First Petition Turned in on ROTC Initiative Van Winkle Now Legally Permitted to Grant Title of Ballot ROTO initiative developments were still moving rapidly today, pushed by the Oregon Committee for Peace and Freedom, which sent a petition signed by 10 voters and officers of the committee to Sec retary of State Fail Snell to legal ly permit Attorney General Van Winkle to grant a ballot title. At the same time word was re ceived from Olympia, Washington, that an optional ROTC initiative ballot title had been filed concern ing the University of Washington and Washington State college. Money Comes in While money continued to jingle into the freedom committee head quarters at the Y hut in small sums, committee leaders mapped out membership for a citizens’ state committee, possibly to be led by J. J. Hansaker, Northwest head of the National Council for Pre vention of War, or Peter Zimmer man, former gubernatorial candi date. Branches of the committee wrere formed at Willamette university in Salem by Monroe Sweetland, for mer organizer of the Student League for Industrial Democracy; at Linfield college by Wilbert Moore, Linfield graduate and pres ent graduate assistant in sociology here; and at Reed college in Port land by Muriel Nicholas, formerly a student at Reed but at present a student here. Paddock to Go to Corvallis Charles Paddock and officers of the Eugene group have tentatively planned a trip to Corvallis this Saturday to organize a branch there of students who have an nounced hope for such an organi zation. The present initiative would make the military scienec course optional at Oregon State college, where not one student was ex empted on any grounds this year by the strict administration. Possibility still remained that the state board of higher education might announce a favorable com mittee report on elective drill and go optional. The committee is headed by Ben Irvine, editor of the Oregon Journal and compulsory advocate. Alpha Kappa l)<*Ita Initiates Font* Miriam Gilbert, Hans Plambeck, Polly Lou Todd, and Orpha Dasch were initiated into Alpha Kappa Delta, sociology honorary, Thurs day night, April 9, at the bi-month ly meeting held at 7:30 in Gerlin ger hall. John L. King, instructor in the Edison vocational school in Seattle, spoke to members present on a position for sociologists in econom ic planning. He said that econom ic planning could bo helped by the dissemination of scientific infor mation from research work and from fiank evaluation of technique of control and propaganda. Mr. King also discussed certain inter Breath uf bprlng ---1 , Sneer ul those zero blasts; chuckle through frozen lips.as you tackle inountainoiis snow dirfts! I,el your thoughts dwell on bath in;; beauties and spring blooms! For it's almond blossom time on Santa Catalina Island and, as a I sort of harbinger of spring for their chilled eastern cousins, these nymphs posed for this scene while reaping their share of blooms. outing loft and right wing political i and economic movements in Seat tle. Dean Wayne L. Morse will speak when the honorary meets on April 22. J. H. Geoghegan, educational director at the federal penitentiary at McNeil Island, will appear be fore the group on May 11. Bryson Students Several song programs have been given during the past few days by students of Hoy Bryson of the University school of music, including Grayson Ross,' baritone, who appeared in a recent radio program sponsored by the Burch Shoe company, and who will sing for the Kiwanis club at its noon meeting l, Monday. Boss holds the Phi Mu Alpha scholarship in voice witli Bryson. Caroll Green, another baritone, sang in the Burch program over KORE Thursday evening. Green is a transfer to this campus from Stanford. Two women students, Madelle Beidler and Lenta Reetz, also ap peared before community groups, the former singing at the Thurs day meeting of the Business and Professional Women’s club at the Hotel Osburn, and the latter pre I scnting numbers before the adult music education class. Flood Control Even in Dry Desert . >V «* - -gt .WVC' ... Several wash Intakes like the one pictured will protect the banks of the All-.Vnieriean Canal from Hood action—despite the fact that the canal crosses a desert region. The intakes are to take care of cloudbursts. The All-American, to be Vuierica’s largest irrigation canal, will water large areas in California’s Imperial Valley. HO Profs to Speak'1 At Graduations State High Schools Slate Faculty Members forJ Final Exercises Twenty-one faculty memoers ui i ; the University will give gradua- J , tion addresses at high school com- j mencements this spring. Each year, a list is made of the I professors who are interested in making commencement addresses. ] The names of the instructors and j the subjects on which they will j speak, are sent to principals of all! high schools in the state, in pam- , phlet form. Bernard Hinshaw, director of social welfare, general extension j division, is in chareg of preparing the list and handling correspon dence with the