Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 22, 1925, Page 4, Image 4

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    GIRL DEBATERS
MAT TIRE TRIP
Advisability of Tour To Be
Decided At Next Meeting
Of Student Finance Body
Contests Will Be Scheduled
With Several Colleges If
Plan Receives Sanction
An eastern tour for the Univer
sity women's debate team will bo
the big forensic event of the year
for girl orators if arrangements for
the trip can be completed. The
matter will involve an addition of
$528 to tho regular forensic budget.
Its advisability will be ddcidcd at
the next meeting of the finance
committee of the executive council
next week when all angles of the
proposition will be presented.
Provided the trip is sanctioned
by the financial committee, debates
will be arranged with a large part
of the following institutions: Uni
versity of Montana, University of
North Dakota, Northwestern Uni
versity, University of Michigan,
Ohio State University, Oberlin Col
lege, Cornell University, Wesb Vir
gina University, Miami College,
Kansas University, University of
Colorado, University of Arizona,
University of Southern California,
and Stanford. The girls would go
east over the northern rohte and
return by way of the south.
Plans Recommended
Debate officials are suggesting
the special eastern trip for the
girls because it would not only in
crease interest in tforensies, but,
since it is the first igirls tour for a
good advertisement for the Univer
sity and the state of Oregon.
A resolution passed Monday night
by the forensic committee of the
executive council enthusiastically
recommended the extra appropria
tion on the part of the finance
committee for the tour. Other con
tributions from sources such as the
Chamber of Commence, Kiwainis
Club and similar organizations in
the city of Eugene besides alumni
association support, would provide
approximately enough funds, it is
suggested.
Three Week’s Trip Planned
Were the girls to take the trip,
they would leave about one week
before the end of the winter term
and be gone about three weeks.
An older woman will accompany
the girls to act as chaperone and
handle publicity arrangements, who
ther the chaperone would be a mem
ber of tho faculty or a promineut
alumui, would be determined later,
“I am very much interested in
stimulating added interest in de
bate,” said Dean William 0. Halt
of the law school yesterday. “1
can readily see wliero this torn
would arouse interest in debate on
tho campus and in the state a!
large. 1. can also realize where it
could oy made an advertising asset
to tho University in this sta'a and
iriticr»aliy. 1 ‘vat under the im
pression that O. A. C. received
mud, favorable advertising for
M-nd:i g its men’s debate r.i im east
last year. It is one way of esuit
ing the mtellect ini uchiovcmcu s of
tiie University.”
Forensic Budgot Low
According to J. Stanley Cray,
Oregon iorensic cinch, O. 0 last
year was allowed $2300 for debate
and eratcry welt during till year
an i i) i» year the budget calls for
In contrast to this, the t ,r
i;v lad get of I lie Univefs -;v was
only $£•"’> last \v<-. Without t. •>
■ i of the '.'..'•in’s tout v. dieh
" oil. sake this year’s budget
$1-U” forensic cnponses tho year
won!1 be little u , , • than 's.'Oi'
Portland Rally Spirit
At High Tide; Business
Section Scene of Parade
(Continued from page one)
rade. Will fall in behind them.
They are to lie organized on Front
Street, facing south, ready to turn
up Washington.
7:15—Combine parade through
down town district through import
ant hotels and streets.
8:45 — Approximately, or nine
o’clock—Arrive at Multnomah Club
i staging short rally inside. Inline
| diately after will begin the big
i Alumni-Oregon student stag rally
i smoker which will include several
vaudeville acts, speeches and other
entertainment.
| Sunday, 7:00 p. m.—Return trip
i of rally special, arriving at South
| ern Pacific depot, Eugene, at 10:30
p. m.
Tickets On Sale Today
Tickets for the rally special will
go on sale today and Friday morn
oing in front of the library. The
tickets will sell at the reduced rate
of $3.81 roundtrip.
The speakers’ committee will hold
a short meeting at College Side Inn
at 12:30 this noon. The committee
includes: Jim Forestel, Jack Her-,
ring, Bay Moeser, Bob Gardner,
Steele Winterer, Fred Martin, Wil
bur Wester, Ted Gillenwaters, Bob
McCabe, Bob Love, Ken Stevenson,
Bud Christenson and Dud Clark.
