EMERALD EDITORIALS Hi Mom! Hi Mom ! How nice to have you here en joying- our biggest weekend with us! This weekend you will watch many col orful processions — some including your son or daughter—wending their way about the campus. They will be presenting roses, carnations, bones and other symbols of tappings to the most outstanding people on campus. The most outstanding, however, will be just standing by, watching the processions. We mean you, Mother. This is your weekend. It cannot begin to show you our gratitude for your years of devotion and protection. Some how, now that we’re away from home, we appreciate you just that much more. Maybe it’s part of the realization that comes with maturity. Maybe it’s just because you’re you. We’ll be grumbling about our bank bal ances—we don’t have any—and getting dunked in Fenton pool and all sorts of things which only Mothers would be in terested in. But Mom, it’s great to have you here. Here's a big boucjuet of daisies from the old campus, roses from the cemetery and blossoms from the tree in front of Carson. ^ ou’re the most outstanding person on cam pus this weekend.—(S.R.) Where Credit is Due Much has been said and written about the Revived Canoe Fete in the past few months. Emerald reporters have hounded the Canoe Fete committee and the archives of the li brary, publicity chairmen have hounded the Emerald, and so on down the line. Radio sta tions, newspapers, and TV stations through out the state have had much to say about the Canoe Fete. But the real heroes, the "forgotten men” of the story of the University of Oregon’s Canoe Fete are the members of the Class of 1912, who, as juniors, first conceived and carried out the idea of a canoe carnival •. held upon the placid bosom of the his toric millrace,” in the words of the 1912 Oregonian. Oregon students were hardy souls in those days. They didn’t coast along the 'Race on luxurious barges supported bv batteries of buoyant barrels—they built platforms on canoes rented from the Anchorage and took their chances with the unsteady craft in the procession. Mrs. Mildred Bagley C.rahanv, permanent secretary of the Class of 1912, recalls that the first Fete, or Canoe Carnival, was lighted by floodlights from the old Anchorage, but that the event "grew more elaborate each year" in size and spectacle. She also recalls the battle her class had at class meetings over whether or not to stage the carnival. “That Ralph Moores almost hounded us to death,” she said. Moores, now a Portland businessman, was chairman of the first Canoe Carnival committee and origi nator of the idea of the carnival. Following a busy morning — aquatic sports were then a big part of junior week end—the first Carnival was held, “to com memorate the sport of canoeing, which is, perhaps, most widely participated in of any of the students’ Springtime sports,” in the words of the 1911 Junior Weekend program. The Juniors’ idea, slow to catch on, was an immediate hit, such a hit that it endured as a part of the Oregon tradition for .10 years. So tonight when the floats sail by, the con temporary Canoe Fete chairman breathes a sigh of relief, and a great Oregon tradition returns to life, we hope you'll join us in paus ing for a moment to remember the people who started it all—the Class of 1912. otrec^om NEQCCD Tlir Oregon I>.iily Kmrrald !• pnhlinhrd fur davi a week during the arlinol year except examination amt vacation pertoda, by the Stuclriit I'liblitatinti! Hoard nf thr (Inivet- i> of Oregon. Entered »i accond rl#»« matter at Ihr olRir, Eugene, Oregon. Suluuriptmn rate*-: $5 jar -rhool year; $2 a term. Opinion! exprmaed on thr editorial pager are thoae of thr writrr anil do not iirrtri-.il to reprevent thr opinion! of the ASUO or thr I ’in vermt > l nvignrd nlitonala ate written hy the editor; initialed editorial! by member! of thr editorial board. II KKY IIARKRI I . K.litor DONNA 111 NltKKfi, llneinr.. M;.-..,yrr biCK LEWIS. SAI.I.Y Ki AN, Aoieiate Kdilora I'Al i. KI-1II-, Managing Kditm 111 II M AI N WA Kl Nf!, Advri Itaittg M,„icr o.\ kit I New! Editor NAN'( Y SHAW. Office Mai -err JERRY C LAUS8KN, CHT t K Mill IIKl Moke, ( i>S|.ni. Editor! 1' 111 I*'HI \I Hi 'Akb; Jerry Harrell, Paul Keefe, Dak l.rwia, (jonioil” Km., . r Wardell Kice, Sally Kyan. Joe College IT JUST TAK.ES a little'coueoe' TO TUT A 'POLISH' ON A YOUNO MAN —YOU'LL SEEA CEAL CHANOE WHEN HE COMES HOWE FOR CHRISTMAS VACATION.. f Mtfcwsr, V HOW'S ABOUT A " \ HANP WITH /" Vjh' ***? ' On Tapping: Its All in the Point of View Editor's Note: The following pieces on tapping, a grand old Junior Weekend tradition, are among the Emerald's classics. Bob Funk’s description of tap ping ceremonies was written for the 1953 Junior Weekend edition of the Oregon Daily Emerald. The second piece, run for five years under the byline “Members of Mortar Board," first appeared in the 1949 Junior Weekend Edition initialed by June Goetze, Em erald associate editor. Both are valuable—for one says that the whole rigamarole of Junior weekend is vastly important, the other says it’s good for laughs—one is fact, one is fancy, both belong among the Emerald’s all-time classics.) The All-Campus Picnic By Bob Funk Emerald Columnist It was the all-campus picnic, and she had just put a slight stain of potato salad on the two-millionth or so paper plate. She was part of a jolly good time, good-food assembly line that reached from Thirteenth Street northward into a group of mothers. She was, as were all members of the food line, a member of a Woman’s Honorary. First there were three Traumas in uniform, then a member of the Woman’s Pastime Poetry Club, and then our heroine herself, dressed in an off-the -shoulder blue formal ■with an I Eta honorary emblem emblazoned across the bodice, which was of gathered tulle with suspended rhinestones. There was a lull in the eating and procuring of food, and from