Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 16, 1952, Image 1

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    USA Candidates
. . . for president In the primary
today urn on review In an editorial
on puKo 2.
Daily
EMERALD
Volume UII
fifty-third year of Publication
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, WEDNESDAY , AERIE 16, 1952
NUMBER 103
36 Oregon Coeds to Compete
For Jr. Weekend Queen Title
Thirty-six Oregon coeds will be
competing for the title of Junior
Weekend queen Tuesday when
initial clminations are held in the
Dad's lounge of the Student Union.
Tuesday candidates will be cut
to 25 in number. The following
evening the 10 finalists will be
chosen. Dress for Tuesday will be
short silks; formats will be re
quired for the second night.
Names of the candidates and
their sponsors arc:
Pat Bellmer, Alpha hall; Joan
fBlakely, Alpha Tau Omega; Bar
bara Booth. Cherney hall; Pat
Johnson, Delta Tau Delta; Mary
Stone, Delta Upsilon; Jo Martin.
Kappa Sigma and Theta Chi;
Janet Shaw, Phi Delta Theta;
Honor Code Vote
Will Be Next Week
Next Wednesday hag been set an
the date for the referendum vote
on the adoption of an honor code
The vote will be taken In 10 a.m.
classes and a booth will also be act
up In the Student Union from 10
to 11 a.m.
An assembly In which members
of the honor code committee will
speak followed by questions from
students has l>een set for Tuesday
at I pm. A coffee hour for the
committee members to give oppor
tunity for more discussion will be
held at 4 p.m. Tuesday.
Instructors with ^Q o'clock class
es will be Mintactecl by letter con
crrning having the vote taken in
their respective classes.
.Members of the committee will
meet at noon Friday in the Student
Union.
Francis Gillmorc, phi Gamma Del
|ta; Marian Smith, Phi Kappa Psi;
Rosemary Vaught, Phi Sigma
Kappa; Dorothy Anderson, Pi'
Kappa Alpha; Joan Abel, Sigma
Alpha Epsilon; Donna Blum, Sig
ma Alpha Mu.
Joan Moore, Sigma Chi; Nan
notte Silverthorne, Sigma Phi Ep
silon; Nancy Ann Yates, Tail Kap
pa Epsilon and Sigma Kappa;
Barbara Allison. Alpha Ohi Ome
ga: Jane Kreckt, Alpha Delta Pi;
Ann Britts, Alpha Omicron Pi;
Mary Alice Baker, Alpha Phi;
Delores Parrish, Alpha Xi Delta;
Helen Jackson, Carson hall; Jane
Cover, Chi Omega; Nancy Van
Allen, Delta Delta Delta; Mary
Stone, Delta Gamma.
Maureen Sullivan, Delta Zeta;
Marjorie Beck. Gamma Phi Beta;
Sally Kceley, Hendricks hall: Ina
Pelts. Highland house; Karen
Sunderlcaf, Kappa Alpha Theta;
Joan Renner, Kappa Kappa Gam
ma; 1m Vaun Krueger. Orides;
Sarah Turnbull, Pi Beta Phi;
Jeanette Stone, Rebec house; Mary
Petersen, University house; Rush)a
Johnson, Zeta Tau Alpha.
Hall Elects Officers
For Next Fall Term
Ben Schmidt. president of Min- j
turn .hall, was elected president of i
the Inter Dorm council Tuesday.
Itay Glass was elected secretary
and treasurer.
Elections of other officers was ,
postponed until next fall due to
rearrangement of men's dorms
scheduled for next year.
Schmidt said the 1DC plans to
continue the fight for free phones. '
An all dorm dance, sponsored by l
IDC is also planned for next fall.
Dolores Parrish,
BonnieBirkemeier
In Oregana Posts
Bonnie Birkemeier, junior in bi
ology, was appointed editor of the
1952-53 Oregana by the student
publication board Tuesday night.
Dolores Parrish, junior in his
tory, was named business man
ager of next year's yearbook.
The two women were the only
petitioners for the jobs.
The board affirmed the temp
orary appointment of Carolyn Sil
va, junior in political science, to
the position of business manager
of the Emerald in a unanimous
vote of the members present.
Miss Birkemier was layout man
ager for the Oregana this year.
Last year she was art editor for
the book.
Miss Parrish was advertising
manager for the 1951 Oregana and
assistant business manager for the
1952 yearbook.
Miss Silva was temporarily ap
pointed to fill the position of Em
erald business manager at the last
publication board meeting follow
ing the resignation of Bob Green
lee. business manager winter term.
She was formerly advertising man
Egcr for the paper.
Applicants for Emerald editor
and Ore-Ntr editor will be inter
viewed by the board May 5. Dead
line for Emerald editor petitions
is Friday noon. May 2.
