Opmn Daily k EMERALD The Oregon Daily Emerald is published Feb 4 thru 8. 11 thru 15. 18 thru 22, £5 thru 29, March IffiApr 2 thru 4, 7 thru 11. 14 thru 18. 21 thru 25. 28 thru .May 2, May 6 hr.. , 1 ’ thru 16, 19 thru 22, and May 26 by the Associated Students of the 1 Diversity ol Oregon. Entered as second class matter at the post office, Eugene, Oregon. Subscription rates: $5 per school year, $J per term. Opinions expressed on the editorial rage are those of the writer and do not Pretend to represent the opinions of the ASUO or of the University. Initialed editorials are written by associate editors. Unsijfwd editorials are written by the editor. _____ Lincoln's Birthday A great man ... and American ... was born 143 years ago today. His name was Abraham “Abe" Lincoln. And during his lifetime he had much to say:_ “...All men are created equal.” (Gettysburg, Nov. 19, 1863). When y'ou picked up the Sunday Oregonian you saw, on page one, a story of racial prejudice toward Negroes in I-.ugene. Negroes here are housed in substandard buildings in an area devoid of plumbing. A woman has been threatened because she rented a home on Friendly st. to a Negro family. Where is this realization of “equality ’? * * * “With malice towards none, with charity for all, with firm ness in the right as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the nation s wounds ... to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves and with all nations.” (Second inaugural address, Mar. 4, 1865). Whom among us ... or among our neighbors in Russia or China or Germany or France ... bears “malice towards none ? How many times since the Civil War have we bound up the nation’s wounds? World War I... World War II... the Kor ean war ... what next? * * * “While Man exists, it is his duty to improve not only his own conduct, but to assist in ameliorating mankind. (Address to Germans at Cincinnati, Feb. 12. 1861). If only men ... throughout the University and Eugene and Oregon and the United States and the world ... would abide by this “duty” as defined by Lincoln, we would be living in the kind of prejudice-free, peaceful, prosperous world he must have envisioned. We pray—on this, his birthday—that these spoken wisdoms of Abraham Lincoln will someday become reality. Skip-to-my-Lou, My Darling We’re playing hopscotch again, as of last 1 hursday after noon and the Alpha Tau Omega petition to rejoin AGS. This move was nothing earthshaking... or even particularly unexpected. * The ATO’s left the Greek fold a couple years back when they had a potential student body prexy candidate they knew didn’t stand a chance of getting the AGS nomination. USA needed a man. So ... the ATO’s joined USA and Barry Mountain be came student body president. (The whole story, which involves a secret political society called Theta Nu Epsilon, isn’t quite that simple, but we’ll let our short explanation suffice.) Now the ATO’s feel USA has outlived its usefulness to them so they’re engineering another switch ... back to AGS. Some of the fellows in the house say they’re just being politi cally honest: they’re Greeks so they’re going back to the Greek bide. (USA is a coalition party of Greeks and independents.) This sort of party jumping is nothing unusual. Happens every winter or spring term when houses see greener pastures on the other side of the party boundary. Remember last spring? Phi Kappa Sigma leapt from USA to AGS; soon after, Sigma Alpha Mu jumped the other way. (They had a potential student body president too. He’s Veep now.) Of course, maybe the Greeks don't want the A TO’s back. It s a pretty remote maybe. We’ll wager a gallon of printer’s ink there’ll be little opposition in today’s AGS meeting. We wish we could give you another reason for the switch ... perhaps a dislike for the USA platform for the coming election. But since the parties have no platforms, it’s impossible. (Yes, we know, they do have a platform of sorts: (1) Better relations between Greeks and independents, (2) more school spirit, (3) more effective student government, and (4) better dance bands. The above have comprised the platform of both parties for as long as we can remember.) Oh, we might give ATO a slap on the wrist for one thing. They neglected to inform USA they were pulling out. That party’s acting chairman heard about the petition nearly five hours after it had been presented at the AGS meeting. For the benefit of those who are wondering whom ATO might have this year as a potential candidate, we might explain that AGS has a policy of not giving any nominations to mem bers of houses for a year after they rejoin the bloc. Wait and see who they have in line for ’53. Hop, skip and a jump ... who’s next? Spring term’s a-coming fast. - - Letters to the Editor I More About Asia Emerald Editor: In a way, I have been aston ished by the way the article on Asia was interpreted by some people on this campus. This ar ticle meant to deal only with the economic situation of Asin, nnd not the cultural or religious side as suggested in both letters to the Editor. I appreciate (even if I do not thoroughly understand) the vari ous cultures nnd religions of Asia. But, at the same time, I try to be realistic about the eco nomic and human situation of the Far-East From M. Islam's letter, you could think that Asia was a paradise before the coming of the West. It is not what our teachers have told us about the Far-East. Sure, we can only plead guilty when we are accused of having exploited the people of Asia; but I do not think however, this is the reason we should still like to be in Asia. Civili/4)tion, as Europeans and Americans understand it, is a many-sided question: it is com posed of technic, of culture, but also of this rare quality: the abil ity to administer. We have in no way the monopoly of culture: quite u few Asiatics are more cultured, more refined than we are. Not even the monopoly of the technic for our machines can Im» Irautht or copied anti other* than us know how to tine them. But to know how to run a busi ness or a firm I* something quite different. To be nble to administer in this "manegcrial age" which Burn ham talks of, you must have the sense of the end in view and of tlie means you dispose of, to achieve