PUBLISHED BY THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON Fred W. Colvig, editor Walter R. Vernstrom, manager LeRoy Mattingly, managing editor Associate editors: Clair Johnson, Virginia Endicott. UPPER NEWS STAFF Pat Frizzell, sports editor. Paul Deutschmann, news Bernadine Bowman, exchange Gladlys Battleson, society Paul Plank, radio editor. Lloyd TupTing, assistant man aging editor. Edwin Robbins, art editor. Clare Igoe, women’s page Leonard Greenup, chief night Jean Weber, morgue director Reporters: Parr Aplin, Louise Aik-*n, Jean Cramer, Beulah Chap man. Morrison Bales, Laura Bryant, Dave Cox, Marolyn Dudley, Stan Hobson. Myra Ifulser, Dick Litfin, Mary Hen derson, Bill Pengra, Kay Morrow. Ted Proudfoot, Catherine Taylor, Alice Nelson. Rachael Platt, Doris Lindgren. Rita Wright, Lillian Warn, Margaret Kay, Donald Seaman, Wilfred Roadman. Sports staff: Wendell Wyatt, Elbert Hawkins, John Pink, Morrie Henderson, Russ Jscli, Cece Walden, Chuck Van Scoyoc, Bill Norene, Tom Cox. Copyeditors: Roy Vernstrom, Mary Hopkins, Bill Garrett. Rclta Lea Powell, Jane Mirick. Tom Brady, Warren Waldorf, Theo Prescott, Lorene Marguth, Rita Wright, Jack Townsend, Wen Brooks. Marge Finnegan, Mignon Phipps, LaVcrn Littleton, June Dick, Frances McCoy, Lawrence Quinlan, A1 Branson, Helen Ferguson, Judith Wodcage, Betty Van Delicti, Stan Hobson, George Haley, Geanne Eschle, Irvin Mann. Assistant managing editor: Day editor: Mildred Blackburne Bob Emerson Assistant day editors: Lucille Davis Elbert Hawkins Night Editors: Bill Davenport Assistants: 3Jot ty Jtohnenkamp Mary Notos Blot on the Escutcheon JT WAS .just a year ago this week when a rampaging, championship - bent pack of Huskies ripped the feathers of I a forlorn I)uek by 20-point margins two nights in a row. But the most outstanding feature of those two games was not the skill of the Washington squad, nor the weakness of Ore gon before their attack. It was a mass demon stration of rudeness by Oregon rooters that could scarcely be paralleled in the history of the University. Saturday night was the worst. Friday the Ducks had been drubbed 42-22, and Saturday the Oregon squad was wobbling just as badly before the certainty of the Washington drive. Three thousand Webfoot rooters were in de spair. Then there came what looked to all like a couple of raw decisions by the referee, and “boos” surged up in a mounting volume that wasn’t stilled until the officials had awarded the Huskies two technical fouls. Those two foul shots were by no means necessary to the Washington margin of vic tory; for they won 51-23. It wasn't the mere loss of points resulting from this mob dis order that made it so bad. It was tht* reputa tion for poor sportsmanship that it gave Ore gon supporters. * • * SPOUTS commentator in tin* Seattle Post -Intelligencer tin- other day served, notice that Washington has not forgotten that exhibit ion of discourtesy. “All s fair in love, war, or basketball in the L. of Oregon seat of learning,-’ lie de clared, “and the crowds use their vocal facili ties in a manner which would shock those of us who prefer gentlemanly and lady-like audiences. “They hoot. howl, and make uncouth noises through tightly compressed lips, and the poor referee, lie .just stuffs a liberal sup ply of cotton in his ears, and hopes for the Wst.V visiting team has to possess steel nerves to win down there the hostility of the crowd is so strong that you ran almost cut it with a knife.” l>ut we didu t take this criticism lying down, by any means. What we resented par tie utility was the winters characterization of Oregon roofirs as uncouth and hostile in the present tense. We thought it was a rather broad conclusion to use those two evenings as evidence that Webloot rooters are character istically boorish. SO last night wo kept an accurate tabulation of Oregon untow avdness. So» i\ to say, tlio results wore not definitely vindicative of out' manners. Tlioi'o wore seventeen “boos,” eight eai ealls, no hisses, no broil\ cheers, six jeered decisions, three jeers at undetected fouls,one laugh at a decision, and one baiting of a W ashington player. ■An extenuating feature of these vocal out bursts was that none of them were prolonged. l>ut we don t really know how to interpret these statistics, for we have no basis for com parison. it might well be that the number, amplitude, and technique of last night's vocalizations were elmraeteristu* of a normal crowd of