PUBLISHED BY THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON Fred W. Colvig. editor Walter R. Vernstrom, manager LeRoy Mattingly, managing editor EDITORIAL BOARD Associate editors: Virginia Endicott, Clair Johnson Mildred Blackburne. Darrell Ellis. Howard Kessler, Wayne Harbert, Dan E. Clark Jr., Victor Dallaire, Charles Paddock EDITORIAL OFFICES: Journalism building. Phone 3300 — Editor, Local 304 ; News Room and Managing Editor, 353. BUSINESS OFFICE: ASUO ofices. Phone 3300 Local 237. UPPER NEWS STAFF Lloyd Tupling, assistant man- Robert Pollock, chief night ed aging editor itor Pat Frizzell, sport* editor Paul Plank, radio editor Paul Deutschmann, news editor Howard Kessler, literary editor Ed Robbins, art editor ( iare Igoo. women's editor Gladys Battleson, society editor Copyreaders Roy Verns* >m. Relta Lea Powell, Mary Hopkins, Hazel Dean, Jane Mirick, Bill Garrett, Bill Pcngra, Gcanne Kschle, George Haley, Frances Borden. Rita Wright, Jack Town-end, Patricia Duggan, Pat Car -n, Jean Raw son, Catherine Callaway, Sylvia Sarlet. Harry-,Proud; '-t, Mignon Phipps. Blanche Brown, Ruth Ketcbum, Anna Mae Halverson, Irman /■ ■ i Espy, Orville Wi’liams. Kathryn Morrow, Matt Kramer. Beverly Brown, Patricia Allisr n, Margaret Rankin, A1 Branson. Stan Hobson, Peggy Rob bins Janet Calavan, Frances McCoy, Theo Prescott. Reporters Parr Aplin. Louise Aiken, Laura Bryant, Morrison Bales, David Cox, Jean Cramer, Marilyn Dudley, Myra Hulser, Sian Hob s' n. Dav< Ross, Ora May Holdman. Anna May Halverson, Ken neth Kirtlcy. Roy Knudsen, Huhard Kuokka, Doris Lindrgren, Dick Litfin. Fclkcr Morris. Alice Nelson. Bill Pengra, Ted Proud foot, Peggy Robbins, Wilfred Roadman, Ruth Mary Scovel, Kathe rine Taylor. Roy Vernstrom. Rita Wright. Desk Utaff This Issue Day editor: Assistant day editor: Bill Cummings Boh Emerson Night editors: Assistants: Homer Graham Mari Medill John Grimes Advertising Manager This Issue Bill Lubersky, advertising manager Don Palmblad, Bruce Currie, Jim Jarvis, assistants Champion of the Afflicted /T"'iII8 week the annual Red Cross member ship drive gets under way on the Univer sity campus as well as throughout the na tion. In one way or another every student will receive an appeal to subscribe to this worthy cause. We hope the response will he generous. On the far-flung front of disaster the Red Cross stands in the first ranks, battling the giants of hunger, exposure and disease. The Colorado river overruns its shores leaving hundreds homeless and hungry; an epidemic rages through a southern community; a fire sweeps the little town of Randon—Wherever disaster strikes the Red Cross is there succor ing the afflicted with its kindly ministrations. There is too little of unselfish humanitar ianism in this confused, bickering world. No organization which allows its warm hand of sympathy to reach over the harriers of face and creed should bo denied support. New Wonder of the World /^N account of the San Francisco bay bridge in the current issue of News Kcvicw stag gers us. We knew it was an undertaking of some immensity and that it would be opened for traffic tomorrow, Thursday, but we were scarcely prepared to grasp at once the cart ridge summary that a few short paragraphs of the magazine shot dazingly into our imag ination. “• • • • dwarfing the Firth of Forth bridge (currently the world's largest, after the open ing ot Golden Gate bridge the.world’s third largest), the San Franeisco-Oakland bay bridge is 22,720 feet along against 8300 feet ior the Scottish span*. . . . combining the longest suspension span, the second longest cantilever span and the largest tunnel bore in the world, requiring (i.7 per cent of the entire American steel output for 1933, and enough concrete to rebuild all the office buildings in San Francisco, employing an an nual average of (i.)00 men, insured for tjt33 million . . . # * * 'yL/'J1,''W ' grandeur of the undertak ing almost strains belief. .Mere bulk doesn’t begin to give the picture. Boulder dam cost two or three* times as much and the Panama canal cost .7 million to