rage EDITORIAL OFFICES, Journalism Bldg. Phono 3300—Newi Room, Local 355 : Editor and Managing Editor, Local 354 BUSINESS OFFICE, McArthur Court. Phono 3300—Local 214 University of Oregon, Eugene lliehard Neuberger, Editor Harry Schenk, Manage! Sterling Green, Managing Editor EDITORIAL BOARD Thornton Gale, AsBoicate Editor; Jack Bellinger, Dave Wilson, Julian Prescott. " uppetTnews staff UM di muiiBvi i Francis Pallister, Copy Ed. liruco Hamby. Sports Ed. Parks Hitchcock. Makeup Ed. Leslie Dunton, Chief Nitfht Ed Bob (Juild, Dramatics Ed. Jessie Steele, Women’s Ed. Eloise Dorner, Society Ed. Ray Clapp, Radio Ed. DAY EDJTUfvo: oor> » atiorson, .viargarei dchii, r rancis i hi lister. Joe Saslavsky. Hugert. Tot ton. NIGHT EDITORS: Boh Moore, Russell Woodward, John Hollo pcter, Hill Aetzol, Rob Couch. SI’ORTS STAFF: Malcolm Bauer, Asst. Ed.; Ned Simpson, Dud Lindner. FEATURE WRITERS: Elinor Henry, Maximo Pulido, Hazel Corrigan. REPORTERS: Julian Prescott, Don Caswell, Madeleine Gilbert, Betty Allen, Ray Clapp, Ed Stanley, Mary Cchacfcr. David Eyre. Rob Guild, Paul Ewing. Fairfax Roberts, Cynthia Idljequist, Ann Reed Burns, Peggy Chessman, Ruth King, Barney Clark, Hetty Ohlomiller, Lucy Ann Wendell, Huber Phillips. ASSISTANT SOCIETY EDITOR: Elizabeth Crommelin. COPYREADERS: Harold Brower, Tw'yla Stockton, Nancy Lee, Margaret Hill, Edna Murphy, Monte Brown, Mary Jane Jenkins. Roberta Pickard, Marjorie McNiece, Betty Powell, Rob Thurston. Hilda Gillam, Roberta Moody, Frances Roth well, Bill Hall. Camline Rogers, Henrietta Horak, Myron Ricketts, Catherine Coppers, Linda Vincent. •ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Gladys Gillespie, Virginia Howard, Frances Neth, Margaret Corum. Georgina Gildez. Dorothy Austin. Virginia Proctor, Catherine Cribble, Helen Emery, Helen Taylor, Merle Codings, Mildred Maida, Evelyn Schmidt. RADIO STAFF: Ray Clapp, Editor; Harold GoBauor, Michael Hogan, Ben Back. • busTness staff A.I.. Yl„ k,- Pmr r. f. c, VI,. w C’,... National Adv, Mtfr., Auten Hush Promotional Mgr., Marylou Patrick Asst. Adv. Mtfr., Ed Me.serve Asst. Adv. (iil Wellington A.sat. Adv. Mgr. Bill Russell Executive Secretary, Dorothy Anne Clark mel Asst. Circulation Mgr., Ron Row Office Mgr., Holon Stinger Class. Ad.Mgr., Althea Peterson Scz Sue, Caroline Hahn Soz Sue Asst.. Louise Rico Checking Mgr., Ruth S tor la Checking Mgr., Pearl Murphy ADVERTISING ASSISTANTS: Gene I'. Tomlinson, Dale Kishor, Ann” chapman, Tom Holeman, Bill McCall, Ruth Vannice. Freri Fisher, Eri Uabbe. Bill Temple, Eldon Habermas, Elisa , Addis, Bill Connell, Wilma I)ente, Hazel Fields, Gorrtnne ITith, Marian Taylor, Hazel Marquis, Hilbert Totton, Hewitt Warrens, Donald Platt, Phyllis Dent, Peter Gantenben. OFFICE ASSIST ANTS: Patricia Campbell, Kay Diaher, Kath ryn Greenwood, Catherine Kelley, Jane Bishop, FJma Giles, Eugenia Hunt, Mary Starbuck, Ruth Byerly, Marp Jane Jenkins, Willa Bitz, Janet Howard, Phyllis Cousins, Betty Shoemaker, Ruth Rippey. ■ The Oregon Daily Emerald, official student publication of the University of Oregon, Eugene, issued Tuesday, Wednesday, 'I hursday and Friday during the college year. Entered in the postoffice nt Eugene, Oregon, as second class matter. Subscrip tion rates $2.fi0 a year. The American people cannot he loo careful in rtnardini/ the freedom of speech and of the press ui/ainst curtailment as to the discussion of public affairs ami the character and conduct of public men. —Carl Schnrs. THE BUDGET IS BALANCED TNISBURSEMENTS and receipts at last have been made to meet hi the A. S. U. O. accounts and the budget has been balanced at approximately $91,000. On the face of things this appears as an achievement. Operating on a balanced budget is rather rare these days, as wiill be attested by the financial plights of numerous states and cities. However, the manner in which the executive council trimmed expenditures to equal receipts must be considered before any praise can be given. Vir tually all activities sustained slight budget slashes, but four in particular were the object of heavy retrenchment. They were the Emerald, baseball, concerts and track. Concerts have been eliminated completely. Base ball has been placed on a restricted basis. The same has been done with track. The Emerald has been reduced from five to four Issues a week, after hav ing operated for 12 years on the former basis. Thus we see that the council has picked at the very foundations of the entire A. S. U, O. program. Perhaps the only two activities that have any cul tural and intellectual values arc the Emerald and the concert program. One has been reduced mater ially. The other has been abandoned. Forensics might be included in this group, and it, too, has Buffered sharp