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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 18, 1927)
QDcegnn iatly Univci'sity of Oregon, Eugene HAY NASH, Editor MILTON GEORGE, Manager EDITORIAL BOARD Robert Galloway . Managing Editor Walter Coover . Claudia Fletcher Ass't. Managing Editor Richard H. Syring Arthur Schoeni . Telegraph Editor Donald Johnston .... Carl Gregory . P. I. P. Editor Margaret Long ...,. Arden X. Pangborn, ... Literary Editor News and Editor Phones, 055 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: Rex Tussing, Vinton Hall, Myron Griffon, Harold Bailey, Harry Tonkon, William Finley, Joe Freck, Everett Kiehn. SPORTS STAFF: Joe Pigney, Harry Dutton, Chalmers Nooe, Glenn Godfrey, Chandler Brown. FEATURE STAFF: Flossie Radabaugh, Florence Hurley, Edna May Sorbcr, John Butler, Clarence Craw, Charlotte Kiefer, Walter Butler. UPPER NEWS STAFF: Amos Burg, Miriam Shepard, Ruth Hansen, LaWanda Fenlason. NEWS STAFF: Margaret Watson, Wilford Brown, Grace Taylor, Charles Boice, Eli.se Schroeder, Naomi Grant, Orpha Noftskor, Paul Branin, Maryhelen Koupal, Josephine Stofiel, Thirza Anderson, Ethn Jeanne Clark, Mary Frances Dilday, Wil liam Cohagen, Elaine Crawford, Audrey Henrikson, Phyllis Van Kimmell, Margaret Tucker, Gladys Blake, Ruth Cracger, Marticl Duke, Serena Madsen, Betty Hagen, Leonard Delano, Fred Junker, Thelma Kern. BUSINESS STAFF LARRY THIELEN—Associate Manager Ruth Street . Advertising Manager Kb Bissell . Circulation Manager Bill Hammond . Ass’t. Advertising Mgr. Bill Bates . Foreign Adv. Mgr. Vernon McGee . Ass’t. Advertising Mgr. Wilbur Shannon .... Ass’t. Circulation Mgr. Luciello George . Mgr. Checking Dept. ADVERTISING SALESMEN-—Bob Moore, Maurine Lombard, Charles Reed, Fcaricis Mullins, Eldred Cobb, Eugene Laird, Richard Horn, Harold Kester, Helen Wiiiiams, 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 rolJo'M year. Member United Press News Service. Member of Pacific Intercollegiate Pj i,,.t( r d in the posloffic.e at Eugene, Orgon, as second-class matter. Subscrip ts • i• • -. r ’.CiO per vc ir. Advertising rates upon application. Residence phone, edil.or, 7zi ; manager, k!7'«9. Business office phone, 1895. Day V'liLor TU J suite—Herb Lundy Niflht i'llilnr Th >.:> h nuc— J. K. Caldwell A : ivl Ni'/h-t J‘J(Hf.or8— Myron Griffin Everett Kiehn >■ t. i l »/. \ )V.K '! I/KU 18, 1027. Associate Editor Sports Editor .... Feature Editoi .... Society Editor Hokh' A hAiitics Noi RecognIzed V\ 'M con Ic me I lint; ti n is unduly !{/ with hi in eon .forI a ble r i or lit thinks the working student ;it least Hie Hidiolaslic peer of the others if not their superior. Although figures are not avaii nbio to test his contention, 'Observa tion tends to confirm it. lie testi fies: “ Not. in u single one of niv classes have I observed a working student who is holding (lie class hack, but 3 have observed that many that are working rank high in scholarship.” Oar argument does not qurirrol with this opinion. Any student with the energy, eagerness and resource fulness to earn his way in college is of superior stuff ami. his progress shpujd not lie curbed witlr economic restrictions. It is no.t the outside labor that qualities him for schol arship; he rises above the distrac tions of his job and the limitations of time through sheer determination. Hut we repeat that neither tho student nor tho University is re ceiving full value. We are not speaking of grades, which may or may not measure development. A student with the ability to liegd a class and at the same time earn his living and fees is far too valu able to tlie University and stale to wash windows at 00 cents ail hour. Herein lies the injustice to student and University. Hxtrcmo privation and scholar ship are incompatible, captains of industry to tho contrary notwith standing. And it is to the Univer sity's interest to see that excep tional students who come to its doors roceivo at least the consid eration that is shown all-star prep athletes. Until that day the Uni versity will bo delinquent in its most important .function. Student loans have done much to alleviate the condition of the im poverished student. University jobs which serve often as valuable labor atories for his academic, work lone done more. Bat under 1 ho present system, we retain our opinion that any student entirely seif-supported by part time work should lie di qualified for full participation in 1 lie race for a degree. He should, not lie wasted. Merely, Looking A Hit Ahead I I'll f'i<’ growth ill’ tin.' v.'ir ’ * ions professional schools which wake it;i the University, there is mure of a tendency to draw the Hues which distinguish tlie students of one department from those of