EDITORIAL AND FEATURE PAGE OF THE OREGON DAILY EMERALD University of Oregon, Eugene Willis" Dunlway, Editor Larry Jackson, Manager Thornton Shaw, Managing Editor Ralph David, Associate Editor Betty Anne Macduff, Editorial Writer Merlin Blais, Radio Director EDITORIAL STAFF Kufus Kimball, Asst. Managing Editor Jack Bellinger, News Editor Eleanor Jane Ballantyne and Lenore Ely, Society Editors. Roy Sheedy, Literary Editor Walt Baker, Sports Editor Doug Wight, Chief Night Editor BUSINESS STAFF Advertising Mgr.Harry Schenk Assistant Adv. Mgr.Auten Bush Assistant Adv. Mgr.Barney Miller National Advertising Mgr.Harold Short Promotional Mgr.Dick Goebel Promotion Assistant.Mary Lou Patrick Women's Specialties.Harriette Hofmann Classified Adv. Mgr.George Branstator Office Manager . Jack Wood Circulation Manager.Cliff Lord Assistant Circulation Mgr.Ed Cross Sez Sue .Kathryn Laughridge Sez Sue Assistant.Caroline Hahn Checking Dept. Mgr.Helen Stinger Financial Administrator.Edith Peterson The Orepron Daily Emerald, official publication of the Associated Students of the University of Oregon, Eugene, issued daily except Sunday and Monday, during the college 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, Local 214; residence, 2800. Welcome Home! 'T'ODAY three students of the University of Oregon return to A the campus after a seven months’ speaking tour in coun tries of the Pacific Basin. They return loaded down with medals, cups, and other awards as tokens of their speaking success. But they bring far more than these concrete symbols of their activ ity—they bring messages of the greatest interest from China, Japan, the Philippines, Australia. Messages of interest and im port. And from these messages one can gain some realization of the nature and value of the work accomplished by the three. The welcome of the University and students today can hardly suitably express the appreciation and thanks due to these emis saries of international good will. Students can best express their appreciation through personal contacts during the year and by the interest they show in pursuing the work that has been given impetus by the Pacific Basin debate tour. In welcoming and meeting with the returning debaters, Wal ter E. Hempstead, instructor in the public speech department and a member of the first world debate tour in 1927-28, lists four things that should be held in mind: 1. Appreciation for the great work the trio has done. 2. Exalting the status of forensics as a sphere of A. S. U. O. activity. 3. Effecting a high degree of social student body conscious ness centered around intellectual activity, which has not been manifested at Oregon as keenly as in higher educational institu tions abroad, nor at all except with football as the impetus. 4. Symbolizing through these boys a peculiar University mis sion of developing international good will, especially between the Orient and the Occident. World History 'T'HE text used in History 203 (World History) in the year 2032 A. D. (After Depression) may well read as follows: “By the close of the second decade -of the last century, the island empire of Japan had reached the conclusion that she needed room for expansion, and that Manchuria was available. The Chinese were in no way able to maintain their control over this fertile, wealthy country. “The Japanese civil power was considering the request of trade protectorateship or purchase, when the military power of the country, taking advantage of the virtual bankruptcy of many nations who might have intervened forcibly, began a well planned invasion of Manchuria, under the guise of protecting Japanese investments from the depredations of bandits. "Within four months every Chinese military body of any strength was driven to the shelter of the Great Wall. The twentieth century methods and equipment of warfare, such as airplanes, machine guns, long-range artillery, and high-power automatic rifles, quickly subdued the feeble and disorganized op position. “It was only the most feverish efforts of the League of Na tions, and the constant and vigorous protests of the Western nations which prevented an actual declaration of war. “Supporters of the League later pointed with pride to this achievement, arguing that if the League had restrained Japan from a declaration of war, and had been successful in eliciting explanations and statements of justification from the Japanese civil authorities, committed to the undertaking by the over zealous