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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 2, 1933)
University of Oregon, Eugene Richard Neuberger, Editor Harry Schenk, Manager Sterling Green, Managing Editor EDITORIAL BOARD Thornton Gale, Associate Editor; Jack Bellinger, Dave Wilson 1 Julian Preacott. UPPER NEWS STAFF Oscar Munger, News r.d. Francis Ballister, Copy Ed. Bruce Hamby, Sports Ed. Parka Hitchcock, Makeup Fid. Bob Moore, Chief Nifrht Ed. jonn liross, Jjiicrary r,a Bob Guild. Dramatics Ed. Jessie Steele, Women's Ed. Esther Hayden, Society Ed. Ray Clapp, Radio Ed. DAY EDITORS: Bob Patterson, Margaret Bean, Francis Pal Jister, Doug Polivka, Joe Saslavsky. NIGHT EDITORS: George Callas, Bob Moore, John Hollo peter, Doug MacLean, Bob Butler, Bob Couch. SPORTS STAFF: Malcolm Bauer, Asst. Ed.; Ned Simpson, Ben Back, Bob Avison, Jack Chinnock. FEATURE WRITERS: Elinor Henry, Maximo Pulido, Hazle Corrigan. REPORTERS: Julian Prescott, Madeleine Gilbert, Ray Clapp, Ed Stanley, David Eyre, Bob Guild, Paul Ewing, Cynthia Liljeqvist, Ann-Reed Burns, Peggy Chessman, Ruth King, Barney Clark, Betty Ohlemiller, Roberta Moody, Audrey Clark, Bill Belton, Don Olds, Gertrude Lamb, Ralph Mason, Roland Parks. ASSISTANT SOCIETY EDITOR: Elizabeth Crommelin. COPYREADERS: Harold Brower, Twyla Stockton, Nancy Lee, Margaret Hill, Edna Murphy, Mary Jane Jenkins, Marjorie McNiece, Frances Rothwell, Caroline Rogers, Henriette Horak, Catherine Coppers, Claire Bryson, Bingham Powell. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Frances Neth, Betty Gear hart, Margaret Corum, Georgina Gildez, Elma Giles, Carmen Blaise, Bernice Priest, Dorothy Paley, Evelyn Schmidt. RADIO STAFF: Roy C’iapp, Editor; Barney Clark, George Callas. SECRETARIES—Louise Beers, Lina Wilcox. BUSINESS STAFF Adv. MKr., Manr neymers National Adv. Mxr., Auten Bush Promotional MKr., Marylou Patrick Asst. Adv, Mgr., Gr a n t Theummel. Asst. Adv. Mk^, Gil WellinKton Asst. Adv. MKr. Bill Russell Executive Secretary, Dorothy Anne Clark circulation Mgr., non new. Asst. Circulation Mgr., Ron Rew Office Mgr., Helen Stinger Class. Ad.'Mgr., Althea Peterson Sez Sue, Caroline Hahn Sez Sue Asst., Louise Rice Checking Mgr., Ruth Storla Checking Mgr., Pearl Murphy ADVERTISING ASSISTANTS: Gene F. Tomlinson, Anne Chapman, Tom Holeman, Bill McCall, Ruth Vannlce, Fred Fisher, Ed Labbe, Eldon Haberman, Elisa Addis, Wilma Dente, Hazel Fields, Corrinne Plath, Marian Taylor, Hazel Marquis, Hubert Totton, Hewitt Warrens, Dortald Platt, j Phyllis Dent, Peter Gantenben, Bill Meissner, Patsy Lee, Lorry P'ord, Jeannette Thompson, Ruth Baker. OFFICE ASSISTANTS: Patricia Campbell, Kay Disher, Kath ryn Greenwood, Jane Bishop, Elma Giles, Eugenia Hunt, Mary Starbuck, Ruth Byerly, Mary Jane Jenkins, Willa Bitz, Janet Howard, Phyllis Cousins, Betty Shoemaker, Ruth Rippey. EDITORIAL OFFICES, Journalism Bldg. Phone 8300—News Room, Local 356; Editor and Managing Editor, Local 354. BUSINESS OFFICE, McArthur Court. Phone 3300—Local 214. The Oregon Daily Emerald, official student publication of the University of Oregon, Eugene, issued daily except Sunday and Monday during the college year. Entered in the postoffice at Eugene, Oregon, as second-class matter. Subscription rates, $2.60 a year. The Emerald’s Creed for Oregon t *'.... There is always the human temptation to forget that the erection of buildings, the formulation of new curricula, the expansion of departments, the crea tion of new functions, and similar routine duties of the administration'are but means to an end. There is always a glowing sense of satisfaction in the natural impulse for expansion. This frequently leads to regard ing achievements as ends in themselves, whereas the truth is that these various appearances of growth and achievement can be justified only in so far as they make substantial contribution to the ultimate objec tives of education .... providing adequate spiritual ami intellectual training for youth of today—the citi zenship of tomorrow. . . . " . . . . The University should be a place where i classroom experiences and faculty contacts should stimu late and train youth for the most effective use of all the resources with which nature has endowed them. Dif ficult and challenging problems, typical of the life and world in which they are to live, must be given them to solve. They must be taught under the expert supervision of instructors to approach the solution of these problems in a workm inlike way, with a dis ciplined intellect, with a reasonable command of the techniques that j re involved, with a high sense of in tellectual adventure, and with a genuine devotion to the ideals of intellectual integrity. . . ."