ANNE CRAVEN Editor ANNAMAE WINSHIP Business Manager MARGUERITE WITTWER Managing Editor PATSY MALONEY Advertising Manager WINIFRED ROMTVEDT News Editor EDITORIAL BOARD Norris Yates, Edith Newton Published daily during the college year except Sundays, Mondays, and holidays and final examination periods by the Associated Students. University of Oregon, Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice, Eugene, Oregon._ _ The Kinerald has a new editor and the campus has a new editor, all in one. Too often this is not clearly understood by students who are not well acquainted with the activities and management of the Emerald. The editor is chosen by the educational activities board, but that board only makes a recommendation, ft is the executive council of the A SIX) that passes final judgment on the recom mendation of the board. Students also often fail to realize that the profit and loss of the Emerald is.not an item in the budget of the h niversity. Rather, it is handled through the activitiesdSoard. so profits at anv time would go hack into student activities such as sports and concerts, and-losses are covered by the fees collected for activitv cards purchased at registration each term. Thus the Emerald can rate itself as definitely a student news paper. The editor and business manager are responsible to the activities hoard and to the ASUO of which everyone enrolled a: a regular student is a member. There is a theorv concerning freedom of the press which emphasizes the fact that the public is responsible for such free dom. In no other situation than the one on the campus could (In- theorv operate more definitely. This paper belongs to the .students who compose the majority of its readers and it is their respuusibilitv to see that the press at the University, as represented In the Emerald, is the kind of free and progressive press that thev want. Each student can express his opinions through the'Emerald, can look lor the expression of other cam pi i> opinions, because this is a student newspaper—it belongs to YOU. fyutube Education... Kvidence of what is to come in colleges and universities all over the United States may he seen in the increased enrollment this term over spring term 1944 at Oregon. Realization of the personal value and national need for education is spreading further with each year. Under the 01 Hill of Rights. 60.000 war veterans, along with main- workers whoso johs will cease with the end of the war ;ov expected to return to campuses all over the United States. .An increased enrollment of 30 per cent over that of 1939 is ("• peeled when the war ends. Mam colleges have been hard hit by the war as usual sources of their revenue have been curtailed. Some of these may lie forced to close bv 1946 if thev do not receive financial aid soon. Institutions of higher learning will face a bloody reckoning ■when students begin to flock back to academic life only to find