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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 20, 1940)
International Relations Club to Meet Here Friday, Saturday . Round Table Discussions Head Program Registration for Affair to Begin Late Thursday By WES SULLIVAN Students and faculty members Interested in international affairs, | whether affiliated with the Inter national Relations club or not, are | invited to attend the meetings of1 the northwest conference of the IRC to be held on the campus Fri- i day and Saturday, according to Dean Victor Morris of the business administration school, adviser of the University chapter. Attention is especially called to the round table discussions to be held from 10:30 to 12 and 1:30 to 3 Friday, and 9:30 to II Saturday morning. Delegates to the conven tion will present papers to the assembly and discussion will fol low. Students may attend any one of the five sessions. Subjects lasted “The System of Future World Security,” “American Foreign Policy, Isolation, Neutrality, or Co operation?” “Peace in the Western Hemisphere,” “The Fat- East and the Present World War,” and “Democracy, Can It Survive?” are the subjects to be discussed. Delegates will begin arriving Thursday afternoon and will regis ter at the Faculty room of Friendly hall. The registration booth will be open from 5 to 9 Thursday and from 9 to 10 Friday morning. Students wishing to purchase tickets for the Friday and Satur day luncheons or the banquet Fri day night can get them at the registration booth or at Dean Mor ris’ office. Miss Jones to Speak Miss Amy Hemingway Jones, di vision assistant for the Carnegie endowment, sponsors the IRC movement, will speak at the open ing meeting of (lie conference Fri day morning at 10. The speaker at the luncheon Fri day at 2:15 will be G. Bernard Noble, professor of political sci ence at Reed college. Andre Philip, professor of eco nomics and finance at the Univer sity of Lyon, France, will be the featured speaker at the banquet IMM1AI.I A thrilling chapter in the March of Mankind! “Little Old New York” with ALICE FAYE and RICHARD GREENE plus “The Man Who Wouldn’t Talk” with LLOYD NOLAN nn 3 They’re Here Again! BETTE DAVIS LESLIE HOWARD in “Petrified Forest” — plus — “Bad Little Angel” with VIRGINIA WEIDLER HEILIG “Sherlock” McCarthy Is on( alt er you ancl \\o do mean you!! EDGAR BERGEN charlie McCarthy MORTIMER SNERD in “Charlie McCarthy, Detective” — plus - WARREN WILLIAM in “The Lone Wolf Strikes” — Granny’s Got Her Gun — MAY ROBSON in “Granny Get Your Gun” — plus — “Laugh It Off” with CONSTANCE MOORE JOHNNY DOWNS Early Arrivals At Game Play Pinochle, Bridge About four basketball games ago, a trio of boys decided to come to the game early, and, to help speed the time away, brought along a deck of pinochle cards. At the Oregon - Oregon State basketball game of Saturday last, many people apparently had the same idea, and consequently many decks of pinochle cards ap peared. Even on the feminine side of McArthur court card decks were in evidence, but bridge was the popular time killer over there. Do you suppose that maybe someday instead of the custom ary bleachers they will install card tables? Friday night to be held at St. Mary’s Episcopal church, 166 E. Thirteenth street. Cooperation from students in finding housing facilities for the delegates is urged by Bill Grant, president of the local club. Writes for Magazine in his article in the current issue of the journal Sociology and Social Research, Dr. Samuel Haig Jame son, professor of sociology, pro poses a correspondence course to help mothers to better understand problems of their daughters at in ntitutions of higher education. Closer interaction between par ants and teachers, would help solve nuny difficulties, the article stales. Duck Tracks (Continued from pai/e three) Wednesday afternoon they (the Rangers) have scheduled a practice game with University high at the latter's gym at 5 o’clock . . . and as Anderson says, his cluh will fast break. Who are the Rangers? Anderson, of course, and Baldy McKevilt, Suitcase Simpson, Bill McMahon, and Dean Van Lydegraf. Short Shots . . . Coach Bums Cutler's swimming team is really mopping up the con ference. . . . The Ducks heat Idaho, (14 to II, and Washington Stute, (16 to !