—From the Bicnniul Report of the University of Oregon for 1931-32. REDUCTIONS ARE IN ORDER DEAN BOVARD of the school of physical edu cation and Mr. Washkc of the men’s gymna sium are to confer regarding the possibilities of re ducing the replacement cost of equipment at the latter’s establishment. At present students are charged double the purchase cost for the loss of all articles. We see no valid reason why the cost should not be reduced immediately. A logical and feasible re duction would be to trim it down to the purchase cost, plus 10 per cent administration fee. Thus, if a youth loses a sweatshirt that costs $1, he will have to pay the gymnasium $1.10. Obviously, this is more fair than the $2 charge he would be as sessed under the present system. No one can deny that 10 per cent is adequate to provide for any extra work that might be involved in checking up on lost equipment. The labor at the men’s gymnasium cannot be so valuable that it costs one dollar to take care of the details con nected with the loss of a piece of equipment worth one dollar. Undoubtedly, various reasons can be advanced why the current plan should be retained, but, re gardless of what they may be, it is difficult to see how they can justify charging students twice what articles arc worth io replace losses. A move to accept the Emerald’s suggestion would be a move in line with a multitude of other downward revi sions that are taking place at this time. Let us hope that Dean Bovard and Mr. Washke waste no time in ordering such reductions. FOR $800—DR. DURANT PHILOSOPHER WILL DURANT speaks in Port land on "The Tragedy of Russia." Dr. Durant is quite widely known as a modern propagator of philosophy. Whether Dr. Durant is a great thinker it is not for us to say. but it is an incontrovertible fact that he is one of the nation's leading observers on social and religious matters. Beyond that, he is a witty amt entertaining speaker. It would indeed be highly interesting to hear Dr. Durant in Eugene. It is said that the expenses of engaging him would be as low as three hundred dollars, it seems unfortunate that the University, even in its present straitened conditions, does nothing about such an unusual opportunity. In addition to the more obvi ous values cf a talk by Dr. Durant, it can be said that it is visitH by men like these that bring the University’s name and reputation into the national spotlight. It would be fortunate indeed for students and townspeople if Dr. Durant could lecture here. MARRIED OK SINGLE? TPHE UNIVERSITY OE IDAHO is considering eliminating ail married women from its faculty. Officials advocating this move justify it as an econ omy measure, declaring that in these times of de pression the woman who has a huouaud that is earning a living has no right to hold a job that could support a single woman. All things being equal, it seems that a single woman should have preference over a married one in selection for a faculty position. Eut, on the other hand, if such an arbitrary measure will mean discharging talented teachers to be replaced by in experienced neophytes the action has a different perspective. There are women on the faculty of every uni versity who are of such high caliber that they never could be replaced. The fact they happen to be married should not bar them from a profession in which they excell. It should have no bearing on their professional standing. Only in cases where the married woman could be replaced with an equally efficient single woman would the measure be practical. A COURAGEOUS WRITER NO "IDLE singer of an empty day” is Upton Sinclair. He is one of the few living Writers who combines extraordinary literary talents with fearlessness and a desire to better th# existence of America’s masses. He has sacrificed personal gains that his books might be owned by the multi tudes, for each person who reads his powerful iogic and carefully-prepared facts is a prospective convert to Upton Sinclair’s way of thinking. His books are more than literary masterpieces. They are weapons to right wrong. They do more than entertain. They inform. Throughout his en tire career he has struggled valiantly against overwhelming odds, but always has he succeeded in accomplishing many attainments. Almost three decades ago his book, “The Jungle,” aided materi ally in the passage of the pure food laws. His scrupulous investigation of the Colorado coal strike in 1913 focused the attention of the nation on the affair and brought encouraging results. In the "Goose-Step” and the “Goslings” he re vealed many incongruous and deplorable situations in education and succeeded in bringing about the solution of a considerable number of them. Always courageous, never selfish, Upton Sinclair stands virtually alone as a great writer who has had the character and fortitude to bring down upon his head the wrath and displeasure of millions of re actionaries in his battle to relieve the oppressed of the nation. Perhaps Upton Sinclair is too one-sided in his views and hopes. Perhaps the perspective from which he surveys conditions is not a fair one. Both reflections are open to controversy. But, regardless of the validity of his arguments, one cannot but admire the man who stands back of them. The courage and unselfishness that Upton Sinclair