VOLUME XXVII UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENB, FRIDAY, MAY 21. 1926 NUMBER 136 Foreign Air WillPrevailAt Vivid Drama Cosmopolitan Clubs From Four Schools Will Be Guests 12 Nations iji Festival Tonight and Saturday Filipino String Orchestra To Furnish Music rf~1OLORFUL costumes, dances and music from the Orient and the Occident, • compose a kaleidoscopic pageant from 12 nations of the world in the Festival of Nations, which will be presented at Guild theater tonight and Saturday night at 8 o ’clock. The Cosmopolitan club, sponsor for the performance, has sent invi tations to the Cosmopolitan clubs at O.A.C., Willamette university, the Chemawa Indan School, and Lin field college. Guests from these in stitutions are expected Saturday night. Those who wish to see the Festival are asked to come Friday night if possible, since tho limited seating capacity of Guild theatre and the guests from the other schools will make it difficult to ob tain seats Saturday. Complete Program Given Following is the program: I. FRANCE “Handkerchief Song” .Lydie Coqblin, Juanita Dietz, Madeline Goodall, Verna Harmon. II. ITALY Song, “O Paradiso” (Myerbeer) . Sylvester W. Brigham III. JAPAN “The Goddess of Sun”—Cast of Characters: Goddess of Sun.... Sumie Yamamoto God of Peace . S. Katsuda God of Strength . H. Tsuboi God of Power . R. Yokota God of Love . J- Tamura God of Justice . S. Masuda SivaJs (Devils): Siva of Destruction .... T. Koita bashi. Siva of Temptation .B. Shiomr Siva of Death . S. Kawakuchi IV. SPAIN Dance, “La Paloma”—Etha Clark and William Forbis. V. RUSSIA g0)1g .Siemon Muller VI. HAWAII Steel Guitar Selections .Simon Carbonell. VII. PHILIPPINES “The Ghost”. Drama in One Act). Cast of Characters: Leonor, A Modern Woman’s Eights Enthusiast .t—■. Marie Smith Don Pedro, Her Father ....Eicardo Leones. Dona Carmen (Mameng)—An Old Fashioned Mother . Elsie Mae Cimino. Enrique—A Young Physician—Eom ulo C. Avila. Narciso—Leonor’s Brother .Jose Gorriceta. Cobrador—A Collector .Mariano Eamos. Place— Philippines. Time— 7:00 to 11:30 p. m. Scene—A Typical Filipino Sala. VIII. SWEDEN Swedish Dance . IX. GEEMANY Song and Dance ....“Memories of Germany”. Helga McGrew, Bes sie Schoeberg McGrew. X. CHINESE AET OF SELF DEFENSE (A Setting up Exercise) - Ben Chen XI. ENGLAND Sword Dance ... Eunice Daniels, Eloise Smith, Marjorie Landau, Berdina Head er, Bernice Lund, Lenore Durkee, Vesta Oriek, Bernyce Hensley. XII. GEEECE •“The Choice of Hercules”. (Drama in One Act). Cast of Characters: Virtue .. (Gertrude Hill Maids of Virtue: Kleonike, Frances Wardner; Theodora, Joy Ingalls. Hercules .Christ Loukas Athenc .Elizatbeth Talbot Yjce .Eleanor Beckwith Herald .Lee Brown Group of Dancers XIII. “THE SPIBIT OF OBEGON” Craftsmen Will Aid In Confering Degree The Craftsman Club, campus or ganizatiin of Masons and sons Masons, have accepted an invita tion from the Masons of Sunnyside lodge, Portland, to confer the M.M. ■degree before their lodge tonight. I To-Ko-Lo Society Elects New Officers TESTER JOHNSON, freshman baseball and basketball play er, was elected president of To-Ko-Lo, men’s sophomore hon orary society, at the annual elec tion of officers last night. A1 Boyden was selected by the mem bers for the position of vice president, Art Anderson, for sec retary - treasurer, and William Crawford and Elwood Enke for guards. To-Ko-Lo has been very active in campus activities during the past year, according to retiring officers. The society has had charge of the freshmen parade, library steps and numerous other traditional campus activities. The retiring officers are: Art Priaulx, president, Walter Cush man, vice-president, Jack Hemp stead, secretary-treasurer. O. A. C.-U. of O. Play Day to Be Held Saturday Friendliness With Social Mingling Feature of Girls’ Meet From 9:00 o’clock tomorrow morn ing until late in the evening Ore gon co-eds and girls from O. A. C. will mix on the campus in the first Play Day, an institution used for the first time this year between the two colleges. 'Canoeing, tennis, hockey, base ball, and a social swim will be the athletic events of the day. The idea of the participants is to make Play Day a happy, get-to gether, fun event between the schools, with no hint of the slight est element of competition. In each event that “matched” sides are needed, both teams will be composed of an equal number of Oregon and O. A. C. women. The canoeing will be purely dem onstration work. The class finals will be run off and a four-crew team will demonstrate crew work. This is the first use of crewing, as such, to be shown on the mill race by the girls. The tennis singles will also bo ex hibition wrork, but the doubles will be the mixed teams. One feature of the day is that no girl will enter more than one ath letic event, thus giving as many