Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (March 7, 1929)
University of Oregon, Eugene ARDEN X. PANGBOBN, Editor LAURENCE B. THIELEN, Manager ' EDITORIAL BOARD W. E. Hempstead Jr.Assoc. Editor Leonard Hagstrom.Assoe. Editor Joe Pigncy.Assoc. Editor Arthur Schoeni.Managing Editor UPPER NEWS STAFF Carl Gregory .Asat. Managing j&auor Donald Johnston ......~.^...—...f,’cature Editor Prf>r(>nA Ma<1m>d ...Literary Editor «#oe rigney ....... Lavina Hicks _ Leonard Delano ....oyvri* oumii . Society Editor .P. I. P. Editor Clarence Craw .Makeup Editor Jo Stofiel..Secretary News and Editor Phone 666 EDITORIAL STAFF DAY EDITORS: Vinton Hall, Lawrence Mitchclmore, Serena Madsen, Carl Gregory. Harry Tonlcon; Mary Klemm and Mary Frances Dilday, assistants. NIGHT EDITORS: Rex Tub aim; cmef; Fred BectilU, Victor Kaufman, Charles Ban. Thornton Shaw, Mildred Dobbins. ASST. NIGHT EDITORS: Max Carman, John Dodds, Evelyn Hartman, Beatrice Dennett, Jean Carman, .Jo Harry, Ralph Yergen, Dave Totton, Graccmary Rickman, Eleanor Jane Ballantyne. GENERAL ASSIGNMENT REPORTERS: Margaret Clark, Wilfred Brown, Carol Hurlburt, Audrey Henriksen. SPORTS STAFF: Delbert Addison, Alex Tamkin, Joe Brown, Fred Schultz, Harry Van Dine, Warren Tinker, Harold Fraandorf. REPORTERS: Mary Klemm, Myron Griffin, Maryhelen Koupal, Clcta McKennon, Margaret Reid, Alice Gorman, T. Neil Taylor, Willis Duniway, Lois Nelson, Dorothy Thomas, Phyllis VanKimmel, David Wilson, Ailcen Barker, Elise Schroeder, Osborne Holland, Henry Lumpec, Merlin Blais, Rex Tussing, Mack Hall, Helen Cherry, Barney Miller. Bob Guild, Mary Ellen Mason, Ruth Gaunt, Lcnore Ely, j Ruth Campbell, Alyee Cook, Bernice Hamilton, Virginia Smith. BUSINESS STAFF •* tr_i a_a_ __ OL_l_ Tt_1 a J__ George Weber Jr.Foreign Adv, Manager Dorothy Ann Warnick....As8t. Foreign Mgr. Phil Hammond.Service Dept. Ruth C re&ger..~.....~....~~.- - ■ Secretary -Cashier Margaret Poorraan... Richard Horn-Ant Adv. Manager j Harold Kester__Aaat. Adv. Manager Ted Hcvitt-.Circulation Manager Larry Jackson.Asst. Circulation Mgr. .Mgr. Checking Dept. Business uttice rnone iay& ADVERTISING SALESMEN: Addison Brockman, Lucille Gatlin, Emmajane Rorer Bernard Clapperton, William Cruikshank, Elaine Henderson, Bob Holmes, Ina Tremblay. Betty Hagen. Margaret Underwood, Osborne Holland. OFFICE ASSISTANTS: Harry Hanson, Dorothy Jones, Cloots Cook, Kathryn Perigo, Julianne Benton, Guy Stoddard, Louise Gurney, Jane Gilbert, Fred Reid. 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 of the Pacific Inter-collegiate Press. Entered in the post office at Eugene, Oregon, as second class matter. Subscription rates, $2.50 a year. Adver tising rates up?n application. Residence phone, manager, 2790. Jo Stefiel, secretary. Day Editor This tnnuf— Serena Madsen Night Editor This Charles H. Barr Asst. Night Editors—Jo Barry John Dodds Cigarettes for the Audience If there is any truth in advertis ing, the audience that listened to Tito Kcliipa at McArthur court last night should go ill a lunly to the nearest cigar store and purchase a large supply of a certain brand of eve 11 -ad vert i see ciga ret tes. The concert of Tito Kcliipa eva.s a rare treat for the campus and for 1'jUgene, and although the audience was highly appreciative, it was at the same time most impolite. A con stant succession of coughs rattled over the huge crowd from the be ginning of the first song to the end of the last encore. The noise at times became so obtrigdvo that it seemed the audience believed its self at a basketball game. It was a wonder that Kcliipa could have been so gracious through it all. My First^Job Professors Relate How First Money Eqrned " My firs! jolt wan as president of 1 lio First National