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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (April 28, 1939)
The Oregon ^.aily Emerald, official student pub lication of the University of Oregon, published daily during the college year except Snudays, Mon days, holidays, and final examination periods. Sub scription rates: $1.25 per term and $3.00 per year. Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice, Eugene, Oregon. PAUL DEUTSCHMANN, Editor BILL PENGRA, Managing Editor HAL HAENER, Manager DICK LITFIN, Assistant Business Manager Upper business staff: Jean Farrens, national ad vertising manager; Bert Strong, circulation manager; J. Rob Penland, classified manager. Represented for national advertising by NA TIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE, INC., college publishers’ representatives, 420 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y.—Chicago— Boston -Los Angeles—San Francisco. Day advertising manager: Jim Frost Assistants: Jean Crites, Bob Rogers Room for Many J.\T fivo (lavs (May 2) llio Associated Stu dents of the University of Oregon will meet in Gorlinger assembly ball and nominate candidates for the four posts on the execu tive committee. For the benefit of those stu dents who feel qualified to run, who have a program which they feel should be put into effect, or who wish to improve the caliber of ^student government the Emerald is running the ASUO constitutional requirements dor nominations. Sec. II. Nominations. Clause 1. Each candidate shall sub mit to the president of the ASUO on or before midnight of the second day prior to nominations, a declaration of intention to run and certificate of eli gibility, signed by the Dean of Men or the Dean of Women. The vice-president or other duly authorized person shall check eligibility before nominees’ names appear on the ballot. Clause 2. Any person not declaring his intention to be a candidate as pro vided in this constitution, may become eligible by submitting a petition signed by fifty members of the ASUO, to the president of the ASUO, not later than two days after the regular nominations. This action would constitute a nomina tion. Such a petition must comply with the eligibility regulations of this con stitution affecting 'candidates and be accompanied by a certificate of scho lastic eligibility. »» * 'JTIIHSE arc the provisions of the A ST JO constitution. They arc simple, clear, and designed to make possible a wide group of candidates, democratically selected. Any indi vidual who has taken three terms of resident instruction on this campus, reached complete .junior standing, and maintained a cumula tive grade point of 2.00 is eligible to run for the executive committee. There is no need for tin1 field to be re stricted. There is rather a great need for a large group of candidates. There are many more than four good candidates on the cam pus. The selection of the four should be made by the students, not by the blocs. The Calliope!!!! Headed for trouble, bloc politicians were mut tering loudly under their breaths yesterday as the newly launched campus-wide campaign to discard the bloc system in politics made rapid strides for ward behind the enthusiastic obosting of everyone from Joe Soap ill to several of the most dyed-in the-wool gravy salesmen on the campus. UO Employment Office Opens Monday will see the beginning of another phase ol' University em ployment service when the Uni versity of Oregon Ducts’ employ ment office opens in Portland. Miss Janet Smith, employment secretary, and Miss Elizabeth On thank, who will direct the Portland office, are opening the office now so that work will be well under way when school closes. Modern Language Articles Go to Press Mrs. Mary F. Wernham, grad uate assistant in romance lan guages, has prepared an article on “Francis Jammes" which will ap pear in Modern Langue Forum. Miss Mary Kessi, resident assist ant, has an article entitled "Cor rections to the Shields Hiograph.x of Italian Translation’’ in the May number of Modern Language Notes. Princeton University is organ izing a corps of students to travel through five states lecturing on public affairs. Alfred