The Weather Eugene and vicinity, cloudy with showers today; rain Wed nesday; little change in tempera ture. VOLUME XLIX UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, TUESDAY. OCTOBER 28, 1947 NUM HEE~3 1 TUmON RAISE ALMOST SURE Sigma Chi Sweetheart To Appear Special Broadcast To Feature Winner On KORE Tonight See Picture Page 3 Sweetheart of Sigma Chi will be chosen during a radio broadcast to night over station KORE, Sam Gil lette, chairman of the event, has announced. Votes will be counted while the program is in session, and at the end the winner will be announced. Coeds reaching the finals are Mary Knox, Alpha Phi; Betty Per ry, Delta Gamma; Barbara King and Janet Paulson, Gamma Phi Beta; Nancy Chamberlain, Kappa Alpha Theta. The five finalists were chosen at a post-fireside conference last Fri day night at the Sigma Chi house. The contestants for the traditional college title originally numbered over 50, but their number was cut down to five after several elimina tions. The winner of the Sweetheart of Sigma Chi title will reign at the Sweetheart ball Saturday night, and the other four coeds will be maids of honor. Serenaders announced.to the fin alists the victory Saturday night, and a dinner was given in their honor at the Sigma Chi house Sun day. AWS Cabinet to Meet Associated Women’s Students cabinet and congress will meet on - Wednesday at 4 p.m., Barbara Johns, AWS president, announced today. The meeting will be held in the recreation room of Susan Campbell hall. Each house is re quested to send a representative. Ignorance of the Law Just Isn't an Excuse • Like many a thief, Darrell Robinson, end on the Webfoot football squad, has found that crime does not pay. At a meeting yesterday of the Oregon club, Eugene sports enthusiasts, Robinson was col lared by two uniformed state pa trolmen waving a warrant for his arrest.The warrant, allegedly issued by the city of San Fran cisco, charged Robinson with larceny of one football in last Saturday's Oregon-SanFrancis co grid clash. The end, it stated, had trans ported stolen property across gridiron goal lines, the case was dismissed when he pleaded guilty because “I just did what I thought was right.” I ------ ---— Sale of Apples Set Wednesday “Join the apple core” will be the theme for Wednesday and Thurs day of this week when the Gamma Alpha Chi apple sale will be held on the campus, Joan Mimnaugh, chairman, has announced. Booths will be opened in the Co op, the Side, the library, Friendly hall, and Commerce hall to sell apples for five cents each to all students. Apples will be served Wednesday noon in all living or ganization, and Thursday night they will be sold in all womens houses after closing hours. Committee heads for the sale are: finance: Marjoree Rambo and June Fitzgibbons; house hales, Mil dred Chetty and Marguerite Johns; posters, Sally Mueller; schedules, Connie Jackson and Joan Carr; distribution, Jeannine Macaulay; booths, Jackie Dilley; purchases, Mary Stadelman and Mailyn Tur ner. Planning Yearbook Drive c. . :• . . - . -i ■ •««*» a ' ' Oregana Editor Ross Yates gets a helping hand from Managing Ed itor Trudi Chernis, while other staff members, Don Findlay, promo tion manager, Larry Davidson, associate editor, Olga Yevtich, busi ness manager, Warren Miller and Laura Olson, associate editors, offer their suggestions. A special sales table has been set up in the Co-op this week for their finished product. UO Religious Evaluation Week Gets Into Full Swing Today Seo Schedule Page 6 | Religious evaluation week goes into full swing today with discus sion programs scheduled for the afternoon and guest speakers on the evening slate starting at 7:45. The religious week activities of ficially started Sunday evening when Dr. George Hedley spoke on “Religion: What It Isn’t and Is" at a program on the music school auditorium. Dr. Hedley is slated for a class room lecture and continuation of the daily skeptics hour at 4 p.m. today in Gerlinger hall. “Jesus” will be the discussion topic and all students are invited to attend. Leading the noon and 3 p.m. discussion sessions at the YMCA and YWCA will be Professor Ro bert Dann, Rev. Charles Scott Ne ville, Rabbi J. Aaron Levy, and Dr. Heyden Stewart. Rev. Neville is the rector of the Episcopal church in Corvallis, and