(JDregim ©atlg izmetalii University of Oregon, Eugene BOL ABRAMSON. Editor EARL W. SLOCUM, Manager EDITORIAL BOARD Ray Nash .— Harold Mangum . Florence Jones - . Managing .. Sports _ Literary Editor Henry Alderman . Contributing Editor Bertram Jessup . Contributing Editor Paul Luy . Feature Editor Editor Editor i News and J&ditor rnones, odd DAY EDITORS: Beatrice Harden, Genevieve Morgan, Minnie^ Fisher, Barbara Blythe, Bill Haggerty. Alternates: Flossie Iiadabaugh, Grace Fisher. NIGHT EDITORS: Wayne Morgan, Jack Coolidge, Bob Hall. SPORTS STAFF: Jack O’Meara. Dick Syring, Art Schoeni, Charles Burton, Hoyt FEATURE* WRITERS: Donald Johnston, Ruth Corey, AI Clarke, Sam Kinley, John UPPER NEWS STAFF: Jane Epley, Alice Kraeft, Edith Dodge. NEWS STAFF: Helen Shank, Grace Taylor, Herbert Lundy. Marian Sten, Dorothy Baker Kenneth Rodaner, Cleta McKennon, Betty Sehultze, Frances Cherry, Mar garet "Long Mary McLean. Bess Duke. Ruth Newman, Miriam Shepard, Lucile Carroll .vlaudie Loomis. Ruth Newton, Eva Nealon, Margaret Hensley, Margaret, Clark, Ruth Hansen, John Allen, Grayce Nelson, Dorothy Franklin, Eleanor Edwards, LaWanda Fenlason, Wilma Lester, Walter Coover, John Black, Thorsen Bennett. BUSINESS STAFF Milton George _ Associate Manager Herbert Lewis . Advertising Manager Joe Neil . Advertising Manager Larrr Thielen .. Foreign Advertising Mgr. Ruth Street . Advertising Manager Francis McKenna .. Circulation Manager Ed Bissell . Ass’t. Circulation Mgr. Wilbur Shannon . Circulation Ass't Ruth Corey . Specialty Advertising Alice McGrath . Specialty Advertising Advertising Assistants: Flossie Radahaugh, Roderick LaFollette, Maurine Lombard, Charles Reed. Rob Moore, Bill Hammond. Office Administration: Dorothy Davis, Ed Sullivan, Lou Anne Chase, Ruth Field. The Oregon Daily Emerald, official publication of the Associated Students of the University of Oregon, Eugene, issued daily except Sunday and Monday during (he college year. Member of Pacific Intercollegiate Press. Entered in the pos toffies at logene Oregon, as second-class matter. Subscription rates, *2.50 per year. Adver tising rates upon application. Residence phone, editor, 2293-L; manager, 1320. Businees office phone, 1895. Day Editor This Issue— Bill Haggerty. Nioht Editor This Issue—Henry Lumpee _ Unsigned comment in this column is written by the editor. Full responsibility la assumed by the editor for all editorial opinion. IF A little knowledge is dan gerous, where is the man who has so much as to he out of danger?—Thomas Huxley. From Burlesquer To iconoclast DISCLAIMING any intentions of censorship but* at the same time demanding “a satisfactory program of supervision,” the dean of the faculties at the University of Wash ington, acting on 1he recommenda tion of the faculty publications com mittee, has indefinitely suspended publication of “Columns,” student humor magazine, and barred the editor and a contributor from par ticipation in student activities for one year. The cause of the trouble was an article entitled “Lincoln Apple, sauce,” published in the current is sue of the magazine. It was written in imitation of the American Mer cury’s “de-bunking” style, as one of a series of burlesques on well known publications. From the Washington Daily we learn that “investigation of the sit uation by the faculty committee after protests from members of the state legislature, patriotic societies, and business and professional men of the city preceded the recommen dations.” In other words, the article was acceptable to the' faculty until tho patriots took offense. Action was taken to save the good name of the ■university and publication of “Col umns” suspended until “those re sponsible for it can present a satis factory program of control which will safeguard the University against the recurrent publication of articles which damage its reputa tion.” The' wholp matter is not directly our affair, especially since the Daily, which )>v its very nature might be expected to champion a free press, accepts the faculty dictum without complaint. But after rending and re-reading the supposedly offensive article we are convinced that it contained nothing that warranted the action taken. The faculty com mittee, in waiting until it was moved by outside pressure, acted, it would seem, not from genuine conviction that there was anything wrong with the article in question, but because it feared censure. This being the case, we can see nothing praiseworthy in the committee’s de cision. Jjineom Applesauce” was plain ly mark0(1 by an apology lino as a burlesquo, not on Abraham Lincoln, but on the American Mercury. It burlesqued (with only fair success) the Mercury’s tactics of bringing heroes down to earth. It was suf ficiently exaggerated as to appear anything but tin* expression of any one’s genuine beliefs. It did make the fatal error of containing too much truth, but whose fault is that ’ Certainly, bv its very nature it con tained nothing that* might offend anyone or alter existent