Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 15, 1951, Page Two, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    -HERALD
_naioAH ii.ii* Rkikald oublii^rd Monday through Friday dflnnf the college y***
_!]S g£°5J. d^LTS 3iM»r 6 (hrouah 28f May 7; Nov. iJ through 27: and
S2»l« 24 »toU«“onNov. 4 ami May 12. by tie A.'.ociatad Students o« the U»>ver«ty
•f Ortfoo. Entered as second class matter a* the postofl&ce, Eugene, Uregi.n. a abscnptio
rates: $5 per school year; $2 per *erm
Opinions expressed on the editorial page are those cf the w^tcr a”d .J® bs
repr£?m1wpmions of the ASUO or of the University. Initialed editorials ar# bitten by
Ihe associate edutors. Unsigned editorials are written by the editor.____
Akita Holmes. Editor
MAKTBL oCBOCGIN, ttUSincn •
Lout* Larson, Managing Editor
Ton King, Ken Mitile*, Jackie Priteek, Assooiate Editors
Fran Neel, Advertising Manager
News Editor: Gretchen Grondahl
Sports Editor: Phil Johnson
Wire Editor: A1 Karr
Feature Editor: Bob Ford _
Asst. News Editors: Marjorie Bush. Bill Frye,
Larry Hobart.
Asst. Managing Editors: Norman Anderson,
Phil Betiens. Gene Rose. _
Night Editor: Sarah Turnbull.
Circulation Manager: Jean Lovell.
Zone Managers: Abbott Paine. Harriet \ a
hev, Denise Thum, Val Schultr, baby
Thurston. Gretchen Grefc, Barbara Keeleii,
Sally Ilazeltinc.
Layout Manager: Keith Reynolds.
National Adv. Mgr.: Bonnie Birkemeier.
which the committee is discussing
at the present time, onto the shoul
ders of the faculty has been ex
hibited, he said. He cautioned
against hasty adoption of the plan.
A committee was appointed by
Mountain to present the idea to the
discipline committee for their con
sideration and suggestions.
Hears Veil Squad
The council decided that a yell
king would be named this spring
to work with the present yell
squad and rally board for the re
mainder of this year and also for
the first game next fall.
Additional members of next
year's yell squad will be named
following the first game next fall,
it was decided, but the present yell
squad, plus the new man to be
named this spring, will lead cheers
at the first football game of ,51.
The decision was reached following
a report by the Hally Board.
Oregana distribution will take
place from 1 to 5 p.m. today in
the Oregana office, third floor of
the Student Union, Business
Manager Bob Schooling said.
The second shipment of books
has arrived and a third is ex
pected today, Schooling stated.
Art School Picnic
Committee to Meet
The art school picnic committee
will meet at 4 p.m. today in the
seminar room of the art building.
All committee heads and interested
students are asked to attend, Pat
Brice, picnic chairman, announced.
The picnic is scheduled for Fri
day.
| Foskett Reports
(Continual from page one)
stated, ‘‘It goes back to the char
ter.” He cited Oregon as a school
at which faculty "soverignty” is
in evidence in the spirit of de
mocracy.
“Responsible to Faculty”
Asked by a member of the coun- j
cil if a student could appeal a de
cision made by the Office of Stu
dent Affairs, Foskett said that no
such review machinery was set up. j
He said that re-judging of a case
decided by the office would con-1
stitute a violation of the principle
of delegated authority. “The di
rectors must act within the frame
work of committee policy,” he
added. Donald DuShane, director
of student affairs, told the council!
that if there is any body superior
to the discipline committee it •
would be the general faculty to j
which the committee ie itself re
sponsible.
Barry Mountain, ASUO presi
dent, asked Foskett’s opinion of a
plan contained within the Stanford
Report which would call for the
establishment of two student i
groups — men and women — to
handle minor discipline cases and
to work in conjunction with the
present Student Discipline Com- '
mittee and the Office of Student
Affairs.
The two groups would be com
posed of a cross-section of stu
dents.
Foskett said that he would wel
come any move on the part of stu
dent in the direction of assuming
responsibility. He stated, however,
that in the past some students had
been guilty of shirking such re
sponsibility. A tendency to shove
the matter of academic cheating,
maintain water supplies
furnish wood products
UdkJkbu. A ■>,
help prevent floods
Retnertifeb—Only you can
PREVENT FOREST FIRES
"White Stag Playmates for
having fun
\\ lien you’re out ami under
the sun;
Xo matter what the time of day
Mix and match ’em to your
play.
You buy ’em as separates for
perfect tit . . . you tit ’em to
gether for perfect fun! In ( of
fec-Crcam, Citrus \ellow, Pol
len Gold, Sail Red, 1 )cpth Green,
Turquois, Cucumber Green,
Summer Xavy, I ar Black,
Clean White, and in the new
Red - White - Blue A i r m a i 1
Stripes, too!
I
t
\ I
GET SET NOW FOR SUMMER VACATION!
(limit lm tact &t uiujuK
do (hMi/
ihani^ttk/
You admire this kid, don’t you? He’s got
guts enough to stand up for his pitcher
against the whole opposing team.
But this kid has more than gutsl He has
grasped one of our very oldest American
traditions—that men and women have the
right to be judged on the basis of their
individual merits. Being “foreign” is noth
ing against an individual—nor is his race—
nor is his religion.
It’s up to each of us to keep disunity
from our families, our community and our
country.
Make sure that you are not spreading
rumors against a race or a religion.
Speak up, wherever you are, against pre
judice, and work for better understanding.
Remember that’s being a good American,
citizen.
Accept or reject people
on their individual worth