Exec Council To Hear Five For Talent Job ! Five petitioners will apear before ilonday’s Executive Council meet ing as candidates for campus tal ent chairman. The meeting is scheduled for 8 p.m. in the ASUO office, Emerald Hail. Talent chairman petitioners are Fred Young, senior, Keith Harry, junior, Fred Schneiter, sophomore, Jerry Ct ary, sophomore, and Emily West, junior, ail liberal arts ma jors. The five candidates were selec ted by Council Members Anita Holmes and Don Pickett as tops in the list of petitioners presented to them last week. Approval of the faculty adviser to the student traffic court will be considered by the council. A. L. Peiterson, instructor in business administration, is the choice of the court members. Cheating on the Oregon campus will be discussed by the Council, ASUO president Art Johnson stat ed Friday. Further debate and action is scheduled on investigations al ready begun by the council,. the millrace problem, a possible “Fac ulty Follies,” renewal of Thursday assemblies, 'overhauling of tradi tions, and a unified campus fund raising drive. All Council meetings are open to the student body. Dormitory Residents Must Pay Bond Issue Worth $1,600,000 for New Women's Hall Book Authored By Campbell “News Beat,” a 385-page report ing workbook co-authored by Prof. Laurence R. Campbell of the School of Journalism, has just been published by the McMillan Com pany of New York. John Paul Jones, associate pro fessor of journalism at the Uni versity of Florida, collaborated with Campbell in writing the vol ume. It is an expanded revision of “Effective News Reporting.” The new version is designed to be flexible enough to be used to gether with any reporting courses or texts. It covers all phases of reporting and even includes its own city directory. Another text book which Camp bell also co-authored, “Exploring Journalism,” was recently recorded in Braille at the New York Public Library for the blind. Oregano Payments Due Living organization space pay ments for the 1950 Oregana must be in by Tuesday, Business Mana ger Jim Sanders announced Friday. Delinquent organizations will not have pages reserved in the book. Social Security Field Posts Open for Qualified Graduates Social science graduates may qualify for field office positions in the Bureau of Old-Age and Sur vivors Insurance of the Social Se curity Administration, according to information received from the U. S. Civil Service Commission. Appointments to the Bureau are made through the Junior Profes sional Assistant-Social Science An alyst Examination announced pre viously in the Emerald. NOV. 8 DEADLINE University seniors may apply for the examinations through the grad uate Placement Office, 216 Emer ald Hall. Applications must be filed by Nov. 8. Field and claims assistants do a large amount of public contact work. They interview, assist and advise claimants, beneficiaries, employees, employers, and others in the administration of the Old Age and Survivors Insurance pro vision of the Social Security Act. YMCA Officer ToVisit Campus Louise Fleming, personnel secre tary of the National Student YW CA, will be on the Oregon campus next Thursday and Friday, Nov. 3 and 4. Miss Fleming will confer with the campus Y cabinet, advisory board, and community leaders on personnel policies and practices. Students interested in profes sional group work, particularly with the YWCA, nyiy arrange for conferences with Miss Fleming by contacting Jackie Barbee Miller at the Y headquarters in Gerlinger Hall. Opportunities include jobs with student and community YWCAs as executive secretary, Y-teen leaders, and program or physical education directors. She will discuss leadership in the YWCA at a special meeting of the cabinet. Junior Advisers, and new officers of the freshman com missions Thursday evening at 5 p.m. A 25 cent dinner will be served. Appointment is made to an ent rance position that offers oppor tunity for advancement. Work re quires the ability to deal effective ly with a wide variety of people and to apply and interpret laws and regulations in specific circum stances. OTHER POSSIBILITIES Registers established from the Social Science Analyst option of the Junior Professional Assistant Examination will also be used to fill p>ositions of the following types in other Federal agencies: Research analyst, intelligence specialist, foreign affairs analyst, educational assistant, and histori an. Further information may be ob tained from the graduate place ment office. Music Room to Open Two More Evenings Responding to requests from students interested in music, the Library announces that the Doug lass Room is now open two addi tional evenings a week. The room contains records, musi cal scores, and equipment for lis tening. It is now open every even ing except Friday and every after noon except Saturday. The schedule is as follows: Monday Thurs...1-5, 7-9:30 p.m. Friday . 