bauk in Now York city. My very first,” admit t oil John .1. Laudsbury, dona of t ho school of music, with a Jiuw.lt.ly mod ost air. "I hitvo other jobs now,” Doan lam Isbnry was serious, “One is keeping the I’hi Dolts and Kappa Sigs out of jail. "1 have boon only niodorntoly successful in that,” ho said. Doan lumdsbury rather contra dicted himself in his statements, as ho also told the Kmorald that his first position was given him at the agi of 1(1, when ho acted more or loss as an ornament at one of the banks at boadvillc, Colorado, which had gone into bankruptcy. " I used In drag mil musty records exert once in a while, whenever they wanted them,” he explained. " I was supposed lo work for loui or fixe weeks, but I got bored and left after one week. ‘•My next job xxas lo find money to buy a pair of shoes while I was in college. That was a real job.” Dean l indsbury’s third position was as a teaching fellow in the school of music. “ You will be surprised at my next one," he exclaimed. “It was help ing to lay out the water system of my home town." Salesmen for Halliburton Lecture Are Listed (Vimlhivt'tl from I’niie (%i<;) Kappa, Jack I'irdloy; Sliorix lioss hall, John IVnlund: Sigma hall, Tom Johns: Sigma Vlpltu Kpsilmi. Ken noth Curry; Sigma Chi, Charles I ;iird; Sigma Nu, Kric Forsla; sig. mu L’tii Lpsilon, Joe Frock; .Sigma Pi Tuu, Sanford Whiting; Theta Chi, Kviinvt h Haley; Zeta hull, Walter Durgan. . Alpha Chi Omega, Helen Winsor;. Alpha Delta Pi, Mildred Swafford; Alpha Gamma Delta, Marguerite Looney; Alpha Omieron Pi, Virginia Grono; Alpha Phi, Lueile Murphy; Alpha -\i Delta, .lean Smith; Chi Omega, Kli/.abeth Kaser; Tri llelt, Hit Blue; Delta Qamtua, Connie Pox; Delta Zeta, Ucadriee Dennett. Gamma Nu, Ruth Jaynea; Gamma Phi Meta, Marianne Speer; Kappa Alpha Theta, Marian Camp; Kappa Delta, Madol.vn Snider; Kappa Kappa Gamma, Bernice Ham ilton; Phi Mu, Ruth Campbell; Pi Beta Phi, Alice Carter; Sigma Kappa, Alice Rutherford; Girls’ Oregon club, Florence Woughter; Three Art club, Albertina Harkov; Hendricks hall, Harriet Kibbee; Susan Campbell, Klaiue Williams. MCDONALD “ .Manhattan (Vk tail,” starring Nancy Carrol, Rich ard Ark'n anil Paul Lukas. Spark [ 1 i11comedy. Also (ho Croon;iders in “Crooning Alojig” and "Oswald” in his second sound oarloon. COLONIAL “Four Hons," star ring Mai caret Mann, Francis X. ’ lliishinan and .lime Cidlycr. One of I the "Big Ton.” Also "Shooting Wild,” comedy, and Pa the news. HEILIG -The Taylor Players in “The Cat and the Canary," a mur der mystery. Also short subjects on the screen. REX "The Wreck,” featuring Shirley .Mason and Malcolm Mae gregor. Also a Universal comedy and International news. Tito Schipa Pays Visit To Eugene's Airfield (Coniunit'll from l'aye One) lido. In fact, he is even beginning to make very definite plans. If things turn out right, Schipa vv'dl journey from Nan Francisco to Salt Lake in a pi.me. The singer is most enthusiastic lever the courses being given to I Oregon students in conjunction with | I he air serv ice here. Oregon, he says, is an outstanding university . . . . "oh yes, very, very, outstaud ing." lie was fascinated with every thing in connection with the air planes and examined them carefully, lit* also expressed his ideas on the Hold field, saving it vv.is "excel Ionic." "Nome day 1 shall liaveoa plane myself," he said, looking his man igei straight in tlu eyes, "and then, lust wait and see ... I shall ride, if the wind is blowing 01 if she is not. ” l.mriiiM K<lil< trials? Do you waul editorials in the Kiuerald? Do you want them whether tIn*\ are read or not ? Win : What per rtuit ot the editorials do you read.' Name Class Ballot must be made out in Cull to lie counted. HERE IS