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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1936)
Hall, Pallett on Committees for Tenth Dad’s Day November 13, 14 Dale Set; Rook-Frosh Game And Banquet Set for Parents" Propram Barnard Hall was appointed general chairman of the tenth an nual Dad’s Day on the University campus by Fred Hammond, stu dent body president. Hall and his co-workers have begun their work of contacting fathers of the stu dents and welcoming them to the two-day affair to be held Novem ber 13 and 14. Earl M. Pallett, registrar and faculty chairman of the day said. ‘‘There has been some confusion as to the date. Dad's Day has defin itely been set for November 13 and 14. Some think that the event will be held in conjunction with Ho/ne coming. This is not true, however.” A freshman football game on the home field will be the highlight of the two-day program. The Duck lings are to play Oregon State’s rooks Friday of that weekend. The day for the banquet and the place where it will be held will be named in a few days, Pallett said. Working with Hall on the Dad’s Day committee are Robert Lee, publicity; Robert Moffett, adver tising; Phyllis Gardner, banquet; Josephine McGilchrist. registra tion; and Gladys Battleson, secre tary. Besides Mr. Pallett the fac ulty committee consists of George H. Godfrey, publicity; George Bel knap, advertising; Virgil D. Earl, registration; Mrs. Genevieve Tur nip seed, banquet; and Clifford Constance, awards. Co-ops Serving Student Needs, Says Onthank Karl W. Onthank. dean of per sonnel, told the cooperators of Campbell house recently that stu dent living cooperatives, while fur nishing inexpensive board and room, are filling their most impor tant function in giving students a philosophy of life for a society which is becoming more and more sold on the whole idea of coopera ' tion as the most rational way of life. The experience of group living | which many students would other wise not get, was also mentioned as an important function of the cooperative houses. The housing administration, he said, was once frankly skeptical of cooperative housing, but now looks to it as a vital and growing feature of col lege life. He congratulated the co operators for successes of the past ! year, and particularly urged the i development of new leadership to insure the permanency of coopera tive housing on the Oregon cam 1 pus. Richard Hagopian Wins Phi Mu Alpha Award The Phi Mu Alpha scholarship has been awarded to Richard Hagopian, a freshman and voice student from Revere, Massachu setts. Phi Mu Alpha, men's profession al music honorary, awards one year scholarship each year to the contestant who, in the minds of the judges, shows the best musician ship, the most accomplishment, and the most promise. The judges for the contest were Paul Petri, George Hopkins, and John J. Landsbury, alt members of the staff of the school of music. Room for the gang, TAYLOR'S, ad Don’t Squint BELIEVE, and RELIVEN ! Glasses, scientifically fitted by our experts, quickly will relieve your eyes of the "strains" which cause squinting. This scien- 2 tifically provided optical relief, shortly will result in relivened sight, as well. Absence of squinting will restore good looks j Smart glasses we fashion will complement them, furthermore, j ELLA MEADE OPTOMETRIST THE DOORWAY TO FINE FOODS College Inn 735 SVV Broadway Restaurant Coffee Shop Portland's popular rendezvous for all college and high school students. On Broadway next to the Orpheum Theater. OPEN ALL NIGHT “Worthwhile photography at a reasonable price. ’ KENNELL-ELLIS SXSl Willamette StudentLoansTotal $2,346 in Last Year A total of 2.348 student loans have been issued by the- loan de I partment of the University in the fiscal year 1935-36. The loans equal $56,248.63 and have been is sued to 453 women and 1,893 men. Freshmen were granted 512 loans amounting to $9,288.58. Sophomores received 800 equaling $17,635.24. juniors received 364 amounting to $8,419.39, seniors re ceived 518 equaling $15,205.47. Loans granted to graduate stu ; dents number 152 amounting to $5,699.95. Juniors and seniors are preferred borrowers, since they have demon strated their ability to do college I work successfully. They are with | in a year or two of graduation and their accumulated indebtedness is | not likely to be a burden too heavy i tor them to carry. Interest on all I University loans is charged for at the rate of six per cent, payable annually. In case a borrower re news his loan, the rate of interest is raised to eight per cent. The personal qualities considered in applicants are: scholastic rec ord, reputation, need for aid amount of present indebtedness ability to repay and effort which the student has made to assist himself. All applications ar;*made through the de^n of men’s office The Firing Line (Continued from page three) consensus of all seems to foe: “Yol l>et. Davis is an all-American.” He must be good. * » * One of the things Oregon's tie with Stanford