Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1936)
Betty Hughes YW Secretary To Go East Mrs. J. S. Evans to Take Over Duties as Leader Of Women’s Group Betty Hughes, retiring secretary nf the YWCA who was to have held office until the end of spring term, is leaving the University of Oregon at noon today to motor to Swarthmore coilege, Pennsylvania, via Los Angeles, to begin work in the training school of adult leaders for peace education and organiza tion of the United States. Miss Hughes will be replaced by Mrs. John Stark Evans. Accompanied by Ruth Haefner, temporary pastor of the Congrega tional church proceeding Rev. Wil liston Wirt, Miss Hughes will drive to Los Angeles where three more volunteer leaders representing Cal ifornia will be picked up. From there the group will go on to Swarthmore college riear Philadel pnia. Leaders Disband to Schools Following the period of leader ship training for the emergency peace campaign the leaders will disband to four training schools for students. These include Whit tier college, Grinnell college, Duke university, and Swarthmore. At these training headquarters students will gather in June from all over the United States for three weeks education for peace organi zation. Then, in groups of five and six they will tour the states for the summer, giving plays, pro grams, and speeches, strengthen ing pacific alternatives to armed conflict, bringing about such polit ical and economic changes as are essential to a just and peaceable world order, and recruiting and uniting in a dynamic movement all organizations and individuals who are determined not to approve of or participate in war. YWCA and V'M Have Blanks Each peace volunteer will be responsible for a share of his total expenses which include transporta tion, maintenance in the field, supervision, books, literature, sup plies, etc., which will cost approx imately $fiO a month. Half of this will be provided by the Emergency Peace Campaign. Students who w'ould be inter ested in such a project for the summer are asked to call at the YWCA and YM for application blanks and further information. Board to Hear (Continued from pane one) Portland. On each of the education al councils will be three faculty members which will be named by Dr. Boyer. Two student members will be named jointly on this group by Dr. Boyer and the ASUO presi dent. Such committees as publications, music, student, welfare, and foren sics are now under the executive j council which is responsible to the ( president of the University. The! executive council will be replaced by the two boards, athletic and ed ucational activities, with a director over each, both of whom will be re sponsible to the University's presi dent. Present Set-up to End The present organization of the ASUO will be discontinued July 1 When Hugh E. Rosson and N. Thom as Stoddard, graduate and assistant i graduate manager, respectively,1 will r esign. Both Rosson and Stod- J dard assisted in the formulation of the rtow plan. Dr. Boyer has made none of the appointments, but will do so imme diately providing the state board approves the plan Monday, it was revealed. Kern Baker Murries Fern Catherine Baker, who grad uated from the University in 1934, ! and Harold Glover were married at Gaston on April 11. Mrs. Glover is a member of Delta Zcta. The ; couple will live at Forest Grove. FOR SALE Black riding boots. I! size 6; atrd white linen breeches. 1 practically new. Complete, $10 Phone 30G. LOST—Ladies locket watch on i blue enamel chain between art museum and art school. Call dean ot w omen’s office, Mrs. 1 Macduff. See Brown Motor Co. ! for USED CARS I Messenger to Garcia Is III ! ____ - =- ' — M , ■— ' Pointing out his perilous route, the man who won world note by parrying the famed “message to Garcia” is shown here—Col. Andrew S. Ilowan, army veteran, reported failing in health in his San Fran cisco home. He will be 7!) April 28. Rowan evaded the watchful Spaniards to reach the Cuban commander at Bayamo on May 1, 1898, with assurance from President McKinley that Garcia could count on U. S. aid. Rowan’s message was verbal, so he would not be shot as a spy if documents were found on him. Fund Push Moves On to $5,000 Goal AAUW Will Give 2 Parties; Proceeds Will Go for Browsing Room Funds and materials for the Uni versity’s browsing room in the new library are beieng sought daily. Ap proximately $5,000 will be needed to furnish the room, M. H. Douglass, librarian, said yesterday. The AAUW members in Eugene are giving two benefit card parties this Saturday, April 25, at Apple