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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1933)
University of Oregon, Eugene Richard Neuberger, Editor Harry Schenk, Manager Sterling Green, Managing Editor EDITORIAL BOARD Thornton Oale, Associate Editor; Jack Bellinger, Dave Wilson Julian Prescott. " UPPER NEWS STAFF Oscar Munger, news kj<i. Francis Pallister. Copy Ed. Bruce Hamby, Sports Ed. Parks Hitchcock, Makeup Ed. Bob Moore, Chief Night Ed. donn i»ross, juiicrary mu 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 FaJ lister, Doug Polivka, Joe Saslavsky. NIGHT EDITORS: George Callas, Bob Moore, John Hollo peter, Doug MacLean, Bob Butler, Bob Couch. SPORTS STAFF: Malcolm Bauer, Aunt. Ed.; Ned Simpson, Ben Back, Bob Avison, Jack Chinnoek. 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 Ohlemlller, Roberta Moody, Audrey Clark, 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 McNie.e, Frances Rothwell, Caroline Rogers, Henriette Horak, Catherine Coppers, Claire Bryson, Bingham Powell. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Frances Neth, Betty Gear hart, Margaret Corum, Georgina GildCz, Elma Giles, Carmen Blaise, Bernice Priest, Dorothy Paley, Evelyn Schmidt. RADIO STAFF: Roy Clapp, Editor; Barney Clark, George Callas. SECRETARIES—Louise Beers, Lina Wilcox. BUSINESS STAFF A civ. xngr., ivmnr ueymers National Adv. Mgr., Auten Bush Promotional Mgr., Marylou Patrick Asst Adv, Mgr., Gr a n t Theummel. Asst. Adv. Mgr., GU Wellington Asst Adv. Mgr. Bill Russell Executive necrvuiry, uwi uuiy Anne Clark 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 Mtrr.. Pearl Murohy ADVERTISING ASSISTANTS: Tom Holeman, Bill McCall, Ruth Vanrilce, Fred Fisher, Ed Labbe, Elisa Addis, Corrinne Plath, Phyllis Dent, Peter Gantmbein, Bill Meissner, Patsv Lee. Jeannette Thompson, Ruth Baker, Betty Powers, Bob Butler, Carl Heidel, George Brice, Charles Darling, Parker Favier, Tom Clapp. OFFICE ASSISTANTS: Betty Brets her, Patricia Campbell, Kathryn Greenwood, Jane Bishop, Elma Giles, Eugenia Hunt, Gene Bailey, Marjorie McNiece, Wilta Bitz, Betty Shoemaker, Ruth Bycrly, Mary Jane Jenkins. EDITORIAL OFFICES, Journalism Bldg. Phone 8300—News Room, Local 355; Editor and Managing Editor, Local 354. BUSINESS OFFICE, McArthur Court. Phone 3800—Local 214. A member of the Major College Publications, represented by A. J. Norris Hill Co., 321 E. 43rd St.. New York City ; 123 W. Madison St., Chicago; 1004 End Ave., Seattle; 1206 Maple Ave., Los Angeles; Call Building, San Francisco. . The Oregon Dally Emerald, official student publication of the University of Oregon, Eugene, issued daily except Sunday and Monday during the college year. Entered in the nostoffice at Eugene, Oregon, as second-class matter. Subscription rates, 82.50 a year. The Emerald’s Creed for Oregon “ . . . . There is ulways 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 ap end. There is always a glowing sense of satisfaction in the natural impulse for expansion. This frequently leads to regard ing achievements as enqs in themselves, whereas the truth Is that these various appearances of growth and achievement can be justified onjy 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 and challenging problems, typical of the life and world In which they are to live, must be given them to qolve. They must be taught under thfi 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 rre involved, with a high sense of in tellectual adventure, and with a genuine devotion to the ideals of intellectual integrity. . . —From the Biennial Report of the University of Oregon for 1031-32. The American people cannot be too careful in guarding the freedom of speech and of the press against curtailment qs to the discussion of public affairs and the character and conduct of public men. —Cqrl Schurs. CHILDREN—AND MORTAR THE STRUGGLE to save higher education from bloody sacrifice at the hands of the high-priests of the political cults proceeds onward to an inde terminate conclusion. The scholars and educators still strive valiantly to protect what they know to be the cultural aud intellectual nucleus of the nation. The turmoil is confined to no specific locality. It is stormy in Oregon; it is even stormier else where. Through it all, from Maine to Puget sound, from Louisiana to the Canadian border, exists a widely prevalent condition. Higher educa tion is hearing a far greater proportion of the gen eral retrenchment than it can endure and still maintain itself on a basis compatible with its pur poses and position. Highways, police forces, armaments, prisons, commissions, asylums the politicians have cut them all, but the brunt has been shoved onto edu cation. "Eire a professor!” rings more pleasingly in the demagogues' ears