This Week’s Churcl By BETTY JA1 Few individual meetings will 1 evening. Instead, members will att gational church at 7 o'clock with the McMinnville Methodist church Planned under the supervision o department of religion, and the sti is the first of a series of meetings religious leaders of the state and nation will be brought to the cam pus. Mary Wright will lead the wor ship service. Preceding the meeting a short social period will be held. Bishop to Speak Another visitor in Eugene this weekend is Bishop Raymond J. Wade, head of the European Meth odist church. Just starting a tour of Pacific northwest churches, Bishop Wade will make his first appearance Saturday evening at 7:30 at Wesley house. At this evening's meeting, which is open to any student or faculty member, Bishop Wade will speak on the European situation. Among the groups meeting early for their own discussion are the Lutheran students who will meet at the YW bungalow at 6 o'clock. Hazel P. Schwering, dean of wo men, will discuss the dean of wo men's duties and problems. Westminster speaker in the morning will be Prof. W. G. Beat tie, director of social welfare, who will discuss “The Complement to Freedom.” Bishop Wade will speak in the By BOV METZLEK “Dust Be My Destiny” star ring John Garfield and Priscilla Lane is a powerfully dramatic story of a young couple who take life as it comes and try to forget about tomorrows. John Garfield has his first starring role and his performance proves that he has earned this part. Priscilla Lane, who is teamed with Garfield for the third time handles her part well and is good to look at anytime. This picture start at the Heilig to morrow on a single feature bill with the usual “selected” short subjects. Mickey Rooney and Judy Gar land hold the spotlight at the McDonald in “Babes In Arms,” the successful Broadway mus ical made in flicker form. This story centers around a group of vaudeville - heritaged children1 who prove that vaudeville is not dead. (Believe that if you can.) They put on a great show that meets with success, and the pic ture reveals the making of the show. Tunes such as “Where or When” and elaborate song and dance numbers keep the picture in a lively mood. Taking advantage of the .suc cess of "Four Daughters," War ners followed it up with "Daughters Courageous,” both featuring the Lane Sisters. This picture returns to town with “Stronger Than Desire" at the Rex. "Fifth Avenue Girl" with Ginger Rogers continues its run at the Mayflower. What’s New in Hollywood Darryl Zanuck is making "Grapes of Wrath” with the sound stage doors locked, and with the last ten pages of scripe, which only three living persons have seen, stowed away in a sealed vault. The first filing cabinet for legs is established at MGM where photographs of the pret tiest legs in Hollywood arc filed away for future reference. A schoolteacher from Billings, Montana, faints dead away when Bing Crosby walks into the Paramount cafe wearing only a sarong ■ . . Lya Lys has the shortest name in Hollywood. . . . Rosemary Lane wondering whether it was just a coinci dence that the "studio salad” she ordered at the Warner com missary contained cheese, nuts, and ham . . . Still pictures of Joan Bennett .Mrs. Gene Mark ey I) in a black wig. taken for her latest picture, so nearly re sembled iledy Lamarr iMrs. Gene Markey II i that playful engravers switched Lamarr stills into a Bennett layout and nobodv \ ct di_.ee crcd i News fE THOMPSON >e held by student groups Sunday :nd a union meeting at the Congre ^ev. Llewellyn Griffith, minister of speaking on "Religion As I See It." : Dr. James R. Branton, head of the ident religious council, the meeting and assemblies at which prominent morning service at the Methodist church Sunday. Sigma Nu and Jobe's Daughters members will at tend the service. Communion Sunday Holy Communion will be cele brated Sunday morning during the church hour at the Baptist church. Dr. A. J. Harms will speak on “Forgiveness and Forgivingness" at the morning service and on “Knowing Christ Better” at the evening hour. Despite the confusion caused by the European situation as to wheth er or not Armistice day should be celebrated, various groups are planning observances during the next two weeks. Dr. S. Earl Child ers, minister of the First Christian church has chosen the Armistice theme for the Sunday evening ser vice. Before speaking on "A Time ly challenge,” Dr. Childers will show a news reel. At the morning hour, he will speak on "Disciples ; of Christ.” National Advertising Honorary Pledges Nine Men Students Nine men were pledged to Alpha Delta Sigma, national advertising honorary, at a Thursday luncheon meeting, it was announced last night by Glen L. Pownder, presi dent. The Alpha Delta Sigma is com posed only of men who plan to en ter some phase of advertising as a career. The new pledges are: Ford Eil ers, Jess Shinn, Dave Compton, Bob Millspaugh, Dick Williams, Bob Calkins, Fred May, Bob Rog ers, and Les Harger. The pledges have a rather tough initiation schedule ahead of them. One