excited basketball fans, lint, on the other haud, it might be that W'ebfooters dem onstrated themselves to be incomparably more discourteous than the student bodies of, say Washington or Oregon State. * » * A matter of laet, the tabulation of gross animal noises among ball fans has never been undertaken on an exactly scientific basis, and until such a scientific treatment of these phenomena is made we are not prepared to accept the dictum of the 1’ 1 scribe. JYoh ahly the obstacles to such an endeavor at exactness put it forever beyond accomplish ment ; but there is hope that the honor of the old alma mammy may be restored, if Oregon fans on their own impulse will exercise re straint over their more barbaric vocal urges. Get Your Tickets Here 'I'HOSE dramatic: Oregon Ducks passed the half-way mark in the conference schedule last night—passed it ip first place, one half gamc ahead of Washington State college and with an won and lost average of .750. The team which sports experts a month ago were picking to place no better than third roared up and down McArthur court and battered the touted Washington Huskies for their sixth victory of the season. We can’t say 1 told you so. The Ducks aren’t “in” yet' in the conference race, not by several cinch shots. But last night they gave Oregon rooters a new thrill—the chance to yell for a team on top. Those rooters were grateful, too. They were of two minds last night as they whooped their exhausted way out of McArthur court. The more pessimistic and stolid fans were predicting an Oregon victory tonight. More imaginative and drunk with the heady wine of victory, others were wondering whom Coach Hobson would dele gate to guard Stanford’s machine gun man of the maple—Ilank Buisetti—in the conference play-offs. * % JT\S FAR too early for that kind of ‘iffiug.’ However, those surprising Oregon men played top-notch basketball last night. Aside from annexing high-score honors, John Lewis made himself the third man in Oregon's fast breaking offense. Paired with sophomores Anet and Johansen, Lewis completed what a hockey fan would call a flashing front lipe. Anyone who think Oregon’s showing was a flash in the pan should think it over. There were five men out there last night, their motives conflicting directly with the Lemon and Green five as they chased the ball up and down the floor. Chuck Wagner and Bob Egge are a pair of guards who. cau play basketball on anybody’s team,—up fan could help but notice their hawk-like checking last night. It’s far too early to, predict that the coast conference title will; leave the Washington Wigwam for the first time hr years. This Is a year to shatter precedents—Oregon beat Washington for the first time in McArthur copi't last night, smashing one. It's too early, all right, to be that optimistic—but pliooey on Duke Ellington if Ralph Sc ho nip can offer a conference playoff as that long awaited bonus attraction. c Miscellany By ERNEST L. MEYER Most serious of the charges again Dr. Glenn Frank, president of the University of Wisconsin, who this week faces trial before his board of regents on charges of incompetency, is that he fails to square pledges with performance. Anil in so doing has iost the loyalty of the more honest members of his faculty and the more discerning citizens of his state. The charge is absolutely true. Dr. Frank is an elocutionary liberal, a speaker of such persuasive poise and polish that in debate the weapons of his opponents remain ingloriously stuck in the syrup of his eloquence. An example will make the point clear. The depression was late in hitting Wisconsin. And when it did strike with full violence in lt>32 Dr. Frank was roaming up and down the country speaking, for a fee, from many rostrums and ladling out his patent medicine for economic sal vation. His recipe was "redistribution of income.” For the “Little Men” On April to, 1932. in un address to the Ameri can Academy of Political and Social Science at Philadelphia, he said: "A too exclusive concern with t.be interests of big men has stalled the eco nomic machine. The key to a renewed economic life is the realization that the income of the little men will ultimately decide the poverty or pros perity of the economic order. Economic states manship must not rest until it increases generally the lower incomes of the little men.” These are fine, fat and rolling phrases. Came the time to put them into practice. Governor Phil La Follettc, taking