(Oregon Sailg ^otctalb
Member of Pacific Intercollegiate Press Association
Official publication of the Associated Students of the University of Oregon, issued
dally except Sunday and Monday, during the college year.
------“*»
DONALD L. WOODWARD .-.-.-... EDITOR
EDITORIAL BOARD
Associate Editor . Margaret Skavlan
Managing Editor.. Harold A. Kirk
Associate Managing Editor .—. Anna Jerzyk
Sports Editor .... George H. Godfrey
Daily News Editor
Mary Clerln Emily Houston
James Case Jalmar Johnson
Gertrude Houk Lillian Baker
Night Bditors
Pete Laura Ray Nash
Webster Jones Claude Reavis
Tom Graham Walter A. Cushman
Lylah MoMurphy
Society Editor
Sports Staff
Wilbur Wester .... Assistant Sports Editor
Richard Syring, Richard Godfrey .
.......Sports Writers
Upper News Staff
Edward Robbins Mildred Carr
Elizabeth Cady Geneva Foss
Sol Abramson Eugenia Strickland
Mary West
Josephine Ulrich
Exchange Editor
News Staff: Helen Reynolds, Margaret Vincent, Esther Davis, Jack Hempstead,
Georgia Stone, Glen Burch, Lawrence Armand, Ruth De Lap, Dorothy Blyberg, Clayton
Meredith, Margaret Kressman, Philippa Sherman, Ruth Gregg, Mary Baker, Alice
Kraeft, Geneva Drum, Helen Schuppel, Ruby Lister, Barbara Blythe, Mary Conn, Ronald
Sellers, Paul Krausse.
BUSINESS STAFF
JAMES W. LEAKE ..._.-... MANAGER
Associate Manager . Frank Loggan
Advertising Managers . Si Slocum, Wayne Leland, Wm. Jones
Advertising Assistants . Milton George, Bill Prudhomme, Bert Randall
Circulation Manager ...- James Manning
Foreign Advertising Manager . Claude Reavis
Assistants .. Walt O’Brien, Hilton Rose, Neil Chinnock
Specialty Advertising ... Mildred Dunlap, Geneva Foss
Adminstration . Margaret Hyatt, Marion Phy, Fred Wilcox, Bonner
Whitson, Bob Warner.
Day Editor This Issue
Dick Eckman
Dorothy Blyberg .Assistant
Night Editor This Issue
Ray Nash
Ronald Sellers .Assistant
Entered an second class matter at the post office at Eugene, Oregon, under act
•f Congress of March 3, 1879.
“In the Lump”
**Jy£ASS judgments are invariably wrong—at least they con
tain but half the truth. When we come face to face with
each other as individuals we see how much in common we
have.”
These words were those of Rev. Lawrence Redfern, Uni
tarian minister and member of the facility of the University of
Liverpool who addressed a group of students Wednesday morn
ing in the Journalism assembly room. In the Rev. Mr. Red
fern’s case he was discussing the union of English-speaking
peoples in the work of rebuilding the world and establishing
world peace. This plea for understanding—for patience until
an understanding can be made possible, can be applied equally
to world politics and to campus critics and campus poets.
To tell a man that he does not understand is as insulting
to his ego as to tell him he has no sense of humor. And yet
the fact remains that there is a constant urging toward better
contacts in many magazines, indeed, in every field of writing.
Cooperation between the universities and the state politi
cians is urged by Glenn Frank in the Century for May. The
understanding between the man with the expert knowledge
and the man who holds the reins of power, is his desire.
Cooperation between the artist and the public is urged by a
writer in The New Republic for April 5. Always the plea car
ries with it the vision of a more complete human happiness by
increasing the individual power of appreciation and enjoyment.
The war between ‘‘the working man” and the “cultivated
classes,” for instance, cannot but be fruitless and futile. The
mass judgment of ‘‘the working man” is as likely as not to be
a sullen-looking individual with soiled clothes who cannot read
and write with any degree of aplomb. The representative of
“the cultivated class” can then appear in nose-glasses and
spats and a way of saying “cultyah.” Both are, as Rev. Mr.
Redfern would have it, wrong. For after all, people are not so
different from each other. The man with the dinner pail
is just as likely to be a representative citizen, and the man in
the white collar a humanitarian, as the other way. And both
measure happiness in much the same terms.
Certain it is, that both can try, if not tolerance per se, at
least kindness. No one has a monopoly on that. After all,
the kindness which is the basis of good manners is an art so old
that we stand in danger of forgetting about it.
Have you $3 to spare! If not, better visit the business office
in the Administration building before noon today, and avoid
late payment fine for registration fees.
Earnest-looking golf fiends, who practice ‘‘taking off” or
whatever it is, on the links near the barracks have been making
pleas not to be considered in the elass with the “flower snitch
ers” when they are found hunting about in the cemetery oppo
site the links for lost golf balls. The graveyard at this time of
t^e season’s golf-ball crop is what the Indians might term a
Happy Hunting-Ground ?
