Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 13, 1934, Page 2, Image 2

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    An Independent University Daily
PUBLISHED BY THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF
THE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON
University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon
A member of the Major College Publications, represented by
A. J. Norris Hill Co., 155 E. 42nd St., New York City; 123
W. Madison St., Chicago; 1004 End Avc., Seattle; 1206 Maple
Ave., Los Angeles; Call Building, San Francisco.
MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press is entitled to the use for publication
of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in
♦his paper and also the local news published herein. All rights
of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.
EDITORIAL OFFICES: Journalism building. Phone 3300
Editor, Local 354 ; News Room and Managing Editor 355.
BUSINESS OFFICE: McArthur Court, Phone 3300—Local 214.
William E. Phipps Grant Thuemmei
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Malcolm Bauer
Managing Editor
EDITORIAL BOARD
Parks Hitchcock, Barney Clark
Assistant Editors
Bob Moore, Robert Lucas, George Root, Fred Colvig,
Henriette Horak, Winston Allard, J. A. Newton
UPPER NEWS STAFF
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Clair Johnson, Sports Ed.
Jan Clark, Telegraph Ed.
Mary Louiee Edinger, Wo
men’s Ed.
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Rex Cooper, Chief Night Ed.
George Iliktnan, Dick Watkins,
Radio Ed.
A1 Goldberg, Asst. Managing
Ed.
EXECUTIVE REPORTERS: Ann-Reed Burns, Henriette
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The Oregon Daily Emerald, official student publication of
the University of Oregon, Eugene, published daily during the
college year, except Sundays, Mondays, holidays, examination
periods, all of December except the first seven days, all of
March except the first eight days. Entered as second-class matter
at the postoffice, Eugene, Oregon. Subscription rates, £2.50 a year.
Arr ogant IN a11011a J i sm:
(Continued from Page One)
You may recall that Beverly Nichols recently
wrote a book called, "Cry Havocs’' Determined to
delve to the bottom of the controversy between “in
ternationalists” and "nationalists,” Beverly Nichols
hit upon the idea ol' bringing togeLher a recognized
spokesman for each side.
Sir Norman Angell, probable winner of the Nobel
peace prize for this year, as selected and consented
to brief the case for internationalism. Lord Beaver
brook, owner of the London Daily Express and as
sociated papers was asked to state the case for na
tionalism.
Lord Beaverbrook wrote to Mr. Nichols: “If you
will get Angell to ask me questions, I will answer
them.’
Sir Normal Angell drew up a set of questions,
a cross-examination of nationalism. Nichols scut
those questions to Lord Beaverbrook.
It strikes a great many American college editors
as a singular and significant fact, that in the word
ing of these questions, the word "AMERICA" may
be substituted for the word “BRITAIN”; the name,
“WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST” may be substi
tuted for the name “LORD BEAVERBROOK,”
without altering the spirit of the questions, without
lessening the tremendous importance to our genera
tion of having an answer to those questions from the
most intelligent champions of nationalism.
;H >K *
“1. Does WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST
agree that if we pile on our already shaken and dis
ordered economic system the further disclocations,
unpayable debts, revolutions, which we now know
are the necessary legacy of war and which so shook
the relatively sound system of 1914, then it will
probably finish off the present order in chaos?
“2. Is it WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST’S
general view that the best way to prevent that re
currence is to continue the old armament competi
tion and decline to discuss international agreement
or organization? If so, on what grounds does he
believe that the old method will not produce the old
result ?
"3. For a nation to be secure under the competi
tive principle it must be stronger than any possible
rival. What becomes oi the rival? Is he to go with
out defence V How shall defence be managed under
this plan since the security of the one means the in
security of the other? Does WILLIAM RANDOLPH
HEARST think that there is some system by which
each can be stronger than the other?
