University of Oregon, Eugene Kichard Neuberger, Editor Harry Schenk, Manage! Sterling Green, Managing Editor EDITORIAL ROARD Thornton Gale. Associate Editor; Jack Bellinger, Dave Wilson Julian Prescott. UPPER NEWS STAFF uschi uiuu^iT, ntna juii. Francis Pallister, Copy Ed. Bruce Hamby, Sports Ed. Parks Hitchcock. Makeup Ed. Bob Moore, Chief Nitfht Ed. Boh Guild, Dramatics Ed. Jessie Steele, Women’s Ed. Esther Hayden, Society Ed. Ray Clapp, Radio Ed. U/\ j FjUI l . non rauereon, i*iarKiirui utan, j rancii) j ai lister, Doug Polivka, Joe Saslavsky. NIGHT EDITORS: George Callas, Rob Moore, John IIollo peter, Doug MacLoan, 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 Liljeqviftt, Ann-Reed Burns, Peggy Chessman, Ruth King, Barney Clark, Belly Ohlemiller, Roberta Moody, Audrey (dark, Bill Belton, Don Oids, 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 Roth well, 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: Ray Oinpp, Editor; Harney Clark, George Callas. SECRETARIES—Louise Beers, Linn Wilcox. BUSINESS STAFF ttuv. ivigr., .»ianr iwymiTH National Adv. Mgr.. Auton Bush Promotional Mgr., Marylou Patrick Asst. Adv, Mgr., Gr a n t Theummel. Asst. Adv. Mgr., Gil Wellington Asst. Adv. Mgr. Bill Russell executive .x'creinry, uoromy Anne? Clark Circulation Mur., Ron Rew. Office Mur., Helen Stinger Class. Ad. Mgr., Althea Peterson Sez Sue, Caroline Hahn Sez Sue Asst., Louise Rice Checkinu Mur., Ruth Storla Checkinu Mur., Pearl Murphy i nr v/regon i/any r-mcrHid, omciai suuieni publication or the University of Oregon, Eugene, issued daily except Sunday and Monday during the college year. Entered in the postofficc at Eugene, Oregon, as second-class matter. Subscription rates, $2.50 a year. " . . . . 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. 'Phis frequently leads to regard ing achievements as ends in themselves, whereas the truth is that these various appearances of growth and achievement can Ik* justified only in so far as they make substantial contribution to the ultimate objec tives of education .... providing adequate spiritual and intellectual .training for youth of today—the citi zenship of tomorrow. . . . . . . . The University should be a place where 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 ami challenging problems, typical of the life and world in which they are to live, must be given them to solve. They must he taught under the expert supervision of instructors to approach the solution of these problems in a workmanlike way, with a dis ciplined intellect, with a reasonable command of the techniques that : re involved, with a high sense of in tellectual adve nture, and with ,i genuine devotion to the ideals of intellectual integrity. . . .” From the Biennial Report of the University of Oregon for 1031-82. THE FOUR HOUSEMEN GATHER VIT'AK ns an imminent anil terrible possibility ™ * must not be overlooked any longer. The strained Pacific situation is as fraught with danger as the gunpowder Balkan states or the armed hos tility along the Polisli corridor. Soon the battle fleets of the world war will concentrate their fight ing strength in the uneasy waters of Lhe Pacific. Aijded to the horror of the breakdown of our economic system, a new threat to our peace of mind is offered. In comparatively safe isolation, Japan is defying the world and has announced her inten tions of regarding her mandate territories as pos sessions and fortifying them as naval bases. Her naval leaders demand this, and as is usual with Japanese diplomacy, the military gentlemen will get their way. • Dr. Warren D. Smith, head of the department of geography, painted the.dangers of the situation at a conference with the Emerald yesterday. The Philippine islands, he points out, are surroundod by Japanese naval bases, heavily fortified in defiance of existing treaties. The Bonin, Yap, Pelew, anil Mariannes islands are within striking distance of Hawaii and the Philippines. It needs only a match to set off the inflammable magazine, some highly publicized incident to stir the wrath of the governments involved. The world war was precipitated by the killing of one man; the Spanish-American war by the sinking of a battleship. Japan’s attitude has been far from conciliatory. Her threatened withdrawal from the league is a defiance of world opinion. During the recent Singer strikes, mobs paraded with placards an nouncing bragartly: “America is big. but little Japan can lick her.’’ She has been buying materials of war from European manufacturers far in excess ol any need except a major conflict. In this strained situation who must keep the peace? Not the statesmen who have been drilled in tlic practice of old world diplomacy, special con cession, and economic exploitation. Nut the busi ness man nor manufacturer who during war finds his business stimulated and his profits increasing; and least of all, the munition maker who amasses an enormous fortune because of the use of his pro duct. It is up to the gtcat mass ol' people to keep the peace. The rank and file who have nothing to gain out of war and only their lives to lose. It is up to them to guard themselves against being swayed by “war fever" and clever propaganda. It is the duty uf the newspapers to avoid tIre panic of tlie moment and to analyze the real situation for their readers. iSome people suffer front the delusion that war is an inevitable panacea lor the ills of humanity Embarrassed political parties have, on occasion, supported war propaganda because of their in ability to dial with linancial crisis. Momentarily it has the effect of dispelling depression, of bring ing good time back to a nation. We must not overlook the fact that we ate paying tot the last war now, and that anothei one will plunge us even further into financial catalclysm. Our greatest hope for continued peace lies in the youth of today, the re is seme encouiagcmcut that disarmament will continue and war be avoided in the huge number ol rapidly growing societies and organizations opposed to war. The latest br<> chine to come to out di li i ouc from a Hungarian studiul organisation asking the Emerald to jotti in the international student campaign against growing nationalism and war fever. American youth is becoming politically consci ous. This is evidenced by the changing attitude of student organizations to such fundamental prob lems as international trade, disarmament, and world policy. There is hope that they will not be stampeded % the same means of wholesale misin formation, dissemination of prejudice, and thinly veiled lies that mobilized the college youth of 1917. If we are goin^ to have to fight a war, let us at i least have oui hand in making it. ___„____________ THAT BEAUTIFUL DETACHMENT "1TTALTER LIPPMANN, in a lecture to a group * ’ of college students, made the statement: “I doubt whether the student can do a greater work for his nation in this grave moment of its history than to detach himself from its preoccupations, re fusing to let himself be absorbed by distractions about which, as a scholar, he can do almost noth ing. The world will go on somehow. ...” Mr. Lippmann pictures the college student as completely detached from the world about him, afloat in a cloud somewhere off in space, as it were. According to his point of view, the student is in a sphere by himself, with no connection what soever with the chaos and misery, the struggle and strife, of the present day world. He would have the college student a pitiable moron, completely unaware of the things that are going ori about him in the world of science, J economics, and government. The New York Herald-Tribune’s versatile col umnist does not tell us how the student, completely unconscious of current world happenings, would get j along in the world after graduating. But then I that is an unimportant matter, perhaps, and prob ably did not concern Mr. Lippmann. Perhaps back in 1909, when Mr. Lippmann re ceived his degree from Harvard, students didn’t think. A senior in an eastern college has made this penetrating analysis: “It seems to me that the depression has made the students who were mental ly awake before the crash think more seriously and in more radical terms. It has stirred them into action in some cases. On the other hand, to those students who drift along seeking their selfish satisfactions, this depression has been a cause for building higher their defense mechanisms against thought and action. Reality has presented difficulties new to them. So they seek to' escape it by the old method of having a good time.” If students are asleep now, certainly they are going to be awakened out of their complacency if present, conditions continue. Present affairs in the Oregon government and threats to higher education by the legislature have set some students to think ing, not merely of these things as they appear on the surface, but also of the deep underlying causes of the financial difficulties that the state is facing, i Other students, however, continue following Mr. Lippmann’s advice and are hardly aware of the important things that have been going on in Salem. Family incomes are decreasing. Part-time jobs are becoming increasingly difficult to secure. Wages have been slashed. And after graduation, there is the long wait for a position. Could any student honestly face these facts quietly floating in one of Mr. Lippmann's clouds of complete de tachment ? ILLITERACY LOSES TN THE cause of education appeared three Oregon -*• students before the state legislature presenting petitions signed by more than BOO persons. The petitions asked that any cuts made in higher edu cation be in keeping with economies made in other state functions, and that, the physical plant of the University rather