SECTION II ' OI~ I VI I NIVK1LM I V OF OREGON, EUGENE, THLRSDAV, JUNE 2. 1055 NO. 141 ON ACTIVITY QUEENS Don't Be Too Popular BY BOB FINK Emerald Columnist April SO, 195* Life had become horribly bor ing for her. It wan getting ho that she wan resorting to going to class. there being nothing else to jjo that was new. What was there beyond thin, anyway ? She had achieved wow, had she ever achieved’ They had to build two new fireplaces In tiie sorority just to provide for her cups There waa the cup she had won her freshman year Best in the Show. And her sopho more cup Purple Hyacinth of Tri Gnu frat club. Her Junior cup (her mother had given it to her It was for drinking out of.) And now: a golden mug for I gliest Pan on Campus (or a golden pan for Cgliest .Mug on Campus—she could never re member which. It held three quarts, was topped by a figure of Venus standing on the shoulders of Diana standing on tiie shoulders of .Minerva who was scratching herself, and l>ore the Inscription “Inher situs Orcgonrnsls: Mens Agllal Womens.**) What was there to achieve after all this? She had thought rather tentatively of developing her mind or winning a letter in some thing or joining TNE. She had also thought of getting married. But would you marry someone with a pin in the shape of a cross, or one of those diamond-shaped ones? Sometimes she envisioned her self posed dramatically on a hill top In Korea, clad in a shimmer ing while nurse's uniform with an off-the-shoulders top and an or chid corsage. In one hand there was a bottle of plasma, which was connected by a long tube to Far ley Granger, Humphrey Bogart and Sir Laurence Olivier, whose j collective lives she wjus saving In her other hand she held a cup which Herbert Hoover. President (insert name in November I. Douglas MacArthur, Wayne Morse and President Newburn had just awarded her for carrying Mercy into the Thick of the Fray. There was a look of inexpressible dignity and compassion on her face. She was not trying to sneeze. At other times she imagined herself on the top of a piano at the Copaca well, that big j night club in New York. She was almost wearing a black evening gown and Marlene Dietrich’s legs were sticking out of it, although everyone thought they were hers. She was singing ' Bill'' in a voice which sounded very much like Helen Morgan's. Everyone was crying. In one hand she held a cocktail which was really orange juice because for all that she was really such a nice girl. Ill the other hand she was holding a tasteful bouquet of roses, gardenias, water lilies, and sagebrush, which had just been presented to her by the Duke of Windsor, Ford Rocke feller, Astor Vanderbilt Du Pont (I,LVj, Albert Kinstein (lie was down for the weekend,) William Saroyan and Cornelia Otis Skinner. You could never imagine the I things she imagined herself. It would take all of the editorial page and part of Duck Tracks. What is there ir^life, she thought, | for one who has achieved so j much ? The more she thought about this, the more melancholy siie became. She had never taken a psych course and didn't know , which way to turn. As you can imagine this led to trouble. Ore dramatic evening her sor ority sister found her sequin hair pin floating on top of the Sneak Dat of Alder Street cup which was full of rain water. They drag ged the trophy for three hoqrs. and at last brought up the lovely suicide’s body. The whole matter was hushed up considerably, however. Her sorority didn’t want the campus to know, after all, that the girl had died in her cups. ON MEN'S RUSHING Rushing Function Held BV BOB FI NK Emerald Columnist Jan. 10, 1952 "Now clean it up, hut not TOO clean," the rushing chairman said. "After all this is supposed to be a fraternity house." All morning they had been scatter ing tasteful arrangements of tennis shoes, footballs, baseball bats ail'd sweat shirts around downstairs. Now it was almost noon, time for the rushees to come, "Is everyone wearing ARUO sox?" the house president barked. Everyone was. Every o:.c'i ARUO sox had holes in them. It was more fraternity that way. "Here come the rushees,” the rushing chairman crowed ns some small apprehensive persons edged up the front sidewalk. “Assume false smiles!” he growled. “You over there—he giving each other the secret grip! Someone start re citing the chapters beginning with Alpha. Assume typical fraternity poses!” One of the more sensitive members ran upstairs and was violently ill. As the rushees entered the front door there was a small embarrassed flurry as the house dog bit one of them right .in his ASUO sox. False smiles and typi cal fraternity poses were main tained on all sides, however, and the general hand-shaking and mumbling-of-names began. "Where are you from"" a fra ternity member would ask. "Well, I'm from—” “Oh, fine little town! Spent a summer there, ha-ha-ha. Some nice girls around there, ha-ha ha. Got drunk twenty times, ha ha-ha. At this point everyone would slap everyone else heartily on the back. This was to show how fraternal and good-fellowsy everyone was. A bell sounded and a group of men began singing a fraternity song about the founders. Actu ally no one knew any real fra ternity songs. They were just making it up as they went along. They sang the same song in loud voices for 45 minutes, although along toward the end the tune and lyrics became suspiciously similar to “On the Leland Stan ford Junior Varsity Farm." Upstairs, a part of the mem bership was dragging rush res through rooms. They ap proached