Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 15, 1935)
Social Events Slate Revised Changes, Additions ‘ Shake Up Calendar Several changes in the fall tern social calendar have be-.?n made and more events have been addei to the former schedule.The revisec schedule is as follows: Friday, November 15. Sigma Chi pledge dance. First University Theatre produc tion. Chi Omega pledge dance. Tri-Delta pledge dance. Phi Delta Theta pledge dance. Kappa Sigma pledge dance. Saturday, November 16. Football, UO-University of Port land, at Portland. Pi Kappa Alpha dinner dance. Phi Kappa Psi pledge dance. Alpha Gamma Delta pledge dance. Phi Sigma Kappa pledge dance. Kappa Kappa Gamma pledge dance. University Theatre production. Phi Gamma Delta pledge dance. Pi Beta Phi pledge dance. Sigma Nu pledge dance. Alpha Delta Pi pledge dance. Tuesday, November 19. Theta Sigma Phi open meeting for women in journalism. Dormitory Dance Set Friday, November 22. University Theatre production. All dormitory informal. Saturday, November 23. UO-University of Washington football at. Seattle. University Theatre production. Wednesday, November 27. Spinster dance. Thursday, November 28. Thanksgiving. Friday, November 29. Gamma Phi Beta pledge dance. Alpha Omicron Pi pledge dance. Saturday, November 30. Sigma Kappa pledge dance. Sigma Phi Epsilon pledge dance. Friday, December 6. Sigma Alpha Mu pledge dance. Saturday, December 7. Alpha Xi Delta pledge dance. Football St. Mary’s-UO at San Francisco. Wednesday, December 11. Modern dance demonstration. Friday, December 13. Closed. Saturday, December 14. Closed. Monday, December 16. Examinations begin. Friday, December 20. Vacation begins. Service Plans .Rural Programs Dr. P. A. Parsons, head of the sociology department, announces that calls have begun to be re ceived by the sociology department and the extension division of the social service department for en tertainments and programs for the rural districts. As yet no special arrangement? have been made but plans, as car ried out in former years by the community survey department, art being contemplated. These pro grams will be given with the ait of a works progress administration grant in cooperation with the county planning board. This work is part of the plur which the University has been con templating for a number of year, in an attempt to enrich the socia anti cultural life of the rural com munities. Send the Emerald to your friends. Subscription rates $2.50 a year. The Hunting pages of his tory record the grandest adventure of all time..! f OPENS '( SAT. CHARLES LAUGHTON CLARK GABLE FRANCHOT TONE A DDE MICKK MOI ED l 5 DAYS J Council of War Gathered around a plain deal table set out under the blazing! African sun, the staff officers of the Italian armies in northern i Ethiopia are pictured holding a council of war shortly after the capture of Aduwa. General Emilio de liono (second from left) presides over the. discussion in his role as army commander. Many Best Sellers Listed Among New Rental Books Among tlie new rental books in the library are: "White Ladies,” by Francis Brett Young, a novel of a family; "Seeds of Tomorrow” by Mikhail Sholokhov, of the Cos sacks of the Don; "The Seven Arms,” an exciting novel of a wild, sentimental, Scottish lass, and written by L. A. G. Strong; "Bright Ambush,” Pulitzer prize book of poems by Audrey Wurde mann; “The Stars Look Down,” by A. J. Cronin, containing a warmth of humanity; the last book of the famous John Galsworthy, “Forsytes Pendyces” and others; “A Fool of Faith,” about a wan dering-preacher, translated from Jar! Hemmer’s Swedish book; and “Green Hills of Africa,” by Ernest Hemingway. “Fatherland,” by Karl Billinger, was smuggled chapter by chapter out of Europe, and is haying its original publication in America. “Salamina” is Rockwell Kent's Greenland book, long awaited. Oth er important 7-day books are “Old Jules,” by Mari Sandoz, the $5,000 j Atlantic prize book for 1935; "Time Past,” memoirs and por traits of French celebrities, by Marie Scheikevitch; “Burners of Men,” extraordinary adventures in Ethiopia, awarded the Gringoire prize in 1935, is by Marcel Griaule. "The Jewish Caravan,” great great stories of 25 centuries, is edited by Leo W. Schwarz. “The Romance of Mountaineer ing” by R, L G. Irving has 41 photographs in collotype. "This Business of Exploring,” by Roy Chapman Andrews is his personal advice and information. “War—No Profit—No Glory No Need,” by Norman Thomas, noted socialist leader and visitor of this campus last year. "What Does American Mean?” by Alex ander Meiklejohn, is a frank dis cussion of condition in the United States. “King Lehr and the Gilded Age,” by Elizabeth Drexel Lehr is typical of American society in the glamorous days of the gay nine- j ties. Thrilling Sea Saga Comes To McDonald Saturday The most thrilling1 adventure of the eighteenth century now be comes the greatest adventure of the twentieth