military powers, the cause of world peace hail been ad vanced. The branding of Chinese military forces as ‘bandits’ was a triumph of international arbitration." It Seems To Be Spring J ANUARY in Eugene. Students, fully rested up after'a stren uous vacation, yawning in afternoon classes. Campus paths dotted with loitering couples. Thirteenth street curbstones con gested with the army of between-elass smokers. The cemetery sprinkled with nature-loving idlers. And a warm sun beaming down on all and sundry. In town, shirt-sleeved merchants conducting overtures to business deals in front of their stores, stretching and yawning. No hot-stove league sessions, but rather the benches of the city park groaning under a full load. In January. Down along the railroad tracks, near the mill, a happy fam ily of the congenitally unemployed snoozing in the shade. The willows bend and creak. The river rushes along. And the ’bos asleep in the shade. Beyond the city limits, small farms steaming under the sun, fields sweating off then recent floods. Chickens and ducks strut ting and waddling lazily across their enclosures. Dogs lying on the garage driveway, panting. A pair of pheasants streaming to the thicket down by the creek at the sound of an approach ing car. January in Eugene. Five graceful poplar trees, part of the once majestic hedge on the southeast corner of Thirteenth and University streets, paid the price of modern life yesterday afternoon. They were felled by University workmen, and pail of the bank cut away, as a traffic menace. The motor cars will rush more swiftly down the street, but tho^e fallen DOOlar; leave ‘a vacant nlacr aram.t the l.-. ' LEMON PALOOKA HUZZAH! KAROO! HURRAH! AND A COUPLA FLOURISHES OF TRUMPETS. HEREZA DOPE ON THE CONTEST WE AN NOUNCED. * * * f This column needs a new name. Palooka offers the magnanimous —ah, magnifunal,—ah, the grand sum of TWENTY-SEVEN CENTS ’ (No Canadian money) for the best name for this column. We also offer undying fame and publicity to the winnah, and prom ise to give him reduced rates on ail mentions and ballyhoo in the future. THIS CONTEST WILL CLOSE NEXT WEDNESDAY, JAN. 13. (OF ALL TIMES) AND THE WINNAH WILL BE ANNOUNC ED IN FRIDAY'S EMERALD. ADDRESS ALL ENTRIES TO LEMON PALOOKA, IN CARE OF THE EMERALD. ANY BRIBES UNDER FIVE DOLLARS WILL BE GROUNDS FOR BARRING THE ENTRY. ANY BRIBES FOR OVER FIVE DOLLARS WILL CAUSE US TO GIVE YOU OUR JOB AND LEAVE THE COUN- i TRY. WE SNOOP TO CONQUER . . . Herb Simmons, our latest addi tion to the copy desk typewriter wreckers, looking for slickers to clean at ping-pong . . . Harold, our olierry-eoke mixer, hotsying about learning to play the game of “Ca • saba” (see any sports headline) . . . Daisy Satterfield again, stop ping a fight at the Campus incu bator (Authentic) . . . Jack Hemp stead’s mustachio, 367 hairs be fore the last rain . . . Chappie King, back from Agua Caliente, with a new fag box, a coat of tan and de nunciations of Mexican Glee Juice . . . Wally Berks the Sig Ep funny boy, clowning as usual . . . Where have tiie Platinum gals of tin* Pi Phi hotel gone? . . . The nasty glance you get from a downtown theatre ticket-seller is chosen by us as the “Look of the Month’’ . . , Ho, Hum Lazy weather . . . TODAY’S POME I'm £01111:1 murder Helen Itrnek Necks with one eye On the clock. * * * PALOOKA’S NEW SCIENTIFIC DICTIONARY Olun where the heart is. Watt an interjection. Lenz's Law- the 1-2-3 system of bidding'. Data father. Spectrum glasses. Pulley a big fellow who abuses little boys. Current a fruit. Atom- the first man. Classified Advertisements ltutes Payable in Advance 10c a line for first insertion; Ge a line for each additional insertion. Telephone 3300; local 211 l<'OK KENT FOR KENT Comfortable room in desirable modern home. Call 27-13.1 or 2335 Alder. LOST LOST Curse between dispensary and Ad building. Return dispen sary. Mist El.I.ANEOl S HARRIET UNDERWOOD 5S3 13th Ave E. Phone 1393 DRESSMAKING SALON Style Right Price Right Upstairs over Underwood & Elliott Grocery. SHOES REPAIRED The finest shoe repairing in Eugene, qual ity work, and service. All soles stitched, no nails. Campus Shoe Repair, 13th between Alder and Kincaid. KRAMER BEAUTY SALON “ Also Hair-cutting PHONE 1SS0 Next to NV&lora Candies NEW BEGINNERS'" BALLROOM CLASS Starts Tuesday S .30 P. M. MERRICK STUDIOS ,61 \\ lll.irnrf I ft Phmi; . .1 l.s 1 Molecule an eyeglass worn by Englishmen. ■ Carbon—What the sculptor is do ing. * * * Old