has shown are rare enough in this day of greed and backwardness to be worthy of praise and commen dation. And, there is this for us to remember. The more public men there are like Upton Sinclair, the sooner will liberalism become a reality, and in no place is liberalism more essential than in the col leges and universities of our country. Twenty quail refuges totaling 60,000 acres have been established in Georgia this year by the de partment of game and fish. James Mayo, Beaufort, North Carolina, hoarded J100 in a box. A rat found it and chewed the bills to fragments. On Other Campuses I Verbal Inadequacies /AF ALL the faculties of man, that of inventive ness lias given him some of his greatest pleasuies, and lias brought him some of l)is great est griefs. Civilization in all its complexity is the invention of man, but along with its benefits, such as medical science and congenial arts are the curses of war and social injustice. Probably the most important inventions of man, using the word invention in its broad sense, are speech and machin ery. These inventions arc his great triumphs and have become the very essence of his being, so much so that we no longer think of them apart from man. The latter of the two has been attacked time and again for the baleful influence il has exercised on man. Oswald Spengler in the realms of philo sophy, D. H. Lawrence in literature, and now the Technocrats for the popular mind, are inveighing against the tyranny of machines and how machines, which man created for his own benefit, have turned like a horrible Frankenstein, and are destroying him both physically and mentally. However, in regard to speech, few people have looked at it from this point of view, and few if any realize the tremendous influence this, the in vention of man to clarify and express thought, has had ir. obfuscating and preventing it. Words are used so frequently that their mean ings become fixed, and one word lias to stand for many delicate nuances of thought. Whenever an individual lias a thought, he lias to express this thought in words, and the only words he can use if he wants to be understood, are the words that are in common use; but these words must be used in expressions which have acquired a certain mean ing. Hence, it finally turns out that the words i determine the thought, or else the individual cannot ' express himself at all. Thought must thus conform j to words, which defeats the prime purpose of lan | gttage. Thus explatns wny many modern poets and prosateurs nave to invent new words in order to express their exact meaning. There is real justifi cation for this procedure, for an artist must master his material and express his every shade of emo tion. By extension, we can apply this to the mod ernists in music and painting. The necessity for proper expression justifies the use, but not the indiscriminate use of foreign words, for, as each language is the expression of a peculiar type of genius, so each language has certain words or expressions which can seize the meaning of the thought far better than any expression in another language. H is triu that as time goes on the vocabulary of every language increases, but as time goes on, civilization becomes more complex, and more events and shades of emotion arise, and must be expressed. Hence we must be tolerant of the in troduction of new expressions and words into our language, we must endeavor to avoid hackneyed and trite expressions, and we must express our selves forcibly and be truthful to our thought, "hen either peaking or w ntuig — McGill Dail.%. The Indian Massacre - - By KEN FERGUSON * __ _ __ __ I - ---—-—————* lbb By JOHN H. MUELLER IS technocracy to be applied to * medical practice? The recent report of the Com mittee on the Cost of Medical Care, which on January 1, 1933, completed its five-year labors of research, has caused some conster nation in medical circles, and leads the Journal of the American Med ical association to brand its rec ommendations as "incitement to revolution” and “utopian fantas ies.” The recommendations of the majority, in which a minority re fused to concur, emphasized the need for the extension of social ized medicine and urged that the "costs of medical care be placed on a group payment basis, through 1 the use of insurance, through the use of taxation, or through the use of both these methods." The re port adds cautiously, however, that this is not meant to preclude the continuation of medical serv ice provided on an individual fee basis for those who prefer the present method. The minority report criticized the significant recommendations of the majority, in asserting their fears of the obstruction of free competition and still increasing costs, and the destruction of the personal relationship between pa tient and physician if the plans of the former were put into effect. * * * The report of President Hoo ver’s committee on Social Trends, also released only recently, in the section on health and medical