An Independent University Daily PUBLISHED BY THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in *his paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. A member of the Major College Publications, represented by A. J. Norris Hill Co., 155 E. 42nd St., New York City: 123 W. Madison St.. Chicago; 1004 End Ave., Seattle; 1206 Maple Ave., Los Angeles; Call Building, San Francisco. EDITORIAL OFFICES: Journalism building. Phone 3300 Editor, Local 354; News Room and Managing Editor 355. BUSINESS OFFICE: McArthur Court, Phone 3300— Local 214. William E. Phipps Grant Thuemmel Editor Manager Malcolm Bauer Managing Editor EDITORIAL BOARD Parks Hitchcock, Barney Clark Assistant Editors Bob Moore, Robert Lucas, George Root, Fred Colvig, Hcnriettc Horak, Winston Allard, J. A. Newton UPPER NEWS STAFF C.eorge (.alias, i\cws r.d. Clair Johnson, Sports Ed. Jan Clark, Telegraph Ed. Mary Louiee Edingcr, Wo men’s Ed. Peggy Chessman, Society Ed. jimmy Morrison, .Humor ivi. Rex Cooper, Chief Night Kd. George Bikman, Dick Watkins, Radio Kd. A1 Goldberg, Asst. Managing Ed. Day Editor This Issue Mildred Blackburne EXECUTIVE REPORTERS: Anti-Reed Burns, Ilenrictte Jlorak, Robert Lucas, Eugene Lincoln, Margery Kissling, Margaret Petsch. REPORTERS: Betty Shoemaker, S'ignc Rasmussen, Lois Strong, jane I.aga^sce, ilallie fJudrcy, Betty Tubbs, Phyllis Adams, Doris Springer, Eugene Lincoln, Dan Maloney, Jean Crawford, Dorothy Walker, Bob Powell, Norman Smith, Henrietta Muramcy, lid Robbins. COPY READERS: Margaret Ray, Wayne ffarbert, Marjory O'Bannon, Lilyan Kraut/., Laurene Brockschink, Eileen Don aldson, Iris Franzen, Darrel Ellis, Colleen Cathey, Veneta iirous, Rhoda Armstrong, Bill Pease, Virginia Scoville, Bill Haight, lilinor Humphreys, Florence Dannals, Bob Powell. SPORTS STAFF: Caroline Hand. Bill McTnturff, Earl Buck j.um, Gordon Connelly, Fulton Travis, Kenneth Kirtlcy, Paul Conroy, Don Casdato, Kenneth Webber, Pat Cassidy, Bill Parsons, Liston Wood. SOCIETY REPORTERS: Regan McCoy, Eleanor Aldrich, Betty Jane B.irr. WOMEN’S PAGE ASSISTANTS: Regan McCoy, Betty Jane Barr, Ruth Hicbcrg, Olive Lewis, Kathleen Duffy. NIGHT EDITORS: Paul Conroy, Liston Wood, Scot George, Reinhart Knudson, Art Guthrie. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Dorothy Adams, Betty Me Girr, Genevieve Me Niece, Gladys Battleson, Bella Rosa, Louise Kruiknnn. Jean Pauson Kllamae Woodworth, Echo Tomseth, Jane Bishop, Dorothy Walker, Ethel Eyman. UPPER BUSINESS STAFF Eldon Ilaberman, Asst. Bus. Mgr. I*red Fisher, Adv. Mgr. jack McGirr, Asst. Adv. Mgr. Dorris Ji.oimes. Classified Mgr. Ed Labbe, Eat. Adv. Mgr. Jams Worley, Sez Sue. Virginia Wellington, Asst. Sez Robert Creswell, Circ. Mgr. Don Chapman, Asst.. Cir. Mgr. Fred Ileiilel, Asst. Nat’l. Adv. Mgr. ADVERTISING SOLICITORS: Robert Smith, John Do herty, Dick Reum, Dick Bryson, Frank Cooper, Patsy Neai, Ken Fly, Margaret Dt.-ldi, Jack Ernlers, Robert Moser, Flor ence Smith, Bob Wilhelm, Pat McKcon, Carol Aulil, Robert Moser, Ida Mae Cameron. OFFICE ASSISTANTS: Dorothy Walker, Wanda Russell, Pat McKcon, Patsy Neal, Dorothy Kane, Carolyn Hand, Dorothy Kane, Marjory O’Bannon. 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 except the first seven days, all of March except the first eight days. Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice, Eugene, Oregon. Subscription rates, $2.50 a year. A Menace lo Freedom TTOW long a tether should be permitted to the discussion of social problems at a university7 Is it right to restrain man's thoughts in his endeav ors to aid mankind? Is the one good and true way lof scoial progress already chalked out? Is there fruit that must be forbidden to the undergraduate mind? Must thought in an institution of higher edu cation become merely the drill of old dogma? Five student leaders at U.C.L.A. recently were suspended charged with attempting, through their positions in student government, to establish an open forum and to put ahead the National Student League, an organization which the school author ities assert to be communistic. We are not commmunislic; we are not even so cialistic; probably, in the line of what we believe, we would fall into the ranks of the conservatives. But, if that is our classification as to what we have accepted, at least we preen out selves as being liberal in what, we have offered our mind. Surely in an American university, where one would expect a free stride on every avenue of social thought, open forums for the discussion of man kinds problems are not going to be forbidden. Sure ly, if communism, as a solution to the ills upsetting our economy, is a menace and a delusion, it is right to expect its dangers and