Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 22, 1929, Page 4, Image 4

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    University of Oregon, Eugene
Arthur L. Schoeni ...Editor
William H. Hammond..Busines3 Manager
Vinton Hall ..Managing Editor
EDITORIAL WRITERS
Ron Hubbs, Ruth Newman, Rex Tuaaintf, Wilfred Brown
Secretary—Ann Hathawuy
UPPER NEWS STAFF
Har7 Klemm ........ Asst. Mntt.
Sarry Van Dine . Sports
Phyllis Van Kimmell .!.
Myron Grifrin . I
Editor
fid l tor
Society
dterary
Victor Kautman .— r. j. r. wnuir
Osborne Holliind . Feature Editor ;
Ralph David . Chief Niuht Editor
Clarence Craw . Makeup Editor I
DAY EDITORS: Dorothy Thomas, Kline Schroeder, Mary Francis Dildny, T. Noil Tay
lor, and Barney Miller. .
GENERAL ASSIGNMENT REPORTERS: Henrietta Steinke, Merlin Blais, Warren
Tinker, Eleanor Jane Ballantyne. and W'illis Duniway.
NIGHT EDITORS: Carl Monroe, Warner Guiss, William White, Beatrice Penned,
Rufus Kimball.
ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Louise Gurney, Jack Bellinger, TH Montgomery,
Thornton Gale, Dorothy Morrison. Michael Hogan, Isabelle Crowell, Embert bossum,
Helen Rankin, Elinor Henry, Bob Samuels, Clifford Gregor, Helen Jones, John
Rogers, Jane Manion. Elno Kyle, and Nan Ruonaln.
GENERAL NEWS STAFF: Dave Wilson, Betty Anne Macduff, Roy Craft, Henry
Lumpee, Barbara Conly, Bobby Reid, Lavina Hicks, Irvin Faris, Lee Coe, John
McCulloch, Eugene Mullins, Phyllis Calderwood, Thornton Shaw, Willard Arant,
Lois Nelson, Bernice Hamilton, Sterling Green, Betty Harcombe, Anne Bricknell,
Janet Fitch, Pete Proctor, and Evelyn Shaner.
BUSINESS STAFF
George Weber, Jr. Associate Mananor
Tony Peterson . Advertising Manager
Addison Brockman . Foreign Adv. Mgr.
Jean Patrick .... Manager Copy Department
Larry Jackson . Circulation Manager
Betty Hagen . Women’s Spec. Adv.
Irm Trempjay . ifuymwniK 1MP.I
Betty Carpenter.Ass’t. Copy Manaxer
Ned Mara . Ass't. Copy Manaxer
Loulne Gurney .. Executive Secretary
Bernadine Carrico .Service Department
Helen Sullivan.Checkin# Department
r red Keid.
.Ass t. (jircuiaxion jngr.
ADVERTISING SALESMEN: John Painton, Jack Gregg, Margaret Poorman, Harold
Short, Harlan Foth, Katherine Laughrige, Auton Bush, Vernon McCliwkey; Mar
jory Swafford, Nan Crary, George Branstator, Harriette Hofmann, Carvel Case,
Helen Parker, Swede Payne, Katherine Franzel, Bud Smith.
OFFICE ASSISTANTS: Ellen Mills, Carol Werschkul, Marian MacIntyre. Jane Lyon,
Nancy Taylor, Beth Thomas, Nora Jean Stewart, Elaine Wheeler, Doris McMor
ran, Lee Coe, Edith Sinnott, Vincent Mutton, Edward Kirby, and Gladys Mack.
The Oregon Daily Emerald, official publication of the Associated Students of the
University of Oregon, Eugene, issued daily except Sunday and Monday, during the col
lege year. Member of the Pacific Intercollegiate Press. Entered in the postoffice at
Eugene, Oregon, as second class matter. Subscription rates, $2.GO a year. Advertising
rates upon application. Phone Manager: Office, 189.r>; residence, 127.
Day Editor.T. Neil Taylor
Night Editor Beatrice Bennett
Assistant Night Editors
Embert Fossum, Helen Rankin,
Elno Kyle
Liquor and the Colleges
'C'OR THE s(‘(*om<1 time in the past two weeks, newspapers
■*’ have contained stories of fraternity houses in middle west
ern universities being raided and students being arrested for
carrying on bootlegging operations.
The latest offenders were members of llie Gamma Eta
Gamma fraternity at the University of Illinois. Considerable
supplies of alcohol, gin and whiskey were confiscated. At Ann
Arbor, Michigan, just a short lime previous, police also arrested
college men and charged them with violation of the Volstead
act.