notions about the hero. It was, we repeat, a burlesque on the American Met cury. The “public” that incited the sus pension is taking tno much for granted when it assumes that col lege editors represent campus opin ion. God forbid! (This from 1 th the students and th.liters. The faculty committee, in permitting the “public" to dictate, in this case at least, did itself no honor. State in stitutions must indeed give heed t « the “public.” ’Tis neither safe nor good business to bite the hand that feeds. But if the colleges are for ever going to listen to a self consti tuted “public. * which alwavs makes plenty of noise whether it means tea persons or a hundred thousand, they might as well ec.nsi operations. To the outraged worshippers of Abraham Lincoln, we would point out that if their idol is all they claim for him he can well stand a dozen burlesques that arc written in burlesque spirit. For the blue-pencil committee w< have pity but not praise. They heard their masters’ voices and got busy. They might better have put the patriots right by defining for them the word “burlesque” and toll ing them of the existence of the American Mercury and explaining its style, instead of making the two stu dents stand trial rather than defend the right of the university and those within it to do their own thinking. For the suspended writers we ex press our sympathies. They may find their compensation in the real i ization that they could teach some I of their teachers a lot. They did | not, nor did they try to shatter the idol of Abraham Lincoln, but even so they successfully reduced to re spectacle old men the possible idols that a few days ago were, we presume, respected teachers. Gentlemen, We Have It ! 11E idea of education with us Americans is a fact. The right of education has come to stand only second to that of political freedom in the body of fundamental tenets of American democracy. Even as the best-favored scion of the “May floweiiest” family of Ihe land, and even as the offspring of the lowliest Italian boot-black or -logger, so may we “Anv-old Americans” claim the loftiest seats of statesman ship or of scholarship as the right ful stuff of our dreams. In theory it is so. Yesterday—for a few short hours —there was on the campus a man from Old England. Mr. Kenneth Lindsay is his name, and the preach ing of industrial democracy is his life, lie is of that momentous pres ent-day political phenomenon, the British Labor party. He is a ris ing leader in this movement, and his business in the United Stntes is to explain its sources and its aims. Those several scores of students who were so favored as to sit in on the British gentleman’s brief talk, went away undisturbed and even somewhat pleased with the visitor’s words regarding ourselves. To those of us who are liberals—and most college students pretend to that per suasion—it was perhaps gratifying to tie told that that which the La bor party of England is working for is precisely the traditional equal ity of opportunity which has always characterized America. | The speaker gave three elements j ns vital to democracy. The third I was education. And most of us who ; were there mentally nodded assent, j Of course! How well do we know it. Have we not etched where all who come to our campus tnay,read, “Ed ucation, the soul of a republic”? Ami yet there was a whisper of a | definition to which the man from England did not give full utterance, lie spoke in a sentence of something essential -something deep. It seem ed he even voiced the word, “cul |ture. " And he hinted—merely hint i ed, that—well, American education still misses something. We some of us were afraid he would say it bluntly 'Education is culture!" Her most of us liked the engaging gentleman and we know that ed ucation is efficiency. The belt rang just then and most of us thought no more about it. We event on to our business of getting educated. MCE more we are confronted with this problem of securing speakers for the campus. Todav’s correspondent is irate about some body's failure to secure Hugh Wal pole’s presence on the campus this weekend, lie doesn’t know who is responsible, but he feels that there is “something wrong, somewhere.” And there is. Just who is to blame, of course is, as always, another matter. The committee in charge of arranging for speakers will probably declare that the risk incurred in getting Walpole and Sandburg on the cam H. J. 