Caramel Apple Sale Opens on Campus Today Booths at Condon, Old Libe, Education, and Co-op; Proceeds Go To Scholarship Fund Carameled apples will go on sale at nine o’clock this morning when the Kwamas, sophomore women’s honorary, will sponsor their first sale of the year. The apples will be sold at a nickel apiece from four booths on the campus. Proceeds are to go to a scholarship fund established by the Kwamas. Freshmen women who will sell are: Between Oregon and Condon, 9:00, Margaret Carlton; 10:00 Mig non Phipps; 11, Margaret Jossy, Jane Mabie, and Ann Dean; 1:00, Jane Weston, Betty Moore and Eileen Carroll; 2:00, Ann Fred erickson, Janet Dillehunt, and Peg gy Vermillion; 3:00 Ann Ernest, Mary Jane Wormser, Oloanne Dykeman; 4:00, Charlotte Sytles. Kae Coleman will sell during the noon hour. Old Libe, 10:00, Jean Merrill; 11, Pat Brugman, May Hoover, and Arleen Thurmond; 1:00 Margaret Fanning, Jean Ferrins, and Jane Burkitt; 2:00 Barbara Stevens, Peggy Lou Smith and Mary Fail ing; 3:00, Betty Lou Swart, Ruth Starett, and Jean Wiley; 4:00, Dorothy Denslow and Dorothy Ash. Phyllis Gardner will sell at noon. Education building, 10:00, Bar bara Needham; 11:00, Janet Cala van, Betty Young and Myra Hul ser; 2:00, Patsy Warren, Lila Hei berg, and Betty Williams; 3:00 Carol Hansel, Betty Lou Roberts Aida Mackie; 4:00, Betty Meek, and LaVern Littleton. Harriet Sarazin will sell at noon. College Side, 10:00, Jean Row son and Caroline Dudley; 11:00, Dorothy Bates, Jane Doud and Catherine Taylor; 1:00, Gerry Hartwick, Lillian Scott, and Paul ine Powers; 2:00, Annabelle Payne, Dorothy Ash, and Phyllis Bolter; 3:00, Betty Jane Van Dellon, Jeanne Wagge, and Izetta Heisler; 4:00, Betty Nichols. Miriam Fouch will sell at noon. Girls who are selling are asked to be at their booths promptly at the time they are to sell. Washington Evens (Continued from pane three) a point on the play on Gannon’s foul. That boosted a one-point Duck lead to four, 16 to 12, Ore gon's greatest advantage of the evening. Wagner left the fuss on fouls a moment later, but the Huskies, far from downcast, opened up with renewed fury. Gannon tipped in a rebound and after Win termute had caged another free1 throw, Werner potted a one-hander from the right on Gannon's out pass. Werner sank one of two gift ers on a fold by Lewis and tied the score at 17. Gannon dribbled in for a lay-in at the right, but Wintermute canned a clever one hander to knot things at 19. Gan non the converted on Anet’s foul to give Washington a 20-to-19 half-time lead. Wild and Woolly The first two minutes of the sec ond half were wild and woolly, with loads of missed shots on both sides. Lewis broke the scoring ice with a nifty under-hand lay-in of a pass he took from Johansen while on the dead run. Then Ziegenfuss hit his two one handers. Lewis brought Oregon up to 24 to 22 with a free throw, but Gannon and Werner holed field goals to give Washington a 28-to 22 margin. Silver laid in Lewis’ rebound, cutting it to 28 to 24, but the deliberate Egge potted a one hander from the right of the key hole to make it a 6-point lead for Washington with 10 minutes left. After a time out, Egge did it again, another one-hander, and Gannon followed by scoring on a tip-off play. Gannon caned a one hander for Washington's eighth consecutive point. Wintermute stopped the onslaught with a free throw, but Dorsey, Voelker, and Gannon dropped successive foul shots to give Washington its 14 point lead, 39 to 25. Goodwill Debate ish Columbia, Minnesota, Wiscon sin, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, New England, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Miss ouri, and Iowa. Members of the team are E. H. Pledger, LL.B., who graduated from Otago university in 1935, and J. H. Kemnitz, LL.M., who is now Mass Flight Across the Pacific ■_.: 4> mmmi '*{' »'—*wST4 Twelve Navy bombers took off from San Diego tor the Pearl Harbor Naval base on what was termed » “routine delivery.” This is the Navy’s most ambitious mass attempt to span the Pacifie. The planes carried a total of 7H men. In the upper scene is the entire complement, officers and crew. Style Show Is Part of School Humor Book Look your best, my fine feath ered friends! Soon will come the selection of the best dressers on the campus to model for the fashion section to be displayed in Scruples, campus humor mag azinq. Selections will be made from both the male and female spe cie of the Oregon campus group and no