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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 11, 1927)
©tegmt Saily University of Oregon, Eugene RAY NASH, Editor MILTON GEORGE, Manager EDITORIAL BOARD Robert Galloway . Managing Editor Claudia Fletcher Ass't. Managing Editor Arthur Schoeni . Telegraph Editor William Haggerty .. P, I. P. Editor Arden X. Pangborn, . Literary Editor Walter Coover . Associate Richard H. Syring . Sports Donald Johnston . Feature Margaret Long . Society Editor Editor Editoi Editor News and Editor Phones, G55 DAY EDITORS: William Schulze, Dorothy Baker, Mary McLean, Frances Cherry, Herbert Lundy, Marian Sten. NIGHT EDITORS: Lynn Wykoff, chief; J. E. Caldwell, Robert Johnson, Floyd Horn, L. H. Mitchelmore, Ralph David. Assistants: Ralph Millsap, Rex Tussing, Vinton Hall, Myron Griffen, Harold Bailey, Harry Tonkon, William Finley. SPORTS STAFF: Joe Pitney, Harry Dutton, Chalmers Nooe, Glenn Godfrey, Chandler Brown, FEATURE STAFF: Flossie Radabaugh, Florence Hurley, Edna May Sorber, John Butler, Clarence Craw. UPPER NEWS STAFF: Amos Burg, Miriam Shepard, Ruth Hansen, LaWanda Fenlason. j I ,i , NEWS STAFF: Margaret Watson, Wilford Brown, Grace Taylor, Charles Boice, Elise Schroeder, Carl Gregory, Naomi Grant, Orpha Noftsker, Paul Branin, Mary helen Koupal, Josephine Stofiel, Thirza Anderson, Kenneth Wilshire, Etha Jeanne Clark, Mary Frances Dilday, William Cohagen, Helen Benn, Elaine Crawford, Audrey Henrikson, Phyllis Van Kimmell, Margaret Tucker, Gladys Blake, Ruth Craeger, Martiel Duke, Serena Madsen, Betty Hagen. BUSINESS STAFF LARRY THIELEN—Associate Manager Ruth Street . Advertising: Manager Bill Hammond Aas’t. Advertising Mgr. Vernon McGee . Ass't. Advertising Mgr. Eb Bissell .. Circulation Manager Bill Bates . Foreign Adv. Mgr. Wilbur Shannon .... Aas't. Circulation Mgr. JLiicieiie tieorge . Mgr. unecmng uepi. ADVERTISING SALESMEN—Bob Moore, Maurine Lombard, Charles Reed, Francis Mullins, Eldred Cobb, Eugene Laird, Richard Horn, Harold Kester, Helen Williams, Christine Graham. The Oregon Daily Emerald, official publication of the Associated Students of the University of Oregon, Eugene, issued daily except Sunday and Monday during the college year. Member United Press News Service. Member of Pacific Intercollegiate Press. Entered in the poetoffice at Eugene, Orgon, as second-class matter. Subscrip tion rates, $2.60 per year. Advertising rates upon application. Residence phone, editor, 721; manager, 2799. Business office phone, 1895. Day Editor This Issue— Herb Lundy Night Editor This Issue—-Myron Griffin Assistant Night Editors— Joe Freck Hal Paddock FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1927, The Old Stuff Is Still Here Oregon grads, iielloi This is Oregon’s big day. As TIood is to Skinner’s butte; as each frosh bonfire in the old days used to rear above its predecessor, so is Homecoming compared with its closest rival for the interest and af fection of Oregon. Today is happily appointed for a great debauch of enthusiasm. Hordes of many generations swarm homo to recapitulate briefly and in tensely their happy years on*the campus. Class lines have faded out long since, house feuds have dissi pated in tho mellowing mists of time. And all Oregon, past and present, is forgathered in response to a dominating common emotion of mingled fellowship, pride, and hoinago. Needless to remark, tho older grads sense a foreign air about the campus. Treasured landmarks have yielded to buildings which intrude themsolves ungraciously into the happy reminiscences of the oldster. Ho feels a little bewildered, a trifle disconsolate for, we’ll have you know, his epoch composed the full flower of Oregon. Never was nor will be again such fighting gridsters or such cards on tho faculty! But if the grads will forget these more obvious and ihevitablo scars of evolution; if they will penetrate to the essential living spirit of tho Uni versity, we bolieve thoy’ll have no occasion to foel any flagging of tho friendliness or enthusiasm of the student body or its mentors. Rather, we are confident that they will find in today’s Oregon as in yesterday’s something eminently worthy of their best. And we wel come this opportunity of proving it. Shadow Boxing And Evil Signs SEVERAL days ago the Emerald discredited tho Daily Califor nian’s statement that tho University has thrown “considerable opposi tion” in tho way of Oregon State Agricultural College’s name-chang ing campaign. Today’s communica t ion, however, gives evidence