©tenon Satin Jfmetalii 3j*tutorial |Jage Editor Edward M. Millor SATURDAY, JANUARY 523, i rail*, xi. xiuggeui Sol Abramson .-. Managing Editor Mildred Jean Carr .... Associato Man. Editor News and Editor Phones, 655 Harold Kirk ...- Associate Editor Webster Jones . Sports Editor Philippa Sherman .—.Feature Editor Wayne Ireland .. Associate Muagc* Bnsinss Office Phone 1895 Esther Davis Geneva Drum Bay John Black Bob Nelson Day Editors Frances Bourhill Claudia Fletcher Mary Conn Night Editors Nash, Chief Niirht Editor Ronald Sellars Bill HaijKerty Earl Raess Harold Mantfum Bernard Shaw James De Pauli Sports Staff Ricoard Syring Feature Writers Walter Cushman Paul Luy Mary Benton Edward Smith Upper News Starr Ruth Gretas Jane Dudley Margaret Vincent News Staff Mary K. Baker Jack Hempstead Barbara Blythe Arthur Priaulx Minnie Fisher Lylah McMurphy William Schulze Pauline Stewart Grace Fisher Beatrice Harden Frances Cherry Margaret Hensley James Leake Ruby Lister Genevieve Morgan Marion Sten Dick Jones Miriam Shepard Flossie Radabaugh Margaret Long Allen Canfield Edith Dodge Wilbur Lester Eva Nealon Business Staff Si Slocum .-__ Advertising Manager Galvin Horn ..Advertising Manager Milton George _ Assistant Advertising Manager Advertising Assistants: Sam Kinley, Paul Sletton, Emerson Haggerty, Bob Nelson, Vernon McGee, Ed Ross, Ruth McDowell, Dick Hoyt, Webster Jones. Marian Phy __ Foreign Advertising Manager James Manning .... Circulation Manager Alex Scott __ Assistant Circulation Manager Frances McKenna -- Circulation Assistant Mabel Fransen, Margaret Long_Speeialty Advertising Office Administration: Herbert Lewis, Frances Hare, Harold Whitlock. —---— . A . . .. - TTnlwmitv of Oregon. Eugene, issued daily except Sunday and Monday during The Oregon Daily Emerald official f&Sd in til. poatoffice at Eugene. Oregon, aa eecond-claaa matter. Subscription rates. $2.26 per Day Editor—Geneva Drum Night Editor—John Black Assistant—Larry osterman Assembly And The Library Once a week, when the hour of assembly draws near, all students are requested to betake themselves out of our library, and the doors are locked until noon. This practice seems to be a hold-over from the days when attendance at this weekly convocation was compulsory, the supposition being that if stu dents have no place to go, they will perforce attend assembly. If attendance at assembly is so much to be desired, for t le welfare of the student body we should carry the matter to its logical conclusions. Since fraternity houses and halls of resi dence are ofttimes congregating places for undergraduates who have nowhere else to go, we should drive them out during this hour and lock their doors. Sundry campus eating places might also be prevailed upon to cease serving during that one hour, once a week, and in the interests of so worthy a cause Mr. Mc Clain would perhaps consent to close the Co-op. Since there are numerous other places about the campus that serve as gathering places-certain browsing grounds such as exist in the Journalism and Architecture buildings; these also should be cleaned out and locked up. ‘ it is reasonable, is it not, that if this were done, students would flock to assembly rather than wander aimlessly over the campus for this hour. _ -r-— Oh, well, it might worse—at Yale they are just now trying to do away with compulsory attendance at chapel. Too Much Parental Ambition One of the most pitiable individuals is the student who has been sent here for an education by his parents, who has been sent here for an education by his parents, who is being financed by his parents, and whose career has been mapped out by these same parents. He may want to be a motor me chanic,, an aviator or a landscape gardener, but father is paying for it, mother has set her heart upon it, and because father was a lawyer or a doctor, or perhaps because father was not a lawyer or a doctor, son must have the best education that money can buy, and be a lawyer or a doctor. He feels obli gated to become a lawyer or a doctor, and never having stood upon his own feet, he sometimes burdens lus professors through several years of futile and disheartening work before lie finds the courage to jump the parental coral. Is it any wonder that such students find classes irksome, and go to the eternal dogs? Is it strange that they sometimes turn out to be ne er-do-wells to be pointed out by enemies of higher learning as horrible examples? According to the. statement, of Mr. Douglas, University librarian, the circulation of books for home reading is higher ier capita at Oregon than at any of 2-1 leading colleges and universities of the country, except Amherst Our per capita ?irculat.ion for the year just past was 33.09, while Amherst, with a student body of 660, ranks first with 34.7J. This is not a bad record. It would be presumptions to claim however, that this is altogether due to our superior liitellectua capacity. In larger institutions it has been impractical to supply ‘enough books of the more popular type to allow current fiction as free circulation as it is given m our library, fact, that a number of courses have laboratory fees available for the purchase of books has released many volumes for gen eral circulation that would otherwise be confined to the reserve 1 l'n'other words, this report may be interpreted to mean that there are more books per capita available for circulation in our library though this is poor solace for those who are driven to the limit of human endurance in procuring assigned volumes. However, it indicates that ours is not such an inefficient libra ry, as libraries go, after all. | Communications j January 21, li>2(i. To the Editor: Will you please grant uio the use of your columns to air my beliefs regarding the foreign language quire incut for the 15.A. degree? At the outBCt I would assert that for eign languages have a certain def inite cultural value, but so do many other subjects taught in eollege and we cannot study many of those we would like to because of lack of time. In many instances and for many students a knowledge of cer tain foreign languages is almost in • dispensable. This, 1 think, is es pecially true of science majors. On the other hand the great majority of our students will probably never liave nay use for foreign languages after they leave the University. If I were the benevolent autocrat of the University, I would abolish the B.S. and all other so-called “science” degrees, and perhaps some others. The B.A. would be the only degree conferred by the University college at the end of the undergrad uate course. I would not require1 any foreign languages as prerequi sites to the conferring of the de gree, but any major department would be given the authority to re quire the knowledge lof one or two foreign languages to be specified by the department, the manner in which this requirement might be met to be determined by the depart ment. At present the B.S. degree simply provides a way of escape for those students who refuse to study any foreign language. If we make for eign languages qptional except where they are a necessary part of the student's preparation for his chosen career, we put them on api equal footing with other academic subjects and relieve them from, the stigma of what to the student ap pears to be an arbitrary University requirement. Under the proposed plan students would take language for a definite purpose aside from the meeting of requirements or accumu lation of credit hours. Probably a great deal of the language work would be done in the junior and senior years after the student has caught a vision of the value of this type of work. A. E. CASWELL. SEVEN SEERS - This little thesis which we snatch bald headed from the works of Robert Benchley, well known humorist, we reprint be cause of the great value that is hidden in its text. We also feel that if there is anything going on that in any way can benefit the students either in adding to their well-being, digestion or happiness we will be only too glad to use this columfi as a means of putting the idea over. THE ROMANCE OF INDIGESTION (Apologies to Robt. Benchley) When you take a bite of that de licious cookie or swallow a morsel of that nourishing bread, do you stop to think of the marvelous and intricate process by means of which Mother Nature is going td convert it into bone and sinew and roses for those pretty cheeks? Probably not, and it is just as well. For if you had to stop to think of it at that time, you would unquestion ably not be able to digest that cookie—or that nourishing bread. But whether you think of it or not this exciting process of diges tion is going on day in and day out, sometimes pretty badly, but always with a great show of efficiency. It is, on the whole, probably one of the worst-done jobs in the world. First you must know that those hard, white edges of hope which you have noticed hundreds of times along the front of your mouth arc “teeth,” and are put to a very def inite purpose. They are the ivory gates to the body. They are nature’s tiny sentinels, and if you have ever bitten yourself you will know how sharp they can be, and what effi cient little watchmen they are. Just try to slip your finger into your mouth without your teeth’s permis sion, and see how1 far you get. Or try to get it out, once they have captured it. Now these thousands of brave little soldiers, the teeth, which we have in our mouths, take the food as it comes through the air (in case you are snapping at a butterfly) or from the fork, and separate it into its component parts (air, land and water). In this process the teeth are aided by the tongue, which is that awful-looking thing back of yourth teet. Don’t look at it! The tongue (which we may call the escalator of the mouth or Nature’s nobleman for short), and the teeth toss the food back and i forth between them until there is j nothing left of it, except the little bones which you take out between your thumb and forefinger and lay on your butter-plate. In doing this be careful that the bone is really on the butter-plate and that it does not instead stick to your fipger so that you put it back into your mouth again on the next trip, for this would make the little white sen tinels very angry and they might all drop out. And now comes the really won derful part of the romance which is being enacted right under your very eyes. A chemical reaction on the tongue presses a little buttotn which telegraphs down, down, ’way down | to the cross old Stomach and says: ; “Please, sir. do you want this food or don’t you?” and the Stomach, whom we shall call “Prince Charm jing” from now on. telegraphs (or more likely writes) back: “Yes. 