Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1928)
University of Oregon, Eugene ARDEN X. PAXGBORN, Editor LAURENCE E. TIIIELEN, Manager EDITORIAL BOARD (Vrthur Schoeni.Managing Carl Gregory.Asst. Managing Joe Pigney..Sports Leonard Delano..P- L * • ...Literary Editor Editor Editor Editor Editor l^eonara naKsnum. Willia.11 Haxj?erty Dorothy Baker. Donald Johnston. Clarence Craw. ... Associate Editor .Society Editor .Feature Editor .Makeup Editor ,Jo stofiel.secretary News and Editor Phone 655 DAY EDITOR? Lawrence Mitchelmore, Mary Frances Dilday, Serena Madsen, Carl NIGHT^EDITOKs! CRc*fTuring, chief; Winston J. Londagin, Waiter Butler, Chas. ‘ H-tX y-'-om EDITORS^1l£it“ Cook, Mary Ellen Mason Fred B^MIh Stiv. rs W. Vernon, Ruth Gaunt, Nils Lcklund, Barney M.ller, Carl Metzen, SPOftTsf STAFF: Kstill Philips. Delbert Addison, Alex Tamkin, Chan Brown, Joe Brown, Fred Schultz, Harry Van Dine. I1PPFR MEWS STAFF- Ralph Millsap. LaWanda Fenian,n, Harry lonkon, Chrysta! RE.^SMa« t-ter McDonald ^^^aH-d^Ruih^Hansen.^Alice '^GorhinnT'T.^NeR0 Taydor.^WRIis Vinton Hal! Dorothy Thomas, Dorothy Kirk. Carol Hurlhurt, Phyllis VanKimmel. Beatrice Bennett, David Wilson. Victor Kaufman, Dolly Horner, Alleen Barker, Klise Schroeder, Osborne Holland, John Dodds. Henry Lumpco, I.avma Hicks BUSINESS STAFF William H. Hammond Associate Manager» Cleorge Weber Jr. Foreign Adv. Manager ■»*7:11 uhannnn ('irculation Manager i-harl^s Keen .. /\uvi iu-mn .nemo*.'- ■ Richard Horn . .Asst. Advertising Manager Harold Kc»tcr....AsaL. Advertising Manager Business Office rnone lo'jo The Orecon Daily Emerald, official publication of the Associated Students of the University of Oregon. Eugene, i-sut-d daily except Sunday and N onday during the college year Member of the t’acific Inter-collegiate Press. Entered in the post office it Eugene Oregim. as second class matter. Subscription rates, *2.50 a year. Adver tiding rates upon application. Residence phone, manager, /it Jit. Day Editor Thin Imur— Serena Madsen Sight Editor Thin Issue— Chnrles H. Harr Aid Sight Editors Thin Issue— Stivers W. Vernon Fred H. Bechill World Confronted By Knotty Problem Progress! That golden word! The I'Jiited Suites is mak ing progress, Htirope is making progress, Ford is making prog ress. Herbert Hoover is making pragmas, K very body is making progress (with the possible exception oi Al Smith, i Wliat will we do with all Ibis progress? Where will we put it .' All the dynamic energy of 111" world is emnbiiied in the task of making progress and nobody gives a thought to its disposition. Alas, is it not about time we had another progressive party?—L. II. Puritan Collegians No ‘Angels’ Either College students of today have nothing on their Puritan exemplars. ; ' Brawls, hazing, wrangles with the faculty, extreme diess, excess smoking the reading of had hooks, the holding or “senseless" and disorderly commencements. religious negli geiiee. free thinking, waywardness,- all such portentous out hreakings and disrespectful eondpet._ whiijh, we are told,mark the spirit of the 20th century coHogintje. played as apparently large a part in the lives of the college‘students 300' years ago. Dr. Henry W. Lawrence, professor of history, Connecticut, college, has revealed these facts after gathering material from authentic sources sujrii as contemporary church records, diaries, and histories,. “We commonly llmik.ol tile American nmi-r man ITtli and 181 h centuries as so incurably addicted tin studious, pi,ify that lie found little time for play and none for dissipa-| tion,” Lawrence says. “It is hard to reconcile with this \ iew such an incident