Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, February 07, 1929, Page 2, Image 2

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    University of Oregon, Eugene
ARDEN X. PANGBORN, Editor LAURENCE B. THIELEN, Manager
EDITORIAL BOARD
W E Hempstead Jr.Assoc. Editor Leonard Hagstrom.Assoc. Editor
Arthur Schoeni.Managing Editor_
UPPER NEWS STAFF
Carl Gregory Asst. Managing .~Z'"'Z'Z'-S&y Editor
Donald Johnson .ft«™ |ggj ™d^no .P. I. P. Editor
S*rcna Wu^“ .ciareneTcraw .Makeup Editor
Jo Stofiel.- • .JccrcUry
News and Editor Phone 665 .
EDITORIAL STAFF „ . r, _
nAY vniTCP’S • Vinton Hall Lawrence Mitchelroore. Serena Madsen, Carl GregolT
DAyS1Ton|on ; Mary K& <n> and Mary Frances Dilday. assistant,.
NIGHT EDITORS- R< x Tus or «.ief; Fred Beehill. Victor Kaufman. Charles Bar.
Barney Miller, Mildred D 'b s.
ASSBTenn^HJeanEDSaSn. ~
Thornton Shaw, Gracemary Riekman. I
GENERAL ASSIGNMENT REPORTERS: Margaret Clark, Wilfred Blown, Carol ,
HuHburt, Audrey Henriksen.
SPORTS STAFF: Delberi Aildison. Alex Tamkin, Joe Brown, I'red Schultz, Harr. I
Van Dine. Warren Tinker, Harold Fraundorf. „ . .,,.1/
REPORTERS: Marv Klomni, Myron Griffin, Maryhelen Koupal, Cletii N , ' !
R Margaret Reid. Alice- Gorman, T. Neil Taylor. Willis. Dumway, I-o» Ndson.
Dorothy Thomas. Phyllis VanKiinmel. David Wilson, Aileen Barker. Fllse Hlhroeder |
Osborne Holland. Henry Chmpec, Merlm Blais, Rex Tussing, Mack HaJl. Helen
Cherry. Barney Miller, Bob Guild, Mary Ellen Mason, Ruth Gaunt, Ignore Ely, i
Ruth Campbell. _j
BUSINESS STAFF
Will’am H. Hammond... Associate Manager
George Weber Jr.Foreign Adv. Manager
Dorothy Ann Warnick.—Asst. Foreign Mgr.
Charley Reed.-.Advertising Manager
Richard Horn....-.Aast. Adv. Manager i
Harold JCester....Asst. Adv. Manager;
Phil Hammond.Service Dept Ted He;v»tt. Circulation Manager
Ruth Creager .Secretary-Cashier Larry Jackson.Asst. Girculatioh Mgr. ,
Margaret Poorman......Mgr. Checking Dept
Business Office Phone 1895
ADVERTISING SALESMEN: Addison Brockman, Lucille Catlin, Kmmajane Rorcr i
Bernard Clapperton, William Cruikshank, Elaine Henderson, Bob Holmes, Ina
Tremblay. Betty Hagen, Margaret Underwood, Osborne Holland.
OFFICE ASSISTANTS: Harry Hanson, Dorothy Jones, Cleota Cook, Kathryn I crigo,
Julianne Benton, Guy Stoddard, Louise Gurney, Jane Gilbert, Fred Reid.
The Oregon Daily Emerald, official publication of the Associated Students of the
University of Oregon, Eugene, issued daily except Sunday and Monday, during the
colioge year. Member of the Pacific Inter-collegiate Press. Entered in the post office
at Eugene Oregon, as second class matter. Subscription rates, $2.60 a year. Adver
twing rates upqii application. Residence phone, manager. 2799. Jo Stofiel, secretary.
Dan Editor This Innue— Wilfred Brown
Night Editor Thin Issue— Charles H. Barr
Anst. Night Editors Thin /ssue—Jo Barry
John Dodds
Chinese Students Busk
In Political Arena
Picture if you ran 200 students, angered, say, by the i«»- J
adequacy of the Kelogg pact, marching noisily to the ottiec o
Secretary Kellogg, demanding an audience with him, and then,
finding him not in, proceeding to his residence which tiny
wreck, h'or good measure they administer a sound drubbing to
several policemen and minor officials of the state department. ;
who attempt to restrain them. If your mental agility hasn t j
balked here, imagine President Cooliilge anxiously summoning
[hem to the White House lawn where he lectures them in some
what the following manner: “Your patriotism is admirable,
but I feel you do not fully understand the policy of our govern
ment. h’or diplomatic reasons we cannot go too last. 'i our
illegal actions only embarrass us. Rest assured that the govern
ment is proceeding in a true peace-loving spirit, and should you
find that all armaments are not abandoned within three years, :
then you may cut off my head.”