girls as possible a part in the play of the day. The 10 girls that will take part in baseball and the 11 girls will compose Oregon’s share of the hockey event have already been chosen. It has been the in tention of the members of the women’s physical education depart ment, which helped to select the teams, to place the representative girls in the sport which they excel in, as well as to give all an oppor tunity. The visiting girls will be taken to the various living organizations to lunch. At 5:30 o’clock visitors and hosts will meet on the lawn just in front of the Woman’s build ing for the big finale of the day— a picnic supper. “Dream Gate” a pantomine, will be presented by the members of Orchesis immediately after the sup per. This promises to be a picture sque climax to Play Day, and is open to the public. It will begin probably at 6:45. National Officers Here To Install Fraternity With the arrival of Clifford B. Scott, grand historian, of O’Neill, Nebraska, and 0. E. Draper, grand guard, of Seattle, yesterday noon, the work of installing Kappa Delta Phi into Sigma Phi Epsil-on began. ■ Last night the initiatory work j started with part of the 24 charter j members being given the ritual, i Initiatory work will continue today j until all active members have been initiated. Alumni members will be initiated Saturday morning. ,The charter will be presented to the local group Saturday afteroon after which a formal banquet and dance will be held in the Eugene hotel. Oregon Alpha of Sigma Phi Ep silon located at O. A. C. is assist ing the installing officers with the initiatory work. Representatives of Washington Alpha at Pullman, Washington Beta at the University of Washington, Montana Alpha of Missoula and California Alpha of the University of California are in attendance. Girls Install Officers For Coming Year Anna DeWitt Gives Report On Conference Held at Los Angeles Work of Honor System Discussed by Members University’s Status High in Financial Plan J^EXT year’s officers were in stalled and chairmen of commit tees named at the last mass meet ing of Women’s League held in Villard hall at 5:15 yesterday after noon. Esther Hardy was named chair man of next year’s Big Sister com mittee, Edna Ellen Bell, chairman of foreign scholarship, Frances Plimpton, chairman of activities, and Elizabeth Waara, chairman of the Woman’s building committee. Kathryn Ulrich Presides Kathryn Ulrich presided at the meeting after she was installed by Anna DeWitt, retiring president, and outlined plans for next year. Women’s League will conduct teais as it did this year; the “get-wise party” for the freshmen girls will be given. Dime-crawljs, the pro ceeds of which go toward the for eign scholarship, will also be repeat ed next year. The league plans to entertain guests of the Universi ty when the high school conference is held. Since this year’s rummage sale was so successful, it will be repeated next year, and also April Frolic. A campus circus will be inaugurated on the campus next year, announced the president, if plans are successful. Anna DeWitt, retiring president, who installed the new officers at the meeting, reported on the West ern Cectional conference of inter collegiate women, which she and Kathryn Ulrich recenetly attended at Los Angeles. They brought back many good ideas for Oregon’s Wom en’s league, she said. Thirty col leges were represented, making 70 girls, and the deans of women also attended the conference. A discus sion on “Adjusting Freshmen Wom en t6 Your Campus” was given by the University of Colorado. There they bring an expert to the campus for the first two weeks of each year to help the freshmen. Honor System Discussed The practical application of the honor system is not much improve ment over the old system, in most places. A discussion of prominent organization was given by the Uni versity of Nevada and a report of finances by the University of Ore gon. The president stated that this University ranks among the first in a competent financial program. “We obtained many ideas just by talking to the girls,” said Miss De Witt. The treasurer’s report showed a balance of $1,053.55 for Women’s League, $170.15 of which was cleared at April Frolic. The new officers are: president, Kathryn Ulrich; vice-president, Catherine Struplere; secretary, Nancy Peterson; treasurer, Harriet Osborne; reporter, Margaret Long; sergeant-at-arms, Elaine Crawford. Oregon Professors Interviewed in Last Portland Center Star ir --. The Portland Center Star, the Portland extension division news paper which is printed three times a term, came off the press yester day. According to the Star, Dr. E. S. Conklin, head of the department of psychology at the University, .vdl speak to the Graduate club of the Portland Center at the Medical School on Marquam Hill, May 22. W’ilkie N. Collins, a former visit ing professor of English literature in the University, and now a writer of note for magazines and New York newspapers, is to handle a course in criticism in the Summer Session at Portland, this year. The paper also contains an inter view with Dr. F. G. G. Schmidt, professor of German on tli2 campus, on German literature. 