as the following- recorded by one b'/.ra Clapp,, in 1738. ( “Lasl night,” this earnest Vale student has recorded, some . of fh,‘ freshmen got six quarts ot Hliuni and about tlwo pax Is fool of Svdar and about eight pounds ol sugar and mad if in to Samson, and evited every scholer in college into ('hurt is is room and we mad such prodigious bought that we raised the Tutor, and he ordered us all to our rooms and some went! and some taried and they gathered a gain and went up to old father Monshcr dore and dimmed against the (lore and yeled and screamed so that a hodey would have thought they were killing dodgs there .... Students of Harvard at an earlier date took a strong dis like to the president of the time, which was Harvard’s third, and forced him to resign by turning “cud-weeds,” as the Ue\. .Mather writes in his diary, and. In violating the tilth t'om mand men I. “set themselves to travcslic whatex'er ho did or said. JYtting was quite, as much, if not more, of a problem 300 vears ago than now. although it did not play its large a part in the college boy's life, there being no co-eds and few girls’ schools in college vicinities. lint .despite the immediate ab senee of the fairer sex, the college fop abounded, to such till extent, in fact, that laws had to he made to regulate the cloth ing worn. Hor instance, in 17hl the undergraduates of Harvard college were forbidden to wear silk “nightgowns." These were a sort of dressing gown of silk or damask, “suitable for print ers and importers, perhaps, but too luxurious for college stud' cuts,’’ for “plain thinking and high living was not to be tolerated by day or night, it might seem.” . Common*1 ) ications To the editor: !»\ tlu* w av, w hat hats beeomo’ ot' t 111* "StlldoUt l .lioll Wo Voted on iiursclvi's, moro ot loss willingly, a fid a ye*»r tax to tho turn* ot1 “A htudut Dmon” lot's see was it no, impossible, it must havo been oS. Olio ot' tho vhict' ho no t‘i(s ol' hoi no a graduate stud out is an exemption from this ami other taxos. Hut how about tho poor l'rosh who ate paying then *ld a year.' We vptod:the tax on thorn yoa, own us who are grad unto students and who are now ex empt, Don't wo owo even an a pla nation to the troshJ Id RADI’ AT k. Knights * (VonUnued from One) dard was appointed to assist in got ting the new pledges acquainted. Hunt also stated that in tho near future the Oregon Knights oxpoet to present a plan to i resident llal. with tli' ohji-rt of forming a closer feeling of m opt rat ion between t In* foreign ami Xmerban students on thr rumpus, snico it is the hope of J the organization to make the .foreign .-'indent feel that Oregon is his alma mater just as much as it is the alma mater of the Anieiirau-born stmleuti. i The list of pledges follows: Kltuer Kuigfit, Alois (Miayleswort h, Tom llaulev, lhnll Spun er, Isaac Hews. .lames Hughes, Hob Heaver, dim l.amlruth, Itoger Ueuuis, Willis Huniwav, Hriau M imna ugh, Karl Oreve, Kenneth Kaley, Knulkuer Short, John Ootids, Walter Kvans, Lawrence Wiggins, Hick Livens, and Ho'* Stanix. The Amblvr A i:s I’KRI) A V W I: s AH S T I A 1! T M At TON \l inn ja\« mill two sinkers (iA'UD reading THleU I'Kancks warn: sitting a handsome lv>\ in a lino \ \.\ V ACTOR headed sti the lihraiy MARY OOl. . ranine lie! m . . A NTON sail gnawing tin iunneent \ KUNA MA\ I.JNMilIK i n;i a let ter A UT III' having wards with ROW Is !