than faculty salaries suffer any drastic reductions. The consideration given Dick Neuberger, Butch Morse, and Steve Kahn is heartening. The gover nor, members of the ways and means committee, and membeis of the legislature listened respectfully to their case, promising cooperation within their power. It is not often that the students of a col lege are able to voice their views and win over members of the governing body; not often enough, we think. Above everything else it proves the power of concerted action and the willingness of the harrassed legislature to listening to-arguments that are sound anti logical. This.is the case in spite of the pressure of lobbying groups who would wreck the state educational institutions in the interests of economy. The immediate result of the action of the ways and means committee is to assure the continuance of the University even though drastic economies will have to be practiced. Faculty reductions will j not be as severe as first proposed. This is in line with the Emerald's arugment that maintainance, buildings, and supplies should suffer rather than personnel. Should the cut have been $1,000,000, as proposed by William Woodward, it would have necessitated j the closing of Oregon. Oregon State, or the medical school, and three normal schools. The action of the 1 committee lias averted a serious blow to the cause of education in Oregon. \ MILLION DOLLAR Qt'ARTKKBADK rPHK MINNESOTA DAILY, student paper at the A University of Minnesota, raises the question of compensation for football players. It points out that coaches are paid and every effort bent to make the game pay, but that the only return for the ath lete is "that tired, aching feeling" and a great deal of talk about "fighting for the dear old alma mater.” This is certainly commercialism with a ven ( geanci and would give rise to all sorts of such difficult questions as to wage scale, hours a day , of training, and the open and closed shop. It would probably necessitate the interference of the intcr : state commerce commission, since many of Minne . stitu's heftiest sons are playing under the Oregon colors. However, if the system were inaugurated many curious questions would arise. Brown of Oregon State would hear of a higher wage scale at Wash ington and promptly strike the night before the lug game Non-union fix)tball teams would be boy cotted and picketed. Me wait the result of the Minnesota Daily’s i impaigu with interest, though the system is hardly applicable to our condition here. With the present A. S. u. O finances wo would have to do some mighty close figuring at V “olworLh’s bargain counter. i Give ’em a Hand! - - By KEN FERGUSON mar ——— v ' 1 ■ ■ —.1 — promenade bycaroHiurlburt | JIM EMMETT selects:'Rosser At kinson, because he considers him one of the ten best-dressed men on the campus. * * * With the legislature chopping an ungodly sum off the appropria tions for higher education, I sup pose we should all go and bury our heads in the graveyard, don sack-cloth and ashes, and in other ways act as if the end of sanity had come. But, society being what it is, I understand that we shall have to continue dressing. So let’s fool the legislature and other aug ust bodies by dressing smartly. * * * Such little things often consti tute smartness. Over 50 per cent of us woar berets. Yesterday morning I gazed about in the classroom and was astounded at how few of these berets were worn with chic. A beret worn on the back of the head, completely off the forehead, Is decidedly 1931. It Lakes only a twist of the hand to pull your beret down over your forehead, making you correctly 1933. Such a small thing, mes cnfants, and yet how telling! * * * Fashion is so full of a number of details! Try wearing a big bow under your chin, as Betsy Steiwer does with her tan boucle suit. It’s delightfully ingenue, flattering, and very, veryr smart. When you go a-golfing, wear a light skirt with a dark top and a dark beret. The aggravating little white ball is guaranteed to go at least ten yards farther. * * * When you buy your new coat, be sure that it is of' the swagger va riety and that it comes only to your knees. Another innovation, reminiscent of our childhood days, is the mid dy-blouse motif. Certain after noon frocks, with big puffy sleeves, are best designed with wide square collars anchored in the back. ❖ * * If you are a tennis advocate, try wearing shorts. You may startle the legislature and Rhino, but at least you can cover the court with greater agility. That’s something. * * * Evening gowns are being de signed with the fullness in the back . . . trailing ruffles, flounces. It gives greater dignity, but a dig nity tempered with grace. It makes you bewilderingly feminine. * * * If one may characterize these new styles, I should say that they are either boyish, not masculine, or that they are