retrenchment. Perhaps of all our major sports, baseball and track are closer to -a Utopia in athletic activities than any others. They are on a far more amateur foundation than football. Although neither is as financially profitable nor as popular with the multi tudes as football, they are essential to any well balanced athletic program. The curtailment of base ball and track cannot but have a derogatory effect on every other athletic enterprise. The entire sys tem is interdependent, and two weak links in the chain mfcy precipitate a general far-reaching col lapse. The Emerald returned a paper profit of $389 last term. This figure may not be attained when all receipts are collected, but it is undeniable that the Emerald is more than self-supporting. Should not the paper then be permitted to operate on a five-day basis at least until its surplus of the fall term is consumed? It was the opinion of the executive council, how ever, that the Emerald should contribute to the support of other functions, rather than being an independent financial unit. Evidently the members forget several important points one among which is the faact that the student body constitution speci fies that the Emerald shall be a "daily paper." It is doubtful if four issues a week conform to the requirements of the constitution. The Emerald could offer a host of other argu ments why the reduction is unwise, but it will not do so. In these times sacrifices are expected. The Emerald already has made several of them. It is opetatmg on a budget $3,500 below that of last year . All salaried workers have accepted reductions. The Emerald is ready to accept the cut in issues, although it does not believe such is the mandate of the student body as a whole. First, how ever,, the Emerald wants to know why other activities were not reduced proportion ately. Certainly it is neither wise nor fair to im pose tlie greatest cuts upon four such valuable functions as the Emerald, track, concerts and base ball. Hallies, an activity whose worthiness is doubtful at best, received its full budgeted amount of $175. This sum was spent during the football season, when, according to those in authority, the need for retrenchment was not realized so keenly as it is at present. The plausibility of this statement is dubious. In a fooiball season as off color financially as was Oregon’s, it seems as if the monetary plight of the organization would be apparent from the start. The Emerald thi., week got* ou a four u_ue a week basis after having been published five times a week since 1920. The football schedule next season is as extensive as that of this year, yet the 1932 gridiron campaign returned a profit of only $4,000, as compared to that of $23,000 in 1931. We wonder what the executive council would have said and done had the Emerald's surplus suffered as great a tumble proportionately. We wonder. IT’S NEW FACTS THAT WE W ANT DR. NITOBE is a sincere internationalist. As a scholar and a gentleman, as well as an inter national figure, he is entitled to the unqualified re | spect of any American audience. His address on in ternational co-operation delivered at Gerlinger hall yesterday was interesting and informative, but one could not help but feel that the hundreds of stu ; dents who turned 'out to hear Dr. Nitobe came away with less than they expected to receive, with ; less than they had a right to receive. The Japanese author and statesman devoted his address to a review of the agencies which exist for international co-operation, such as the International Labor office, the World court, the League of Na tions, and others of the 473 international associa tions in existence. This type of material is not new to a college audience, for phases of it are covered in a score of courses of study offered at the Uni ! versify. The bulk of Dr. Nitobe’s address, then I constituted a repetition of the lectures we hear in our class-rooms from day to day. We are reasonably familiar with all this inter national machinery. What we want to know in why it isn’t working. If our automobile refuses to run and we call in a mechanic who contents himself with describing to us are various mechan ical parts of the machine, we'd have small patience with him. We would want him to tell us what part had dropped out and needed replacement, or what mechanical additions were needed to get the car to running again. In a time of international crisis, with grave economic diseases aggravated by diplomatic ner vousness, it is no reassurance to review the agencies I which now exist to help create international under ■ standing and cooperation. No matter how many | of them there may be, or how wideflung their in fluence, they are not numerous enough, not pow