A SCORCHING LET TER WE RECEIVED FROM THE 11 ANONYMOUS “KING CHARLES” j < Hey hey. The hamlet of Holly wood doubtless will be happy to 1 learn that all the Oregon stndents 1 who tried out for campus movie 1 screen tests have definitely given ] 1 up their ambitions to become mo- ! I lion picture stars. The rush for the j cinema capital is off. •] ! Duck Soup, tis man to man, did 1 you ever see a more dissipated look- 1 ing crew in your life than the males ' of the Webfoot flickering photos' And as for the women—compared with them a battered old stovepipe hat is a thing of beauty. KINO CHARLES. EVIDENTLY KING CHARLES WAS NOT ONE OF THE FEW WHO WERE REPORTED AS BE ING ABLE TO RECOGNIZE THEMSELVES. ADOLPH Menjou was PASSING through Eugene WHEN the tests were BEING made and was ASKED to come u|> and HAVE a screen test MADE incognito. HE gave the name AND address of a student AND the other day lie WAS informed that all THE mob scene characters HAD been chosen. WE'RE AFRAID THERE’S NO CHANCE, “ADDY” OLD HOY. DEAR SUCK SOUP, You blithering, jaundiced, furfur accous, indigent, catachrcstical, rep ercussive, insalubrious, mellifluous, pantopliagous, gulp, phantasmagori cal, defalcators. Keep my name out of your columns! A. L. S. P. S. May all your cliildrcu have hives. HE All A. L. S. We resent your postscript that our progeny have hives. That \s mi bees-llcss. DUCK SUUI’. TODAV, l’KOM SCOTLAND Then there’s the Scotchman who’s so tight lie hates to pay anyone a compliment. (A rare sample of the headline writers’ art): SWINE SELL WELL IN LOCAL MAliKET To encourage contributions to Duck Soup we offer a choice of the following prizes to bo given to those who turn in not less titan 999.9 ac ceptable jokes daily during the term: "Ntil'fy " Harnett: his l*l;n U string t ic. s. t . Smith: his fur lined rout. Doe O: limin’: her sorin'; skirt. \. Holmes Haldriilgt’: his foveloi'k. I>r. lioweii: his mnustaiho. Prof. Wjllvox: his flowing rape.1 Miss Hurgoss: her blank link pit'ii'. \ alfiit ini' Boyer: Itis middle IUIUU’. .lullii H. -\Ji’iiIU-r: his u ifeless stiiti'. Prof. Shumaker: Ins dog troupe. Pint’. Krust: his i-outh (hr doesn't u..i' it any wav'). 'Irtliur f links: his elitoks likv Spitrenbergs. I'lii’ t \v o d 'cam's; their lin ks. XiiiirtMv Pish: his aest it illations. Kurnost MoH: his pipe and eol lection of curses. tioorgo \\ 111 m iiii'i»ii: his green sack. \V. p. t.. riiaihir: a few of hi initials. Han.' lumtlen: his statin' for tin' court'.aril of the blind school. DUOB. SOW What They Say Tabloid Bits Taken From News of the Day ‘IVT0 SUCH MAN ;is >oah exist * cd, nor was any voyage nadc in the Ark. Noah was not a nan. Tire word Noah in Hebrew ncans ‘nature’s rest,’ and it was ised to signify an expression of a diase of universal man’s existence. , Ark’ means vessel in the sense of i thing destined to contain and pre erve something, and here refers to ^ he shelter for the principles of gen erative nature.”—Diy William K. Serkson, dentist and Bible studVnt, n Brooklyn Daily Eagle. ‘ * 1V^" ^ K IAD IX general is suf fining from a feebleness of nind. In America there are 100,- • 100,000 people, but only 10(1 are tsing their brains to the fullest ex eat and those 100 cannot make! nuch headway in a nation of volun- I ar.v morons.”