Honor Roll Ulst of the I HO Oregon st udents on fall term honor roll appears on page two. ’ Vol. LIV JG1TAT m daily "EMERALD Fifty-third year of publication UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 7, 1953 Wet Weather Typical Oregon rain was fore cast by the U. S. weather bu reau for this week. Today will be cloudy with showers. NUMBER 46 SAM ADAMS Williams to Lecture • On Radical Leader William Williams, assistant pro fessor of history, will open the * winter term lectures in the Brows 1 ing room at 7:30 tonight dis . cussing Samuel Adams. !His lecture will deal with Ad ams, “Taproot of American Rad icalism,” and his activities as a major political leader prior to and during the revolutionary period of this country’s history. Carlisle Moore, associate professor of English, will conduct the discus sion following Williams’ address. In his first year of teaching at ' the University, Williams is the author of a new book, “American Russian Relations, 1781-1947," [published by Rinehart this fall. He was the United States rep resentative to the Carnegie In stitute at the world student con ference in Paris, France, during ' 1948. A member of the American his - torical association and the Missis sippi valley historical association, Williams did his graduate work i KWAX Staff Changes Set University radio station KWAX will begin its series of broadcasts this term Monday at 6 p.m. with 13 changes in the top staff. Students announced as staff L members for wintor term are John Bree, senior in speech, program di rector; Joanne Forbes, junior in speech, program coordinator; San dra Price, junior in speech, busi ness manager; Gordon Rennie, jun ior in speech, continuity director; Don Parr, junior in speech, special ’ events director; Jerry Shaw, sports director. , Dick Peterson, senior in speech, publicity director; Loanne Morgan, sophomore in speech, traffic man ager; Hugh Garrabrant, junior in business, chief announcer; Gordon Burtner, senior in speech, news ed ’ itor; Shirley Pettyjohn, senior in ! speech, office manager; Judy John son, freshman in liberal arts, rec ord librarian; Ken Whittle, junior in business, transmitter engineer. Hugh Garrabrant, chief an nouncer, will hold announcer and disc jockey auditions Wednesday, Thursday and Friday afternoons at 3. Staff members will meet tonight at 7 p.m. in the KWAX studios. Positions Open For Senior Bali | Petitions for Senior ball chair manships were called for Tuesday by Senior Class President Tom Wrightson. Committee chairmanships open include decorations, promotion, publicity, tickets, programs and chaperones. Preference will be given to seniors, Wrightson said, but all students may petition. Petitions may be picked up on the third floor of the Student Union. They should be turned in to , the ASUO office, the special events room of the SU or to Wrightson by Friday, Jan. 16. The Senior ball will be held Feb. 14. at the University of Wisconsin and received his PhD in 1950. Prior to his teaching assign ment at the University, he was in structor in American foreign re lations at Washington and Jeffer son college, special lecturer in American history at Bard college and visiting lecturer in American history at the University of Wis consin. Cash Waits Owner Are you broke? Not from the | expenses of the first of the term, but from losing money. Some money was found on eampus Monday and is now be ing held by Dorothy Evenden in the business office at Em erald Hail. ext. 200. The own er should be able to Identify Ihe approximate place where the money was lost and the amount. Theater Plans Election Party The election of a new University theater executive board will be held at the “UT Jamboree,” an nual winter term theater party scheduled for Sunday at 6 p.m. in Villard 102. A representative from each class will be named. Entertainment for the party, which is held for all students working at the theater, includes a showing of the movie “Hamlet” produced by Jim Blue, senior in liberal arts. Music, dancing and refreshments are also on the eve ning’s program. Nominees for representatives on the board are: freshmen, Ce cily Ley, liberal arts, David Sher man, journalism, Carol David, lib eral arts; sophomores, Judy Ellef son, speech, Betsy Thayer, liberal arts, John Jensen, speech; juniors, Sandra Price and Clarence Suitor, both speech majors; seniors, Bev erly Brunton, Donna Knoll, Phil Sanders and Jo Anne Forbes, all majors in speech and graduate students, A1 Kaiser, speech, Ben Padrow, English and Georgia Hemovitch, general studies. Beverly Brunton, senior in speech, and Phil Sanders, junior in speech, are chairmen for the event. Freshman Men Hear Discussion Of Frat Advantages, Rush Week Nearly 300 freshman men heard talks on the opportunities of fra ternity membership and the rules governing rush week at Tuesday evenir.g’s assembly in the SU ball room. Fredrick Hunter, ex-Chancellor of the State Board of Higher Edu cation and main speaker of the evening, emphasized the leadership which a fraternity offers. He com pared fraternity membership to “a three-year .course in leadership with training in the recognition and acceptance of authority, re sponsibility, and criticism.” Hunter said the idea of the fra ternity as "polite country club” was only a small part of its func tion. A film, “Toast to our Brother” was shown. Jim Harding, IFC vice-president, briefed the freshmen on the rules to be followed throughout the week. Men going through rush week will sign up for rush dates Monday from 2 to 5 and 7 to 10 p.m. Any freshman who has a 2 point GPA for twelve hours of credit is elig ible for rushing. Upperclassmen must have a 2 point GPA and a 2 point accumulative grade to be eligible. The rushees will have twelve dates during the week from Tues day through Friday with three dates each day. The time of the dates is lunch from 11:30 to 1 p.m.; dinner from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m., and evening from 7:30 to 10 p.m. Sat urday will be preference day when the rushees will pick up their bids. In order to change a date, the rushee