Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 31, 1930, Image 2

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    . EDITORIALS
°_
FEATURES ♦ HUMOR ♦ LITERARY ♦
University of Oregon, Eugene
Vinton Hall, Editor Anton Peterson, Manager
Robert Allen, Managing Editor
EDITORIAL WRITERS
Dave Wilson, Rex Tussing, Rill Duniwny, Harry Van Dine
UPPER NEWS STAFF
Nei! Taylor, News Editor
Jack Burke, Sports
Barney Miller, Features
Editor’s Secretary:
Carol Hurlburt, Society
Lester McDonald, Literary
Warner Guiss, Chief Night Editor
Mary Helen Corbett
NEWS STAFF
3tar Reporters: Lois Nelson, Merlin Blais, Ralph David, Elinor Jane Ballantyne.
Reporters: Betty Anne Macduff, Lenore Ely, Jessie Steele, Isabelle Crowell, Thelma
Nelson, Helen Cherry, Jack Bellinger, Betty Davis, Helen Rankin, Beth Sal way,
George Thompson, Roy Sheedy, Thornton Shaw, Zora Beemnn, Rufus Kirnball, Vir
ginia Wentz. Ted Montgomery, Jim Brook, Carl Thompson, Isabella Davis, Eleanor
Coburn, Joan Cox, Allan Spaulding, Fletcher Post, Kenneth Fitzgerald.
General Assignment Reporter®: Mary Bohoskey, Eleanor Coburn. Joan Cox, Fred
Fricke, Eleanor Bheeley, Barbara Jenning, Madeline Gilbert, Katherine Manerud,
Katherine King, George Root, Frances Taylor.
Day Editors: Dorothy Thomas, Thornton Gale, Phil Cogswell, Lenore Ely, Thornton
Shaw.
Night Staff: Monday- Harold Birkenshaw, George Kerr, Marion Phobes, Marion Vor
Jand; Tuesday—Eugene Mullens, Byron Brinton, Lois Weedy, George Sanford;
Wednesday Doug Wight, Eleanor Wood, Dorice Gonzel, Betty Carpenter; Thurs
day Stan Price, Earl Kirchoff, Gwen Elsinore, Rita Swain; Friday—Fred Fricke,
Elsworth Johnson, Joseph Saslavsky, George Blodgett.
Sports Staff: Mack Hall, Bruce Hamby, Alfred Abrnnz, Erwin Lawrence, Kelman
Keagy, Vincent Gates, Mahr Reymers, Esther Hayden, Ed Goodnough.
BUSINESS STAFF
Jack Gregg, Advertising Manager
Larry Jackson, Foreign Advertising
Ken Siegrist, Circulation Manager
Addison Brockman, Assistant Manager
Ned Mars, Copy Manager
Mae Mulchay, Ass’t. Foreign Adv. Mgr.
Edith Peterson, Financial Adm.
John Painton, Office Manager
Betty Carpenter, Women's Specialties
Harriet Hoffman, Sez Sue
Carol Werschkul, Executive Secretary
Lavry Bay, A.-s’t. Circulation Manager
Bob Goodrich, Service Manager
Marie Nelson,Checking Department
Copy Department: Janet Alexander, Beth Sulway, Martin Allen, Barney Miller, Victor
Kaufman.
Office Assistants: Marjorie Bass, Jean Cox, Jean McCroskcy. Virginia Frost, Roselie
Commons, Virginia Smith, Ruth Durland, Mary Lou Patrick, Carolyn Trimble,
Harriett Kinney.
Production Assistants: Gwendolyn Wheeler, Marjorie Painton, Marian McCroskcy,
George Turner, Katherine Frentzel.
Advertising Solicitors 'this Issue: Bill Barker. Dick Goebel, Victor Kaufman, George
Bra ns ta tor, Betty Zimmerman, Aunton Bush.
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 postoffice at
Eugene, Oregon, as second class matter. Subscription rates, $2.60 a year. Advertising
rates upon application. Phone, Manager: Office, Local 214; residence, 324.
