Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 20, 1952, Page Seven, Image 7

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    SU Currents
SU To Observe
Changed Hours
During Vacation
Special hours will be observed in
the Student Union during Thanks
giving vacation. On Wednesday,
November 26, the building will
open at the regular hours, but will
close at 8 p.m. The various areas
of the building will close as fol
lows: Main desk, 7 p.m.; recrea
tion area, 7:30 p.m.; and food serv
ice, 7:45 p.m.
The SU will be closed all day
Thank: giving, Thui. day, Novem
ber 27. On Friday and Saturday.
November 28 and 29. the opening
and closing hours will be: building,
8 a.m. to 10 p.m.; main desk, 8 a.rn.
to 9 p.m.; recreation area, 2 p.m.
to 9:30 p.m.; and food service,
noon to 9:45 p.m.
Regular hours will be resumed
on Sunday, November 30.
• * *
Entertainment Planned
For Committee Meeting
The Student Union personnel
committee will meet at 6:30 and
7:30 tonight in the SU Dads'
Lounge. Entertainment will be pro
vided by the dance and music com
mittees.
Clyde Fahlman, chairman of the
SU Board, will give a demonstra
tion of group therapy. There will
be a roving mike and questions
will be asked. All students partici
pating in the SU program are in
vited to attend, Personnel Chair
man Andy Berwick said.
Early SU Closing
Slated for Friday
Due to the Oregon-Oregon State
game, the Student Union will close
at 11:30 p.m. on Friday and Satur
day nights. The snack counter will
stop serving at 11:15 pin.; the
main desk will close at 11 p.m.
Tickets on Sale
For Whiskerino
Beginning Today
Tickets for the annual Sopho
more Whiskerino to be held in the
SU ballroom Saturday evening,
Dec. (3, will go on sale in all men's
living organizations today accord
ing to Don Rotenberg and Mary
Anne Foster, co-chairmen of the
ticket committee.
Price of the tickets has been set
at $2 per couple. Sales in the liv
ing organizations will continue un
til Dec. 4. On Dec. 1, tickets will
go on sale in the Student Union
and in the Co-op.
Members of the ticket commit
tee are Anne Hill, Jerry Beall, Ter
ry O'Brien, Phil O'Keefe, Todge
Burns, Nancy Randolph, Sue An
derton and Julia Doherty.
Rotenberg urged the committee
members to pick up their tickets in
the SU from 3 to 5 p.m. today in
order that they may be distributed
to the living' organizations this
afternoon.
Positions Still Open
For Christmas Tea
Deadline for petitions for sub
chairmanships of the AWS Christ
mas tea, Dec. 6, is Friday noon.
Petitions should be turned in to
Jean Mauro at Alpha Chi Omega.
Chairmanships include food, dec
orations, invitations, publicity, pro
motion, collections, distribution
and program. Anyone wanting in
formation on the various commit
tees should call Miss Mauro.
Su Board Dissolves Old Policies;
Rulings Applied to Trophies, Forum
J nr< e obsolete policies woi'e dis
solvo«l l)y the Student Union board
Wednesday and two new policies
adopted to make clear policies
needing restatement.
Dissolved were the policy gov
erning the embos ograph, which i;
now handled by the SU administra
Events Planned
(Continual from I'nrjc one)
Oregon's rally squad will lead the
OSC section in calling out the
names of the OSO players as they
ate introduced; OSC's yell squad
will do the same for Oregon.
Plans had also been made for
• he letterman’s club from the two
schools to guard the goal posts fol
lowing the game, Dignan said
Wednesday. Order of O President
Jim Livesay could not be reached
Wednesday night to confirm the
plan.
Stay Off Field
A special leanest from Multno
mah stadium officials asking; that
students stay off the playing field
following the game has been made.
A telegram to Athletic Director
Leo Harris said this cooperation
was needed to help the stadium
prepare for the high school cham
pionship semi-final game between
Jefferson and Central Catholic to
be played on the field Saturday
night.
Campus clothes will be in order
for the game, Campus Social
Chairman Elaine Hartung has an
nounced, and for the various lunch
eons between Oregon and OSC liv
ing organizations scheduled to
precede the game.
The joint hands-off policy be
tween the two schools in regards
to vandalism on the two campuses
will be extended to Portland, it
was announced earlier in the
month by the two offices of stu
dent affairs. The agreement, made
eai-h year before the annual game,
stated that students apprehended
in activities resulting in property
damage will be liable for the cost
of repairing the damage and will
be suspended.
URC to Present
Assembly Program
"Thank We All," a dramatic pro
gram presenting Thanksgiving
from the pilgrims to 1952, will be
presented by the University Re
ligious council during the Tuesday
assembly hour next week in the
Student Union ballroom.
The Thanksgiving service, which
is being planned by Laura Leo
Newton, senior in sociology, will
include a cast and chorus made up
of representatives from all of the
campus religious groups.
lion because there was not enough
mil for the service last year; the
statement governing townspeople
participation in union activities,
which the board felt had no appli
cation to present problems or
needs; policy governing the loan
of records from the record lending
room as there is no set up for
lending records at the present
time.
Policy Statement
The new policy dealing with the
University social rulings reads:
"The Student Union board pro
gram operates within the frame
work of the rules, regulations and
procedures of the student affairs
committee.”
New policy concerning the four
St' chalk nge trophies extends the
time the trophies may be kept by
the living organizations to the end
of the term following the term
v.dien the trophy was awarded.
