Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, January 16, 1934, Page 2, Image 2

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    University of Oregon, Eugene
Sterling Green, Editor Grant Thuemmel, Manager
Joseph Saslavsky, Managing Editor
EDITORIAL BOARD
Doug Polivka and Don Caswell. Associate Editors; Merlin Blais,
Guy Shadduck, Parks Hitchcock, Stanley Kobe
UPPER NEWS STAFF
jyiaiwjiin Daucr, .\tws j\u.
Estill Phipps, Sports Kd.
A1 Newton, Dramatics Ed.
Abe Merritt, Chief Night Ed.
Peggy Chessman, Literary Ed. |
jiauicy n uiiiui jc,a.
Cynthia Liljeqvist, Women’s Ed.
Mary Louiee Edinger, Society
Ed.
George Callas, Radio Ed.
DAY EDITORS: A1 Newton, Mary Jane Jenkins, Ralph Mason,
John I'atric.
EXECUTIVE REPORTERS: Ann-Reed Burns, Roberta
Moody, Newton Stearns, Howard Kessler.
FEATURE WRITERS: Ruth McClain, Henriette Ilorak.
REPORTERS: Clifford Thomas, Helen Dodds, Hilda Oillam,
Miriam Eichner, Virginia Scoville, Marian Johnson, Rein
hart Knud sen, Velma McIntyre, Pat Gallagher, Virginia
Gather wood, James Morrison, Frances Hardy, Ruth Weber,
Rose Himelstein.
SPORTS STAFF: Bill Eberhart, Clair Johnson, George Jones,
Dan Clark. Ted Blank. Don Olds, Betty Shoemaker, Bill
Aetzel, Ned Simpson. Charles Paddock, Bob Becker.
COFYREADERS: Elaine Cornish, Dorothy Dill, Marie Pell,
Phyllis Adams, Margery Kissling, Maluta Read, Mildred
Blackburne, George Bikman, Virginia Endicott, Nan Smith,
Cormne La Baric.
WOMEN’S PACE ASSISTANTS: Betty Eabbe, Mary Gra
ham, Be Lie Church, Marge Leonard, Donna Theda, Ruth
Heiberg.
NIGHT EDITORS: Alfredo Fajardo, Bob Parker, George Bik
nian, Tom Binford.
ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Henryetta Mummey, Vir
ginia Catherwood, Margilee Morse, Jane Bishop, Doris
Bailey. Alice Tillman, Barbara Beam, Eloise Knox, Eleanor
Aldrich, Margaret Rollins, Marvel Read.
RADTO STAFF: Barney Clark, Howard Kessler, Carroll Wells,
Eiwin Ireland, Eleanor Aldrich, Rose Himelstein.
SECRETARY: Mary Graham.
UPPER BUSINESS STAFF
Kon Rew, Asst. Adv. Mgr.
William Temple, Asst. Adv.
Mgr.
Tom Holman, Asst. Adv.
Mgr.
Eldon Haberman, National
Adv. Mgr.
i i .umpny, .National
Adv. Mgr.
Fd Lahlic, Promotional Mgr.
Fred Fisher, Promotional Mgr.
Win. Perry, Circulation Mgr.
Kuth Pippey, Checking Mgr.
Willa Hit/., Checking Mgr.
Alene Walker, Office Mgr.
v j/iv i i • ’i ■. mi ivi r,.\ : I•<)i> ticmweii. Jack Lew,
M argaret Chase, Hob Crcsswell, Hague Callister, Jerry
Thomas, Vernon Ruegler.
BUSINESS OFFICE, McArthur Court. Phone 3300 Local 31 I.
EDITORIAL OFFICES. Journalism HIdg. Phone 3300 News
Room, Local 355 ; Editor and Managing Editor, Local 354.
The Oregon Daily Emerald, official student publication of the
University of Oregon, Eugene, published daily during the college
year, except Sundays, Mondays, holidays, examination periods,
all of December and all of March except the first three days.
Entered in the postoffice at Eugene, Oregon, as second-class
matter. Subscription rates, $2.50 a year.
FROM PUOWHORSE TO PEGASUS
^vREGON, the undisputed cellar champion of the
Northwest in basketball last year, came out
of the basement Saturday night and knocked over
the Pacific Coast conference champion Beavers 30
to 26.