While it is a deplorable thing, when looked at in an ethical
light, critics who condemn colleges should remember that the
college life is but a cross-sect ion of every-day life anywhere
in the country.
If there are to be violators of the law in every community
which boasts of a main street, college* cannot be expected to
be a glistening shrine atop the hill, where no evil can originate
or flourish in defiance of tin* laws of the nation. Every col
lege has its liquor problem.
There is a certain amount of drinking done in this Uni
versity and every other university in the state, or in every
institution of higher education in the United States. There
is, however, little public display of drunkenness such as one
finds in many places outside of college.
Offenders have been discovered and punished at Oregon
just as they were found out at Ann Arbor and Urbana. But
the point which should be brought ouL |>qt rarely is, in pub
licising the alcoholism in colleges i^ffijit thei:j*"}s proportionately
no more drinking in a group of colleige' stifllcuts than there is
in any similar-sized cross-scetjion |5pf American youth.
When the United States can look ijjito “every walk of life,
and say “There is no longer alcohol isintipresont,” then she can
turn her eyes on the college and expect to find a similar con
dition. g/**? I
CTNCI$ tji.
Leaks in the Dike
tic avowed purpose of holding tlie bin1 eonferenee
foi»t fen If n’limcs in Portland is to make money, the l'niversity
is losing a comfortable sum through the “bootleu” sale ot
student tickets to alumni or other friends of students in Port
land.
The student exchanges his A. S. U. (). card for a ticket and
either sells this or sends it to friends in Portland. The I'ni
versity and associated students get no direct return from such
a transaction. Although there are conditions stipulated on
the student body card which are designed to make transfer of
tickets illegal, it has been practically impossible to enforce
them.
At the graduate manager’s office wheels are turning to de
vise means of curbing this sale of student tickets, but as yet
no workable plan has been produced. In the interests of mak
ing more inonev, this should he consummated.
Chicago, due to lack of funds, will close its public schools
for two months in December and January, the board of educa
tion declares. While the legal machinery is slowly put into
motion to provide some source of revenue to pay for the schools,
the hundreds of thousands of school children will remain idle,
a truly deplorable condition in a city which is supposed to
have plenty of money in the pockets of its gangsters and beer
barons.
- , i!
A man in the east was burned severely when his wooden
hjg caught fire. Does anvone know where we cap buy asbestos
hats!
A poet recently said that when lie could not sleep he wrote
poetry. When we can not sleep we’ll read it.
Campus Forum
DEFENDS “LEMON TODDY”
To the Editor:
A matter that has puzzled me
for some lime is the attitude of
some University officials toward
the humor columns of the Em
erald.
You know and I know that
straight filth isn't humor, but a
few subtle wise cracks add that
racy touch to a joke which the
public craves.
Such jokes are mercilessly cen
sored from the Emerald humor
column. Very often quite inno
cent jokes are excluded from the
column because someone's nar
row evil-mindedness succeeds in
squeezing dirt from them.
Now the idea of censoring ques
tionable reading matter may bo
all well and good, and I would
find no room for criticism if the
policy of excluding it were con
sistently pursued by the powers
that be.
But, the puzzling thing is that
professors are allowed to pollute
the minds of students by assign
ing page after page of such filth
as Rabelais and Boccaccio pro
duce, and all under the guise of
good literature.
I like to read a joke now and
then that has a racy tang, or a
subtle allusion to the obscene, but
it certainly disgusts even my evil
mind to read page after page of
unfiltered gutter slime.
T. NEIL TAYLOR.
5 LEMON
“GOOD MOURNING,” SAID
THE UNDERTAKER, AS HE
W A T ( H E D THE WEEFIV G
WIDOW PUT AN ONION in
HER HANDKERCHIEF.
Which only goes lo show iis hou
even our daily greetings may he
turned a round.
* * *
And now with Oscar Wilde on
the campus it seems quite strange
people aren't wearing sunflowers.
But the campus gardeners say
dandelions are out of season, too.
The only thing left to wear is
skunk-cabbage.
* * *
Then we mustn’t forget to sing
a few strains from the new Foun
tain Pen song. Heard it?
Howzat ?
Yes, ‘Tve Waited a Lifetime
for You.”
♦ t- *
AND I CALL HER MY MUCIL
AGE BECAUSE SHE’S SO
STUCK ON ME.
TOMORROW’S PUTRID PUN
“Asterisk” (*) in a sentence.
No football player should be
And I hull her my Mucilage girl
because she’s so stuck on me.
We note that the editor of the
O. S. C. Barometer has been in
volved in two automobile accidents
in the past month. After reading
some of his recent editorials we
are tempted to murmur “No
Wonder.”
