Oregon Emerald i ;■ mregon uatiy Enteraii, puuushed daily during the college year except Sundays, IH‘nriiys, holidays, an 1 hual examination periods by the Associated Students, University ui Jrgni. Subscription rates: $1.25 per term and $3.00 per year. Watered as second das. matter at the postoffice, Eugene, Oregon. Represented for national advertising by VATIONAE AD\ ERTISING SER\ ICE, mC., college publishers’ representative, 420 Madison Ave., New York—Chicago— 15 os tun -Los Angeles—San Francisco— Portland and Seattle. CifLL M. N'ELSON', Editor JAMES \V. FROST, Business Manager ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Hal Olney, Helen Angell E Jit >rial Boar I - Roy Vertutrom, Pat Erickson, Helen Angell, Harold Olney, Kent Jimmie Leonard, and Professor George Turnbull, adviser. Bin Wic.r mil Leonard, Managing Editor cat Stiver, News Editor Fred May, Advertising Manager Bob Rogers, National Advertising Mgr. E ii"'rial and Business Orifices located on ground door of Journalism building. Phones 8500 Extension: 382 Editor; 353 News Oliice; 359 Sports Office; and 354 Business Office i. UPPER BUSINESS STAFF Anita is a '.oerg, Classihe-i AJrveuiiing Manager Ron A l [m ugh, Layout Production Man ager 13111 VV Ulian, CUCUUUUII malice I Emerson Page, Promotion Director Eileen Millard, Office Manager Pat F ckson, Women'* Eli tor Bolt Fiavelle, Co-Sport* Editor Ken Chi istianson, Co Sporti Editor UPPER NEWS STAFF Ray Schrick, Ass’t Manag ing Editor Betty Jane Bigg3, Ass't News Editor Wes Sullivan, Ass’t News Editor Corrine W'ignes, Executive Secretary Mildred Wilson, Exchange Editor Fragmentary Education qpilKV loll you occasionally in psych classes that incidental learning is important. That is to say, all that is worth ■\vlii ■ information i> not outlined in the duller textbooks. One fti;r aneeivably pick up the choicest bits in the most ofihand •laituer. F'*r instance, if you read last 'week s women s pages you would lutve gleaned some incidental scraps that might (or •right not t have taught you something. One headline announced "Weekend Promises Real College Spir t.” The story was about desserts and social things. Anil tlii. abruptly, unannounced except for it thin black line alienating it from the previous printed matter, the story gave vu to a printer’s filler that said. ‘‘dolin lvirwin, G-foot 6-inch SKU) round freshman at Ohio State university, wears shoes that are 1G inches long and nearly G inches wide.” if if A NOT HER story was obviously beguiling the reader with the caption "Try it Gleaming Red Straw Hat in Spring Buti.’’ The good make-up man. hunting about lor an appro pi u filler to make the story stretch to the end of the column, ^eizel upon this: ‘‘John P>. Waite, professor oi criminal law at. the Pniversity of Michigan, is a bow tit' addict. The other day 100 of HO freshmen in one of his classes showed up wear ing bows.” Tim casual reader could toss off 230-pound John Kirwin and Cm. mologist John P» Waite with the merest flicker of an eyelash. And yet the filler people may be mighty men in their out kingdoms. Tim reader should handle these gentlemen gevnt iy, respectful of the fact that knowledge is where yoiffind ir\ Who knows, these bits of incidental intelligence might pop up O ' a quiz program any day now.—P.11. Everybody Likes Him lETANNY Yezie left town for California Sunday. During the two weeks period that the new end ooaeh was in Eugene and -nixing on the Oregon campus, he came to be held in high onto ’n by Eiiiversity students for two reasons—first, he s one of t. best end coaches in the business; second, his personality fs it initiating and because of it he s made many a new friend. • > is a great mixer. In two weeks lie’s made as many frie in Kug me as most people make in one year in a town. He \ as to be friendly, however, beeause his other job calls for *nee'. :ng lots of people and inspiring their confidence. Ve/.ie o\\ • ■> a boy-,’ camp in the high Sierras just out of Eos Angeles. JSorn - sixty-five boy> flock out to his camp every summer to svvii hike, fish, and limit. Naturally, Yezie must be able to ik' ; hoy’.s father feel that his son is in safe hands. * # * II^AilEX fall praetice rolls around, when the Ducks are look ing toward a r u-ky lit game schedule starting in October, Ve will be back at Oregon. Ilis summer with *'hi- boys’’ will over, and he can devote his time to coaching the cuds. Tha N a job which has already occupied most of his time. T1 ‘ Oregon ends a " stronger now than they were at any to time last year, according to many observers. It is sure that opposing backs will have a tough time making yardage around tliat department. W.de is the type of eoaeli who loves to work with his ends rn hi s own suit; he works effectively and with a degree of con fide ■ and pep which overflows onto the other players and p ,e- the team added energy and drive.