Bernhard Nobel, donor of t ho famous Nobel peace prize, made bis fortune from the im mense sales of dynamite as an instrument of war. Final French (Continued from page onr) of the Paris slums who find daily sanctuary in la maternelle from the ugliness ami terror of their lives at home.” Of the same picture and in the same paper Mr. Meller writes: "Like all perfect ait. it seemed utterly artless, it seems to me that the American motion picture art may well take this picture as a model of how the motion picture industry can and should be used for the purpose of expressing human emotions.” Tickets for both the matinee and the evening show will be 25 cents and may be bought at the door or from Pi Delta Phi members on the campus. We specialize in • Electrical Service • Radio Service • Schick Shavers DOTSON S RADIO SERVICE lltli & Oak I’li. 20-J Some of the seniros in tlie eco nomies department declared that the trouble with marriage is that a fellow can't support a wife and a government on one income. — Utah Chronicle. i 'iu>umiiiiimiimimiiiiiiuHiiimiiA<n!iutuiiiiiiimuiuiiiiiimiiimuiiiuiiiiuiiuiinui«i- - Don’t Forget to take a CAMERA when you go on your pic nic. W c havc all kinds of Cam eras and full photographic 8 equipment for sale. We also do expert developing and printing. CARL BAKER FILM SHOP 698 Wiliam. Phone 535 .. . .... with you Joe Soap Said to Me... Things certainly have been picking up around the Emerald shack the last day or two. I just got through kicking three politicians out of my office, waded through a pile of public-spirited ritizens sitting on my desk, and uncovered my typewriter from underneath a pile of political propaganda, when in walked Joe Soap again. His face was beaming. He looked like a new man. "I see that a few things have begun to happen around the old place, after all,” he greeted me cheerfully. ‘‘Excuse me for my hasty remarks to you yesterday.” “Well Joe,” I returned modestly, “It. just goes to show you.” “Don’t sit there and gloat at me,” he snapped, the old fire lighting up in his eyes. “Just because the political scene has got a little complicated and the campaigns have opened up is no sign that everything is going to be all right.” “What more has to be done, Joe?” I asked him. “The way the situation looks at present there will be a full field of candidates, the proportional repre sentative system should work, and if the blocs aren’t broken, they certainly have been cracked.” Joe looked at me with that all-knowing look. “A lot more has to be done,” he said vehemently. “Student government has got a chance to function now. But the battle isn’t over by a long shot. This fire that is burning in a few public-spirited citizens of the campus has to be caught by everyone. The campus has to realize what possibilities there are in the executive committee.” We sat quietly for a while pondering the gen eral situation. Even though Joe was panning me for feeling satisfied I knew that he was happy. The dreams he had of “every man a politician” were showing signs of coming true. “There is something else for you to think about,” Joe interrupted our bit of silent philos ophization. “You have very little to gloat about. Didn't the frosh election amount to a complete victory for the bloc system? And won’t the rest of the class elections be worked on the same basis? And how do you know that the blocs won't run to cover and patch up the cracks?” “I gotta go now,” he said with a twinkle in his eye. “See if I can find you some good dirt or some more of my high-falutin’ political ideas.” As the movement spreads, it is interesting to notice that bloc politics has become a pain in the neck not only to those who advocate real repre sentation in student government but also to the so-called bloc politicians themselves. Everyone is tired of the bickering, promising, double-crossing, vote-buying, and dictating of bloc politicians. Above all, everyone is tired of student "govern ment” where the government stops the minute a newly elected man gets into office. * sfs Si* ‘‘I hate the bloc system,” said Hoy Vernstrom, Delt president, last night. “Sure, I’ll run for presi dent under the new setup,” he