'Fete’ Theme Deadline Set For 4 Today Prize of $20 Is Offered Winner; FiveEntrants Have Submitted Ideas For Judgment Themes for the canoe fete, to be held May 7 during Junior week end, will not be accepted after four o’clock today, Bill Dalton, canoe fete chairman announced last night. Contestants must submit plans in Ralph Schomp’s office. Five entries had been turned in last night, according to Sam Fort, general chairman. The $20 prize for the best theme submitted is the largest sum of money ever to have been offered. Helen Jones won $10 last year for her prize-winning theme entitled "Stardust." Judges Are Named Hal Young, professor of voice, Lance W. Hart, assistant profes sor in the art school, and Hazel P. Schwering, dean of women, will judge the plans submitted. The en tries will be judged on the suit ability of the general theme to all events of the weekend, ideas for continuity, the harmony of the theme in relation to the natural surroundings of the Mill Race, sketches of suggested designs for floats, probable expense, and on the musical theme suggested. Exhibit Is Planned The winning plans will be ex hibited soon after the judging which will take place Saturday morning. Sam Fort urges that houses begin to think of ideas for floats as soon as the theme is re vealed. Drawing for pairing of houses will be held next Tuesday. Employers Hire Oregon Students Miss Janet Smith, employment secretary in charge of the new placement service for graduates, reports that employers and person nel managers of large concerns have employed a number of Uni versity graduates, and that the employers are so pleased with the students they are asking for more. Recently Robert Near, '33, ac cepted a position as traveling salesman with the Spool Cotton company, and Clifford Thomas, ex-’36, was employed by the ad vertising department of the Paci fic Telephone and Telegraph com pany in Portland. Five girls, who were graduated from the Univer sity, are working in the commer cial department, and the personnel manager has asked for more of this year's graduates, Miss Smith said. Other personnel managers are writing for information about graduate students, Miss Smith said. Among them are the Roy and Girl Scouts, the Campfire Girls, Eastman Kodak company, public utilities, Prudential Life Insurance company, American Express, Arm strong Cork company, Chevrolet Motors, Goodrich Tire company, Remington - Rand, Montgomery Ward, Sears and Roebuck, and Swifts. S. B. Lewis of the Weyerhauser Timber company will be in the em ployment office this week to in terview students interested in en tering this field, Miss Smith an nounced. Miss Smith urges all graduate students, who have not done so, to register with her because she is receiving so many letters ask ing about students. "The only trouble," Miss Smith added, “is that we do not have enough people to choose from.” Dr. Bond Speaks On Labor Moves At Eugene Forum In the first of a series of three Eugene community forum discus sions on the subject of "Strikes.” Dr. Jesse H. Bond, University business administration professor, spoke Wednesday at Villard on "The Origin of Labor Movements." Dr. Bond, who has had experi ence on both sides of the labor question, devoted his talk to ex plaining the background of our present labor setup. Next Wednesday Rev. Cecil Ristow. pastor of the First Meth odist church, will discuss the justi fication of the strike method as a labor weapon. This will be fol lowed by a debate on the same subject. Send the Emerald to your friends. Subscriptions only $3.00 per year. Some of Things He Can Buy With $200 When the nows got around that Henry Fel/ of Eugene had 200 Townsend plan dollars to spend within a month, salesmen weren’t slow in seeing un opportunity. Among those who were willing to have Mr. Fel/, sign on the dotted line were a vacuum cleaner salesman, a radio salesman, a farmer with a cow and numerous other “peddlers.” Music Is Important In% Revolution-Torn Spain By CATHERINE TAYLOR Music still plays an important part in the lives of the Spanish people in spite of their absorb! ion in their revolution-torn country, according to Miss Viskiv Krokowsky, well-known concert violinist who has re turned from Spain tecently. The music, she explained, is now mainly of a local nature. Music masters and bands give concerts in the cities for the amusement of the wounded soldiers. The wortd-tam ous cellist, Pablo Casals, whom Miss Krokowsky counts as one of her friends, has been doing' this work in the very center of the strife. Miss Krokowsky was in Barce lona, where she was head of the violin department at the state conservatory during the worst part of the revolution. She pictured the heroism and idealism of the Span ish people in the present disas trous situation, and told of how even the churches in fact, those which have remained intact, have been converted into hospitals for the wounded soldiers. | In speaking of Spanish music, Miss Krokowsky stated that there was marvelous talent in Spain, both in music and the other fine arts! "In Spain,” she stated, "es pecially in Valencia, every child seems to be born with a brush in his hand. The painters have won derful talent, and the musicians seem to have the art born in them.” Miss Krokowsky was asked what she thought of the modern "swing” music in comparison to the concert masterpieces. "Person I ally,” she stated, "although I like the swing music for dancing or simply relaxation, I feel that it j leaves you nothing permanent." I She compared the “swing" music to the drinking of cocktails which I leave nothing except a dizzy sen sation, and the masterpieces to the sipping of a rare old wine which one may enjoy long after it has been tasted. She feels that, while “swing” music may have a certain amount of influence in the development of music in the future, it will not predominate. It is not ait, she be lieves, and real art will always prevail Miss