Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (April 25, 1947)
Highway Disrupts University Plant Traffic improvements can be a headache as well as being an aid to travel-weary motorists. Such was the sentiment expressed by D. L. Lewis, physical plant superintend ent .when he explained the difficul ties induced by the work now being done on highway 99 south of Eu gene. Most immediate change will be an alteration of the fuel delivery system. The new highway will run so close to the sawdust hoppers that truck will not be able to make de liveries as before. Also, when the highway is com pleted the University powerhouse will probably have to be moved to comply with the state set-back law. In its present location nearly half of the power house is in the set back zone. It is expected that when the powerhouse is rebuilt to meet the expanding needs of the Univer sity that its locatoin will be changed U 0 Fellowship Holds Social Affair Tonight The UO Fellowship will hold a semi-formal social, open to the pub lic, Friday, from 8 to 11 p.m., in al umni hall of Gerlinger. A full eve ning of entertainment is in store, which will be climaxed by a short devotional message by Don Pierce, pastor from Oak Ridge, now at tending the University. Short silks will be worn by the women, with sport clothes in order for men. Refreshments will be served. Vet Addresses Grange Paul Bosnyk, sophomore in busi ness administration, will address the Irving Grange in Junction City tonight on material gathered from his experience during the war. A former staff sergeant, E.T.O., Bosnyk will speak on “The French Bee America Through the G. I.” through the auspices of the Uni versity's speech and drama depart ment. CLASSIFIED “ LOST -Blue-green Parker 51 in scribed with Doris IVtaughn. $5.00 reward if returned in good ■ondition to 1332 Kincaid. poll SALE Bicycle. Men’s 3 speed. $35. See at Campus Cy clery, 11th and Alder. FOR SALE—Mercury, II Candid Camera f27 lens. Speeds to 1000th see. Fine condition. Berne Howard 1018 Hilyarit. FOR SALE- Tuxedo. Size 39, $25. 217 E. 11. See Glenn Campbell. VIOLIN for sale reasonable. Trailer 8. FOR SALE—-Model “A” Ford Coupe. T. P. Gross, 1009 Patter son. EX PERI ENCED thesis typist; term papers, manuscripts. - Mercedes Sinclair, phone Spring field 620, or write lit. 3, Eugene. LOST -Gold-cap Parker “51”— Hold letters H. Lee Harris. Apt. 5 Mayflower theater. GIRL wanted to move into dormi tory. Please contact Marge Huston Ext. 3S6 or Ext. 387 as oon as possible. LOST Gold Sig Ep fraternity ring at Laurelwood Golf Course, steward. 819 E. 11th. Gilbertson. LOST Billfold, Return papers, keep money. Jim Porter, 2300 Patterson Dr. PRE-WAR Brentwood golf clubs Driver and four matched irons, canvas bag. excellent condition. 825. F. M. Starkweather, Jr., Apt. 4, 2256 Patterson (Amazon Flats). A CHALLENGE TO THE CLERKS AND SCRIVENERS_ As the athletic highlight of the University's outstanding social week-end, to wit, the School of Law's Junior Week-end, it has b customary for the jurisprudential scholars to engage with the lo y clerks and scriveners who frequent Commerce Hall m a game softball. exhaugtive research into our interminable files has disclosed the fact that in the past twenty-seven years the clerks have failed1 o win a single encounter, although by devious tricks and fau y u P ing the bookkeepers have on several occasions come close to victory despite obvious inferiority on the playing field. Knowing that even in the soul of a lowly clerk there may burn the desire for’ revenge and the love of competition, we, the Associated Students of the School of Law do hereby challenge the clerks and bookkeepers school to the said game on Saturday, the third of May, at 2:00 p.m., on an appropriate diamond behind the Physical Education School. We, the undersigned, feel certain that with 1,300 embryo cleiks plodding daily through the dreary halls of commerce, that there must be among them at least nine able bodied men who will rise to this challenge. If such physical specimens can be found, their representative is requested to appear at room six in Fenton Hall at 10:00 a.m. on Tues day, April twenty-ninth. At this time the formal contract for the fray will be signed and sealed. Through great expense to our student body, we have secured he services of several brililant legal minds to draft the said contract, which will govern such vital matters as the split of gate receipts, treatment of umpires, and the delicate handling of in toxicated spectators. Signed: Commissioner of Athletics University of Oregon School of Law Passing Stressed In Football Drills Coach Jim Aiken gave his hard working Webfoot gridders a mid week breather by devoting most of yesterda3*s practice to passing drills. Some time was also spent on fundamentals but Aiken sent his first-string crew to the showers early. Norm Van Brocklin and Bill Abbey were on the pitching end of most of the aerials with Pete Torchia doing a major share of the receiving. Aiken stressed the fact that he was