Behind the With JACK BRYANT BULLETIN AURELIE WOLCOTT, I’an hellenic and Tri-Delt prcxy, gets SAEized Wednesday after noon as she takes FRANK LU KOW’SKI’S pin. He’s changing his name to Lucas. * * * BETAZ now own a railroad! Editor Jermaln complains at lack of room and plans to move it from chapter room to McAr thur court. “It’s always too crowded for me to play,” he moans. Story of the week is Art Winetrout’s and Bette Hobbs’ decision to be married at the Tri-Dclt house December 20. Of COURSE you’ve heard of the celebration that the Kappa Sigs threw after Art announced that he was going to make the big jump . . . EVEN better was that Oregon’s football team is going to be minus one star tac kle come next season . . . he’s going to work in his pop’s Ford garage as a parts man . . . he’s not going to finish the term, and Eette has already gone home to get ready. , . . * * * CONGRATULATIONS a r e due the Sig Eps on their steady drive to rid the campus of the Sl*Es and install the Sig Kps . . . they started this many long years ago. Three years hack they had it well under control and now a complete victory. . . MORE CONGRATS to FRANCES BUD (BEASTIE) NESTOR ... he comes through with the news that he left his pin in Seattle . . . now he says tell all the pretty girls hello. BOB SMITH IS BACK in the good graces of Mary Jane John son, Seattle . . . She saw him play his sensational game against UCLA. THE SPORTS STAFF is wandering around with the phrase, "This boy Frank Em mons is really in love. . .” Then there is the TIMELY idea about having HOMECOM ING for the grads next year . . . the idea centers around having a campus dance the night before the big game and an Alum dance the night of the game. . . Alums arc still kick ing about the last one, and while on the subject, if some one mentions Leon Mojica for next year there is going to be at least one picket at the joint. * * * Cutest column of the day was Dave Compton's little ditty on advertising men’s clothing . . . Dave, you know, is one of the members of BOUNDERS ROW, really an exclusive organi/.ation . . . (you have to live on Pat terson street!) . . . Another rluh, not heard much from this year hut still active, is the SMOOTCHE club . . . leading member Mary Jane Horton who returned from Chicago Tues day. Rod McMillan, prominant Fiji, relinquished his pin to a Portland lassie over lust week end. . . THEY ISAY Virginia Swcaringcr keeps (tie Fiji (?) phone busy three hours a day talking to ? . . . Sense Please Didn't sec Kitty Hitter and Bob Whitcly at the Uptown - Saturday night but they were there . . . also missed all the ATO and Pi Phi cuties that were allegedly there. . . . BBT THEY CAN'T SEE ANY MORE OK EACH OTHER if they tried: Mary Carmack who fell in a hurry for Johnny Martin (he fell hard too) De lores Davidson, not a baker,‘is also seeing a lot of Rockcy Rodman. . . . Fire, Fire Delivering for thr (censored) last night offered an opportun ity to talk ill the fire drills at the Alpha Chi ami Chi O man sions . . , one Chi O keeled over and one Alpha Chi nearly had heart failure. Utile publicity has bi'cn giv- ' en the 3 o'clock club, and I probably because they don't 1 want it . . . the club is the 1 bunch that hangs around the 1 press and puts the Emerald lo bed . . . they meet at 3 o'clock * in the morning for a ieed. of 1 cokes and hamburgers—Hiry 1 can't get those good sandwich- a cs from the (censored) because that place closes at. 12 . . . We've beard stories about some l el their meetings. A ifvSiSiia’a V:-?i l t tte students jet prom* v, 'NoMan’sLand’Was NeverLike This--or, The Throttle’s Reign on 13th A popular vagary which sometimes finds itself boomeranging is tlie time-honored expectation, near-resignation, that collegians will be varyingly erratic and given to ex tremes in their natural habitat. To the man in the street, particularly the non-college stock, it is his wont to prefix the word “crazy” just before the word “college” when referring to the boys or girls who belong. Guppy-gulpers and angleworm swallowers certainly do not help to refute this concep tion. However, there is something which hap pens every hour of every day in and about this campus which would seem to indicate the shoe is on the other foot, namely the driving characteristics demonstrated by non-Univer sity cars. Even state law has plenty to say about how to drive in certain restricted areas, such as residential