VOLUME XXXIX UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1938 NUMBER 11$ Junior Fete Goes on Air Tonight at 7 XORE, KSLM, KEX to Carry Broadcast Telling Mothers of Weekend In a three-station hookup link ing together Eugene, Salem, and Portland, Junior weekend will go on the air tonight at 7 o’clock to tell the state about the three-day holiday here and to invite mothers to the campus for the weekend. Released through KORE, KSLM, and KEX, the half-hour program will use campus talent and will present several Junior weekend features, including some short his tories of past Junior weekends and a complete program of this year’s Motorcyclist Struck by Car, Injuries Slight Franklin S. Allen, junior in journalism, was slightly injured last night when hit by a car at the corner of Thirteenth and Agate. He was taken to the Sacred Heart hospital where he will have to remain for a few days, according to the medical report. Allen was pushing his motor cycle east on Thirteenth, having evidently run out of gas, and was struck on the side by a Pon tiac coupe driven by Novel L. Foss. The driver was complete ly exonerated by police officers after discovering that none of the lights on the motorcycle were in working order. Libe Terrace to Be Site of Free Dance Miss Paasikivi, Gage, Hal Young Award Prizes at 4 Another innovation of this year’s Junior weekend is the libe terrace dance, to be held on the terrace in front of the library from 3 to 5 o’clock Friday. Free to everyone, the dance will have Buck McGowan’s six-piece orchestra to supply the music. The concrete of the terrace will be waxed and in good condition for dancing, according to the commit dee in charge, which is headed by Carolyn Dudley. One of the features of the dance will be a prize dance open to ev (Please turn to page eight) Journey's End Wayne Harbert . . . editor of the 1938 edition of the Oregana, sitting among a few of the 2150 copies which have come from the press. The results of his year's labor will be distributed on the campus tomorrow, while a few extra copies will be sold at the education activities office. (Picture by George Knight.) ASUO Card Holders Elect New Officers Today from 9 to 3 What The Candidates Say — Harry Weston Since I am unacquainted with the office and the duties of the executive committee, I believe it would be superfluous to establish at this time any definite statement as to what my policies will be in office. Wally Johansen I have no statement of any kind to make at this time. Jean Palmer j The first thing that a member of the executive committee should think of is Oregon. The school should come first. By supporting Dr. Erb and his policies it will mean a greater future for Oregon. The executive committee has a real opportunity in having Dr. Erb to work with. Zane Kemler I feel that the past year has indicated a very marked improve ment in student interest in cooperative campus activities. It is my hope that this trend can be continued throughout the coming year i by an expanded student activity program. The present ASUO offi cers have established an enviable mark in efficiency and it is my plan to make every effort to maintain that efficiency in ASUO administration. Clair Hoflich As a dormitory and independent candidate I have withdrawn from the ASUO elections to throw my support behind Zane Kemler for president of the student body. I am confident that Kemler is the best man in the field and warrants the support of the dorms Write-In Threat Appears As Classes Show Voters Unopposed Candidates With straight tickets the order of the day as class voters prepare to cast their ballots, the only contest apparent before election, barring write-ins, is in the junior class, with two presidential and two secre tarial aspirants in the running. ._„The sophomores are already out of the election and are preparing to meet tonight to cast a unanimous vote for their unopposed ticket, there being no chance for other nominations. The filing deadline was passed Saturday. The first-year class, with its lineup of Stan Staiger, Barbara Pierce, Jean Kneass, and Lloyd Sullivan, represents a coalition of most of the Greek letter organiza tions, with the only threat loom ing in the shape of write-ins. The frosh ballots will have one blank box for write-ins, in addition to the names of the nominees. Juniors Offer Opposition The junior class offers the only list with more than one candidate for any office duly filed and in order. For president Bill Cum mings and Bob Bailey will fight it out with ballots. Unopposed for vice-president is Harriet Sarazin, while Jean Holmes and Dorothy Magnuson are the candidates for secretary. George Jackson is the lone nominee for treasurer. Here again write-ins remain a possibil ity. The joker in the frosh deck is that class cards may be bought all day. Other classes have closed their card sales. Voting will be at the YMCA hut from 9 to 3, under the direc tion of Noel Benson, ASUO vice president, who will be assisted by a board of representatives from each class. Parade Barely Misses Crash At In ter section An ambulance nearly added to the melee of last night’s 30-car “Kemler-Palmer” ASUO politi- j cal parade when it almost crashed into one of the rally cars stalled at the intersection of Thirteenth and Alder during a pause in the route. The parade, well equipped with spotlights, horns, and oth er noise makers, was winding through the campus serenading the living groups, when the am lance returned from the scene of an auto accident in which ranklin Allen, junior in journal ism was injured. Plaintiff Asks $246 In Moot Court Trial The law school’s moot court trial begins tonight at 7:30 in the cir cuit court room of the county courthouse. Harrison Winston will bring suit against Herb Galton ask ing for $246 damages, sustained in a recent auto accident. Hoflich Drops From Race After Ballot Are Printed; PoLts To Be in Y Hut By BILL. PENGRA Approximately two thousand ASUO card-holders eligible to to the polls at the YMCA hut l>o~* tween 9 and 3 o’clock today will find ballots containing five namoj, four of which will be named U» position on the executive commit-* tee. Clair Hoflich, nominated late lastj week by the dorms, withdrew from the race late yesterday, leaving? Wally Johansen, Jean Palmer, Zano Kemler, and Harry Weston to bo placed in the four positions. Five Listed on Ballot Culminating many weeks of poll-* tical wrangling, which has seen t ho splitting and reshaping of part 4 blocs, the final list of five candi dates’ names were printed yester day. Named by ASUO Vice-Pre;.vy^ Noel Benson to t’/e election control board to serve at the polls aro Elizabeth Turner, Bill Pease, Clydo Carroll, Dick Johnson, Vein Moc re,, B'rances Schaupp, Joe Sallee, and Mary Elizabeth Norvell. On the preferential ballot count ing board are Herman Kehrli, di rector of the bureau of municipal research, Waldo Schumacher, pro fessor of political science, Jameo Barnett, head of the political sci ence department, Ed Robbins, EUl Cummings, and Bill Pease, stu dents. Male Choir of 1,000 Sings Here Tonight Male singers of Eugene from, six to sixty years will be present-* eel tonight, in a choral concert* in the school of music auditorium,, at 8 p.m. . The concert will be opened with selections by boys in the first and second grades, and will progreuf* through the high schools and fin ish with the Eugene Gleemen, di rected by John Stark Evans. The final selection of the program will be the ensemble number, with: 1,000 voices. Groups will sing separately as well as in larger ensembles. . lia ble Masterson, Dallas Norton* Maxine Hill, and Glenn Griffith,, will direct the groups of boys. Among the selections to be sung* by the Gleemen will be the famou * Rudyard Kipling “Boots,” and tlio rollicking “Cosi Cosa.” Folk songs, a Gregorian chant, hynmi, and choruses will be included oa the program. The public is invited to attend the concert, with no charge foil admission. INSTRUC TOR BACK Oliver L. Barrett, head of the* sculpturing department at the art school, returned yesterday to hi?j duties following an illness of sev* eral days.