Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, December 01, 1932, Image 1

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    .V0LX?!?*LS9F-IV _ UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, THURSDAY,'DECEMBER 1, 1932 __NUMBER 40
Publication Of
Oregana Made
Sure By ASUO
$."."00 Is Put in Biuljiet
For Annual
EXPENSE CURTAILED
Subscription)) Are Still Available
Through Various Sales
Representatives
The A. S. U. O. will publish an
Orcgana this year. This was
made a certainty yesterday when
the executive council voted to
make provisions in the student
body budget for the publication of
the year book. The sum of $5000
was set as the maximum amount
to be spent on the book.
As the subscription campaign,
which came to an end last Friday,
fell far short of the expected mark,
there was some fear that the Uni
versity would be without an an
nual this year. Tuesday the stu
dent publications committee met
to consider the advisability of pub
lishing the book, but could come
to no satisfactory decision.
Executive Council Decides
The matter was then left up to
the executive council, which de
cided that the book should be pub
lished as usual.
It was the consensus of opinion
in both of these meetings that the
student chronicle should not be
done away with, despite the lack
of interest among students. It
was pointed out, however, that,
due to present condition expenses
of the publication should be cur
tailed as much as possible.
Subscription solicitors will take
a much needed rest over the
Christmas holidays, and again in
January will launch a determined
drive to sell copies of the book.
Subscriptions Still Obtainable
Gordon Day and Helen Stinger,
in charge of sales, announce that
subscriptions may be had at any
time by application to the A. S. U.
O. office in McArthur court, and
that representatives will again be
on hand after the first of the year
to obtain the names of those who
wish copies.
Work on the book which has
been under way since the begin
ning of the term, will continue.
Roger Bailey, business manager,
and Virginia Wentz, editor, an
nounce that subscribers will be
able to obtain their copies of the
Oregana early in the spring term.
Chib To Hear Speech
On ‘Press and Politics’
William M. Tugman, managing
editor of the Eugene Register
Guard, will speak tonight at the
Y. M. C. A. hut, at 7:15 on the
topic, “Press and Politics.’’
Membership in the Student Soci
alist club does not necessarily de
pend upon affiliation with the na
tional Socialist party, as was indi
cated in yesterday morning’s
Emerald.
“This club, on the contrary, is
open to all students who are in
social and economic problems,”
Wallace Campbell, president of
Socialist club on the campus,
stated last night.
Lieutenants Made Captains
First Lieutenants William J.
Bowerman, Arthur M. Clark,
Webb W. Hayes, and Edward R.
Kinney were appointed to the
grade of captain yesterday. The
appointments were made by order
of Lt. Colonel F. A. Barker.
Da ve Wilson9 Newly Elected
Phi Beta Kappa9 Has Complex
By ELINOR HENRY
Dave Wilson was one of the
easiest “Senior Six" fledgling Phi
Betes to find—and also one of the
hardest to corner.
“Here’s your interview,” he
flung back at the reporter as he
hastened down the “shack” hall
one day last week. Then he
paused with his hand on the edi
torial office doorknob. “Just say
that I said that it's a good thing
I was elected to the Senior Six
this fall, for I wouldn't have had
a chance at the lowest twenty-four
by next spring ”
Finally, the reporter realized
that he's always busy anyway, so
she walked boldly into the office
and started firing questions at him
while his fingers rambled steadily
over the keys of his typewriter.
“I have more jobs than Art
Cannon,” he informed his inter
I viewer. “The only difference is
that I don’t work at mine.”
It seems he’s one of these pub
licity experts you hear about. He’s
campus representative for a local
dairy. “I’m considering breaking
away from the Emerald and pub
lishing a paper of my own, the
‘Kampus Kitchen.’ My latest re
search project is a dictionary of
campus cooks.’’
He stopped typing and started
stuffing photographs and copy in
to big envelopes. He was getting
his music school publicity off to
the Oregonian and the Journal, he
explained. In the summers, he’s a
“dipe-herder in a summer camp
for boys. He considers “Ciravan,”
his Emerald column-, one of his
jobs, and not the easiest.
“I think that most of the so
called professional honoraries are
(Continued on Page Three)
| They’re Headed for Dixie.
