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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 5, 1937)
Armistice Daij .Celebration tc Be^Beld Soon Perry Smith to Speak Classes Are to B€ Dismissed Midway Through Morning An Armistice day celebratior | November 11 with the Veterans oi Foreign Wars working in conjunc | tion with the University will bring Perry Smith, distinguished ace avi j-ator of the world, to the campus to address the students, the vete rans and townspeople in McArthur court at 11 a.m. Classes will be dismussed mid way through the morning to allow students to attend the assembly and to view the veterans, escorted by a complete ROTC unit, march ing up 13th to McArthur court to take their places and observe the customary one mintue silence in memory of the comrades left in France. Recently in France Mr. Smith spent last summer in France dedicating battle monu ments eercted on battlefields by the United States government. Mr. Smith is now national chap lain of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. The state commander of the VFW will also be on the cam pus to attend the celebration. NOTICE Emerald readers will go paper less Saturday morning. * This Saturday’s issue has been discontinued because of the num ber of students who will be in Port land Saturday. The papers will be made up later in the year. DIi. LESCH NOT HOST Dr. and Mrs. Edward Lesch were not hosts for Don Blanding last Saturday, Dr. Lesch announced yesterday. SHOW YOUR SPIRIT Drop in and get one before you leave Don’t go to Port land without an Oregon Sticker on your car. * Clay Pomeroy * Bus Knowlton * Jim Timmons OREGON SERVICE •STATION 11th and Hilyard 3 FAMOUS ^TRAINS • Five "Sailing*" monthly from Portland. 39% hours to Chicago. PORTLAND ROSE-Dai/y PACIFIC LIMITED—Daily • Winter Excursion 4, Fares East. • Low-Cost Meals, e Air-Conditioned Coaches and Sleepers. e Fast, Convenient Service. • Free Pillows and Porter Service in Coaches. UNION PACIFIC SHIP AND RIDE UNiur. 1 J C. Cumming, Gen. Passenger Agt. C. H. Jacka, Trav. Traffic Agt. 751 Pittock Block Portland. Oregon Three Sisters Area Open to University Skiing Enthusiasts ‘ Paradise Region Within 100 Miles Will Be Opened to Skiers for Winter; Facilities Have Been Poor in Past By MORITZ THOMSEN A few Oregon students have been inclined to be skeptical about the fact that within eighty miles of Eugene some of the best skiing country in America is found. So few people have been able to get into the Three Sisters region during the winter, that little has crept out about its possibilities, bu£ event those Montana and Idaho collegians Cummings Names Dads' Dag Helpers _ Hospitality Group Will Make Fathers Feel at Home Appointments of student com mittee heads for the annual Dad’s day program, in conjunction with | University faculty members and j representative dads, were an ' nounced last night by Bill Cum j mings, student chairman. Elizabeth Turner was named chairman of the registration com mittee, and a corps of assistants will be selected. Jack Enders, as chairman of the official University greeters’ committee, will head the Dad’s day greeting and hospitality | committee, with Lloyd Hoffman, president of Skull and Dagger, as his assistant. Members of Skull • and Dagger and Kwama will work with the greeters’ committee in welcoming the dads and conducting the campus-wide open house. Sam Fort was named advertising and promotion chairman, and Jack Lochridge was placed in charge of decorating and preparing the cam pus for the dads. Rita Wright was appointed publicity chairman. The banquet committee head and sub sidiary members will be named in the near future, according to Chairman Cummings. A meeting of the student com mittee heads with members of the faculty will be held at 3 o’clock this afternoon for the purpose of drawing up a complete program for the weekend. Cowboy Club Meet (Continued from page one) No Cowboys I was a trifle disappointed when I didn’t see any horses tied out in front. I felt that they weren’t quite in the spirit of the thing. But I hurried right on in, and walked up and down the aisles a few times peeping into all the booths, look ing for people attired as I was in true cowboy, dress. I just knew this club would be a few serious people bent on upholding the high traditions of the west. I kept getting the queer impres sion that there was something be hind me, the way everyone snig gered as I went by. But I stuck with my purpose, and finally somehow found myself out in the street, alone, disappointed. I had n’t found the Cowboy Club. X felt a little disillusionment and went home that night and asked myself several times