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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 9, 1937)
Paramount Will Be Scene of Pep Rallu Oregon Students Will Gather at Burnside Bridge at 10 p. m.. Fort Says Preceding the Oregon-California game, a huge pep rally will be held Friday night at the Paramount theater in Portland featuring a state-wide broadcasting hook-up, Sam Fort, rally chairman, said yesterday. Students will congregate .at 10 p.m. at the foot of the Burnside street bridge on the west side and go up Broadway to the Paramount theater in a rally parade led by the Oregon band and a noise float. Binford’s Band Greets Arriving at the Paramount they will be met by Binford's band which will be outside the theater in the true style of premier open ing. Student celebrities, Oregon yells, and Oregon songs will all be heard over a state-wide hook-up over HEX from 10:35 to 11 o’clock. At 11 the scene will shift to the Paramount stage. Preceding the main feature will be a stage show, vaudeville skits, a chorus routine,; Maury Binford’s orchestra, and a rally skit that has been planned by Wendell Kaufman. Eddie Cantor Feature The regular feature will be Eddie Cantor in "Ali Baba Goes to Town.” The admission price will be 55c with tickets obtainable from all rally members. In general charge is Sam Fort. Scott Corbett is in charge of ticket sales. UO Remote Control ed with KOAC as one of its activi ties. A long-felt need will be answer ed if the proposal to make the Uni versity articulate is approved by the state board of higher educa tion, from which source must come i the necessary funds. The Univer sity, hitherto voiceless, except for a limited weekly time on the air, would be in a position to render a maximum of service, through pro viding a medium of expression for all departments, including music, speech, journalism, science, exten sion, and all the rest. That there is emphatic public and student demand for services available only through the medium of radio, was the statement made yesterday by W. A. Dahlberg, assistant professor of speech, who said that the University is under present conditions unable to meet this demand. Placing the stamp of approval upon the proposal to give the Uni versity a voice, Mr. Dahlberg sug gested that addition of radio con nections would provide facilities for including a strong radio course in the curriculum of the state system, both from technical and other standpoints. Speaking for the speech depart ment, Mr. Dahlberg, who has made numerous tours of the state with University speech units, said that the speech department had never been able to answer all requests received for appearances, due to lack of time and of travelling ex penses. Radio would make possible better service through its directness, ac cording to Mr. Dahlberg. Under the present arrangement much time and expense is lost in travel ing to Corvallis to broadcast, ot to other parts of the state. Sleuths Seek (Continued from pat/e our) a parlor table with a shelf below in the style of the 1900's, a four legged stool, a straight armless chair of the same period as the table or a Victorian horse-hair chair, and a gilt ballroom chair and footstool. A decided rise in interest on the part of the male students in the ASUO shack recently was evident when Volchok revealed that Miss Enters scheduled a reverse strip tease as one of her acts. Miss Enters' Eugene appearance will be in McArthur court at 8:1 > a m. ASUO cards will be good for , admission, with general admission at 50 cents, reserved seats selling i at $1 and $1.25. Quackenbush’s : HARDWARE, GLASSW VRE 1 IRVIN & IRVIN Phone 317 W. G. and Lucy Irvin CLEANING, PRESSING, REPAIRING 643 E. 13th St. Eugene, Ore. * Exchange Ducats For Seattle Game Go on Sale Today Exchange tickets for the Ore gon-Washington game in Seat tle wiil go on sale today in the ticket office on the first floor of the Igloo. Tickets will go to members of the ASUO for $1, and will be in the student section in a good location. Approximately four hundred of the numbered seats will be held for Oregon students, but will be turned back to Seat tle some time next week if still unsold. Students who wait to pur chase seats will have to buy general admission tickets which will be at the end of the Wash ington stadium. Campus Calendar There will la- a business meeting of the Condon club in the geogra phy seminar room in Condon this morning at 11 o’clock. Kwamas will meet in the AWS roo mon the third floor of Ger linger today at 4:30. VMCA cabinet meeting at 4:30 today. Tuesday: Westminster luncheon 12 noon. Call reservations to Mrs. Bryant, Westminster house, by nine this morning. Mr. Joseph W. Conrad, representing the North- 1 west International Relations insti tute and the Emergency Peace Campaign will speak. Rally committee meets today at 3:30 a (.College Side. Important. A meeting of Beta Gamma Sig ma, business honorary, will be held in room 208 of the commerce build ing this afternoon at 4 :00. The Propeller club will meet Tuesday night at 7:30 in the men's lounge in Gerlinger hall. Alpha Delta Sigma meeting Tuesday at 4 p.m. in Mr. Thacher's office. Very important! There will be an important meet ing of Gamma Alpha Chi tomor row night at 7 at the Gamma Phi Beta house. All members must be there. Richard Johunnscn, BEAVER, thrown in millrace from Kappa Sig bridge, left his gold Waltham wrist watch in care of some Duck. Leath er-braided band with spot of sold er near stem. Would greatly appre ciate