>i)R'i Til Y CKMAT11 , ftVeetly. ,t> down Al. W IN Soup" - ; next to II, SAM night for I )s M IT 11 1‘KTKR fi njje i Ktl mail I A Kl.OW N CAI.K smh king Turning.. Back Pages In Campus History That Tell How The Collegians Used to Act. Fifteen Years Ago From Oregon Emerald, November 8, 1913 University women, under he sup ervision of Doctor Stuart and a swimming instructor, will have the use of the new tank in the men’s gym on Mondays. The varsity yell leader has an nounced that underclassmen only will be allowed to wear rooters’ caps at the game with O. A. C. today. * * * The Oregon Citizens’ Educational league ^dans to raise a $1,000,000 endowment fund for the university from individual contributions. Twenty-five Years Ago From Oregon Weekly, November 9, 1903 The time has arrived for seniors to consider the question of a suit abb' class pin. Several designs have have been suggested and one of these will be approved at the next class meeting. East year Albany college tied with Oregon for the intercollegiate football championship of the state and won the track championship, but lost this season’s first football game to Oregon, to 0. A number of students surprised a certain popular Oregon co-ed at her home Tuesday evening on the occasion of her birthday, and spent the evening with cards and music. DUCK ■* SOUP - Send in your original contribu tions for this column sometime be fore Friday noon and maybe you will be lie lucky person to get two tickets to the McDonald. Wc like both the contributions that have come in so far. (I'roiu Weil. Register) In this precinct the judge,, lifter administering the oath, added each time that, “an unmarried man’s residence is where he sleeps accord ing to law.” Is there a law telling people wlicie thi'y cnh sleep? Mary plays a little golf, Her game is very toad; So is what our Mary said One day when she got mad. Our new Dean of Men, Hugh Higgs, says it is a sin to brag. * , Hut, we say, who ever saw a * guy with a big fish sneaking * up an alley ? * * * * * * * . * * MAKY K. JOHNSON was seen on the campus recently, where she plans to attend a few classes before re turning to her (more or less) per manent home in Portland. KROSII HUN POY KU WONKKIIS wiihki: tui:v hut \u, tuk liAimms 'I'hkv rsi-: in thksk -SNAP” coriisl'ls () ,N T 11 K CA M PI’S. We hear the knives over at the Sigma I’i Tun shanty are awfullj dull. Hooks as though the hoys Were in for a long whet spell. OXK i LOKINB TllOUiHT. IF I'O NT H I li r T OKs TO DUCK WOl’l.D f *1 FAKE Sl(;\ Til El It NAMES IT WOULD MAKE AWAKD1NO OK I'KIZKS CON si DUKA BUY HAS IKK. THE COOK. Classified Ads LOST Ohe U bo'nK on First Not 'i. bunk, belonging lo K. 0. Ransom. I'loaso leave at (’hi Omega house or j*liouo Tll'.t. W 11.1. poisoii wild" took I In* wrong b|aok i oat at tlio Soph Informal please iiill 7»o-.l. 11 S tMO DKKSS.M \Kl\c. T \ 11.« )1> I \ ii, Al. TEEATlOXN. tjUICK SERVICE. Miss MSSIA A \ I' Miss DAN sT ROM, I‘HONK L’^oo-,1, MS K. loTll. U-M» la )ST 8n a ok book ami pair of 1t-ineh sheius. at Armory, 1- inch j si ir of shears in Engine roil in f A if - building. Leave at Emerald ot'fiee. LOST -Cheek for $(10 made out to Dorothy Kathryn Webster. Kinder please call Kappa Alpha 'J’lieta. I!-0-7-8 PERM I' A FE Rs es or fly typi Ouo cai In'ii eo|iy free. Myrtle M. MeAlpiu, [Uiblie stenographer, Eugene lintel. d 0-7 $ . Moo day «,veiling, between Condon end Alpha l’lii li .Use, Call f-Al. [CAMPUS Bulletin Men's Frosh Commission will meet : this evening at 7:45 at the “Y” lint. All freshmen men are cor dially invited. Dr. Reinhardt will speak. Women’s League Council meeting this evening at 7:15 in Woman’s building. Important that all mem bers be there. All women journalism majors in vited to attend open meeting of : Theta Sigma Phi this evening at 7:45 in men’s ,lounge room of the Woman’s building. Homecoming directorate be at