OREGON EMERALD I’ubished Wednesday and Saturday dur ing the college year by indents of the I'NIVIiKSITY Oh OKliOON Application made lot -ciond elao* in i rates. SUBSCKII’TIu.N Is \ m > One year.$1 IHi Single copy.$ .05 EDITORIAL STAKE KdItor-in-Chlef . ...W. C. Nicholas. 10 News Kditor .Ralph Moores, 12 Assistant .Win. K. Rowell, 'll City Kditor .Calvin Sweek, 'll Asistant .Dean Collins, '10 Reporters .I,. I Ray, '12 .R. lit. Rowell, li: .W. S. Main 12 .H. L. Cash, 12 .F. S. Waite, 12 .Geo. Shantln, '12 .Dan Mitchell '12 .W. it. Bailey, 12 .Karl Ontliank, '12 .Helen Higbee '12 BUSINESS STAKE Business Manager.. Friis. Dean, 'll Circulation .C. A. Osterholin, '12 Advertising .lames Canfield. ’12 Saturday, June 11, 1910 Some Things That Are Worth While and Others mat Are Not Yv Iru all the conflicting philosophies concerning the meaning 01 n.e have .1 satisfactorily settled, when 1. cnieaiis and i>rahinins lane compro mised their differences and agreed up on the fundamental spring of human action, when charitable Christian shall rest in peace with justice loving Jew, and our own motives shall be exhib ited to us without hypocrisy, color, or pretence, two forces, we believe, will be found to be behind them all: The desire for esteem; self esteem for some, and for some the esteem of others. I.very man must decide for himself which of these gods he wishes to fol low, and no two will agree probably on the basis for self esteem. As to the esteem ol others, let us see how it may be acquired. In history there are two classes of men; one was admired, the other loved. I he one was the hero, the other the man. YVe still admire Caesar, the hero, but we love Brutus, the man. The world turns in terror from the genius Napoleon, with his path of blood and ruin, to the man Lincoln.fl It is time for college men to think a little more carefully about the mean ing of these men’s lives. We are in a little world of our own, and our chief object after learning, perhaps, should i e to make friends, to win the esteem of our fellow students. We should recognize that in this the only thing that counts is our worthiness and the effort we put forward. I he office of the politician, the place won by the hero has only two possible uses. One is as a means of winning esteem, and the other is as a symbol that this esteem has been won. An office held for any other purpose is useless. No office brings popularity, or if it does it is only the proverbial popularity of rats for a sinking ship. ! heretorc, students, remember tins: An office is not worth striving for ;is ;m honor. It you have the honor, the office will come without striving. If an office docs not come with the esteem of yonr fellow men, it will go into prof itless hands, and yon will get something far better. Hie spontaneous applause which greeted a student when he went forward before the meeting last Tues day afternoon was a symbol of popu lardy more unmistakably than all the offices in the student body. Offices may be won by intrigue; applause like that, never. If that student takes our ad vice, he will value that applause above any other honors he can receive while a student at this or any other univer sity. To all who stay over for the few days of Commencement this year is promised a time of real pleasure. Ex aminations are all ofl. the mind is free front the thought of harassing quizzes and grim professors. I he reaction from the year is a fine sense of rest and con tentment, so that when the two culmi nating days of Commencement come, Tuesday and Wednesday, exeryone feels in a joyous and hilarious (perfectly conventional) mood, to enter with spir it and zest into the various occasions which is of hearty good fellowship and friendship with all who claim the Uni versity as their alma mater. A FEW WORDS ON THE FAMOUS OREGON SPIRIT DUDLEY CLARKE, 1910, PHI LOSOPHIZES ON A L TIMELY TOPIC The Shame of the College There conies a time in the life of every college man when he wants to say exactly what he thinks,—that time is usually just before he graduates, for he feels that he can talk with assurity of the conditions of college life. 1 have been asked a number of times during the last few weeks to give my opin ions on various things connected with college life, and this I have done freely. To stop any misapprehension, I would say this at the start,— I am not aiming my remarks at any particular bunch clique or set; if any take offense, it is because the shoe lits, and those that it pinches the most will holler the loud est. so keep your eyes open for squalls. What does a man come to college for? Kvcryonc will say at a moment’s notice that it is to get an education. Well, what does an education consist of? It consists of what a man absorbs from his books and (yes that’s where the rub comes in) what he absorbs from his associates. Let’s gel right at the heart of the matter and find out what a man gets from his associates. Does a man mix with the ones that are most con genial to him? Does he mix with the ones whose assistance will help him in after life? Does he? Yes, if theose men happen to be in the same house with him ; yes, if his bunch happens to be friendly with the other crowd. I’ll venture there are not ten seniors in college who can hon estly sav that they know all the men in their