TEXTILE CLASS TO VISIT
LARGE WORSTED MILL
Miss Margaret Daigh’s class in
textiles is planning to kill two
birds with one stone next Saturday
morning when the students in ad
dition to taking part in the noise
parade, visit the OregBn Worsted
Mill in Portland. Besides Miss
Daigh, most of the twenty girls in
the class will make the trip. Prob
lems and methods in connection
with the study of wool will be
noted.
Miss Daigh, who is a University
of Washington graduate, has charge
of the classes in clothing and tex
tiles in the household arts depart
ment, which were conducted last
year by Miss Mary Davis.
WOMEN’S HONORARY
FRATERNITY ELECTS
Phi Chi Theta, national women’s
honorary commerce fraternity, elec
1 ted officers for this year at a meet
! mg held yesterday. They were:
! Ida Bell Treinayne, president; An
toni Koberstein, vice-president;
I Alice Olsen, secretary; and Glenna
Fisher, treasurer.
One of the functions of this or
ganization is that it offers every
year a $50 cash award to the best
all-around senior girl in the depart
ment. Last year this prize was
awarded to Mary Jane Hathaway.
i Y. M. C. A. DRIVE ENDS
! WITH S620 SUBSCRIBED
Team Workers Commended
At Final Luncheon
Over the top by twenty dollars,
Sneli was the actual result of the
Y. M. C. A. drive which was
brought to an official clese at ihe
biiirlieon of team workers at the
Y nut yesterday noon, when the
total amount raised was announced
as $620. Chairman Bob Hunt com
mended the workers at Wedres
Uaj's luncheon.
Friendly Hall subscribed $66,
more than any other one men’s
j living organization. Sigma Alpha
Epsilon and Kappa Sigma led the
fraternity houses.
Boland Davis as director of n-in
frateinitv men solicitation and in
charge of the team rap*tint, oral
1Hft 'iendall. president of the Uni
versity Y. M. C. A. both expri' t i.l
appreciation Ar the support given
t''em by the men work'.ig under
them for the work done !n putting
the drive across better than it In.s
ever teen before.
Onefre Hipe, with $40 50 led ;,he
team securing highest number of
pledges from non-fraternity men.
All nlier captains reported a mark
ed increase in results yesterday
over.those of Friday of last week.
“I am greatly delighted with the
success of the canvass,” declared
Bov. Henry W. Davis, director of
the United Christian work, yester
day, “and with the manner in which
it was put over. Bob Hunt, as gen
eral manager, Bart Kendall who
was responsible for the living or
ganizations, and Boland Davis who
organized his forces for covering
the unaffiliated students all proved
themselves to be real lead-ers. The
captains and team members were
equally loyal. No small part of the
success was also due to the publi
city given by the Emerald.”
“This survey,” Mr. Davis con
tinued, “as announced in the pub
lished budget, will be spent by the
Y cabinet in the upkeep of the Hut,
the employment work, new maga
zines and papers, the bringing of
speakers to the campus, and in con
HOMECOMING SLOGAN COUPON
Homecoming Slogan
! Name .
i
Fill out and leave in box at library
NOTICE!
To U. of O. Students
Going to Portland—
Dean McCluskey
and His Famous
Oregon Aggravators
Will Appear in
Two Grille Dances
at the
Portland Hotel
Main Dining Room
Friday and Saturday
9:00 to 12 p. m.
75c Covers Friday—$1.00 Covers Saturday
Reservations
For Any Number
Can Be Made by Phoning
229-R
br at
%
The Portland Hotel
See That Game! The Grid-Graph Way!
By Special Arrangment With The Rex, the A. S. U. 0. Presents
OREGON - CALIFORNIA
football classic play-by-play on the Grid-Graph
SATURDAY THE Doors Open 1 p. m
2:30 to 5 p. m. "C' 'Vr THEATRE Pictures 1 to 2:30
Admission 60c Feature Film Follows Game
ferences with students of the North
west, and a small part for the bud
get of Harold Bounds, an alumnus
of Oregon who is doing a great
work in China.”
Wilford Long, treasurer of (the
Y. M. C. A. will take charge of col
lecting the pledges which are all
due by December 1, 1925. Fratern
ity presidents will be asked to co
operate in collecting the money and
letters will be sent unaffifiated
men when the pledges are due to
be paid. ,
SAMARA INITIATES THREE
Samara, women’s honorary sci
ence fraternity, initiated three new
members last pight at the home of
MisB Ethel Sanborn. The initiates
were Madeline Ford, Mildred Baily
and Gladys Moeller.
Following initiation a dinner was
given at the Anchorage, honoring
the new members.
