SU Currents Bombay Writer To Tell Indian View On Korea India, the caste system, the Indian attitude toward its present rulers a d the Indian outlook on the Korean war will be the subjects discussed by Sudhaker Bhat, journalist from the The Bombay Times of India, in a coffee hour forum to be held in the Dad's Lounge of the Student Xj'iiion Tuesday at S p.m. Bhat's campus appearance is under the co-sponsorship of the SI coffee hour forum committee and the International Relations club. T> is is another example of the ir ique opportunities Oregon stu dents have of questioning well own. informed men in their own particular fields, according to Kail K.irshbarger, coffee hour chair man. The India journalist has been For the Best in fish and seafoods Call 4-2371 NEWMAN'S FISH MARKET Fresh, frozen and canned fish and seafoods 39 East Broadway H EMC .Si Now Through Saturday PRISONER OF ZENDA’ Stewart Granger Deborah Iverr STARTS SUNDAY Robert Taylor in “ABOVE AND BEYOND” r MAYFLOWER MS HU 8r-AL'DFP. DUVl 5-IOZZ NOW THROUGH SATURDAY “THE BIO SKY" Starring Kirk Douglas STARTS SUNDAY “THE MAN IN THE WHITE SUIT” Starring Alex Guinness brought to this country by the state department under the Ameri can Leadership Program which has chosen him as an outstanding representative of his country. Re cently Bhat has been working in Portland with the Oregonian in which two of his articles have ap peared. He is coming here as part of a preview of the American col lege educational program. During his visit to the campus. Bhat will visit various depart ments in the University in addition to appearing at the coffee hour forum. Free coffee will be served. File Petitions For 4 SU Posts, Zavin Requests A final appeal for petitions to fill Student Union committee chairmanships has been made by Don Zavin, vice-chairman of the SU board. Recently vacated chairmanships of the recorded music and art gal lery committees are still open to ; petitioning according to Zavin. Also being sought are special J events chairmen for the Intercol legiate Billiard tournament, March 5 to 19. and the National Intercol legiate Bridge tournament, Feb. 19 to 21. Petitions for these positions may be picked up in SU 310 and 301. Deadline for petitioning is Friday at 5 p.m. 4 More Students Win Honor Status Four students have been added to the fall term honor roll, the’ office of student affairs has an nounced. The omission of the names from the original list was due to late grades, the office said. The students are Janice May, senior in English; Robert Hooker, junior in political science; Eliza beth McLlveen, freshman in Eng lish and Barbara Gardner, senior in mathematics. 'Apple Polishing' Party is Tuesday - The Apple Polishing party, an informal get-together for faculty and students sponsored by AWS, will be held Tuesday from 4 to 5 : p.m. in the Dad’s Lounge of the ■ Student Union. Closer acquaintance among stu i dents and faculty members is the object of the party, said Dorothy Kopp, chairman. Light refreshments will be serv ed, and campus clothes will be in order. . ATTENTION STUDENTS MONDAY, JAN. 19th is the last day for returning textbooks for full refund U of O Co-op Store Social Calendar Winter term 1953 January 14-1 (J Amphibian Pageant 17 YWC A Waffle Breakfast 24 Frosli Snowball 25-29 Religious Emphasis Week. 27 Smart) Party 30 Lemon Orange Squeeze Februa ry 7 Dad’s Day 7 International Fun Fest ival 13 Co-Rec night I 4 Senior Ball 20 Heart Hop 25 Women's elections 27 IRL Conference 27 WRA Carnival March 4 Women’s Installations 7 Military Ball 13 Closed period 16- 21 Final Exam Period 17- 22 High School State Bask etball Tournament Spring Term 1953 April 3 Good Friday 5 Easter Sunday 10-12 YWCA Retreat 19 Jr.-Sr. Breakfast 24-25 Duck Preview May 9 Junior Prom 10 Junior Weekend and Mother’s Weekend 9 All-campus sing 23 Mortar Board Bail 30 Memorial Day June 5 Closed Period 8-13 Final Exam Period 13 Alumni Day 14 Baccalaureate and Com mencement Chairmen Desired For Senior Ball Petitions for Senior Ball chair manships must be turned in to the ASUO office, the special events room of the Student Union or to Senior Class President Tom Wrightson at Chi Psi by 5 p.m. Friday, Wrightson has announced. Preference will be given to sen iors for the following chairman ships: decorations, promotion, pub licity, tickets, programs and chap erones. The Boston Bruins of the Na tional Hockey league played 14 straight games without defeat in 1930 before the New Yolk Ameri cans stopped them. New Freshmen Honor Society Will Initiate Twenty-Nine Twenty-nine University women and two honorary members will be initiated Jan. 22 as charter mem bers of Alpha Lambda Delta, na tiortal scholastic honorary for fieshmen women. Miss Lida Spragins, dean of women at Southern Methodist uni versity and national president of the honorary, wtll be on campus to install the chapter here. The charter members must have scored a grade point average of 3,5 or above at least once during • Campus Briefs j ^ The Women’s Field Hockey association will hold a dinner meet ing at 5:30 p.m. today on the sun porch in Gerlinger hall. Features of the meeting will be election of officers for the coming year and the discussion of plans for the com ing year, according to Jackie Say lor, secretary of the group. 0 The pre-nursing club will hold a special noon meeting Friday at Wesley house. Members bring a sack lunch. ^ l’anhellenlc will meet today at 4 p.m. in the Student Union to plan winter term rush for women. KWAX to Feature European Reports Two reports on conditions in Europe and a radio workshop dra ma will highlight tonight's sched ule. of KWAX broadcasts, which is as follows: C :03- Piano Moods G:10i News Till Now p:15 Sports Shots comments by Jerry Shaw on local and na tional sports events. 