* * *
Anyway, we are sure of one
thing,'when better sororities are
made, the Sigma Nus won’t
“make” them.
Did you know Moses was a
Toreodor ?
How come ?
Why, don't you remember how
the Egyptian princess rescued a in-,
from the Bull Rushes?
i
Vel
The Collegiate Pulse
A FRESHMAN HONOR SO< IK1A
I • o °
When the day coni' s foi elec
! tion of s'-nioi.-' to Phi Beta Kappa
and Phi Kappa Phi, the recogni
j tion has come too late to serve
I one purpose of these societies—
I that of inspiring students to a
i real interest in high scholarship.
For this reason Phi Beta Kappa
j on some campuses has sponsored
| the formation of a national fresh -
! man honor society, Phi Eta Sigma,
to which all freshmen making
grades of naif A and half B are
eligible. It was founded by Phi
Betes, not as a competitor, but
to bring the desirability of good
standings more concretely before
the eyes of freshmen.
Many men who go out to make
the freshman organization keep
! up the high standard for four
, years, and eventually win the
coveted key of Phi Beta Kappa.—
Washington State Evergreen.
| Boy, she sure gave you a dirty
i look.
Who?
Why, Mother Nature of course.
We suggest that the coal miners
buy a cake of Ivory and have some
good clean fun at home,
BLACKOUT
What makes you think Mary is
such a nice girl?
She told me she had a hope
e.hest.
I get a big kick out of going
with Marge.
Yeh ? Her old man got a big
kick out of me once, too.
# sis *
WON’T THE PHI BELTS
HAM) IN SOME OF THOSE
WISE CRACKS PULLED IN
THEIR DEN THE OTHER
NIGHT? THEY MIGHT BE
WORTH THE COLONIAL TICK
ETS.
THE SODA JERKER.
SOCIAL SERVICE
CROUP INITIATES
Alpha Kappa Delta, social ser
vice honorary, held its formal in
itiation last night. A bancpiet
was held at Lee Duke's at 6:30.
Lee Brown was toastmaster, and
Dr. Parsons chief speaker.
Afterwards the ten new mem
bers were initiated at the home
of Dr. Parsons. Virginia Judy
Esterly, dean of women, spoke on
problems of social welfare which
she observed in Scandinavian
countries.
Those initiated were: Dean Vir
ginia Judy Esterly, Dr. James M.
Reinhardt, Dr. Luther S. Cress
man, Katherine Bluhm, Dorothy
Davidson, Gwendolyn Shepard.
Bess Templeton, Roniaine Nichol
son, Myrtle Hubbard, and Eliza
beth Plummer.
I
Choice
Sea Foods. . .
in all varieties offered
by the sea, are always
kept fresh in our mar
ket. We make every
effort to please our
customers by giving'
them a genuine per
sonal type of service.
NEWMAN’S. FISH MARKET
57 N. Park
Phone 2309 i
Visit tin1 (lrt,‘on Stamp l’rmnium Parlor—3rd Floor
1*1 ION F. 2700
Come in and receive a prescrip
tion adapted to your personal
needs—by
MISS GENEVA MABRY
Expert from the New York Salon
Dorothy Gray
Miss Mabry is not hero to soli merchandise—she is
here merely to help you with your individual beauty
problems—to (five ndviee and consultation. She will
not try to sell you anythin*;. dome in today for FREE
consultation.
TOILETRIES DEPT.
Friday and Saturday
fvcfijl
Marion: George was the goal
of my ambitions, but
Marian: Byl what?
Marion: Father kicked the goal.
—Sun Dodger.
Tim: They call my girl “Spear
mint.”
Jim: Why? Is she wriggly?
Tim: No, but. she’s always after
meals.—Tiger.
He: You look almost sweet
enough to kiss.
She: I intended to look better
than almost.—Chaparral.
•Fros!i: Yes, I’m out for track.
Pretty Baby: Well, if you stick
around me ipuch you'll soon in
crease your speed.—Burr.
I call my shoulders bandits, for
they hold my dresses up.—Orange
Owl.
WE RENT ’EM
U DRIVE ’EM
New Cars
Lowest Bates
GATES AUTO RENTAL
59 W. 5th St. Phone 943
NATIVE STUDY GROUP im
portant meeting: next Sunday at 4
o'clock in Westminster house
election of officers.
OREGON KNIGHT meeting, ac
tive members and pledges, 110
Johnson at 5 o'clock. Bring song
books and money.
CHARM SCHOOL GROUP will
meet Sunday at Westminster
house at 5 o'clock.
