Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, January 16, 1932, Image 2

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    EDITORIAL AND FEATURE PA6E OF THE OREGON DAILY EMERALD
University of Oregon, Eugene
WillisDuniway, Editor Larry Jackson, Manager
Thornton Shaw, Managing Editor
Ralph David, Associate Editor
Betty Anne Macduff, Editorial Writer Merlin Blais, Radio Director
EDITORIAL STAFF
Rufus Kimball, Asst. Managing Editor Roy Shcedy, Literary Editor
Jack Bellinger. News Editor Walt Baker, Sports Editor
Eleanor Jane Ballantync and Lenore Ely, Doug Wight, Chief Night Editor
Society Editors.
BUSINESS STAFF
Advertising mrr. •..~.narry ocnens
Assistant Adv. Mgr.Auten Bush
Assistant Adv. Mgr.Barney Miller
National Advertising Mgr.Harold Short
Promotional Mgr.Dick Goebel
Promotion Assistant.Mary Lou Patrick
Women’s Specialties.Harriette Hofmann
Vyinsauim nuv. jmk*.vitrviKc iimhiovow*
Office Manager .Jack Wood
Circulation Manager.Cliff Lord
Assistant Circulation Mj?r.Ed Cross
Sez Sue .Kathryn Laughridfre
Sez Sue Assistant.Caroline Hahn
Checking Dept. Mgr.Helen Stinger
Financial Administrator.Edith Peterson
ADVERTISING SOLICITORS: Caroline Hahn, Velma Hamilton, Maude Sutton, Grant
Theummel, Bernice Walo, Louise Rice, Florence Nomblais, Bill Russell, Harlan
Boals, Mahr Reymers, Bill Neighbor, Vic. Jorgenson, John Vernon, Althea Peter
son, Ray Foss, Ellsworth Johnson, Bernice Ingalls, Mary Codd, Ruth Osburn,
Magdalen Zeller, Lee Valentine, Lucille Chapin, Norris Perkins.
MARKETING DEPARTMENT: Nancy Suomele. execuMve secretary; Betty Mae Higby,
Alma Tye, Laura Hart, Virginia Kibbee, Louise Bears.
OFFICE ASSISTANTS: Pearl Base, Nancy Arcnboid, Airna Tye, Marian Henderson,
Virginia Howard, Laura Hart, Helen Schacht, Helen Knlmbaoh, Betty Gorrill,
Annabel Tullock, Mildred Laurence, Mabel Harrow, Jean Frazier.
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, $2.50 a year. Advertising
rates upon application. Phone, Manager: Office, Local 214; residence, 2800.
We’re Webfoots, You Bet
A RMED with ballots, the campus went to the polls yes
terday and settled (we pray once and for all) the
Webfoot, etc., etc., etc., etc., controversy.
We’ve been Webfoots for a long time, and Webl'oots
we stay. (Student voters said that yesterday.
Now, all together, WEBFOOTS, WEBFOOTS, WEB
FOOTS!
Political Pot a-Boiling
QHARP, cold winds sent feathery flakes of snow and stinging
^ bits of sleet into the streets of many cities this week. Long
lines of men huddled close to the walls of buildings and waited
their turn at municipal soup kitchens.
In different sections of the same cities still other men gath
ered, but they lined up at mythical political soup kitchens from
which are already being rationed out advance notes on what will
happen this summer. For this is another presidential year, and
the man in the street is interested. The soup kitchen pots are
boiling and brewing for the down-and-outer; the political soup
kitchen utensils are cooking as hard for the man who wants
to know who will be the nation’s next president.
At the Democratic soup kitchen in New York City an old
familiar cook has appeared, ladellng out sustaining messages to
the stand-bys who are hungry for another Bourbon victory. It.)
our old friend A1 Smith. Al, who we thought had gone in for
radio cities and Empire State buildings in the proverbial “big
way” and forgotten dreams of the presidency. But, once a poli
tician always a politician, it seems.
