Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 17, 1925, Page 2, Image 2

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    UH QDregtm Bailg limetalii Siiitotial Page m
Edward M. Miller -—
Harold Kirk .
Sol Abramson --
Jalmar Johnson ..
________ Editor
.... Associate Editor
........_ Managing Editor
_ Associate Managing Editor
Frank H. Loggan
Wayne Iceland —
Philippa Sherman
Webetex Jones -
__ Manager
Associate Manager
Feature Editor
__ Sports Editor
^ th« Associated Student* of the University of Oregon, Jtugene, lBsued aauy except i
e°arreS Mn°bery Jm£5& °IntercolCatc PreS, Aviation Entered in the poetoffice at Eugene. Oregon, as second-class matter.
* • ^— Phones—Editor, 1320; Manager, i*i.
The
college year. - -
year. Advertising rates npon application.
Sunday ana ivionaay during me
Subscription rates, $2.25 per
Day Editor—Alice Kraft
Night Editor—John Black
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1626
Assistant—Lawrence Ogle
I1 ‘ .. r -.. .
A New University
of Oregon Magazine
Plrifn! nqV{ pathetic'- are the only ad
jlcCiTeffhat might be used in describing
the list riP publications issued under the
auspices of Oregon students. It is indeed
appalling that a State University -with
.‘J000 students should confine itself to the
jicasept rpster of student publications.
An .inventory is not difficult to make,
so brief is the list given in the ‘Hello’
book.
First, the ‘Hello’ book, yearly infor
mation and advice,
The student and faculty ‘Directory,’
unadulterated statistics.
Besides these two are the ‘Daily Emer
ald,’ ' the annual ‘Oregana,’ and the
monthly ‘Old Oregon,’ the latter an
alumni magazine.
The Oregana, while demanding a vast
expenditure of labor, is a yearly book of
record, and practically speaking, does
not afford an opportunity for student ex
pression.
‘Old Oregon,’ alumni magazine, “a
campus publication edited monthly both
for the interest of students and the
alumni. . .” is written from the alumni
point of view. While serving its purpose
admirably in keeping the alumni in touch
with the University, it holds but little
interest for the casual student and is not
adequate for the expression of undergrad
uate life.
That leaves the ‘Oregon Emerald’ the
only full-fledged student periodical in
existence—the only page where student
expression may find itself in print!
Twenty-five years ago, with 300 stu
dents enrolled, a monthly magazine in
addition to the Weekly struggled bravely,
but somewhere along the line it gave up
the ghost.
Pot and Quill, women writers’ frater
nity, recently published one issue of a lit
erary magazine, “Green Ink,” but it died
in swaddling clothes.
Lemon Punch, the brain child of cam
pus wits, died a recent ignoble death, and
lies with grave unkempt.
A magazine of short stories, planned
last year, got no farther than the brains
of its projectors. No finances.
Last year, also, there was ‘Emerald
Ink,’ a supplement promised in lieu of
the extinct Sunday Emerald, Gone, gone,
also a victim of financial disability on
the part of the Emerald.
Another Emerald supplement planned
for the present year seems to have fol
lowed the rest of the corpses with not
enough money on hand to provide a de
cent funeral.
The University needs a new magazine
of general circulation and appeal. Call
it, a University of Oregon magazine, if
you will. It should not, be strictly liter
ary, humorous, or of any preconceived
stamp. Rather it should represent the
University as a whole, and should fairly
bubble undergraduate life.
Let it he to the University as ‘Vanity
Fair’ is to our contemporary life. The
best short stories; the bes*t caricatures;
the best verse; the best humor; and any
other expressions of our philosophy.
Perhaps an entirely new magazine
should spring forth; or possibly an amal
gamation might he effected with ‘Old
Oregon,’ and the latter’s running organi
zation revamped to suit the needs of the
situation. Discussion will decide the best
means.
