Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 22, 1934, Page 2, Image 2

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    University of Oregon, Etigene
Sterling Green, Editor Grant Thuemmel, Manager
Joseph Saslavsky, Managing Editor
EDITORIAL BOARD
Doug Polivka, Executive Editor; Don Caswell, Associate Editor;
Guy Shadduck, Stanley Robe
UPPER NEWS STAFF
v»eorge Lallas, News Ed.
Bill Bowcrman, Sports Ed.
A1 Ncwtoa, Dramatics and
Chief Night Ed.
Elinor Henry, Features Ed.
Barney Clark, Humor Ed.
Cynthia Lityeqvist, Women’s Ed
Mary Lomee Edinger, Society
Ed.
James Morrison, Radio Ed.
•AY EDITORS: A1 Newton, Mary Jane Jenkins, Bob M©pre,
Newton Stearns.
EXECUTIVE REPORTERS: Ann-Reed Burns, Howard Kess
ler.
REPORTERS: Miriam Eichner, Marian Johnson, Ruth Weber,
Leslie Stanley, Newton Stearns, Clifford Thomas, Henry
etta Mummcy, Helen Dodds, Henrictte Horak, Dan Clark,
George Jones. Roberta Moody, Peggy Chessman.
SPORTS STAFF: Clair Johnson, Asst. Sports Ed.; Don Olds,
Margery Kissling, Bill Mclnturff.
COPYREADERS: Elaine Cornish, Dorothy Dill. Marie Pell,
Phyllis Adams, Maluta Read, Virginia Endicott, Mildred
Blackburnc, George Jones.
WOMEN'S PAGE ASSISTANTS: Mary Graham, Bette
Church, Ruth Heiberg, Betty Shoemaker.
NIGHT EDITORS: George Bikman, Rex Cooper, Tom Ward.
ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Henryetta Mummey, Irma
Egbert, Margilee Morse, Jane Bishop, Doris Bailey, Mary
Ellen Eberhart, Dorothy Dykcman.
RADIO STAFF: Howard Kessler, Eleanor Aldrich,
SECRETARY: Mary Graham.
UPPER BUSINESS STAFF
Fred Fislicr. Adr. Mgr.
William Temple, Asst. Adv.
Mgr.
Eldon Haberman, National
Adv. Mgr.
Pearl Murphy, Asst. National
Adv. Mgr.
Ed Labbe, Cirenlatinn Mgr.
Kutli Rippey, Checking Mgr.
Willa Bitz, Checking Mgt.
Sez Sue, Janie Worley
Alene Walker, Olfiae Mgr.
BUSINESS OFFICE, McArthur Court. Phone 3300—Local 214.
ADVERTISING SALESMEN: Bob Helliwell, Jack Lew,
Bob Cresswell, Jerry Thonus, Jack McGirr.
OFFICE ASSISTANTS: Gretchen Gregg, Doris Osland,
Cynthia Cornell.
A member of the Major College
A. J. Norris Hill Co., 155 E. 42nd Si
Madison St., Chicago; 1004 End Ave.
Los Angeles; Call Building, San Fri
The Oregon Daily Emerald, official student publication of the
University of Oregon, Eugene, published daily during the college
except Sundays, Mondays, holiday®, examination periods,
•11 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.
flousecleaning
'■y'HERE hasn't been much quibbling as to the
general soundness of the New Deal. As an
emergency measure it seems to have been well ac
cepted as the best way out even by most of the
gentlemen who dabble in economics and should
know what they are saying. Realizing that as a
short time prescription, NRA is reasonably sound,
it is a little difficult to understand why more than
900,000 workers have been forced to join the ranks
of the unemployed since last October.
In all fairness it must be said that between
March and .October of 1933 about 4,000,000 of the
14,000^000 unemployed were sent back to work, so
that even with the winter setback unemployment
is still 3,000,000 up on the all-time low.