'dear!” or "You can do what you like with it for all of me.” Just as he happens to feel at the time. And then, such a hurry ana Dustie as goes on in the mouth! “Foodie’s going to visit Stomach!” all the little teeth cry, and rush about for all the world as if they were going themselves. “All aboard. all aboard!” calls out the tongue, and there is a great ringing of bells and blowing of whistles and bumping ! of porters and in the midst of it all, the remnants of that delicious ' cookie seated nervously on the ton gue. ready to be taken down on its first journey alone, down to sea Princfe Charming. For all the joy ousness of the occasion, it is a little sad. too. For that bit of cookie is going to get some terribly rough ! treatment before it is through. The food is then placed on a con yeyor, by means of which it is taken to the Drying Boom, situated on the third floor, where it is taken apart apd washed and dried, pre paratory to going through the pressing machines. These pressing machines are operated by one man, who stands by the conveyor as it brings the food along and tosses it into the vats. Here all rock and moss are drawn off by mechanical pickers and the food subjected to treatment in a solution of sulphite, a secret process which is jealously guarded. From here it is taken to the Playground where it plays around for a while with the other children until it is time for it to be folded by the girls in the bind ery, packed into neat stacks, and wrapped for shipment into bundles of fifty. Some of these bundles, the proteins, are shipped to the bones of the body, others, the hy drates, go to making muscle, while a third class, the sophomores, con tribute to making fatty tissue which nobody wants. The by-pro ducts are made into milkrbottle caps, emery wheels, and insurance calendars, and are sold at cost. Thus we see how wonderfully Nature takes care of us and our little troubles, aided only by soda mint and bicarbonate. SEVEN SEEKS. Theatres I--1 MCDONALD—Last day: The world’s sweetheart in her latest and greatest picture, Jdary Pickford in “Little Annie Rooney,” humor and pathos in a wonderful drama. Extra added attraction, “Life’s Greatest Thrills,” Frank Alexander in spe 'cial concert, “In Annie Rooney’s Own Back Yard,” a medley of old favorites. REX—Last day: “The Midnight Flyer,” a dynamic romance of the roaring rails, with Cullen Landis, Dorothy DeFore, Barbara Tennant and little Frankie Darrow; Mermaid comedy, “Lickety Split,” with Ligo Conley; International news events; J. Clifton Emmel in melodramatic musical setting on the organ. Com ing—“The Broadway Lady,” with Evelyn Brent. MANILA DAILY PLACED IN LIBRARY BY CLUB | Filipinos to Have Basketball Team To promote fellowship among their kinsmen, is the aim of the Varsity l’hillipinensis, a club for Filipino students of junior and senior stand ing in the University. The president of the club, Ro mula Avila, a senior in the busi nss administration college, an anounees that the club now receives a Manila daily paper, the Tribune, which has been placed in the new room of the public library. This paper is for the benefit of those who are interested in knowing something of the ideals of the Fil ipinos, and their views concerning international affairs. The Tribune is edited bv natives who have been I educated in American universities,! and the paper is printed in the English language. The Varsity Fillipinensis hoicks its meetings the first Friday of. every month at the Y. M. C. A.' There are 16 active members, one a graduate. Manuel: Alcid,^who is! working for a Master’s degree in the business administrafion col-, lege. Ur. Warren Smith acts as the club’s advisor, and Mrs. Charlotte Uonnellv is an honorary member of ithe organization. A literary or musical program is ! often included in their meetings and sometimes after business ses 1 sions the students hold debates. A basketball team is being organized to compete with the Japanese team j and other organization teams on the ' campus. Campus Bulletin | Georgia Benson—Bequests that all of the girls who were on the committee to sell Christmas cards for the Fine Arts building fund turn their money in to her before the end of this week. j 1 Girls interested in Scouting meet in Susan Campbell