principals. The faculty members who will make commencement addresses are Roscius H. Back, assistant professor of military science; Jesse H. Bond, professor of business ad- j ministration; James M. Carrell, as sistant professor of speech; John L. Casteel, director of speech divi- ! sion; A. E. Caswell, professor of physics; N. H. Cornish, professor; of business administration; H. V. j Hoyt, dean of the school of busi- j ness administration. W. A. Dahlberg, assistant pro- ] fessor of speech; Daniel D. Gage,; associate professor of business ad- ^ ministration; R. R. Huestis, pro- i fessor of zoology; Samuel H. Jameson, professor of sociology; John J. Landsbury, dean of the school of music; Alfred L. Lomax, I professor of business administra- ] tion; R. R. Martin, instructor in j sociology. E. H. Moore, professor of soci ology; Victor P. Morris, professor] of economics; Wayne L. Morse,] dean of the school of law; E. V. D. j J Murphy, head of the department of ij military science ... Karl W. On- I thank, dean of personnel admin- jj istration; Philip A. Parsons, head ! j of the department of sociology; I and Howard R. Taylor, professor ] of psychology. Bryson Speaks to North Bend Kiwanis Roy Bryson of the school of mu sic was in North Bend Thursday, I speaking before the North Bend] Kiwanis club at their noon meet-1 ing, on the subject of "Attitudes i on Music and Musicians in Com- ] munities of the United States." Music as a solution to the leisure 1 time problem, and the place of mu- I sic, both traditional and in the modern world, was pointed out by 1 the speaker through the use of 100 definitions of music. Westminster House To Observe Easter Annette Surdam will lead a spe cial worship service at Westmin ster house Sunday morning at 9:45. All townspeople and students are invited to this meeting which will consist of special music and a de votional service. Tt will last less than an hour so that people will have an opportunity to attend their own church services. At 6 o’clock there will be the regular Sunday evening tea, fol lowed at 6:30 by a discussion on immortality. Forensic* Season (Continued from pace one) The committee named is: Elinor Stewart, registratioon; Virginia Endieott, banquet: Marjory Kiss ling, reception: Marjorie Smith, secretary; Bill Marsh, advertising; and Wayne Harbert, publicity. \tteiul Weekend Events A string of social events, entic ing for every mother, is being ar ranged in the combined program of Junior Weekend and Mother's day. 1 The 1936 edition of the canoe fete. "Stardust," is expected to at tract many mothers to the campus for the weekend, Chairman Dave Lowry says. Other events which the mothers may witness will be: the Junior Prom, the frosh-soph tug of war, the painting of the O. and the wa ter carnival. S|MHdal Events Listed The mothers themselves will par ticipate in a round of social activi ties including: a mass meeting, teas, banquet, special dinners, and the all-campus luncheon. Church services dedicated to the mothers are being arranged for May 10. Another feature of the weekend will be an exhibit of Oregon flow ers given by F. K. Sipe. associate professor of botany. LOST. Parker pen Tomlinson. I Phone 758. I Oregon's Flower a Resident For 30,000,000 Years “Oregon Grape,” a shrub well tnown to Oregonians as their state lower, has at last been proved to )elong really to Oregon alone, as t is a 30,000,000 year old resident >f Oregon, according to Dr. C. A. \rnold, curator of the fossil plant nuseum of the University of Michigan. Dr, Arnold identified fossil leaves :ound in miocene rock from east ;rn Oregon as Oregon grape. Specimens of fossilized wood ’ound on the field trip led by Dr. S. Cressman, anthropologist, 'rom the University last summer nto eastern Oregon, have also been dentified by Arnold, and several assistants, from the ethno-botani cal laboratory at Michigan. These specimens were proved to be rock elm. They were found in Guano valley in eastern Oregon where nothing but sand and sage brush exists now and are considered also to be of Miocene time. Dr. Arnold said that evidently in eastern Oregon in the early times many plants grew which no longer are native to that district. These include the ginko tree which grows now only in Japan, the ail anthu or tree of heaven, and ironwood. It is thought by anthro pologists that these trees and plants “traveled” from Asia to North America across what is now 9 Men Initiated In Phi Mu Alpha Nine men were initiated Thurs day into Phi Mu Alpha, men’s national music fraternity, in the University music building'. William Gresham is president of the group. Those initiated are Wayne Gil fry, Wendell Gilfry, PvObert Gould, Tom Turbyfill, Jack McClay, Wil bur Jessen, Dallas Norton, Al bert Chamberlin, and Earl Scott. Gresham said that the entire honorary is planning to attend the regional convention of Phi Mu Al pha to be held in Pullman. Wash ington. on the Washington State college campus May 1 and 2. the Eering sea but at some early time existed at a land connection between the continents