the lead, voluntarily slashed his own $7,500 salary 20 per cent. People of the state looked to Dr. Frank to follow suit, but Dr. Frank clung to his $18,000 honorarium, his $13,000 expense account, his free residence, his free de luxe Lincoln, his chauffeur, his $20,000 revenue for writing and syndicating a column on university time rnd his paid-for speeches on behalf of the “little men.” In writing tins l am aware that 1 sound like a demagogue and rabble rouser, or at least like one who begrudes the rendering unto Caesar. This 1 do begrudge when Caesar is only a Caesar on a soapbox. What happened was that to balance the uni versity budget Dr. Frank and a committee of re gents he dominated put into effect a system of “salary waivers” w hereby the faculty accepted pay cuts running from 12 per cent on a salary of $300 or less to 10 per cent on a salary of $3 000 and 20 per cent on a salary of $20,000. The greatest bur den thereby falling on the "little men." Case of a Poor Scholar 1 was living in Madison at the time, 1933, mid I did not fully realize what this "salary-waiver ' business meant until my w ife and l had for supper one night a brilliant young scholar who was i\ ceiving from the university the staggering pay of $30 a month. For his $30 a month he corrected blue books for two large sections in philosop!¥\. Couldn’t Catch a Cold VG**3 V/HY HE HASN'T HAD THE FLUtET, « helped his professor in secretarial and conference duties an,d used what spare time he could find to work on his doctor’s dissertation, This scholar had been cut 12 per cent on his $30 salary, or $3,60 a month. “It means,” he said simply, “that I have to give up cigarettes and one meal a day.” He was only a “little man,” and to heck with ! him and his cigarettes. Meanwhile, besides his salary, I?r. Frank, who spouts about redistribution of income, was receiving as expenses from the state during the depression years: In 1931, $13,06S; in 1932, $M,3-t3; in 1933, $16,513; in 1934, $13,310, and in 1935, $11,571 And-only last year Hr. Frank had the effron tery to recommend that the university income be increased, by raising student fees, a proposition so shocking in the face of his own extravagance that it was promptly rejected by the regents. Sullying a Tradition Now all this may sound somewhat picayunish, but it is important^in analyzing the background of the revolt of all real Wisconsin liberals against the fake liberalism of Dr. Frank. The predecessors of Dr. Frank w’ere Charles R. Van Hise and Dean A. E. Birge, both of whom I knew quite well. Both were liberals in spirit and so hopest that they were under no compulsion to prove it in pompous orations. Both were respected for their scholarship, Van Hise in geology ar.d Birge in biology. Both lived simply and when they entertained, entertained simply. Dr. Frank is no scholar and what respect he receives from the men on his faculty is based on called, in all justice, a Great Gliberal.—New York expediency rather than honesty. His opus, “Thun der and Dawn,’’ is such a windy portfolio of pre tentiousness that I have yet to find a member of his own staff who has managed to wade through its pages, a feat to which I lay claim with great modesty but with a still greater weariness. And when the Franks entertain they entertain mostly , and lavishly the bluebloods and bigwigs in politics.; and business and society and the high salaried-satellites of the prexy, with occasional paternalistic gestures toward the “little men.” The result in Wisconsin is not animated by “politics.” It is a wholesome and needed uprising against an academic stuffed shirt who has be trayed the progressive and democratic ideals for which the university has been famous. Neither is it a “surprise attack,” which friends of Dr. Frank claim, because Dr. Frank has known for months and even years that he was slated for the skids. It is revelatory to find the defense of Dr. Frank led chiefly by such well-known "liberal” organs and writers as the Herald Tribune, the pro-Landon St. Douis Post-Dispatch, Mark Sullivan, and espe cially Walter Lippmann, who in the field of jour nalism is another Glenn Frank. Ea,ch might be Post. QUACKS By 1UIKSSO II CA M PUS amateur or nithologists were in a stew last w c c k as \ aricd robins flocked to the V u i v e t s i t y greens. Words l'levv as argu nt e n t a t i o u of what is and w ii.li isu •. a. room piexaaieu. vu agreed on regular robin red breast, with whom everyone is familiar. He runs in little steps. 