added. Incidentally, Hoy was the “darkhor.se” candidate mentioned in this column several days ago when the DU bloc politicians were trying to decide on the man they wanted to sponsor, Clair Hoflich, last year’s inter dorm prexy, also heartily endorses the plan to discard bloc politics. *H sfc :!: Lloyd Hoffman, Scott Corbett, Roy Vernstrom, J°hn Dick, and Verdi Sederstrom, are the leading candidates who have indicated their willingness to run for student body president to date. John Biggs has been mentioned, but will not commit himself. Anyone and everyone else is perfectly welcome to toss his hat in the ring. Plenty of good prospective student body presidents come to mind: Hal Jahn, Jack Dunn, Phil Dowry, Joe Frizzell, Gordon Ben son, Burt Barr, Bob Schultz to name a few. Every student who feels qualified to run for ASUO executive committee should be free to enter the race both men and women. Then you and you and you may go to the polls and vote for the four best persons in the order of your choice, regardless of your affiliation. Hob Calkins, elected sophomore class president ! b.v a margin of JO votes over Jack Dousing, went into office via the gravy train. He is a good man and will carry out the meager duties of a soph prexy very capably, but just how much did the freshmen themselves have to say in putting him up for the job? Did they think things out for themselves? They did not. They were told how to \ote by bloc politicians who had promised to put Calkins into office in return for the support of the dorms behind Verdi Sederstrom. Ad Managers to Hear Hoopmen UO Basketball Five Will Be Guest of Portland Group Experts in the various fields of 1 advertising- will vie with the Uni versity of Oregon U. S. champion ship basketball team as attractions for the Oregon Newspaper Publish ers Association ad managers’ an nual session, scheduled for Satur day at the Multnomah hotel in Portland, it was announced here today by Harry Schenk, associa tion manager. The first string five of the famed team, together with Coach How ard Hobson, will be guests of the advertising managers at luncheon, and the boys will give the news papermen the “inside dope” or. how they won the national title, Schenk declares. The five are Bob by Anet, Wally Johanson, Urge! Wintermute, John Dick, and Lad die Gale. Authorities to Talk Authorities in various fields of advertising who will speak at the all-day session include Joseph R. Gerber of the company by the same name; Errol Proctor of Bots ford, Constantine and Gardner; C. H. McKinley, advertising manager of the Albany 'Democrat-Herald; Ed Carswell, advertising manager of The Dalles Chronicle; Mac Wil kins, of Mac Wilkins and Cole and 1 Reo Young, advertising manager of the Forest Grove News-Times. Topics to be taken up include selling Oregon products, layouts, publicity, liquor advertising, and display advertising. Many to Attend Sunday morning the advertising men will be guests of Botsford, Constantine and Gardner com pany at breakfast. Advertising men from all sec tions of the state are expected to attend, Schenk states, as will also a number of Alpha Delta Sigma members. Schenk, W. F. G. Thacher, and Frank Short will represent the University faculty. UO Co-op (Contmned from cage one) for a two-year term. The fresh- j man elected will hold this position | for one year. The report to be given by Mr. McClain is the audited report pre pared quarterly by Spencer Col lins, certified public accountant, Lochridge said. In 22 volumes, Princeton univer sity will publish the 100 “lost” (hitherto unpublished) plays of American authors. Books, Pamphlets Given to UO by Washington Doctor Ninety-five volumes of books and a number of pamphlets have been sent to the University library by Dr. George Overmyre of Retail, Wash. Dr. Overmyre, who stated in his letter to the University lbirary that he no longer had room to keep the books, included among them 15 volumes of the Americanized En cyclopedia Britannica, and a 10 volume set of Harper’s Encyclo pedia of United States History. The books sent in the collection are mainly on historical or bio graphical subjects. The pamphlets are mostly medical publications. Duckling Nine (Continued From Score: Presidio Caiwell, 1 . Plunkett, m .. Carroll, r, m Bergholm, 3 .. Hargreaves, 2 Lewis, s . Hussey, lb ..... Raymore, c ... Down, p . Janosick, p ... Zukowski, p . Seton, 1 . Morrow, r . Cordray, 2 . Swain, s . -Williams Page Tivo) B 2 2 4 2 . 