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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 14, 1925)
REVISED S0C1 PROGRAM GIVEN All Dates Open For Events Are Being Rapidly Taken As Fall Term Advances Dances, Receptions, f Teas And Class Affairs Fill the Calendar Until December Available dates for social events are rapidly being taken, according to information received from Dean Esterlv’s office where all social af fairs are registered. Although ad ditions keep coming in, the best dates for fall quarter have already been taken. Due to former diffi culties many clubs and organiza tions have endeavored to register as early as possible. Class Parties Friday The social calendar for fall quar ter is as follows: October 16, Friday—Class par ties; Women’s league—Dean of Women’s tea, October 17, Saturday—Football, Pacifie-Eugcne; Alpha Omicrim Pi tea, Alumni hall; Faculty reception; Alpha Tau Omqga dance; Sigma Alpha Epsilon Pledge dance; Chi Psi pledge dance; Journalism Jam boree. October 21, Wednesday—Dime crawl. October 22, Thursday—-Alpha Xi Delta tea, Alumni hall. October 2.1, Friday—Football, California-Portland. • October 30, Friday—Alpha Chi Omega underclass dance; Delta Zeta informal; Chi Omoga under class dance; Alpha Xi Delta pledge dance; Get Wise party, Woman’s league. October 31, Saturday-—Football, Stnnford-Palo Alto; Theta Chi un derclass dance; Delta Gamma, pledge dance; Sigma Alpha Epsilon infor mal; Tau Nu pledge dance; Kappa Kappa Gamma open house; Kwama tea; Alpha Phi underclass dance; Friendly llall barn dance. November (i, Friday—-Delta Tau pledge dance; Sigma Chi underclass dance; California club danco; Al pha Gamma Delta underclass dance; Hendricks Hall informal. November 7, Saturday—Football, AVillamettc-Salem; Kappa Sigma informal; Theta Chi upporclass dance; Delta Gamma reception; Kappa Alpha Theta underclass dance. November 11, Wednesday—Armis tice Day. Holiday. November 14, Friday—Homecom ing. November 15, Saturday—Home coming game, O. A. 0. - Eugene. November 20, Friday—Phi Kap pa Psi underclass dance; Thacher Cottage dance. November 21, Saturday—Sopho more informal. _ November 20 - 29—Thanksgiving vacation. December 1, Tuesday—A. S. U. O. concert. Anna Case. December 4-5—Closed week-end. 1 EDUCATIONAL CLUB TO MEET The education dub, ft course for graduate students will meet on Thursday night in room two at 7:.'10 sharp. Mrs. Edith Patteo will speak on “Impressions of French Schools.” It is imperative that all taking this Woitk 'lie present as individual work for the whole term will be mapped out. STUDENT FEE OFFICES OPEN 8:00 A. M. TODAY Student fees are due and payable at the University business office starting today and continuing for ten days until October 24. Univer sity officials again urge students to come early and avoid the rush. Fees will be $.u per term higher this year than formerly, due to the extra tax voted by the student body last year. This extra fee goes in to the general fund for the student union building, the building of now grandstands and the erection of a basketball pavalHon. The total fee for regularly regis- j tered students will be $18.75 plus I the class grid laboratory assess ments. This includes the cost of ■the student daily paper, student body and class fees, homecoming luncheon and other expense items. The cashier’s window opens at 8:00 o’clock in the morning and re mains open until 5:00 o’clock at night on week days and on Satur days it closes at noon. The sched ule this year allows the student two Saturdays in which to pay his fees. LIBRARY ASSIGNS ROOM FOR VARSITY DEBATERS Material For Questions To Be At Reserve Desk Varsity and frgshman men de baters will do their reference work in room 30’ on the reserve floor of the main library as a result of ar rangements made with the refer ence department by Jack Hemp stead, men \s debate and oratory manager. Material will be on re serve at the desk on the second floor. Books dealing with every phase of the questions are being collected and a bibliography is be ing made. The special room will be a con venience to all candidates for the men’s debate squads of the school. This same room will also be used by women debaters when the ques tions for tho freshmen and varsity girl’s debates are announced this week. Resolved: “The nations of the ■world should adopt a Jpol^cV "of?, hands off in China,”'is the'ques tion of tho varsity men’s debate with O. A. C. this year. Tryouts on this*subject will be held on Oc tober 30 to select the varsity de- J bate squad for the season. “ i'hat the federal government j should discontinue granting sub- I sillies- to the states,” is the sub-j ject for the freshman men’s de-j bate with O. A, 0. which is to be] held in April. Tryouts |on ’this subject will be held on October 29. A magazine bibliography in- j eluding references on each of these] subjects is now being collected in | addition to the books to bo used for reference. While a number of tho magazines are in duplicate sep arate form, a majority of them are eidntnined in the yearly vVdumets on the main floor of the library. Some magazines on the federal sub sidies question will be called in from tho various state high schools which are debating the subject this year and to which the material was sent recently. , Bibliographies will be posted on the reserve floor and main floor. The books in the library on the Chinese question have been put on reserve. Students