century, according to recent movie reviews. If the motion picture camera had been in practical use 150 years ago, it is likely that no more au thentic nor thrilling record of the amazing exploits of H. M. S. Bounty and the historical mutiny would have been recorded than will be seen in Metro-Goldwyn Mayer’s saga of the seas, “Mutiny on the Bounty," which opens at the McDonald theatre Saturday. Berlin and Hardships Adventure loving men again lived the perils of angry sear . . . the silent suffering of tyranny . . . the heartbreak of loneliness to recreate this immortal struggle of a handful of mutineers. Pacific coast shipbuilders, using the original plans of the Bounty, constructed an absolute replica of the picturesque mutiny ship used in the picture. Charles Laughton surpasses all his other masterful performances as the tyrannical disciplinarian, the cruel but dauntless Captain Bligli. Clark Gable portrays Fletcher Christian, the young of ficer who leads the mutiny. Fran chot Tone enacts the part of Mid shipman Byam who supports Gable’s insurrection. In addition to the native girls, Maria and Mamo, featured roles in “Mutiny on the Bounty" are played by Herbert Mundin, Eddie Quillan, Dudley Digges, Donald Crisp, Henry Stephenson, Francis Lister and Spring Byington, with hun dreds of supporting players ap pearing in the production’s many spectacular sequences. Old Time 'Hoe-Downs’ Set For Gerlinger Tonight Genuine barn dances, rye waltzes and all. will be the order of the night at a shindig whieh will be held in Gerlinger hall, from 7:30 to 9:00 tins evening. Students, faculty, and towns people who are wearied of formal | affairs may find relief in the no date, no - charge, no - stiff-collar ! dance where an old time orchestra of seven pieces will guarantee to round the corners off square i dances and shake the grain out id' rye waltzes. To Have I’aul Jones Jim Lawton, square dance caller over KOKK, will be present to do the honors on Paul Joneses, so IMUIMH MltlllllWU imiimmiiuiiiiiimmimMiiiiiiiiiiiiuKiii come prepared to “swing your, partner," "cast off six," “bow to the lady on your left,” and other truly Western customs. Even the football players were heel-toeing or toe-heeling r y e waltzes two weeks ago Friday, and they lived to beat Oregon State. Only a fiddle and a piano inspired them but tonight seven pieces will be in the orchestra. The first college cheer is c edited to Princeton students, who got the I idea from an unknown private of ' the Seventh Regiment of New York, as the outfit mobilized for , war in April, I860. iiHiuum units FOR CHRISTMAS Twelve photographs—twelve good friends made happy. KENNELL - ELLIS STUDIOS mmmmammimmwmmmmmimm Band to Have Active Week Will Play at Game, ‘Challenge Day’ Gather The University of Oregon band is scheduled for one of the most ictive weeks of the year, begm ling Saturday morning at 7:30. It was originally planned for the band to leave Eugene on the noon train for Portland in order that they might go through their usual pre-game ballyhoo, but the plena have been changed, Ihe organization will leave at 7:30 and arrive in Portland around 11 a. m. They will serenade down town Portland until lunch time and immediately following, will march to the stadium to play for the game with Portland university. Then, rather than returning to Eugene either Saturday night or Sunday, as is usual, the band will be held over in Portland until Monday night. The annual “Chal lenge Day’’ ceremonies will be held in Portland Monday as a prelude to the University of Washington classic to be played in Seattle the week-end following. While in Portland, the band will be housed in the Imperial hotel. It is expected that the organization will appear at many civic service club meetings during the week end, will broadcast over the major radio stations and will appear at several of the major theaters. KOPP LEAVES PORTLAND Jacob Kopp, ex-’38 Swiss student on the campus last year, left Port land in July for his home in Switzerland upon receipt of orders to report for military duty Aug ust 19, 1935. Mr. Kopp.s two-year permit to remain in the United States would have expired in Oc tober but he had planned to get an extension. Many Students Fail to Pay Third Fee Installment Ninety-five students failed to pay their third installments of registration fees which were due yesterday, and are now being charged 25 cents a day additional. The fines will he continued throughout the week. Next week students still delin quent will be subject to suspen sion from the University. Fees may be paid at the cashier’s office in Johnson hall from 8 a. m. until 12 noon, and 1 p. m. until 3 p. m. Sigma Delta Chi Will Hear Duniway Former Emerald Editor To Speak at Dinner Members of Sigma Delta Chi, men's honorary Journalism frater nity will gather at the College Side Inn this evening for a dinner meet ing. Guest of honor will be Willis Duniway, ’32, graduate