"1. If, in order to be secure, AMERICA must
make herself stronger than a rival, does WILLIAM
RANDOLPH HEARST suggest, that that rival will
accept the situation and not resort to alliance mak
ing? And if that rival makes alliances, is AMERICA
to refrain from resorting to the same weapon? An
Hail Webfoots?
TRIBUTE is due Prink Callison, his co-workers,
-*• *■ and his hard-driving team for the spirit and
determination to win they displayed in the decisive
9-6 victory over Oregon State college at Multnomah
stadium Saturday.
To give credit to one individual would do injury
to his fellow team mates for it took eleven fighting!
men working in perfect unison to emerge victorious i
over the powerful, well-balanced Corvallis team.
The mystery that hung over alumni and students j
as to why Oregon should be so strong for was no', i
the squad the smallest in the conference at the be-]
ginning of the year, and rated weak by scribes- j
was cleared Saturday. Team work is the solution,!'
w ith marvelous blocking and interference running j
in front of brilliant ball packers. Time and again
the crowd arose thrilled as an army of ducks swept
down Beaver after Beaver creating a hole for the'
bull to advance.
Next Saturday Oregon will invade the Trojan j
camp. And this time they will win. But they will
have no set-up. even though Troy has taken it on 1
the chin many times this season. Southern California 1
has a strong team but Oregon has one stronger. On
to Troy!
Although Hollywood still tries to keep its mar
riages a secret, they always leak out. The movie I,
idols should remember the old axiom "Merger will .
out. Indiana Daily Student.
alliance is an arm, like a battleship, or a submarine,
adding to a nation's power. Are AMERICANS to
leave this arm entirely in the hands of prospective
rivals ?
“5. From the time of GEORGE WASHINGTON
TO LINDBERGH there has not been a single cent
ury in which AMERICA has not been drawn into
the affairs of EUROPE. Does WILLIAM RAN
DOLPH HEARST really believe that, if isolationism
was not possible . . . even in ancient times, a great
Power, a CREDITOR NATION SUCH AS AMERI
CA, in the days of the airplane can continue to pur
sue isolation?
"6. To keep AMERICA free of general or per
manent commitments and be guided by each circum
stance as it arises, was the method pursued before
the War. Although AMERICA had no League Com
mitments in 191I and men up to the last, WILLIAM
RANDOLPH HEAJ 1ST AMONG THEM, proclaimed
how free their han Is were, America was drawn in.
Does WILLIAM R INDOLPH HEARST think that
AMERICA could have kept out, that her entrance
wsa a mistake ?
"7. If he thinks AMERICA’S entrance was a mis
take, would he have regarded the victory of the
Germanic powers, the creation, that is, of an hege
mony so preponderant that AMERICA could not
have resisted any demands that it cared to make j
upon AMERICANS, as a matter of indifference? If
so, why trouble about armaments at all—if it is a 1
matter of indifference that combinations, much
stronger than AMERICA, should arise ?
“8. If, on grounds of national security, AMERI
CA cannot accept the preponderance of a foreign
combination, why should AMERICANS expect for
eigners to accept THEIRS, especially as their pre
ponderance (the Allies) resulted in imposing upon
their rivals a treaty which Mr, HEARST himself
refers to as the “UTTER INJUSTICE OF THE
VERSAILLES TREATY”?
“9. On the eve of the War, Sir Edward Grey
declared that the only possible alternative to the
see-saw of the Balance of Power, by which the pre
carious defence of one was achieved by the depriv
ing the other of all defence, was for both to pool
their power to secure the observance of a common
rule of international life, like arbitration of disputes:
To build up what Asquith called the community of
Power behind the law. On what general grounds
does WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST differ from
that view?
Lord Beaverbrook replied to Beverley Nichols:
‘‘Thank you for your letter, and the enclosures
from Sir Norman Angell.
“When I said I would answer his questions, I
had no idea that X would be confronted with such
an immense catechism.
"It would take me a great deal of labor and time
to answer the questions as they should be answered.