>, over the weekend ion the dreaded Inland Umpire trip. Vic tories over Oregon State and Wash ington were hung up earlier. Plans and arrangements for a third barnstorming trip to New York and through the East and Middle West are being completed for next year . . . despite the fact that Oregon has lost a few ball games this year, chiefly because of relatively green material. Coach Hobson and Oregon officials feel the experienced gained by players in games against varying types of ball is very valuable. No more sacrifice fly in the base ball code. Hereafter when a batter comes up in the clutch and poles out a long fly to score a teammate from third he will be charged with a time at bat, such is a ruling of the baseball rules committee, meet ing with Commissioner Kenesaw M. Landis. Last year, the sacrifice fly was restored after several years absence. YMCA Schedules Group Meetings Jameson to Speak; Frosh, Town Hall To Hold Discussions Tn order to carry out its purpose of attempting to understand the fundamental implications of the Christian philosophy of life, the following groups of the YMCA will meet this week. The commission on building a life philosophy, Earl Holmer chair man, will meet this evening at the home of Dr. James R. Branton at 2058 Harris street. The ultimate purpose of this group is to find some meaning, purpose, and direction in life and to find the basic Christian relation to these forces. Jameson Speaks Samuel H. Jameson, professor of sociology will discuss “The Prac tical Implications and Limitations of Our Civil Liberties” before mem bers of the commission of political, social, and economic problems at the YMCA lounge tomorrow af ternoon at -1 o’clock. Don Walker is chairman of this group. Freshmen Meet The frosh discussion group will hold its weekly meeting at 7:30 o’- ; clock in the YM Hut but the defi- ; nite line of business has not been announced. The meeting is open to both men and women students at the University. The governing body of the i YMCA, the student executive conn- i cil, will meet at 8:45 o’clock fol- i lowing the frosh discussion group. . All cabinet members are requested j to be present. The Town Hall discussion group under the direction of Frank Mc Kinney, chairman of the group, will meet at the Westminster house to hear the “Town Hall Meeting of the Air.” The group will meet at 6:30 o'clock to listen to the radio ( and then following that the debate is discussed by the students with Paul Sutley, executive secretary of! the Y, leading. Dr. Gilkey Compares (Continued from page one) prohibitive as far as starting new houses is concerned', he pointed 1 out. Women on the campus have lo cal sororities but do not live in them. Mortar Board is one of the ' eldest women’s sorority groups there, and the one to which Dean < Gilkey’s wife belonged. Most of the Chicago students live in apartment houses, the dean said. Fifty-nine per cent of the students are self-supporting. One of the problems Dean Gil key is currently concerned with is that of the interference of radio 1 programs to church attendance. While he feels that the programs ; broadcast from the Rockefeller memorial chapel benefit thousands, ' others say that religious programs detract from church attendance, in that people can hear better music : and famous preachers and will stay at home to hear them. "But I* get hundreds of letters from people who listen to the program,” he said. Dean Gilkey is a member of Del ta Upsilon fraternity. AGAIN We Sag: Yours for tlie TAKING are hundreds of campus scenes and happenings. Make your camera keep a record of your College days. Our camera department will help you. 'CO-OP’ Browsing Room Head Has Idea for Display A letter in a recent copy of the Saturday Review of Literature gave Miss Sawyer of the browsing room a good idea for a display. The letter follows, in which 17 books are mentioned. Smart stu dents are asked to read it and see how many they can spot. Miss Sawyer then invites them over to Lhe browsing room for a check up. Letter Given “Sir: Let me register a plea that gome publisher start the way back lo novels and biographies not long er than 400 pages. How long be fore the wind changes and the strange interlude during which the leading public eagerly grabbed books of 600 to 1200 pages has gone with the wind. “Tf the publishers could know ivhat people said on Main street as well as on Wimpole street they would know that Babbitt is lined up against Anthony Adverse to overlong literary efforts. Short Works Better “Why, on the good earth, do they not see that the short works are better suited to time and the river, and that while the average reader may enjoy spending forty days in one book it really applies to only once in a lifetime. “There’s bound to be less honey in the hom for the publishers when “Book of the Month” means it will take a month to read the book. My prayer for tomorrow is that the publishers will have pity for women readers and give us shorter novels so that after wakeful night over Taos, we can sleep in peace.” Leland