And over at the Republican soup kitchen, Hoover says that
he will continue to be the chef behind the political pots. That
suits us. The food is good there, too.
No More Ineligibles
"VTO more ineligible men or women students in campus ap
pointive positions—that's what the formation of a central
checking office under the supervision of Irma Logan, A. S. U. O.
secretary, means. No longer will non-registered students be
able to hold jobs which should rightfully go to those men or
women actually members of the associated students. Brian Mim
naugh, in providing a check on registration of appointed stu
dents, has laid down a constructive act. Wc welcome it.
Last term the Emerald exposed one incident of a Eugene
man, who, although on the campus daily, was not a duly regis
tered student in the University and therefore wrongfully holding
three A. S. U. O. appointments. Later a high official on the
student daily was also found not to be a full-time student. Nu
merous other cases of ineligibility have been overlooked in the
past. One of the recently returned Pacific Basin good-will de
baters admitted that he held an important Junior Week-end
appointment last year and yet was not in attendance at school
that term. A well-known master of ceremonies on the campus
has accepted appointments and yet not been a member of the
A. S. U. O. this past term.
But now we are to have no more of the above. The Emerald
is glad to think that its efforts in revealing the eases mentioned
have not been in vain, and that student body officials have come
forth with an excellent plan to prevent future errors.
January in Eugene
/ANE week later. Students beginning to think about mid
terms; sleeping in afternoon classes. Campus paths running
rivers, or oil-filmed lakes. A raw, chill wind sweeping down
Thirteenth street. Watery flakes of snow seen against the back
ground of the Tomb south wall as they drift to earth. Sloppy
mud baths between Condon and the parkway.
In the cemetery only the bleak stones watch the squirrels
shiver.
In town, cars splash through the streets, but there are few
on the sidewalks to get the bath of mud ttiey distribute. One
week later.
On the sentinel hills, muggy mantles of melting snow, in
the lowlands to the north, un uninspiring pall of cold and damp.
One week later.
"For the first time since the establishment of a government
weather bureau in Los Angeles, 04 years ago. snow fell today
within the city limits of Los Angeles," the United Press reported
yesterday. It ought not to be hard to find snow in as large
un area as the city limits ot Los Angeles, though.
"It s just a slip twixt the skirt and the hip." Professor
Emeritus Sweetscr. And perhaps a bit more in this weather.
Since when has the It. O. T. C. begun holding meeting for
the prevention of war ?
OREGON ♦
♦ ♦ GRIPE
As we tuck this in the crib for
the night, we ain’t heard yet how
the biff nickname contest came out,
but if we had thought of it sooner
we would have suggested some
sort of a compromise like “Lum
ber jacket rappeneerfoot.”
_r — ri
AND IN CASE YOU FOLKS IN
THE NICKEL SEATS ARE IN
DOUBT, OUR NEW NAME FOR
THIS SCANDAL RAG IS "ORE
GON GRIPE,” NOT “TRIPE.”
* * #
Little, Irwin, on hearing that the
Igloo bonds are liquidated claims
that the soup at his tong has been
that way as long as he can re
member.
* * *
Which brings to mind the yarn
we once heard about Slick Jack
son, what rustles the ads to pay
for this yar sheet. They say that
he was at a banquet. The gent
next to him tasted his glass of wa
ter, and eyed it suspiciously.
"Hey, Slick,” he pipes up, "this
water tastes kinda funny. What’s
the matter with it?”
The Slicker sipped a bit of it,
thought a moment, and turning to
the man, came back, "It's been
cut.”
# * *
TODAY’S WEEP
Gone from off this mortal earth
Is Genevieve McClure.
She asked a brawny Pi Kap
If he wanted a manicure.
MUD IN YOUR EYE . . . The
Zestful Phi Dells, snowballing the
windows in their shanty . . .
NNNNNYEAH, the darn copy
cats that instituted the name con
test for ouah fair university . . .