young, graceful, feminine in the extreme. Sophis tication has been cast aside. Ele gance has been tempered. To paraphrase the “Ancient Mariner:’’ “a sweeter and a wider race we rise out of le crise." We Select for Promenade: Fran ces Spence, because she is demure yet arresting in a black velvet for mal with wide rustlings of taffeta over the shoulder ... a fascinat ing contrast for her blond hair. — Assault and Battery Hitchcock || Virginia Howard reports that she last saw her long-lost dog on the Phi Delt front lawn. Was it a coincidence that the boys had hash for dinner that evening? * * s Speaking of the boys from the barn. Bob McCombs remarks that the Phi Delt greeting is now as follows: “Stick around and we ll I open a window." * * * Ho-llum Column P. J. Schissler will leave today: Football players express regret] in seeing former mentor depart. Headline Oregon State Barome ter. $ * ♦ A news note tells us that any essay contest is open to all stu dents, sponsored by the United Daughters of the Confederacy of I West VirginiaWest Virginia. Isn't that just too sweet of the dear girls from the United foaughters of the Confederacy of West Vir ginia. We must write them and tell them wc think the work they are carrying on is just too brave for words. 5» * * Ex-Oregon Student To Return From Mexico. Headline, Ore. Daily Emerald. We can't see why. ° V * n’t Coincidental with the contest to find the best looking senior man we re going to run a contest to find the best looking man in any class. Here is our list of choices and the companies they are backed by: I. Orville tiled i Bailey. The Better Beta Bread and Baking As sociation of West Bend, New Hampshire. 2. Jack (Jake) Cate. Western Fire-Arms and Munitions corpora tion. 3. Jake (Pretty-boy) Stahl. Al phabet Soup company of Jackson ville, Fla. 4. Bill (Applejack) Kinley. Thirteenth St. Brewers associa tion. 5. Hal (Ginrickeyi Birkenshaw. Nesco Animal Cracker company, Austin, Texas. Daily balloting will be held on all candidates, with results and returns broadcast every hour. * * * ON THE POLICE BLOTTER: | Roy McMullen staring pensively . . . Reynolds Allen back at the slot machine . . . Steve Smith smoking . . . Betty Karkeet here and there . . . Dick Hides running. A Decade Ago From Daily Emerald February 4, 1923 Old Scottish Customs A proposal to compel the Fni versity of Oregon and Oregon State College to take care of all of llii-ir expenses out of the mill age taxes appeared ir the senate today. * * * Can \ou Believe It? Toronto co-eds arc revolting against the lavish expenditures showered upon them by chivalrous males, according to a report from that city. Some girls declared that they would prefer a street ear to a ta.\) for a dance date. * * * sheer Diplomacy ExauptraUtd students >( the Ohio State college recently tried the gentle art of bribing the girls in the registrar’s office to change their programs for them. One of the bribes offered consisted of a pair of silk hose, but the good girl j wouldn’t weaken. * * * z —And Again Oregon again tasted defeat at the hands of O. A. C. last night when they were swamped to the tune of 39 to 15. * # * To Fit a Compact Dean Straub is conducting a contest among the women on the campus to see which one can write the shortest and most complete code of ethics for Oregon women. The code, the dean said, must be short enough to be written on a post card. Contemporary Opinion . . . Enough Is Enough Wf/HEN the legislature went into session, this newspaper, in view of the need for economy, re solved not to oppose any action which that body might take to ward reducing state expenses. It was believed that criticism of any single item of reduction might slow down the whole process—a process vital to the welfare of the state. The resolution must.be modified to the extent of saying that higher education is being made to take an over-heavy share of the cuts. Those cuts have gone as far as they should go. After all, of the $50,000,000 in taxes raised each year in Oregon, only $2,000,000 (4 per cent t goes to higher education, j and if the institutions of higher learning were abolished altogether, the people still would be bearing 96 per cent of the burden previous ly borne. This, however, one would never guess by following the pub lic discussions and the delibera tions of the legislature. One would be led by them to believe that by further reductions imposed upon these Institutions, the total burden could be noticeably lightened. The trouble in the legislature has been that the institutions of high-! or education, sensing public dis pleasure over the Corvallis-Eugene difficulties, and realizing also the extreme need, have been more will ing than most other state activi ties to accept reductions. Since the 1929-30 biennium they have,j voluntarily, accepted a cut of ap proximately 32 per cent. In the coming biennium, if the