accomplished wa: silencing the talk about the In dians’ open practice. For severa seasons, ever since Tiny Thornhil took over the reins, Stanford ha: boasted that all its practice ses sions were open to the public. This week it happened. Thorn hill announced that there will be closed drill from now on. Oh no it’s not secret. Just “semi-secret.' Meaning that a few of the choser can get in by pulling the propei strings. When the Indians had everyone else at their mercy, they didn’t need to worry' about scouts at prac tice periods. Now it’s different and no wonder. Passing Show (Continued from pane one) cessitate many reclamation pro jects in the near future and coop eration with the federal govern ment is needed, it was said at the meeting. Turns Killer A huge black bear, a “pet” at traction at a roadside restaurant and filling station in Ellsworth Maine, yesterday attacked amJ killed his keeper and helper. The keeper, George Langley, 60, was chased from the bear’s cage when he brought food for his “pet.” James Virtue, 68. grabbed a shovel and struck the animal, but was slapped down and mangled be fore a neighbor who came to the rescue could help. The enraged beast was shot down- as it stood over Virtue’s body, human blood drooling from its mouth and drip ping from its claws. Tax Limitations (Continued from pan1' one) | elementary education by its sev ere cuts in revenue. Students in contact with the ad ministration finances of various departments find that this year's budget for the higher education is based on an allottment of $1,000. I 000 loss than in 1929, although en j rollment is back to the 3,000 mark Various friends of higher edu i cation throughout the state have written in, asking what will hap pen to higher education should this measure pass. The answer, accord ing to such noted authorities a: Henry Reed, former Multnomal county assessor, is that by 1942 th. higher education allottment wouk be cut another $1,000,000. HOME COMING isn’t complete without a float in front of your house to welcome the grads. Wallboard — Paint — Nails and a Wide Variety of Other Building Materials at Twin Oaks Building Supply Co. 069 High St. Phone 7Si2 Lassen Park Naturalist To Lecture at University Dr. Carl Swartzlow, park natur alist of Lassen national park in California, will give a lecture at the University of Oregon October 22 on Lassen national park, which will include not only the geology of the park, but also the research and I educational program carried on by , the park. I This lecture will be the first in a series of popular science lectures to be sponsored by the science fac ulty and the University museum. Dr. Swartzlow is from the Uni versity of Missouri, and is in the west on a two-year leave of ab sence. He will also speak before i the geology classes. Music Group to Give Smoker Monday at 8 The annual Phi Mu Alpha smok er will be given in the lounge oi the school of music next Mondaj evening at 8 p. m. All men students are invited tc this informal get-together. Enter tainment will be provided by the pledges of the organization whc will present instrumental and vo cal numbers. Refreshments will be served. YMCA Cabinet to Meet At Mossy Maples Camp A group will meet at the YWCA bungalow at 8 o’clock Thursdaj | evening to sing Oregon songs. Th< meeting under the direction of Mrs E. P. Seifert, is open to girls whc I like to sing. Girls who play the banjo, mandolin or guitar are askec to bring their instruments with ; them. Yeomen Expect Increase In Members This Year The Yeomen will meet at 7:3C Monday night in Gerlinger hall Entertainment will be in the forrr of a dancing class. The Yeomen are expecting ar increase in membership this yeai ranging from 200 to 250. exceeding ' last year's figure of 120 members i WLA Sc!iemiles> (Continnerf from page one) Living organizations will b< called Tuesday for their orders, t' | be delivered Thursday. Wednesday will be campus day | Thursday, houses and faculty: Fri , day, townspeople and hotels: anc ! Saturday, the football game I Booths will be set up in McMor ran and Washburne, also on Fri ! day. Each chairman will choose al j least five girls to work under hei and those having campus booth; 1 will have several each for different hours of the day. Working with Miss Edmonds are Beth Pratt, house orders; Frances Olson, hotels: Betty Meek, secre I tary; Myra Hulser, publicity; Mar garet Carmen, treasurer; Jean Ackerson, campus; Kae Coleman, faculty; Dorothy Dinslow, town or ders; Frederica Merrell, booths; and Marionbeth Wolfenden. foot ball game. Parade Float ( Continued from page one) June Brown, Kappa Kappa Gam ma; Cracker Vaughan, Phi Delta Theta; Jack Huemma, Chi Psi: Dick Olcott. Kappa Sigma; Nancy McAnulty, Chi Omega; Woody Robinson, Sigma Nu. Jerry Cameron, Zeta Hall; Rob j ert Swan, Canard hall; Don Smith. | Beta Theta Pi; Gerald Crisman, I Alpha Hall; Sam Fort. Alpha Tau Omega; Ralph Olsen, Pi Kappa Al pha: Fred Bradshaw. Sigma Chi; i and Jerry Chessman. Kappa Alpha ! Theta. . x' Voice