Vote for Governor
THREE full days before citizens of Oregon go to the polls to
choose a new governor, University students will have in their
hands as accurate a forecast as possible of the trend the campus
vote will take November 4. For the Emerald and the local chapter
of Sigma Delta Ciii, journalistic society, are sponsoring a straw
vote among all students today, to settle the oft-raised query of
politically-minded students: “Which candidate for governor will
carry the campus?’’
All four gubernatorial candidates Julius Meier, independent;
Phil Metschan, Republican nominee; Edward Bailey, Democratic
nominee; and Albert Streiff, Socialist have visited the University
during the past month. All delivered talks on the issues of the
campaign before student meetings, and two of them will have held
downtown rallies.
The straw vote today will be. handled just as though it were a
student body election. You need not be of tegal voting age to cast
your ballot in this poll. The only requirement is that your name
appear in the student directory.
Clip the ballot in today’s Emerald and then go to the lobby
of the main library any time between 10 a. m. and 3 p. m. Let's
make this straw vote a true indication of campus sentiment on the
governor campaign. Vote!
IT IS a bit of a surprise that some of the many needy students
which our employment directors tell us are on the campus have
not seized an easy wmy to put themselves through school estab
lishing a sedan-chair service to transport students over the diagonal
path which leads from Condon hall to the women’s quadrangle.
Dear old Captain Salisbury has nothing on the hundreds of
intrepid student-explorers who pick their precarious way across
this modern “Slough of Despond” every rainy day. The cost of
cleaning clothes and shoes hopelessly muddied here would more
than pay for the building of a board walk similar to others on the
campus.
It is incongruous to walk past a new $125,000 fine arts building
on a terrain which still retains its neolithic aspects. Carpenters
worked several days early this month repairing the walk which
leads from Johnson hall to the Music building. Could it not have
been left unrepaired another winter, and the money spent on a new
walk or pontoon-bridge laid across the Oregon slough?
AL the next session of the legislature, let’s send a student lobby
committee up to Salem to work for a special board-walk appropri
ation. '
Erasing the Red
GOVERNMENTS are always interested in fine figures. Not from
tlie physical culture magazines, but from the reports of an
investigating committee probing Red activities in the United States
is this conclusion reached.
Fifty thousand men and women, if we remember rightly, hold
opinions dangerous to the well-being of the other millions in the
country. That proportion may be said to be four-hundredths of
one per cent. Americana is surely getting a pink tinge when four
hundredths of one per cent have more than held their own in the
enabling American society.
To be sure, foreign wheat traders are not included with the
syndicalists and powerful communists listed, and the figure might
possibly reach up to another hundredth of a per cent. Still, let it
rest at four-hundredths of one per cent.
The only recourse we have, experience seems to tell us, is to
follow the example of our city police. They drive hoboes, criminals,
and people without visible employment, into the neighboring cities.
Applying the same principle, the country deports all the Reds it
can.
Four-hundredths of one per cent isn't such a small fraction.
It isn't much finer than the famed Volstead one-half of one per
cent. But the government knows how to reach finer figures than
that. The fifty thousand men and women themselves offer the so
lution.
With each man deported, the country is rid of one fifty-thou
sandths of foui-hundredths of one-hundredths of ttie population.
After all, we can’t find much fault with hustling a small frac
tion like that out of the country.
Eugene townspeople who question the ethics of using stool
pigeons before arrests might also inquire into the ethics of crack
ing books before exams. Guesses and suspicion are usually both
wrong. But, then, we never flunked a course in a college we didn't
attend, either.
Thorp’s no use in printing the candidates’ platforms with the
Emerald-Sigma Delta Chi ballot, the reporter says, if students
don’t know them, they won t vote anyway.
It is too bad that more voters aren't like that.
Consumers wonder why bread isn't down when wheat prices
arc low. Well, 9-million-a-day stock went down yesterday, but we
don t get any bigger cokes.
CAMPUS ♦
ALENDAR
Kappa Della has appointment?
with Kennell-Ellis Studio today foi
Oregana pictures.
Special meeting of A. W. S. coun
cil today at 5 p. m. in the worn
en’s lounge of Gerlinger hall.
l’i Dei i I’hi meets Friday at 11
o’clock a the Green Lantern. A1
member:; urged to be present.