of some campus resentment. Two years of frequent abortive ef forts to replace tho A. with S., in dicates that tho reformers’ road was not rose-bestrewn. So there's nothing remarkable in discovering a sympathetic discord here. But our correspondent scents something sinister in tho change. His fears are not alone for the for feiture of those “valuable and high ly remunerative land grants.” Per haps tho erstwhile Aggies plan to absorb us—Pioneer, Deady and all! But the Emerald doesn’t beliovo in signs. It believes in nows. And when responsible agents date-line their dispatches O. S. C. or Oregon State they are authentic. However strong be the Emerald’s urge to re form, it draws the line at christen ing colleges. Let the neighbors ex ercise their penchant for juggling initials as they wish; facts are not so easily altered. Our correspon dent is shying at a bogey which is of the shadow, not the substance. The whole affair reminds us of a doggerel couplet. It seems that a sensitive Mr. Hog took legal steps to rid himself of his cross. Some quipsters were inspired to produce the following poetic gem: “Hog by name and hog by nature, But now it’s Hoag by legis lature.” Fight ’Em, Oregon! Fight! Fight! TODAY finds Oregon in the midst of its thirteenth annual Home coming. Last night’s rally is al ready a thing of the past. Today is the big day. The program for the day calls for a variety of events. Prominent among them will bo the campus luncheon, the cross-country race against the Aggie harriers, and the Homecoming dances. All will come in for a good share of attention but are fated to yield first place in the crowd’s interest to the annual bat tlo for the football supremacy of Oregon. What a game it should be! What fight and spirit will be shown! What though certain dopesters give the Aggies a margin of 13 points or so! Oregon has spillod the dope and thrown the bucket far and wide so many times in the past that dope no longer is given serious considera tion when the Lemon-Yellow clashes with the Orange and Black. Oregon is out to win. She must win! Every Oregon man and woman worthy of the name, whether of the faculty or of the student body is praying for an Oregon vic tory. A maligned student body will bo there to show that all talk about a dead Oregon spirit is just some moro of what is known as bunk, apple-sauce, and the like. Oregon students stand ready to give the lie to their accusers. The Oregon team is ready for whatever Coach Sehissler’s athletes have to offer. Win or lose, the j Oregon gridders are going to fight in such a way ns to rocall the days i of old for the alumni. It is waiting ' to answer the criticism which has been directed against it without cause. The team means to win if it takes its last bit of energy. One thing is certain. The game ' will not be a pink tea affair. Ore | gon students have tho spirit of old. The team has never lost its fight. The combination spells victory. —W. C. Commun ications Milky/i Our Brother’s Keeper To the Editor: Why the reference to the Oregon Agricultural College as O. S. C. and Oregon State in the columns of the Emerald ? Why do Oregon students aid the Corvallis institution in their attempt to cover up the fact that they are an agricultural school? As long as farming, agriculture, and other arts of the soil are taught at our sister institution, they merit the name of O. A. C., the Aggies, or (if you wish) the Beavers! It is a well known fact that it is lega?Iy impossible to change the title of the other Oregon school, as they hold certain valuable and high ly remunerative land grants from the government under their original name, and they will lose these if any legal action is taken. They have waged n secret publicity cam paign by word of mouth, and by “stickers” to got people talking of them as Oregon State. They can’t do it. True Oregonians should not let them get away with it. DICK JONES. Physical Ability Test Will Be Given to Men A physical ability test will be given to all men students in the Men's gym Saturday, November 19. A list will be suspended in the basement of the gym to which all aspirants must sign their names be fore 6 o’clock on Friday, Novem ber 18. Special P. A. men must tako the test or they will not be able to hold their privileges. P. A. men in gen eral are invited to try to raise their grade. The entire schedule must be completed before any event will count in the grade raising. : It SEVEN L SEERS WELL! If the Oregon Spirit is dead, that was certainly a wow of a wake they