must sign for ma terial under the same conditions as ordinary reserve books and will use room 30 for the debate work ex cept when using bound volumes of magazine references. REARGUMENT OF CASE SET FOR OCTOBER 20 The ease pending before the Su preme Court at Salem concerning the validity of the auditorium bonds issued by the city of Eu gene for the construction of a municipal auditorium on or adja cent to the University of Oregon campus is to be reargued the L’Oth of October. The case was appealed to the Supreme Court by the city of Eugene last May. The city and University are be ing represented by Mr. Foster of the firm of Potter, Foster and Inl ine], and Mr. Kean of the firm of Williams and Bean. Dean Halo is cooperating with them in argu ing the case before the Supreme Court. W. A. A. Council Meets: New Rulings Instituted In Womens’ Sports {Continued from page onej which will lie decided by the pftlnt j system committee. The W. A. A. handbooks, which | have just come off the press, will . be distributed to all members of! W A. A. They will also be sent to the twenty colleges and universi t'es who are members of the west ern section of A. ('. A. C. W„ and to the larger high schools of Ore gon with the view of educating 1 high school girls in the work and interests of W. A. A. HOMECOMING SLOGAN CONTEST My Suggestion is .. Submitted by Address . 'OLD OREGON’ ID HE HOMECOMING ISSUE 0 0; °. • • ; 0 I “Bunk” Short To Contribute Page of Cartoons ! _ ; Homecoming stories, Homecoming j humor, Homecoming plans, will fea ! ture the next issue of “Old Ore I gon ” which will be off the press j the first week in November, thus j reaching all alumni before the week-end of their return to the campus. Jeannette Calkins, editor of the alumni magazine, returned i late Monday night from Portand | where she worked during the week end arranging for special features : for her magazine. ! “We are trying to make the j Homecoming issue the best number j we’ve had,” Miss Calkins said yes 1 terday. “Wo are planning a page ! of Homecoming c a'ltf o o n s by |“lAnk” Short, ’23, whose work as | a cartoonist was well known on the I campus. Another member of the | alumni association, Leonard For dan, ’23, is writing ian article on | the athletic situation from the j alumni point of view. “Mr. Jor |dan,” Miss Calkins said, “is a mera | ber of the Portland Alumni belong ing to the Order of the ‘O. ’ ” The section devoted to news of graduates will be larger than usual as the class secretaries are sending letters asking for news of members j of the different classes. Instead of individual letters go- j ing to each alumni.of the Univer- j j sity, as has been the custom, an j i invitation will be carried through j i“01d Oregon.” Formerly, letters | were sent to each ex-student, but [ owing to the great number of alum ni, it is thought advisable this year I to discontinue the custom and to j issue a general “bid” to everyone.; Rome of the features of the issue ' will be a double page spread de-, [voted to football, a humor' section [concerning Homecoming and a> ! Homecoming poem by l)ean Collins, | ’10, who is contributing a poem | to each issue of this year. DEMOLAYS LUNCH AT ANCHORAGE THURSDAY - I A get-together nml get-acquainted i hour with the glad hand of wel come 'conspicuously present will be j the DeMolay luncheon that is; scheduled for next Thursday noon I at the Anchorage. There will be an ' opportunity to meet DeMolay broth-! ors from all over Oregon and even farther afield; a real “bull feat” for members of the order. A jazz orchestra will play pop ular selections during the luncheon, the committee in charge has an nounced. Professor Dunn, of the University faculty, who is keenly interested in the new campus De Molay organization, will deliver an address of welcome. Plans for the future will also be discussed. Tickets for the affair nre now on sale at the Co-op. Frosh Squad Battles With Varsity: Chemawa Game Is First On Schedule (Continued from page one) one of the most promising men out for a wing position is out probably for the entire season due to a se vere ease of blood poisoning. Sandvall, all-star center from the Portand interscliolastie league and cue of the best bets for snapjrer back, is out for several weeks, due to a wrenched knee. A large num ber of other men are suffering from less serious injuries but enough to hamper them from participating in scimmage. Chemawa First on Schedule The not too-highlv touted Indian eleven have a very good team this season. In the two games played thus far they defeated the strong Commerce high school eleven of \ Portland and The Dalles pigskin ' warriors, state champions of two j years ago, were also forced to de- j feat by the red men. The mainstay. of their team is a 190-pound full back who has yet. to be stopped. It is planned by Coach Leslie to use at least thirty men in the game Friday as it will be his only chance to get a good line on the men be fore the University of Washington babes envade the local camp, Satur day, October 31. The probable start ing line-up for Friday afternoon’s game is as follows: Kippel, center; Thompson and Flagel, guards; Mar tin and DeMott, tackles; Burnell and Johnson, ends; Woody or Wil son, quarterback; Gooden or Gould, fullback; and Ostrum and Hagen, halfbacks. THREE PLAYS COMING; FANTASY CAST CHOSEN Tlio advance class in dramatic interpretation i* working on the first of three plays to be given