This hasn’t happened. It won’t. Rut the momentary,
phantasy may make more vivid the action of a student mob
from the Central Government university in Nanking, China,
which a few weeks ago wrecked the home ol Minister ol Foreign \
Affairs C. T. Wang,1 before being pacified by President diking j
Kai-shek, dust as it had seemed that the Chinese students had ;
abandoned polities to the solons of the Kuomintang and re- [
turned to their books this new outbreak occurred.
The provocation seems to have been the belief
that the government wasn’t proceeding fast enough in
tin- abolition of unequal trinities, coupled with the
rumor that Minister Wang and Minister of Finance
T. V. Soong had recognized Japan's claims on the in
famous Nishihara loans of IMF) as a concession to
Japan's consent to tariff autonomy. Rut the National
Anti-Japyn association in a series of demonstrations
in Nanking had decreed no eonscssions, and the grape
vine rumor following closely after a. week of anti
Japanese agitating fanned the ebbing coals of stu
dent ardor. To cool them required President
Chiang’s generous wager of his head against the un
equal treaties.
I Ins recent outbreak, however. seems to lie Hie excep
tion rather than the rule now in Chinese student activities. !
It is an atavistic throw hack to the tumultuous day of 1919 !
192f) when students stumped the country from one epd to the
other, agitation against imperialist intervention, forcing out I
the traitorous Anl'n clique which had attempted to barter'
away China's sovereignly, and ushering in the Nationalist
Revolution. Last summer, the conclusion of the first military
stage of the Revolution was symbolized by the renaming of
Peking, the northern capital, to Peiping, city of peace.
I he student movement habit of opposition seems
to have been slower in adjustment, as evidenced by
the Nanking incident. Possibly the students acted up
on the ancient Meneian presumption “if a person has j
the power of authority nine chances out of ten he is
using it wrongly. Perhaps too, they of a generation
that has become articulate since the carlv struggles
ot the Nationalist drive resented the injunction of
the older revolutionists: “Stick to your books."
I he future of the Chinese student movement is not easilv
predictable except in generalities. Sporadic political out-'
breaks may continue to enliven an otherwise serene scholastic!
lib' Rut already the tremendous energy of the movement'
as a whole has been diverted into new and constructive I
channels.
The rights o| co-education and self-government won a
determination for stud,\ has taken hold of the students ai
most as a fad. Rut the “back to the books1' trend has not
meant ^ a revival id the old scholasticism of rote learning
The Renaissance has begun. Research in the order of the
da.\ research for the specific purpose of applving scientific
knowledge to China's problems of reconstruction'. Most protui
1,1 H’1' curriculum are courses of natural science medicine
engineering, commerce, agriculture, and education. The most
capable students are no longer going into polities but into tin
mass education, rural school, and vernacular language move
nu n S Dr. .John Rcwey and Dr. Ilu Shilt'arc the new patron
seludars. Ii means that the reeoi.struction era of nation build
jug has set ,n and that the real revolution in China.,as in
Russia, is social and onl\ sccondarih political.
Edward Tomlinson, Veteran,
Speaks at Assembly Today
{CoiUumul from fage One)
otluoai c»l in this country. Hr -Ini
gru'liiule work at the University of
UtliiJbu i IScot limil, iintl is ;i I rl
low nl the American t ieo^i apliical
soviet y.
In atiJitioii lo bciii^ a traveler
au»l lecturer Mr. Tomlinson is also
a writer. Artitle* writleu b„. him
I .
itin "TraieJ Muga
“t'urronl IJisturv.’’ and the
"'■'■'I'lyn Spectator." HC |lus just
1 'it til It'd "Down the
filter.” which will l„. put.
.l;s.l,"'J «"»"• The New York Herald
l",’uu'’ '‘ip'ugetl liiui to write
.111i*-1< x mi Hi,, public upiuiou in the
■s"iitli A in 01 iru u countries toward
the l:nitod States.