held over it last night. « » * LIFE ’S LITTLE TRAGEDIES The color-blind frosh wearing a black and orange rooters’ lid in the Oregon rooters’ section. rrm A1 B. Dam, noted Inventor of jlastic beds, who is on the campus n the interests of his company dur ng Homecoming. A1 says that dur :ng the past two years enormous progress has been made in the in iustry and that now a special Homecoming model bed is available for sororities and fraternities. It sasily accommodates 75 persons. It las a luminous dial indicator which >ells at all times exactly how many jccupants are in the bed. By glancing at this, the house steward :an tell at a glance how many more ;he bed will hold and he can also ;ell when everybody is up in the norriing. Gretclien wonders if the “round ;ho world debaters” have scheduled iny contests with the Spanish bull ’ighters. “Pardon me,” said No. 13X3. “You go hang,” said the governor. Wetzel of Oregon, stopping Maple jf 0. S. C. on an attempted end run after “Vic” had warned him seventy sight times not to try to make any thing around that end. This was the thirtieth attempt that resulted In no gain. Maple had resorted to Vic’s end because Biggs had threat ened to call the next guy who came his way an “Aggie.” Hodgen is breaking through into the O. S. C. backfield so often and fast that twice the referee thought him an orangeman and penalized O. S. C. for backfield in motion. TODAY’S MILL RACE CANDI DATE The bird who swipes women’s um brellas so he can get acquainted with them when they answer his “found” ad in the paper. “How could you get hurt by dropping your wrist watch?” “Idiot, I had it on.” Divorced are Air. And Airs. O’Grady; Game was exciting, He hugged the Wrong lady. Frosh Ben Dover says that ever since he first entered the University and was told the freshman class was the cream of the school, he noticed that the upperclassmen were tire milkmen for they always water the cream. MADDENING MOMENTS About 6 o’clock last night, realiz ing that you forgot to get a ticket at the Co-op. The most pathetic ease of the week-end so far happened when Mrs. Splutter went insane during the noise parade. It seems that she could not hear herself talking and she thought that she had lost her voice, thus affecting her mind. “She’s sure a beaut,” said the frosh as he gazed adaniringly at Skinner's. kst TRY AND STOP US!!!; Ghosts of Old Kincaid (With apologies to “Ghosts of the Alamo”) There’s the tramp of a ghost on the low winds tonight— An echo that drifts like a dream on its way; There’s the blur of the spectres returned for the fight, Grave-risen at last from a long-vanished day. There’s the shout and the call of grim soul unto soul As they come one by one from the past’s shadowed glen, To join in the rally, the “Osky’s” long roll When ghosts of old Kincaid are gathered again. I hear “Beauty’s” voice and his blood-curdling cry As he sweeps all the rooters as one to their feet, As Parsons, Malarkay and Cornell and “Sky” Follow up the long trail of the Aggies’ retreat. Though lost in the darkness that covers their past, In undying memory their deeds shall remain And their spirits shall rise in thie old order massed When ghosts of old Kincaid are gathered again. You think they’ve forgotten because they have passed— The day that the Aggies came on old Kincaid massed To witness defeat before Oregon’s fight? You think they’ve forgotten—but faint from afar Old Bezdek is calling the roll of his men, And a voice answers “Here” through the shadows that bar When ghosts of old Kincaid are gathered again. There’s a gleam on the field—and you thought it a star. There the “ghost ball” is passed—and you thot it the moon You thought the wind echoed that anthem of war, Knowing the lilt of the Oregon tune. Grey shade after shade stir again into breath, Grey phantom by phantom they tackle their men, Where souls hold a rivalry greater than death. When ghosts of old Kincaid are gathered again. CAMPUS Order of the “O” banquet for alumni and active lettermen, Fri day at the Campa Shoppe at 6:30 p. m. New football lettermen especially invited. Features! Speeches! Big time! Or<fer of the “O” men meet at R. O. T. C. barracks promptly at 1 o’clock today Friday), where the parade will form and march down to the field to the reserved seats. Be prompt, wear sweaters, and bring student body tickets. To-Ko-Los—Be at McArthur Court at 10 a. m. sharp this morning to handle transportation for the campus luncheon. Absolutely everyone out on time. The marriage of Miss Margaret Seymour