EDITORIAL OFFICES, Journalism Bldg. Phone 3300—New* | Room, Local 355; Editor and Managing Editor, Local 354. ; BUSINESS OFFICE. McArthur Court. Phone 3300—Local 214. ; Member of the Major College* Publications Represented by the A. .1. Norris Hill Company, Call Build ing, San Francisco: 321 10. 43rd St., New York City; 1206 Maple Ave., Los Angeles. Cal.; 1004 2nd Ave., Seattle; 123 W. Madison St., Chicago, 111. University of Oregon, Eugene Richard Neuberger, Editor Harry Schenk, Manager Sterling Green, Managing Editor ~ EDITORIAL STAFF Thornton Gale, Assoe. Ed. Jack Rellinirer, Ed. Writer Dave Wilson, Julian Prescott, Ed. Writers UPPER NEWS STAFF Uncar Munjrcr, News Eu. Francis Pallister, Copy Ed. Bruce Hamby, Sports Ed. Parks Hitchcock, Makeup Ed. Leslie Dunton, Chief Ni^ht Ed. John Gross, Literary Ed. Boh Guild, Dramatics Ed. Jessie Steele. Women's Ed. Eloise Dorner, Society Ed. Ray Clapp, Radio Ed. DAY EDITORS: Bob Patterson, Margaret Bean, Francis Pal lister, Virginia Wentz. Joe Saslavsky, Hubert Totton. NIGHT EDITORS: Bob Moore, Russell Woodward, John Hollo peter, Bill Aetzel, Bob Couch. SPORTS STAFFr Malcolm Bauer, Asst. Ed.; Ned Simpson, Dud Lindner, Ben Back. FEATURE WRITER: Elinor Henry. REPORTERS: Julian Prescott, Don Caswell, H.'izle Corrigan, Madeleine Gilbert, Betty Allen, Ray Clapp, Ed Stanley, Mary Schaefer, David Eyre, Bob Guild, Paul Ewing, Fairfax Roberts, Cynthia Liljeqvist, Ann Reed Burns, Peggy Chess man, Margaret Veiiess, Ruth King, Barney Clark, Betty Ohlemiller. Lucy Ann Wendell, L. Budd Henry. ASSISTANT SOCIETY EDITORS: Mary Stewart, Elizabeth Crommelin, Marian Arhterman. COPYREADERS: Harold Brower, Twyla Stockton, Nancy Lee, Margaret Hill, Edna Murphy, Monte Brown, Mary Jane Jenkins, Roberta Pickard. Marjorie McNiece. Betty Powell, Bob Thurston, Marian Arhterman, Hilda Gillam, Roberta Moody, Frances Rothwell, Bill Hall, Caroline Rogers, Henri ette Horak, Myron Ricketts, Catherine Coppers, Linda Vin cent. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Gladys Gillespie, Virginia Howard, Frances Neth, Margaret Corum, Georgina Giidez, Dorothy Austin, Virginia Proctor, Catherine Grihble, Helen Emery, Helen Taylor, Merle Gollings, Mildred Maida, Evelyn Schmidt, RADIO STAFF: Ray Clapp, Editor; Harold GeBauer, Michael Hogan, Ben Back. BUSINESS STAFF .tiiiiiHj'rr, nnrry ocnenK Adv. Mgr., Mahr Reymers National Adv. Mgr., Auten Rush Promotional Mgr., MaryJou Patrick Asst. Adv. Mgr., Ed -Meserve Asst. Adv. Mgr., Oil Wellington Asst. Adv. Mgr., Bill Russell Executive Secretary, Dorothy Anne Clark urcumuon wigr., orani 1 neum mel Asst. Circulation Mgr, Ron Row Office Mgr., Helen Stinger Class. Ad. Mgr., Althea Peterson Sez Sue, Caroline Hahn Scz Sue Asst., Louise Rice Checking Mgr., Ruth Storla Checking Mgr., Pearl Murphy ADVERTISING ASSISTANTS: Gene V. Tomlinson, Dale Fisher, Anne Chapman, Tom Holeman, Rill McCall, Ruth Vannice. Freil Fisher, Ed Enhhe, Rill Temple, Eldon Haber man, Elisa Addis, Rill Connell, Wilma Dente, Hazel Fields, Corinne Plath, Marian Taylor, Hazel Marquis, Hubert Tot tori, Hewett Warrens, Donald Platt, Phyllis Dent, Peter Gantenben. OFFICE ASSISTANTS: Patricia Campbell, Kay Dishor, Kath ryn Greenwood, Catherine Kelley, Jane Rishop, Ktma Giles, Eugenia Hunt, Mary Starbuck, Ruth Ryerly. Mary Jane Jenkins, Wills Ritz, Janet Howard Phyllis Cousins, Hetty Shoemaker, Ruth Kippey. The Oregon Daily Emerald, official publication of the Asso ciated Students of the University of Oregon, Eugene, issued duily except Sunday and Monday, during the college year. Mem ber of the Pacific Intercollegiate Press. Entered in the post office at Eugene, Oregon, as second class matter. Subscription rates $2.50 a year. Advertising ratcB upon application. Phone Manager: Office, I.ocal 214: residencce, 2800. Mi'll must be at liberty la say in print what ever they have a mind tc say, provided it wrongs no one. —Charles Anderson Dana, New York Sun DEFINITION OF POLICY fT^HE FOLLOWING communication was sent to the president of the associated students yester day. At this time we call it to the attention of the student body and faculty: December 1, 1932. Mr. Robert Hall, President, A. S. U. O., Campus. Dear Mr. Hall: I write to rail your attention to the editorial,! “An Idea of School Spirit,” which appeared in the j Emerald of December 1. From time to time, I be lieve, there lias been some misunderstanding be tween the student body administration and officials; of the Emerald regarding the prominence accorded (he various types of news stories which find their way to the Emerald copy desk. On several occasions yourself and other student executives have wondered why committee appoint ments and similar stories did not receive greater prominence than they were accorded by the Emer ald news staff. It nas been, and shall continue to be, the policy of the Emerald that academic stories, and stories that emanate either directly from the University administration