Gaffer Sanford, coyly swing ing from one light to another tells us of the Turk (We’re so tired of Scotch jokes) that bought himself a second-hand car, and then mar ried a widow with gas on her stom ach. Tsk, tsk, is dees a system? AND AS THE CUSTOMER SAID TO THE MEDIUM, "GO IN TO YOUR TRANCE, GAL, GO INTO YOUR TRANCE;” BUT YOU FOLKS IN THE BACK OF THE ROOM AREN’T LISTENING, SO WILL CLOSE. * * * DON’T FORGET TO WRITE A TITLE TO OUR COLUMN: Win twenty-seven cents, to be posted with our student body president. (Who are we Konnu post him with?). CAMPUS ♦ ♦ ALENDAR Formal banquet tonight at 6 o’clock at men’s dorm to honor Pacific Basin debaters. Tickets may be obtained at the Co-op for 75 cents up till today. Dance tonight from 9 to 12 at McArthur court with the Pacific Basin good-will team! George Weber’s orchestra will play. Tick ets 75 cents a couple at door. All students meet at the South ern Pacific depot at 11:25 to greet returning debaters and parade down Willamette street. The 11 o’clocks have been dismissed. Oregon Yeomen w’ill hold an im portant business meeting Monday evening at 7:30 in the men’s lounge at Gerlinger hall. All mem bers please be present. Alpha Delta Sigma will hold a very important meeting this after noon at 4 o’clock in Mr. Thacher's office. All members must be there. Plans for the Krazy Kopy Krawl will be discussed. University band will play in uni form at ttie Southern Pacific de pot at 11:20. They will leave the barracks at 11:10. Theta Sigma Phi will hold a very important meeting at 5 o’clock to day in 104 Journalism. W esley Group Will Hear Wu Tang on Manchuria Wu Tang, fifth year law student, will speak before the Wesley foun dation on the subject, "The United States and the Manchurian Situa tion" Sunday evening at 6:30. A social hour at 5:30 will precede the devotion service. The speaker will be recalled as one of the participants in the Sino Japanese debate which took place on the campus last term. Wu Tang was born in Hankow, China, and worked for two years in the cus- ) tom house in Manchuria. lT.KDGING ANNOUNCEMENT Phi Kappa Psi announces the pledging of Henry Wilkins, of San Francisco, California. mi n a a ■ ■ '■ m » i. ■ m,. New Telephones Change Numbers At Emerald Office A CHANGE in the telephone service of the Emerald edi torial offices has necessitated some changes in the Emerald phone numbers. The new num bers are as follows: Local 354—Editor, Managing editor, news editor, sports edi tor. Local 355—News room. AH notices and stories for the paper will be taken in the news room. Members of the general news staff may also be reached at this number. Those calling from outside the campus should specify “Emerald News Room,” to avoid confusion. Local 354 is intended for the use of those desiring to talk personally with staff officials. Connection to this line may be obtained by asking the operator for the desired party or office. Some of these numbers dif fer from those in the student directory and in the University telephone directory, and it is asked that those using campus phones note these changes in the books. Capricious Coeds To Cut Capers at A.W.S. Jamboree Who’s your date for the Co-ed Capers?” You’d better call her this week or it will be too late. Of course it isn’t essential that you have a date for the Capers, but you’ll have a slick time if you date her up just as though you were a man, and call for her with your coach and four and do all the things a very proper escort should! (In these years of de pression and dire distress we do not, under any circumstances, rec ommend that you splurge yourself to the extent of sending her gar denias, however.) The Co-ed Capers will be the biggest event yet, according to the committee of Associated Women Students, which is making plans for the affair. And though they haven’t said so, we suspect that their belief is founded on the fact that women only are in charge of the Capers, the great all-woman jamboree of the year. For those who haven’t been awake long enough to know what it’s all about, the Co-ed Capers is a women-only costume event which will replace the April Frolic of old. It will be held next Wednes day evening at 7:30 in Gerlinger hall. And all women attending will be allowed late permission un til 11 o’clock. How do I know? Best authority on the campus— Hazel Prutsman Schwering! Oh, yes, and Harriette Saeltzer just burst in to say that her com mittee will sell popcorn balls and Eskimo pies in unknown quanti