to Lester Wade was sol emnized in Portland at the First Presbyterian church, October 29, Reverend Harold Bowman officiat ing. After the ceremony a wedding breakfast was given at the Heath man hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Wade are former University of Oregon students. She is a member of Alpha Omicron Pi and he is affiliated with Sigma Al pha Epsilon. No Matter How Much You Learn YOU KNOW ONLY SO MUCH AS YOU REMEMBER. Your mind will obey you just in proportion to the requirements you place upon it if yoiv give it a chance. You can al ways remember if you train your mind to serve you when and as you want it to serve. You can think and talk better and clearer with training that will take but a few minutes of your time. Prof. M. V. Atwood, formerly of the N. Y. Col lege of Agriculture at Ithaca, now Editor of Utica Herald-Dispatch wrote: “I have all memory courses and yours is the best of the lot. You owe it to the public to publish it in book form.” In response to this and other demands this course has been issued in a handy little volume to fit your pocket and the cost is but Three Dollars postpaid until December when Five Dollars | will be the price. LIFE AND HERALD, Johnson City, N. Y. _--—-. Welcome, Old Grads ■ Chocolate Footballs 25c ■ Oregon Ribbons m Attached I Yes follows—the girls like era! H Remember—our eaudy is p strietlv fresh. ■ Otto’s Confectionery I ■( Eugene's Pioneer Candy g Store 705 Willamette Call 5C 1 s .—. "" | t'uii a ■ ■ a ■ a m:« m'» a Homecoming Vespers Consists Entirely of Musical Numbers A musical program featuring the Women’s Glee club, contralto and violin solos, and harp and organ ac companiment will comprise the Homecoming vesper service, Sunday, November 13, in the auditorium of the Music building. Why God Made Hell Do you know why? If you don’t, you should learn NOW—at once. One reviewer has said: “When Dante went to Hell he must have steered clear of the roasting appar atus. ... it remained for Dr. Sauabrah to interestingly and fear somely describe the nether re gions.” Over 2,000,000 have read it. Why not you? One Dollar post paid. LIFE AND HERALD, Johnson City, N. Y. The Campus Stroller Observes. THAT win or lose, it’ll be a good game. THAT another year lias passed in which the freshman bonfire commit tee overlooked the possibilities of the men’s gym as a source of fire wood. THAT Oregon’s oldest living grad, “Jupe” Pluvius, is confined to his bed with a bad “cold,” but may yet recover sufficiently to make his annual Homecoming visit. THAT the alums act as if they'd like to say “Hello!” when passing, but are a little bashful about it. THAT today the lemon-yellow “Mum” again comes into its own. THAT Oregon Fight in the stands will do much to assist Oregon Fight on the field in producing a victory. THAT any grads w-ho still doubt that we have that fight will please form their opinions after THE game. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Hendry of Oregon City are visiting their sons, Ted and Jean Hendry, this week on their return from Los Angeles. They will remain in Eugene until after Homecoming. 'Theaters ^ natv-'*1 MCDONALD—Second day — Bebe Daniels in “Swim, Girl, Swim,” sup ported by James Hall, and with Gertrude “Trudy” Ederle. On the stage, George McMurphey and his soloists, featuring “Honolulu Blues,” ^ nightly at 8:50; cartoon and Para mount News. * * * HEILIG—Today and Saturday— Tom Mix and his horse Tony, in “The Circus Ace”; a Hal Roach comedy, Our Gang in “The Old Wallop”; Metro-Goldwyn News, the spotlight of the world; Curiosity Novelty, and Bathe News. Coming — November 16 — Moroni Olsen Players offering “Lillies of the Field.” * * * COLONIAL—Continuous show to day from 2 to 11 p. m., showing George Jessel in “Private Izzy Mur phy,” a comedy drama of a Jewish boy who enlisted under an Irish name; Collegian Series, Patlie News; Harry Lamb at the Robert Morton organ. 12 Pencils with Name Printed in Gold, 60c Johnson City, N. Y. assorted colors, high grade No. 2 black lead, postpaid. Cases for six pencils, Morocco, $1; leather, 75c; imitation leather, 50c. LIFE AND HERALD, Johnson City, N. Y. Edgeworth is what the well-dressed pipe ■, will wear It’s the OF Oregon Spirit - - To treat the Old Grads and show them a good time. Bring them in after the game for a regular food fest. The Peter Pan PHONE 252 • Chesterfield smokers dorft change •/ with the tides but ivatcli how other smokers are changing to Chesterfield! • • • FOR THE BEST OF GOOD RE/VSONS BETTER TASTE/