«$M$> ^ '♦JhJi Editorial Page of the Oregon Daily Emerald ♦♦♦<♦ aa University of Oregon, Eugene Arthur L. Schoeni .—....Editor William H. Hammond _.Business Manager Vinton Hall ....Managing Editor Associate Editors Ron Hubbs Rex Tussing Ruth Newman Wilfred Brown, Secretary—Ann Hathaway Upper News Staff Mary Klemm_Asst. Mng. Editor Victor Kaufman.P. I. P. Editor Harry Van Dine.Sports Editor Osborne Holland.-Feature Editor Phyllis Van Kimmell. .Society Ralph David....Chief Night Editor Myron Griffin ....Literary Clarence Craw.Makeup Editor Business Staff George Weber, Jr. -Assoc. Mgr. Tony Peterson ..Adv. Mgr. Addison Brockman ..— ..Foreign Adv. Mgr. Jean Patrick.Mgr. Copy Dept. Larry Jackson...Cir. Mgr. Harold Hester.Office Mgr. Betty Hagen....Women’s Spec. Adv. Ina Tremblay.Asst. Adv. Mgr. Louise Gurney.Exec. Sec. Day Editor ..Dorothy Thomas Night Editor .Ted Montgomery Assistant Night Editors.Carl Monroe Louise Gurney Robert Kern 0 Jack Bellinger Katharine Patten 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 Intercollegiate Press. Entered in the post office at Eugene, Oregon, as second class matter. Subscription rates, $2.50 a year. Advertis ing rates upon application. Phone Manager: Office, 1895; residence, 127. « Courtesy to Bruins /'■'•OURTESY to visitors on the campus has been one of the features of Oregon spirit which has attracted favorable comment from the hundreds from other universities and the business world at large. A small incident occurred last Friday afternoon at Hay ward field which caused comment of the other type among the members of the UCLA football squad. When the Bruins took the field for a light, workout before their game Saturday, there were a number of Oregon football men on the gridiron working out. Contrary to all ethics of sportsmanship, these men refused or failed to let the UCLA team have the field for their prac tice. Courtesy of the field for a pre-game practice is one of the unwritten laws of football. Oregon should make an apology to the visitors for this breach of athletic etiquette and take steps to see that it, does not take place again. The discourteous manners of Webfoots who continue to hold their own practice after the opposing team is on Ihe gridiron, while they are not common to Oregon teams, it is believed, can quickly give the university a black eye in the sports world. OR years the tradition has been that of the Women’s league * to si'll chrysanthemums for Homecoming. The league has always taken the orders for the flowers, which all co-eds wear the annual week-end, and many profits have been added to their foreign scholarship fund. This tradition has always been theirs and is a worth while one. This year several local florists and agents from out-of town firms have made their appearance to sell chrysanthemums for Homecoming. The Emerald does not feel that such agencies should be patronized. Fairness may be shown to the local florists when the contract is made by the Women’s league for all flowers they sell by purchasing from a different Eugene dealer each year. Should the executive council see fit to take action, such sales campaigns by outsiders might be curbed. One of the per manent motions of the A. S. U. O. constitution, passed Febru ary, 1922, states, “The executive council prohibited promiscuous selling of merchandise of any kind . . . or souvenirs upon the university property and this shall be construed to include sales by campus organizations.” In Defense of a Tradition Dormitory Needs Name T-TOW much longer is the university going to leave the men’s dormitory over on Onyx street unnamed? Most buildings on university campi, especially living organizations, have names, and in view of the difficulty in deciding whether to call it the “men’s new dorm” or “new men’s dorm,” the uni versity owes it to tho student body to christen the structure. Since this naming custom seems to favor the recognition of men who have done much for Oregon, like Condon, Villard, Deady, and Gerlinger, Dean John Straub might be the next in line for such a high honor. Indiana shows moving pictures at its student body assem blies. Maybe Oregon might have been able to get larger turn outs, too, if they resorted to the appeal to the eve instead of the ear. Dad's Day was a great success. Even though it is only three years old it is one of the best traditions Oregon now has. f The Collegiate Pulse „----—_———a WHAT’S BEING DONE? It was cold in war-time France that October day in 1918—cold and muddy. Heavy mud, thick mud, clung to sloshy boots of ex Washington ’20 as he plugged along. It’s not hard