Gertrude Tolle Writes of Life In Canton, China Oregon Graduate Teaches General Sciences in Christian College Something of the life of an Am erican teacher in China during the revolutionary period is told in a letter recently received from Ger trude Tolle, ’23, by Professor E. E. DeCou, head of the mathematics department. Miss Tolle has spent three years teaching general sciences at the Canton Christian college, Canton, China. During that time, she has had a number of interesting ex periences in connection -with her work. Canton has been the center of most of the revolutionary disturb ances in China. In her letter, Miss Tolle told of how the teachers at the college were forced to flee to Hong Kong and British protection when warfare threatened the safety of the foreigners in Canton. Many of the teachers, Miss Tolle among them, continued on to Manila and spent the summer there. Last summer was spent in Japan. While there, she climbed Mt. Fuji yama in company with an English teacher. The organization of trades unions among the Chinese' working classes gave rise to an amusing incident. Even the household servants, ac cording to Miss Tolle, have joined the unions. Those who were en gaged about the college took it into their heads to go on a strike and did so. The strikers not only refused to serve or prepare food in the homes and eating commons at the college, but they would not permit food to be brought to the students. As a result, the faculty had to endeavor to feed the students out of such slender stocks of foodstuffs as they 1 had on hand in their houses. After the stri&e had been in progress for a week, word came from the union headquarters that the local strike was unauthorized and that the strikers must return to work. The servants, said the Oregon grad uate, were very loath to resume work under compulsion without hav ing gained some concession from their employers. They finally ar ranged that the school authorities should set off a large number of firecrackers when the servants re turned to their jobs. In her letter, Miss Tolle said that she expecta to be back in the United States soon, probably leav ing China this month. She plans to resume teaching in the high schools of Oregon. Basketball (Continued from page one) player capable of getting his share of the counters. At center is Erick son. Canine at guard -was high point man for the Vandals with four field goals and two free throws against Washington. Jacoby and Canine are the regular guards. Probably the brightest light of the Vandal quintet is Johnny Miles, forward. He led his team in scor ing last year and for his all-round ability received honorable mention on the all-coast team. The Vandals have capable substitutes in Green, Judevine and Dawald. It will be a great game with two Classified Ads LOST—Green gold Amethyst ring with initials “B. J., ’21" on in side. Lost somewhere near Wom an ’s Bldg. Tuesday afternoon. Finder return to Emerald offiee. Reward. j20-21 FOR RENT—Single room for boy student. Two blocks from eenter of campus. All modern conven iences. Inquire 968 Alder St. j 20-21 LOST—Pair of Tortoise-shell glasses somewhere in University district last Wednesday. Finder please call 835. Rbward. j21 WANTED—Dressmaking. Call Mrs. Stocker, 797-J. 724 E. 9th St. J21-22 Sandwiches Crisp hot toasted ones Waff ells French egg with butter, syrup Pastries The kind you get at home Try these on.ce and you’ll be back often. We offer quick service. TOASTWICHE SHOPPE llth and Alder of the contenders for the champion ship trying to out-hustle each oth er. Idaho will have its veteran team and Oregon will be very much in evidence with its three veterans, Okey, Swede and Jerry. Ridings is once more in a suit and g6ing great and Scotty Milligan is readv for his first conference garute. Four more games have been slated for the Webfoots. Gonzaga will be met in Spokane, January 26. Mult nomah club will be met in Portland, February 12, and a return tilt will be put on in the Oregon gymnasium, February 16. The Willamette Bear cats will be met in Salem, Febru ary 2. Ten regular conference games complete Oregon’s 1927 hoop sched ule. Basketball Schedule Changes Give Girls More Practice Time Another change has been made in the schedule for girl’s basketball practice, which lengthens the per iods. This plan was favored by most of the girls turning out, as one 35 minute period was not long enough. The schedule as it now stands is: Freshmen: Monday, none; Tues day, 4:05 to 5:15; Wednesday, none; Thursday, 4:40 to 5:50; Friday, none. Sophomore: Monday, 4:40 to 5:50; Tuesday, none; Wednesday, 4:40 to 