44Johnson” Monicker Proves Dark Horse '"pHE old “dope” about Smith, Brown, and Jones being the three most popular surnames in America misses the truth by just one-third, according to a tabulation of the common names from the Oregon directory of the last three years and of the alumni directory. Johnson has supplanted Brown, just as a Maryland man, who is writing an article on the frequency of names, has predicted. Only the alumni nomenclature attempted to uphold the dignity of Brown, thereby sacrificing Jones to Johnson. Otherwise the new order—Smith, Johnson, and Jones — reign supreme at Oregon. In 1923-24 the Smiths’ had 16; the Johnsons’ 18; and Jones’ 16; last year there were 28 Smiths; 10 Jones; and 18 Johnsons; and this year there are 42 Smiths; 17 Jones; and 40 Johnsons. Fine Arts Fund To Receive $100 From Seniors Entire Class Votes to Join Alumni Group; Other Money Voted ,_ f The last senior meeting of the year was held yesterday afternoon. At this time it was decided to give $100 as a gift for the Fine Arts building. Fifty dollars was voted to be paid for the senior section of the Semi-Centenial edition of the j Emerald. The rest of the money in the treasury is to be used to buy a year’s membership in the Alumni Association and one year’s subscrip tion of Old Oregon for each member of the class of 1926. The *two spot lights belonging to the class were turned over to the jurisdiction of the Executive Council. All seniors were requested to meet in front of the old library by the Senior Bench, next Thursday just before the assembly hour for a group picture of the class for publication in Old Oregon. The senior class was urged to at tend the annual Alumni luncheon on the Saturday before commence ment. Those graduating will wear their caps an/1 gowns, and at that time they will be given all litera ture on the graduation exercises. Salem High Defeats Freshman Nine 7 to 5 In one of the hardest fought base ball battles of the season the Sa lem high school nine defeated the University of Oregon yearling nine 7 to 5 in a fray played on the var sity diamond yesterday afternoon. Coach Harry Ellinger used three pitchers in yesterday’s battle and were touched for 14 safe hit*?. McDonald started on the |inound with Emmons taking a fling at the job and Evans finishing the game. The freshman hit the offerings of Lyons and Fabry for only 9 bingles. This afternoon and tomorrow the yearling nine face the O.A.C. Books on the Corvallis diamond in the last two games of their series. In the two previous fracases the Books were victors by a large score. Liquid Air Treatment Used for Poison Oak “Liquid air treatment for poison oak has been used with some suc cess at the University of California and at the Oregon Agricultural Col lege,” said Dr. Fred N. Miller of the University Health Service, “but it is yet in an experimental stage.” Dr. Miller stated that we do not have it here because it still an ex periment and is very expensive to install. The treatment consists in freezing the tissues, and killing the poison oak. It is sprayed on the irritation several times in se vere cases, but one application has often been found to be sufficient for ordinary eases. Dean Hale to Leave For Stanford June 15 William G. Hale, dean of the Un iversity of Oregon law school, will leave June 15, for Palo- Alto, Cali fornia where he has accepted a po sition on the faculty of Stanford university for the summer school session and will teach courses in torts. Prospects For Varsity Track Appear Better Cripples’ Return Brings Ray of Light among Cinder Artists Multnomah Meet Will Offer Good Work-out Team Pointed for O. A. C. Contest May 29 BY WEB JONES nPHE return of the cripples to the track squad this week sent a ray of light into the after-conference meet gloom which has pervaded Hayward field. The Multnomah meet in the immediate offing ap pears to be merely a good workout for the varsity team. By no means will the competition be easy but it will be enough to bring out all the heretofore hidden strength for the last time before the “Big meet” of the year on May 29 at Corvallis. Vic Wetzel, javelin thrower, dis cus tosser, and shot heaver, who has been reclining lazily in the sun on Hayward field to “sun out” his in jured arm which has prevented work, is now back in the harness and Bill Hayward says he will be able to work with both the shot and discus but will not be able to play with the spear this season. That puts the mentor in a bad