m. . Oregon Emerald 'I lie i j.,‘%on t/auy Emera.a. puuusned daiiy during the college year except Sundays, JMtViidav holidays, and final examination periods by the Associated Students, Untvciaity 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 ADVERTISING SER\ ICE, INC., college publishers’ representative, 420 Madison Ave,, New York Caicago - xsas ton- Los Angeles—San Francisco—Portland and Seattle._ LYLE M. NELSON. Editor JAMES VV. FROST, Business Manager ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Hal Olney, Helen Angell Editorial Board: Roy Vernstrom, Pat Erickson, Helen Angell, Harold Olney, Kent Klilrer, Lonnie Leonard, and Professor George Turnbull, adviser. Jiinmic Leonard, Managing Editor fcent St)tar, News Editor Fred May, Advertising Manager Bob Rogers, National Advertising Mgr. Editorial and Busings Offices located on ground floor of Journalism smming. t nones J.tOO Extensa: 382 Editor; 353 News Office; 359 Sports Office; and *54 business Offices. UPPER BUSINESS STAFF rtinia u.icv oerg, L-iassineu Aavernsing Manager «B<»n Aljiaugh, Layout Production Man ager X>lU viswuianyii iu*«a6v» Emerson Page, Promotion Director Eileen Millard. Office Manager t*at Erickson, Women'* Editor Bob Flavel's, Co-Sports Editor JKcn Cbnitianson, Co-Sporti Editor UPPER NEWS STAFF Ray Schrick, Ass't Manag ing Editor Betty Jane Bigg3, Ass’t News Editor Wes Sullivan, Ass't Newi Editor Corrine Wignes, Executive Secretary Mildred Wilson, Exchange Editor No Swimming Sign Posted >JT v; oi. ’t be long, with warm spring days just ahead, until the University of Oregon student mind turns to thoughts of swimming, and consequently to the millrace. Those students who ar? not helped into the race by obliging friends and Orator nt • y brothers probably will don suit and head for the ischoo' 'a ‘Tittle creek” for a swim. Before they do it might be well to point out a few facts concerning swimming in the millrace. (1) The race has been condemned for swimming by both infirmary doctors and by Eugene health authorities. (2) livery year the infirmary has a «umber of eases of sore throat, or other afflictions, directly trace 'bT to the millrace. (3) The race is a part of the "\\ illarn ette river which has been a serious problem in stream pollution for m my years. A.appealing as the millrace may seem on warm spring days it should be remembered that the water is polluted with all kinds of germs which have been put into the Willamette j'ivar through city sewages. Until some solution to the problem of stream pollution is worked out the millrace will be unfit for .fiwinimitig. The University tank may not seem as attractive as the mill .rao«-, bo * it’s a great deal safer. Go Look at Spring you want to see what spring looks like, go down to the back ,4eps of Villard and stand under the lilac bush that is begun i ig to bloom there now. Look out across the old part of the campus and watch the mm li t'r through the tall trees and strike the grass. Open your eyes v id \ and then breathe deeply. If you pick the right day, especially one of the brighter mornings, you will be sure you tiave located the exact spot where spring lives. Thursday morn ing v, a - rather nice. Spring came out for a while. * * jJF you kail heard the Old Testament verse before, you would stand there and think “What have I to do any more with ♦idols? I have heard him and observed him: I am like the green ♦fir tree . . ..” Ido’s dictate the winter. Spring is an elusive, pulsing thing. •The idols of winter are mechanical: strict schedules, dark classrooms sickness of hate and war. Spring is puckish. It defies tiro winter idols, then runs away. Out by Villard it’s easy to believe that God's in his green mor.'.i on i all's right with our world—for a moment at least. Go look at spring taunting the winter idols.—P.E. In Years to Come .THE interclass rivalry that typified the college life of the h voes of the stories we so avidly read as high school dreamers is overshadowed at the "University of Oregon by the ♦intense "cliques” created by living groups. It is the pep and ♦interest incited by closely knit Greeks, dorms, and co-ops that ..make up Oregon’s school spirit . . . and such an arrangement rJias it.' faults. Snobbishness is a possible result. jGn-' night’s junior class party was a step in a new direction , . . it was an attempt toward creating a bond of friendship and .unity in one undergraduate class, toward building a fighting ti.pirit : . the third-year students that will help toward a bigger Junio:: Weekend. * # # rjpm: Junior Weekend directorate, which arranged the affair, tl ought of it principally as a way of letting all the juniors fin on. weekend plans, as an attempt to make each member of the cla*. of '42 think “This is my class and my weekend. 