Th* Oregon Daily Emerald ia published Monday through Friday daring the college yeat from Sept. 15 to June 3, except Nov. 16, 25 through 30, Dec. 7 through 9, 11 through Jan. 4 March 8 through 10, 12 through 29, May 3, and 31 through June 2, with issues on Nov. 21, Jan. 23, and May 8, by the Student Publications Board of the University of Oregon. En tered as second class matter at the post office, Eugene, Oregon. Subscription rates: $5 per school year; $2 per terra. Opinions expressed on the editorial page are those of the writer and do not pretend to represent the opinions of the ASUO or of the University. Unsigned editorials are written by the editor: initialed editorials by the associate editors. elsie Schiller. Editor DICK CARTER, Business Manager JACKIE WARDELL, RON MILLER. Associate Editors KITTY FRASER, Managing Editor VALERA VIERRA, Adv. Mgr. Give Them A Chance The freshman election controversy is with ns again. We hope it’ll be settled this time. Under the present system the four freshmen officers are elected on one ballot using the preferential system. This means that four men running for president get the four offices; students, especially women, run ning for representative haven't a chance. This system works alPright for the other classes because in the party-controlled general election there are seldom more than four persons running for office, with the stronger candi ' dates opposing each other for the presidential post. And » party members know how to vote for their candidates. But in the freshman elections there are no parties to limit the number of candidates. Presidential candidates receiving ‘‘one’’ votes can easily out-distance representative candidates who seldom receive a vote higher than “three”. Result: you have to run for president in order to have even a slight chance of getting any office. Last spring an amendment that would have changed the freshman ballot was presented at the general election and de feated. Whether because of lack of interest or because no one could understand the amendment we don’t know. We hope the senate will this year place an understandable measure on the ballot. And we hope the student body will re alize the situation and end the confusion. We don’t necessarily mean that all the freshman officers shouldn’t be men. But look it this year’s senate—only four women out of thirty members. Lots of women run in their class election. They haven’t a chance and they lose interest. And we lose several potential leaders. —(JAY.) A Difficult Job We want to take a moment to thank Dr. Victor P. Morris for the time and talents he’s placed in his job of acting-president of the University during the interim between Harry K. Xewburn’s resignation and Dr. Wilson’s arrival to take over his new duties. We recognize the fact that a temporary position can some times, and in this case did, have more pressures, more problems, more headaches than would ordinarily be involved in this job. We know it’s hard to know just which are your decisions to make in such a position and which must be left for the in coming president. And we realize that some decisions which had to be immediate we’re probably awfully hard to make. We think Dr. Morris was in a difficult position. And we think he did a job which shouldn’t be overlooked in the hullabaloo •over Dr. Wilson’s arrival. What we especially liked about Dr. Morris was his friend liness, his smile when we met him on the campus and the deep interest he took in student activities. We liked his willing ness to hash over Emerald problems with us and we liked . the gesture of a Sunday night dinner at his home for a group of students. It provided an excellent opportunity to know the Morrises as people. And they are wonderful people. So thank you, Dr. Morris, and we’re sure the business administration school is probably as glad to have their dean back as he is to be back in his special field of interest. US Civil Service Jobs Announced Examinations for U.S. Civil Ser vice Commission positions have been announced by the commission for jobs in the Navy Department -and other federal agencies in Wash ington, D.C. The other general area of work includes farm credit examiner po sitions with the Farm Credit Ad • ministration. Salaries range from $4,205 to $5,060 per year. Navy department salaries range Trom $5,940 to $10,800 per year. No written test is required for -either of the examinations. Applications for the Navy de partment jobs must be filed before March 30, with the Board of Civil Service Examiners, Navy Depart ment, Washington 25, D.C. Qualifications for both areas of work include experience in the specialized field of work. Applications for the farm credit examiner positions will be accepted until further notice, and are to he filed with the Board of Civil Ser vice Examiners, Department of Agriculture, Washington 25, D.C. Another position, substitute mail handler in the Post Office Service in Eugene, has also been announced by the commission. Applicants for this post must reside within tTie delivery of the Eugene Post Office or be patrons of the office. Salary for the post office po sition is $1.56 per hour. Interested persons may apply at any post office or may write to the Direct or, Eleventh U.S. Civil Service re gion, 302 Federal Office Euilding, Seattle 4, Washington. -.1 It tiff at the Zoo At Last: Frustrated Pioneers Meet Over Flaming Campus by Bob Funk Emerald Columnitt Revolution ia like plowing it turns some old dirt under and turns up some new. —from Uncle Gloomy’s Almanac (Synopsis of preceding install ments: A SUBVERSIVE (name withheld by request) dropped a Shakespeare Variorum on THEL GA SLURM and decapitated her,, Student Body President IGNACE RONGSISTER and hungry, beau tiful JANET PLANET were a larmed to read of this in the Uni versity Daily Blrthstone, more alarmed when they were ap proached by Communist Spy ALICE MALICE. Their fears vanished when they learned she merely wished to plan an All Campus Revolution similar in na ture to Junior Weekend. In the nation's capital. Sena tor Deuterono my Squirm prepared to march west to Investigate.) Senator Squirm's desti nation in the Far West was tne campus of the stated univer sity in the State of Lethargy. The campus was built orr high ground (the catalog indicated, reassur ingly) to avoid floods