than "Cut down the police force!" or "Limit the national guard!" It is ngainst such conditions that the nation's foremost scholars and educators are directing their influence and en deavors. They have the statesmen on their side; it is the politicians who oppose them. One of the foremost gladiators in the amphi theatre for higher education is Dr. William Trufant Foster, ex-president of Reed college, and now a noted writet* and scholar. University of Orogou stu dents will have an opportunity to hear him when he speaks at Villard hall Thursday night. In an appearance at Portland Sunday, he uttered some pungent comments on higher education, the sub stance of which follow: “They have cut government payrolls and thrown the victims into the bread lines. Still they want more cutting. How much is enough? They do not say. Especially they insist on cutting down expen ditures in education. They have liquidated business. Now they want to liquidate education. They have thrown 40.000 teachers out of work. Now they call lor further retrenchment. "The tragic mistake of the retrenchment is the ■assumption that any reduction of taxes, at any cost, is economy. It is possible to economize on education until we have broken down the morale of the aation, and destroyed the very institutions which the retrenchers are trying to protect. "There is no economic reason why the education of youth must go up aud down with the stock market. The children of today should not be forced to pay for the mistakes of their patents Payments can wait; childten cannot. No tO-year-old child will ever again be to yours old The next generation should not be crucified on the cross of false econ omy." To those who have followed the words of Gleuti Frank, Arnold Rennett Hall, and many others on the subject, Dr. Foster's fact* ring as a fitting cli max. His phrases portray vividly and dramatically the mistake of economizing by Impairing the effi ciency of higher education. "Payments can wait," be say:., "but cbXirez casaci.'’ -S* is TfitJC to vt«, -M~3" vy between Mink point and Turtle ridge is gravel in stead of concrete. But a generation of future citi-' zens of the United States will be unjustly and cruelly crippled throughout their lives if higher learning is slaughtered upon the altar of political expediency. . A bridge or a mile of concrete can wait. A j child cannot. That kind of logic ought to sway the j politicians. Even they can understand the differ-1 ence between flesh and blood and mortar and steel. I DEPRESSION DANCES THERE are those of us who remember when all winter-term house dances were at either the Eugene or Osborn hotels and when a five dollar tax for the annual formal was a matter of course. Those days are past. A few of the hardier fra ternities and sororities have seen their way clear to have hotel dances this term, but only a few. The majority are using their own houses and making the affairs either informal or semi-formal. And the strange part of all this enforced econ omy is that house dances this year are as enjoyable, if not more so, than any past affairs. Most house interiors are handsome enough to lend atmosphere to any formal occasion, and with a few flood-lights and possibly the conventional palms, can be easily transformed into attractive dance floors. The drudgery and expense of decorating is eliminated, and a, little extra money can be applied to the music or programs. Punch has replaced elaborate intermission meals, and finances and digestions have profited thereby. House dances this year are more informal, less work, more economic, and still lots of fun. AS THE WORLD SPINS MADLY PROM the four corners of the earth comes news bewildering in variety and foreboding in portent. It makes headlines in the newspapers, conferences in the capitals, and sober thought wherever men meet and think. But before the fraternity fireplace all is calm; words are blithe and spirits are gay. To the news that the would-be assassin of President-elect Roose velt is sentenced to an 80-year term, the collegiate reply is short and succinct—“poor sucker!” The tidings of prohibition repeal action in con gress evoke brief comment from the Greek brethren. “What the hell?” is the rhetorical retort. With the price war rampant in Eugene, beer can be had as low as a dime a quart, and corn likker for a mere six bits. So why the fuss about repeal? Even the sombre rumblings of war in the Orient go unchallenged in the portals of the tri sigmas. Why bother that the world after nearly 20 years again hovers on'the brink of armageddon? With the returns of the latest Aggie basketball game still ringing in their ears, why should our Univer versity men pause to consider matters of greater moment ? And when glaring headlines fairly shout the news