EDIT n Daily EMERALD VOLUME LII UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1951 NUMBER 94 Educators Petition For Salary Increases, Retirement Program A committee of professors repre senting all schools in the state system of higher education Mon day petitioned the State Board of Higher Education for 20 per cent salary increases and a more ade quate' retirement program. Charles G. Howard, professor of law, and Thurman S. Peterson, associate professor of mathejna tics, represented the University on the professorial committee. In speaking of the requested salary increases, which would amount to an estimated 2 million dollars on a two year basis, How ard compared the present economic . status of Oregon’s state college in structors with skilled workmen. The average citizen’s dollar in come has gone up 2 y2 times since 1939, Howard said, while the in come of plasterers, painters and electricians who work for the Uni versity is up as much as three times. But the dollar return to college teachers has increased less than 1% times, Howard reported. The professor said Oregon lag ged far behind other states in col lege salaries. They introduced gov ernment statistics as proof that their salaries are now below pre war standards. A 20 per cent in crease, the professors stated, would merely bring salaries back to the purchasing power level of pre-war days. Miners Get More Peterson indicated that profes sors’ salaries have gone down even in comparison with the secretaries who work with them. Arthur Hughes, professor of en gineering at Oregon State Col lege, informed the board that the present pension system gives long time teachers less than one fourth of his salary on retirement. John L. Lewis’ miners get more on re tirement than do Oregon’s state professors, the committee told the board. (please turn to page eight) Roscoe Pound to Talk On Law Thursday Roscoe Pound, one of the foremost thinkers of our time, will speak on “What's Happened to the Law?” at S p.m. Thursday in the Student Union ballroom. Noted American jurist and university professor. Pound was for 20 years dean of the Harvard Law School. Since 1949 he has been a professor of law at the University of California at Los Angeles. Pound also taught for seven years at the University of Enters to Enact Art Combination A combination of the arts of mime, choreography, costumes, and scenic design is the program that Angna Enters will present at the University Theater Feb. 12. Only 400 tickets may be sold to the “Theater of Angna Enters," according to Theater Business Angna Enters Manager Virginia Hall. She urges season ticket holders to get their reservation requests in by Feb. 1, to take advantage of their prior ity rating. Mail orders for the performance are now being accepted. Admis sion is $2 for season ticket holders, and $2.50 to the general public. The dancer's program will con sist of a series of sketches, each a complete story, told with pan tomime and dance against a back ground of music. Miss Enters uses no scenery, but she creates and uses numerous props. Famous for Many Arts Versatile in many arts, she has won fame as a dancer, painter, mo tion picture senarist, playwright, author, and, of course, on the stage for her "Theater cf Angna Enters.” Sometimes she enacts her story with dances, but then again she will remain motionless in a chair or at a table and convey her char acterizations by movements of her f hands and the expressions of her face. .Nebraska. When in 1924 he was offered the presidency of the Univer sity of Wisconsin, Pound de-i dined on the grounds that his life work is the teaching of law.I Pound is a member of the Amer ican Bar association, the Nebraska Bar association, and the Illinois State Bar. He holds a fellowship in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the medal of the Academie Internationale de Geo graphic Botanique. For two years he was a judge in the Nebraska Supreme court. Son of Judge Stephen Bosworth Pound, Roscoe Pound was expos ed to the law profession early in life. He was a delegate to the In ternational Congress of Lawyers and Jurists in 1904 and to the Na tional Divorce Congress in 1906. He was once a member of the Na tional Committee on Law Obser vance and Enforcement. Pound acted as legal adviser to the Chinese Ministry of Justice in 1946. He is the author of many books concerning the law. Among these arc “Law and Morals,” “Social Control through Law,” “Organi zation of the Courts,” “The Spirit of the Common Law,” “Criminal Justice in America,” and "Intro duction to the Philosophy of Law.” KWAX Ready in 2 Weeks If Last. Equipment Arrives Millikan to End Week with Talk Religious Emphasis week acti vities will end tonight with the 8:15 address of Dr. Robert Mil likan, visiting physicist, who will speak on “The Road to Peace.” The lecture is open to the public and will be held in the Student Union ballroom. The last in the Lecture series, “Marriage Tomorrow,” will be conducted by Dr. and Mrs. J. I Randolph Sasnett this afternoon in the SU Chambers Room from 4:30 to 5:15. “Contemporary Religion in Literature and Drama,” a panel discussion, will include the Sas netts and Carlisle Moore, assist ant to the dean of the College of Liberal Arts, from 3:30 to 4:45 p.m. in the SU. The fireside program will also be concluded tonight in campus living organizations. Chambers' Say Dating Means Grow into Love By LaViiim Kruger “You don’t fall into love, you grow into love.’’ ” The fact that dating usually leads to marriage keynoted the second lecture, “Dating,” by Dr. and Mrs. O. R. Chambers Tuesday night in the YW and YMCA spon sored Marriage and Family lecture series. Dating was defined by Mrs. Chambers as a social engagement between two persons of the op posite sex, not necessarily, pre arranged. Everybody Does It “Biological development and ‘everybody does it’,” were two of the reasons given by Mrs. Cham bers for dating. Exploritory dates, which are merely for personal prestige and not mutual pleasure, were discussed by Dr. Chambers. He explained that these are signs of the socially inadequate person. Who to date was elaborated on (Please turn to fane seven) Symphony to Present Initial Soloist Program The University Symphony Or chestra will present its first solo ist program at 8 p.m. tonight at the School of Music Auditorium. The program consists of Bach’s Concerto No. 2 in E Major, played by Larry Maves, freshman violin ist; Cimarosa’s Concerto for Oboe and Strings, Charles Humphreys, junior oboist; Mozart’s Canzona, “Voi che sapete” from “The Mar riage of Figaro,” Joy Grimstad, senior soprano. Violin Concerto Nrff 6 in E Flat Major by Mozart, played by Ann Kafoury, senior violinist; Wag ner’s “Wotan's Farewell” and Magic Fire Music from “Die Valky rie,” sung by Walter C. Martin, junior baritone; and Franck’s Var iations Symphoniques for Piano and Orchestra, performed by Mad elon Adler, junior pianist. Cykler, an associate professor of music, and George Boughton, asT sistant professor of violin, will conduct the numbers. Most of the students have had experience in other musical pro grams and all are music majors. Maves won a scholarship as the outstanding boy musician at Inter lochen Music Camp in Michigan for two successive years; Humph reys is an out-of-state scholarship winner from Los Angeles where he studied oboe. Miss Grimstad sang the part of Martha in the opera of that name given at the University last spring: Miss Kafoury has been concert mistress of the orchestra for three years, while Martin sang the role of “Plunkett” in “Martha”, and Miss Adler played with the orches tra on its fall term tour through southern Oregon. FM broadcasting- will begin over KWAX at the end of two weeks if installation of equipment is completed, 1). Glenn Starlin, instructor in radio and speech, announced Tuesday. A transmitter, the latest piece of apparatus to arrive, was re reived shortly after 1 p.m. Tuesday at the radio studios in Villard. Roger Houglum, presently in charge of the Eugene public school station, KK\ A1, will su pervise the installation. No Antenna “Our only setback is that we have no antenna as yet; but since it is comparatively simple to attach, all other pieces will be set up first in hopes that it will have arrived at the end of two weeks,” Starlin added. The Gates Radio Company in Quincy, 111. has been notified that there is no antenna in the ship ment, and if it does not arrive within a reasonable amount of time one will be purchased from another manufacturer. “FCC approval will be necessary, however, if we have to substitute for an iteirt specified in the appli cation for our FM license, such as the antenna,” Starlin explained. “In such a case we will get special dispensation privileges.” Installation Plans Discussed . Starlin and Houghlum met Tues day night to discuss installation and broadcasting plans. The first step will be to get the transmitter mounted and the co-axial cable attached from it to the roof, where the antenna will be placed. The transmitter itself resembles a deep-freeze refrigerator. It is eighteen cubic feet of highly sen sitive apparatus encased in a gray steel cabinet, two feet high and (please turn to fane cinht) WAA Picks 1951 Theme For Carnival “Alley of Oopdee Doo” waa chosen as the theme for this year’:* WAA Fun House, which is to toe held Feb. 23, the Friday of Dad * weekend. Formerly know as the WAA Carnival the name was changed to the one of Fun House by the decoration co-chairmen Ber nice Bradley and Marian Christian son. Some regulations for the Fun House are as follows: 1. a maxi mum of 20 cents may be charged" for admission for any booth; 2. no coins may be exchanged at booths. Script must be used for every thing; 3. booths will be 10 feet square unless otherwise specified; 4. 50% of take will be appropriated if the houses do not clean up after wards 5. any paper materials •paioo.ida.nj eq jsnut tnooq uo pasrt Plans for booths carrying out the general theme should be ready by next Tuesday’s meeting at will be shown the place where which time the representative-* their booths will be located. Square Dancing Session Set in Gerlinger Annex SQUARE DANCERS get properly squared away by renowned folk dance instructor, Madelynne Greene. Miss Greene was a guest at the weekly square dance session last Wednesday night. Gerlinger annex will be the site of tonight’s square dancing session rather than the Student Union ballroom, according to SU Pro gram Director Olga Yevtich. The change was made tonight only because of Religious Emphasis week activities, but the group will meet in their regular place in the ballroom next week. Dancing, due to begin at 7:30. will last two hours. Miss Rosamond Wentworth, instructor, will teach beginners during the first half of the period. The advanced group will be given the floor for the last hour. About 150 persons, including’ spectators, were present for last week's meeting when Miss Made lynne Grene, popular California folk dancer, was on hand to offer instruction. The regular Wednesday-night sessions are sponsored by the De partment of Health and Physic at Education and the Student Union Board. Students and faculty members attending the dances are asked 1o wear either moccasins or some kind of footwear not worn on the. street.