prac tice, contended that "medical or ganization has not changed as rap idly as scientific medical research. . . . There is a marked survival of traditional, individualistic prac tice, to which many physicians cling as did the early handicrafts men seeing their independence and creative skill threatened by the machine. The necessary equip ment is often too elaborate and expensive, even for the rich doc tor.” From the layman's standpoint, it still remains obvious that costs of medical care are such that the pa tient and physician cannot get to gether. and there arises the prob lem of eradicating this discrepancy | which all the individual competj i lion of the past, the allegedly low | er costs and the "personal rela tionships’’ have not conquered. It is certainly not to be contended that the alternative to private practice is completely desirable and without prospective defects. The limitations of medical service on a large, anonymous, scale have already appeared in European sys 1 terns. However, whatever the vir j tues of competition and personal relationship might be. it is still i maintained by the proponents of social medicine that socialized medicine would make up in its merits the losses of such virtues. # * * Again, it might be plausibly j maintained that the "personal” relationships.’’ which the conserv atives fear will be lost, has al ready disappeared to a large ex tent: and where it still prevails, socialized medicine would not de ! stroy it. In the metropolitan cen ters. with specialists who treat al limited number of ailments, the in-' iunale family physician is only a romantic memory. Ju small coni-; ! munities. where general practice .prevail- the mere fact of a gen-1 i oral coverage of expeuoes by state tax would not turn a friendly visit into anonymity. It is likewise feared that state medicine will destroy personal in centive by eliminating competition between individual physicians. The critics of Individualism retort, however, that pure competition for limitless profits is not the only type of competition that exists. Gradation in wages, in rank and other modes of recognition, will still prevail just as they exist in many another occupation and pro fession, as in college teaching, re search institutions where the in dividual initiative has not been starved by the substitution of fixed salaries for flexible fees. Is it plausible to assume that a doc tor of medicine has a different hu man nature than a doctor of sci ence or philosophy? * * * Medical service, it must further be noted, is affected with the pub lic interest. There is no assurance of health for anybody unless there is the assurance of health for ev erybody. For that? reason, it is ar gued, individual health and its cul- I tivation should not be left to the choice of the individual, to be jug gled in the personal budget with other items only to be eliminated by the insistence of other items temporarily more seductive. Like police, public education and oth er services, medicine is, or rather should be, a public rather than a private function, all of which again leads in the direction of investing such services with governmental sanction. In view of the evident fact that physicians are not able to sell their service under present conditions, it would appear reasonable that they would be willing to give up a certain modicum of liberty in ex change for security. The Califor nia Medical Association has, there fore, accepted the suggestions of the majority recommendations, in declaring their adherence to the insurance principle which would dispense service in exchange for periodic fees. This project is now before the local societies of the state of California. It may well be urged that Ore gon likewise pay heed to the state of medical practice in this com monwealth. Defects in the theory and practice of state medicine do exist: the resulting bureaucracy and the temptation of malingering on the patient as well as a poten tial stifling of personal ambition and industry which is Often asso ciated with government employees. Nevertheless, we must be careful not to base our judgments of state medicine on pictures of private practice which have been distorted by memories and traditions of the romantic family physician, nor on an incomplete grasp of the drastic changes which are slowly but in exorably taking place before us, nor yet on a false conception of the implications of the new and as yet almost untried system. Assault and Battery iitchcock I 'AMPUS informants tell us that '■J the student body is agog with the biggest bit of real news since the Fiji dance, or did we say dance? Raymond Joseph (Butch) Morse will attend the Theta form al. Plus the added attraction on today's big double bill, plus, folks, promenade by carol hurlburt _L_Z_'__ TMESSRS. Siegfried and Emmett select: Rudy Crommelin, be cause they consider him one of the ten best dressed men on the campus. (Watch for No. 6.). * * * A thousand apologies, dear read ers! I, the infallible, have