Oregon W Emerald The Oregon Daily Emerald, published daiiy during the college year except Sundays, Mondavs, holidays, and final examination periods by the Associated Students, University of Oregon. Subscription rates :_$ 1.25 per term and $3.00 per year. Entered as second class matter at the postoftice, Eugene, Oregon. Represented tor national advertising by NATIONAL ADVER HSIAO SERVICE, INC., college publishers’ representative, 420 Madison Avc., New York Chicago— Bos ton—Los Angeles—San Francisco—Portland and Seattle. LYLE M. NELSON, Editor JAMES W. FROST, Business Manager ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Hal Olney, Helen Angell Jimmie Leonard, Managing Editor Kent Stitzer, JS'ews Editor Fred May, Advertising Manager 13oh Rogers, National Advertising Mgr. Editorial and Business Offices located on ground floor of Journalism building. Phones 3300 Extension: 382 Editor; 353 News Office; 359 Sports Office; and 354 Business Offices. Editorial Board: Hoy Vcrnstrom, Pat Erickson, Helen Angel], Harold Olncy, Kent Stitzer, Ummie Leonard, and Professor George Turnbull, adviser. UPPER BUSINESS STAFF Anita Backberg, Classified Advertising Manager Ron Alpaugh, Layout Production Man ager IS ill Wailan, circulation manager Emerson Page, Promotion Director Eileen Millard. Office Manager UPPER NEWS STAFF rat t-ricKson, womens Editor Bob Flavelle, Co-Sports Editor Ken Christianson, Co-Sports Editor i\ay ociiii^k, i iviAlias ing Editor rom Wright, Ass’t Manag ing Editor Betty Jane Biggs, Ass’t News Editor Secretary Wes Sullivan, Ass’t News Kditor Mildred Wilson, Exchange Editor Writing to Dad Made Easy PUBLICITY chairman Buck Buchwach stormed around the campus yesterday madder than a coed who has been “stood up.” The occasion was the poor response on the part of many houses to the program of sending letters home to dads, inviting them to attend Oregon s annual Dads’ weekend celebration. “My gosh, we wrote the letters, provided the envelopes and offered to mail them,” Buchwach fumed. “What else do they want us to do, sign them, and provide the stamps? ’ While Buchwach failed to take into account the number of students who signed the letters and mailed them without waiting for the committee, nevertheless if must he apparent that many students did not respond to the request to “write home” even when the letter was prepared for them and all they had to do was sign it and address the envelope. * # * A large part of these probably “didn’t have time” to do the little addressing necessary. At least they thought they didn’t have time. They were wrong. They had plenty of time and if they had stopped to think about it they would have realized it. A few minutes from a bullfest or a bridge game, a little less loafing, or a .couple of minutes less talking to the girl friends on the phone would have given plenty of opportunity to get the letter ready. Dad really hears from his son or daughter at college too little throughout the year. Writing to him for once was made easy. Too few responded. Even if he was four thousand miles away and couldn’t possibly come lie undoubtedly would appreciate the invitation. The publicity chairman had something to be mad about. Politics ala AWSj T’S at least a “different” situation when an Oregon organ ization wants political reform and can’t quite figure out how to reform. But so stands the Associated Women Students council. As idealistic as any conglomeration of young womanhood, they have a plan all worked out by which they believe the major portion of any “blocking” together of coed living or ganizations for AWS elections in February can be avoided. The proposed plan is not elaborate, nor is it a sure cure for political ills, hut it at least shows that all this reform propa ganda hasn’t gone unheard. But with the coed’s president in the infirmary and a constitutional change required before elections, legislation is at a standstill. What the AWS heads want to do is have the nominating committee, usually composed of the senior members of tin1 executive council of the organization, meet to nominate two candidates for each office. Contrary to the present policy, the committee would keep them secret until the time of the nominating-electing assembly. There the proposed candi dates will be presented for the first time, nominations may be presented from the floor if additional ones arc desired, and election ballots will be placed in a ballot box as the AWS members leave the assembly instead of at the usual election one week earlier. « * # IF any semblance of this reform is to take place, however, the AWS must take immediate action. For according to the present constitution the nominating assembly must, be held at least the fourth week before final winter term examinations (February 10-14), and “Elections shall be held the week following the nominating assembly.” In order, then, for the elections to be moved up to the day of nominations the constitution must he amended. Qual ifications for amendment of the AWS document include printing “at least twice in the Oregon Daily Emerald” of the proposed amendment, “after which it shall be voted on at a special election or at any regular or special muss meet ing.” That leaves only next week open for the constitutional reform to set the stage for the required nominating assembly the following week. Such reform probably won't solve the situation. There will undoubtedly he inter-house, agreements between the representatives on the nominating committee, and some of the secrets will leak out J3JUT it does show that women are thinking about the situation, are recognizing the ill will it fosters.’ Out of education may come legislation, old of legislation may come non-partisau voting for the truly reliable candidate . The plan does not tap the real depths of political evils, and is relatively shallow in its approach to the conditions it strives to correct. But these women governors—idealistic as they are about the scope ol their plan*—may set a stage for greater tilings. And there must, bt a Kmaissaiiec before tlisrs csii b’5* EeJ:or'^4!: *. Time’s Sad-Eyed Men JT might not be so cozy to be a man of the hour, just at this point. In fact, it must be acutely distressing. Look at Time’s cover of recent weeks. Have you ever seen a more world-weary lot? Go back as far as December 2!!, 1940. 1’ope Pius XI, the “Martyr of 1940,” looks quizzically,- almost unbelievingly, out at the world. Maybe he doubts the statement that “In Germany only the cross has not bowed to the swastika.” Move up to January 6, 1941, and catch the ferocity of Time’s “Man of the Year,” Winston Churchill. He has offered his people “blood, toil, tears, and sweat.” On his shoulders rests the burden of an empire. The January 13, 1941, Time presents “The Honorable Mr. Secretary Jones” and comments that “if jobs were wives he’d be tin- patriarch of polygamists.” Mr. Jones looks dis tinctly as though he had bitten off a very large bite and is wondering what to do about chewing it. * * * J^HNG Boris III, “Bulgaria for the Bulgars—if possible,” has a doubting cast about his eyes as lie salutes the world from Time’s January 20 cover. He stands proudly, be-medalled, bewildered. Quite the saddest looking of the group is CIO’s Phillip Murray on the January 27 cover. He, too, looks only into confusion. Cogs and wheels and men and money must be nightmares to him. These sad-eyed, laden men are playing checkers with fate, Each move is watched, on them depend the problems of ships for Britain, God and the Vatican, safe money risks, the future of a tiny nation, and the welter of business that is American industry. These men are brave, for they are aware. They can look ahead, sensing impending shocks and current states of mind. They brace themselves. How sad they look. —P. E. Does It Take a Death? (Contributed) rJ"'HURSDAY noon a boy was struck down by a car on Thirteenth street next to Oregon. lie hit the fender of the car and flipped two-thirds of the way over, and lit on his side near the curb. He was able to get up and walk away, but that’s not the point. The speed of the car is not the point. The fact that the street was slightly wet and muddy causing the car 1o skid is not the point. The point is that he might not have moved as quickly as he did. lie might not have been bumped into the gutter. lie might have been thrown under the wheels and been killed. * * * JC such a catastrophe had occurred the editorial columns of this paper would blaze forth this morning saying “traffic must be abolished from Thirteenth street.” The administra tion would take immediate steps to see that no such accident ever occurred again, and messages would come in from all over the state asking that some sort of precaution be taken against accidents of that kind. In short, Thirteenth street would be closed. As it is now, the matter will be settled between the parties involved, and most of the school will go on its way scarcely aware of the accident, when all it, would take would be one murder to stop such accidents from ever occurring again. We say murder because any death which can be prevented, and is not, is murder. Must a life be sacrificed before we can have action? Some day Thirteenth street will be closed. Why can’t that day be soon—soon enough to prevent murder? J. W. S. This Collegiate World By ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATE PRESS IT CAN HAPPEN HERE, observes the Daily Cardinal at the University of Wisconsin, in relating the following incident: You are in a political science lecture. The lecturer is talking about the rip-roaring 1920 Republican presidential convention in Chicago, after which the Congress hotel found itself some 50 grand in the hole. Rut you can't sue a whole mess of baby-kissers scattered all over this fair land. You can’t stop Republicans on the street and assess