Krokowsky, born in Russia, ! has played in every country in Europe. She speaks Russian, Span ish, French, German, Italian, and j fluent English. The tall, dark, strikingly attractive violinist has 1 some of the most famous art ists in the world for her friends. She knows Andres Segovia, world famous guitarist, and Enrique Arbas, conductor of the symphony orchestra in Madrid well. Jose Marie Franko, famous pianist conductor, has in recent years re fused to accompany artists with the exception of Miss Krokowsky. This is the violinist's second trip to America. Miss Krokowsky will be here in definitely. This summer she may have a master group in Portland. She eventually hopes to return to Spain, perhaps not to live there, but her love of the appreciative European audiences may cause her to return when conditions are better, she said. HiiSJI ■ ■ ■ ■ :»> I It ‘BuJBiiiU ■ Student Supplies ■ Toiletries * Remedies ■I Freshly frozen Wee-Maid Ice Cream ■ THE LEMON ‘O’ O. L. Ireland, Prop. I We deliver Phone 2717 ® Cor. 13th and Alder Infirmary Visiting Hours Remain Same During Spring Term Visiting hours at the infirm ary will he exactly the same spring term, with the following rules being enforced. 1. Each patient may have two visitors each day. 2. Each visitor may stay with the patient twenty minutes. 3. Patients may choose the visitors whom they wish to see. 4. Visiting hours are from two to four p.m. daily. 5. Exceptions to the above rules are to he made only at the direction of the doctor in charge of the case. G. Ten cents is charged to visiting students who sit on the empty beds. These rules urc primarily for the benefit of the patients in the hospital, and nurses in charge ask that students cooperate with a thorough understanding of these regulations. Mezzo - Soprano Will Be Heard at Annual Musical A .special feature of the Mu Phi Epsilon annual musicale to be held April G, will be the songs of Mrs. Josephine Albert Spaulding, mez zo-soprano from Salem. Mrs. Spaulding, who was grad uated from the University of Ore gon, will sing Wolf's “Vcrborgen heit," the famous, "I Am Thy Harp," by Huntington-Woodman, and "The Time for Making Songs Has Come” by Roberts. For several seasons she has been tudying with Paul Petrie of the Oregon State college music fac ulty. She is a member of the] coaching class conducted by Wil lem Van Hoogstraten in Portland and an alumnae member of the Mu Phi Epsilon music honorary. The program will begin at 8:301 p. m. Proceeds will go to the an nual scholarship fund. An informal reception will follow for all who! attend. Other numbers on the program I include a prelude on the new Poole' electric organ, violin solos and duets, piano solo groups, and a1 harp ensemble, all by active mem bers of the chapter. Pintmlls pay at Taylor's Physical Education Leaders S p e a k at OSC Conference Two of tlie foremost men in phy sical education work in the nation will take part in the annual spring meeting of the Oregon State Phy sical Education association, here, April 2 and 3. Friday night at the dinner meet ing presided over by Miss Madeline Larson, director of women's physi cal education at the Eastern Ore gon" Normal school, Dr. Henry M. Foster, graduate of the University of Oregon and head of the men’s physical education department at the University of Washington, will address the convention. Dr. Foster obtained his masters degree at Col umbia university in New York be fore coming to his present position in Seattle in 1929. The luncheon session, Saturday noon at the Osburn hotel, will have as principal speaker Dr. Jay B. Nash, professor of education and head of physical education at New York university. Both men’s talks will follow the program theme: How our facilities can exemplify our philosophy of physical education. Following the Friday evening dinner session, a tour of inspection of the new phy sical education plant will be led by Dean John F. Bovard. B. A. Professor’s Book On Property Published The only book to approach the problem of land title from an eco nomic rather than a legal stand point, “Land Title Assuring Agen cies in the United States,” by Dr. Daniel D. Cage, Jr., associate professor in the BA school, has recently been published. Three thousand copies have been sold to date. The American Title association invited Dr. Gage to be guest speaker and to review the book at their national convention, held October, 1936, in Springfield, Illi nois. Spring is just around the corner. Where are you? Why, buying clothes from Emerald advertisers: of course. Send the Emerald to your friends. Subscriptions only $3.00 per year. }£,5MS®3HS®MSISJ3i3JSJ3J3®S/SJSlSigf5j DON’T COUNT ON FISHERMEN’S LUCK . . . to find your lost ar ticles. USE EMERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR RESULTS LjSISISMSJSISlSJSJSISJSlSfSISJSSiSJSISJiE On Mother's Dmj A Personal Gift I hat Only You Can Give— Keiinell-Ellis Studios PICK THE Right Horse in the A S U O SPRING TERM SURE FIRE (A winner, doubly so with its delivery service.) First Race April 10 Second Race May 9 Third Race 8 heats April 23 Fourth Race Publication Handicap All Term Fifth Race Field Entry Spring- Term Entries: 1. Sy’s Wranglers, 5-piece. 2. Bert Woodbin, 1 0-piece. 3. Sam’s Swing Band, I 2-piece. 4. Alexander’s Ragtime Band, 8-piece. 5. JIMMY DORSEY (OUR CHOICE TO WIN). Post time—7:30-8:30. Entries: 1. College Side Glee Club. 2. Barber Shop Baritone. 3. Filly Pond. 4. NINO MARTINI (A SURE WINNER) 5. Elson Neddy. Post time—3 p.m. Entries: Field. (OUR CHOICE IS THE DRIVING DUCKS) Entries: 1. New York Sun. 2. Morning Oregom’an. 3. San Francisco Chronicle. 4. THE OREGON DAILY EMERALD (A winner, doubly so wit hits delivery service.) Everyoe one a guaranteed winner: 1. Richard Haliburton. 2. UO-OSC Track Meet. 3. Tennis Matches. 4. ASUO Elections. 5. Participation in ASUO Activities. 6. ASUO Student Body Dances. TICKET WILL GIVE YOU A WINNER IN EVERY RACE THIS IS NO GAMBLE