Frosh to Play
Last Big Game
As Yearlings
Year men Meet Babes 7
O'clock Friday Night;
Preliminary to Varsity
Team Lost First Game to
Northerners Week Ago
The yearling basketball players
"ill get their last chance to play
r as freshmen when they meet the
Washington babes at 7 o’clock Fri
day night at McArthur court.
The game, which will be a pre
liminary,to the varsity contest, was
formerly scheduled for an earlier
hour, but both games were set for
later in the evening because of the
editors’ banquet the same evening.
The frosh dropped their first
game to the northern freshmen a
week ago, and will have their only
chance to retaliate tomorrow. The
players and the conch. Spike Leslie,
were of the opinion that they lost
the game because of their own
poor playing rather than because
the Washington team was really
superior.
If the yearlings play to the best
of their ability they will have
every chance of winning, if not
they will undoubtedly lose. The
varsity and freshman squads scrim
. imaged last night, and although the
r varsity diii not run away with the
game, the frosh play was ragged.
'I lie second team freshmen lost
a close game to tjie 0 company
quintet of the Lane county league
at the Armory floor Tuesday night.
Here is the summary:
Freshmen (2!)) (82) Company C
8ea,l’s (8) .V.(<5) K. Murrayl
Kdick (5) .F.. (12) O. Murray
Ankeny (8) .C ... (4) Van Dine
Teague (.’!) .G. (G.) Boyer!
Waffle ((3)-.G. (2) Emmons
Shaffer .S. (2) Barnes
Referee: Daniel Maginnis.
Y. M. C. A. Will Elect
New Officers Today \
The election for new Y. M. (J. A. j
officers will be held today at the ;
“Y” hut from 9 until 5 o’clock, j
All men students of the university
are eligible to vote.
Don Campbell, junior in sociology, i
is the only candidate for president, i
Campbell has been very active in
cabinet work, among other things,
attending the industrial seminar at
A-Tacoma last year. He is chairman
of the reorganization committee,
which has just brought about a re
vision of cabinet policy.
Wilbur. Sob.ni of Portland, and!
Hal Anderson of Eugene, arc the j
two candidates for the vice-presi
dency. Sohm, who is a sophomore
in architecture, is chairman of the
interchurch council and a member j
of the cabinet. Anderson is in
charge of the discussion groups
which are being held at the men’s
living organizations, and he has
been active in student body work.
He is a junior in geology.
Walter Evans, freshman in pre
law, and Carl Moore, sophomore in
economics, are the candidates for
secretary. Bay Foss, freshman in
business administration, and Similar
Peterson, junior in biology, arc run
ning for treasurer.
Waffle Sale by Frosh
Proves Big Success
Waffles, great numbers of them,
p were consumed by the hungry stu
dents of Oregon at the waffle sale
which was held by the frosh com
mission yesterday afternoon at the
'Y. W. 0. A. bungalow.
Twenty tables which were placed
in the bungalow were too few for
the students wlfo crowded the room.
Trouble caused by blown out fuses
slowed service temporarily, but
after these were repaired, every
thing went smoothly.
Virginia 11. Smith was general
chairman for the event, which was
held to raise money for the Y.W.C.A.
Education Honorary
Holds Social Tea Hour
A social ton hour was hold by
mombers of IJi Lambda Theta, na
tional education honorary,for wom
en, yesterday at 4 o’clock in the
women’s lounge of the Woman’s
building.
The program consisted of a re
r port by Mrs. Andrew Fish, instruct
or in home economies, on “Growing
Into Life” by David Leabury. The
report analyzed child psychology
and dealt with problems between
parents and children.
i|tiMSMaEEiaEiaMaa®s®iMaEjaE!ri
1
You, too, will like our
CARMELS
Plain, nut, layer, licorice, and
earmels coated with our won
derful chocolate, both light
and dark.
WALORA CANDIES
851 13th Ave. East
'
Poetry ^ Book Rerieies
! Unwary S>ectian™f foiled by &w*na fflabeett
Nightfall Is A Wolf
Nightfall is a wolf
| That gobbles down the sun
| And often eats up half the uioon,
Leaving just starry crumbs.
HELEN BOUDEN.
* * *
Puritan *
j He lived so (lose to God’s white
world;
He drank so deep of ice-bound
streams;
He looked so long at frosted pines,
And trudged so far by scant moon
beams . . .
How could he laugh at purity?
No breath to breathe the air but his;
No thing to char but fresh-felled
oak;
No one to know Ms thoughts but
God;
No laws to bind,'but those lie
spoke . . .
What else could touch security?
A virgin world, so new, so vast,
I bat pushed snow mountains in his
path;
That lapped up life, but newly cast
To frozen crystals, as aftermath
How could he laugh at purity?
CONSTANCE BORDWELL.
* * *
Way of Sacrifice
By Fritz Von Unruh
Thpy were just a group of lads
in thb German advance on Verdun,
wondering what it was all about—
a schoolmaster, a scholar, a drum
mer, a cook, a waiter, a cadet, a
curate, and the captain. Lying on
the floor in the transport train, they
heard the incessant sound of the
wheels on the metal rails, of tho
rails under the wheels, and in that
sound they imagined they could
hear the noise of shells and crash
of detonation. The train roared on
through the darkness toward the
German front, carrying the lads
who wondered what it was all about.