Investigation seems to show that neither the
president nor the machinations of the New Deal
are at fault. Neither is the plan being sabotaged
by workers. The criticism must go to the men who
are administering this huge government corpora
tion. It is serious criticism too, with 11,000,000
men pointing accusing fingers at NRA. The ques
tion of whether or not the government should be
responsible for these unemployed is irrelevant. One
need not go outside the actual workings of the New
Deal to find what is gumming the works.
Even so conservative a group as the Pennsyl
vania State Federation of Labor has sent a state
ment, unanimously adopted, to (he White House,
demanding a thorough house cleaning in NRA.
They are the latest of the protesters. The Darrow
report is being hushed. But for 10 months various
labor interests have besieged Washington with de
mands for a clean-up in the administration. Simply
stated, the trouble lies with the administrators who
find themselves faced with such a tremendous job
that they have thrown up their hands and refused
to do it thoroughly.
They are not necessarily politicians, though
plenty of string-pulling and back-slapping have
gone on under the New Deal. Neither are they
necessarily subsidized by "big business interests.”
They have found out that the president’s request [
for true justice for botli the little man and the big
men is too large an order. Consequently, siuce the j
turn of the year, NRA has concentrated on big
concerns. The blue eagle no longer affects the
ordinary business man in the least. Price cutting,
cheap labor and kindred evils are largely unregu
lated. Instead corporations and large-scale industry
are benefiting. Many a great industrialist has gone
to Washington to curse the New Deal and returned
smiling, acquiescent or actually militant in its be
half, because he saw how he would be benefited.
Corporations again declare dividends. Daily papers
print statements by these same Industrialists tell
ing how much profits have increased.
For the little man no such thing can be said.
Federal figures show that since October wages have
only kept pace with commodity prices. This is
complete stagnation and, coupled with the fact that
higher prices have caused more problems in relief
and among the unemployed, presents a dark pic
ture.
The indictment points to NRA's administrators,
wim admittedly are playing up to the big concerns,
and slighting the little men who must need help.
This does not incriminate the basic principles of
the administration. It merely shows that a com
plete housecleaning should again elevate justice to
its proper position.
Publications, represented by
New York City; 133 W.
, Seattle; 1206 Maple Ave.,
Notes on Sham
To the Editor;
'T'O do the Emerald justice, cheap cynicism is a
vice from which it is almost always free, and
from which it has been particularly free this year.
But this morning's editorial, "Land of Sham," takes
in altogether too much territory, and surveys this
broad area with instruments that are entirely too
false.
Of course it is possible for a clever student by
the exercise of sufficient unscrupulous ingenuity
to obtain a hollow and worthless education when lie
might obtain a good one. It must be because of
■some romantic notion that a college degree has a
value in itself.
The kind of thing the editorial conclude h
not so bad because ‘‘it fits us for living in a world
of sham.”
God help the poor senior who goes out next
month to ‘‘sell” the world on the strength of a sham
degree, sham industry, sham honesty and the sham
kind of thinking the editorial sets forth.
There is plenty of sham in the world, and it
occasionally shows up in the classroom, but the
other thing is fairly plentiful too, and is in great
demand. ERIC W. ALLEN
The editorial referred to by the. dean of the
school of journalism appeared in last Friday's Em
erald. Based on the career of Floyd Tillery, as re
counted in the current American Spectator, it dem
onstrated the possibility of being graduated from
college with honors, yet without an education.
Mr. Tillery’s discourse was intended to show
that the only education he received at his Univer
sity was in the arts of bluffing, cramming and
memorizing. The Emerald editorial was neither a
defense of this type of education nor a defense of
the common American conception of higher educa
tion’s function. Its intent was to show that the
ordinary university, in suffering such a student
attitude to prevail, is catering to the demands of
its students and the expectations of the parents
Who pay for their education. The college merely
holds a mirror to the social scene, and presents
annually to society a large percentage of graduates
whose learning is meager, but whose front is bold
and whose standard of manners is on a level with
that of the world in which they expect to live and
win their way. And thus armed in superficiality,
they have an even chance of achieving their goal.
The editorial excited some comment, not all of
it in the vein of Dean Allen’s communication. If
it was cheaply cynical or representative of a sham
type of thinking, it was not so intended. Do other
readers have comments on “Land of Sham”?