1 want •if to be big!” Hut the idea has many more possibilities than that, for al though there were many juniors who didn’t come up to Ger linger last night, those who came probably gained a little more realization of just what the “Class of ’42” really is. For the first time since they heard Dr. Erb deliver the welcoming address back in September, 1938, these proud holders of new “Junior Certificates” found out they had something in common. A faculty member was as excited as Gene .Brown himself over the party yesterday. She declared she had been praying for something to bring class spirit back to its own ever since she came to Oregon.. She had a faraway look in her eyes as slip reminisced that “democratic get-togethers like this one are what old grads remember longest.’’—II.A. From All Sides Exchange by Mildred Wilson No longer can any son of Eli or Nassau deny that Harvard men are the ultimate connois seurs of what’s what in feminine pulchritude. The “savoir faire" of the sons of Harvard was official ly recognized recently when nine men were asked by the American Society of Beauty Culturists to cast their unbiased glances over numerous contributions to what makes a strong man meek—sub mitted by Wilfred Academy for girls. —The Harvard Crimson. * * * Pi Tau Phi, honorary at the University of Pittsburgh, believes in simplifying things. Seems as though payment of the Pi Tau Phi award to the out standing senior in college has to be authorized by the Pi Tau Phi treasurer. When the award was announced at a Scholars’ day as sembly recently it turned out that Sally Jane Thigpen, treas urer of Pi Tau Phi, had won it. Thus, Sally Jane Thigpen must transfer $10 from the Pi Tau Phi treasury to the personal account of Sally Jane Thigpen. Pi Tau Phi believes in simpli fying things. —The Pitt News. * * * “Little grains of powder, Little drops of paint, Makes a girl’s complexion Look like what it ain’t.” —Ka Leo O—Hawaii. * * * After telling his sociology class that human group behavior was fairly predictable, Frank Sweetser of the Department of Sociology at the University of Indiana, said, “I’ll predict that no matter how warm the weather gets, no one will come to class in a bathing suit. I’ll even pre dict that no one wrill come to class barefooted.” That was on a Friday. “By golly!” Mr. Sweetser ex claimed, when Rodney Anderson walked into class Monday, minus socks and shoes, “Someone did it." —Indianapolis Daily Student. International Side Show By RIDGELY CUMMINGS Ezra Pound is a poet from Ida ho who prefers to live in Europe. He is an admirer of Musso the Deuce-o and considers Italy the _ cultural center of the world. Yesterday Ezra came to Rome from the little Italian town of Rapallo where he has been crystal gazing in an ivory tower and ex pounded on the Cummings . , ,. , ., ° international sit uation. He advocated a confer ence between Roosevelt and Mat suoka to “keep both Japan and the United States out of war.” Pound’s Dream Pound solemnly told foreign correspondents that the basis for Japanese-American understand ing should be a deal in which the U.S. would trade the island of Guam, strategic air base in the Pacific, for two of Japan’s best known “Noh" dramas. The U.S. needs the Noh dramas, particularly the “Awoi Noh,” and Japan needs Guam, Pound as serted; hence everybody would be happy. In addition the poet would have Japan pledge the U.S. free access to China's tungsten supplies. Now of course the suggestion is a trifle far-fetched, but I men tion it because it ties in with an editorial reprinted in the Emer ald yesterday from the Cornell Alumni News. The Word Is “Must” The editorial, written by one Romeyn Berry, told how the word “must” has been restored to the vocabulary of youth and how youth is accepting the idea of compulsion but “prefers not to talk about it or have it talked about.” The truth of that statement is debatable, but the paragraph that Ezra Pound's acrobatics remind ed me of has