present signs are right, they will be re ceiving about 42 per cent less in tax money than they were receiv ing eleven years ago. Instead of accepting and appre ciating this attitude, and passing on to state activities which arc just as expensive and which have not shown such willingness to co operate. there are members of the legislature who continue to pon der over the institutions of higher education, wondering where they can cut further. If they cut fur ther. some of them will breathe their last. A study of increase in taxation in Oregon during the ten-year pe riod. 1921 to 1931. reveals the principal functions have contrib uted to the increase as follows: Percentage Elementary and high schools 49.1 rowns and cities .22.6 Roads and highways .21.9 Ports and docks . 5.1 \11 higher education . 1.0 Total 100.0 Evidently higher education ha..-, been the least of the offenders in bringing upon the state the condi tion which it now faces. However, there is a wise old saying from pioneers days to> the effect that it is the squeaky wheel which gets greased, and some of the other functions of government appear to have been doing a lot of squeak-! ing, and getting a lot of greasing, while higher education has gone i along with about the same allot- ( ment of grease as in earlier and : less reckless times. It now offers ; to get along with a whole lot less, I and nothing more should be asked.—Morning Oregonian. - -j i By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, D. C., Feb. 3— ™ (AP)—Despite the extraordin ary number of election contests— 11—with which the new house will have to deal when it convenes after inauguration, proportions of j the Democratic majority are so large in unchallenged seats that no particular political significance | attaches to them. They may be, and no doubt are, j vitally important to the contes tants and contestees. No such significant results pos sibly could flow out of what is done by the house itself—the only constitutional judge of the qualifi cations of its membership—about these 11 proceedings as one simi lar contest in 1930 might have in volved. Control of the house then hung on such small events. Had there been 11 house contests filed after that by-election, it would have been major news and deferred for long a decision as to which party was to control that house. * * * What actually changed the pres ent house from Republican to Democratic control after election but before its first session was deaths among members-elect. The Democratic tidal wave that swept the opposition under this year so decidedly was slow in starting and cumulative in effect. The present house was safely Re publican the day after election yet even more solidly in Democratic hands a few months later when it first met. There have been deaths already among members-elect of the next house. The 1932 election results were so overwhelming, however, that neither contests nor deaths nor both could upset Democratic control before the next congres sional elections next year. If all contestants were success ful, it would only add to the Demo cratic majority. There are more Democrats than Republicans un willing to accept the verdict of the voters at face value and who raise the cry of fraud. The number of Republican lame - ducks in the present house, something upward of a hundred, would only be in creased if that cry was generally heeded by the next house. * * * There is evidence, , too, that President-elect Roosevelt and his advisers are counting heavily upon , the Democratic majorities in the new senate and house in shaping their plans for his administration. Having the party whiphand so substantially in the congress to come, reliable, enduring majorities to put through an administration legislative program in at least the early stages of the congressional session are reasonably to be ex pected, even if there is some bolt ing among Democrats in both houses. Quite likely it is the prospect of a highly favorable situation “on the hill” in the next congress j which makes Mr. Roosevelt so loath to intervene now in muddled legislative situation of the lame duck session. However powerful might be his influence now, in advance of his inauguration, it will be many times as great as president. 