Oregon Daily Emerald Member of Pacific Intercollegiate Press Association Official publication of the Associated Students of the University of Oregon, issued daily except Monday, during the college year. KENNETH YOUEL ____ EDITOE Editorial Board Managing Editor .... Phil Brogan Associate Editors ........Ep Hoyt, Inez King Associate Managing Editor ....-.Art Budd Copy Supervisor.....Jessie Thompson Daily News Editors John Piper Freda Goodrich Ted Janes ■•a Maxwell Florine Packard Alignt .Editors Leon Byrne Taylor Huston Ed. V&litchka Junior Seton Leonard Lerwill Sports Editor ..._...Edwin Fraser Sports Writers: Alfred Erickson, Harold Shirley. News Service Editor . Rachel Chezem Information Chief: Rosalia Keber; As sistants : Maybelle Kin*?, Pauline Bondurant. Feature Writers: Nancy Wilson, Monte Dramatics .Katherine Watson Byers. Music ...Margaret Sheridan News staff: Clinton Howard, Genevieve Jewell, Anna Jerzyk, Geraldine Root, Margaret Bkavian, Norma Wilson, Henryetta Lawrence, A1 Trachman,, George Stewart, Phyllis Coplan, Lester Turnbaugh, George H. Godfrey, Marian Lowry, Marion Lay, Mary Jane Dustin, Georg ians Gerlinger, Dorothy Kent, Webster Jones, Margaret Vincent, Margaret Morrison, Doug las Wilson. Busin ess Staff LYLE JANZ --- MANAGES ASSOCIATE MANAGER_LEO MUNLY Advertising Service Editor___Randolph Kuhn Circulation Manager___Gibson Wright Assistant Circulation Manager.....Kenneth Stephenson A4v. Asslstants..Maurice Warnock, Lester Wade, Floyd Dodds, Ed Tapfer, Herman H. Blaesing Entered in the postoffice at Eugene, Oregon as second-class matter. Subscription rates. Mil per year. By term, 75c. Advertising rates upon application. Phones Business Manager-961 Editor _(66 Daily News Editor This Issue Night Editor This Issue Theodore Janes Taylor Huston *-*---—---— Shall Campus Day Be Abolished? Campus day will no longer be a feature of Junior Week-end! The death sentence of the famous Oregon tradition was sounded at a recent meeting of the class committee in charge of the festivities. No more will Oregon men rub elbows at their picks and shovels one day a year! No more will the feeling of pride in the beauty of the campus be stimulated by democratic toil! It is the edict of the Junior Week-end committee of the Junior class. Last spring a great furor was caused by the summary abolition of the campus luncheon from the Junior Week-end program by the class committee. After the discussion had raged for some time every one awakened to the fact that Oregon traditions were being abolished by a class committee and the action was reversed . The result was a student body Traditions committee. The duties of this committee, according to the A. S. U. 0. constitution, are “to inaugurate and perpetuate the best traditions of the University, and to make recom mendations concerning their findings to the student council.” Does the discussion have to he repeated this year ? Campus day is certainly one of Oregon’s most valued traditions, and even supposing its demise to he desirable, the constitution provides that the action shall go through the Traditions committee and the student council. According to the chairman of the commitee no permission to dis continue the campus clean-up has been granted. The Junior committee has doubtless acted in perfect good faith. Its action is based on the belief that the University caretakers can accomplish more than the more or less unorganized efforts of the students. But there is something more than the actual work done to be considered. There is the spirit of democracy—and the spirit of service to the University. A quotation from the editorial columns of the Emerald a year ago is pertinent. “Where, we ask, might the stately, senior cops with their shining stars and likewise shining paddles display the efficiency of their powers as the keepers of traditions without the campus day. # * * * Oregon must not impair the effectiveness of its distinctive Junior Week-end by emasculating the event in any detail. * * * * Here is a tradition which has come down !o us through the years and which is yet dear to our alumni, even as it was in the beginning.” If the work has been poorly done in the last year or two it is the fault of poor organization. Jack Benefiel, graduate manager, yes terday declared that there would be plenty of work for the students to do. There is too little feeling of obligation to the University and anything in the way of an annual community work-day will help to remedy conditions. Junior Week-end should not degenerate into a mere rushing festivity for campus living organizations. As the annual campus clean up day is a tradition the matter should go through the hands of the Traditions committee and the student council before it is definitely settled. Prison Tactics or an Honor Spirit Thoughts of examinations and recognition of the fact that every year several students are expelled from the University for cheating prompt an inquiry, Why not adopt an honor system? In some schools of the University there in an honor spirit far stronger than any honor system ever could be. Professors can give out the questions and leave the room for the rest of the period with no thought of cheating. It is hoped that a’spirit of that kind can be maintained throughout the entire University. On the other hand when a professor gives out two sets of questions, requires that books and notes be left in the front of the room, and otherwise employs prison tactics, there are a great many who accept it