That Reprobate Jury
A CENTURIES-OLD feature of Anglo-Saxon
justice, the unanimous jury verdict in crimi
nal cases, went by the boards in Oregon at the
primary election last Friday. By a majority of
33,000, the voters of the state protested the pre
vailing delays and ineffectiveness of the jury sys
tem by adoptir^g • the constitutional amendment
permitting a verdict of ten jurors in all criminal
except capital trials.
Far from being cause for congratulation, the
new law not only fails to solve the jury problem,
but may prolong the day of genuine reform.
“Hung" juries, at which the law is aimed, are not
a frequent phenomenon in Oregon courts; more
over, they are not evils in themselves, for it may
be better for an occasional guilty man to go free
than to throw innocent men behind bars.
Charges of corruption in the juries of this state
are on the whole unfounded. Often have guiltless
men been saved by one or two conscientious ob
servers of the clause, “beyond a reasonable doubt.”
The rights of a defendant to careful consideration
in secret session are endangered by the prospect
of two intelligent juror.s being overruled by ten
emotionally-minded “peers.”
Public indignation has been wasted on a point
that is not vital, for the trouble is at the beginning
not the end of a trial. Jury personnel is far below'
average, for substantial members of a community
may escape duty through the maze of blanket ex
emptions that thin them out like shellfire. Men of
the bench agree that the juries they install are on
(he whole not average in intelligence.
More pertinent to this problem of justice is the
proposal to eliminate all blanket exemptions, and
to put dismissal of veniremen entirely in tlje hands
of the judge and only on the gravest grounds. Such
a provision would cut down the weary and costly
hours spent in impanelling a jury. An intelligent
jury, picked as a true cross-section of a community,
needs no ten-juror law as an aid to justice.
Reformers of the state’s court machinery have
found some merits in the measure, however. In
the November elections in 1932, Oregon adopted
optional no-jury trials in criminal cases, and the
ten-juror verdict may force more alleged criminals
before judges for their trials. If that becomes a
definite trend, it might even spell the doom of the
jury, which at. best is a cumbersome and unreliable
feature of the American court system.
On Other Campuses
Democracy and Education
T'VEMOCKACY has failed! That, ay the beginning
of a student editorial, does not. shock you,
does it? Nor were we shocked when in political
science and like courses which we took recently
both professors and students candidly, too candidly,
admitted that democracy is nothing more or less
than a flop.
It may seem peculiar that this most conserva
tive of American institutions, the university, should
denounce "rule of the people, by the people, and
for the people.” To us, however, it appears that i
the same things that make the higher institutions
conservative, the fear that upset of control will j
mean an overthrowal of any dominance we may
have, prompts this antagonism. Therefore, lest our
tin fetishes be pried open by the masses and found
to contain nothing more than exceptionally thin
ait, we say, "Democracy has failed!"
II you were to ask us what we think about the
matter, wo should probably agree that popular rule
is doomed. We often wonder, though, if we ate
thinking logically and if the holdings of educational
loaders are not only more sane but also more cor-!
reet.
"Education is life and growth in a social en
vironment,' says John Dewey in his education t
book, "Democracy and Education." With other'
principal American educators, he believes that edu-1
cation without democracy is impossible. It does j
seem reasonable that if learning breeds learning, j
the less of it we have the less the subsequent in- j
erement will be and the less attractive a world |
for us to control.
Even if training does spread to the lowliest I
moron, making him better fitted to do his menial I
tasks, the intelligence of one who is able to mount
(he eliminating barriers will still fit him to excel.!
In time, as we see it, the more complex world under
such a system would select our most perfect off
spring lor sutvival. Then, through democracy,
would we have a race of supermen.- Daily ©'Col
legian
i
Settle the Issue
By STANLEY ROBE
1
Employment for the College Graduate
Editor’s note: Till* is the
first of a series of articles by
Earl W. Onthank, dean of
personnel administj;ation, out
lining a procedure which he
hopes will be of assistance to
University students and grad
uates in obtaining employment.
