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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 6, 1938)
ROTC Prepares for Annual Inspection ROTC officers, staff and stu dents were busy yesterday pre paring for the annual round of spring inspection tours by various army officials. The first of these visits will be by Major General A. J. Bowley, commander of the 9th corps area. Major General Bowley will be on the campus on Monday for a brief inspection and a meeting with Dr. Donald M. Erb and Chancellor Frederick M. Hunter. The annual inspection by Major W. C. Moore will be made on Mon day, May 16. He will look over class rooms, building appearance and will also watch the classes drill. All students will wear uni forms to class fr'r the inspection. On Governor’s day, May 25, Ma jor Ralph Talbot Jr. will be pres ent to inspect the drill teams. Five men were pledged to fra ternities during the past week, Virgil D. Earl, dean of men, an nounced yesterday. They are: Delmar Rice, Pi Kappa Alpha; Bob Wick, Alpha Tau Omega; Stanley L. Hanson, Theta Chi; Tom McKelvie, Sigma Chi; and Werner Asendorf, Beta Theta Pi. Side Show one cruiser, seven submarines, oil tankers, and aircraft car riers. Also, large sums of money will go to the Spanish border, where France may have a new enemy on the other side if Franco’s troops continue their sweep toward Italy’s “mare nostrum.” In the Mail first ye£tr the class had pur chased the awards. When the team was leaving for ~the coast conference bas ketball playoff we were a,gain asked to build a flaming “O” on Skinner’s butte. The “O” was there and it was a good job. Then came our Frosh Glee and the editor admitted it was a “good jig.’ We tried to get a good band, charge a reason able price and give the students a good time. We cleared ex penses and succeeded in profit ing close to $100. Out of the calm came the problem of the constitution. It was found, Williams was satis fied and extended an apology for his “beef.” The points in question by Williams were sat isfactorily cleared. He was satisfied, but not The Emerald. They had to kick whether or not they knew what they were kicking about. Our class formed a coalition and put officers in by an al most unanimous vote. The class got together and cooperated to their satisfaction, but not The Emerald’s. They had to kick! The present administration has almost completed its term 1937 _ Member 1938 Associated Collegiate Press Bruce Curry, Natl. Adv Mgr. Assistant, Jean Kneast Dorthea Wray, Circulation Mgr. Hal Heaner, Fri. Adv. Mgr. Assistants: Chas. Schannup, Norm Holt, Jean Farrens. EMERALD REPORTERS rcou grange Lyle Nelson Elizabeth Jones Bud Jermain Sadie Mitchell Betty Thompson Bill Scott vjcnc cmyuer Glenn Hasselrooth Pat Erickson Priscilla Marsh Gordon Ridgeway Bud Updike Cathy Taylor EMERALD SPORTS STAFF Bill Norene, George Pasero,. Doug Parker, Eva Erlandson, Dorothv Burke, Joan Jen ness, Chuck Van Scoyoc, Lyle Nelson, Ehle Reber, Larry Quinlan, Milton Levy, Bill Phelps, Eugene Snyder. THURSDAY NIGHT STAFF John Biggs Lyle Nelson Co-advertising managers this issue: Maurice L. Klapper Irwin H. Buchwach and we have over S400 in the class treasury. Class card sales will increase this amount next spring. Last year’s class was without a balance (I am told). We have 250 class card holders which is a larger num ber than any other class. The Emerald is a student publication and should be the voice of the students. The pow er of the press is OK but shouldn't this power be fair? I ask only for a square deal and an even break and neither of these were present in your edi torial. What are clean politics ? ? ? ? “Tiger” Payne, Frosh class president. (Editor’s note: The Emerald doubted neither Tiger’s business ability or the value of his serv ice to the class. It merely ex pressed disappointment with President Payne's interpreta tion of representation and de mocracy. The statement in the editor ial, “Little constructive work was done by the class of 1941” was clumsy and not true. “In the extension of student de mocracy” should have been added to it.) Musicians to Play At Mothers' Banquet. Miss Hixon, Phi Beta' Trio, Delta Tau Four on Program Lorraine Hixson, who took the part of Solveig in “Peer Gynt,’’ th6 Phi Beta Trio, an the Delta Tau Delta quartet will furnish the mu sical background for the Mothers’ banqut program to be held Satur day night in John Straub memorial hall. The banquet will start at 5:30, and the progi'am at 6:30. Miss Hixson will sing Grieg’s “Morning Song’’ as her part of the program. The Phi Beta trio, playing inci dental music during the affair, con sists of Charlotte Cherry, Audrey Aasen, and Dorothy Davis. The Delta Tau Delta quartet will sing the Oregon pledge song at the opening of the program and “Mighty Oregon” at the close. Clyde Ingermann, Bert Chamber lain, Roy Vernstrom, and Walt Vernstrom make up the quartet. REX THEATRE BLDG. EUGENE, OREGON ^ Off With the Old- I On With the New | O Now is the time for all good sophomores and frosh to change t otheir respective cords and moleskins. Moleskins i Eric Merrell 1 825 Willamette Los Angeles Junior college has just completed arrangements for the shipment of 100 pounds of hu man organs for its life science mu seum. Northwestern university sorori ties have at last given up heil week activities. Editorial headline from a college paper: “Are We All Turtles?” KAMPUS Barker Shop LEO 1 )EFFEXBACIIER, Prop. I st Shop West of Campus 14 West 8th St. Phone 330 . EUGENE - - OREGON Dance 0 AAAA.AAAA .AAA A 4. 4 *»T"rT"T ^ri7-^r V ~^r 'rr V ir 'tSt “The Place for Nice People” WILLAMETTE PARK