Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, February 02, 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 Sbadduck, Parks Hitchcock, Stanley Robe
UPPER NEWS STAFF
Malcolm Bauer, News Ed.
Estill Fhipps, Sports Ed.
A1 Newton, Dramatics Ed.
Abe Merritt, Chief Night Ed.
Peggy Chessman, Literary Ed.
Barney Clark, Humor Ed.
Cynthia Liljeqvist. Women’s Ed.
Mary Louiee Edinger, Society
Ed.
I George Callas, Radio Ed.
DAY EDITORS: A1 Newton, Mary Jane Jenkins, Ralph Mason,
John Patric, Newton Stearns.
EXECUTIVE REPORTERS: Ann-Reed Burns, Newton
Stearns, Howard Kessler, Betty Ohlemiller.
FEATURE WRITERS: Ruth McClain, Henriettc llorak.
REPORTERS: Clifford Thomas, Helen Dodds, Hilda Gillam,
Miriam Eichner, Virginia Scoville, Marian Johnson, Rein
hart Knudsen, Velma McIntyre, Pat Gallagher, Ruth Weber,
Rose Himelstein, Margaret Brown. Eleanor Aldrich.
SPORTS STAFF: Bill Eberhart, Asst. Sports Ed.; Clair John
son, George Jones, Dan Clark, Don Olds, Betty Shoemaker,
Bill Aetzel, Charles Paddock.
COPYRF.ADFRS: Elaine Cornish, Dorothy Dill, Marie Pell,
Phyllis Adams, Margery Kissling, Maluta Read, George
Bikman, Virginia Endicott, Corinne Ea Barrc, Bob Parker.
WOMEN’S PAGE ASSISTANTS': Mary Graham, Bette
Church, Ruth Heiberg, Pauline George.
NIGHT EDITORS: Bob Parker, George Bikman, Tom Bin
ford, Ralph Mason, A1 Newton.
ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Henryetta Mummey, Vir
ginia Catherwood, Margilee Morse, Jane Bishop, Doris
Bailey, Alice Tillman, Eleanor Aldrich, Margaret Rollins,
Marvel Read, Edith Clark.
RADIO STAFF : Barney Clark, Howard Kessler, Eleanor Aid
rich, Rose Himelstein.
SECRETARY: Mary Graham.
UPPER BUSINESS STAFF
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OFFICE ASSISTANTS: Gretehen Gregg. Maryanne Skirving,
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A member of the Major College Publications, represented by
A. J. Norris Hill Co., 155 K. 42nd St., New York City; 123 W.
Madison St., Chicago; 1004 End Ave., Seattle; 1206 Maple Ave.,
Los Angeles; Call Building, San Francisco.
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 postofficc at Eugene, Oregon, as second-class
matter. Subscription rates, $2.50 a year.
“THE GREAT GLIBERA!/’
■pOR all these years we’ve been hanging on Ihe
words of Glenn Frank, thunderous trumpeter
for liberalized educati n, vociferous champion of
the new era in learning. The Emerald, last year
and this, has frequently quoted President Frank,
has viewed him as the great apostle of progress
in his field.
If Ernest L. Meyer, writing in the current issue
of the American Mercury, is correct, we should
regard him as the great apostate. But our tardi
ness of perception is forgivable, for Mr. Meyer says
“it took the campus (University of Wisconsin) two
years to doubt him, four to see through him, and
six to regard him with amused contempt. And to
day, eight years after his arrival, he has probably
not a single admirer left. . . .”
When Frank came to the University of Wiscon
sin, he was hailed as the leader of the “Revolt
Against Education,” as the “boy president” who
was to launch a new scheme of higher learning.
His Experimental college, under the direction of
sincere Dr. Alexander Meiklejohn, was to introduce
a new technique professors would become tutors,
scholars would educate themselves and discipline
themselves. The dream of Dr. Meiklejohn has
faded, the Experimental college has disappeared,
and Meyer attributes its failure largely to the lack
of support from Glenn Frank.
President Frank prohibited Dora Russell, femi
nist and advocate of companionate marriage, from
speaking at Wisconsin, after she had been invited
by the Student Forum. The dean of men wouldn’t
even let her accept an invitation to dinner at a
fraternity house. President Frank is declared to
have alienated all the progressives, to have exhib
ited profound lack of erudition, to have permitted,
nay, proposed, a manifestly unfair schedule of sal
ary cuts which penalized heavily the great number
of small-salaried professors without correspond
ingly greater cuts for the high-salaried officials.