Applications Available
A scholarship for any under
graduate women is being offered
again this year by Zonta. Eugene
women’s club.
Applications for the award may
be obtained in the office of Mrs.
Golda P. Wickham, director of
women's affairs, and must be re
turned by Monday.
Law School Says Theme Is 'An Ill-Fitting Thing'
Student Body Fell in Deliberate Trap
With Choice of Jr. Weekend Theme
I'ENTON HALL, State of Hoi
lis Apr. 15 "Pre-pubescent Pon
dering*," Is the theme for law
school weekend ceremonies, an
Eirjerald wire recorder learned to
day.
The theme was selected by the
standing committee on themes aft
er nearly a year of deliberation.
The wire recorder was pretty near
ly worn out.
Robert Abrams, committee
chairman and Queen of last year’s
law school weekend, stated that
‘‘this theme embodies all of the
joys and sorrows of childhood un
dergraduate days, and is symbolic
and emblematic of the carefree
times before the stern and self
sacrificing life of the law student
is embarked upon by these ster
ling examples of young red-blood
ed manhood and womanhood.”
This theme., he said, was much
prefered to a similar one, "Child
hood Memories,” which was "sub
mitted by a disgruntled faculty
member of the speech and drama
department for the consideration
of the law school committee.”
Theme Was Not Mature
"This puerile suggestion was, of
course, rejected immediately, as
^not being in keeping with the sort
of theme which the mature young
collegian would care to have asso
ciated with his University,” he
added.
Edward V. O'Reilly, president of
the law school student body, asked
of the reason for the similarity be
tween the law school and general
student body theme, stated that
"in the past it has been our ex
perience that the general student
body committee on theme selec
tions has been able to find out just
what* the selection of the law
school committee was before it was
announced."
"This time,” he sneered, "they
were given the impression that the
rejected theme mentioned by Mr.
Abrams was, in fact, our selection,
and as in the past, they stole it.
We were careful to make it like
our theme as much as possible be
cause we feel that by doing so we
are making the general student
body’s Junior Weekend a more dig
nified affair, rather than the fiasco
which it usually is!”
He was coaxed into admitting,
however, that the Junior Weekend
theme was really a poor substtiute,
in his own words "an ill-fitting
thing."
Student Body Foiled
Asked her opinion of the con
stant burglarization of the law
school weekend themes by the gen
eral student body, Miss Corrine
Gunderson, secretary of the law
school student body, drawled "of
course they didn't get away with
it this time since they weer foiled
by the committee's plot."
She was nice enough to, add,
however, that "if the general stu
dent body has a little bit nicer
Junior Weekend by stealing their
theme ideas for us. we are happy,
for we regard the members of the
general student body’ as little
brothers and sisters, each and
every one of them."
O'Reilly, finally’ convinced he'd
better talk about something else
before some outsider blew his pre
vious law school smitherines, did
say that, the nominating assembly
for members of the law school
weekend court would be held to
day in room 307, Fenton Hall, at
3:30 p.m.
"We* will have maestro Bobby
Christ and his Fenton Filharmonic
music makers as the convention
orchestra," he said, "and every
one appearing will be given an old
"Vote for Wilkie" button free. The
convention, he remarked is expect
ed to be the same staid, dignified
affair it has always been in the
j past.
26 AGS Class
Nominees Listed
Twenty-six candidates for class
(officers were passed by the Asso
| ciated Greek Student screening
j committee Tuesday. The finalists
I for the ASUO genera leleetion
will be selected next Tuesday in a
I primary election, according to
i Larry Dean, AGS president.
The AGS Candidates
The candidates are;
Senior class president; Tom
Wrightson.
Senior representative; Gretchen
| Grefe, Mary Alice Baker. Ann Car
son, Jane Simpson, Francis Gill
| more.
! Junior class president; Clark
Miller, Bill Walker. Bob Morris,
I Bob Brittain, Don Almy.
Junior representative: Carolyn
1 McLean, Patricia Gustin, Jane Slo
cum, Patricia Ruan, Ann Diel
! Schneider.
Sophomore class president; Don
Gartrell, Andy Berwick. Bob Bos
|worth. Bob Summers. Alex Byler.
Sophomore representative; Rose
1 mary Hampton. Jacquelin Steuart,
Ann Gerlinger, Janet Miller, Joan
: Honeywell.
Nomination Assembly Thursday
At a nomination assembly 3:30
i Plea tr turn to page three)
Quorum Lacking
In Senate Meeting;
Later Date Set
The 20 members necessary to
j constitute a quorum were not pres
| ent at Tuesday night's scheduled
1ASUO senate meeting. ASUO
| President Bill Carey has scheduled
j-a senate meeting for 7 p.m. Thurs
; day.
i Informal discussion was held on
i
: a proposal made by Mike Lally for
j the order of names on the general
It's Not True
Kiimors that Merv Hampton,
ASl'O vice-president, had resigned
his position in the senate were de
nied by Hampton Tuesday night.