member of the organization and former edi tor of the Emerald. Duniway is in charge of the Sa lem branch of the United Press^ and has for the past few weeks been occupied with busniess con nected with the state legislature. He will speak to the members on the high lights of the session. A number of local newspaper men will be present. Duniway since graduating from the University school of journalism has worked on the editorial staffs of the News-Telegram, Journal, and the Oregonian, all Portland papers. (At the appointment of Virgil Pinkley to Rome as United Press correspondent there, Duni way succeeded him in the Salem branch. Sogo Matsumoto Exhibits Rare Wood-Block Prints Mr. Sogo Matsumoto, a Japanes lecturer and distributor of old Chi nese wood-block prints was a re cent visitor on the campus. H exhibited the prints to art stu dents in the art school library, am also sold some of the art piece lie displays. Mr. Matsumoto introduced Jap rnese prints to Americans b; bringing the original shipments o vood-block prints to the Unitec States in 1901. These prints came from the or iginal masters of wood-block print ing and cutting in Japan, and in eluded such artists as Hiroshiga Hokusai, and Haranabu. These : artists have since become well - known in America. The Chinese wood-block prints ! which Mr. Matsumoto now intro - duces were the forerunners of 1 Japanese prints and were widely s copied by Japanese artists. These Chinese prints are about • 200 years old, and are very rare. ' The designs in these prints were : the sources for much Chippendale I design and also French-Chinese de sign. Some of the prints are done in black and white only, and others are done in colors. These prints are regarded as masterpieces of design and craftsmanship. Faculty Studies Will Be Feature Of New Library Provision for escape from world y beings and annoying interrup :ions has been made in the new ibrary for these faculty members writing books and magazine arti de3 and who desire solitude. The 16 individual studies on the third door of the library will be avail able to these literary aspirants, rhey are not for conference, but ■vill be issued to each faculty mem ber who will have his own key. The studies will be especially use ful to those writing books and ar ticles requiring research investi gations. ProvTsions have also been made for graduate students working on their theses. There will be 90 desks, each by a window, on -every “stack” level, and the desks are to be individually assigned to the graduate students. MARGARET II1I.L TEACHING Margaret Ellen Hill is teaching music in the high school at Lapine, Oregon. Dr. A. S. Pearse, Duke univer sity zoologist, is making a special study of oyster diseases and their prevention. The work is being fi nanced by the government. Russian medical students are .’lassed as workers and are paid 100 rubles a month by the govern ment. Send the Emerald to your friends. Subscription rates $2.50 a year. DANCES: JIMMIE DIERICKX Friday Nito. ROOTS GRANT Saturday Nitc. JACK MILLS Sunday Tea Dance 4 :dl) to 7 :IW). Sunday Nile 0 to 12. WILLAMETTE PARK Admission 40c Football’s longest run from scrimmage was made by Wyllys Terry of Yale, against Wesleyan, November 4, 1884. Terry ran 115 yards for a touchdown, starting from five yards behind his own goal line. The feat could not be duplicated today. It has been im possible since 1912, when the old 100-yard field was shortened to the present 100-yard length. SEA FOODS ARE OUR SPECIALTY If it’s fish you want see us. Oyster headquarters. NEWMAN’S FISH MARKET Telephone '2309 39 East Broadway Awaits Induction Born 34 years ago of Texas school-teaching parents, and chosen last June as president of Tuskegee Institute, Dr. Frederick Douglass Patterson, above, will be formally inaugurated at Tuskegee, Ala., on October 28. The new head of the world-famed Negro school, founded by Booker T. Washington in 1881, is an agriculture expert and alumnus of Prairie View, Iowa State, and Cornell of Iowa. Libe Given Books By Japanese Author A gift of several volumes of natural science research of the first scientific expedition to Man chuokuo has been presented the University library by the author, Shigeyasu Tokunaga. The maga zines are printed in both Japanese and English. BURR ON CAMPUS Sherwood Burr, Jr., who was employed in the credit department of Meier and Frank store in Port land during the summer, is attend ing the University medical shcool this fall. Parson-Day Wedding Miss Mary Browne Parsons and John Stewart Day were married in Medford on August 17. Mrs. Day was graduated from Annie Wright seminary in Tacoma and finished in New York. Mr. Day was grad uated from the University of Ore gon in June. He is a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. Oregon Couple Wed Robert Bennett, ’38, and Russell Humphreys, ’36, were married in Portland on September 15. Mr. and Mrs. Humphreys will reside in Eugene