erful enough to give us any sense of security for the future. So far, so good, but where do we go from here ? We appreciate that Dr. Nitobe is in a delicate position in lecturing on interational co-operation while the papers are again filled with cables from Manchuria. We also appreciate that if he had got ten down to fundamentals in his address and had fearlessly spoken of the obstacles to world peace and the measures necessary to remove them he might have had to say some things unpleasant to American ears. But we could have stood that well enough, and whether we agreed with him or not, we would have felt that we had received some things of permanent value from his address. College students are becoming more and more critical of “authorities.” That immeasurable gap between idealistic platitudes and hard realities which we see on all sides is inevitably making us more hesitant to accept as the revealed gospel any thing an eminent speaker chooses to bring before us. The international scene cries aloud for courage | ous measures. We are looking for a program of | acWon, and we shall have less and less patience with j international academics. By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, D. C.—(AP)—Jan. 9—Where President Theodore Roosevelt had the support of his “tennis cabinet" in his physical conditioning, and where President Hoover’s morning session with the “medicine ball cabinet” had its place in the news, President Franklin Roosevelt is apt to have a “swimming cabinet” of bis own. For in the water, Mr. Roosevelt, a powerful swimmer, is free of the after effects of the infan tile paralaysis. That fact accounts for the “Little White House” at Warm Springs, Ga., for the swimming pool at the Roosevelt estate, Krum Elbow, for the pool that replaced potted plants in a conservatory in the grounds of the executive mansion in Albany after he became governor. SIS sis <|s Just what will be done about providing suitable swimming facilities for White House use during the coming Roosevelt administration has not been dis closed. It is safe to say, however, that there will be a pool and that the next President of the United States will make daily use of it. Swimming is a part of his physical routine and it is his good luck that from boyhood he has always found joy in water sports. At Albany swimming parties in the pool always enter into the entertainment of guests. They are as much a matter of course as Mrs. Roosevelt's teas every afternoon at which the secretarial staff puts in an appearance, work permitting. An invitation to spend a day or stay overnight i at the executive mansion almost is invariably ac companied by a suggestion to bring a bathing suit. Nearly everybody swims and the governor gets a lot of boyish “kick” out of these water parties. * * * Incidentally, the amenities between the outgoing I and incoming administrations are being maintained by Colonel Louis Howe for Mr. Roosevelt and Law rence Richey for Air. Hoover. When Howe made his first Washington visit after election. Richey guided him about the White House and it is a reasonable assumption that the physical arrangements of the mansion in view of Mr. Roosevelt's special necessities came in for care ful consideration. Mr. Howe is credited with having assumed that ! he slipped that visit over on the White House crew I of reporters. He picked a Sunday morning, early, for the trip and did not sight a reporter at any time. His surprise, next morning when he read an account of Iris visit in his New York papers may be imagined. The W hite House statt of clerks, stenographers, telephone operators and what-not probably looked a bit askance at Howe if they saw him that morn ing Jobs are important. Yet there seems some thing behind the prediction that most of the per manent staff will not be disturbed. The President elect himself is said to ba\. laid down that com mand. “The Right Hand Knoweth Not What the Left Hand Doeth” By KEN FERGUSON \ I A Message to Garcia (This is the first of two articles by Dean Allen. The second will treat of the report of the Presi dent’s Committee on Social Trends.) By ERIC W. ALLEN Dean of the School of Journalism ^INCE school closed a few weeks ago a new word has been add ed to the common language: tech nocracy. It is heard wherever the depression is discussed—and where is it not discussed?