If Sigma Upsilon and Pot and Quill,
men and women writer’s fraternities.
Hammer and Coffin, publishing society,
and others interested will lend their ac
tive support the magazine can be made at
reality. The need is imperative.
--3—
The Book Nook
o-;---———?— -
Have ypu read “Weo^ End”? I£. not listen
to a tale, of a party supremfc. ’ It began, all
parties do—but this one in particular began at
an exquisite country home with alt its adorn
ments including the guest who habitually gets
in the way of anything breakable. __ From the
introduction of the character who is'persuaded
to come on the supposition that some one else
will be'therej to the end where the. host makes
his nightly pilgriamage to bring his wife to bed,1
the-reader is kept, with his eyes fastened on the
printed page. Fortunately the book is—oh so
short; and one can persue the whole book—-a
chapter before breakfast, a chapter during
breakfast, a chapter on. the way wherever one
is going-—-and finish it in a very mad rush.
There seems to be nothing missing. Thera are
the bored the forced gay, tjie bathers,the moon
light escapades, the naughty and the very
naughty, all in this book of an ultra-sophisticat
ed set. And the stories told by the would-be
authors among the guests are an art in them
selves.
Tlie reader who wants something light but
exceptionally entertaining will find many mom'
cuts of enjoyment in “A Young Man’s Fancy’'
by John McIntyre. It is the story of a young
man who falls in love with a wax figure in a
department store window. The lovely adven
tures ho pictures in his mind for himself and
his wax lady keep the reader interested to tho
last word. And when he plans the dinner for
his wax lady and she appears—well, it certain
ly would be a shame to spoil the story for you
by going any farther.
The reader who wants something
light but exceptionally entertaining
' will find many moments of enjoyment
in “A Young Man’s Fancy” by John
McIntyre. It is the story of a young
man who falls in love with a wax fig
ure in a department store window.
The lovely adventures he pictures in
his mind for himself and his wax lady
keep tho reader interested to the last
word. And when he plans the dinner
for his wax lady and she appears—well,
it certainly wold be a shame t)o spoil
the story for you by going any farther.
• * * *
Let us once and for all settle the bones of
Perci Barks, who bays at the moon on moon
light nights—when else could he, silly! Now
Mr. Professor’s first book which we shall call
the Elastic Age (although garters did not enter
his book, either in his characters or in his
words) had a lot of truth in it. A Prof, at a
college for boys only, he handed across the
“lowdown” on conditions which wer prevailing
to a great extent among some of those eastern
universities. He followed this book with a
short story in the Liberty magazine which con
tained a “punch” as well as a lot bf truth.
But right then and there, he forgot that books
of his kind should contain something of value
to get across and wrote instead what he prob
ably termed ns “red hot number right off tho
frying pan” designed “to knock the present
generation and all their friends intb a cocked
hat”. But with his book which rambles on
about a poor little half breed girl and bad, bad
men, he merely accomplishes the inner orna'
meats of a garbage can. The way to show those
authors that they‘can’t “put anything over on
us” is to leave them and- their works scverly
alone.
F. M.
<>■-'-jj---o
25 Years Ago
o-<=>
OREGON WEEKLY
October 16, 1900
A few days ago invitations were issued writ
ten in red ink on burnt brown paper, profusely
decorated with skulls and crossboncs, black eats,
and coffins, containing Rhetorics,, Trigs,
’Noroies, theses and briefs ready for interment.
These sombre scrolls, tied with black ribbons,
announced to the college girls that ye shades
of last year's Y. W. C. A. Would hold their mid
night revelries in ye haunts of ye athletes, on
ye twelfth day of ye present month, in honor
of ye novice maids preparing to enter ye lower
regions from ye effects of ye old-time Hadley
and Genung.
All the young ladies interested in the foot
hall benefit are requested to m|eet at Miss
Friendly’s at 4 o’clock, Wednesday afternoon.
