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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1938)
'Quality’education, Not'Quantity’, Request of dr.erb Guaranteed Silk Hosiery Nat ion ally k n o w n hosiery that has a posilivo "iiaranlcp of sal i s f a c I ion. (2 tlirond silk hoso ox C‘0|)I(*(1.) * ROLLINS * HOLEPROOF * HUMMING BIRD * LARKWOOD 79c to » H25 per pair mnaiiasiinmg'aiHiimiHBiUBiigimgiggiimiiffiiTi WIT 11A M’S Join our Hosiery Club 1 3th pair Free START RIGHT — END RIGHT Good Resolution—“From the beginning of the term I will type all my papers.” RENT A TYPEWRITER— PUT IT TO WORK Remember All money paid to us for rental may bo applied on purchase. Office Machinery and Supply Co. 1017 Willamette St. Phone 11S Send the Emerald to your par ents ;Tiul let them read UO news. Send the Emerald to your par ents and let them read UO news. Who is Jack Winston He’s on his way up! His music is danceable! Advance Sale Tickets $1.25 Sigma Delta Chi is offering a limited advance sale of tickets at SI.Ltd each. Tickets may be purchased from representatives at men's living organizations or at the Co Op. The price at the door will be .fit). Hurry anil gel in oil the saving at the ad vance sale. Get Your Ticket Today Advance Sale Ilis 0 months nt tin* Hal Tabarin, San l-'ra neisco, cracked Kay Kyser's records lor attendance and for length ol! en gagement. lie was featured at the Texas Centen nial at Dallas, earning his nickname “The Centleman from the South.” lie has played at the Hotel Mark Hop kins, San Francisco: Cafe Little Club, Shanghai. China; The Plaza, Dallas, Texas. lie broadcast nightly, eoast-to-coast, over the NBC networks for !• months. (Herb Caen, the San Francisco Chro nicle's radio editor, gave him one of his hard-to-got *' Kadiorchids.’’) He has recorded for Victor and for Brunswick. „ lie has Penny Parker, the blonde singer who has stopped many a show! Get on your spring clothes and come to McARTHUR COURT, Friday, March 25. It’s Informal Sigma Delta Chi Spring Informal Dancing 8:30 to 12 Prexg Erh Stresses Oregon's Need for 'Studious'Students Portland and Alumni Welcome Administrator At Banquet; Says 'University Will Be No Country Club' Announcing his policy as one working toward “quality” not “quantity,” Dr. Donald M. Erb, new president of the University of Oregon, received the welcome of Portland alumni, at a ban quet held March 17 in the Portland hotel. Maintaining that “there can be no mediocrity,” Dr. Erb explained his distaste for the “intellectual loafer or unappre ciative student.” “The University,” he added, “shall be no country cum, wnere persons can go to polish their social attributes.” However, Dr. Flrb contemplates no ‘‘dull grind” for Oregon stu dents. He indicates a like for sports activities, and said that the versatile student ma1<es the best citizen.” Governor Charles H. Martin also spoke at the banquet, deploring the number of cultural leaders who failed to take part ip public life and declaring- that education was1 the necessary means to combat ig norance and slips in democracy. Small Schools Represented Bruce Baxter, president of Wil lamette university, welcomed Dr. Erb for the independent colleges of the state. Roland Davis, presi dent of the Portland alumni, served as toastmaster. On March 15, President Erb and G. A. (Tex) Oliver, new football coach, were similarly welcomed at a banquet held in the Osburn hotel of Eugene. Dr. Erb lauded the excellent re lationships that have existed be tween the University and the town, and the state. He also asserted that his aim would be to continue the progress of the institution so that the highest quality of students may be attracted here. Coach Oliver spoke briefly, prom ising a new, interesting type of football, that would also win games. He also invited Eugeneans to attend the football “clinics” which he will hold in the near fu ture. Musicians' Ball Tonight Features 4 College Bands Three local campus dance groups have been notified of their selec tion by the