9 The Oregon Daily Emerald, published daiiy during the college year except Sundays, Mondays, 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 A OVERT I SING SERVICE, INC., college publishers’ representative, 420 Madison Ave., 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, News Editor Fred May, Advertising Manager Boh 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: Roy Vernstrom, Pat Erickson, Helen Angell, Harold Olney, Kent Stitzer, Timmie Leonard, and Professor George Turnbull, adviser. UPPER BUSINESS STAFP Anita Backberg, Classified Advertising Manager Ron Alpaugh, Layout Production Man ager Mill WaJlan, Circulation Manager Emerson Page, Promotion Director Eileen Millard. Office Manager Pat Erickson, Women’s Editor Bob Flavelle, Co-Sports Editor Ken Christianson, Co-Sports Editor UPPER NEWS STAFF Ray Schrick, Ass’t Manag ing Editor Betty Jane Biggs, Ass’t News Editor Wes Sullivan, Ass’t News Editor Corrine Wignes, Executive Secretary Mildred Wilson, Exchange Editor The Job’s Ahead rjpiIE job facing the officers of the “majority class of 1944’’ elected by the freshmen yesterday, is a big one. It is probably a bigger job than has faced any group of class officers in the history of the ASUO. It is a job which will test the leadership of the six elected to the freshman council of the “majority class.’’ . The election did not end the battle between those who womd give representation to all students and those who would restrict the right to vote to the possession of a class card. Only by setting an example of efficient and fair student gov ernment can the present majority class hope to see their ideas spread throughout the student body. The new officers will lie faced with the problem of keeping up interest in their organization. They will have to spend a great deal of effort in keeping students interested in class government—students too engrossed in themselves to care about others’ affairs. That will be the biggest problem facing the leaders of the “majority class.’’ * * # rJpHI5 spirit which promoted and made possible the forma tion of a “majority class’’ should not be left to die now. If the officers are true leaders they will devise ways and means of keeping that spirit up, of keeping it directed to wards worthwhile things which will benefit the University. Of course one of the best ways to keep the interest in the new class is through participation in campus affairs. By constantly being on their toes the new officers can help in ASUO and University affairs and can gain a great deal of publicity for themselves. In that way they can make their organization so well known that it will readily become ac cepted as the official class. One of the big things before the ASUO at present and one which the new class might well promote is the student union issue. A few hours in conference with some of the student leaders or with Dean of Men, Virgil Earl, should produce many ideas of tilings which can be done in that field. There are other fields, too, in which the new class can apply its efforts and by so doing keep up the interest of its members and strengthen its position as the “majority class of 1944.’’ In an Old Dutch Garden CJLOWLY the applause dies out. A little titter of whispered conversation breaks out as members of the audience, which packs McArthur court, exchange reactions to the gold en-voiced singer’s first rendition. The audience stirs rest lessly. Clompity-clomp, clomp, clomp! Heavens! Who could be driving a team of mules into McArthur court during the concert? Members of the audience crane their necks to sec what is causing the disturbance. Oh! It is only some coeds, with a mania for wooden shoes, arriving at the concert a little late. And thus it goes—a typical experience on the Oregon cam pus. Everywhere you go there are coeds in wooden shoes. They clomp their way merrily through the balls of the library. They stomp up and down the stairways of University build ings during class hours and the students in the back of the classrooms feel tempted to offer the professor a megaphone so he can make himself heard over the din. • « « QNIf thing is certain. The wooden shoes cannot be con demned by the campus males on the usual grounds for criticism of coed styles impraeticality. The wooden shoes are probably practical considering Oregon's dampish climate. Furthermore, the girls sav they are comfortable, which may be true, hard as it is to