as a challenge to cheat. An honor spirit cannot be built up in a day. Replacement of the antiquated methods can only be accom plished by a gradual process. The suggestion that tennis courts be used on Sundays is not at all unreasonable. The arguments advanced by the contributor to the Communications Department are sound, and the Emerald suggests that the matter be given thorough consideration. CAMPUS BULLETIN Notices will be printed in this column for two issues only. Copy must be in tills office by 4:30 on the day before it is to be published and must be limited to SS words. Life Saving Class—Meeting tonight at 7:15. Crossroads—Meeting 7:30, Thursday evening at usual rendezvous. Phi Theta Kappa—Meeting Thursday at 4, room 101, Commerce building. Education Seminar—Meeting Thursday evening at 7:30 in room 2 of the Education building. Pi Lambda Theta—Luncheon for mem bers and members-elect at the An chorage, Thursday noon, March 22. Personal Hygiene Examination—Will be held in assembly room at Villard hall Monday night, March 26, at 7 o ’colck. Restricted Exercise Men—Report at regular class hour in street clothes to Mr. Scott on Friday, March 23, for final examination. Physical Ability Tests—Tests will be given on Thursday and Friday, March 22 and 23. Men who have signed up should report on the floor promptly at 12. Foster Conference—O. D. Foster, rep resentative of the Council of the Church Board of Education, will be open for conference in the Y. W. Bungalow Thursday at 4:15 p. m. Pro and Con—Open forum meeting of Pro and Con 7:15, Thursday evening, room 4, Commerce building. The ques tion of eugenics will be discussed. Dr. Stuart will talk. All girls invited. Pinal Grades—In Physical Education 51B, 52B and 53B will be posted on the bulletin board in the men’s gym nasium on March 27, 28 and 29. No grades changed after 6 p. m., March 29. Emerald News—There will be only two more issues of the Daily Emerald printed this term. Heads of depart ments and others having news for publication are asked to release it at once. Paculty—Members of the faculty who wish to attend the banquet for visit ing newspapermen at the Osburn Friday at 6 o ’clock, may obtain tick ets at the Journalism Shack or from any upperclass journalism student. COMMUNICATIONS Letters to the Emerald from students and faculty members are welcomed, but nust be signed and worded concisely ff it is desired, the writer's name will be kept out of print. It must be understood that the editor reserves the right to reject communications. WRESTLERS NEED TIME J o the .helltor: In last Saturday’s issue of the Emer ald, the first editorial discusses the status of wrestling in the University of Oregon, I believe that the editor intended to make a constructive criti cism, but its effect has seemed to me destructive. Such an article reflects seriously on the wrestling coach and the men who engage in the sport who are trying to put wrestling where it ought to be in this University. Wrestling is a science which requires a great amount of training and exper ience, as well as individual aptitude. Just as it requires years for a wrestler to gain pre-eminence in the sport, so does it require years of coaching and experience to build up a creditable wrestling team. O. A. 0. and Washington have given much more attention to wrestling than Oregon for many years, and hence have developed a large amount of valuable material from which to draw in making up their wrestling teams. In meets with these universities, Oregon has fail ed to make any sort of a score. It does not follow, however, that this failure to compete with these teams argues dis credit to the wrestling coach or his men. It simply means that it will take a few years of careful coaching and stimulation of this sport to put us on an equal footing with the institutions where it has always had a much larger 1 following. 1 am convinced from personal observ- j ations that the present coach knows i the game and has done everything in | his power to pass that knowledge on | to the students and to stimulate interest ■ iu this sport. This editorial is a sign of increasing i interest iu wrestling and if this inter- j ost can be diverted into constructive j channels, Oregon should be able to build ; a wrestling team equal to that of any | on the Coast. Yours sinoerelv, W. K. LIVINGSTON^ M. U. TENNIS AND BLUE LAWS To the Editor: Even after the announcement that plenty of tennis courts will soon be built, we tenuis fans have another axe to grind with the power of the press. Every year communications are pub lished and sometimes brief editorial comment is made about that most op pressive campus blue law, no Sunday tenuis. No action has ever been taken because of these annual complaints but let’s start something real this time. If Emerald eonununications do no good let’s try a petition. Other athletic recreations are allow ed on Sundaj. such as canoeing (maybe that is amorous, though) hiking, one ole cat, throwing of the horses’ foot wear and Y. M. 0. A. shuffle board. Why not tenuis? Very few universities prohibit Suu day tennis. Such a rule is a relic of the days when colleges were mostly SHORT COURSE WILL BE GIVEN TO SECRETARIES Constructive Program Is Plan for Commerce Visitors Every effort has been made to bring men to the campus who will succeed in presenting to the chamber of com merce secretaries ideas that will prove constructive in the program for state development that is now being carried on, according to