of the requirements is the selling of space on a sandwich board which they must carry about j the streets on the Saturday of Homecoming week. . Gift in Reading Room Miss Ethel R. Sawyer’s new desk in the browsing room is causing much comment. The desk is a gift of Percy A. Smith, manager of the : West-Made Desk corporation of j Portland. Ray Schrick, Tom Wright and j Jack Buker were initiated into the 3 o’clock club last night. a* ■ iKhiAi.ii DOROTHY LAMOUR AKIM TAMIROFF iu JOHN HOWARD “DISPUTED PASSAGE’’ plus THE JONES FAMILY in in “TOO BUSY TO WORK’’ and the latest edition of MARCH OF TIME “THE KID FROM KOKOMO” with Wayne Morris, Joan Blondell, Pat O’Brien and “THE FIRST WORLD WAR” (Real pictures of First World War) IflEILIG “Full Confession” with VICTOR McLAGLEN and In Old Monterey” with GENE AUTRY GINGER ROGERS in ‘FIFTH AVENUE GIRL’ Caravan On Slate Monday Webfoot Boosters To Welcome Alums In Portland Trek A largo percentage of students and at least three Eugene organ izations had last night pledged their support to Oregon's first offi cial homecoming caravan which is set to leave here Monday morning to invite Oregon alumni between here and Portland to the weekend festivities. Led by homecoming's five pretty coed greeters, the caravan will head first for Salem where KSLM will broadcast their initiating of Governor Charles A. Sprague into the Eugene Quarterbacks. In Al bany the sign-bearing groups of Eugeneans will make Willard Marks, chairman of the state board BULLETIN All students Interested in join ing the Portland caravan Mon day morning to advertise home coming weekend should get in touch with Joe Gurley by to morrow, he announced last night. of higher education, a Quarterback, and in Portland, Mayor Joseph K. Carson will be the center of the radio broadcast. Besides the Quarterback mem bers and every University student who wants to go, the caravan will include the junior chamber of corn mere and a group of alumni. Leaving immediately after the regular Quarterback meeting early Monday morning, the cars will ar rive in Portland before noon to be greeted by the Oregon Alumni association and the Oregon Duck club on the west side of Sellwood bridge. From there the cheering throng will parade through down town Portland. Also on the slate arranged by Joe Gurley, promotion chairman, is an appearance on the Curbstone Quiz program over KEX Monday after noon and several other radio ap pearances. Police escort may accompany the caravan, according to develop ments last night. Students wishing to attend should notify Gurley by Sunday night with promises of available cars. Geology Class on Trip To Examine Dam Site The geology students, accom panied by Dr. Warren D. Smith, will examine the Fern Ridge dam site this morning and tomorrow afternoon. H. B. Wood, geologist with U. S. engineers and Thomas Ellison, also a geologist with the project, will each accompany one of the groups. The purpose of the trip is to illus trate the sort of work done by geologists on a dam of the Fern Ridge type. Two Murals (Ccmtmucd from page one) work for their master's degrees and show excavation scenes, one of which was taken directly from Dr. Chessman's eastern Oregon dig gings. After the taks and comments members of the general anthro pology classes served refreshments to the guests who examined the exhibits on display. New collections given to the mu seum include: The Mrs. Phyllis Harrington Wetherbee collection, the Mrs. Isaac Lee Patterson collection, the I Dr. Robert Joseph Marsh collec- i tion. the Mrs. P. G. Hendricks col lection, the Paul Van de Velde col lection, and some material of the Philippines from Dr. VV. D. Smith. New loans include the Evans Pettinger loan, the Mrs. Alice Hen ly Ernst loan, the Frank S. Trew collection loaned by Mrs. Karl On thank, and the loan of 40 Klamath baskets by Mrs. Dan E. Clark. 'Snake' Trek (Continued from page one) mentioned the Oregon “Victory Bell." He told the student crowd that Washington State also has a bell which is rung when the boys from the Palouse hills are victo rious. and he hoped that it would ring tomorrow afternoon. Chilly night air thinned the ranks of the rooters wearing only thr two-piece prints over their campus clothes, leaving a smaller but apparently enthusiastic crowd to follow the- band in the program tujale, “Mighty Oregon.'' Students Organizing on Neutrality Question, Collegiate Poll Shows By ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATE PRESS As always happens when a great political or social question faces the nation, college students are today forming organizations to influence the opinion of their fellow students on the questions of war and neutrality. At Princeton university, undergraduates have formed "The Am erican Independence League,” which is “dedicated to the purpose of revealing, strengthening, and expressing the determination of the American people to keep out of the European war." The league al ready counts one-third of Princeton's student body as members, and a second chapter of the organization has