PUBLISHED BY THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon Robert W. Lucas, editor Eldon Haberman, manager Clair Johnson, managing editor EDITORIAL OFFICES: Journalism building. Phone 3300 Editor, Loral 354 ; News Room and Managing Editor, 353. BUSINESS OFFICE: McArthur Court. Phone 3300— Local 214. MEMBERS OF MAJOR COLLEGE PUBLICATIONS Represented hy A. J. Norris Hill Co., 155 E. 42nd St., New York City; 123 YV. Madison St., Chicago; 1004 End Ave., Seattle; 1031 S. Broadway, Los Angeles; Call Building, Francisco. The Oregon Daily Emerald will not be responsible for returning un-solocited manuscripts. Public letters should not be more than 300 words in length and should he accompanied by Die writer’s signature and address which will he withheld n requested. All communications arc subject to the discretion ot the editors. Anonymous letters will he disregarded. The Oregon Daily Emerald, official student publication of tbe 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 ot March except the first eight days. Entered as second-class matter It the postoffice, Eugene, Oregon. Subscription latcs, $2.50 a year. A Hg For Their Snobbery HL. MENCKEN, he of the dyspeptic pen, is a * thinker praised and damned praised when he attacks a popular gripe, damned when he pours ridicule over things held dear. His article in the spring Yale Review should gain him a full measure of praise, for there in he impales one of the most cherished American gripes the British scorn for the American “langwidge." The lexical snobbery of our island cousins is so vulnerable that it needs not even the redoubt able Mencken’s ridicule; however, the ex-Mercury editor marshalls up a choice array of examples. For instance, there was the Rt. Rev. Cyril Henry Gelding-Bird, Assistant Bishop of Guildford and Archdeacon of Dorking, who was hailed before a magistrate and fined 00 pounds for maligning a member of the English mobile police with the horrid Americanisrfr, “speed-cop.” Fancy! * >1* »J< How vastly better, exclaims Mencken, is such an American expression as “bouncer,” rather than its English equivalent, “chucker-out”; or “movie,” rather than "cinema”; or "shock absorber,” rather than "anti-bounce clip.” Just contemplate the beauty of such Americanisms as “mug,” “rubber neck,” "goof,” “bunk,” or “hoosegow.” In the face of that sublime expression, “lounge lizard," says the writer, Horace Annesley Vachell “fell silent like Sir Isaac Newton on the seashore, over whelmed by the solmen grandeur of the linguistic universe.” To Mencken's mind, the American aptitude for coining expressions of this sort is not a sign of lingual degeneration, as our overseas kin fear. Far from it. "In current American,” says Mencken, “one finds all the characters and tendencies that marked the rich English of Shakespeare's time - an eager borrowing from other languages, a hold and often ingenious use of metaphor, and a fine disdain of barricades separating the parts of speech.” Indeed, while the British repose in their mellow moss-and-ivy tradition, the lingual leadership of the Anglo-Saxon race is passing into vigorous American hands, and although no American writer has appeared to challenge the Avonian bard, we are akin to the spirit of his grand times. Who knows, maybe one of these years . . . ? Politics, Opera Bouffe POLITICALLY speaking, our sister state of Washington has shown a fine flair for comedy. The commonwealth’s Jute official history reads like the script of a Mack Sennet chuckler, minus none of the trimmings. First, after a slap-stick campaign, they elect Orchestra Leader Vic Meyers to the lieutenant governorship, making him ex-officio president of the state senate, which is an office of no mean importance. Then in Seattle they elect Mayor Smith, who gives the city a grand show and secures nation wide publicity with his contest to find the com munity’s best diaper-pinning male. But now they have pulled the prize comedian of all out of the bag and sent him off to the big time show at Washington, L>. C. Representative Marion Anthony Zioncheck, whose frequent, gay breaking of the peace assures him the front page of any newspaper in the country. Beside Zioncheck’s antics, how stolid and stuffy seems our own delegation in congress! Only the sporadic tiffs of Representative Pierce and Ekwal enliven Oregon's space in the Congressional Record. How blind are the people of this state to all the possibilities of real publicity! Well, the stolid burghers of Oregon will just muddle along, electing men merely on their record of social achievement and oblivious to all really vital concerns. . And Washington Washington will re-elect Zioncheck. Miscellanything Being Stuff From Hcali and I heali THE annual convention of the American News paper Publishers’ association, now in session in New York, got wrought up on Wednesday over the issue of ‘‘freedom of the press.” The discussion v/as led by Colonel Robert R. McCormick of the Chicago Tribune, that well-known packing-town palladium of liberty, which, during the late war, vigorously upheld the right of freedom of the press by calling for the.muzzling of all dissenting journals. From careful study of the records of publishers leading the