Not only did they get the jump on the Oregon
State series, and lay the foundations of a good
season, but they made sure that no reptition of last
year’s debacle will come this year.
Thirteen games remain on the schedule. In
those, Oregon can take any position on the ladder
that the morale of the team, and the spirit on the
campus will allow it. That we have a good team
was shown Saturday night. That we have a good
coach was also shown when a carefully planned
passing attack completely routed the longtime air
tight zone defense .of Slats Gill.
That game was a spark. It may grow into a
flaming spirit that will carry the team to a great
season. It glowed brightly all over the campus
after the gun sounded that gave Oregon victory.
More than the rooting sections, and the yell
leaders, and the pep rallies, is the attitude of the
University at other times than game nights.
NOTHING TO BRAG ABOUT
IFE was too easy for Viola Sayles, above,
pretty 19-year-old Carnegie Tech drama
student, daughter of wealthy Pittsburgh parents,
and she slipped away to Cleveland and found a job,
so she could pay for her own education.”
So runs a cut description under a picture re
cently released by NEA (Newspaper Enterprise
Association).
Next to the Horatio Alger boy who wins his
way to the top through pluck and daring, America
loves to romance over the child of wealth who,
tired of the stupid round, strikes out for himself
and finds true happiness in hard work and the
simple life.
It is an outworn institution of the halcyon days
of the twenties when the worker did the employer
a favor to work for him, when production was
everything.
Today it is nothing more than an example of
vain and insidious grandstanding. Grandstanding
not only to the rest of the world but to the smug
little ego of the self. It is as detrimental its it is
hollow, when one who lias plenty takes the job of
one who has not, robbing that person of an income
in order to satisfy a selfish whim.
Of course one such ease will not contribute ma
terially to unemployment. But then, one murder
does not deplete the human race, either.
Ml l i.I K ami nir. niMiui !'
HANCELLOH HITLER'S recent tangle with
the churches in Germany, fallowing as it does
the heavily manipulated election in November, has
left some doubt as to the strength of the German
dictator's position. Concessions the Nazi govern
ment has made with respect to church practices
where they have come in conflict with state poli
cies have been interpreted as a sign of compromise,
With prospects of further giving way.
His denouncement of the terms of the Versailles
treaty and his military-minded political organiza
tion have given the rest of the world the fervent
hope of a breakdown in Hitler's political machinery.
Besides the present church controversy, another
affair pounced upon as one of those much looked
for signs is the apparent growing friction between
Hitler and his bull-necked confrere, Premier
(Goering of Prussia.
Protestant bishops met at Halle to organize
their protest against religions nationalization, and
were not molested. The Catholic archbishop of
Munich voiced disapproval of ins church, and no
“storm troopers” appeared, though previously they
have interfered with and arrested a number of
priests.
The religious controversy holds little serious
threat for Nazi control in Germany, though a few
more errors in diplomatic judgment on the par}
of Hitler himself may alter his position in the or
gauuiation. Hitler and Nazism are by no means
jsynouyivou.. though a tremendous v ave of peisoual
popularity and emotionalism, pent up through lung
years of humiliation at the hands of the Versailles
signatories, swept into office the eloquent adven
ture-spirit, Hitler. This latest of dictators to rise
on the European horizon thus far has a strong grip
on his position, thanks to his national popularity
and thanks to Paul-Joseph Goebbels, his masterly
minister of propaganda.
The National Socialists have wandered far from
their traditional liberal policies, and have embraced
the interests of industrialists and financiers. A.
Nazi spokesman recently declared there shall be
no further government ownership of the means of
| production. Under Nazi tutelage four steel trusts
have become one, consolidation has heightened the
pyramids of industrial and banking organization.
Increased centralization of German economic life
is being carried out under Nazi sanction and de
cree.
The Nazi government has much more than pop
ular enthusiasm as a be ;is; it has the backing of
Germany’s most powerf 1 interests, and will have
as long as it furthers their cause. Public enthu
siasm in Germany will not suddenly die out, and
even though it should the Nazis fortified their posi
tion by allying themselves with what are still the
most strongly organized economic forces in Ger
many. Controversy with the church failed to
weaken Mussolini’s position in Italy, and there is
no more hope of its doing so in Nazist Germany.
