To the High School Press Conference, An Open Letter We hope you touring teenagers will not be dis appointed if your welcome was a bit listless. This campus has just been through one of the fastest fall terms in University history and the good peo ple about you are tired. Then too, there is the mat ter of the fast approaching final exam week. They look at the next 17 days with helpless gloom. Here, for your perusal, is a thumbnail sketch of the lit erary plant you’re about to inspect. SCHOOL, OF JOURNALISM. Rated among the top five in the nation. Faculty persues a “hands off” policy outside the classroom that greatly stim ulates output. Doing good newspaper work is ex pected; near perfection is a requirement along with reporting, publishing and editing. THE EMERALD. An eight-page paper (printed on both sides). Was awarded All-American rating last year thus signifying the end of the national emergency and imported Mexican headsetters. No paper on Sundays and Mondays because the peo ple that put it out are “social” on Saturday night and usually can’t get out of bed Sundays. The paper is lightly regarded by townspeople, avidly scanned by anxious parents, quoted and mis quoted by papers throughout the state, nervously tolerated by the Eugene Register-Guard, and laughed at, spit at, cursed, and admired by the finicky Oregon student body (a group which de mands nothing less than a professional tabloid daily crossed between Forever Amber and The New Testament. EMERALD EDITOR. Named Eob Frazier. Started Oregon 1940. Claims the war retarded his progress. Got job because administration thought a bald-headed editor would lend dignity to the pa per. Married and has one noisy boy, age 3. Is a camera fiend, wears spectacles, highly intellectual, and leers at young girls. Genial, easy to work for. Thinks the Emerald is composed of the edit page and seven lesser pages. MANAGING EDITOR. Named Bill Yates. Gets older with the term. Always busy. Courts cute Kappa by penny post card. Catches occasional nap in publishing class. Thinks the ad side is a not too necessary evil. Has picked up beautiful lead-col ored tan Jrom night work. ASSOCIATE EDITORS. Use two women loaded with hidden talent as associates. Maryann Thielen is a big “wheel” in Theta Sig, a woman’s journal istic honorary organized in Schenectady by George Sand to gain control of the American press. Writes snappy, tangy editorials on a variety of subjects she knows nothing about. Maryann came to the Emerald from the Police Gazette. . . . Jeanne Simmonds is other edit writer. Came to Oregon along with a load of brick that eventually became Deady hall. Is called “Simmy” (among oth er things) and is loved by everyone who knows her. Simmy is hard to get to know. Has big “in” with officialdom. Won Gerlinger cup last year. Writes “hearts and flowers” type edit. Particularly useful around the holidays for wishing people happy Eas ter, Christmas, Thanksgiving, Fourth of July, etc. NEWS EDITORS. Two females, June Goetze and Bobolee Brophy, mismanage this office. Have sharp talent for deleting sexy material from stor By LARRY LAU ies. Came to Emerald from obit. dept, of Christian Science Monitor. Gossip, drink coke and coffee eight hours a day. News mysteriously funnels in and out of their office. Unfortunately they will not graduate this year. Sneak out of Susan Camp bell at night by staging false fire drills. Both mad about the same linotype operator. SPORTS EDITOR. Uses nom de plume of Wal ly Hunter. An aged character who was graduated out of Woodburn in 1939. Garbles sports stories beautifully. Can be seen in coast press boxes where he distributes sandwiches. Will probably work for the Daily Racing Form when he graduates. DEAN TURNBULL. Feared and respected by the freshmen. Sophomores and juniors want to protect him. Feared and respected by the seniors. Mild-mannered, gentle, has a habit of playing yo yo with his glasses during classes. WARREN C. PRICE. One of the biggest chees es to come out of Wisconsin. Law school is a pipe compared to his reporting course. Lures innocents into taking law of the press. Is married and has three children who don’t take up much of his time as students would like. His fabulous store of semi useless information. Likes to make people think he’s hardboiled, but his bark is only half as bad as his bite. LAWRENCE CAMPBELL. J?ew to Oregon. Came from Syracuse university. Was co-author of a sparkling textbook called "Exploring Journal ism.” Pulls hundreds of little "funnys” during class. Operates on the “shotgun theory” of humor where you depend on quantity and the law of averages to pull you through. Spends a lot of time in his lectures beating around the bush* but seems to know his stuff. HARRY HEATH. Another newcomer to Ore gon, hailing from Oklahoma. Shackra'ts were non plussed to learn that he doesn’t