gate’s social room in their down town store. Proceeds will be divid ed between the fund for the brows ing room and the scholarship loan fund of the organization. Two Bridge Parties In the afternoon Eugene women will play auction and contract bridge. Both men and wiomen are invited to the affair in the evening. Bridge, “monopoly,” and various other card games will played at the latter event. Mrs. Frank Chambers is chair I man of arrangements for both af fairs, and she will be assisted by Mrs, Nelson Macduff, Mrs. E. R. Knollin, Mrs. John B. Bell, Mrs. Wayne L. Morse, Mrs. F. M. Hatha way, Mrs. Warren Korstad, Mrs. Clifford Constance, Mis. William Tugman, Mrs. Robert M. Fischer Jr., Miss Ruth Haefner, Miss Mabel Wood, and Mrs. W. H. Maxham. Mrs. Macduff in Charge Mrs. Nelson Macduff is president of the American Association of University Women. Her assistants are members of the executive com mittee. The West-Made Desk corporal ion of Portlarkl will make a desk for the browsing room especially de signed to harmonize with the other mom furnishings. Percy Smith, of the furniture corporation, made the offer to the University. He is a for mer Oregon student. Smith Attends IVItTlina Of Hoy Scout Council Dr. Warren D. Smith, professor 'f geology, gent to Koseburg last light to attend a meeting of the A’llamette Boy Scout council. Dr. Smith is chairman of the Court of Honor for the council. IVac*e Advocates (( ontimied from fooc out') smt to interested persons tluough >ut the state, soliciting active help n the name drive. Sufficient blanks to bring in 1,000 or 3,000 names are expected o be checked out tonight. Send the Emerald to your friends. Ban on Jazz Off For Minstrel Show Phi Mu Alpha Will Present Swing Music Concert in School Auditorium The closed door policy on jazz will be overlooked at the music school auditorium Thursday night, when Phi Mu Alpha presents its "Modern Minstrel Show.” For the first time in the history of the University, jazz music will be played in public by a band of picked campus musicians directed by Earl Scott, Portland, according to Jimmy Morrison, director and master-of-ceremonies of the shojv. “Those who see the show are in for a mild surprise,” Morrison said, “as our idea of a 'modern' minstrel show does not include a lot of ‘corny’ gags. The program will not be entirely jazz music, or ‘swing” concert, for Phi Mu Alpha has en deavored to build a well-rounded program of representative music of today.” Twenty-two members of the hon orary will take active part in the program. Robert Garretson is scheduled to play a classical piano number; Wayne and Wendell Gil frey, a baritone horn and bassoon duet; Grayson Ross will sing with the chorus; other vocalists and in strumentalists will perform. A Ray Noble arrangement of “Blue Dan ube” will be played by the orches tra. Admission is 2,r> cents. All seats are reserved. Proceeds from the show will be used to help send a delegation of Phi Mu Alpha mem bers to its province convention in Pullman May 1-2. Science Council Has Quarterly Meeting The quarterly meeting of the So cial Science Research council wus held at 4 o’clock yesterday after noon to decide and discuss applica tions for assistants in research pro jects next year. Appointments for next fall will he announced at a later date. Theta Clii-DG (Continued from page one) Lamina-Phi Sigma Kappa’s politi cal pot and Beta Theta Pi-Pi Beta Phi’s “Skunk Hollow” slingshot range. Judges were: Mrs. Alice B. Mac luff. Dr. and Mrs. Schwering, Ralph Schomp, and Prof. E. C. A. Lesch. Elizabeth Turner, chairman of the AWS event, expressed her ap preciation yesterday for the help Skull and Dagger gave to insure the success of the carnival. FOR MOTHER’S DAY Make this day a happy one give her the one thing she will most appreciate— i 1 'l our Photograph Kcnnell-Ellis Studios H MINIM 111—MX! HI State Board Will Meet at Ashland IIO Medical School May Be Permitted to Educate Health Officers Formal permission allowing the tlniversity of Oregon medical school to add the necessary course for ed ucation of public health officers and nurses will be among the business considered by the state board of higher education at its monthly meeting in Ashland next Monday. Selection of the University medi cal school as one of the few institu tions in the country permitted to prepare public health officers and nurses, was made recently by the federal government. The choice was made both because of the reputa tion established by the school and because it is the only class A medi cal school in the northwest. Will Approve Budgets