In the busy life I lead, I do not have the opportunity
to do so. It is too big a proposition for me.”
The significance, the importance of those ques
tions is increased because there are TWO powerful
men in TWO powerful countries to whom those
questions may be put as to ONE man. Particularly
for that reason, they must have an answer—not for
the readers of the newspapers of either Lord Beav
erbrook or WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST, but
for us, the generation of young Amercians who
might have to fight another war if Lord Beaver
brook and WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST hap
pen to be wrong, if “PREPAREDNESS” does not
preserve peace.
This whole letter of mine is being sent to the
editors of 644 college newspapers in America, and to
the editors of college papers in Canada, for simul
taneous publication as an open letter on or as near
as possible to the day of November 11, Armistice
Day.
Yours is a tremendous influence in America.
More than any other man you represent the ‘Power
of the Press." What you believe, you have the power
to lead milions of other Americans to believe. That
is why it is to tremendously important that you
explain and defend “nationalism” as opposed to the
“internationalism’ embodied in the spirit of the
League of Nations, to those of my generation who
are about to believe—one way or the other.
Yours, very sincerely,
Francis G. Smith, Jr.
Editor, The Daily Princetonian
President, the Association of College
Editors.
Money Saved
(Continued from Paye One)
a dormitory for the normal school.
The board asked that the offer be
submitted in writing for final de
cision.
C. D. Byrne's title was changed
from aeting secretary to secretary.
He is also director of information
for the system and executive as
sistant to the chancellor.
The board voted :>tiO to take out
membership in the National Asso
ciation of Governing Boards of
State Colleges and Universities.
One reason the meeting was
called was to consider problems
arising should the 20-mill tax lim
itation measure carry. However,
it was defeated at lust Tuesday's
election.
In the report to Governor Meier
the board said that in carrying out
the unification of higher educa
tion ttie board encountered various
difficulties, "iueludiag tUc econom
u' depression, on the one hand, and
on the other hand, traditional ideas
ot institutional perogatives and i
curricula, entrenched through long
usage under separate boards."
conn ACTS FOR MOON HA
WASHINGTON, Nov. 12. —(API
A key for the lock that holds '
Tom Mooney prisoner was fash-,,
toned today by the supreme court
hut whether the highest tribunal
will direct that it be used remained
a question for the future.
Mme. Time’s Waxworks
By FREDERIC S. DUNN
'J'HERE was an epoch in the
olden times when the YWCTU
was a leading factor in Univer
sity circles, and Rhinehart’s Hall,
in the back of the block now
known as the White Temple, on
the corner of Oak and Broadway,
was the recognized play-house.
Mrs. Condon, wife of Dr. Thomas
Condon of the Faculty, was Presi
dent of a militant, but dignified
famous Condon Twins, Clara and
Fannie, were by natural selection
among the promoters of the junior
organization. And where they led,
we followed.
Many were the benefit socials
and entertainments sponsored by
their coterie in old Rhinehart's
Hall, in which the undergraduates
of then, many of them the grand
dams and grandsires of now, and
alas! many of them dead, played
eloquent, ludicrous, pathetic roles.
Tragedy, comedy, and farce were
sometimes accidentally commin
gled. But it all ‘took’ immensely.
If you could not get Mocha, you
could get Java, or two-thirds one
and one-third the other, harmon
iously, if unintentionally blended,
and you would not know which
v/as the other.
I was clown or prima donna or
whatever you might dubb it, in
several of these delightsome skits,
and well do I remember my cur
tain calls. (Please smile. Can’t
you see this is one of the pits
from ‘Prunes I have ate’ ?) And
one shrill note was ‘Mme. Time's
Waxworks’.
This was a popular farce of the
time, in which living persons posed
as statues in wax, the interlocu
trix, Mme. Chronology, introducing
them in their proper order. The
images were all stacked up in a
row at the back of the platform,
to be trotted out on a low wheeled
pedestal and displayed and ex
ploited before the footlights, with
appropriate innuendo and by-play.