districts and school zones, hut this seems to make no difference as far as the between-class hurrier can tell, lie must watch and wait for a safe crossing anyway. Trucks, busses, passenger cars—everything on wheels — are in a hurry. They force their way through bluntly, and with consummate and undeniable crust. * * ■* A LL streets about the campus are heavily V used, both by pedestrians and wheeled traffic. Drivers have gotten used to going by these routes rather than others, while the stu dents naturally swarm about the University buildings. Most of the 3600 or so students enrolled do not drive cars to class. Any school of any considerable size is bound to develop into a compact unit. This is especially true of colleges and universities, which become little communities within com munities. Such is the University of Oregon. At many schools of this size and type the tendency is toward complete isolation, block ing off the campus streets completely from through and almost any other traffic. It did not take long for traffic experts to realize that a campus has a need and a right to be a unit. Where there is another route it has been found more satisfactory to make use of that. Even on the Corvallis campus, where it must be admitted the situation is slightly differ ent, there is no constant whizzing through of public traffic. # * ■* rJ''0 student pedestrians, moving about on 1heir own campus, a special consideration seems merited. They are busy, and the cam pus is their unit. But instead of special con sideration they get not even ordinary courte sy. Between classes no one is allowed to for get that the hand at the wheel and the foot at the accelerator pedal are blithely uncon scious of the fact that in roaring down Thir teenth they are not on the open highway. It was most interesting last year, especially toward spring, to watch the movements of the city council toward regulating traffic in the University vicinity. The council was con vinced to a man that it was the collegians who ought to be watched as reckless and dangerous drivers. At the same time there was a smashup happening daily and oftener at University and Thirteenth, not once includ ing University drivers. Small proof this was of the aklermanic theory that it was a colle giate axiom to operate with only two speeds: wide open and stopped. * * # this time the University officially re quested stop signs, all ways on Thirteenth at University and at Kincaid. Stop signs, one way, only at the entrance to the jcampus proper, were the answer. Still the University could not get the city to realize that here was no ordinary stretch of city streets. This is no complaint against speeding. It goes farther than that, for speed is no hazard in itself, what with better drivers and better equipment. Speed is here to stay, and it is good. But there is room for the exercise of common sense on the part of those non-Uni versity drivers who do their maneuvering on or about the campus. They are not God just because they hold the wheel of some fast truck which takes the route through the campus as the shortest way. True, not all such drivers are as rude as those in whose direction this is pointed, but these are in the minority, as anyone can see by simply going out and watching the stream of traffic whistle down the campus asphalt, scattering pedestrians like a splash in water. No driver likes to wait for pedestrians, but where he should not be driving at all he must expect that. * * * fJ^IIE situation might adjust itself temporar ily to a point at which conditions might be better than they now are, but this will not come in a short space of time. Better law en forcement alone is not enough. The only real solution is one which has been entertained for no little time in the minds of plenty of thinkers who have direct and official contact with the problem. What better answer could there be than to shut off campus streets entirely to through traffic, or to any traffic? There is not a single non University property between Kincaid and University on Thirteenth, and there are enough alternate routes to make blocking feasible. Thirteenth is not needed for through traffic, and since its days are numbered as a traffic street, it is just as well that the idea be gotten used to now as later. Re-routing could be a simple matter. # * # CTION, if any is to come, will undoubted ly wait until the state decides what it is going to do about