Greater "O’ Group Works in Summer Bill Sehlotli’s Committee Holds Picnics, Dances ^ Throughout Oregon Greater Oregon again was in troduced to entering freshmen through the medium of the Greater Oregon committee which carried on the summer rushing throughout the state. Bill Schloth was chair man for the state-wide committee and his co-workers were active students of the University. The Portland area was divided into high school sections including Jeanne Aronson as Grant high chairman; Betty Riesch, Washing ton high; George Knight, Hills' Military; Molly Cunningham. Lin coln; and Genevieve McNihce, Jef ferson. Mildred Blackburne was general chairman for the Portland group. me ciimax ui me son came on September 3 when the University gave a picnic at Jantzen Beach. Mothers and dads, alumni, and students, as well as Oregon rushees, were guests on that day. Kwamas and Skull and Daggers made up the reception committee. An attendance contest was one of the added attractions of the picnic. A loving cup was donated by a Portland jeweler for the largest number in attendance from the living groups. Chi Omega was winner of the trophy, Alpha Tau Omega took the second place, and Chi Psi was third. The cup was awarded after intermission at the dance which followed the picnic. A list of popular songs was played during the half-hour radio broadcast. The songs had been chosen by University students and rushees. The radio broadcast was made over the Columbia network and was sent out over 17 stations. Larger Oregana (Continued from page one) living organizations and indepen dent groups. The girls selected will be displayed in a novel beauty and personality section. The personal ity half of the section will picture campus leaders. Another novel introduction to Oregon yearbooks is the attractive two-page display of each living organization. The pages will tell through pictures the activity of the group. In addition to the usual in dividual portraits, there will be displayed snaps of various mem bers, portraits of the officers, and pictures of the formal dance. Sales Start Friday The subscription campaign for the 1937 book will start Friday, and Casciato is confident that the sales will exceed the 1500 mark set by last year’s volume. Editor Casciato urges that all students who are not at present on the staff but wish to work on the 1937 book see him at once at his office in the new ASUO head quarters. Howe Appointed (Continued from page one) economics department staff as in structors. Three new appointments in the school of education, all of which had been announced previously, have been formally approved by the board of higher education. They are Dr. Elizabeth Montgom ery and Dr. Luther L. Mays, who will take over the remedial teach ing and atypical children clinic work, and Dr. Wendell S. Brooks, who will take over the work of Professor F. L. Stetson, who has been granted a leave of absence for a year. Dr. LeRoy Detling, graduate of the University of Oregon who re ceiired both his master of arts and doctor of philosophy degrees from Stanford, has been appointed as sistant professor of botany, subject to approval of the board at its next meeting. Instructors and Assistants Named Other appointments announced today include: H. C. McMurty, assistant in the registrar's office; Dorothy Ball, j Stanley E. Williamson, Faul Hughes, instructors in education: Edward D. Kittoe, instructor in ed- I ucation; William A. Miller, part World's I argest Airplane Hangar Now under construction at Santa Monica, Cal., is this -hanger. The structure, 300 feet long, is ac claimed the world's largest and is being built to h ’.use future airplanes of 200-foot wiugspread. time instructor in physics; Charles A. Reed, Jr., part time instructor in zoology; John C. Goplerud, grad uate assistant in business adminis tration; Adolph J. Phillips, Ernest A. Jacobson, graduate assistants in education; Mrs. Helen S. Grubbe, Valborg Anderson, Edward F. Kretzer, Dorothy Blair, Jack W. Huggins, graduate assistants in English; Leland Thielemann, Hazel Miller Howe, graduate assistants in Romance languages; Mary Leola Nelson, Ruby Findley Ellis, gradu ate assistants in economics; Elias Hull Porter, Gordon R. Williams, graduate assistants in psychology; Mildred Baker, Marian Bcezley, i Wilbert E. Moore, graduate assis tants in social survey; E. N. War ren, Eleanor Tonsing, Earle Vos sen, physical education. fcHello* Dance (Continued from page one) will not be disappointing, judging from the novelty numbers and un usual arrangements planned for the colorful Oregon “first get together.” Tickets at $1 per couple go on sale immediately at all living or ganizations and at the University Co-op. Club Rates on Tickets A special club rate of 75 cents a couple is offered if tickets are bought in blocks of ten or more by living organization members. Evening dates at the sorority houses will be cancelled Friday night so that freshman girls will be free to attend the night football game and “hello” dance immediately following. Sorority Rushing (Continued from page one) Johnson hall at 7:30 a. m. Rushees are to reply by 9:30 a. m. at the Panhellenic office in the hotel. Afternoon correspondence from