Woman in Her Sphere group of
Philomelete will meet Sunday from
I 4 to 6. Watch Saturday's Emer- ^
a>d for announcement of the place. [
Anchorage To Exchange
Manager Willi Peler Pan
! The Anchorage and the Peter
I Pan will exchange managements
Saturday, November 1, according
t a Darle Seymour, who for the past
three years has managed the An
chorage and who will take over
I the Peter Pan establishment.
Walter Hummel, who has oper
ated the downtown confectionery
for the past 10 or 11 years, will
; take over the mill race restaurant.
Between Classes
Yesterday we saw: EUGENE
LAIRD being razzed in contracts
class . . . BUD REYNOLDS knock
ing the Emerald, boosting his the
atre, and pigging . . . JANE WAR
NER looking meditative . . . JOE
FRECK blowing smoke rings . . .
DOROTHY HALL making an
nouncements . . . BOB NEEDHAM
puffing on a pipe . . . DOC ROB
NETT looking for a match . . .
MARY HUNT plodding Pi Phi
wards . . . JACK MEIER taking
his hacks . . . BILL KNIGHT look
ing solemn.
■ • . _
♦THE WETFOOT
“ALL, THE NEWS THAT’S FOOT TO PRINT”
I-——.
| “OH, GOODY, WE'RE GOING
TO HAVE A I'YtOSH BONFIRE,”
I AND OTHER EXPRESSIONS OF
J GLEEFUL REJ OILING. I T
I WOULD HAVE BEEN A DEATH
BLOW TO GLASS POLITICS TO
HAVE ELIMINATED THIS IN
| STITUTION, BECAUSE IN FU
TURE YEARS HOW ON EARTH
i WOULD THE FROSII I'REXY
BE ABLE TO HAVE ENOUGH
PLUMS TO HAND AROUND IN
ORDER TO INSURE ELECTION?
* * *
IN MEMORIAM
| The grim reaper snatched him,
Young Horatius B. Tremblay;
The tenth one to ask me
My thoughts of the assembly.
What? Make our University of
Oregon assemblies interesting?
Never. Our traditions must re
main intact.
aft *
The Greater Oregon Committee
if- being faced with the problem of
persuading at least 200 more stu
dents to enroll in the University
P. D. Q. in order to have enough
people to fill out the homecoming
committee appointments.
* * *
If this isn’t done, it’s going to
be a lieek of a note if the old
alums, our guests, are forced to
(ill vacancies in this committee in
Classified
Advertisements
Rates Payable in Advance
1 Insertion ..$ -35
2 Insertions .60
3 Insertions .HO
5 Insertions . 1.00
Insertions must follow one
another, copy must remain the
same, and size limited to 25
words.
DOROTHY HUGHES,
Classified Ad. Mgr.
—
WANTED U. of O. man that
needs work; do not apply unless
you do. Cal! at University Apt.?.,
No. 3, between 7 and 9 p. m.
PARTY wishes to share expenses
with someone driving to Port
land, Friday. Call 120.
LOST Green Sheaffer fountain
pen with clip. If found, call
17-il-J.
FOR RENT A small, furnished
house. For further information
call at 1352 Beech street.
order to insure a successful home
coming.
I
HYMN OF HATE
Oh it’s easy enough to forgive her
If she soft soaps when she can,
But the dame who galls
. Is the one who calls
You “A dray big, booful man.”
(Note: To get correct pronun
ciation and accent on the last line,
remove your teeth, fill your mouth
with mush, make two quick gar
gles, and then repeat the names of
the major prophets in Chinese.)
* * #
NOT SO READABLE
Stenciling punnes fulle putrid,
And slandyr, pro and anti,
Scandyl and awfulle vers,
To please Ye ignoranti.
Fore and twentie lounge rounds
Sprawled a boot ye hearthe,
They rede ye column intentlie,
Bat show no signe of merth.
Wun disillusioned punsterre
His brovve much sorrow bears,
Sadde them haggyrd wrinkuls,
Ob piteous them graying hares.
Stenciling punnes fulle putrid,
Ne’ermore simile he pecke;
With ye smille of swete reporse,
He hungcth by ye neck.
les mcuonald, it has just
BEEN DISCOVERED, LEFT A
CREAMERY TO COME TO COL
LEGE AND STUDY POETRY.
