wa II. I I ■ I,n, I i « * ■ I I ■■■ ■ . I — > — ,1 ■■» mm ■■■■ ■ « ■■ ■> ■■■ .. EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE OREGON DAILY EMERALD ♦♦ (Shregun SailH tmcralit University of Oregon, Eugene Arthur I,. Schoeni . Editor Will him II. Hiiminond . Business Manager Vinton Hall . Managing Kditor EDITORIAL WRITERS Ron Hubbs, Ruth Newman, Rex Tussins, Wilfred Brown Secretary—Ann Hathaway UPPER NEWS STAFF Mary Klemm . Assistant Managing Editor Harry Van Dine . Sports Editor Phyllis Van Kimmell .. Society Myron Griffin .. Victor Kaufman . E. I. P. Editor Ralph David . . Chief Night Editor Clftience Craw .. Makeup Editor BUSINESS STAFF George Weber, Jr. Associate Manager Tony Peterson . Advertising Manager Addison Brockman.Foreign Advertising Manager Jean Patrick . Manager Copy Department Larry Jackson . Circulation Manager Befty Hagen .. Women's Specialty Advertising Inn Tremblay .. Assistant Advertising Manager Betty Carpenter . Assistant Copy Manager Ned Mars.Assistant Copy Manager Louise Gurney . Executive Secretary Bernadine Carrico . Service Department Helen Sullivan . . Checking Department Fred Reid . Assistant Circulation Manager The Oregon Daily Emerald, official publication of the Asso ciated Students of the University of Oregon, Eugene, issued daily except Sunday and Monday, during tin* college year. Member of the Pacific Intercollegiate Press. Entered in the pos toff ice at Eugene, Oregon, as second class matter. Subscription rates, $2.60 a year. Advertising rates jpon application. Phone, Man ager: Office, 1806; residence, 127. Day Editor .T. Neil Taylor Night Editor.Beatrice Bennett Assistant Night Editors Helen Rankin, Helen Jones Literati vs. Coaching «npHE publishers would be happy to receive A small cash amounts from those who particu larly desire that an active and incisive minority paper exist on this campus.” With those words a new pseudo-critical-literary pamphlet, dubbed “Socks from Socrates” was flung upon the campus yesterday by unknown persons, • paid for by money from unknown sources. The contents were mostly literary contributions which were rather good reading. True to their threat of being “incisive,” which means sarcastic or biting, the editorial column of our self-termed "contemporary" launched into a bitter attack on alleged wastage of student funds. A few rounds of machine-gun fire were dedicated to the Emerald. The editorial read as follows: No, we don’t know Dr. C. W. Spears, but we do know: That the maximum salary received by deans of schools at the University of Oregon is $‘1,1300 per year; That the maximum salary received by full feathered professors at. the University of Ore gon is $4,000 per year; That notwithstanding, Dr. C. W. Spears will receive $5,000 per year for his academic func tions; Moreover we know: That the associated students are paying in excess of $4,000 yearly interest on a debt of $00,000; That the executive council of the associated students enunciated, Coolidge-like, a policy of economy in October, 1929, on that basis aban doning plans for a lecture series; And that now the associated students non chalantly agree to add $0,500 each year to Dr. C. W. Spears’ 5,000 other dollars. Total $11,500. The editors of the Oregon Emerald have an nounced unanimous student approval. They mistake. We could not endorse, this transac tion even though the good Dr. Spears were composite of ltockne, Jones, and Warner. To pay the head coach of an academic institution within $500 of the salary received by the presi dent is too obviously a capitulation to the sweep of modern, perhaps, but vitiating intoxication of athletic school fervor. * # * We are tempted to shout ‘‘Eureka” and “A Bas" in the same breath. For the past term the Em erald has had an editorial policy which was em phatically against the overemphasis of football in the American university. The Emerald’s editorial columns have not declared that Dr. Spears had "unanimous student approval” as the literati-pen man suggested. It tries to reflect the true state of affairs in student life and in so doing declared that he had “enthusiastic student backing.” As to the financial side of the question (Ah. this clash between theory and cold facts, between theorists and realists), the $11,500 was a stiff price to puy. Anything' good costs money. The Uni versity would have a difficult time to find a man versatile enough to act as a health service doctor and serve as a professor of physical education for less than the $5,000 they are paying Spears. The A. S. U. O. paid McEwan $5,000 out of its own pockets. It will pay Spears $6,500. Whether he is worth more is a gamble, since results cannot be foretold. The University was also forced to raise the McEwan figure to $5,000 but figured they were getting their money’s worth by gaining the services ot a skilled surgeon who