By KARL W .ONTHANK
Dean of Personnel Administration
rpHIS is the season when seniors
become seriously concerned as
to where they go from here.
Some already have assured posi
I t.ions, a few others, particularly
! girls, are not expecting to enter
| employment, but the majority are
looking forward, more or less hope
I fully, to finding remunerative oc
cupation, preferably in line with,
their educational experience.
This is the fifth graduation class
since the depression struck. No
where have the effects of the de
pression been as devastating as
upon the opportunities for young
men and women finishing formal
education and ready to enter the
"productive” occupation. E s t i -
unites of unemployment among
college graduates of the last three
years run as high as 70 per cent.
It is said that as many as 500,000
college and university graduates
were unemeployed as recently as
last December. In the face of these
conditions what are the prospects
for jobs for the 125,000 new grad
uates of 1934 ?
Conditions were never quite as
bad here as they were reported to
be elsewhere. Probably not much
more than half of the University
of Oregon graduates for the past
three years have found employ
ment in the field for which they
had prepared but less than 25 p.er
cent could be classified as unem
ployed. Temporary jobs at what
ever could be found are being
dropped for more permanent em
ployment in desired fields as times
are improving.
Nevertheless, letters coming to
the writer's desk, from unemployed
graduates trying to pay off loan
fund notes have more than once
displayed discouragement and dis
appointment at the results of col
lege education. There is occasion
ally a suggestion of bitterness that,
college has somehow failed, since
it has not protected them against
the effects of depression.
It may be admitted in candor
that the college curriculum often
leaves much to be desired from the
standpoint of immediate social and
economic usefulness. No critics
are franker on this point than uni
versity statesmen themselves. The
conference to be held at the Uni
versity this summer to discuss the
implication of current social trends
for higher education is evidence of
the lively interest here. But the
real basis for this feeling of disap
pointment is mainly in having mis
taken expectations of college edu
cation. The time is long since past
when a college diploma was a pass
port to a preferred job. College ed
ucation tends to develop one intel
lectually and culturally, to increase
one's capacity to understand aud
to find worthy satisfaction in life.
Professional courses offer more
specific training for occupations.
But neither creates personality nor
substitutes for actual experience
on the job. College graduates
should be and generally are able
to do better work and to go far
ther than non-graduates, but it is
as incumbent upon the graduate as
upon the one who has not been to
college to hustle for a place and to
prow his worth.
Prospects for employment for
college graduates as well as for
others are looking up encouraging
ly this spring. The number of calls
coming to the appointment office
and otherwise reaching the cam
pus is impressively larger than
last year. Competition for every
place is still very keen, however.
Those who feet the better jobs, or
perhaps any at all in their pre
ferred fields, will be those who are
thoroughly qualified and who use
to best advantage the aids and
techniques of job-getting.
The editor of the Emerald has
asfeed the writer to describe brief
ly some of the means that college
! graduates can use toward getting
' positions. The methods suggested
are not original nor even very new.
They have proven their worth by
the experience of others, often
costly experience, which may be
had in this way free by job-hunt
ing seniors.
Some of the suggestions may
seem unflatteringly elementary. In
extenuation. of this the writer of
fers only his observations and those
of others who have occasion to
coach students on how to apply for
positions, that elementary instruc
tion is often needed. College grad
uates, much more than others of
their age who have not been at
tending college for the last four
years, have not been seeking jobs,
and by getting or losing them
learning what to do and what not
to do -in applying for a position.
Failure to observe the simplest us
ages in making application has
cost many an other wise qualified
graduate the good job he was
seeking. •
To get a job in these times re
quires more than ability to do the
work it requires. There are scores
or hundreds of others after it who
can probably do that passably well.
To get the job requires that the
candidate have ability to fill it plus
ability to convince the employer
that he is the most promising can
didate of the lot. That is why the
techniques which are to be sug
gested are important. They help
one to present himself and his tal
ents in the most convincing man
ner.
Topics to be discussed are: cam
pus aids to employment; selling
yourself; finding a market; the ap
plication; the interview; holding
the job and getting promoted.
Under the .