if I was be ing too presumptuous wanting to get into every activity. I finally decided I will henceforth be mere ly another empty-headed seeker af ter earthly pleasures, and leave1 the higher planes of thought for those to whom they come easier. But gosh, I did like that Cow boy Club idea. Dodge Meets Faculty (Continued from page one) 11:30 weekend evenings,” he said. “The whistle blows twice, called the first kissing whistle and the second kissing whistle. I just won der what you students do without such incentive.” Dr. Dodge was duly informed that University students needed no whistle and then instructed in the mysteries of Oregon's own dat ing term, “pigging.” “This is the westernmost chap ter of our fraternity that I have visited," Dr. Homer L. Dodge told a group of Phi Gamma Delta bro thers at an informal dinner in the Fiji house last evening. Accom panying Dr. Dodge as guests of the fraternity were: Dr. C. V. Boy er, University president, Burt Brown Barker, vice-president, and Dean James H. Gilbert, of the so cial science school. Send the Emerald home to Dad every morning. He will like to read the University happenings. who boast of Sun valley and the Rocky mountain slopes are forced to admit that the McKenzie pass with a few improvements could be come as famous as Paradise valley or Yosemite, once they have seen it. The new road, which will be kept open for the express purpose of making this territory available for winter sports enthusiasts, will open up a hundred square miles of snow covered earth. There will be a sla lom course at Frog Camp, and miles of trail. The slopes at the base of the Three Sisters are as long as any at Sun valley, and an altitude of over 6500 feet will make possible a powder snow all winter. Sad Affair Previously Skiing at Oregon previous to this season has been a pretty said af fair, particularly in the vicinity of Eugene. Of course Mount Hood has been one solution to the skiing problem, but for an Oregon student to attempt to drive over three hun dred miles each weekend to the terrain has been too much of a task. Small parties last year went out from time to time dressed in tin pants, hiking boots or oxfords, and skis without harnesses. They drove as far as they were able, and then walked. A ten mile hike to a skiing country, was not uncommon, and not too much was expected after the arrival. Women, naturally were barred; only the sturdiest Amazon could be expected to enjoy the hardships of a ski trip. There was ' over a great deal of skiing done on those trips. It was one struggle after another. Frozen feet, wet clothes, broken ski tips, and a slow dull hunger pain characterized each excursion. Quite a Journey By the time a suitable (usually half suitable) place was found, and the skiers made ready to fasten the hickory sticks to their feet, they discovered a little disconcert- . ingly that they were too exhausted to play. They rested and returned. Sometimes they skiied back—over | slushy snow, blackberry bushes, J rocks, and fields of pine needles. I These things, needless to say, arc not good for skis. The pioneer days of skiing are over at last. Now it will be possible for women to enjoy a sport without being muscle bound, and it will leave most of the day open for skiing. No longer will three quar ters of a person’s time be spent reaching a snow field. When you reach the summit of the McKenzie pass, you will have snow and plenty of it, and you will also find that; skiing is a sport, not physical | drudgery. Duck Tracks (Continued from fmjc two) tion-wide attention by downing Texas, 20 to 0. Dartmouth and Princeton are an other pair of rivals Slated to trade yardage and bruises. The men of Dartmouth are too good. Make it 13 to 6. The tide of Yale should roll to morrow in a 27 to 0 triumph over a battered Brown. Louisiana State 19, Mississippi State 0. Minnesota 26, Iowa 0. Texas A & M 14, Southern Meth odist 0. Columbia 13, Navy 0. Ohio State 6, Indiana 0. Duquesne 6, Carnegie Tech 0. Yes, ant] there are plenty of close ones. Kansas university and Arkansas, for instance, will nose out Nebraska and Rice Institute by 7 to 6 scores, respectively. Fordham 20, Purdue 7. Army 13, Harvard 12. Northwestern 7, Illinois 0. Detroit 21, Manhattan 0. Texas Christian 14, Centenary 6. Tulsa 14. Drake 0. Temple 7, Michigan State 6. Missouri 30, St. Louis U 0. Colorado 13, Utah 7. Boston college 21, Western Maryland 0. Holy Cross 7, Colgate 0. Georgia U 13, Florida 0. Kentucky 7, South Carolina 6. Mississippi 7, George Washing ton 0. Oklahoma 13. Iowa State 0. New York 25, Lehigh 0. Michigan 19, Chicago 0. TOM Try a Wimpy when going HILL’S Iamburger through Salem 697 X. Capitol Oregon RALLY at the Congress Hotel 5th and Main St. iiimiwiMmiiitt mniimiiinii «lll!lll|!lljll!!itl!I!!l1ll!niiint!l BART WOODYARD and his famous dance band IIIIIilllllltlllillillllilUllllllllliE i'piiiiiiiiiiiii'yiii'iiiiiiiiiintii SPECIAL PRICE TO ASUO TIC KET HOLDERS A 25e reduction on each ASUO card presented (50c per couple) on cover charge of 75e. uiiiiiiininiiiiiH .111111111111111! i These Portland Merchants Welcome University of Oregon Students WSC-OREGON STARTING LINE-UPS Klumb .LER . B. Robertson Grim stead....LTR. Estes Campbell ... LGR. Huston Rumberg .... C .. Breaid Hoptowit ... RGL. Walden Farman .RTL. Foskett Harrison . REL. Yerby Angelo . Q .