inadequacies to be laid bare in the cold light ( f tree debate, rather than to allow it to fester as a deep, unreasoned thorn of re bellion. I Six i lours a Work ** A RT when really understood is tlie proviiue o' ^ every human bring.” Robert Henri, (ho in spiratioal teacher-painter recognized no extra-cur ricular activity In the pursuit of ii. “When Rio art ist is alive in any person, whatever his kind of work may be, he becomes an inventive, searching, daring, self-expressive oreatlire " Henri’s whole life was spent intensely and solely - not. as the common bland assumption holds, for “art's sake,” so much as for the spirit of art, art as an awareness a . harpening of one’s sen abilities and powers of perception until the whole physical world spreads out before one like a fascinating can va», profoundly strange and interesting in its entire ty profoundly colorful ami revealing in each re lated part of the whole pattern. For art has no bounds, no section-posts or race or country; behind I it and with it are the same spirit and the same creative principle. Art is an incentive to .life. Here on the campus a wary student stops before the tall, ornate door of the museum of Oriental art. hesitates for a moment, and then asks the kindly doorman, “How long will it take me to see this col lection of art?” It is an understanding smile tha accompanies the door-man’s answer when he says "Well, some folks see it all in fifteen minutes, bul others, many others, come fifteen or twenty times.' and, we add, they find each time something new something to admire through wonder and amaze ment at its profundity, and something to own, actu ally own, through that only invincible method ol ownership—understanding and appreciation. Six hours a v/eek the museum is open to the pub lic and to the students, and the museum librarj in Gerlinger is open every week-day afternoon. Anc the rest of the time, whether we realize it or not art, if we wish it, is in everything we do, ready tc temper our activities with a keener appreciation “Art tends toward balance, order, judgement of rel ative values, the laws of growth, the economy o! living—very good things for anyone to be interested in.” Plain Horse Sense JT has been a durned dry season. The corn’s with ered on the stock, and the grain’s been heckled aplenty by the swirling dust blown from the hard, parched earth. Yes, and the cows have moved stu pidly about in a fruitless quest for something green. But the vultures overhead know it isn't there and continue to hover hopefully. Farmer Brown has been thinkin aplenty these days. When he drops his aching body into the vast armchair by the old oil lamp, he reads the Pleasant Valley Crier and wishes that the “kid” was here tc brighten things up a mite. But the ‘kid” was in col lege, and that’s where he belonged, and that’s where he stays until he graduates if it took ten tussles with mother nature and taxes. Farmer Brown sees in the Crier that there is a tftx limitation bill up at the next election, Sounds mighty attractive too. The city fellers say that this confiscation of property must stop; the property tax is out of proportion, and it’s unfair, and it must be displaced by something else. And Farmer Brown thinks they’re right! By the great horned spoon he oughta know! He’d paid taxes, and he hadn’t much left either just about enough for the kid, thank God. Cist taxes. Good idea. But Farmer Brown also reads that the schools will be hurt and hurt plenty too. They will lose good professors, abolish fine courses and activities. Yes, and they might have to close down for a spell too. Schools would slip back in an age when slipping means lower standards, and lower standards mean wasted time, and wasted time means defeat. Farmer Brown knows that things move fast now days. “No, by crackie,” he reasons, “it would hurt the “kid.” It ain't right and it ain't reasonable. We aren’t living in an age like when I was a boy when this Oregon education stuff was a-slippin' and a sloppin’ in its effort to get goin’: This is 1934, and American education is essential and not to be sniped at by hurried tax reduction bills. There must bo other ways. They better dig ’em out, because they can't, stop my kid. And besides it just ain’t horse sense! And on election day Brown hitches up old "Bess” and drives into town. Farmer Brown has a fine boy and the boy has a fine lather. They are firm and steady. They are what we need right now. The New York Hearld-Tribune editorially pro claims (hat President Roosevelt spoke to the bank ers recently ”1100 amiable words, rich in butter ial. Perhaps Mr. Roosevelt though a little grease might help the wheels of tlie banking machine to keep up with the New Deal. Arrives the Emerald's music critic, after sleeping through a couple of Tuesday morning classes, and says, “Say, this Kreisler fellow is pretty good!” The 20-mill tax limitation bill fight is getting warm. It is making a valiant attempt to smother Upton Sinclair's EPIC in its quest for the headlines. People in our sister state, Washington, are strug gling with a “40-mill tax limitation bill. Oh, my gosh! "Big Cheese Plant Doubles Its space headline. "Well," says the Emerald cynic, "it looks as thougn polities is due for a boom.’ The Passing Show W hal a Boner rpHK supreme court of the state of California has {fronted a new trial to David A. Damson, con victed of murdering his wife on Memorial day, 1983, and sentenced to hang for his crime. The court or dei \1 a new trial lor Damson on the ground that he was convicted on mere suspicion. Yet, according i > the New Republic, October 24, the chief justice made the verbal statement that he and his col leagues believe that Damsou is guilty. \\ liat expectation does this chief justice have for a iair trial lor Damson, il' he allows such a state ment to be made public? How does lie expect to timl a new jury whose members will not be swayed by Hii opinion, d they are at alt uncertain about a pioper decision? The evidence in the case is almost enliielj circumstantial, and circumstantial evidence always leaves just cause for doubt. Therefore, a jury 1,1 whom such evidence is entrusted should certainly not tie influenced in any way by a preconceived opin ion about the case. Whether this supplementary statements of the alitornia chiet justice was given in confidence and was not expected to tie made public, or not, it cer tainly show s, a woeful lack of forethought on the ['ait ot i‘ th tne judge and the reporter, if not a will tlit breach of faith. Daily Kansan. Emerald of the Air By GKORGE Y. BIKMAN edition <>1 tlic Kmeiald-ol - the-Air id being written in the perfect setting for a ghost story. There are two ffliohenug, dancing candle* here in the pres roc in, am! now some fellow of iciportanw comes in to tell us that it’s again. regulations to uu tin. mean.- 01 jlituumauon. Gee, aua with laired in the li.imi. What'll we do? An 1 this column's gotta come out. Our NBC stuff came today. But with one candle on this side of the room, and that being continually borrowed by some unrecognizable blond, oi is she brunette, we just don't see how we can read the stuff to copy it. So you NBC fan* will have to wait. Follower.' of the popular piano team of Buck McGowan, who plays up that, and Chuck French, who plays clown that, will get ,t chance to hear the boys do then ditties today at -Flo. Its tin last local appearance of the bey., wt believe, before they appear on the Broadway stage in Portland as part of the rally hullabaloo. The three best bets on the NBC schedule today ate Yallee at 5:00. Show Boat at o.OO. and Paul Whiteman at 7:00. Fred Waring comes on CGS at 0:30 for a siz zling and soothing half hour. At 7:00 on the same lieok-up "45 Minutes in Hollywood” brings film stars, previews and music. We ll he thankful when tomor row conics, because then we ll get a cbailee to lead this Its a good thing we type with the touch sy-.. - - -—- *'0 i.^*iv~ *-0 ,it- • iu me, The Day’s Parade By PARKS HITCHCOCK Pacific Air Route? Harmless Hari-Kari Childless City TJROSPECTS that fruits of the many trans-Pacific flights, such as the one now under way by Cap tain Kingsford-Smith a,nd his com panions, might not be so far off seemed a step nearer last week as the administration perked an alert ear to the advice of Dr. Hugo Eckner, Graf Zeppelin commander, and Paul W. Litchfield, American dirigible tycoon. Germans in the Air The Aviation Commission has no desire to be outstripped by the re markable progress in the air shown by the Germano-Dutch in terests, not only in Europe, but in South America, ana is now serious ly considering the establishment of j a regular Hawaiian air schedule. Whether dirigibles o r heavier t.han-air craft will be employed in this service, if and when inaugur ated, is the problem over which ex-Oregonian Vidal and his associ aterr are now pondering. The Airplane's Bid It is for that reason that the government is keeping its eyes on capable Captain Kinksford-Smith. If heavier-than-air flight can prove that it is capable of standing the gaff of long-distance service it may well get the bid over the di ! rigible, a mode of transportation whose American record has un fortunately been marred by a long series of lamentable calamities. Dr. Eekener Speaks Dr. Eekener advises the Ameri can government to employ dirigi bles in the California-to-Hawaii