Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, January 14, 1933, Page 2, Image 2

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    Oregon Daily Emerald
EDITORIAL OFFICES, Journalism Bldg.
phone 3300 — News Room, Local 366;
Editor and Managing Editor, Local 364.
University of Oregon, Eugene
BUSINESS OFFICE, McArthur Court.
Phone 3300—Local 214.
Richard Neuberger, Editor
Sterling Green, Managing Editor
Harry Schenk, Manager
editorial board
Thornton Gale, Associate Editor; Jack
Bellinger, Dave Wilson, Julian Prescott.
UPPER NEWS STAFF 7
Oscar Manger, News Ed.; Francis Ballis
ter, Copy Ed. ; Bruce Hamby, Sports
Ed.; Parks Hitchcock, Makeup Ed.;
Leslie Dunton, Chief Night Ed.; John
Gross, Literary Ed.; Bob Guild, Dra
matics Ed. ; Jessie Steele, Women’s Ed.;
Eloise Dorner, Society Ed.; Ray Clapp,
Radio Ed.
Day Editor This Issue—Doug Polivka.
The Oregon Daily Emerald, official stu
dent publication of the University^ of
Oregon, Eugene, issued daily except Sun
day and Monday during the college year.
Entered in the postoffice at Eugene, Ore
gon, as second class matter. Subscription
rates $2.50 a year.
ASUO President
Makes Statement
To the Editor:
The stories that have recently
appeared in the Emerald stating
that the executive council had cut
the Emerald to four days a week
apparently are due to errors in re
porting.
In order that the students may
know what the executive council
did, the minutes read, ‘‘It was
moved, seconded, and carried that
the recommendation of the finance
committee be accepted and that
Plan 2 be adopted with the excep
tion that the budget surplus of
$840 be distributed between track
and baseball, and these sports be
continued with intercollegiate com
petition.”
Concerning the Emerald, Plan 2
merely stated that the budget fig
ure be reduced from $12,361.50 to
$10,352.59. There was no state
ment made as to the number of
issues.
There were obviously several
possible methods of taking care
of the cut, including the reduction
of the number of issues per week,
reduction of the number of weeks
published, reductions in salaries
given to staff members, and com
binations of these. If the second
method were chosen, it would
mean that about three weeks’ pub
lications would be cut from the
spring quarter.
It was assumed that the easiest
and most obvious way to comply
with the reduced budget was the
reduction of the number of issues
per week. But of the publications
committee and the Emerald staff
desire a paper issued five days a
week, it is immaterial to the exec
utive council so long as the re
duction in expenditures are pro
vided for.
It might be added that the per
centage cut for the Emerald is
LESS than any other major ac
tivity except football, as it shown
by the following figures showing
percentage of cut:
Concerts 99.4%.
Baseball 43.4%.
A. W. S. 40.0%.
Oregana 37.6%.
Track 36.4%.
Canoe Fete 29.5%.
W. A. A. 26.0%.
Basketball 27.6%.
Athletic fields 50.0%.
Forensics 16.7%.
Emerald 16.3%.
Football 16.2%.
Although these cuts are drastic,
the executive council is gratified
with the spirit of cooperation
which students connected with
these activities have shown.
BOB HALL,
Pres., A.S.U.O.
Assault and
Battery iitchcock I
w/E see Bob Hall, versatile stu
” dept body president, Is in
charge of the vod-vil acts for the
Krazy Kopy Krawl tonight. He
ought to have obtained a lot of
valuable experience from handling
the executive council.
* * *
Found out at last where they
print the examination papers. It’s
right next door to the University
press.
A man named Domas, Isaiah
Domas, runs the place. No rela
tion to the author of the “Three
Musketeers.” They've got two
mimeograph machines, one multi
graph, and one “little” machine.
Hun pretty fast, too. Turns out
about two sheets a second and if
you don’t think that’s fast, try it.
They’ve got a sorting table that
just turns around and around all
the time. Doesn’t seem to go any
place, just turns like one of these
new rotary cafeterias. Doesn’t
cost anything to ride, though.
Said they’d heard a lot about
exam paper robberies ever since
somebody stole the Zom-Macpher
son petitions, but that nobody had
ever been caught. Lucky.
• • •
We see the paper is back on a
five-day basis. Like the fifth card
in a stud hand, it’s this one that
counts. * * *
We see the frosh commission is
going to sell apples in the near
future. At ten cents an apple we’d
rather pay the doctor bill.
Emerald
Of the Air
The regular “newspaper of the
air” with latest dope on the paper
printing controversy will come to
you today at 12:15 on the Emer
ald-of-the-Air program over
KORE.
Watch this column. Something
might happen—how do we know!
Five in Infirmary
The epidemic of the grippe
seems to have gone its way at last.
Only five students are now in the
infirmary; they are Gene Way,
Charles Clay, Douglas Pelton, Jo
seph Deming, and Duncan York.
NERTZY
F un—F a vors—Features
KRAZY KOPY KRAWL
Tonight . . Campa Shoppe
Campa Shoppe Serenaders
15c 15c 15c
Showing at 7 and 9
CONRAD NAGEL
After the Game
ronight 2 Great Shows
OWL MAT—10:40
The Best Marx Brothers Yet!
_ mi jmzm: mwrwm
IwNt THELMA TODD
STARTS SUNDAY—MAT 10c TILL 6
^oVOS^Jack0akie
V ■ * CmSmU in the Hollywood Scream
You’re In For The
Laugh of a Lifetime
After the
Krazy Kopy
Krawl
Tonight
Everyone Will Be
Here. Why?
Because It’s
the Place to Come
Starts Sunday
ALSO SUNDAY
All Seats
Any
Time
25'
JANUARY STATIONERY CLEARANCE
AS THE EMERALD GROWS SMALLER CO-OP BARGAINS GROW BIGGER AND BIGGER %
One Lot Box Paper
Values to $1.50
Full sized letter paper,
Hasty notes, Semi-note paper,
Correspondence cards. To clear
A Few Pounds
of Paper
High grade paper but without
envelopes to match.
Very cheap at
Envelopes Only
25c Packages
Good correspondence envelopes
Specially priced at
2 for 25c
Oregon Seal
Stationery
Fifty boxes Broadcheck Weave
paper, die stamped with Oregon
Seal, was 85c box.
29c
-- UNIVERSITY CO-OP 1
^ “THE: STUD&NTS_O^N__STOjBJ|^::_____^/
Pound Paper with
Envelopes
Papers made by Crane, Eaton,
Montags. Values §1.35 to §1.50,
A box of paper and one pack
age envelopes
59c