“Cait University of Idaho student electrical engineers draw !
new powers from the invisible and inscrutable force which j
science l*irnesses but cannot define?” We read this in regard I
to electricity in The University Argonaut of the University of
Idaho. Well, it’s hard to say how we compare with Idaho in
this regard, but it is certain that “some invisible and inscrut
able force” was at work yesterday drawing students out of
their classes. Of course there is the Student Union drive . . .
and the weather ....
Campus Bulletin
Notices will be printed in this column
for two issues only. Copy must be
in this office by 5:30 on the day before
it is to be published, e: must be
limited to 20 words.
Oregana Representatives — Please
turn in receipt books at the
Graduate Manager’s office this
morning if possible.
Student Union Workers—Banquet
tonight at 6:00 p. m. for all drive
workers at Woman’s building.
Mazama Hike — Old Baldy next
Sunday. Leave 8:30 a. m. from
the administration building.
Mazama Hike—Old Baldy next
Sunday. Leave 8:30 a. m. from
Administration building.
MOTHER’S DAY GIFTS
TO 1 ARMENIANS
Sale of Handkerchiefs From
Near East Planned
In place of the conventional
flowers and candy for gifts on
Mother’s day, M. Parounagian, an
Armenian relief worker, offers for
sale hand-made linen handker
chiefs. M. Parounagian spoke to
members of the World Fellowship
committee at 4:30 at the Bungalow,
Thursday, on the conditions in the
Near East and of relief work which
has been done there.
M. Parounagian, who was born
in Turkish Armenia, says, in de
scribing the relief work, that linen
is furnished the Armenian mothers
who have families to support, and
they do the work on the handker
chiefs which come in appropriate
folders, ready for mailing. The
proceeds from the sale of these ar
ticles go to the support of these
families, now that industry in the
Near East is generally paralyzed
owing to the recent war, and no
other means of making a living is
possible.
Members of the women’s organi
zations on the campus will take
charge of selling these handker
chiefs, under the direction of Miss
Florence Magowan, Y. W. C. A.
secretary. Miss Magowan Will al
so have samples at the Bungalow
so that students or others who are
not reached through the organiza
tions may procure them from her.
NO OPINION CAN BE GIVEN
ON WORK OF OIL COMPANY
As no one is permitted to obtain
samples of the rock or gas from the
well of the Guarantee Oil company,
located south of the city, no opinion
.can be given regarding the progress
being made, according to members
of the geology department. The
last rock that was tested from the
well was igneous, being a variety
of basalt containing pyrite. That
gas has bepn found in quantity does
not necessarily attest the presence
of oil. No conclusion can be reach
ed until the gas is tested, and rocks
from the drilling analyzed.
FORMER OREGON STUDENT
TAKES HIGH SCHOOL OFFER
R. U. Moore, ex-’23, who is teach
ing in the Salem junior high school
will fill the place now occupied by
Mr. Harold Benjamin, principal of
the University high school, who
received a $1,000 scholarship to
Stanford university.
F. C. Wooton, assistant in the
educational department, will act as
head of the history and social sci
ences department in the University
high school which will be vacated
by Rollien Dickerson, who has ac
cepted a position with the Ethical
Cultural college of New York.
<t>--<>
I At the Theatres I
<2>---S’
HEILIG — Last time* (Satur
day, “The Great Divide,” one ;
of the epic photo dramas of
the west, and conceded a high
place in film drama.
The Greenwich Village fol
lies, with Gallahger and
Shean, will he here May 5.
This show is meeting with
great success in California,
and is hailed as one of the
best to come to the coast. I
I THE REX—Last day: “As Man I
' Desires,” with Milton SHls.
Viola Dana. Ruth Clifford
Rosemary Tlieby, Irving Cum
mings and cast of favorites,
mi a stirring adaptation of
Gone Wright’s novel that
sweeps from the luxury of
London drawing rooms, across
the seven seas. ,0 a forgot
ten isle, where a south sea
siren wooes and a man for
gets; Mermade comedy, “Wide
Awake,” with Lige Conley;
Oregon’s own Webfoot Week
ly of state wide news events;
LeRoy DeVaney in atmospher
ic accompaniment on the or
gan.
Coming: “Sackcloth and
Scarlet,” from the novel by
George Gibbs, with Alice Ter- j
ry and a Paramount cast.
WOMEN’S BALL TEAM
SCHEDULE COMPLETED
Windup of Doughnut Season
Planned for May 5
v _
Good weather next week will put
the doughnut season in women’s
baseball back on its feet. Fourteen
games postponed from last week
have been added to the regular
schedule for the coming week. It
is rumored that the result of the
Susan Campbell II-Hendricks II
game next Friday will be a fairly
conclusive indication of the out
come of the doughnut finals.