class that they care to meet or who, in fact, know more about their own classmates than to call them by their first name when it comes near election time. What kind of a college is this anyway? Is it a state university where, it is supposed, men will broad en out and do the best for the state, or is it a select crowd of social parasites? To tell the truth after being four years in attendance, 1 am as much at sea over that matter as a freshman;—and by the way while 1 am on the matter let me express my opinion about politics and politicians. When l came here they told me that the best man was hound to win, and that it was “Oregon Spirit” (a title of some antiquated feeling I believe from the way things are now run') that would see that all personal and private griev ances were laid aside, and the best man would be bound to win. As I think of tin matter at the present moment it makes me laugh. The best man win— why yes—he’ll win if he happens to be long to a clique that has a little in tluence or if he happens to be that kind of an individual who would sell his chance for a little worn out tinsel. Does the best man win; does he? Do you take into consideration whether he de serves the place, has he honestly done enough to entitle him to it? Not by a whole lot. You vote for the man whose house may help yours in the next election or who has never offended your tender feelings (that to the call of honor are as thick as a hull's hide). 1 said it oie outset of this little com muni cation that I didn't want to be per sonal but if there is a man in the Var- j look back over the events of not a year | ago, but a week, rnd say that what I sity that calls himself a man, who can have said is false, he’s a candidate for the Roosevel* Nature Faking Club and he knows u. As for the college poli ticians, and by 1 e way you know them as well as I do, they are, to say the least the most contemptible and nau seating beasts that ever infested the campus. Such persons, whose only aim in college is to get the name of their men in the fraternity magazine, and to see that the crowd has the most offices, however incapable, as nine times out of ten results from them to be, are the ones that will babble most about “Ore gon spirit,” and occupy half an hour of your time trying to find out where you stand on a matter that is none of their business; that beast has occupied in times past some little place on the cam pus, and to those who remain when I am gone I would say this: Though the faculty has cut out hazing, it is not in any sense of the word hazing to give the water cure to a pest. Even the trees are sprayed to rid them of a parasite. Since 1 have gone this far, I might as well go the Hurt, and say a few things more before 1 "cut it," and those few things are these: You ask an Or egon man of the old guard what the one thing that Oregon was most noted for was, and he will say “Oregon spir it.” To those men Oregon spirit meant everything for the Varsity, and nothing that interferes with it is to oe taken into consideration. That the men who held the offices and captained the teams were the men who earned them honestly and by consistent and untiring effort for the Varsity. What is the “Oregon spirit,” that you prate about today (and know nothing of)? I'll tell you what it is. It's self, pure and simple, nothing more or less than self. '1 here are a few things that you can blind a man’s eyes to for a little while, hut when it gets so that bunches are working to the detriment of the college, then it is high time that some one did what the most successful of them don't do—come out in the open and open the eyes of the grids and mdergrads to the, condition th ists. Oregon spirit of the past is a myth md grows more and more wnaln.Ai every year. The word bunch or men is heard on the campus live times to the word Varsity once. Student Body offices, captains of teams, and what not, are the prey of petty jealousies and scraps. If you have read this far you »vill know what I meant when I headed this “ I he Shame of the Varsity.” If you’re a man and the little tin god of Self and Bunch hasn’t eaten its way into that part of your anatomy where it is supposed your conscience lies, hen you know what to do If you’re not, then the words of the prophet paraphrased, “The Lord have mercy on die Varsity." DUDLEY R . \ ’ I 0111 Kelly lias hearkened to the never to he resisted call of the diamond, and left last night for Chehalis, where he will take charge of the Chehalis team in the state league. The University of Michigan will pub lish a daily paper during the summer session. WANTED.—College men to sell our lawn sprinkling device. Just on the mar ket, absolutely no competition. It will be a wonderful summer seller and money maker. Write at once for full partic ulars. RAIN- BOW- S PR A MFC. CO., Greenville, Mich. k ********* * WILL YOU RENT YOUR CA- * NOE FOR THE SUMMER? * * Miss Perkins wants one this sum- * * mer. See her about it. * **********. »;* >;< *;«»;« ^(nj**j**j* .**»;«v *;*►;« >j« »j» v *1*»I* v♦!» “l**J* *J»’i**i* v*5* *•»♦ v The Latest Out Are in Spring Styles Sophomore Clothes Stetson and Regal Shoes Stetson and Mallory Hats duett and Star Shirts Correct Apparel for Every Occasion Roberts Bros. 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