place for a javelin thrower. Holder May Not Bun “Doubtful” was the way Bill characterized the case of Tom Hold er, one of the most promising two milers ever seen on Hayward oval, who was forced to quit work with a broken ankle bone. Holder has been warming up swathed in tape and bandages, and the other night he ran several laps. If he improves he will be able to enter the Big Meet. The entire turnout will be entered in the Multnomah fracas and the best three men in each event will be picked to make the trip to Cor vallis. There will be juggling of events, for Bob Overstreet is trying his legs on the quarter and Bill Prendergast, erstwhile quarter man, is to run the 220. The rest of the crew, varsity, super-varsity and jog gers will enter their respective events. Olympic Player to Come Multnomah, from reports received, is no set up by any means. Chief among the athletes who make a wholesale invasion of the campus Saturday will be the Olympic fa mous Ralph Spearow, who once, while vaulting for Oregon, came within a lia:r of making a coast record with the bar set at 13 feet 6 inches. The vault, which he bare ly missed, wa|s the feature of the afternon. He will enter the high jump where he approaches 6 feet and any number of other events— for he has won track meetB almost single handed in the hey dcy of his career. Roland Renfro, the sensational (Continued on page fow) Prohibition Subject Chosen for Orations For Jewett Contest The general subject of “Prohbi tion” has been assigned to all pub lic speaking students who are com peting for the Jewett prizes, and the subject will be dealt with in different ways by the several de partments of public speaking. Extemporaneous speaking classes will talk extemporaneously on the subject. Preliminaries will Vie held May 24, and finals May 27. The prelegal English classes will give orations on prohibition, June 1. Written and spoken English classes will give business talks, June 3. The advanced public speaking class will deliver lyeeum addresses, June 2. Six students will compete in this division. The subjects are: Flivvering pioneering, Jack Hemp stead; Puddles of Mud, Steele Win terer; The New Dimension, Donald Beelar; Bumps and Bumpers, Mark Taylor; Gold Bricks, Walter But ler; Old Soaks, Ellsworth Plank. Judges have been chosen for con tests of the written and spoken and extemporaneous speaking divisions. Stanley Gray, Hugh Rosson, J. A. Johnson, and Harry C. Hawkins will judge the talks of the written and spoken division, and Walter W. Sny der, Robert D. Horn, Stanley Gray and Hugh Rosson the extemporane ous division. Approximately $180 will be given in prizes. Amphibians to Sport In Sea Garden Pool SEA GARDEN effect,under water will be one of the novel decorative schemes that will greet persons who come out at 7:15 this evening to see the Am phibian swimming exhibition in the tank of the Woman's build ing. Colored lighting effects will be employed to make the scenic effect more attractive and elab orate. As these are glowing the Amphibians will do various for mations underneath the water. Diving, racing, life saving, and stunts will all contribute to the program. The club personnel, under the direction of their coach and ad visor, Miss Ernestine Troemel, has been practicing intensively for the event for several weeks. There will be a fifteen cent ad mission charge. R. Bailey Goes To Moscow for Tri-State Meet “Heroes in the Battle of Life”, Topic of Oregon Speaker “Heroes in the Battle of Life,” an oration advocating freedom of thought, is the subject which Ralph Bailey, Oregon's entrant in the northwest Tri-State contest at Mos cow, will deliver tomorrow night. Bailey has completed a three month period of preparation under the coaching of J. Stanley Gray, head of the department of public speak ing. The event is the last on Ore gon 's forensic calendar, and it is believed chances of winning it for the second year in succession are excellent. Bailey, accompanied by Jack Hempstead, general forensic man ager who is making the trip in stead of the coach, leaves this af tlernoon on the Southerni JPacific for Spokane from where they will go to the University of Idaho at Moscow Saturday morning. The oration makes an appeal for the extension of monetary support and public recognition to the moat talented men in the various fields of human endeavor such as science, arts, politics and sociology. Bailey believes that through government bureaus, churches and schools, we would have a systematic subsidizing of our advanced thinkers. He con-1 tends that the American public should accept the intellectual work of their pioneer thinkers in order to insure advance of Western civ ilization. With this event, the Oregon man completes a four year forensic career in which he has made an enviable record. In his freshman year he