5:50; Thursday, none; Friday, none. Junior-Semior: Monday, 'none; Tuesday, 5:15 to 5:50; Wednesday, none; Thursday, none; Friday, 4:40 to 5:50. There will be a special period on Thursday from 4:05 to 4:40 for the forwards only of all classes. Besides these practices, which are held in the inside gymnasium, there will ibe scrub practices in the out door gym practically every hour, so that if any girl misses a prac tice, she can make it up there. This new schedule does not affect the requirement of three practices a week. Girls who have had their heart O. K.’s but have not turned them in to Miss Shelley, do so at once, as they cannot 'go on playing until this requirement is complied with. Day (Continued from page one) tion of good teacher, one who has done and is doing first class scien tific research in economics, and an administrator of unusual capacity as shown during the period he served as chairman of the depart ment of economics at Harvard and since as dean of the school of busi ness administration at the Univer sity of Michigan.” While on the campus Dr. Day will address a special meeting of the Social Science club Friday night and a group of graduate students and faculty members Saturday night. Both meetings will be held at the Anchorage. A trip up the McKenzie highway is being planned Saturday to entertain him during his stay here. OPEN AGAIN To serve you with the best line of foods in town. Our kitchen and dining room thoroughly remodeled and redecorated. Ye Towne Shoppe “OUTWARD BOUND” Presented by Moroni Olsen Players Prices: $2, $1.50, $1, 75c (No tax) Diversions on a Penny Whistle 1 _i An American Tragedy By THEODORE DREISER The inclination arises occasional ly to put aside the pursuit of truth and to join with the dear, good people who say that there is so much that is unpleasant in the world, why write about it. Theodore Dreiser’s latest, and possibly most important book, is thoroughly unpleasant, made so by the subject matter, underscored by a method of pursuing psychological minutiae until it entangles the read er like a delirious obsession. No smallest turn of event, no most sub sidiary character^but is hunted and struck down by the lumbering fore paw of this literary dinosaur. The fact that the plot is conceived with undeviating unity only serves to enhance the effect; and the circuit ous tracery of event, in which a be wildering number of side paths re turn always to the weary main road, creates a sense of a wild flight where escape in a new direction brings one ever back to the same nightmare spot. There is no beauty unless it be that of hard, undecorat ed veracity; no charm unless it is in the rough-spun textile. Clyde Griffiths was as surely born to dis aster as though lie had been the child of some tainted house of clas sic. tragedy whose father’s sins should be visited upon him by the revengeful gods. Fate is the mov ing force—the fate of heredity and circumstance. Pliable, desirous, unintelligent, and unskilled*, the pale figure of the protagonist is subjected to two volumes of elaborate scrutiny. He is introduced as the uneasy assistant at a religious service held by his family who conduct a gospel ses sion for a livelihood. The atmos phere of ineffectual and fanatical sincerity fosters in him a blind re sponse to instinct, which, in be wildered unenlightenment, turns from reality to sensual satisfaction. Little as the boy responds to reviv alism, the same elements compose his flawed spirit which compose the dim and wavering 'spirit of the preacher, his father. Through a series of jobs Clyde es capes the cramped drabness of his home and rises to a position in a pretentious city hotel where he is initiated into the vicious sophistica tions which pass for pleasures. In experience and inherent timidity in hibit his participation, but do not lessen the effects upon his repressed licentiousness. He is unable to dally with sex as do his companions, and involves himself with one girl who plays upon his easy devotion. This phase ends in a disastrous auto mobile wreck, the consequences of which Clyde escapes by running away. After a period of conceal ment he is transported through the assistance of an uncle, a prosperous manufacturer, to a position in his factory. In the small city he is stimulated by intermittent glimpses of the smug social group to which his uncle’s family belongs; and his desire to become important fires his senses so that he enters upon an affair with Roberta Allen, a factorv girl. With single-minded persistence he urges her yielding to him. Short ly afterwards, chance inducts him into the fringe of the town’s