will work with the health service. * * * But this is not a defense of high salaries for coaches. It is merely an explanation. The sock ‘'Socks” takes at the student body and University is justifiable but it does not represent the opinion of the students as a whole. Most students were little interested whether the coach cost $6,000 or $12,000 so long as they got a good one. At last word, the collection box for another issue of "Socks” is still open. "The boy or girl who conies to college and has not the moral strength to stand up for the Ideals he or she has been taught at home, but hauls down his or her colors, does not deserve a place on a college campus." President Alfred T. Hughes, Hamline university. An eastern college paper has barred cigarette ads from its columns. And, we'll venture, 4,009 students quit smoking. Students Want Grades LESS than nix months after it had abolished its grading system at the request of students, Oberlin college has again established grading. Though students were informed only whether they were passing or failing, discontent grew stead ily at the Ohio institution, for the faculty secretly kept marks for their own use. The best way, stu dents said, was to have no grades at all. Oregon, too, has a large number of students who would immediately, they themselves say, per ‘ form wonders scholastically if only they were not graded. Grades are not their goal at all, but knowl edge. “In Germany, now, but . . . ah!” Why, even classes are wrong. Should a university be like a penal institution? Oberlin’s reversal might be, if those Oregon idealists could see it so, a prophecy of such condi tions on the campus. For if the faculty knew what the students were doing, what would be the use of it all? Let the world judge by its treatment of the graduates. Surely that would be the best test of worth. But the fact remains that the world does not hand a problem to a graduate and judge him upon his answer. First it asks whether he can handle hard problems at all. Subconsciously then, these pass-or-fail apostles seem to want to hide from that preliminary test. “Choose us by our feet, for they have carried us this far,” they paraphrase the old myth. Niord, the tale tells us, chosen for his wondrous feet, was the god of winds. Literature on Downgrade? <UBLICATION of Varsity Weekly Suddenly A stops.” “Monthly Literary Magazine Suspends Publica tion. Lack of Student Support Held Reason.” Every week or so headlines like those appear in the daily collegiate press. From Maine to the Pacific college literary magazines are finding the row too hard to hoe and are giving up the ghost. Several times in the past Oregon has tried it. Literary pamphlets and humorous periodicals have been put out. But not for long. Lack of student interest, difficulty in getting advertising, and a paucity of subscriptions brought the cloud-flying poets back to the earthly realization that money makes the mare go. Whether students are less literary-minded than in previous days is not the main question. Rather, it seems to revolve around the inability of college writers and editors to give the student the same amount and quality of enterLaining and thought provoking literature that they can get by purchas ing a nationally known and circulated magazine. School spirit stops short of charity when it comes to spending money. It is nice for a college to have such an organ of high-brow expression, but the students do not want them. If they did, they'd buy them. "Athletics breeding race of giantesses”—head line. Does that mean we have to cut out dancing? " « ■■ ------ [£] ' I Oreganized Dementia! * I [3j______________£ T"VR. CONFUZUS’ cave-mate, a nameless old man who has discovered a pre-historic library out on the Amazon, has submitted a document from which the OREGANIZED DEMENTIA staff has translated tiie following three-part serial. The an cient Eugene folk used to tell it to their children more than a million years ago. It was practically impossible to translate ver batim. OKOO PULLS FAUX PAS Story Telling Of How a Young Lover Puts Skids Under Villain. (Tense Drama in Three Parts) PART I Okoo lived when people stone-axed beasts for clothing, long before the world was any good. He was a fine man, nearly perfect, in fact. But Okoo lie was insane, bugs, Idiotic over one thing Toitus. That wasn't : his pet pterodactyl, either. No. lit was the girl he would marry : if a last drop of blood stuck with him. She was horrible to look at; abut in those days man had no |sense of beauty. Commits Self •‘Snore!” said Okoo in his best Ipre-historlc French. “Love me, O jmnid. My heart is thine. See. 1 wallow in thy footsteps." "I’ll have none of you,” she said coyly, “You ain’t fit." "Toltus,” whinccd he, “I got good teeth. That’s something.” Toltus Critical "But you are yellow,” said Toitus with her