Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, March 10, 1925, Image 1

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    MCI ELECTS
OFFICERS TODftY
Nine Girls are Nominated;
Voting Will Be Held at
Bungalow From 10 to 2
NATIONAL OFFICER HERE
Banquet at College Side Inn
To Be for Y.W. Members;
Winners to Be Announced
The annual T. W. C. A- election
of officers will be held today at
the bungalow from ten until two,
and only those who are members of
the organization are eligible to
vote. The returns will be an
nounced tonight at the banquet
given at the College Side Inn. Miss
Henrietta Thomson, national Y. W.
C. A. secretary, will be present.
The candidates for office for
thhe ensuing year are:
President, Peggy Boyer.
Vice-president, Beatrice Peters,
Genevieve Chase.
Secretary, Dorothy Munselle,
Nancy Peterson.
Treasurer, Dorothy Delzelle,
Christine Holt.
Undergraduate representative, Ol
ga Jackson, Virginia Keeney.
One Nominee for President
Peggy Boyer is the only nominee
up for president. She is a junior
and has been active in Y. W. work.
She is a member of the cabinet
personnell this year and last year
was chairman of the Seabeek com
mittee, where she did excellent
work.
There are two nominees for the
office of vice-president, one is
Beatrice Peters, who is a sophomore
this year and at the present time
Y. W. secretary, and the other is
Genevieve Chase, a junior, who has
had charge of the University high
school Y. W. work this year and
was also head of a World Fellow
ship discussion group.
There are two candidates for
treasurer, Dorothy Delzelle, a soph
omore, who has been active in com
mittee work this year, and Chris
tine Holt, a freshman who has al
so been an active committee worker.
Bunning for secretary are two
candidates, Dorothy Munsell and
Nancy Peterson. Both are fresh
men and members of the freshman
commission.
Undergraduate representative nom
inees are Olga Jackson, a junior,
who is a member of the cabinet
this year as chairman of meetings,
and Virginia Keeney, also a junior
who is a cabinet member as chair
man of the bungalow.
National Officer Visits
Miss Henrietta Thomson, whose
headquarters are at Berkeley, where
she has charge of the Y. W. C. A.
friendly relations work, will arrive
on the campus tomorrow. She will
probably stay at Hendricks hall
while here. She will leave tomor
row for 0. A. C. where she will
attend their annual election and
banquet. Miss Thomson Jftnade a
short visit on the campus two years
ago.
Beatrice Peters has charge of the
banquet tickets. All Y. W. mem
bers are urged to come.
Planetary Bodies
Used in Decoration
For Frosh Glee
“The Garden of the Moon,”
was the idea carried out by the
class of ’28 at their Frosh Glee
last Saturday night in. the Wo
man’s building, although the ef
fect was not distinctly brought
out.
The orchestra was located on
the left side of the floor, and
the stage at the end of the hall
was devoted to huge, grotesque
figures of creatures probably in
habitating the lunar regions.
On either side of the stage were
brightly lighted moons, one green,
evidently carrying out the cheese
myth, and the other white with
the silhoutte of two young people
in amorous embrace, depicting a
honeymoon scene.
The walls were hung with blue
curtains and from the ceiling
hung stars, moons and other plan
etary bodies.
The punch was delicious and
the programs, drawn by Hal
Westphal, were hand-painted and
showed considerable work. A
large crowd attended the dance.
RABBI JONAH B. WISE
TO ADDRESS ASSEMBLY
Interesting Talk Promised
Campus Audience
Jonah B. Wise, rabbi of the Jew
ish synagogue, Temple of Beth
Israel, in Portland, will speak at
assembly on Thursday, the last
meeting of this term. He is well
known throughout the state as a
public speaker, and he is especially
prominent in Portland as a leader
in social welfare movements. He
is also a member of the board of
higher curricula of the state of
Oregon.
Rabbi Wise is a graduate of the
Hebrew Union college of Cincinna
ti, which was established by his
father. He has attended the Uni
versity of Berlin. He is national
president of B’nai B’rith, and edi
tor of a Jewish paper “The
Scribe,” published in Portland.
The Rabbi is reputed to be a
great lover of books, and has a won
derful collection of them. Among
the very old Hebrew manuscripts
which he possesses are some which
have been handed down in his fam
ily for many years. Others he has
picked up at odd, out-of-the-way
places.