I - ___ _
These three Oregon backs spell trouble for Louisiana State, op
ponent of the Webfoots in an interseetional football game at Baton
Rouge, La., Decenioer 17. Above are Mike Mikulak, hard-plunging
fullback, and Elmer Brown, talented triple-threat halfback. The Jad
below is Pepper Pepelnjak, another half.
Oregon Art School
Professors Honored
Tht art school received an honor
last week when two of its profes
sors were invited to send a piece
of their work to the annual ex
hibition of western watercolor
painting, which will be held in
San Francisco at the California
Palace of the Legion of Honor.
Andrew Vincent, professor of
art, and Lance Hart, assistant pro
fessor of drawing and painting,
were chosen among 75 artists in
the west to contribute. The dis
play will be open to the public
from December 5, 1932, to January
8, 1933.
Vincent’s contribution was a
watercolor landscape of a group of
trees. Hart sent a painting of
three figures against a back
ground of water.
Different Type of
Public Speaking
Contest Planned
Entrants Will Be Chosen
From Seven Classes in
Forensic Course
A new deve:opment in public
speaking will be introduced to
Oregon students this month when
the directors of forensics disclose
the final arrangements for the se
ries of four amateur extemporan
eous speaking contests.
The seven classes in the intro
ductory course in speaking, com
prising 115 students, will each
choose a representative from their
group who will participate in the
finals.
Entrants may speak on any sub
ject for a period of six minutes.
However, the topics will be those
that each class chooses for its final
examination material.
Wednesday evening, December
7, these speakers will meet in 110
Johnson to compete for the $10
and $15 prizes offered by the de
partment.
Three more such contests, open
to any student who has not worked
on college debate, will be conduct
i ed during the year in addition to
■ the three varsity meets.
—.—__
Book on Business Law
To Be Published Soon
Professor Charles G. Howard of
the law school, working in con
junction with Professor Essel P.
Dillavou of University of Illinois,
will mail the second edition of
"Principles of Business Law" Mon
day to be printed by the Prentice
Hall publishers.
The book was first printed in
1928, and has been widely used in
colleges in the United States,
| Canada, Australia, and Japan.
Mistake in Exam
Schedule Printed
I n Correct Form
An error appearing in the re
cently published examination
schedule, which it is thought
might give rise to confusion and
error on the part of many ar
riving at the exam on time, has
been called to the attention of
the Emerald and is here print
ed in correct form.
The schedule as printed
reads: “Tuesday, December 13
- 10-12, 1 o'clock classes on
MWF, any two of these days
and four and five hour classes
I at 8.’’ This should read: “10-12,
1 o’clock classes on MWF, any
two of these days and four and
five hour classes at 1.”
Seniors Will Meet
At Villard Tonight
A special meeting of the senior
class has been called for tonight
by Cecil Espy, president of the
class. The meeting will be held in
the assembly room of Villard hall
at 7:30.
Plans whereby the senior class
might subsidize the Oregana, in
case of a need for funds, is sched
uled to come up for discussion. The
proposal has been endorsed by Bob
Hall, student body president, and
is in line with traditional policy
until about 10 years ago.
Through the proposal the gift of
a bust of Dean John Straub would
not be jeopardized nor would the
allotment of a sum to the student
loan fund, as the money for the
Oregana would be taken from the
loan fund only in case of necessi
ty, Espy pointed out.
Movies To Be Shown
At Pan Xenia Meeting
Some moving pictures of “Cuba,
the Island of Sugar,” will be shown
at the meeting of Pan Xenia, in
ternational foreign trade honor
ary, at 7:30 in the men's lounge of
Gerlinger hall.
There will be a discussion of a
Christmas banquet to be given as
an anniversary of the founding of
| Pan J^enia ten years ago, on De
! cernber 6. 1022.
Campa Shoppe
Will Be Scene
Of Annual Jam
Newspaper Motif To Be
Carried Out
TO BE DATE AFFAIR
Features Include Scandal Sheet,
High Eight Broadcast by
Radio Editor
‘‘Jam before you Cram.”
With this as their slogan, mem
bers of Sigma Delta Chi and
Theta Sigma Phi, journalistic soci
eties, today swung into the last
lap of preparations for the annual
ill-campus Journalism Jam, to be
given at the Camps, Shoppe Sat
urday, December 3.
