UO, OSC Student Architects Finish Southern Tour Landscape Artists Spend Vacation Near Los Angeles Approximately thirty landscape architecture students from the University of Oregon and Oregon State college tal'e leave for Los Angeles, Friday, March 11, on the department’s annual spring vaca tion field trip. The group, accompanied by Pro fessor and Mrs. F. A. Guthbert, and Mr. D. E. Thompson, of the landscape architecture department, and Professor W. Dorr Legg of Oregon State visited some famous parks, campuses, and residential areas in the Los Angeles sector, which are good examples of land scape architecture. In addition, numerous housing developments and city planning projects were all included in the group’s itinerary. For these rea sons, a few students in the regular architecture school accompanied the landscapers on the trip. Ralph Cornell, noted Los An geles architect, George Hunting ton, and Dorothy Wright, former Oregonians, arranged the sched ule for the college group. These southern-Californians also acted as guides while the students were in the city. The schedule included visits to the Elysian park, Santa Anita race track, UCLA campu3, Pasa dena area, Bel-Air district, Hol lywood, and Huntington park. ALL CAMPUS HOSTESS Mrs. Siefert Finds Career In Gerlinger Enjoyable Tunnels to Contain Extension of Wires For Phone System Extension of the underground telephone wire system on the cam pus is being made by the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph company. Wirps in lead cables are being placed in the tunnels between Thirteenth street, the extension building, and the heating plant. "This will be an improvement to the whole setup as it will rid the campus of more telephone wires strung around from pole to pole," stated I.). L. Lewis, superin tendent of the physical plant. The tunnels which will extend from the heating plant to the mu sic school when completed will con tain hot water and steam pipes, and wires for electricity as well as the telephone wires. Men Dominate By Small Majority In 3476 Eurollment Official registration figures just released from the registrar’s of fice list a total of 347G students m attendance during winter term. This shows only a very slight In crease over the 3459 registration of winter term last year. Although men still hold the lead over women, the 2115 registerd shows a 2 per cent decrease over last winter term figures, while the 1361 women registered are an in crease of 5 per cent. MENUS SPARK REVIVALS ... Houses Plan Renovations For Spring Term Desserts Desserts during fall term are vi tal. They give new students a chance to get acquainted and help tile flock who got themselves "un pinned” over the summer to get back in the swim. But by spring term, when everybody knows ev erybody anyway, desserts need something to give them zest for existence. There’s no better place for that new lease on life to begin than in the food. For six months previous to that eventful day in March when spring begins, white-jacketed boys have been slipping a slab of ice cream under desserting noses with half-apologetic shoves. From then until June, the usual policy is to merely add a few crushed strawberries on top. Or else strawberry shortcake. Now ev erybody loves those first straw berries, and the guests have prob ably bribed their cook into serving 161 Students (Lontimu’d from fni/t’ one} Baldlnger, Randall Caswell, Peter Chiolero, Doris Cleeton, Don Coul ter, Eunice Edwards, Nathan Ed wards, Thud Elvigion, Norman Ev onuk, Robert French, Katherine Gibson, Mary Barbara Godfrey, Fred Grant, Phyllis Gray, Ruth Hall, Louise Bering, Earl Holmer, Hope Hughes, Leone LaDuke, Ed ward Larson, Alice Luvaas, Bill Maltman, Peter Matulaitis, Glenn Maynard, Mari Medill, Martha Kenney Moore, Edith Oglesby, Edith Onthank, Gerald Osborne, Constance Riddell, Omar Schmidt, Monroe Shelley, Ruth Solberg, Randolph Sorenson, Ruth Sprech- j er, Eathel Sutton, George Thorpe,i Dolores Tobler, Donald Treadgold, j Barbara Stallcup Warner, Mar guerite Weigant, Abbio Jane White, Horace White, Jane Young. Betty Mae Anninsen Betty Mae Anunsen, Barbara E. Scott, Maryjane Bovingdon, Stan ley Brown, Elsie Jane Brownell, Lila Furchner, Aida Brun, Willard Mattson, Pearl Wilson, Beryl Rob ertson, Dowell