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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (April 17, 1950)
9*t the Bacj, (Continued from page two) eight teams of last year in each sport were seeded to best positions for survival. The others were dumped into the schedule in any way they might fall. The eight best teams in each sport last year were fraternities, leaving fourteen fraternities and sixteen independnts to “fall” into the luckless first round tennis schedule. The golf schedule was comparable. By no stretch of the imagination can it be conceived that all independents in each schedule with no fraternities could be chosen by lot for that first round. Still later, the P. E. department claimed the losers of last year’s first round were placed ill the first round for this year. However, opon examination ot' last year's first round independents have learned that there were fraternities who lost last year’s first round but were not placed in this year’s opening round. The purpose of the motion and this letter is not to change the schedule, for it is too late. Nevertheless, the ISA feels that such dis crimination is unwarranted, that the person in the P. E. department who drew up the schedules should be exposed, and that the stu dents and the faculty should be informed of the incident in order that future discrimina tion can be avoided. Very truly yours, Keith W. Clark, Vice President ISA 32 Students Receive Straight 'A' Averages On Winter Honor Roll Thirty-two 4.00 students head the winter term honor roll, released Thursday by the Registrar’s Office: Gerald Berreman, Donald Boots, Ralph Brown, Marjory Bush, Jef frey Currier, Don DuBois, Bill Duhaime, Robert Erickson, Robert Forrest, Joan Foulon, JoAnne Gil more, Walter Grande, Stanley Gul lixson, Delores Insell, Helen Jack son, Martha Johnson. Frances Klein, Alice Maier, Anna May, Thomas Mitchell, Wayne Norton, Stanley Pierson, Jackie Pritzen, Randall Poison, Terrance Roseen, Toinette Rosen berg, Janice Schneider, Barbara Stevenson, Jack Tashiro, Virginia Thompson, Marjorie Tuggle, Chris topher Williams, and J o h a n n e Wong. The following students received a GPA of 3.5 or above: A through D Joan Abbett, Kathleen Acker man, Nan Adams, Coral Albee, El wyn Anderson, George Anderson, Warren Anderson, II. Howard Anthony, Betty Bagley, Arthur Baker, Frances Baum, Harold Bau man, Donna Bernhardt, Dwight Berreman, Ruben Beseda, Cather ine Black, Richard Bray, Barbara Brayton, Donna Brennan, Lloyd Brown. Roger Brown, Patricia Burrows, Donna Buse, Ann Butler, Mildred Chetty, Dorothy Christensen, Stephen Church, Donald Clause, ^Barbara Clerin, Anton Coenenberg, Sarah Conger, Clare Conner, Rob ert Cool, Stanley Culp, Richard Dahlberg, Shirley Dalton, Orla Deedon, Donald DeLisle, Fred Dodge, Raena Domreis, Daniel Domreis. Alma Donson. D through H Mary Dorris, Dorothy Drury, James Duran, Jean Duyck, Shirley Ebbe, Adeline Ehrlich, Gordon Ericksen, John Evans, Mary Ever ton, Lorita Ewing, Weslie Eyres, Calista Farrell, Robert Fearrien, Andrew Flanders, Charles Follans bee, Diane Ford, Donald Ford, William Gallinger, Anne Gentle, Arlo Giles, Mary Graham, Gretchen Grondahl. Caroline Griesel, Corinne Gun derson, Gerald Halbett, Wendell Hamilton, Glen Hankins, James Harber, William Haseltine, Robert Haugard, James Haycox, James Heidenreich, Shirley Henson, Jo seph Herscoe, Robert Hewett, Elmer Hibbs. H through IVI Elizabeth Hopper, Charles Humphreys, Virginia Huston, Bill Hutchinson, Shirley Hutchison, Philip Jackson, Gladys Jeppesen, Arthur Johnson, Gene Johnson, Leland Johnson. Robert Johnson, William Johnson, Helen Jones, Lester Jones, Elizabeth Knight, Leona Kohler, Elizabeth Kratt, Allen Kraxberger, David Krieger, Harry Ladas. David Lanning, Ross Lanser, Norma Latimer, Loren Lawson, Gary Leaverton, Duane Lemly, Sally Lichty, John Lewis, Helen Lish, Isabelle Lowry, Pat McCar ger, John McGay, Eugene Maier, Mills Marsh, Norman Marsh. Renee Masson, R3yla Masterson, Charles Mather, Rosa Mathes, Charles Mathias, Marilyn Matthias, John Meyer, Beverly Michel, Joan Mimnaugh, Joan Moll, Marianna Morrill, Charles Mullaley, Ibsen Nelsen, Robert Nelson, Douglas Nicholson, Maxine Nuttman, Wil lard Offord, Constance Ohlsen, Carolyn Oleman, Ken Omlid. O through R Donald Orchard, Gerald Owsley, Vera Paugh, Richard Parker, Wayne Parpala, Roy Peacock, Lester Pederson, Elizabeth Perry, Raymond Perry, Roger Perry, Carolyn Petersen, Marjories Peter sen, Eunice Peterson, Irene Philan, Donald Pickens. Mary Pickens, Holger Pihl, Joyce Pinner, Kenneth Poole, James Richard Porter, Glenn Put nam, William Queen, Matti Raik kala, Jean Reynolds, Grace Rhodes, Alexander Riasanovsky, Eleanor Ribbans, Patricia Rice, Treva Rice, Henrietta Richmond, John RicR mond, Louis Robinson. Robert Robinson, Edward Robi son, Willard Rosborough, Gene Rose, David Rosenlof, Harry Sack ett, James Sanders, Tomiko