14ut discord eaiue with discussion ot the smal ler red-breasted specie, classified as an Alaska robin. Ue hoys. (Ques tion was whether the latter was truly a robin. This week argument can cease, as worry and sympathy increases tor robin or uou-robui. hopping or running through w aist - high snow and slush. * * * So it's Ellington for the ball, huh ? Good stuff. The more name bands the better. Which brings to mind the tale ol a trick Maestro | Ben Benue played on a Dakota tank town this summer. The good maestro, after much j persuasion, had condescended to take a week-end flyer from metro politan Chicago and play in Brown's Valley, South Dakota. And all for only $1500 (fifteen hundred bucks) too. Mow the citizens of said tank town were only about 200 in num ber. But they scored the country side, advertised with skill, and on the BIG night managed to draw some TOO (seven hundred' couples at !j>o (three bucks) a. throw. A slight profit. The attempt was a success, tank town's citizens three weeks later again wired Mr. tteruie m Ins Windy City bide ant, again ottered $1.'>01I (fifteen hundred bucks). Mired back Economic Koyulist Bernik : “tittecu hun dred bucks question mark stop will send you my trumpet player stop answer soon stop love stop Ben stop kidding me.” It’s a fact * *?* \ one - word characterization of College Side's Newt Smith is “stolid,” according to Iguesso. With typical sarcasm, Brother Iguesso II comes back . that he thinks the description perfect with the “t” left out . . . “solid.” * * ffc Speaking of Smiths, one of our top faculty men has the name and precedes it with a S. Stephenson. A vocabulary plus plus is one of his many recommendations. Many many words he knows, an^l special izes in correct use of all. Students who enjoy brilliant conversationalists and have simi lar aspirations would do well to cultivate Oregon's Oxford-trained Prof. Smith. A brilliant mind for recollection ip his. Only slips are noticed by third-termers in his courses, when jokes repeated be come too familial-. They're usually good, though. «!■ S' * "T^l CK TRACKS . . . From all reports Sunday's ski train might have been more appropri ately named with a "whi” pre ceding the 'ski," . . . Flu Sig's perfection in chastity, Cece Bar ker, had the usual monotony ( .') of a special-delivery letter every Sunday at the dinner table brok en (his weekend by a long-dis tance call Saturday uight from bis beloved and betrothed W'SC coed. . . . Which reminds us that friends of Althea Peterson con tend she still receives two a day and three on Sunday from hand some Bill Si'hloth, now at Har vard.Letters, not phone calls. . . . Sunday's society told of the marriage of evalum sec retary Bob Alien and former campus leader Velina Farnhatn. . . . Last week we ealled Irwin (Oi-one) Cory's erooning at the park melodic with a question mark. Parkites Saturday dis agreed, eaiue 01U ot usual silent stoogy shell, and applauded with some vigor. Mere than surprised were leading Sig Chi ctuquers. [rooT 1* Lights By EDGAR C. MOORE TODAY’S ATTRACTIONS MCDONALD: "Plainsman” and “Dangerous Number.” HEILIG: “Theodora.. Goes Wild.” REX: “Texas Rangers” and "Three Married Men.” MA V FLOWER: “Dimples.” STATE: “Follow the Fleet” and “Nine Days a Queen.” “Theodora Goes Wild” at the Heilig and she brings to us a new and different Irene Dunn, a dyed in-the-wool comedienne. This is probably as light and easy as any comedy that will come this year. It definitely had something to it that held interest and at the same time drew a multitude of laughs. Miss Dunn as Theodora is a small town girl, taken to writing stories of the "true romance” type. While at her publishers, she meets an artist, Melvyn Douglass, who follows her home and creates a scandal by his attentions to her. | She finally falls for him and then j finds out that he has a wife. She goes “wild” in trying to in duce Douglas’ wife to get a di I vorce and it makes perfect enter tainment. Bringing to life “Wild BUT' ■ Hickok, is "The Plainsman,'' at the McDonald, a fast moving tale of ! the frontier days after the civil j war. Jean Arthur comes closer to • stardom for her excellent perform ances in this picture. She plays as I “Calamity Jane," frontier beauty i and woman of action and Hickok. played by Gary Cooper, falls in | love with her. This picture could easily be tak : eu as a memorial to those who ! helped open the West for the im I migrants. , The photography is exceptional ! ly good. | . . . For sparking eyes. todu.