2 2 . 4 2 1 1 0 1 2 2 1 1 R H 1 0 0 0 3 3 2 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 A E 10 0 10 0 0 0 0 1 2 2 2 2 1 8 0 3 2 1 1 0 2 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 Totals . Frosh King, 3 . Austin, e . Whitman, 1 . Carney, m . Carrilho, s . Adrian, r . Goodhew, lb .... Skade, 2 . Musselmann, p Libke, 3 . Waits, lb . Hay, 2 . Dragoo, r . May, m . Horenstein, 1 27 9 B R . 3 2 9 21 H O 1 1 2 1 2 3 2 2 0 2 1 0 1 10 5 A E 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Totals . 36 19 18 21 11 2 *Batted for Raymore. Score by innings: Presidio . 003 001 2— 9 Hits . 012 004 3— 9 Frosh . 020 674 x—19 Hits . 012 753 x—18 Home run, Carroll. Three base hit, Carroll. Two base hits, Whit man, Carrilho, Carney, Hussey. Struck out by Musselmann, 7, Janosick 2. Losing pitcher, Down. Left on bases, Frosh 6, Presidio 7. Bases on balls, off Musselmann 4, Down 2, Janosick 3. Umpire, Hank Nilsen. Time, 2:15. Varsity Golfers Trim 'Dwellers’ Challenge Match Taken by Webfoot Squad, 22 1-2 to 4 1-2 The Cellar-Dwellers took on the varsity golfers yesterday and got '‘whapped” by a score of 22y2 to 4 /, in a challenge match at the country club. A varsity team of Cliff Smith, Bill Watson, Shelby Golden, Fred Davis, Dwight Near, and Rich Werschkul, bested Lou Cook, Er iing Jacobsen, Bobby Anet, George Smith, Earl Fortmiller, and Doug Ramsay. In doubles Near and Davis took three points from Fortmiller and George Smith. Golden and Cliff Smith took two points from Lou Cook and Bob Anet, who took one point. Watson and Werschkul took 3 points from Ramsey and Jacob sen. In singles Lou Cook took 3 points over Cliff Smith, Erling Ja cobson lost three to Bill Watson, and Bob Anet lost 3 to Shelby Golden. George Smith lost to Fred Davis, / to 2 \'2, Fortmiller lost 3 to Near, Ramsey lost 3 to Werschkul. Lou Cook was medalist with 69. Early to bed, and early to rise, and your gal goes out with other guys. Indiana Daily Student. i ~ When you send your trunks with us you are assured of . . . • Bonded drivers • $15,000 insurance with each truck cargo 0 All points on Pacific coast • Fast pickup and de livery PACIFIC TRUCK EXPRESS 1307 Olive Ph. 509 Duck Cinder (Continued From Parje Two) sheet with a first in his event. Lloyd Dod, bespectacled Webfoot hurdler, will be up against top competition when he meets Hec Edmundson's three ace hurdlers, Captain Jack Flagg, Jim McGold rick, and Bob Lockhart. Hayward is expecting both Dod and his teammate, Harry Weston, to take points in the lows and highs. Buck Out Jim Buck, No. 1 Duck sprinter who ran his best race last season against the Huskies when he pressed Mack Robinson, will not accompany the team to Seattle. A sore thigh muscle pulled in a time trial more than two weeks ago i still handicaps Buck and Coach Hayward does not want to risk the chance of further strain on the sprinter’s leg until it is completely healed. Bob Diez, who took both dashes ! against Portland last Saturday, will carry the brunt of the sprint duties for Oregon. Diez ran the 100 in 10 flat and the 220 in 22.8 against the Portland Pilots on a cold afternoon. Ehle Reber, mainstay of Ore gon's broad jumping department, has consistently bettered 22 feet this year and may pull a first out of the fire for the Webfoots to morrow. Hayward will take but two weight men on the Seattle journey. Frank Emmons 'and A1 Samuelson will double up on the shot put and discus throw. POLITICIANS ATTENTION! WHAT IS PLOP? O-ton Slate WAfHBllW PHONE 2700 World Famous Jantzen SWIM SUITS Made in the Columbia Empire Tliis year's .Tantzens arc colorful as a May Festival. There are lush new colors. There are lovely Knit-In prints. Accent is on youthful contours, with np-curvc bust lines and extra nip to the waist. The glamour new fabrics are rich and lustrous with the sheen of sun shine. 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