PLEDGING A N N< HNCEMENT
Alpha Della Pi announces the
pledging of Margaret Frye, of
Powers, Oregon.
CLASSIFIED AD
PIANO JAZZ—Popular songs im
mediately; beginners or ad
vanced; twelve-lesson course.
Waterman System. Leonard .1.
Edgerton, manager. Call Stu
dio 1672-W over Laraway's Mu
sic Store, 972 Willamette SI.
Res. phone 13F23.
Heavy Wool
Socks are Now
in Vogue
Men !
Priced as low as
50c
PAUL D. GREEN’S
“Store for Men’’
9~>7 Willamette St.
TAYLOR U.-DRIVE
ATTENTION STUDENTS
Talk to us about our new low rates
Late Model Graham Paige
Call 2185 Coupes and Sedans 857 Pearl St.
pi--— --—■—■■—
SYSTEM
”■0
j
i
I
1
s
-1
Congratulations, Team!
We are ''ontiilent 11 int tlm vYrbfoot
tram can (bd'ea* Proe /slum's Rainbov
chaser- •
We urge every Oregonian to go to
the game and see one of the best events
of the year.
MAY STORES
Our Specialty Is Electrical Repair Work
Call 304
ELKINS ELECTRIC STORE
63 East Broadway
At
Christmas
Time
. . . Twelve Photographs—by Kennell-Ellis—
will correctly solve twelve puzzling"
GTFT PROBLEMS
Call 1097 for an Early Appointment
Kennell-Ellis Studios
Sue’s
Parrot Found Out
That it would be a topsy-turvy world indeed if there were not
a new whisper fluttering around each day about what it is
possible to pick up around in Eugene's stores, and so like the
faithful bird he is he brought his tidbits home to help Sue in
writing her column, though of course she found some things
out herself and how! So it behooves the wise shopper to
listen in while the Green and Yellow Parrot broadcasts.
Sparkling Touches
That glitter their way into
the heart of the college girl
— pretty buckles that dress
up even the simplest of
pumps. At Buster Brown's
Shoe Store on Willamette
may be found some of the
loveliest styles of shoe or
naments.
Speaking of
Likenesses!
The Parrot whispers that he
had his picture taken at Ro
manes over J. C. Penney's—
and that it enhances even
his splendid looks. So he
suggests that the students
would be wise to have their
photos taken for Christmas
gifts.
The Light That
Never Fails
Now, as welt as in the old
colonial days, we find that .
candlelight for soft effects
far excels, and when those i
candles are set in beautifully
and intricately designed can
delabras and candlesticks
the effect is far more lovely.
At the Alladin Gift Shop,
41 West Tenth, some very
exquisite candlesticks may
be found—and don't forget
that the unusual may always
be discovered there.
Be in Time!
To get a good selection of
Christmas Cards — for the
Parrot says, with a shiver of
anticipation, that old Kriss
Kringle's day is not so very
far off! At Coe's on Wil
lamette there are some very
smart and individual cards
that await the engraving of
your name on them.
Now It’s—
Butterfly Jewelry
From England comes genu
ine butterfly jewelry set
with opals. Old-fashioned
girls and Dutch girls are set
on real butterfly wings of
bine and black with the
opals adding touches of
brighter colors, f Laraway’s
Jewelry Store has this jew
elry in broaches and pend
ants in different shapes and
styles.
Fluttering Hankies
For the dainty co-ed, linen
hand-made kerchiefs from
Switzerland and pastel-col
ored chiffon dance hankies,
and large-sized sport ones
that are so effective to
swish around. At the Co-Ed
Dress Shop on Willamette
the shopper will find just
such dainty bits to match
her frocks.
In Case Your Mind
Turns to Gifts
You might go to McMorran
& Washburne's and go up to
the second floor to the’
needle department. And then
the Parrot went wild, for
there he found “pouchiu”
pets and jumbo pets in very
life-like shapes. . . . Also
tapestry pictures, needle
point tapestry and rayon
pillows in colorful hues.
Wintry Days
Call for somethin?: warm in
hose and at the U of O Co
Ed Shop next to the College
Side there are some; of the
best-looking silk and wool
hose. And not to forget a
warm head, there are also
Barets in smart colors.
Girl Knows . . .
Is that if she is going to
look her best at all times
and be in short the'essence
of smart, modern young
womanhood she will have to
visit a competent beauty
shop every once in a while.
So from experience the Par
rot suggests the Eugene
Hotel Beauty Parlor, tele
phone 647, as a very good
place to go.
What
P?
As Friend to
Friend . . .
The Parrot suggests that
you go over to that relative
of his, the Green Parrot, and
get some really good food—
food that pleases even the
most particular of eaters.