Callis, Marian Bil ly Christensen, William Moore. Billie Jean Dexter, John Dunn, < Bette Jean Edglngton, Leonard Farr, Hyman French, Lee Ghorm ley, Ray Hewitt, James Gibson, Ruth Ann Graham, Roy Jensley, and Robert W. Herndon. Dora Jane Juston, Thelma Nel son, Toshio Inahara, Avis Klemme. Arne Jensen, Helen Johnson, Doris Jones, Rudolf Kalina, Donna Ketchum, Robert Lovell, Karl Zim merman, Doris B. McAlister, Nina Rae McCulley, Ruth Dorene Mar guth, Dorothy Oshanic, Lolita Pierson, William Ralston, Clyde Rose, Clarethel Roselund, Nancy Jane Scott, Lyle Selleck, Mary El len Smith, Elva Jane South, Rob ert Toon, and Emma Verdurmen. Edith Marie Allen, Gloria Dif ford, Richard Jones, Richard Kahn, Eileen Millard, Hugh Muir, Lois ReaL them at their own house so much that they’ve practically turned into a strawberry. Be Unusual So try something' different. If ice cream seems inevitable, why not use refreshing' pink pepper mint in tall sherbet glasses instead of the inevitable brick model ? Strive to give the table that look of "spring” that makes the party a success. The girls next door might be surprised if they are confronted with a gay red piece of early melon sometime in May, but they’ll think it’s novel. Iced coffee instead of the usual hot variety, or punch, tea, and other cool drinks will give a dessert a quality of restfulness. New Ideas Several houses are dwelling on spring term variety in entertain ment. Bowling and skating parties are in line for their share of at tention. After a session of activity, the field is wide open for more substantial food, for coeds have big appetites after a workout, too, and they’ll dive into a stack of sandwiches with gusto. i"J- - ■ i By MARJORIE MAJOR Oerlinger hull's Mrs. Edith Sie fert has bpcn for the past spvpn years mother, hostess, and friend to the whole University of Ore gon. "I get to know everyone sooner or later,” she smiled, her hands busy with knitting. Every day from h t small apartment next to the beautiful Alumni room she sees the file of students going to class es. Mrs. Siefert is the quiet guar dian of what is perhaps the activ ities center of the campus. She eats her lunch while basketballs bounce up and down in the gym and while the dancing classes sharpen their 1.rush-tap-step routine to the tune of ".Scatterbrain.” "7i> rounds rotiay Independents are her special charges. She orders the punch and cookies for their parties and sees that the ice is delivered on time. She also guards the antique cop per service which is brought out almost weekly to shine on the tea cloths of some University club or honorary. Her only objection to activities is the muddy tracks of late-for class students which spatter across Alumni hall in rainy weather. She doesn't think students change much—except for their clothes. The boys still eat all the food that's left, she says, and the girls still want to know if she has a bobby pin. Her contacts are an increasing source of enjoyment and she speaks often and emphatically of the "zest and cooperation of young people.” “Sunset on Dawns” "I guess the most beautiful thing on the campus is the sunset across the lawns ...” she added, irrele vantly. Mi's. Siefert has a mental file of student biography and anecdote that is fascinating. Her memories, however, are not of who made Mor tar Board, but of the music stu dents who practice on Sundays on the grand piano. She may not re call committee heads, but the girls who decorated for a dance on a one-dolla’r budget are special peo ple to her. So she keeps house in her ivory tower apartment and watches each year's quota of new students come, while checking the laundry and seeing that someone dusts the banisters. Frosh Shooters Win Four Postal Matches Via the postal service, the frosh rifle team defeated four out of six distant opponents, reported Capt. Harvey Blythe, coach. With a maximum of 4000, the Webfoots defeated University of North Dakota, 3645-3503; Clemson Agricultural college, 3654-3577; University of Wyoming, 3655-3508; and ■ with a top of 2000, Georgia Tech 1845-1832. Idaho beat the Oregon squad 3732-3664 and Oregon State had a top score 3737-3665. Do You Squint when you read? HI I III! If you do your eyes need imme diate attention. Start your Spring term out right . . . get your