Almost every year Rabbi Wise
appears before the student assembly
and his keen wit and charming
personality have made him one of
the most popular of the speakers
who aTe regular visitors on the cam
pus.
PIANO STUDENTS OF MUSIC
SCHOOL TO GIVE PROGRAM
Students of piano of the school of
music are giving a program at 4:30
on Friday afternoon, March 13, in
the lounge room of the music build
ing. The hour will be devoted to
piano selections and anyone who is
interested is invited to come. The
program will be announced later.
DR. MIRIAM VAN WATERS TELLS
OF JUVENILE COURT’S PURPOSE
By Glenn F. Burch
Few people really understand the
function of a juvenile court. The
idea is apt to prevail that it is a
replica of the ordinary police court
constructed on a smaller scale, or
that it is an institution which in
some mysterious manner converts
wayward boys and girls into model
children.
Dr. Miriam Van Waters, referee
of the juvenile court in Los An
geles and a nationally recognized
authority on juvenile delinquency,
brushed aside both popular concep
tions in the course of an interview
yesterday, in which she character
ized the court as aiming at a “bet
ter understanding of human na
ture.” The institution, she averred,
is not a court whose sole, function
is to mete out punishment to wrong
doers, nor is it primarily a clinic
for the treatment of diseased young
minds. It is rather a court which
aims at educating those who come
within its jurisdiction away from
delinquency, and endeavors to mar
shal the social forces of the com
munity to assist in the enterprise.
In Dr. Van Waters’ belief, the
future work of the juvenile court
will probably be carried on in two
separate and distinct fields: rural
and urban. Of the two fieldB of
endeavor, the need of the rural dis
tricts is the greatest, especially in
the west, where little has been done
to aid the delinquent child. “The
monotonous lack of social resources
in the country tends to drive the
children to the city prematurely;
in many cases long before they
(Continued on page four)
NOTED SOPRANO
TO SI TONIGHT
Florence Easton Concert
To Mark Third Number
Of the A. S. U. 0. Series
ARTIST’S VOICE PRAISED
Program Said to Be Most
Varied Ever Presented
Before Eugene Audience
Tonight, Florence Easton, world
renowned prima donna soprano,
will be heard in concert at the
Methodist Episcopal church audi
torium at 8:30 o’clock. The as
sisting artist is Elinor Remick
Warren, composer-pianist, who will
contribute several notable num
bers to the program.
This concert is the third number
of the A. S. IT. O. concert series.
Student body tickets will admit
students, and townspeople may pro
cure tickets from either Laraway’s
Music store or the Co-op.
Program Has Five Groups
Florence Easton’s voice is noted
for its rich, clear and exquisitely
beautiful qualities which always
approximate the acme of perfection.
Herman Weill, well-known music
critic of the New York Journal,
gives the following tribute: “Flor
ence Easton is one of the satisfy
ing interpreters of songs to be
listened to nowadays. Her purity
of tone, apt vocalization, clarity
and justness of diction were really
superb.” From the Chicago Herald
Examiner comes the following:
“This was an evening of perfect
song. It exhibited one of the beau
tiful voices of the present.”
Following is tonight’s program
which is one of the most varied
ever to be presented in Eugene:
1. (a) Deh Vieni non Tardar .
. Mozart
(b) Have you seen but a whyte
Lilly grow .Anonymous
(c) A Pastorale .Carey
Florence Easton
2. (a) La Pavane .Bruneau
(b) Celle que je prefere .
... Fourdrain
(c) Widmung .Schumann
(d) Aud dem Wasser Zu Singen
.-.Schubert
(e) Zueignung . Strauss
Florence Easton
3. (a) Prelude .Schutt
(b) Consolation .Liszt
(c) Frolic of the Elves .
.Elinor Remick Warren
(d) Humoresque ....Rachmaninoff
Elinor Remick Warren
4. (a) If June Were Mine .
.Hilton Turvey
(b) The Unforseen ....Cyril Scott
(c) Children of the Moon _
.Elinor Remick Warren
(d) Joy .Wintter Watts
Florence Easton
5. (a) Aria In quelle Trine
(Continued on page three) '
LIFE SAVING TEST
GIVEN BY RED GROSS
Out of the 14 men taking the
American Red Cross life saving
test yesterday, 12 passed and are
now ready for the final quiz, which
will be given Wednesday afternoon
at 4 o’clock. The quiz will be giv
en orally.
Those taking the test were: E.