the others. At. many of the larger institu tions of the country, the different schools arc separated from each other to the extent of having dis fiuct student body organizations in each division. Such a system, it would seem, tends to build up a sort of class eunsciouHhiess between the members of the various groups. H is only natural that students who are planning to follow a certain profession should feel a bit super ior 1u those who are preparing for one generally considered as some what lower in the social scale. To permit sharpening the lines of de markatiim between students of- the one and students, of the other is to threaten the spirit of democracy which is characteristic of so many university campuses. Taken by and large, (lie relation ships between Oregon students are quite democratic. It is a condition which has done much to make Ore gon an institution loved by many who came to the campus without friends and were made to feel as though they had always been a part of the .campus crowd. For the present, there Is little change in the situation, (rivalries between schools are limited to an occasional athletic contest as a re sult of a challenge couched in grandiloquent, terms. Departmental social functions are usually freely patronized by students of other schools. Under such a condition, all arc made to ted that they are part of a common whole. The University, however, will continue to grow and with the in crease in size, the different depart ments will tend to become more and more self-centered. When such a time dues ovine, another of llio finest traditions of Oregon will be ill danger of going by the boards. In the meantime, Oregon students may continue to boast of the demo cracy of the campus and hope For its continuance. -—VV. Commim* He v:ulies Bo.it Who Hath Least' 'It. f)m Klit r; 11>\ ■ ’ to :‘M wit j {hi lilt tI ■ ’• . al.! llli.i: ' "W rhtl. . i n’t i 1’iiy. '’ The eililorinj, in • penhing of j , I/.* r . I , , * . , r . , I 1 i 111-.' iij jh-i uu,r biau,oui •. 11 .io* is | f die' *• Irsiili'.; a ]'I ..ninl liaiuli-' ( ip i i' :> ,-.i i \ i"'. '.. .' a I i U they j L M I ■ I .■! ■ iv . I -.: : ’ ■ ■ s as a iiholi'. Ail overworked in'm’s j attention it- too much ovintod and } In’ i i.nt at is I" ' idivsi -i.lv or | lu. ntaliy.” in other Vioi.1 s you {state that fielt'-sn pportiug students ill a class . tend to ludd that class back from ‘ rapid progress. Not in a single one ot my classes have L observed a ’working student who is holding the class back, but I have observed that many that work rank high iu scholarship. Of course there limy be nn ex ception on either side ol' the line. 'J’here are occasional students who would fail whether the} are self supporting or not, who depend 11 excuses rather than application to cover theu- inefficiency. It mar In- true that a self-sup porting student ill many coses is not realizing full value socially. At J college there are many small circles! within the bje social circle that Lei outer. Keen in the most lemoeratie universities, distinctions »et\voou the rich student and the work iitstudent w i11 probably al ways exist unless nature Itself •lie teres. The student \vlu> lias not ueans has to omit certain assoeia 1 ions open to the student who has. iUi> ;. i t all in the worthwhile • I i• \ idha-e may b ■ * unparod the switiiie.iou. pool. file stmle.ii 'S >p; ed '■ :e de> p w iter and told i o ■ u in!. It lie can, his fellow stu* li nts begin to notice him, if not he "ib to ohpivion. 'This, it st uns, is W he! A • It is v. ; *’ -suppori it’.; er . !u i her he lei ei\i s a monthiy i , h .1 > on: t lie old m i M. ” u> I i:iveisiiy is certainly u**t i:; m, an i! justice by allowing the t!i‘-support mg .student to ean v full-* time work for he is amply able to carry it. Or course he must Jearu to really use his time ami to live within his income, but after all isn’t that roipiued of any one who is to become a success in life ? 11AKOU) b. 0 L’lLDliL Official Status of Casey To the editor: Ralph l>. (*asc\, ret erred to sev eral times in the JKmerald ami the Washing* mi l‘uil\ «> *‘a former OrtpMi faculty member” is, more correctly, a present Oregon faculty member away on a one vein s leave ot absence for purposes of study and research. LK1C W. ALL LX, TkSEVEN * SEERS INTRODUCING- THE HOUSE MANAGER’S SONG, “NOTHING COULD BE BUTTER THAN MY OLEOMARGARINE. ” Fiauk: “Don’t you think in time you could ever learn to care for me!” Franker: “No; something tells me I won’t live that long.” HORRIBLE CRIME SCENTED IN EAST (By Clothes Press) NEWARK, N. J., Nov. 18.—(Spe cial.)