1-5 p.m. Saturday . closed Sunday . 2-5 p.m. The Douglass Room was estab lished through a bequest fmm the late Matthew Hale Douglass, for mer University librarian. Besides musical scores, reference books in the field of music, and phonograph records, the room contains a phono graph with earphone attachments and an equipped adjacent room for group listening. Land crabs in Australia often steal golf balls. Over here the guy who loses a golf ball sometimes turns out to be a land crab. Every penny of the $1,600,000 bond issue on Carson Hall must come from the pockets of stu dents living'in University dormitories. T I1U T ;,vtc(-rmn That’s part of the explanation given by University Business Manager J. r\ when he addressed the Executive Council this week on the high costs ot dormitory *• Lindstrom said $11.40 monthly is being paid by the 855 students hv mg in c ing the Vet’s Dorms, on the $81,600 yearly interest on Carson Hall. ' Interest alone on the Carson issue will add up to approximately $850,000 by the end of bonds’ 30-vear span, making a total of $81,600 to be paid off each yeai. __ FIGURES CORRECTED Lindstrom Wednesday corrected figures he had given the Council on interest costs for Carson. Fig ures previously quoted totaling $1,100,000 interest were based on the original $1,825,000 building plan for the new women’s dorm. At present the Oregon legisla ture does not appropriate funds for the construction of “student buildings,” such as dormitories, student unions, and basketball pa vilions. All such construction must be financed by the University through bond issues, although the state furnishes tax money io build classroom buildings. Any profits over expenses in the Vets’ Dorms go into an extra ordinary repairs fund, or toward paying back the bonds for the Vet erans’ Commons, which contains the cafeteria and other facilities. RECEIPTS TO MEET DEFICIT Vets’ Dorm receipts will be used to help meet any deficit that might arise in operating the regular dormitories, Lindstrom stated. It is anticipated that the money in the repairs fund will have to be used to reroof the Vets' Dorms in the relatively near future. New men’s dormitories to re place the temporary Vets' struc tures are being considered by Uni versity officials, Lindstrom stated, but any moves in that direction de pend on two factors: (1) what the 1951 session of the state legisla ture does and (2) what Congress does in the way of federal aid to education. To start University construction, either the state or federal govern ment would have to guarantee 45 per cent of the funds. $60 RENT “If they would do that, we could build tomorrow,” Lindstrom de clared. Married couples living in the recently converted Susan Campbell Hall also contribute toward the Carson bonds. Kent for Susie’s three-room suites is $60 monthly, including heat, light, and water. KATES FAIR Asked if he did not feel these rates rather high, Lindstrom an swered that they are reasonable compared to private housing in Eugene. University officials felt that they must earn as much from Susan Campbell under this plan as from single occupants in previous years. In comparing dormitory bills with fraternity and sorority house bills, several factors should be kept in mind, the business manager pointed out. ARRANGED DIFFERENTLY Dormitory house bills are drawn up on an 8 1 3 month basis, as op posed to nine months in most fra ternities and sororities. Some living organizations serve three meals a day seven days a Theta Sigma Phi to Take Chrysanthemum Orders Theta Sigma Phi, women's jour nalism honorary, will start taking chrysanthemum orders next week for the Portland game, Nov. 5. Living organization chairmen will take orders, and a booth will I be in the Co-op during the latter part of the week. Flowers will be paid-for upon ordering and may be picked up the day of the game at a centrally lo , cated Portland florist shop. week, while others, including Uni versity dorms, serve only two meals on Sunday. DORMS CAN’T SAVE Another item on which frater nities, sororities, and co-ops can save is on service costs, Lindstrom stated. Members and pledges can do many house chores, while the University is on a civil service basis and must hire all help. Average monthly house bills for board and room, today are $68 in Carson Hall, $63 in Hendricks and John Straub, and $60 in the Vets’ Dorms. LIVING INDEX This represents