in the near future. The program, com plete, will consist of a comedy, a tragedy, and a fantasy; the last of these being the one worked upon now. “Aria Da Capo,” a play in one act, by Edna St. Vincent Mil lay, is considered by dramatic critics to be one of the best one-act plays ever written by an American, and the participants will have plenty of opportunity to show their ability. There has been a try-out for the five parts and the results are-.as follows: Pierre, Arthur Coe Gray, ’27, and as his understudy, Cecil Mat son, ’28; Columbine, Florence. Wil ton Couch, ’26,. understudy, Dorothy Koepke, ’28; Cathurnus, Cecil Mat son; Corydon, Edgar Buchanan, ’27; Thyrsis, Alfonz Korn, ’27. The class in play-producing will do all the staging for the plays as a part of their training. “All of the classes,” Miss Wilbur finds, •“though not very large, are very in terested; and I find it very delight ful to work with them.” Annual Y. M. C. A. Drive For Funds Started; $600 Goal Set By Leaders Continued from page one) Be.'inl, Boy Herndon, Bill Kid well, and Cecil .Matson. Eobinson Encourages Drive Claude Eobinson, former presi dent of tlie A. S. U. O., in a letter wishing the Y. M. C. A. success in the drive, wrote as follows: “Tell Mr. Da , is that I esteem the Y. M. C. A. institutions in the various cities, aside from their ! other activities for the fact that a wayfarer can always go there and be assured of a clean place to live in at moderate rate. Besides he is welcomed in a manner that is : not mercenary. This, indeed, is a great boon to a young fellow with out a great deal of money in a strange city.” HALE TO SPEAK ON COURT Dean Hale of the school of law will ’spealc next Friday before’the Lions’ club in Salem on'“America and the World Court.” The dean is [ also scheduled to address the mem-1 bers ’ meeting of the Eugene Y. M. C.' A. on the same subject, Friday evening. $10.00 and $25.00 i University Tailor BARGAINS IN and Overcoats AT ONE-HALF PRICE On Alder Near 11th Don’t Let Those Negatives Lie Useless ! 'T'llOSE negatives of last year's pic tures. they are just as good as ever. You had better get another set to replenish those you have lost or given away. Every one of them tells a story you cannot afford to lose. REMEMBER—Our work is exclusive, not a sideline. Baker Button “EVERYTHING PHOTOGRAPHIC’’ MISS ALDEN SPENDS i ! Summer school "in Columbia Uni-„; versity, attendance at the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of her alma, mater, and a visit at her home in NeW England: these were the activities of Miss Florence D. Alden, of the physical education de partment of the University of Ore gon, during the past summer. The first thing on her vacation program was to attend the Smith College anniversary at Northhamp ton, Mass. The most impressive ceremony at Smith was the procession in which marched 6,000 alumni and students dressed in white wearing their class colors and carrying banners. “Everyone was there,” Miss Alden said, “from the freshmen to gradu ates of fifty years with hoary hair and long skirts.” From Northhampton, Miss Alden went to Teachers’ College at Colum bia University, New York, for a six weeks summer course. Here, she kept an apartment with three other women from the coast, Miss Flor LAST TIMES TODAY Leatrice Joy in “Hell’s Highroad” Coming Thursday Only “The Danger Signal” featurifig Jane Novak A Biama of Love Amid Railroad Thrills PAINE’S COLONIAL llth and Alder ence Evans, who plays for the gym nastic and dancing classes at the University of Oregon; Miss G. Bar bara, head of the physical education department at the Washington State College, Pullman, Washington, and Miss Alice Evans of Pomona College, Claremont, California. After summer school, Miss Alden visited her home in Springfield, Mass. She returned home by way i of the Canadian Kockies, stopping ' often to take horseback trips into I the wilds of America. A BIG Victory For This Shop Scoring on the Old Idea That Better Styles Can Be Had In Port land. i ( For Right Style This Fall Choose ROYAL PARK Herewith presenting Royal Park in the three button mode —shown also in the two button coat. ..Both models are truly correct—Both embody the fin est new style tendencies. If you consider the purchase cf a new Fall suit and do nbt look over the offerings of this shop you do yourself an injustice. HERMAN’S Alder at Thirteenth Eugene JUST IN— The Macgregor Imported Wool Scarf-Muffler Some striking -patterns destined for much fav orable comment here as in the East, this Fall. Likewise, some new Macgregor Golf Hose and a smart; selection of Cravats are avail able. Linking Alder Street with Fifth Avenue Football Schedule UNIVERSITY OF OREGON vs. DATE OPPONENT Oct. 17 Pacific University . Oct. 24 *U. of California . Oct. 31 Stanford University . Nov. 14 *0. A. C. (Homecoming) Nbv. 26 *U. of Washington . PLACE TIME Eugene—Hayward Field .2:15 Portland—M. A. A. C. Field. 2:30 Palo Alto.. Eugene—Hayward Field . 1:30 Seattle—Stadium . 2:00 Ticket Information *Keserved seats to be sold for these games. Seat applications have been mailed to all Alumni on record. California game tickets to be sold by the Multnomah Club, Portland. Other game tickets, including the Oregon section at Washington game at Seattle, by the Graduate Manager. Jack Benefiel, Eugene. Mail your application early. Prices, reserved seats, Idaho game, $2:00; U. of California, O. A. C., and U. of Washington $2.00 and $2.50