houses to''rushees must be in the campus office by 2:30. Answers from rushees to houses must be in the hotel office by 3:30. Sorority women do not break dates with rushees. If necessary for a rushes to break a date, she must notify the Pahellenic repre sentative in the hotel, who will then notify the house. Rushees are not to phone houses. Rushing' Hours Set No student shall be bid before she is officially registered. Rushees call for bids after preference din ner at S o'clock and answer by going immediately to the house chosen. Luncheon hour shall be from 12 noon until 1:30 p. m. Dinner is from 6:30 until 8:30. Evening dates shall be from 8:30 until 10:00 p. m. All rushees must be in their room., by 10:30 p. m. A Panheilenic jury meets every Paint This Week ' V ©* % o ° o Your Furniture and Rooms, with WATERSPAI! easy work ing ENAMEL and other PITTSBURGH PAINTS, BUY AT THIS SIGN The Handy Uptown Store 103s Willamette St. day during rush week to decide upon any violation of rules. House.-' and rushees are asked to report any violations. A violation on the part of a rushee will automatically cancel her opportunity to pledge. Frosli Meet (Continued from page one) D. Earl, dean of men; Mrs. Alice B. Macduff, assistant dean of wo men and housing secretary. Others to Speak Miss Janet Smith, employment secretary; and O. F. Stoddard, dean of the lower division, will make short speeches. President Boyer will deliver a brief address of welcome. Announcements of events for the remainder of rush week will be made by Dean Onthank. Freshmen will be warned to follow directions on printed instructions and sched ules they have already received, in order to avoid confusion and penalties. Mortar Board, senior women’s service honorary, will usher at the assembly. 100 Students (Continued from page one) caid, formerly occupied by Pi Kap pa Alpha. A total of 27 men are expected to live at this unit. Women Take Old Annex The women’s cooperative, start ed last spring at 1414 University, will also utilize the old infirmary annex to house 35 or more girls. Mrs. Doris Walzen, the new house mother, said the organizzation plans to use the kitchen and din ing room facilities at the Univer sity street unit to serve the entire membership. , A semi-cooperative organization Student Housing Committee, will again run this year under the di rection of.Andy Gogdonovich, ex ecutive secretary, at 1136 Alder, the former Phi Mu sorority house. It is expected to have the large est enrollment of any of the units, possibly 40 or 45. S.C.A. May Enlarge The S.C.A. at 1532 Kincaid has already announced that in the event a large number of appli cants have to be turned down it may enlarge to two units. The women’s co-op may also find it necessary to add another unit later in the year. Rates in the houses are expected to settle be tween §16 and $18, with each mem ber required to do several hours work each week. ^aiumiiiia ... | WELCOME Old and New Students For 20 years we have had | the pleasure of serving Uni- ^ versify of Oregon students. UNIVERSITY TAILOR 1128 Alder St. Phone 2641 IniiniHiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiniiiiiuiiiiiimnmiiiiiiiimiiiiiiimimiHuiuiiiimim'miiiiiiimti^ EducationProfGoes East to Make Study Vacancy Wit! Be Filled tty Montana Poly Executive For Year Period I F. L. Stetson, professor of edu cation at the University of Oregon, . will leave here this week for Wash- I ington. D. C., where he will serve •_s one of four specialists who will make a thorough study and in- | vestigatien on “cooperative study j c-f econdary school standards,” for j one of the large eastern founda- j tions, according to a recent nn nounccment. More than $ir>0,000 has been set aside by the founda- : tion for this study, regarded as one j of the most important undertaken j in recent years in this field. Dr. Brooks Will Fill Ftaeo A icave cu absence tor a year has been granted to Professor Stetson. During his absence his place here will be filled by Dr. Wendell S. Brooks, president of the Billings, Montana. Polytechnic Institute. Recommendations f o r the leave of absence for Professor Stetson and appointment of Dr. Brooks as acting professor have been forwarded by Dr. C. Valentine Boyer to Chancellor F. M. Hunter, at the request of Dr. J. R. Jewell, dean of the school of education. Professor Stetson, a recognized authority in the field of secondary j education, will carry on with his j colleagues a survey of approxi- | mately 200 high schools in various j sections of the country. These | have been selected as ‘'typical”; yet each has one or more features that are unusual. It is felt that these features can be evaluated by experts and the results be made known to all educators. A possible educational renaissance in the sec ondary field is foreseen. The United States office of education will co operate with the experts in the woi*k. Breaks Prominent in Education Dr. Brooks, who will come here for the start of the fall term, is a graduate of Yale university. He obtained his master of arts degree from Chicago, a doctor of philos ophy degree from Northwestern, and has been a m.ember of the faculties of the universities of Michigan and Colorado. Since com ing west he has been prominent Wilson Music House Formerly "The Music Box” 39 East Tenth St. We’ve got ’em all the latest hits in records and sheet mu sic—also big, fresh stock of supplies for music students. Telephone 727 insulated . . . Lifetime0 Guarantee...2-way Feather touch0 Point... Streamlined Balance0 ... ONE-STROKE Vacuum and Lever Filling, takes in over 400 per cent more SKRIP per stroke than multiple stroke pens ...Visible SKRIP supply • ..Dry-proof, Air-sealed I With the 7 features that equip your hand and free your mind in class Uses the Last Drop Pen-SKRIP, Successor to Ink, preserves pen "insjdes," flows easily, driesquickly. 