uproar for a free press I find that with a few notable exxceptions their private definition of freedom of the press is as follows: The treedom to distort or suppress news which runs counter to the publisher’s own political or monetary interests. The freedom to lampoon, degrade and “smear” in news columns, editorials and cartoons the polit ical record and private life on an opposing party official and the freedom to bellow like a self righteous bull when that smearing is criticized in the right places. A Difference in Definition The freedom to denounce interception by. a senate committee of private messages from a pub lisher to his editors, and the fredom of the pub lisher to steal, extract or buy by outright bribes private messages and documents that corroborate the publisher's prejudices or increase his profits. It must be added in all fairness to the publishers that this is not “invasion of privacy’ but it is “getting the news.” This department will offer to any one who can explain the distinction a prize consisting of a photo of the surviving Lindbergh baby being scared witless by the muszzle of a camera in the hands of a photographer employed by a publisher now yowling loudest against the invasion of privacy. The freedom to demand in ringing editorials a fair deal for the masses, shorter hours and higher wages for the underpaid, and the freedom of the publisher to fire from his staff members of the Newspaper Guild who are espousing particularly and passionately these identical reforms. The freedom to sprinkle the editorial page with copious extracts from the Bible and dedicating the newspaper to God, country and the home, and the freedom of the publisher to live lavishly and some times lewdly, confident that he as publisher is exempt from the spotlight of front-page sensa tionalism reserved for hapless citizens no more wicked but less powerful. The Ulterior Motive There is no one, let me add, who believes more earnestly than I do in freedom of the press. Ham string that and you are on the high road to dic tatorship. Germs of intolerance and biogtry do not thrive in the sunlight of free expression. What I do resent is the monumental hypocrisy of some publishers who have violated every honest implication of freedom of the press in private deal ings with their fellow men and who now, when their own profits or prestige are at stake, raise a howl to high heaven in defense of that freedom. There is a finer ideal than freedom of the press, and that is freedom of the oppressed. And in time, perhaps, the oppressed will recognize that most publishers with million-doliar investments at stake, like exploiters of all times and al kinds, are paying lip service to a. concept which has become a mere slogan and which they have sullied with the muck of the counting house. Ernest L. Meyer in New York Post. Innocent Bystander ❖ HiiimiiiiiiiiiimiimntiiiuiiiiiuiiiNiiimiiiiuiiiiimiuumMiiimiimmimmiiiiHiiiimuiiiiuiiiiiiiuiutiimiHutuuiiiuiuiniiiuuiimummiimiiimuiuiiimuiiuuuunuttiu By BARNEY CLARK When.' was Clark when tire lights went out? * * * Tin1 other day 1. It tries to relate a gag on himself by mak ing la!se-faees at Harold Noble, and the gug backfired. Some dope in his Modern fill rope class thinks that 1. Ik is throwing rocks at Harold for neglecting his pupils and proceeds to rip oil a letter to the editor excori ating the Bystander. It this un fortunate child (who forgot to sign his name to the letter, in cidentally) had ever studied the gentle art of column-writing, he would have reali/.ed that the gun was pointed the other way. Far be it from the Bystander to ever cust a brick at one of the very, very few platform performers on this campus who really has something to sav and knows how to say it. All kid ding aside, this boy Noble is as potent as they come, and if you kiddies want to become big brainy men and women best you crawl into his Mod. Europe be fore they bounce you out of this dive some June. ilaxid "JJave the Biplomut" l.imrj (ells us that he lias the finger on I5ill Marsh, aiu! is I>re|tarrtl to evert the olil [ins sure an) time now. The Marsh nialolw, says Dave, het him that Finley would \> in the elec tion, the penalty clause in the contract requiring the loser to push a peanut with his nose from tin' l.ihe down to College Side. As you probably know, Marsh came out on the short end ol the deal. Thus, Mr. l.owry is prepared to collect, and has offered to inform the Bystander of the hour of the debacle in advance, in order that yOir kiddies can be in formed in turn, insuring a large turnout for the festival. It should lie an inspiring sight, since the Marsh nose is almost negligible and a peanut is a very small target. And now for a pot'm. There is nothing like poetry to elevate the soul, as Dean Schwering has often said, and this particular epic has Ijeen especially tailored for the carriage trade. LINKS FlUC \N 1MIT.TI Ol > 1. VIA “l d rather be reckless aud happy tonight Viul pay for my weakness in sorrow, Than wait for a future (and legal) delight, For tomorrow is always to morrow”’ * * * « “Well, the light hurts my eyes.” Kact1 Shiiikiiio _r* (Continued front (’tliie one) tiff, and Kendall Lottridge and Robert Marks for the