ties. Price, five cents. The four classes will give stunts, for which each of them hopes to be awarded the Laraway cup. And the Senior Cops and other promi nent entertainers are going to give some "very new and very differ ent” features. TI TTLE SPEAKS Professor H. S. Tuttle delivered an address at Monmouth Tuesday night for the Parent-Teacher asso ciation on "Discipline” before an audience of 200. Bring your RADIO or ELECTRICAL troubles to DOTSON'S RADIO SERVICE Phone 1824 11th and Oak Evangelist Arthur Long v ill be heard ou TONIGHT at Christian I Church I REVIVAL f Is a Great B Home and Family * Service I 1 he Abundant Life In 'l outh, Courtship and Love m ■ ■ M m m BOOKS OF THE DAY EDITED BY ROY SHEEDY BLACK ANARCHISTS The Russian Dance of Death. By Dirk Gora. Key Books. By JACK BAUER When General Denikin’s White army broke up in the Dnieper val ley, in South Russia, where it had 1 followed the German retreat, black anarchists rose from the ashes to l loot the country. After many ex periments in autocratic govern 1 ment, the Blacks finally won com plete sway, and soon engaged the Red armies. Between the battle lines were the Ukraine Mennonite settle ments. The ancestors of these pi ous Dutch, German, and Swedish settlers had been invited to come to the fertile Dnieper valley 150 years ago, and they had prospered. But the Tsarist regime had com pleted plans for their exile to Rus ; sia, the author says, when the Oc tober revolution blew ‘‘that rotten government” apart. The schoolmaster of the Men nonite normal school, who was a humanitarian, a gentleman, a per son of culture and sympathy, is the story teller. His picture of the visitation of the plague, when 50 per cent of the Dutch settlers died; of the slaughter of their cat- ' tie when the Black soldiers wanted ! a meal; of the thousand liumilia- ] tions and abuses heaped on them by the ‘‘murderous marauders,” is I near to a classic in tenderness for U of O SHOE SHINE * * * Best on the Campus ALL PRICES REDUCED BETTER SHINES FOR 1 Oc 821 East 13th his people, in patience and forgive ness for his enemies. Makhno’s anarchist horde, Au thor Gora says, “after eight years of systematic drill for killing” in the army of the Tsar, was now “given the opportunity for slaugh ter on individual initiative.” Four of the 12 villages of peaceful set tlers were wiped out in one at tack. When Gora’s own father and brothers are killed as White sym pathizers, the old schoolmaster throws up his hands with the cry, “Sophocles, you who wrote Anti gone, I yield the pen to you.” ENESCO RETAINS SKILL AFTER EARLY DEBUT (Continued from Page One) well as violin, and his work in this field won many prizes for him. He is now recognized as the father of the modern Rumanian school of national music. His “Poem Rou main” and much of his chamber music are based on typical Ru manian themes. Before he was 21, Enesco heard a complete program of his own compositions played at the Paris Conservatory, where he studied for several years. He was a consist ent winner of prizes in composi tion. Yehudi Menuhin, 14-year-o 1 d San Francisco boy who received an ovation of 20 minutes’ duration at his first European concert in Paris in 1929, has been for several years Enesco’s pupil. Kayla Mit zel, who played with the Portland Symphony orchestra this season as guest artist, also is Enesco’s pupil. Large Part of Chemistry Staff To Attend Conclave Most of the chemistry staff members are planning to attend the convention of the Oregon sec tion of the American Chemical so ciety to be held at the Merrie Abbe cafe in Portland tomorrow. Dr. Charles S. Keevil of the chemical engineering department at Oregon State college, will talk on “Heat Transmission.” C. “STUB” NOGLER LEO DEFFENBACHER U of o STUDENTS AND FACULTY WE HAVE APPRECIATED YOUR BUSINESS IN THE PAST AND INVITE YOUR FURTHER PATRONAGE Campus Barber Shop 849 East 13th Avenue Opposite Sigma Chi SUPERIOR HAIRCUTS BY CONTENTED BARBERS STUDENTS ALUMS AND OLD Subscribers Order Now ! Students, Send One to Your Parents Friends, Send One to Your Friends I wish to subscribe to the OREGON DAILY EMERALD for the current school year, ending June, 1932. Name . Street .0. City .State . (Please check one of the following:) ( ) Enclosed find check (money order) for $1.75—rest of year. ( ) Enclosed find check (money order) for $1.00—one term. (Mail to Circulation Manager, Oregon Daily Emerald, Eugene, Oregon.) Phone 3300 — Local 214 Subscribe NOW! Don’t Wait