VOLUME XXVIII UNIVERSITY OF OREGON. EUGENE, THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1927 NUMBER 57 Will Bearcats Scratch New Hardwood Floor? Unofficial Dedication Rumored; Gotham Is Late in Name Contest By HAROLD MANGUM McArthur Court, Oregon’s new basketball pavilion, erected at a cost of more than $175,000, etc. will be opened to the student body and outsiders for the first time to morrow night when the varsity hoop team shakes hands; with five young m e n representing! Willamette univer-j sitv. Although noa great cloubt as been expressed as to the Gene Vidal ability of the Webfoots to take care of themselves on the hard wood, a big crowd is anticipated as very feq; students have seen the in terior of the new hoop structure, and not m'ore than half a dozen have seen the lemon-yellow eagers in action this year. * * » Although no added inducement is required, the Order of the “0” has taken five cards in the game and will initiate a quintet of its neophytes between halves while the screeching thousands appre ciate, hoot and jeer. No burlesque basketball is being prepared, says Horner Jonothan Dixon, behemoth right tackle 'on McEwan’s grid team, but straight away comedy that can’t and won’t be reproduced this side of the Rockies, or the ■other side either. It’s a secret—the east and mo tif—but we’ll whisper that the lettermen intend to steal a march on the big moguls and dedicate Joe Gymnasium a week ahead of time. And it won’t be Clifton N. (Pat) McArthur Amphitheater, either. Now don’t let that get out, but come early and wear loose gar ments able to wittstand the ravages of boisterous cachinnations. That’s a two-dollar word. * Speaking of hilarity, Delbert Obey Oberteuffer, genial instructor in physical education, suggests that his class room be christened “ Ober teuffer ’s Omnipotent Occult Oddi torium of Hygiene.” That’s carry ing a good thing too far. Toss a brick into the middle of a lake and ripples will reach every shore. Put your bread upon the wa ters and it will come back to you. Put your whole wheat into a saucer of milk and it become milk toast, and 'worth twenty cents a portion. All of which leads up to the follow ing clipping from a New York daily newspaper which found its way to the editorial sanctum yesterday. “According to press dispatches, Oregon University is on the search for an athletic title. It has gone for fifty years without a ‘m'onicker’ and the present one of ‘ Web-foot ers ’ is too long for cheers or news paper items. Our suggestion is 1 The Salmon’ for these reasons: They are near the Columbia river, the name is short, when they lost they may be termed ‘ poor fish ’ and yet they will at intervals be called *Salmen.’ Fair enough.” Not so fair! Gene Vidal, Oregon’s popular baekfield coach, has just returned from a vacation in Hollywood, where he played a iminor role in a current moving picture production. Campus coeds say, that Gene has every natural qualification for a movie shiek—wavy dark hair, pearly white teeth, etc.—but Vidal modest ly asserts that Eieardo Cortez and Eamon Navarro have nothing to fear from him. Freshman Y. W. C. A. Members Entertain Freshman Commission, will enter tain the sophomore and upperclass girls at a tea to be given today at the Y. W. bungalow between three and five o’clock. Miss Florence Mago wan, secre tary of the Y. W., has suggested that taking a Big Sister to the tea would afford a pleasant means by which the freshman girls could ex press their appreciation for the help given them this year. Naomi Hohman, chairman of the committee in charge, is planning several musical numbers. A group of freshman girls will serve. PRESS SPEAKER I-- -=^==-„. ■... I Hal E. Hoss Prizes of $1000 To be Given in Writers’ Contest College Authors Will Vie For Money Offered By Harper’s The Harper Intercollegiate Liter ary contest, held for the first time last year, will be repeated this year, and undergraduates of Oregon are invited to compete, according to an announcement received from the edi tors of Harper’s Magazine. The magazine offers a first prize of $.500, a second of $300, and a third of $200 for winners. Last year Julia Godman, a freshman in the history department, won honorable mention in the contest. Henry Seidel Canby, critic and editor, Elinor Wylie and William McFee, writers, are the judges of the manuscripts, which are to be sent directly from the writer to the Harpers Magazine, Intercollegiate Literary Contest, 49 East 33d Street, New York City, not later than mid night on March 5, 1927. The stories must be any form of prose work suitable for magazine publication, not longer than 7,000 words if stories, 4,000 words if ar ticles, essays, etc. Papers previously published in college newspapers or magazines are eligible, but not ar ticles which have appeared