Clarence Faust to Be Featured As Main Speaker at Celebration One of the main speakers at the 7f'lh anniversary celebration Nov, 1, 2 and 3 will be Clarence T"aust o( the Ford Foundation and Stan ford University. Faust will speak at the official dinner, Nov. 2. Registration for the college and university representatives from all sections of the country will be Nov. 1 A. concert will be presented that evening by the symphony orches tra under the direction of Edmund - Cyckter, associate professor of music. A.I90 scheduled to speak is James B Connat, president of Harvard University and. N. A. M. MacKen z.e. president of the University of British Columbia. MacKenzie will deliver the opening address Nov. 2. and Contain wilt speak at the anni- | versary convocation that after-1 noon. Acting dean of Stanford for four months in 1949, Faust has been dean of humanities and sciences ; since 1948. He is associated with j the Ford Foundation, the country's wealthiest philanthropic society, as I a member of the board. Conant, who became president of j Harvard in 1933, holds many de-1 grees from colleges in the U. S., i England and Canada. President of the University of British Columbia since 1944. Mac Kenzie was -president of the Uni versity of New Brunswick four years previous to that. YWCA Sponsors Trip for Foreign Stedents to Plant Twenty foreign students will tour the Springfield Plywood corp oration plant Wednesday evening I usder the sponsorship of the YM CA.. The students will meet at 7 p.m. in the lobby of the Student Union budding where they will take the bus to Springfield. Only cost of the tour will be the thirty-five cent bus fare, according to Peter Streef fce-k, chairman of the YMCA in ternational affairs committee. This is the first of a series of such tours to be sponsored by the YMCA in order to give foreign .students an opportunity to see various aspects of life in Eugene and nearby communities, Streef kerk said. The tour is limited to twenty persons and the first twenty who register will get to go. Streefkerk announced. Students wishing to tatce part in the trip may register in the YMCA office, room 318, Stu dent Union. Grapman to Show German Movie “Waxworks,” a silent German film, will be shown Wednesday in 207 Chapman hall at 7 and 9 p.m. Material for many future film fantasies, including “The Thief of Bagdad” was provided from this | charming fantasy, according to, So idra Price, Student Union movie chairman. The movie shows the story of a poet commissioned by a fairground showman to write stories around ] three of the figures in his wax-1 works show. The stories form the j three parts of the film: Ivan, the Terrible; Haround-Al-Raschid, Cal iph of Bagdad; and Jack, the Rip per. Also on the same program is “The Little Screw,” a German titled adaptation of a Soviet ani-1 mated cartoon. Book Discussion Group to Meet The great books discussion group v/il discuss “Plato's Republic”, Books I and II, at 8:15 p.m. in 319 Student Union Thursday. Discusisons of the group are open to all interested persons, in cluding townspeople, students, and faculty members. Persons attend ing the discussion are asked by the g.:oup to read the material prior to Thursday night. Skull, Dagger Petitions Sophomore men who wish to petition for membership in Skull and Dagger, sophomore men’s hon orary, may do so this week, accord ing to John Beal, president. Petitions, which are due by noon Wednesday, may be turned into Beal at Phi Kappa Psi, or to Bob Scott, secretary, at Sigma Chi. A small number of new members wiU be admitted to the honorary fall term, Beal said. All sophomore men with a GPA of 2.00 or above are eligible to peti tion. Foreign Students Have Trouble In Some Lectures Classroom lectures and discus sions are sometimes hal'd to un derstand for a number of foreign students. D. P. Bhutani. student from India in journalism, reported ; recently. He said that some instructors, t unmindful of the presence of the ; foreign students, speak too fast for them. Other students have said : that during discussions, both the teachers and the American stu- ( dents have a tendency to use j American idioms. This ninkes the English somewhat different from the language in the books many of the foreign students used to learn English. Discussions become quite unin-! telligible to them, Bhutani said. He pointed out that this was one of the reasons foreign students find . it hard to participate in classroom discussions. Sweetland to Speak To Foreign Students Monroe Sweetland, national Democratic committeeman from, Oregon, will speak to foreign stu dents in journalism Tuesday eve ning in the Straub dining room. His talk on the Democratic party will follow that given last, week on Republicanism to the same group by Walter W. R. May, editor and co-publisher of the Ore gon City Enterprise-Courier. The appearances of Sweetland and May are part of a special semi nar offered by the school of jour nalisim to its 14 foreign students. Sophomore YWCA Selects Members Replacement for three members of the sophomore YWCA cabinet were chosen at the weekly meeting of the cabinet Monday, according to Ancy Vincent, president. Sue Hannah will take the place of Barbara Rubin, social chair man; Virginia Means will succeed, Barbara Johnson as duckling coun selor chairman; and Joan Lawson and Jane Slocum will be new mem bers-at-large, following the resig nation of Joan Gates and a deci sion by the cabinet to add one new member. The next meeting of the cabinet will be at noon Monday in Ger linger. Production Crews Told For Next Student Play Production crews for the forth coming University theater's pro duction of “Mad Woman of Chail lot”, scheduled to open Oct. 26, have been announced. Lorna Anderson, senior in speech correction, is in charge of properties. James Blue, senior, in liberal arts, is the chief carpen-1 ter and in charge of all properties on the floor. His assistant, John Jensen, is in charge of all proper ties hanging from the ceiling. Members of the fundamentals of stagecraft class will assist in the set construction, advised by the class instructor, Howard Ramey. Sophomore Whiskerino—Oct. 27 tyeaUtSurU} 0 0 0 THE LATEST RELEASE IN CORAL Side A—"Undecided" Side B—"Sentimental Journey" by—the Ames Bros, and Les Brown Also— —the latest and largest Assortment of Easy-to-Learn Instruction Books. 50c to $1.00 Records of All Kinds at 1235 Willamette 3 AIT \ Ph. 4-9252 WANT TO BE A WITH THAT QUEEN ON CAMPUS ? ? Then Apply At Once! ! 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