"Boost Traditions, Spirit,5 New Assembly Theme i 'Tiger' Payne Releases Fall Program Plan Schedule Will Open Thursday; Frosh To Sit in Balcony Cleeson “Tiger" Payne, ASTJO president, in an interview today disclosed a new plan in reference to student body and pep assemblies to be followed out this year. The first student body assembly ■will come on Thursday, October 3, according to “Tige" and will be mainly to acquaint the freshmen with the spirit of the school and Borne of the customs. During this assembly the freshmen will sit in the balcony as they will through out the year. There will be five assemblies Jfall term, pep and student body combined, and Payne announced that important matters will be brought up before the students at those times. “There is more school spirit this year than ever before as exempli fied by the great increase in sale of athletic cards. Never before have so many houses gone 100 per cent before the end of registration. Also there will be more enthusiasm due to the fact that all students now belong to the student body.” ■ This year he has inaugurated several new ideas in the handling of the assemblies. A chairman will be appointed to handle each, and efficiency will be increased in that, manner. Pat Cloud will be the chairman of the initial assembly and will ap point a committee to help him in details. The cooperation of the drama, music, and speech depart ments will be asked at various times throughout the year as will that of the entire student body. Also student talent will be dis played as often as possible with the Greek living organizations singing as before. This year a new policy in regard YWCA Will Welcome Frosh Wednesday The YW bungalow, filled withs flowers and warmed by a cozy fire, will be the scene for a general as sembly to welcome freshmen and new students at 4 o’clock Wednes day afternoon. Jean Crites will pre side and Dorothy Dunham will act as chairman. All upper classmen as well as new students are invit ed to attend. The highlight of the program will be the talk by Mrs. Mar garite DeCou, executive chairman of the YW. Mrs. DeCou is as fa miliar with the women’s movement abroad as she is with it at home, as she has acted as a member of the National Board of the Na tional Women’s Movement. “I have watched with deep con cern the fate of the YW women in Europe,” stated the executive secretary of the YWCA. The larg er part of Mrs. DeCou’s speech to the girls will be the program of work this year at the University of Oregon and the dangerous sit uation with which many of her YW friends in Europe are faced. Noble Return Gives (Continued from page one) group meetings in Tokyo. The group has a membership of about 30 persons, the oldest being a mem ber of the class of 1905 and the youngest of the class of 1937. One of the people with whom Dr. Noble visited frequently is Dr. Jiro Harada, who as visiting lec turer in Portland and at the Uni versity in 1935-36, taught Japanese art and culture. To all his ac quaintances and friends here Dr. Harada asked Dr. Noble to convey his “best regards and good will.” Dr. Harada is continuing his work wth the Imperial Household mu seum, Dr. Noble reports, to faculty attendance will be fol lowed as some time during each assembly a roll call will be taken of the staff. The prexy closed with the state ment, "The way to make our stu dent body a success is to acquire new student spirit, not through the rally committee but to interest the students themselves. Victory Specials! • Jones Pork Sausage for your breakfast • Large Angel Food Cakes.39c • Fancy Mixed Salted and Buttered Nuts...49c lb. Elliott’s Grocery Phone 93 Le.t the Folks at Home Follow the Webfoots This Year! ill III!' Don’t Miss a Single Issue! SUBSCRIBE NOW! $3.00 per year $1.25 per term Sign up today at McArthur Court—Northwest entrance or Call 3300-354 Churches Open Services to All All Students Invited To Attend Worship At Town Parishes University students will have) the chance to go to the worship of the church of their choice at the morning and evening meetings tomorrow. Those witli Methodist inclina tions may attend the church serv ice at the church at 12th and Wil lamette at 11 a.m. In the evening they have the opportunity of at tending a forum on “Evaluating Our American Way,” which will be led by A. F. Holmer of the city, YMCA. Westminster house will entertain at a social hour at 6 p.m. Anne Dean will lead a worship service at 6:30. A planning forum will be presided over by J. D. Bryant. Helen Lyle, Episcopalian youth leader, reports that the weekly morning prayer and sermon of that church will be at 11 a.m. Rev. E. S. Bartlan will deliver the sermon. An open house for University stu dents starts at 7 p.m. at Centen ary’s parish house at 13th and Pearl. Dr. Victor P. Morris, dean of the school of business administration at the University, will conduct the morning University class at 9:45. Christian Endeavor meets at 6:15 at the church at 12th