eyes tested and fitted if glasses are neeessary. Enjoy the Spring by “seeing-right.” Dr. Ella C. Meade OPTOMETRIST Phone 330 14 W. 8th St. POETS... Dr. Moll Forms UO Poetrq Group New Organization To Become Active Here Spring Term Ernest O. Moll, associate profes sor of English, has announced for mation of a poetry-reading group which will become active with the start of this term. An extracurricular activity, the group is open to all students who wish to join. Moll .States Aim “The aim,’’ stated Professor Moll, “is to stimulate interest in contemporary poetry.” The local group will be a branch of a nationwide organization known as the League to Support Poetry, with headquarters in New York and chapters in major col leges and universities in the Unit ed States. William Rose Benet is president of the league. Unestablished I’octs Poems read and discussed by students at informal meetings will be those submitted to the league by unestablished contemporary poets whose works have not yet appeared in book form. Names of students who have joined include: Bob Hiatt, Fred Timmen, Ronald Hankins, Virgene Wade, Drusilla Johnson, Dennis Bakewell, Dean Dwyer, Jane Pen gra, and Ruth Jordan. Contest Will Feature Personal Libraries A personal library contest will be sponsored by the University library to celebrate National Book week, which begins May 3. Cash prizes for the purchase of books will be awarded in two divisions, graduate and undergraduate. En trance deadline is noon, April 30, and any registered student’s libra ry is eligible. The libraries will be judged on usefulness to their owners and on their value as the nucleus of an interesting library for future years rather than on the total number of books or their money value. Text books are excluded. Oregon W Emerald Advertising Staff: Barbara Schmeiding Night Staff: Mary Wolf, Night Editor Lee Flatberg Bernie Engel Bob Frazier Lynn Johnson Copy Desk: Ray Schrick, City Editor Art Litehman Kent Stitzer Wes Sullivan Bernie Engel Lynn Johnson Bob Frazier Morse Wins Praise For Dispute-Settling The "noteworthy accomplish ments" of Wayne L. Morse, Ore gon's law dean and Pacific coast maritime .labor arbitrator, are praised in "Waterfront. Boss,” an article by William Flynn In the February issue of “The Coast.” The article traces his life and outlines his legal achievements. Commending Dean Morse’s arbi tration policies, it describes the peace they have brought to the Pa cific coast’s waterfront. Honesty and integrity for the ar bitrator and unqualified respect for legal rights by the parties to the dispute are, says this article, the principles upon which Dean Morse’s arbitration is based. The article declares that "his philosophy of social justice” and his "respect for constitutional gov ernment" linked by an "unshakable trust in the ability of the demo cratic process to reach valid and equitable conclusions” form an in tellectual background which lias established Dean Morse’s standard for judgment of labor disputes. Why Let Mother Scrub Clothes? 7^--172= \ W*i'LL 1 Springtime is too nice for f\I<> liier to wash your own clothes, (live her a real treat . . . send your laundry to ns. We'll do it cheaper, quicker and just as carefully as Mother. Try the New Service today! Phone 825 NEW SERVICE LAUNDRY TAKE FOR CREDIT ; r Enroll now for spring form golf and receive Eniversity credit, un der Ken Oinlid. Ruses come just Ihree blocks from the clubhouse. Laurelwoo'd 1 Golf Course 2700 Columbia Phone 414 Dinner... Dancing ALL SPRING TERM Every Evening except Monday from 6:30-8:30 Eddie Gipson s 3-piece Band Make Reservations Now for Your Spring Formal Eugene Hotel DINING ROOM AND COFFEE SHOP Drop a line to. \ for your copy of TOB i CCOLjlNi5rTJ • S • A the book that givesyou the facts about tobacco and tells you ivhy for a Cooler, Milder, Better Smoke k» 1011 I X VI v Eli* l a. A short while ago we published TOBACCO LAND, U. S. A., the only complete picture story of the growing, curing and processing of fine tobaccos, from seed-bed to cigarette. So great was the demand for this book from smokers everywhere that another million copies are now coming off the press. TOBACCO LAND gives real information and is yours for the asking. The more you know about how cigarettes are made the