or the various schools and depart ments shall receive considerable prominence when ever (heir content justifies doing so. It is tiie honest conviction of the other members of the Emerald’s editorial board and myself that stories concerning committee appointments and the naming of directorates are, as a whole, not of vital Concern or interest to the majority of the students of the University. As mentioned in this morning's editorial, we believe it is to the advantage of Ore gon morale and spirit to devote greater space to educational and cultural achievements rather than those which involve only extra-curricular activities. We also are of the opinion that to give publicity as a reward for serving on student committees is certain death for the success of such enterprises. Students who are not willing to serve on commit tees without having their names and countenances spread throughout the campus newspaper should never be requested to do so. I hope this clarifies whatever misunderstanding we might have had in the past in regard to this matter. If at any time myself or the other members of the Emerald staff can be of service to you and your colleagues, do not hesitate to call upon us. Very truly yours, RICHARD L. NEUBERGER, Editor. The lettei printed herewith was written in a definite attempt to rectify several misunderstand ings that have arisen this semester over the appro priation of news space. As set forth in its editorial yesterday morning, the Emerald believes this is pri marily an educational institution. This paper is of the opinion that any emphasis and stress on academic attainments will react favorably towards stimulating noteworthy extra-curricular work, but believes that this theory is not applicable with the situation reversed. The Emerald does not intend to withhold from publication any legitimate news stories. The news! staff has been instructed to search assiduously for any items that include the names of students. Names make news, and the correspondents and re porters of the Emerald have learned in their jour nalism classes that news is the backbone of a news paper. True it is that the Emerald is financed by the A. S. U. O., an organization primarily for the pro-1 motion of extra-curricular activities. But there also exists the fact that the Emerald is an organ of the University administration. Largely because of that, and because it thinks Oregon must progress educationally ii it is to progress at all, this paper believes academic attainments should he encouraged to as great an extent as possible in the student newspaper. We call to attention two stories that appear on the first page of this issue. One recounts the suc cess of a University professor 111 aualyaiug the writ ) IMPORTANT! THERE will be an important announcement of interest to both alumni and students in tomorrow’s Issue of the Emerald. ing technique of a great French novelist, Balzac. The other interprets student opinion in the recent election. It is items of this sort which we desire to dove-tail with our other stories. We of the Emerald are more than eager to do our part in cooperating with the administrative officers of the A. S. U. O. They have shown them selves willing to do the same. We are sure they will realize our aims and desires in the matter which we have described briefly herein. After all is said and done, we are legion in that our ambitions and motives are to advance the University of Ore gon as an institution of higher education. We be lieve these can be in a large measure realized if the student body is encouraged to devote a reasonable portion of its endeavors to intellectual thought and advancement. ALL IN A DAY’S WORK 'T'HIS IS end-term time, the frantic moments be fore the curtain falls on the fall term act of school year. The moans are many, the wails ascend to high heaven. Ye student hurries by with fevered brow; eyes grow blank; hands clutch and unclutch the dampish pencil. The midnight oiled lamp sput ters; ice-packs are in order. This is that darkest day when the desolation of an Oregon fall finds fit companionship in the desolation of the collegian’s spirit as he crams; as he works against time; as he belabors the fates that gave him cause to sweat. Hard work? You don’t know the half of it. Con sider the late defunct Mr. Edgar Wallace, super mystery writer, playwright, newspaper man, et al. All in the days work for him. He once wrote two short stories, an article on racing, rehearsed one of his plays, and attended a luncheon at which he spoke, all in a day. In a year he wrote 20 full length novels, 8 plays, 300 articles on the theater, 300 articles on racing for daily newspapers, and 30 articles for magazines. His longest single day’s job was a 36,000-word newspaper story on the war, which took 20 hours to write and filled 30 columns of an English newspaper. Give pause, you end of the term paper fiends. Let lie and pull no more vexatious hair. Edgar