—K.C. UNION NOWS By Ann Reynolds Here’s an idea that should at tract student attention. How shall the building be constructed? The committee wants to know which of two ways would be more satisfactory to the majority of students. The first method would be to build each unit as complete as possible as we go along. In other words, as each room is built, the complete furnishing would be provided until the available funds are gone. Then the next addition would have to wait until more money was raised. For example, if the first unit would be a ballroom it would be built and furnished and would perhaps be the only facil ity provided for until we could get more money. The second method is to com pletely finish the outside struc ture with an architectural plan in mind. With this method not all the rooms could be furnished per manently at the same time. A semi-permanent finish would be given the walls of some of the rooms. Less elaborate light fix tures would be temporarily used so that they could be replaced by the more appropriate ones. How ever, the complete outside archi tecture would serve as a basis for continued improvement. Now here are the problems for both sides: In the first method the students would get the bene fit of completed facilities. They would, however, have fewer rooms and less on which to con tinue work. Another important point to consider is the fact that if one unit were built at a time the architecture would be rather unattractive until the building could be completed. On the other hand the second method makes it necessary for the students to wait until later for the completed interior archi tecture. However, “unifinished” does not mean rough boards and loose wires, but completed fur nishings except that the paint and such finishings would be temporary. A point for the sec ond method is that the general exterior architecture would per haps be more attractive if the building were built as a whole. Most of the important rooms that the students would be using the most would be furnished per manently and perhaps the rest of the building could be furnished with student murals. This is a good chance to plug the weekly bulletin “Union Now’’ that is sponsored by the sopho more committee. So far they have published three editions that con tain some good information if the readers were able to look be neath the amazing adventures of Mr. Whipsneed and Penelope the Pullet. It is a good idea to keep track of the information they give out because the more the stu dents know about the possibilities of construction the more they can tell what they want. 'Potentials' to Give Whisker Preview Potential winners of the Sopho more Whiskerino are asked to display their “crops” at the chi!-toning of Don "Noah” Good’s “Norwind" this afternoon, it was revealed by Sheriff Homer Thomas last night. Bewhiskered men should con gregate at loth and Willamette at 4:45 o'clock this afternoon. Thomas and his posse will be on hand to lead the soph delegation in the parade which will precede the christening. International Side Show By RIDGELY CUMMINGS Wowww! What a letter. I did n’t suspect that Gene Edwards knew so many big word's, and all of them soaked in acid. As a matter of fact, even Cummings though Mr. Ed wards finds me a “schoolboy sage” and a “dislocated ego,” even though he speaks of my “notorious puer ility” and my “verbal d i a r - rhea" — or per haps it is because of these very terms, I am immensely flattered by his open letter. Mr. Edwards certainly proved that he suffers no constipation of the vocabulary, but the fact that he considers me as a person more important than the things I write is bound to be soothing to a “dislocated ego.” For Mr. Edwards, using a common debat ing device, almost completely begged the question and concen trated all his no small amount of wit in a personal attack on the man who raised the question. What Is Question? The question is briefly whether a man who insists that “the great masses of human beings are not fit to govern themselves” is real From All Sides By Mil.DItED WILSON A severe shake-up of the en tire San Francisco police depart ment may result from a “socio logical experiment” conducted by two Stanford freshmen in the tough “South of Market” area of the city a few days ago. The two are now in the hospital