Sato, Stephan: ^ Scott, Dirk Schepers, Lois Schmidt, Rose Seid, Frank Sherman, Ralph Sherman, Robert Short, William Short, James Schrader, Bert Simmons, Lin Sloan. S through Z Donald W. Smith, Eugene Smith, Velma Snellstrom, William South well, Herbert Spady, Bliss Stanley, Ralph Stratford, Warren Street, Maureen Sullivan, Mary Swigart, Irene Tedisch, Sue Teter, Ann Thompson, Ralph Thompson, Glenn Torrey. Martha Troxell, Roberta Tussing, Richard Unis, Melvin Van Lorn, Edward Vannet, Barbara Vowels, Roger Wahlgren, Joanne Walker, James Wallace, Harold Weeks, Jane Wiggen, Ruth Joanne Wilcox* Charity Williams, Lois Williams, Lyle Williams, Rhoda Williams, William Williams, Ruth Willough by, Harold Witherspoon. Peter Wright, Virginia Wright, Norman Yatchmenoff, Madeline Millicent Young, Daniel Yuzon, Hiroto Zakoji, Charles Zemalis, George Zupan. Despite laws, some cities still have the smoke nuisance. Where there is too much smoke there should be some firing. Book of Psalms Subject of Talk by Rabbi Gitin “The Book of Pslams” will be discussed by Rabbi Joseph Gitin, Temple Israel, Stockton, Cal., at 8 p.m. Thursday in 207 Chapman. Rabbi Gitin is sponsored by the University Lecture Series. He represents the Jewish Chau tauqua Society, which sends lectur ers to college campuses as part of an educational program. The pur pose of the program is to make au thentic information concerning Judaism available to students. The speaker was formerly Rabbi in Buffalo, New York. He lectured at Buffalo Tarbuth College, and was a weekly radio speaker there. Rabbi Gitin has also been Hillel Director at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. At one time he was the only rabbi in the state of Montana. He s a graduate of the Uni versity of Cincinnati and of the Hebrew Union College there. In addition to his lecture, Rabbi Gitin will speak to University reli gion and English classes. Dr. R. H. Ernst, professor of English, is chairman of the lecture series. bemo Aspirants To Speak Today Democratic candidates in the coming elections will speak in Eu gene today at three meetings. David Shaw, candidate for the House of Representatives, will speak at a Young Democrats ban quet this noon at the Anchorage Cafe. Lew Wallace, candidate for gov ernor, will meet interested stu dents, faculty, and townspeople at 3 p.m. in the upstairs room of the Side. Most of the candidates on the ballot will be present at a banquet at 6:30 in the Community Center cn Willamette Street, sponsored by the Democratic central committee. Sigma Nu Wins Vodvil Honors Sigma Nu carried off most of the honors at Friday’s All-Campus Vodvil, with Con Sheffer and Jerry Crary’s “Two Kids and a K-9” being selected the top act and Crary winning laurels for the best individual performer. Campbell Club’s “Flicker Flash backs’’ took second-place honors in the competition. Attendance at the show was esti mated at 2800 by Co-chairman Willy Dodds. Proceeds from the performance will go to the World Student Service Fund. Faculty Members Discuss Education at OEA Meet More than two dozen University faculty members participated in discussion and speeches on the problems of teaching grade and high school students to live in an atom bomb dominated world, at a meetin gof the Oregon Education Association in Portland recently. Representing the University were P. B. Jacobson, dean of the School of Education, and education professors H. B. Wood, R. G. Lang sten, and P. E. Eiserer. Better Conditions Urged Very few teachers are going into grade school work at present, stat ed Roderick Langston, University professor of education, before the Association of Childhood Educa tion meeting. His solution to the problem was higher salaries and better teaching conditions.' Langston also spoke on the im portance of art in the elementary school curriculum before members of the art interest group. Mrs. Jean Glazer, professor of art education, served as chairman of this meet ing. C. P. Schleicher, professor of po litical science, maintained that “it isn’t the right of the teacher to teach communism, it's the right of the student to learn about it,” while speaking on teaching of con troversial issues before the social scienc esection. Journalism Discussed Chairman of the foreign lang uage section was David M. Dougherty, head of the Foreign Language Department. An address on Argentina’s educational system an dsocial structure was given before the same group by Bernado Gicovate, professor of romance languages. Carl L. Johnson, pro fessor of romance languages, gave an illustarted talk on French paint ing. High school journalism was dis cussed by L. R. Campbell, profes sor of journalism, before the jour nalism section. Samuel N. Dicken, head of the Geology and Geogra phy Department, spoke on “Oregon from the Air,” to the geography teacher's section. 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