Jim Brooke promising us a tip,
and us never getting it . . , Merlin
Blais, who thinks a contact man
is the gent that spins airplane
propellers . . . the announcement
in Thursday’s Emerald about the
prevention of war . . . Heath, hot
sying in war'class about “delpoy
ment” sitchiashun . . . betcha I can
clean up any gag you know . . .
on second thought, maybe I can't
... so we gut that out of the way
. . . a coupla Sigma Chis on the
roof of the Green Lantern . . .
our mistake, it must have been a
couple of other Chis . . . Cest fini.
HOW TO OUT I!ll> OF A BLIND
DATE LEMON
Kun out in country. Discover
you arc out of gas. Out will get
huffy anil walk home.
If this doesn't work, walk home
Classified
Advertisements
Rates Payable in Advance
10c a line for first insertion;
' 5e a line for each additional
I insertion.
Telephone 8800; local SIT
LOST
LOST: Green u'ul black Schaeffer
fountain pen. Name engraved.
Reward. Call Bob Needham,
phone 1006.
MISCELLANEOUS
HARRIET UNDERWOOD
583 13th Ave E. Phone 1393
DRESSMAKING SALON
Style Right Price Right
Upstairs over Underwood &
Elliott Grocery.
shoes REPAIRED The finest
shoe repairing in Eugene, qual
ity work, and service. All soles
stitched, no nails. Campus Shoo
Repair, I3th between Alder and
Kincaid.
~ KRAMER BEAUTY SALON
Also Hair-cutting
PHONE 1SS0
Next to Walora Candies
NEW BEGINNERS' BALLROOM j
CLASS
Starts Tuesday 8:30 P. M.
MERRICK STUDIOS
801 Willamette Phone 5051
yourself. It’ll cost you a good car,
hut sometimes it’s worth it.
Take gal to see “Purple Plumes
of Passion.” Will get interested in
show and you can sneak out unob
served.
Suggest a little ride in Birkin
shaw’s flivver. Gal will immediate
ly complain of headaehe and in
sist on going right home.
Sing tenor, accompanying self
on banjo or zither. Woman will
suddenly remember eight o’clock
class and want to go home.
If she can’t swim take her can
oeing. Don’t try this if you can’t
swim. If you can’t tip the boat
over, you can always swim ashore.
Don’t make the date.
FAREWELL, AS THE PA
TIENT SAID WHEN THE DOC
TOR ASKED HIM HOW HE WAS
FEELING.
CAMPUS ♦ ♦
ALENDAR
Alpha Xi Delta announced the
pledging of Dorothy Lindeman of
Rainier, Washington, yesterday.
Mathematics club will meet Mon
day at 12:40 in front of Condon
for Oregana picture.
German club will meet Monday
at 12:30 at Condon for Oregana
picture.
International relations group of
Philomelete will meet at the Green
Lantern Sunday morning at 9:30.
Bring 30 cents for breakfast. Any
girls interested are invited.
Physical education club council
meeting Monday at 5 in the social
room. Gladys Gregory, Harriet
Londahl, Edith Clement, and Mil
dred Anderson please be there.
Phi Delta Kappa, men’s profes
sional fraternity, will meet at the
Education building Tuesday at
4:30. Election of new members.
Action will be taken on the pro
posals of the National council.
Alpha Omlcron Pi announces the
pledging of Edith Korhonen, of
Portland.
V. W. C. A. World Fellowship
group meeting at 8:30 Monday
night.
All freshmen discussion group
leaders will meet with Marcia See
ber at the Y at -1 o’clock Monday.
The Woman in Her Sphere group
of Philomelete will meet Sunday
afternoon at 4 in the men's lounge
of Gerlinger hall.
Cosmopolitan club meets Tues
day night at 7:45 at the Interna
tional house.
Nature group of Philomelete
meets tomorrow in the women's
lounge of Gerlinger.