politics will enter into this choice. Poise, good taste, neatness will be the only basis for judging in this contest. Two volumes of Scruples will be published. One volume will be included in the 1937 Oregana and the other will be distributed among visitors, parents and stu dents during Junior weekend. Speech Groups To Make Trips Two speech symposium groups, . made up of University students ac tive in varsity forensics, will make j state-wide trips during February. These trips are sponsored by the educational activities board of the ASUO and are made each year to further interest in varsity foren sics. One group, under the direction of W. A. Dahlberg, assistant pro fessor of speech, will address au diences in Portland, Astoria, and Knappa-Svensen. The other group, which consists of Walter Eschebec k, Avery Combs, Edwin Robbins, and John Luvaas, will address the Newberg chamber of commerce, the Salem Kiwanis club, and the Salem Ro tary club. The group will also go to Portland, where they will study the J. W. Studebaker public forum programs, now being held there, j These forums, which are sponsored | by the U. S. department of educa tion are being given in leading Cities to aid adult citizens in an i organized quest for understanding ' of public affairs. John L. Casteel, director of the 1 speech department, will be in 1 charge of the second trip. completing the degree of bachelor | of arts and studying advanced 1 economics at Otago university. David Wilson, who was a mem- j 1 ber of the University of Oregon [ t Pacific basin debate team which | c visited New Zealand in 1931, will 11 take part in the assembly. Mr. Wilson is now connected with the i Japanese consulate in Portland. : c Plans are being made by Order t of the Mace, University of Oregon , e speech honorary, for a banquet to j 1 be given in honor of the New Zea- b land men, Kessler Cannon, presi-1 f dent of the honorary, announced f yesterday. I s Poetry Reading Lists Approved Students planning to take part in the W. F. Jewett poetry contest to be held Wednesday, March 3, (may secure a list of the approved poems at the speech department, the dramatics department or at the reference library. According to John L. Casteel, director of the speech department, the poetry speaking movement is comparatively new and might be considered a marked tendency back to the conception of poetry as something to be read aloud. Poetry speaking contests and festivals are popular in England. In the preface of the latest edition of the poems of John Masefield, he tells about attending a festival in Edinburgh and being so impressed by the beauty of poetry as spoken by the Scotch that on his return home he joined other poets in spon soring an English festival. Peace Campaigners to Talk in Portland Feb. 9 Sherwood Eddy, prominent pub lic affairs speaker, and Mauile Royden, noted peace campaigner, will be the principal speakers at the conference of the emergency peace campaign in Portland, Tues day, February 9.. Paul Elliott, secretary for the Pacific Northwest Emergency Peace campaign and chairman of Lhe league of nations organization and associated with similar other groups, has arranged the confer ence. Mr. Elliott urges that all per sons planning to attend the meet ings should make reservations, be cause of the limited capacity of :he auditorium. Reservations can be made either I :hrough Dean Onthank or Glenn | Griffith, YMCA secretary. Kigorous Training (C- titiHttf 1 from too* cfw) ows this. Dinner, a little gayety vith friends, and then sleep. In the evening, the ballerina who s not in her dressing room in good ime for make-up and the long itual of donning her ballet slip >ers is likely to find her name losted on the bulletin board for a ine. As an example of the life of the lallerinas, a bit of research reveal- j d intimacies of Tamara Touman- j va, youngest ballerina in the bal- : »t. She is the daughter of a Georg- | in princess and one of the Czar's fficers, and was born in a freight i rain that was carrying her moth- , r away from Russia ami the revo- | it ion. lu Paris she was discovered y Mine. Preobrajenska, one of the jrmer prima ballerinas of the ! .ussian Imperial Ballet. Under i jch tutelage she attained inter-1 national fame as a ballerina at the age of 17. tl Toumanova is one of the leading ballerinas in the ballet coming here. Her mother is her constant companion, and chaperone on all of her daughter's travels. WAA Badminton Begins This Week