6;30 Musician Comments Philip A. Dewey speaks on “What Puts Glee in a Glee Club.” 6:45 Report From Europe A Visit to Paris 7 p.m.—People Under Commu nism Merle Fainsod moderates "Terror as a System of Power." 8 p.m. Campus Classics Porgy and Bess 9 p.m. Radio Workshop—"Soli tary Singer” written by Karl Harshbarger 9:30 Kwaxwoi’cs their freshman year. The two hon oiary members, both Phi Bet i Kappas, are Golda Wickham, di rector of women's affairs, and Marie Mason, instructor in math ematics. They will be faculty ad visors of the honorary. Alpha Lambda Delta is for freshmen women, bat the charter members are selected from the three upper classes In order to es tablish the chapter. After installa tion, only freshmen women will be pledged. The first pledging of the first-year women will be dar ing winter term. Sylvia Wingard, sophomore in business, lias been elected presi dent of the group. Other Officers include Aileen Kronquist, sopho more in English, vice president; Laura Harper, sophomore in liber al arts, secretary; Judith Harris, sophomore in psychology, treasur er; Jackie Saylor, sophomore in liberal arts, historian; Anne Gentle, senior in general social studies, senior advisor, and De Wanda Hamilton, junior in Eng lish, junior advisor. Formal installation banquet will be held in the Student Union ball room Jan. 22, according to Mrs. Wickham. There are now some G8 chapters of the national scholastic honor ary in the United States. Pledges of the honorary are Miss Gentle, Maxine Nuttman, senior in history; Sally Hayden, junior in business; Cathy Tribe, | junior in business; Marian Casts. sophomore in music; Stephanie Scott, senior in art; Joanne Walk er, senior in English; Sally Pal mer, junior in business; Shirley Shupe, junior in English, and Di anne David, sophomore in liberal arts. • Others include Miss Harris, Betsy Thayer, sophomore in lib eral arts, Kathleen Ackerman, i senior in music; Vera Paugh, sen ior in foreign languages; Miss Hamilton; Janet Shaw, senior in English; Vanda Jane Randall, junior in English; Miss Harper; Pat Ward, senior in general social studies; and Miss Wingard. Also pledged are Joan Marie Miller, junior in liberal arts; Dor othy Pederson, junior in music; Miss Saylor; Laura Sturges, soph omore in journalism; Virginia Ra | bick, junior in music; Jackie War ! dell, sophomore in journalism; Hope Ecklund, senior in history; Miss Kronquist, and Mary Whit aker, sophomore in liberal arts. Oregon—Way Back When By Ann Ritchey Emerald Reporter When French bobs were the mode, women were thinking about smoking and “Oh, you kids” was about the cleverest answer to any thing, our parents were going to college and . .. guess what ... get ting into all kinds of trouble! One adventurous freshman male made front-page copy in a 1920 Emerald by his playful painting of the administation building lamps. They were made a beautiful freshman green, in keeping with the strict campus traditions of the time. He was. no doubt, responding to an editorial in which the class had been reprimanded for not ob serving the green-hat custom. A look into Mother or Dad’s re cord collection might reveal copies of some of the song favorites, such as “Avalon” or “My Man fox trot.” Played on an Edison grapho phone, these classics were sung by a toich singer or Rudy Vallee. , The cultural side of education was taken care of nicely by private dancing academies and piano schools that taught the latest in “real jazz.” For those students who didn't go to the academies, the proper form of dancing was taught right on the campus. Spacing her pupils 10 inches apart dependent upon the size of the partners”, the physical education teacher who taught the course insisted upon j both partners extending their arms in almost a “straight line.” “Cheek” dancing and the practice of the partners looking over one another’s shoulder were vigorous ly discouraged. Oregon wasn't doing too well in sports about this time, for Paci fic university’s biggest goal of the j year was to beat us in football .. . j which they did. The school administration was really anxious to change students I during this period, for reports by i the infirmary doctors and physical | education teachers revealed that most university students, both male ! and female, were about 15 to 23 percent underweight. This they de cided to correct by making students | quit eating meat and smoking. Entertainment was either hilari ously funny (slapstick) or flashy and feminine in nature. Advertised in nearly every issue of the Emer ald was George White’s Scandals of 3919, and a popular movie with students was Charlie Chaplin in “The Kid.” Adolphe Menjou, too, came for his share of attention with “For Sale.” In order to get students to attend a mixer with a county fair theme, the Emerald ran an editorial re peating a charge made by .some one that University of Oregon stu dents know no other way to enter tain themselves socially than to dance. The dancing was carried to such an extreme that the punish ment for girls who did not make 2 point GPA’s was that they not be allowed to attend dances! Another criticism made of uni versity students was one that prob ably sounds familiar to many of us that the students had very poor English usage. Spelling and sentence construction were consid ered especially appalling. Along about 1930 things became more daring, and women began smoking in earnest. In fact many of them acquired the habit. Ad vertisements became common in the Emerald pages, and almost every cigarette ad pictured a wo man enjoying her recently-acquired freedom. The university was shocked, in 1934, when prohibition’s repeal chai ged a few things ip Eugene. Near the campus area alone, three restraunts were guilty of selling beer, and many stories were writ ten urging students not to patro nize these places.