—at luncheon clubs, on the radio, in newspapers and magazines, in smoking com . partments on the trains, and now it is making its entree about the fraternity fireplace. What is technocracy? To an ! swer fully would consume too much space. The definition must be dodged. In its various aspects ! technocracy is a research project, a group of engineers working on statistics, a new form of govern ment, a social philosophy, and a publicity wave. The last is per | haps the most important. * * * Technocracy is not nonsense. There is too much truth in this 1 body of thought for it to be super ciliously brushed aside in its en tirety. It is emphasizing certain facts that ought to be emphasized (facts not previously realized by 1 the man in the street), but it is I also asserting from the housetops I some things that social scientists regard as only probably or possi bly true, and of these last it has not yet submitted its alleged proofs | for critical examination. And en thusiasts on the fringe of the group have been making predic i tions that sound wild. It is rais j ing hopes of a millenium to come impossibly soon. On the other j hand the wide popular spread of this doctrine may speed up the necessary social reorganizations. * * * The wildest statement printed so j far is that technocracy could, as | early as 1934, guarantee every family a standard of living equal to what a $20,000 income brings j at present. Even the more modern ! technocrats promise vastly better i living for all us a result of devel oping our machine industry to its utmost, taking its control away i from the business men, capitalists, 1 and politicians who now run it, anil handing it over to engineers to operate solely in the interest of production and distribution. Prof its and debts are to be cancelled out. The technocrats are said to have amassed, in the engineering j buildings at Columbia university, vast charts of statisttics showing what enormous wealth our mod ern techniques could produce for all Of us if business considerations I could be wiped aside and the con trolling engineers told to go ahead and run the national plant at full capacity. It is now more than half idle. * * * Technocracy is a scheme to wipe out in fact these "business consid erations." it proposes to meas ure wealth not in dollars but in a new energy-unit, perhaps some thing like the British thermal unit. In its research aspect it is a new form of cost accounting, disregard ing bonds, stocks and ownerships. It substitutes this measure for the economic concept of "value," which is based not upon energy consumed in manufacture and transportation, but upon desire and scarcity. Under the techno cratic scheme the dollar would dis appear from the picture Now . m any of the sciences the invention of a new form of meas urement has revolutionary results It inevitably initiates great chang es, whether anyone wills it or not Have the technocrats a new, valid and easily usable form of measure ment ? Nobody knows. They claim they have, and it is the most def inite claim they make, but the details of their method have not been published, nor their figures analyzed by outside critics. If they have, and if their new units proves easily applicable, look out for deep seated social changes! But up to now scientists are left to guess how practically one can measure in terms of energy, the worth of a tube of tooth paste, a locomotive, or a college education. Naturally they are skeptical. * k unsocial istic from the direction of Mos cow. There seems to be no class war idealogy, and no worship of Marx or Lenin. Veblen, rather, is the patron saint, and the thought is American rather than European. Anyway, technocracy is furnishing, and the man in the street is avidly adopting, a new vocabulary (not so very new to economists) in which the fundamentals of social life can be discussed without tendencious and prejudice-arousing references to Marx and Moscow. Even capi talism has been rechristened as "the price system." As a phenom enon in the growth of public opin ion, this is of some importance. promenade by carol hurlburt .. _I 4 blessed event has occurred . . . 1033, the child, has been born, and from all reports, both mother and infant are doing well. You may have made a “good resolution" to get a straight “A" average: you may have determined to give up wine, women, and song: perhaps you have given up that companion of our convivial home . . . friend cigarette: or perhaps you have decided to stop biting your finger nails. Ninety-nine chances out of a hundred, however, you didn't in clude any "fashion notes" among your resolutions; a«d so if you will permit me to make a few sugges tions, go into a “strange inter lude." so to speak, here are sonv' ideas which you might turn into resolutions, if you aren't already overburdened with them. * * * There is little time in the whirl of college life, when there is one assignment after another, one class after another, one party after an other. with midnight bull-sessions thrown in, to give time to our toi let. At this time I don't choose to discuss whether or not this is a man's