University of Oregon, Eugene Arthur L. Schoeni .....Editor William H. Hammond..Business Manager Vinton Hall ....Managing Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS Ron Hubbfl, Ruth Newman, Rex Tussin^, Wilfred Brown Secretary—Ann Hathaway UPPER NEWS STAFF wary KJomm .... Aflat. Mnpr. Editor larry Van Dine .- Sports Editor PhyJlifl Van Kimmell... Society Myron Griffin —. Literary Victor IV ft il I man .r. j. r. rAiitur Osborne Holland . Feature Kditor Ralph David .- Chief Ni»ht Editor Clarence Craw . Makeup Kditor i_ i \i_ t'_:. n:i.in.. 'r xi«:i lor, and Barney Miller. GENERAL ASSIGNMENT REPORTERS: Henrietta Steinke, Merlin Blais, Warren Tinker, Eleanor Jane Ballantyne, and Willis Duniway. NIGHT EDITORS: Carl Monroe, Warner CuiBB, William White, Beatrice Bennett, Rufus Kimball. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Louise Gurney, Jack Bellinger, Ted Montgomery, Thornton Gale, Dorothy Morrison. Michael Hofcan, Isabelle Crowell, Kmbert Fossum, Helen Rankin, Elinor Henry, Bob Samuels, Clifford Gretcor, Helen Jones, John Rorth, and Jane Manion. GENERAL NEWS STAFF: Dave Wilson, Betty Anne Macduff, Roy Craft, Hester Hopkins, Barbara Conly, Bobby Reid, Lavina Hicks, Irvin Faris, Lee Coe, John McCulloch, Eugene Mullins. Phyllis Calderwood, Thornton Shaw, Willard A rant, Lois Nelson, Bernice Hamilton, Sterling Green, Betty Harcombe, Anne Bricknell, Janet Fitch, Pete Proctor, and Evelyn Shaner. BUSINESS STAFF Tony Peterson .- Advertising Manager Addison Brockman . Foreign Adv. Mgr. Jean Patrick .... Manager Copy Department Betty flatten . Women’s Spec. Adv. Ina Tremblay . Asst. Advertising Mtcr. Louise (iurn«*y . Executive Secretary uui i j ii nnuu ... v>ii cuiuuuii * The Oregon Daily Emerald, official publication of the Associated Students of the University of Oregon, Eugene, issued daily except Sunday and Monday, during the col lege year. Member of the Pacific Intercollegiate Press. Entered in the postoffice. at Eugene, Oregon, as second class matter. Subscription rates, $*2.50 a year. Advertising rates upon application. Phone Manager: Office, 1895; residence, 127. Day Editor.Mary F. Dildary Ass’t. Day Editor .V. Kaufman Night Editor .William White Assistant iNignt manors Isabelle Crowell, Michael Hogan Sins of Their Elders . . . A YOUNG man sat in the library, his head bent over a dry ^ *■ volume of some social science. That tlie black type impressions on the pages were uninter esting could be seen from the far-away look in his eyes and the glassy fixity with which he let them loll on the pulpwood sheet. Ahead of him sat a girl, dressed in tlie ordinary clothes which were a la mode on the campus. Not pretty clothes, but more in keeping with her plain, unattractive face and physical bearing. He saw her through unbiased eyes, merely as one mortal takes stock of another. What, an odd dress she had on. He did not like its color nor the way it hung. And her shoes. Too large. Sizable feet were unattractive in a small person. To her proportions they were not unwieldy, he thought. Her hair, lie noted too, was a plain shade, brown. Nothing , to write poetry about. In all, she was just another mortal, imbued with the inalienable right to live. Probably someone’s sweetheart. A fraternity brother interrupted "his reveries by slamming a book on the desk. After a few words, the man with the eyes asked the newcomer if he was acquainted with the girl ahead. The one with the brown dress and homely face. Sure, she’s an Alpha Alpha, he was told. As if a magical transformation had taken place, the plain ness of her seemed to disappear. Oh, she’s an Alpha Alpha. . . . That’s a good house. And with those words al( the stored np concepts, percepts and other psychic phenomena were called forth in his mind, to clothe the young woman in a more attrac tive raiment. All the past glories of the Alpha Alpha’s came back to help make her a princess instead of a colorless bit of humanity. Knowing what house she belonged to put her in a different light in his eyes, lie looked again. She wasn’t so bad-looking after all. Thus do many college students shine with reflected glory. Thus many “rate” because the house they belong to has had a number of letternien or good-looking girls the last few years. Individual merits are submerged under the overpowering weight of a gold fraternity