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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 23, 1938)
3ISl5l3I5I5l3J5IS0SI3EI3EIS15iBMaJSJ3MS13ISISJE/EJSJa/McMi®c!®BMiySJS®e! FOR YOUR ROOM... • Pictures — Prints — Etchings — Woodblocks. • Colorful maps and posters - History. Adventure, Sports. of Countries. Citi ICS • We do picture framing. Bring us your orders. THE ORIENTAL ART SHOP 122 E. Broadway Miner Bldg. Annex s/sf3i3i3isi3i3JSEi5i3isiBisia®3isiaM3MaM3fao3ia/a/aMaiaoi3M3ja(aMaj3Ejaiaisifl l!!!i!niriB!!lll!!i!l iiimni Meals 25c | OREGANA I CONFECTIONENY j mini iiiiimiimmnmifmiiimiiimiiimiiimiiiimiiimiimimminmiiii Bernice Cotner Modern Designing Dressmaking Remodeling Clever designs in sport clothes ideal for class wear. Smart ideas on how to remodel last year’s formal. Distinctive styles for date dresses. 841 Willamette Upstairs 78 Given JC's With Honor Privileges Seventy-eight UO students re turn to school this week with the privilege of working for honors in their various fields, having won Junior certificates with honors privileges. Male names predominated on the list released through the offices of the registrar yesterday, with 51 men rating the distinction to 27 women. The following students have been awarded the Junior Certificate with Honors Privileges: Robert Joseph Albi, Herbert Hatfield Anderson, Phyllis Viola Bales, Jack D. Blank inship, Kathleen L. Booth, May Kay Booth, Barbara Jean Boyd, Phoebe Frances Breyman, James King Buell, Oswald Roland Burghardt, Margaret Ellen Burnett, Madeline Jane Cattrall, Waldo Easton Cau field, Ben R. Clabaugh, Alice Mary Coldren, Raymond Curtis Couter. Dorothy Denslow, John Robert Douglas, Jack Howard Dunn, Olo anne Dykeman, David Charles England, Robert Henry Epler, Bar bara Jean Evans, Robert George Fairfield, Anne Erika Frederiksen, Philip Beckett Glass, Don Edward Good, Homer D. Graham, Russell Loran Guiss, Jane Louise Hall, Howard Haughsland, Ruth Luella Hillman, Milton Horenstein, Shel ton C. Ingle, Herbert T. Iwata, Har old E. Jahn, Virginia Jepsen, Leonard L. Jermain, Elizabeth C. Johnson, Robert Jolly, Howard Lloyd Jones, Jean Kendall, Rachael Koken, Helen M. Kurowski, Betty Lou Kurtz. Lorraine Naomi Larson, Mildred Joyce Little, George Brown Loaf fler, Robert L. Mack, Irvin L. Mann, Donald Marcy, Catherine Miller Owen G. Miller, James Moe, Pat ricia Murray, Elaine Maxine Nel son, Charles Aaron Phipps, Theo dore William Proudfoot, Iola Mar guerite Quesseth, Victor John Regi nato, Keith Paul Rinehart, Galen P. Robbins, John Milton Scarlett, Richard W. Sears, Dale Owen S h u e y, Jr., Theodore Sprague Smith, Hiroshi Sumida, Robert George Swan, Lawrence Ralph Teeple, Ellen Torrence, Gordon Wil bur Tripp, Charles F. Tyson, Roy N. Vernstrom, Dean Elbridge War ren, Richard H. Werschkul, Mar garet Helen Williams, Ben James Winer, Robert Irving Winslow. Innovations (Continued from page one) one of the best features of the new plan is the isolation of the rushees from their mothers. Over anxious parents often make a smooth running "rushing machine” an impossibility. Many Rushees Stay in Dorm An unprecedented number of girls who came to the campus a week ahead of time for rushing activities apparently changed their minds and have reserved rooms at the dormitories. Only seven girls gave up the whole business as a bad job and went home when they failed to “make” the house of their choice. New System Good, Says Schwering Mrs. Hazel P. Schwering, dean of women, declared the new living quarters of the rushees in the dorms to be a great improvement over the period of hotel residence for the frosh during rush week last year. "The method is not yet perfected,” stated the dean. She said that more of the problems attending the pledging question would be solved each year. Deferred rushing cannot be the answer to present difficulties in orienting the freshmen to the fraternity system, according to Dean Schwering, because dormitory facilities at the University are not com plete enough to house all the first year women. It is necessary to crowd the present dormitories to capacity, placing four girls in nearly every room, to contain the independent students and those who deferred their pledging