its return. Please notify Bish ard or Johannsen, Theta Chi, Cor vallis. Five students were admitted to the infirmary yesterday making a total of 11 patients confined to bed. They were: Janet Johnston, Jand Dachtelberg, Charles C o a te, Charles Walmun, Richard Olcott. Leonard Rueckea, Bill Phelps, John Beckett, Henry Moretty, James i Grimm, Robert Stafford. Portland Commerce Dr. Warren D. Smith, head of lhe departments of geology and geography on the campus, spoke! before the Portland chamber of commerce yesterday noon. Dr. Smith’s talk, which was! broadcast over station KEX, pre sented a general picture of the Willamette valley project and also stressed the geologic causes and •esults of floods and means of ’lood control. The Willamette project which is list now getting under way is one >f the "little TVA’s" encouraged )y President Roosevelt. By means )f seven dams built on seven of he tributaries of the Willamette •iver, floods will be reduced, irri gation and increased navigation nude possible, hydroelectric pow r provided and stream pollution, uinimized. Dr. Smith urged the cooperation if all valley interests in putting his project before congress at its ext session, closing his talk with lie reminder that "time and tide vait for no man, and in the niean ime ‘Or Man River keeps rollin' long.’ ” Send the Emerald home to Dad very morning. He will like to read he University happenings. EUGENE HARDWARE CO. ISKOAim W .v OAlv EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE Phone 670 l To Star at Portland Rally Maurlo Binford’s campus orchestra will furnish the music for the I niversity of Oregon's rally in Portland this weekend. They will play at the Paramount theater on Friday night preceding the Oregon-Callfornia game. As a feature of the Emerald of the Air program, Binford’s orchestra will also be the student talent for i tonight’s broadcast. Fee Payments Must Be in by Wednesday Wednesday, November 10, will be the last day students can make University fee payments, accord ing to an announcement today by Clifford K. Stalsberg, University cashier. After 3 o’clock Wednesday af ternoon students delinquent in fees will be subject to a fine of 25 cents a day for the first week, to be fol lowed by suspension from the Uni versity if fee payments are not made by the end of the week. Delinquents include not only reg istration fees, but also non-resident tuition and student body fees. Payments are also due on the $15 student body cards on which the purchaser is allowed $1 toward the price of an Oregana. Alpha Delta Pi Has House Party, Tea Gretchen Smith, of Alpha Delta Pi, entertained three of her soror ity sisters over the weekend by giv ing a house party at her home in Oswego, Oregon. Next Sunday the girls will give a preference tea. This tea will be held from 6 to 7:30, and boys will be invited. Mrs. Underwood To Present Piano Concert Tonight Opening her program of classi cal piano masterpieces with a Mo zart number, Mrs. Aurora Potter Underwood, assistant professor of music at the University, will pre sent a group of selections in the music auditorium at 8:15 tonight. Compositions by Brahms, Chopin, and Debussy, are to be played by the musician. The famous contem porary Paderewski is to be repre sented by the playing of his se lection, “Cracovienne Fantastique.” One of the most interesting num bers which Mrs. Underwood will give is the Schulz-Evler “Concert Arabesques on Motifs by Johann Strauss." The motifs will be themes from the ever - popular Strauss “By the Beautiful Blue Danube.” This will conclude the program. The concert is open to the public. The Alpha Xi Deltas have planned an informal dance which is to be given November 20. The decoration motif is to be kept a se cret until the evening of the dance. SAE’S TO HAVE DESSERT The boys of Sigma Alpha Epsi lon will play host to Alpha Omi cron Pi next Wednesday evening when they will entertain them at dessert. Informal Meeting To Honor Leighton All PE Majors and Minors Are Invited; Starts at 7:30 An informal meeting and friend ly get-together will be held tonight in the men’s gymnasium to honor Dean R. W. Leighton of the school of physical education. All PE majors and minors are invited to attend the meeting which is scheduled to begin at 7:30 and will feature a general address by Dean Leighton. This is a mixed sports group and women as well as men are invited to attend. A general program is planned with card games for entertainment and cider and doughnuts will be served afterward. Send the Emerald home to Dad every morning. He will like to read the University happenings. FUN! and relaxation that you’ll really enjoy b e t ween study and class periods. Equip vonr house with the interesting and fascinat ing game of PING PONG A complete set -— net, paddles and balls on sale at the By HOOD Posture founda tion, loose lining, telescopic eyelets, peg top, shaped, padded tongue, molded sole, light weight, sponge cushion heel. Per $if <,25 JL wp the Uinioersitij ?CO-OP’ Anchored 47 miles off shore, the I Nantucket Lightship guides traffic on I the Atlantic Coast. Mail and supplies | come aboard once a month—one of the | most welcome arrivals is the supply of | Chesterfields. Cbesj?4ieW Chesterfield ’ Chesterfields give more pleasure to smokers wherever they are... On land or sea or in the air Chest erfields satisfy millions all over the world. They’re refreshingly milder . . . They’re different and better. Copyright 10J7, Liogett & Myers Tobacco Co, ...a taste that smokers like