and from i there on down the coast. Forest Supervisor Talks to Reporters P. A. Thompson, supervisor of the Willamette national forest, spoke to Professor George Turn bull’s reporting class Thursday morning. Mr. Thompson told the class of the work that the forestry service does, and suggested meth ods of reporting forestry news. The W'illamette national forest, of which he is supervisor, is the largest timber stand in the United States in one national forest, con sisting of almost 5,000 square miles. He said that his work is widening all the time from com batting forest firest, and now in cludes forest preservation, improv ing recreational facilities in the forests, and developing water power possibilities. Gym Alterations Proceed Rapidly Alteration of the old men’s gym into a natatorium is progressing rapidly, according to reports re ceived yesterday. WPA workers have a considerable portion of the old gym dismantled already. The building has been cut in two. with only the roof remaining in tact. Concrete foundation for the south wall has been laid, and next week the wall itself will be poured. The space to be below the bleachers to contain locker and shower rooms has been prepared and awaits concrete pouring. It is expected that the deeper end of the pool will be further deepened about two feet. An average of 30 men per day are employed on this job, it was reported. LACES to Go and 1HINGS to Do j I Rent a Bicycle Morn popular 1 li i s year tliiin ever. Open (ill 10 p. m. or later by appointment. f Campus Rental Stand I 13111 mid Alder a 1 AFTER A BUSY AFTERNOON * > ’sr «i. -=€? / / i / / / / Playing Tennis i Or GOING SWIMMING There Is No Place Like the ANCHORAGE For Cool Drinks Or ;i Real Diunor Served in Quiet, Comfortable Surrounding*. ‘•DINE BY THE WATERSIDE” KAMPUS KR1ER By HOWARD OVERBACK Bert Wheeler and Robert Wool sey have poked fun at about every thing and the latest to get its share of kidding is the old Western thriller. “Silly Billies,” their current sa tire, includes all the thrills that commonly provide the smash cli maxes of sage-brush sagas, but, as Woolsey said while the picture was filming, “No western was ever like this.” There are vicious desperadoes and a stage coach hold-up. Peril rides the plains in the persons of a hundred blood thirsty Indians. Renegade whites do their dirty work. The U. S. cavalry rides to the rescue—and arrives late (as it always does). The boys are destined to dance on the lynching rope, te be scalped, to be burned at the stake, to perish in quicksand—in short, to endure all the breath taking thrills of twenty Westerns crammed into one madcap comedy. Lovely Dorothy Lee, who has been with the boys ih just about every picture they have made, is again romantically teamed with Bert Wheeler. * * * Audiences have come to look for something new and different when Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers team in a musical picture and they are not to be disappointed in “Top Hat,” which opens at the May flower theatre this Sunday. In this RKO Radio musical comedy Astaire and Miss Rogers ! not only introduce the “Piccolino,” most sensational of their dance creations, but they demonstrate a new romantic technique. The “Pic colino,” is one of several colorful song and dance routines, all of which are done to the lyrics and melodies of Irving Berlin, who wrote the complete musical score for the picture. * * * Last night the vicinity of 11th and Alder looked like election eve on the campus with people lined j up along the sidewalks, cars for blocks around, soft drink mer- j chants doing a rushing business, I and everybody excited and happy (?). What was happening? Yours truly was crammed into the projection booth trying to hear the picture and see it at the same time. There is nothing harder than trying to see a show and listen to it also and being right next to the mike is something awful. After the show was over it was nearly impossible to get out through the swarm that came for the same purpose as myself. The result is as Professor Dahl berg once said, “I don't like to go where there is going to be a large crowd. A SPRING TONIC FOR SPRING FEVER _ :— ~ X V T 1 ■ * I ! •> vv ny not enjoy comfort and relaxation on the MILL RACE in addition to getting some muscle-building exercise? CANOES FOR RENT ANCHORAGE RACEWAY laite Cl uuac Ui i»«su ing gas from the pain less dentists of the /'I plains . . . out where ;J the Wild West gets really MAD! // \i. r ^ 1 j v Door ODen \ 12:45 wsemssma Sunday Tues.-Wed. Thurs. Only Fri.-Sat. "Don’t Gamble "Lives of a ' “Powder Smoke Range” With Love” Bengal Lancer” “You May Be Next” The Mayflower will now have Matinees Saturday and Sunday TONIGHT Be Sure To See OUTWARD BOUND! Playing At THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE April 11, 13, and 17 Admission 35c Call Local 216 For Reservations RMMUB I RIDE FOR HEALTH Balmy weather is here to stay. Why not enjoy it on cool trails \v here the music of n a t u r e l ings in your ears. EUGENE HUNT CLUB OUT AT THE FAIRGROUNDS