Ken nell-EUis studio at 5 o’clock this afternoon :to have group picture taken for Qregana. Imperative! Y. W. Cabinet will meet at 1 o’clock instead of at 7:50. The Murray Warner Museum of Or- j rental art and Museum library on | the third floor of the Woman’s! building, University of Oregon j campus, will be open every Sun- j day afternoon from 5 to 6 o’clock. ] This elutnge will make it neces- j sary to keep the Museum and the j Museum library c-losed on Mon- . days. , A meeting of the Architecture club ! will be held this afternoon at - o’clock in the lecture room of the! Architecture building. All archi- ! tecture majors are requested to be 1 present. Pi Lambda Theta social hour will be held Tuesday, Nov. 13, in Al umni hall. International Relation,? Club will meet at Condan hall this evening at 7:30. Every member bo there. i The Hermian Club and the Women's Order of the “O’’ will have their group pictures taken this morn i NOW THAT HOOVER is elected let's give more thought to MUSIC Come in anil hear the latest records ihcHlding': I Wanna Be Loved by You 'Helen Kane Sonny Boy...A1 Jolson Some Sweet Someone Thu High Hatters Laraway’s Eugene's Oldest Mlisle House 070 Willamette ing at 11 o’clock in front of the Woman’s building. All mem bers piust be tiiere. Alpha Kappa Delta tv ill honor How aril Knight, executive secretary of the National Conference of Social Workers, with a dinner at the Anchorage <5:30 today. • ■The Devil in the Cheese”, a three-act comedy will be lie first fall inree-aci tumw; offering of the Oregon State elrapter of the XationaF Collegiate Players • • • but a mosquito blocked the way THE Panama Canal diggers had engineering brains and money aplenty. But they were blocked by the malaria and yellow-fever bearing mosqui toes, which killed men by thousands. Then Goreas stamped out the mos quito. The fever was conquered. The Canal was completed. The importance of little things is rec ognized in the telephone industry too. Effective service to the public is possible only when every step from purchase of raw material to the operator’s “Number, please” has been cared for. This is work for men who can sense the relations between seemingly unre lated factors, men with the vision to see a possible mountain-barrier in a mole hill—and with the resourcefulness to surmount it. BELL SYSTEM \A nation-wide system of 18,500,000 inter-connecting telephone “OUR PIONEERING WORK HAS JUST BEGUN ” DIRECTOR Dick Barthelmess ★ S1' A R * OLD GOLD T H E C A S T First Cigarette ........ X Second Cigarette .... Old Gold Third Cigarette.. . ^ Fourth Cigarette ....... Z “Making a blindfold test is like conducting a movie tryout, lint in this competition I found mv star ‘right off the reel.’ I named Old Gold for the lead part the moment I tasted its thrilling flavor and its soothing gentleness to the tongue and throat. RICH \RD BARTHF.LMESS... endeared lo movie-goer* th.e world over tor his superb acting in such l ust National pictures as. “The Pateut Leather Kid,” “The Noose” and "Out of the Ruius.” i'. LoriibrJ Co., t-sL. 17 Made from the heart-leaves of the tokc:ai plant MR. RARTHELMESS was askcj to smoke each of the four leading brands, clearing his taste with coflce between smokes. Only one question was asked: " Which one do you like best?” W//.y you can pick them • nree types ol leaves grow on the to bacco plant . , , coarse tep-leavrs, irritating to the throat . . . withered ground-levi es, without taste or aroma . . . and the heart-leaves, rich in cool and Ira grant smoking qualities. Oniy the heart-leaves are used ia OLD GOLDS. SMOOTHER AND BETTER —“KOI A COUGH IN CARLOAD"