OVERFLOW
rvUR efficient society editor came to us yes
terday in high rage and asked us to go
to bat on this:
It seems that the City of Eugene very
knavishly constructed its parking laws on alley
iike Alder street so that cars could stop only
on one side.
It also happens that this is the side away
from Sorority Row, and that side is, for several
blocks, a vast, unspoiled stretch of badlands,
untainted by the hand of occupation.
What burns the sisters up is the fact that
(a) in alighting from vehicles after the correct
manner prescribed by law, they are forced to
step into an oozy quagmire, and that (b) it
is worth a body’s life to have to cross the
street to reach the houses when the boys are
whooping it up and down that street, and that
(cl the number of reverse turns necessitated
by The Law make it pretty much of a mess
all the way 'round.
Any sorority wishing to sever diplomatic
relations with the common council of the City
of Eugene, county Lane, has our heartfelt
sympathy.
■
* * *
A new high in apple polishing was struck
the other day when a resident of a southern
chain-gang had ten years knocked off his sen
tence for writing the state prison board a nice
letter in praise of the chain-gang system.
We never can tell when we ll need the train
ing we’re getting here at college, can we ?
* * *
Useless information: the five-cent slot ma
' chine that has stormed its way from a crude,
gaudy little thing to a’ stately fixture requiring
a new wing for its housing, pays off on a 60-4.0
basis. The company that owns them gets 40
per cent of the take, while the house gets the
60 per cent and makes all the pays.
The house, we understand, pays off some
thing like 30 per cent of the loot in prizes.
Bear that in mind, young men and women of
America, when you next hear the devil’s
promptings.
We have every right to expect, before long,
the ultimate in the way of nickel-eaters: a
board 90 feet long, shooting basketballs, with
a small grandstand for kibitzers attached.
On Other Campuses
Library Dating
CEVERAL weeks ago, 3,000 delegates of the
^ American Library Association and the Inter
national Federation of Library Associations met in
Chicago for the discussion of problems concerning
the operation of libraries. Present at this conven
tion was Hervey Allen, author of "Anthony Ad
verse." In a speech before the entire group, Mr.
Allen spoke of the solitude and quiet becoming a
library. H. M. Jones, professor of English at the
University of Michigan, urged that rooms be pro
vided where readers might burst into “loud guf
faws" rather than having all rooms suggestive of
a funeral establishment.
Such arguments seem entirely plausible. To
those individuals who are desirous of studying in
our own library, the popular habit of “library dat
ing" is quite annoying. No doubt, financial strains
of the past few years have necessitated more eco
nomical ways of spending evenings with a date, or
perhaps house rules do not permit any other type
of home date but that does not give license to the
j frivolous couple enjoying a "library date" to sit
.across the table from some student conscientiously
j trying to study, and to distract his attention with
: their uncanny “cooings."
That many students are without adequate fa
cilities for- proper study can not be denied. Ref
erence material is often needed; the rooming house
or fraternity, more times than one, lacks the quiet
that should be found at the library. Instead of
turning his steps toward the library as an aid to
studies and a haven from distracting noises, we
continually find the student intentionally avoiding
j this institution. He barricades himself in his room I
amid noises and eonfuson rather than attempt the
utilization of privileges that are his.
Surely, he who uses the library for dating does j
not go there with the intention of acquiring the J
maximum benefits from an evening's study. There
is no doubt that the mental efficiency of such a
i student is greatly reduced by the surrounding en
vironment. He can not carry on a jovial conver
sation with a lady friend and yet concentrate on
some scholarly pursuit.
Until the time when he who now abuses the
privileges of flic library realizes the true value of
such an institution and uses it as was originally
intended, the student will be failing in the recog
nition of rights due others -others who would use
the library ar an aid in obtaining an education —
Purdue L.xpouent.
Uncorked By STANLEY ROBE
Beer Situation Remains Dormant
By DOUG POLIVKA
rpHE campus beer situation, with
reference'fo'the present zone,
remained at a standstill over the
weekend and yesterday. Proprie
tors of campus eat shops were pre
paring- to act, while University of
ficials remained silent.