Jack McClure and I, as July and
January respectively, were the
flunkies, whose duty it was to lift
the images by their stiffened el
bows and wheel them out on their
car. Jack was jauntily cothed in
I striped tennis jacket and white
trousers, and carried a fan. But as
January, it was my fate to wear
McClanahan’s great fur coat, and,
mercy!—the perspiration that I
I copiously exuded, that stuffy eve
ning!
I was to sing a ditty in three
stanzas to the tune ‘I’m word of
the land and the sea,' from Pina
fore, but no score of the opera
j could be procured for me until that
! very evening, and in my worrisome
I hunt, I had not well memorized my
; lines and filled in the last score of
j two verses with something like
'Jay-fiddle-de-dee-cob-cob'.
Dr. E. DeWitt Connell, the ‘Lije
i of then, was Rent Day, an English
j land-lord in dressing gown and
I skull cap and false whiskers and
i with a fractious leg which would
fly out straight whenever we set
him down, until we would oil the
joints and yank it back into place.
i Helen Osborne-Damon was Rainy
Day and had a smiling crank at
j the back of her neck, which we
j would pretend to wind up. Dora
Scott, Varsity Librarian, was In
dependence Day and would start
off on ‘Columbia the Gem of the
j Ocean,’ at the last jolt in carting
; her back and forth. Linna Holt
! was Thanksgiving Day, who, in
her jerky efforts to dissect a
pumpkin pie, came near to includ
ing my thumb. And, while I was
sucking said thumb,—this was not
in the program,—that wag of a
McClure ate the pie.
There was one big boy in the
caste named Farrington, who
snorted in the midst of Mme.
Chronology’s dissertation. And
when he was supposed _ to lean
down and kiss Vin Straub on the
forehead, the wheeled pedestal
shot out from under him and sent
him reeling into the stage flies.
And, once, the curtain went up un
expectedly and found ‘Lije without
his whiskers and Dode in what
looked like a near close-up with
somebody,—say, who was that fel
low ?
Well, that’s that.
(The next issue will contain ‘Old
Brindle Horns the Tennis Net’).
“On the
Bandwagon”
By DICK WATKINS
WORD or two concerning the
great American college band
wagon.
Generally conceded to be among
the best light college songs in the
country are, AMHERST’S “Lord
Geoffrey Amherst,” COLUMBIA’S
"Roar, Lion, Roar,” GEORGIA
TECH'S “Rambling Wreck from
Georgia Tech,” HARVARD’S
“Harvardiana,” MICHIGAN’S
"The Victors,” ANNAPOLIS’ far
famed classic of many generations
of midshipmen, “Anchors Aweigh,”
PRINCETON’S “Cannon Song,”
STANFORD’S “Come Join the
Band,” (remember how the words
go -local version, “Stanford for
you, but not for me”), WISCON
SIN'S “On Wisconsin,” (said to
be copied by more high schools
than any other college air),
WASHINGTON and LEE'S fam
ous holdover from Civil War days,
he “Swing,” and YALE'S “Down
he Field.”
Well-known alma mater songs
nclude CALIFORNIA’S "Hail to
California,” PRINCETON'S “Old
Massau." COLUMBIA’S “Sans
Souci,” PENNSYLVANIA'S “The
Ted and Blue," HARVARD'S
•Fair Harvard,” YALE’S "Bright
College Years,” and N.Y.U.’s "The
Palisades.”
By far the most widely known
>f all college marching songs is
MAINE'S "Stein Song" which was
so successfully introduced to the
adio lanes by RUDY VALLEE a
ew years back, and which before
lis time, was hardly recognizable
mtside Maine's own boundary line.
t'ALE’S famous "Boola Boola." is
i close second, and was met with
meh enthusiasm when it was first
ntreduced at a football game that
he referee had to call time out
ind delay the game till the fans
lad sung it to their heart's con
ent. Tunes like that which are
net with such instant spontaneity
re rare as a blue moon, and almost
i thing of the past by now.