Wallace wrote ‘‘The Ringer,” one of his most suc cessful plays, in four days. He wrote the “Callen dar” in four days; the "Terror” in three days. A good average working day for him was from 8 a. m. till 10 p. m. He never said a word in his life about eating Grape Nuts. Concentration was the secret in his case; concentration and utilization of time. It’s that simple, any of us could do it—but this is the dark time, and we most of us must do our term’s work now—if he’d only written a book telling us how. NEW STEPS FOR OLD THE DREAM of every co-ed is to some time or other attend a ball at either Annapolis or West Point. Handsome officers, uniforms, striking set tings, what could be more exciting! But after the thrill of arriving and looking over the environment had passed, the average co-ed from the University of Oregon would find herself unutterably bored. Why? Because men at West Point and Annapolis, even though they be the cream of America’s man hood, can’t dance! At least, not according to the standards of this campus. Collegiate dancing in the West has become so intricate and exciting that even high school students are unable to emulate it. In the East the style of ballroom dancing is totally different. “Rat-racing” or fast dances with rhythmic breaks and walking steps is unknown in most cases and frowned upon in all others. Dancing there is dignified, conven tional, and most uninteresting to the western co-ed The tango and rumba are fast being incorporated into regular collegiate dance steps on this and other Pacific coast colleges. Every year the store of new steps increases and every year collegians become better dancers. WHOA, THERE, LADS AND LASSIES PLEASE, please, contributors, try to keep your letters to the editor below 500 words in length. A considerable number of communications have been received lately, but the majority of them stress size, rather than content. The Emerald welcomes the contributions of every student on the campus, but urges that the letters be kept within a reason able length. This paper believes the Safety Valve to he one of its most valuable features, but its purpose will be destroyed if every contribution has to be deleted and cut before it can be published. COOPERATION DESERVED qpilE man who presides over Oregon’s athletic department must be given every aid and promise of cooperation necessary to his success. By giving one person responsibility ami authority over the University's athletic program, both the execu tive council and the athletic program proved them selves eager to assist in whatever progress might be made. Mr. Kosson deserves a full and fair op portunity to dispatch his new duties and fulfill his new obligations. Vests are a popular item in the second-hand clothing markets of the natives of India while there is lit He demand for trousers because the Indians arc not accustomed to wearing them. A record of the colors of 15,000 bricks, collected from all parts of the country, has been made by the bureau of standards. Colors ranged from light buff to deep red. Soviet economists estimate the forested area of the entire U. S. S. K. to be more than two and one fourth billions of acres. Less than a billion acres 1 are believed suitable for commercial exploitation. Land values in Palestine, coincident with a large population increase, are approximately 50 per cent higher than the price average a decade ago. Farm land makes up 16 per cent of the total area of Japan and 48 per cent of all the families of the nation are engaged in agricultural pursuits. Explosives ami coal tar are cited as chemistry's chief contributions to highway progress. Agricultural work engages approximately JO per cent of tht population ot Venezuela. I Then and Now - • x™EERGUSO-N CAMPUS CARAVAN _By DAVE WILSON rpHE Sigma Delta Chi promoters * of tonight's Journalism Jam claim they've been double-crossed by the faculty. They put their trust in the dean of women’s closed week-ends and advertised their drag as "the last big dance of the term.” * * * But the faculty reduced the dean’s social calendar to a scrap of paper and announced Christmas Revels for the week-end before exams. * * « So the slogan for the Jam is now “the last good dance of the term.” * * A call goes out for athletes ly ing fallow to man the Women’s Physical Education club's tea dansante next Monday afternoon. Any man not sure of his physical stamina should have legs and lungs checked before attending. * * 5j« Fiji Sandy Platt says that of course Brother Burg (Amos to you I has climbed Skinner’s Butte. According to Sandy, every Fiji scales the peak at least one night a week, most of them without shifting gears on the bad turns. * * * A huddled 18 attended the spe cial senior class meeting last night to vote on subsidizing the Ore gana out of class funds. Question I of the evening was:—Is visual evi dence of graduation worth $500? Question No. 2 was: How many make a quorum ? * * * There's