this end, e.g., the sense of pioportions. You must also have the notion of upkeep, not only under the accountant form of amortization, but also the ele mentary form of keeping the ma terial in good shape. People who have been to Asia will tell you that nothing Is perfectly looked ufter. What is really missing is the sense of tile great adminis tration, with a few exceptions for Indian groups such as Tala Birla or Dalmia. You do sometimes find the technic, the financial competence, the intelligence or the ability, but hardly ever do you find a rational organization, the notion of value of time, the capacity to defend your business against the temptation of bar gaining. "Dispatch Is the soul of busi ness" was what I»rd Chesterfield used to say. But to come to mi end is not in the hublt of the -The Atomic Age Labor Leader Hits Taft-HartleyAct, State Politics and Money Troubles - By Phil Johnson -— Organized labor's chief bone of contention with the Taft-Hartley act was explained Monday by Secretary George Brown of the r T O otnto in. dustrial union council when he talked to students of Professor P. V Klein sorge s Economics -42G class. According to Brown, the framers of the act expected it | to be used to destroy the ef fectiveness of l’hll Johnson ( it uu r ummin wnrn a ur|irrmiuu arrived. The provision which would cause this reduction of union strength is the one allow ing strikebreakers to vote in shop elections. Since the strikebreak ers naturally would vote against unionism, and the union mem bers would not be allowed to vote because they would be striking, the union would be voted out of that firm, according to Brown. He also asserted that the fra mers of the Taft-Hartley act be lieved that a depression or re cession was approaching at that time and that they realized that large numbers of potential strike breakers (also known as "scabs”) seek employment during periods of economic decline. Although the nation does not appear to be immediately threat ened by a depression, such a de cline is possible, and the unions, Brown maintained, will then face a great loss of effectiveness. The C.I.O. Official also provided some interesting observations on national and state politics. He stated that on the 65 major issues coming to a vote in Congress in 1951, Southern Democrats united with Republicans to defeat the administration 33 times, includ ing a vote w'hich resulted in "the emasculation of the defense pro duction act.” Furthermore, according to Brown, Oregon’s Representative Harris Ellsworth voted with the Republican-Southern "unholy al lience” on 15 of the 17 most-im portant issues, was absent on one vote and, supported the adminis tration on one. Referring to Oregon politics, Brown asserted that Oregon’s 1953 legislature will face a finan cial crisis because the 1951 legis lature did not provide for suffi cient taxation. Usually the state has enough reserves to carry the financial load from one session to the next, but this time, the speaker re marked, the normal reserves will be exhausted by . the time the legislature meets. Brown maintains that the pro ponents of an Oregon sales tax delayed taxation proposals In the 1951 legislature because they felt that a 1953 financial crisis will reduce the difficulty of forcing a sales tax upon the people. He hinted that organized labor will vigorously oppose any sales tax because the lower and mid dle-income groups suffer a heav ier proportional load than others under such a tux scheme. He also indicated that the 1953 legislature will discuss the pro posed national amendment limit ing income taxes to 25 per cent. He claimed that if this amend ment is adopted, “the only alter native" will be a national sales tax. Oriental: he understands, he <11* CIIMMCN, ho makes conclusions , ., and then often nothing happen*, Whut la Innuffiolent and ofteiJ lucking In the average worker; not only capahlo to carry nut mi order, but alno to Interpret It and If necessary to adapt It to un foreaeen rlrcumstunce*. The Weal han passed a loud time ago from the tool age tni the machine age, and more re-, cently to the managerial age In dia, and we are apealtlng of the' moat favored country In Asia, haa arrived to the machine age, but by the muss of ita workers ahe la alill prcdominently art I - aanal and only a few of her lead era have reached the niveau of the managerial age, like the Pal ais for instance. And let us apeak of the "deveis opinent of Asia,” AI. Islam ? Theoritically Asia might be able to industrialize by herself. But tell me how she is going to do It, when Europe, who has already a greut industrial background, has to rely on foreign aid. To start up a big industry in Aslg.^you need capital and technic Where are you going to find that, M. Islam, if not In the U S A or the- Soviet Union? And by the way, in what kind of world do you think we are living just now if not In a '’sharply divided'1 world ? And speaking of ''the thou sands of people in the name of western civilization,” how many millions were slaughtered recent* ly In the name of "religion,” M. Islam? A higher concept, is tt not ? I know the Buddhist has a symbolic respect for life, lie it tlie one of a mosquito or a grass hopper. But tf they do not kill the cows, who nourishes them? Who In Aslu seems to worry alioul th<; poor? Christian charity, this “milk of human kindness” men tioned In Shakespeare, seems tu belong more to the West than to the Far-East. Immensely developed, techni* cal methods have been placed in the hands of states, a power thaj governments of earlier days could never have imngined. Solutions are no longer individual but coU lective and they have ceased to be national, because no state is large enough any longer to ac* alone. Under these circumstan ces, the horizon has widened, hag become world wide. It is on a world plan that poli tics, economies and military strategy compel us henceforth to reason and to live. To consid. r the problems of our time, what* ever they may be, in another light is to run the risk of judg ing everything by false syyrid ards and form an outdated angleT Mare I>elemme Foreign Student Grades on the Curve “ It’s nothing, really—I gave them 100 multiple-choice questions— hut none of the answers are right.”