business administra tion officials who are completing final arrangements for the short course which will be held April 2-7, inclusive. Circulars giving the main features of the program prepared for the secretar ies under the joint supervision of the school of business administration and the Oregon State Association of Com mercial Secretaries have been mailed to all chamber of commerce secretaries throughout the state, and replies re ceived by Dean E. C. Bobbins indicate that not less than 30 secretaries will come to take advantage of the course, which is being offered for the third time. The plan of the program as outlined is to devote most of the time to the consideration of the subjects of tim ber, lumber, live stock, horticulture, land settlement and tourist travel. The general program of state development will be in charge of W. B. D. Dodson, manager of the Portland Chamber of Commerce, who will be assisted by men recognized as experts in their respec tive fields. A. S. Dudley, secretary-treasurer of the Sacramento Chamber of Commerce, is scheduled to conduct two round-table discussions on “Best Means of Col lecting Dues,” and “Membership Main tenance.” Mr. Dudley is a member of' the executive committee of the Nation al Association of Commercial Secretar-' ies, and is considered one of the best j chamber of commerce men on the coast. Ralph Casey of the school of journal ism will lead a series of class dis cussions on “Community News.” Mr. Casey is not only an experienced news paper writer, but has had experience in! preparing community news for cham bers of commerce. Round table discussions will be led by II. O. Frolibach, president of the Oregon State Association of Commer cial Secretaries, M. J. Duryea, Prof, i C. D. Thorpe, and J. W. Brewer, gener al secretary of the Oregon State Cham ber of Commerce. President P. L. Campbell, A. S. Dud ley and J. H. Gilbert will each lecture one evening during the course. Colonel “Bill” Hanley has signified that he will be present and will address the secre taries. The Eugene Chamber of Commerce, the Rotary club and the Kiwanis are planning a luncheon and dinner for the visitors. Meals will be furnished at Hendricks hall, and Mary Spiller hall and Susan Campbell hall will provide rooms for the secretaries, the women stay ing at Susan Campbell hall. THORPE GOES TO BERKELEY Wi'l Represent Oregon at Debate Conference in California Prof. Clarence D. Thorpe, coach of the University debating teams, will leave tonight for Berkeley, California, where he will represent Oregon at the Pacific coast debating league confer ence being held at the University of California, March 24 and 25. The league was organized last fall at a meeting at Reed college, and at the session this week-end the business to be taken up will deal with the rules of conduct for the organization. An other problem to be considered is that dealing with the judging system to be used at the college debates. Other institutions entitled to send representatives are O. A. C., Stanford, Reed, Whitman, Washington State, and the Universites of California and Sou thern California. “DRIVEN” AT THE HEILIG An artistic triumph for both players and director is “Driven,” the Charles Brabin - Universal - Jewel productiin, which is showing today, Friday and Saturday at the Heilig theater. It is a study in primitive emotions, a story of’ life as it actually is lived in the heart of the Blue Ridge mountains. The action revolves around the sac-; rifices by a Spartan mountain mother of her husband and three oldest sons in order to bring peace and happiness to the youngest, a child that has been born into this brutal family through some strange error of fate. seminaries. Some universities, while prohibiting tennis during church hours, 9 to 12 on Sunday mornings allow it the rest of the day. Even that is better than our obnoxious and enervating Blue Law. Rally round, tennis devotees, and we ’ll do something for the ultimate good of the University. UNOWHO, '24. Save Your Dates, Girls, for Saturday Night MIDNITE SONS Are Playing at Ye Campa Shoppe Spring Brings New Millinery ■L'uiBiiimuiHiuitHiiimiiniHiiiiiBiiiiHiiiiimimniiiBnimiiii fjl A visit to our show room will convince you of our exceptional VALUES IN TRIMMED HATS SET OFF. The outstanding style point in present dis plays is the prominence given to flowers and ribbons. (J A full line of the latest creations in newest wanted millinery. The Style Shop 9th and Willamette ■i" i* I TONIGHT Y. W. C. A. Benefit Performance of mt La Malquerida (The Passion Flower) Nance O’Neil’s greatest stage success. Norma Talmadge’s greatest screen play GUILD THEATR E Also Tomorrow and Saturday Nights 75c and 50c—No Tax Day and Night Classes Now Being Organized Shorthand, Bookkeepping, Typing, Burroughs Machines EUGENE BUSINESS COLLEGE Ask for Rates 10th and Willamette Sts. Phene 066 CORN—A hard, horn-like excrescence on the feet . There’s no sense in having them when RED CROSS CORN CURE TAKES THEM OFF OVER NIGHT PRICE 25c And your money back if it fails! The World’s Most Beloved Story Told with a sweet sincerity and wistful charm that will cap tivate all. “Lavishly mounted and done on a grand scale. The castles are authentic, the pageantry sumptious and the mobs—MOBS.” —The Evening Mail. “The production itself stands out as a world beater.”—Variety. Mark Twain’s Immortal Romance THE PRINCE AND THE PAUPER 1 STARTING TODAY The CASTLE Also the Stone Face Comedian Buster Keaton in “The Electric House”