—This morning the body of an unidentified -sailor was found cut to pieces, and sewed up in a sack. Detectives from headquar ters express the belief that the man committed suicide. f f_. s: DUTT'. (LG AT xiKAL GEID OEAPH Music lover:; of ilogene and vi cinity av< . , to liave tlie e; no - o great music - Liman’s perfo . after noon 1 ‘ esent ed in concert at McArthur court under the . :■ vices of the Stanford Cal. gridgraph. It will be Button's final appearance of the year and a staff of Old Gold photographers will be on hand to secure pictures fer their advertisements. George McMurphey’s Kollege Knights will accompany Dutton when he sings his immortal, “Coine On, Little Oyster, Get Back in Your Bed.” TODAY’S (i HOG RAP11 It'AL A NSW ion ".Hurry up, funny-i'aee.” “Gwan, Vienna gain’ with you.” (And she laughed as . . .) “The campus hasn’t changed very much. Even the meals arc the same.”—Lynn Jones in a Home coming interview. . * * ' ■* The Eugene street department has announced that the collegiate Ford, left parked on Kincaid street near the end of Fourteenth, will- he sold at public auction if not claimed within six months. It has been there quite a while, according to authorities, who are estimating the exact time by a lighted cigar which was left in the back sdat and which is still burning. ■ A small riot was created the other day when an Irishman, upon getting into a street; ear crowded with Scotchmen, remarked, “Begora, but it’s tight in here.” Overheard of long distant hikers in Venice: “Gee, these new water wings pinch my shoulders.” Till your tumbler For Bill, our chum; lie went to Frisco To drink hay rum. w« like of t nigh', they to p; would i.'t hadn’t j;* t tBud that own v would front other tiring and. : “It t) . '■ ■ • '• * if I .1 i‘U\l v.-iU: fresh air.’’ AVI i ut to get 1\\ t" and Blue -to 10 And now wo will have the fa mous Siamese Twin song, "Side by Side.’’ The fellow worth while is the man with u smite when liis garter comes down in the middle of the aisle. 1*. S.—This wasn’t a college man. “You loved me yesterday but you won’t today,” said one tennis play er to another. * * • TAMOt - l.As f WOKBS *'.L'iu too sliy. SEVEN SEEKS. CAMPUS ! . Bulletin! Freshmen women who did not take ; their personal hygiefte mid-term examination report to 121 Wo man’s building at 11 o’eloek Sat urday morning. The last meeting in observance of the Week of Prayer will be held in the “Y” hut, Friday, 7 to 7:20. Students are invited to at tend. Varsity Philippinensis — Important meeting tonight at the “Y” hut at 8 o’clock. Dial meets Monday, November 23, at 2352 Willamette, at 8 o’clock. Take College Crest Loop ear. . Remember the Wesley club line party tonight. First thing is “Tlllie the Toiler” at the Heilig, then a big surprise afterwards. There will be eats. Meet the rest of the gang at the Methodist i church at 7:50. Social swim will be held as usual tonight at 7:30. i Librarian’s Intuition Strongly Impresses Puzzled Reporter Pity tlie librarians, Pity them every day} llow can they ever know What you want—from what you say? Sufficient honor and praise has; not been given in song and story to the omniscience of the librarians, no, not nearly enough. Such is the con clusion of one reporter, after loiter- i jug around the circulation and re serve desks of the library for several j afternoons. For example, wflat is , one to make out of this’ “I've got to stick my face in a heard for an hour,” said one co-ed to her friend, strolling up to the ' desk, but not looking overjoyed at 1 the prospect. The reporter felt stir rings of a great curiosity. , To the librarian she said, “Have you any beards in?” The librarian looked regretful, < " 1 ’m sorry,” the librarian said, “but . they are all out just now. Do you want me to call one in?” Breathlessly the reporter awaited [ the co-ed’s answer,' meanwhile won dering how the choice between senior mustaches would be determined. Would the heard be selected for its , color, perfection of growth, or gen eral style? Which? The eo-cd poiidcred for a moment, then decided, “No, don’t call one in.! I’ll study sumelhifng else.” The reporter felt decidedly let down and bewildered as the co-ed ; walked away.' Was it possible that'! all this jargon meant something , other than it appeared to on the sur face ? "What in flue world was that girl j asking for?” demanded the puzzled reporter of the librarian. "Why, she wanted Beard’s Econ omic Interpretation of the Consti tution,” said the girl in charge of the desk, as if it were the simplest tiling in the world. .Initiation (Continued from page one) pounded up un'i'l discovered to be the 1 .