been formed on the Harvara campus. Incidentally, national headquarters of the new organization are in the offices formerly occupied by the Veterans of Future Wars, now defunct. Not quite so serious, but just as interesting, are two other pro posals that have made their appearance in the last week or two. In the University of Pittsburgh's towering Cathedral of Learning there has sprung up the “Loyal Order of Sons of Leavenworth," whose slogan is “If America goes to war, we go to Leavenworth.” Here’s an interesting paragraph from a letter explaining the organization: “Hurry! Form your own District Cell of the Loyal Order of Sons of Leavenworth! Pick your cellmate while you may. Write now for your free membership card entitling you to all the privileges of our future home. Write today to ask any questions you may wish about our secret shuffle, out national symbol—the ball and chain—or any other practices of our exclusive Order.” On the Cornell university campus, Stan Cohen, columnist for the Cornell Daily Sun, stirred up a bit of interest with this telegram to Secretary of State Cordell Hull: “Sun political expert advocates corridor through Canada to join Alaska to Union, free enslaved minorities in Vancouver, protect economic future of nation. Would resort to force if necessary. Can we expect support of state de partment?” At this writing, the Hitler-like proposal has met with no response from Mr. Hull! We've ali thought for a long time that something ought to be done about it this business of making the life of today's collegian glamorous and carefree—and at last the Daily Dartmouth of Dart mouth college has done it! We believe you'll give a rousing second to this editorial! “It’s about time somebody tried once and for all to dispel the myth of the carefree college boy. The college boy, people who are out of college, or have never been there, will tell you, lives a life which runs the gamut from pure joy to the ultimate in rhapsodic existence, and the Sunday magazine sections picture him with glass in hand, his lips creased in a gay smile, while a number of beautiful women parade past him like so much beef on the hoof. The motion pictures are doing their level best to prolong the life of this popular fiction, and thousands of young girls who stand on their feet all day behind the counters from Worcester to Oshkosh find their own particular heaven in watching some clean cut god of the Tom Brown species cavort through a land overflowing with evening clothes and exciting football finishes, strewing his fraternity pins behind him. “The college boy may seem that way at times, and particularly when he begins to reminisce for the benefit of the homefolks during vacation periods, but that is because he is learning that the only way to please is to give people what they expect, and that no one will believe, much less listen to him, if he tries to tell the crowd that he is doing a serious job of going to college, and that he has a lot of things on his mind. “The fact is that college boys work hard, take a Saturday night off for relaxation, like to sit by the fire and read the newspaper, are ugly or good looking as the case may be, have their domestic troubles with their roommates, get broke, argue with the traffic cop, do or do not like their eggs flopped over, and call Mr. Roosevelt names, even as any average citizen who lives uphill and goes to work on Main street. To be sure, college boys are young, and they do these things with more spirit, and harder than they will twenty years from now, but the point is that this is what they do, and it's peculiar that nobody wants to believe it. “Just the same, we hope the day will come when some stranger will tell us that he’s working in such and such a place, and we can reply that we’re going to college, without catching that ‘oh, college boy' look in his eye.” To which we say, "Amen!” Definitely valuable is the following suggestion from the Midland of Midland college, for long have students talked about the text books that add to their scholastic miseries. So wc pass on |o you the editorial “Carrying a Heavy Load.” “Ancient and honored is the tradition among textbook writers that a book must have weight to have value. Therefore, those fat volumes you see under the arms of students aren’t encyclopedias or congressional records. Rather they are four or five pounds of assorted literature, history, philosophy and what-have-you. “We don’t mean necessarily that the larger the book the more stuffy it is. In fact, most texts are attractively written and very readable despite the facl that it would take years of study for most mortals to assimilate them. “Because the amount to be covered in a semester demands large daily assignments, most of us skim over 30 or 40 pages and are left with a rather vague impression, much like a passenger on a streamliner after a 100-mile-an-hour trip across country. “The day is not far distant, we hope, when textbook authors will boil their subjects down to the meat, flavor them spicily, throw in a little sauce and serve in succulent, tasty dishes to culture-hungry students.” 