The section of the Knox state
liquor law, under the heading of
“Minor’s Age Limit” was shown
to campus food shop proprietors
yesterday. The section reads:
“No person, under the age of 21
years, may obtain a purchaser’s
permit. It is further provided that
it is unlawful to sell alcoholic liq
uor, which means any alcoholic
liquor containing over one-half of
one per cent of alcohol by volume,
to any person under the age of 21
years, and it is also made unlaw
ful to give any alcoholic liquor to
any person under the age of 21
years unless same be given by the
parent, guardian, or other respon
sible relatives.”
It is interesting to note that
more than one-half of the campus
is composed of students under the
age of 21 years, also that beer is
being sold at present off the cam
pus to persons under age of 21
years.
In commenting upon the fore
going section of the Knox state
liquor law, campus eating place
proprietors remarked that no ac
tion has been taken on establish
ments now disobeying this section
of the law. It was also pointed out
that there is similar state law per
taining to1 the sale of tobacco.
At one campus eating house vis
ited yesterday where the place of
business is licensed to sell bottled
beer, near the campus, the owner
spoke of the disgrace of having
students buy bottled beer and open
it in the street, within the beer
zone of the University. The owner
said he would be one of the first
to install beer on his premises
should the University officials
sanction its sale.
Pertaining to the sale of bottled
beer, one such licensed place of
business near the campus last year
was forced to discontinue such
practice this year because no one
bought the beverage in bottled
form, since beer was sold on
draught only two blocks away. The
owner of this same establishment
maintained that with the money
from the sales lost in food since
the sale of beer off the campus,
he could have easily purchased a
license to sell beer as it now is
being done outside the University
beer zone.
Proprietors of campus eating es
tablishments yesterday were pre
paring to take up the matter of
the present beer zone around the
University with University offi
cials. No University official could
be contacted yesterday to speak
for the administration.
With the only recent develop
ment in the situation being the ad
vocation of beer near the campus
oy Tom Tongue, student body pres
ident, the question remains the
same: campus eating place proprie
tors maintain that it is apparent
that one of two things will soon
take place. University heads will
soon sanction the sale of beer with
in the old beer zone, or the campus
shops will be forced by financial
pressure to sell beer in opposition
to the University administration.
Innocent Bystander
By BARNEY CLARK
Everytime Innocent Bystander
gets to thinking of professors and
slogans at the same time it pro
duces the following startling re
sults :
“The Lesch said, the better!”
"Life is real, life is Ernst!”
“Here's Howe!”
"If I had the wings of an An
gell!" (We got to whistling on
this one.)
"Ganoe thyself!”
"Have a Hart!”
"This Hoyts me more than it
does you!” (Accent fresh from
Noo Yawk.)
“What's Dunn is Dunn!”
"The Morse code!”
“A horse of a different Collier!"
"Standard Earl!" (Accent also
fresh from Noo Yawk.)
“The holy Bonds of matri
mony!”
"Back to Nature!”
"Allah’s Holaday!” (It's your
turn to whistle.)
“Hollis lost!” (Ow!)
“The Powers that be!”
“A Rae of hope!”
“Twinkle, twinkle, little Starr!”
“She sells seashells by the Sea
shore!”
* * *
Just to show that we’re mod
est or something, we will step
aside and NOT write an “Ogden
Gnash” this issue. Instead, we
will let Georgie “Tusko” Ben
nett contribute one of his gems.
Take it away, George!
The Campus lntelligensia
“We love depth and erudition,
Scholarship, learning, and tradi
tion;
Quiet study, breadth of view,
True wisdom; yes we do—
Just as it doesn’t interfere
With our drinking yeasty beer!”
* * *
Drop that gun; I’ve got you
covered!
AMERICAN MAN OF
BUSINESS ‘RACKETEER’
(Continued from One)
Greeks who followed, was not
economy-minded, although his ad
justment was adequate for the
problems besettting him.
“Man realized early that he
could conquer nature only by na
ture herself.” said the speaker.
"The Greeks found it easier for
their spirits to soar without the
weight of economic problems, so
they divided the people into think
ers and workers.
"Even as late as the sixteenth
century, man was not economy
minded, although the discovery of
the new world, and the corre
sponding increase in wealth of
Europe made people sit up and
take notice.