patterning his passing attack after the wide-open style of football he used at Nevada. Nothing more than the ugual aches and bruises have hit the squad this week and the entire team should be in top shape for the scrimmage Saturday. This scrimmage will follow the track meet on Hayward field and will be open to the public although it will not be a regular intra-squad game Aiken said that the team had not had time enough to learn theii plays and his system well enough for a game but added that several intra-squad tilts will be played be fore the close of spring practice. The University library was es tablished in 1892. Speech, Drama Profs To Attend OS A Meet * University of Oregon faculty of the speech and drama department plan to attend the state speech con vention of the Oregon Speech asso ciation at Willamette university May 10, according to W. A. Dahl berg, acting head of the speech and drama department. Horace W. Robinson, assistant professor of speech and dramatic arts in the University of Oregon, will act as chairman of the conven tion session on “Interpretation and Drama.” Advertising Staff: Day Manager: Bob Chapman Layout Staff: Sally Wallen Betty Jones Dave Goss Fred Matthias Kit Wilhelm Virgil Tucker A1 Ruedy Account Executives: Jim Ivory Marge Huston Bob Zundel The first excursion train of the Santa Fe Railway reached Las Vegas, New Mexico, in the year 1879. A BIG DOUBLE VALUE! DEODORANT CREAM /■*> 5 <“>* ^ ? „ © ^ i 0F TUSSV 5 UE°DORANT cream 1 ,<* ! i ‘■fMNA|Nl A4.UMIN0M SULFA^ Di*«- * UN* oonnufTS CO*'‘ Reg. Price $1 SALE PRICE perspiration and odor 1 to 3 days. Creamy smooth. Will not harm skin, delicate fabric. LIMITED TIME! 986 Willamette Administrative Groups (Continued from pa<je one) old age. They are impatient of all restraint. They talk as if they alone knew everything and what passes for wisdom with us is fool ishness to them . . . As for the girls, they are forward, immodest, and unwomanly in speech and dress.’ Yet this is a quotation from Peter the Hermit of the 12th cen tury B.C. “Maybe history is merely re peating itself with the present condemnations of the modern age but I am inclined to believe that youth lives up to the standards adults set for them.” Importance of GPA Registrar C. E. Avery declared that, on basis of experience here and elvewhere, he saw no evidence of an increase in alcoholism or sex immorality. John Gilbertson, Interfraternity council president, said that he could see no increase in drinking among younger students and that an increase in drinking among veteran students was brought about by the advanced age of that group. Gilbertson also thought that UiC cheating was caused by the im portance now being delegated to the GPA. He added that the ad ministration should be compli mented on bringing moral pro blems to light by means of student discussion groups and home rela tionship classes. Student Union (Continued from f'agc one) . which will serve as a hub of cam pus life, and which will preserve for this school the unity it must keep if it is to continue to be a great University.” Also on the program, a portion of which was broadcast, were Bill Russell, director of the Lane coun ty, Eugene driVe, Walter Darling, campaign director, Bob Moran’s trio singing “As I Sit and Dream”, June Johnson singing “Italian Street Song,” and Jim Luckey, chairman of the drive on the cam pus, explaining the system of the ocntest between the living organi zations. Kappa Sigma and Alpha Xi Delta were the living organiza tions diawn from the bowls to sing “Oregon” and “As I Sit and Dream” respectively. Wally John, son, general chairman of the drive, was Master of Ceremonies. for /» LIMITED ll*E CLEANSING CREAM There's a Barbara Gould Cleansing Cream for your type of skin that cleanses thoroughly and leaves it refreshed, soft and smooth. SPECIAL... for Dry or Normal Skin. CREAM POMPON for all Skin Types. EVERYBODY'S DRUG STORE 9S6 Willamette St. Lecture Notes Offer Vocabulary Brushup ^ The following lecture notes are excerpts from the English compo sition section of a notebook turned into the school lost and found de partment. “The allegory of the alliteration is an anacoluthan analogy coupled with an anaphora anticlimax. The apostrophe apposition may differ from the antithesis of the baroque rococo but the chiasmus cliche re fers to the deductive epigram of the equivocation euphenism. This fallacy or false analogy is similar to a hyperbaton hyperbole and ny steron proteron. “The induction of irony induces litoes (meiosis) to the metaphor. Menthonymy may be' non-sequitur but onomatopoeia can be oxymoron without being parenthesis. How- , ever, the personification of the re ductio ad absurdum becomes a rhe torical question if the satire is not a simile of syllogism.” ■ "Perfect Marriage" Loretta Young David Niven "Sweetheart of Sigma Chi _i ^TMcKENZlE IN SPRINGFIELD P June Haver - John Payne I "Wake Up and 1 Dream" "LITTLE IODINE" with Jo Anne Marlowe )pen week nights 6:45 p.m. “Down Missouri Way” and ‘‘Under Arizona Skies”