Other popular marching songs
nclude. U.S.C.'s stirring "Fight
>n for U.S.C.". WASHINGTON'S
Bow Down to Washington." CAL
IFORNIA'S "Our Sturdy Golden
Sear." ithe most inspiring of all
•ollegiate spectacles, to hear it
rlayed by their 100-piece band,
sacked up by a male chorus of over
>.000 voices altogether in one root
tig section), ARMY'S "When the
Caissons Go Rolling by." RUT
TERS' "Loyal Sons of Rutgers"
plugged by OGEIL NELSON).
and NOTRE DAME'S “Victory
Song.”
* * *
The origin of many songs in use
on different campuses is often in
teresting to follow. For instance,
NORTH DAKOTA’S alma mater
song was modeled after the Aus
trian national anthem. YALE’S
“Bright College Years,” goes to
the tune of “Die Wacht am Rhein”
(The Watch on the Rhine). The
“Marseillaise” is used without the
slightest sign of a guilty conscience
by CENTRE while PENNSYL
VANIA has taken over lock,
stock and barrel, the now obso
lete Russian air, “God Save the
Emerald
of the Air
By GEORGE Y. BIKMAN
The Board of Review of Radio
Stars, national radio magazine,
which each year surveys radio pro
grams of the country, has rated
“One Man’s Family” third in all
the programs on all the networks,
the Palmolive Beauty and the
Firestone concerts have been given
first and second place, thus giving
“One Man’s Family” highest rank
among the straight dramatic pro
grams on the air.
Rasback’s "Trees” and the ever
popular ‘When Day Is Done” have
been chosen by Phil Duey, bari-|
tone, as his solo numbers on the
program with Leo Resiman’s or
chestra and Johnny to be broad
cast this evening at 8:30 over
NBC. The orchestra will plav
"Thanksgivin ,” “Serenade for r
Wealthy Widow,” “Give Me a
Heart to Sing to," "The Moon Was
Yellow" and "Talkin' to Myself.”
Vincent Youman’s "Hit the
Deck" wil lbe presented in a full
hour radio version by the Palm
olive Beauty Box players tonight
at 7:00. Jane Froman will be guest
star.
CBS features George GivoL's
proprietorship of the famous "Ac
ropolis No. 7" at 7:00. Bing Crosby
goes on at 6:00. and Fray and)
Braggiotti, popular piano team,
will play a guest performance with
Isham Jones and his orchestra a
half hour later.
Consider yourself being kept in
the dark regarding today's per
former on the Emerald-of-the-Air.
It’s going to be done in the ultra
modern manner. And remember
the Purple Cow!
WADE BROS.
Headquarters for
Campus Cords
j Noble Czar.” The well-known
“Pirate's Chorus’’ can be heard
masquerading under three differ
ent names at three different col
| leges, MICHIGAN, NEBRASKA
- and COLORADO.
The good old tune, “Annie Lisle,”
is used as an alma mater song by
| so many colleges that it would
■ take an adding machine to count
them all up, but to mention a few:
LEHIGH. CORNELL, SYRACUSE,
I KANSAS, SWARTHMORE, ALA
j BAMA, VANDERBILT, and so on,
far into the night.
RUDY VALLEE, by the way,
made such a financial success of
boosting the "Stein Song,” that he
was able to donate a sizable slice
! of his royalties from it, to the
University of Maine's gymnasium
fund.
We might add also, that it was
the first college tune to become a
commercial success.
Tin Pan Alley, from time to time
has tried to cash in on the popu
larity of collegiate airs, but has
not been unduly successful. Among
a few they have turned out, which
we can men here, although many
have been long dead and buried
are: “The Varsity Drag,” “Colleg
iate,” “Betty Co-ed,” “My Old Fra
ternity Pin,” “The All-American
Girl,” “You’ve Gotta Be a Foot
ball Hero,” “New Haven Stomp,”
and “College Rhythm,” coming up,
from the new picture of the same
name.)