The executive committee was
given the authority to delegate a
chairman of any special event in
the program. Special events now
planned are bridge tournaments
and bowling tournaments. This ac
tion was taken by the board be
cause the area usually handling
special events, the recreation com
mittee, was dissolved earlier this
term.
Coffer Forum Addition
SIT Director Dick Williams is
handling the selection of a faculty
member to the coffee hour forum
committee. Appointment of a fac
ulty member to the committee was
approved at the last board meet
ing. Names of faculty members re
quested for the committee will be
cleared from the office of Univer
sity President H. K. Newburn.
Hoard Chairman Clyde Fahlman
appointed a special attractions
screening committee. Members of
the committee are: Dick Williams,
chairman; Paul Lasker; Virginia
Dailey; Bob Kully; George Hop
kins and Jim Livesay.
An SU social hour will be held
today at 6:30 p.m.
Married Students
To Meet Monday
University of Oregon married
students will meet for the first
time this year Monday at 7 :30 p.m.
in the Student Union.
Sponsored by the YMCA, the
meeting will be under the direction
of Charles Carter, graduate in edu
cation.
Spencer Snow, freshman in lib
eral arts, will sing for the group.
The married students will also see
slides of the Wallowa mountains
taken by Alvin Kaiser. The eve
ning will close with refreshments
and a social hour.
Married students who wish
transportation services or baby
sitting services should call the
YMCA office for assistance, ac
cording to Russell Walker, YM ex
ecutive secretary.
On The Air...
KWAX Reporter
Kappa Rho Omieron, UO radio j
honorary, has begun the selection
of the year's pledges Ken Warren,]
president of KRO, has announced.
Pledges are being notified this
week, and will attend the meeting
next Monday night at 9 p.m. Selec
tion of membership is based upon
outstanding work in radio.
The new pledges, who will be ini
tiated at the end of this term, will
participate in KRO’s annual Christ
mas show, “Uncle Charlie’’. This
program originates on KWAX, is
taped and sent to all radio stations
in Oregon.
Last year’s outstanding achieve
ment awards, presented at the
KRO banquet spring term, will be
on display for the next two weeks
in the KWAX studio, located on
the third floor, Villard.
"Lilliom,’’ from which the
Broadway musical "Carousel" was
taken, will be presented on Radio
Workshop at 4:30 p.m. today over
KWAX.
Under the direction of E. A.
Kretsinger, assistant professor of
speech, the drama has a cast of 11
— Lilliom, John Bree; Julie, Loanne
Morgan; Louise, Carolyn McLean;
Mrs. Muskat, Shirley Pettyjohn;
Mother Hollunder, Jeanette Stone;
Policeman, Bill Ruiter; Ficsur, Bill
Ruiter; Magistrate, Ben Padro;
annouoncer, Gordon Rennie; cash
ier, Gordon Rennie; and sound, Ben
Padro.
Thursday
5 p m. Sign On
5:02 I’iano Moods
5:15 U.N. Story
5:30 News Till Now
5:45 Sport Shots
6:00 Varsity Bandstand
6:15 Campus News
6:30 Kadlo Workshop Ilrama
7:00 Progressive Rythmns
7:30 American Folkways
8:00 Campus Classics
9:00 Serenade to the Student
9:30 Anything Goes
10:30 Emerald of the Air
10:35 There’s Music in the Air
10:55 Sign«Off
Anthology to Publish
Two Students' Poems
Poems written by two speech
majors will be published this year
in the Annual Anthology of Col
lege Poetry, according to an ac
ceptance slip received Wednesday.
“Foem" by Karl Harshbarger, a
junior from North Liberty. Iowa,
and “Vignette in Surrealism” by
Joseph Wolvek, a graduate student
from Brooklyn. N.Y.. were the two
accepted by the National Poetry
association.
"The Anthology,” wrote Dennis
Hartman, secretary, “is a compila
tion of the finest poetry written by
college men and women of Amer
ica.” It represents every section
of the country, and selections were
made from thousands of poems
submitted, he said.
. Pres. Harry Truman told
Congress Tuesday that American
arms shipments to Western Europe
slumped “considerably behind"
schedule in tlie first six months of
the year. But, he said, “real prog
ress was made in strengthening the
free world.”
r" " . =
© Campus Briefs
• Members of the Sophomi re
Whiskerino decoration rommitUe
will meet at 4 p.m. today in t >
•Student Union, according to J rn
Light. co-chairman.
• The University of Oregon
Young Republicans will meet at
6:30 tonight in the Student Union.
• Ralph I least is, head of the
Biology department, announces
that C. W. Clancy will discu s
"Ovary Transplants and Femr>
Sterility in Drosophila" at 4 .n.
Friday in 314 Science.
e Craig Wrath ford and Lin
Truax were admitted to the .iy
firmary Wednesday. Also confin d
to the infirmary are Stuart Olson,
Howard McGinnis, Ernest Eeig
-trom, Donald Wilkinson, Gary
McManus, James Massey. Erne st
Sellers, Phil Singleton, Barba; a
Risley. Julie Fuller and Lucille
Swaggert.
^Inter-Fraternity Council v. I
meet tonight at 6:30 p.m. in tee
Student Union. Fred Baltz. secre
tary and treasurer, said that it is
an important meeting and urges
all memers to attend.
Dr. Leland A. Huff
Optometrist
43 W. 8th Ave. Ph. 5-3525
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