Oregon *<§' Emerald ALL-AMERICAN 1946-47 _ The Oregon Daily Emerald, official publication of the University of Oregon, ]Published daily during the college year except Sundays, Mondays^ and final examination periods. Entered as second-class matter at the postomce, Eugene, Ure. Member of the Associated Collegiate Press_ BOB FRAZIER, Editor_ BOB CHAPMAN, Business Manager RILL YATES Managing Editor JUJNH. UUilii D\J IJ' > U&MZt Jjxxvy**** Co-News Editors_ DON FAIR iKtu iaxluk Co-Sports Editor ____ JEANNE SIMMONDS, MARYANN THIELEN, BARBARA HEYWOOD Associates to Editor_ VIROI L TUCKER DIANA DYE Advrtising. Manager_Assistant News Editors PHYLLIS KOIILMEIER HELEN SHERMAN Asst. Managing Editors __ A Good Place for Grass Wednesday evening two University students were injured while crossing 13th street in front of the College Side. It was a dark and rainy night, and the intersection there poses many problems for the driver who has just come through the dark campus.. He is suddenly confronted with many distrac ing lights from the block of store fronts that makes up the campus business community. After driving through three blocks where tlRre is virtually no pedestrian traffic in the evening, he comes upon the “most crossed" street in the Un iversity section. The wonder is that such accidents have not happened more often. The University and the city took a step in the right direc tion last year, when, after years of campaigning by the Em erald, they blocked off 13th street during class changing periods. Ideally now we look toward the day when 13th will be blocked to traffic entirely, when grass will grow between Commerce and Chapman. But that time is not yet. Before much more can be done about 13th street, there will have to be some provision made for east-west traffic through Eugene. Right now 13th is the only artery through the city between the highway and 19th. It is only reasonable to expect that the citizens of Eugene be allowed to cross their town. Anybody who has driven on 13th at 10 minutes to the hour knows what a headache the present light system is to the driver. He must either stop and wait 10 minutes, or he must skirt the campus, using University street, 11th, and the muddy wagon-road that connects the two. Then he must get a re-do on shock absorbers, wash job, and temper. If he meets a bus on University street, that’s just tough. Any further closing of the street would result in even greater inconvenience to the city’s drivers. The answer seems to he to run 11th through, north of the physical plant, and to provide an adequate north-south outlet at Onyx or Emerald. Then we could plant grass on 13th from Kincaid to University. Lucky Is He With an Uncle To many students (in the terminology of a freshman comp class) “My Summer Vacation Means My Summer Job.” The old question of where to find work is a natural harbinger of spring. It is also a blight on the season, because the day when full-time employment, let alone part-time or summer-time work, was nearly unobtainable is not yet forgotten. These lean years have not returned, but the University branch of the U. S. employment service has announced that summer work will be more difficult to obtain. The branch is judging mainly by the number of office and industry jobs available in Lane county. Dean Karl W. Onthank was more Optimistic about job conditions in Portland. Many of the jobs he listed, however, are open only to graduates. The usual quota of resort jobs is still offered to college students. Therefore let the student whose favorite summertime sport is check-cashing start soon an application-letter barrage, for although things are not had, they are not good. That ragged old scarecrow. No Job, is sitting on a distant but visible pin nacle, leering. Fortunate indeed is the student who has a standing summer job, a special talent that assures him of work, or a great in dustrialist for an uncle.— B.H. All This for Free Are you happy with the Oregon state liquor law? Do you wr approve the actions of the people who run your local, state, and national government? Do you think Lane county is run effic iently? Are you interested in a mill race? If any of the above issues titillate you, and if you really want to see something done—one way or the other—about them, you have your chance next May, at the Oregon primaries. But before you can vote, you must register. It’s easy today. There will be registration booths open all day today in the co-op. Its free. Regional Inequalities Seen In Granting Research Funds By BILL WASMANN An article in the February 6 issue of Science magazine makes interesting reading, but it is not recommended for those having blood of a low boiling point. Inequality in the granting of research funds in the field of medicine is the author’s, Clarence A. Mills’, thesis. Although we’ve no statistics to prove it, we do feel that his thesis could be expand ed. to almost any field of study. "There exists no evidence that native in telligence is better in one part of the United States than in another. Opportunities for the blossoming of exceptional ability do vary sharply from region to region, however—a variation which is correlated closely with the availability of institutions of higher learning. This is particularly true of the de velopment of young scientists; there is no way in which promising individuals can be discovered except by bringing them into • close contact with science subjects. Encour agement of research in America must thus mean the greatest possible broadening