This is the last big dance pre
ceding closed week-end for finals.
Music will be furnished by Abbie
Creen and his Midnite Sons. It
will be an informal date atfair.
Decorations Novel
Decorative features both novel
and realistic — highly appropriate
for an affair of this kind—are be
ing worked out by the decorations
committee under the chairman
ship of Jesse Steele. A newspaper
motif, even to details, will predom
inate. Every phase in newspaper
make-up, construction, and pro
duction will be illustrated in some
manner in the decorations.
As a special feature of the eve
ning, a scandal sheet, the full size
of an Emerald, containing the pro
gram, will be released. Augment
ing this, Ray Clapp, Emerald
radio editor, will conduct a high
light broadcast in which prominent
(Continued on Paye Three)
Peace Is Topic of
Warren 1). Smith
At Honor Banquet
Good Will, Understanding,
Confidence Necessary,
Says Speaker
“Peace is built upon a tripod,
having three legs, the first of
which is goodwill, and confidence;
the second, understanding; and the
third an equitable distribution of
the good things in life," Dr. War
ren D. Smith, head of the geog
raphy department, said last night
in his address at the international
banquet given by the Wesley
foundation in honor of the Inter
national house. His topic was
“The Basis for an Enduring
Peace.”
New Outlook Needed
“One thing that we must have
is a change of heart, and deal with
other nations reasonably,” Dr.
Smith said. “When they come
knocking at our doors with goods
to sell we should not have to make
them pay tribute. The world must
remove these barriers to trade;
more specifically, it must come to
an understanding of the need for
lower tariffs.”
The speaker pointed out the
need for a world economic coun
cil, pointing out the fact that the
world’s machinery has become so
complex it cannot be allowed to
run by itself. We must shift from
the politician to the statesman in
choosing our government leaders,
he said.
Warriors Discredited
“The meek and the peacemak
ers, not the warriors and imperial
ists, will inherit the earth,” Dr.
Smith said in concluding iris talk.
Donald Saunders, president of
the Wesley club, was toastmaster.
Kazumi Hirao, president of Inter
national house, responded for that
group. Francisco Tubban spoke
on “The Filipino Youth Move
ment,” and Jack Bellinger spoke
on “Wesley Foundation Acros3 the
Sea.”
Musical numbers were given by
Michael Haimovich, Ted Pursley,
and Claudio Cendana.
I
I
Campus Calendar
Frosh groups of Polly Pollitt and
Mary Ella Hornung meet at 2 at
( the bungalow.
Christian Science organization
! on the campus will hold its regu
lar Thursday evening meeting at
7:30 in the Y. W. C. A. hut. Stu
dents and faculty members are
| cordially invited to attend.
Amphibian initiation will be 1
■ held at 7:30 o’clock tonight in the j
1 lounge room of the women's phy- j
sical education department. Old
members please be there at 7:15.
Frosh group led by Jean Failing
will meet at the bungalow at 4
o'clock today.
Phi Mu Alpha meets tonight at
7:15 in the music building.
League for Industrial Democ
racy and Socialist club meet to
(Continued on Page Three)
Given Power
Hugh E. Rosson, graduate man
ager, who was given full power
and responsibility for Oregon’s
athietie program by the executive
council in last night’s meeting.
Reporter Finds
Senior Six Are
Very Elusive
_
“Interview the Senior Six ? Why,
that’s easy. Just go to the library,
and you’ll find them all studying!”
Oh, really .... yeah .... and
other obvious remarks. Anybody
who could find a newly elected
Phi Bete in the library last Fri
day night had better (or worse)
eyes than the Emerald reporter.
Early interviewing was a nice
idea. The story broke Friday
morning, and it would have been
lovely to have a juicy interview
in that night.
But here’s the results of the
canvass:
David Wilson enjoying his house
pledge dance.
Janet Fitch reported "out call
ing." Later she turned up at the
College Side, but then it was too
late to do anything about it.
Helen Raitenan dancing with a
SPE.
Elma Doris Havemann getting a
hearty laugh at “Once in a Life
time.”
Arthur Monroe Cannon very
very busy in his always very very
busy statistician’s office in the ad
ministration building.
