Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, February 13, 1935, Page 2, Image 2

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PUBLISHED BY THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF
THE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON
University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon
EDITORIAL OFFICES: Journalism building. Phone 3300
Editor, Local 354; News Room and Managing Editor 355.
BUSINESS OFFICE: McArthur Court, Phone 3300—Local 214.
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
this paper and fttso 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 Awe., Seattle; 1031 S.
Broadway, Los Angeles; Call Building, San Francisco.
William E. Phipps Grant Thuemmei
Editor Business Manager
llobert Lucas
Managing Editor
EDITORIAL BOARD
Parks Hitchcock, Fred Colvig
Assistant Editors
Malcolm Bauer, Barney Clark, Bob Moore, J. A. Newton,
Ann-Reed Burns, Dan K. Clark Jr.
UPPER NEWS STAFF
Clair Johnson . Assistant Managing Editor
Reinhart Knudsen . News Editor
Nr*H fiimnson .. .. Snorts Editor
Rex Cooper . Night Chief
Ed Robbins . Telegraph
George Bikman . Radio
Dan Maloney . Special
Arin-Kct'd Burns ..
Itry Chessman .
Dick Watkins ...
.. Women
.. Society
Features
Ullli’ I HI V 7
Monairdi--flrnnf 'rliniim- I f'.liff TluimflS
Assistant—Fred Fisher
Executive Secretary - Jean
Cecil
Advertising Manager — Ed
Labbe
Assistant Fill Jones
Merchandising Manager—
Eldoni Uaberman
Assistant Ed Morrow
Assistant. Maude Look
National Advertising Man
ager Fred Heidel
Circulation Manager — Car
roll Auld
Classified Manager Dorris
Holmes
Sez Sue — Virginia Welling
Assistant T’atsy Neal
GENERALSTAFF
Reporters: Wayno Harbert, Rhyllis Adams, Signe Rasmussen,
Ruth Storla, Murjorie KibLc, Helen Burtrurn, Rob Rowell,
June J.agassee, Charles Raddock, L«Eoy Mattingly, Fulton
Travis, Rhado Armstrong, liallio Dudley, Norris Stone.
Copyreaders: Victor Dallaire, Margaret Ray, Virginia Scoville,
Dan Maloney, Margaret Veness, Hetty Shoemaker.
Assistant Night Editors: Gladys Rattleson, Genevieve McNiece,
Hetty Rosa. Louise Kruekman, Kllamae Woodworth, Ethyl
Eyman, Hetty McGirr, Marilyn Ebi, Helen Worth, Arlene
Reynolds.
Sports Staff: Bill Mdnturff, Gordon Connelly, Don Cawciato,
Jack Gllligan, Kenneth Webber.
Women's Rage Assistants: Margaret Retsch, Mary Graham,
Betty ..Jane Barr, Helen Hart ruin, Hetty Shoemaker.
Day Editor This Issue .Dorothy Dill
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
ftt the postoffice, Eugene, Oregon. Subscription rates, $2.50 a ycai.
New American Sitle Show
T ADlvIvKZ and gentleman, slop right up!
Ton oonts, a dimi'. 11n' tenth pari ot a
dollar, to soo Maaa—damn Dionne, llio oo
lossal. gigantic, terrific mol lior of llio la
mons ipiinluplols.
Tllo soono, as wo ouvision il, is before llio
cifnvas dotno id’ a circus tout a year or I wo
from now; and wind only a tow months ago
touoliod us as tho lioroio efforts id' back
woods medical science lo keep life in five
tiny bodies so unusually conic into the world
lias become completely Marmmiized lo tin*
status of six-1 earn'd sheep and I wo beaded
cal vos.
Jt is llio confounded assininily of llio
American people who seem constantly I<>
demand something unusual, soundliing spee
lacular. something; “colossal, gigantic, ler
rifie." We must always have -someone lo
lionize.
Shipwreck Kelly sat on a flagpole for an
incredible number of weeks, and some
thousands of young boys worshipped him
and emulated him by perching in trees for
incredible numbers of weeks.