Can this be the Glenn Frank who was quoted in
the Emerald a year ago as saying, “Now is the
time to declare a moratorium on vested interests
and vested ideas . . ? Can this be the Glenn
Frank the Emerald quoted a little more than a week
ago, in an article titled: “On Radicalism"?
Apparently our idol may be suspected of having
pedal extremities of clay, if so, he would not bo
the first to have learned that prating of liberalism
can be made to pay well for a time. But eventu
ally people catch on, and they apply epithets like
“the great gliberal” that's what Madison citizens
are now said to be calling the president of the Uni
versity of Wisconsin. It looks like the beginning
of the end. Insincerity doesn’t last long, particu
larly when the insincere one writes and talks as
frequently and loudly as does President Glenn
Frank.
The Safety Valve
An Outlet for Campus Steam
All communications arc to lie addressed
to The Kditor, Oregon Dail y Kmet aid,
and should not exceed 200 words in t
length. Letters must be signed, but
should the writer prefer, only initials >
will be used. The editor maintain* the
right to withhold publication should hr
sec fit.
.
t I I .1.-1. II .. —
TO the Editor:
Would it be presuming too much
on your office to ask for a general
brief outline as to the purposes of
the Emerald? Is it a student or
gan, published and paid for by the
students, or is it run as a Utopian
daily from which publicity for stu
dent affairs must be minimized lu
the lowest degree?
I tealize you (.uunot devote col
umns lor that purpose, but must
the attitude ol' your subordinates
Ir' such that articles dealing with
coming student events are met
with a scowl and a "What, more
publicity!" and require a lengthy
debate on the merits of the story?
HENKIETTK HORAlv.
IMPORTANT WORK DONE
AT RESEARCH MEETING
(Continued from Page One)
reports of progress from faculty
members who have received grants
and passing on projects faculty
members would like to undertake
next year were some of the mat
ters discussed at the meeting.
At the session were Acting Pres
ident C. V. Boyer, Ralph W. Leigh
ton. executive secretary of the re
search committee: liobert 11. Sea
shore and Ia>!cr from tb; Uni
versity. Dean Packard of the Ore
gon State college school of science
is chairman of the council.
The acting presidents of both
the University and the college
were present and expressed their
belief in the necessity for re
search.
“It is unforunate,” said Taylor
“that the present economic condi
tions make it necessary to reduce
the amount of research undertak
en, since now, more than before
there is greater need for such
work.”
The research council handles
grants given to aid professors in
research work and consists of the
chairmen of divisional councils
from the University and the state
college.
The budget for next year's re
search work will be arranged at
Uil uc.vt rn rtH'g during the cpimg
term, faylor said.
IDIOTORIAL, OR WHY EDUCATION FAILS
CO the editor says we gotta have an editorial so
^ we says aw nuts can it be something silly, so
he says okay so we says okay.
So if you’re one of those people that have main
tained their scholastic purposefulness in this loafly
weather scram outta here and let us sloths loll in
our indolence.
O, mothormothermother where are my flannel
britches, my pansy shoes, my shirt with the free
love collar.
Oh, they’ll give us our diploma and they'll show
us to the door, and they’ll say congratulations
you’re the class of thirty-four; so buckle up your
buskin boy and tighten up your belt, for you’ll soon
be out of collitch with your pockets bare of gelt.
The next time they have a contest for queen of
the cranberry festival vc're going to scream. And
was Hari-Kiri the movie actor that played “Trader
Horn” ?
Thunder over Backgr; unds of Principles of Ele
ments of Basic Pedagogy; “Having therefore de
posited the residua] increment in conjunction with
the bicameral basis of monetary specie as may be
hitherto requisite, we may conclude that such dis
tribution will create undue pressure upon Imperial
organization of such factors Involved, also known
as Newton’s (Mendel’s) Law, or Fulton’s Folly.
That, roughly, is the idea.” (Fifteen yards for un
necessary roughness.)
So Ulysses Landed, hey. Goodole Lyss. Good
ole James Joyce. For Lo! I bring glad tidings of
great Joyce, the old steelyringer himself. The next
dance is Ladies Joyce. Yuh will write books, will
yuh!
George Noel Gordon, Lord Byron, 1788-1824;
Algernon Charles Swinburne, 1837-1909; Robert
Burns, 1709-1796, and look where he ended up: in
a cigar box; last one in’s a rotten egg.
Oh, well.
SAY IT FAST
WE still retain a sentimental fondness for the
memory of Dean John Straub, late professor
emeritus of Greek at this forgetful University of
ours. We are not alone in that affection for the
nild-spoken, kindly mannered counsellor of fresh
men.