And Lewis Fendrich absolutely
out of the state for all ye inter
viewer could find out. Rumors of
threatened mill racing Friday
morning by ihe physics depart
ment may have had something to j
do with it. Monday he passed
chocolates to his beloved col
leagues for not carrying out the
threat.
Dean of Women
Will Attend Meet
Hazel Prutsman Schwering, dean
of women, will attend the section
al conference of high school deans
at Salem, Saturday, December 3.
Kate W. Jamieson, dean of women
at Oregon State college, will also
speak at the luncheon.
The conference includes about
120 deans, girls, principals, and
superintendents of high schools
of the Willamette valley and
Columbia river gorge, including
Portland.
Mrs. Alice B. Macduff, Miss
Maxine Lamb, of Eugene high
school, Miss Alice Baker of Roose
velt junior high school, and sev
eral others from Eugene are plan->
ning to attend the meeting.
Vocalist, Pianist Will
Give KOAC Program
Solos by George Barron, basso,
and by Harold Ayres, pianist, will
make up a program to be given
by the University music depart
ment over KOAC, Corvallis radio
station, at 8:30 tonight.
Mr. Barron will sing three
groups consisting of: ‘‘Le Cor” by
Flegier and "Thrinodia” by
Holmes; “Aus Meinen Grossen
Schmerzen” and "Fur Music” by
Franz; and Burleigh’s arrange
ment of “Deep River" and Wood
forde-Finden’s "Kashmiri Love
Song."
# “Prelude in E-minor” by Men
delssohn, and “Laendler” by
S g a m b a t i and Tschaikowsky's
“Waltz of the Flowers” from the
“Nutecracker Suite,” compose the!
two groups to be played by Mr.
Ayres.
Festival December 5
Women’s Physical Education'
club is sponsoring its annual P’all
Festival for all physical education
students December 5, in the danc
ing room at Gerlinger hall from 4
to 5:30. A program will be pre
sented by physical education ma
jors, and tea and social dancing
will follow.
Additional Powers
Are Bestowed Upon
Graduate Manager
—--A
13 Msn Are Cited
To Appear Before
Traditions Court
The following men will ap
pear at the men's gymnasium
t > receive the paddle from the
Senior Traditions council at
12:40 today:
Cosgrove LaBarre, Omar
Summers, Bill Byrne. Frank
Keaveny, Lloyd Faust, James
Halver, Paul Caseburg, Monte
Brown, Frank Levings, Frank
Spears, Bob Nelson, George
Peterson, David Goodell.
Burg To Lecture
At Meet Tonight
In Eugene Hotel
Explorer To Show Pictures
Of ‘Camargo’ Cruise;
Canoe Trips
The cruise of the “Camargo"
around the world and adventures
in a canoe will be shown in mov
ing pictures tonight by Amos
Burg, explorer and lecturer, when
he appears as the guest speaker
at the annual Matrix Table for
mal banquet, sponsored by Theta
Sigma Phi,' women's journalism
honorary.
Burg was sent by the National
Geographic society on this 30,000
mile voyage of Fleischmann’s yacht
last year, on which he did much
scientific research and took many
reels of film for the society. One
reel which he will show tonight
will be taken from this voyage.
The other reel will be snatches
from various canoeing experiences
Burg has canoed down the Yukon
in Alaska, and down the Macken
zie in Canada to its mouth in the
Arctic ocean.
Cass Baer Hicks, well-known
writer for the Oregonian and oth
er newspapers, is expected to ar
rive this noon to attend the ban
quet. Other out-of-town guests
will include Mrs. Kay Cleaver
Strahan, Oregon author, Mrs.
Kate Jamieson, dean of women at
O. S. C., and Mrs. Elwood Smith
of Corvallis.
Burg’s illustrated lecture will be
the main feature on the program.
He will be introduced by Mrs. Sal
ly Elliott Allen, honorary member
of Theta Sigma Phi.
Miss Peggy Sweeney is to play
a group of violin numbers and
Miss Hose Simons will sing a
group of songs. They will be ac
companied by Miss Edouise Bal
lis.
