n Daily EMERALD VOLUME LII UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1951 NUMBER 59 'Adequacy' Discussed In First Lecture of Series “Emotional maturity, as physical perfection, is a goal of all persons but one which none completely achieve,” Dr. and Mrs. O. R. Chambers agreed in their discussion of “Social Adequacy,” Tuesday night in the first of Marriage and Family lecture, spon sored bv the YW and YMCA. Council Selects Date for First Sport Night An athletic carnival set to music jwill seek the favor of the public Mar. 10 when the ASUO presents the first annual Sport Night. According to information releas ed' by ASUO President Barry Moun tain, the indoor sport display will feature a track rpeet, a smoker, tumbling and other demonstrations provided by the School of Health and Physical Education. Music will form a background for the per formance of the various events which will take place in McArthur Court. Admission price will be 50 cents for students and $1 for townspeo ple. The ASUO will be assisted by the Order of the “O” in carrying out the spectacle. Mountain said that the possibili ty of gaining financial self-suffici ency for the ASUO was one of the major considerations in the presen tation of Sport Night. He express ed hope that through the receipts taken in the ASUO could cease to be dependent upon other sources for revenue. The program has re ceived the approval of the student affairs office, Mountain said. Petitioners for the general chair manship of Sport Night are now being sought. Senior or graduate students, preferably PE majors with managerial experience, are requested to contact Mountain con cerning the job. Petitions will be accepted until 5 p.m. Monday and pray be turned in to Mountain’s of fice. JIFQlFCtoMeef On Senior Rides Discussion of the senior ride problem will be continued Thurs day at a joint meeting of the In ter-Fraternity Council and the Jun ior Inter-Fraternity Council. The council was last week in formed of the seriousness of the se nior ride issue by University offi cials. Debate was tabled and house representatives were requested by IFC president Bill Harber to pre sent the problem to their individual living organizations. A definite policy regarding senior hazing may be formed Thursday. In further action last week the IFC abolished the four week wait ing period on freshman initiations established following deferred rushing. Due to the present emer gency and the fact that many men are entering the armed services, the council expressed approval of initiations during the first portion of the term. Formerly fraternities were not allowed to initiate fresh man in the beginning four weeks of winter term. A 2.00 GPA will still be required. A student-iaculty committee was formed to consider assistance for fraternities by the University ad ministration during the period of emergency. A report on the com mittee’s findings will be presented at Thursday’s meeting. Dr. Chambers, chairman of psychology at Oregon State, and Mrs. Chambers, who has taught psychology at OSC, pointed out that “emotional maturity is a necessity for so cial adequacy.” The speakers first gave symp toms of social inadequacy, and then characteristics of the emo tionally mature individual. “Inadequacy is largely an indi vidual question,” they pointed out. Among types of persons demon strating inadequacies are those with fixations or dependencies, those who repress their own ideas, who withdraw from the group, and who use various psychological de vices for excusing or hiding their inadequacies. Types of Inadequacies Dr. Chambers mentioned the morose or depressed individual, the egocentric or self-centered type, and the one who uses compensa tion to hide his true personality. Jealousy is also an indication of inadequacy to meet a social situ ation, he remarked. The person who relies on arti ficial stimulation to produce a good time is .showing a further type of (please Hern to page eight) 'Hello—Joe?' NASHVILLE, Tenn., —(JP)— If Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin accepts a transoceanic tele phone call, three college, stu dents plan to ask him these questions: What do you think will be the outcome of the Korean crisis? Why does Jacob Malik veto so many UN proposals? Da you have any plans to mobilize in Eastern Europe like the United States has in West ern Europe? Why did Malik veto the cease fire proposal in Korea? Do you have a successor in event of your death? Expecting their call to the Kremlin to be completed at 9 a.m. (PST) some day this week are three Vanderbilt University freshmen: Jimmy Threldkeld, Tupelo, Miss.; Hans Pauls, Steu benville, Ohio; and Charles New man, Cookerville, Tenn. When the phone call was plac ed Sunday night, Threldkeld said the trio wanted to learn from Stalin if they should join the U. S. Army now or wait for the draft. KWAX Equipment Still Arriving Equipment for KWAX, the Uni versity’s new FM radio station, is still arriving, but, according to word from Glenn Starlin, radio-irT structor and advisor to the sta tion, it will be some time yet be fore the radio station can begin broadcasting. Radio tubes were received Tues day. Still to come, said Starling, is a transmitter and antenna. The equipment is being sent from man ufacturers in Quincy, 111. Starlin said broadcasting will start two weeks after all equip ment has arrived. Blood Quota Now 500 Pints Clearance for receiving 500 pints of blood in the University blood donation drive Monday was re ceived through Multnomah Coun ty Red Cross headquarters Tues day, Donna Mary Brennan, presi dent of the campus chapter, has learned. Students, faculty members, and husbands and wives of students are urged by Miss Brennan to sign up for the drive today in order to reach this new' goal. The original University quota, was 350 pints. Pledge Cards Due «• Pledge cai'ds are due at 5 p.m. today. Boxes and pledge cards are available in the Co-op and main entrance, of the Student Union for the use of both on and off-campus students and faculty members. Parental releases for students under 21 may be turned in with pledge cards or brought to the Stu dent Union Ballroom at the time of donation Monday, Miss Bren nan announced. This new ruling should make it possible for addi tional students to receive parental consent, she said. To reach the goal of 500 donors each individual must make the success of the drive his personal responsibility, and not leave it up to others, Miss Brennan empha sized. 