about a half-mile to the north, in the vicinity of the Royal Court and Sometimes Music platform, came the whine of a public ad dress system. The member of the honor ary caught her breath, and across the rows of food lines fifty other I Etas also caught their breath, which caused a considerable disturbance round that area. From the distance a soft female voice, veiled with Junior Prom Fatigue, said “the members of the Sat urday Night Dignity Group, senior women's honorary, will now tap..and from the manhole in front of Friendly there emerged the president of the Dignity club, carrying a boquet of calla lilies and wearing “My GPA” perfume. Behind her marched sixteen other Dignity ladies, carrying perfume atomizers full of hydro gen gas. The band, in the dis tance, began playing “Land of the Empire Builders,” hesitat ingly. The Dignity Club members wound in and out of the crowd, attempting to spot tappees. From the center of the group a young woman waved the Ger linger cup, which was full of lemonade, and shouted “here I am girls.” They surrounded her solemnly (Dear winner of the Gerlinger Cup: when we wrote this we didn't know who you would be, lady, honest); as the fourteenth member filed past, she raised her atomizer and sprayed the Gerlinger Cup Win ner with gas. The fifteenth mem ber struck a match to her, and she shot into flame. The sixteenth member wept happily. Everyone cheered. “Dignity Club taps Lee moan Gruck,” the public address system said. The I Eta member stood at her post, straining with every mus cle. Perhaps it was for nothing, she thought, that she had climb ed to this pinnacle of activity points. Who else had been more imaginative, more aggressive, on subcommittee for forced sales for the I Eta Icky sale her fresh man year? Who else had risen during Trauma meeting her sophomore year and said, “I think this year we should do something real nice ?" Several cheers rent the air as more junior women blazed into the Dignity Club, and among that number were several of the I Eta faithful. The I Eta member stood trembling, and a tear fell into the remains of the potato salad. And then, suddenly, there was a sudden (good word, sudden) blare of music from the band, and the trees parted over her head and the sun fell upon her. The crowd parted, and the ladles of Saturday Night Dignity Group tripped lightly over the lawn. The I Eta member held her breath. Her eyes were fixed upon the Dignity President. Her mouth was slightly ajar; a fly flew in, and then out again, landing finally in the potato salad. The Dignity Club came onward, onward, and wound around once, twice, three times about her. In the distance she could hear her mother singing “Hail, Hail the Gang’s All Here,” and her sorority sisters singing “An chored in Quadruple Eta.” And as the twelfth member passed by, our heroine felt the blast of hydrogen gas. Ecstatically, she saw herself put to flames. The public address system was an nouncing her arrival on Olym pus. Shf stood there, crying hap pily. until they brought the fire extinguisher to put her out. Why Grows the Rose? By Member* of Mortar Board When the black-garbed Mor tar Boards wind their way through the crowd at the All Campus Luncheon this afternoon to tap new members, they will be performing one of their last official functions of a busy year. Behind this simple process of presenting outstanding junior women with the traditional rose is a long and thorough process. As Mortar Board is a national honorary, each woman who is selected for membership must have the qualities by which each Mortar Board in every chapter has been chosen—scholarship, leadership, and service to the University. The process of selecting new members for Mortar Board is a careful and thorough one. When the Mortar Boards be gin to scan the lists of out standing women, they consider not only what they know about each girl, but also what deans, department heads, and campus leaders have to recommend. If possible, no avenue of student participation is overlooked. When the lists are complete, the affirmative plan of voting goes into operation. By this sys tem, no one is "black-balled.” The whole process is a positive one—positive discussion and pos itive voting. When any girl re ceives a unanimous vote, con ducted by secret ballot, she is declared elected to membership. The course of each girl’s col lege career is carefully taken into consideration. One of the first points is the scholastic re cord, for scholarship is one of the three prime requisites. The minimum requirement is 3 above the campus average for the past five terms. This year, each girl considered had to have at least a 2.99. In outstanding cases ex ception of a .1 were permitted. The second criterion is lead ership. To qualify each girl had to have shown definite signs of capable leadership, ability to handle responsibility by hersi-If. Contrary to a common miscon ception, Mortar Board is not a collection of presidents. Leadership ability is prob ably most frequently evidenced by eleetion to a position of president, but l>eing president of an organization is not itself a qualification for the senior women's honorary. The ability to lead Is found in those who may not hold the "top spot,” and Mortar Board has sought to reeognize this. The third necessity is service to the University. This does not mean a girl must have kept busy for three years in a large number of campus activities. The activi ties of the girls, whether they be in several fields or in only one or two, should add up to some definite accomplishment that is a credit to the school. Thus, each year, the wearers of the gold tassel have taken the responsibility seriously. They have tried to overlook no girl really qualified; they have tried to extend membership to only those' really deserving. We are proud of each girl to whom we will present the rose this afternoon.