them a proportional share of the damages. You can t serve papers on a real elephant, much less a symbolic one. “What arc you gonna do? Whom can you sue?” the lecturer thunders. “Whom are you gonna sue?” There were courts to handle cases like this—lawyers would be seen -the Congress would sue. Would sue the Republican party for damages! From the silent depths the answer breaks forth: “Yehudi." You wouldn’t expect it in a political science lecture, says the Cardinal. From All Sides Exchange by Mildred Wilson Parents who worry about their college sons and daugh ters not getting enough sleep will find comfort in the figures compiled in a recent study con ducted by the Student Opinion Surveys of America. Collegians who say they sleep less than seven hours each night consti tute only one-fifth of the na tional student body. The other four-fifth get at least seven hours, and of the total 7 per cent say they spend nine or mote hours asleep It was found that women, by their own admission, sleep more than do men. Lower-classmen spend more tune in bed than do juniors, seniors, and graduates. —The Daily Texan. Slippery ice—Very t.tam Pretty girl—Tumbled in Saw a boy—On the bank Cave a shriek—Ihsa she sank Boy on bank—Heard her shout Jumped right in—Pulled her out Now he’s hors—Very nice But she had—To break the iee. The McMinnvillan. John Brosky. junior at the University ot Pittsburgh, spoke his term paper—and it wasn't in a speech class. Last week he handed in his history paper on two phonograph records. On them he had recorded his views on the ‘ Rise of National Mon archies ” Brosky, an amateur ' adio fan. rigged up the record ing outfit in his home in Car negie. Commented Dr. John C. Amundson, history professor, as he listened to the records on the faculty club radio-phono graph. ’ This is certainly some thing lva.v." — lie Pitt Ne„s The Passing Parade By HIMMBEKT SEESALL, They say that CHUCK EA TON wanted to live in an apart ment last year, and went to see DEAN SCHWERING to get permission to live out of the of ficial list of boarding houses. "Why do you want to live out?" queried Mrs. Schwering. “Well—er—I'm married,” ad libbed Chuck. “You are!" exclaimed the dean unbelievingly, "Why, I haven’t heard—who are you married to?" (Pause) “Oh—er — a little Japanese girl," exclaimed Chuck. Mrs. Schwering naturally, was astounded. “But where is she— I’ve never heard of her?” “Well—” came the answer, “I left her in Tokyo!" Wonder who the ten JOE COLLEGE and BETTY COED finalists are—Thus far it hasn’t leaked out, and that’s no dream! Operative two spent all day trying to find out and thus cre ate a “skoop"—but Messrs. Riesch, Goss, and the deans are very unsociable about the whole affair—maybe we'll have better luck with the Little Colonel. Enough of that—of course you know by now that LIBBY EADES’ knee is all healed up, and she's once again reporting in at the Side every so often— One of Hendricks’ cuties, OLIV IA DYSINGER, now has Phi Sig PORTER JENNINGS’ pin . . . MEN — ATTENTION! We hear that one heckuva cute Alpha Chi transfer from the cow-ledge is now gracing our campus—she answers to the name of SHIRLEY HOLCOMB. GORDY HOY will soon be in the Sigma Chi stocks, which have been working overtime lately, ’cause he didn’t think that going steady with H. J. KERR was enough—he had to go and plant his pin. But, given the chance, who wouldn’t? BILL HAMMEL, SAE, is im porting talent from Portland for his house dance—got her all dated up, three weeks early. GRACE BABBITT is another cute Hendricks girl from near Portland—only it’s Portland, Maine . . . We hear tha,t ELAINE CLARK is getting a little puckered at BOB BROD ERICK — he's broken dates three weeks in a row—for good excuses, but even enuf good ex cuses is enuf—sheza Kappa, heza ATO . . . HERB (SENA TOR) BARBUR is fighting hard for JOHN DICK'S start ing berth on the law school hoop team, which meets the Emerald Saturday morning at 10 in a do-or-die battle. At the libe—that vibrantly buoyant Theta, BETTY LOU BRUGMAN being squired about by one of the California Sigma Chis, CHANNING KILBOURN . . . Special operative 4 has dis covered still another fingerwavc in WALKER TREECE'S hairdo. JEAN JOHNSON left school, but that didn't make any differ ence to MONK karterman; who got initiated and'promptly ordered a Theta Chi sweetheart pin . . . Who was it that re marked that these WPA em ployees work just like Kappa Sigs study? . . . MARY JANE WORMSER momentarily gets behind in law school to undergo an appendectomy. It seems that one name was omitted from THOMAS WRIGHT'S list of girls who have a monopoly on the Fiji house—how about that LA DUKE? . . . and speaking of PHI GAMMA DELTAS. STU RANDALL seems to be making the most of his last month at college. Latest fling is with CONNIE W A LB RIDGE. Alpha Phi beauty. See you at the in formal (I hopei Saturday night. Women sailing captains will oc cupy the limelight during the pre