—A. T. Orage, editor, i n the Brooklyn Daily Eagle. INCIVRIIINC WPCRTER - - due ■ —— Today’s Question: Judging by the screen tests, do you think men or .vomen are more vain? Fie I d a Wigging, .junior in Eng isli: “I think men are, because they took more interest in the screen tests. Girls are used to the paint, uit it was unusual for the men, and they felt like they had ‘it’.” Lester Fait, junior in business ad ministration: “I believe the reason for more male screen tests is the more care-free attitude on the part jf the men and their spirit of bra-' cado. A woman is likely to wonder ivliat her friends will think, wherc ;is the men don't care.” Alberta Graves, freshman in his tory: “There has always been an argument concerning this, and since more men had their screen test taken, it would seem that men are more vain.” Bruce Titus, junior in pre-medics: ‘It might be said that men consider themselves better looking, but J be lieve they wished to support the j campus movie.” Judith Blom, graduate student in German: “Why of course not. It just goes to prove that there are a lot of good looking men on the campus.” Tito’s Liquid Tones, Ease Ot Execution, Color Recital (Continued f(pm Page One) last pianissimo nuance. And what ail Avc Alaiia hi' gave us, with a new consecration. There was but little fortissimo in the program, but tlio Harlequin’s (Serenade from “Pngliacei” and the “Chi se nne seorda eehiu” (Da rthelemy) were tlie nearest of the regular program. That last number was a universal favorite for the bravado and care- j less abandon in it. The Padilla I “ITincesta” was powerful with j feeling too, and Scliipa's voice al most sobbed. There was only one number in English on his program, and that was the song that (leral dine Farrar has made famous, "At Parting” (fingers), and to hear Tito Schipa sing it is to love it all over again and to love Scliipa for the way'in which he sang it. But Mr. Scliipa sang another song in English for an encore that many named their favorite, and that was one of Scliipa’s own compositions, “I Shall Ketiirn.” It was supremo as song, sentiment and pofrm,-—it was Tito Scliipa personified. Altogether Mr. ’ •Scliipa sang seven i m ores. La Far follcttn (Cesti-Sehipn), 1 Shall fie turn (Scliipa), Kl Oaucllo (Schipal, i A ilia pol: i (Lacalle), April Pool, <) Sole Mio (Capua e, and La domic mobile from fiigoh.tto (Verdi). The! house almost went wild with ap plause over these last two numbers, i "The best that has ever come to Oregon’s campus!" So said most people, and rightly! Frederick Longas was an accom panist of merit, and his solos were vigorously encored. The Ledoff "Music Bov” which he played for an encore, was more perfectly done than 1 have ever heard it before. Tito Scliipa’s recital was’ a mile stone in Oregon's musical history never to lie forgotten. Billy Reinhart Named Head Backfield Grid Coach H'ontimud from I'nije Out') prominently successful with his I *;» sf l*n 11 teams. Last year’the Ore gonians captured the western <Ii\ i Mon of tlie eonfcreure rare and then defeated Washington State college in a three fime series for the northwest title. In receiving the appointment as 1i;h kfield euaeh, Keiuhart perhaps is the only euaeh on the eoast to hold three major athletie coaching positions. At the - itoe meetiug of the execu tive hoard) a resolution was passed, preventing ineligible athletes from competing under Oregon colors in athletic meets. This includes all sports, hut it was particularly di reefed toward the swimmers and boxers who sent in applications ior .... ...t.. . Laurf’sac.''. CAMPUS BULLETIN ’here will be no more meetings of the university Girl Scout troop this term. •hysical education for men—Final grades will be posted on the bul letin board in the men’s gymnas ium at 9 a. m. Monday, March 11. No grades will be changed after Thursday noon, March 14. Women’s ieague council meeting to night at 7:15 in the Woman’s building. *i Lambda Theta—There will be no meeting today. • Up ha Kappa Delta will meet .to night at Delta Gamma, at 8. Dr. Heustis will speak. Swama meeting tonight at 7:40 in Woman’s building. Very import ant. ?i Sigma will meet tonight