•orner-stoue of the new Fine Arts building. This prompted the Con- ■ hm club members to resolve that ill buildings comprising the Uni versity be torn down immediately md a huge placer mining project started with water to be piped from the lower mill race, which is dry and where it won’t be. missed. Three grizzled roek,-’hounds, tip parently unaffected by the shoot ing fray, piled sagebrush imported from eastern Oregon on a smudgy i fire and cooked flap-jacks built on j the proportions that put girth be-j fore diameter. The weight of the second pan-cake broke the handle of the frying pan, falling on the feet of one of thy men and break ing down his arches. The final feature id' the initia tion which many geologists in seek ing' the eminence of this great so ciety have quailed before and which in later years accounted for their false teeth, was to take a bit of one of tin so Jlapjacks. All the boys balked, sonic of thorn threatened to •resign, but pistols raised menac ingly persuaded them to attempt the uuderiaki The general verdiet c. as that ihusi flapjacks were about ns tende as a keg of railroad •spikes. _\ ijie i,f the initiated mem bers were :•• ced to remain iu the imirmgiy oar night. Robnett (Conliiund from page one) time this year, if the plans of the malinger are carried out. If this tour is arranged it will be a new thing in the history of the Univer sity, a. . •!■■ , to Mr. Kolmett. In addition to the regular spring trips for the orchestra and men's glee club, several home concerts are planned fi r tl is year. A concert by the women's glee club is tentatively planned for t'ebrudry, and in uddi , . 11 i .s ;n nearby cities w ill be schedule if arrangements can be made, so vs the manager. The Campus Stroller . r*\ Observes . THAT if the 0. 8. C. rooters are >till desirous of posts as souvenirs, t might he suggested that the tele phone variety are plentiful, now that | host; supporting trolley wires we peing uprooted. THAT in answer to our letter lome concerning Thanksgiving din ler, we received a list of the rela tives who will he present, and wo lave a mental picture of our portion pf the Turkef—either the neck or die other extremity. THAT we heard a faint voice jab poring in an unknown tongue on the 'adio the other night, and thought ve had China, but it turned out to pc Ton Lung advertising his famous relery from 8aIt Lake. THAT after a thorough investiga tion we can state that none of the 'lowers received by principals in ast night's dramatic performance ,vero paid for by the recipients. THAT the jinx held over Wiish ng by Oregon in past years may dill be alive and healthy—who uiows ? 'Theaters „ > —_1 11K1LTG:—Etiday nn<l Saturday— I Marion Davies in “Tillie the Toiler.” j rillie of the comics on tlic screen vifh all her .jolly pals. “The Vis 011,” a startling picture, photo- ! (ruphed in natural colors. Eugene’s! lopular stage show band, Freddy ; Holt and his Arcadians, offering a lew I’aul Ash style program. Coming—“The Eire Brigade,” the j ng parade of peace times. “Cali- ! 'ornia, ” Spanish love, American -oarage. McDONAED—Second day—“Rose ,t The Golden West,” with Many Valor and Gilbert Boland; also, j ‘Collegians”: George McMhrphey’s 1 p_>—■■—«*—>■—*"—*»—■■—"*—”—«"—"—"ja Friends are Made - - —-OYEIi coffee cups. Face a man across a ^ table for half an hour and you will glimpse his real personality. (Jet together at—• I oflie Attrijotaije DARLE SEYMOUR, ’22 “Get the Anchorage Habit— It’s a Pleasant One” “Kollege Knights,” in a "Spanish I Serenade,” featuring “Spanish Nights,” from "Creole Moon,” by Billy O’Brvant; Frank Alexander on. the organ; Paramount News. Coming — George Ado’s famous American college classic, "The Col lege Widow,” with Dolores Costello and the U. S. C. student body and football team; on the stage, first public appearance of E. H. S. con cert orchestra under the uirecium of Sharkey Moore. * * * BEX—First day—Buck Jones in “Chain Lightning,”- a tingling ro mantic adventure of a two-gun man of the west, who was lightning on the draw and an eagle-eve on the sights; also, another episode of “Blake of Scotland. Yard,” with Hoyden Stevenson GREAT AND CONTINUED F R E E F R E E SAFETY RAZORS Given Away FREE With Each $2,00 Purchase Men’s plain black patent Oxfords— $5.95 Men’s shoes— $2.98 $3.48 College girls’ Oxfords— $3.48 Women’s white college pumps Reg. - - $9.00 $5.95 i/2. Block From Post Office F. C. PURSLEY CO. *>46 Owners Willamette aiajaEiaiaMafaiaisisEEisisEii3®^ Co-Eds ISISfSI5ISJS!31SJSfSI3IB13I5H3n rsl Wo can fix you rigid for the Sophomore Dance. Cfold, silver, and opalescent kid pumps and one strap creations. Also satin, patent, suede and velvet pumps with French or spike heel. Buckles or clasp ornaments to attach. Model Shoe Store MSESEii 881 Willamette St. HOSE TO MATCH don’t change with title calendar ... but natch how oilier smokers are changing to Chesterfield! ,*£?*Hr.c9. c< FORTH! BEST OF GOOD REASONS BETTER TASTE f