smoke, drink, or chew. Aside from these abnormalities, seems to be a fine fellow. Has loud voice. Rumor has it he talked to cattle on the range beefore being confined to a classroom. JACK BILLINGS. An old line, pre-war shack rat. Graduated last year and is trying to badger the University out of a master’s degree while teaching elementary journalism. Curly hair comes from sampling Johnny Kahananui’s “Swedish punch’’ last year. Speaking of Swedes, he married one named Christine Christian. Cute kid, but no one knew her. LESTER SCHANGLEN. Also teaching elemen tary journalism, sweating out a master’s. Rail birds predict an early end for this character. Does n’t smoke, drink, chew, or eat meat. Owns his own farm where he raises everything but children and salt. MARIE BROWN. Faithful secretary, also offi cial crying towel. Carries large stock of sympathy chits for journalism majors who come in to switch to ceramics or bobsledding. Is leaving the Univer sity this term after 57 years of faithful service. Is slated to become the house mother at Creswell fire department. Oregon ^ Emerald ALL-AMERICAN 1946-47 The Oregon Daily Emerald, official publication of the University of Oregon, publishei daily during the college year except Sundays, Mondays, and final examination periods Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice, Eugene, Ore. Member of the Associated Collegiate Press BOB FRAZIER. Editor BOB CHAPMAN, Business Managei BILL YATES JUNE GOETZE. BOBOLEE BROPHY Managing Editor Co-News Editors walt McKinney, jeanne simmonds, maryann thielen Associates to Editor WALLY HUNTER Sports Editor PHYIXIS KOHI.METER HELEN SHERMAN Assistant Managing Editors VIRC. TUCKER Advertising Manager National Advertising Manager.....Marilyn Turnet Circulation Manager .Billi Jean Riethmillei Editorial Board Harry (Hickman, Johnny Kahananui, Bert Moore, Ted Goodwin Bill Strattor, Jack Billings. ^ i rrnrrrrrrrrr r— rrTTrrTrWW tFp¥« Library Displays Musical Works Albums and scores of several great composers, and books on in terpretation of their works are now on display in the library cir culation department. Among the composers are Baclt? Brahms, Mo zart and Wagner. A Gilbert and Sullivan score of “lolanthe,” a book of Gilbert and Sullivan opera stories, and an al bum of folk songs and ballads sung by Susan Reed are also in cluded in the exhibit. On display until January 1, the exhibit is a part of the library's program to correlate audio-visual instruction with books in the li brary. A CHRISTMAS GIFT FOR MOTHER See Holmer’s handmade plastic and cordette BAGS! 736 16th E. Call 3869 The Years That Went Between By REX GUNN It is strange the way finals come. First they are a dim ap parition somewhere across a vast space of two months, then 'they are looming in your face a week away, and there never seems to be any real lapse of time between. So many things are that way. It was like that with childhood and today. One day you were a kid listening to the oldsters try ing to recall school friends they had known. You thought of your friends and said to yourself—"It will never be that way with me, I’ll remember these friends al ways—we’ll do everything to gether—we’ll—” and then that time receded and you forgot. It has been the same with me. Sometimes I recall with a start that I lived 18 years in the South. There was a host of childhood ac quaintances, familiar places, es tablished habits that have passed out of my life as completely as if I had passed from this globe onto another. Now, sometimes, I hear con versations which include some thing that would have been con sidered funny where I was born, and I revert to that first reflex that was formed in me and turn to laugh with the group, but the group isn’t laughing. The same thing will probably happen to you (if it hasn't al ready) when you are gone from Oregon—from the things asso ciated with this locality. And you will feel that sudden passage of years. I guess it will always be that way—graduation, a new job in a new place, finally death. There are many times when we are quite alone with no way to communi cate. O.S.C. Follows Suit We see by our competition clown on the Corvallis campus that the executive committee of the ‘‘A.S.O.S.C." has gone on record in favor of a tuition increase to build an Aggie Igloo. Proponents of the plan on this campus were not surprised, and further predict that a similar system will be put into effect at the college of education in Monmouth. It seems the only way left to raise money for student buildings, and distasteful as it may be, it seems to be the way we must accept if we are to build student union buildings and basketball pavillions ‘‘in our time.” _ POLAR STAR AND WHITE STAG SKI PARKAS Black, white, ski red, altitude blue Sizes 12-18 $16.95 kle elastic waist — Fur to frame the hood — Full length zipper — Zipper pockets