90 sheets Westminister Will Broadcast Different Students Will Have Charge Of Worship Hour The weekend social slate for Westminster house will include a hike, discussion groups, a union meeting, and plans for a series of radio broadcasts. Immediately after the game to day members will meet at West minster house for a hike to Hen dricks park, where they will eat their lunch. From 7 until 9 today evening music-lovers will listen to the NBC symphony broadcast around the house fireplace. Sunday morning at 9:45, W. G. Beattie, associate professor of ed ucation in the general extension division, will speak on “The Cor relative of Freedom," a continua tion of the discussion on freedom two weeks ago. A group of young people will meet at Westminster at 6:30 Sun day evening to go en masse to hear Dr. L. O. Griffith speak be fore the union meeting of campus religious organizations at the Com munity church. There will be a short social gathering before the services at 7 o’clock. Westminster will be in charge of a week’s series of radio broadcasts over KOBE, beginning Monday morning at 7:45 and lasting until S o'clock. Relta Lea Powell will lead the services with “Friendship” as a theme. Tuesday Peggy Lou Smith will be leader with the theme. “Prayer"; Wednesday, Elaine Nelson, leader; theme, "Love;” Thursday, Jack Newton, leader; theme, “Hope”; Friday, Bob Knox, leader; theme, "Medi tation; and Saturday, Anne Dean, leader, theme, “Applied Christian ity.” Services will include music and readings in scriptures and poetry. Company E, Section One Wins ROTC Laurels for Week With a more than perfect score of 100.1040, Company E, section 1, won the ROTC laurels for the week last Wednesday at the weekly uni form drill. Companies were judged on personal appearance and con duct in the ranks, with demerits being given for every unbuttoned pocket or unshaven chin. Addition al merits were given to those stu dents whose uniforms showed un usual care. The officers commanding the honor company were: Company Commander Robert Pettee, and Platoon Leaders Herb Anderson and Roger K. Conrad. Second place went to Company B section 1 with a score of 100. 0769, third place to both Company B section 2 and Company C section 1 with scores of 100.0513. Korn's Bread STANDS FOR \ BEST' WHICH MEANS Double-the-Milk Watch Out! or those MJDTKRMS will GKT YOU . . . if you don’t take good notes. MAKE Y 0 U K NOTE TAKING SIMPLE I’m our “(|j. A. ” I) r ii 111|, s in o o l Ii, easy writ iny, heavy, notebook paper. ALSO: Green tint fillers 11x8Zi. 00 sheets I He 9*/2x.t», 90 sheets Ilk: “Eye-Ease” Fillers ALL HALf POUND PACKAGES 8' hc510C each 9/4x6 Green tint, 11x8/4 1 hiinmennill Museum Gains Two Fossils, Horse Hoof And Elephant Tooth Added recently to the many fos sils already in the geology section of the University museum of nat ural history were two more rem nants of ages that once were, Dr. Warren D. Smith, head of the de partment of geology and geogra phy, announced Friday. Donated by Harold E. Hansen, law student, who was working in Alaska last I summer, the specimens include a horse hoof and a small elephant : tooth. About 50,000 Years Oid The hoof of the ancient Alaskan horse was found about 100 feet down in the sand and the tooth of the baby mammoth was discovered buried about 150 feet in frozen gravel. Dr. Smith remarked that at the time these two animals were alive, during the pleistocene era, there were horses and elephants in Ore gon also. The two donations are on ex hibit in the museum of natural history. Fraternities Pledge Three, Dean Says Dean Earl yesterday announced pledging of Neal Nichols and Her bert A. Jones to Phi Sigma Kappa, and O. J. Everson to Sigma Phi Epsilon. Westminster Group To Be in Charge of Morning Devotions Among early risers next week will be seven Westminster house members who will be in charge of the morning devotions over KORE. Sponsored by the Eugene minister ial association, the devotional hour starts each morning at 7:45. This means that the person in charge will have to be at the station around 7:40. Those who will lead the worship period include Relta Lee Powell, Peggy Lou Smith, Bob Knox, Elaine Nelson, Jack Newton, and Anne Dean. Themes upon which the students will speak are “Friendshi p,” “Prayer," “Meditation,” “Love," “Hope,” and “Applied Christianity." Frosh Draw Ezmuaans rmsmsmn (Continued from page two) colors with his fierce tackling and blocking and has been stamped as almost a certainty for future var sity action. Pee Wee Bujan also made several vicious tackles and several of the ball packers dragged themselves slowly to their feet. The 10th of November is rapidly approaching, and unless the eight injured frosh regulars round into shape, the outlook for a victory in this second rook encounter is still dark. m Quickly Seen New glasses will im prove your sight imme diately — and your alertness to business de tails, immeasurably. If this is so, you want to know it. 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