sentation of the final chapter of “Our Wonder World," a scries of programs concerning the Smith sonian institution. F1DAY EVE RADIO DANCE 35c Couple SATURDAY EVENING Hal Hardin’s Orchestra WILLAMETTE park International Side Show By RLDGELY CUMMINGS The juggernaut of war is rumbling ominously closer to the United States. I remember once seeing a gaudy lithograph picturing Hin _dus in white loin cloths throwing them selves in the path of a huge car which was covered with ob scene paintings and bore upon it the image of J agannatn, Cummings Lord of the Hin du world. Every year at the festival of Rathayatraf don’t ask me why they call it that) the juggernaut is drawn through the streets and it was formerly believed that devotees sacrificed themselves beneath the wheels. Recent research indicates that the Hindu god objected to blood and that its presence near his image was considered defile ment, but the word juggernaut is in our language to stay. It's a good word to describe the trend of events and yesterday two elderly gentlemen made gestures of devotion. They Favor War James W. Gerard, who was U.S. ambassador to Germany during the last world war, told the senate foreign relations committee he was in favor of declaring war on Germany. Senator Hiram Johnson had just asked him: “If the situa tion is as bad as you say, why don’t we declare war against Germany now'.” “I’m in favor of it but see no necessity for it,” Gerard re plied. “We have committed enough unneutral acts accord ing to the H\gue convention of 1907 to justify a declaration of war by the Nazis, but they don’t declare wrar because they fear the effect upon their own peo ple.” Also yesterday, speaking in Chicago, Secretary of the Navy Knox said the nation is stand ing at the sidelines of ‘‘the most critical battle in world history” and added, ‘‘I would rather die fighting Hitler than live under his rule.” Marshall Prophesies It is extremely unlikely that either Knox or Gerard will be called upon to die but, if Verne Marshall, chairman of the No Foreign War committee, is to be believed then the U. S. gov ernment is making prepara tions for a lot of boys to die. Four and a half million iden tification tags have been or dered by the war department, according to Marshall. “Last Monday evening I warned the middlewest by radio that our defense legislation, en acted and pending, calls for out fitting an army of 4,000,000 American soldiers whose ulti mate assignment will be to try to. recapture continental Europe from the Nazis,” Marshall said. “I scarcely hoped for govern mental verification of that statement at this early date,” he added, referring to the tags. Juggernaut Rolls on Things look bad, there’s no doubt about that. Here’s a quote I picked out of “The Magazine of Wall Street” for January 25. It’s from an editorial urging passage of the lend-lease bill: “Our neutrality of course has long since been abandoned in fact. We are trying to help Britain defeat her enemies, without full participation in war or risk of American lives.” The juggernaut rolls on. It is a wild and hungry thing. So far we have been asked only for American arms and munitions to throw into its gaping maw. How soon will it be demanding American flesh and blood ? • «» Dinner Dancing Every Evening except Monday from 6:30 - 8:30 Eddie Gibson’s 5-Piece Band EUGENE HOTEL DINING ROOM AND COFFEE SHOP EUGENE IS ELECTRIFIED at. 1 he reasonable rates and excellent service available through your Eugene Water Board. Keep your home well lighted and electrically equipped, and you will keep the health of your family. Municipal Electric and Water Utilities Spruce-up for Dad! LUMBER * HOUSEPA1NT SNELL3TROM LUMBER CO. 6th 6. Chameltou Phone _’0o OregdnII’Emerald Friday Advertising Staff: Jean Adams, Fri. Adv. Mgr. Bety Bisbee Jean Eckley Helen Moore Jeanne Routt Night Staff: Ray Schrick, night editor Dorothea Cathcart Dick Shelton Fritz Timmen Copy Desk: Wes Sullivan, copy editor Elsie Brownell, assistant Joanne Nichols Herb Penny Mary Wolf Ruth Jordan Charlie Woodruff Blessed Event WE CALL IT . . . Wp call it a Blessed Event because we're bless ed if we’re ever seen so m a n y tantalizing new clothes as these. Do come in and see them. Spring print dresses with a redingote of light wool fully lined with the same print as the dress, are the news of the season... $19.95 1004 Will. St. Phone 633 GOING HOME? Have Your Car Checked ® Gas ® Lubricated @ Oil Changed at VARSITY SERVICE 13th & llilyard On the Stage—In PERSON! ROY ROGERS — Plus — “WHO KILLED AUNT MAGGIE?” with John Hubbard and Wendy Barrie — Plus — Johnny Mack Brown in “TONY POST” See It Now! Henry Fonda - Dorothy Lamour and Linda Darnell “CHAD HANNA” — Plus — “Second Chorus” with Fred Astaire and Paulette Goddard mmfti Music and Romance! Betty Grable and Don Amcche in “Down Argentine Way” — Plus — “CAVALCADE OF ACADEMY AWARDS" MOVED OVER! “THE HIT PARADE OF 1941” Starring KENNY BAKER