the bridge’s $77 million. Think, though, of the boldness ol tin* engineers who dared even conceive a bridge erected on' the tricky, floor of San 1 ianciseo ba\. Go back to the terrifving > earthquake of 1 DOG and consider the repeated I tn» temblors which the Bay region has exper ienced since, and then wonder that engineer ing science can inspire the quake-wary popu lation with the confidence which the actual construction necessitated. Truly this is a marvelous age. We’re Losing Our Memory rj~'IIE reason we only have one war in each generation is that people have such good memories. So long as remembrance of the “last war” is clearly etched in people's minds there is little danger of a recurrence, but after 18 or 20 or ‘25 years, the picture fades and the frantic scramble for armaments starts anew, nationalism runs rampant, and the du Ponts and Morgans sally forth to work us into another nice profitable fracas. It was only 18 years ago today that America swore “never again.” The horror, the futil ity, the tragedy of war were not soon to be forgotten. Yet today we arc forgetting. Even those who were through it recall the comrade ship of their buddies, but forget the bloody stupidity of it all. The rest of us are sitting idly, unconcernedly, watching our armament budget rocket to an annual figure exceeding $1,200,000,000, while our waf department drafts plans for mobilizing industry in event of war, and even the citizenry of this state expresses its anticipation of war by turning down the nationalization of military training in their schools of higher education. Yes this is the anniversary of the Armistice. But are we not forgetting the firm resolve to which we once dedicated this day? We are the new generation; must be commit the same folly as our adults? No More Touch Tackle ^LTIiOUGll touch football was substituted this fall for a milder program of swim ming, volleyball, and water polo, it will not be included in next year’s intramural pro gram. The intramural board’s statement that the fall program of former years will be resumed is not the result of a new decision on the sport and was nftt influenced by injuries which occurred in play this year. It is, rather, a restatement of the reasons why touch tackle was played this year under the sanction of the board and why the necessity will not be present next year. pACKI) with the problem of supplying a substitute program when both gymnasium and swimming pool were not at their disposal, tlie intramural directors responded to many requests and made touch tackle a donut sport. Next year, with the completion of the new physical education building and the recon struction of the swimming pool, the sports setup of previous years many be resumed. # * ALTHOUGH it is not the plan of the board to include touch football in the liklT pro gram. the intramural board is determined to timl out what can be learned from this year's play. No record of football injuries has been kept at the I Diversity hospital. The intra mural board is conducting its own investiga tion, dependent mainly on the statements of managers of fraternity football teams. In line with this study of injuries, the board will seek some means of eliminating and re ducing the dangerous features of the game, should it ever he re-introduced here. # # * J^Xh.N though touch football be excluded from the intramural curriculum, there is no nay to regulate the even more dangerous st reel and saudlot contests. However,’ wiping it oil the donut slate will eliminate the prac tice sessions which have been held this year and will, perhaps, reduce the incentive to play. I lie completion ot the new gym and the Pool may also help to limit saudlot and street contests by attracting students to use the new improved facilities. Touc h Football ..