Free Education Confronted by Perils Amherst President Sees Danger of Federal Control AMHERST, MASS.— (ACP) — The growing fear of U. S. college and university administrators that higher education is headed for complete governmental domination has been concisely summarized by Amherst College’s President Stan ley King. Pointing out that when colleges (Please turn to page six) j’Most Beautiful’ Yearbook Expected to Sell OutToday During Morning Hours Only 60 Copies of 1939 Oregana Remain To Be Sold at Spring Term Registration; Annual Already on Way to Press Fifty-four days before distribution time and already a record breaker in many respects, the 1939 edition of University of Oregon students' own yearbook is expected to go over the top in sales this morning at registration. Only 68 copies are left to be sold. The Oregana will become a closed corporation after the 60 books are gone, as far as late orders are concerned, it was learned through Vi Net comes first for spring’s evening dresses . . . in the Basque silhouette with its moulded bodice emphasizing the tiny waistline only to swirl in yards and yards of flare that means en chantment for you. In chiffons — prints — laces — as well as net — size 11-18 in fresh pink, lime, aqua, peach, copen, black and navy. $12.75 to $24.75 EUGENE'S FASHION CENTER ■TOillHailHill IIIIIIIIHIIlIHlIBilillBIIIIUIIIliailMIIKBIIIIIHIIIIHininailllBlIlIBHIIIliailllBli TOM HILL’S (iiiiiiiiiiinnnimiiuinmnimifiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiimninninmnii Try our famous Hot g Dogs on your next ^ trip north. Salem | 697 N. Capital St. ia!!!l!B!!li;fll!!HB!!l!!aiil!!B!'l!ll uie uregana Business omce .satur day. Records Smashed Smashing ail records for the number of honoraries included and coming out with the first natural color photograph cover in the en tire United States, the book has already hung up two marks where its compilers expect more to fol low. One-fourth of the book is com pletely finished, Oregana Editor Don Root, said yesterday, with fra ternity and sorority sections al ready off the press. All that is left in the Oregana office is work on the new index. All the rest is at the engravers, lithographers or printers. All New Pictures “Comes the revolution” could be an Oregana rallying-cry this year, according to previews of the book in its incomplete stages. For one thing, it’s bigger—10 inches by 13, instead of last year’s 9 and 12. Also, every picture in the book is a fresh one, which has never before appeared in an Oregana. Probably the most revolutionary change is the dividing of the book into schools, with all senior pic tures and honoraries being includ ed with their respective schools. Each school will have a different color paper for its pages, with three different kinds of type being used. And the schools are por trayed in some cases with graduat ing seniors demonstrating the work of the school. More Color Pictures A step-up in the number of color pictures is announced, eight color pictures being planned. Three out of every four campus or ganizations appear in this year s book, a result of special activity on the part of Oregana Busmess Manager Dick Williams. Forty-five living organizations and 37 honor aries will appear. Junior weekend time is Oregana time this year as in other years.! williams said the buoa win oe ready for distribution on Friday, May 12, the first day of Junior weekend. First Come First Served So when registration today turn McArthur court into a shambles of blank forms, tables, and milling humanity, only the first 60 students to step up and say “I want to order a 1939 Ore gana” will be allowed to sign on the dotted line. “First come, first served,” says Manager Williams. The price is $5.50. Of this, $3.50 ^ must be laid on the line as a down payment. The other $2 can come out of the general deposit. Spring ASUO (Continued jrom page one) flail local greens. Tennis is not far behind, the first official racquet swinging scheduled for April 11. From then on the term is honey combed with sports dates. Baseball opens April 22, with the Oregon State college Beavers making the first foreign cleat marks on Howe field turf. The Beavers also end the season here May 27. Piece de resistance on the term's menu is the home-grown campus musical, due for. a six-night run starting April 17. With original music, campus chorines, and Hor ’ ace Robinson direction the produc ggjgjgjgjgjgjgjajajgjSjajajgEJEEI^^fEJSEEEEMEfSMciJ^EiJciJtlcilEilciJciJBiJEJciJDiJEJEiEieiJEJEJffl^ciJCijKJEiEiciJEiEieJEJejcdiEicjiaciJEiciiEJEi'y Congratulations to our University of Oregon Basketball Team for their fine CHAMPIONSHIP play. May continued victory be theirs. Eugene Farmers Creamery Manufacturers of Championship Dairy Products Butter - Ice Cream - Milk - Cheese ^ __ ————— '.■nmmrarararammraramrarararararararararanansraraniinarr'ilTainilniRI He Told 'Em Anse Cornell . . . had his hands full last week arranging for the series with the California Bears, and then defending Oregon’s right to play in the NCAA playoffs to night in San Francisco. Janet Smith Speaks At Medford High Practical advice cn a problem of utmost importance to youth today, that of obtaining' employment, was given to Medford high school stu dents and students from other schools in that vicinity Friday, when Miss Janet Smith, employ ment secretary of the University of Oregon, spoke at the Medford senior high school. Miss Smith’s topic was “Person ality in Obtaining a Positon.’’ She! has given this talk at other places in the state and it has been en thusiastically received and warmly praised by educators and others. Miss Smith, who has conducted the employment bureau of the Uni versity since 1923, is regarded' as an expert in her field. Under her direction the university employ ment service has been developed until hundreds of students find work enough to keep them in school each year. A service for graduates has also resulted in placement in excellent positions for many of them. tion will pack the Johnson hall theater. ASUO card holders get a 50-cent reduction on the musical. ' Election will remain up in the air until the date i3 set for nomina tion. The elections are expected to be run off some time in May, prob ably early in the month. ASUO card sales will go on to day in the Igloo as at other regis- i trations, with ASLTO representa tives stationed at each table. I SEE BARKER AND SEE HIS FINE VIOLINS They are above average in tonal quali ties. Some are extra good, old and mellow toned. The better ones are priced at 550.00, 575.00, 5100.00, 5150.00, and 5300. These are left with me tor sale. Also cheaper instruments from 55.00 to 535.00 — Strings and other fixtures for violins. I also do violin repairing. M. S. BARKER 760 Willamette Street 1 Round Trip Ticket New York World’s Fair San Francisco Exposition $ A A !N DELUXE 9U COACH <4 OC + IN STANDARD H JD PULLMAN ♦ Plus Sleeping Car Charge Daily — April 28 to October 28. Return limit 2 months. Youth Hostel Plans Made At Meeting on Campus During Spring Vacation rians for Oregon’s part of the nationwide youth hostel progressed last week when an organization meeting of Portland and Eugene sponsors met on the campus with Nancy Jane Reasoner, Seattle, North west district organizer for the American Youth Hostels, Inc. A network of stopping places of hikers and bicycle riders to secure rooms and meals for only a few cents a day while seeing the nation is the aim of the group. The proposal to make Eugene one of the main stopping places nas Deen advanced by interested parties. Information on the travel sys tem for cyclists and hikers, now in operation in a score of European countries and most of the eastern portion of the United States, was furnished by Miss Reasoner. Local Sponsors Named The youth hostels, at which travelers may obtain a lodging for 25 cents per person, will be set up first at convenient intervals for bi cyclists, and later close enough for hikers, Dean Onthank stated. The trails will follow country roads, with side branches into the moun taijis and to the coast. Portland sponsors for the hostel organization are Dexter Keezer, president of Heed college; G. H. Oberteuffer, A. R. Watzek, and Charles Botsford. The Eugene group is headed by Dean Onthank, and includes Percy M. Morse, Dr. J. E. Richmond, Pro fessor F. P. Sipe, Dr. Harry Nor ton, George H. Godfrey, and Rus sell Jones. The group will form subcommittees to assist in locat ing the hostels, equipping them, and working out routes. East and west side routes south bound from Portland will be or ganized first to connect with hos tels already established in Wash ington. Miss Reasoner stated. A new major in recreational pro grams is now listed on the curricu lum of Massachusetts State col lege. Kent State university’s wrest ling team has won 45 straight vie tories on its home mat. ^SfSSr uram §P*Spwr'«fr*r TF uitprr mw CHARLES BOYER SIGRID GtIRIE _iB^ HEDY LAMARR^ PLUS: Bobby Broen in “Pishmerman’s Wharf” SUNDAY until WEDNESDAY JUNIORS Plan to Make SPRING TERM Your Best at Oregon and JUNIOR WEEKEND the Greatest Ever GET YOUR JUNIOR CLASS CARD at Registration TODAY ^gjgjgjgfgjgjglgjgjgfSMSMSMSJSrSJSTSlSIlSISISJSnSffilMSiBSISJSISJSISIEIlSMSJSiSISIHSJSfi^ a M To the Applause OUR CONGRATULATIONS AND WELCOME Championship quality is to be found in our workmanship as well as in Ore- J* gon’s fine team. New Service Laundry ] Phone 825 n < uiJM^JSISMSfSI3f3ISMSI3®Mi3M3ISISI3I3I3I3I3I3I3ISISI3I3ISISJSISI3ISI3ISIBIfiI3I3I3JBJ3rih' "With one foot on the land, and one in industry, America is safe.” ^ —HENRY FORD Factory in a Meadow A dozen small Ford plants dot the fields and meadows within fifty miles of Dearborn. We call them the “village industries.” Their windows are bright in the sun, and their wheels turn to the harnessed energy of once lazy streams. Many of their workers are farm ers who love fine machinery. After harvest and before grecn-up, these farmer-workmen park their cars in neat rows beside the plants. Inside, with the newest, most modern ma chines, they build Ford parts. With the money earned, they buy that fertile forty just east of the pas ture lot — families go to school — houses grow wings—barns are fdled with provender and sheds with back saving machinery. These Ford families have one foot on the land and one in industry. They raise food for themselves and feel secure. They know that if slack times come, farm and garden will still provide employment. Life is pleasant in the villages. Working conditions are almost ideal. Men do better work and are proud of their contribution to Ford quality. It shows up in the fine performance and all-around dependability of the 1939 Ford cars. FORD MOTOR