\, ZT.Y Kosalynne Kitchen. . . . A \ er> damp, snow\, si us In . sopping Qu.uuai.ck, thirty. Tune ’er Out... By JACK TOWNSEND TONIGHT’S BEST BETS 6:00 p. m.—Ben Bernie. 6:30 p. m. — KGW — Packard hour. 7:30 p. m. — KGW’ — Jimmy Fidler. I 7:55 p. m. — KOBE—Basketball. 8:30 p. m. — KOIN — Pick and Pat. 9:00 p. m.—KGW—Death Valley Days. Comes the revolution! Our friend Pollock didn't like the way we ribbed him the other day about his grand column that he didn't turn in, so he goes and writes something that he calls a radio col umn, but if it's a radio column then we’re a boiled owl. Here it is: By BOB POLLOCK Today the Townsend act is re pealed and the original Tuner Out goes on the air, saying nothing— about as usual. Recently—because of a pair of sevens and a five from home—we accumulated a radio. One of these Monkey Ward mantel models. Downtown they put the old bite on you for $12.95—so it cost us $8.50. Nice little outfit—brings in KOA, XER, KOBE—and the landlady, howling like hell about the noise. Also brought in a law student weaving (homeward from the shingle-hanger’s brawl at the Del Bey . ; . smart lad—his mother having been badly fright-.. ..ened by an unabridged edition of Webster some time before his premier—and he stood incoher ently in the middle of the floor and muttered about women and a babe in Seattle—but this is a family paper. About wrestling. Went to a match the other night in the local well-padded wring. Well-named. The boys do their earnest best to do just that to each other’s necks and the heart of the grunt and groan public. Sat in a ring-side seat—because of an Annie Oakley. Comes the semi-windup. Sailor Trout and a guy with whiskers called Otto Luger. Bout goes on for a few minutes, suddenly Trout hoists his carcass into the air and lets go a flying drop-kick that fans the Dutchman’s whis kers but misses him entirely. But the lads in the two-bit seats cannot see this. So—with IT The Oregon Daily Emevald, official student publication of the University of Oregon, Eugene, published daily during the college year exvept Sundays, Mon days, holidays, examination periods, the fifth day of December to January 4, except January 4 to 12, annd March 5 to March 22, March 22 to March 30. Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice, Eugene, Oregon. Subscrip tion rate, $3.00 a year. BUSINESS STAFF Circulation Manager.Caroline Hand Asst. Jean Farrens Frances Olson.Executive Secretary Copy Service Department Manager .Venita Brous National Advertising Manager .Patsy Neal ... Assistant: Eleanor Anderson. Collection Manager.Heed Swenson Friday Advertising Manager: Charles Skinner; Assistants: Maxime Glad. an expression of awful agony on that part of his face visible above the hirsute decoration— Luger sits cn the back of his lap, holding his puss. Would suggest Ottilie recruit a few actors at the Armory for her next produc tion. Those boys can really put it out. Prize. The head-writer who scribbled when men of the desert had taken Jerusalem: ‘ARABS CAPTURE CHRIST’S HOME TOWN.” Thirty. Passing Show (Continued from pane one) for the nation’s motion picture audiences. Misses New Deal Issues Only minor new deal, issues were ruled upon by the supreme court decisions were handed down. Im portant issues concerning proposed yesterday as the last of its formal national legislation are expected to be brought up at the next ses sion Monday. Eugene Propeller Club Installed by Portlander Because G. K. Conyer, president of the Port of Portland Propeller club, was absent Philip Thurmond, secretary of the Portland Propel ler club, presented the Port of Eu gene Propeller club with its char ter at an installation banquet last Saturday. Mr. Thurmond discussed the gen eral objectives of the club. Calvin Crumbaker, professor of economics, , also spoke. Glenn Kantock, student presi dent, was general chairman of the program. A. L. Lomax, professor of business administration, is hon orary president. No man works at TAYLOR’S, adv. I With poor lighting you are wasting your energy . . . injur ing your eyes . . . and spoiling your own chances for better grades. Don’t guess about your light . . . have it checked. Electricity is so reasonable in Eugene that the price cannot be considered in comparison with your sight. New type I.E.S. study lamps make adequate lighting pos sible in any room. Let us check your lights.