has worked in or near the Univer (Please turn to page three) Above left is Barbara Borrevik, student chairman of this year’s Re ligious Evaluation week, which began on the campus yesterday. Be low are Rev. Charles Scott Neville (left) and Mre. Gladys Lawther, two of the many guest speakers scheduled to address students at living organizations and special Evaluation week functions. Amazon Project To Be Finished Plans to complete the last 100 units of the veterans housing pro ject in Amazon flats were released Friday by I. I. Wright, superin tendent of the Oregon physical plant. University and public housing ad ministration officials will meet Saturday to discuss final arrange ments. Last summer, a deficiency ap propriation of about $130,000 to bring the total number of units at the student housing project to the authorized 250 was approved by congress. University authorities have re ported that grading, landscaping and other work in connection with the project will be completed as soon as actual housing construction is completed. There “final touches” have been delayed to prevent un necessary repetition of effort. Nyland Chosen Joe; Handelin Gets Betty Carol Handelin and Harry Ny land were chosen Betty Coed and Joe College last Saturday night at the annual Sophomore Whiskerino. Winner of the whisker cup and free shave by rcampus barber Charlie Elliot was Bill Rooney, sophomore in law. Miss Handelin, sophomore in art, from Coos Bay is affiliated with Alpha Phi. Nyland, also a sopho more in art, is from Portland, and is a member of Delta Tau Delta. Approximately 800 couples at tended the dance. Carnival Petitions Due Petitions for the position of chairman for the WAA carnival are now being accepted. Sophomore and junior women who are mem bers of the WAA are eligible. Pe titions may be picked up at the dean of women’s office in Emerald hall, and must be turned in to Bar bara Borrevik at the Delta Gamma house by November 6. State Board Committee Gives OK $5 Increase ! Proposal Gets Final Vote Today ' PORTLAND, Oct. 27, (Spe cial)—Approval of the $5 per* term increase in the incidental fee at the University of Ore gon, to be earmarked for stu dent union purposes, was given Monday by the finance com mittee of the state board of higher education. The recom mendation will go to the full board Tuesday, where its ac ceptance, in light of the finance committee’s action, is virtually a certainty. In making its recommendation the finance committee took cogni zance of requests by the executive council of the student body, and of a campus poll in which well over two-thirds of those contacted sup ported the proposed action. Ncwburn Approved The requests were transmitted to the board through and with the approval of University President Harry A. Ncwburn. By its action the committee also recognized the vital importance in the University’s educational pro gram of a student center building. The building will permit the Uni versity to offer a better, well rounded educational experience to its students. It is estimated that the fee, which will run for 10 terms, will provide about 15275,000, based cn present enrollment figures. Religion Profs To Join Faculty Two visiting professors of re ligion will present courses on the ! campus winter and spring terms, Dr. P. B. Means, head of the re ligion department, has announced. Dr. Edgar J. Goodspeed, profes sor emeritus of New Testament and Biblical Greek from the Uni versity of Chicago, will give a series of 12 lectures winter term for a two-week period. The topic of his talks will be the "Founding of the Christian Church.” Dr. Henry N. Wieman, professor of religion at the University of Chicago, is scheduled for spring term. He will conduct two three hour courses for upper classmen titled the “Philosophy of Religion” and “Contemporary Crisis of Our Civilization.” Dr. Means said thtere was a possibility of awarding regular college credit for these courses in cluding the two-week series by Dr. Goodspeed. The Iowa Plan, which would in corporate three professors of re ligion, one each from the Catholic church, the Protestant church, and the Jewish church. This plan was introduced at the University of Iowa. Although it is still being considered, action on such a plan is not being taken at the present, Dr. Means said.