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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 31, 1936)
Spring Grade , Standings j \re Revealed klpha Men Take Top Place; Pi Kaps, Alpha Xi Deltas Xext Alpha Xi Delta sorority and Al ha hall led the living organiza ions during spring term in the ush for scholastic honors, it has ieen revealed at the office of the Jniversity registrar. The men rere the smartest, however, post ng an average of 2.715, compared o 2.651 for the sorority. Women ,s a whole attained a much higher .verage than the men, leading hem 2.474 to 2.329. The all-TJni 'ersity average was 2.391. The highest possible average: vould be a 4 point, and would nean a straight A rating. Four joints are given for each hour of V, 3 for each hour of B, two for t, and one for D. Complete Standings Given Standings of women’s organiza ions: Alpha Xi Delta, Women’s 3o-op, Pi Beta Phi, Hendrick's rail, Delta Delta Delta, Alpha Imicron Pi, Alpha Delta Pi, Kappa Alpha Theta, Alpha Chi Omega, 3hi Omega, Alpha Phi, Zeta Tau Alpha, Alpha Gamma Delta, Kappa ;<appa Gamma, Susan Campbell lall, Delta Gamma, Gamma Phi Beta, Phi Mu, and Sigma Kappa. Bank of men’s organizations: j Mpha hall, Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma j rail, Omega hall, Men’3 Co-op, I Delta Upsilon, Theta Chi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Phi Kappa Psi, Sigma Alpha Mu, Alpha Tau Omega, Delta Tau Delta, Sigma Chi, Kap pa Sigma, Chi Psi, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Sigma Kappa, Sigma Nil, Zeta hall, Phi Gamma Delta, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Beta Theta Pi, and Gamma hall. Lem on-Yellow (Continued jrcm pane one) for the school, including an outline of the football season. KOTX Will Broadcast Dancing will begin in the pavil ion at 9 o’clock. Admission will be only 25 cents a person, through special arrangement with the comnnnv. and everyone who Is the ' least bit interested in the Univer sity of Oregon bas been urged to attend. The regular Jar.t'/en beach orchestra will plav and station KOTN will broadcast during the evening. "This type of meeting will be in valuable to von in making contacts ^ with vour future fellow students, faculty, the University alumni, and the mothers and fathers of students at Oregon,” Bill Schloth, executive secretary of the Greater Oregon committee has written prospective freshmen. "It will be one of the most-interesting as well as one of the largest affairs that the University has ever sponsored in Portland.” Mrs. K. C. Peets, president of the Oregon Mother’s club, has been heading that group’s committee, working with W. M. Davis and Arthur M. Geary for the Dads and alumni, respectively. Students co operating include Kathyrn Cole man, Bob Gridlev, Mildred Black burne, and Jim Wells. To the men’s or women’s living organization, including halls in the dormitories, regis tering the most members and special guests at .lantzen beach resort on University of Oregon day, September 3, a handsome silver loving cup will be awarded. The award has been offered by Zell Bros, of Portland. Throughout the evening, a registration booth will bo open in front of the main entrance to the dance hall in the sunken garden. All names must be registered there to count to wards the award. r-:-'J-E. .Stays At UO Ralph S. Sehomp, formerly as-j sistant graduate manager, will re main at the University as director I of educational activities. I Athletic Chief Anse Cornell, a graduate of Ore gon, who has returned to hLs alma mater to take charge of the ath letic administration of the Insti tution. Meads ASUO^ Fred Hammond, who will serve as student body president at Ore gon for the coming year. Welcome, *40! Iii a few weeks, you who have 1 selected the University of Ore j gon, will be “On the Cam j pus.” You have set for yourself i a goal. To reach it you must ac I cept responsibility and take ad vantage of every opportunity. Oregon offers you the opportun ity of a sound, well-rounded Uni versity training. It cannot, however, give you this oppor tunity unless you accept the re sponsibility and the advantages it offers. Whether you do well in your studies and get value received de pends almost entirely upon your attitude and industry. You will find distractions, here as else where, which, if not resisted by exercising your own will power, may prove harmful. The easiest way is not always the best way. You will find that a great deal of what you have set out to do will be accomplished through your own endeavor. These first few weeks are likely to be confusing, and at first glance the University may seem large and un i friendly. However, a principal aim | of the University and its students i is to make you feel at home. You will find that adulation I from your fellow students