93 EARN PLACE ON FALL
QUARTER HONOR ROLL
(Continued from Page One)
Margaret A t w o o d, Corvallis;
Constance Baker, Grants Pass;
Sam Banning. Wanna; Munson
Bennett, Beaverton; Katherine Bis
bee, Heppner; Byron Brinton,
Haines; Arthur Cannon. Toledo;
Margaret Davidson. Oswego; Jua
nita Demmer. Medford; Donald
Entry. Hood Kiver; Laura Gold
smith. Klamath Falls; Marjorie
Halderman, Astoria; Kenton Ham
uker. Klamath Falls; Roy Hern
don. Freewater: and Irvin Hill,
Cushman.
A 1 b e r t a Jackson, Stevenson,
Washington; James KennedayJ
Multnomah, Oregon; John King,
Freewater: William Knight, Hose
burg; Henry Landt, San Diego;
William Michel. Chiloquin. Oregon;
J a m e s Moynahan, Sacramento;
Helen Raitanen. Astoria; Percy!
Riddell. Monmouth; Lorna Sched-!
een, Gresham; Aimee Sten. st.i
Helens; Orval Thompson, Shetld;
Thomas Tongue. Hillsboro: Sieg
fried von Berthelsdorf, Klamath
Falls; Clara Waffle. Astoria: Mar
garet Williams, Elgin, and Norma
dum-ei,'Coburg.
/
The
STUDENT
CHURCH
By GENEVIEVE DUNLOP
Most of the University student
organizations have engaged visit
i ing speakers and performers for
! their meetings for this Sunday.
Included in the list are professors,
missionaries, and a reader and im
personator.
Methodist
R. B. Porter, secretary of the
campus Y. M. C. A., who is begin
ning a series of six talks on India
for the morning meetings of the
Methodist students, will speak on
“India—The Land and Its People.”
I The Wesley Foundation will hear
! “The Bishop’s Candlestick” from
! “Les Miserables” by Victor Hugo,
as read and interpreted by W. L.
j Heestand of Chicago. The read
ing will begin at 6:30. Preceding
it there will be a social hour, with
j Thelma Shuey, social chairman, in
charge.
Presbyterian
The upperclass and the freshman
groups are meeting together to
hear Ernest G. Moll, professor of
English, speak on “What I Think
Are the Most Important Things in
Life.” The hour for the class is
9:45.
“Have We a Right to Preach
Christianity to Shanghai Before
New York Is Christian?” will be
discussed by the Westminster
Forum. Miss Helen Whittaker,
who has returned from five years
in China, will lead the meeting.
A special collection of interesting
objects will be on exhibition. The
group is to have a social half hour
before the devotional service which
begins at 6:30.
Baptist
Rev. Kenneth Tobias will be the
teacher for the Chi Omicron Sigma
class this Sunday, his topic being
“Work with Rural Groups.’’ Spe
cial music for the 9:45 session will
be vocal selections by a trio com
posed of Margaret Osborne, John
ny Bridell, and Rollin Calkins, and
a vocal solo by Doris Turner.
The Baptist Young People’s
union will conclude their study of
Burma at their meeting at 6:15.
Dr. Mary Fowler Thompson, a for
mer missionary to Burma, and
Mrs. Casper Wood will speak to
the group. Mary Knowles is in
charge of the meeting.
Lutheran
The Lutheran Student associa
tion will meet at the Y. W. C. A.
bungalow Sunday at 6. There will
be a social half hour, followed by
a short business meeting and a
program. Rolla Reedy, president
of the Y. M. C. A., will speak on
“Christian Principles and the Pres
ent Economic Problems.” A bri'f
report of the Northwest student
convention held in Tacoma, Wash
ington, will be read. Rolf Boddine
is president of the group.
Congregational
Two questions are to be consid
ered by the Student Forum at the
meeting at 6. The group will en
deavor to find answers to (1)
“What Is Jesus' Teaching on Mar
riage?” and (2) “What Have Our
Instincts To Do with Success in
Life?”
