Board Presents Budget Proposals Jo Legislature At the invitation of the special committee on higher education of the joint ways and means com mittee of the Oregon legislature, the state board of higher educa tion presented its budget proposals to that committee last Friday af ternoon, February 2, Chancellor Frederick M. Hunter said Wednes day. These proposals were con tained in the requests of the board which were included in the 12tli annual budget of the state of Oregon. The principal requests were $1, 811,000, supplemental, and $2,237, j2£0 for the building program, and $220,000 for classroom and labora tory equipment in the state system of higher education. These requests had been reduced by the budget director, Dr. Hunter said, to $1,600,000 for the supple mental appropriation for the mill age, and $1,000,000 for buildings. The state board of higher educa tion urged the ways and means committee to recommend appro priations for the full amount in both cases, according to the chan cellor. The statement was made that J£e return of the veterans be pro vided for, and that all of both ap propriations and much more would actually be necessary. Members of the board present were Willard L. Marks, president, Leif Finseth, and R. E. Kleinsorge. The central executive office was represented by Dr. Charles Byrne, H. A. Bork, and Dr. Hunter. Building Fee (Continued from page two) power to tax the students directly through the fund paid at registra ■*§ion. However, if it did not, the DANCING Every Saturday Night 9 ’til 12 at the EUGENE HOTEL with ART HOLMAN AND HIS ORCHESTRA ip. the Persian Room [power could be granted the state legislature, and the students vote on the question. Campus landscaping projects in October 1935 used S36.000 of the fund in addition to the §17,000 allotted by the PWA. Quizzed on their latest reactions to the building fee and the use to which it has been put, the majority of the students agree that it should be continued, that it's “a good thing.’’ The state, they believe, should at least match the student output. The students can't bear the entire burden. A §2,000,000 appropriation from the state board will enable the students to use a part of their building fund' for the more per sonal, local items that will be need ed in addition to the actual build ings. Lineup of UO Future (Continued from page tiuo) several will be self-financed through fees and gifts. The Donald M. Erb memorial student union building is expected to cost $700, 000, which the board believes will be available immediately after the war. An additional $200,000 may be available from gifts, a larger loan (if enrollments come up to expectations!, or possibly a federal grant. Two additional dormitory wings, also self-liquidating, and costing $250,000 are planned, to double the present housing capacity for wom en. This project will also include provisions for improved dining and kitchen facilities for the existing women’s dormitories. Housing Conditions Acute With, all the women’s dormitor ies, coops, and sororities filled to capacity and the overflow in John Straub men's dormitory, the need for these additional units is de monstrably acute. Proposed for the University for the first biennium is a classroom, laboratory, and natural history museum building costing $600,000. This building will provide modern facilities for the sciences, and will also release space at many other points on the campus greatly need ed by other departments. It has been more than 20 years since any major additions have been made to the general classroom or labora tory space. In the 1947-1948 biennium a $75,000 music building addition is proposed to relieve overtaxed fa cilities because of a recent marked increase in music enrollment. Also proposed for that biennium is the remodeling of Villard hall at a cost of $100,000. Speech and Drama Building For the 1949-1950 biennium an appropriation of $140,000 itf re quested for a speech and dramatic arts building, which will release space in Johnson hall, the admin istrative building. The plan for that two-year period includes a $100,000 addition to the Commerce building, which the large school of business administration has long needed. In 1951-1952, $120,000 is asked for an addition to and remodeling of Oregon hall, which will double the present capacity of the build ing. Also scheduled are two sec ond-story wings for added reading space in the library and enlarge I Why not try UNIVERSITY GROCERY for The Best in Food and Drink in all Well-Known Brands?? Eleventh Street I Ted Baker Wins Bronze Star Medal For "meritorious achievement in I connection with military opera- j tions against the enemy at Bou gainville, Solomon islands, 10 March, 1944,” Edwin M. (Ted) j Baker, University sophomore, j Wednesday received the Bronze j Star medal. He served with the i American division of the army in- j fantry until his recent discharge,! following wounds sustained in the South Pacific. "It came very much as a surprise,” Ted declared. Ted is the son of Mr. and Mrs. I Alton Baker, of University street. He attended the U. of O. during the fall and winter terms of 194 2 and 1943, leaving the campus with the original ERC (enlisted reserve corps) group in May, 1943. Now a journalism major, Ted enrolled for his freshman year as a business administration major. ment of the book stack rooms. Condon hall will be enlarged to house the social sciences in the 1953-1954 biennium at a cost of $175,000. A stranger sitting in on a card game, astonished at irregularities, could containhimself no longer. “Say, did you see that sailor slip the ace from the bottom of the deck?” he protested. "Well,” said one of the players, "it's HIS deal, ain't it?” State Lags Behind (Continued from page two) student fees, loans, grants, and gifts, the Oregon state board of higher education provided during the prewar decade, 15 buildings on the various campuses at an aggre gate cost of approximately $3,000, 000. Reports indicate that most states are planning postwar expansion of their higher educational facilities. Illinois expects to spend upwards of $30,000,000. reports the Oregon state board's booklet on the mat ter. Other densely populated states such as New York. Wisconsin, and California are averaging as much as $30,000,000 for their postwar education building plans. In com parison, the state board of Oregon asks only $2,000,000 to fulfill post war educational needs in tire state. A one million cut would reduce drastically the usefulness of the state system to the returning vet erans. There simply will not be suf ficient facilities. Student Fee Packs Load (L ontinited from page tuv) remainder financed by PWA loan from the federal government. The men's physical education building and Chapman hall were also student financed structures and were purchased to a large ex tent by the student building fund. Of the $100,000 spent in the DAY SCHOOL OR NIGHT CLASSES Secretarial, bookkeeping, stenographic or typing courses. EUGENE BUSINESS COLLEGE Phone 666 364 E. Broadway We have served the Willamette Valley for many years, giving you dependable service in motor transportation. Tj STORAGE 7 McCracken bros. motor freight 556 Charnelton Phone 1234 V alentines * Cards * Figurines Demitasse Cups * Collectors' Items The Gift Shop 963 Willamette building of the infirmary in 193-1, the state appropriated $50,000. matching the amount of govern ment aid and the building fund. Prior to that time Oregon stu dents had floated loans for Un building of $200,000 McArthur court, Hayward field, the grand stands, and the physical plant. Self-financing projects calling for immediate postwar construc tion on the campus are the pro posed $250,000 addition to the women's dormitories and the $700, 000 Erb Memorial building, cf which $200,000 lias yet to be raised by gifts or additional government, loans. CONSERVE . . . for VICTORY! l-ucl is ammunition so use it wisely. It is waste ful as well as expensive to burn fuel in a furnace that refuses to work prop erly. Check your today! MANERUD HUNTINGTON FUEL CO. 997 Oak Call 651 "Youth on Trial" David Reed and Cora Sue Collins — and — "Saddle Leather Law" Charles Starrett "Up In Arms" with Danny Kaye and Dinah Shore — and — "San Fernando Valley" with Roy Rogers "MUSIC IN MANHATTAN" with ANNE SHIRLEY DENNIS DAY McDonald "THIRTY SECONDS OVER TOKYO" with SPENCER TRACY VAN JOHNSON