made a tragic error, defamed the dead in fact. It seems that Neli Gwynn was beloved of Charles the Second, who didn’t have quite the reputa tion of Henry the Eighth, and Henry, it seems, had six wives in stead of eight. But, I ask you, what difference do a couple of wives more or less make ? « * * This is the time of year when most of us are seeking for reju venation. goat glands, the Foun tain of Youth or some other mag ic elixir to make us feel once again Sweet Sixteen (and never been kissedM. So here are some ideas garnered from here and there, which will bring back that spark of life to old limbs, old gowns, old loves. * * * If you are tired of looking so phisticated and worldly wise and want a new way of doing your hair, try brushing it straight back off your forehead, holding it in place with a tortoise-shell back comb or bandeau. It is supposed to curl around your delicate shell like ears and cluster at the nape of your neck. It is guaranteed to make you look very youug. decid edly pretty, and startlingly like Alice of Wonderland fame . . . that is. if you aren’t already loo blase. Women of Paris and London add glamour by dusting their raven locks with a blue phosphorescent powder, which gives their hair a glistening quality. The powder, heaven be praised, brushes right out. & * * Lilyan Tashman has started a vogue which you would find it fairly simple to copy: she wears a jewelled clip in her hair on either side of the forehead and a third clip in the V-shaped bodice of her gown. Dramatic! Diabolic! * # * An unusually effective and nov el combination was worked out by a beautiful New Yorker, who had black hair, wore a black dress, bright red finger nails, and a dia mond watch with a bright red rib bon strap. * * * And if you have an old party frock, give it new personality by winding a wide velvet sash around it. The sash should be as wide as a toreador's. Or else you can use a wide taffeta sash with a big puffy bow. * * * Word comes from Paris that vio lets have cast off their shrinking ways and leaped back into the lime light. Smart Parisians be lieve that violets "make” the dress. Use your own discretion. * $ * We Select for Promenade: Mal colm Bauer, because is handsome ;n a new sweater of dragon yel low (dragon yellow being one ot the rfdtou j smart colors) SeUh! plus Carol (Flash) Hurlburt. Through the aid of such redoubt able piggers as Howard Kejnper, Ralph Brown, Rosser P. Atkinson, and John Creech, a booklet has been compiled to aid R. J. (Butch) Morse in his peregrinations. Extracts follow: 1. Mention Miss Hurlburt's col umn quite frequently. 2. Ask to be introduced to such notables as Anne Kistner, Althea Peterson, and Helen Tem pleton. 3. Do not eat your lettuce with the hand, flf there is no lettuce, write us, enclosing a self-addressed stamped envelope). 4. Do not mistake Kay McVay for a girl you met on the banks of the Wabash in 1924. It was prob ably somebody else. 5. Do not attempt to kiss the house mother. (It is not consid ered good form this year.) * * * Incidentally it is rumored that Mr. Morse, Mr. Weimar and Mr. Neuberger only have one tuxedo among them. Weimar claims he will probably be asked to attend the KAT formal, and then the boys will struggle over the tux. Neuberger claims he will be vis iting an uncle by the name of An drew Simpson, of New Haven, Connecticut on the same night. No body believes him, though. Investigation shows that lost gym clothing is charged for at double value. Harry Handball says that after all the men’s gym isn’t much different from a bridge game. They both have penalty doubles. * * * ON THE POLICE BLOTTER: Roy Kilpatrick talking loudly . . . Phoebe Greenman strolling . . . Oscar Munger talking about his landlord . . . Dick Carter on his way to class . . . Bob Riddle go ing somewhere . . . It’s winter again, and here comes the rain and George Bennett. Emerald Of the Air Again today at 12:15 the Emer ald-of-the-Air reviews the dailj news. Facts and features, new: and notions. Get on the air—the news is there. Are you listening to the weekly drama at 7:15 on Tuesday eve nings? George Callas, director oi dramatics, and Barney Clark manufacturer of manuscript, are just about ready to spring some thing new. Watch for it! Washington Bystander. . By KIRKE SIMPSON "W/ASHINGTON, Feb. 1— (AP) — ™ President-elect Roosev e 11 ’ s statement defining the upholding of "the sanctity of international treaties" as the “cornerstone" of inter-governmental relations, im portant as its immediate bearirg may be upon developments of the Manchurian problem, probably was not unexpected in Europe or in [ Tokyo. Had there been any disposition - on his part to go counter to the non-recognition policy now fol i lowed by the Hoover administra i tion in the far eastern trouble, it j seems that it would have cropped I up in the course of his election campaign. The Hoover-Stimson doctrine of non-recognition of Manchu k u c crystallized during the progress of the presidential