Tho University of Washington football eleven
defeated the Seattle High School last Saturday
by a score of 5 to 0,
<>
Seven Seers,
Statistical Bureau:
I think that..*..
Is the handsomest male student on the
campus.
-o
SEVEN seers
Beauty Contest
For it’s always good weather
When class fellows get together,
With a sign on the entrance
That no others are allowed.
Elections for the handsomest man on the
campus are rapidly flooding the office rooms
of’the Seven- Seers, and many a beauty will
see his name in the column today. This, how
ever, ends the nominations, and those votes
cast over the week-end will be fore those al
ready namied. The votes will be counted Mon
day and the winner of the title will be announc
ed in the' Emerald Tuesday. Remember, girls,
to vote for a man whose name is on the list,
and place your votes as before in one of the
three boxes that are placed in the Libe, the Co
op, and the Journalism shack.
May the Handsomest win!
New names up before the voters are:
Courtney Nelson Mert Foltz
Abbot Lawrence Carvel Nelson
Vernon Fowler Art Priaulx
Bill Bamber Courtney Kelson
George Belknap Ike Reynolds
“Lord Chesterfield” Guyer
Juan Caedo Domingo
Those previously published are:
Duke Carter
Jim Johnson
Pug Toole
Jim Forestel
Bruce Y. Curry
Gene Shields
Milt Rice
Bob Knight
Art Gray
Sol Abramson
Bob McCabe
Abbie Green
Bill Martel
Dick Godfrey
Jerry Plue
Bill Dills
CylbeTt McClellan
Jim Robertson
Wayne Leland
Wilber Wester
Jack O’Meara
Glenn Burch
Bud Pearson
Fred Martin
Fame lies in the offing for the winner of
the Beauty Contest. Already a contract has
been signed with the Phampus Phlayers Philm
Corps, for the production of a film entitled,
‘The Mislaid World—A Sheepherder’s Ro
mance,” starring the Seven Seers’ Prize Beauty.
Dther engagements, including a speech to be
broadcast over KGW on “The Importance of the
Asterisk and the Seven Seers in Modern Art,”
ire being arranged for the fortunate one, and
the greatest reward of all—a life membership
into the Almighty Order of Sev^n Seers itself!
Because of the continued fair weather, the
first meeting of the year held under the aus
pices of the California Club was a failure the
other night. No one had anything to complain
about and President Fitzimmons was at a loss
for an issue.
Soon, however, a sun-kissed son of the sunny
state, from Sunnyvale, laid a motion on the
table to the effect that a Citizen’s committee
lie appointed for |the purpose of rebuilding
Tia Juana. The motion was accepted and Lew
Cody, of film fame, was unanimously elected
to fill the chair.
Contributions should be placed in garbage
cans or taken direetly to the city dump. As
every sophisticated Californian nurses a tender
spot in Ms heart for Tia Juana, contributions
were not slow in forthcoming.
Contributions received to date:
Ted Becker: ..Half a dozen corkscrews.
Bob Neighbors—Sir packs of marked
cards.
Ted Flangus: ..One noiseless cash reg
ister.
George Craig: One deck of slightly used
pinochle cards.
W. C. T. U.: One dozen jars of cynide jell.
Latest fashions for well-dressed morons
wnre discussed and the following conclusions
were reached: This is the time of the year
when the well-dressed man must select his ward
robe for pheasant, partridge, snipe and crap
shooting.
BULLY
“My husband has just bought me a new
Rolls-Royce,” said Gloria Swanson, “and
I’m going to feel so silly in it. I’ll just
ride out in front With tho chauffeur and
pretend I’m the maid.”—Movie Weekly.
“THE EVOLUTIONISTS
and
CHRIST OR INTERPRETERS”
wHU 1.,. the sermon topic of the Rev. Frank Fav Eddy next
ountlny morning at the Unitarian Church.
