ON SERENADES Voices Rend the Air BY BOB FI NK Emerald Columnist Feb. ’7. 11*53 It was two o'clock in the morn rig and she was lying somewhat northeast of center on the Lambda Pu sorority sleeping porch. She was a thing of beau 1 y, duplicated ,>n every side by the sleeping forms of her soror ity sisters. Her luxuriant hair, unencumbered by pins or other machinery streamed luxuriantly over-her pillow. Her slender fig ure was swathed in a frothy neg ligee i we got this part out of •a booki. By the pale light of the moon you could see the breath curling delicately front her nostrils. From somewhere down the street came the >ound of a • oarse Faugh and the drop of a l*eer can. Almost instantly the form of the Saturday Night Sophomore Serenade Appre hending Committee chairman, I which had been motiopleas lie sides the window, tensed; and with this tensing, fourteen beautiful sophomore committee members sprang from their t>-ds with hoarse cries. ‘Serenade’ Serenade"’ the voice of the committee chairman wailed, siren-like. Another mem ber was poking sieepmg Lamb do P'1-?’ in vulnerable places with 8 hairpin. The Thing o: 3eauty cleverly put her pillow over her face and her luxuriant hair and attempt ed to sink info her mattress. This worked for approximately three minutes, after which time the pillow was snatched up. a flashlight pushed near her face, and a ruellow voice broke the night with “All right ladies, everybody wants to show their House Spirit, doesn't Every body." They stool, imbued with House Spirit, at the windows, and they were lovely to behqld. The com mittee chairman was peering nearsightedly down onto the lawn. The Committee for Ren dering a Beautiful Song of Reply was neighing nervously off to the side. Down on the lawn one mem ber of the Triple tireek-letter w e-h a ve-forgotten-frajemity leaned against his brother in the bond, who leaned against still a third, who found a rest ing place against a tree. They mumbled for a time, could not j agree upon a song, and left, j There was a general feeling on j the sleeping porch that this ! had possibly been an Unregis tered Serenade, and everyone went back to bed. The commit- \ tee chairman was severely dis- ! appointed. It was two-thirty o'clock the same morning when the commit tee chairman again raised the hue and cry, and the Sisterhood again gathered expectantly at t.he windows. Below on the lawn five hundred members of the Phi ' Phi fraternity were gathered into' five parts. Members holding torches formed an Omega in the center; a line of men in front were holding roman candles. The ON SOPHISTICATION Four Sophisticates Congregate in SU BV BOB FINK Emerald Columnist Feb. >7, 1952 They were sitting, four of them around a table in the soda j bar. Each had her left elbow o:*> the table. Each was dangling a; cigarette between the first arid second fingers of he; left hand. It was. they all knew, the ulti mate in sophistication. “I'm so awfully tired," sighed one, delicately filtering some smoke through her nostrils. "So beastly tired." The other three muses looked at her sympathet ically through half-closed eye lids. "Wretched." said one. “Wretched," the other two agreed. They were all drinking small cokes. It was not sophisticated to drink large Cakes. Someone might get the idea that you actually liked Cokes. You were not supposed to actually like anything. “I was going to New Orleans BOB FUNK to the March Gras." said the tired one, ‘‘but I just couldn't drag myself away." “I'm so disgustingly bored." said a second one, listlessly stir ring her Coke with a straw,'“why don't they serve cocktails in this place anyway?" “Ah, cocktails," sighed the tired one. “Cocktails," the other two agieed looking coldly down into their Cokes. “Here comes someone we know," said the leader. “Look at her but don't speak.” They all looked directly through the ac quaintance. The acquaintance, being up on such etiquette, looked directly through them. It was all extremely sophisticated. “She's such a grind,” said one of the sophisticated ones. “I heard she actually likes it here,” said another. They all sneered slightly in the direction of the acquaintance. “Remind me to cut her dead, not that I won’t.” said the tired! one. “Really, I would speak to m.ore people, but it’s -so strenu ous." Noticing that their cigar ettes were not too far along, they