* t LIBRARY CAMPUS ON PAGE 4: Signs Posted On Bad Corner, But Not Enforced VOLUME XLII UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23, 1941 NUMBER 111 Present-Day Stars Lead Revival Film 4th Educational Show to Feature Inclusion of Sound Still prominent and popular to day, two motion picture stars, Janet Gaynor and George O' Brien, are featured as leads in one of the two revival films to be presented in the movie room (207) of chapman hall four times this afternoon and evening. “Sunrise,” produced by Fox films in 1927, and starring the two favorites, is accompanied by a German film “Hands.” Although this is the fourth pro gram in the series of six spon sored by the educational activities Times for today’s movies are 2, 4, 6:45, and 8:45. All students will be admitted free upon pre sentation of their activities cards. board, these two films are the first to be accompanied by sound. Music is included in the complet ed pictures to add mood and at mosphere and both films, al though made in a past decade, have a modern flavor. Little comic byplays, such as a small inebriated pig, and a lady with unstable shoulder straps, add humor to the later part of the film, which ends on a note of frustration with the music of horns calling across the dark waters of a lake. “Hands” represents a compro mise between the abstract and realistic, and it is unique in that only hands appear on the screen. The director felt that the laws of the medium are very often ob scured by actors and yet the hands were used as a means of expression. BA Major Wins Scholarship Club Gives Award To Eathel Sutton For Excellent Work Portland’s Rotanna club’s sec ond annual $25 scholarship to an outstanding girl business admin istration major goes to Eathel Sutton, it was announced at the Beta Gamma Sigma banquet in the Eugene hotel last night. The Portland organization honored Lorene Marguth similarly last year. Bert V. Chappel, speaker at the banquet, outlined ten attri butes which he said every job holder should possess. Comment ing on one attribute, he said. “Never stop studying, never stop growing mentally. Constructive thinking takes knowledge and knowledge j/takes continued study.’’ Other of the attributes were dependability, cheerfulness, di plomacy, punctuality, self-confi dence, tolerance to other em ployees, having an objective, be*. (Continued on page five) TO CALL ON WEBFOOTS ■nmi ' Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, wife of the president and famous in her own right as a columnist, will speak to students and townspeople in McArthur court Wednesday, April 30, at 8 o’clock. Her talk will concern relations between the Americas. 'First Lady' to Speak On Pan-Americanism The first lady of the land, Airs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, will present her first lecture in Oregon in McArthur court next Wednesday even ing at 8 o’clock. Speaking on “The Cultural Relationships Between the American Republics,” Mrs. Roosevelt will appear at a lecture free for all University students with activities cards. In addition to her extensive social duties as the first lady, Airs. Roosevelt is able to fill between 30 and 40 lecture engagements each season, write an occasional book or article, turn six columns a week for a new'spaper syndi cate and visit her children, who are situated in various sections of the United States. According to Mrs. Roosevelt, the secret of her amazing ability which makes it possible for her to accomplish unbelievable quan tities of work—is merely efficient organization. The mother of five children, one girl and four boys, and the affectionate grandmother of sev eral other children, she has never shirked a motherly duty and an illness, birth, or wedding finds her speeding to the city where she is needed. A special price of 25 cents is offered all school children (in cluding high school students) and other prices are: Reserved seats— $1.50, $1, 70 cents, and 50 cents. IN TODAY’S EMERAL News . 1) 2, 3, 5, 8 Sports . .6* ? Edits . Calendar . First Lady No. 1 The size of the crowd Mrs. Roosevelt gets will Surprise her. Why I bet that she draws Almost as many As Kyser. J.W.S. Loans Due Loans drawn at registration time for one month will be due Thursday. April 24. They are payable at the student loan windows 1 and 2 on the second floor of Johnson hall. bt Working Man? If So, Look Out For Economist Are you working your way through college? If so be pre pared to answer questions which 10 members of the economics sta tistics class, under the super vision of Miss Beatrice Aitchison, economics instructor, may ask you. This class is conducting a sur vey on student earnings. By tak ing a cross section of the campus they expect to find the per cent of Oregon students who are self supporting and what type of work they do. 