campaign. Not even the question of war debts ri valled it for attention during that ’ period. * * * A survey of Mr. Roosevelt's campaign discussions shows that he avoided any reference, direct or indirect, to the Manchurian situa tion. The explanation may be that Mr. Roosevelt was in agreement with the purposes of Hoover poli ey and with the non-recognition doctrine Secretary Stimson had proclaimed. Whether the now more emphat ically indicated continuity of that policy after Mr. Roosevelt takes office will expedite the League of Nations' handling of the Manchu rian crisis, now further threat ened by Sino-Japanese clashes on 1 the borders of China proper, is hard to foresee. Certainly, however, there can be little point in waiting to see what the change in administrations at Washington might produce in the way of a change in the American attitude. The Roosevelt-Stimson confer ence, followed by Mr. Stimson's re assertion of the non-recognition doctrine and Mr. Roosevelt's care 1 fully worded statement in sup port of that policy raise these events to the dignity of a striking illustration of the old idea that, broadly speaking, political parti sanship. in this country stops at the shore line. * * * Incidentally, the enactment of the Philippine independence bill over President Hoover's yeto sug gests that nu* many legislators were impressed by the fears ex pressed by administration spokes men that the islands might fall a prey to aggressive neighbors. That must have been based on au estimate of possible future Jap Letters to the Editor All “Letters to the Editor” must bear either 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 sees 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. Another Hour, Please ! To the Editor of the Emerald: i Sir: The recent revamping of i the reserve library schedule to al | low users of books overnight one ; hour extra, to 3 o’clock Sunday I afternoon, was fine. We liked It but it didn’t go quite far enough. Why not extend the time for J returning books to 9 o’clock daily i except Sunday? This writer is one j person who would benefit greatly j by such a change. Knowing at i closing time at night that it was j safer to take a book out for home ! consumption, without oversleeping | possibly, and incurring a fine, I should prove an incentive for do ing more home work to quite a large number. As the system is now, it is neces sary to get to the campus with reserve books before the sun is up, 8 o'clock class or not. And who can be certain, the night before, i that his overnight book will be there when the roll is called up yonder in the reserve library next morning ? Delay of opening the library re serves until ,9 o’clock is a matter of secondary consideration, but, with an eye to economy, does use of the reserves before 9 a. m. jus tify keeping them open ? R. H. P I I --- -y A Decade Ago From Daily Emerald February 2, 1923 Heads of Preppers | Orlando Hollis, freshman at the I University of Oregon, is president ! of the Oregon Association of High | School Presidents and Secretaries, ! who are meeting here this week j end. Harry G. Johnson, Jefferson | high school, is president of the Oregon High School Press associa ! tion, which meets at the same time, * * * i The story of a Portland Ore gonian will be shown in a movie, “The Making of a Newspaper,” part of the “College Night” pro gram to be put on in Villard hall this evening. * * * May Be True ; The senior sombrero was criti ! cized by an eastern Oregon high i school delegate, who said that the fourth year men reminded him of a gathering of cow-punchers stand ’ ing by for the spring round-up. * * * Pinocle tournament—Last call! Sign up before 6 o’clock tonight. * * * Portland Correspondents John Piper, journalism junior, and Ep Hoyt, senior, cover general news and sports, respectively, for the Oregonian. John Anderson, senior, writes both sports and gen eral news for the Telegram. Ar thur Rudd, a junior, is campus re porter for the Journal. anese policy and need for expan sion. If it was, certainly there has been no recent time when Japan was more preoccupied at home and on the mainland and perhaps more inclined to agree to the suggestion of the Philippine bill of safeguard ing insular independence through a general treaty to be negotiated by the United States. CLASSIFIED | -------— LOST—Kappa Sigma pin, some where on campus. Return John Zentbaum, Kappa Sig house. : LOST—Black key case containing valuable keys somewhere on | campus. Return Y Hut. Don Saunders. 1 LOST — Four-months-old- shep herd pup, white except for a brown spot on right eye and small spot on back. Answers to name of “Unco.” Call 1516. LOST — “Masefield’s Poems,” li j brary book. Finder please call 569. SUNDAY I SERVICES 11:00 A. M. “The Christ Mind —Its Radical Nature” 6:00 r. M. STUDENT FORUM Discussion Based on Dr. Rebec's Questions 1:30 F. M. EVEN UNO FORUM Dr. Samuel .Jameson Will Review Stuart ('base's "A New Deal” Congregational Church CLAY E. PALMER, Minister