Mikeroscope
By JIMMY MORRISON
Glancing hastily over the front
page of the Emerald this morning,
I find that the Yeomen, Phi Mu,
Fiji, and Sigma hall have been
picked by the judges as the. finest
groups of radio talent which can
be found on the campus. Through
out the length of the contest the
only thing of marked importance
,has been the decided lack of in
strumental music, which after all
is the basis -of almost every radio
program presented in the country.
£ ♦ *i!
Ted Lewis is getting a lot more
publicity than Duke Ellington did
when he was in Portland, yet the
Duke is unquestionably far belter
than Tittering Ted .the man who,
because he can't carry a tune,
merely talks the words and gripes
us who go for good singing with
dance music. Perhaps the reason
why the common, people prefer the
corny flashiness of Lewis to the
superb music and rhythm of Elling
ton is because Ellington's rhythm
is either too slow or too fast for
dancing. But that's the same argu
ment the same people put up to
discredit good classical music—it's
no good because they can’t dance
to it. How often do these people
have a chance to dance to Elling
ton's music at the Cotton club on
Lennox avenue, anyway?
Gee .it would be terrible if John
ny Robinson gets down in the class
of Guy Lombardo, but it looks as
if he might if he keeps on like he
is now. He has discarded one of
his trumpets and added another
saxophone. That leaves only two
brass-trombone and trumpet. A
situation like that leaves a sort of
open sound when the brass is tak
ing a chorus, and gives the saxes
more chance to do dirt. The ten
dency lately in dance bands has
been' to sacrifice saxophones for
niors trumpets, c-o beware, Mr.
Robinson, don't let your fate be
that of that Lombardo guy.
Dance Bands Tonight
6:00—CBS, Glen Gray
8:00—NBC, Ben Bernie’s Blue
Ribbon Casino orchestra.
8:15—KYA, Kay Kyser.
8:30—NBC, Herbie Kay
CBS, Freddie Martin
KFWB, Jack Joy
KYA, Tom Coakley
8:45—KSL, Frank Dailey
10:30—NBC, Tom Coakley
CBS, Gus Arnheim
11:00—NBC, Ted Fio Rito
11:30—KFI, Carol Lofner
Drinking songs and Old English
ale houses and stuff like that will
be in order this afternoon, when
the Yeomen wage the first war of
the contest finals over KORE at
4:30.
Innocent
Bystander
By BARNEY CLARK
A CHARMING note of informal
ity was the high-light of Hat
Kistner’s ensemble, as seen in Col
lege Side last night. Her pedal
extremities ‘were encased in a
ducky pair of blue leather BED
ROOM SLIPPERS, lined with
lambs-wool in an antique fashion.
•V loutl ringing in our ears,
and three times around the
moon is six. Chi Psis have more
fun than people. His mother
was frightened by an air-flow
Chrysler. Nine thousand booths
in College Side, and with a
Chinaman in each booth, the
square on the hypotenuse is
equal to the sum of the squares
of -the two sides, on alternate
Tuesdays’ anyway.
* * * J
•'The Kingdom of Italy, aS we
have seen, was established in 1859
and I860. Venetia was acquired
in 1866, and Rome in 1870. In
these cases, as in the preceding,
the people were allowed to express
their wishes by a vote, which, in
both instances, was nearly unani-!
nioui ;n taver ot tiis anuenatiou. 1
in the former case by about 647,
000 votes to 60; in the latter by
about 130,000 to 1,500.” That,
briefly, is our policy, and. Madam,
1 can assure you we stand behind
every bed we sell.
Don Eva would be convicted
of piracy in any court in the
land: There’s murder on the
high O’s every time he sings. .
Love thy neighbor is all right
in its place, but we live in an
apartment house.
THOUGHTS WHILE STROLL
ING: Dear heavens, how my
feet hurt! Is that Georgie Ben
nett ahead of me, or are they
moving a house? Dear me, it is
Bennett, as natural as life and
twice as large! It’s hot, isn’t it,
or is it just my metabolism?