its new highway. Any of the proposed new routes would send traffic streams in better lines than the present. Ap parently nothing is going to happen very soon, and meanwhile this source of irritation maintains itself, a thorn in the side of the University. It is not reasonable for the city to assume that college students, because they come from other cities and towns, because they are here only for four years, have no right to a better arrangement in their own college unit community. Unless it can be demonstrated that Thir teenth cannot possibly be given bodily to 1 he University it would seem that this is the only lasting solution to the difficulty. Meanwhile drivers might tend to their knitting everywhere in the several blocks each way in which University students must navi gate afoot. The Oregon Daily Emerald, official publication of the University of Oregon, published daily during the college year except Sundays, Mondays, holidays, and final examination periods. Subscription rates: $1.25 per term and $3.00 per year, rmterea as second-class matter at the postoffice, Eugene, Ore. ___ Represented for national advertising by NATIONAL ADVERTISING SERVICE, INC., college publishers’ representative, 420 Madison Ave., New York—Chicago—Boston—Los Angeles—San Francisco—Portland and Seattle._ . BUD JERMAIN, Editor Lyle Nelson, Managing Editor GEORGE LUOMA, Manager Jim Frost, Advertising Manager Jean Giles, National Advertising Frederick Killers, Classified Manager BUSINESS STAFF Bay Cook, Merchandising Manager Herb Anderson, Circulation Manager Janet Farnham, Executive Secretary Charles Kenyon, Staff Photographer Serious-Minded Wings—A Winner JU there ever was a course around liere which developed quilt; the spirit that the new pilot curriculum has built up in a few short weeks il would have to be a wonder. In the i'i)-st place, Carlton Spencer and his board had a list as long1 as their collective arms from which to choose applicants. When the opportunity was first made known enough bids came in the first day to fill the course, but Spencer went out and campaigned for a larger list, and he got it. Out of this they did their picking, established an alternate lineup, and made some entries for next year. With so large a list it is certain there was plenty of the very best material to select from. Coming along fast, the flying classes have already developed into one of the most hotly pursued studies in the University. Part of this is due to the fact that the people who are conducting the pilot training indicated early in the game that they meant business. No loafing would be tolerated, and none has been. There is too much ground to cover and the investment is too great. * * * ANOTHER tiling about University flying winch is obvious is that tlio iortunate ones who are enrolled are getting a whale of a bargain for their motley. This they know ami are anxious to protect. No one in I lie course wants to get “rolled out “ id' it. That is why the competition is so keen both 1o stay in and to get in. Let an enrollee miss a couple of classes in a row and lie commences to try to guess about his suc cessor from tin* alternate list. With so long a list the goods have to be delivered. Only two hours of University credit are given for the training. They are learning to fly, these would-be pilots, chosen from among the regular under graduate ranks of 1 lie University. And inci dentally, it was no slight job of maneuvering which got for this school so large an allot ment. Here is (lie most modern course in tlie 1 niversity. It is good to see il succeeding well. The BAND BOX By BILL MOXLIOY Orrin Tucker ami his bund are currently playing at the Mark Hopkins in Han Francisco. Doesn't seem very far from here. In fact, it's so close that if Mr. Tucker and Wee Bonnie ever started to come north xve might send out a special delega tion to block all the highways and steer Tucker and company ight to the Oregon campus. The anly trouble is that, if Orrin •ould be lured up this way we'd lave to enlarge the Igloo. And here Is no way of telling how nany people would be killed in he rush when the baud began o play “Oh .Johnnie,” I’m go the. Oliver Metronome Seven out of 1U of the men n Gray Gordon's Tic Toe baud dayed football when they were n college. Perhaps the timing .ml coordination learned ou the ;ridiron are responsible tor hose dock-like rhythms . . . ienny Goodman's new band till needs some