"It was not until the machine
began to assume ascendancy over
the machine-maker that men arose
whose vision was to raise them
selves into positions of power by
means of tools.
"There followed the develop
ment of the factory, when men had
to ad;ust them. else. to machme.',
and a new phase m the history of
the human face began. A mad
scramble for world markets be
gan, with cut-throat competition
between nations as well as corpor
ations, leading to a spirit of con
quest and war.”
Goldenweiser described the
great cataclysm of the World war,
the subsequent boom, and finally
the crash of '29. “all an economic
chain of events.” He discussed in
detail the present reconstruction of
human society.
Stalin. Mussolini, Hitler and
Roosevelt were inspected, together
with the policies they stand for. by
the professor.
"In soviet society the roots of
capitalism have been undermined."
he said. “Mussolini has attempted
to limit the frivolity of capitalists,
as has Hitler. The United States
alone is accomplishing something
seldom tried before in history, in
that she is pulling herself out of
the depression with the same out
lines of social structure remaining,
using measures intended to tide
over rather than revolutionize.
Roosevelt's achievements ra n k
with those of soviet Russia.
In summing up hi. pecch. Gel
cieuweiaer explained that “the
world is sick with economics. It
is as if nature, tired of being
whipped by man, has turned the
tool against the tool-maker. The
trouble is not to be found in eco
nomic over production but is the
result of the utilization of technol
ogy for selfish purposes.”
After the lecture, Dr. Golden
weiser conducted a public forum.
Dr. George Rebec, head of the
philosophy department and dean
of the graduate division, presided
at the meeting, which was the sec
ond of the lecture series sponsored
annually by the Committee on Free
Intellectual Activities.
Roger Williams of Oregon State
college will be the third speaker
of the series, lecturing on ‘‘Chem
ical Secrets of Living Matter”
Wednesday, January 24.
GOOD WORK IN STRING
GROUPS NOTED SUNDAY
(Continued from rage One)
Favorable comments come first.
The violin sections, particularly
the first violins, performed most
satisfactorily of any group in the
orchestra. For this, we believe
credit is due Howard Halbert, the
leader of the first violin section,
which recovered excellently when
another section missed its cue. a !
mishap which occurred most no-1
Classified
DRESSMAKING — Ladies~tailo7- j
ing, style right, price right.
Petite Shop, 573 13th Ave. E.:
Phone 3208.
PATTERSON--Tumng. Ph.3256YV.
HOST—On campus, blue Shaeffer
pen, name Deffa Hosstetter.
LOST—Brown bill fold containing
about 535 in currency, student
body tickets, and other re-1
ceipts. Please leave at Emerald
office. Reward.
LOST—Between Deady hall and
the men's gymnasium, a gold,
moss agate ring, with an image
of a tree in the agate. Finder
please notify Morgan Burchard, I
Sigma hall.
LOST - YV bite- gold Hamilton !
wrist watch, without strap. Tom
Holman, 1320. Reward.
LOST - Brown Angora beret.
1 mder please call or notify Uni
versity librarian's office.
ticeably during the prelude to ‘'Die
Meistersinger.”
The cello section did very well
also, under the guiding hand of, we
believe, Mrs. Lora Teshner Ware,
who teaches that instrument in
the music department. This group
produced excellent harmonies dur
ing the cello section solo which
opens the 1812 Overture.
Director Rex Underwood did not
establish as rapid a tempo as
might have been possible with a
professional group of musicians.
Professional orchestras have used
these numbers over and over
again, and their pace has consist
ently been faster than that used by
Underwood yesterday.
This, we presume, was due to his
estimate of the players’ collective
technical ability.
The climaxes, which are very in
tense, or at least can be, in the
Meistersinger overture and the
1812 Overture, were more effect
ive than we had anticipated.
The great weakness of the or
chestra is quite obvious. It is the
brass section. As noted, they
missed their cue entirely one time.
At others they seemed uncertain
of their entrance and, consequent
ly, were weak and straggly.
A couple of the wind instru
ments were a bit off key. More
definitely, a clarinet, noted during
the Borodin dances, and the big
bass horn which was a bit flat in
its solo passages of the Tschai
kowsky.
