Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 21, 1938, Page Two, Image 2

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    New ROTC
Head Likes
Oregon,U O
Favorable Reports
Of UO Are Correct,
Says Colonel Lyon
Expectant and enthusiastic, Col
onel Robert M. Lyon arrived here
yesterday to begin his service in
the Oregon ROTC department. He
will serve as an assistant to Col
onel E. V. D. Murphy until Aug
ust 1, when he will officially take
over the duties.
“I have heard so much of Ore
gon and especially the University
of Oregon since my appointment
that I was anxious to get here,
Colonel Lyon said.
“From what I have so far seen,
the state and the University have
lived up to my expectations,” he
stated.
Colonel Lyon is a supporter of
all university sports. He indicated
he already has a bet on with a
friend at Oregon State on next
year’s football game. He also will
be present as an Oregon booster
at the competition on Governor’s
day, May 25,
Like most Hawaiians or people
who have lived in Hawaii, the col
onel is an ardent swimmer He does
not like to swim in tanks, however,
but prefers “a place where I can
swim for an hour or two without
touching bottom.”
“I plan no immediate change in
the ROTC courses,” he said. “Col
onel Murphy has the situation will
in hand and I will be glad to fol
low along in the lines he has laid
out,” he said.
Colonel Lyons is also enthusias
tic over journalism and journalis
tic writing. He has tried to per
suade his son, a teacher at Muske
gon, Michigan high school to take
this as a career, he said. His fa
vorite writers are Dale Carnegie,
Boake Carter, and Edwin C. Hill.
Music Building
Driveway Closed
The driveway in front of the
music building was permanently
closed Friday to avoid the danger
ous traffic problem and to reduce
dust.
Plenty of parking space is avail
able in the parking ground south
of the building for faculty mem
bers, students and people having
business at the building.
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New
| Arrivals
for
I Summer
Wear
• Play Togs
• Linens
• Sheers
• Dressy Cottons
• Sport Wear
Almack
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Unusual Children
To Hold Limelight
Exceptional children from all over Oregon and Pacific coast states
will hold the limelight at the nationally famous DeBusk Memorial
Clinical school, in connection with the summer session of the Univer
sity of Oregon at Eugene from June 20 to July 29, according to Dr.
Elizabeth Montgomery, director of the clinic.
Normally intelligent children having special disabilities in reading,
spelling, and arithmetic are invited to attend' the school. Students of
all ages, from grade school to college are admitted to the clinic.
Two Purposes
A dual purpose is served by the clinic—benefiting the children
Library Books
Must Be Rechecked
After Exam Week
All books checked cut of the
University library should be
returned by the end of exam
week, Miss Bernice Rise, circu
lation librarian, announced yes
terday.
If students wish to re-check
books at that time, they may do
so, Miss Rise said.
Women Enter
Archery Meet
Scores were entered yesterday in
the ninth annual nationwide tele
graphic meet by sixteen Univer
sity women archery students who
are making up the two eight-man
teams entered by Oregon this year.
First team scores:
Eleanor C. Francis . 380
Barbara Godfrey . 322
Mary Kay Crumbaker.279
Suzanna Cunningham .279
Phyllis A. Bolter . 275
Ruth Endicott.272
Mary Elizabeth Hole . 248
Marjorie Kuzanetn McKean <
Total .2302
Second team scores:
Dorothy Hall ..... 241
Anna Marie Huffaker.208
Dorothy Schnorenberg.208
Marjorie Louise Hastings .. 178
Loretta Crocker . 174
Faye Clark . 168
Harriet Douglass. 168
Harriet Minturn.169
Total .1504
The scores shot by the Univer
sity teams this year were consider
ably higher than the scores for
last year’s match which was won
by the first team entered by Los
Angeles Junior college. A score of
2302 which was shot by the first
team of Oregon this year would
rank about twenty-fourth place ac
cording to scores entered in last
year's match. Two or three teams
from over one hundred colleges and
universities are expected to enter
the match.
JEWELL, TO SPEAK
Dean Jewell of the education de
partment will give the commence
ment address at the Lewiston state
normal school at Lewiston, Idaho,
June 6.
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Board and Room
for women at
I ALPHA GAMMA ■
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DELTA
1648 Alder St.
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Adjoining campus
for
Summer Session
dune 20-dulv 29
~ $54.00, board and single
" room
* $44.50, board and double
I room
B Special rates for 3 or 4 h
■ in room
m $5.50 a week for board
only
■
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Mrs. Ora Ladd
Miss Mary Jeyell Ladd
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* Phone I 393
i Evenings; Mornings 8-10
1
S
and training teachers tor this
work in their schools. A number
of courses will be taught by ex
perts in charge of remedial cours
es in connection with the clinic. In
addition to supervising the clinic,
Dr. Montgomery will teach a class,
“Diagnostic and Remedial Tech
niques,’’ which will pay special at
tention to the evaluation of in
struments recently developed for
use in this field.