'f here Are the Men of Letters? Tfct SEVEN k SEERS THE ALPHA CHI OMEGAS HAD A BENEFIT DANCE TUES DAY TO PAY FOR THEIR HOUSE DANCE THE NIGHT BEFORE. At least that’s one of the few ways by which you can make mon ey the same way you spend it. Heal'd during the recent flood: “Johnnie, swim out to the pump and bring mamma a bucket of wa ter. ’ ’ CAMPUS STROLLING Katherine Talbot munching her breakfast on the run to an 8 o’clock. This morning it’s a piece of toast. Yesterday it was a doughnut. I hope the Kappas never have bacon and eggs, or waffles. That will probably take care of itself, how ever. Alice Kraeft, the tiny presi dent of Hendricks hall. I wonder if her feet reach the floor when she is sitting in the president’s chair. Some Sigma Pi Tau father must be a nurseryman judging from the number of shrubs around the house. FAMOUS REMARKS “Now when I was in the Philip pines— ” Warren D. Smith. I THERE'S always a ^ BRIGHT side to most THINGS when you get RIGHT down to the BOTTOM of proceedings FOR you know I was JUST thinking yesterday WHAT 'a good time of THE month the flood CAME and cut us off FROM the outside for A WHILE at least ANYHOW I haven’t HEARD from home in ALMOST a week"now BECAUSE no mail can GET through and I WAS thinking how DISASTROUS it would be AT say the first of the MONTH not to hear from HOME in nearly a week. THANX. Gretchen says the Rotary club i has certainly got the jump on the j other service clubs this winter, j ‘ ‘ The railways are using Rotary i snow plows on most all the nioun- i tain lines,” she reads. There are some practical co-eds. pus, is too great. “They want too much,” they will wail. “The stu dents won’t come. Men like that never have been successes (finan cially).” And so on. Obviously if anything is to be done to change this state of affairs, it must originate with the student body. Those interested in securing first class speakers (and there is no small number of them) can, like our correspondent, talk themselves black in_ the face about the situa tion, but the value of such protests has only a momentary value. It isn’t cumulative. It lacks the weight of concerted determination. They might ask the committee all sorts of em barrassing questions, such as: why turn down Walpole at one figure, when Roy Chapman Andrews is glad ly signed at an even higher con sideration ? Is there some conspiracy afoot (as our correspondent hints) against men of letters1? Sandburg yesterday, AValpole to day . . . who will it be tomorrow. We’ve lost two good speakers; are we going to lose the next-one, also? And the next? G. F. B. Commun ications Wliitlier Bound. Committee? Dear Editor: A short time ago Carl Sandburg visited those parts and delivered a number of lectures. lie spoke in Salem before a large crowd, lie spoke in Portland, lie visited Cor vallis at the invitation of the stu dent bodv of O. A. C., and addressed the student body, lie didn’t speak in Eugene. This Saturday night Hugh Wal pole, well known English novelist and man of letters, will speak in Portland, lie will not, I understand, appear in Eugene. 1 do not know just who is re sponsible for the speakers who ap pear on the campus, nor do T know who is responsible for those who don’t appear, but the arrangement or lack of arrangement seems to me a queer one. Why the state Uni versity, of all places in the state, should not take an active part in the entertainment of men of letters, is to me a mystery. As a member of the student body l feel that those responsible for our speakers are eith er sadly negligent in the perform ance of their duties, or are deliber ately insulting the student body which they serve, by tactile infer ring that we are not interested in the Sandburg and Walpole type of speaker. If this last is true I would like to challenge this assumption on the part of “those in power.’’ Sincerely, A RC. I know one who is majoring in Eng lish, but she is mixing some sewing and cooking from the household arts department with her Shakespeare and Ancient Literature. UNFAMILIAR SCENES | The copywriter at his writer making | copy. | The dressmaker at her dresser mak ing dresses.. ! The watchmaker watching me make watches. | And the presser at his presser mak ing—panties. SELF-CONFESSION IS ONLY HALF SCANDAL. There seems to be a dearth of men for the Order of the O to paddle this season. Why not reserve the en tire section for them? That would ; fix it up all right. * » * Things are still pretty wet over in Springfield. All the girls are wearing pumps. Many of the people are sleeping on the floor fearing the springs in the beds will come through. They should sleep on a fraternity bunk if they have those fears. SPRINGFIELD SONG HIT “DO YOU BELIEVE IN FER RIES?” Five thousand fans sat breathless. Five thousand fans rose as one. The score was tied—only a few' .min utes to go! One team scored on a long shot—five thousand fans yel led with all their might. The other team followed with a difficult one handed shot after taking the ball through the entire opposing team— tli cheering was deafening. When the referee had hushed the crowd and stood ready to toss the ball on what might be the deciding play of the game a clear feminine voice behind me said, “I don’t like Flora’s new hat, do you?” MY SOUP’S COLD. Drama (Continued from page, one) diesis alone. “Night’s Mardi Gras” was the theme, and the lines were written by Mildred Le Com]ite Moore, now in charge of the chil dren’s dancing classes on Saturday afternoon. The staging was designed and executed by Nolan B. Zane’s class in design, and Miss Victoria