Well, omi thing we can lie tpiilo sure of
is that those who admire Madame Dionne
cannot emulate her by going homo and hav
ing quintuplets any old day in (lie week.
Following li|»
F AST spring a group of four young men,
•fay Wilson. Orton Doodwiu, Sterling
firoon and Rolierl Dodge, was selected lo
represent the I'niversily of Oregon at a
•lapa nose-American student conference in
1 okyo, sliited tor llio following summer.
I lie only expense lo these students was
that oI the passage across and back. Tliev
were guests o! (lie Japaneses tourist bureau
and (lie board of tourist industry after their
arrival in Japan.
-Now representatives from the group of
sb students who attended the conference
last summer are promoting a similar eon
lorenco lor this coming summer. Wiulic W il
helm. Jr., ol Wood college in Portland is the
chairmen ol the committee working on this
project.
Here is an intelligent use of the confer
cnee met hod. Not only does it give those di
reetly concerned a new insight into the daily
lives ot others, but it gives t lieui a personal
acquaintance with one another which will
make directly for more intelligent under
standing. It cannot fail to encourage better
lee ling between the two peoples.
I'o the Japaneses goes I he credit for the
lirst concrete advance with the idea.
To the representatives who went to Japan
last summer goes th(‘ credit for the very
important laetor of emit inning the good
work which has been begun.
OneMan’s Opinion
■ Hy Stivers Vernon_
\ N aggravated politician in Portland lets out
^ *- an awful squawk because Governor Martin
put flic kibosh on a pet measure which lie the
politician was sponsoring.
In a lather of patriotic fervor lie opines that
the present chief executive of this state has de
signs on the idea of becoming a second Huey
Long. Whereupon, the population of this peace
oving commonwealth giggles and tells each otliei
what they’d do to a Huey who raised Ins head
m the Northwest.
No matter what oue tlnuks of Governor Mar
tin's policies the time is not yet ripe to liken "mm
to the senator from Louisiana. In the first place
he hasn't the strangle hold on his constituency
hat Long lia. Martin does not have as many
friends who would die for him uoi as many
enemies who would cut his throat if the oppor
tunity arose. And the governor ha . not yet
. er d su; ativu of sticking an c„.:iuti-.
finger into ihe University a private and particular
little pie. Not that he won’t he probably will
have to in some way or other before his term
is up. If he can work around the chancellorship
issue for the period of his term in the state hoiIs'\
ae is a better side-stepper than we think he is.
Then too, there is the matter of the body
guard. No public character in these United States
Tas reached the proportions of a public menace
jr a public benefactor until he has to have a
oodyguard. As long as the Kingfish could walk
.he streets of New Orleans or Baton Rouge un
ittended, he was practically a nobody. It was
tnly when enough people began to hate him so
nuch that he was in danger of bodily harm
jnless protected, that he became a top-holer in
he national picture.
And, by tin. w ly, Brother Long may have
permitted his bodyguard isn’t his name Joe
Messina?—to beat up one too many newspaper
men, The fracas at the Baton Rouge depot the
other day, in which Messina practically scrambled
an AP cameraman, left a fearful taste in the col
lective mouth of the nation's news dispensers. In
a convention of a national news-writers guild in
New Jersey about this time, a resolution was
passed condemning Huey’s action and threatening
to turn the power of the press against him.
Now if you think this is an idle threat just
witness a couple of things this aforementioned
power has done in the past few months. In the
first place there is the case of Bruno Richard
Hauptmann. He has constantly been referred to
in press dispatches as “the stolid machine-gun
ner,” or some other appelation which does any
thing but promote in the breast of the reader a
friendly feeling for the Teuton. The press tried
Hauptmann and found him guilty long before the
courts took up the issue.
Or the case of Huey himself. The papers have
devoted countless thousands of words to his mad
escapades. These words may not always have
been in strictest accord with his maneuvers but
at least they played them up in a manner that
was excellent publicity. The press, as a whole, has
dealt favorably with Huey largely, perhaps, be
cause he was picturesque and he was “news.”
Now then, suppose they swing to the other
extreme. Suppose the scribes malign him with
such phrases as they tied to Hauptmann or per
haps ignore him altogether. What will happen to
Lhe Kingfish? Just this: He will fade from the
national picture as quickly as he appeared and
run back to the bayous of his home state where
iie belongs.