in activ ities comes much easier than aca demic achievements. A certain amount of praise is good for the soul, but a balance should be main tained. Activities alone are not a preparation for your life work. Your success here and in later life must be based on a wider scope, a : balance of interests, upon your willingness to work alone as well ■ as with a group of admirers. This is your University. Those of us who have been here for some time think it the finest, and we know that before you have been here more than a few weeks you and your classmates will be glad to call yourselves Oregon men and women. Ralph S. Scliomp, Manager, Educational Activit ies. 1206 Jobs Found (Continued from page one) work, should contact Miss Smith immediately and see her at their earliest possible convenience. A full-time permanent place ment service for graduating sen iors was installed by Miss Smith last year. Oregon’s football teams have de feated the University of Washing ton seven times within the last eight years. When you establish your University resi dence in Eugene establish your banking home with us—a banking home like your home bank. We have been here to welcome students for over 52 years. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF EUGENE Home Owned and Home Managed Since 1883 Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation This year marks the begin ning of a new era in student ac tivities. Under the separation of athletic and educational activi ties, the University of Oregon students this year will be of fered one of the fullest and most diversified activity programs ever attempted. Speaking for the athletic depai t ment, I sincerely believe that Ore gon athletics are definitely on the upgrade, with outstanding material and coaches in all branches. Along with this definite improvement, we are embarking in schedules which promise to provide the fin est in athletic competition. An ex ample is the 1936 varsity football schedule, which will pit Prink Cal lison’s Oregon Webfoots against every other Pacific Coast confer ence team. Six of these games will be held within the state, giving Oregon students an unprecedented opportunity to follow their team through the season. The success of this entire ath letic program depends upon the support it receives from the stu dents, who, rather than the coaches or the athletic manage ment, can really claim the Oregon teams as their own. Let me urge that all students who can possibly do so avail themselves of student body membership, for I am confi dent they will be more than repaid in sharing the successes enjoyed by our athletic teams. Anson B. Cornell, Athletic Manager. Student fees have been re allocated at the University. Mem bership in the ASUO will be $7 fall term, $5 winter, and $3 spring term. Welcome, you freshmen who will soon be registered in the University as members of the class of 1940! May your four years at Oregon be profitable ones. You are fortunate to be com ing to the University. Those of us who have spent several terms on the campus realize what a glorious future faces the insti tution. Optimism shines from every angle at Oregon. Enrollment has begun a decided climb after the natural slump dur Student Store Adds New Features Coming Fall Term During the summer a new de partment has been installed in the University of Oregon Co-op to fill a long-felt need for uniformity and efficiency in manuscript typing and mimeographing. For many years the graduate school, the library, and the students alike, have been dissatisfied with the quality of work done by typists, selected at random and with little or no knowledge of their previous work. Under the supervision of Miss Theda Spicer, who will herself de vote several hours a day during the school year to this work, a space has been set aside for this ing the depression. New officials have created closer ties among the state's several schools of higer er education. And now our Eugene campus has been the scene for the past year of bustling building ac tivity. Expenditures on such im provements the last 12 months soar past the million dollar mark. A huge new library is nearing completion on the newer part of the campus and by December 1 University officials expect to have the building ready for occupancy. The modern infirmary, long a need, is ready for service, and the new' men’s physical education plant ris ing near McArthur court will cer tainly fulfill a long need for such a building. Reorganization of the associated students, wrought by the optional fee set-up, is now functioning smoothly under new directors and clear sailing seems to lie ahead. As fall nears, I look forward to meeting every member of your class, in order to better equip my self to administer the highest ideals in student government. Yes, Mr. Freshman, welcome '40! Fred Hammond, President, Associated Students. Buy Pittsburgh Paint For your HOUSE : ROOMS : FURNITURE Easiest working—best covering. Call us for Painters to do your large jobs. FOR ART STUDENTS We sell good Brushes, Oil Colors and Supplies at LOWER PRICES than stores near the campus. Waldorf Paint Co. 1038 Willamette St. Opposite Register Guard Office “The Handy Up Town Store for Paints” |1,siaJ3isisi3jaiaiiaasM5iB!iaiSM5i5JsiMiaisjajsMMMM.'s®®aaaia®arMiaM=jMM®MiMia'siEEisiaiaMaaaE®aaEF2j 3 [S | The ’40 Co-ed Shoots I ! to Win with ! a e a ia 1 Hadley Fashions 1 1 i Tv 1 USJeJkJ This miss is wearing Archer, a new three piece Bradley, that will set your fall wardrobe to a flying start. Ellen Kaye Dresses $19.75 up Coats and Suits $19.75-$79.50 When you reach the campus, you will need a Bradley to make a hit. Brucewood $19.75 Original Styled t>y Ethel Freid IC.Hari 10th and Willamette Visit our Subway Pin Money Shop—Dresses $3.95-$7.95; Coats $9.95-$18.95 lasiaii purpose on the balcony of the 1 Co-op. Here themes, manuscripts, J theses and articles will be typed, j for students and faculty members, j mimeograph work done for houses; and individuals, and papers care- I fully edited by a competent staff 1 under Miss Spicer. The office will 1 be open at definite hours during ] the day, and the work will be r priced reasonably. University Will (Continued jrom page one) seek factual background in one of the newer sciences, psychology,, will be "Physiological Foundations of Human Behavior,’’ to be taught by Dr. A. R. Moore, professor of physiology. This course will take up the physiology of animal be havior, nerve physiology, tropisms, and conditional reflexes, as well as the effects of environment and internal secretions on animal con- | duct. Students who desire an under standing of the problems of ad justment of family life may enroll in “Family Relationships,” a course to be offered in the non-maior household economics department. It will be taught by Miss Emma jane Peterson, instructor in house hold economics. Flanked with evergreen shrub bery, an outdoor stage and ampi theater has been completed at the rear of the University’s music auditorium. Something Missing? —this co-ed is ready 1 -1-^ for the campus but has mislaid htr Heidel Hat. STYLES OF DISTINCTION E. Heidel-Hats 1007 Willamette Dave Morris ^oes to Heidelburg Dave Morris, who was to have >een senior class president at the Jniversity the coming year, left ast week for Heidelburg, Ger nany's famed University where he has been awarded a year’s scholar ship. Margilee Morse will automatic ally succeed to the presidency of her class, having been elected vice president last spring. This is the second successive year that the upper class has been ruled by a coed, Mary McCracken having held the post last year. GET READY NOW for those new positions that are opening up all over the country. Our business will train you quickly. Fall classes open Sept. 8th. BRADSHAW BUSINESS UNIVERSITY "A College—Not Just a School.” 841 Willamette St. Phone 260 Hotel Eugene “The Outstanding Hotel on the Pacific Highway” The Eugene Hotel Coffee shop, newly in stalled, has proven very popular with Colleg ians. Here is found reasonably priced food pre pared under the personal direction of Adolfo Simonelli, our famous chef. © * 200 Rooms 100 Baths Ralph Kruse, Manager E mam Oregon enthusiasts— both parents and alumni—are asking: W HAT’S THE /WQREGON’this Year? SPORTS... SOCIETY... ACTIVITY... Accomplishments of facul ty, students and the univer sity . . . No matter what phase of campus life, you will find the Oregon Daily Emerald editors have aptly caught the tempo of Oregon in their columns. They give you concisely, dra matically and understanding ly what you want. Puh-lenty Favorable — Believe You, Me! Get a load of this: The 1936 Webfoot team composed of — but wait! You can read all that “dope" in the news columns of this issue of the Emerald. Of more interest to you is the fact that you can continue to receive this “dope”—and ad vance dope it is—from this center of col legiate activity as soon as the action occurs this fall. Stories by Coach “Prink” Callison . . . personal interviews with players ... pictures . . news from the practice field . . from the players' bench ... all will go to make the Emerald unusually interesting to Oregon football followers. Clear, curt, concise, illustrated is the new mail edition of the Oregon Daily Emerald S3 Enclosed find (S3.00) ($1.25) for an Oregon Daily Emerald subscription. Mail it every day to Name Address —the University of Oregon Daily paper. It will be mailed to you by the term for $1.25 or at a greater saving, one year for $3.00. By filling out and mailing the coupon on your left, your copy of the Emerald will reach you immediately. Do it now!