world, but inevitably a wo man judges a man upon his ap pearance hi, glooming, whet! - ei or not he has that-clean cut ap pearance . . . polished shoes, well kept nails, a close shave, a clear shirt, a straight tie, closely cu hair. The most attractive woman i: the fastidious woman. If he: shoes are dainty; her stocking: sheer; her frocks neat, well-fitting her finger-nails like japonica bios soms, her hair shiny, her slur fresh and carefully made-up, she must inevitably be charming ir appearance. * * Jj: Not to indulge in personalities but one of the most beautiful girls I know, born to be the delight am apple of a man's eye, loses hall her attraction in that she isn't fastidious about her person. An authority on fashion desig • | W. R. Letharby, writes: “If wre i look for the main stem of principle | on which modern costume develops, we seem to find it in the desire for freshness, for the clean, the uncrushed, and the perfectly fit ted and draped. Probably a mod ern lady’s ideal would be to wear a dress once and then burn it.” * * * 1 Of course, you should have made your resolutions a good ten days ago . . . but what are a mere ten days to a college student? * * * And if you are interested in knowing how the world of fashion gowned itself on New Year’s eve, dazzling even the much be-dazzled New Yorker, here is what Ninon of the San Francisco Chronicle writes from New York of that glit tering night and morning: “There was enough lavish fur to have robbed the plains of Siberia —sweeping wraps of ermine deep ly collared in sable—long wraps of the ermine with voluminous, ex quisite puffed sleeves—deep velvet coats with two and three sweeping circles of white fox—velvet with two or three skin deep silver foxes. Everything new and beautiful you | have ever seen sketched or heard about popped up here and there. “And through It all ran the sim ple formula of slender women with infinitely simple, clinging gowns of this or that co:or and some in teresting but usual fabric.” a: * * We Select for Promenade: Maud Sutton, because she announced her engagement to Frank Jay Cobbs, Jr., at an eggnog party on New Year’s day, given at the home of her parents in San Francisco, and because she looked particular ly charming in a long, clinging gown of black satin, made with wide and flattering sleeves of ruf fled pinky satin, terminating just below the shoulder. Letters to the Editor All “Letters to the Editor” must bear cither the signature or initials of the writer, the former being preferred. Be cause of space limitations, the editor [ reserves the right to withhold such communications as he secs fit. All let ters should be concise and to the. point. The editor of the Emerald solicits opin ions and constructive criticism from » the members of the student body. Don’t Cut the Emerald Tp the Editor of the Emerald: Sir: The existence of the Emer ald is justified because it alone performs and can perform func tions that are vitally necessary to the students' activities. Reports of games, announcements of coming events, news of campus activities, j and editorial comment on the con i dition of the student affairs arc all necessary to the efficient anc interested student. Further, it is self-evident that the daily publica tion of the Emerald tends to carry news of the University to many people and increase the prestige of the institution. Cutting the issues of the Emer ald will of necessity lessen the I Assault and Battery -By Parks Hitchcock (Editor’s note: C o i n c i dent with the demise of Walter Win chell and his notorious legion, Mr. Hitchcock passed from the kith and kin of columnists last term. Between that time and this a period of transition, dur ing which there was great tur moil in Mr. Hitchcock's soul, took place. Now he emerges, as one from a bath (in the mill race), purified in mind and body. His column now will lack all prurient details and he pre sents it to you in hopes that it will stand forth as an eminent example of literary effort, a mas terpiece so splendid in its style and content that you will be both dazzled and attracted by it.) nFHE STORY has been sneaking t * around to us that Frank Swayzt (self-styled “old maestro of thr law school”) has invested in a new suit. Swayze claims it’s his first purchase along this line in It years. * a: * Rumor has it that Anselmr 1 “Bud” Pozzo and Mike Mikulat 1 are giving Gassy Cornell the boost | up at the Pi Phi dive. * * * We’ve always been secretly I awed by the sun dial, found tc the northeast of the ad building Even Mr. Lyons, the cashier couldn’t tell us why anyone would ever build a sun dial in a country where the sun never shines. Nosed about quietly for a while I and finally discovered that the dial was erected in