was on the Oregon debate team which defeated (Washington 2 to I. He lost the same Tri-State (Continued on page four) Alpha Delta Sigma Elects New Officers Calvin Horn, ’27, was elected president of the W. F. G. Thacher chapter of Alpha Delta Sigma, na tional advertising fraternity, at a luncheon held at the College Side Inn yesterday. Paul Sletton was elected vice-president, and James Manning, secretary-treasurer. Re tiring officers are: James Leake, president; Wayne Leland, vice president; and Paul Sletton, secre tary-treasurer. Initiation for the three new mem bers, George Ross, Douglas Wilson, and Edward Ross, will be held Thursday at five o’clock. Wilson is manager of the campus maga zine to be started riext /year; George Ross is manager of the Ore gana this year; and Edward Ross is connected with Emerald adver tising work. Dr. Warren D. Smith to Speak Before Sigma Xi Dr. Warren D. Smith, head of the department of geology, will lec ture tonight before Sigma Xi, na tional honorary scientific research fraternity, at 8:00 o’clock in 103 Deady hall. The subject of Dr. Smith’s address is “Contribution to Geology and Economic Geography of Southeastern Oregon.” The pub lic is invited to the meeting. Sigma Xi will hold a business meeting at 7:30 preceding the lec ture for the purpose of election of officers. Freshmen and Sophomores Picnic Todays Busses for Second Year Students Leave Villard At 3,4,5 o’clock Free Streetcar Tickets Provided Every Frosh. Games, Food, Dancing Are Features Planned piCNICS, three of them will be held this week-end. The freshmen and sophomores today, and the jun iors, tomorrow. Freshmen will journey by street cars to Midway. Sophomores will travel in busses that leave Villard hall at 3, 4, and 5 o'clock to their destination at Seavey’s ferry. To morrow juniors will leave on a spec ial train from Villard hall at 2 o’clock for their happy picnieing ground at Coburg Bridge. Frosh Go in Street Cars Free street car tickets both ways will be distributed to every fresh man wishing to go. Tickets will be given out at a booth in front of the library between 1 and 5 p. m. They are absolutely necesfcary and must be obtained during those hours. Students may take the Springfield car at any place. Cara will pass Villard hall five minutes after every hour and five minutes after every half hour. The pienie will be over at 11 p. m. It is a no date affair. A treasure hunt, with a prize Rockefelldr would delight | in, i» only one of the big lively events lined up for the afternoon's amuse ment. Baseball games for both eds and co-eds, horseshoes, swimming, and strolling, are other afternoon past imes. The refreshment committee will start serving lunch, all you can eat, at 0 p.m. Features to Enliven Dancing From 7 until 11 o’clock the mem bers of the class will dance to the strains of Sharkey Moore's red hot note blowers. It won’t be just plain dancing, according to the com mittee, but tags, and Paul Joneses. Features will be interspersed and many prizes will be awarded. A bonfire will cast a cheery glow over the evening. cnaperones for the freshman pic nic are: Mrs. Virginia Judy Kster ly, dean of women; Mr. and Mrn. Andrew Fish; and Mr. and Mra. Robert D. Horn. According to Don McCook, chair man of the sophomore picnic, the sophomore frolic will be the “big gest and beet ever given, resplen dent with fun and noise. It will resemble a fourth of July celebra tion,” he says. No dates will be allowed and all women are asked to go. Busses will leave Villard hall at 3, 4, and & o’clock and the picnic will be over at 10:30. Sophs Have Weber’s Jan Entertainment, under the direc tion of Frank Riggs, will be of the merriest order. George Weber’s six piece orchestra will furnish mu sic for the dance. Swimming, ath letic contests between the single and “married” men, prize races, and a baseball game between brunettes and blondes, are some of the fea tures. A committee of five women will decide the complexion of men wishing a berth on the ball team. The refreshment committee has departed from the usual picnic fare and will furnish a surprise menu. Class officers for next year will be installed by Benoit McCroskey, retiring president. Juniors are warned by the com mittee, against making dates for their picnic. The refreshment com mittee visited the Table Supply store last evening in order to make sure that the food they had ordered was up to standard, and they re port that Uio meun is no ordinary one but ought to lure anyone at least 20 miles. All members of the class of *27 are asked to meet in front of VU lard hall at 2:00 tomorrow. A baseball game between two fa mous teams will be the first event of the afternoon. This will be fol lowed by a volleyball game, races, swimming, dancing eating, and morn dancing. The Oregon Aggravator* will furnish music.