to picture him—ex-Washington ’20. He dropped an L. A. course to enlist. That center room on the second floor of Denny Hall which looks toward the lake was a fa vorite of his. Ex-Washington ’20 never grad uated—not from college. A dron ing machine gun saw to that elev en years ago. His name? It’s not important except that it's about half-way down the list on the little bronze tablet which hugs a grey stone at the entrance to the campus at Seventeenth. Before many days pass by, The Daily hopes that plans will be per fected for an Armistice day cele bration on November 11 which will do justice to the spirit that sent ex-Washington '20 to France. —University of Washington Daily. Students at Henry Ford's old school, recently moved to Dear born, Mich., will have to study by old oil lamps to preserve the at mosphere. last week’s McDonald TICKETS GO TO A POET NAM- I ED K. W. OCR NEXT PRIZE1 WILL BE A PAIR OF RESERV ED SEATS IN THE NEW HEI LIU THEATER. (Ed. note—Their Heats are all padded this year.) * # * RUDY ROSCOE He calls the girl friend "Flypa per” because all the boys are stuck on her. * * * Oscar, our dumb Phi Bote, thinks Lydia Pinkham is an in structor in the |)hysics ’depart ment. OUR ILLITERARY SECTION Oh, there was a little frosh, And he flunked a course, by gosh, And he wished that he was dead, dead, dead. When his old man asked him why, He said, "I cannot tell a lie. There's nothing in my head, head, head. K. W. * * * TODAY’S PUTRID PUN “Dispair” in a sentence. Dispair of pants lias a hole in the seat. * * * Oh, divorced are Mr. and Mrs. Vernon McKieth, To amuse the poor kifls, She used his false teeth. Keep a clean shirt for the Home coming dance (safety deposit vaults for rent at 1st Nat. Bank.) * * * What are dice? They are some bones in the hand. * # * LET’S HAVE LOT’S OF COM PETITION FOR THE HEILIG DUCATS. .... The Soda Jerker. 500 OREGON DADS PAY VISIT TO CAMPUS (Continued from Page Three) Helix O. D. Isaminger. Heppner Chas. Thomson. Hillsboro H. R. Emmott, Win. G. Hare, L. J. Rushlow, Thos. H. Tongue, Jr. Jennings I.odge William L. Finley. Klamutli Falls B. E. Kerns. La Grande Colon R. Eberhard, R. J. Kitch en, A. W. Nelson. Lakevlew M. J. Barry, Dr. E. D. Everett, S. A. Mushen. Lebanon Dr. J. G. Gill. Llnnton J. B. Schaefer. Malin A. W. Macken. Marshfield A. E. Adelsperger, Wm. Schroe der, W. L. Stark, W. C. Tremblay. Mauplii H. R. Kaiser. Medford Edward E. Gore, J. C. Moore, C. M. Morgan, F. J. Spaulding. Modoc Point N. Y. Stoddard. Moro O. L. Belshe, J. F. Foss, J. C. McKean, W. C. Miller, W. A. Rug gles. Mount Angel Peter Schmitz. Myrtle Point Henry A. Schroeder. Newberg E. C. Baird. George Larkin, W. J. Oglesby, John S. Rankin, W. H. Woodworth. North Bend Wm. Vaughan. North Powder A. F. Grissom. Ontario Capt. A. A. Lofstedt. Oregon City Jas. E. Hedges, P. K. Hammond, Wm. Hammond. Pendleton Chas. L. Bluhm, F. W. Bond, R. M. Crommelin, James Johns, Guy H. Johnson. J. R. Raley. Will M. Peterson, H, E. Nelson, T. L. Reedy. Pilot Rock B. C. Reeder. Port Orford Frank E. Tichenor. Powers C. D. Frye, Dan E. Thomas. Prairie City Ralph French, Elmer A. Kim berling, E. W. Kimberling. Prineville Eyril L. Kidwell. Kiekreall Gus Prang. Koseburg D. N. Busenbark, John E. Run yan, I. T. Whitney. Reedsport H. L. Chapin. Salem Dale X. Eeechler, P. H. Bell, R. T. Boals, Lott D. Brown, T. W. Creech, Wall R. Gamer, Carl D. Gabrielson, J. E. Goodfellow, C. N. Laughrige, R. P. Riggs, C. E. Sieg mund, Homer H. Smith, F. D. Thielsen. Sandy W. A. Proctor. Seaside J. G. Babbidge, Frank Daly, Frank James, John Seines. Silverton C. W. Keene. Springfield P. I. Brattain. Tillamook Ross E. Sumerwell. The Dalles H. N. Crandall, W. J. Seufert, S. A. Skirving, P. J. Stadelman. Toledo A. M. Cannon. Vernonia Judd Greenman. Vida J. F. Minney. Union W. M. Dobbin, W. O. Haggerty. Woodburn Blaine McCord, John P. Hunt. Outside of Oregon Burlingame, Cal. — Allan F. Hunt. Eagle Rock, Cal.—Dr. M. M. Null. Los Angeles, Cal.—Harvey H. Duryee. Paso Robles, Cal.—Gifford L. Sobey. Piedmont, Cal.—Fred B. Bain. San Francisco, Cal.—Dr. F. S. Pyle. Aberdeen, Wash.—John R. Ken nedy. » • Everett, Wash. —-Edgar M. Rogers. Seattle, Wash.