to do with academic freedom. It mentioned the college professors who during the last wrar suffered because they aired their convictions, and then went on: “They weren’t guilty of what they’d been persecuted for, of course, but they'd indulged in loose talk at the wrong time, which is bad manners. It was the verdict of society that while the incidents had been un fortunate and discreditable to the administrations of the col leges involved, the victims got just about wliat they asked for and had it coming to them.” Academic Freedom To me, the above paragraph reads like an insidious attack on academic freedom on the grounds of etiquette. Since when has Emily Post been the arbiter of philosophers ? Galileo was guilty of bad man ners, and Giordano Bruno, and Tom Paine and Thomas Jeffer son and Abraham Lincoln and many another great man had the courage to voice unpopular opin ions. How' are we ever going to ban ish war from the world if it be comes “bad manners” for the in tellectual leaders of the nation to say with conviction that war is stupid insanity? There seems to be a contradic tion in saying that it wras “dis creditable to the administrations of the colleges involved” to fire their outspoken professors and at the same time say the profes sors had it “coming to them.” It was probably nonsense that Ezra Pound talked in Rome yes terday—certainly it is unpopular that an American suggest his country give up a strategic is land to an economic rival—but it is heartening nonsense to hear of a man who still thinks that a The Passing Parade By HUMBERT SEESALL, JR. To Doc Henry’s plea that there be no confusion of his tri-week ly effort with Humbert Jr.’s col umn, Humbert Jr. appends a hearty AMEN. Not that Humbert Jr. ever expects to be accused to his face of something for which he is not responsible— since he writes under an as sumed (really, it is!) name— just that he has to look in the mirror while shaving and can’t afford a trip to the barber every day. Even a columnist is sensi tive to public opinion. National Defense Notes: Kap paz are devoting their front porch to nightly “blackout” drill for the balance of the term. The last few were called on account of rain—at least the light didn’t seem to be burned out those times. Taking the spring happenings in their logical order of impor tance, it seems that: third finger, left hand—a chunk of gold-mounted ice from Sigma Chi’s Harry Williams to Pat Holder, four-star boarder at the D Gee mansion. Don’t know who deserves the congrats the most, Harry or Pat. Anyway, this calls for cigars. but not far behind in the race comes Jim “Blackout” Houck, Theta Chi threat, who finally un loads his brass onto Nancy Dut ton, Kappa. Long memoried readers will recall that this was one of the predictions made by Poppa Humbert last term. Humbert Jr. feels called on to predict, too. Watch Carolyn “Hol lywood” Chapman. Baxter Pond has a good reason to hold off now, but it isn’t going to last very much longer. What will this boost the Sigma Chi total of planted crosses to? There sems to be no intra Theta dissension over Tom Star buck, the Chi Psi merman. They all seem to respect Betty Stock well’s claim. While the cat’s away, the mouse will play—Seen at the Forest er’s—Carol Nelson and John Dick. According to Nels Hodges, DU, steady life is really tops.—With Kappa Virginia James—we can see why! . . . and Wednesday night found Paul Gilbert pulling the “out of gas” line on Piphi Mary Lois Dana. Lou Torgeson replanted his pin on “Bangs” Dube during spring vacation. They think maybe it’ll work now with Phyl in Portland, and Lou in Eugene. . . . Also dur ing vacation. Bob Whiteley got his ATO sweetheart pin back from “Grandma” Ritter in Port land. Seen in a yellow car: Fiji’s Al lan “Fast Fade” Foster with Jeanette “Yellow Car” Harbert. Seen walking around: Foster and Harbert. Draw your own conclu sions. Spring has cum and Humbert Jr. has fallen in love, too . . . She’s only a bootlegger’s daugh ter, but I love her still. “Noh drama,” whatever that may be, is as valuable as an air base. The writer for the Cornell Al umni News would probably want to fire out of hand anybody who talked like Ezra. I’m glad the editor of the Emerald still agrees with the dictum of Voltaire, who said something like: ‘‘I disagree with what you say, but by golly I’ll sure back up you’re light to say it."