___, \ (Continued from paije one) that: “It is to be thoroughly muter-j stood that the introduction of touch football this fall as an intramural sport was due to the fact that many students had petitioned to introduce this game in the past, and as we are in an emergency situation, we could not conduct our usual fall program, because of the lack of swimming pool and building facili ties. Because of the lack of space and facilities to carry on our usual program and, further, because of the decided interest ou the part of the students in this sport, it was introduced for this year and this year only. There was no thought in the minds of the intramural boutd to make the sport one to be repeat ed, "In view of the fact that next fall our emergency situation will un doubtedly be over and we will have our new building and the sw miming pool will be finished, it is the inten tion of the board to revert back to the fall program of years before: namely, swimming-, water polo, am! volleyball," Mr. Washke's statement continues. Study Being Made “Furthermore, those of us in charge of the administration of the intramural program in the mean time ate making- a study of the cause of the injuries and what can be done to eliminate them so we shall have this information on hand in case we should ever consider its reintroduction. This information, when gathered, should be very help fid in guiding us in any future ac tion." Mo statistics on the injuries caused by touch tackle in either games und< r supervision or in sand lot games are available at tin Uni versity hospital so the intramural board is conducting it., own investi-1 gation, with a view toward determ- ; imng thc'extent of the injuries and i to alleviating their eases. "Reports from M of the teams! which participated were all in favor of continuing the sport. Send the Emerald to your friends. Subscriptions ouh S:: 00 |vi ye u Lighting; Systrni (C ontinued from /'m/c on,-) three sets of gates before the on- ! trance to the delivery lobby' are hung. These wrought iron gates were done by \VPA labor in Port land this summer. Woodearvings in the upper divi sion reading room were hung Sat urday. Murals for the entrances and the plaques contain messages, written by late University workers. • One entitled "University Progress " is by Protessor Frederick G. Young, who was dean of the school of so cial science from ls‘>;> to 19-.Y and the other, entitled. "Opportunity for ! Youth of Oregon," is by Miss Luel.a : Clara Carsons. The flooring and parts of the ceiling are yet to be put in. Both the bronze doot • and enttaru e gates arc ready to ho hung waiting com pletion of marble work. Ross Hammond of Portland who; is in charge of the construction is expected in Eugene the end of the week to see if it is possible to speed i ip l he wot k • Tune ’er Out... By BOB POLLOCK The beating of drums, the blare of bugles, and the sound of march ing men that's all you’ll get today besides sleep. That is, except for the Colonel’s boys . . . they’ll climb out of bed, into their nice monkey suits and be ready to feel the thud of an eight and a half pound Spring field on their shoulders for a couple of pavement miles around nine this morning ... ah, yes, the ROTC marches again, NBC does Armistice day very well indeed ... at 8 this a. m. a talk from the Tomb of the L'n known soldier with all the old time-worn phrases . . . should be of some comfort to us all . . . then, the Disabled Veterans’ com mander, Froome Barbour, will try to talk employers into hiring ex soldiers to keep the lads from em barrassing the administration by asking for pensions . . . Last big shot of the day is at seven when women all over the country will give peace talks. Then, with appropriate ceremonials, the flag will be lowered and we will be able to go back to buying battle ships. Yep, we saw ’em "Bury the Dead” last night, too . . . A lighter note in the general dish of hooey will be provided by Flank’s Kmerald of the Air on KORK from 8 to 8:30 tonight. , Pianos? Say, the lad has a mil lion of ’em—with three players: Gus Meyers—and here’s a plug for a good campus band . . . and a suggestion they dig up just a little bigger repertoire—Chuck French, who’ll try a solo, and Jack McCarty, the blond lad, who booms the Mac’s noisy organ on Wednesday nights. There’ll also be a ipystery trio with Gus Mey ers as pivot man . . . we call it a mystery trio because who’ll be in it and what they’ll sing is a mys tery even to genial Gus himself— or was last night ... so Plank says. No paper tomorrow’ ... so here's a tip: try the symphony Thursday evening. They've got "Ride of the Valkyries" from "Die Walkure” by Wagner. Personally, wre don’t know a conductor's baton from the jani tor’s broom, but that number is OK. TCU Ugliest Man (Continued from page one) annually for cigarettes, as revealed by a survey conducted by the Ma jor College publication. Room and board costs students $637,640, with the men paying three times as much as the women. Flowers are purchased by the men to the tune of $48,706, the wo men spending $12,506. In their more intellectual moods, students spend $235,706 annually for books, but the greatest amount goes for the purchase of books of the fic tion type. Stators Hire Chaperon Hiring a chaperon for Saturday informal entertainment is the new social idea introduced on the Ore gon State college campus by Sig ma Nu. Dr. Kate \V. Jameson, dean of women, has approved the plan and suggested that a similar idea be adopted in the rest of the fraternities and sororities. So|>li Informal (Continued from page one) A novel plan to secure dates for prospective customers was formu lated yesterday by a committee of sophomore women. According to the “dating bureau," dates of all varieties can be had from a com plete listing. With a motto of "dates we sell, we do not tell," the group of girls plan to give satis faction to prospective informal cus tomers. r c cum * C- m c ni i ft -1- i The Oregon Daily Emerald, official I indent publication of the VniversiU of j Oregon. Kiifrene. published daily during: | the college year except Sunduys. Mon- I days, holiday*, examination periods, tho fifth da> of December to January t except January 1 to 12. annd March 5 o' March March L'2 to March JO. Tutored a* second-class matter at the I'ostoffice. Eugene, Oregon, Sul -scrip tion rate, $$.00 a year. MKMHKU OF MAJOR COLLEGE I'rm.it'A rioNs Ucpre -'nted hy A. J. Norris Hill C'.. ■ • r i Jnd St . New Yerx v i* > . M Madison St . Chicago ; to i _ml \'e , Seattle; l * J l S. Broadway. l.o> Argi-le.; t ail Building, San Francisco. Business Office Assistants .J.'can Farrens, Bettylou Swart. Sal’\ MoCirow . Avlnvi Smith. Anre Earnest. Bett> Crider, Margaret Carlton. lVri> Dt Youn, .’can Cleveland. Helen Huns* lav V ames. Anne Fredrickson. Aliv; i >n ri p p. Barbara F py. Caroline HowirJ, Jatuv BaTkett, Louise 1'lunt n:c- Nancy Cleveland. Bl SI NESS STAFF Nat al Advertising Mg Daisy N A->i-i .;it . Eleanor Anderson t irc ilnt ion From Mgr. (b raid C: i-:m*n Circulation Manager Franco.- Ol-on \- -tit.;: Joan Ruwsott Merchandising Manager I o- M ik r Portland Adv. Mgr. Bill San o c Kxceutive Seetvtarv Caroline Hand v .on Manage luve. Swenson Campus Calendar Patients in the infirmary today are: Laverne Littleton, Gayle Mey j er, Beverly Brown, Alice Morris, May Hoover, Peggy Hayward, Jean Rawson, Bob Piper, Dick Pierce, Harry Ragsdale, William McCurdy, Don Armpriest, Everett Naylar. Vernon Sprague, and LeNells Mathews. All campus libraries will be open at the regular hours today. Students Invited to Sing In Young People’s Choir All University students are in vited to sing in the Young People's choir, which practices at the Meth odist church every Thursday night, from 5:30 to 7, according to Mary Field, music student, directing the group. A potluck supper will precede the singing session, and each is expect ed to bring one covered dish. Feverish War Days (Continued from page one) fare, Colonel Leader was a man of sparkling democratic personality, and because of his influence the Oregon campus became one of the foremost military centers in the state. He lectured to the students on military science and tactics, and i gave them actual practice in trench I warfare by making a battlefield out of the golf course that lay in the I block where Hayward field and Mc Arthur court now stands. Trenches, dugouts, first aid sta tions, barbed ware entanglements, i and .communication lines were es J tablished and the students held j sham battles that lasted all night, j There were casualties, too, in the | line of black eyes, bruises, scratches, end torn clothing. j The excitement w’as great but in , no way touched the joy of that day in November when Dean Eric W. Allen of the school of journalism read the wire reports of the Armis tice to the assembled throngs on Kincaid field, the athletic field w’here Condon hall now stands. Kessler Wins (Continued from page one) Two of the winners, Howard Kessler and Stanley Robe, are jour nalism majors. The third, Edwin Robbins, majors in economics. 15-Minute Talks The contest was held Monday af ternoon. The competitors spoke in turn for 15 minutes per entry in the speech laboratory. Their voices were carried to room 218 S. H. Friendly hall where the judges and the audience listened. A board with a switch regulated by Professor Casteel in room 218, directed the speakers when to change their tone or speed of voice. AWS Council Cets (Continued from page one) at the first AWS mass meeting of the year. Plans were also discussed for an AWS auction sale in charge of Marie Rasmussen, while Vivian Emery described the work of freshmen orietation on the cam pus. A report from Gladys Battelson showed a profit of aproximately §135 from the three-game mum sales for the AWS treasury. The council adjourned after de ciding upon recommendation from Fred Hammond, president of the student body, to help Oregon wo men uphold traditions in the fu ture. Send the Emerald to your friends. Subscriptions only §3.00 per year. SOS (Save Our Sophomores) DATE COUPON Fill, out this coupon and drop it in the box in front of the Col lege Side. Applicant's name. Phone number. Preference, if any. Requirements: Height: tall t 1 medium ( .. i short ( ...1. Weight: heavyt .1 middle (..) feather t.. >. Eyes: black ( ...) blue (....! brown i . Hair: red ( .1 blond (. ..) 'brurfettc t ' none (....!. Personality: yes ( ) no t ..) plus ( ). Remarks . Aragon Aqueduct Dynamited . .... . All’s fair in war,” so loyalists dynamited the aqueduct in Aragon (o flood rebel position's in an effort to stem the advance on Madrid. Heating Tunnel Strange ‘Under-Campus’ Maze By DICK LITFIN Some day you must try it; ’twas a real experience. I mean exploring the maze of steam heating tunnels that are laid beneath the surface of Oregon's campus. In places you are 25 feet beneath the surface. The tunnels are six feet wide and seven feet high. Through each tunnel run two pipes— a heat-protected steam pipe and a drainage pipe. The tunnels are elec trically lighted. The longest and largest passageway begins at the heating plant ana ronows a airecc line soutn alongside University street to the Igloo. Another starts at the heating plant, crosses to the art building, turns south to the ad building, con tinues to Gerlinger hall and ends at the new library. A branch tunnel is now being constructed between the two trunk lines along Thirteenth I street near University. It will be used to carry off drainage and transfer heat from one main tunnel to the other. The air is surprisingly co'ol and clean, because air heated by the warm pipes rise through ventilation shafts and cool air rushes in at the plant entrance. Along the 1800 foot tunnel be tween the heating plant and the Ig loo, small underground springs pour through the cement walls and are carried off by a floor drainage sys tem and steered into the millrace. Workmen are constantly kept busy caring for new streams of water seeping through the walls. Construction of the two main-line tunnels, the new branch, and re pairs are supervised by F. E. Sea man, construction foreman. Con struction was started by the CWA, taken over by the SERA, and is be ing completed by the WPA. Some of the isolated, quiet por tions of the tunnels would provide an excellent location for a murder. Or as protection from an air raid. The Passing Show (Continued from payc one) spokesman said, his country will still attempt to make some direct agreement with her hereditary en emy. France. Paving