Dean Dyment Finds
Reconstruction Slow;
Tour of France Enjoyed
(Continues from page one)
see much of the city because Dean
Dyment was vaccinated for typ
hoid, ahd remained clc(se (to his
hotel, but they tnanaged to visit
the World’s Fair Exhibition and
the Exhibition of Beaux Arts.
Frbm Paris they began their
journey to the battle fields on bi
cycles. Apparently this mode of
OREGON MEN
The best place to have
your hair cut
GI.UB BARBER SHOP
Eugene Hotel
Grill Dances for College
Students Every Friday and
Saturday Night, 8:39
Geto. Weber’s Collegians
Cover Charge $1.25 per Couple
Make Reservations Early
Phone 2000
Try Our Special
Sunday Dinner
Concert, 6 to 8
‘I found your money’
Little Want Ad has ybur
money for you. This de
partment is of real service
to you. If you lose your
money, your hat or even
your friends, little Want
Ad will recover for you.
“USE ’EM—THEY’RE
FOR YOU’’
travel is quite satisfactory, for,
Mrs. Dyment writes: “We enjoy the
cycling greatly, and as we take it
by lazy stages we have not become
very tired.”
Three days were spent at Verdun,
from which place they visited many
surrounding points. They found
everywhere barbed wire, trenches,
dugouts, old guns, shell holes and
much debris.
Fort Douaumont, taken by the
Germans and recaptured by the
French in 1916, and around which
some of the most bitter fighting of
the war took place, was described
by Mrs. Dyment as extremely in
teresting.
“It has underground rooms and
tunnels, electric-lighted when the
Germans had it,” she wrote. “There
was the room of the commanding
general, sleeping rooms, kitchens
The Freshman Corsage
OF COURSE
We Excel
in
Corsage Technique
|
Combining color harmony in j
the most artistic arrange- j
ment, whether it be worn at
the waist, shoulder, arm or
wrist.
THE
UNIVERSITY
FLORIST
13th Ave. and Patterson
Three Blocks West of Campus
PHONE 654
P.S.—To the FRESHMEN:
By.* all means see Harold
Lloyd in “THE FRESH
MAN.” hut when you need a
Corsage for your “Peggy”
See—
The University Florist
Women will
never change!
LAST
DAY
TODAY!
“IN EVERY
WOMAN’S
LIFE”
is the intimate story
of every woifian’s desire
In the Cast
VIRGINIA VALLI
LLOYD HUGHES
COMEDY NEWS
and washrooms, telephone and elec
tric rooms, etc. The Germans had
built an elevator •which lowered
the soldiers to a still lower level,
from which, an underground pass
age extended more than half a mile
out into the forest.”
“Verdun is being steadily re
built,” continued Mrs. Dyment,
“but in the villages ruins are still
standing and the new work appar
ently progressing slowly. I was
much distressed to find that the
niee new houses still had the barns
built as a part of them.”
TONIGHT
| 2 Shows 7 ft 9 |
Welcome Back to Eugene
BICE & CADY
The Original Comedy Stars
- in -
“Am I Bight”
LIND—TBEE—0
“A Day in the Apple Orchard
FASHION FOLLIES
“From Old Fashioned tb Jazz”
WITH VIOLET EOLAND
Styles, Songs and Steps
BAY & ELDEBT
- in -
A Bural Oddity
Helen—BINEHABT & DUFF—Ermine
- in -
Songs of Today and Yesterday
Topics
of Day
“A Cloudy Romance”
Oregonian
Review
Heilig Concert Orchestra
Charles Runyan, Conductor, featuring
Selection from “II Trovatore”
TIPS
WE WATCH THE MARKET
Is it better to buy a quan
tity of eggs now or will
they be cheaper? Shall I
buy the winter’s potatoes
now or tide myself over
for a few weeks in the
hopes that they will be
cheaper ?
Do you ever ask your
self questions like these?
We are more than glad to
help you answer them.
We watch the market
closely and you can profit
by our knowledge. If
eggs are going to be more
expensive later on we will
tell you. If you should
buy apples now we will
let you know.
The Table Supply watches
the market for its custo
mers.
SPECIAL CANDY
“For the Train or the Game”
SCHROFFT’S CHOCOLATES
Nuts, Fruits and Creams
2 lb. box, Regular price, $2.50
Special—$ 1.75
1 lb. box, Regular price $1.60
Special—$ 1.00
—SEE OUR WINDOWS
University Pharmacy