Records (Continued from page one) deeply amazed by the recording results than boys, and that mos' students find their voices higher pitched and less clearly enuneiatec than expected. The recordings are made on a! ! uminum alloy disks which may b< played on any phonograph. Dur ing the second term all students ii the extempore speech classes wil have a second recording made oi the back of their first ones to shov what change or improvement ha: resulted from a term's training ii speech. See it Made Student Supplies - Toiletries Wee Maid Ice Cream LEMON “O” PHARMACY O. L. Ireland, Prop, Cor. 13th & Alder, Phone 2717 Marian Morse Is i New President Of Spinster Club Marion Morse, sophomore, was elected Wednesday as ^resident of the Spinsters’ club, na. .nal serv ice organization for town women. , Jessie Rae Atwater, junior, was \ chosen as vice-president of the wo- i men’s organization; Gayle Buchan an, junior, secretary; and Jean Schaefer, junior, treasurer. Miss Morse replaced Constance Lewis, who graduated last year and who is now working in Portland. Oregon chapters of the organiza tion are located in Portland. Salem, Corvallis, Eugenei and The Dalles. Plans are being laid for raising money for the S100 scholarship which is awarded each year to a. Eugene girl, Miss Morse said. i Emerald Ballot (Continued from page one) I vote will not be postponed until after the ROTC debate next week, although the challenging Oregon Committee for Peace and Freedom was active in urging this change : yesteday. The daily has editorially affirm ed its stand in the interests of the facts involved, the debate should precede the straw vote, but this paper’s activities in the latter part of next week would not allow pro per play to the poll results at that time. Debate Time Uncertain The Oregon Liberty association has declined to debate before the vote or during its first day, Mon day. Difficulties in organizing the compulsory sentiment into an ac tive group and in selecting debat ers was cited by Robert Prescott, active member of the association, as the reasons for the delay. The expected details of the time and place of the debate, therefore, were not available as the Emerald went to press last night. Unique in the ever-increasing national pastime of straw votes, ' the Emerald’s poll will be conduc ted more along the lines of an ac tual vote. Names will be checked off a list of all the students in the University as the ballots are hand ed out to voters by the poll clerks. Classifications Listed It i3 believed this new plan will be an insurance against unfair vot I ing. Any student in the University ! is eligible. The ballots will indi cate the presidential choice, opin ions on voluntary or compulsory ROTC, sex, year, major school, in-) dependence or affiliation in regard to fraternities and sororities, and in the case of men, whether or not they have taken any course of compulsory training here. Next week the Emerald will print a daily survey of the results in regard to the many angles made available by the classifications list ed. Two large committees have been named to clerk the polls and to tabulate the totals. The Emer ald has endeavored to contact per sons of every political belief for representation on the committees. Send the Emerald to your friends. Subscriptions only S3.00 per year. Oregon Graduate Goes To Harvard University Irving Anderson, a graduate of Oregon, now has a position in the psychology department at Harvard university. He obtained his bachelor's degree in* 1932 and his master’s degree in science from Oregon. He studied under Dr. Seashore of the Univer sity of Iowa. He married Josephine Potts in 1933, an Oregon graduate in so ciology, of that year. Broadway to Give Style Show Today The Broadway Incorporated will stage its semi-annual style show in the parlor of the chamber of commerce building Friday evening. October 16 at 8 o’clock. Hand knits from Fleishers Yarns, Incor porated will be shown under the su pervision of Miss Hazelle Bozeman. Assisting her will be Miss Mary Ann Franzwa, instructor in knit ting at The Broadway, and several models. The second half of the style show will be demoted to the showing of fur coais, sport coats, dresses, knitted suits, fotmals, and acces sories. Music will be furnished by a string trio composed of Elaine Moore, Martha Moore, and Roberta Moffitt. Dorothy and Joanne Ward will entertain with tap dancing. Thomas Issues I__— (Continued from page one) An advance guard of Oregon students will enter Portland to night. Many students are expect ! ing to leave this afternoon by auto. I No official rally will be held Fri j day night. Students will be greeted by an ! enthusiastic and well-practised ral ly team. The yell leaders have ac j cumulated an interesting reper I toire of antics and gymnastic | tricks. Ends Are Scarce (Continued front page three) Skinner or Foskett will be at I tackle, and Amato and Giovanini | will probably open at guard. Ver | non Moore may draw the starting j bid as