Libby Crommelin has the lithe
poise of a fawn. Some fawn,
eh l$id? Gracious, my feet are
worn down to the ankles—I
must stop strolling, or I won't
have a leg left to stand on.
YES INDEEDY, JUDGE
DEADY AUGUST MAN
(Continued From Page One)
ings and marginal glosses have
crept into the later MSSS.). It
was Commencement of ’84 and
Dan, as Junior, was one of the
ushers, in accordance with an un
written law of the Medes and Per
sians in that epoch of the Univer
sity. Previous Commencements
had been marred by late comers,
sometimes brushing the ushers
aside and trooping in during the
rendering of a solo or an oration,
so Professor Hawthorne, fussily in
charge of ways and means, had
given drastic orders not to admit
any one except at intermissions.
Dan was outside guard, his back
I to the door and his hand on the
knob, when who should stalk up
the stairs and face Dan but the
Duke of Deady! His train or his
meal or his barber had been late.
LA. great crowd was waiting to be
^admitted, but no waiting would do
; for Judge Deady. He shouldered
i the others aside and was going in!
jAha! Horatius at the Bridge!
‘Young man,’ boomed the Judge
i (boomed is right, even if our sub
ject is not Mussolini). Do you
j know who I am ? I am Matthew
| P. Deady’.
‘Yes?’,—and Dan still had his
back to the door. ‘Well, I am
Daniel Waldo Bass’.
Judge Deady was shrewd enough
not to show his discomfiture but
blandly, grandly, rejoined, ‘Ah-h.
I am glad to'meet you, Mr. Bass.
Do you by any chance happen to
be related to my old friend, Judge
Waldo?’ Dan -was, and a pleasant
conversation resulted, until ap
plause from inside indicated the
close of an oration and the Judge
was in due pomp ushered to the
platform.
My own experience was not
nearly so spectacular, not for me,
at least. I was whipped to a fin
ish, with no chance to defend my
self. During my ushership as Jun
ior, it chanced to be, not the
Judge, but Mrs. Deady who was
late and it fell to my lot to escort
her up the aisle. I did not know
who she was, which should have
made no difference, for the assem
bly room was already packed, but
I succeeded in finding her a seat
about midway from the front,
when I was petrified by a roar
from the rostrum that reverbo
rated through the whole audito
rium, ‘TAKE HER UP FRONT’.
Two or three settees ahead, I
urged a group to move over to
admit Mrs. Deady, meanwhile not
ing a stir on the platform,—Judge
Deady rising from fcis seat as if
to come down and annihilate me.
The commotion was quieted when
Professor Hawthorne came to the
rescue with a chair from the ros
strum and seated Mrs. Deady in
the aisle. My cheeks still tingle
with mortification when I think
of it.
We must admit that it was a
stroke of strategy to select Judge
Deady for the Presidency of the
Eoard. His celebrity as a jurist,
his wide reputation as a State fig
ure, and, if for no other reason,
the very grandeur of his de
meanor, added a quite sensible
weight to our then tenuous little
institution. And by commanding
respect himself, he drew a whole
some regard to the University and
sustained it through those earliest
storms of pioneering.
Thirteenth in series, Wednesday,
“When Garfield was Assassi
nated.”
MUSIC CONCLAVE TO
CONTINUE MEETING
(Continued from Page One)
music in general; Ethel Miller
Bradley, president of the Society
of Oregon Composers, addressed
the group on the place of creative
music in the field of teaching.
The association honored its pres
ident, Frederick W. Goodrich, of
Portland, by passing a resolution
expressing appreciation of his
work. The business session also
commended the fine work being
done by the University, Oregon
State college, and the Portland
schools.
Opening the convention Sunday
afternoon was a tea, followed by
the University symphony orches
tra concert that evening. A mem
bership rally was held at the Eu
gene hotel Sunday evening. Piano
repertoire classes were conducted
by Ella Connell Jesse and Bradley
Keiser, of Portland; and Jane
Thacher, of the school of music,
from 1:30 to 2:30 yesterday after
noon.
Social events yesterday included
the no-host breakfast in the morn
ing, and the annual banquet, held
at the Osburn hotel at 6:30.
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