cursed inhuman smirk, "you cur.” ’ Oh! Oh! Please don’t. I Toltus think I’m brave.” ‘ Kill Buvo then. He insulted me once. He said I wasn't no lady. With that I might like you more.” “Milady, it shall be.” Stars Lost As usual that noon, the sun shine drowned out the star light. Buvo was outside his grass hut gorging himself upon maggots. lie was very largo of frame, and when he swelled his enormous ehest at the approach of Okoo, the latter sweat. liuvo Betrays Emotion “What want you?" sourly demanded Buvo. his emotions betrayed by the food oozing from his clenched fist. “ToUus," shivered Okoo in reply. “Toitus-. j Toitus—— ." “Otherwise. She ain't no more here than noth ing,” said Buvo in his characteristically poor gram mar. “I'll choke you if you don’t leave. Nay-. Wait.” tlsn’t this stupendous? Wait and see what hap pens tomorrow.) Where U. of O. Summer School Goes i Both travel and study will be ! offered students by the Univer sity of Oregon next summer, when < the summer session ship will make the trip to Hawaii and return, with ample time there for both work and play. Classes will be held at the Uni- ~ versity of Hawiai and Punahou campus. Ueft to right, above, Hawaii hall, at the University of Hawaii in Honolulu; and one of !|||§ the buildings of the historic Pun- ■ aliou campus, the oldest educa- ;/ tional institution west of the Rocky mountains. Below, the lib rary that summer session students will use at the University of Hawaii. Extra curricula activities at the Hawaiian summer session may incluSe a few hula lessons. 3——--——>iej One Fr’a Penny By Gnilfin a---B We, the editors of this column, having a fondness for life and a decided aversion to dark alley ab ductions, wish to take this op portunity of stating that the graceless diatribes contained in this potpourri have been and will continue to be in the future ex actly what they seem, anonymous. While we might enjoy basking in any fame or notoriety occassioned from the publication of these fa bles, it is, we hasten to assure you, but a propensity to safety and a desire to keep what friends we may have that prompts this re buttal of the implications of the pointing finger of publicity . . . For in the degeneration of this column, its space has come to be used as a vent for the spite of any and sundry of the disappointed suitors and scorned women abound ing on the campus. So the lists are open. Air out your scandal, unearth the skeleton, and have at thee. Anything scathing enough or insulting enough will be accept ed, and, the gods willing, printed . . . And now, to fable number three. —Guilfin. FABLE HI And now we can go no further without giving space to the rah rah boya. You know them. You can’t help but know them. Their chests are just a little bit bigger and their smiles just a little bit more sneering than the general run of the so-called and self-named "big three” fraternity men. Their motto is, “The-’s are the best.” | It has a lovely, alliterative swing j to it: “The-’s are the best.” | The most characteristic trait of I this gang of mill-race boys is a certain gesture of the hand. The fingers are stretched wide and ! the hand is wiggled from the wrist | in a rather semi-circular motion. ! This is accompanied by a wagging | of the head and a knowing wink. It may mean almost anything, but usually implies nothing in particu lar, which is indeed characteristic of the organization. (Neither a beau geste, nor a shanghai ges- j ture!) And women! Haven’t you ever heard about the sweethearts? Well, they are the pick of the There are plenty of times when the very thought of going to class is unbearable: and, of course, there are plenty of times when the assignments aren’t ready either. At such times the "O" Lunch is a wonderful retreat where one can forget about all the things yet to be done. Skipping? campus. “The -Babies are the Best,” (More alliteration!) Ore gon women just can’t resist ’em! They break dates, give back oth er pins, sell their souls, do any thing to rate a - date, dance, dinner, or ride. There's some thing about the -’s. They’re the best, you know, my dear. The house is not a bad house. It shows signs of dissipation, but all in all it's not a bad house. In fact it was a helluva good house when beer was just right. The only trouble being that most of the fellows preferred to have a room in the basement instead of one of the choice apartments up stairs. However, a little bad luck and indiscretion removed the charms of the lower floor, and the fellows all live upstairs now. The -’s have what is known as a well-balanced group of mem bers, if you please. Their ath letes may not always take trips, and their political candidates may not always win, but nevertheless, well-balanced is the word, and they’ll stick to it. Of course, they have plenty of Don Juans, and even (and this is a novelty) even