Delta Gamma sorority, went to China together. They spent some time teaching in the Overseas school, which is on the Canton cam pus, but which is conducted only for foreign bom Chinese whose parents send them to China for their education. Miss Wave Lesly is teaching mathematics and Miss Gertrude Tolle is teaching phys ics. Walter K. Belt, who graduated rrom u. A. C. before taking a year’s graduate work at Oregon, is teach ing English on the Canton campus. A copy of the News Bulletin, pub lished quarterly by the Canton col lege was sent with the letter. Miss Himes suggested that the Canton group be put on the Emerald ex change list so that the old Oregon students would have some connec tion with their former campus. ASSEMBLY SPEAKER IS GUEST AT LUNCHEON Hr. Miriam Van Waters, who spoke at assembly yesterday, and who is superintendent of the juve nile hall and referee of the juvenile court in Los Angeles, was the guest of Dr. F. G. Young, dean of the school of sociology and a group of advanced students of the depart ment, at a luncheon at the Anchor age yesterday noon. Dr. Van Waters spoke on the es sential needs of the social welfare worker, their problems, and gene ral work. As most of the students present are soon to do similar work, she endeavored to set before them a pic ture of what their activities would require of them. The life of the social worker is not a bed of roses, she declared. It has many ups and downs. She stressed the absolute neces sity of having a good personality and keen common sense. A good personality, she pointed out, is al most invaluable. However, even though these qualities are decidedly important in the success of a social worker’s career, they do not carry the force that they might, and should, if the worker does not pos sess a good scientific foundation. A worker cannot succeed to any great degree unless he or she pos sesses this knowledge. YOUTH PROBLEMS STATER CREITER Dr M. Van Waters Declares Parents Evidence Lack Of Interest In Children HOME LIFE IMPORTANT Returning to the campus of her Alma Mater in the role of lecturer has served to make new friends for Dr. Miriam Van Waters, judging from the number of students in the group surrounding her following her address at assembly yesterday. The pleasing personality which has probably played no small part in her success in juvenile work was a factor in putting across to her audience something of her energy and good will. In her address on “Youth in Con flict,” Dr. Van Waters declared that it is not a lack of parental control that causes the increasing number of juvenile delinquents in the United States. She laughingly quoted G. Stanley Hall as saying that the only thing that would cause the American boy to commit suicide would be the thought that he was losing control of his parents. The trouble is caused, she said, rather by a lack of interest than by a lack of control. There is a shift ing of emphasis from the child and home to economic problems—to making a living. In the mind of the chi 11 whose parents are more interested in buying a car than maintaining a home, she said, is bred a cynicism and a distrust not only of the parents but of society in general. Old Theories Denied In her experience as a social worker, Dr. Van Waters said she has seen the old theories of the causes for criminals and delin quents exploded—such theories as physical peculiarities in the size of the brain or the length of the arms, or the mentally retarded. In dividuals brought before her court, she says, ail1 of every type—intel ligent, mentally deficient, under protected and over-protected—and the only effective means of treat ment is to deal with them as in dividuals, seeking for the cause of their delinquency. Dr. Van Waters said that child ren pick up the emotional flavor of the home even before they can speak, and often serious crimes by children are the result of the at mosphere created in the home by the parents. The modern mechani cal conveniences of the apartment house rob the child of healthful di version and the ensuing monotony results in mischief for the child. The speaker quoted a famous ju venile worker as saying that “The true home of the child lies in the attitude of the parents toward one another, possessing common sympa thies and going toward the same goal.” Enthusiasm Heeded Speaking of the importance of keeping up the enthusiasm for charity work after it has once been established, Dr. Van Waters said. “The greatest social forces are clear ideas in the minds of energetic men and women of good will..” She said many social workers camo into the category of fanatics if one defini tion of the latter was true—“fan atics are those who redouble their efforts when they have forgotten their aim.” Mrs. Victoria Booth Clibborn Damarest was present to give the invocation. An announcement was made of her meeting for University girls on Friday at the Armory. BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION STUDENTS WED MONDAY Claire Wills and Marley C. Lewis, both sophomores in the business ad ministration department were mar ried March 2, at the First Christ ian church. Both Mr. and Mrs. Lewis are of Cottage Orove. They will make their home in Eugene, and Mrs. Lewis will continue her work at the University. -—--O W. A. A. Hike Listed To Cover Ten Miles Saturday Morning An official W. A. A. hike is scheduled for Saturday morning. The party will start from the Ad ministration building at 9 o’clock. This hike has been especially ar ranged for tho benefit of those who lack the