First Christian
The Loyal Berean class is con
tinuing the study of Hebrew his
tory and for this Sunday will dis
cuss “Organizing National Gov
ernment.” Mrs. R. M. Day is the
teacher for the group, which meets
at 9:45.
"My Share in My Home” is the
topic to be discussed by the Young
People's Christian Endeavor. The
meeting will begin at 6:15 with
Myrtle Upton as leader.
Community Liberal (Unitarian)
The Young People's group is not
planning a regular meeting for this
Sunday but will attend the Forum
meeting of the church at 8.
Episcopal
The Student council will meet at
7 in the men's lounge of Gerlinger
hall. There will be group discus
sions.
PENDELL WILL SPEAK
ON HUMAN RELATIONS
(Continued from Page One)
dividuals," and by a study of such
a definition he will show how far
the modern study has gotten away
from the days of Hobbes or even
Thomas Jefferson. Getting along
without the ancient hypothesis of
“marginal method'' is Dr. Peudell's
theory.
, Tkere-will be an opportunity-at
the close of the lecture for ques
tions and discussions from the
floor.
These lectures are being spon
sored by the committee on free in
tellectual activities. According to
Dr. Townsend, member of the com
mittee, Tuesday’s lecture will be
of particular interest to students
of economics, business administra
tion, and sociology, and, of course,
to those working in any of the
social sciences or cultures.
TWO CRITICS UNITE
IN PRAISING DRAMA
(Continued from Tagc One)
Gene Love portrayed a middle
aged English schoolmaster with a
quiet serene repose and a kind of
effortless, self-contained calm
which this reviewer would not
have thought it possible for an
American amateur to achieve. His
thoughtful kindness to the younger
officers—one of them his superior
—was without a trace of condes
cension. It was a mercy that Sher
riff spared us the sight of his dy
ing: there seemed something fit
ting in his going quietly out on a
desperate raid, and just fading out
of the play.
The drama is rather the domes
tic misery—and occasionally com
edy, of warfare in the trenches;
so it does not rise to tragic heights.
But the officer’s supper after the
raid, with Lieutenant Osborne
missing, yet all the more present
in spirit; and the terrible, poig
nant grief -of his younger col
league, all this was, in spite of its
lower key, as moving as a Greek
tragic scene.
Set off against the pathetic
scenes, there were some admirable
comic bits. Wilbur Walker, as Pri
vate Mason, orderly, cook, waiter
and handy man for the officers’
mess, would have pleased Dickens’
heart. His cockney lingo, his cur
ious mixture of creeping submis
sion and jaunty humor, his sloppy
gait, made one think of Cibber's
description of Garrick doing Abel
Drugger. And Walden Boyle as
Lieutenant Trotter—well he might
have been an English grocer from
somewhere in Camden Town.
Hearty, insensitive, full of sappy
jokes (England has Babbits, too),
he played the fat tradesman turned
officer, the fat a little gone to his
head. His snapping-turtle table
manners were particularly good;
face in the plate, and perfect nose
dive technique. Yet he was much
more than a "bundle of tricks; he
made a well-integrated character
study, just as Walker had done of
liic ui uci ly .
Leonard Dart as Captain Stan
hope had the heaviest role, and he
showed by one stroke after another
the real character of a young offi
cer who had gradually taken to
drink to keep up his nerve and re
lax the tension, and who accord
ingly had grown testy, moody, ex
plosive, yet still kept his grip on
his work, if not on himself. His
old self comes back in the crises,
and his rapid changes of emotional
mood hence made the part a hard
one. Dart succeeded in translat
ing the playwright's intent, and
so made us first like the man, and
then feel him unsympathetic, and
finally we liked him immensely. It
might be added, that like all the
actors, he played to his fellows on
the stage, not to the audience. One
could not, in fact, detect many con
cessions to the feelings of the au
dience.
Jack Stipe played the part of
Lieutenant Hibbert, the quitter,
with a good deal of finesse. There
was no possibility of making us
like the character; but he did make
us like his acting of it. The sup
porting roles were also well man
aged by Ethan Newman, Charles
Shoemaker, and Martin Geary.