only one thing sure about the use of the cash surpluses that most classes accumulate. None of the money will ever return to those whp put it up. * * * A misguided frosh tells me that when he signed up for the course in “Listening" he thought he was going to get into one of Dean Gil bert's classes. * * Why should the freshmen hold an assembly on how to get through final exams when I can give them the essentials in a few words ? Rule 1—If you come to weak point in a quiz, write two or three pages as illegible as you can. The reader will think you’re a Doctor of Philosophy. Rule 2 -Don’t quote any opin ions that the prof thinks unortho dox, no matter how many famous authorities say you're right. Rule 3— When answering a question with one of your prof’s pet theories, always start off with "the most acute thinkers main tain that—” Rule 4—Don’t hope that cram ming on texts will make up for frequent absences from lectures. Even if you read every book on -1 Two and a Half Decades Ago From Oregon Weekly December 2, 11)0“ (Editor's note: There was no Oregon Weekly on December 2, 1902, and no Emeralds December 2, 1912, or December 2, 1922. Nor was there an Emerald December 2, 1917, a decade and a half ago. Hut there was one for December 2, 1907—ten pages printed in red ink!) Hed Ink Special It was exactly a year ago today, December 2, 1900, that the Oregon Weekly wore the erimson of vic tory over Multnomah Amateur Athletic cluh on Thanksgiving day for the first time. Today Oregon again dosed a very successful sea son with n great exhibition of football, winning over Multnomah, 10 to o. * * * Among those who stayed in town over the holidays: William Barker, Cecil Espy, and a number of others. » * « A Gay Time? Tile editor had to cut two classes this week to get the Week ly out at all, and it's a day late. None of his assistants were in town during the holidays and some were sick afterwards and turned in very little copy. Jp >P Jp Dr. H. D. Sheldon, instructor of philosophy and education, is at present on a trip to Pullman and Whitman, where ho will deliver addresses. Jp Jp tft Write 3 our Ow n! No reports of the Engineering dull. \. M. (. or 1’hilologian soddy were handed in for publi cation this week, hence their omis sion. Jp » Last Tuesday evening the Glee and Mandolin club, gave then first concert of the year befeue a large and enthusiastic audience at the Eugene theatre. * * sj; Five Years From B.A. Dr. James H. Gilbert will ad dress the Y. \Y. C. A. Tuesday, December 8. * * * FRANC LUCILE HARD, Opti cian and Refractionist, Suite 1-i, New Christian Bldg., Eugene, Oregon. (Adv.) I the subject from cover to cover,! the average professor just can’t \ believe that you know anything if you haven’t heard his discourses. * * * Jupe Prescott proposes that courses in cosmetic culture should be offered to co-eds. The most popular lectures in the series would be on “Emergency Restora tion of Mussed-up Makeup.’’ * * * Question that shouldn’t be asked: What are our 500 business administration hopefuls going to administer ? Washington Bystander WASHINGTON, Dec. 1.— (AP) ** —The crack made by some body soon after election—“What, 4S hours, and no beer yet?"—has more pith to it than appears at first glimpse. It roughly represents, no doubt, the actual idea of lots of folk who voted. They confidently expected the present congress to be so im pressed by the election results that it would rush through a beer bill as about its first job in Decem ber. Plenty of such bills left over from last session, any one of which would do the trick, already are pending in house and senate com mittees. But this optimistic estimate of how easy it would be to legalize beer overlooks one very important factor. Those much discussed sen ate rides deserve a place in the picture. They have not been very materially changed since Charles Gates Dawes, in his vice presiden tial inaugural in March, 1925, paid his respects to them. :Jt $ $ How About Borah Those rules acquire particular significance when one remembers that Borah has made it plain he will oppose vigorously either mod ification of the Volstead act or repeal of the Eighteenth amend ment. He is not prepared, he has indi cated, to see a beer bill hustled through the short session while he takes only a normal part in de Black Scotch Grain Ski Moccasins Special price: Shoes of _ this type and grade ,n i |, • sold for $13.r>0 in 1!)30. I' till d o ll h 1 e sole „ , ., - .... .. i , Kejnilar price this vear. \\aterproot - lull $1J.