Belly Brown, Grilles, Wins First Game of Singles Tournament First rounds in the WAA bad minton tournament will be played this week. Contestants are asked to arrange the time and place of their matches, and to record the winners and losers on the score board in the gym in Gerlinger hall. Betty Brown, Orides, defeated Wilhelmina Gerot, Zeta Tau Alpha, 11-2, 11-1, in the first game of the singles tournament Tuesday after noon. Hours at which the gym is avail able are: indoor gym, 4 o’clock Tuesday, 1 o'clock Tuesday, Thurs day, Friday: outdoor gym 4 o' clock Tuesday, 3 o’clock Wednes day and Friday; 2 o’clock Friday, and 1 o’clock Tuesday and Thurs day. Singles Players Chosen Those who will meet in the first round of the singles tournament are Jane Bogue, Gamma Phi Beta, vs. Sylvia Sarlat, Sigma Kappa; Harriet Sarazin, Alpha Ornicron Pi, vs. Jessie Long, Alpha Xi Del ta; Olive White, Alpha Chi Omega, vs. Ardis Dillon, Hendricks hall: Margaret Bell, Gamma Phi Beta, vs. Dorothy Griswold. Sigma Kap pa; Gladys Battleson, Alpha Omi cron Pi, vs. Florence Bercovich, Alpha Xi Delta. Takako Nakajima, Susan Camp bell hall, vs. Myra Starbuck, Kappa Alpha Theta; Miriam Fouch, Gam ma Phi Beta, vs. Jane Weston, Pi Beta Phi; Dorothy Burgess, Susan Campbell hall, vs. Dorothy Ash, Chi Omega; Betty Crider, Gamma Phi Beta, vs. Georgia Langford, Sigma Kappa; Margaret Van Matre, Susan * Campbell hall, vs. Mary Fulton, Kappa Alpha Theta; Frances Olson, Gamma Phi Beta, vs. Mary Wormser, Pi Beta Phi; L. Faulkner, Susan Campbell hall, vs. Jean Palmer, Chi Omega; Pauline Morlan, Orides, vs. Evelyn Shields, Pi Beta Phi; Gayle Meyer, Gam ma Phi Beta, vs. Edith Ekstrom, Orides; and Betty Cleator, Alpha Dr. Taylor Is Thumbs Down on ‘Youth Act’ “Tf a college is going to finance (he way of all students who wish I to enter the institution, regardless of their scholastic abilities, the entire scheme of curriculum will have to be revised,” stated Dr. How ard R. Taylor, head of the psychology department of the University, when interviewed on his opinion of the California youth act introduced into the California legislature this last week. The act, if passed, will provide educational, vocational, and em ployment opportunities to high school and college students under the age of 2■> years, regardless of their grade standing and ability to learn. “America has reached the static degree that Europe has had for many years, that of industry not having room for uneducated youth. There was a time in our country when foreign countries were encouraged to send emigrants ; to help build our industry. Today, ! our factories are full, and labor I unions are so strongly organized j that they heartily discourage ad mittance of youth to their ranks,” continued Dr. Taylor. “If all students who were not financially able to attend school, were helped with this supposed aid 1 without regard to their abilities, I our institutions would be flooded and because they would not find what they supposed was there, w'ould become dissatisfied and cause considerable disturbance. “The plan is a generous one, but in my opinion, certain revolution ary steps in the working of our schools would have to be made,” concluded Dr. Taylor. Chi Omega, vs. Alene Knox, Hen dricks hall. Doubles Teams Named The following teams will play in the doubles tournament: Sarlat, Langford, Sigma Kappa, vs. Bell, Bogue, Gamma Phi Beta; Sarazen, Battleson, AOPi vs. Ol son, Nestor; White, Cleator, Alpha Chi Omega, vs. Ash, Palmer, Chi Omega; Dillon, Knox, Hendricks hall, vs. Fulton, Starbuck, Kappa Alpha Theta; Nakajima, Burgess, Susan Campbell hall, vs. Shields, Weston, Pi Beta Phi; Morton, Ek strom, Orides, vs. Long, Bercovich, Alpha Xi Delta. Get a shake at TAYLOR’S.—adv. Quick Ones (Continued from fiacje three) of the second half. Nice tip in: Gannon under the basket out-jumped Wintermute to sneak one in. Longest shot of the game: Lewis when he let fly from mid court and it soared over the backboard. Several pretty steals: By Bobby Anet out in mid court. Oregon’s war cry—with their zone defense: “Arms up boys.” Most nicknamed player: Zeig enfuss the Husky sophomore whom the crowd dubbed “Swiv el - puss,” “Dribble - puss,” just “Any old puss,” and several more. Most consecutive misses: Oregon in the second half. Anet dribbled down in a corner and shot, follow-, ed by Johansen under the basket who missed, followed by Silver, who missed, and then by Silver who missed again, and the Huskies