Davis, O. H. Mason, O. W. Rich
ards, J. C. Stovall, R. Van Atta, .T.
Ross, J. C. Profitt, E. D. Conway,
R. E. Jones, A P. Goss, G. J. Ma
jovski, B. Taden, and W. B. Ham
ilton. The names of the two who
failed in the test will not be given
out until Thursday, when all of the
grades will be posted.
Another class in the life saving
work will be organized immediately.
The classes are open to anyone who
may be interested in the work, and
the course may be substituted for
the regular gymnasium work. Those
in charge of the work, and form
ing the board of examiners, are Ij.
E. Palmer, R. Fahl, L. Webster, and
R. Bartlett.
WOMEN TO SWIM
IN MEET TONIGHT
Four Classes Will Compete
In Preliminaries; Final
Contest to Occur Later
HEADS NAME MEMBERS
Alpha Chi Omega and Susan
Campbell I to Decide
Doughnut Championship
All four classes are to compete
in the woman’s inter-class swim
ming meets in the Woman’s build
ing tonight at 5:00 o’clock, the
juniors against the seniors, and
the sophomores against the fresh
men. Winners of the contest this
evening will compete for the inter
class .championship tomorrow.
Class teams, chosen last Friday
and Saturday, are as follows: Fresh
man: Laura Breske, Mabel Fransen,
Florence Hurley, Kellie Johns, Mar
garet Michels, Monica Michels, Es
ther Hardy. Substitutes: Hazel
Kirk and Ruth Sloper.
Class Teams Listed
Sophomores: Margaret Pepoon,
Catherine Osborne, Ruth Miller,
Alice McKinnon, Mary ,, McKin
non, Rhona Williams, Frances Mor
gan. No substitutes.
Junior: Elizabeth Lounsbury,
Janet Wood, Adrienne Hazard,
Dorothy Evans, Margaret Stahl,
Elizabeth Lewis, Wanda Plincz.
Substitutes: Anna DeWitt and Hel
en Cantine.
Senior: Hilda Chase, Marguerite
McCabe, Stella Haglund, Gertrude
Tucker, Beatrice Fish, Viona
Pyritz, Grace Sullivan. Substitute:
Emily Houston.
The events for class swimming
include 20-yard free style race, 60
yard free style .race, 20-yard back
crawl race, 20-yard breast stroke
race, plunge for 30 seconds, and
dives. The four required dives in
the diving exhibition are straight
front swan, front jack-knife, and
back dive, and three optional dives,
dive, and three optional dives.
Class Managers Listed
The class managers are: Margaret
Michels, freshman; Margaret Pe
poon, sophomore; Elizabeth Louns
bury, junior; Emily Houston, sen
ior.
The final meet to determine the
championship for doughnut swim
ming, which was to have been held
Monday evening, will take place
Thursday. Alpha Chi Omega, win
ner in League II by its victory
over Susan Campbell II last Satur
day, will swim against Susan Camp
bell I, champion of League I.
FOB ITSELF
The proposed basketball pavillion
to be located on the campus will
cost $20,000 it is estimated. By
utilizing the earnings, the commit
tee plan to make the building pay
for itself.
Funds for the erection of the
structure, however, must be raised
by the student body, and the com
mittee is considering methods by
which this may be accomplished.
According to tentative plans, the
proposed building will provide three
practice floors extending across the
room and one floor extended length
wise. Movable beachers will take
care of the crowds in important
contests when the single court is to
be used. The building will be of
wooden construction strongly re
enforled with steel girders and de
signed to meet the needs of the Uni
versity for the next 15 or 20 years.
The committee will meet tomor
row to continue the work on plans
for the proposed building. Mem
bers are: Edwin C. Tapfer, chair
man; Mary Skinner, Victor R.
Risley, Kenneth R. Stephenson, L.
H. Johnson, Karl Onthank and Vir
gil Earl.
AGGIES TAKE TITLE
BY ONE-POEfT LEAD
David Again Slays
Goliath; Hoop Game
Is Scene of Fray
Goliath — enormous, gusty
throated Goliath—sat back after
shaking the heavens with an
enormous “Hail Beavers.”
David answered with a defiant
“Oskie” from the galleries.
The giant roared forth in spon
taneous glee when getting the
best of the fray; groaned mourn
ful murmurs of consternation
and dismay as he received an
unguarded blow, or muttered dire
epithets of remonstrance when
the judge of battle ruled against
him.