pin from a house that “rates.” The college man or woman takes on “color” or personality in proportion to the excellence of the house to which he or she belongs. There is a clannishness about it. all. Snobbery, a bit. The fraternity system fosters an evil against the person which is unfair and undesirable. When the system provides fellowship, discipline and a place to .live it is fulfilling the main part of its duty to the university. A Plea for Open Football TJE AVAS a football star, captain of his crow, Phi Beta Kappa, A prom chairman ami after lie was elected Rhodes scholar from the University of Wisconsin he suffered a nervous break down and lias spent nine months in Idaho recuperating so that lie can go abroad to study. Jeff Burrus, the man in question, came out. of it all with the conviction that college athleties used him rather selfishly. Says an article in The Nation, a magazine known for its abrupt and downright stands on topics of national interest: “lie be lieves that tin* exploitation of physically endowed young men . . . as if they were game fighting cocks or maddened bulls is something less than one ought to expect at the hands of his Alma Mater. . . . That modern football was not really an ama teur sport at all—that it was from the outside a great show by means of which universities keyed up the loyalty of alumni associations and impressed the taxpayers; from the inside, a relentless industry which built commodities of various kinds upon the blood and sinew and carefully nourished college spirit of the players.” If such be the ease, and the recently published Carnegie Foundation report dealt with the subject of college football in the light of big business, let the boy who wishes to become a warrior on the gridiron be paid a high price for his services. The salaries should be high because of the extraordinary talent required and the serious risks run. In addition, colleges should throw the shrouds off the busi ness of football, pay openly for the services of stars and indulge in open competitive bidding for the cream of the prep schools. Reality should characterize the dealings of colleges with the major sports because these sports are no longer in the realm of amateurism. Campus Forum - SELLING OF “MUMS” To the Editor: One of the most admirable func tions of the Women's league is raising funds to bring a foreign scholar to the University of Ore gon each year. The funds are gathered from the Dime Crawl and sundry concessions connected With athletic events. One of these concessions is the sale of chrysan themums at Homecoming. The Women’s league, however, has taken an imperative stand on the sale of the ’mums. In the past, various student groups have shared the privilege with the league, but for this Homecoming the women’s organization has de clared an unfounded ban on com petition. A group of Oregon ath LIBRARY STEPS 12:40 Today Rice McHaley, Vernon Har rah, Sam Rotenberg, Cecil Co hen, Jim Dinsmore, Bob Hall. Signed: JIM DEZENDORF, President Oregon Knights. GORDON RIDINGS, Chairman traditions com mittee, Order of the O. ietes, all self-supporting, following the steps of numerous predeces sors, plan to sell the flowers for the Homecoming battle with Ore gon State. The opposition from the Wom en’s league is thought by the ath letes to be out of keeping with the liberal traditions of the school. The athletes are against outside agencies exploiting the campus, but they believe there is enough prolit from the sale of flowers so that both 'the league and the self-supporting players, operating independently of each other, can share equally. The A. S. U. O. constitution in cludes a clause prohibiting "pro. miscuous selling of merchandise" on university property. The ath letes propose to confine their ac tivities off the campus, and will organize their sale of ’mums di rectly with the fraternities and sororities. The self-supporting athletes who wish to take advantage of the sale want no conflict with the Wom en’s league or the foreign schol arship, but merely desire an even break such as has existed in the past. The boys need the money and are willing to work as hard for it to remain in school as the Women’s league is to bring a for eign scholar to the campus. . Sincerely, l ■ G. C. NEW GERMAN CLUB CHOOSES OFFICERS The officers for the ensuing year