Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 12, 1939, Special Edition, Page Four, Image 4

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    Tradition Reigns Supreme
At Campus Luncheon
Wearing white shoes, a tie, and
speaking to a beautiful girl may
make an Imposing picture for
Esquire, but it won’t do on the
Oregon campus Friday at the cam
pus luncheon.
For this year, the Oregon tradi
For Quick and Expert
TAILOR
SERVICE
We still take your
old suits in exchange
or credit on your tail
oring.
UNIVERSITY
TAILOR
1128 Alder St.
tion that forbids any of the afore
mentioned evils will be strictly
enforced as it has been in the past
by the letterman club, the Order
of O.
The age-old penalty for the
grave offense of either wearing a
tie, white shoes, or speaking to a
girl at the campus luncheon is
“dunking,” which is being ducked
in the pond between Fenton and
Deady halls.
Various of Oregon’s notables
have at one time or another been
forcibly ducked in the pond. In re
cent years, Coach Howard Hobson
and Dennis O'Brien Donovan, fiery
Irish quarterback for Tex Oliver’s
gridmen, have been the two most
famous "dunkees.”
However, this year Donovan will
be dunking, instead of being
dunked, as he is now one of the
most brilliant satellites of the let
terman aggregation of stars.
Experience will be the best
teacher for those who defy tra
dition Friday noon, but the tuition
1 will be extraordinarily high.
See these Arrow Shirts at
“THE MAN’S SHOP”
BYROM & KNEELAND
32 E. Tenth
Phone 364
ITatTonTl .
arrow
A Wy, 1
io^L
Welcome to . . .
ARROW’S OPEN HOUSE
Tear down to
"*y our Arrow
W dealer this noon
if you want to get the pick of
this season’s crop of Arrow
beauties. Be the first on the
campus to wear what everyone
else will be wearing six months
hence. New patterns, new colors,
in Arrow shirts, ties, underwear,
handkerchiefs, and sportswear.
Huge assortments of crisp fresh
Arrow merchandise just waiting'
to be ensnared...get yours now.
1} it hasn't an Arrow labet,
it isn’t Arrow.
Arrow Headquarters on the Campus
Campus Shop
Clay Pomeroy Jack Wagstaff
!
Eight to See
Big Weekend
From Infirmary
Eight students were recover
ing from various minor illnesses
yesterday.
Thursday’s sicklist included
Seth Smith Betty Plankinton,
Ted Olsen, Bob McAuliffe, Jim
Jarvis, Maxine Winniford, Peggy
Snow, and Margaret Spliid.
Tea Scheduled for
Visiting Mothers
At Gerlinger Today
Mothers visiting the campus this
weekend will be entertained at a
tea this afternoon in alumni hall
in Gerlinger from 3:30 to 5 o’clock.
It is being sponsored by the
AWS and YWCA as a special
event for Junior Weekend, with
Queen Maxine Glad and her royal
court as guests of honor.
Officers of the mothers’ clubs
of Portland and Eugene will pour.
In the receiving line will be Mes
dames Donald M. Erb, Hazel P.
Schwering, C. H. Weston, Alice
Macduff, John Stark Evans, and
the Misses Anne Frederiksen,
Margaret Van Matre, and Betty
lou Swart.
Members of Kwama, Phi Theta,
AWS Council, and Mortar Board
will act as hostesses with the as
sistance of freshman girls. Mary
Failing, Virginia Tooze, and Mar
cia Wright are in charge.
Campus Tour Slated
For Mothers Saturday
Mothers and students will meet
in front of the infirmary at 3 p.m.
Saturday to be conducted on a
tour of the campus.
They will visit the health serv
ice, physical education building,
art museum, museum of natural
history, and library. At the li
brary attention will be drawn to a
special display and the Burgess
and Nash collections.
LAMOREAUX EMPLOYED
Harold Lamoreaux was recently
employed by Woolach Brothers,
Goodyear tire distributors in Eu
gene, Miss Violet Runte, secretary
to Miss Janet Smith, employment
secretary, reported yesterday.
r.'~
Moms Help Students
To Pay School Costs
It's not only papa, but mama who helps pay the way of Oregon
students. At least, the Mothers’ Emergency Loan fund is helping
many an Oregon student meet his creditors at the start of each month
wrtth a smile rather than frowns or evasive glances.