a Lord Byron, we hear. Come, now, one and all, summon up your collegiatism, get out your raccoon coats, wiggle that hand, wag that head, wink, give three rousing rah-rah-rahs and join in that good old chorus: “- is the best.” —SEZ YOU!! Four fraternity houses at O. S. C. were recently robbed of an ag gregate of about $800 worth of personal property. The Phi Delta Theta, Alpha Sigma Chi, Sigma Nti, and Theta Delta Nu houses were the sufferers. FORUM MAN HELD A SENIOR To the Editor: Yesterday’s communication has an element of justice in it—but only after the following facts are considered, facts which should have been investigated before criticism was made. Dean Hugh Biggs, Dr. James H. Gilbert, A. S. U. O. President Tom Stoddard, all consider the man ap pointed a senior. If campus us age and approval count, then the appointee is a senior. He is in his fourth year. Unless he be counted a senior this year, according to a decision made last spring, he will jump from junior to no class at all. The appointment was delayed until all the rest of the director ate could meet to decide on the man. The office was considered most important. The contested appointee was the choice of the entire directorate because of his success in advertising and mer chandising, his originality, his membership in Alpha Delta Sig ma, advertising honorary, Guild hall play advertising campaign work and his practical work on the Coldex index advertisements. To save embarrassing the ap pointee, who is excellently quali fied, it seems to me the writer should have consulted the admin istration or myself before blaring half-truths. —Day Foster. Barred From Pan-Hellenic To the Editor: A student of the University of Oregon finds herself in an embar (afiurafcurafajfa^rajrgifgjfajrcjrgii ENGLISH TOFFEE That delicious crisp, crunchy toffee—made with toasted almonds—and has that rich but ter taste . . . also the genuine English chewing toffee. You'll like them. WALORA CANDIES 851 East 13th Avenue ^3J3M30HSI31BISn3i3M3ISISM5MSlSIc!lSJSISI3lSM5E®131SiSJS13i3MSM3EMSME®^ 1 ~ RULE TAANCE Lee-Duke’s Campus Band Friday and Saturday Nights LEE-DUKE’S CAFE Phone 549 for Reservations ' rassing position. As a member of | the editorial board of the Oregon Daily Emerald she asked for the privilege of sitting in at meetings of the organization known as Pan Hellenic—an organization whose decisions affect a fairly signifi cant portion of the student body. As an upperclassman and a member of a sorority, should her house so desire, she is very decid edly eligible to representative standing in that body. Which would have been the best policy? To have used various influences within her own group to secure that privilege and at the same time have another mission at hand? The press usually has the inter ests of its field at heart. It is a public servant and is above com mitting the crime of underhanded ness. So she chose the out-and out method and in so doing for feited right. Now, to be wholly reinstated into that right she W'ould have to sever her connec tions with the instrument that is expressive of that which stands for democracy. She believes this to be a wrong that should be righted. Must it take shrewdness to combat seem ing narrowness ? If customs or bar riers must be broken down to meet this challenge, won’t there be enough persons benefited to justi fy the change? —P.ikth Newman. KFAB at Lincoln Nebraska is broadcasting an interfraternity song contest sponsored by the or ganizations of the University of Nebraska. Northwestern university has joined the list of colleges and uni versities having aviation in their curricula. Next Sunday 11:00 A. M. “Moral Chaos Today— Cause and Cure’’ What is our moral author ity? When do we find moral free dom ? i Is the -younger generation becoming more moral? FIRST CONGREGATIONAL, CHURCH Where Christian Liberalism Is Preached y irj uy uu irj i=j ua izj irj i=j lu ua l=j ca ta lsj itj itj i=j i=j isj la lu cj lu i“i i“j isj i“j g Is E The Smart Pieces in 1 Jewelry This I Winter | includue dainty lustreful jewelry E of pearls, crystals, amethysts, i corals, cornelians', as well as jade | and torquoise sets. There are [| also Peking pieces that make very !l attractive bits for the formal § dress. i Feminine frocks for evening wear are very subtly added to with these individual jewelry settings. Rings, neck laces, bracelets and pins are among the selection. Oriental Art Shop Off Eugene Hotel Lobby rarararanarararararararariDnararanararrai Hart Schaffner & Marx Tuxedos $35 Remember, that formal attire is either all right or it’s all wrong . . . there is no middle ground! And now that “happy days are here again,” you’ll want to be going places and doing things . . . but first let’s be sure everything’s all right. Come in. Wade Bros. Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes