Oregon Daily Emerald RAYMOND E. VESTFR, Manager. o Member Pacific Intercollegiate Press Association._ , >y»oclate Editor .Lyle Bryson ?T~rs Editor..Charles E. Qratke Assistant News Editors Velma Rupert, Elisabeth Wbitehouse John Dierdorff. Sports Editor.Floyd Maxwell Sports Writers Eogene Kelty Harold Shirley Art Rudd Statistician Don D. Huntress Night Editors ° Wilford C. Allen. Carlton K, Logan, Reuel S. Moore, Kenneth Youel. News Service Editor ... .Jacob Jacobson Assistants Alexander Brown, Eunice Zimmerman —---—...-i feature Writers E. J. H., Mary Lou Burton, Frances Quisenberry _ _—-——---1 News Staff—Fred Guyon. Margaret Scott, Kay Bald, Owen Callaway, Jean Strachan, Inez King, Leuore Cram, Wanna McKinney, Raymond I). Lawrence, Margaret Carter, Florence Skinner, Emily Houston, Mary Truax, Howard Bailey, Ruth Austin. Madalene Logan, Mabel Gilliam, Jessie Thompson, Hugh Stark weather, Jennie Perkins, Claire Beale, Dan Lyons, John Anderson, Maybelle Leavitt. ______* Associate Manager ..Webster Ruble Advertising Manager . it..,. —------— Circulation Manager . Staff Assistants: James Meek. Jason McCnne, .George Miclntyre .A1 Krohn -—-1 Elwyn Craven, Morgan Staton. -----—-—| Official publication of the Associated Students of the University of Oregon, issued daily except Sunday and Monday, during the college year. Bbtered in the post office at Eugene, Oregon, ah second class matter. Sub scription rates $2.25 per year. By term, 75c. Advertising rates upon application. Campus office—055. PHONES: Downtown office—1200. THE REALIZATION HAS COME. With but seven cases of cheating; brought before the stu dent advisory committee during the past term as against 29 for the term proceeding, students and faculty alike have cause for rejoicing. The decrease is not due to a decrease in watch fulness on the part of the faculty, but rather to a realization on the part of students that cheating does not pay. The high-water mark has been reached and passed. It is highly improbable that the students in the future will toler ate cheating. They have come to a realization that, cheating is dishonesty, and that dishonesty is a sin. It is not with a feeling of pride that the student tells of a large number of students caught cheating. The decrease in the number of cases brought before the committee is cause for feeling of pride. It is true that during the past term, more than in any pre vious year, the students have come to look down upon the cheater. The student who lets it be known that he is a cheater doesn’t rate so high in the estimation of his fellow-students as he did in the past. He admits dishonesty, whereas in former day he admited a peculiar quality which enabled him to fool his instructor. It is dishonesty now, not cleverness. While tlie amount of publicity given to penalties and to the University regulations and the policy of enforcing them may have influenced some, the majority were influenced sim ply by the proposition that cheating was wrong. A still greater decrease during the final term is to be hoped for. The question of what constitutes cheating may be the cause of several cases, but students are now convinced of .the moral depravity of cheating and dishonesty. It is with a feeling of pride that we say, “Cheating is NOT.prevalent at the University of Oregon.” The varsity nine plays its first game of the season this Saturday. Let’s all be out to get a line on what’s to be ex pected during the coming season, and incidently show the players we’re ready to back them as far as they can go. Language students are likely getting worried. Maybe the elimination of the vocabularies in the back of the book will be the next move. It’s getting time to trot out the Mexican athletes. The doughnut track meet looms in the horizon. BULLETINS TO TAKE PLACE OF CATALOGUE University Will Send Printed Matter of Special Departments to New Students. Following u new practice of prepar ing a series of informational bullet ins to be mailed to prospective students in stead Of the present form of catalogue, the committee on catalogues announces in its annual report that this form of publication will be used as it is more convenient than the filmier method which necessitated searching through several hundred pages for desired infor mation. These bulletins are prepared to give the specific information desired by n group of people having similar interests. The first of this new series, that of the graduate school, is in type, the report states, and the others will follow in rapid succession as they are needed for mail ing, The catalogue for 1920 was issued later than usual owing to the uncer tainty and high hopes for ♦he future which were prevalent in all minds at the time when the catalogue would nor mally have been prepared. This made definiteness of statements out of the question on many points of interest to new students. The increase in the resources of the University has permitted und compelled very extensive reorganization in many schools und departments, and the annual catalogue has undergone a considerable change as a result. The new form of bulletin, the report says, is at present in u,se in many of the larger universities of thp country. EXTENSION DIVISION WORKS IN VACATION Kilpatrick, Stetson, Almack and Powers Make Trips Off Campus On Various Missions, Outside of the short-term course for state chamber of commerce secretaries ami publicity campaigns for the regular University summer term the extension division offices were quiet during the spring vacation period. Professor 1'. L. Stetson was in Spokane attending the Inland Empire Teachers’ association, as were several other University of Ore gon professors. John O. Almack, spe cialist in the extension teaching depart ment. spent the week in Portland visit' mg Franklin, Lincoln and Washington high schools. He will deliver the dedi cation address for the Ooquille high school building. May 1. Earl Kilpatrick, director of Hie ex tension division, was in Salem Saturday for n conference with the state superin tendent of schools; with the exception of this trip, Mr. Kilpatrick lias been kept busy on the campus with affairs ★-★ Announcements Orchestra — The orchestra will ap pear before assembly this morning. All members are requested to be there. A short meeting of all old and liew mem bers will be held in Villard hall this evening at 7:30. Tlier^ will be no re hearsal. Christian Science Society of the’Uni versity of Oregon. Meets this evening at 7:15 p. m. in room 11, education 'building. Students, faculty and employes of the University are invited to attend. Cross - Roads — Meeting Thursday evening of this week. 315th Engineers — Dean Dyinent would like to see personally any men in the University who fought with Com pany A or Company C of the 316th Engineers, 91st Division, at Tronsol Farm in the Argonue on September 29. 1819. Y. W. C. A. — There will be the reg ular meeting of the Y. W. C. A. at the bungalow this afternoon at 4:45. Mrs. George Bolder will talk on Women in Industry aiul posters illustrating this work will be shown.* All girls are urged to attend this first meeting of the new term. Y. M. C. A. Friendship Council and Cabinet meet for the final meeting of the present organizations this year, from 7 to 8 this evening. Women’s Educational Club — Regular business meeting Thursday, 7 p. m., at the Oregon building. Presbyterians — Mr. and Mrs. Giffen will entertain the Presbyterian church committee at luncheon at the Anchorage today noon. One student from each house on the campus has been invited. Sigma Delta Chi — Members of Sigma Delta Chi are requested to meet tonight. 7:30, at the Kappa Theta Chi house. PROBATION STUDENTS’ PETITIONS ARE DENIED Minimum Standard of Seventeen Hours In Two Terms Must Be Made Declares Committee. Without exception, the probation com mittee denied the petition for re-in,state ment in the University submitted by eleven of the 215 students who had be come ineligible for registration because of failure to make sufficient hours 'Neither were any exceptions made to the 100 students who have been placed on probation for the spring term. The committee takes the stand that, regardless of the cause, the 17-hour minimum must be achieved. It held that in establishing the 17 hours for two terms the University was setting an ab solute minimum, and that students com ing under this minimum must conse quently be refused re-instatement. These eleven students who had peti tioned the probation committee had made from eight to 10 2-3 hours in two terms. Of these, one made 16 2-3; one, 161-3; one, 11 2-3; and one, 15; but it was found that the students making these credits had received low grades. A new scholarship code replacing the existing probation code, and containing one or two substantial changes, will be submitted to the faculty at a meeting to day. MANY TEACHERS ARE WANTED. I More calls for teachers are being re ceived by the school of education than the appointment bureau is able to fill according to Professor C. A. Gregory, head of the bureau. If students want the assistance of the bureau in obtain ing teaching positions for next year, he says, they must register at once. CUPID HITS PI PHI S. The engagement of Lillian Pearson. Pi Reta Phi to Dr. Harold Orosland of the psychology department, was announced last evening. Tuesday evening Ruth Diehl, Pi Beta Phi. announced her en gagement to (’larence Gray. Sigma ('hi, of Portland. LOST. — A brown leather purse on ,13th street between Hilliard ami campus. Finder please call Frances Peterson at 851 or leave at Emerald office. Re ward. connected with the summer term. Alfred Powers, who is in charge of visual instruction, arrived home yester day from a week’s trip to Florence, where he addressed a teachers’ insti tute. Wing’s Market Quality, Service and Low Prices. Fresh and Cured Meats. Phone 38. 675 Willamette Street. FROSH TO PLAY INDIANS Babes Will Meet Chemawa for Two* 1 Game Series at Salem. __ i The frosh nine will have their first ] games of the season this week-end at : Salem when Coach Bill Steers takes his , babe diamond artists to the capital city i for a two-game series with the Chemawa i Indians. Eleven men, as yet not picked, will make the trip. 1 Jake Benefiel is still working on the frosh schedule for the coining season. He ' has lined up a four game series with . the O. A. C. rooks, and hopes to book ; games with several of the high school teams of the state. ' For the week - end games, “Tex” i Knight. “Left.v” Baldwin, Frances Al stock. Doug Wright, Phil Ringle, Joe Anthony, Ward Johnson. Terry John son “Brick” Goodrich and Glen Sorres- - by seem likely to make the Salem trip. STUDENT CONTROL OF CLASSES IS SUCCESS (Continued from Page 1.) humble proportions. In fact, the posi tion of the college and the newspaper, in this regard, keems decidedly re versed.” The dean visited the University of Kansas, Kansas State College, Univer sity of Missouri, Princeton, Harvard, Columbia, University of New York, Uni versity of Michigan, Marquette Univer sity, the Jesuit school at Milwaukee, and the University of Wisconsin, of which he is a graduate and the University of Minnesota. He also visited a number of smaller colleges. “I feel that the work at Oregon compares favorably enough with anything in the East,” he said, in speaking of the journalism training. The eastern training, he said, specialized in different lines of jour nalistic work, while the western system embraced a wider, more comprehensive curriculum. The University of Kansas, the dean found, was the only school of importance where the general journal istic training was being given similar to that at Eugene and Seattle. “The East” he said, “will be slow to give full credit to the Western universities. This is due to the fact that the East does not now, and probably never will, know much about the Pacific coast.” Aiumm Are met. In Chicago Dean Allen met William A. Dill, formerly of Eugene, and who at one time owned the Springfield ^News. He was a reporter and desk man on the Register, later the Guard and Portland Oregonian. At present he is the night editor of the Associated Press in Chi cago ,and is secretary of the newly es tablished Medill school of journalism, at Northwestern University. At Harvard, •the dean met Lamar Toozet a . graduate of Oregon. Toozc will complete his law course there this spring, and will begin his practice in Portland. The dean also met Mrs. Tooze, who was formerly Marie Sheahau, also an Oregon student While visiting Princeton, Dean Allen met Doctor .T, D. Spaeth, who has been at Oregon during several summer terms in pnst years. Dr. Spaeth was coach ing the Princeton crews and the dean first encountered him on the lake, di recting four varsity eights with the aid of a launch and megaphone. The dean visited the offices of many of the metropolitan papers in the cities where he stopped and was impressed by the wonderful equipment used by the modern newspaper. Only one paper, the office of which bears the memory of the airly days of journalism, was found. This was the Boston Post, a paper which numbers its daily circulation at a cold half million. Amid the crooked streets of Boston the office of the Post is still to be found in the original building. The nnrrowness of the streets gives rise to a law against the erection of new struc tures in this part of the city and New England tenacity prevents the Post from moving. To get the space neces sary to house modern presses, they dug a basement seventy feet deep. This did not give space enough so buildings on the side were bought and the same pro ve* ding carried on. Presses and raa :hines were crowded in until the alleys ictweeD them rivaled the crooked streets >f the city itself. Where the floor of an idjoining building did not quite match, t was joined by an inclined platform—■ mrtitions built, and additions con strueted until one finds oneself in a maze >f journalistic atmosphere and machin ery unrivaled for its intricacy anywhere •lse in the country. The Editorial Association convention ipened at Birmingham, Alabama, and 'rom there the editors junketed through fuskegee, Montgomery, Pensacola, St. Augustine, and Cuba. Dean Allen did lot make the trip to the island. At one if the sessions the dean read a paper >n the college trained journalist, and an swered the oft propounded question, “Is 2e making good?’’ The true achieve ment of the college journalist, the dean said was not to be found in answer to he question, “is he holding his job?” but rather whether he is ,level, ■ creditable and salient reputatilTV high standards in journalism. - °r believes, is beginning to strated. E. E. Brodie, of x1r has been a constant editors conventions at tin Oregon, was elected This, he 1)0 demon national association. A. E. y '(‘fn «*y, who attendant at the 1 diversity ()f livesident of tlm ooi'hies, of Grants Pass was also in attendance, m" is son Earle, a forme1, student of Oregon, in Birrnineham \ Voorhies met liis , , ro'ngham, and they attended the convention together Earle Voorhies has been editing a Bos ton suburban newspaper, but plans'"^ return to flip University of Oregon soon WANTED — Students washings and ironing. Fluteing done; fine work specialty. Work guaranteed MRS. EDNA HOWELL, apr-9. 2092 Onyx St., cor. 21st Avo IF WHY NOT PHIL-UP Opposite The Co-op Store Boost the OREGON PRODUCTS CARNIVAL April 11th, 12th, 13 th. When Good Clothes Mean Much Figure out what good appearance means to you. You’ll appreciate then how little good clothes cost. For that “well-dressed” feeling we suggest Society Brand Clothes. They give you all that good taste demands — and at reasonable prices. Our assortment will please you. $35 to $60. CTYLE EADQUARTERS KJ where »orifty Urand tflothfS are fold metros t7J3 Willamette Street Hiking and Picnic Days Are Now Here We specialize in putting up lunches for these occasions that are made according to your individual taste. When in town, drop in to the PETER PAN WALT HUMMELL, Proprietor.