defendants. Witnesses for the plaintiff were Reva Herns. Mrs. Winifred Simp son, the plaintiff, Harry McCall, and Hay Bailey. Witnesses for the defense were Dean Wayne L. Morse. Robert Hunter, Robert Mil ler. one of the defendants. Bill Sex snr.it h. Orlando J. Hollis, instructor of this trial practice class presided aver the court. Other officials a'ere Virgil Scheiber, bailiff-no tary: Alton Hukanson, clerk: G. Barnhard Kodde, reporter-sheriff: ind l'hylic Gardner, forewoman of the jury. This case is tire fourth of the se ries of moot trails conducted by he trial practice classes and the :‘irst to be based upon actual 'vents. The fifth and last moot rial will be held May 7. : abactip.rot- l\*tC-9 a year. pi li j*f ■ SsraEfr J I ^ h : r r I The Marsh Of Time By Bill Marsh Jack Benny’s broadcast to morrow evening over the air lanes of the entire nation will mark his fourth anniversary as a radio headliner. May 3, 1932, saw Benny starting his own series of pro grams. His surprisingly rapid climb to the top ranks of net work stardom will always be re garded as little short of mirac ulous. Even more phenomenal than his rapid rise is the con sistency with which he has clung to the. top rung of the ladder. Radio scribes in the United State and Canada have, for three seasons in a row, se lected him as the foremost comedian on the air. No other radio comic has ever had such an honor bestowed more than once Benny’s success has done lit tle to swell the Benny ego. He if. still the modest, quiet chap who came on the air for the first time four years ago. A great deal of his success is probably due to this modesty, and to the fact that Benny has never tried to make his pro gram a one-man show. • When scripts arc handed out at his rehearsals on Sunday mornings, Sehleppcrmun’s lines arc not written in dialect, but in ordinary language. Schlepp never murders the same sen tence the same way twice, so Benny lias sense enough to leave his stooge’s dialect alone. But Benny won’t even admit that his program is tops be cause of his own good sense and modesty. Hd feels that most of his success is due to "good writ ing, good direction, skillful as sociates and the - Cod-given sense of humor of the American people.” Benny’s first effort at broad casting occurred when Ed Sulli van, one of Broadway’s most famous columnists, invited him to make a guest appearance. Jack still has the script of his first broadcast, a yellow, dog cared document which lie re gards as his most prized posses sion, because, in his own words, "it was the turning point in what some people are humorous enough to call mj career.” ^ From Boston: Comes a yarn about a business-woman who, glancing out of her office win down, was horrified to see, ly ing oh the ledge, hundreds of feet above the swirling traffic in the streets below, nothing more or less than a very fine speeinient cl’ a dead man. Quivering and jittery she caied the police to come and lug tin corpse away be:, re it rolled oil and killed somebody. The police arrived, steamed through the office in full array, and arrived at the window just iu time to see the corpse rise up. dangle its feet over the dizzy height, and stretch: On- vf th - bolder gendarmes ventured to open the window. The corpse smiled. "Hello.” Ia\ i stigatii n developed the i.»v, vliui the v ^.rpsv was uoi ii corpse, but a window washer. It seems that he had gotten tired, so he stretched himself oat on the ledge for a little nap. My gosh, there's one lad who doesn't want to go walking in his sleep! LFenatmg 1 earns To Start Forum A parliamentary forum based on the lines of speaking unions com mon in Great Britain and Canada wilt be organized by members of the men’s and women's debating teams Monday evening at 8 o’clock in room 1.3, Friendly hall. Interest of Oregon debate members was aroused on their trip to Vancouver, B. C. The purpose of forming the forum now is to insure smooth functioning of the organization next fall. Officers will be elected from students present at the init ial meeting Monday night. It is expected to have regular meetings at which members will discuss cur rent problems. Th# form of the discussions will be modeled more after the Ameri can congress and legislatures rath er than after the stricter British parliament. Frosh Answer (Continued from payc one) iding in the depths of the Theta Chi house. Harbert, unscrupulous author of yesterday’s libel on the freshman ' class, was apprehended in true i gangster style by a group of husky frosh led by Harry CHfford. He : was taken for a ride over the cam pus which resulted in the dunking i spree. Freshmen, aroused by the slur made at their high ideals, organ ized the little party early in the morning but waited until noon to carry it out. Leaders of the frosh class “flying squad” will use the event as a warning to smart-aleck, : weak-kneed sophs who make un warranted slams against the ’stucheon of the class of '39. Freshmen participating in the abduction were Harry Clifford, organizer, Jack Lochridge, George Campbell, Dick Olcott, Bob Hin man, Mike Cooley, Bob Recken, ; Wilis Fry, Fritz Watkins, Lloyd Tupling, and Edgar Moore. They j adopted for their slogan “Action— Not Words.” Rumor had it that Herbert's story, published on May 1, was a Communist attempt to undermine America’s system of higher educa tion. It was also alleged that Har bert was being paid directly by the Soviet government, and that he received his orders by code directly from Stalin in Moscow. Llye Baker, Ralph Cathey, and Elizabeth Turner met in the Col leeg Side yesterday afternoon to make plans for hiring thugs from New York and Chicago to aid them in the tug-of-war battle. They de cided that because of the weak ness of their class they had best enlist outside forces to aid them in whatever attempt they could pos sibly make to quell the powerful freshmen. Astrid’s Son --- Next King of Belgians The sorrowing nation of Belgium, -.tunned by the death of Queen \strid. find.