The signal to cease combat
sounded.
David shouted in victorious
glee.
Goliath lay prone, speechless.
Thus was the picture presented
at Corvallis Saturday night as
Yell King Martin’s small band
of faithful Oregonians, stub
bornly withstood the mighty on
slaught of Aggie vociferations.
GUILD HILL PLAYERS
TO GIVE ‘RAGGEDY MAN’
Miss Banfield to Appear in
Last Campus Role
A glimpse into the life of the
country domestic of old India will
be revealed in the Guild hall play,
"The Raggedy Man,” which is mak
ing its second appearance on the
campus starting Wednesday night
and running for four evening per
formances with a Saturday matinee.
The play, a combination of comi
cal situations in the life of the
country folk of Indiana years ago,
is based entirely on the various
poems of Riley's noteworthy col
lection. Such characters as “Old
Aunt Mary,” Raggedy Man,” “Or
phan Annie,” and others enrich
the cast with their recognizable
personalities and their popular
characterizations of Riley’s poem
people.
The cast of characters utilizes
everymember of the dramatic com
pany, including Miss Charlotte Ban
field, who is making her farewell
appearance in this production. Miss
Banfield leaves the campus at the
end of this term to be married and
the play is being produced to hon
or her in the part of “Grandmother
Squeers” which shhe made so popu
lar two years ago.
Miss Kate Pinneo, recognized as
Guild theatre’s leading comedienne
during the past three years, has re
turned to the campus and will again
portray the part of the gossipy post
mistress of Griggsby station, who of
course never reads the post-cards.
Other campus dramatic stars are
cast in amusing roles.
The seat sale for “The Raggedy
Man” starts today. Tickets are
being sold at 75 cents for reserved
secton andi 50 cents for open sec
tion. Doors open at 8 o’clock, and
the curtain goes up at 8:30.
PAPERS WILL BE READ
AT SIGMA XI MEETING
The Oregon chapter of Sigma Xi
will hold its regular monthly meet
ing Friday night at 8 o’clock, when
two papers will be read
Dr. E. M. Harvey, of the Ore
gon Agricultural college, will pre
sent “An Explanation of Certain
Growth Responses of Apple Shoots
to Ringing and Defoliation.” Dr.
E. T. Hodge of the University ge
ology department, will explain
“The Geology of the Three Sisters
Region.”
A number of members from O. A..
C. are expected to be present at
the meeting which will be presided
over by Dr. O. F. Stafford, of the
University chemistry department.
The meeting place, to be defin
itely announced later, will be in
the Woman's building or in Deady
I
Varsity Defeated,
27-26, In Hardest
Hoop Battle of Year
Half Ends in 1 3 to 13 Tie; Stubborn Fight Put
Up By Both Quintets; Gowans High
Scorer With 10 Points
By George H. Godfrey
Salem, Ore., March 9.—A lone figure, tired almost to ex
haustion after 40 minutes of gruelling battle stood up to shoot
a foul tonight, with the score lacking one point of being tied,
and missed. The miss was not the result of an erratic shot
brought about by nervousness, but merely a trick of fate which
caused the ball to bounce a fraction of an inch the wrong way*
---.Thus the final Oregon-O. A. C.
EDITORS AND WIVES
TD BE HONORED AT TEA
Theta Sigma Phi Will Be
Hostess on Friday
Wives of the editors attending
the Newspaper Conference will be
entertained Friday afternoon from
43:30 to 5:30 at a formal tea in the
sun parlor of the music auditorium, j
given by the local chapter of Theta
Sigma Phi, women’s national jour
nalism fraternity. The editors will
be asked to attend after their Fri
day^afternoon session.
In the receiving line will be Mrs.
IVirginia Judy Esterly, Mrs. Eric W.
Allen, Mrs. Rudolph Ernst, Anne
Landsbury Beck, Miss Jeanette
Calkins and Miss Margaret Morri
son.
John Stark Evans will play sev
eral selections on the new pipe or
gan during the afternoon’s enter
tainment.
From 1 until 3 Friday afternoon
the underclass women of the school
of journalism will conduct the vis
itors on a tour of the campus.
The Murray Warner collection
,will be open from 11 to 12 Saturday
.morning for the accommodation of
,the visitors.
EGO,N MATMEN LOSE
MEET TO W.S.G. TEAM
Although Oregon lost its last in
torcollegiate wrestling meet of the
year to Washington State wrestlers
Saturday afternoon, 35 to 45, the
fans were treated te a fast exhibi
tion of grappling.