hall at 1:00 Saturday afternoon. Paris of Revolution Hard to ' Imagine; Says Doctor Clark (Continued from page one) France, not for its atmosphere so much as for its people. Borne, where the doctor and his j family spent a week, and in Flor ence where they were also a short time, attracted the travellers through the beauty of the build ings, and are work, rather than through the people as did Paris. “The standards of the people and cities of Italy are very low,” Dr. Clark said. Agricultural cultiva tion as well as the development of natural resources is retarded. Large stretches of country are unoccup ied. In many places, wooden ploughs are being used, and even the real agricultural districts are not, seem- j ingly, very prosperous,” he pointed out. “The vineyards, the main source of agricultural revenue, seem poor and their vines only fair, none of them bearing heavily,” he added. The Clarks, while in Switzerland, were right at the base of the Alps for awhile, Jungfrau Glacier being just above them. They went up into the foothills of the peaks on one of the small railroads that runs clear to the top— In leaving Swit zerland, they travelled over the Brenner Pass, through the largest tunnel in the world, which runs through the Alps. Belgium and jGermany showed almost no signs of war, Dr. Clark stated, in referring to Antwerp, Brussells, Cologne, along the Rhine to Heidelburg, the parts of these countries that they touched. Before reaching Belgium, they passed through Amsterdam and Hague in Holland. There are so signs of occupation except in Cologne where the Eng loish soldiers are seen on the streets, but seem not to make them selves obnoxious or even disagree able, for the people pay no atten tion to these foreigners. Two Scotch soldiers in their kilts were the only ones Dr. Clark said he saw on actual duty even there. The ship “Paris” carried the Clarks to Europe the first of July, and they returned to this country the middle of November on the “Minnekahda,” and spent several weeks in the East where Dr. Clark attended the American meeting of the Historical Society at the Uni versity of Michigan, at Ann Arbor. r *\ Fresh Pure— Milk and Cream First on the list of essen tial health-building foods for growing youngsters should be — MILK! Let them have plenty of it with their cereals at breakfast time. Make sure though, that it is Pure, Pas teurized and Fresh! We’ll deliver that kind to your dbor ?d3fiy, Just phone) $£>1 365. We manufac ture Willamette Gold Butter. REID’S DAIRY YEARLING!) TO MEET ALBANY FIVE TONIGHT This evening the yearling basket ball team will receive its formal baptism of intercollegiate basket ball when it meets the formidable Albany college quintet at. Albany. Ten freshman hoop ringers and Coach Earl “Spikd” Leslie will leave for Albany at 4 o’clock this afternoon. In speaking of tonight’s game Coach Leslie said, “I’m glad to get this game. We need it badly as we have only one more practice game before the first O. A. C. Book encounter.” Although Coach Leslie had to start his practice all over again at the beginning of this week, he ex pects a different brand of basket ball exhibited than that of the two Portland high school games. Leslie emphatically denounced the indi« vidualism shown in the two previ ous tilts. “Tonight,” he said, “the men will be instructed to take no long shots. The ball will be worked down past the foul line before a shot is attempted. I want to break up the playing of these individual all-stars.” Coach Leslie will follow the same policy as that of other practice games. All ten men will be given a chance to show their wares. The line-up will find two star players missing. Bed Scallon is in bed suf fering from an attack of the grippe, and Don McCormick is in a Port land hospital recovering from the spinal meningitis. According to Leslie, he received word yesterday noon that Don had felt better Thursday than any day and is ex pected to recover. “The absence of McCormick in our line up will be keenly felt,” said the yearling coach. “He playe'd a wonderful brand of ball in half of the Frank lin high game. Here Is a New Combination Ice Cream, always delicious, tastes even better when served in a variety of flavors Try this brick for tomorrow’s dinner— Cherryanne — French Nut Peppermint Stick Bulk — Cherryanne Ice Cream Eugene Fruit Growers 8th AND FERRY PHONE 1480 iaiajs®j3®siai5®ai3iaisisisia®aisiaiBEja/SEiE!isEiaisiQ!iiisEiE Those Films —Which you for got to have fin ished— May be DEVELOPED AND PRINTED Quickly and Efficiently at Carl R. Baker’s Kodak “EVERYTHING FOTOGRAPHIC’’ Shop -4 Points to Success Good. Salary, Steady Posltlotx. ^ Interesting Work, <£>lo Demand. ’Svtoene 5ckool of A ifindcw i)ressii\cT 4 ^ /*% 4 Ti A ♦ 4 ♦ r 5ho\\> Card Writitv? Dqy-t\lc;ht 2 to 6 Week. ^ Covtt-ses Course 956 Willamette St. \ 1 RIALTO THEATRE RVDOLPH LTL 1 Cobra PJUSSENTtD BY RTTZ-CAJUTON FICTUR1S, INC, J WILLIAM* , r RESIDENT CL paramount Q&tasc I JUNCTION CITY SUNDAY — JAN. 24 I