Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1950)
USC Professor To Begin Series Of P.E. Lectures Dr. Eleanor Metheny, professor of education and physical educa tion at the University of Southern .California, will arrive on the cam pus today to conduct a series of .conferences and lectures. Her three-day schedule begins today with luncheon at the Dei :ey Cafe for the faculty of the chool. "Professional Aspects of :he Field,” will be discussed. At :30 p.m. she will meet with all 'E graduate students. “The Economy of Human Mo tion,” will be the lecture topic of *Dr. Metheny, at 8 p.m. tonight in 207 Chapman Hall. The lecture, sponsored jointly by the School of •Physical Education and the Uni versity Lecture Series committee, is open to the public. At 9 a.m. Wednesday, Dr. Me theny will meet with PE majors in 121 Gerlinger, to discuss “Pro fessional Opportunities.” Individ ual conferences for graduates and .fnajors are planned for the after noon. Dr. Metheny will speak on “Body Mechanics,” at her final ap pearance at 10 a.m. Thursday in 101 PE. “Dr. Metheny’s_schedule has been planned to give an opportunity for everyone in the school to meet her in a situation directly applied to his professional interest and needs,” R. W. Leighton, dean of the School of Health and Physical Education, said Monday. A professor at USC since 1942, Dr. Metheny has done much re search and writing in her field. Five years ago she was one of the specialists in physical educa tion sent to Japan to recommend a plan for reorganization of edu cation. Before coming to USC she held positions on the faculties of Wellesley College and the Univer sity of Iowa. The speaker is a member of the Society for Research in Child De velopment, Sigma S3, Delta Psi Kappa, and the American Statis tical Association. She has contri buted to the publications, Child Development, Human Biology, Psychometrika, American Journal of Physiology, and the Journal of Pediatrics. Students Examine Weyerhaueser Mill Geography students toured the pulp mill and container-board plant of the Weyerhaeuser Timber Company in Springfield last week. The class was accompanied by S. N. Dicken, head of the geology and geography department. Because of good weather, the well-known smell wasn’t too noticeable. Students were assured by the paper mill engineer that the company is conducting several research projects to eliminate the odor. “Also, this plant does not pol lute the McKenzie River,” he said. He asserted that there is more oxygen in the water returned to the’river than is in the river water itself. Students walked through the pulp and papermills, which seem ed to include miles of steel walks, most of which went from the seventh floor and back again. Their guides were two research men, one of whom is a Princeton gradu ate. The class followed the progress of wood scraps through the shred ding plant, the pulp plant, and the drying rollers, until the wood came &6ut as brown paper. The paper is used in making cardboard contain ers. AdrianaJounlins, Native of Latvia, To Talk Today “Latvia and one year of Rus sian occupation” will be the theme j of Adriana Jounlins’ talk before the international student luncheon group this noon in the Student Union. Miss Joulins, a native of Latvia, came to the United States in 1949, after having lived a year in Ger many. Her native country was oc cupied by the Russians in 1948, and she lived under them for a year before going to Germany, where she attended high school. A sophomore foreign language major, Miss Jounlins also tutors other students in German and Russian in her spare time, and teaches ballet for the city recrea tion department. Foreign students at Oregon, or any other university, are here to gain a general knowledge of the United States and the American way of life. This was the opinion expressed by Pietre Streefkerk, Dutch student, at the internation al luncheon last week. Steefkerk also stated that he thinks foreign students study harder than American students because they are used to heavy studying. More time is devoted to studying in other countries, and there are not many activities to detract from study time, he said. Holland, a nation whose area could fit into the state of Oregon about seven times, has a population of approximately 10 million. This crowded situation causes many of the economic problems of Holland, Streefkerk said. Though this is the same sort of problem which prompted Germany to invade her neighbors, under the theory of "lebensraum,” or living space. Streefkerk said that “Holland is not going to invade any