pivotman. Complete list of the men mak ! ing the Portland trip follows: Tony Amato, Arleigh Bently. Chan Ber ; ry, Del Bjork, Tom Blackman, | Chuck Bracher, Bob Braddock. ■ Denny Breaid, Jerry Calhoun, John Engstrom, Bill Estes, Ed Farrar, Bill Foskett, Pat Fury. Dave Gam mon, Bob Hinman, Nello Giovanini, Lief Jacobsen. Jean Lacau, Don Kennedy, Dale Lasselle. Vern Moore, Cliff Morris, Jimmie Nich j olson. Hank Nilsen, John Pastega, Merle Peters, Bud Robertson, Er nie Robertson, Ken Skinner, Clift i Strom, Cecil Walden, and John Yerby. VARSITY Service Station 13th & Ililyard r :i!Wh’ iiHMttli - J&iaitit;-? STUDENTS Do You Know ? THAT YOU CAN NOW GET COMPLETE FLIGHT INSTRUCTION FOR AS LITTLE AS $48.00 CALL EUGENE AIRPORT Phone 1 1 95 FOR NATIONALLY KNOWN AND CORRECTLY STYLED CLOTHES Stop in at j See the New McGREGOR and WIL-WITE SWEATERS NUNN BUSH SHOES DOBBS HATS PHOENIX STRIPED SOX VAN HEUSEN SHIRTS BOTANY WOOL PLAID TIES S3 7 Willamette Eugene. Oregon Pot and Quill Plans Short Story Contest An original story contest for campus women will be conducted by Pot and Quill, women's writing honorary. From these stories, which are to be turned in by No vember 15, the organization will select its new members. Short stories, poems, plays, and any other form of literary work will be accepted. The manuscripts may be of any length and may deal with any subject. The place where the stories are to be turned in will be announced later. Judges will be active and alumni members of Pot and Quill. The meeting of the group planned for last evening has been postponed until next Tuesday. Interpreter (Continued from page one) she wrote in an article published that November in the Saturday Evening Post, because he w^as a superb opportunist and understood Germany, then crying for an out let. He cleverly played his trump card: militarism. Germans like to be dictated to, she wrote. It pleases them to be part of a system, to unquestiohing ly perform a duty. Hitler knew how to appeal to their class-con sciousness. Mrs. Ross, who with her husband is visiting at the home of Dean and Mrs. John Bovard, said the school which she was at tending was closed and that post modernism which had rapidly beer gaining momentum, was stifled. Khaki-clad Nazis present a unit ed front now, but behind it is i people whom Bismarck describe^ as having innumerable varied in terests. Some day, she wrote, Ger many's status as a nation must be determined. Hitler Teaching Needed “If Germany must continue te suffer before she learns the solu tion, then she needs someone like Hitler to teach her that politica histrionics are not the answer t( this crisis,” Mrs. Ross concludet in her article. Thus, back in 1932, an article which was pooh-poohed by follow ers of the European situation anc even by friends of Nancy Ross or the University of Oregon faculty has been proven true to the letter After interpreting Germany a: she saw it, Nancy Ross returnee to the United States to publish he first novel, “Friday to Monday.’ The past several months she anc her husband, a federal architect have been touring the country in a car and yacht-like house-trailer. In it she has a library of 150 books, and an extensive collection of mod ern art studies. “Even an ice-box and electric stove,’’ she added. Speaks to Editing Class Mrs. Ross spoke to Dean Eric Allen's class in editing Thursday morning about a modern art-ap preciating system suggested for the browsing room in the new li brary. While attending the University, Mrs. Ross was a member of Theta Sigma Phi, Pot and Quill, Kappa Kappa Gamma, and wrote special features for the Emerald. She will be in Eugene until the middle of next week. Send the Emerald to your friends. Subscriptions only $3.00 per year. EDWIN D. RATHBONE Osteopath Phones: Res. 3142; Office 3130 Office hours: 8-12 and 1:30-5 207 Tiffany Bldg. ,. » » «—•—•—• •—• Rader Beauty Salon Smart Hairdressing Eugene Hotel Bldg. Phone 2890 OREGON HOTEL and COFFEE SHOP 537 Willamette Phone 1860 3’ui)iaa!ti:KiiiiiiuuiuimmaHiiiriimiiiiuuiiiiiiuiiuiiiiiiiiiuuiiiiliiilluiimiiiiiiimni(u THIS WEEKEND DANCE with | DAN FLOOD’S MUSIC 1 1 1 at ; I BAL I TABARIN | Portland’s gay new Grille | in former Club Vietor Saturday Night a Big ■ | Football Dance Broadcast | i | 50c cover Friday, $1.00 Sat. | [ | AT3400 for reservations | 1 | or call Jack McCarty I | Eugene 940 ... (HAULM.« “the shop smart women prefer” Keyed to the tempo of modern youth! The Chumley “Streamliner” Color 2112 22 22'> Black 23 Brown Navy Rust London Tan Spruce Green Nickel Grev Bright Red Bright Green Cash ( ) Charge C.O.D. t > ( ) Broadway near Alder A hat versatile enough to suit all the varied occasions of the hurry ng miss of today! Wear it as a snap brim—or as a Breton rolled all around. Rain or shine, it will come up smiling for the “Streamliner” is made to rigid specifi cations in fine fur felt. Mail Orders Promptly Filled Just check the blank at left for the color in the size you wear. Charles F. Berg Second Floor Portland, Oregon