Another sermon in the series on “The Faith of an Evolutionist”
The Soloist at This Service Will Be
MRS. H. D. SCHOUGALL. CONTRALTO
The aim of this series of seimxms is to show how the religious
faith of one who frankly confesses himself an evolutionist is
modified.
t ni\ ersitv men and women are always welcome at these
services.
1I1K Hrnr.h 10R MOUKRJJS” will 1>C the general theme of
a stries ut talks at t ln--s which meets .immediately’ after the
Morning Service each Sunday, led by Mr. Eddy. Next Sunday
the particular topic will be "The Background of the Old Testa
ment.”
University men and women are always welcome at all of the
services of "The Little Church of the Human Spirit.”
Our Church Is Located on East Eleventh at Ferry St.
Services Begin at 10:45 A. M.
From George
To You—
pAT AT the all-Oregon place. Delicious foods await
you in the most palatable forms. Don’t for
get the Oregaim.
Ice Cream—Dessert of Desserts
No oilier goodie can take the place of Ice Cream.
Try our fancy Sundaes and Soda Specials.
The Oragana
■o--—— ^
I Campus Bulletin I
«®---—
Dean Hale’s class in law of the
press wil} not meet Friday.
Alpha Delta Sigma Meeting at the
Cftmpa Shoppe Friday noon. Im*
portant.
Oregana Humor stiff request# . any
one desiring to , do cartooning er
humorous work on the 19j>d book,
to see Bob Keeney. Phone 940.
Alpha Kappa PsA—Luncheon, Col
lege Side Inn, Friday noon. Very
important! Be there.
Mu Phi Epsilon—Meeting of active
members Sunday, October 18,;
2:15 o’clock, lounge room, music
building.
All those interested in passing tests j
for swimming hoboTS see Miss E.'
Troemel, Woman’s building, this
week.
Alpha Kappa Psi luncheon post- j
poned until next week.
Formal Tea for Dean Egterly to
be given today between 4:00 and
6:00 in Alumni Hall. All campus
and faculty women as well as
faculty wives invited. Freshmen
women especially urged to eome.
Saturday, October 17—2:15, Foot
ball game, Oregon vs. Pacific Uni
versity, Hayward field.
OT
SUNDAY ENTERTAINMENT
A delightful place to spend Sunday evening”
Featuring—ABBIE GREEN
WALT HOWELL
ROBERT MISNER
You’re invited to the entertainment
no cover charge
jud"
ORIENTAL GRILLE -From 8-11
-*. * ~
vO IV
-»—» --fc
Buy Your Clothes the
New Way
ON OUR NEW CHARGE
SERVICE SYSTEM, THE
Ten-Pay Plan
You may have found it inconvenient
to pay the full amount necessary
to buy a
'
Suit or Overcoat
at one time . We have inaugurated
a new way of handling your charge
account . . Many men are finding
this Plan of the utmost convenience.
Perhaps you would like to investi
gate it.
Fashion Park Clothes
THE FINEST MADE
are featured by us extensively on
this plan . . This insures the best in
Men’s Clothing . . styling—fabrics
and quality.
There’s an ample stock from which
to make selections.
$25 YOUNG MEN’S SUITS AND O’COATS
You pay $5.00 when purchased and $2.00 weekly
$30 YOUNG MEN’S SUITS AND O’COATS
You pay $6.00 when purchased and $2.40 weekly
$35 FASHION PARK SUITS AND O’COATS
You pay $7.00 when purchased and $2.80 weekly
$40 FASHION PARK SUITS AND O’COATS
You pay $8.00 when purchased and $3.20 weekly
$45 FASHION PARK SUITS AND O’COATS
You pay $9.00 when purchased and $3.60 weekly
$50 FASHION PARK SUITS AND O’COATS
You pay $10 when purchased and $4.00 weekly
There is no added cost
to you—plan prices and cash
prices are identical
Green-Kilborn Co.
men’s wear
825 Willamette Eugene, Ore.