voluntarily. ■ A FOOTBALL EXPERT^ TELLS YOU IN THIS WEEK’S POST I IN THE SAME ISSUE DOES THE PUBLIC THINK COLLEGE A wzicTr nr timft .. I)r. Robert Maynard Hutchins, President of the University of Chicago, to write a series of artlcle.son education. He received 900 letters from readers. Now, in Hutchins Answers Hutchins, lie gives you a peek at his mail, and shows you what people told him about education. MR. GLENCANNON-THE YOGI OF WEST NINTH STREET. For years, in barrooms throughout the world, Mr. Glencannou had studied the breath-control problem. Read what happens when lie finds a hook called “The Secrets of Hindu Yoga lircoth Control," and, aided by a quart or two, tries it out. A swell new story by Guy Gilpatric, wherein Mr. Glencannon steals a letter box. A WOMAN SPY IN BERLIN CAN’T TRUST ANYBODY! Not eve, her employers. Perhaps not even herself. The Gestapo ordered Anna Kleerman to trap a “harmless, rather stupid'* young Englishman. The records in File No. 36475 tell you what happened. A dramatic story by W illiam W hite. ALSO: Soda Poppers Can Take It, by Jerome Barry..and Love is a Happen stance, by Dorothy Thomas...\/y Day in Courtt in which Arthur Train, creator of “Mr. Tutt," tells you of Abe Hummel and other celebrated shysters who once paraded before the criminal bar..llow they catch your Friday's Fish, as told and pictured in color by Bernard Breedlove ..Editorials, poetry, fun and cartoons. WHO’LL WIN the big games this Fall? What men from here will be in the head lines? A football expert makes some prophecies, and gives you a team-by-team appraisal of your competition. Tells how the new rules affect the game, whether 1938 football will be conserva tive or razzle-dazzle, and what the colleges think about the new legal athletic scholarship introduced in the Southeastern Conference. Here’s some lively dope about teams, trends and players; read it in the Post this week. Pigskin Preview of 1938 by FRANCIS WALLACE FREE! If you haven’t received your copy of “1938 Football Schedules,” showing new rule changes, this year's games, and 1937 scores of 350 leading colleges, ask at the business office of the paper publishing this advertisement. * Ted Bank's (Continued from page four) Tessier, visualize the following: Tony Knap, Milwaukee, Wis., and Flay Smith, Notus, ends; Richard Trzuskowsky and Ray Kaczmarek, Milwaukee, Wis., tackles; Walter Musial, Milwaukee, Wis., and Jack Donovan, Bovill, guards; Lyle Smith, Moscow, center; Earl Gregory, Potlatch, quarterback; Harold Roise, Moscow, and Edgar Wilson, Aledo, 111., halfbacks; and George Chrape, Buhl, Minn., full back. To back up this veteran team other lettermpn such as Rudy Aschenbrennef, center; Tony Kamelevicz, fjuard; Dick Therrell, tackle; Emory Howard, end; Merle Stoddard, quarterback; Steve Belko, Jim Johnston, halfbacks; and Harold Durham, fullback, are available. 'CuAtnsJi Outh. Stole WA/HBURNEJ PHONE 2700 Candles * Famous “Tally IIo” Tapers 18-in., all colors, ea. . ,10c 12-in., all colors, 2 for 15c 10-in., all colors, 2 for 15c Colors: Ivory, white, daffodil, yellow, red, pink, green, black, orange, orchid, coppiir, blue. Large Birthday Candles, box of 12, 10c Small Birthday Candles, box of 36, 5c Votive Nite-Lites.25c, 2 tapers iiiinHimtuiHiiiraiiiiii NO Squeal NO Grunt NO Nothing but clear music after your radio is repaired at — ECONOMY RADIO LAB Westinghonse Radios IlSI Don’t Take Our W ord For It . . . simply ask anyone who has been on the campus a year and he’ll tell you that the most valuable recollec tions of your campus life are all pictorially presented in THE ORE GANA. Find Out Her Name and Address . . . how? ... by looking in THE OREGANA where you find not only campus activities, sports, and faculty . . . BUT the entire student body presented in fascinating pic tures . . . taking all guesswork out of locating people. And You’ll Thank Us . . . for advising you now while there’s plenty of time, to decide that you want your Oregana for 1939 and to avoid any doubt about getting your copy you are going to sign for your ’39 Oregana at Registration. The Staff. Typewriters AT THE * NEW DESIGNS AT THE Parker, Sheaffer, Waterman Expert Pen Repairs Nationally Advertised AT THE