Hampton said that he had turn
ed in a resignation to Bill Carey,
ASl'O president, because of a
"personal matter.” but after con
sideration, changed his mind and
retracted it.
election ballot to be decided by po
litical parties in a drawing for the
positions. The proposal will be dis
cussed Thursday.
The committee on constitutional
changes will meet at 1 p.m. Thurs
day, Chairman Helen Jackson an
nounced. She asked that senators
with suggestion changes on the
•constitution submit their ideas to
her or to committee members Jane
j Simpson, Judy McLoughlin, Bill
! Frye or Pat Dignan.
| Carey emphasized the import
ance of senators attending senate
meetings, pointing out that several
important items of business re
mained to be considered by the
senate including the honor code,
all-campus election and constitu
tion changes.
Senators present were Bill
Carey, Mary Alice Baker. Janie
Simpson, A1 Karr, Judy McLough
lin, Arlo Giles. Virginia Wright,
Bob Boswortli, John Tonack, Bob
Glass, Bill Frye. Helen Jackson,
Pat Dignan. Rosamond Fraser,
Cece Daniels, Mike Lally, Joan
Abel, Tom Barry.
Polls Open af 9
For Voting Today
In USA Primary
Four candidates for the United
Students association nomination
for ASUO president will head the
list to be voted on in the USA pri
mary election today.
All students who are not mem
bers of any other campus political
organization are eligible to vote in
the election upon presentation of
their student body cards.
Polling booths will be located in
John Straub, Carson, Vets dorms,
the Co-op and the Student Union.
They will be open from 9 a m. to
6 p.m.
ASUO presidential candidates
are Don Collin, Herb Cook, Jim
Haycox and Helen Jackson.
Dick Davis is the only candidate
for the senior class presidential
nomination. Merle Davis and Do
lores Parrish are running for the
senior class senate representative
nomination.
Junior class president candidates
are Dick Hollenbeck, Ben Schmidt
and Tom Shepherd. Earl Fowler
and Bob Simpson are running for
the junior- representative post.
Sophomore class president nom
inees are Milan Foster and Don
P-otenberg. Aloys Biown. Judy E3
lefson and Mary Whitaker are on
the ballot for (he sophomore rep
resentative post.
Senate-at-large nominees are
Aloys Brown, Pat Choat Don Col
lin. Dick Davis. Merle Davis. Judy
Ellefson, Milan Foster. Earl Pow
ler. Jim Haycox. Dick Hollenbeck,
Helen Jackson, A1 Karr. Jim Lan
caster. Judy MeLoughlin. Peter
Moe, Don Rotenberg. Ben Schmidt,
f Please turn to pane seven)
_
Vodvil Schedule
Given Today
j Eliminations for the All-campus
Vodvil show will be held between
6:30 and 10:30 p.m. today and
Thursday in the Student Union and
Gerlinger annex.
' Living organizations who have
; not yet turned in the theme of
■ their act have been asked to do so
r before Wednesday's eliminations.
; Themes may be turned in to Pat
i Bellmer, Alpha Delta Pi. or Joanne
: Frobes. Carson hall.
The vodvil will be held April 25
| at 8 p.m. in McArthur court. Five
[men's and five women’s acts will
! be presented instead of six, as was
previously announced.
Women Try Out in SU
Women’s eliminations will vise
the following elimination schedule
and will take place today in the
Student Union ballroom:
Alpha Chi Omega. “A French
man in Eugene” 6:30: Alpha Delta
Pi, "Waiting for the Robert E.
Lee". 6:40; Alpha Gamma Delta,
"Dancing Midgets", 6:50: Alpha
Omicron Pi, “Cow Cow Boogie", 7
p.m.; Alpha Phi, "Life upon the
Wicked Stage”, 7:30: Alpha XI
Delta, "The Tri Foo". 7:20: Ann
Judson, "Women in Politics". 7:30;
Carson, “Tragedy in Blues". 7:40;
Chi Omega, “The House for Toys”,
7:50 p.m.
Delta Delta Delta, “Gill Crazy”,
S p.m.; Delta Gamma. "I Can
Smell It "Now”, 8:10; Gamma Phi
Beta, “Slaughter on 10th Avenue”,
8:20: Highland House, "Going Lion
Hunting”, 8:30; Kappa Alpha The
ta, "A Tram Named Desperation”,
8:40: Zeta Tau Alpha, “River
Boat”, 9 p.m.
Men's eliminations will be held
Thursday in Gerlinger annex.
Each house must turn in a writ
ten script when they appear for
eliminations.
A1 Barzman and Dick Othus
have been selected as masters of
ceremonies for the show.