So don’t worry about Governor Martin. Our
guess is thal he is dangerous to no established
order not until lie gets a bodyguard.
Moods have recently played havoc in
southern ( aliloruia. The l,os Angeles eliamb
er ol eonnueree will probably capilali/.e on
this by sending the information io residents
of llie dt'oiilh area.
Iluey, the Louisiana had boy, believes
that lights should he louglit with brains not
brawn. In either ease we don I see how lines
could conic hack For the second round.
Ilalys allcmpl to collect iiidemil ies
amounting to $-1-1.!>()() I'r. the African em
pire, Ltliiopia. seems lo have lalten on a
’‘dark ’ out look.
As soon as Ala and I’a Dionne memorized
the names of the ipiiut iiplels. they began a
vaudeville tour.
The Passing Show
THE RKiHT OF DISCI SSION
\ MOVEMENT to “purge” American colleges
of Communists, “sup-headed college boys and
unbalanced professors," is gaining momentum
throughout the nation. Syracuse, Columbia, Wis
consin, California, Chicago, Harvard, and other
universities have been "exposed" as "hotbeds of
radicalism," and il is expected that others will
be attacked in the near future.
Started and vigorously pushed by the Hearst
newspapers, the movement seems to be founded
on motives much deeper and more obscure than
the mere increase of circulation of the newspapers
involved. II is militant, strategically planned, and
ruthless. The despicable methods used by Hearst
men to collect the material for the Red scare news
, stories and editorials are exemplified by the “ex
| posure" of Communism at Syracuse University.
A young man, giving his name as Richard
j Smith, called on Prof. John N. Washburn, of
Syracuse, said that he wished to enter the uni
sian experiment, and asked that liberal professors
be recommended. The young man was a reporter
| on the Hearst Syracuse Journal. Professor Wash
! burne's remarks, both at the first interview and
at a Uim.li the next day where Smith and another
I Journal reporter represented themselves as violent
j revolutionaries, were splashed all over the front
! page of the Journal with distortions and misrepre
sentations. as an exposure of insidious Communist
agitation in Spraeuse University.
The same tactics were unsuccessfully attempted
j at Columbia University. The cry was taken up by
other Hearst papers. Senator Hamilton Fish added
his voice making charges against several other
schools and editorials demanded "What do you
[ propose to do about it ?"
The campaign has met with some organized
opposition, not because the opposing groups and
individuals are in sympathy with Rod agitators,
but because they believe in the right of every man
to state his opinions, and recognize tHo danger of
submitting to such Faseistic movements as Hearst
is conducting A group of eminent teachers is
attempting to bring Mr. Hearst's methods out
into the open, and threatens to boycott his news
papers. Conferences of professors of journalism
and of college editors have passed resolutions op
posing any interference with academic freedom,
and condemnation of Heaist's policies and tactics
has been general and vigorous m the collegiate
press.
American students, whether they are in sym
pathy with radicalism, or ltiieiisely opposed to it.
should seize every opportunity to uefend then
right of discu: iou ag iin-t campaign:, which are
■! r ‘uou;;1’ 1 - T 1 • > i.ir,; f "f tie. Atie r
i teat: people. Daily K.ui an.
The Day’s
Parade
_ By Parks Hitchcock
If ill Mr. Tug well
IVaII: the Plank?
''|"'HE recent dismissal of Jerome
N. Frank, chief counsel for the
AAA has led to various predictions
as to the fate of other noted lib
eials. Among newshawks this ten
: oency has been strengthened by
| Secretary Wallace’s firm stand
' behind Chester Davis, AAA admin
i istrator in the purge, and the fur
| ther announcement that famed
liberal Rexford Guy Tugwell, un
i dersecret.ary of agriculture, vaca
tioning in Florida, was not consult
j cu on the ouster proceedings. De
| partment officials admitted that
| this failure to consult the under
j secretary was unusual.
Is Mr. Tugwell Safe?
In the same breath, however
they assert (through the voice of
; the secretary i that no attempt was
! being made in the direction of Mr.
