Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 03, 1925, Page 4, Image 4

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    TEN OF FMM
TOUR III EUROPE
Advanced Study In Italy
And France Done By Five
of School of Music Staff
Dr. Clark and Miss Perkins
Remain To Do History
And English Research
Br. Dan Clark, director of corres
pondence study in the Extension
Division, and also an American his
tory specialist, is filling the vacancy
left in the history department. The
extension work will again claim him
when Dr. R. C. Clark returns for
the winter.
Donald Barnes, assistant instruc
tor of history and his bride, formerly
Margaret McGregor passed the sum
mer in England. Professor Barnes
studied the records of William Pitt,
to be used in a course he is instruct
ing this term called “The Ministry
of William Pitt.”
Miss Mary Perkins is in England
on a one year leave of absence and
will return to the campus next fall.
She is studying English literature.
Instructors Still Abroad
The faculty of the University of
Oregon was well represented on the
continent this last summer, and sev
eral of the members have remained
in Europe for the winter to study
and <conduct research work in their
respective branches of learning.
Dean Colin V. Dyment and his
wife, Dr. Bertha Stuart Dyment,
are visiting the battlefields of
France, in which Dean Dyment ser
ved in the late war. The deaa is
gathering historical data, and Dr.
Stuart will probably study medicine
in Vienna. They expect to go to
Prague later.
Five of the school of music faculty
went abroad for advanced
study, and all have returned to the
campus to resume their work here.
Dr. John .T. Landsbury, dean of the
school of music, spent the summer
in Paris. Madame Bose McGrow,
instructor in voice, also studied in
Paris. Mrs. Jane Thacher, instruc
tor in piano, divided her time be
tween Vienna and the French
capital.
Rex Underwood Visited Paris
Rex Underwood, professor of vio
lin and director of the University,
orchestra, and his wife, Aurora Pot
ter- Underwood, instructor in piano,
were in Paris.
Dr. B. C. Clark, head of the his
tory department, and his bride, for
merly Marguerite Straughan, have
been in England since June. Dr.
Clark obtained special permission
to have access to the records of the
earlj- trading -companies of the Paci
fic Northwest, which are in the Bri
tish Museum in London. These will
be very interesting and will prove
valuable in the courses in early Ore
gon and Northwest history which
Professor Clark teaches.
OLSEN PLAYERS KNOWN
BY ENGLISH FACULTY
Moroni Olsen, who directs the
Moroni Olsen Players, and plays the
part of Higgins in “Pygmalion,”
which will be given in the Heilig
theatre on Monday evening, is well
known to several members of the
English department faculty.
Miss Florence E. Wilbur, director
of dramatics on the campus, knew
him in Seattle, Where he was an in
structor in the Cornish School of
Dramatics, and admired his work
very much.
Mrs. Alice H. Ernst, another mem
ber of the faculty, who also knew
the company in Seattle, stated that
to her the outstanding features of
their work was their ensemble play*
ing, keen insight and understand
ing together with a particular grace
and cosmospolitau finish that is un
usual.
DANCE
WINTER GARDEN
TO-NIGHT
Music by Winter Garden Yellow Jackets
8-Piece Band
GENTS $1.00 LADIES FREE
Special Sunday Night
Plate Dinner $1.00
With Music by “Pi-id Pipers”
6 to 8 p. m.
MENU
Tul t i Knuti Cocktail
# # #
Combination Salad
* * #
('reamed Chicken on 1’attie with Jelly
or
Southern Baked Ham with Steamed
Hubbard Squash
# # # *
Lemon Chiffon Pie Burnt Leather Cake
lee Cream or Sherbort
* * #
* . Tea Coffee Milk
Ye Campa Shoppe
“GOOD FOOD—GOOD SERVICE"
Miles Elliott Malcolm Tennent
, DRAMATIC INSTRUCTOR I
ENCOURAGES WRITING
“Drama is the most human thing
in the world,” declares Florence E.
Wilbur, head of drama and play
production at the University of Ore
gon. “It is like cutting down
through a part of life, showing every
condition. Drama is the only art
which forms a combination of all
arts.”
Miss Wilbur believes in the de
velopment of the theatre world
j through people with a university
background, and wishes to encourage
her classes to write one-act plays
for production.
The new instructor is enthusiastic
about the community drama move
ment, which started in this country
30 years ago, and which became j
popular about 1911 or 1912.