believe, lint there are a couple of things we can say about them. They're darned noisy and darned unattractive. It does seem, when the coeds go to concerts,, that they could, for the sake of the rest of the audience, park their wooden shoes under their bed for that one evening. —-II. O, This Collegiate World By THE ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATE PRESS All girl, connected with dramatics at the University of Rochester, N. \ ., are getting stocked up on aspirins. They ’re sure their headaches in the next few weeks will be noted for their frequency and severit, They vo decided to produce, March i and t\ "The Hand That Rocks the < radle, a musical comedy written by three seniors, \ irginia liettys. Rita \\ eiiuiartner ami Marilyn He Liguori, and. a junior, Virginia Forquer. Betty June.-., 11, has plunged into the task of directing the extravaganza, which consist of a mere sis. acts with six separate easts. And here s the kicker I he goal of the modest production is to portray the roles of all great women of the past m moulding history. EOT hjiirr ■ nr v .'!. u.v i.fidi'.. r: cd-e. Ute TAU CHAPTER OP BETA THETA PI AT WABASH COLLEGE IN ITIATED THREE GIRLS INTO THE FRATERNITY IN 1861 / V ww STREAMLINED EDUCATION HEAP FUN / c I "JARRIN’ JAWN' szimmm \ TEXAS AvAA.ALL i AMERICA FUU..BACK : FOR TWO YEARS VFAIL ■ ED TO EARN HIS NUM ERAL AS A FRESHMAN.1 COAST to COAST IM ELEVEN DAYS ! THE TRAVELING SCHEDULE FOR. BRADLEY COLLEGES BRAVES RECENTLY CALLED FOR THEM TO PLAY BASKETBALL GAMES IN NEW YORK AMD LOS ANGELES WITHIN ELEVEN DAYS! i so be it... By BILL FEND ALL going back further than stu dents in a lecture room, SO BE IT repeats headlines from past EMERALDS: 1938: UO BUILDING BUD GET NEED TO BE STUDIED. 1939: STUDENT UNION ON HORIZON . . . 1940: STUDENT UNION NEED CITED BY PROFES SOR . . . 1940: STUDENT UNION BODIES TO MEET . . . from 1938 to 1940 it’s the same old song and dance with new arrangements . . . * * * JOHN CAVANAGII’S student union committee is looking for “consistent interest” within the student body with all the. ex pectancy of an old maid looking under the lied . . . (“consistent interest” comes from UNION NOW', the eolm that broke a bottle of champagne over its own how in Saturday’s edition and then Tuesday leaned over to lap it up) . . . to get synchronized action on the student union the commit tee needs something to draw attention—like the wink of a TRI-DELT . . . * * * The committee needs to take a two-way initiative like belt and suspenders on 50 per cent of a two-pants suit . . . first a THINKING program . . . then an ACTION program . . . let’s see, er, um—perhaps a burlesque during JUNIOR WEEKEND . . . that would bring them around quicker than rumba time . . . (what w’as that you said, DEAN ? ) ... to continue interest surround ASUO meetings with student union committee members who have more suggestions than a conga . . . UNION NOW! By Ann Reynolds There are very few colleges in America the size of the Uni versity of Oregon which lack student union building facili ties. With the enrollment the size of ours and the amount of student activity, it is undenia ble that if Oregon doesn't soon build a recreation center, the University may rightly bo branded as decidedly backward. From the successes of student union plans on other campuses the students can derive rtiany valuable suggestions that will help them in planning their own building. Last week the University of Illinois at Urbana dedicated a 51.505.000 student union build ing with a shout of "open at last " The University of Illinois, alma mater of President Krb, who is a staunch student union building promoter here, had long worked fft' the building. Now, m spite of many postponements, the students have a dignified brick building that will open a new era in the service which the university provides for students, faculty, and alumni. tluildiug Occupied • First to move into officer n Lrs new building v. ere tie atu * si« * could even cast a calendar of student events directed towards a student union tiiat includes a!l the advantages a lamp post offers a drunk—support and illumination . . . present a model plan for a student union . . . break ground on the chosen site (if this can he located) for a drive not among students alone — but a drive that will extend to the ink wells of the legislature itself . . . by the way, if anybody does decide where to put the build ing, at least the