Geary was to the life the type of
rather scholarly colonel, a bit of a
martinet, perhaps, but human in
the end.
These comments on the actors
might be summed up by saying
that behind their work was dis
cerning and sensitive direction;
while the setting in which they
worked was in a traditional stem
ming from that great Russian
theatre where Gogol's “Nachtasyl"
was played: which means that the
setting was done in low-keyed
browns without a trace of artiness,
and with the perfect sincerity that
the script of the play demands.
The lighting was laid on with a
sparing hand.
In fact, there was nothing too
much, and the economy of means
was not the least merit of the pro
duction. There was only one small
detail in which the production end
might effect an improvement, and
perhaps that is not feasible but
it seemed that in several of the
short scenes toward the end either
the firing should have been keyed
lower, or the voices louder; or. if
the reviewer might venture a sug
gestion which is perhaps not tech
nically practicable, the rhythm of
the machine-guns and the rapid
tire speech micht br alternated, or
maybe the one used to orchestrate
Ivy Walkem, Petite Blond,
Featured Tonight at K.K.K.
Who is this Ivy Walkem person?
wonder curious students as they
read the Krazy Kopy Krawl signs.
If you saw Fanchon and Marco's
“Black and Gold Idea,’’ you know
her as Yvonne LaFaye, the petite
blonde who featured as an acro
batic dancer.
Discontinuing her stage career
temporarily, Ivy is taking this op
portunity to continue her educa
tion. Entering the University this
term as a sophomore transfer from
Oregon State college, she intends
to major in physical education.
In her total five feet she has
compressed enough ambition to
supply a very much larger person.
Besides an 18-hour study schedule
she is reporting for the Emerald
and filling a number of dancing
engagements. Tonight she makes
her debut to the campus at the
Krazy Kopy Krawl.
Perched upon a grave in far-off
Siam, listening to the weird chants
and clanging cymbals of' Oriental
funeral rites, Ivy first formed her
dancing aspirations.
Perhaps it was the tantalizing
morsels of food left to appease the
hunger of the Asiatic dead that
lured her, then a mere youngster,
to that strange spot. Thereafter,
at any rate, whatever strain of
music falls upon her ear draws
her like a magnet', and puts her
dancing feet into motion. Not
even in the big cathedrals of Eu
rope, which she visited before she
was 10 years old, could they resist
to dance.
Born in India, where her father
was a civil engineer in the employ
of the British government, she
lived a nomadic life during her
first ten years, traveling through
Europe, Africa, and Asia, finally
settling down to attend school in
Montreal.
Her language, she says, was a
grand mixture of French, Burmese,
and Hindustanic. Unable to speak
English, she had to occupy her
time in school somehow. So she
proceeded to “brush up” on her art
by drawing pictures of the teacher
—a pastime eventually discovered
and punished in the customary
manner.
It was not until her high school
days in Portland, where she at
tended Commerce, that she took
up dancing seriously. The win
ning of a contest gave her a schol
arship to a dancing school and a
contract to appear at various sub
urban theatres in Portland.
A year on the Orpheum circuit
and eight months with Fanchon
and Marco followed. Most of her
tours were made during the sum
mer vacation. Since September
she has appeared with Cole Mc
Elroy’s orchestra.
“The most exciting moment in
my stage experience ? I should
say it was the time I made a ‘hit’
in the 'Black and Gold’ perform
ance at the Fox-Broadway in San
Francisco. From a standing posi
tion on one boy's hands I was sup
posed to do a back dive across the
stage, another boy catching me.
He missed. I crashed into the
piano. Two hours later I woke up
with all sense of feeling gone. It
took three weeks to recover from
injuries to my spine and instep.
I went on with the act again, but
it was necessary before every per
formance to freeze the places that
still pained.”
the other. We are not used, like 1
the Chinese, to following two me
lodic patterns at once. —But this
is a minor detail in what is on the
whole the most admirable and
moving play which has been seen
here in several years.