But we're sorry they named the men's dormi
;ory after him, rather than some other building.
Hie dormitory is formally dedicated to his memory,
you remember—last year at a rather impressive
ceremony that imposing structure was christened
John Straub Memorial building.
Nobody ever calls the building by its proper
name, however, and the worthy name of Straub
seems destined to die out just because it's much
easier to say Men's Dorm than to say John Straub
Memorial building. We have often considered im
posing a strict rule upon all Emerald writers that
Lhey refer to the building by its proper-name, and
thus by constantly dinning it into campus ears
bring about popular acceptance. That's the way
the old "women's building” was changed to the
more proper Gerlinger hall.
In this case it would be impossible. Nobody will
mouth "John Straub Memorial building” as long as
here's a shorter term available. "Straub build
ing” is shorter, but its difficult labial stops don't
lend themselves to ready usage. "Straub hall” is
better, but is officially incorrect.
Will somebody please suggest a way for the
Emerald to help perpetuate the name of Dean John
Straub ?
i
OVERFLOW
I P. MORGAN takes an awful beating.
" * Twice this week we have heard stories
that pick on him.
The first was last Sunday when Warren D.
Smith told of a holy painting in a little church
in Alaska. J. P. offered $25,000 for it, and
was told no.
The second was an item we noticed in a
magazine about a solid teakwood shrine in New
York Chinatown. Morgan tried to buy it for
$150,000 and was told no.
It's a hard life when you run around getting
your checks turned down, and wind up with a
midget in your lap.
Placard in downtown window: “We are well
equipped to write any kind of INS.”
Thought you might be int.
Lots and lots of people ask us how we keep
on turning out editorials and columns day after
day. Don't we e-ver run out of material ? The
answer is, of course, that we do run out of ma
terial; we rau out early in the year and we've
just filled space since then.
So far, wo haven't remotely approached the
point of our little piece, but here it is, and so
help us, it's true. A lady member of Professor
Turnbull's journalism class became a bit puz
zled about the 50-years-ago column in the Ore
gonian, and she halted the class to query:
"But, Professor Turnbull, don't they ever
run out of material?"
We understand that the good professor was
a hit bewildered himself at this, but he care
fully explained to the ydung lady that every
day brings its quota of news, that this process
was going on 50 years ago just as it does now,
and there really isn't much danger of running
out for a long, long time.
In Bondage ... By STANLEY ROBE
1 _ , 1
The University’s Early History
Editor’s note: Tins is the
fourth of a series of interviews
with Dr. F. G. G. Schmidt, head
of the department of Germanic
languages and literature, and
oldest in service of the Univer
sity faculty, on early history of
the University of Oregon.
By DOUG POLIVKA
i4TlOW and when was the Uni
versity of Oregon founded?”
To this question, Dr. Schmidt
answered, “It was founded and lo
cated at Eugene in 1872, by an
act of the state legislature. The
school was open and began giving
j instruction in the year 1876.
“Up until the time the Univer
i sity was placed under a state
I board of higher education, its
management of affairs was in the
hands of a board of regents. This
board was appointed for a term
of twelve years by the governor
of the state and was confirmed by
1 the state legislature. It conferred
! all degrees and granted diplomas,”
Dr. Schmidt continued.
“The permanent endowment of
the University consisted of eighty
thousand dollars from the sale of
land granted to the state by the
government for the purpose
of establishing a University,”
j Schmidt explained,
i "A fund of fifty thousand dol
lars was donated by the great |
railroad magnate, Henry Villard,”
stated Schmidt. “This is one rea
son why Villard hall is so named,
and why almost every early cata
logue mentions the fact that the
University is situated on the Ore
gon and California railroad. The
railroad regarded the Villard
building as one of the scenic spots
on the line.’’
in issy tne university was
made the state depository of all
documents published by the gov
ernment, through the influence of
the Honorable J. N. Dolph, then
Oregon’s United States senator. In
the same year the University had
approximately two thousand dol
lars worth of mathematical in
struments, including surveying and
engineering implements. The phys
ics and chemistry apparatus was
valued at more than three thou
sand dollars.
The following are quotations
from the 1889-90 catalogue:
“The departments of geology,
mineralogy and natural history
are provided with large and valu
able collections to illustrate their
teachings. Professor Condo n’s
cabinet is already widely known
on this coast, and is justly noted
for its record of Oregon's former
history.”
“All the express companies
doing business in the state have
generously proposed to trans
port articles to the Museum'
free of charge; weight of any
one shipment not to exceed
twenty-five pounds.”
