m Published daily during the college year except Sundays, Mondays, holidays and final examination periods by the Associated Students, University of Oregon. Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice, Eugene, Oregon. RAY SCHRICK, Editor; BETTY BIGGS SCHRICK, Business Mgr. Dune Wimpress, Managing Editor Ted Bush, Associate Editor Jack Billings, News Editor John Mathews, Associate Editor Member Associated Co!ie6iate Press ALT.-AMERICAN 1942 UPPER NEWS STAFF Lee Flatberg, Sports Editor Marge Major, Women’s Editor Mildred Wilson, Feature Editor Janet Wagstaff, Assistant Editor Joan Dolph, Marjorie Young, Assistant News Editors UPPER BUSINESS STAFF xiuvci usiriK lwanagers : John Jensen, Cecil Sharp, Shirley Davis, Russ Smelser. Connie Fullmer, Circulation Manager. .L.01S ^iaus, ^lassineu Auvenihiug -uf Washington. —U. of W. Daily. A certain Oregon State coed was floored with the remark that the Spanish corn her cook ing class had prepared for the men’s dormitories was tasteless. (Continued on payc three) By TED HA5MON BEACH-COMBER Concerning her past, We won’t say more, Nor bother to cast Driftwood on the shore. Associated Press dispatches which brought the news of the gallant but tragic end of Dale Lasselle brought back to us bits of conversation we had with an other former student last month. While Lasselle will be remem bered for his former gridiron ac tivities from 1934 to 1936 in var sity football, this friend of ours has only a medium-sized college career behind him. and war ahead of him. And for p.nother compar ison, Captain Dale Lasselle crashed to his death only 10 days after he had' arrived in England; our friend expects to be there be fore the end of the year. Net a Sermon This certainly is not any ser mon on the fact that ‘‘war is hell,” but merely to mention what the human mind goes through in certain moments. This friend of ours has secured his air corps wings and is merely adding fin ishing touches to the career be fore him, but already a strange philosophy is weaving its pattern in that young man's mmd. Naturally military discipline is, in part, acceptance of duty without personal regard. And this is a large order, especially for our generation that has been weaned cn a democratic life, nursed with the warm milk of peace-and-plenty. But this friend has to forget all that for a bigger job; the philosophy that he has created witin himself, we th|^^ is important enough to pass^a to e thers. Not Bag Things "One doesn't bother to think of big things” we were told. “Of course there is the job to be done, but it's always the smaller things that linger longer than cne can imagine. On routine flights I have often thought about how the eight o’clock bell used to ring in Oregon, how the words of some so-ng I heard 'way back in 1937 went, or even the hollow sound of a cheering yell at a football game. It’s those little things, not how many com mittees I worked on, who was (Please turn to page three) COMMUNICATIONS* ... directing arm of combat and Western Electric equipment “ goes to every battle front Army pl-« ””aufint‘wcoor*Mtemecha» sets. Radios r,de m« comma„aeM get reports ized operations. Ax Y telephones, vnre and and give orders ove announcing sys switchboards. NavaJ terns, telephones and ra lized equipment A major source of tins ^ manufacturer is Western Electric * ' d today to meeting *- delive”46 8 words to fighting men.