a tier of nine-decker beds. “These are the pads." a large member explained. “Try one!” He pushed a small rushee into the bottom bunk. The oth er members quickly strapped him down and stapled a pledge pen on his chest. “Welcome into the brother hood!” the large member shout-i i ed, his voice full of hearty good 1 "humor. After a time everyone went in to lunch. The members of the fraternity jumped up every six and one-quarter minutes to sing hearty songs. It was necessary to stand to sing the songs, since all the other fraternities stood to sing similar songs. During some songs you folded your arms over your chest. If you did not , have a chest, you put your hands 1 in your pockets. During other i songs you stamped your feet. At | one point in the last song every I one threw their salads up into the air. All the salads landed on the rushees. It was really aw-' fully effective. After lunch they1 sat in the living room. The fra ternity members sat down care fully so that their ASUO sox showed. The rushees did not sit down. They milled nervously about in the middle of the room. When it was time to go a brass band appeared and played some stirring fraternity music. The fraternity members stood on one another’s should ers and yelled “We’ll see you again this evening!” Deep in their withered hearts, the rushees doubted that very much. Campus Commentator Will Leave University »y JOft (MKUNER Ex-Emerald Editor And what exactly can one say about Bob Funk after ‘'Seven Years at the Zoo?" One might acclaim his mere longevity as a student at the University of Oregon. Robert Norris Funk enrolled at the Uni versity as a freshman in the fall of 1948, a rather tentative jour nalism major from Ukiah, Calif. Now after seven years, he is leaving the campus. In the mean time he has become a campus fixture second only to the Pio neer Father. The University in the fall of 1948 was quite a different place from what it is now. There was no Carson hall, Student Union, Commonwealth hall. Science building or Allen hall. And beer was sold in Taylor’s and the Side. But other Oregon students have been here as long, or near ly as long, as Funk. What has made Funk the personality, the tradition he is today? One might explain his promi nence by compiling a list of his activities. During his freshman year, 1948-49. Funk was chosen out standing freshman man in jour nalism by Sigma Delta Chi. His freshman activities culminated in being tapped for Skull and Dagger that spring. Funk began a three-year asso ciation with the Oregana during his sophomore year, 1949-50. He was a-asociate editor of The Book that year and also was editor of the Ore-Nter at the end of the school year. For those who may not think of Funk as ”a fraternity man it may come as a surprise to learn that he was president of Tau Kappa Epsilon and a member of the Inter-fratemity council in his junior year, 1950-51. He was again associate editor of the Ore gana and a student member-at large of the Publications board. He was tapped for Friars that spring. Dining his senior year, 1951 52. Funk held the top campus position of Oregana editor and was an ex-officio member of the Pub board. At the end of the year he was awarded a Bachelor of Arts degree in English writ ing. In the fall of 1952 Funk en tered the law school. His first year at Fenton hall was perhaps the quietest of his college career. But he couldn’t remain inactive long. The first spark of life in cam pus politics in several years was injected into the 1953 ASUO elections when a group of tongue in-cheeek law students formed the Peon Party and nominated Funk for the ASUO presidency. In the election Funk trailed both the AGS and UIS candi dates, but under the preferential voting system received a berth on the new senate as senator-at large. When Don Collins, ASUO vice-president left school the following winter term, Funk was elected to fill the vacancy by members of the senate. This year. Funk’s third year in the law school, has been one of his busiest. He is law school representative on the Student Union board; president of Phi Delta Phi, law honorary; mem ber of the Student Union and Educational Activities board, and was on the Canoe Fete steering committee. Next week Funk will graduate second in a class of 17 from the law school. Of course, Funk's most con spicuous activity has so far been omitted. That is his series of hi larious Emerald columns which have kept the campus in an up roar for the past six years. Funk began his career as a columnist in 1949 with “Sopho more Wisdom.’’ It wasn’t very good, as he readily admits. The next year he followed with “Rc: Hash,4’ still not very good, but an improvement. They may have been funny at the time, but in r^rospect seem to have lost much of their humor. It wasn’t until the fall of 1951 that Funk really hit his stride as a columnist. Following a sum mer visit to the San Francisco zoo (where he noticed a great similarity to the Oregon cam pus!. Funk re-christened his column “A Day at the Zoo.” The laughter hasn’t stopped yet. But what can be said of Funk as a columnist? Any commen tary or criticism of his inimitable doggerel verse, his sparking al legories, his witty satires—any attempt to explain Funk to his readers would be superfluous. And so we introduce you to this special section of Funk col umns, a compiliation of the hu mor that has amused and amazed the Oregon campus for the past four years. We hope you win enjoy the Oregon Daily Emer ald's tribute to Bob Funk. HUB FUNK As Peon Leader