a steep rise from prewar days. The Hendricks house bill in 1939 was $33 a month. Here’s where the Cost of Liv ing Index comes in, Lindstrom ex plained. University administrators watch this offical survey of com parative prices carefully to see how dorm prices compare with food, rent, and labor rates through out the nation. The food index alone has gone up from 99.8 to 202.6 since 1939; at that rate today’s bill at Hendricks should he $66 monthly. “If we cut food costs we could cut charges to the students, but they wouldn't like that,” Lind strom declared. Fifty to 52 per cent of student board bills is set aside for food alone, not including the salaries of cooks and other helpers. “The only answer the University can see is good management,” Lindstrom stated. LABOR COSTS SOAR “We watch food and labor costs; especially labor, because we figure that the student can get along better with fewer services than with poorer food.” Labor costs have risen 2Vj> times above the 1939 index. To supervise the diet of all dor mitories, new foods director, Philip Barnhart, was appointed this year. Barnhart will also watch over the food services in the Student Union when it is completed. MONEY SAVING PLANS Barnhart is now working in several money-saving plans, Lind strom said. Among these is the possibility of putting in a sealed milk dispenser which could save $7000 a year. Milk could be pur chased in bulk at 18 cents a quart instead of in half pints at 5 y2 cents, or 22 cents a quart. “As such reductions accumulate we will pass them on to the stu dents in the form of lower bills, but our first responsibility is pay ing for the bonds on the dormi tory,” Lindstrom explained. Cross Jobs Open Co-chairmen for the annual Red Cross fund-raising drive, to be held sometime during the latter part of winter term, are still being sought. Sophomore, junior, and senior men and women are eligible. Petitions may be turned in to Donna Mary Brennan at Kappa Alpha Theta Wednesday. U.O. Professor Comments On Texas Civics Text Ban Action of the Houston, Texas, school board is symptomatic of the fear and hysteria which we may see evidenced on a much broader scale in the future, C. P. Schleicher, profesor of political science, stated Thursday in regard to the banning of the civics book written by Dr. Frank Magruder. Schleicher said such tactics would result unless some way is found to provide a much greater degree of security in the world. Magruder, whose book was ban ned because of an objectionable paragraph mentioning communism, is retired Oregon State College history professor and is still a resident of Corvallis. His book has been standard in Oregon and throughout the nation for 30 years. Revised editions ap pear yearly to keep pace with changing conditions, Magruder said. fcugene High School uses the book as a regular text for United States history in the junior year, while University High has the 1948 edition as a supplementary refer ence. “We have never received any complaints on the book,” said Dean Mickelwait, Eugene High principal. The Houston board Tuesday night banned Magruder’s book, “American Government” due to the objectionable paragraph cited by Attorney Ewing Werlein in the 1947 edition which might “cause youngsters to think socialism and communism are good.” The paragraph states in part, “ . . . postal system, power projects and progressive taxes are bits of socialism; and public free educa tion and old age assistance are ex amples of communism.” ‘‘The board’s action is showing - fear of a word,” said H. E. Dean, professor of political science. Magruder said Wednesday that ‘‘the board got excited over some thing that already had happened.” The statement in the 1947 edition was revised in 1949 because Ma gruder thought it might lead to misunderstanding. The word com munism has been eliminated. The book now states that the United States has capitalism modified by certain co-operative trends. Houston schools will have to continue using the book, in spite of the ban, because there are no other approved texts available. Be sides the paragraph in question has already been studied by the Hous ton seniors. Werlein said he might approve of continued use of Magruder’s book if the revised edition chang ing the paragraph was used. The matter will be settled, he stated, at the Nov. 14 Austin meeting of the state textbook committee. The first statement had been in the book for 20 years, Magruder added. The Houston ban was the first to ever be invoked against “American Government.” “I am not interested in commu nism, know no Communists, and have never voted for socialism or communism,” Magruder asserted.