„ Nilsen Bayne .LHR. Gebhardt Sienko .RHL . Nicholson Littlefield .. F . Bentley WHY NOT... have a roller skating party. Spe cial rates to groups of 30 or more (except Friday and Satur day nights.) \V. 7tli near Willamette Phone: BRoadway 3928 NIKKO SUKIYAKI TEMPURA (rried ohrimp) -CHOP SUEY-NOODLES Party and Banquet Rooms 126 N.W. 4th Ave., near Davis A. TAMBARA, Proprietor PORTLAND, ORE. Headquarters for Football Mums Holden’s Florists the Corsager Corner Broadway and Morrison Beacon 3940 MODERN ♦ BEAUTIFUL STORY & CLARK DYNAMIC SPINET £f a 'Tamou.l met i c a n T?e it a net The progress of eighty years of fine piano craftsmanship, is exemplified in this superb Dynamic Spinet by Everett Worthington... a wonderful home adornment... a source of lasting pleasure. *345 CONVENIENT TERMS STORY & CLARK Dynamic Spinel Equitable Allowance on Your 'Piano Write for pamphlet of New Type Spinet and Console Pianos COLLINS & ERWIN PIANO CO. 2nd Floor Alderway Bldg. PORTLAND, OREGON NEW PERKINS HOTEL In the heart of downtown PORTLAND 5th Avenue at Washington St. Single $1 with $1.50 Rate J- Bath -*■ Douglas Charlesworth, Mgr. ^p5MSja®aEiBMaja/aj3®ajEisEJSfSJSM5jaisia®siaiaeiaE®e]BjeiaMSjaHajajaMS 1 On the way to and from the Game . . . stop at SHORT’S * Fountain Service * Sandwiches * Dinners I E I OREGON CITY (■! r.' Main Street at the liri< THE FOOD AT HUNG FAR LOW is DIFFERENT Chop Huey, Chow Mien and Noodles Chinese Dishes a Specialty Open 11 :30 a.m. to 3:30 a.m. Saturdays, Open 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 a.in. PORTLAND, OREGON II Arrow HITT The Shirt That Won't Let You Down Price $2.00 414 S.W. Washington St. Portland, Oregon A liite to Eat after the Game... UPTOWN DAIRY LUNCH Two blocks \V. of stadium Visit the Woodcraft Foun tain Lunch for Sandwiches and Drinks. WOODCRAFT FOUNTAIN LUNCH Four blocks tv of Stadium enjoy our balcony “blue lounge” in portland varsity headquarters before the game—afterwards—anytime is hilaire’s restaurant for fine foods—waffles—“snacks” fountain treats — center of downtown — Washington st.—60 steps from broadway • [aiiCUCJjCJjDjjQjjQjjeJ/QjjpjjQjjpy LUBLINER’S FLORISTS Portland Hotel Bldg., 61 6 S.W. Morrison St. offer CHOICEST PORTLAND 3ra.rarajgjgj2f3i3fSM3M3MSMSM3ISI3JSfcil HATS AND FURNISHINGS FOR YOUNG MEN ulohn Helmets V THE MAIMS SHOP 969 S.W. Broadway Near Salmon PORTLAND, OREGON MHiiiiiiiimiiiimmmmiiiimiimiiingmiimiimiiiimiiiiiimiiiiMmmimmmiiuiiiHimiiiiii HIGHLAND TAVERN Restaurant WE NEVER CLOSE i 815 S. W. Bdw. Near Yamhill niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiuiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiinniiiiy Buy your Gal a Mum clt Pierce Flower Shop East ciid of Stadium Choicest Blooms 50c, 75c, and $1.00 Beacon 1301 j ^;>iiiiiiiiiiiiiU!iiiiiiii]iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiHiiiiiiiimiiiiiiimmiiiiiiii!iii)iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiii!!:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiui!iiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iniiimi!!iiiiiiiii:iiiiiiHiimmiiiiiiii9 ifllSJSISJSISlEJSJBJSISISI5I3JSIEM3ISlSISISISISJSI2Iffl For Convenience . . . Palace Hotel 12th STREET AT WASHINGTON PORTLAND, OREGON Only f> blocks from Broadway' Only f> blocks from the Stadium Rates $1.00 & up riiJSJBJBJS/SJSISEOIBMBJSISIHISISISISMBJSHHSMBMSJSMiifSHSfSEElSISOlSMBiSfSrSiS <JUEEN OF THE CAMPUS For the glamour of dress that makes people look twice, do your fashion shopping with The Fashion Coat & Suit Co. The collegiate girl will find chic clothes for all cam pus occasions. The Fashion Co. suggests sequins and velvets as a basis for your dressy dresses. . . . Tea dresses that are strik ing . . . formats that will at tract may be found at The Fashion Co. The Fashion Co. wants to be your Portland headquar ters for fashions. Let them glamorize and glorify your exciting moments with smart clothes. Ihe tashion Cloak-and Suit Co. 936 S.W. Washington Street Corner Tenth Phone: BEaeon 5913