11-'-—I Books By JOHN SELBY INFLUENCED, perhaps, by the signs of the times, H. G. Weils has mixed a little more novel into the sociological treatise he pub lishes this week as "The Bulping ton of Blup.” And yet treatise is scarcely the! word. Perhaps the proper term is discussion, for, although there is hardly a page on which there is not material for an essay qn some j phase of modern life, there seems to be small attempt to arrive at definite conclusions. Wells begins with his Theodore Bulpington as a preadolescent (Blup. just to clear the air, is a boyish contraction of Blayport, Theodore's village i. Theodore meets one rather fu tile pose in his parents; a relig ious poseur in the person of a fam ily intimate; science personified by a leighbor family, and so on. There comes adult emotion, or as nearly adult emotion as Theo dore can manage. The war shreds the world—and Theodore. He emerges a thoroughly unim-j port ant, faintly disagreeable, but pathetic person. And the reader may emerge from the book with the feeling that life is fairly futile anyway. I he book j of the u eek coutaiu eery little sweetness and light, on We Thought So Too To tlic Editor of the Emerald: A review in the Emerald of the orchestra concert on Sunday, Jan uary 22, contained a statement that I should like to correct. I had intended letting it pass with out comment, but even yet, I am questioned as to the verity of the statement. The critic remarked that the last movement of the Bruch Con certo for violin and orchestra was accompanied by piano instead of orchestra and didn't like the idea. Neither do I, but it has a certain fascination because of its very ab surdity now that my attention is called to it. As a matter of fact, the entire concerto was accom panied by the orchestra, and any other procedure would be unthink able. The critic's mathematics were sound for there were three movements listed, and only one definite pause. This would logical ly indicate, if nothing else were taken into consideration, that only two parts had been played. The catch lies in the fact that after the solo part of the first move ment is played, the orchestra modulates into the slow move ment and with a hardly percep tible pause, the adagio, a slow movement, begins. The only things that indicate this change are that the tempo is slow instead of fast, the key is different, the rhythmic pulse is in three instead of four, and the melodic material is entirely new. Otherwise, there is nothing to differentiate it from the first movement. The last movement, of finale, which is fast and brilliant, is so obviously a cli max to the whole work that it never occurred to me that it could be mistaken for an adagio. It was my fault for not clearing this up in the program notes. Concer tos and sonatas have a bad habit of being written this way and be ing a trap for unwary reviewers. Many well-known critics have come to grief in some such man ner in the early stages of their careers, and it is with no intention of berating the Emerald critic, but with the hope of clearing up some of the confusion which exists that I am writing this letter. The num ber that was played with piano was a Fugue, by Tartini, arranged by Fritz Kreisler, and was played as an encore. I had considered having Miss Brockman play a Bach number for violin alone as an encore. I dread to think of the accusations that might have been hurled at us in that case. -Li* x.xuaxiig, j. oxxuuxu xxx\e uu ex press my appreciation to the Emerald for its cooperation in the matter of publicity and my gratifi cation at the large student atten dance and intelligent interest. I was extremely proud of the. extra ordinarily beautiful playing of Miss Brockman and of the fine work of the orchestra. In this group, and in the band, is an un usual array of fine talents and personalities—one which would be difficult to duplicate anywhere under similar circumstances. The credit they receive is only nomi nal and the many hours of rehear sals that are required of them arc given because they love good music and have a feeling of pride in playing it well. It is a genu ine pleasure to work with them. The ambitious schedule of the A. S. U. O. should do a lot towards acquainting the students of Ore gon with the talent in their midst. The band concert provides the neit opportunity. Cordially yours, REX UNDERWOOD, Head, Dept, of String Instruments. the whole. There is George Dan gerfield’s “Bengal Mutiny," for an example, in which a man who should know the whole story de scribes in a reasonably small space and without too definite a bias just what happened to India in 1857. The Sepoy uprisings were “sprung" by a most insignificant lever, namely the refusal of the native troops to use ammunition greased in a certain way. But the effects of this illy chos en grease upon British and Indian history are visible today, and for this reason Mr. Dangerfield’s ex planation has a certain timeliness as well as a considerable historical value. Campus Calendar (Continued from Page One) table for Eugene ministers at the Methodist church at 11 o’clock Monday. He will speak on a phase of the psychology of religion. * * * Temenids will meet Sunday at 5 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Wein rick, 765 East 17th avenue. The illness of Mrs. Dunn has necessi tated the change. '* * * The Young People’s Christian Endeavor society will have charge of the regular Sunday evening hurch service at 5 p m, tomorro'.v it the Fir?t Christian church.