of impending conflict, the lackadaisical I rejoinder of Joe College drawlingly comes through j the haze of cigarette smoke; “Aw, shoot the chinks. Too many of ’em now.” It’s getting so that it’s a mark of distinction to have even a socialist club on the campu3. i Contemporary ==Opinion= Honor Systems TNTERESTING reading is the recent report of a study of the "honor system" in colleges and universities. There was a time when with the aban don characteristic of the intercollegiate world the "honor system” was being debated, lauded, adopted, or adapted on campuses from coast to coast. Dis illusionment followed close; it was found that the system did not function unerringly and with dis regard to local conditions surrounding it. And, of course, there were those who were quick to see in the failure of the system the general breakdown of the entire collegiate moral fabric. The observations of Franklin I. Sheeder, of what in his report he calls conditions prerequisite to the development of a true and active honor spirit, are sufficiently stimulating to warrant condensed quotation (1) A student body that is normally and intel lectually worthy of a college education .... Stu dents should not be admitted to college who are mentally or morally unfit. This calls for a careful examination of the pre-college histories of all pros pective candidates for admission and a courageous determination to sacrifice quantity for quality. . . . (2) A student body that is serious in its pur poses- i. e., individuals who are really in quest of an education. This means the discovery and modi fication (or elimination) of the lazy student at the earliest possible moment in his college career. . . . (3> A faculty group that knows as much about youth as it knows about the subject matter which It teaches, and because of this knowledge has such sympathy for the confidence in youth as to be trust ful rather than suspicious in its dealings with them. . . . , hi An eaucauonai pnuosopny wmcn places me I emphasis upon growing rather than upon merely learning facts. This is one of the most revolution ary conceptions in modern educational thinking. . . . (5) Less emphasis upon examinations, grades and credits. This is a natural outcome of the adoption of the educational philosophy suggested above. . . . tOI The realization that a curriculum to be truly educative must be built upon the interests and needs of individual persons. Such a curriculum will not impose upon the student an array of courses which are meaningless to him. At the same time, if , properly administered it will provide ail that is j necessary to make him a fully integrated person * ality. Too often the discussion of student honor has hinged ou the question of cheating in examinations and on the justification for a student reporting in fractions of the code. The real issue lies deeper, is education itself merely a series of graduated ac quisitions of knowledge? oi is it something infinite ly more? Naturally, we are impelled to the second alternative. Hut that does not lead us to agree that a "fully integrated personality" is the end to seek. Rather, life and education assume signifi cance aud drive as we find causes aud loyalties out side ourselves which lead us to forget ourselves save as we see the need for preparation iu order: that our service might be richer aud more effective. Taken out of this natural social setting education a J»y?is4 of iasoinjjle pi-ob’ear 3*udsn. i* bl't "a-- —TT'ttee'MltirtxTi. i Another Trophy for Troy By; KEN FERGUSON promenade by carol hurlburt rpHE event for which the world waits anxiously, breathlessly, is the inauguration of Franklin Delano Roosevelt as president of these United States on March 4. One can almost feel the apprehen sion in the very air one breathes. Nothing is being done, all activity is at a standstill in the interim. # * # What we of the "world of fash ion” have been waiting to know is what Mrs. Roosevelt will wear at her husband's inauguration. A press dispatch from New York tells that while she officially re ceives the distinction of becoming the first lady of our land, Mrs. Roosevelt will be clad in a grey velvet gown that reaches to her ankles, has long full sleeves puffed after the Victorian manner, and a regal stand-up collar. She will wear dark blue kid pumps. These are low-heeled in order that she may better endure the grueling task of standing throughout the lond day. # * * It is enlightening of Mrs. Roose velt’s character that she took only thirty minutes to purchase her outfit. What efficiency! * * * Another event, which is of in ternational importance, has been thrust forcibly upon us. We brought it to your attention Sat urday when we discussed the vogue for trousers, but, more gen erally, it may be called the ap pearance of the masculine-femi nine mode. * # * If you recall, women of the post war period almost lost their heads in an endeavor to ape men’s clothes. The pendulum swung back, and the year 1932 marked the high-water mark of intense femininity. 