~ EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE OREGON DAILY EMERALD ~ ~ ©regutt daily. University of Oregon, Eugene Arthur L. Sehoeni . Editor William H. Hammond . Business Manager Vinton Hall . Managing Editor EDITORIAL WRITERS Ron Hiiblis, Ruth Newman, Rex Tusslntt, Wilfred Rrown Secretary—Ann Hathaway UPPER NEWS Mary Klemm . Harry Van Dine . Phyllis Van Kimmell Myron Griffin . Victor Kaufman . Ralph David . . Claience Craw . STAFF Assistant Managing Editor .. Sports Editor . Society . Literary ... P. I. P. Editor . Chief Night Editor . Makeup Editor BUSINESS STAFF George Weber. Jr.. Associate Manager Tony Peterson Advertising Manager Addison Brockman Foreign Advertising Manager Jean Patrick . . Manager Copy Department Larry Jackson . Circulation Manager Betty Hagen. Women's Specialty Advertising Ina Tremblay Assistant Advertising Manager Betty Carpenter . . Assistant Copy Manager Ned Mars . . Assistant Copy Manager Louise Gurney -••• Executive Secretary Bemadine Carrico . Service Department Helen Sullivan . Checking Department • Fred Reid . Assistant Circulation Manager The Oregon Daily Emerald, official publication of the Asso ciated Students of the University of Oregon, Eugene, issued daily except Sunday and Monday, during the college year. Member of the Pacific 1 ntercollegiate Press. Entered in the postoffice at Eugene, Oregon, ns second class matter. Subscription rates, $2.50 a year. Advertising rates ipon application. Phone, Man ager: Office, J81J5; residence, 127. Day Editor .Barney Miller Night Editor.Warner Guiss Assistant. Night Editors John Rogers, Jack Bellinger, Gwendolyn Metzger Education a Variable BERTRAND RUSSELL, "catsup-faced, white haired” radical pacifist, says: "The American educational system is not designed to make people know the truth. It is tainted with propaganda and with the money of Big Business. . . . The obvious purpose ... is to turn out job lots of men and women with brains as standardized as so many gum vending machines.” Granted that education today turns out gradu ates with 50 ounces of assorted, standardized knowledge. Granted it forces individual differences into the mold of forced similarity. To assert that the American college student holds such an attitude, wholly to the exclusion of all facts, it is a mistake. Outside of the realm of certain accepted learning, the American college man or woman holds all possible attitudes on any variety of subjects he or she cares to be concerned with. Let it be said to the detriment of the American educational system, these attitudes are in the ma jority weak and subject to abrupt alteration. Con fronted as they are with a wide variety of ideas in each field, the radical and conservative viewpoint both presented for the student’s intellectual ap proval or disapproval, he goes from one extreme to another. He has no original ideas. He is af flicted by the thought. "I am immature, incompe tent to judge.” In the classroom he is ranked according to his ability to stand up and relate what someone else has said about such and such a sub ject. It is inevitable that the student should feel this way until he has acquired a matureness (should it be “rigidity?”) of ideas which will fortify him to stand up and let the world hear of his opinion. Education presents a confusing array of conflicting ideas and theories which force the student to be a pliant weigher of dogmatisms he is the jury and must decide for himself which he will cham pion. He seldom has any original ideas of his own; he takes up and supports one or the other of the theories he had presented to him in his educational work- whichever seems most noteworthy to him. Neglecting a Duty FOOTPRINTS in the snow sometimes tell a story. And this happened to be the footprints of sev eral people who forgot or else have never realized the sacredness of the seal at the entrance to Vil lard hall. The observance of this little tribute to the seal of our Alma Mater perhaps may always go unheralded as far as you and I are concerned, and then again it might not. The moment of pass ing around or over the seal as the case may be is not of long enough duration to warrant stopping and looking around to see who may be impressed one way or the other. But whether noticed or unnoticed there should be a little feeling of pride, an Inward satisfaction in guiding one's steps so they will not fall on an emblem of the University. It is a chance to up hold the honor spirit of Oregon. A man does not enter a building without first removing his hat. He does it whether there are others near by or whether the place is entirely without occupants. Oregon has not abolished all traditions. Those which are a joy and appeal to the pride of its stu dents have been retained and this is one of them. The seal was not so carefully put there by a proud graduating class merely to be trodden under feet, whether covered with snow or otherwise. R. N. The Band Divorces Sports THAT the band is not an auxiliary of sports is shown best by the band itself. Instead of dy ing a cold, cold death up in the barracks and wait ing for periodic basketball games and spasmodic military parades the organization is planning its own way and marching proudly along it. Sunday, when the band gives its concert in the music building, there will be no long punts or snappy floorwork, no card stunts or yell-king's bawled commands; in fact, nothing at all to take attention away from the music itself. And the music will be worth-while if practice and spirit mean anything. The new system of credits and upper-class musicians is still proving beneficial. ' —R.T. Now' they have driverless automobiles which will start, stop, and back up at the word of command spoken by someone entirely away from it. That's nearly human. Let's hope they do not make them with obstinate ideas of their own. Washington recently gave students quizzes on their professors to find out just what weaknesses and failings these pedagogs had. Now that the results have heen practically compiled schools of the nation are inquiring about them. Washington announced that they would be kept at home wh You will find at the “Co-op” a choice line of face powders, c o m p a e t s, toilet soaps, tooth pastes and brushes, razor blades and shaving creams—hundreds of articles of every-day use. ♦ the Our writing paper stock represents the finest paper makers in Amerie a. We s h o w papers from Crane’s, Whiting a n d Cook’s, and Montag’s—besides a 1 a r g e variety of numbers in OREGON SEAL STATIONERY UNIV CO-OP a