Musicians’ Mutual as sociation of Eugene to participate in a “battle of bands’’, feature of the annual musicians’ ball to be held tonight at the Winter Garden. Along with Carl Rooeen's orches tra, well-known town dance band, Maurie Binford, Earl Scott, and Art Holman will each furnish the music for one of four hours danc ing, starting at 8 o’clock. Tonight’s dance is the first of an annual series, and the first sponsored by Eugene and Lane county musicians to be open to the public. Room and Board, $27.50. Clean room, superior meals. Excellent location across from new infir mary. 1315 E. 13th. 2 VACAN CIES. COMMERCIAL PRINTING . . ALLENBAUGH PRINTING CO. Phone 76366 East Broadway ... THE BROADWAY : is especially pleased to . Welcome Oregon Coeds back for a | gay Spring Term | and to be able to offer you for your new shopping 1 ! center a new and enlarged 5 | Broadway. Make our new store your headquarters for spring clothes. Just arrived * New Dresses * Spring Coats * Man Tailored Suits | THE BROADWAY ixc 20 A 30 East Broadway Spanish Class Has Film Here Tuesday Movie of Old Mexico, 'La Paloma/ to Be Told by Wright Dr. Leavitt O. Wright’s first year Spanish class is bringing “La Paloma,” a Mexican-made film, tc the Mayflower Tuesday, March 22, at 4 p.m. .Tames Wells is head of the committee bringing the film, while Richard Williams, Margaret Dari, Margaret Robbins and Don Castanien are helping him. For those who do not understand Spanish, yet want to enjoy the at mosphere of the film, a loud-speak er hookup, with Dr. Wright at the microphone, will give explanation of the action in English. Dr. Wright, who saw “La Paloma” in Mexico City last summer, states the movie shows superb Mexican scenery and local color, while a number of currently popular Latin songs are set in this background. Tickets may be obtained from stu dents in Spanish classes and at the door Tuesday afternoon. “La Paloma” is a product of Mexico’s rapidly growing film in dustry which last year put out a dozen hits. It enjoyed a long run in Mexico and has proved so popu lar in the United States that Di rector Miguel Contreras Torres and his leading lady, Medea de No vara, are now in Hollywood filming milian is the setting for the film. His empress, Carlota, intervenes to save the lives of two captured Mexican soldiers, and there starts the tangle of the story. Medea de Novara plays the part of the ro “La Paloma” with the dialogue in English. The disastrous empire of Maxi HAWAII SUMMER SESSION June 27-Aug. 5 New worlds to conquer . . . new ideas, new thrills in sports. Ex hilarating courses in a fully ac credited university. . . . Distin guished faculty from the world’s leading universities. Make this change this Summer. Plan to attend the International Confer ence of the New Education Fel lowship (Progressive Education Ass n) at the University. June 20-25. Steamer fares are low ... frequent sailings. For full information write Director of Summer Session UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII mantic Carlota, while Don Catar ino, the Mexiran version of Stan Laurel, supplies tlie prineipal rom edy interest;. | Oawi Sl&XjL . Wathburnct t* M o R P A N WASMBURNE -PHONE 2700 Coeds! Caution! Do not make a mistake—there, is only one genuine Spalding Saddle Oxford soldi in Eugene—and that is at Washburne’s Accept no substitute . . . look for the Spalding trademark . . . insist on Genuine Spald ings ! * Saddle Brown and White * Black and White WASIIBURNE’S OX THE CAMPUS TS TTIE DUDLEY FIELD SHOP You carry Chesterfields in your own special case... or you may prefer the attractive all-white Chesterfield package. In any case you’re supplied for a day of real smoking pleasure. Fill your case with Chesterfields ... for that refreshing mildness... that pleasing taste and aroma that so many smokers like. Chesterfield's mild ripe tobaccos . . . home-grown and aromatic Turkish . . . and pure cigarette paper are the best ingredients a cigarette can have. Copyright 1938. Ljcoett Myers Tobacco Co,