'Cash on Line' Patient Stays Another Night Still no visiting signs posted on the infirmary. Ain't it awful? Send her a posie and a tube of toothpaste, and chances are he forgot his cigarettes and a deck of cards. Oh, woe—and it's spring, too. Pastime of the measlites is, "Hmmm. spots all gone—Bet ya’ I get out tomorrow." "Bet a dime ya' don't." "It's a bet—cash on the line." Missing out on mid-terms to day are: Blanche Thompson. Peg gy Magill, Margaret Barrett, Otillia Hofstetter, "Bunny" Lynd, Beverly Goetz, Donna Williams, Jean Hanger, Billie Dexter, Oliver Stendal, Harry Benson, James Kurtz, Bob Brokaw, Tom Oxman, Don Knowles, Orviile Marcellres, Jim Davidson, James Pollard, Bob Lovell, Bill Skinner, Cleve Ross, Billy Frank, and Redmond Ru dolph. Captain Long To Tell Tales Of Seven Seas Soldier of Fortune To Show Movies Illustrating Talk The man who, as a youth, found four and one-half years of ad venture in 32,000 miles of travel around the world, Captain Dwight Dong, will appear before Univer sity students Friday evening, presenting a two-hour technicolor movie. The program will take place in McArthur court begin ning at 7:30. Free to all students on activi ties cards, Captain Long's movies feature shots from many of the foreign ports of the world—Bali, Jamaica, Panama, and many oth ers were photographed by the soldier of fortune. When only 21 years old in 1934, Captain Long broke off his studies at the University of Washington, and set off from Seattle in his 32-foot yacht, the Idle Hour. Since then he has made his vagabonding profitable and pleasant by writing two highly successful books, "Seven Seas on a Shoestring," and "Sail ing All Seas." (Please turn to f'agc free) Arabian-Lunged Four Announcers Picked Four students “won out” from a competing field of 35 yesterday afternoon to serve as commen tators to describe Junior Week end floats as they drift down the mill-race May 10, Jim Carney, fete chairman, announced last night. Winners were Eloise Rockwell, Lillian Davis, Dave Zilka, and Gene Edwards. Two of these top four, one woman and one man, will later be chosen as the “prin cipal characters’’ on which to base the program, Carney re vealed. The name of the prime min ister for Junior Weekend cere monies mil be announced in to morrow morning’s Emerald Buck Buchwach, promotion chairman, declared last night. Script for the canoe fete is en tirely written with continuity ar ranged by Sally Ray and Pat Er ickson. Arabian Nights, theme of the weekend, will be carried out in full, according to the chair man. Contest to decide the commen tators took place in Gerlinger hall and was open to students of all classes. Judges were W. G. Hoppe, instructor in drama; H. H. Hanna, instructor in speech; and W. A. Dahlberg, assistant professor of speech. Fact-Finders Discuss New Union Plans Construction Sites Viewed for Favor In Campus Future By BOB FRAZIER Suggestions as to location an<§ functions of the University stu dent union building were dis cussed last night by abor t 4(b persons who attended an open meeting of the faculty-student iac t-findin g committee. Discussion of sites revolved! particularly around the “Sheldon block’’ on Thirteenth and Ur.iver sity. where Dr. H. D. Sheldon'® house now stands, and the spot west of Deady hall, south ci Uio Dad’s gates. Principal point in favor of th« site west of Deady was its cen Dr. Will V. Norris, chairman of the fact-finding commit too, invited students having idea® for the student union building to put them in “memorandum form” and either give or mail them to him in Deady hail. tral position in respect to the present location of most campu# living organizations. The point was made, however, that future University expansion will be east and west, rather than north and south. Plans for cam pus development call for expan sion eastward past the infirmary and men’s dorms. Dr. Norris declared that eon (Please turn- to (age eight) Staff Lecturer To Speak Here London Professor Plans to Discuss Physical Theories Dr. Thomas Greenwood, staff lecturer of Birkbeck college, Uni versity of London, will speak here Thursday, April 24 at 4 p.m. in 103 Deadly hall or. tin* “Interpretation of Physical Theo ries,” announced Professor Ru dolph H. Ernst, director of the University lecture series. Professor Greenwood, who ha» been on leave in America since June, 1939, has given lectures in many of the Northwestern state*#, and has taught at the University of California summer school. Lectures Abroad For twenty years Dr. Grociw wood has been political correspon dent for British and Americai* newspapers, and in the past JLS years has been visiting lecturer to more than 40 universities iA European and American coun tries. ■Philosopher’ Editor Profess-or Greenwood is a for mer Rockefeller research assist ant, and editor of “The Philos opher” in London, as well as ot an international series of mono graphs on log,c and methodology. He is a regular critic of learned periodicals, and a contributor to publications in all his fields. His extensive travels have add ed to