recover ing from severe injuries which they claim they received when they were “bruised and smashed wantonly and without provoca tion” by San Francisco police. The Encinamen were picked up in the questionable district and booked for vagrancy. The “vic tims,” even though badly injured, begged to be released from the hospital so that they could iden tify their assailants in a line-up of 12 uniformed men. The case looks doubly tough for the police after the following statement released by Dean of Men John Bunn: “These are high class kids— they are boys of superior ability. I am sure they would not go up there just on a lark, and I’m sure they were genuinely inter ested in social conditions.” -—Daily Trojan. * $ * A student at the University of Iowa bought a brand new tux so he agreed to sell his old tux to his friend, who rushed it down town and had a couple of yards cut out of it so that his nose would show over the collar. Two days later he walked in to view the remodeled tux and was horrified to discover that he'd given his friend his brand new, ultra-modern tuxedo by mis take. —Utah Chronicle. * * * When Robert Ripley heard of George Toot, a freshman music major at Kent State university, who also toots a trombone, the cartoonist thought it strange enough to write to Toot asking permission to use the facts in his cartoon. —Indiana Daily Student. ly a “potential fascist.” I took the affirmative, Gene the nega tive. Gene's sole contribution to the point at hand was denial of the fitness of the label and a sugges tion that I read John Stuart Mill's essay “On Liberty.” A very dangerous suggestion, Mr. Edwards, and out of your own mouth you shall be con demned. Here’s what John Stu art Mill has to say. Kinds of Tyranny There are various forms of tyranny, and the first is the tyr anny of individuals. Society, in order to protect itself against innumerable vultures, allows itself to be ruled by one big vulture. But the big vulture is as bad as the little ones and so must be checked. This is done by forcing him to recognize certain political liberties or rights which if broken provide grounds for resistance and general rebellion. Another and more popular way of hamstringing the big vulture is setting up certain constitution al checks. But from the idea of constitutional government conies the idea of rule by the majority, which in turn gives rise to a new form of tyranny. This new form is the tyranny of society. The tyranny of the majority is more formidable than many other kinds of political op pression because there are fewer means to escape it and it pene trates much more deeply into the details of everyday life .enslaving the soul itself. Limit to Restraint “There is a limit to the legiti mate interference of collective opinion with individual indepen dence," says Mill, and to find that limit is the problem. In crder that the greatest good may accrue to the greatest , number it is necessary that some rules be imposed, wrote the old Utilitarian. What rules? That is the question. The rules vary with geography, time, and culture. No two coun tries decide alike. Yet always the rules seem self-evident. This “nat uralness” of the prevailing rules is an illusion which results from the magical influence of custom. Ruling Class Morality Now we are coming to the meat of the matter. Says Mill: “Wher ever there is an ascendant class, a large proportion of the moral ity (or custom) of the country emanates from its class interests and its feeling of class superior ity.” The morality that exists be tween dictators and stooges, be tween planters and negroes, be tween men and women (with men in the dominant position) is merely the creation of their class interests and feelings. When a class is losing its as cendancy, or when its ascendancy is unpopular, the prevailing mo ral sentiments frequentlly reflect inqratience with this superiority. That is why a lot of the people in the CIO unions, for instance, re sent the power of Mr. Henry Ford and Mr. J. P. Morgan. Natural Servility But a lot of people still wor ship our capitalistic masters. Mill says there is a servility in mankind toward the supposed preferences and aversions of our temporal masters which results in our giving in to their prejudices and even getting very emotional about the wrole business. Though essentially selfish, this servility is not hypocritical. We rational ize aud convince ourselves. As a result we nourish perfectly gen uine sentiments of abhorrence to deviators. The heretics are burned, unpopular reformers are ostracized, dissenters are put in (Continued on page five)