Champions of the four leagues
into which all house teams have
been divided, will meet for semi
finals, May 4. Finals on May 5
will determine the doughnut cham-i
pion and bring the doughnut season
to a close. Inter-class baseball will
follow immediately.
Make-up games to be played this
week in addition to the regular
schedule are as follows: Monday,
April 27: Town-Kappa Omicron;
Thacher-Chi Omega.
Tuesday, April 28: Tau Nu-Kappa
Kappa Gamma; Alpha Gamma Del
ta-Delta Zeta.
Wednesday, April 29: Alpha Del
ta Pi-Alpha Omicron Pi; Kappa Al
pha Theta-Delta Delta Delta.
Thursday, April 30: Alpha Chi
Omega-Susan I; Alpha Xi (Delta
Delta Zeta; Pi Beta Phi-Tau Nu;
Alpha Delta Pi-Chi Omega.
Friday, May 1: Hendricks II
Susan Campbell II; Delta Delta
Delta-Delta Zeta; Thacher-Alpha
Delta Pi; Kappa Kappa Gamma-Pi
Beta Phi.
ROLLEIN S. DICKERSON
LECTURES AT NEWPORT
Professor Rollein S. Dickerson,
head' of the history department of
the University high school, gave a
lecture at Newport last night before
the Women’s club on a civic topic.
Today he will speak to the teachers’
institute on the subject of social
science.
OKLAHOMA STUDENTS VOTE
TO ABOLISH HONOR SYSTEM
University of Oklahoma. — The
students at the University of Okla
homa have voted to abolish the use
of the honor system in the univer
THE OLD RELIABLE
“MAC” “JACK”
VARSITY BARBER SHOP
11th and Alder
sity with the provision that each
school or college be allowed to re
;adopt the system if it so desires.
Geology Freshman
With Spring Fever
Becomes Poetical
It might have occurred in any
science class which contained a
freshman with a creative mind
freshman with a creative mind
and a touch of spring fever. As
it was, it happened in a geology
class. The student frankly ad
mits that it was his fault and
not the fault of the lecture that *
he was bored. I was a perfectly
good lecture.
But the fact remains that he
was bored. The sunshine was
warm and inviting and a game of
tennis followed by a long cool
swim seemed the only desirable
things under the sun. And here
he had to sit and listen to true
but unexciting facts about the
palezoic era. For a person who
did not possess a scholarly, scien
tific mind it was too much!
“When the cord of monotony is
stretched most tight, then it
breaks with a sound like a song”
said Gilbert Keith Chesterton.
The freshman grew more and
moTe restless until a little nur
sery jingle began to recur to
him—with variations. This is his
version of it:
G is for Geology,
A subject that’s deep.
You go to the lectures
And get “rocked” to sleep
Rex Shine Parlor
The Only Place to Get
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The super-quality of
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using it yourself
rather than simply
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BRODIE & CO.,
Printers
26 W. Seventh Ave.
Phone 363
III
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Jim The Shoe Doctor
Yes, Certainly, It’s
It Stands for the Best
^ HIS warm spring weather makes one want some
thing cooling and refreshing. Housemanagers
find Blue bell a most popular dessert. It is inexpen
sive. most satisfying, and easy to serve.
If you do not have Blue Bell ask your housemanager
to serve it Sunday.
Eugene Farmers’
Creamery
Phone 638
Sunday Night
From 6-9 o’clock
Sam Soble and his
“Bozo” Orchestra
■BiiiniiiniiiiBiiiiiaiiiiiBiiiiiaiuaii
Cwime Shoppe
Choker Special
This is a Trade Stimulator
We just made a large purchase of different styles and
colors of chokers that we are offering you at a very low
price.
No choker is worth less than $1.50 anywhere at any time
and some run as high as $4.00.
See Our Window.
Choice of Any Choker in the
Window
$1.25
Sales Prices Till Monday Evening
Luckey’s Jewelry Store
W. W. Bristow
rihifPlit' TUESDAY
I MAY 5th
The Theatrical Event of a Lifetime
_r_
/ne CH-nniviiArib, INC.
/A.L Jones E Morris Green \
\ Managing Directors /
announce
S OheWDRLD 1TOUR
, THOSE
UNIQUE & EXTOAOODmABV
COMEDIANS
bGaliaqher
T „„r! \/ .n< ' _ .
Mr Shean
(IN PERSON )
America's greatest revue
tyhe
Greenwich
follies
BRILLIANT
ALLSTAR
...CAST.*,,
30 FAMOUS I
ARTIST I
MODELS I
Devised and Staged by John Murray Anderson
MAIL ORDERS NOW
Make all checks and money orders to Heilig Theatre.
Enclose self-addressed, stamped envelope for return
of tickets.
PRICES—Entire lower floor. $3.50; balcony, first 3
rows, $3.00; next 3, $2.50; next 3, $2.00; last 4. $1.50,
(Plus 10% tax).