all puffed feverishly, put theut out, and casually lit new ones. The tired one, having grown bored with her Coke, i quietly slushed it onto the j floor. “I wish one of these I peasants would come and mop i this up," she said, “Yes," said - one of her com-1 patriots, “it's such a beastly j place.” “So boring," said another. “So unsophisticated,” said the fourth. They ail inhaled a great deal of cigarette smoke and exhaled it through their noses, choking only slightly. They were all so very tiled. members refreshed themselves with last gulps of Coco Cola, and then began roughly as follows: “Take, O take those lips away; Should 1 not live another day I should expire surfeited, re plete. With love of you, who an* so neat; With love of you, who are so fair. For whom you know I really care; With love of you who would not go With any other blackguard, schmo But me (but I) of frat rhl l*hl. In summary, even should 1 die You’d stilt possess my i*hi I’hi pin Which, on this campus, means You’re In.’’ The song of reply was all about the beautiful, gorgeous, and re dundantly charming members of Lambda Pu being the people everyone wanted to pin, even the cross-eyed ones, and so this sere nade was no' surprise. The, gil l being serenaded was receiving her eighth serenade in as many weeks, and was hoping to break the existing record and receive the Serenade Cup on Founders’ Day. On the .sixth serenade a small group of dis gruntled sisters had attempted to thrust her bodily from the sleeping porch onto the blazing torches of the serenading fra ternity. This plan had been frus trated from fruition only by the tact that the lady in question had lodged on a first floor awn ing. Since then she had kept her self chained to the house presi dent on tile rather naive sugges tion that no one would throw the house president out the window too. As the Song of Reply ended there was an ecstatic breathing on all sides, and the Most Sere naded cut another notch on her bedpost. “Beautiful.’' the committee chairman sighed. Down on the street a beer can clinked. The committee chair man tensed expectantly. And by the dim. romantic illumination of the moon, a member of the senior class of Lambda Pu sorority. Al pha of Oregon, shot herself with a small revolver. ON INTELLECTUALS Gertrude, Woman Compete for HIM ■ BV BOB FI NK Fmeruld Columnist Oct. 16. 1953 They were sitting at the Stu dent Union, looking at each other. It was nice there, she sup posed. but crowded. She kept an swering questions asked in the conversation next to her. The juke box started, making con versation impossible: she fol lowed the song for awhile, but it was all about somebody loving somebody else who was no good, same old story, and she lost in terest. He was a member of the avant | gards. He had become a member 1 so he wouldn’s have to take baths anymore, or something. They had met in a literature class. She had turned around. ; and there he was, breathing on her. She hadn't ever had a chance 1 to introduce herself, since he was | always expanding on his relation j ship to art. which was complex I j and as far as she could gather, j almost non-existent. He was a singer. Some day he ! was going to be great. He was | working up a new kind of music I without rhythm or harmony or any of those restrictive things.: | and he was going to sing in Car-; , negie Hall some time if the rats (hadn't gotten it first. His actual j vocal range was two rather pleb j lan notes, anything above or be low them was accomplished by pure gall. Gertrude came ploughing across the room toward them. , Gertrude was the big eompeti | tion for the heart of the bathless member of the avant gard**. Gert rude was avant garde, too; may I be not enough, though, j Gertrude sat down tragically, i She was carrying a l>ook en titled "How To Write Good.” "What do you think of Scho penhauer?'’ Gertrude asked. Gertrude was a genius at small talk. "I think he's Nietzsche.” said the singer, looking around with an aren't-I-the-one smile, which was unbecoming as well as un-! grammatical. “Schopenhauer has changed my whole life.” Gertrude stated gravely. “Yesterday he was just another name; today today I'm a new woman." She looked at Gertrude rather carefully. The new woman was well concealed. Gertrude wan possessed of a grooming all her own. Her hair was a startling example of indecision. The part in front had once started out to be bangs but was now just hang* ing there* the middle part had not yet recovered from having been in contact with the pillow all night, anil the back part had obviously given up long ago at any attempt to be anything but a lot of hair. "You're looking very nice to day, Gertrude," she said polite ly, hoping that Gertrude would forget about Schnopenhauer. Gertrude, who evidently hadn't looked at herself in the mirror, acknowledged the compliment and then started to work on the singer. "Have you sung anything late ly?" she whispered intellectually, leaning close to him. "He's got a cold," the other lady put In. attempting to push Gertrude back off the table. "Ah, you don’t know any thing,” the singer said. "I haven't been singing because nobody's written nothing worth singing." Needless to say, she thought not very many compositions of any noticeable length had been writ ten for a range of two notes. "If Schopenhauer had only written music," Gertrude began. "He still ought to go to the infirmary." Gertrude and the si n g e r cringed at the word. It was so material. "Unartistlc," mumblpd the singer. "She don't know nothing.'* The juke box started again, and they all three sat there, look ing at each other. Somehow she was going to have to become a member of the avant garde. May lie Gertrude would help her with her hair. Maybe she could stop pressing her clothes, or give up baths. It would take a wdille. The juke box was singing some song about a man that some fool ish woman had loved and who had subsequently run away for some reason (possibly her sing ing voice) and left her in a very displeased mood. Same old story. It Was a long way, she felt wear ily, from here tg Schopenhauer, ON SOCIAL REGRESSION Fraternity Still Safe BV BOB FUNK Unit-raid Columnist Oft. 9, 1953 It was evening in the fraternity house, and there was an oppres sive sense, of intolerance in the air. Members of the censorship committee were meeting in the dining room, blacking out intel lectual articles in the newspapers. .Several members, reeking of alco hol, lay passed out on the floor. A cki'ion sounded, and there ua-> u clatter ol' uncut toenails on the floor. The bondsmen, wearing identical cashmere sweaters, uniform haircuts, anil low foreheads, rail in a mut tering par k into the chapter room. The chapter room was simply decorated. There was a banner declaring “WHITE IS MIGHT WHITE IS RIGHT" dominating one wall.On the opposite wall was an array of whips and old Ku Klux Klan uniforms. The mem bers sat down on various assorted beer kegs. “The meetin till now come ta order," snarled the Grand Drag j on. The Grand Dragon announced ; the agenda. It was as follows: 1. Report of the committee for I corruption of public morals. 2. Report of the committee on J | the 1953 Christmas Project Rae j ial Discrimination for the chll j dren of Eugene. 3. Hallowe'en vandalism torn | mittee report. j 4. Report on the committee for j rephrasing the ritual in obscene i language. 5. Proposals for pledging. As usual, committee chair men for most of the committees were either too intoxicated to report, or were doing time. The meeting grated discordantly on until it was time for the fifth item on the agenda. “There’s this real nugget,” slobbered the Grand Dragon, “and he don’t eat much, so maybe we oughta nail a pledge pin on 'im.” The standards chairman arose. “Whut color is he?” “Sort of dirty tan," replied the Grand Dragon. “A NON-CAUCASIAN?” asked the standards chairman incredul ously. I "Naw,” sneered the Grand Dragon, “he just doesn't wash.’’ Everyone snarled with relief, and the proposed pledge was promptly voted in. "An now," the Grand Dragon said, almost in a normal speaking voice, “we’ll sing the Closing Song." The bondsmen stood, and peering at each other-malignantly through the thick smoke, they shrieked— "Dear old irat dub, we hereby pledge To never leave 1 his narrow ledge Of intellectual degradation To which we cling in fond stag nation. To never read a elassie hook; To never ever bear or brook The slightest racial deviation From pure Caucasian pigmen tation; To never know no English Lit., Or when infinitives are split.” As this ended, there was a tear (maybe from the smoke) in every eye. The members file out, gulp for fresh air. Social regression was safe for another day.