Professor of Music to Continue Series of Historic Organ Recitals A series of historic organ reci tals continuing winter term will be given by Donald W. Allton, profes sor of music, beginning this even ing. The recitals, tracing develop ment of organ composition from the 16th century to the present, will be presented at the music auditorium each Monday at 8 p.m. and carried over KOAC. Divided into four parts with two 15-minute programs devoted to each part, the series will be pre sented in the order of the pre-Bach school, the Bach school, the ro mantic period, and the contem porary period. Compositions by Italian com posers Gabrieli and Friscobaldi and the Dutch composer Sweelinck will be offered as the first of the series. This will be Mr. Alltoh’s second presentation of these historic re cC.als. He had previously given the series when with the music fac ulty at the University of Kentucky. Cressman Plans Study in Mexico Dr. L. S. Cressman, head of the anthropology department, will make a three month study of Mex ican archeological supplies during February, March, and April. Cressman is now on leave from the University. He will leave at the end of the month for Mexico. He plans to spend most of his time in the Mexico City and Oaxaca area studying the Mexican material at first hand. His findings will be used for background material on which to view his study of the Great Basin of the Southern Oregon country. After the Mexican studies he will examine some Maya collec tions in Yucatan and Guatemala. A monograph covering his re search on the prehistory of the Great Basin in relation to the American southwest will be writ ten by the anthropologist. The Klamath area will be given special emphasis in the study. Dr. Cressman has written an earlier study entitled “Archeolog ical Researches iti the Northern Great Basin." Quartet Gives First of Concerts The University String- Quartet presented its first concert of win ter term Sunday afternoon at the Portland Art Museum under the .sponsorship of the Portland Sym phony Guild and the museum. The program is one of a group sponsored by these organizations, featuring musical ensembles from colleges or universities in this area. Members of Sunday's quartet were George Boughton, Mary K. Allton, violins; Edmund A. Cykler and Milton Dieterich. cello. Guest artist in Faure’s piano quartet No. 1, and Shostakovich string numbers on the program include Haydn's string quartet, opus 76, No. 1, and Shostakovitch string quartet No. 1. Next concert in the series will be January 29. Clubs Will Present Films on Surrealism Four films concerning surreal ism and experimentalism, spon sored jointly by the Foreign Movie Club and the Journal Club, will be presented at 3:30 p.m.. Thurs day, in the Mayflower Theater. . The movies are silent, and will last approximately 90 minutes. Admission price is 25 cents. Dr. Peterson Writes New Calculus Text Dr. Thurman S. Peterson, pro fessor of mathematics, is the author of a new calculus text, “Elements of Calculus,” recently published by Harper Brothers. Dr. Peterson has written two other boks which are used by more than 400 colleges and universities in the United States. They are, “Intermediate Algebra for College Students” and “College Algebra.” Camp Jobs Open For College Girls Women looking for experience working with young girls and an opportunity to spend a summer camping in the mountains may apply for work as a camp counse lor in the Billings Girl Scout camp near Redlodge, Mont., Mrs. Edith R. Jacobs, counselor for women, reported Saturday. A leadership training course will be held from June 21 to 27, with the regular camping periods be ginning on June 28. Girls from the second to twelfth grades will attend the camp. Counselors will receive board and room plus additional com pensation, depending upon their qualifications. Additional information may be obtained at the Office of Women’s Affairs, 201 Emerald Hall or by writing to the Billings Council of Girl Scouts, 301 North 27th Street, Billings, Mont. Gilkey to Speak For Religion Week Charles W. Gilkey, named main speaker for this year’s Religious Evaluation Week, Feb. 12 to 16, has served as visiting' speaker on religion on campuses all over the nation for the past 30 years. Bob Kingsbury, senior in history, is chairman for the annual week emphasizing religion and life on the campus. He will announce the names of his subchairmen next week. Dr. Gilkey, fomer dean of the University of Chicago Chapel, has been awarded seven honorary doc torates by American colleges and universities. The well-known lecturer num bers among his speaking experi ences a journey to the universities of India as Barrows lecturer from the University of Chicago. At Chicago he served as trustee, professor, dean of the chapel, and associate dean of the Divinity School. World War II Vets Offered Army