! Tugwell’s power, Mr. Tugwell and
Mr. Frank were not. only good
i friends but were hi very close ac
cord as to matters of policy, so
many astute journalists are in
clined to take the department's re
marks cum grano sal is.
Militant Mr. Jackson
Others who were asked to re
sign received a great many gra
tuitous compliments but neverthe
less got the sack. Mr. Jackson,
consumer’s assistant counsel, alone
refused to hand in his resignation
and intimated- that he may fight
the issue; he is noted as one of
the most aggressive and devoted
liberals on the AAA. His chief, Dr.
Frederick Howe, chief consumers
counsel was likewise deprived of
his job, but given another in what
Mr. Davis termed the “interests of
harmony and operating efficiency.'
New Job for Frank?
As we. predicted Mr. Frank will
in all probability be offered a post
in another part of the administra
tion, or so sources close to the
president have intimated; his val
ue is too apparent to be overlooked
unless he chooses, as he has con
ceded as possible, that he would
lather return to his private law
practice.
The Uherals Doomed?
It will, at any rate, be a subject
of a great deal of interest in the
next few months to see whether
handsome Rex Tugwell’s star re
mains on the ascendant. If he
loses the administration’s favor at
this point, liberals cannot but take
it as a premonition of their ruin in
the present administration, an
event which many of the more far
sighted fear to be imminent.
The Curious
The Curious Cub went a-inter
viewing last night and although he
didn't climb on her knee, he did in
terview Miss Mary Finley Graham,
i the Emerald society editor and
secretary to Bill Phipps,
j Mary, in case you don’t know it,
it about five feet eleven, Blonde,
nice to the people who contact her
and highly efficient. In her lap
rest the destinies of many a gown
and social custom.
She was born? Yes, most cer
tainly in Junta ra, Oregon, on
September 11, 1916, which she un
blushingly admitted, makes her
precisely 19 years of age (or very
close, anyway).
Hobbies ? Swimming, golf, read
ing and the one she gets the big
gest kick out of is driving a car.
Mary thinks coeds are “a little
pseudo-sophisticated for their own
good," which should help answer
one of the questions the men have
been trying to figure out. The Uni
versity is a grand place and Mary
feels that two years are essential
to any man or woman, not only for
the expert training, but for the
contacts in real walks of life with
teal people but, she says, it's not,
In her opinion essential to success
(whatever that is).
She admitted coyly. "And Cubby,
I have a vicious temper." Where
upon the Cub departed but not be
fore he discovered she is not su
perstitious but won't take exams
on Friday the thirteenth (if it can
be helped), is fond of music and
plays the piano for her own en
joyment: has as her ambition tire
desire to sit behind the society
desk of a metropolitan daily give
eiders, and go to parties: her pet
date is tall, dark, and brainy but
they're hard to find. Also another
like the Ouija board.
"Ihd you ever tell one to go to
bell?" she asked. "They never
work after that." The Cub never
hud (worked or toldi so the inter
view was closed
• • Q'J tin. Fur tub! '• 'out tuuuU
, bub a nption rate e-'.o'J a year
Rhapsody
In Ink
By (he Oct lljius
Science
TIME SLOUCHES ON.
Curious snoopers last week clev
erly concealed a dictapi.-one in one
of the “Three Trees” (from which
Sigma Chi’s new annex derives its
name).
A few days later the smoothly
turning disc unloaded its
“CATCH,” to a roomful of those
same snoopers, by speaking as fol
lows :
!!!!! .... you say she
weighs 200 pounds; then she
must be a Gamma Phi . . . then"
you asked her what she though
of hoys that drank and smoked
— (at this stage a heat blister
appeared on the disk, making all
sounds temporarily indistinct.
Opined Editor Oetupus, waiting
tor the defect to grind by, “It’s
Ton: McCall learning for the first
time of what he did on that Mc
Kenzie party last weekend . . . . ,
that’s not garlic, that a Pi Phi.
The threshing of typewriters in
high drowned out further sound.
The Oetupus, Oregon Emerald's
forty year old humanist, today
commented bitterly on the wreck
ing of his column last Monday
night, or early Tuesday morning.