1933 launches a swing to the extreme left. The outstand ing example of this mode is the strictly tailored suit. * * * Last Christmas when Henri the stylist returned from New York he told me that the smartest thing for spring would be this tailored suit, which is designed on man nish lines. The skirts are straight. The jackets are trim with a well groomed air. Some are single breasted; others double-breasted. Some, after the manner of men's suits, have slightly padded shoul ders. v * * The suits are most chic when they come in men’s suiting with a firm smooth weave; are popular j when a white hair-line runs through the cloth. Perhaps you > will prefer your suit in flannel of! dark blue or grey. Tweeds, espe- j eially those with a herringbone! design, have rushed to the fore, i But if you are more exquisite in your taste, have your suit made from imported French wool. * $ * The top of your suit may be of a dark bright color, and you will find this contrast not only in col ors but in patterns, because some of the models combine both checks and plaids, for example, but use fabrics of the same weave. $ ¥ * These suits, of course, are in tended for street wear, so that you may meet man upon his own ground, look him in the eye and feel his equal tin a skirt I always feel his superior!!. But. most precious daughters of Eve. don’t breath a sigh of relief and think that these mannish -v>r*r««v ’ ** * (j • f» hours. Intriguing evening gowns, built on sculptured lines, are com plimented by short tailored jack ets. Mess jackets, inspired by the cadet’s uniform, have been grad uated with high honors into the full-dress evening class. • * • The inconsistent thing about this masculine mode is that these mess jackets, while they cling to the waistline and have all masculine characteristics, such as a low-cut front, revers, and belt, sometimes have full Victorian sleeves than which nothing could be more fem inine. ♦ * * O, woman, thy middle name is inconsistency . . . but isn’t that a woman’s privilege ? * * • We select for Promenade: Irene Van Houten because she exempli fies the feminine mode in an eve ning gown of palest blue. Made with a tucked bodice of chiffon, it has a long clinging skirt of lace, a low decolletage in black and a wide bow of the pale blue satin. The ensemble is complete with slippers of blue and hose of blue lace. Washington Bystander. . By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, Feb. 20.—(AP) ** —One thing can be said of Speaker Garner's trip to the thea tre to hear a political parody on the new job to which he will go March 4, the vice-presidency. Nothing said jokingly about that post possibly could be more bit ing than what Garner has been saying about it for years. Yet just about the time Garner was enjoying the wise-cracking at the vice-presidency, President-elect Roosevelt was letting it be known that he long ago, when running for the vice-presidency, had fav ored cabinet service for the vice president and proposed to draft Mr. Garner for such duty. Nor will it be merely a stand-by service in Garner’s case. That he is to play an important part in the Roosevelt “new deal1’ plans has been obvious from the start. » * * But for the fact that Garner, with his 30-year background, will be available as vice-president for off-stage contacts with his old col leagues of the house, the names of house ’members certainly would have passed through the public dis cussion of possible cabinet timber. As it was, a flock of senators bobbed in and out of the cabinet picture; but not a single house member. It has been customary for all in coming presidents to seek a con-! tact through their own official family with the house. President Hoover's appointment of the late Jim Good of Iowa as secretary of war and his drafting of Walter Newton of Minnesota, just re-elect ed to the house, into his personal, secretariat illustrate that theory. With Jack Garner at his side, how ever, Mr. Roosevelt need not go j farther. * * * Incidentally, Roosevelt's banter- ] ing offer to the news writers at! Warm Springs to bet that SO per ! cent of their published specula tions as to his cabinet selections would be wrong overlooks the fact that they have left almost no na tlnntJiv known ^ r< this speculations. Somebody ought to have taken Mr. Roosevelt up. One trouble the president-elect seems to have had in making his cabinet is the embarrassment of riches. There are so many demo crats held by other democrats to be fully qualified to fill any of the