Avakian’s class in costume design made the costumes. The production was under the management of James Leake, ’26. Last year the Bailee Drama was given in the McDonald theater and was an adaptation of “Midsummer Night’s Dream.” The same art! classes did the costuming and stag ing as the year before, and also shared in the finances. Here’s the Place— for Good Fountain Service! Milk shakes with wafers Malted Milks Sodas Sundaes, all flavors (your choice) 15c Electric Toastwich Shop 786 E. 11th St. PARR Shirt tvzth an on it. This shirt has the long point collar. It is made of a genu ine imported English Broadcloth — the best in collars and in shirts that you can buy. Ask Tour Dealer CAMPUS Bulletin^ Th.9 Mathematics club will meet at 7:30 in room 1, Johnson hall. Gladys Euehler will speak on Con formal Mapping. Women’s League tea this after noon from 4 to 6, on sun porch of Woman’s building. Mass meeting of W. A. A. at 4:15 in 101 Woman’s building. Impor tant. Sigma Delta Pi meeting Friday at 7:30 at Y. W. bungalow. Miss Thompson to speak. Agora meets tonight at 7:30, Woman’s building. Phi Chi Theta meeting tonight at J100 Commerce at 7:15. Alpha Delta Sigma meets today } noon at the Anchorage. History (Continued from pago one) source of interest in the winter sport. Basketball was resumed at the University during the 1917 season but with little success. It marked one of the freakiest athletic seasons ever experienced by the Webfoots. Eleven games were played, and none was won. Oregon’s most decisive defeat that year was at the hands of the Multnomah club aggregation, which romped away with a 33 to 3 victory. Several things interfered with Oregon’s hoop season. The lack of experienced players and a post-sea son football game with the Uni- | versify of Pennsylvania eleven, ' ABILITY —to study —to work —to succeed Depends on your Physical Fit ness. Try Chiropractic. Geo. A. Simon Phone 355-J Over Penny’s Store DAY GERTRUDE ATHERTON’S widely read novel “The PERCH of the DEVIL” When two women are in love with the same man. something interesting is bound to happen —- especially when one is his wife . . . Week-end Trips to Portland —loiv roundtrip fares for week-end travel $5.30 there and back Go Friday. Saturday or Sunday; return by midnight Tuesday fol lowing. Trains at 7:35 a. m., 11:10 a. m., 3:20 p.m. Returning S:3 5 a.m., 9:30 a. m., 5:00p.m., 8:15 pan., 9:00 p.m. Special Pullman leaves Eugene 2:20a. m., ready at 9:30 p. m. an 1 arrives Portland 7 a.m. Returning leaves Portland 1 a. m , ready at 9:30 p. m., and arrives Eugene at 5:30 a. m. Save time, money and nervous energy. Travel by train. Pacific, F. G. LEWIS, Ticket Agt. iH Phone 2200 ;§j which attracted Coach Hugo Bez dek’s attention until after the new year. Members of the team included Lynn McCready, Hollis Huntington, forwards; Dick Nelson, center; Shy Huntington, Ferd Cate and Jay Fox, guards. (This is the third article of a series of early basketball days at the University.) Dr. Walter Barnes Returns to Classes Walter Barnes, professor in his tory, returned Monday to his class es after being absent for about two weeks because of illness. Mr. Barnes is also taking Dr. H. D. Sheldon’s class in.World history in the absence of the dean. Prompt Service When you need a clean shirt in a hurry, don’t forget our fleet of delivery trucks are always ready to serve you. Phone 252 for fast service at reason able prices. Domestic Laundry Phone 252 Grille Dance Friday, February 25 No Grille Dance Saturday Ye Campa Shoppe FILMS Developed and Printed at Carl R. Baker’s Kodak Shop “Everything Fotographic’’ 7 West 7th, Eugene, Oregon WHERE QUALITY MEETS CONFIDENCE Laraway’s Shopping News GHARMING AG6ESS0RIE? ^Somplement fjnntf Sostumes Delightful new things from here and there - - all in accordance with fashion’s dictates and good taste are here in diversified displays. Trifles that were chosen with care and created with that effectiveness that makes one’s costume a suc cess. Smart Kid Gloves In Harmonious Color Combinations A collection of imported gloves, per fect in every detail and expressing the most pleasing and most advance glove styles $3.98 Dainty Spring Neckwear Attractive New Styles Display includes lovely collar and cuff sets, neckpieces, and vestees. Developed oi organdy, voile, linen, pongee and crepe de chine. In lovely new Spring shades., cream and white. 69c to 98c Much Interest Centers In The New Handbags In various delightful new shapes tlie eolored leather handbag is the smartest accessory for wear with new Spring attire. -Made ot finest leathers they’re cleverly fitted with change purse and vanity necessities. $2.49 to $7.50 Exquisite Silk Hosiery Chiffon And Service Weights Colors: Alesam, French nude, nude, piping rock, champagne, sauterne, bran, grain, gunmetal, mauve, taupe, dorad.', peach, atmosphere, white and black. 69c, 98c, $1.49 and $1.98 pair Laraway’s DEPARTMENT STORE 966-968 Willamette Street, Laraway Bldg-. WHERE QUALITY MEETS CONFIDENCE