young social set where he is singled out for his appealing weakness by Son dra, a vain, passionate woman of the group. Sondra is a figure of all that is desirable to him. The sud den knowledge of the pregnancy of Roberta, in whom his interest has waned, enters as a menacing factor to the attainment of that desire. Unable to be either resourceful or 1 cruel, he delays satisfaction of Rob erta’s claims until she threatens exposure. Fired by his infatuation for Sondra, and his fear, he turns to the logical solution of ridding himself of Roberta. His distorted and ill-planned scheme of murder ing her by drowning is again, as always, with him, directed by cir cumstance and not by intelligence. Ilis crime and its discovery, the trial, and sentence to electroci^ion are elaborately analyzed. In the death house Clyde completes the cycle of sensual surrender by under going a violent religious, conversion. The thin substance of his nature is ignited to a final burst of fervor; and at the last his ^pallid figure passes without volition and without comprehension to extinction. It is perhaps an American tragedy as Dreiser indicates; possibly the current of American life moves in such channels as to carry a flotsam will to just such an end. But the American aspect does not seem im portant; the character creation is too specialized for that. In attempting to make a general evaluation, only a contrast of values is achieved. Force and significance the book must be allowed in full measure; and distressing morbidity as well. It is an arresting psycho logical achievement, and it is also an involved, ungraceful, styleless novel. But whatever its compon ents, these combine to produce an ineradicable picture, the effect of which is like the witnessing of a January Clearance of Shoes Will continue for one week more. Mean ing just six days of selling at these great ly reduced prices. Supply your footwear needs while you have the opportunity of this big saving to you. crime—one doubts neither the fact nor the meaning of the fact. One only wishes long after that it had not been witnessed. Nigger Heaven By CARL VAN VECHTEN Knopf The Bright Boy of Broadway per sonally conducts a tour of Harlem, taking in and pointing out all shades of God’s stepchildren in all stages of activity, with a tabloid teh-twenty-thirty plot thrown in. Porgy By DU BOSE HEYWARD One of the race paints movinglv and poetically several of his negro brethren against the slumberous background of an old Southern city. Rudd (Continued from page one) eight. “McDuffer,” the comic on the sport page of the Oregonian, is an example of the new one column space saving strip. Mr. Rudd was the editor of the Emerald when it was enlarged from six to seven columns. He also edit ed the Sunday Emerald, a weekly publication w'ith a literary tone, which has since then been discon tinued, and was president of the Pacific Intercollegiate Press. He is affiliated with Sigma Delta Chi, Friars, Hammer and Coffin and Phi Gamma Delta. During the past year Mr. Rudd was able to combine business with pleasure to the extent of making New York in the theatrical season, —■■■ 1___ TONIGHT’S THE NIGHT You can hear ’em laugh for blocks— Just Listen— < I Week-End Special BOND TYPING PAPER Ream University Pharmacy The Students’ Drug Store Canadian Rockies in June, New Or leans for Mardi Gras, Florida in February, and topped it off with his European trip in the summjer. He I. ,. ' -- i9 now on his way to Los A^igai^ after which he will return to Now \ ork by way of New Orleans, the Grand Canyon and Chicago. i*J» Man • Mtra A Fine Variety of Style in Tuxedos They have the wide shoulder effect young men like, they are close at the hips with just a body - tracing sugges tion that gives smart ness and distinction $35 to.$45 Wade Bros. Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes (SjJXBILLYD£PtmTm/VTj7TiA& L Entire Stock of Women’s Silk Umbrellas In 3 Specially Priced Groups To $7.50 Values $5.98 To $10.00 Values $7.98 To $13.75 Values $10.98 -They re new! The smart umbrellas of the season Naturally no one wants an old umbrella these days ony more than they would care for a last seasons "—•They are the very latest fashions for these rainy day protectors include Mannequin handles, Novelty handles and others with heavy silk cords. Of course all the brightly colored (and subdued tones too) silk coverings which look So pretty in umbreUa crowds on rainy days Some women will be prompted to se costumes.0" ” dlfferc"t hues to go with various THE STORE WIDE JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE CONTINUES IN ALL DEPARTMENTS