So Fritz Von Unruh paints the
opening scene of “Way of Sacri
fice,” published by Alfred A\ Knopf
and company.
The men are in the trenches wait
ing for the zero hour, each man’s
nerves on edge, each man feeling
the hopelessness and wastefulness
of it all, yet each man forced on
involuntarily into the noil ot Ver
dun. Tito men go over find charge
the ^’rencli lines under heavy shell
fire ne scholar and the captain go
the way of sacrifice. The cook and
the waiter are taken wounded and
crazed to the hospital; the curate,
both his eyes blinded, disappears,
stumbling through the woods, while
only the drummer and the school
master and the young cadet return
physically unharmed, still wonder
ing what it is all about.
“Way of Sacrifice” calls to the
mind of the reader Stephen Crane’s
“Red Badge of Courage,” published
a half century ago. Although doal
\f
‘11
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BUTTERED :l
POPCORN
Only pure creamery
butter used. 1
Groceries and Luncheon b
Supplies ■ |
UNIVERSITY GROCERY ;
790 East 11th Avc.
Pre-spring Specials
In tailor-made suits of the high
est quality ami the latest fab
rics. Come in now and investi
gate.
UNIVERSITY TAILOR
1128 Alder
FOR YOUR
FORMAL
DECORATIONS
We Feature:
WALL BOARD
PAINTS
VENEERS
Twin Oaks
Lumber Co.
689 High St.
Phone 782
ing with stirring action, the em
phasis is wholly on the psychologi
cal reactions of each of a half
dozen or more characters partici
pating in the action.
“Way of Sacrifice” was written
in the German trenches before Ver
dun in the spring of 1910. The pub
lication of the work was suppressed
by the German authorities, but it
was secretly circulated in manu
script form among German regi
ments and is said to have contrib
uted materially to the collapse of
the German morale during the last
months of the war.
WILFRED BROWN.
Vanity Under the Sun
By Dale Collins
Collins is a man who can intro
duce two men in the beginning of
his book, give the reader every rea
son to believe that they are to be
principal characters, and then calm
ly kill off one of them on page 14.
Collins is a man, I repeat, who can
do this and get away witli it.
Furthermore, one of the characters
was killed by being struck in tlic
back of the neck with an electric
fan. People have been known to
catch cold by being thus visited
with such an instrument, but a
fatality is something new and dif
ferent.
For that matter, tire other char
acter almost dies in a different way,
but on the samo page—a catastro
phe which if consummated would
bring this work to a very early end
for a simple lack of someone to
write about. But lie lives. How
that man docs live!
“Vanity Under the Sun” is the
old, old story of the man who for
gets his name and past, and I should
have very promptly turned up my
Roman nose at the very, very old
ness of it, but I couldn’t, for some,
reason, bring myself to it. Now
I’m glad I didn’t, for it turned into
an absorbing thing with a delicious,
rather newish old romantic strain
in it.
Come to think of it, the whole
plot is old, hut the moss has been
washed off with brilliant writing.
Much as I would like to, I can’t
DR. L. L. BAKER
General Dcuttsttry
1209 Pearl Street
Eugene, Oregon
Phono 2929
pan it, and for that reason, I don't
like the tiling.
MIKE GRIFFIN.
* * *
Your House
T pass your house.
The lights are long fingers on the
grass
Beckoning me.
I can see you there alone before
your fire
Smoking your pipe
Fitfully.
There’s room In that big chair for
me.
I rub my cheek—
It almost feels the roughness of
your coat.
Come—I cannot tarry
Your white walk tugs so at my
feet. . .
If only your windows would not
smile so sweet a welcome!
MARY LOU BUTTON.
‘Old Oregon9 Published
By Students; Out Today
“Old Oregon” will be out today.
This is the first time for a number
of years that the magazine has been
edited and published by journalism
students. Marion Sten, Serena Mad
sen and Cedi Snyder are the asso
ciate editors.
The first copy of “Old Oregon”
was put out by Dean Eric W. Al
len’s class in editing ami publish
ing and is the only other time it
was in the hands of the students.
Since that time tlie alums have
been publish'iTTg' the magazine,
which conics out every month.
The cover will feature a draw
ing of the Campbell Fine Arts
building to be erected as a mem
orial to Prince L. Campbell, former
president of the university.
Beattie Tours Clatsop,
Tillamook Counties
t\l. .G- Beattie, lecturer in tlic ex
tension division, will return today
after a- week spent iu Tillamook
and Clatsop counties, which ho
toured in the interest of extension
work.
SPECIAL
BALLROOM
CLASS
NEW
SHORT COURSE
STANG’S
DANCE STUDIO
861 Willamette Phone 2843
Fifteen Years Ago—
Students thought of a canoe and the old mill
race when spring fever attacked the campus. Now
they start the campus car and till it with gas at the
OREGON SERVICE STATION
Eleventh and Hilyard
Waffles
Toasted
Sandwielics
Salads
Ties and Cakes
ELECTRIC TOASTWICH
SHOPPE
Colouial Theatre Bldg.