posts that it looks like a forest of cabinet timber. Assault and Battery Hitchcock I HEADLINE: DOUGLASS IS MUM. Must be good for the flower business, anyway. Jim Emmett, suit and cloak ty coon, releases the following rates for men students wishing to be se lected as the best-dressed men on the campus. Note: any of the following purchases entitle the buyer to the title of fifth-best dressed man or eighteenth-best dressed man as the numbers indi cate: 1. One suit clothing plus horn rimmed spectacles .24 2. One tie, striped .16 3. Two sweaters and a handball, 3 4. Two handballs and a sweater, 7 One set earmuffs and a pack age Mothersills seasick rem edy .1 6. One top silk hat and three ties (railroad) .6 * * * Our idea of tough luck is the case of Guiseppe Zangara who got 80 years for missing the gent he shot at. Most college men have been missing for years and still manage to keep out of the pen. * * * Advices from the firing line in form us that Rosy Gagnon, feet ball satellite, has followed in the trail of his mighty compatriot, Senator R. J. Morse and started pigging in a bigger and more ex tensive way. It * * # It is rumored in diplomatic cir cles that the Sigma Nus and the mill-race have broken off rela tions. Ardent prohis charge that the millrace is bringing beer-bot tles inside the three-mile limit. Bob Hammond claims that he wishes that the mill-race would go mind its own business and keep away from their back yard. There is considerable talk of importing some branch of the McKenzie to take the place of the millrace if this impudence is not ceased imme diately. * * * ON THE POLICE BLOTTER: Bob Stranin getting his daily air . . . Speck Murray studying . . . Clark Thompson upside down on the horizontal bar . . . Euphemea Laraway plus ritz . . . Bill Catlow running around in circles . . . Bob Johnston giving the College Side the once over. 1 ■ ■ ■" iii ! (Questionnaire -By BARNEY CLARK THE following are the answers to the questions furnished by Alfred L. Lomax, professor of bus iness administration, in last Sat urdays Emerald. I. The "Buy American" cam paign is a well meant but misdi rected effort to break the depres sion by focusing the attention.of; buyers on the purchases of Ameri can goods to the exclusion of for eign goods. Some American goods contain imported materials, Therefore," Americans who pur such articles arc indirectly SilOO''rv!nc- fortigO <- m — c > * Since only 35 per cent (by value) of our cargo trade is carried in American bottoms, and it is the evident intention of the Shipping Board that greater amounts of our foreign commerce shall be carried under the American flag, there ap pears to be an inconsistency in our national policy, if the “Buy Amer ican” campaign can be called a 1 policy. 2. According to the merchant marine act of 1920, the president was empowered to put into effect the coastwise laws to the Philip pine Islands when it was thought the tonnage would warrant such an arrangement. To date that ha3 not been done, and the export fig ures for the islands are given in the Commerce Yearbook covering foreign trade. 3. There is no standard interpre tation of the term, “alongside.” The custom of the port determines that. In one port, "alongside’’ means within 90 feet of the ship’s side. Usually it means close enough so that the ship’s tackle can take the cargo. 4. The term "loading” is freely interpreted in marine insurance as beginning at that time when the ship’s slings have the cargo in custody. A Decade Ago From Daily Emerald February 21, 1923 Poor Fish ’Mid doleful oompahs from in struments of musical notoriety two little goldfish were soulfully low ered to their grave ’neath the old Alpha Phi oaks this afternoon. It seems that some campus hero dan gled the Alpha Phis’ pets by their tails and the pore things died— ’stoo bad. * * * Sprechen Sie Deutsch? Three Old World students from Germany and Holland will pay the campus a visit on March 4th, as the first delegates of a series of six students to visit America from foreign countries. * » * No Crooner Oregon students will have the opportunity to hear one of Amer ica’s most noted tenors this eve ning when Paul Althouse gives a recital of purely American songs. * * * Seven students were found eli gible today for degrees by the Faculty club in its monthly meet ing. * * * Gas and Oil, Too Spring is here. Flowers are blooming, almost anyway, birds are singing, and piggers (God bless ’em) are showing the girls a good time. Co-eds blossom out in new creations, and young men’s thoughts turn nightly—aw heck. On Other !nii!lllllllll!i;i|llil!litllllllllll!|||||||!l|||||||||||||||[|!|i||ini||!!