JUST ANOTHER MAN GONE
FROM BUTTER TO VERSE.
* * *
Little Junius remarks that the
order of t He “O” started its cam
paign yesterday on the libe steps
to strengthen the freshmen’s char
PLAY GOLF AT ‘ THE GREENS"
Tlit' First ami Finest Indoor Golf Course in
the West.
8th and Pearl
Phone 532-W
Are You Caught
Again?
VV/Tl'11 no dean clothe- for the dunces this week
T end With several house dances tonight and
the hin Sophomore Informal tomorrow evening it
is embarrassing, to sa\ the least.
(’all 123 and we \' ill get the clothes yen want
to wear back by the time of the dance. We never
fail!
Eugene Steam Laundry
178 W. 8th Street
Phone 123
t? g
^dddddddddddddddddddddddddddadddddduddddddddefElddd
raMaaiaa/EiaaraiaaEfi
acter. When reforming a charac
ter, says Junius, like anything
else, it is always necessary to start
at the bottom.
* * *
BUY YOUR TICKET NOW
FOR THE JOURNALISM JAM
BOREE. DON’T BE ONE OF
THOSE STANDING ON THE
OUTSIDE COOKING THIN.
(Of course we get a rakeoff on
things like this, whaddya think we
print ’em for?)
YMCA Sends 160 Letters
To University Graduates
One hundred and sixty letters
were sent out by the campus Y.
M. C. A. this week to graduate
students of the University who
have served on the cabinet in past
years. The letters, which tell of
the work of the ”Y,” go to various
parts of the world.
Glancing over the mailing list,
Walter Meyers, who is in charge
of activities at the Hut, said, “It’s
surprising where these students
have scattered in just a few brief
years. One of the letters went to
South America, another to the
Philippine Islands, and two to
Honolulu.”
“It is hoped," he continued, “to
keep the graduates who are inter
ested in touch with the work of
the association here on the cam
pus.”
43 Co-ed Photos
Missing in Files
Girls Must Have Pictures
Taken by Momlay
Checking up on the reference
cards in the dean of women's of
fice on the campus, it has been
found that pictures of a consider
able number of women are not in
the files. It will be necessary that
these girls have their pictures tak
en over at the Baker Film shop be
fore next Monday.
Those who will have to have this
done are:
Helen Amort, Helen Ashliman,
Eloise Beaumont, Rosemary Ber
tois, Mary Louise Bodine, Ruth
Bryant, Ruth Charlotte Clark, E.
Merl Clasey, Alice Cook, Rosa Con
stantino, Elaine Demorest, Mar
thiel Duke, Grace Fernell, Alma
Flaig, Lotus Giesy, Elizabeth Hib
bert, Harriette Hofmann.
Jessie Judd, Sara Jullum, Fran
ces Keene, Jean Leonard, Thelma
Lund, Catherine McGowan, Kath
leen Martin, Mary Masterson, Em
ma Meador, Jane Menzies, Ruth
Metcalf, Ora Needham, Peggy
Peck, Nona Peterson, Louise Rick
ert, Mae Rivers, Evelyn Roberts,
Grace Rogers.
Louise Smartt, Elsa Smith, Hel
en Sullivan, Myra Symons, Helen
Valentine, Mildred Weeks, Mildred
Wharton, and Thella Wood.
PEG-TOPS, BOWLERS
WORN AT 1911 DANCE
(Continued from Pchjc One)
of gym, armory, and eventually,
Igloo.
The amount of publicity given
to the dances has varied evety
year, from front page headline
stuff, to last minute campus bul
letin news. Twice the dances were
scheduled so late that they barely
received faculty permission. In
1921 the dance was only given two
inches on the second page of the
Emerald: less publicity than was
given in the same issue to a cake
sale of the home economics class.
At first the dances were strict
ly informal. Shirt-waists and
skirts, peg-tops and bo\Vlers were
given preference, but in 1911 the
i
FOR JOINT SENATOR VOTE FOR
L. L. Ray
(U. of O. 1912)
Unless he is elected, Eugene, the home of the Uni
versity. will have no citizen on Lane County’s dele
gation to the next legislature.