v hipping in tape—he doesn't sound nearly a smooth as he used to 'til led Bailey is evidently si hed ed a rally dame by the SUO” It Bays on the studeut ■ J . tii1 V - • --- • Uert u it? WHAT ABOUT uled to be Benny's steady vo calist . . . Speaking of swing, they laughed when he walked out on the dance floor with a paper bag full of water—they didn't know lie was going to ‘‘swing it." Ouch! Kindling the Border, Bruin Downtown music stores re port large sales of “South of the Border” and "Scatterbrain" . . . Glen Miller's recording of "Blue Kain" is drawing favorable com ment. "Biggy Wiggy Woo" is another of those crackpot con coctions that may turn out to be a hit. Wait until you hear Hal Kemp’s recording of “The Little Red Fox." They say it tops anything Hal has ever done. Frog-Voice Fades Exit: Tony Pastor from Artie Shaw's band and Jack Leonard from Tommy Dorsey’s crew . . . Glen Miller and Larry Clinton are slated for spreads in a forth coming issue of Life magazine. l or that all-important house dance this weekend or in preparation tor t In1 Christmas holidays, visit our salon in Penney s new store Bee Perl Koepp or Harold •* Carpenter for new* style haircut ting;. Style fingerwavo .... 50c Shampoo and lingervvave. 75c Permanents . . . . . $3.50 Haircutting . . L.: t#. ,.j .,50c ON THL BALI UN i’ Penney’s Beauty Salon .'.’.''I fcr'iti.• • X* iilta asa ■ i. JOE RICHARDS MEN'S STORE 873 Willamette, Eugene offers the Oregon man Manhattan Products Campus leaders protect their popularity with good grooming, good tailoring...both "stitched-in" qualities of Manhattan Shirts. Cast your eye on the Manhattan neckline and notice the collars on the smartest shirt that ever scored on your college. Notice the fit, that's a hit with style wise college men from coast to coast.. . and the flattering, action-free lines that result from unusually fine designing. Look them over today and the next time you buy shirts either in smart stripes, white or plain tones, say — vI'll have a Manhattan.'* THE.MANHATTAN $HIKI-COMPANY, N Y C) ff a*y S**>rf e»er s^r'rlj befc*» the ’•*'& caftd $>ze. *e »*"W g»e you a *ew shirt Tested cnd ccpra>ed by A^encon tnif *u'e of lounde---'g. SHIRTS ! DcNEFFE’S present MANHAI T AN SHIR I S for every occasion DeFJEFFE i3 ® Theatre Bld^. = EMERALD REPORTERS: Bob McGill Darrell Lear Betty Jane Thompsoi Niama Banta Mildred Wilson Jeff Kitchen Betty Jane Bigga Janet Piper Norman Foster Connie Averill Alma ransis Corine Lamon Elsie Brownell Jack Buker Howard Fishel Jim Banks Edith Oglesby Helen Sawyer Jean Adams Eleanor Engdahl Jean Spearow BUSINESS DEPT. ASSISTANTS: Mary Ellen Smith, National Advertising Janet Rieg, Circulation EXECUTIVE SECRETARIES: Arviiia Daum x linuna uuiuvio BUSINESS UfJ'KJEj SEUKEIAKIUSS Billie, wade Sue Ehrhart tfoyu i^opennaver BUSINESS PROMOTION STAFF: ivatmeen oraay, unairmi Joan Stinnette Kennett Lawrence Mary Jean McMorris Dorothy Horn Evelyn Nelson SPECIAL ACCOUNTS: Khea Anderson, Chairman Lynn Johnson Don Brinton SPORT STAFF: Margaret i oung Bob (Lefty) Smith Jerry O’Callaghan i\ancy Lewis Bernard Engel Margaret Dake Mary Belcher Kay ^cnncK Kay Foster Milt Levy Jim Schiller Len Ballif Charles Boice Bob Flavelle Bob Potwin Friday Advertising Staff: Doug Parker, Adv. Mgr. Betty Mae Lind Pat Heastand Kenny Maher Bob Potwin. Copy Desk Staff: Hal Olney, Copy Editor Mary Ann Campbell, Assistant Jonathan Kahananui Howard Fischel Joan Chrystall Tom Wright Ellie Engdahl Barbara Roberts i, Rachel Bishop Night Staff: Roy Callaway and Bernard Engel, Co-editors NOW PLAYING!! FRANK CAPRA’S “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington” • All of Eugene is raving about this greatest of Capra’s hits! DEAD END KIDS RONALD REGAN MARGARET LINSEY in “Hell’s Kitchen” plus BILL BOYD in in ‘Law of the Pampas’ THEY’RE HERE AGAIN! DEAD END KIDS in “Call A Messenger” and “Tropic Fury” with RICHARD ARLEN We DARE to show the uncensored version of “ALL QUIET on the WESTERN FRONT” plus “THE HONEYMOON'S OVER’’ * Orchestra DYLE LINN'S DANCE BAND 5 pieces _Eugene Crow Stage * Barber rHE VARSITY BARBER ShopT Stylish haircuts 35c. nth and Alder. • Shoe Shine E you know what a good shine i3 . . . Come to Campus Shoe Shine. OK A BETTER dye or shine job, see • Gust ' at the Campus Shine Shop —ip years on the campus. 9 Films Developed FILMS DEVELOPED FREE Prints 3c each Enlargement Fre6 with each roll 956 Willamette developed EVERYBODY'S DRUG