Each year the fund loans money for short periods of time to help
students stay in school until they can obtain money at a later date.
Increased
Fund Aids
Students
Oregon Mothers
Add $200 More to
Scholarship Fund
By HAL OLNEY
Score another point for the Ore
gon Mothers. This organization,
which has helped so many Oregon
students, announced yesterday that
the scholarship which they have
presented to outstanding Oregon
high school students every year
since 1935, will this year be in
creased to $500.
The scholarship was originally
set at $300 and has stayed at.that
figure until this spring when the
ever-helpful mothers organization
announced that $200 would be add
ed to the original amount.
Some of the leading students of
the school and highest ranking
scholars are among the beneficiar
ies of this fund. The first year this
scholarship was offered, in the
spring of 1936, two students, Paul
Deutschman and Tom Turner, were
the beneficiaries. Each student re
ceived $150. Both have justified
their selection by carrying top
grades during their college years.
Have Been Prominent
Deutschmann, in addition to
earning an accumulative grade
point of 3.09, has been prominent
in various school activities. A
journalism major, he has attained
the highest position in that field
that a student can receive during
his college career—editor of the
Oregon Daily Emerald.
Deutschmann is also a member
of the ASUO student union finance
■i
Dinner Dancing
6:30 to 8:30
COFFEE SHOP
AND
DINING ROOM
Eugene Hotel
RALPH KRUSE, MANAGER
Broadway & Pearl. Phone 2000.
’ i : « c r ; • : : i
To date controllers of the fund
have made 708 loans, amounting
to $13,460.30. The average loan is
$19.01.
Practically all of the outstand
ing loans at present will be col
lected by early summer. The fund
will accordingly be largely in cash,
ready for reloaning by the opening
of the fall quarter.
Chairmen of the fund commit
tee will make a full report of the
year’s financial doings at tomor
row’s business meeting of the Ore
gon Mothers. The fund now values
$1,965.17, figures released from
Dean of Personnel Karl W. On
thank’s office showed yesterday.
committee and Sigma Delta Chi,
j men’s professional journalism fra
| ternity.
Tom Turner ranked sufficiently
high in the academic line to be
pledged to Phi Beta Kappa, na
tional scholastic honorary. He has
a GPA of 3.72 for his four years’
work.
Other students who have re
ceived the scholarship have also
been high ranking students. Aida
Brun, who was one of the three
students awarded the scholarship
in 1938, received a straight 4
point GPA last term.
Already 60 students have ap
plied for the scholarship this year.
I Thirty of the students have re
ceived absolutely the highest pos
[ sible grades during their high
school years.
A committee of three faculty
members will interview all 60 of
j the applicants. Karl W. Onthank,
j dean of personnel is chairman of
the committee. The other two
members of the committee are:
Dr. Rudolph H. Ernst, professor of
English, and Dr. Victor P. Morris,
dean of the BA school.
| Beta Gamma Sigma, business
; honorary, held its annual election
j Tuesday evening at a banquet at
the Del Rey cafe. The new offi
cers are Dr. Victor P. Morris, dean
of the B. A. school, president; Glen
j R. McDaniel, vice-president; Miss
I Ruth May Chilcote, secretary
■ treasurer; and Theodore Proud
foot, initiation chairman.
New York World’s Fair
San Francisco Exposition
AS LOW AS
$AA IN DELUXE
Sill COACH
—with ether attractive fares fer
Sleeping Car Travel
DAILY- April 28 to October 28
Llb«r»l Return Limits ft Stopovers Permitted
3 Famous Air Conditioned
TRAINS EAST
J. C. Cumming, Gen. Pass. Agent.
Portland, Oregon.
751 Pittock Block,
C. IT Jacks, Trav. Traffic Agent.
UNION PACIFIC
RAILROAD
dead cf the and the Cdallni^rr'
I