Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, February 21, 1958, Page Three, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    'KKCKIVINti A TROI'HY for Pershing Rifles’ first place award in drill competition recently held in
(nriallis is army ItOK i adct Captain Hoyt Martin. The trophy was formally presented in cere
monies at Hayward Field Thursday. Cadets, from left, are Robert Davis, Martin, Jim Lynch and
.Jim Cain, detachment cadet commander.
Oregon's Anniversary Should Be Celebrated
• • •
(C onttnued from />arje 2)
’ Or perhaps the name of B.J.
'(Buck) Hawthorne would win
out. He's the English lit and
later psych professor who moved
from Confederate drummerboy
to colonel on Lee's staff and
then led the G.A.R. column down
„ Willamette Street In 1898,
. carrying the stars and stripes
, himself.
. There are the stories of the
* big referenda election battles
- literally fights for the life of
' Oregon and the continuing
■> ( lashes with OAC over cur
* ricula. The Aggies got englneer
' ing away from Oregon back In
| ‘ 1913 with some liberal interpre- j
’ tation of the "mechanics arts”
wording of the land grant col
' lege bill.
The University held, of course,
that mechanics arts meant trade
_ courses, like carpentry, train- I
. ing for electricians and the like;
. professional engineering in
. volves theory and belongs in a
% university.
Unfortunately, Sheldon gives
-the “nig” fight—the 1933 defeat
- of the Zom-MaeUherson ron
• solidation bill—less than a page.
- \\ hen he wrote his history not
• enough people were dead to in
* elude all the details of what
• Turnbull calls a “really dirty
fight.” That one would have j
• moved virtually the whole cam
" pus to Corvallis as part of the
■ State College and left a sort of
SOC-OCE-EOCE combination as
’ consolation to Eugene.
Onthank, who had been sched
uled to write the student side
„ of the University history for
, Sheldon’s book, hopes to write
a history that will supplement
. Sheldon’s in such areas as stu
. dent life and perhaps some of
- the red-hot battles.
. Until that sure-to-be-lively
- publication, Sheldon's book re
. mains the only complete author
•’ ity on the University story.
- And although it is written pri
marily from a faculty-admin
- istration view there are enough
" accounts of student activity to
make it delightful skimming for
the most casual reader among
University undergraduates.
It ought to be in the library
of every living organization on
campus, something its $2.50
charge shouldn’t prohibit. It
could become a handy defense
reference in case there’s an all
out move toward Greek-letter
building names.
Men's Honor Society
Scholarships Offered
Phi Eta Sigma, national fresh
! man men’s honor society, each
year offers two $300 scholarships
for graduate study to qualified
seniors. These scholarships are
awarded on a competitive basis
nationally. Any Phi Eta Sigma
member is eligible.
Deadline date for making appli
cation is February 28. Applica
tion forms and additional infor
mation can be secured from Bill
I Denman,
European Sketches
Up at AA Building
Currently on display in the re
view room of the architecture
building are European sketches
and etchings by Louis Rosen
berg, formerly of Portland.
Rosenberg also served on the
j University faculty for four years
as an instructor of graphics and
etching.
The pieces, from the artist’s
personal collection, show “The
supreme hand of a master
craftsman,’’ said Sidney Little,
dean of the school of art and
architecture.
i
Ex-Chancellor Set
For AAUP Address
Dr. and Mrs. Charles D. Byrne
will present an illustrated talk
of their experiences in Nepal
Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the annual
dinner-social meeting of the Uni
versity chapter of the American
Association of University Pro
fessors.
Byrne is the ex-chancellor of
higher education in Oregon.
Tickets should be purchased
this week from Roland Bartel, in
the department of English. Tick
ets are $1.75 cash, and all faculty
and staff members and their
wives or husbands are invited.
Try taste-tempting
creations from the
Rosebud Bakery
Pure Ingredients
Fresh Baked
Clean Baked
Cakes for Special Occasions
56 W. Broadway Ph. Di 4-8216
ROSE
MOTEL
969 Franklin
DI 5-3053
Across From Campus
Newly Redecorated
Free TV
Reasonable Rates
Air Conchfionino - temperature* made to order—
lor ai. weather comfort. Get a demonstration!
\ \
Impala Sport Coups with Body by Fisher. Every window of every Chevrolet is Safety Plots Glass.
* *
A BEAUTIFULLY MOVING THIN-G! ’58 CHEVROLET
It brings you a RADICAL NEW V8,* a new Full Coil
suspension, a new Safety-Girder frame—more new things than any car
ever offered before. Don’t put off driving this one!
Chevy was built to put a zest into driving
that hasn’t been there before. You sense
this the instant you feel the silken
response of an engine like the new Turbo
Thrust V8. It’s an extra-cost option that
gives you extra-quick action the second
(
your foot flicks the gas pedal. Chevy’s
new Full Coil suspension is standard. Or,
for the last word in comfort, you can even
have a real air ride, optional at extra cost.
See your Chevrolet dealer for good-as-gold
buys right now! * Optional at extra cost.
inly franchised Chevrolet dealers
display this famous trademark
See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer for quick appraisal—prompt delivery!