Peterson, Dodds Get WSSF Job Ed Peterson, junior in music, and Willy Dodds, sophomore in business, were named co-chairmen of this year’s World Student Service Fund by the ASUO Executive Council Tuesday afternoon. The drive, scheduled for early in spring term, will include a fund raising campaign for aid to students abroad and the All-Campus Vodvil, with proceeds slated for the fund. Judiciary Committee Named The Council approved recommen ^dations from President Harry K. Newburn and ASUO President Art Johnson for faculty and student members of the judiciary commit tee to decide on questions of consti tutionality. Warren C. Price, associate pro fessor of journalism, and Kenneth S. Ghent, associate professor of mathematics, faculty members; and Don DImick and Morris Galen, law students, were appointed to the committee. Permanent judiciary committee chairman, according to the ASUO Constitution, is the Dean of the School of Law, at present Orlando J. Hollis. Millrace Answer Soon Questions of constitutionality will be submitted to the committee by the Executive Council. A report on the possibilities of a Millrace site for Junior Weekend Canoe Fete stands will be forth coming soon, Second Vice Presi dent Lou Weston stated. Student financing for clearing the site will probably be necessary, Miss Weston said. Seniors Interest In University High: Fogdall . -*r'" “The interest shown by high school seniors in attending the Uni versity is very high,” stated' Vergil S. Fogdall, director of men’s affairs, upon returning from a four-day tour of several Oregon high schools. Fogdall, together with represen tatives from Oregon State College, Oregon College of Education at j Monmouth, Vanport College in Port land, and the Oregon Technical Institute in Klamath Falls, spoke to students on the State System of Higher Education institutions last Monday through Thursday. Building Create Interest He found interest especially high in the University’s new buildings, with the girls quite enthusiastic over Carson Hall. Much enthusiasm was also shown for the new Stu dent Union. Fogdall borrowed architectural drawings of the University’s build ing program from the President's Office and showed these, as wel las photographic bureau photos of cam pus life, to the high schoolers. Students Ambassadors Although these visitations by college and university officials help to promote good relations with high school students, Fogdall empha sized that students who come from the particular communities are the real “ambasadors of good will.” Forum Slates Cheating Topic Campus Forum—student dis cussion group—will discuss the problem of cheating and possible solutions Thursday night at 7 in Chapman Hall. . A panel of three students and a faculty member will each take five minutes to present views, and then answer questions from students in the audience. The meetings aim to give students a chance “to hear campus prob lems discussed in the open, and invite as large a student audi ence as possible,’’ says Chair man Dorothy Orr. Student Court Plans Parking Inquiry Plans to investigate the city's action in putting up parking meters along Kincaid between 12th and 13 th and along 11th between Alder and Hilyard are being formulated by the student court, Chairman Dick Neely announced Tuesday night . The city’s decision, which will affect students parking along the edge of the campus and in front of three living organizations, was made without consulting either the University Administration or tfie students, Neely said. Cars parked on campus lawns will be towed off and the owners required to pay towing charges in the future, the chairman stated after the court’s regular Tuesday evening session. The cases of townspeople who violate University traffic ordinan ces will henceforth be turned over to the district court, Neely stated. This will include the cases of the three local judges who were issued University parking tickets for park ing in the driveway by Johnson Hall, the chairman pointed out. The judges were on the campus to judge the Law School moot trials. A total of $4 in fines was received by the court Tuesday night. Two students appeared to plead their cases and two posted bail in the Of fice of Student Affairs. Student court files now list 2028 student cars. Weather. . . Cloudy with rain Wednesday, be coming partly cloudy with few showers Wednesday night and Thursday. Religious Evaluation Continues Morning worship at 7:30 a. m. today will be held in Gerlinger's Men’s Lounge instead of Alumni Hall. The service, a daily feature of Religious Evalution Week, which ends on the campus tomorrow, will be led today by Bob Peterson and the Rev. Carroll Roberts, pastor of First Christian Church. “New Grain Out of Old” is Dr. Charles W. Gilkey’s topic for to day’s main address, scheduled for 4 p. m. in 3 Fenton. This is the fourth in the series of addresses on “First-Hand Religion” by Dr. Gilkey, principal speaker of the week. Gil key Experienced Dr. Gilkey, who appeared on the University campus for a similar observance ten years ago, has spoken to students on college and university campuses in 30 of the 48 states during the past 30 years. The final informal discussion session on student religious prob lems and questions brought out by the lectures or other aspects of the campus religious program will be held from, 7 to 8 p. m. tonight in Westminster House. “Bull Session” At the “bull session’’ tonight Dr. Gilkey will discuss with stu dents questions submitted through the question boxes at the lectures and in the University Co-op, and and other questions which may come up at the meeting. Personal interviews with Dr. Gilkey from 10:30 to 11:30 a. m. today and tomorrow may be ar ranged by constacting Ben Lyon at Westminster House. A luncheon for directors for re ligious foundations and interested faculty members is scheduled for noon today at the Anchorage. Registration Material Available Saturday Material for advance registra tion may be picked up by students beginning Saturday in Emerald Hall. Full details on advance registra tion processes will be published in Thursday morning’s Emerald. Prides Rate Highest On’House G.P.A. List; . Campus Makes 2.427 Ondes, off-campus women’s organization, was tops schol astically fall term, a release of house grades by the registrar’s! office disclosed Monday. A house GPA of 2.85 brought the Orides in ahead of Delta' Gamma sorority (2.83) and Ann Judson House (2.81). I au Kappa Epsilon was first among the men’s group and seventh in the University with 2.7. I uenty-five finished above the all-University averace o£ z.vzt. ine women, as in the past, came in higher than the men, reg istering an all-women’s GPA of 2.57 as against the all-men's 2.357. See page three for complete list of house and group grades. Today's Students Fail to Grasp Symbols: Gilkey By CAROL JONES Illustrating “Contemporary Re ligious Illiteracy," the theme of the third in the series of Religious Evaluation Week speeches. Dr. Charles W. Gilkey pointed out that the American student today cannot grasp the symbols of religion. His understanding and learning are based on fact, and he cannot evaluate the parables of the Bible and apply their morals to his own life. Story to Illustrate "It is too bad,” explained Dr. Gilkey, “that scholars debate about the possibilities of talking animals when someone alludes to the re ligious fable about Jonah and the whale. The story is designed to illustrate a great moral or material truth, and today’s generation tends to accept it literally and thus ques tion its validity.” The American sense of symbol quality is no longer functioning, and Americans miss the points of a great many religious tracts ,ofr in both the Old and the New Test ament, the works and ways and characteristics of God are pre sented in terms of symbols. Think in Symbols These symbols, or word pictures, are derived directly from the languages and minds of the Orien tal peoples of the Near East who think so much in terms of symbol representation, in contrast to Oc cidental literalism. Our language is insensitive and inactive in the much larger and important mat ters and religion goes beyond our literalism, he said. “This creates a problem for those preaching today to the American student,” contends Dr. Gilkey, “who knows only the language of the laboratory or dormitory.