, The t'uiversilv of Oregon bund,
uudti the dii'eetiuu oi Walter i\r
ris, will play thrco short sclectious
before tho assembly takes up. Ar
rangements have been made with
tiie president's office that the band
will play at assembly every other
week for the remainder of the term.
The invocation will be given by
Rev. E. V. Stivers, piaster of the
First Christian church of Eugene.
DUCK
THE FASHION BOARD OF
MERCHANT TAILORS SAYS A
MAN'S WARDROBE SHOULD IN
CLUDE 20 SUITS AND 12 HATS.
Hurray, that means that wc col
lege men have only 19 suits and 12
hats to go!
TODAY’S PUTRID PUN
“razor”
1 called lier twice on tlie phono
hut I couldn’t razor.
WE HAVEN'T FORGOTTEN
ABOUT THAT GOOD NEWS WE
PROMISED YOU. MAYBE TO
MORROW!
* * *
THE “Suiudgers” funny
COLUMN in the O. S. U.
BAROMETER is trying to
FIND out who took first
PRIZE for the best
COSTUME at Die Ag Ball
OVER there last week-end.
JUST wait until they
FIND it was an Oregon
CO-ED. We won’t tell
WHAT she wore.
SOME WORKMEN HAVE BEEN
SEEN TAKING COILS INTO THE
NEW SIGMA CHI HOUSE.
Are they for the heating plant,
cr what?
It. A. SCHOOL NEWS
Ralph Cover, publicity chairman
for the B. A. student body dance,
decided to make the posters himself
and save money.
However, he has decided that it
is costing him more than if he had
had the art department make them.
“You see,” he explained, “1 make
such good signs that they are stolen
as quickly as 1 can make them. I
wish I had let the' art department
make them.”
Roma Whisnant was selling tick
ets for the dance, lout most of the
men she approached had excuses.
They couldn't dance, or couldn't get
a date, or had to study.
“I never saw swjfe a slow hunch
of men as there are in this depart
ment,” said Roipa.
“But you’ve never hccn out with
me,” retorted Robert Lemon, to
whom Roma had been trying to
make a sale.
THE A BOV E KREK PUBLICITY
IIS PRINTED BECAUSE Ol'1 A
THREAT TO PLEDGE THIO COOK
TO ON K OK THK H. A. IIONOU
AR1ES IK HK DIDN’T.
A ml t lion today is Thursday, and
nobod' is supposed to read the
Kmerald on Thursdays.
TODAY'S LIMPING LIMB RICK
A couple ip the graveyard did coo,
A ghost came along and said, "Boo! ”
Yelling and weak,
The fend lovers shriek,
"Henceforth we'll go elsewhere to
woo! ”
AL & LU.
M \KY BALKY TR1KD TO MAID
H KB LETTER IN THK Kt K K BOX.
It must have been a hot letter!
SOME PI,EDGINGS
BAGPIPE & KILTIES Jack Bciie
fiel.
Y. M. C. A. - Rudolph Ernst.
George E. Moll.
S. Stephenson Smith.
W. A. A. The "Pioneer.”
Editor's note. (We can't call it
editorial, because it’s supposed to
lie serious). Anyway, hereafter an
nouncements of pledging* or re
leases of one house by another will
be avoided. Tliev are of interest
to only those concerned.
K\ I iN \\ I A fOIvS C AN 'T GKT
A WAY KKOM PESTERING
W l V KS. TIIKY EVEN KICK
THEIR AIR POCKETS.
THE COOK
McDonald ••ti.io i^itiot,"
slurring limit .laiiuings, Floi'cmo
\ itlor Mini Noil ll;imilt<m. Also,
. I o 111111 y M ; i r \ ill ill " S( r 11 in in i li * ||io
Ulnos \uny," \ itu|>lH>iio ai t.
COLONIAL -(.ioorgo Kain*rot‘t aiol
Kvilyti Hr*-nI in “ Tin- Dragnot,” an
uiiiloivvin lil ilrama. Also, "l.'aiii|'us
Culms,” romi’ily.
HKILIG Ivslhor Ralston iu "Tilt
Sawilnst I’aiailiso." Also, “Tlic
t^niol Wuikor,” louioily.