of the base of student exposure, as well as the broadest possible support of promising in dividuals once they have been found,” he says. The Mills investigation into the distri bution of research funds brought out “very disturbing inequalities in the granting of such funds—inequalities so pernicious in end re sults as to indicate the need for an entirely new basis of action with the large federal outlays in future years. The article divides itself nicely into two parts; one dealing with his findings, the other dealing with federal outlays in future years. We shall deal with the latter question at a later date. For the sake of brevity here are a few of the inequalities. The American Cancer Society raised $14,138,897 by public sub scription all over the country during 1945-46, and of this about 39.5 per cent was contrib uted by the northeastern states. In the dis tribution fo these funds up to February, 1947 this same northeastern section received 66.7 ’ per cent of the total. The remainder of the country, which contained more than 70 per cent of the total population and contributed 60.5 per cent of the funds, received only 33.3 per cent of the research money distributed. More than half a dozen ether institutions which grant funds for similar purposes are mentioned. Many of them are not dependent upon public support, but practically all of them ignore, in the main, the fact that the United States extends below the Mason-'! Dixon line and west of the Mississippi river. The fairest distribution of funds Mr. Mills could find was that made by the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. “For once, less than half of the funds (48.7 per cent) went to the northeastern area with its 29.7 per cent of the total U. S. population.” Anybody Here Like Newsreels? Newsreels are hardly worthy of the name nowadays. More and more they have become publicity mediums for the movie industry; the occasional shot that actually features news of the day—real news—is almost a rarity. Universal-International newsreels invar iably have pictures of J. Arthur Rank himself _• at_ i p_ uiiiwilg^ III X IV 1U1 some kind (it’s never very clear) of a conference, leav ing New York after a confer ence, visiting Washington to see H. Truman, taking tiffin with King George, or going on lengthy walks with a Un iversal v. p. I like a good many of the pictures Rank's company turns out, but I’m getting awlully tired ol those interminable shots showing him embarking, disembark ing, or hobnobbing with international wheels. 20th Century-Pox always makes a point of getting Darryl F. Zanuck into their "news reels." He plays polo . . . contributes to charity . . . graciously accepts academy awards . . . once, so help me, they took pic tures of him as one of the recipients for some American Defense medals that were being passed out to members of the American Le gion post on the 20th Century lot. I confess to being curious about just how many veter ans employed by 20th Century are members of that post; the quota probably resembles the latest figures on Ivory Soap’s purity. Let's not bother to consider Barney Bala ban, Louie Mayer, Spyros Skouros, or the rest of the movie colony big guns individual ly; let it go by saying that pictures of them presenting (or receiving) awards, medals, checks, etc. are boring to an extreme. They ay bbK i MUUnb do the work of nembutal without the danger of nembutal. Let’s consider Eric Johnston, ex-presi dent of the United States chamber of com merce and currently czar of the motion pic ture industry. Eric is another distinguished, well-groomed bore, and the only difference between him and others of the Balaban Mayer-Skouros ilk is that ALL the Compan ies numb theater audiences with bits from his latest speeches. I’d gladly pay roadshow prices to see a full length picture starring Eric Johnston if the newsreel companies would promise never again to devote one iota of space to his ex tremely unimportant doings. That’s purely a dream situation, of course. See a newsreel without one shot of Eric Johnston addressing the National Association of Key Chain Man ufacturers or some other select group? To cjuote Sam Goldwyn: “I give you my answer in two words: Im-possible.” Actual news shots are something else again, but they’re almost as bad, sometimes. '1 he Hollywood idea of making events con form to someone’s idea of how they should be often gets played to a fare-thee-well. Eugene theaters last week were featuring scenes of a Midwestern flood; one newsreel showed the usual flood scenes, then the camera focused on a dog riding the roof of a doghouse float ing down-country. Pure happenstance that the newsreel cameraman just happened to be within easy camera range when that dog just happened to drift by? Must have been. M ho, cocking a critical eye at Hollywood, would ever dream of suggesting that the dog was placed there just for the benefit of the camera ? Speak up, you dirty Red Commun ist bum, you. In answering a polling reporter's question of “Why Should One Go to College?" an instructor at Villanova college said, "It is one of the obligations exacted for the privilege of being alive that a man must ask these three questions about him self: 1) What am I? 2) Why am I? 3) Where am I going? One goes to college to help him find the answers to these questions.” Library to Close The library will be closed Sun day, April 18, from 1 to 5 p.m., to permit library personnel to attend the Isaac Stern concert, according to Dr. R. c. Swank, librarian. ^