project in a trial line to test their permanent value as carrier agents, with a view toward ultimate ex pansion to include lines to South American and European ports. The genial German airmman has in vited the United States to join with and enjoy the facilities of the Zeppelin Corporation (German owned) and Holland in arranging schedules and service. Reports in February If tlie commissions report in February approves of the new ser vice on the Pacific coast, no small battle will be precipitated between the two chief California cities for the honors as terminal point of the line that may eventually extend to both Australia and the conti nental Orient. San Francisco edi tors have already signified their intention of asking the base for I j the bay cities, and those ac quainted with Golden State psy I chology can hardly expect Los j Angeles to be far behind. Boost to Oriental Position Although it is too early to re ganl the trans-Pacific air service ; as an accomplished fact, it would be well to consider the possible! ramifications of such a plan if it were put into effect. It is to com mercial ventures of this scope that most of our reliance upon amic | able relations between Washingto I and the Orient must be placed. If f it. is lound necessary to subsidize the project heavily, nevertheless, I j the diplomatic and ultimate inter-1 ! relationarly value of the tie-up j cannot be ignored, and it is the j j opinion of many qualified editorial [thinkers that, commercially suc cessful or not, the air-route should be put into efect at the earliest i possible opportunity. * * ❖ \ N interesting commentary up *- on the times comes from Ber- j lin: So-called "anti-suicide” gas is’ being given a trial in Hamelin, the Pied Piper town. The city gas works, are now employing a gas, that although still explosive, is without the well-known deleterious effects of the ordinary lighting and heating mixture. If the gas proves successful it will be in stalled in major cities all over Ger many and will force disgruntled anti - Hitlerites and persecuted Senimitics to turn to poison and the rope for relief from the ob- ‘ noxious Teutonic esardom. ''HE alarm expressed by New York City Health Commission er John Rice last .Monday tha' New York may soon become a city of old people because of the si': per cent drop during the last SO years in juvenile population, can hardly be shared by most of r. Many people are realizing, that, al though an urban center possesses many marked facilities for social intercourse, it is hardly the place in which children can be given the I greatest care Commissioner Rice s figures demonstrate interestingly enough that those families who can aford it choose a suburban lo cation for the upbringing of their children. In truth it is not a la mentable fact but rather one high-1 ly creditable to the canity of Dad Still Triumphant By ed hanson ! - — Siui By FREDERIC S. DUNN ^N early member of the class of '88 did not pursue Kis academ ic course to graduation. A tall, slender boy, Milton F. Davis, abandoned the campus to accept an appointment to the U. S. mili tary academy at West Point and thereafter followed a soldier’s ca reer with honor and distinction. Once, when he returned on a fur lough to visit his old classmates, it was just too bad for the rest of us. The way those coeds flut tered around Milt in his handsome cadet uniform was scandalous. Any half-dozen would have jumped from a second-story window if he had whistled, a.nd there was no one to court-martial him if he had. The long, fascinating list of promotion, of honorable service, of citations for gallantry, of high of fices in peace and war held by this boy of ours who left us to become a brigadier-general! We used to think that U. S. Grant alone could wear epaulets like that! Mapping the Sierras, first to as cend the mountain named in his honor, explorer of the Grand Can yon, recipient of the Silver Star citation in the battle of Santiago, governor of El Caney during the yellow fever epidemic, chief of staff r>f the 3rd brigade until the end of the Philippine insurrection, chief of staff in air-service during the World war, superintendent of the New York military academy at Cornwall-on-Hudson, — is it any wonder that Alma Mater opened her reticule to give Brigadier-Gen eral Milton Fennimore Davis an honorary degree, to date back to the year in which he would in reg alar course have received the B.A. ? This was in June of 1928, and sub sequent alumni lists include his name as of the class of 1888. It was a great disappointment Alien word came at a late moment that General Davis could not be present to receive his degree. We A'ere all ready to “ovate" in