—W. H. Horner. Stevenson, Wash. R. W. States. Tacoma, Wash. - Geo. Gilbert, Scott Henderson, Daniel F. Mul lins, A. B. Nessenson. Walla Walla, Wash. — J. C. Scott. The Ambler YESTERDAY WE SAW: JOHNNY KITZMILLER giving his daily recitation for DR. CROS LAND — MARGARET UNDER WOOD, zealously in quest of knowledge — SHORTY MCDON ALD giving an early morning representation of a frost bitten Eskimo—BEA MILLIGAN taking her customary stroll — COACH McEWAN wending his way to the Ancho rage PROFESSOR LESCH and his faithful police dog A pigger and his gal warming the senior bench — MYRTLE CLARK searching for BUD DUN HAM. GERMAN CLUB meeting to-j night at 7:30 at the Y. W. C. A. j bungalow. TEAMS FOR INTRAMURAL VOLLEYBALL will be chosen this week at the regular night prac tices. Come out as many nights as possible. TRY’OUTS will be held again for “The Last of Mrs. Cheyney” at 3 o’clock at Guild Hall (103 Johnson). AMPHIBIAN meeting tonight in the pool of the Gerlinger build ing at 8 o’clock. Very important, election of officers, and everyone must be there. W. A. A. COUNCIL meeting to night at 7:15 in the Gerlinger building; important, all members must be present. ALL WOMEN who have not completed their first-round match es in the fall tennis tournament must do so, and turn in their scores at the chart in the Ger linger building, by Wednesday. SOPHOMORE INFORMAL committee will meet at 7:30 in Villard hall. RALLY COMMITTEE will meet this afternoon at 4:45 in 110 Johnson. MATHEMATICS CLUB meeting scheduled for November 6, post poned until Wednesday, Novem ber 13. EMERALD SOLICITORS— Meeting at business office tonight at 7:15. Everybody be there. - RLEDGING ANNOUNCEMENT Alpha Gamma Delta announces the pledging of Frances Martin of Salem, and Margaret Wahlstrom, of Bandon, Oregon. 4 o’Clock Coffee That’s the popular hour and the place. The Anchorage < BHBHM This Eternal Hurrying demands convenience. And now we offer you 1 lie con venience of being able to buy your fraternity jewelry 11‘om stock. -Jewelers the country over sell frater nity ,j( welery from cata logs, but only at Bristow’s can you buy it direct. Save S & H Green Discount Stamps Suye7\eb CV*>\ Q P1I0NE 2700 New! Flannel and Wool Crepe Skirts F ashionable Yoke Front and Button Trim ALL SIZES ’ Here have been assembled all that is smart ami new. all that is most favored in the skirt world. Skirts of flannels with yoke front, button trim and inserted kiek pleats, box pleats, all around pleats and flares. In navy, wine, preen, tan and bluebird. You'll find them a nerfeet mateh to any blouse or sweater you desire to wear. Eberhart Writes Of Psych Work At Northwestern Oregon Graduate Sends Word to Dr. Conklin Of New Duties Carol Eberhart, who graduated last year from the psychology de partment, and who received a fel- j lowship at Northwestern univer- j sity, is taking an active part in the psychology work being done at the Evanston, Illinois, school, according to word received by Dr. Edmund S. Conklin, head of the psychology department. Eberhart, who was also an Ore gon letterman in basketball, is do ing assistant work for three pro fessors at Northwestern. In a comprehensive examination taken at the beginning of the year he placed just beneath two students who are working for their doctor’s degrees and he placed above all others working for master’s de grees. In the history and social sections he ranked first. At Northwestern practically all the psychology text books have been written by members of the faculty, his letter states. The ap parent interest in Oregon has transformed him into an informa tion bureau on the western part of the country. In Illinois all the people drive Lincolns or Packards or Rolls-Royces with chauffeurs included, but the scenery at Ore gon easily compares with that of Lake Michigan, he writes. A Barbecue! A nice, big, fat, juicy barbecue sandwich The Phone 02952-W Lunch The University of Edinburgh has a chair of American history, literature and institutions, whose purpose it is to give Scots a cor rect interpretation of the past and present of this part of the new world. A greater number of students were graduated from public schools in North Carolina in 1928 than were enrolled in all the public schools of the state twenty years ago. Enrollment for the season 1907-08 was 7,144 students. The total number or graduates in 1928 was 12,512. Pardon.... We hate to repeat any previous state ments but learning to dress well is a learned art and the first rule is clean liness. We do dry cleaning, pressing, and laundering, and if we can be of any service to you call 123 and our representative will assist you in any possible way. m Eugene Steam Laundry 178 8th W. Phone 123 Reasonable Prices Convenient Service Are the two outstanding fac tors that have made the student store the popular campus shopping center which it has become. Thousands of students have learned that it pays to “Try at the Co-op First” 1 E E E E E E E E E | E E E E E tli EST- A NATION-WIDE N.B.C. NETWORK 95-713GC GENERAL ELECTRIC