Pledged to Support the Bailey
Platform
(Paid Adv.—L. L. Ray)
Hallowe’en Dance
At the Exclusive
Cocoanut Grove
12th and Alder Sts.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31ST
George Weber’s Music
LIMITED RESERVATIONS
Phone—3376—Now
COUPLES $1.65
(Including Full Refreshments)
DANCING—9:00 to 12:00
:SJa®2JEJs©2ES®aJ
|l5fSlSIEJSJEJS®5l3JSISJB®Si3MSH3JSMSSjSI3ISJBMSIS®5©
October 31, 1930
Dear Folks:
Mr. Skeie has just finished putting in a windowful
of Specials. ... I jusl wish that you folks could take a
look at it. . . . Do has silverware, clocks, umbrellas, and
many other item? at less than cost.
T asked Mr. Skeie what the idea was in selling them
at such ridiculous prices, and he says, “Tick, we are get
ting in so much new merchandise that we simply have
to make room for it, so the only thing to do is to put
a price on some of the older items that will move them.”
So take a tip from Tick - here's an opportunity of a
lifetime.
Oeweh if Store
OUT Willamette
Phone 141
TICK.
' If it comes from Skeie’s
it must be good.”
first formal was held and proved
so successful that the girls clam
ored for it next year, with the
stipulation that men wear gloves
to keep from ruining the girls’
frocks with their moist hands.
From 1911 until the war, sopho
more dances were formal, then
during the war they were abolish
ed because of lack of men. In 1919
they were held again, but very in
formally, because Dean Straub
v.as opposed to the formal idea
! and the men protested that dress
suits were not procurable. Grad
ually they worked around* until
women came formally and men in
formally; however, this year the
sophomore class has issued an edici
of absolute informality for mer
'end women both.
Letter From Graduate
Expresses Appreciation
A letter expressing her appre
ciation of the University of Ore
gon and telling of her presen
i work, has just been received by thi
mathematics department froir
Miss Helen G. Crozier, new hea<
| of mathematics in the high schoo
j at Fortuna, California.
Miss Crozier graduated fron
Montana State college, but for th<
past two years was a graduate as
sistant at Oregon. She writes tha
she is enjoying her work and ha
an able staff. There are several
; other Oregon people teaching a
Fortuna.
"I appreciate greatly what th
people at the University did fo
me while I was there,” she goe;
on, ‘‘and I am very interested ir
the department of mathematics a
Oregon.
CHECKER
TAXI
RATES
From Town 35c
Extra Passenger 10c
Phone 340
I
RINGLETTE
Permanent
Push
Wave
Beautiful
Kinglette
Ends
$4.95
Complete
Finger Wave and Shampoo
$1.00
All Lines of Beauty Culture.
BROWNIE BEAUTY SHOP
Carroll-Davis Pharmacy
Phone 25 760 Willamette
' James, Past Member, Is
Business School Visitor
Chester A. James of Portland
who was last year connected with
the school of business administra
tion as research agent, was on the
campus Wednesday.
Mr. James is now connected
with the Columbia River Valley as
sociation which is studying the
possibilities of a steamboat navi
gation of the Columbia in an at
tempt to lower freight rates on ag
gricultural products in the upper
Columbia valley. It was in con
nection with this study that Mr.
James spent the day conferring
with members of the school of
business administration faculty.
I
I
l
I
{
AT THE
Old Mill
Saturday Night
Everything Collegiate
Portland
'' $530
b013»d 'IRI1'
Tickets 'an*
are on «*» return
Saturday, wing Tues
limit the ilso KOod
«* JehCon the Oregon
for use
Stages
To Other Points
iftlv and in c°m
Go sxvittty time
fort by tram. **
and worry
Week-end fares
* Southern
phone the t them
Facifle AS‘'n el infor
and for »“
nvation
Southern
Pacific
v G- Lewis, A-Sent
pHONE 2200
College
Ice Cream
Special Menu for This Week
HALLOWE’EN BRICK
Orange
Chocolate Malt
Pumpkin
^ ^ ^
Individual Pumpkin Molds
^ ^ ^
BULK
Chocolate Malt
And Fresh Apple Cider!
Eugene
Fruit Growers
Asssociation
Phone I 480 8th and Ferry