.--—
Former Students
(Continued from Page One)
members added. He is now work
ins' toward his masters degree in
theology at the Pacific Bible Sem
inary, Long Beach, Calif. Mr.
Lertis also received a B.A. degree
from the Eugene Bible University.
R. Frank Baker who received his
B.S. degree in October, ’34, is now
living in Pasadena, California, and
is the athletic director of Pasadena
junior college. His wife, Margaret
Baker, was also a student of the
University of Oregon in the class
of ’18.
Naomi B. Carlton, ’32, has the
position of school nurse in the
Klamath Falls schools.
Rowena W. Nisser, '32, former
worker in the Springfield district
for the Eugene office of the Red
Cross, has been appointed execu
tive secretary for the Red Cross
at Boise, Idaho.
Jessie Ellen Stephens, ’32, is in
structor in nursing theory at the
Mercy College of nursing in Sacra
mento, California. Miss Stephens
is a gradduate of the Good Samari
tan hospital nursing school of
Portland in addition to receiving
her degree at Oregon.
Paul R. Lafferty, '32, of Eugene
has been ordered to active duty
with CCC headquarters at Med
ford
William T. White, Jr., ex-’33, is
working in New York City with
the California Fruit Growers Ex
change.
Glen H. Gummess, ex-’35, is at
tending Harvard university medi
cal school.
Francis L. Muller, ex-'32, and
wife moved from West Point, Vir
ginia, to here in Eugene.
Carolyn A. Haberlach is super
visor of public school music in the
two elementary schools in Tilla
mook this year.
Lawrence E. Winter, 32, and
his wife, Maxine Moore Winter,
ex-’33, are living at Heppner
where Mr. Winter is superintend
ent of schools.
Helen A. Chaney, '32, who did
graduate work at the University
of Washington last year, is teach
ing English and history in Olym
pia, Washington, high school.
Ronello gerry Lewis, ’31, who
received his masters degree in bus
iness administration in '34, is now
living at Albany, New York. He
was married on August 27, 1934,
in Albany, to Margurette Troudt
of Portland, Oregon. He has a po
sition as head of the accounting (
department of Montgomery Ward j
------
Theater Revue
McDonald — “Cleopatra"
starring Claudette Colbert, j
Henry Wilcoxon, and Warren
William, directed by Cecille
B. DeMille.
COLONIAL — Norma Shearer
and Robert Montgomery in
“Rip Tide.”
By R. KNUDSEN
Very Little Theater
T)ROBABLY the most outstand
ing dramatic club in Eugene is
the Very Little Theater group. The
organization is made up strictly of
Eugene residents and contains sev
eral members of the University
faculty. Each year the group pro
duces three of four plays in their
Very Little Theater located on 13
street.
The Very Little Theater forms
a wonderful recreation for Eug'ene
townspeople. Members of the
and Company mail order house in
Albany, New York.
Elizabeth Keene, ex-'33, is teach
ing at Westfir again this year.
Miss Keene was a member of the
Delta Gamma sorority on the cam
pus.
Mrs. Elizabeth Busch Johns, T3,
was recently elected president of
the largest P.T.A. in Oregon—that
of Laurelhurst school in Portland.
Mary Galey, ’32, is secretary for
the Carnegie Guidance Grant which
is under the school of education at
Stanford university. She is living
in Palo Alto, California.
Alice R. Carter, ’32, formerly of
Eugene, is working in the SERA
office in Santa Cruz, California.
Bradley R. Thompson, ex-’31,
former resident of Eugene, now
has a position with the Hickock
laboratories in Cleveland, Ohio.