country to gain more space for living.” Instead,.she is resorting to in creased industrialization in an at tempt to solve her economic prob lems. Industrialization has not solved all her economic dilemmas, how ever. The most critical period in Holland’s economic history since 1943 came‘in 1948. At that time, America granted $400,012,000 to Holland under the Marshall Plan. “Without Marshall aid, Holland would have fallen back to the level of 1943, one of the darkest years for the Netherlands,” Streef kerk said. EMERALD TODAY'S STAFF Ass t. M. E.: Ralph Thompson Desk Editor: A1 Karr Desk Staff: Judy McLoughlin, John Hunt NIGHT STAFF Night Editor: Rusty Holcomb Night Staff: Joan Cavey, Jean Asplund, Sylvia Jones, Doris Smith Taylor's, Side (Continued from page one) He stated that he has talked to Ray Hawk, director of men's af fairs, concerning the possibility of issuing standard identification cards in order to avoid the pre sent confusion. Alpine was cited for violation of the state’s Liquor Code, and a hearing has been set for Wednes day at 1 p.m. Preview of Science (Continued from page one) section, additional physics labs. Second floor: North section, bio organic, chemistry, and physical chemistry labs; center, nuclear physics lab and offices; south sec tion, elementary biology, biology offices, and organic research. Third floor: North section, gen etics and experimental embryology labs, physiology, lab, genetics re search,. and lab offices; center sec tion, animal rooms and aquarium; south section, bacteriology and microtechnique, cryptogamic and advanced botany, and embryology and histology labs. In the street-level basement will be three lecture rooms, plus optics, photography, and spectroscopic laboratories. Exterior finish of the edifice will be of concrete, similar to the Uni versity theater. • General contractor on the job is the Ross B. Hammand Company of ‘Portland. The Buchanan Co., Portland, and the Morse Electric Co., Eugene, have the mechanical and electrical contracts. Lawrence, Tucker & Wallmann, Portland architects, designed the structure. It is best to .keep one’s mouth closed and be thought a fool than to open it and remove all doubt. Author Unknown. We’Ve all been doing it all our lives, but it’s still doggone hard to get out of bed. CLASSIFIED | ( LOST—Polyphase slide rule, black leather ease near SU—Reward, Ext. 234, Daniel Yuzon. 39 WANTED— Ride near Stockton for Thanksgiving;. Share ex penses. Arthur Novotny, 1876 H Street, Springfield. 40 LOST—In vicinity of campus, col lie pup with harness. Owners; anxious. 1261 Alder St. Ap. 7 40 SU Art Gallery Displays-Photos An exhibit of 57 photographs taken by Tom Burns Jr., a senior at the University, is now on dis play in the Student Union art gallery. j , Burns graduated from high school in Portland and attended' the Art Center School in Los" Angeles. After three years of air force duty in Italy, he came to Oregon to continue his education. After graduation he plans to enter the photography field, preferably as a free-lance magazine photo grapher. Scenic photography is Burns’ favorite subject, especially the mountainous western United States—more specifically the Wal lowa Lake region of Oregon. Last summer Burns won two Oregon Journal photography con tests. When asked if he thought photo graphy would ever replace paint ing, he replied, “Both have their place of the realistic while paint place of realistic while painting is ing is becoming abstract.” French Club to Meet \ Lcs Thelemites French Club will feature Jim Ivory, senior in archi tecture, tonight at 8:30 p.m. as’lie speaks on his visit to France this summer, There will also' be French folk dances and French songs. H EILIC 4-931. Kathryn Grayson dn “The Toast of New Orleans" “The Devil's Henchman” ‘ MAYJIOWER UTS lluaAUM DIAL 5-102 2 “Woman On Pier 13” VT'ne Captufe” Teresa Wright, Lew Ayres LANE £W 4043 Ricardo Montal Ban "Mystery Street” Gene Kelly “The Black Hand” Mi KINZIE^ 1*5 Springfield 77i “Mr. 880” with Bnrt Lancaster “Stella” Victor Mature Humphrey Bogart “San Quentin” “Alcatraz Island” Ann Sheridan, John Litcl CASCADE Drive In Theatre “Battleground” “Ticket to Tomahawk” TILL YOUVE SEEN THESE. . . LOOKING FOR A BETWEEN-HOUR SNACK? WE HAVE LOADS OF SUGGESTIONS • Fruits • Cheese • Crackers • Potato Chips • Pickles O Cookies HOGAN'S GROCERY & COOK MKT. Phone 4-6209 544 - 13 East i ANNOUNCES A NEW SERVICE CLASSIFIED ADS NOW ACCEPTED AT THE MAIN DESK OF THE STUDENT UNION % ALSO AT THE EMERALD SHACK between 2 and 4 4 cents per word first insertion 2 cents per word subsequent insertions