-, some measure ot comfort in the knowledge that one of ior two si.Us will some day oe its monareh. Here's the fastest pieture ■ t the future ruler—Crown 1’riuee Baudguin, Dube of Brabant, second u three children horn to tying Leopold and Queen Astrid. He will be i\ o \old *s»epteruhcr 7. ? nines Emmett Gels advertising Job James Emmett, ex-Oregon stu ent, was the only student from rew York university accepted by Viliam Randolph Hearst for 10 ositions offered by him to eastern ollege students. Emmett received a scholarship rom NYU and left Oregon in 1935. te was a business administration tudent at the University, major lg economics. He was affiliated nth Sigma Nu. Emmett said in his letter to V. F. G. Thacher, professor of Inglish and advertising, that the >b was general advertising work r either the radio, magazine, or ewspaper field. nurinary List Hits [Vo-Term Low Mark Only two new patients, Althea iurghardt and Mary Graham, were dmitted to the infirmary yester lay to keep the total confined here to six, the lowest number of iatients to be in the infirmary at ny one time during the last two erms. The other four patients are: ■forma Strom, Esther Clausen, Clifford Troland, and Ed Shuey. Failing-Beekman (Continued from page one) eel, speech director, said last light. Persons wishing to compete for he first prize of $150, awarded by denry Failing of Portland, and for second prize of $100, given by C. C. 3eekman of Jacksonville, must •egister for the contest at the of :iees of the speech division before Vlay 16. All members of the graduating ilass are eligible for competition, rhe series of past contests, over i long period of years, and the high juality of orations delivered have ?reated for this contest a tradi :ion of the highest character, said Mr. Casteel in commenting on Mans for this year's contest. Orations are limited to 1500 vords and may be on any subject, jut must be organized in composi :ion, including not more than ten ser cent of quoted material. In case more than six contest ints enter, a preliminary contest vill be held. Speakers in the final lontest wil^ appear in academic costume at the music auditorium May 29. p Herbert Skalet won first prize ast year with his oration,' “What Price Justice.’’ Orval Thompson Phi Theta Upsilon Names 22 Women Service Honorary Holds Banquet and Initiation At McCrady’s w unn-u v-iv< imu JL WCil Lj LW KJ ated by Phi Theta Upsilon, junior women's service honorary, at a banquet held last night at Mc Crady's cafe. Marjory Kissling was in charge of arrangements for the initiation. Those initiated were: Isabelle Miller, Jane Bogue, Molly White, Gayle Buchanan, Lucia Davis, Clare Igoe, Jean Gulovson, Mar garet Carman, Frances Schaupp, Martha Stewart, Gladys Battleson, Hallie Dudrey, Laurene Brock schink, Jean Larson, Gretchen Smith, Betty Brown, Elizabeth Turner, Olive Lewis, Jean Acker son, Kathleen Duffy, Constance Klelzer, Genevieve McNiece. Mrs. Hazel Prutsman Schwering and Mrs. Alice B. Macduff were guests of honor. Frances Watzek is acting president of Phi Theta Upsilon in the absence of Dorothe Hagge who isn't in school this term. Members who were present were Martha McCall, Liiyan Krantz, Marjory Will, Helen Nickachiou, Helen Bartrum, Phyllis Adams, Patsy Neal, Virginia Endicott, Shirley Bennett, Clara Nasholm, Frances Watzek, and Marjory Kissling. took second prize of $100 speaking on “A Conservative Liberal," a dis cussion of the career of Oliver Wendell Holmes. Seniors who wish to take part in the contest should signify their intentions at once to the speech department, said Casteel, l^elp and information will be impartially given by members of the depart ment. Schomp Accepts (Continued from page one) During his senior year, Schomp was assistant editor of the Ore gana and did considerable work on the business staff of the Ore gon Emerald. Appointed to the position of as sistant graduate manager in 1934, Schomp has shouldered much of the burden of directing the finances of class and publication activities. Schomp will probably remain with the University until the end of the school year. Subscription rates $2.50 per year. FOR THE CANOE FETE Building Lumber of All Kinds MacDonald Lumber Co. 555 High Stfeet Phone 1094 jiSEJSj2M^M3M3ISJ2JSJ3MSJ2J3M3JM3JSMSJ2fS®3JSfSfi213J3JSJSlSf2JSi3MfSf3f3JSI2J2J0 Ship Home save Railway Express can handle laundry packages for you very easily and economically. 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