780 E. 11th
Special 25c Plate Lunch
lloine-madc Pastry
M
t
G
ilk Shakes
3hcss Ties
Bottled
Driaks
ood Coffeo
. m ■» ■» yr-yT » »’» * * * '» »"»’ ^ ■»' ^ ^ "
Novelties as Gifts
Wliou you must buy a
birthday gift or a remom
‘brauce, drop in and see
what charming things wo
have to offer.
<£
ORIENTAL GIFT SHOP
Balcony of Style Shop McDonald Theatre Bldg.
Proof sufficient!
He’s sophisticated!
When he gets hungry he
immediately thinks of
The
U
0
f f
Lunch
Call for Seniors
To Help With Ball
Issued by Leach
Few Report Art Biiildhig;
Schedule for Women to
Help Runk Announced
i Unless all seniors report for work
1 immediately to help with the hnng
i ing of the deeorations for the
I Senior Ball, which is to be given
j Saturday night at the Woman’s
i building, the deeorations will not
be up in time. So far only three
! or four seniors have gone to the
I art building to help Floyd Runk,
| according to Marion Loach, head of
the women’s committee, and it will
be impossible for these few to finish
the work.
A list of the hours that the men’s
houses were to report for work was
printed in yesterday's Emerald. The
seniors from the women’s houses
i are to report as follows:
Thursday, 1 to 0, Alpha Gamma
Delta, Alpha Oinieron Pi, Hendricks
hall; Thursday, 7-11, Alpha Xi
1 Delta, Timelier cottage, (.'hi Omega,
iiiiHiiiiHiiiiniminmiiiiBiiuiHiiiiwi
MMHN
I Ludford’s
' for
PAINTS
and
DECORATING
SUPPLIES
You will find a large assort
ment of colors and materials
for decorating. .J*nst what you
will need for that dance.
ARTISTIC
PICTURE FRAMING
I
| PAINTS ART GOODS
2 ARTIST SUPPLIES
| 55 W. Broadway Plwno 749
liiiaiiiiiiKiniiniBiiiBiiiHiBiiiiininii
LAST
DAY
» USUAL
\ PRICES
A
I
LET’S GO SEE
JEAN
HERSHOLT
in
A UNIVIRf AL PICTURE
with
MARION NIXON and
GEORGE LEWIS
In a brilliant oiitortainment of
vaudeville u 11 <l night dub life—
a new tragedy against a back
ground of maddening .IA/Z!
Come prepared to laugh and
cry.
Kappa Alpha Tltot'a; Friday morn- j
ing, 8-12, Kappa Delta, Sigma Rap-j
pa, Delta Zeta; Friday, 1-6, pi Hot a j
Phi, Phi Afn, Gamma Phi Beta,
Delta Delta Delta; Friday night,
7-12, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Delta
Gamma, Mary Spiller hall, Alpha
Chi Omega; Saturday morning, 8
12, Gamma Nu, Susan Campbell
hall, Oregon club; Saturday, 1-15,
Alpha Phi, Alpha Delta Pi.
“It is absolutely essential,” said
Miss Leach, “that all the senior
women turn out and help put tlio
dance over. It is the only thing
that they are asked to do. Thero
is no sewing of doth to be (lone,
and the work is very easy.”
FROM THE DEEP SEA
"We (jet the choicest of fish
for those who ilemund tlio
best iu sen foods. Whatever
your sea food needs may lie
we can supply them oil very
short notice. Our prices
savor of economy first, plus
tjuali I y.
NEWMAN’S
FISH MARKET
Wholesale Rotail
Phone 2300 Free Delivery
Announcement
Mr. Biugoyne of 1 lit* Rainbow lias taken over
tin* Collect' Side Inn
MR. PAT M. SCOTT
M ill be the new manager
Tin* former good nervier will be continued
with pastry and food to please the most
fastidious palate. Come in and meet us.
College Side Inn
WHEN IT'S
PRINTING
call
363
Natron Printing Co.
i
r~> fiaperxes 0*^r\ S^tcvu?
M? MOPE&N & VWtfHBURNE
— PHONE 2700. —
$1.00 Silk
Hole Proof Sox
69c
I
.
All first quality, new patterns and
a lot of colors. All sizes, but don’t
wait too long to buy.
’EJS(SiSJSJSMS13JSMfiJSMSM21filSJH JTcl(S(3JS13Mi5JSMSJ3MSM3ISJS(3JSlSMSJSJSfSI3fSI^&
Pre-Spring Inertia
Just stroll down to the Peter Pan
and order the cure in any flavor.
Our food will give you an incen
tive to do_well, most any
necessary task.
PETER PAN
Tenth and Willamette
‘ ‘ ‘-^
?. r?s?if Tafr/krtfi gfc E*Vh ?jai35Ei/*aiSsiiZ