honor of a man named Mays, Wilson Pierce Mays. It seems he was a student and died. He was an econ major. May be that explains it. Well he came from Portland, entered in ought five, died shortly after. Most ev eryone seems to think it was his ■- - - father who built the dial. It’s got Latin all around the edge (of the dial, that is). Too deep for us. Jf! # $ We understand that Roy Mc Mullen is just “moping,” now that his primitive passion has gradu ated. Quite a blow. * # Jj! A grocer down on Eleventh street has a note pasted up in his window' that says: “For sale: In account with Gordon Fisher—30c. What am I offered?” * a- * Virgil Langtry, self-styled “Til lamook Tessie,” has invented a new deal in super-business. He rents crockery. The scandalmon : gers up at the law school have it j that he has five of them out ! among his clientele. * s*. * Speaking of crockery, we hear that Jack Rushlow' sold his at last. Johnny Londahl w'as the pur | chaser. •fc V Our friend Mikulak advises us ; that the Oregon chapter of the Minnesota Rotarian club is ! thinking of incorporating at their club house down on PattdVson street. Members already include i such famous names as Mikulak, Morse, Neuberger, Gemlo, Gagnon, J Cuppoletti, and Weimar. (Morse and Neuberger are undoubtedly ringers but there’s nothing we can j do about it.) * Hi * We understand that the other night when Bud Johns was up at the Tri-Delt house the other eve, somebody left a small dog on the front porch in a basket. He and Cobbs appropriated it and took it back to the “Grand Hotel.” * * * We see Bob James is the latest fly attracted by the Redmond terror. , _ ,.a___ HIGHEST QUALITY NOTEBOOK PAPER • 8lrXll .,. 25c 9'vx6 ...g.. 20c 8U.x5'- .°.*.. 20c 7^x5 . 20c Typing Paus . 15c Typing Packets . 20c Typing Paper . 50c Ream Full Line of Notebooks UNIVERSITY PHARMACY The Students' Drug Store llth and Alder Phone 114 prestige of the University and cause unfavorable comment in many places. The proposed changes in the publication of the Oregon State Barometer last fall certainly did this and no doubt the same effect will to a lesser extent apply to the dropping of the Sat urday issue of the Emerald. This policy will also injure the students as they will not have the Saturday issue with its reports of games and the announcements of meetings and activities. If the cutting of the Emerald was necessary because of lack of I money or because the omitted is l sues were unessential to student ; activity no strong protest would be in order. However, the Emer ald last term operated at a pro fit. So that this cut seems unrea- . ! sonable. Unless the powers-that-be 1 I can justify this crippling of student activities and this lessening of the | prestige of the University, their decision is certainly unwise and merits condemnation sufficient to bring about a reversal of the ac tion. GEORGE BENNETT. A Decade Ago From Daily Emerald January 10, 1923 All Wet Thirteen and fifteen-hour—even thirty - seven - hour—train rides from Portland over shaking tres tles and flooded tracks were the lol of returning students and fac ulty members last week-end. Marshfield and central Oregon stu dents are still marooned. * • * Dean George Rebec left England yesterday for Paris after spend ing three months of his year's leave of absence at Oxford univer- ' sity. * * * Sez You! The doom of the three-term plan at Oregon has been sealed; the two semester plan is adopted. * * * Dean Eric W. Allen was elected president of the Association of American Schools and Depart ments of Journalism at the annual convention held the last of Decem ber at Northwestern university. "The Faculty and Student Di rectory for 1922-1923’’ is out. * * * Flunk ’Em Thirty-eight students failed to make passing grades in even three hours’ work during fall term. Over 100 students are on probation be cause they did not pass the re quired nine hours of work. Emerald * Of the Air The first Emerald-of-the-Air of the winter term will bring you to day at 12:15 a quarter hour of cur | rent news from the Oregon Daily | Emerald. The Emerald-of-the-Air comes to you every day at this time with a variety of news, lectures, sports talks, music, and features. It’s your program! Are you lis tening ? CLASSIFIED LAUNDRY at lowestrates. Call and deliver. Phone 2293-W. FOR SALE -Pontiac sport road - ster, at Blue Book price. 970 Patterson St. ! - - I GRAND BOOK SALE Four Lots of Real Bargains Kooks Formerly 50 e Up to $2.50 Also Kooks From the Rental Library Kooks Formerly $1.00 to $3.00* Kooks Formerly $2.00 to $5.00* ^ Kooks Formerly $5.00 to $20.00 Some Fine Sets Choice Editions ]/2 Price I Join Our Co-op Book Club All the Kooks You0Can R*'ad—Jan. to Jan. $1.00 Winter^Term Only UNIVERSITY CO OP]