REX Association \ aiiilcvillc ioail
slioo. Jtuc j.U
CAMPUS
BULLETIN
Junior women who will sell Shine
Day tickets meet today, in room
104 Journalism at 1 p. m.
Alpha Delta Sigma will meet Friday
noon at the Anchorage.
Mu Phi Epsilon will meet at 4:00
o’clock today in the music audi
toriym. Very important.
The lighting committee for the cam
jius movie will meet at (he uni
versity post office today at 1
o 'clock.
The camera committee for the cam
jius movie will meet in room 10C
Journalism today at ■'! o’clock
jointly with the makeup com
| * mittec.
Pi Lambda Theta luncheon today
noon at tile Anchorage.
Phi Beta Kappa will meet at 11 :1C
on the library steps this morning
for Oregaua pictures.
Important—All Daly club member;
i bo at the main, library Thursday
at 11:30. There will be a sliorl
business meeting and a group pic
ture will be taken for the Ore
gana.
Y. M. C. A. cabinet meets at 4:3(
today at the hut. All member!
askekd to be present.
Women’s league council meeting to
night at 7:1.1 at the Woman’:
building.
I
i
I
I
Winter football practice will begii
oil Monday beginning at 3:30. A1
players who want places on Ore
gon’s Pig!) team, please report t<
Captain .John ,1. MeCwan.
Pan Xenia luncheon today at 12:11
at the Anchorage. Mr. Tomlinson
the assembly speaker, will be tin
guest of honor.
Open meeting sponsored by Alplu
Kappa Delta, sociological fratcr
uity, tonight at 8 o’clock in Alum
ui hall. Dr. Parsons will speak
First and second law school major
have Oregana jiietures taken ii
front of Oregon building at 10:.It
today.
Correction-The list of Oregon fac
ally members signing the petition
to Senators MeNary and Steiwe
opposing the time clause of tin
cruiser bill published in 'files
day morning’s Emerald, shouh
have included the name of Deal
Charles Carpenter of the sclioo
of law.
The Co-op board will meet at tin
library steps at 11:30 o’clock thi
morning for Oregana picture.
Crossroads will meet tonight.
Pledges and active members of Ore
gnu Knights will lpcet at 1
o’clock Thursday at 110 Johnson
Very important.
Intramural rifle entrants may sigi
oil the bulletin board at the K
O. T. C. barracks.
—
! Varied Species of Birds
Inhabit Local Campu:
[Coniinuctl from Tago One)
I lie golden crowned kinglets am
the ruby crowned kinglets, or tin
little k i I Dicers, which arc usualli
seen during rainy weather.”
'flic Am'lolnm warbler should In
j easily recognized, according to Dr
II nest is ’ description. “This bird is
Use
This Service
for your
Week-end
Trips
Train and motor-coach
combine to give flexible,
time-and-money saving,
travel service. .
The maximum oi time at
your destination when you
use—
The "Silver Grays”
Portland via Corvallis and
Albany —8-00, 9:35,
+11:50 a.m.; 3:30, 4:30
p.m.
t' Silver Cray Limited.'’
Ll’ia Harrisburg.
Roseburg- 1:55,0:35 p m.
Marshfield via Roseburg
--1:55 p.m.
Grants Pass,Medford.
Ashland, San Francisco
•—1:55 p.m.
And many other points
You'll hnd a convenient
way to almost any Western
Oregon destination via the
deluxe "StUer Grays." Ask
about connections to Mc
Minnville, Monmouth, Sil
vetton, Lebanon, Newport,
etc.
Motor-Coaches leave 5
minutes earlier from South
ern Pacific Station.
Trains to Portland
Lease at 3:25, 4:40 a. m.;
12:40, 2:50, 4:25, 7:00
p.m.
Southern
Pacific
M B. COLL, Agent, S- P. SUgtt
F. G. LEWIS, Agent, S. P. Co.
Piiunc _’2Q0
■ —_—-3—T
| uf a bluish color, and has five yel- j
| low spots,” he said.
Probably many of the students !
• who study in the English reserve
; library these winter evenings won
I der what kind of owl does all the
j screeching on the roof of the vener
1 able old building.