2oz.,15c. Permanent, or Wash able, in colors. GLANCE and be warned in advance of your fluid supply—for both these Sheaffers are visible-fluid type. TOUCH point to paper and write without coaxing — for each has a perfect-flowing Feathertouch° point. TACKLE a long theme or a book with ' confidence—for each has a huge fluid reservoir. ENJOY that pen performance for good—for both the VisisSated lever-fill and the vacuum-fill Sheaffer are Lifetime0 guaranteed. V/. A. SHEAFFER PEN CO., FORT MADISON, IOWA. All Lifetime0 pens are unconditionally guaranteed for the life of I the owner except against loss and willful damage—when serviced < subject only to insurance, postage, handling charge—35c. j /Itez&cvtzxf ,A ¥IU$U TO TH€ LAST 080* • IKSUMTIO FOR «RFICT FLOW * M 7-^ SheafferS PENS, oil colors, $2.25 to $18 PENCILS, $1 to $5 • Vacuum — Visibly SKRIP Supply $8.75 to $10 V* 3.50 Plctinum-chcnnc! ^FeathertouchJ point. V/rites 2 ways, regular or fine. SKEIE’S JEWELRY STORE 927 Willamette Street Phone 41 1 All pens $1.00 clown and 50c per week. No carrying charge. Nice Kitty I _ __I Who'll want to go to the South Sea Isles in search of beauty after seeing Kitty Williams in her Ta hiti-inspired outfit at Miami Beach, Florida ? It’s a three-piece outfit of printed linen in multi-colored geometric design. in the affairs of the Northwest Association of Colleges and Pre paratory Schools. Tell them you saw their ad in the Emerald. _* Mail the Emerald to friends. I Student Activity (Continued from faeje one) gives the purchaser tickets to six football games, seats at two con certs. subscription to the Oregon Emerald, privileges to participate in campus activities, and a bonus attraction not yet announced. "Real value in a full prSgram j of athletic and educational activi- | ties will be offered to students this fall. F ns a,rc being made to ex tend tie present range of student activities, in which only holders of student activities books can par ticipate. This term's AsUO pro gram certainty offers full value for the money," Ralph S. Schomp, manager of educational activities, said in announcing the opening of the sale. Persons wishing to oblaiu stu dent activities books before regis tration day may purchase them at the ASUO offices iu the old dis pensary building. Concert groups to appear on the campus during the coming term are Don Cossacks Male Chorus, Sunday, October 25. Roland Hayes, Sunday, December 6, and a special bonus attraction scheduled Decem ber 10. Tickets for University of Oregon game?, with other colleges include University of Portland, September 25, in Eugene; University of Idaho, October 17, in Portland; Washing ton State college, October 24, in Eugene; University of Washing ton. October 31, in Portland; UCLA, November 7, in Portland; Oregon State college, November 21, in Corvallis. More value for th. money ha3 been the keynote of work dene by new managers of educational and athletic activities duflng the re organization of the ASUO last spring. Ralph S. Schomp, educational activities manager, has attempted during the summer months to formulate a more extensive pro gram for educational activities. Improvements in publications, larg er forensics groupincreased women’s activities, and broadening of other student activities will be carried out during the year. Worth Seeing!! Zipper Note Book New styles and sizes of the finest leather notebooks, brief eases, and portfolios. Just the thing for sehool. — $3.00 and up — Esterbrook Fountain Pens A durable penfj with interchange- Jp able parts. A new point is only 25c. Other pens from 50c up. Shew Card Colors . . . Complete assortment of Sheffield’s Colors. 2 oz. size 25c. Buy them by the dozen for $1.65. Sheffield India Ink A Downtown Store That Will Save You Money VALLEY PRINTING CO. STATION HRS Phone 470 76-82 West Broadway FOR THE SUPPLY IS LIMITED . . . fountain PENS Schaeffer, Parker and Waterman Pens 69c to $2.50 and up TYPING PAPER Stationery Artists’ Xiiimlics Come early if you want second-hand books—for the demand is always great. ALSO—New text books—as recom mended by your professors at the publishers’ list prices. —.. OFFICIAL BINDERS Official gray canvas books, die-stamped with the Oregon Seal in the school colors. NOTEBOOK PAPER In all .sizes, to fit. all types of looseleat' notebooks. Either lined or tmlined. m —u TYPEWRITERS Royal — Remington — Underwood Smith-Corcna For 1 Oc a day, you can “rent ’em or buy ’em” $3.00 Down — $3.00 Per Month Student Lamps L’’or vour stiulv' UNIVERSITY e CO-OP 3 ft EVERYTHING FOR THE STUDENT