then took the ball. Dramatic shot: Lewis shooting a cripple from the side which after several trips around the rim and surrounding territory decided to drop in. Handwriting on the wall shot: Gannon’s one hander from the side making the score 26 to 22 from which point the Huskies were never seriously threatened. Belated rally: Oregon with three minutes to go poured in two quick ones but the lead was too great. Snappy exhibition of tennis: Be tween halves of the tussle. Biggest display of booing: None. PHI PSI MARRIES Walter T. Williamson ’33, mar ried Ardis Ulrich in Portland, Jan uary 23. He is a member of Phi Kappa Psi. Radio Students Get Real Training Weekly Broadcast Made Over Stations KORF, And KOAC The University of Oregon is one of the few colleges in the western part of the United States that is able to give its students actual work in radio broadcasting, D. E. Hargis, who is in charge of the University radio work, said yester day. At the present time there are about 35 students enrolled in radio class work, which was first offered on the Oregon campus Uiis year. These classes are divided into three sections: announcing, forum work, and dramatics. Students are given a chance to take part in actual radio presentation through the weekly broadcasts made over KOAC, Corvallis, and KORE, Eu gene. “A number of my students say that their ambition is to go into radio work," Hargis said. “David Hoss, who recently withdrew from the University, is now announcing over KORE, and Jack McCarty, who was enrolled in the radio class last term, has a position as an an nouncer over KCxW and KEX." Mr. Hargis, who joined the Uni versity of Oregon faculty this fall, did his undergraduate work at the University of California and re ceived his master’s degree in speech at the University of Minne sota last year. The Yeoman-Orides winter semi formal has been scheduled for Fri day, February 5, at the Osburn ho tel. Dinner gowns and dark suits are in order and corsages optional. Members of these independen dent groups may invite outside guests. There will be a charge of 35 cents to be paid in advance at the Y-hut for each Yeoman, while the Orides will be admitted on membership cards. There will be no charge for men who are not Yeomen. Room for the gang, TAYI.OU’S. ad — One reason why they all keep Camels handy 'IGOROUS, active people — in sport, society, and in V the world of work — count on healthy nerves and proper nutrition to see them through. Take your cue from them and make Camel your cigarette too! When you smoke Camels at your meals and afterward, the flow of digestive fluids — alkaline digestive fluids — speeds up. Strain and tension are lessened. And you have a delightful sense of digestive well-being. With their matchless mildness, Camels are better for steady smok ing, and they don’t tire your taste. C<^>vrijrht. 1937, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, North Carolina PLUGGING at the books often taxes digestion —burns up en ergy too.Y ou'll welcomeCamels — for their cheery "lift”—for their gentle aid to digestion. When you smoke Camels with your meals and afterward, ten sion eases, your food tastes bet ter and you enjoy a sense of digestive well-being. Camels set you right. And they never tire your taste or get on your nerves. “SKIING TAKES GOOD DIGESTION and a healthy set of nerves,” says Sig Bucbmayr. shown executing a diffi cult jump turn across a rock (right), and enjoying Camels during a hearty meal (above). "I smoke Camels a lot. I know they don't get on my nerves. And they help my digestion. Camels and food are always in the same picture. Smoking Camels with my meals and afterward lets me enjoy my food more. Camels set me right! Lighting up a Camel seems to give me new 'zip.'” SEA GOING CHIEF ENGINEER. George Buckingham (above), controls a maze of high-powered machinery. Such re sponsibility taxes digestion. He says: "I enjoy Camels steadily. Camels keep my digestion on an even keel.” ROSE DAVIS (above), champion cow girl from Fort Worth. As a star attrac tion of the rodeo, Miss Davis often rides a bucking bronc twice a day. She says: "The jolting puts a strain on my digestion. That's why I always smoke Camels with my meals and after.” " ,-ck Oakie » — ,3C , v0^ie.thisb«V. GoodutVo^rtt o' 3=jycTSSfe. U*‘ 5 T.,8 J0P“C„ S T. ,9;WP®*", T 6 '0P*P S .. Camels are made from finer. MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS -.Turkish and Domestic ? than any ether popular brand.