“Those are screech owls,” said
I Huestis. “Little brown fellows, not
1 over seven or eight inches high, but
I they make lots of noise for their
i size. As far as I have been able to
observe, they stay here all year
! round, but I have never found out
! where they build their nests.”
i When asked about the squirrels
1 which live in the big trees on tho
j campus, Huestis disclosed a rather
: interesting fact, about their origin,
i “They are fox-squirrels,” lie said,
I “and arc not indigenous to this part
of the country. Somebody, I fpr
i get whom, brought a few of them
'here from the East years ago, and
now they arc all over town.
“And another thing. The gophers
here on the campus are the biggest
i on the Pacific coast. Goodbye.”
-
The Ambler
Yesterday we saw:
“CfifUGK” SPEAR galloping to
class . . . DAVE WILSON in his
ultra-natty R. O. T. C. uniform . . .
ESTELLE JOHNSON heaving a
baseball . . . WALLY LARKIN
slyly picking up. a ‘snipe’ . . •
JEAN ADIX proudly displaying her
flaming red mittens , . . WOODIE
ARCHER puffing out his chest . . .
JOHN' GALEY pernieatittg the at
mosphere with his cheery whistle
. . . JEAN ROGERS and her usual
Phi Pelt following . . . HELEN
SULLIVAN benevolently bestow
ing popcorn upon a lean frosh . . .
VERNON AIcGEE stroking his
beard.
(). S. C. Group to Be
Host to Oregon Club
An invitation to visit, the Cosmo
politan club at (). S. C. on Interna
tional night, Friday, February 1-1,
has just been received by members
of the Cosmopolitan club at the
University of Oregon.
International night is an annual
affair for the two clubs and is al
ways held following the basketball
game between the two schools. The
meetings alternate between the two.
A very interesting program is ex
pected, according to Sam Whong,
president of the club. At the last
I meeting in Corvallis, a group of stu
dents from each country represent
I ed in the club put on a skit.
Grad Joins Faculty of
Cottage Grove High
Gretehon Clemens, ’25, of Grants
! Pass, has been made a member of
the Cottage Grove high school
faculty, to fill out the year as
English and dramatics instructor.
Announcement of the appointment
was made at the appointment,
bureau office of the school of edu-i
cation by Miss Ida M. Pope, sec
retary, yesterday afternoon. Miss
Clemens' is a member of Kappa,
Kappa Gamma sorority.
“Let's sprinkle
Spangles on the floor
Then we need wait for
nothing more
Turn on the Vie,
turn down the glim
And let me dance
this dance with him."
DANCE .
tonight:
Everyone dances when the
floor has l>een preparedwith
Spangles. Good for any floor.
Just pure white crystalline
flakes that can be sprinkled
on in a minute to give a
smooth, glossy finish. Then
the fun begins. No waxing,
no polishing. Makes danc
ing a pleasure at any time.
Keep a package on hand.
For sale at
All leading druggists
and grocers
20 MULE TEAM
fPANGLCX
When a Feller Needs a Friend ■ : : : By briggs
You WANT To CRo%S5 Th£ „
Streglx But Zwi5-6-SH- *
l co^e.5> a car. Th\$ way
' AMD " ZWI^-S S ~SH”
comes a ca^ That wav
~Arsii> Them Tvjo come ai^mG
PROM OPPQ5»<TE P/R\=CTIONS
jjj£ ( 0
Finally You gej- op'all Yovr
Courage and start across
O V
--
whv donj r You L_iJ All Sight; v
'MOH'EE OLD GCLP5 L OFFICER, GET
MISTER AmD MOT
Be BAuLirsjci up The
^T^AFFlCJ
Me OUT OF
This And i
PROM'SE —
NO T A GOUGE*
^ a carlo ai?.
© r. Lorillsrd Co., list. 1760
.. not a cough in a carload
0» your Radio . . . OLD G OLD PAUL WHITEMAN HOUR
. . . Paul Whiteman, King of Jazz, and his complete orchestra, broadcasts
the OLD GOLD hour every Tuesday from 9 to 10 P. M., Pastern
Standard Time, over entire network of Columbia Broadcasting System.
Now try
in taking notes and writing themes
This is the student's pen
par excellence.
The Parker Duofold's pol
ished iridium-tipped point
glides gently over paper. Ink
flow starts immediately and
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Finger-pressure is re
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Action so responsive that
pen can be made 28‘,i' lighter
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Don't take a lesser pen.
See the Duofold at your
nearest pen counter today.
See "Geo. S. Parker —
DUOFOLD” imprinted on
the barrel to be sure vou
have the genuine.
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