“There are two outstanding ex
amples of this movement,” she said,
“one at Pasadena and the other at
Santa Barbara, California. I worked
at Santa Barbara as director of
drama extension work under the
Community Arts Association of that
city. The association has a beau
BRING YOUR SHOES TO THE
NEW PROGRESSIVE SHOE SHOP
“The House of Quality and Reputation”
The Best of Workmanship and Materials Used
W. A. McCLEW, Prop.
44 9th Ave. West Eugene, Oregon
Are You Ready?
The KICKOFF this afternoon
demands that you wear a
ROOTER’S CAP
We Have Them
Lemon ‘0’ Pharmacy
The Convenient Campus Store
“BOB” 1243 Alder Street "VIC”
FALL DAYS AND TENNIS—
% »
are ideal if your racquet is in shape. If not, ten
nis of course any day is a complete disappoint
ment. Let our racquet expert restring your
racquet. You will find it as snappy as a new one
DANNER - ROBERTSON
77 9th Avenue East Phone 53
Obak’s Kollege Krier
OBAK Wallace, Publisher E.E.J. Office Boy and Editor
Volume 4 SATURDAY A. M. Number 1
OBAK GREETS FRESHMEN
Dean Obak of Obak’s college to
day opened the year by welcoming
into -tli e Obak portals all of the in
coming freshmen. In his greeting
the Dean told the now men just
what would be expected of them
and.what they could expect in re
turn.
“Wear your freshman caps relig
iously and do not bring the univer
sity into disrepute,” was the steam
warning of the Dean. “Remember,”
he said, “that clothes make very
little difference if the man inside
them is of the right sort. Remem
ber. too, that some of the greatest
men of this country disregarded
clothes entirely. Charles Hughes
used his whiskers for a necktie,”
continued the Dean, “and oven Use
less S. Grant fought through the
civil war with nothing more than a
union suit, for protection.”
The Dean recommended that the
boys “hit the tables every day in
order that they become proficient
with their billiard sticks and pool
balls. “If you wish to become a
credit to th<* school and be thought
highly of you must see to it that
vour shots are what they should |
Dean Wallace as he appeared just
before entering a friendly game of
hot hand.
be.” Every man, he claimed, should
be able to “run the table” before;
leaving the college and should have
that accomplishment as his goal.
JUDGES’ STAND
TO BE ERECTED
In order that the*town dignitaries
may be able to view the freshmen
drag down the avenue, Obaks col
lege will erect adjudges stand on the
side of its campus next to Willam
?tte street. Those wishing reserved
mats must apply immediately.
Heilig Theatre Monday, October 12th—Not a Picture
AMERICA’S CLASSIC OF LAUGHS AND HEART THROBS
3 Years in New York—2 Years in Chicago—1 Year in Boston
distinguished cast Mrs. Frank Bacon Thomas Jefferson Bessie Bacon
Headed By As “Mrs. Jones” ‘‘Lightnin’ Bill Jones” as ‘‘The Vaudevill Actress”
SEAT SALE OPENS SAT URDAY, OCTOBER 10th
PRICES. Including Tax—Lower floor, first 10 rows >2.20; last 8 rows. $1.45—balcony, first 3 rows $1.65
jyj a II ORDERS be at once w^en accompanied by certified checks, express or postoffice money
orders. Send self-addressed, stamped envelope for safe return of tickets.
tiful theatre seating 850 people,
where the community presents plays
This gives
and brings
under good direction,
a recreational impluse
together the community along lines '
in which no other movement eould
possibly draw it so close.
i
HAVE YOU
GOT
COMPETITION?
Say It With Flowers
CHASE
Gardens
Why Rent?
You Can Buy Any Make of
PORTABLE TYPEWRITER
CORONA
REMINGTON
UNDERWOOD
For $5.00 Down, $5.00 per Month '
We have a large stock of Rebuilt Typewriters in
all standard makes, for sale or for rent.
OFFICE MACHINERY & SUPPLY CO.
1047 Willamette Street
Phone 148
Films Developed
and Printed at
Carl R. Baker’s
.KODAK
SHOP
7 West 7th
Kodaks — Frames
Everything Photographic
SHE’S
/
coming
MONDAY
TUESDAY
WHERE PRICES ARE ff£V£# RMSeD.
in
Dainty BEBE
DANIELS
“The
Manicure Girl”
A comedy of a cute little cuticle cutup
who loved to “hold hands’’ and of a
breezy young fellow who “nailed”
her.
It’s a
PARAMOUNT
PICTURE
Dorothy Wyman at The Wurlitxer