The Beethoven was rather nicely
done, since the bulk of the score
was for the string sections.
The Borodin was done with con
siderable vigor as it should have
been done; a tribute, we feel, to
the interpretation of Director Rex
Underwood.
SIGMA CLINGS TO TOP
PLACE IN GRADE LIST
(Continued from Page One)
attained by Chi Psi, which fin
ished ninteenth in the compilations.
List Given
The entire list of house stand
ings follows:
Sigma hall .1.6701
Hendricks hall .1.6630
ALL WOMEN’S HALLS 1.6530
Susan Campbell hall .1.6354
Kappa Delta .1.6330
Sigma Kappa .1.5896
Phi Mu .1.5849
Kappa Alpha Theta..,...1.5776
NON-SORORITY WOMEN 1.5623
Alpha Xi Delta.1.5577
NON-ORGANIZATION
WOME .1.5219
Delta Upsilon .1.5109
Alpha Omicron Pi .1.5090
Sherry Ross hall . 1.4992
Alpha Chi Omega .1.4835
ALL MEN’S HALLS .1.4630
ALL WOMEN .1.4536
Kappa Kappa Gamma.1.4469
Alpha Delta Pi .1.4385
ALL WOMEN’S
ORGANIZATIONS .1.4309
Pi Beta Phi .1.4297
Chi Omega .1.4067
ALL SORORITY .1.2923
Omega hall . 1.3839
Beta Phi Alpha .1.3788
NON-FRATERNITY MEN 1.3220
Chi Psi .1.3155
Alpha Phi .1.2983
ALL UNIVERSITY .1.2981
N ON-ORGANIZATION
MEN .1.2713
Gamma Phi Beta .1.2678
Theta Chi .1.2469
Delta Delta Delta .1.2373
Alpha Gamma Delta .1.2195
Sigma Alpha Mu .1.2079
Alpha Tau Omega .1.2016
ALL MEN 1.1834
Zeta Tau Alpha .1.1461
ALL MEN’S
ORGANIZATIONS .1.1458
Beta Theta Pi .1.1450
Delta Gamma .1.1316
Reading
Writing
PEGGY CHESSMAN, Editor
T AST month’s hook of the month
selection was Ralph Roeder's
“The Man of the Renaissance,”
vivid and convincing portraits of
the four great men of that period.
In what has been called “the most
superb single volume in English
on the renaissance,” the author
describes these four “lawgivers”—
Savanarola, Machiavelli, Castigli
one, and Aretino—and the era in
which they lived—1494 to 1530
in a style both complete and im
pressive.
“The four figures illustrate four
phases of moral life of their age,
and taken together they compose
the man of the renaissance,” he
writes. And in all the 530 pages
of his book he devotes his words to
a careful analysis of each of the
men, never rambling, never di
gressing unduly, but taking his
pace slowly so that the result may
be convincing. He has shown the
weaknesses and faults, the
strengths and perfections of each,
and what is more, has amassed his
material so that there is an inter
pretation of their lives and writ
ings.
Shattering the modern concep
tions that the renaissance was a
period only of great achievement
and success, an era of exuberance,
Roeder shows ' with authenticity
that the time was also one of suf
fering and of misery, and that “it
was no coincidence perhaps that
the artistic glories and moral mis
eries of the age came to climax to
gether.”
“The ascetic virtues of Savona
rola, the expedient virtue of Mach
iavelli, the convivial virtue of Cas
tiglione, the animal virtue of
Aretino,” he writes, “what are
these but the final solutions of
those who fear life, those who ac
cept it, those who compromise
with it, and those who succumb to
it?”
Delta Zeta .1.1164
Kappa Sigma .1.1.1018
ALL FRATERNITY .1.0883
Phi Delta Theta .1.0676
Phi Sigma Kappa .1.0539
Pi Kappa Alpha .1.0451
Phi Kappa Psi .1.0298
Sigma Phi Epsilon .1.0180
Sigma Chi .1.0051
Phi Gamma Delta .1.0000
Sigma Nu .9955
Zeta hall .8831
Delta Tau Delta .8589
Sigma Alpha Epsilon .8545
“Patronize Emerald advertisers.”
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