Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, February 16, 1950, Page 3, Image 3

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    -§ U Board Hears Policy Discussion
Manner of perpetuation of the
Student Union Board was the chief
topic of discussion at a hoard meet
ing held Wednesday in the ASUO
Office in Emerald Hall.
Following lengthy discussion by
the board, considerable progress
was made concerning the selection
of board members.
“A formal system of perpetua
tion of the Student Union Board
will be ready for adoption in the
future pending further investiga
tion and recommendations,” stated
Les Jones, chairman of the board.
Jim Wallace, chairman of the
corresponding committee presented
a composite report of the pro
gram systems employed by twenty
student unions throughout the
country. The following sugges
Omm Daily
EMERALD
TODAY'S STAFF
Assistant managing editor: Hal
Coleman.
Desk editor: Marjory Bush.
Copy desk: Sue Teter, Tom Jacobs,
Lila Mae Popish, Helen Jackson,
Liz Trullinger, Milissa Millam.
" NIGHT STAFF
Night editor: Mary Hall.
Night staff: Sarah Turnbull, Mar
garet Phelps, Allen Heed, Stan
ley Turnbull.
Philosophy Professor
Gets Article Published
An article by Arthur Pap, pr.o
fessor of philosophy, has been
printed in the second issue of a
new philosophy magazine now on
sale at the Co-op.
Entitled “Philosophical Studies,”
the new magazine is devoted to
analytical philosophy or the phil
osophy of meaning and definition.
The name of Pap’s article is “Are
Individual Concepts Necessary?”!
tions were presented:
1. The union board as a whole
acting as a program committee.
2. A mixed system providing for
members of the board to head the
program committee with additional
sub-committees.
3. Outside standing committees,
the chairman of which would be
a member of the boai’d. This
system would use extensive sub
committees.
It was emphasized that the plan
initiated would be placed on a trial
basis and would be set up in a flex
ible manner permitting changes
as growth necessitates. «
Gammc Alpha Chi
Picks New Officers
Gambia Alpha Chi, women’s ad
vertising fraternity, recently elect
ed officers for the coming year.
They are: president, Donna Mary
Brennan, vice president, Sue Bach
elder; secretary, Barbara Williams;
treasurer, Barbara McBee; report
er, Mary Fran Lorain; program
chairman, Karla Van Loan; con
tact chairman, Shirley Hillard. The
newly elected officers will be in
stalled next week.
Panhellenic Petitions
Deadline Set at March 1
Junior and senior women may
petition for open Panhellenic posi
tions until March 1, Fran Robson,
president, announced,
Open to seniors are scholarship,
social, and publicity chairmen posi
tions. Juniors may apply for rela
tions chairman. Petitions may be
turned in to Miss Robson at the
Sigma Kappa house.
Just think, Dad tried to put his
arm around me four times last
night.
My Gawd! What an arm!
“Oh, John, even in the dark I can tell it’s a
PHILIP MORRIS!"
Anytime, anywhere you can detect the "exclusive difference”
the minute you light up your first Philip Morris.
That’s because it’s the one cigarette proved
definitely less irritating, definitely milder,
than any other leading brand.
Remember: there’s NO CIGARETTE
HANGOVER when you smoke
Philip Morris!
call
FOR
mup MORRIS
Mighty Missouri
Makes Last Trip
As Fighting Ship
NORFOLK, VA., Feb. 15—(UP)
■—The Battleship Missouri sailed
for Cuba today, leaving behind
the Hampton Roads mudbank and
fog which delayed her 29 days,
but bad luck sailed with the
Mighty Mo on her last cruise as a
fighting ship.
As the 45,000-ton battleship
sailed past Thimble Shoals, where
she was stuck for 15 days, word
came from Washington that the
navy’s only active battleship will
be reduced to training status.
The navy budget, which needs
the Mo’s operating cost for an
other aircraft carrier in the Pacific,
caught up with her after she had
won over the Japanese, the mud
bank and the fog.
The Big Mo was a proud ship.
The Japanese surrendered on her
decks in 1945. And her officers
and men received the news from
Washington today in sad silence.
A woman flees temptation, but
a man crawls away from it in the
cheerful hope that it may overtake
him.
Color Television Set
To Broadcast at Once
WASHINGTON, Feb. 15—(UP)
—The dark horse in the color tel
evision race said today on the eve
of critical comparative tests that
it was ready to broadcast in color
right now.
Color Television, Inc., of San
Francisco, announced that it has
developed a system of color TV
that combines brilliance, simplicity,
and reduced cost of operation.
President Arthur S. Matthews,
and Vice President George E.
Sleeper, Jr., inventor of the pro
cess, told a news conference late
yesterday that CTV is ready to
show the Federal Communications
Commission its color system next
Monday.
Furthermore, Matthews said, it
is ready for a three-way demon
stration Feb. 23 at the FCCS
Laurel, Md., laboratories against
the respective color systems de
veloped by the Radio Corporation
of America and the Columbia
Broadcasting System.
Both CBS and RCA staged dem
onstrations before the FCC, both
singly and together, late last year.
CTI was unable to move its
equipment here in time to com
pete then.
The seven FCC members, who
have held months of hearings on
the advisability of licensing color
video now, are trying to find out,
in essence, which system offers
the most promise for future de
velopment, they are looking par
ticularly for such things as color
fidelity, flickers and “ghosts” to
set an acceptable standard.
Matthews was confident CTI’s
system would prove up, although
he conceded that .“There is still,
plenty of room for improvement.”
It is based on conversion of the
present black-and-white camera
and receiving equipment at rela
tively low cost.
At the camera end, the system
takes three color pictures simul
taneously—in red, green, and blue
—and transmits them as a single
image over the air. At the receiv
ing end, the three images appear
in a single tube in their colors and
are combined optically and shown
by projection to the video audi
ence.
He: I had a dream about you the
other night.
She: Did you?
He: No you wouldn’t let me.
For Your Convenience
OrMQn Daily
EMERALD
Now offers you this service:
Emerald Classifieds now sold at the
CO-OP
Place you ad at the pen counter.
Please place your ad before 4:00 p.m.
for appearance in next days paper
You can still place ads at the "Shack" also.
• • • •
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