should take his date card to the IFC office, 214 SU, between 9 1721 Students Complete Registration; Saturday Noon Deadline for Fees A total of 1721 students, slightly less than half -of the anticipated enrollment for winter term, had completed registration procedures and the payment of fees late Mon day, according to Clifford L. Con stance, registrar. No estimate of Tuesday’s figures was available. Payment of fees and the final steps of registration may be made up to 12 noon Saturday. A late payment fee will be assessed after that date. The last day for chang ing classes has been set for Jan. 19. Following that date, students who drop or change courses must obtain a grade in the course. Student body cards, received up on payment of tuition and fees, must be presented at the athletic department in McArthur court in order to obtain free athletic cards. These cards will be necessary for admission to this weekend’s games with Washington State college. Only 96 women and 349 men had obtained their cards by Tuesday afternoon, reported Bob Shetterly, senior in political science, and Jack Fahlman Named To Union Position Clyde Fahlman, Student Union board chairman and a senior in sociology, has been appointed to the student executive committee of the National Association of College Unions for the coming year. One of ten students selected for a position on the board, will also lead work shop session at the Association of College Unions’ national convention which will be held at Berkeley, Calif., in April. DU's Move to Philadelphia House; Sherry Ross Moves Back to Straub Philadelphia house is now occu pied by members of Delta Upsilon after a move that saw members of the co-op moving into the old DU house which has been purchased for them by a group of church or ganizations. Eighteen or twenty DU mem bers can be accommodated in their present quarters, the rest of the members are living at home or off campus, according to Ray Hawk, associate director of student af fairs. This arrangement will be have been moved from Hendricks annex and that the Sherry Ross group in the vets’ dorms will prob ably move back to John Straub hall this week. maintained until completion of the new DU house next fall. Hawk added that all women Adair, junior in business admin istration, who were issuing the cards. Walls Refinished In SU Rooms Refinishing of walls in the Stu dent Union in first, second and third floor meeting rooms and halls was done during the holiday vacation at a cost of about $2000, according to Dick Williams, direc tor of the SU. Constant moving of furniture caused damage to the plaster walls and necessitated the installation of Kalistron and micarta wall cover ing materials, Williams said. Walls of the first floor meeting rooms and the third floor hallway were lined from floor to ceiling with Kalistron, a new plastic ma terial. Walls of the second floor meeting rooms, adjacent to the ballroom, were covered with blue micarta to the height of about five feet. Physical plant employees during the holiday period repaired cracks in the walls in several places, caus ed by the gradual shrinkage of concrete brick. Employment Low For Winter Term Part time jobs for students “are rather quiet this term” according to Miss Shirley Sylvester of the student employment office. The slack in job opportunities follows the high employment of students over the Christmas vacation. The outlook for summer employ ment is better said Miss Sylvester. Summer jobs for men in the na tional forest service at Yellow stone park and for men and wom en over 21 in hotel work at a Colo rado resort are presently available. Notification of other summer work, including canneries, should be made soon, she added. Students may register now for this and other types of work at the employ ment office. a.m. and 11:30 a.m. on Tuesday or from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Wednes day through Friday. Open rushing will begin one week after the formal rush week closes. The same rules will regu late that period. 36 Pledged Fall Term Thirty-six men pledged 15 fra ternities during fall term open rushing, the office of student af fairs announced. Pledged were: Alpha Tau Omega—Ron Pheis ter, Paul Poetsch and Harlan Thoreson; Beta Theta Pi—Paul Hales and Harold Reeves; Delta Tau Delta—John Gregor, Ronald Monroe, Richard Neifert., Keith Robertson and Robert Schafer; Kappa Sigma — Douglass Talbot; Lambda Chi Alpha—Lynn Emrick; Phi Gamma Delta—Jack Profitt; Phi Kappa Psi—Phillip Dixon and Lawrence Kleinsmith. Phi Sigma Kappa—Ronald Mil ler; Pi Kappa Alpha—Alvin Bus by, Bernard McMahon, Edward Morris, Richard Morse, Ray My rick, Jr., Clarence Suiter, Richard Swennes and George Weseman; Sigma Alpha Epsilon — Charles Coulter; Sigma Chi—Manning and Merritt Barber; Sigma Nu—Ward Cook; Sigma Phi Epsilon—Duane Allan, Ralph Ettel, Jr., Trenton Huls and Leslie Maxson; Tau Kap pa Epsilon—Harvey Eppstein, Dan Meeker and Randolph Middleton; Theta Chi—Leo Naapi. Seven Ma/ce Law Honor Grade List Seven students made the law school honor roll fall term, accord ing to Dean Orlando J. Hollis. A cumulative grade point average of 3 point or higher covering all work done in the school of law is needed to make the special honor roll. William E. Dushaime and Steve A. Tyler headed the third year class. The three top men in the second year class were James L. Hershner, Malcolm F. Marsh, and Malcolm J. Montague. William T. Linklater and John R. Gill earned top rating in the first year class. YW Service Group To Meet Thursday Women interested in working on the projects sponsored by the YWCA service committee should attend a meeting of the committee at 4 p.m. Thursday at the YW, Sharon Anderson, service chairman has announced. Topics which will be discussed by the group include the YW’s work in the children’s hospital school, the big sister program, the charm school for junior high school students, work at the juvenile de tention home, helping displaced persons adjust to the English lan guage, the YW co-operative nurs ery and the Westmoreland teen age canteen projett.