Orsaon Daily EMERALD The Oregon Daily Emerald is published daily five days a week during the school rear •sccept examination and vacation periods, by the Student Publications Hoard of the Univer sity of Oregon. Entered as second class matter at the post office, Eugene, Oregon. Subscrip tion rates: $5 per school year; $2 a term. Opinions expressed on the editorial page are those of the writer and do not pretend to represent the opiniens 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 WARD ELL. RON MILLER, Associate Editors KITTY FRASER. Managing Editor VALERA VIERRA, Adv. Mgr. LEN CALVERT, LAURA STURGES, Editorial Assistants Thank You, Dr. Wilson We'd like to thank and congratulate President Wilson for the interest he has expressed in student opinion here at Oregon. We take this occasion because this is our last opportunity to point out to University students the responsibility this man in the president’s office is asking us to assume. President Wilson appointed a faculty-student committee ■fever a month ago to do three very important things: 1. study the duties and responsibilities of a student union director; 2. consider applications for the vacancy created by the resignation ■of Dick Williams* and 3. re-evaluate the present educational activities program at the University. Recommendations of the committee have already been re layed to President Wilson. And we think any result of the committee’s study will have an important effect on life here at this University. Membership of that committee was based on equal repre sentation of faculty and students. We think that’s good. We firmly believe that in the area of student activities, Oregon students can accept more responsibility and more initiative and we are glad to see President Wilson is willing to offer that responsibility. But at the same time it is a challenge to the student leaders on this campus. The president of the University has placed great value in your opinion and your interests. In turn, you must accept added responsibilities for this area. We believe you will. We know you can. Pomp and Circumstance The last paper goes to press and you're through. And then how does one say good-bye ? Do you just walk out the door and close it behind you? Or is there room for a few sentimental tears and good byes in this rnodern, unsentimental age? Do you just square your shoulders, clean off the top of a rather battle-scarred desk, pick up your books and walk out the door—without a backward glance? How do you say good bye ? This, after all, is the end of one life and the beginning of something new. You’re looking ahead, but even as you stretch forward to see over the next horizon and around the next bend, you are still taking one last furtive, longing glance back down the road you’ve traveled to June 3, 1954. This is just another change—one change in a long pattern of such changes which ultimately make up life. Change is the breath of life and of progress to mid-century America. And, if you always have the consolation of opening a new door with one hand just as you close the last, you also have just a touch of nostalgia for people you have known and things you have done and places you have been and thoughts you have thought here on this University campus. Oh, we can laugh at sentiment but we hardly think we could live without it. But is that how you say good-bye? So, the last paper goes to press. You go back to sit down for one last time at that old desk, to rummage through old copies of the Emerald, stacks of mail and copy paper, Bibler mats which ran three weeks ago. It’s kind of lonesome when the office is empty and the staff has gone its way for these last few days of college life. There’s been a lot of times when you’ve washed you weren’t editor of this paper, wished that there was someone else who was older ■ and wiser who would take the responsibility for a few' days. But you’re going to miss the Emerald and the University. For the most part, it was good being editor of the Oregon Daily Emerald. And for every decision you had to make too fast, for every time a staff member failed to come through, for every morning that a paper came out late, for every person that has pointed out a misplaced comma or a misspelled w'ord in “your” paper, you’ve learned a little something. You’ve learned a little about writing and a lot about people. You’ve