200 Pledges Received Considerably more than 500 should sign lip because of disquali fications and failures to appear for appointment. Approximately 200 pledges have now been received, she stated. Pledge cards should be turned in by house presidents to Herb Nill a,t Theta Chi, for the men, or to Leslie Tooze at Kappa Alpha Theta, for the women. Appointment cards will be mail ed to donors, stating time to ap pear for their donations. In the event of class conflicts, the donor is asked to check with the Office of Student Affairs to make neces sary arrangements to enable him to keep his appointment. Students are reminded that any one who has had infectious jaun dice within the past year or has been inoculated for typhoid or vac cinated within the past month should not sign up as they cannot be accepted. Milton Dieterich To Give Cello Recital Thursday Milton Dieterich, assistant pro fessor of music, will present a cel lo recital at 8:15 p.m. Thursday night at the Music School Auditor ium, assisted by Marjorie Carlson, Suzanne Lichty, and Keith Cock burn, junior, sophomore and sen ior in music, respectively. William Woods, instructor in piano from the University of Southern California will be pianist for the group. This is his first year at Oregon. Urofessor Dieterich graduated from Grinnell College in Iowa and has played cello in various orches tras „as well as given many solos. He was a member of the Oklahoma City Symphony for many years also. The program follows: Sonata in G minor, Opus 38 by Brahms; Chorale 34 by Bach-Bazelaire, and Romanze by Scnumann-Salter, for four celli; Requiem by Popper for three celli and the piano; and Son ata in G minor, Opus 117 by Faurc. SU Board Postpones New Member Selection For at Least One Week -vppoimmcnt ot a new mem her to the Student Union board has been postponed for at least a week, and possibly longer than that. Six out of 14 voting' members of the board were absent from the Tuesday night meeting and as a result, members present were not able to reach a major ity vote on anv candidate. (According to the SU board’s Perpetuation Plan, eight is the re quired number of votes needed to elect a new member to the board.) Straw votes conducted by Board Chairman Hapk Panian indicated a split vote between Barbara How ard and Patricia Mullin. The two women, both juniors in the School of Education, will be reinterviewed by the board at its meeting next Wednesday. Appointment will be made that night providing a. ma jority vote is cast for cither candi date. Find ‘suitable’ Meeting Time During a discussion later in the meeting over setting a more "suit able” time for board meetings, Ed Peterson remarked: “It would be interesting to find out where everybody is tonight and why they’re not here.” The board settled on 4:30 p.m. Wednesdays as the most suitable time for meetings. Other business during the meet ing included final preparation for a "clambake” to be sponsored by the board: a report from the chair man of the SU directorate; and acceptance of a proposal that the SU board sponsor the Lemon Orange squeeze. SIT to Handle ‘Squeeze* The Junior Interfraternity coun cil, which sponsored the Lemon Orange squeeze last year, was turned down by the Student Af fairs committee which recommend ed that “preferrence be given the SU board for handling that event.” According to Dick Williams, SU director, the dance would take the place of the regular Friday night mixer. It has been scheduled for the ballroom following the Jan. 26 Oregon-OSC basketball game. Dewey Wilson, chairman of the Student Union directorate, read a report to the board in which he commented on the success of last Friday’s mixer and the Wednes day night square dances. He also said there was a con siderable increase in the number (please turn to pa fie eight) Tickefs on Sale For Dinner Tickets are now on sale for Reli gious Emphasis Week's Fellowship supper to be held at 6 p.m. Sun day in the Student Union. * Students, faculty and towns people may purchase them for 60 cents at any religious organiza tion on campus, at the SU main desk on Thursday and Friday or. at the door Sunday evening. Jane Simpson, chairman for the supper, said Tuesday that the guest speaker will be the world famous physicist. Dr. Robert Mil likan, from Cal Tech. George Yost, R. E. Week chairman, and Barry Mountain, ASUO president, will also speak. Miss Simpson emphasized the fact that the fellowship supper will be taking the place of the reg ular Sunday evening meetings at the religious foundations on the campus. This supper will formal ly inaugurate R. E. Week activi ties. Approximately 150 students, fac ulty and townspeople attended tho supper last year and "We hope to exceed this number this year,’ Miss Simpson announced. Castellto Speak On Philosophy “Cybernetics and Philosophy : will be discussed by Dr. Albury Castell. head of the philosophy de partment, from 7:30 to 9:30 to night in the Browsing Room of the Student Union. Castell has been at the Univer sity since September, 1949. Before that time he had been associated with the University of Minnesota, the University of Washington, Pur due, and Columbia University. Among the books he has written are "College Logic” and “Intro duction to Modern Philosophy.” Castell is also an experienced radio lecturer. This is the second of the lecture forum series, and it is open to members of the association, facul ty, and students in the University 'Moonlight Girl' Finalists CANDIDATES FOR MOONLIGHT Girl of Phi Sigma Kappa aro from left to right, top row: Pat Foley, Barbara Brabham, Fern Lyon; bottom: Sherry Antony, Donna Claire Ringie, and Thelma Savelieh. The Moonlight Girl will be named Jan. 27.