the Way Labor forces began bearing down on the national government yester day and from many quarters in an organized campaign for wage and hour legislation, even though con stitutional amendment may be nec essary. Sweat shop evils, and employ ment of child labor, noticeably in creased since invalidation of the NRA, were the concern of labor leaders both within and outside the government. President Roosevelt yesterday said he had given no thought to constitutional amend ment. ( HAT GROUP TO MEET "Family Ties Shall We Tie Them Tighter or Shall We Loosen Them" will be discussed at the meeting of the YWCA campus chat group Thursday evening at eight. Mrs. Emmajean Peterson of the home economics department will lead the discussion. Everyone in terested is invited to attend. Fencers’ Club Elects Officers Delbert James Robinson was elected president and Lenore La vanture, secretary-treasurer of the University fencing club last week in Gerlinger hall, when approxi mately fifteen students gathered to plan this year’s fencing activities. Men and women agreed to meet twice a week for practice, Monday afternoon from 3 to 5 o'clock, and Thursday evening from 7:30 until 9:30 in the Women’s. Gym of Ger linger. It was also agreed to ac cept the invitation of Oregon State to a friendly match at Corvallis soon. The group decided to tax them selves twenty-five cents a term club dues for social purposes with which to serve refreshments to their own group and when enter taining fencers from other schools. It was generally believed by var ious members that both advanced and beginning fencing classes for men would be taught next term by j the University to correspond to those fencing groups already active in the women's physical education department. • Winter Excursion Fares East. • Low-Cost Meals, e Air-Conditioned Coaches and Sleepers. • Fast, Convenient Service. • Free Pillows and Porter Service in Coaches. J C. Cumming, General Agent C. H. Jacka, Trav. Traffic Agent 751 Pittock Block Portland, Oregon DRAPERIES — FURNITURE UPHOLSTERING REPAIRING APPLEGATE FURNITURE CO. llth and Willamette Phone 861 TODAY’S ATTRACTIONS HEILIG: “Mummy’s Boys” and “Hearts in Bondage.” MCDONALD: “Road to Glory” and “Mr. Cinderella.” REX: "Little Lord Fauntleroy” and “Things to Come.” MAYFLOWER: "Bullets or Bal lots.” STATE: “Strange Wives.” James Dunn and Mae Clarke at the Heilig in "Hearts in Bondage” is a picture portraying the epic battle between the Monitor and the Merrimac with a nation's fate and two lovers’ happiness in the bal ance. Wheeler and Woolsey give > another hilarious exhibition in the supporting bill. Frederic March, Warner Baxter, and Lionel Barrymore, three great stars in the year’s greatest war ro mance, “Road to Glory’’ at the Mc Donald. The strange drama of heart-starved fighting men and a girl with love to give—to one. June Lang and Gregory Ratoff head the remaining cast. “Mr. Cinderella,’’ a full length comedy with Jack Haley and Betty Furness, is on the same bill. * * * Freddie Bartholomew and Do lores Costello Barrymore appear in another masterpiece, “Little Lord ^ Fauntleroy” and H. G. Wells’ “Things to Come” an amazing and thrilling forecast at the Rex. * * * Edward G. Robinson, of “Little Cdesar” fame, and Joan Blondell co-star in “Bullets or Ballots,” an expose of several big-city rackets on today's bill at the Mayflower. FILTER-COOLED faa/nA MEDICO SOMETHING WONDERFUL GOES ON INSIDE: FINEST I BR.AR ■ MONEY CAN BUY ■UNHEARD OF VgtUE ✓ Tliis simple appear ing yet amazing absorbent filter in vention with Cello phane exterior and cooling mesh screen interior keeps juices and flakes in Filter and out of mouth. Prevents tongue bite, raw moutb, wet heel, bad odor, frequent expectoration, No breaking in. Improves thetastesnd aromaofany tobacco. ALSO CIGARETTE AND CIGAR HOLDERS THE ONLY PATENTED “CELLOPHANE”-SEALED FILTER-IT REALLY FILTERS Don’t Count on Fisherman’s Luck ... to find your lost ar ticles. to see the rest of the students know that you can type out their terra papers. . . . USE EMERALD t LASSIFIED ADS FOR RESULTS