Two outstanding workers in the
field of “backward” children from
other schools will teach classes.
Dr. S. C. Gribble, professor of edu
cation at Washington university,
St. Louis, will offer “Methods for
Exceptional Children,”' and Miss
Lillian Raynor, counselor and spe
cial teacher in Central junior high
school, Los Angeles, will teach
“Remedial Reading.”
Background Offered
In the clinic a diagnosis of the
difficulties of each pupil is made
on the basis of information gained
through all available sources such
as scholastic records and informa
tion from parents, as well as a
number of tests given in the clinic.
Individual instruction, based upon
the needs of each pupil as revealed
! in diagnosis i» given by experi
| enced teachers working under the
close supervision of the clinic staff.
Work in speech correction will
also be given at the clinic this
year.
The clinic does not limit itself
to kinesthetics or any other meth
od of correcting difficulties of chil
dren, it is pointed out by Dr.
Montgomery. Difficulties of each
child are diagnosed and the most
| effective method of correction is
then applied.
Many Inquiries
To date more than 100 inquiries,
i many of them from other states,
have been received concerning the
J clinic, she said.
The clinic was started in the
summer of 1928 by the late Dr. B.
: W. DeBusk of the University of
Oregon and Dr. Grace Fernald of
the University of California at
Los Angeles. The clinic has grown
steadily and is now conducted
throughout the regular school year
; as well as during the summer.
Dies in Crash
Mrs. Henry W. Salisbury was
l on a transport plane which crashed
over California mountains.
Fish-But No
Rods Invade
Deady Bowl
Darting in and out between
the mosses and rocks of their
aquarium, the guppyes, red
moons, helleri, and other dimin
utive tropical fresh-water fish
that J. E. Herbertson, of the
zoology department, keeps in
i his research room ih Deady hall,
need have no fear even if the
fishing season is well under way
in the rest of the country.
These fish, which were shipped
in containers from islands in the
tropics, are kept in water that
is warmed to about 70 degrees.
Tropical fish are not hatched
from eggs like most other fish,
but are born alive, and the new
ly born fish resemble their par
ents in every detail, except that
they are a trifle smaller in size.
Mr. Herbertson feeds these
fish food but he finds that with
this diet exclusively the brilliant
colors of the fish seem to fade,
; and it is necessary to give them
; occasional endocrine gland stim
ulating food in order to preserve
their color.
Two Field Trips
To Be Made Today
Two field trips will be made by
geology and geography students
this weekend. Members of J. C.
Stovall’s field geography class
will go to the coast Sunday to
compare physiographic features of
that region with the territory
around Eugene.
The quicksilver mines at Black
Butte, Oregon, are the destinations
of a group of students making the
trip today accompanied by Warren
D. Smith.
EXAMINER HERE
A state examiner of operators
and chauffeurs will be in Eugene
today between the hours of 8 and
15. His offices will be in the
.Knights of Pythias hall.
Men Plan
Study Trip
A study of geological formations
in the Wallowa mountains of
northeastern Oregon will be the
purpose of a field trip to be made
, this summer by an expedition
sponsored by the state department
of geology and mineral industries.
University of Oregon men who
will be included in the group are
Lloyd Ruff, Fred Hoffstead, Wil
bur Greenup, Herbert Harper, and
Warren D. Smith. Students from
Oregon State college, and men
from the state department, includ
ing Ray Treasher, a University
graduate, will complete the
group.
Leaving the first of July, the
group will go to Joseph and pack
in from there up the north side
of the Wallowa range, and will
work at an altitude of between
6,000 and 10,000 feet. Besides map
ping the geological formations of
as much of the region as can be
covered, they will also study pos
sibilities of mining in the Wal
lowas. They will return in early
September.
Three UO Profs
Asked to Write
For Dictionary
Three members of the Univer
sity faculty have been asked to
write articles for the Dictionary
, of American History, a cooperative
, work to be published by Charles
Scribner’s Sons.
Dean R. C. Clark of the history
department is writing articles on
“Oregon Land Frauds,” “Oregon
Experiment,” “Oregon Short
Line,” and “The Pacific Republic
Movement.”
Dr. Dan E. Clark, assistant di
rector of extension, is writing ar
ticles entitled “Great American
Desert,” “The Homestead Move
ment,” “The Mississippi River,”
“The Mississippi Valley,” and sev
eral other shorter ones.
Dr. John T. Ganoe, associate
professor of history, is also writ
ing articles for the book.
1
Try our
NEW SWEDEN
SOFT ICE CREAM
at the
■
|
■
Mayflower Cafe
■
i
Good Home Cooking
at Reasonable Prices
Eleventh near Alder
■
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HIBP
Announcement
A Bruno Cameraman
will be located at the
OSBURN HOTEL
Eugene
Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday
May 23, 24, and 25
No appointment needed
Call at your convenience
BRUNO STUDIOS
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