(Continued from Pape One)
lish lad fresh from school in Eng
land. He had a dog-like devotion
for his commander and former
schoolmate Stanhope, and showed
youthful enthusiasm and eager
ness that exemplified the young
men first going into battle. He
handled the part well and deserves
commendation.
The smaller parts were played
by Wilbur Walker as Private Ma
son, the orderly and cook. His
droll humor brightened the play
considerably. Jack Stipe as Lieu
tenant Hibbert, Charles Shoe
maker as the sergeant-major, Mar
tin Geary as the colonel, Bob Fer
guson as a captured German pris
oner, Ethan Newman as a runner,
and Eldon Woodin as an orderly
all had small parts, but played
their bits splendidly and in excel
lent character.
. The setting prepared by the the
atre workshop class under the di
rection of George L. Andreini was
outstanding. The scenes are all in
a dugout that made the audience
feel as if it were actually at the
battle front in France.
ALL IN READINESS FOR
BIG DANCE AT GROVE
(Continued on Page Four)
secured to finish out the program.
Abbey Green To Play
Abbey Green’s orchestra which
recently played several engage
ments in Portland and which will be
remembered for furnishing synco
pation for the rat racing at the
sophomore informal, have been se
cured to furnish music for the
dance, according to John Painton,
co-chairman. The band will put on
several unique stunts to supple
ment the evening’s program.
Face powder, rouge, cough syr
up, shaving cream, toothpaste, face
cream, and shaving lotion were a
few of the favors promised by
‘‘Slick" Jackson for those in at
tendance tonight.
Reservations Requested
Roger Bailey has announced
that the ticket sale has been going
rapidly and requested that any
house or persons desiring table res
ervations but who have not as yet
secured them, get in touch with
their organization ticket repre
sentative or secure them at the
College Side as soon as possible.;
He announced that houses or or
ganizations desiring special tables:
for their members could secure
such by getting in touch with the
house representative as soon as1
possible or by making their request
at the College Side Inn. Persons *
wishing tables for private parties
may do the same.
The Krazy Kopy Krawl was first:
instituted in 1927 and since then
has been made an annual event.
1
EMERALD
A number of selections will be
played on the piano by Lucille
Skeie, to accompany a news and
editorial program, when the Em
erald of the Air is broadcast this
afternoon at 4:15 over station
KORE.
The Eugene station announced
yesterday that the “Cavalleria
Rusticana,” opera in one act by
Pietro Mascagni, will be broadcast
Sunday afternoon at 2:30. The
one-hour presentation will be by
transcription made in Europe by
the La Scala orchestra and chorus.
New YWCA Membership
Cards Available at Office
Girls Interested in Group Asked
To Register Names
Since all old Y. W. C. A. mem
bership cards were destroyed at
the beginning of the school year
in the interest of an intelligent
membership, another opportunity
is being given to all those who did
not sign new membership cards
at the beginning of this school year.
Girls may sign any time in the of
fice at the Y. W. C. A.
In checking the files it was
found that many girls have made
financial pledges to the Y. W. C.
A. but have not signed member
ship cards. It has been a policy of
the association to make finance
entirely separate from member
ship, therefore membership does i
not necessitate pledging nor does
pledging alone make one a mem
ber.
Frances Keene, in connection
with the officers of the associa
tion. stated that no membership
cards will be issued after Febru
ary 15, two weeks before general
elections.
MIGHTY OREGON’SONG
COMPOSER ONCE LEADER
(Continued from Page One)
first uniforms the band had were
of green and yellow combination
with semi-military design. For two
years the organization wore mili
tary garb.
Another development made its
initial appearance this year when
the 10-year instrument buying
plan was installed by Hugh Ros
son, graduate manager of the A.
S. U. O. Already three instru
ments—bass saxophone, two snare
drums, and a bass trombone—have
been purchased under the plan. At'
the completion of this plan the
University will have one of the
most completely equipped bands in
the country.