I _-____ f tv.e world t
defense ai today, 'n the \
sary f0T i Jworld conditions.
of menacing ronaenmed ,
Pacifism iouS denom- \
“I blush f°r 1 ® x 'belong." th® I
ination to ^ ..that one of
t RAW
10 PORTLAND
5p-n*
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Lv.EUGENE At. 7.55a.cn.
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\ WHAT, He HAD A WOODEN LE6 AND A GLASS
l AND STIIL WON THE "MOST- POPULAR-MAN CONTEST?
HE WORE
CAMPUS CORDS
M'BOY- THAT MADE
\UP FOB, EVERYTHING
it3f
' ' 1'' \ \'
: These good-looking
1 UNIVERSITY CORDUROY
TROUSERS'CUCK'LlKf A
MILLION.... AND MAN -
HOW COMFORTABLE AND
LONG-WEARING !
to GET ’EM
PICK
this gold L*eei.
AT VOuR CLOTMIERS
CAMPS?!
CORDS
Cot tbit university • touch in moot trousers.
rUNXjfiS and CAeMPUS RUTFS heavyJr-'-jd.
group go at their work with a zest
that produces quite remarkable re
sults. Last year unusually good
success was had with the produc
tion “East Lynne,” “Misanthrope,”
and “What the Gulls Knew,” writ
ten by Mrs. Sally Allen. Mrs. Al
len’s play has been responsible for
much favorable comment outside
of Eugene.
Already this year work is pro
gressing on “The Fatfter,” a three
act play -written by August Strind
berg. It is expected to be produced
some time in the next 30 days. Wil
liam Tugman, managing editor of
the Eugene Register-Guard, is act
ing as director for the project.
Lance Hart, assistant professor
of drawing and painting, is presi
dent of the Very Little Theater.
Any Eugene resident who desires
to join in the work of the organiza
tion is given a trial and if a part
suitable for him is open, he is put
to work.
cation rather than pursue military
training, to refuse to bear arms if
called to the colors, and to sab
otage industry to prevent its suc
cessful functioning during war. I
ask that writer—would he or she
be enjoying the rights of liberty
and freedom today if his or her
ancestors had followed such advice
at Bunker Hill, at Gettysburg or
St. Mihiel ?”
Another challenge to our patriot
ism is the “insidious, underhand
seditious force called communism,”
Capt. Shertzer declared, and con
eluded his address with a challenge '
to the assembled patriots to “keep
faith with those living comrades
who today face the future on hos
pital beds, or with maimed and
broken bodies and minds.”
H. R. Gould, superintendent of
the city schools, and Carlton E.
Spencer, of the University faculty
gave short talks following the main
speaker.
In the afternoon the open-air
fireplace, built with funds raised
by the Business and Professional
Women, was unveiled. Mrs. Ella
T. Edmunson made the presenta
tion speech, and Dr. M. C. Harris,
councilman, accepted for the city.
An Armistice day ball at the
Armory in the evening marked the
close of the day’s ceremonies.
CLASSIFIED
AND
SWAPS
i'
AVhat a GRAND feeling
to know you can get wliat
you want through CLAS
SIFIED !
10c per line
OREGON STUDENTS
Have your car serviced with
Flying A gas and Cycol Mot
or Oil at Ernie Danner’s As
sociated Station.
Service With a Smile
Corner 10th and Olive
Phone 1765
DRESSMAKING
PETITE SHOP
573 13th St. E. Phone 3208
"Style Right — Price Right"
DRESSMAKING and alt
eration work. 2479 Alder st.
Phone 115-W.
TUTORING
TUTORING: German by
experienced teacher educated
in Germany. 50c an hour.
Miss Anna Gropp. 1798 Col
umbia street. Phone 2630-W.
BEAUTY SHOPS
Irby's individual haircut
ting, 35c. Permanent push
waves $1.75 up. 41 W. Tenth
street. Irby’s Beauty Salon.
LOST AND FOUND
LOST: Black Conklin
fountain pen. Call Warren
Gill, 1024.
PHONE 3300
Classified Department