* Welcome, Mothers The Emerald extends today a cordial welcome to all mothers vis iting the campus. We hope you enjoy Junior Week-end. The Weather Fair Friday. Maximum . GO Minimum . 37 Precipitation, slight. VOLUME XXXII UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, FRIDAY, MAY 8, 1931 NUMBER 123 MIMNAUGH TICKET ELECTED INTACT --<«L_ _ Junior h ek-End To Open Today at Luncheon) Canoe Fete on Race Tonight Is Leading Event Eleanor and Princesses To Rule Over Campus t Festivities This Afternoon Include Flivver Race, Beauty Parade JUNIOR WEEK-END Program Today 10:00—Pacific Northwest In tercollegiate Golf Match. 11:45—Campus Luncheon. 12:30—Orchestra and Enter tainment. 1:30—Flivver Race. 2:00—Men’s Beauty Parade. 2:15—Tennis Court Dance. 2:30—Washington vs. Oregon Baseball Game. 8:00—Canoe Fete. Junior Week-end will open today at noon with the campus luncheon, when the entire student body and visiting mothers will gather on the campus lawn as guests of the jun ior class. The event is the first of a long series planned to fill in the three-day period, Friday, Satur day, and Sunday. The leading event of the day will be the canoe fete, “La Fete Mod erne,” scheduled for 8 o’clock this V evening on the mill race. Fifteen floats, entered by living organiza tions, will pass in review, in com petition for the annually presented prize trophies. A modernistic set ting has been planned for the fete, in keeping with the title; and an improved lighting system will fa cilitate complete visibility. Queen Coronation Tonight Queen Eleanor I, who will reign over Junior Week-end, will be of ficially coronated at the canoe fe^e by Art Potwin, president of the junior class. She with her four at tendant princesses will arrive at the throne platform on board a rocket-ship. Queen Eleanor will also reign over the junior prom Saturday evening, and she will be honored by a special place at the mother’s tea and banquet Satur day. Immediately following the cam pus luncheon a number of events will be run off. The flivver race in l which the campus' oldest “rolling ” wrecks” of four cylinders or less will compete in terms of the short est distance in the greatest length of time. The men’s beauty parade, a new feature on the week-end pro gram, on the faculty tennis courts, and a tennis court dance imme (Continued on Page Three) Death House for Candidates r i 1 Student voters went to the polls at the Y hut early yesterday to decide the fate of candidates for A. S. U. O. offices. Here are a few of the voters snapped by the Emerald’s staff photographer. High School Title In Debate Will Be Decided Saturday Medford and Prineville, District Champions, Are To Meet in Villard The high school debating cham pionship of Oregon will be decided here tomorrow when Medford high school, winner in western Oregon, meets Prineville high school, the winner of eastern Oregon, accord ing to Percy M. Collier, of the Uni versity extension division, chair man of the high school league. As champions of eastern and western Oregon these two teams will be awarded the Burt Brown Barker cups, while the winner of this last debate will receive the E. E. DeCou cup. Medford Has Affirmative Helen Wilson and Donald . Dar neille will compose the team which will represent Medford, under Ralph R. Bailey, coach. They will argue the affirmative side of the question. Last week this pair de feated Astoria high school in a contest held in Portland, thereby winning the right to represent western Oregon. Last year Med ford won this right, also, but was defeated by McLoughlin high school at Milton-Freewater, in the final debate. The Prineville team, upholding the negative, is composed of Fran ces Mays and Catherine Coshow and coached by Vernon I. Basler. The debate will be held at 7:30 o’clock in Villard hall on the cam pus, and the subject under discus sion will be “Resolved, that chain stores are detrimental to the best interests of the Amerian people.” Judges will be Robert Prescott, Eugene; George W. Robbins, of the school of business, and Carlton Spencer, of the law school. Canoe Fete Staging Improves t t D. T. Bayly, Viewer of Many Annual Mill Race Shows, Says Events Getting Better Each Year By JIM BROOKE “There is something that always stands out in every Canoe Fete,” D. T. Bayly, manager of the An chorage Raceway, who has viewed a succession of fetes from his door Iway, said yesterday. “One of them tips over, or catches fire, or gets caught on the trees or along the bank. But as a rule they go off pretty smoothly. “Are they getting more elabor ate ? Well, I don't know,” he con tinued. “They had some mighty fine floats in 1922 and ’23. I sup pose they are improving in quality a little. One thing does improve, though. There has been a contin ual bettering of staging and stands. “When I first came here the peo ple saf around on the banks of the race. Later they built a species of ‘seats’—that was in 1922. Until I acquired the property they were 4 unable to construct anything on the other side of the race. The or chestra was on this side of the race, and sat at one end of the bleachers. “The arches and lighting effects have been made more elaborate all along. Last year they introduced the sound effects. “Anyone ever injured in a fete? Not that I know of. Of course, quite a number of people have fal len ii to the race trying to look on from various points outside the bleachers. "I remember one year there was a group of small boys who got up in one of the trees that spread over the race. Too many of them got on the same branch, and when the thing broke, they all landed in the water. It caused a big laugh. “The bleachers have been built considerably larger this year, so I .oubt if anyone need try that stunt. With half the students working on the floats, and enough seats to hold the rest of them, this year’s fete ought to be the 'biggest and ibest’ of them all,” he concluded. Water Carnival Race Rules Given Out by Rollwage Event Saturday To Start At 10:30 o’Clock; Features Ready Rules to which entries in the water carnival races must adhere have been formulated, it was an nounced yesterday by Jack Roll wage, carnival chairman. Leading events on the program for the car nival will be a canoe race, dnd a men’s and women’s swimming race. The event will take place at 10:30 Saturday, morning on the mill race. Swimming race entries, both men and women, will be required to pass physical examinations at the health service by today noon, or they will not be allowed to en ter. Hugh L. Biggs, dean of men, made this statement imperative yesterday. 11 Rules Given The canoe race entries will be subject to a set of rules as fol lows: 1. Canoes shall be procured by Dr. Nelson L. Bossing Says Edifice Near Campus Opportunity To Influence Life Editor’s note: This is the third of it series of articles being pub lished in the Emerald concern ing united student religious work and its relation to the proposed union of student religious organ izations on the Oregon campus. By JACK BELLINGER A united interdenominational church for students was advocated by Dr. Nelson L. Bossing, profes sor of education, in an interview yesterday. Dr. Bossing is chair man of the student-faculty com mittee on religion, which met at 4 o’clock yesterday afternoon to con sider various plans to better the student religious life on the Ore gon campus. “If the churches involved in the talked of merger should fail in their plans of union to provide for a church in proximity to the Uni versity of Oregon campus a real opportunity will have been lost to influence most effectively the stu dent life,” Dr. Bossing said. “It is quite difficult, if not im possible, for a large church made up of older, more mature people in the community to provide the right kind of worship and intellectual at mosphere that would appeal to a group of students,” Dr. Bossing continued. He pointed out that people who make .up the personnel of the church have interests largely cen tered around problems that con cern their business and social life. At the same time students are interested in problems that largely center around youth, such as a de termination of accepted standards of ethical behavior, and an attempt to develop a philosophy of life cen tered around problems of intel lectual questioning- that are raised in the University classroom. “As a member of the University staff and looking at the problem from the standpoint of campus needs, it appears to me a supreme opportunity for the Eugene de [ (Continued on Page Three). ,