where both are attending the University of Oregon. Mrs. Humphreys is a member of Phi Beta and Mr. Humphreys of Sig ma Alpha Epsilon. Send the Emerald to your friends ROMANCE 1 REVIVED | In Our Holiday Showing By Classy Jean S Romance lias conic 1o life | in this thrilling "roup of | now spring dresses by | Classy Jean. Tt’s a bril j limit collection that in 3 eludes subtly flattering j cocktail dresses — cliarm 3 iny versions of those pop ular double-duty frocks— | street frocks of classic || simplicity — and breath i ! j taking fashions for after ■ noon wear. Tt’s a line ! crammed w i t h fashion - ideas that are young, | refreshing: and new. In | brief, if you’ve a spark of | romance left in your soul, 4 you'll see the promotional | possibilit ies of Classy 11 Jean's advance spring line! Priced $1 0.75 to i $21.50 THE BROADWAY INC. 30 East Broadway SAMPLE OFFICIAL BALLOT SPECIAL ASUO ELECTION November 15, 1935 Junior Finance Officer Vote for One 1. FRANK NASH 2. KERMIT PAULSON Proposed Amendments to ASCO Constitution, Providing; Indepen dent Executive Position on Executive Council. AMENDMENT TO ARTICLE 3 An elective office known as the independent executive position shall be created. This officer shall be in attendance at least four terms in the University; he shall not be a member, pledge, or as sociate member of any living organization during his term of office. The first shall be appointed by the executive council and thereafter be elected at the regular election. AMENDMENT TO ARTICLE 5 The Independent Executive Officer shall be a member of the executive council, and will carry out duties delegated to him by that body. YES, I vote for adoption NO, I vote for rejection Local Typsetter Recalls' Boyhood Of Sinclair Lewis “Who wrote ‘Main Street,’ Frank?’’ That was the chance question shouted through the throbbing roar of the press room one proof reading night, that dis covered Frank Evans, campus lino type operator and father of twin Oregon co-ods, was a schoolmate of Sinclair Lewis. “Sure, we went to school to gether,” he said, getting up from the clicking type keys to smoke an in - between - cigarette while he chatted of boyhood memories. Sinclair Lewis’ real name, ac cording to Frank, was Harry Lewis, so as “Harry” he called him during the conversation. It was at Sauk Centre, Minne sota that Frank and Harry started school, but it was not until the fourth grade that Frank’s memory served him by remembering vivid ly the red-headed, slim youth, Harry Lewis. His father was a doctor so the Lewises lived in a comfortable house in a quarter block of ground. When Harry was only six or seven, Frank remembered his ability to fight off the older boys who would pick on him, and when he was in the eighth grade, a little incident which happened one day in the schoolroom. “Some ink had been spilled on the floor, and the teacher accused Harry,” said Frank. “Now Harry was a normal student, quiet, but stubborn, and when he believed himself right, nothing on earth could change his mind. He was in dependent, too, but his temper only came out when it was pushed, in spite of his red hair. He wouldn't admit spilling the ink, so the teacher beat the tar out of him with her ruler. Harry swoVe, but took it until half an hour later, when the teacher, worn out with her efforts, but still unable to move Harry, sent him home, un conquered. That stubborness stuck with him, because later he refused the $5000 Pulitzer prize because he felt there was some unfairness in the judging. According to Mr. Evans, Sin clair Lewis had one brother, Claude, who attended Ann Arber and Rush Medical school in Chi cago. He is now a practicing doc tor. Before Sinclair Lewis became a novelist he reported all over the United States, and was a reader for Munsey publications. He met his future wife in Italy and after a whirlwind courtship married her in England a short time later. They now reside in Vermont and have one son. Mr. Evans has been on the campus for six years, and in the type setting business since leaving high school. He is the father of the clever musical twins, Josephine and Beatrice Evans, sophomores on the campus. Students’ Matinee DANCE at the Winter garden 8th and Charnelton Every Sat. Afternoon 2-5 p. m. ‘EUGENE’S- OWN STORE” M c Morran &'W ashburne MERCHANDISE OP MERIT ONLY -PHONE 2700 Creates a Wonderful Illusion ■ Clear — Sheer Without Peer Beautiful merchandise of knitted silk that looks so fragile and deli cate but has so much strength and elasticity in every thread. Van Kaalte Illusion Hose . $1.00 Van Kaalte Panties and Vests . 75e each Van Kaalte Brassiere Slips . $2.00 Van Kaalte Pajamas and Gowns . $2.00 - $2.95 Van Kaalte Pie-nit Gloves . $1.00 Special Train to Portland SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16 .50 ROUND TRIP Oregon vs. Portland University Leave S. P. Station 7:30 A. M. Tickets good returning until midnight Monday. Southern Pacific Phone 2200