his MWOSALD 1>:45 COMIMOIS 11:4.3 « STARTS TODAY • DOLORES r2$cm> t&DU BRRRV V KiaiNALO OWJN y VICTOR JORT*^ k 050000 JORT FIRKINS ' Plus this Best Seller ROBERTS RHjEHART'S I 20c Mats Nit O' jicau 000 20c ISa Oregon's One Honorary B. A. honor. The Baccalaureate services were held that year in the First Methodist Episcopal church and the speaker was distinguished as having been for the third time in vited to preach the commencement sermon. He was Rev. Herbert S. Johnson of Boston, Massachusetts, son of the first president of the University, and old friend and school fellow of the general him self. The letter had given Herbert permission to utilize, in exemplifi cation of his theme, a harrowing experience of his in the Grand Can yon of the Colorado,—and that ser mon I shall never forget. It was in 1895 that General Davis, then but a young officer recently grad uated from West Point, was sent to explore the canyon and, through some mishap, found himself, alone, bleeding, starving, struggling up, up, out of the depths, to reach the blue sky, as if miles above him. He fell, he fainted, he was all but crazed with the terror of his plight, when at last he clutched the rim of the precipice and, groveling there, found God. A soldier, then to declare his faith,—it was a won derful citation. Oregon has not been lavish with her honorary degrees. This is one of which she can never be ashamed. No detective work is needed in ioeating tlie dealer who sells what you want. Just look in the "Where to Buy It” section of your telephone hook! There, local dealers are listed beneath the trade marks of many advertised products—such as Philco, Greyhound »Lines, Willard Batteries, Buiek and Goodyear. Besides helping you find the brand you want, this service helps manufacturers cheek sub stitution, neips dealers increase sales. r — w Where to Buy It” is just one of many serv ices pioneered by Bell System men to increase the value of telephone service. :Why hot say "Hello" ■ to Mother and Dad \ tonight? Bargain rates o n ■ st a 11 o n -1 o - s t a t i on wV-i-S calls ajter 8:30 P. M. BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM f Some of This Stuff Is PURE QUILL By JIMMY MORRISON I^/HEE; Hey. look, the “humor” i * column gets into the paper at j last. For the past few days the ! only person who laughed at the : so-called jokes has been the hu mor editor. After you read them, you will probably admit he was right, even if they had been pub lished. The Emerald has been so full lately that Phipps said only the good stuff was to go in, so-o-oo-oo. It’s history now, but you can't deny it’s the pure quill. Prink Callison ought to sign “Cotton Top” Serge Jaroff to play on his football team. Did you no tice Mr. Jaroff invariably surge through the line for first downs? Half the time he was running the wrong way, but most of his end runs were excellent. Some of the campus women took > quite a fancy to the Don Cossacks. Between singing groups they were clamoring for a word or two with their brothers from across the waters. Laura Goldsmith’s ability to | "Peak Russian bagged her a date with a burly Cossack after the con j cerL and the pair was later seen Russian down to the back room of ; the College Side. Velma McIntyre told one of the bewhiskered gents., in her ..best French, “Vrotre musique est bon,” whereupon he replied that , he though the American girls were very pretty. Henriette Horak also did well by her curiosity. She talked French to the boys. We couldn't understand much that she said, but at any rate she was certainly going to town. The Ducks looked like they were going to salt down a big score in the Utah game, but the Utes al I ways met them at the goal line with plenty of pepper. The Phi Psis’ stoc krose in the eyes of many of the campus lads since their Beer Brawl Saturday (Please turn to page 4) CLASSIFIED AND SWAPS Kumpty Dumpty sat on a wall, Humpty Dumpty had a groat fall, And when he found, he had to be mended— He called CLASSIFIED and his woe was ended. For he knew beyond a. doubt That he could run an awful lot At 10c a line, no fish attached— No wonder at all, that he’s newly patched. TUTORING TUTORING: German by experienced teacher educated in Germany. 50c an hour. Miss Anna Gropp. 1798 Col umbia street. Phone 2630-W. A-29-31. NOTICE We are proud to announce the new 4 door, 6 cylinder standard sedan at $707.20 delivered at your door. Think of it! A new Chevrolet stand ard sedan at $707.20 deliv ered. These cars are now on display in our show rooms for your consideration. We will be glad to demonstrate at your convenience. Valley Chevrolet Co. TO SWAP TO SWAP: Red sport coat size 14 for whal have you. Phone 290-R.