“The perpetrator of the dras- j
tie alterations is not wholly un
known, for,” said grizzled sage
Oetupus, “we have it from a
reliable source that Bruno, Beta
race horse, was seen through a .
lighted window of the University
press building crouched over a
linotype machine lapping the
keys gently.”
Medicine
Long ignored in the public print'
| has been the law school’s hard
[ working nicotine squad. From
eary morn (8 a. m.) until far into
the evening (11 p. m.) the bevy of!
wrinkle-browed, garrulous males
which throngs the over-taxed curb
j has lent itself humbly to the thank
j less search for knowledge—How
| much smoke makes a puff? Not a :
| common, ordinary B. A. puff, but
! a virile, ultra-perfect, between-the
i case legal puff.
; They’re at it again: Bleary
eyed George “Thirst for Knowl
edge” Belt grasps the curb firm
ly and hoists himself up among
tlie cigarette butts . . . Slouehy
Harry McCall warms to the
argument and deftly flicks the
ashes from Phi-Delta-Phi-Man
Dryers' Camel. . . Serious Art
“Canby, I’d die for you” Clark
pauses on a tort to scratch his
ankle (It’s Preshy Bob Anderson i
coining up for air) . . . The
mere mention of heir is too much
for Funnyman Mize who pulls a
swoon to mask tlie all-too-evi
dent recovery of a three-day-old
snipe . . . But it remains for
Little Stanley Darling to send
the ease to the jury with “But
Nora is a nice girl.”
Play Excerps
Radio Features
By George B'lkman
Emerald Radio Editor
You can get a good idea of how
good the University players’ lat
[ cst production. “Dangerous Corn
ers" will be by listening to their
j presentation of excerpts from the
■ play on the Emerald broadcast to
day at 4:45 over KORE. And we
secretly hope that Mrs. Seybolt
will speak a few words into the
I mike, because her voice, in our
opinion, registers just about as
prettily as they come.
At 6:00 this evening on CBS
Lily Boris, Metropolitan opera
star, makes her regular W ednes
day appearance with liostclan
et/.' orchestra and vocal ensem
ble. Jack I’earl, formerly Baron
Munchausen, returns to the air
at 1:00 as Peter I’feiffer, assisted
by Cliff Hull, formerly the fam
iliar Sharlie.
On NBC: Tony Wons at S:15 a.
j m.. The Girl Next Door at 1:45. a
talk by Richard Whitney, president
of the New York stock exchange,
at 1:30; Mary Piekfotd and com
pany at 5:00. John Charles Thom
as. baritone, at 0:30. Jimmy Fid
ler's Hollywood gossip at 7:00:
Lenny Ross it S:30, Fred Allen
v.ith Portland Hoffa at 9:00.
Dance Hands to
Chan^e Around
IP, Dick Walk'll
Emerald Feature Editor
il iK! i r»»C RE A Ml i\l!i\
\\ UEuE—
fill (till --t> t n i ill ' i.
I
The Vicious Cycle
fRight Behind’
Women’s Editor
Editor, the Emerald:
I think all this fuss about the
men vs. the women is just too
amusing. I get the biggest laugh
cut of the men saying they are so
smart when everybody knows any
smart girl can lead any one of
them by the nose. Well, if they
think they are as smart as all that
why don't they show it when they
take us out ?
I haven't seen a man on the Ore
gon campus who doesn't talk about
anything except how good he is
and how he was a star athlete in
high school and all that. And if
they think any smart girl is going
to swallow all that they are entire
!v mistaken. We won’t do it. What
I mean is, a girl wants something
more in a man than just a hand
some face and a line you can catch
a fish on. That is, I mean a smart
girl.
I think the editor (or is it edit
ress?) of the women’s page is per
fectly right about most of the
things she says. If Mr. J. A. N.
thinks cosmetics and things like
that are bad, why doesn’t he look
around at every other campus on
the country ? • Maybe he doesn’t
like them, either.
I want to say that I am right
behind the editress? of the wo
man’s page and I hope she keeps
it up.
CHARLOTTE McGILL.