|| Campuses Change the Name fT’HERE is little that can justly be said in opposition to the clamor aroused by citizens of the southern part of this state to sever U. C. L. A. from its mother uni versity, U. C. at Berkeley. Not altogether indifferent to the problems of California’s state university, or universities, the av erage tuition-payer of this vicinity would undoubtedly view such a movement with mild approbation. After all, U. C. and U. C. L. A. are in fact already two separate institutions, each with its own lo cal problems, its own philosophers, its own social heritage. Then, too, the administrative tie between the two schools is said to be respon sible for the fact that they have 1 -— ; | A New Yorker At Large gmi!ii:iiiiii:iiiii!:iiM!,uiimiiiM|i|!iiiimi|n:|:*|!!i||i",inm|"i*'i|iiniii":ii|!!|""imi By MARK BARRON |\-EW YORK, Feb. 20—Joe Cook ^ is back from a very unhappy invasion of London, and the great trek of celebrities has started mew to his Lake Hopatcong •state. This pride of Evansville, Ind. (although he is really Spanish and born Joseph Lopez), brought his ;omicalities to the Piccadilly stage right at the heat of the “Buy British” campaign, and he found our cousins across the sea in no mood to entertain Broadway stars. * * * When a brochure upon world famous hosts is compiled, then the name of Cook must come well up at the head of the list. His domain on a New Jersey lake has been built especially for the entertain ment of his famous guests. And what a line-up of guests: Jack Dempsey, Gov. A. Harry Moore, Marc Connelly, the late Hudson Maxim—in fact, the list includes spotlight names from such varied professions as politics, journalism, art, music, theater, police departments, diplomacy. His parties are democratic. Virtually every stage hand in Manhattan has been there. One of his typical parties win include a senator, a prize fighter, a portrait painter, a newspaper man, a stage hand, a musician, a detective, and a couple of fellows who are just out of work. They come there for conversa tion, sports and food that delights the most exacting of epicures. Be sides his many talents on the stage, Joe is a noted chef. His pride is a huge outdoor fireplace where he barbecues chickens, steaks and spare ribs in the wood of a smoke fire and smothers them in paprika-flavored gravy. Maxim, whose laboratories were near by, often put aside his experi ments with high explosives to drop over to Cook's and try out his own favorite recipes at that outdoor fireplace. The two show spots of the place are the museum and the golf course. The museum has for its purpose the exhibition of any article one can name which is now larger than a man’s hand, and there is a prize for anyone who can name such an article that isn’t there. The prize never has been claimed. * * * The golf course has several fan tastic features. There is one hole where the player niust drive through a tunnel. One of the tees is atop a high water* tower. Another green is in the shape of a bowl so if the drive goes on the green the player is bound to make a hole in one. Another green is merely a small island surrounded by a canal. Some players have taken as many as 40 drives to sink a ball on that one. Cook also has a huge outdoor stage where he and his troupe of icrobat - comedians practice the stunts they pull in his new shows. sever met on the gridiron, a situa tion which has robbed the coast of a. lot of good football contests. But one caution, if separation is lecided upon. Let the name of the southern institution be changed, so that touring Iowans can longer be shown, by Iowans who have taken permanent residence in Los Angeles, the U. C. L. A. campus with a flourish of civic pride and a “There, brethren, is the Univer sity of California about which you have heard so much.’—Stanford Daily. S-P DOLLAR DAYS! Again! "Cent-a-Mile’' roundtrips to almost everywhere in the West. Tickets are good on all trains, in all classes of accommodations. Here is your opportunity to take that trip at less than half the regular fares. SAMPLE ROUNDTRIPS: Portland $ 2.30 Salem .. 1.40 Medford . 4.45 Klamath Falls . 4.95 San Francisco . 13.50 Los .Angelos .JZ. 21.90 I e.Announcing-— A REVOLUTIONARY NEW DINING CAR SERVICE Complete luncheons and dinners for 800 to $1.25 and breakfasts for 500 to 900 When next you eat in a Southern Pacific diner, you will enjoy a serv ice unique among American rail roads. "Meals Select"—they were named by Harry Butler, our new dining car manager, who originated them. The new meals will be a per manent feature of our service on all dining cars after February 15. f t-A Sample Menu ~ 8<¥ SOUP Beej Broth with Barley Consomme ESTREE Grilled Salmon Lima Beans French Fried Potatoes THE SALAD BOWL Hot Corn Bread Assorted Bread DESSERTS Green Apple Pie with Cheese IceCream,Cake RiceCupCuslard Tea Coffee Milk SealheK Psdflc A.. *J. GQJLDTSE, a 'rcAyv t