learned about ideas and men’s reactions to those ideas. You’ve learned a little about the powers and sins of news papers and the written word. And now' another year is over. So you close the last issue, you look around the Emerald shack, you hold your breath for next year’s Emerald staff, wash the University good luck in the future and in future students, and you walk out and close the door. And that’s how' you say good-bye. The Cat's Away ■ ■■ I “I'd bettor go in now, Wort ha I—I see tho’ hoiisrmotliiT hack.” Letters... ... to the Editor Sake of Accuracy Emerald Editor: For the sake of more accurate guilt by association my name has There Is no organization be hind this “freedom paper.” The drafters felt that this would he expressive of student opin ion, and we presented it to a larger group of students to see If they agreed. Whether or not It is expressive of student opinion it is obvious that we underestimated the extent of McCarthy’s venom of suspicion and fear. By the way, the people at the Monday meeting did not defame the Emerald’s chastity by sug gesting it had succumbed to cen sorship, but your editorial was interesting anyway. Emerald Editor: To Jim Kallas: Jim, you have a legitimate gripe about someone destroy ing the sign In front of the Lu theran Student house. I can see where such action would be very disturbing 'to your Lu theran students, I would prob ably take such action as a se vere insult. However, I resent your impli ations that the person who per formed this unworthy deed is: 1. a fraternity man, 2. drunk, and 3. mentally unbalanced as you did in your letter to the Emerald editor on May 28. On what firm grounds did you base these three accusations that because a sign is torn down that the person who tore it down a a drunken, men tally unbalanced, fraternity man? One of the main purposes of any fraternity is to help fts members mature. Encouraging the members to destroy prop erty and become perpetual drunkards is no way to teach a man to mature. You are evi dently ignorant of this as is illustrated by your accusations. I do not know of any fraternity man who has become mentally unbalanced because of fratern al influence. I say to you, Jim Kallas, keep these thoughts in mind, and next time think twice before you make narrow accusations (which are probably false) toward fraternity two “Is.” Toby McCarroll Legitimate men just because you need some one to blame. Wesley B. NaJsh President Tan Ku|>|>a Epsilon. Campus Calendar 9:15 Educ Seminar 111 SIT 11:00 Journ Kac 112 SU 11:45 Women's PE 113 SU Noon Drama Staff 110 SU AAA 111 SU Coop Bd 114 SU HE Wk Exec 319 SU 2:30 Newman Cl Exec 315 SU 4:00 Ore Ntr Staff 110 SU Gam Alp Chi 112 SU Alpha Lambda Delta Init Ger 2nd FI 6:30 IFC 315 SU APO Wait 334 SU 7:00 Sig Delta Chi 113 SU Green Feather To End Campaign Oregon Student*' declaration for academic freedom or Green Feath er campaign will end today, ac cording to Forbe* Hill, graduate in liberal arts and chairman of the group conducting the drive. Canvasaera for the declaration will be stationed In the commut ers' lunch room of the Student Union from 6 to 7:30 p.m., Hill said. Student* may sign the peti tion at that time. Exam Schedule Following i* a xbrtlulr final, for ftpllng term, 1954: All ifdiani or *ulijrct: I).,(r ami Time HA III, 11.’, Il l Jnnc H (Tu) M |0 Knit 101, 102, I'M Junc H (Tu) 10 12 Mih 10; 100, foj, 100. 107 l"H Junr |0 (Till It 10 Mil III. 117. tU, IN. 115. I ll> 211. 212. 2U, 214. 215. 210; 221. 222. 223 Junr K (To) I I I’ly 20*. 209, 210 Junr lo (Tin lo 12 Wr. K; III, 112. 11.1; 214 Jnnr lo (Till I I AH utlirr cla*1*** l#y hunt-. * M H 1 M 9 T in M 10 T 11 M II r 1 M 1 T 2 M 2 T 3 M 4 M Irregular ami mnfhcU J nor 9 iW I » 10 Junr 9 (W) 1012 Junr 11 (Fj 8 10 J unc II (F) 10 12 Junr 7 (M) * 10 Junr 7 < M i In 12 Junr 9 <\V) | .1 Junr 9 (\V) 75 J one II (FI I I Junr II (Fl .< 5 J unr 7 (Mi 13 J unr 7 ( M ) June s (In) 3 S Junr to ( 13- . J uur 12 I -SI Y thank you For Your Patronage Wc Look Forward to Serving You LAST THREE DAYS! 20% Discount On All ELGIN WATCHES! SALE ENDS SATURDAY! University Jewelers fi«9 E. ISth Congratulations Best of Luck and a Grand Summer To you who are returning this fall—just want you to know that Hadley's are planning some interesting things for you—In the mean time have the fun you can . . . Karl F. Thunemann HADLEY'S Willamette at Tenth