Lovelace, Phoenix, Arizona. Betty Brown Gets Fellowship Award For Year of Study Eetty Brown, senior law student it Oregon, has been awarded a fel owship by the American Associa :ion of University Women. The fellowship, worth $1200, is iwarded every three years by the issociation, and may be used by ;he winner to study at any insti .ution she chooses. The board which made the award 'or the association has as chair nan Mrs. Beatrice Walton Sackett >f the State Board of Higher Ed ication. Members include Dr. Kate rameson, dean of women at Ore gon State college; Mrs. Maida 3ailey of Reed; Mrs. Hazel P. ?chwering, dean of women at the University of Oregon; Dr. Helen 3earce of Willamette, and Miss Beryl Holt, state president at Sa em. Sleemen Sing (Continued from page one) iix-part John Stark Evans ar ■angement for the Gleemen, tak :n from a secular carol from Rim iky-Korsakow’s opera, “A Christ nas Night.” • ‘‘One Who Yearned Alone”— rschaikowsky's melody, usually called “None But the Lonely Jeart.” “Carnival”—A Russian mazur ca. “Suomi’s Song” — Sometimes 'ailed the “America” of Finland sung as a salute to a brave and friendly people in their hour of stress. “Irish Love Song”—(Mavour leen) Margaret Lang’s Irish bal ad in an arrangement by Mr. 5vans, featuring the tenor of Joe “lark Keever. “There Was a Crooked Man”— i laughing song arranged as ac companiment to a piano solo by “ora Moore Frey. “Liebestraum” — Mr. Evans’ seven-part arrangement of Liszt's mmortal ballad, with baritone and enor solos and duets. “Lord, I Want Two Wings"—a craditional melody adapted as a legro spiritual with seven inci lental solos by various Gleemen. “Down by the Old Bayou”—a iescriptive negro spiritual. “Let Me Be Born Again”—Mr. Evans’ own arrangement of Vic :or Young’s song, featuring Les ;er Deady’s baritone voice. Men Students Spend (Continued from page one) Entertainment finds the stronger sex with an expense account more than doubling that of the women. Books, the other side of college life, and other things, show the men still paying out more than • Dressmaking PETITE DRESSMAKING SHOP. f>S3 E. 13th St. Ph. 1058. • Musical Instruments ALL KINDS MUSICAL instru ments. 700 Willamette. • Lost LOST—Will the finder of two rings in Friendly hall Monday between 5:15 and 6:30 please no tify Mrs. Ottilie Seybolt, 106 G K H V ALLIGATOR gabardine raincoat, size 38 for Green 40. Tuesday afternoon. Will trade at 900 E. 19th. SUEDE PURSE from art school. Contents valuable to owner only. Reward. Notify Mignon Phipps, Hendricks hall. _ FRIDAY MORNING, gold Elgin wrist watch between Commerce j and Johnson. Leather strap. [ Phone Ehle Reber, 700. Theta Chi 'Bs', ATO (Continued (rout page three) and came out ahead at the end of the period. Graybeal made three baskets to lead the first-quarter scorers. The Duds settled down in the following frame to post a 17-16 halftime lead. Speedy Bun Hodgen, Dud captain, sank an archless two hander from midcourt to provide a thriller in one of the season’s hard est-fought contests. Coming down from a jump ball, Graybeal’s eye met an upthrust fist; result: a bleeding face wound forced Jay to the showers. The Duds led, 23 to 20, as the last quarter started, Mann boosted the lead another point as he canned a foul shot. From then on, in rapid fire succession, Scott, Miller, and Ralph Dunn cast off to put ATO ahead 26 to 24. Stafford was the” given two free throws; he sank one and chose to take the ball out of bounds instead of shooting the second. With 30 seconds to go, Stafford and Jack Dunn tossed in field goais to make the ATO lead total 7 points. Lineups: ATO, 31 24, Duds J. Dunn, 4 .F .2, Ager Hay, 2.F.1, Clemons Miller, 4 .C .... 4, Blenkinsop Scott, 7.G .t.. 2, Mann Graybeal, 7.G.6, Hodgen Subs: ATOs—R. Dunn 4, Staf ford 3; Duds—Taylor 5, Metcalf 4, Wilson. Officials — Cushing and Tower. mi sigs 17; finns 10 Holding the Norsemen scoreless during the entire second half, the Phi Sigs uncovered a surge of pow er as they set press box tongues wagging with their victory over the highly-touted Finns. The score was 5-all at the quar ter and 10-all at the half; from there on the Finns could try only long shots, none of which connect ed, as the Phi Sig defense tight ened. Each team lost a man on fouls in the fourth, Wyatt being dropped from the winners' lineup and Urell leaving the Finn roster. Lineups: Finns, 10 17, Phi Sigs Seeborg .F . 7, Fetsch Lundell, 2.F.3, Caples Hart, 1 .C.7, Spaugh Urell, 6.G . Wyatt Savel, 1 .G . Schick Subs: Finns — Martin, Schluter; Phi Sigs—Weills. the women as shown by their $187,700 in relation to the wo men's $91,000. Dr. Aitchison expressed the be lief that this estimate is too low, as not enough returns have come in looking as if the entire expen ditures had been recorded. “Some people have never been to show or had a coke for over a year,” she said. Another element entering into the low estimate is the down ward change in price levels since 1929, which was the peak. This survey is being conducted on a cross section of University students and the returns reflect what should be an average of the expenditures of the campus as a whole. One out of every ten stu dents is being contacted. Dr. Gilkey Says (Continued from page one) be seemed like the jump from one side of a small ditch to the other; today it is like standing at the edge of the Grand Canyon, Dean Gilkey said. But like the Golden Gate bridge, he said, which spans the greatest distance yet known to man. the simple fundamental of man's need for God and God's love for man spans the greater jump in the field of religion. Preceding Dean Gilkey's talk, John Stark Evans of the music faculty gave a short organ recital. Ski Film to Be Shown With French Movie Accompanying the French mov ie, “Les Perles de la Couronne” will be “Ski Pilots,” a one-reel sound film, it was announced Monday by Miss Maxine Winni ford, graduate assistant of Ro mance languages. The show will be presented Wednesday in 207 Chap man hall. “The Pearls of the Crown,” English title of the picture, is a mystery play dealing With the theft of the crown jewels. Tracing the clues of the stolen jewels takes the characters through most of Europe and covers a wide range of French, English, and Italian his tory from Catherine de Medici through the time of Madame Du Barry, and Queen Victoria on up to the present day. Skiing in summer and winter will be described by Commentator Grantland Rice in the 20-minute short, making the entire show two hours in length. There will be two shows, at 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. Anyone wishing to attend the movie may secure tickets from members of the Pi Delta Phi, French honorary, or room 216, Friendly hall. Admission charges Friendly hall. Admission charge will be 25 cents. Bishop Dagwell Talks Here Today Eishop Dagwell of Portlan'd will be the guest speaker at the West minster house Tuesday noon to day. The luncheon starts prompt ly at noon and costs 25 cents. Mrs. Bryant, hostess of West minster house, asks that those wishing to come and hear Bishop i Dagwell make reservation early in order to assure a place and food. Bishop Dagwell will be in charge of the communion service for Episcopal students Wednesday morning between 7 and 8 in the men’s lounge in Gerlinger hall. For those who would like to see him, Bishop Dagwell will be in the men’s lounge between 2:30 and 5. Special appointments for this period or another may be made through Miss Helen Lyles, student director. Following the regular Lenten service at 7:30 at St. Mary’s Epis copal church Wednesday evening, the student group will meet in formally with Bishop Dagwell. He will also be at the Friday open house for students at Miss Lyles' home from 4 to 6 o’clock. Luman Completes First Air Course Robert D. Luman, former stu dent at the University of Oregon, Library to Sponsor Birthday Contests Tn conjunction with Library clay, May 3, and the celebration at the same time of the third anniversary of the library, the library will spon sor two contests, one to find the best student library, the other for a poster to advertise the occasion. Two prizes, one for $15 and the other for $7.50, are to be given for the best personal library be longing to an undergraduate stu dent registered in the University. Entries are to be made April 20, at the librarian’s office. Prizes consist of books selected' by the winners, the orders to be placed through the University li brary. The library also offers two awards of $5 and $2.50 in books May 3 for the best poster drawn by a student. Entries should be in the library office by May 2. has successfully completed his pri mary training as an army pilot at the army air corps training detach ment, Glendale, California. He will leave immediately for the “West Point of the air,’’ Randolph Field, Texas, according to Captain K. P. McNaughton, commanding officer. Chesterfield presents a Combination you can count on for MILDNESS AND BETTER TASTE CLARK CABLE AND VIVIEN LEIGH i A The perfect blend of the world’s best cigarette to baccos in Chesterfield gives you the two things you want and look for in a cigarette . . . Real Mildness and Better Taste. Then, if you add that Chesterfields are far cooler, you know you have a ciga rette that really satisfies. The Cooler, Better-Tasting, DEFINITELY MILDER Cigarette I