front doors could be erected with the $30, 000 already in the fund and then construct the building around the doors in years to come . . . this principle worked for the big iron gates on the lower campus. * * * the committee says it has had slories in the EMERALD . . . fine, but they have become so stereotyped that one look at the headline is enough to drive the reader 'into reading the. sports page! . . . any time flow this colm expects to catch some body up by seeing one story in twice during the week instead of by the month . . . * * * sure we need a union . . . you don't have to keep telling us that! . . . tell us HOW we can get one . . . WHERE we're go ing to put it . . . WHEN we're going to get it , . . WHO is go ing to decide that we shall have it . . . (you say we are the ones to decide . . . phooey, we have decided, but we don't hold the purse strings i . . . * * * WHAT about it? ... so be it . . . dent body officers, the men students’ league, the women students’ league, and the ath letic association ticket commit tee, Each office is completely equipped to accommodate any student activity. For weeks, while paper-hang ers, floor-polishers, wood-carv ers, painters, electricians, and other craftsmen finished their work in the building, a food ser vice committee polished equip ment and arranged furniture in preparation for opening a mod ern cafeteria. In the cafeteria itself more than 1,500 people can be served, and adjoining rooms have "a seating capacity of 450. It is expected that twice this number will be. served dur ing lunch hour. ISiiildmg Described Among the impressive things about the building are the hand carved wood work in the gen eral lounge; the masculine knotty-pinc, leathery men's lounge; the women's lounge in white and gray-blue; the digni fied, restful browsing room; and the crimson-draped ball room The outside of the build ing, with its cupola, portico, and other American colonial features, closely resembles the. Independence hall in Philadel phia. and the unusual interior furnishings make it perhaps the outstanding architectural achievement of its kind m America Thus another college opens the door to another student ac tivity center. When will the doors of the University of Ore gon student u:::cn Uml-m.g U opened' wright or wrong With TOMMY WRIGHT Pick any letter from A to Z and maybe we can start a col yum. Anyway, here is a little bit of news that isn't fit to print but as long as there are freshmen, sophomores, juniors, seniors, and grads at Universi tas Oregonenesis, something has to be written to satisfy mor bid curiosity. It may not be spelled that way but the name is still “MUD.” Something has to rouse the boys and gals besides an alarm clock. 3-MINUTE POME . . . A blonde; the moon. The dawn, too soon. The libe, at noon. And she still flunked that test. PAN LIST IV . . . Rebuked, by ROBERTA LE MEN. This pillar of playfulness couldn’t tell whether she was fishing for a return engagement, or whether she was just talk ing. Probably both, was Wat son’s deduction. ROBERTA is burning the candle at only one end, and she knows it is Ro man—ferinstance — what’s this about a broken window, and why the interest ARCHIE MARSHIK has in the whole af fair . . . Second, last and enough for the pan list today is another Alpha Chi LEMON, BETTY ANN, who had to do some fast speaking to get rid of one Ore gon date to keep a date with the supposedly steady, JACK HAN NEMAN of Beaverburg. CAMPUS WHISPERS . . . Alpha Chi ex, SUSAN FAU KEL, takes the very steady path to romance and sends out wedding date announcements . . . Will somebody—Will any body straighten us out on the Pi Kap DAVE CASEY- NOR MA ROGERS deal-maybe he just thought about planting his pin . . . and the Theta Chis don't call MERLE HANSCOM baldy for nothing . . . Reports of feminine reform movements up Astoria way confirm the fact that WILLIE PORTER is cir culating, like bad air, again . . . Valentines will all be delivered before we darken your break fast cawfee again, so here's a plug for JIM HARRIS, who has been dating at more than one sorority—a best bet for any one's king of hearts . . . WEN DELL ANDERSON and ANN REYNOLDS are collecting box tops to join the Kellogg flying club. CONCLUSION . . . What is to be, was to be, it did happen here; we happened to hear, so it happens to be here. So long for a while. International Side Show By RIDGELY CUMMINGS Like Will Rogers, most of the things