required 50 miles necessary for hiking credit this term. A definite course has not been fixed, but Grace Chapman, who will lead the party, expects to follow the Loraine highway, which leads out past the old golf links south of town. Not more than ten miles will be covered. OREGON TO CRIPPLE' WITH W.S.C. SATURDAY Match Here Will Be Last on Wrestling Program The Oregon wrestling team will attempt to win theJast meet of the season when they tackle the Wash ington State grapplers, Saturday af ternoon at the men’s gymnasium. Tho meet is scheduled to start at 2 o’clock. Last year the varsity took the Cougars into camp and will try to repeat. The exact strength of the visitors is unknown. They defeated Idaho throe bouts out of five. The University of Washington took tho big end of the score from the Cou gars and Idaho turned the tables on the Huskies by winning four out of five bouts. In the first meet of the season Oregon defeated Ida ho by taking four bouts. Oregon’s lineup will be consider ably strengthened as Ford, the fast 125 pounder, will be back to take his place on the mat. Ford has been suffering from cauliflower ear. Either Wingard or Davis will go in the 135 pound division. Davis has been suffering from an injured toe. Coach Widmer has not decided whether he will start Peterson or Woods in the welterweight. Woods has been working hard and is ready to swing into action. Harry Leav itt is the 158 pounder representa tive. Either Cartwright or Wells, a letterman of last year, will be chos en for the light-heavyweight class. Wells has been turning out regu larly and has been showing his old time form. Guy Rathburn, of Willamette, has been chosen to referee the moot. PROFESSOR HONORED FEW AT UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII University of Hawaii.—Freshman girls are not permitted to speak to a boy on the campus during school hours. The rule permits them to speak to professors. SPEED! PLAYING DONE BY TEAMS Close Checking By Players And Stonewall Defense Outstanding Features RIDINGS HIGH POINT MAN i Score Tied in Second Period By Oregon; Teamwork Of Both Fives Unusual (Complied by George H. Godfrey) The crowd started gathering out side of the Armory at three o'clock, and by the time the doors were opened at four, the number await ing entrance was estimated at more than 2,000. The place was com pletely jammed long before the starting whistle. The O. A. C. subs came onto the floor at 4:28. The Oregon subs appeared at 4:32, followed by the varsity and Aggies at 4.41. The game play by play: 4:45—The officials took the floor, the Oregon team warming up at the west basket, and the Aggies at the east. 5:03—Game starts, with regular line-ups. Oregon takes ball at once, and with rapid passes works it to basket. 5:04—Brown fouls Gowans, who converts. Score, Oregon 1, O. A. C. 0. 5:05—O. A. C. takes ball, with Oregon checking (closely A rush carries ball to Aggies basket, but they were given no chance to score. Oregon takes ball to basket, but Hobson misses. Ball goes back to O. A. C. basket, but both Bidings and Baker miss. The ball now is seesawing back and forth, with Ore gon in possession most of the time. The game is fast, with neither team getting many chances to shoot. 5:07—Oregon’s balk in from out side. 5:07—Brown fouls Gowans, and Gowans again converts. Score, Ore gon 2, O. A. C. 0. Oregon is check ing closely using man to man de fense. 5:08—A rush carries ball down to Oregon goal, but Gowans misses, another rush ends in ball going out side. 5:09—Held ball, Bidings and Jost, Oregon gets ball, to lose it to O. A. C. 5:10—O. A. C. holds ball for several passes but Gowans takes it on dribble. Basket is scored, but doesn’t count, as whistle blew for outside. 5:10—Westergren dribbles down, but is checked too closely to score. 5:11—Oregon works ball down, loses it, but Bidings fails to place (Continued on page four) TALKATIVE PANAMA MASCOT ADOPTED BY KAPPA DELTA PHI A new “student” has arrived on the Oregon campus. Oscar is his name. He comes direct from Pana ma where he was born eight years ago. He is a handsome fellow with circular eyes tinged with brown and is clothed in a beautiful frock of green, yellow, and crimson feath ers. The new “student” is the Kappa Delta Phi parrot. Oscar has already adopted the Oregon “Hollo” tradition. When one comes np to view him he never fails to give a hearty “hello.” In the mornings when the fel lows are rushing to get to their eight o’docks, Oscar takes it easy. He twitches his head with enthu siasm, biting now and then the bars of the 'cage which hold him cap tive, and shouts out the name of the new song hit, “Tea for Two.” The parrot feels right at home i with the gang. He likes to listen in on the fireside talks, interrupt ing the boys quite often with some off-hand remark. He seems to like jazz music bet ter than the classical, for when the former is played he sways with the musical rhythm, but with the lat ter he ruffles his feathers and screeches in a displeased tone. Os car enjoys shaking hands. When, any one puts a finger through the cage, Oscar gently takes hold of it with his foot and looks kind of slyly at him and says, “goodbye.” Oscar enjoys answering questions, although often he gets entirely off the subject. He seems to think that ho “gets by heavy” with the co-eds, talking and laughing more when they are around. “Sometimes I wish Oscar had at tended the school for the dumb,” says V. Herbert Brooks. “He often gets excited, and when he does, he is a regular talking dictionary.’*