Sociology Honorary
Holds Initiation for 6
Alpha Kappa Delta, the nation
al sociology scholarship honorary,
held its fall initiation yesterday
evening at the home of Dr. Philip
A. Parsons. It was followed by
an informal banquet at Lee Duke's
cafe. The neophytes are: William
Barney, Joel Berriman, Sarah
Laufman, Paul Foreman, Kather
ine Morse, and Art Hoven.
The speakers were Dr. Luther
S. Cressman, William Barney, and
Zuileime Tibbets, the president of
the honorary. Wallace Campbell
acted as toastmaster.
Hugh Rosson Is Virtual
Athletic Director
TITLE STAYS SAME
Executive Council Names Frosh
Basketball, Baseball
Squad Coaches
||UGH E. ROSSON, Oregon
*1 general manager, upon be
ing questioned last night, said
the new responsibilities and
power given him by the execu
tive council in regard to the
athletic situation would entail
the assuming of no new title
by him.
The executive council, in an of
ficial resolution, last night be
stowed upon Hugh E. Rosson,
Oregon general manager, addition
al powers and responsibilities
which make him virtually the di
rector of Oregon's intercollegiate
athletic program. He will be the
closest the University has had to
a director of athletics since Virgil
D. Earl resigned such a position
two years ago, at which time it
was abandoned officially.
The supplementary power and
duties given Rosson include those
of representing the associated stu
dents in all negotiations, and also
i supervising and directing all em
ployees of the A. S. U. O. His
responsibilities also will increase
proportionately and he will be
held accountable for the adminis
tration of the program.
(’ontacts Provid'd for
The additions to the student
body resolutions were proposed at
a meeting of the athletic commit
! tee, and ratified formally by the
| executive council. They follow:
Clause 1. The graduate mana
ger shall be empowered to repre
sent the associated students in all
negotiations and contacts with the
school of physical education, or
third parties, in all matters con
cerned with intercollegiate ath
letics.
Clause 2. The graduate mana
ger shall be held directly respon
sible for the full administration of
all athletic policies, and supervis
ion and direction of all employees
of the associated students, and the
allocation of their duties.
Freshman Coaches Named
These new duties w:n become in
cumbent upon Rosson at once.
They follow directly upon the sug
gestion by the Oregon Daily Em
erald that a director of athletics
be named to replace the athletic
committee, basing one of its main
contentions upon the fact that
there was no one in central author
ity over the department. The ath
letic committee is provided for in
the A. S. U. O. constitution, how
ever, and can be abolished only by
a vote of the student body. The
granting of power and placing of
responsibility upon Rosson answers
the question of responsibility
raised by the Emerald in advocat
ing an athletic director. The stu
dent paper mentioned no particu
lar Individual.
The executive council last night
also ratified the appointment of
Rockwell (Red) Rogers as coach
of freshman basketball, and that
of Johnny (Evers) Londahl as
coach of freshman baseball. Both
are students in the University.
Londahl captained the baseball
nine last spring. Both will work
tinder William J. (Bill)) Reinhart,
I noted head of both varsity sports.
Correspondent Advocates
Course in Cosmetics Here
By JULIAN PRESCOTT
Red! Oh, how red. And what
reds. All the way from yellow
with a tinge of red to a red so
deep as to look as if it were
purple. Almost as many different,
ones as there are different co-eds.
And the shapes. Nice big full
ones painted over thin ones. Short
Fifi D’Orsay ones replacing the
Joan Crawford type. Then the
quantity. Just a bare trace that
adds a little color to an otherwise
pale pair of lips. Great coats of
paint that look as though they
would crack if bent.
And as the eyes travel on from
the lips they come to cheeks. It
might be a pleasant sight and
again it might not. Natural ones
and most unnatural ones.
That pair of two pink spots on
cheeks of cream colored satin that
remind one of pink roses among
yellow ones under a shroud of
black velvet. Those red splotches
on cheeks that might have a natu
ral pink blush beneath. And that
suntan that leaves white rings
around the eyes and under the
chin.
And above, the eyebrows and
hair. All the natural shades and
colors and many that aren't. Black
eyebrows with hair that is blond.
Blond hair trying to be more
blond.
They are all (.o be seen on the
campus just as on any street in
any city. Since the fair sex is
bound on using cosmetics, why not
a course in the use and applica
tion of them? That would be a
real service to society for it would
aid women who are later to take
their place in the business and
social world in making themselves
more comely.