at 8 o’clock in the Y. W. C. A. bun galow. Dr. Smertenko will speak. Big Sister captains must hand in reports for the term to Helen Peters or Bea Milligan by end of week. Iregon Knight meeting at 11 o’clock in 110 Johnson. All members are requested to be present. Mu Phi Epsilon will hold their reg uler meeting at 4:00 today in the lounge of the Music building. Readers Influenced by Gay Titles, Large Type (Continued from Page One") hey don’t belong. But of course hat isn’t for print. (This hastily.) “What do professors read? Well, roil ’ll be surprised. Lots of them, larticulnrly those who teach sub jects requiring intensely heavy daily ending, like to pick up something for recreation. Why, today a pro fessor took out something of Sax Itohmcr’s mystery stuff, for ex uu pie. (Just then another customer nmbled up the stairway and stop led to greet him: “Hello, Larry, what’s on your mind todfty f ' WlSat vas on Daq-y’s mind wasu ’fc just that iay on the book shelf, so the conver sation went on.) “Of course, more consistent read ers know their authors and they keep in touch with new things, Then, too, they follow book review columns and know the kind of thing they want to read. “Yes, I think the student tasli in reading on the whole is vert good. (Bob was glancing througl a copy of Huxley’s Point (Jountei Point for which lie says there! ha: been a great demand lately.) “Poets? Well, I’m not so mud iii touch with traders of poetry as of prose but one thing, certainly more women are interested in Sara Teasdale, than men,” ho smiled. “And, oil yes, more women read Halliburton, too—that ought to in terest you. “Men apparently read stuff with more action, on the average.” Just then a bevy of co-eds, mak ing their High Hat pilgrimage, ap peared — so the chat — it really wasn’t an interview — was over. “Come again,” said Bob. PLEDGING ANNOUNCEMENT Alpha Chi Omega announces the pledging of Margaret Gierhart of Eugene. Former Pupil to Give Piano Recital Tonight John Clifton Emmcl, who, when attending the university, was a pupil of Jane Timelier and who is now studying piano under Frances S. Burke and Jacques Gershkovitch, of Portland, will present a recital in the music auditorium tonight at 8 o’clock. There will bo no charge for this program, and Dean John Bands liurv, of the school of music, is de sirous of making it a homecoming affair for all former students of the music department. Important Train and Stage Announcement Fbr your greater convenience on trips in Western Oregon a new ticket arrangement has been put into effect whereby the same tickets may be used on the stages of tlie Southern Pacific Motor Transport Co., Oregon Stages, Inc., and the Pacific Stages. For example, you can leave here on the stages of one line and return on the other, using the same ticket. Schedules of those companies have been coordi nated, too, giving v^u better service than ever before. Rail tickets good on these lines Southern Pacific rail tickets also are good for use on the “Hed Tops” and “Silver Grays,” and, with few exceptions, on the Pacific Stage line. If you wish, you can go by train and return by stage. Stages Call at Oregon Hotel F. G. Lewis, Ticket Agent Phone ““00 Phone or call on us at any time for all travel information Southern Pacific but a mosquito blocked the way • • • THE Panama Canal diggers had engineering brains and money aplenty. But they were blocked by the malaria and vellow-fever bearing mosqui toes, which killed men by thousands. Th£n Gorgas 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 seeminglv 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 t / niUscH-tvuie system ef mter-tonnccting t'iefhont, “ o u R r i p v E £ R ! N G W ORE H A S JUST BEGUN”’