else where. The contribution which wins first prize will be published in Harper’s Magazine, and the magazine also re serves the right to publish the sec ond and third prize manuscripts. The magazine wishes to establish a relationship with the future writ ers of unusual promise, and to en courage young writers. Amphibian Club to Give Exhibition Saturday For Visiting Delegates For the benefit of the high school delegates, the members of the Am phibian club, women’s honorary swimming organization, will give a short demonstration next Saturday at 11:40 a. m., in the swimming pool at the Woman’s building. Girls wishing to pass swimming honors will be given an opportunity to show their ability on a Tuesday night at 7:30 p. m. An appointment must be made ahead of time with Miss Troemel, swimming coach, or with Virginia Lounsbury, head of swimming. The requirements for swimming honors are: 1— Swimming for endurance and form. 4 times around pool with one stroke (not back), 4 times around pool with an other stroke (not back), 2 times around pool with an other stroke (not back), 1 length of pool with back stroke. 2— Dive for object in eight feet of water and recover it three times in succession. Choice of (a) surface dive or (b) dive from side. 3— Diving. Any three standard dives. 4— Choice of (a) swimming under water length of tank or (b) plunge for distance of 40 feet. Beelar Names Juniors to be On Directorate Plan Being Considered To Abolish Lottery For Canoe Fete Dance to be Under Direction of Powell Week-end Will Climax Big Year for Oregon Appointments to positions on the Junior Week-end director ate were announced yesterday by Don, Beelar, who was selected gener al chairman b y Prank Riggs, presi dent of the junior class. The success of the events directed by the junior class this year, already a banner year in the history of the Uni men and two worn- McCroskey en, all prominent in campus activ ities. McCroskey Heads Vod-vil IBemtoit McCroskey, varsity de bater and orator, and last year’s president of the sophomore class, has been chosen to supervise and select the stunts for Junior Vod-vil, scheduled for two nights, May 13 and 14. He will work out plans immediately, in order that all hitches may be ironed out before the last minute. Herb Socolofsky, who has been prominent in committee work for the past two years, will have charge of .the canoe fete, the annual eve ning regatta of fantastic and beau tiful floats, staged on the mill-race. Lottery May Go If a plan now being considered by the committee is accepted the old lottery of drawing partners for the float will be abolished, and frater nities and sororities will be allowed to choose the organizations with whom they wish to work. As be fore, a fraternity and a sorority will combine in producing and di recting an entry in the fete. Don McCook, varsity swimmer and class officer last year, will man age the business side of the Junior Vod-vil. Mpiaoii a/uc The much-heralded Campus Day, when university lawns are trampled and prominent personages make their splash in the fountain between the library and Deady hall, will be under the management of Bill Mc Gregor, varsity swimmer. Pauline Stewart will be in charge of the campus luncheon. (Esther Hardy has been appointed assistant chairman and secretary of the Junior Week-end committee. Publicity for all events will be handled by Harold Mangum, varsity football man and sports editor for the Emerald and the Oregana. Tennis Man Named Bill Powell, letterman in tennis, and active in campus affairs, is chairman of the committee in charge of the Prom, the final big event of Junior Week-end, May 21. Commit tee chairmen will make their ap pointments soon. The school year of 1926-7 has been a cardinal year for student in terest on the campus. It started with the very beginning of the fall term, when the Oregon (football team started slashing through the mud under the direction of Captain John J. McEwan, new helmsman of Webfoot football destiny. Pavilion Hot Stuff The semi-centennial celebration aided in raising public as well as student interest in University activ ities to a high point, and a semi climax was reached in the inaugura tion of Dr. Arnold Bennett Hall as Oregon’s administrative head. The completion of the immense basketball pavilion has assisted in stretching basketball enthusiasm to the utmost, if a wonderful oppor tunity for a championship team is not alone sucicient to fan student loyalty into a blaze of interest in the mapde court game. 9 A proper climax to a year of ac tivity will be the events of Junior Week-end, the vaudeville, campus day, the canoe fete and the Prom. And if the plans of the directorate work out as expected, Junior Week j end during the spring term will be no letdown. Survey Class in Fight Over Adam-Eve Fiasco <