and Oak streets. Baptist young people will get the chance to meet Sunday morn ing under the leadership of Henry Schroeder. Prof. Walter Fiscus of the Northwest Christian college will speak at the evening meeting at 6:30. The young people’s class at the Lutheran church meets at 9:45 a.m. Luther league is at 7:30 at the church, located at 6th and Pearl. Church services will be avail able to student attendance at all of these churches. Two Librarians Leave University To Attend School The furniture in the reserve book room has been rearranged to try to keep the freshly painted walls clean. A new clock has been aded to this room, too. Both Frank Bennett of the cir culation department and Adele Skinner of the associate graduate leading room have gone to library school. The former is going to the University of Southern California at Los Angeles; the latter is study ing at the University of Michigan. Miss Myrna Barrett was trans ferred from the Business Admin istration library to take Miss Skin ner's place. Mrs. Rutherford is now in charge of the Business Admin istration library. Business Office To Conscript Staff Monday Afternoon Recruits to the business staff of the Oregon Daily Emerald will be signed up at 4 o’clock Monday aft ernoon in Room 105 of the Journal ism building by ‘'General” Jim Frost, business manager, and his lieutenants, Fred May, advertis ing chief, and Bob Rogers, na tional advertising head. Freshmen are urged to attend this meeting and find a position in one of the four departments of the business office: advertising, circulation, office, and layout makeup. “Journalism majors are not nec essarily specified,” Frost stated. "B.A., social science, and arts and letters students will find that ex perience in the business office will help them in their line also.” This week at McArthur court students who are unfamiliar with the library and its customs may sign up for a tour through the building. Lasting several hours, the tour will take place on Thursday and Saturday mornings and any other time if enough students decide on it. _ Seven Houses (Continued from page one) Torgesen to fraternities, and Miss Christenson to sororities. Daily prizes will be given Mon day through Saturday to the card salesmen who lead in each of these groups, and a five-tube radio to the salesman who is high-over-all when the contest ends Saturday. New Plag Stage Crew Has Easg Time Unique is the word that de scribes the scene-shifting method used by the University Flayers in their forthcoming production, “Touch Wood.” Instead of chang ing sets, the audience will move from the lounge in Gerlinger to the theater in Johnson hall, where an exterior scene will be played. “Touch Wood” will be played in the lounge of Gerlinger hall, be cause it is an informal play, and the small lounge promotes a more intimate relation between the audi ence and the actors. When the play was produced this summer, the exterior scene was played outside on the cam pus. However, due to weather con ditions, it is slated to take place in the Johnson hall theater. Professionally, “Touch Wood” is known as a perambulating produc tion, which gives scene-shifters a vacation, and audience a chance to stretch cramped legs. Because of limited seating capac ity, the drama department has an nounced in advance that seats will be limited to one hundred persons for each performance. All seats will be reserved. Radio Group Plans Varied Programs Opening the year with new modern studios in the extension building, the radio department un der the direction of D. E. Hargis, instructor in speech, plans a wider variety of entertainment over KOAC and KORE, it was an nounced yesterday. According to Mr. Hargis the new studios include one small studio and a control room. Included in the new arrangement is a room to store sound effects. Every Thursday from 7:30 to 8:30 KOAC will broadcast a stu dent hour. The University Theater of the Air and an interview series with campus and visiting person ages will take 45 minutes. The re maining 15-minute program has not been selected. Friday evenings from 7:30 to 8:30 the radio department will broadcast a collegiate quizz. Each week a different type of quiz pro gram will be featured. English 309, radio course in pub lic discussion, is open to freshmen students. The course in radio pro duction is open only to upper di vision students, Hargis said. Refreshments will be served by Kwamas, women’s service honor ary, during registration today. Welcome Students •We wish to sell to you again. • We have New suits in up-to-date styles. Also we do a 1teratio ns and mending on wo men’s and men’s garments. • We have been with the. students for 22 years. There is a reason for it. University Tailor 11-8 Alder Phone 2tHl Oregana Editor Schedules Date For First Meeting 40 Staff Positions Open to Students Of Varied Talents First general meeting of the 1940-41 Oregana staff will be 8 o'clock Monday evening at the Oregana office on