and foul smells from capitalist plywood works. The campus was an archi tectural argument, each period from the pyramids to the geo desic dome being heavily repre sented in the form of a building named after the mothers of dead members of the Board of Regents. On one part of the - campus a statue of the Pioneer Father peered dimly back. Ei ther to frustrate this affair, or perhaps in pity (since neither parent was a thing of beauty), the administration had built the imposing Administra tion Building between the two. Professor Marion Clarion, for eign languages, had often secretly pondered this thwarted romance. To him it symbolized his own dingy life. He taught a very foreign language to the sons and daughters of millionaire plumbers. He had a small office in Amiable Hall full of water pipes, fluoresc ent lights, and regret. There was a little room left over for a desk, and at that desk he composed a lecture in which he would attempt to dispel his students' lingering impression that the Cid was some how related to Billy the Kid and was now on television. The door opened. “Got a light, youngster?” a velvet voice asked. He looked up to* see a cigarette and—YOVV!— beyond the cigarette a woman dressed In rt scarlet gown. She was the real thing all the way down to the floor. In his ner vousness he tried to light her thumb. 'Welcome' and Fine Is Court's Decision by the Associated Press Wakefield, Rhode Island—Some weeks back, Perry Potter was fined $15 for reckless driving when his car left the highway and cracked up. He appealed. In appellate court, the state an nounced it was prepared to re duce the charge from reckless driving to speeding. It had found, said the prosecutor, that Potter was just out of the Army after fighting in Korea. Said the judge—one dollar fine. And, he added: “Welcome home!’’ "Dr. Clarion?” she breathed. "Speaking," he choked. "I understand," she said, "that you arc an Enlightened Intelli gentsia prototype. We need one of those to take minutes at the All-Campus Revolution cell meet ings, and to write manifestos now and then." ‘Tve never written a mani festo,” he confessed, choking on a fingernad, "but I'm sure I'd like to. I wrote my thesis on ‘Speech Aberrations: Catelan'. if that helps any." He tried to make it sound like sort of a semantic Kinsey Report. "Never mind that." she luughed throatlly. “You’re all right. You could go places If you knew where to go. \Miut you need Is to throw off the Iroiids, arise, revolt, and gener ally take over. I see muscles bulging under thut coat. You're laden, man." "You remind me of Liberty, leading the people," he said. “Can that sort of breeze," Alice (for this was indeed Alice) said. "We're having a little cell meeting over at the student union tonight, and I'll see you* there, son." Then she was gone. He heard her clumping* down the hall. Liberty, with a cigarette and a charred thumb. He went to the window. Below him was the Pioneer Father. An all-campus revolu tion! He could imagine Admini stration Building burning, with the Administration and the head bf the department of foreign languages all Inside, screaming hideously; ard then in his mind’s eye the walls fell, and the Pioneer Father saw for the firs* time the Pioneer Mother. The beginning; Gene sis; primavera... Senator Squirm sat in the club car, speeding Went in the crack "City of Schnorkland". He waa thinking about wickedness. Wick edness, he thought, was one of the most satisfactory things about life. If you were wicked, you had your own reward. And if you were not wicked it was so very satisfying to point this out to others. And to investigate the persons who were. He stuck a pin into a new wax figure of the Easter Bunny. He settled back into his seat. “Wake me,” he said to the porter, "if anything suspicious happens." (Next term: the cell meets; Blood and Revolution; Senator Squirm on Campus; Sappho Sven son dies horribly.) Let tern... ...to the Editor Emerald Editor: In the Emerald of March 2, wax an editorial entitled "Lets Uac the Vote." Within this article was the statement that the graduate student amend ment before the senate for revis ion "was originated an a bit of political finesse during the heat, of the campaign and we suspect U18 put the amendment on the ballot to draw graduate student votes." 'I he point that I feel was not brought out In this statement Is the fm't that a 118 senate member was contacted by graduate student*'Who sought hit support for such an amend ment. It was the mime group of gruduute students who spoke to a I IS meeting and urged the organisation-to pu«h this amendment. Therefore, the point I wish to make is that the amendment was not pri marily for the purpose of get ting votes for the party hut, for getting representation for graduate students. The unfortunate thing about the amendment was that it was too ambiguous as to a time of election. It was the intent of the trainers to have the flections during fall term. At the time of spring term elections, however, the dates of the freshman class spring term elections were being considered for revision. Because of this reason. It was felt best to leave the time of elections ambiguous In order that there would be no conflicts between the two elections. When the problem eamr la fore the senate fall term, the senate decided ’that the elec tion* would be *prlng term and therefore a vacancy existed to he filled by petition. The Constitutional Re v i s I o n committee of the senate was faced with this problem and after constdetable thought and discus sion decided that one of two pro posals were sound. These pro posals differed only in regards to the election of the graduate student; whether by the senate or the graduate students. The cofto mlttee felt that the student body was In favor of graduate stu dent representation but it was uncertain of graduate student in terest. Therefore, it submitted both proposals to the senate. The senate's answer to this problem should come Thursday night. It is then up to the students to de cide if the senate was correct by approving or rejecting the pro posed-amendment in the general elections spring term. Hollis Ransom I The Other Half rwt -react**1* cneK>/ ±ZZT^ M . ^ I m m -(l js He’s worried about breaking up his beautiful Teacher-Student friendships. He has to turn in final grades today.”