(K). leather lined. Quar ter heel plates, set in. bate, casts his vote and lets it go | at that. And what about Wesley Jones , of Washington and Morris Shep pard of Texas ? Have election day events served to make them ready to ignore the means of blocking precipitate action so conveniently at hand in the senate rule book ? ! The Bystander does not profess to know the answer. It is quite j clear, however, that short of the difficult job of invoking cloture in the senate—and no instance where it has ever been done comes to mind—one or two stout senatorial vocalists could very easily set at naught the will of a great major ity of the national legislators in both houses to rush a beer bill onto the statute books this winter. There are lots of senators—and Borah is one of them—quite able physically to defy the majority sin gle handed and talk a bill to death. It has been done, not so long ago. * # sts The difficulty with short or “lame duck" sessions of congress —and the coming winter session will be the lamest ever known, with some 150 ousted or retired senators and representatives still voting—is that pressure of time before the fixed adjournment date, coupled with the urgent necessity of getting through a budgetary program for the next fiscal year, increases many fold the tempta tions to filibuster. That is where the senate's long distance talking rules become a positive factor. Contemporary Opinion . . . Education and War /~kNE OF the most vital and at the same time interesting problems of today in international relations, especially insofar as they concern the United States, are the relations between war debts, our economic condition, and popu lar education. An important event in this con nection was the recent address of Sir Norman Angell, famous British statesman and pacifist. Sir Nor man’s main point was the failure of education in the prevention of war, his claim being that if the people of a given country have a clear knowledge of the facts in the case, their action will be in a log ical accordance with them. Uni versity faculty opinion, as reported in the Daily Cardinal, tends to agree, on the whole, with this feeling of Sir Norman’s. As one member of the faculty expressed it, “Education in all countries is organized on a scheme of nationalism. It is interested in good citizens rather than the teaching of the truth.” The facts, _ Emerald Of the Air —Biucc Hamby. Emerald sports editor, will give one of his weekly sports talks on the Emerald-of the-Air program over KORE to day at 12:15. His subject will center around all-coast football selections ana will touch upon for this year’s Ore gon basketball prospects. __ The Safety Valve An Outlet for Campus Steam AH communicr.tions arc to be ad dressed to the editor, Oregon Daily Emerald, and should not exceed 200 words in length. Letters must be signed, but should the writer prefer, only initials will be used. The editor maintains the right to withhold publi cation should he see fit. More About the Fountains To the editor of the Emerald: I read with interest your editor ial of several days ago regarding the water in the indoor fountains here. I think your criticism was excellent, but still the water in the fountain of the school of jour nalism is as warm as ever. It isn’t fit to drink. Let’s do some thing about it. Either the foun tain should be repaired or else fixed so that it bubbles continu ously. A Journalism Student. of course, are evident. If a nation is to maintain its existence, it. must have a loyal citizenry, and this, in turn, is possible only if they have a set of fundamental and common myths with which to hold them together. The estab lishment and perpetuation of these ideas, so important to the exis tence of a nation, is possible only through a type of education which works from many angles to the final result of emotionalizing them far, beyond hope of removal through any intellectual process. This is nationalization. This is the road to war. We can only conclude what is forced upon us as a conclusion— that the battlefields of tomorrow grow out of the classrooms of to day: that Johnny, who is such a good student today, becomes such a good citizen tomorrow that noth ing can keep him out of a war on the day after. And Johnny, as a soldier, hasn’t much chance of liv ing very long, considering the ad vancement we have seen in arma ments and the like. And what comes out of war, we of this generation have observed all too personally, all too well, not to be just a little bitter, a little grim.—Wisconsin Cardinal. j Put HEALTH in your curriculum . ... GOOD HEALTH means vitality. Anti it takes lots of energy to be a leader in the classroom, and in the social activities of college. So to succeed, you must make your health a required course. ) Too often constipation is permitted to under- ’ mine health and sap vitality. It may cause head- „ aches, loss of appetite and energy. Try this pleasant “cereal May” to health. Two -I tablespoonfuls of Kellogg's ALL-BRAN daily Mill promote regular habits. It supplies “bulk,” vitamin B and iron. Ask tliat it be served at your 1 fraternity house or campus restaurant. • • The most popular ready-to-eat cereals served in the dining-rooms of American colleges, eat ing 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 whole wheat Biscuit. Also Kaffee Hag Coffee — real coffee that lets you sleep. [