the second floor of McArthur court, Wilbur Bishop, yearbook editor, announced last night. Approximately 40 staff positions will be open at that time and ready for student applications. These in clude jobs for writing, typing, sec retarial work, proofreading, art work, and copyediting. Those interested do not have to major in any special field, Bishop revealed. The only qualification, he said, is an interest in the year book and a desire to work. Names of those receiving ap pointments will be announced in several days, allowing enough time for several personal interviews. Preliminary work on the book has already started under the di rection of Bishop and Business Manager Dick Williams, and will speed up with announcement of the full staff. Enlarged CAA (Continued from page one) course taught at Oregon, students are being chosen to take the one given at Corvallis and Albany, where they take ground school and flying respectively. From last year’s CAA students six were named for the advanced school at the Oregon Institute of Technology at Portland. They are Wendell Ha ley, Lloyd Cummings, David Hersh iser, Pierce Mallory, Kneeland Stone, and Paul Christy. This year’s course will not differ entiate from last year’s in selec tion of applicants, as preference will be given first to seniors, then juniors, and finally to underclass men. Chancellor Hunter Leaves for East •Chancellor Frederick M. Hunt er left Eugene Wednesday, Sep tember 25, to attend a three-day meeting in Washington, D.C., of the educational policies commis sion scheduled for September 29. This commission which is just completing a five-year program sponsored by the General Educa tion board, will work on the final volume of a series outlining a phi losophy for education in America. This volume is entitled "Integra tion of American Education.” This commission, which was created in 1935 by the National Education association and the Am erican Association of School Ad ministrators, was recently granted funds to continue in operation for another four years. Dr. Hunter is one of the thirteen appointed mem bers of the commission who are chosen from the nation’s education leaders. The commission will also take up matters relating to educational agencies throughout the nation and will plan the future program. Carlton Spencer Granted Leave Professor Carlton Spencer of the law school was granted a year's leave of absence to accept his com mission as major in the U. S. army. The headquarters are in Salem. He will continue as director of civil aeronautics program here at the University until someone has been appointed to fill his place. Since he did not receive his ap pointment until September 26, there has not as yet been appointed a successor. Dean Morse announced that he is in communication with several lawyers in regard to the vacancy. 700 Books Donated By Mabel Dodson Through the courtesy of Miss Mabel Dodson of Portland, the li brary has an increase of approxi mately seven to eight hundred vol umes of books. They were from the library of the late James Dodson Basey, captain U. S. army, retired. Captain Basey was bom in Port land in 1892. After finishing his education he was given commission of second lieutenant in the U. S. army March 24. 1917. He served both in this country and over seas. He participated in the Aisne Marne defensive and was wounded. He died in Seattle on January 9, 1934. The Serbian Order of the White Eagle, fifth class, was awarded him for services during the World War. His aunt also left his sword and decoration from the Serbian gov ernment to the University library. They are on display. Only the best in Photo Supplies at Baker’s! Carl Baker Film Shop, the largest and most complete in Oregon, ln^ furnished only the best in photo supplies and equipment to OREGON students for years. Visit our most modern and up-to-date plant, equipped to develop all kinds and types of films; to supply you with the latest, in cameras, movie equipment, and printing supplies. Come in today. Carl R. Baker Film Shop 7th and Willamette Phone 535 Dinner, Dancing! Again we bring you FUN and Relaxation with DINNER DANCING Eddie Gibson’s 5-Piece Band EUSENE HOTEL DINING ROOM AND COFFEE SHOP 1,087 Students Can’t Be Wrong That is why more Oreganas were sold yesterday than at any single day during the history of the Oregana. We give you 5 more good reasons why you, who didn’t register yesterday, will order your copy today. 1— It is a tradition that Oregon supports its yearbook better than any other student body in the West. 2— Authorities on yearbooks freely admit * that the Oregana is getting better and better as each edition rolls off the press. 3— Because old grads wouldn’t sell their Oregana for I 0 times the money they paid for it. 4— Because you may use. our Easy Pay ment Plan. 3—Because the Oregana will be remem bered long after the price is forgotten. When ordering your copy be certain your name is spelled correctly The 1941 Oregana