Marking and grading then was
still done on the old scale of one
hundred, with sixty as a mini
mum.
a SLuaeni wno, in any one
study, falls below sixty (60) is
thereby conditioned as to his class
standing, and in order to be re
stored to full standing he must
pass in a re-examination some
time before the regular examina
tions of the following term; when,
however, a student falls below
sixty in more than one study of
the same term, or in one study
in two consecutive terms, espe
cially in the first and second terms
of the year, he shall thereby for
feit or lose his class standing.”
When asked the reason for
the peep-holes in the doors of
the Oregon building, Dr. Schmidt
explained that the building, now
housing the law school and the
language departments, was built
to house the school of educa
tion, and that the heads of that
department checked on their
practice teachers to see that
they were not “asleep on the
job.”
;
i
Reading
Writing
PEGGY CHESSMAN, Editor
Editor's note: Heading and
Writing today presents a re
i view by !S. Stephenson Smith,
I associate professor of Eng
lish, of James Joyce’s “I'lys
ses.” The Co-op now lias the
book on sale, Judge Woolsey’s
decision having made it legal.
' 11 used to “bookleg” for $150
but now sells for $3.50.
By S. STEPHENSON SMITH
{».| [LYSSES" by James Joyce is
also a masterpiece in the com
ic. Joyce found Europe in pretty
much of a mess during the years (
11914 to 1921, when he was writing ;
he recalled his Dublin days of
1904, and concluded that the mess
had been developing even then. He
could not see much hope in the fu
ture, either for the average self
j made man like the Irish Hungar
1 ian Jew, Leopold Bloom, perhaps
the champion muddle-mind in all
j literature: nor yet much more!
hope for intellectuals like himself I
and his friends.
The world of the great city
seemed to him drab, dusty, and
preposterous, suffering from spir
it mil decay. Yet he had to make
j some adjustment to this sorry
muck heap on which he found him
self cast. So he exorcised his dis
gust by painting this world as it
was, with an aroused fury of j
truthfulness rarely equalled since
the early church fathers. But he
had to live in this world somehow,
and come to terms with it. And
that is where his comic irony
comes in
Rideo quia desperandum. 1 laugh
because there is no hope, might be
his motto. The bad jokes of the
' Jrkfir jfg ->> 4 t ^ ■
1 that one must resort to irony tor.
defense. And his irony runs the
whole gamut.
In the “chaffering all-including
most farraginous chronicle,” as
Joyce describes his work, the
strokes of ironic wit are, the “sun
ny islets of the blest and the in
telligible” (Did Carlyle say this of
Coleridge, or Coleridge of Car
lyle ?). I subjoin a few specimens
from “Ulysses,” beginning wdth
bad puns and inverted proverbs,
put in with sardonic intent:
If others have a Will, Ann Hath
a Way.
Woman: the unfair sex.
God made the country, man the
tune.
Aristotle was Plato's schoolboy
once-- and has remained so, one
would hope, added John Eglington.
Who made the allegation, says
he?
I, says Joe, I'm the alligator.
That Great Empire on which the
sun never rises.
Well, I must be going, says
Dloom. (It is his turn to stand
treat, i
Who's keeping you ? said the j
Citizen.
D r u m m o n d of Hawthornden
helped you over that stile.
I teach the blatant Latin lan
guage. says Professor MacHugh.
The language of a raeg the acme
of whose morality is the maxim.
Time is money ... Bah ... I ought
to profess Greek, the language of
the spirit. Kurie eleison . . . the
vowels that the Semite and the
Saxon knew not.
Shakespeare Made in Germany
as a French polisher of Italian
scandals.
But these are only grace notes, j
The massive artillery which Joyce
moves up on Nationalism, the Sinn
Fein movement, and the whole
idiotic practice of foreigners tak
ing a hand in separatist move
ments in the twentieth century
i Self-Extermination for Small Na
tions': all these are given a dose
of heavy bombshells in the ii.-t of
the Foreign Friends of the Emer
ald Lsls.
What nationality is Hiram V. ,
Bomboost? Harakiri Hokipoki?
Vladimir Pokehantkerscheff ? Pan
Poleaxe Paderyski? Nationalgym
nasiumsuspensorium . . . natural
historyprofe ssorprivatdocent
Kriegfried Ueberallgemein? and
about two hundred others? The
Tower of Babel had nothing on
Joyce.
Then there are eighty pages of
SUNDAY
11:00 A. M.
“TOWER
of
BABEL”
What does archaeology
say about this tower?