Chief business of the board, how ever, will be the approval of the operating budgets for the various schools connected with the state system. These budgets have been prepared during the past several weeks. Routine business such as the changing of course numbers and various minor appointments will probably conclude any action the board may take at the meeting. I Following the meeting, members of the board will inspect agricultur al experiment stations at Talent and Medford as well as the plant of the normal school at Ashland, where the meeting is being held. Milk Shakes 10c Patronize Our Fountain LEMON O PHARMACY We Deliver Phone 2717 13th and Alder Let IRWIN and IRWIN 643 East 13t1i Street PHONE 317 Freshen Your Wardrobe Ex-department Head Visits Here Monday W. G. Beattie, who was director of the department of social welfare and associate professor of education at the University last year, visited the campus Monday morning be fore leaving for San Francisco on a three month’s vacation. During the past year, Mr. Beat tie has been state director of adult education with the WPA, with head quarters in Portland. He is also assistant director of the Portland summer session, and will teach courses in education there this summer. r 1 Eugene’s Own Store McMorran & Washburne Merchandise of Merit Only PHONE 2700 For Absolute Freedom and Thrilling Beauty— No Mend Knee Highs 3 Thread Chiffon Weight Maybe you have noticed how beautifully the new copper shades in hosiery blend with that peculiar brown on Spalding Oxfords. We have the shades in the No Mend Knee Length Hosiery. tut' FIRST FLOOR • POLITIX • Handbills — Placards Candidate Cards Printed Vote X Valley Printing and Win! Valley Printing Co. Stationers Phone 470 76-82 W. Broadway CLEANING WHITE SUITS OPEN UNTIL Is Our Specialty! We will press your suit while you wait. 15 per cent reducation for cash and carry. THE BEST CLEANERS Phone 740 821 East 13th St. Oregon Song Series This is tin' second in a series of Oregon songs representing various periods in the growth of the University. mini uiniiiiji'iiiii m i w w pmarwK • » nwniiiwiinin .. riuitiiiiii Recollections always linger of my Alma Mater. Where her standards point to vict’ry, for each son and daughter; Midst the coast and Cascade ranges, dauntless is the yellow; May her banner wave forever ideals that we hallow. Like the giant fir abounding, o'er the hills surrounding. Are the roses of past conquests, cowardice defying. In the archives of my school-days lives the Lemon Color May we thru the ages, ever emulate thy valor. By Willamette's sparkling water, stands our noble Alma Mater; _ Sing thy praises evermore of battles fought and won. Sweet remembrances abiding of the same canoes gliding. DREAMS OF MY OREGON on vvi, iuuuuoinm.v.1 aounut; i>i tut cmuiv v cvauwo ^uuiut;, j Let me dream by the old mill race dreams of my Oregon. Dudley Huntington (McCoshi j ♦Courtesy the University Co-op POOLE FUNERAL HOME International Ball Set Friday Night Flaps of Foreign Nations To Decorate Gerlinger Tickets on Sale — The International ball Friday night will be the climax to Inter national Peace week, which I started yesterday when Smedley D. Butler spoke to students and townspeople at Gerlinger. Gerlinger hall will be appropri j ately decorated for the ball with I the flags of foreign nations. These were loaned by Dr. “Deacon” Rich mond, who is the official flag man of the Eugene Rotary club. Sam Fort, who was in charge of the decorations for Frosh Glee, will decorate for the ball and for the model league Thursday evening in Villard. | Paul Plank has planned a pro gram for the intermission which will be announced later in the week. The music will be furnished by Buck McGowan and his full \ orchestra. Tickets, which are 75 cents a couple, will be sold by Skull and Dagger members on the campus this morning. Ten in Infirmary Over Weekend Ten students remained in the in firmary over the weekend. Tne list includede Venita Brous, Helen Os land, Gilbert Schultz, Richard Reum, Raymond Platts, Roderick Aya, Jack Gavin, Clyde Walker, Beverly Caverhill, and Doyle Pigg. 1929 Graduate Weds Miss Edith Rothstein and Man uel R. Schnitzer were married in Portland on March 29. Mrs. Schnit zer is a graduate of the University of Minnesota. Mr. Schnitzer is a graduate of the University with the class of 1929 and is a member of Sigma Alpha Mu. Send the Emerald to your friends Subscription rates $2.50 per year. Educated Rat Given New Home By Psych Profs About 3 p. m. yesterday small, towheaded George Billings wan dered into Condon and asked where he