Posts Direct appointments in the regu lar army are now being offered to persons under 30 who served in active federal commissioned ser vice during World War II, accord ing to Col. Frank R. Macrdian, head of the Military Science De partment. Applicants may accept appoint ments in the regular army and, subject to approval by the depart ment of the army, be granted leaves of absence without pay in order to complete college educa tion or graduate work, if not more than two years are required for completion. Additional information may be' obtained from the Military Science Department. Winter Issue of Comparative Literature Magazine^ Features Article on Dryden by University Professor The winter issue of Comparative Literature has just appeared with a new, brighter cover and an article by John C. Sherwood, as sistant professor of English, at Oregon. Sherwood’s article, “Dryden and the Rules: The Preface to ‘Troilus and Cressida,’ ” is the first one written by a University of Oregon professor to be published in the magazine, printed here by the University press. Said Sherwood, “The article is intended to show how Dryden ap plied the rules of the French neo classical critics to the criticism of Shakespeare, and to show that the rules did not interfere with his appreciation of Shakespeare.” FOREIGNER CONTRIBUTES Among the other material in this issue is “Franco-German Lit erary Relations: A Survey of Problems,” by Henri-Peyre, head of the French department at Yale University, and one or the few foreigners heading a department in the United States. The content of his article is that “the literary relations between France and Germany in the last century and a half are numerous and important enough to deserve a great deal of further study,” according to Chandler B. Beall, editor of Comparative Literature. LANGUAGES IMPORTANT Peyre points out that for schol ars studying French or German literature for this period, it is more important to know both languages than to know medieval French or German. He believes that it is more advantageous to study the views of German poets and writers on ancient French literature than to study the anci ent French, or vice versa. A. Lytton Sells, in his article entitled “Zanella, Coleridge, and Shelley,” studies the influence of Coleridge and Shelley on the Ital ian poet Zanella, in the Nineteenth Century. ONE IN SPANISH The only article in this issue which is not in English, and the first one in Spanish to be published by Comparative Literature, is “Los tratos de Argel’’ by Joachuin Cas alduero. The title is that of the first play by Cervantes and, says Beall, is “a long, detailed, excellent study of the play.” “Edmund Gayton on Don Quix ote, Andres, and Juan Haldudo,” by Edward M. Wilson, studies the attitude of the Seventeenth Cent ury English writer towards certain episodes in “Don Quixote.” Copies of Comparative Litera ture may be obtained in the office of the University Editor in Friendly Hall. Single copies are priced at $1, and year’s subscrip tions cost $3.50. Natural Historian Sets Speech Here Dr. George Gaylord Simpson of the American Museum of Natural History, New York, will speak on the Oregon, campus Jan. 24. Simpson, sponsored by Sigma Xi and the University Lecture Series, will discuss “The History of Fauna of Latin America.” |Dr. Simpson has won many awards in the field of natural his tory, and has published a number of books, the last being “The Meaning of Evolution,” published at Yale in 1949. He has made more than 10 field expeditions in this country, Argentina, Venezuela, and the European continent. 1— — Oregon Graduate School Offers FellowshipsRanging up to $1500 Fellowships worth up to 51500 are offered this year by the Grad uate School at the University. Five fellowships will be awarded for preparation of college teachers in the social sciences. The fellow ship program, aided by the Car negie Corporation of New York, will depart from the traditional Ph.D. degi’ee plan in two respects. A broader social science training and a systematic preparation for teaching careers by instruction and teaching experience will be emphasized. To accomplish this program, visiting professors have been add ed to the regular staff with special lectures scheduled. Other fellowships offered are $1000-$1200 for teaching and re search, $700-$900 for graduate as sistants, $500 for the Robert A. Booth award in public service, and $500 for the Thomas Condon award in paleontology. Applications, due March 15, may be obtained from the Dean of the Graduate School. If and when someone can pre vent the common cold, we’ll have little left with which to dread the winter. i i I.—.—-- . IT'S A WISE MOVE TO USE Orman Daily EMERALD CLASSIFIED ADS RATES: First insertion 4 cents per word, subsequent insertions 2 cents per word. The best way to get your message to the Oregon student body