were elected by the German club at its first meeting of the year Tuesday evening at the Y. M. C. A. bungalow. Diana Deinin ger was elected president; Esther Saager, vice president; Laurence Frazier, secretary; Mildred Mc Gee, treasurer. There was a short discussion of the program of the year, and the remainder of the evening was spent with German games and mu sic. About 25 people were pres ent. An invitation is extended by the club to all students who have had one year's study of German to attend the meetings of the club on Tuesday of every other week. The Ambler YESTERDAY WE SAW A RED-HAIRED DAME looking for JOHNNY KITZMILLER . . . MARION KEEP pretending she was ill . . . JIMMY RALEY play ing taxi in his little blue Chivvy ORPHA NOFSKER talking to BOBBY ROBINSON . . DON EVA in the process of making a dirty crack . . . MARK McCORNACK gazing wistfully at his pipe . . . JOHNNY ANDERSON plaguing HARRIET KIBBEE . . . CHUCK REED looking surprisedly at his feet .... HENRIETTA DUN NING speaking to every man she met . . . THE “ALPHA HALL SPECIAL” making studes scatter all the way down Thirteenth. With the Soph Informal com ing; on as well as house dances —the co’ed's mind runs to her clothes and jewelry. . . . And for jewelry The AU&din offers her dainty sophisticated pieces that will enhance her frock. The Alladin Gift Shop West of Willamette on 10th LEMON GOOD MORNING, EVERY BODY, INCLUDING SIGMA NU CHAPTER OF THE FOUR SQUARE GOSPEL. We wonder how Ed Cheney felt when he dropped the collection plate. Tough to have palsy so young, isn’t it, Ed? Doc Romig wants to know if the Y. M.-Y. W. “Joint Confer ence” is secretly backed by the chiropractors. * * * The Apache’s Fiancee Says: I call my boy friend “Hammer” because he has such a hard head. MEAT DEFINED A pup asleep On a log, A hornet’s nest— HOT DOG! * * * Dan—So you’re going into the manufacturing business, eh? What are you going to make? C'upid—I’m going to make love. TODAY’S PUTRID PUN “Deluxe.” Ah washes mah silk hose in deluxe. Bay—Forsooth, Harold, come All Lines of Beauty Culture Beau Monde Beauty Shop All Graduate Operators Phone 466 Over Western Union A Sign of Good Reading WILI, 15c RENT ANY BOOK IN The “HIGH HAT” LIBRARY FROM TODAY, NOV. 7 UNTIL MONDAY, NOV. 11 Here Are Some of the New Titles Roper's Row My Wives The Bridal Wreath The God Who Didn't Laugh Five and Ten Farewell to Arms Scarlet Sister Mary Well of Loneliness Broadway Interlude Whiteoaks of Jalna Love of the Foolish Angel Six Mrs. Greenes On the Anvil The Unintentional Charm of Men Black Sun The World’s Delight Falcons of France The Deruga Trial Sacrifice Sense and Sensuality Fish Preferred Love Letters of an Interior Decorator The Uncertain Trumpet The “HIGH HAT” LIBRARY On the BOOK ■BALCONY of the UNIV.’CO-OP’ ind join ns in a gamft of Spud joker. Window—Watoha mean Spud tinker ? Hay—We use potato chips. ~ . A Amos—What’s the difference between a Co-ed and Aimee? Gideon — Well, when Aimee prays, she says “Amen,” but when a co-ed prays, she says “a man.” * * * INFAMOUS EPITAPHS Here lies what’s left of Rat Mc Nap, The cheese was good, but, ah, the trap! * * * Freshmen should always remem ber to oil their “Tin punts” before going out on sneak dates. * * * Have you beard the new “Clum sy” song? No. “I’m just a vagabond lubber.” # * * NO, THE SIGMA NUS DID NOT WIN THE HEILIG TICK ETS. WE ARE STILL, ACCEPT ING CONTRIBUTIONS AND OF FER A SECOND PRIZE OF A FREE RIDE ON A CAMPUS LAWN MOWER. .... —The Soda Jerker. I ALPHA DELTA SIGMA lunch eon meeting today at the Anchor age. Every member is urged to attend. Very important. PI LAMBDA THETA will hold its initiation today at 5 o’clock in the Gerlinger hall. There will be a banquet following the initiation. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE OR GANIZATION meets tonight at 7:30 in the Y. W. C. A. bungalow. INTER-FRATERNITY COUN CIL meeting this evening at 5 o’clock in room 110, at Johnson hall. COSMOPOLITAN CLUB execu tive committee meeting in Y hut at 3 o’clock. MASS MEETING for all women today at 5 o’clock in Alumni hall of the Gerlinger hall. CAMPUS MOVIE tickets may be secured today from Hal John son at Phi Kappa Psi house, or I TOASTED SALTED NUTS Oh, Boy! Are they good? Well—just try them—see how crisp and fresh they really are. Almonds, Pecans, Pistachio, Filberts, Pignolias, Cashews and Peanuts. Also a variety of nuts not salted, including the Ly dice, a Chinese nut. WALORA CANDIES 851 13th Avenue East FIR,ST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST OF EUGENE Announces A FREE LECTURE on CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Entitled “Christian Science: The Union of Reason and Revelation’’ COLONIAL THEATRE Friday, November 8, at 8 P. M. By Miss Lucia C. Coulson, C. S. of London, England. A member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. THE PUBLIC IS CORDIALLY INVITED There Will Be so many lovely girls At the Soph Informal but the secret of loveliness is knowing your type and making the most of it. Here, you may he sure that we will give you every aid in achieving heautv. All treatments are at the hands of skilled and expert beauticians. We specialize in— Permanent Waving Shampooing—Marcelling Facial—Finger Waving—Manicuring Scalp Treatment—Individual Hair Cutting Open From 8 A. M. to 8 P. M. Model Beauty Parlor Over Lee-Duke Cafe • Phone 2362 Sheer, Slim Hose The particular college girl—the girl who wants pretty hosiery for campus wear as well as for the more formal occasions_will appreciate the grace and quality of the Humming Bird stockings. With pure silk tops and an extra length leg. And best of all they are absolutely guaranteed—a new pair if they are not wholly satisfac tory. At Only $1.48 KAFOURY’S I, :rom house representative of "Ed's ro.ed.” THEME SONG contest for “Ed's Zto-ed” rehearsal at McDonald leater at 5 o’clock. Evryone be there. THESPIANS meet on terrace between Susan Campbell and Hen dricks halls today at 12:30 sharp for group picture for Oregana. V. W. C. A. AND Y. M. C. A. will hold retreats this week-end at Newport. All interested in at tending are asked to call at either the bungalow or the hut. FROSH COMMISSION groups of the Y. W. C. A. will meet this afternoon. Y. M. C. A. FROSH COMMIS SION—Special meeting today at 5 o'clock in the Y hut. All char ter members must be present. WOMEN IN HER SPHERE group will meet in the women's lounge of the Gerlinger hall at 5 o'clock for a social hour. OREGON DALY CLUB will have group pictures taken tomor row. Time to be announced later. DR. J. R. WETHERBEE Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Office Phone 1601 Residence 1230-M 801-2.3 Miner Bldg. ( Eugene, Oregon Phone 25 BROWNIE BEAUTY SHOP Ringlette Permanent Wave $7.50 Bo sure and make your ap pointments either by phone or calling at the Mezzanine floor of Carrol-Davis Phar macy. ‘ ‘ Registered Operators ’ ’ A Cup of Coffee Hot, steaming coffee, when your eyelids droop and the book drops from your hand. Take a brace and order a cup of coffee from The "O” Lunch. It’ll do you worlds of good, and you'll be able to finish “cramming” for Prof. Crosland’s Psychol ogy Quiz . . ■ and that's something not to be taken lightly. Phono The 02952-W Lunch h mmmmn DANCE ARMISTICE EVE At MIDWAY Sunday Night 8 to 11 o’Clock Featuring HENRY KAAHEA “The Singing Hawaiian’’ MUSIC BY Johnny Robinson’s VARSITY VAGABONDS ) The most popular ready-to eat cereals served in the dining-rooms of American colleges, eating clubs and fraternities are made by Kellogg *in Battle Creek. They include Kellogg's Corn Flakes, Pep Bran Flakes, Rice Krispies, Wheat Krumbles and Kellogg's Shredded Whole Wheat Bis cuit. Also Kaffee Hag Cof fee—the coffee that lets you sleep. OLDER PEOPLE often think that college life is one of easy lolling around. You know better. You know that the steady grind of classes and outside activities takes every ounce of energy you have. Keep fit if you expect to keep it up! Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN will pre vent constipation, the cause of most ill health. Two tablespoonfuls eaten every day will keep you strictly reg ular. It’s guaranteed. ALL-BRAN is a pure, wholesome cereal, delicious with milk or cream, mixed with other cereals, or with fruit or honey added. Ask that it be served at your fraternity house or favorite campus restaurant. ALL-BRAN V l!linillinilll!IHI!l!iHil]tHII[HIIIIIHIIIIIBIIillHI!ll!BI!linillimil!IHIIIinil!IHIIIHII!!IB!ll!IHI!!IIBm!ni:i!nill Winter Frocks Regular Values to $25.00 plover campus frocks and afternoon dresses . . . with just that distinctive style that will make them dear :o the co-ed’s heart. BEARD’S 856 Willamette St.