could get a white rat. Puzzled bystanders sent him up to the psy c h o 1 o g y department, for they! thought "they used rats up there for something.” Wearily George climbed to the third floor of Condon. There he saw Dr. L. S. Beck, psychologist, and re peated his request. Dr. Beck di rected him to Dr. Calvin Hall, also a psychologist, who has charge of rat experimentation. Dr. Hall asked George what he wanted it for, and George, who was getting a little tired and frightened by this time replied that he wanted a big white rat for a pet. Notes were sent and several calls made and George finally became the proud possessor of the largest white rat in the rat shack. George’s rat will have the advantages of an education, it was said, as it has been a subject of learning experi mentations carried out by the psy chologists. George is 11 years old and a pupil of Francis Willard grade school. Yeomen Meeting Off Till Thursday The Oregon Yeomen meeting which was originally to be held to morrow night has been postponed until Thursday at 7:30 because of its being the night before campus elections. At the meeting Thursday night, nominations will be made for offi cers for the coming year. They will also discuss plans for the next year's work. Fred Gieseke appointed Tom Wildish chairman of a committee to work with Helen Lewis of the Orides, on a picnic to be given about the middle of May by the combined groups. John Miller, James Mountain, and Lew Evans have been named to help Wildish for the Yeomen, the Orides assistants have not been se lected as yet. (nini)[(i]fnHri]rnlin]rn]Fn]!KUnl!fn}rrD[n)n3m]|n][K]rn]fn]|n!rft]fHHn]r Final Dates Set For Jewett Contest Final dates for the annual W. F. Jewett poetry reading contest have been definitely set as April 22 and 23. John L. Casteel announced Mon day that the preliminary contest for the sixteen entrants will be held Wednesday at 4 p. m. All persons entering the contest must come to room 13 in Friendly hall at 3:45 to morrow to have sections and speak ing order assigned. Finals for the six persons chosen tomorrow will be held in the men’s lounge at. Gerlinger hall. The pub lic is invited. Prizes this year arc $20, $15, and $5. Omega, Abba (Continued from page three) wild and woolly session. Zeta hall did not score until the fifth, when it tallied three counts. In the sixth the determined Hallmen pushed five more runs home to bring the score to 16 to 8, adding five more in the final inning to set the final count at 16 to 13. Cannon pitched for the Dabbas, while Truby and Patterson worked for the losers. Big Ed Jacobs was the class of the day’s play, with his sparkling work on the initial sack for the Abba Dabba team. Behind the stellar pitching of Beanpole Wheelock, the sweet hearts of Sigma Chi scorched the Yeomen by an 11 to 3 count. The castlemen counted two in each of the first two innings, followed up with four tallies in the third, and three more in the fourth to win the contest handily. Hodes opposed Wheelock on the mound. The championship playoffs will be conducted on a round-robin basis, rather than an elimination basis, according to word received from Marion Weitz, director of in tramural sports. The Pi Kaps and Omega hall will play off for the league four title this afternoon at 4 o’clock, and the round-robin tourney will start tomorrow at 4. Alpha Tau Omega, Beta Theta Pi, and Abba Dabba are already as sured of a place in the champion ship playoff. 3 fn3173 fH! ITU fin Ini IKHnl [r3170 fnl R3 fnl fnl HU fin Ini [73 In] fn] HU fnl frD Extra ! Extra! Extra? When the Newsboy Shouts: You Are Curious to Inspect His Paper to See What Has Happened When Eugene Merchants Shout About Good Bargain Through the Emerald You Should Be Just as Curious to Inspect Their Merchandise — It Will Pay You — The Eugene merchants who support your Emerald have goods to sell you that you need, or they would not spend money to get their message to you. If these merchants did not feel that their merchandise was the best in quality at the price offered, the would not spend money to get this message to you. And, if they felt that you would not make subse quent purchases at their stores, thev would not continu ously spend money in the Emerald to help keep your trade. It is to our mutual benefit that you choose Emerald advertisers as a directory for vour Eugene buying—bene ficial to you, because you are dealing with merchants who are after vour continued patronage—beneficial to us, be cause with “advertising results” we are able to put out a better Emerald. “Mention Emerald Advertising When You Buy”