I know I read in the pa pers. In the "good old days" a man Cummings got to know things from liv ing and obser vation, from watching the sun rise and the sun set and the cows have calves and the land bring forth crops. A wise man then was Cummings For Information as to fares and other details Inquire frftrc of your local agen not necessarily smart. Today the opposite is true. A smart man is not necessarily wise. Writing these columns day after day, trying to give a di gest of what is happening on the war front abroad and the political front at home, I have become more and more struck with the fact that our whole culture is built upon words. Words Hurled Thousands upon thousands of words are hurled at us through newspapers, books, and maga zines, and over the air. Life is so complex that most of the things we know today are what someone else has told us. We feed upon words, and eating we .become gluttonous. Satiation comes only with blood-shot eyes. Even the so-called writers are victims of their own tools. Sam uel Johnson once spoke of a contemporary with scorn, say ing he had written more than he had' read. But there is some logic in turning the phrase the other way and saying of a man —he has read more than he has written. Vultures ? Many writers are a species of vulture, who pounce upon the SAFE - FAST COMFORTABLE ECONOMICAL • LOW-COST MEALS • AIR-CONDITIONED COACHES AND SLEEPERS • CONVENIENT SERVICE • FREE PILLOWS AND PORTER SERVICE IN COACHES BRONZE GIO MAKE-UP keyed to 7 color affiliate shades New . . . (or Spring, 194! . , . Your Clothe' and Acces sories in the seven daringly different South American Color Affiliate Colors . . . Brazilian Beige, Trinidad Tan, Lima Lemon, Chile Sauce, Bogota Blue, Peruvian Pink, Argentine Navy. To dramatize these, Elizabeth Arden creates her brilliant Latin-American Bronze Glc Make-up , . , varies it with Harmonizing lipsticks. UOOiO BRONZE GLO.?.Q0, 1 55 LIQUID BRONZE ROUGE ...... I CO MALACHITE AND GREEN GOLD EVE SHA-0O5 . 1.25 SUN-FAIR ILLUSION POWDER . . I 75 3 00 ROSE BEIGE CAMEO POWDER . . 2.00 3.00 LIPSTICKS —CHOICE OF CYCLAMEN EVENING. SCHOOLHOUSE RED. CINNABAR. ROSE FUMEE ... . 1.50 SLACK COSMETIQUE . I 50 BRONZE GIQ HARMONY BOX ... 5 00 #u ss ell’s outpourings of others, swallow them, and regurgitate. This is particularly true of commenta tors, which is what I have been posing as for some time. Whe ther the result is digestible or not depends somewhat upon the writer, somewhat upon that on which he feeds. I thought of this last night when I sat down to write this piece and noticed that my first reac tion was to pounce upon the pa pers and the wire to see what had happened, according to oth er men's versions. There was plenty there, but today I am a rebel. Not a single quote goes in this one. Today I refer you to the newspapers. Tomorrow? Well, tomorrow is another day. Oregon ■§ Emerald Wednesday Night Staff: Bill Hilton, Night Editor Ardie Alexander, Assistant Madelle Christopherson Yvonne Torgler Barbara Lamb Jim Wilson Dick Shelton Laurel Gilbertson Doris Jones Copy Desk Staff: Ken Christianson, copy editor Mary Wolf, assistant Lee Samuelson Bob McClellan Bob Frazier Marge Major Betty Jane Biggs Wes Sullivan Ted Goodwin Elsie Brownell Jo Ann Supple Your Crowning Glory Personalize your liair with individual styles to set you off from the crowd. Your hair is your personality. 1004 Will. St. Phone 633 Remember o u r eoecl shop with elotlies to suit the Oregon girl. Preston & Hales Zipper Notebooks and All Kinds of Leather Gifts I’li one G6-") ST.j Willamette Held Over! “THIS THING CALLED LOVE” with Rosalind Russell and Melvyn Douglas Real Western Action! Jack Holt in “The Great Plains Robbery” — Plus — “Prairie Schooners” with Bill Elliott cn Thrilling Adventure! Linda Darnell and Tyrone Power in “Mark of Zorro” — Plus — “Charter Pilot” with Lynn Bari and Lloyd Nolan wmm Two Great Pictures! ‘Philadelphia Story’ with Cary Grant, Katherine Hepburn and Jimmy Stewart — Plus — ‘Dr. Kildare’s Crisis’ with Lew Ayres, Lional Barrymore and Laraine Day The Winner Vs L& CHICKEN POTATOES |J 10 EGGS 9'/iO«ANGCS » IS 0Etf On the 1 health Parade You'd pay a lot of money for potatoes, eliiekeu, eggs, oranges or beef. Dut you wouldn’t pay so much for milk. And you wouldn't think that one ipiart of milk eontains as many vitamins as these. It does when it s from the Fugene Farmer's Cream ery. Eugene Farmers Creamery 563 Olive Phone 633