The matches were fast and closely
contested with the result in doubt
until the final bout between Woods
of Oregon and Dunbar, W. S. C., in
which the visitor won by a fall
after receiving draws in the first
two bouts. Woods put up a good
fight but was downed just two sec
onds before the seven minute
period was up. The summary:
125 pound class—Hendrie, W. S.
C., defeated Sumption, Oregon, de
cision and fall in 2:16.
135 pound class—Wingard, Ore
gon, defeated Peters, W. S. C., by
fall in 4:06 and decision.
145-pound class—Dunbar, W. S.
C., defeated Woods, Odegon, two
draws and fall in 6:38.
158-pound class—Leavitt, Oregon,
defeated Hitchcock, W. S. C., by
two decisions.
175-pound class—Waldorf, W. S.
C., defeated Wells, Oregon, decision
and fall in 4:23.
Referee—Rathburn, Willamette.
Ford, Oregon’s regular 125-pound
er, was out of the meet because of
a cauliflower ear that was injured
some time ago.
game ended tonight with the
Aggies victors by a 27 to 26
score.
It was by far the hardest fought
contest ever engaged in by either
an Oregon or an O. A. C. team. The
playing of both teams was nearly
on a par, with Oregon having a
shade bettor most of the time.
The first half, almost as fiercely
fought as the second, ended in a
tie, 13 to 13.
Oregon led most of the second
period, but the Aggies crept ahead
near the end, two converted tech
nical fouls on Oregon giving them
the lead. Just as the gun ended
the play, Baker fouled Westergren,
who narrowly missed. Gowans was
high point man of the game with
10, four of them from two brilliant
long field baskets. Hidings, O. 'A.
C., was held to three field goals and
two fouls. The lineup and sum
mary:
Oregon 0. A. .0
Hobson.F. Hidings
Gowans.F. Baker
Okerberg.C. Brown
Westergren.G. Steele
Jost.G. Stoddard
Oregon scoring: Field goals, Hob
son 1, Gowans 5, Westergren 2,
Okerberg 3, Jost 1.
IO. A. C.: Hidings 3, Baker 2,
Brown 2, Steele 2, Stoddard 1.
Free throws: Oregon, Okerberg
1, Westergren 1. O. A. C. Hidings
2, Baker 2, Diwoky 1, Steele 2.
Referee: Nig Borleske. Umpire:
Sam Mulligan.
GAME PLAY BY PLAY
Both teams took the floor at 7:15.
The gym is packed, with hundreds
outside unable to get in. So vocif
erous is the crowd that every time
a basket is shot in practice the gang
goes wild.
The lineups for the start of the
game—Oregon: Hobson, Gowans,
forwards; Okerberg, center; Wes
tergren and Jost, guards. O. A. C.:
Baker, Ridings, forwards; Brown,
center; Steele and Stoddard, guards.
The game, play by play:
7:23—Oregon varsity takes floor
greeted by Oregon team yell.
7:29—First whistle, Oregon gets
east basket, O. A. C. west.
7:30—Game called by referee.
Oregon immediately takes ball, but
Baker intercepts ball and ball is
worked down, Ridings misses, Stod
dard misses long shot, held ball,
Oregon recovers. Okerberg drib
bles, held ball, O. A. C. recovers.
7:31—Foul on Baker for charg
ing, Westergren converts. Score,
Oregon 1, O. A. C. 0. Hobson takes
ball on tip off, narrowly misses
long shot. O. A. C. recovers ball
and takes it down floor. Brown
misses shot. Gowans dribbles down
floor and ball is held near Oregon
basket. Jost recovers and converts.
Oregon 3, O. A. C. 0, Gowans
misses, O. A. C. recovers, rushes
down, but Ridings misses long shot,
Ridings misses cripple, then con
verts. Oregon 3, O. A. C. 2. Wes
tergren gets ball, dribbles down and
misses. Held ball, Okerberg and
Ridings. Ridings dribbles down,
but loses ball, Oregon brings back
up to lose ball to O. A. C.
7:30—Brown converts for O. A.
C. Score, Oregon 3, O. A. C. 4.
Oregon gets ball from O. A. C.
and works it down, Hobson misses,
O. A. C. recovers, Baker misses long
shot, Oregon recovers, works ball
down, and Gowans converts. Score,
(Continued on page four)