Ore-nter May Be Mailed To Students Next Year A proposal to have the Ore-nter, freshman orientation handbook, sent to prospective Oregon students was discussed yesterday at the meeting of the Executive Council of the ASUO. The group decided to back the proposal and to con sult with administration officials to see if the plan is feasible. asuu ^resident .tra Alien pointed out that the council has budgeted $200 for the booklet and expects to receive an equal amount in contributions. He added that any surplus funds could be turtied over to financing the book and addi tional contributions could be raised. The council also designated a committee of seniors to investigate the possibilities of eliminating or changing exams for the senior dur ing spring term. Ed Allen ap pointed Phyllis Evans, D. Lu Simonsen, and Louise Goodwin to serve with him on the committee, which will seek an arrangement similar to that existing at Oregon State college. OSC Exams Allen explained that at OSC seniors may be given their exams during the last one-hour class sessions of courses and that some schools or departments have eliminated the exams altogether. After an explanation of the duties and responsibilities of senior athletic manager, the council recommended that men holding such posts should be put on the work program for the full year. The recommendation will be re ferred to the athletic board. AIRLINE TRAGEDY (Continued from page one) active in Westminster house events. Miss Carter took flying lessons during the summers in LaGrande, and, after teaching high school near LaGrande for a year, she started training as a stewardess last September, in Chicago. Miss Carter was stationed with the United Airlines office in Portland and flew two routes, one to Van couver, B. C., and one t< Chey enne, Wyoming. Three weeks ago Miss Carter was on the campus with Miss Anne Craven, last year’s Emerald editor, visiting friends. FOR DADS' DAY ) Take Him to Dinner at i3m On The Mill Race CAL & RIJTII ALBERT . A FAVORITE PLACE TO GO Students know They'll Get Good Food Sewed While It's Hot Come in to WHITE PALACE 4/ East 10th Phone 172 OPEN It A.M. TO 2 A.M. 997 Franklin Blvd. Vet Administration Adds Two to Staff Miss Virginia Murphey and Mrs. Patricia Young have been added recently to the staff of the veter an’s administration guidance cen ter, it was announced today. Miss Murphey is a clerk in the train ing division and Mrs. Young fills the position of secretary in the advisement division. Miss Murphey, a Eugene girl, attended the University in 1943, majoring in liberal arts. Since then she has worked for the navy de partment in San Francisco and at the physical education building at the University. Virginia is a mem ber of Chi Omega sorority. Mrs. Young and her husband, who is a senior in the school of architecture, arrived here from Terre Haute, Indiana, on January 1, While at Terre Haute, Mrs. Young was director of a YMCA teen canteen. Since she has been here she says that at least she’s discovered why Oregonians are called Webfoots. Radin To Discuss Japanese in U.S. The moral and political impli cations involved in the movement of Japanese-Americans from the West Coast during the national emergency will be defined by Dr. Max Radin, professor of law at the University of California, at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, February 7, in 207 Chapman hall. Under the title, "Japanese Americans and the Race Problem,” Dr. Radkin will give the second faculty lecture of the winter term. He has been a professor of law at California since 1919. He was ad mitted to the New York bar in 1902 and to the United States supreme court bar in 1939. DUCKS' 1919 (Continued from page one) ~ with the Koke-Chapman firm in Eugene. Award of Cups Another event of half-time will be the awarding of cups to living organizations having the largest number of fathers registered for Dads’ Day events. The houses with the highest proportion in at tendance will receive the Norbland and Shaw trophies, and the living organization with largest per centage of freshman dads regis tered will be awarded the Laur gaard cup. However, dads of women living in Eugene are not eligible, and their daughters are not included in house membership for these awards. Campus contest winners in 1943 were Pi Beta Phi, Norblad trophy; Phi Gamma Delta, Shaw trophy; and Alpha Gamma Delta, Laur gaard trophy. FOR DADS' DAY Take Your Dad to DINNER at Willamette and 10th Seijniouf& _■ H *'Am »< |«»r |oo r. — — Atomic Bomb Illustrations At Natural History Exhibit A series of 18 illustrations and an exhibit of various minerals con stitutes the atomic bomb display now being shown at the museum of natural history. The display was arranged by Jack DcMent, re search chemist in the Portland mineralogy laboratory, who re cently presented the exhibit to the University. The minerals were contributed by the geology department and contain the substances from which uranium is secured, uranium being a vital component of the atomic bomb. A map showing the distri bution of these minerals through out the world has also been con tributed by the University. The accompanying illustrations show the general process in the con struction of the bomb. DeMent, former Reed college student, has recently published a bojk, “Uranium and Atomic Pow j er.’’ The Condon club has scheduled | him to speak on the campus some time this spring. H. C. Dake, Portland dentist, is assisting DeMent in the construc tion of the exhibit. Dake publishes “The Mineralogist,” a mineralogy magazine with a world-wide circu lation. 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