In what respect was the
Tower of Babel like
modern civilization?
First
Congregational
Church
CLAY E. PALMER,
Minister
CLASSIFIED
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Telephone 3800: local 214
DRESSMAKING — Ladies' tailor
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LOST — "Logic," by Creighton,
iindcr lea-' e at University depot
or phone 922-W. Reward.
parodies on many of the great his
toric styles in English literature,
running from the Ayenbite of Inwit
(the sting of conscience, to you, I.
B.) down through Mallory to Car
lyle and Pater. Elinor Glyn and
Billy Sunday and other eminent
vulgarians come in for passing no
tice. Besides these flourishes,
there are many passages of wit
and irony far more profound in
their implications, deserving in
fact the name and style of “cosmic
irony,” in that they show the slips
in the very funny make-up of the
Universe, and make us wonder if
the world was really made for
man.
I suppose I should offer, as Ar
temus Ward used to on his London
programs, to call on readers and
explain any of Joyce’s jokes which
they may not understand; but I
maintain that in the midst of all ]
the stream - of - consciousness j
stuff, and the erudite conversa
tions. and the topsy-turvy take-off
on Freud’s nightmare world, there
are these flashes of Irish wit, and
leaping thrusts of Joycean irony
which will strike home even to
the common reader—though if he i
reads Joyce he will become an un
common person, judging by all the
Greenwich Village precedents I en
countered from 1921 to 1925.
Innocent
Bystander
By BARNEY CLARK
We have long admired S. Stev
enson Smith in our humble way,
and here is one of the reasons
why:
Mr. Smith was lecturing to one
of his classes on sex education.
He asked the members how liberal
they thought discussion of the
question ought to be.
Says a Theta,
“I feel that such discussion is
all right among adult groups, but
who is going to tell our youth
about it?”
Says S. S. S.,
“Who is going to carry coals to
Newcastle ?”
People certainly went in for
serenades night ’fore last. There
was the Beta serenade of the
Alpha Phi house, and the Alpha
Phi serenade of the Beta dive,
during which one of the Alpha
I'hinds fell into the mijlraclb,
and being unable to swim, had
to be fished out by a courageous
sister. The Alpha Phis enjoyed
this immensely, but the Betas
were worried, and stood on the
bank in silent and awe-struck
terror. Good ol’ Betas!
Aa-a-nd there was the Scabbard
and Blade serenade. This was a'
|
Emerald
of the Air
AT the sound of the gong for
4:30 this afternoon, we re
move the asbestos from around
the mike for 15 minutes of har
mony with our star blues crooner,
Lou Perry. Modern rhythm is the
essence of this broadcast, which is
crammed full of the latest “moon
and-spoon” songs. Maxine Mc
Donald accompanies at the piano,
and since we called her a “piano
pounder" last week, we hereby
wish to retract this derogatory ex
pression.
The program originates in the
studios of KORE.
demure little affair, and we have
only heard of it from the Gamma
Phis, so maybe it didn't happen
at all, but was only Donin going
by in the stilly night.
Or maybe it was the Madmen’s
serenade, which also occurred.
This was a choice affair indeed.
No one, not even Chancellor Kerr,
knows just who perpetrated it. At
the Pi Phi cave they said they
were the Phi Delts, and at the
Kappas they said they were the
Phi Delts, but at the Delta Gam
ma tong they ’lowed they were
Chi Psis and dedicated eight songs
to Betty Graham. At the Theta
hangout their enunciation wasn’t
clear enough to determine just
what they claimed to be, so it is
conceivable that when they
reached the Gamma Phis they
might have sunk to claiming they
were Scabbard and Blade.
At any rate, the last seen of
the great enterprise was two
of the lads hotfooting it down
Alder street, each with a pail
of beer balanced on an out
stretched hand, and a blue-coat
on close pursuit. They were go
ing faster, but the cop was
traveling in a straight line.
And then there is Dick Carter’s
new theme song, which is “Night
Owl.” Dick strained an eye
muscle studying (ha!) and his
physician has ordered him to sit
in the dark and rest his eyes. It
is very lonely in the dark, so Dick
is looking for a companion, pref
erably feminine, to sit in the dark
with him and keep him company.
Line forms on the right.
* * *
OGDEN GNASHES
“Mixing whiskey,
Beer, and wine;
Leaves you feeling
Far from fine!”
* & *
“I’M NOT SCREAMING!!!!”
BREAKFAST
for 8 o'clock martyrs
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Always oven-fresli and crisp.
Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek.
The most popular ready
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