J. <4.IV. Comes Back
Editor, the Emerald:
Just a word to the people who
read the first four paragraphs
only of my letter of approximate
ly a week ago; namely, ’’Jean Mon
tesano” and the editor of the wo
man’s page.
"Montesano" his identity has
been revealed to me- has displayed
his usual failing of not being thor
ough in his reading. He says, “in
one corner Marge Petsch, and in
the other J. A. N.” He is quite
wrong. J. A. N. is in Marge
Petsch’s corner and backing her
up. Montesano will note that if he
reads my whole letter.
The women's page editor calls
me an "antagonist.’’ and says no
point is sufficiently advanced for
her to grasp my meaning. Per
haps I should use words of one
syllable.
Therefore the translation of the
last paragraph of my letter is as
follows: I concede that the girls
are right in their squawk and that
it is the task of the men to bestir
themselves to remedy their ways
so that the girls will no longer
have any interesting subjects upon
which to write for the women’s
page.
J. A. N.
ON t lil ISE
Dorothy C. Keber. ex-’2T. of Mt.
Angel, is on a Mediterranean
cruise with her father. Joseph J.
Keber. They will visit Egypt, the
Holy Land, and Constantinople. On
their return trip they plan going
through Rome. Switzerland, and
Germany. Miss Keber s brother.
11 '■ P s Tv'h*- l . i.> t al, ing .in
uivanccd course in church liturgy
Again I See In Fancy
-Kv Frederic S. Dunn- --
Our First President
Elect Chose OSC
As George Washington was not
the first president of the United
States taut was preceded by a pro
tempore President whom history
should therefore capitalize, there
are probably not a half-dozen al
umni who know that John W.
Johnson was not the first choice
of the Board, when they"' met in
executive session on April 8, 1876.
The latter was tendered the chair
in Mathematics, which again is a
matter of surprise, for Professor
Johnson can not be dissevered in
our memories from a mo, amas,
amat. Greek and Latin were of
fered to President B. L Arnold of
Corvallis College, which was still
operating under the auspices of
the Methodist Episcopal Church,
South.
It is not difficult to diagnose
the attitude of the Board in the
selection of a President, J. W.
Johnson was at the time Principal
of the Portland High School, the
only one then existing in the State,
although there were numerous
academies. The Board may have
felt that the new University should
have at its head a man of greater
titular prominence and experience
and that the Principalship of a
High Schooi, irrespective of the
incumbent's eligibility and profi
ciency, did not provide a glamor
ous enough background. How
greatly were they subsequently
disarmed of any thought to derate
Johnson, once he was installed as
President!
The man upon whom the choice
of the Board fell was profusely
decorated with degrees, widely ex
perienced in administrative posi
tions, and withal, most happily
known throughout the State, Dr.
Thomas M. Gatch. He had once
before been President of Wiliam
ette University and now, after an
interim in California and as Prin
cipal of Portland Academy, was a
second time occupying the Presi
dency at Willamette.
Much that was transacted at
this meeting of the Board was
either proleptic or later annulled.
Prof. Arnold failed of re-election
at a later session, though he was
subsequently offered a Professor
ship. As for the Presidency, Thom
as Gatch may not have been in
trigued with the prospect of ex
changing a long established insti
tution, situated in the Capitol City,
for one hardly as yet born, and lo
cated in a village with no future
in sight. No communication is on
record. He may not even have
been apprised of his election, for
subsequent minutes apparently
start all over again. At least
Thomas Gatch continued at
Willamette and Professor Johnson's
election to the Presidency of the
University of Oregon was consum
mated in time for him to issue an
attractive little bulletin over his
signature and to open the Univer
sity in the fall of 1876.
But in the University’s fourth
year, Thomas Gatch resigned the
Presidency of Willamette to accept
(Please turn to page four)
Answers
(l) Salem hi.
('*) One who can't resist a I
strong drink.
(3) William Sidney Porter.
(4) Albany.
(5) Marie Antoinette.
(6) Jenny Lind.
(7) Special tax on bachelors be
tween 25 and 65.
(8) Harvard, 1036.
(9) 31.
(10) Quoits.
asoline miles
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