Pledge List. . . ... for winter term rush week ap pears on Page 8 or todays Emer ald. The lint was compiled by the office of student affair*. n daily EMERALD 39 Fifty-third year of publication UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1953 Showers . . . ... today and tonight with winds reaching speeds of 35 to 40 miles per hour are predicted by the United States weather bureau. High today will be 52 degrees, low tonight 45 degrees. NUMBER 55 Volume I.IV RE WEEK OPENS SUNDAY Dinner tickets Now Available i I lu- program for the annual campus religious evaluation week will open Sunday evening in the Student Union anrl con tinue through Thursday, Jan. 29. 'Pickets for the opening dinner meeting at 6 p.m. in the SU are available only through advance registration. Tickets will he placed in all living organiaztions. Martha Walter, tickets Griffis fo Speak In SU Tonight University students interceded in advertising will have an oppor tunity to hear a person in the field discuss “Careers in Adver tising" tonight at 7:30 in the Stu dent Union. George Griffis, vice president of the Advertising Association of the West, is the speaker for the meet ing, the first in a series planned by the campus advertising frat ernities, Gamma Alpha Chi and Alpha Delta Sigma. Griffis has been in the adver tising business 23 years and is di rector of plans and merchandising for the Pacific National adver tising agency in Portland. Indian Newsman Slates Forum Talk On Caste System Oregon students will have an opportunity to question a represen tative of India on such subjects as communism in India and the caste system at a coffee hour forum to be held today at 8 p.m. in the Dad’s Lounge of the Student Union. Sudhaker Bhat, noted Indian newspaperman, is being brought to the campus by the International Relations club and the SU coffee hour forum committee. | chairman, may be contacted at Delta Gamma. "Shaking of the Founda tions” is the theme of the week's program which is made ; tip of addresses by leading re j ligious leaders, luncheons, fire side dinners and discussions. ; The theme deals with the as | pects of religion which aid in ; dealing with the communist men | ace and other world problems. This year the program is con centrating on the basic religions, Christianity and Judaism, in con trast to the parliament of world religions stressing Eastern reli gions which made up the program last year. Speakers have been chosen for scholastic and other qualifications rather than a de nominational basis although a ma jority of the better known denom inations will be represented. Houses will have a choice of a date for their fireside rather than a speaker because of the limited number of speakers available. Religious evaluation week is co sponsored by the Religious and Spiritual Activities committee, the University Religious Council, and the Religious Directors associa tion. It will incorporate the regu lar Sunday evening meetings of the religious groups on campus, -the Wednesday evening browsing room program and the fireside programs of the various living or ganizations. Willamette, Tributaries Crest, Flood Lowlands The Willamette and its tribu taries crested upstream early Mon day above flood stage, but, accord ing to army engineers, water con tained in the new Cottage Grove and Dorena dams kept the river two feet below the level it would have reached. The flood crest at Eugene with out the dams would have been 15.8 feet instead of 13.9. The engineers added that the Lookout Point dam, now under construction, would have kept the crest to 9.5 feet. In the Glenwood area between Eugene and Springfield, where evacuations were made Sunday, things were reported “back to nor mal” by Walter Steen, Red Cross disaster chairman in the area. “We had the health inspectors here by 8:30 this morning and were moving trailers back by 9,” Steen said. He reported that very little damage had been done in the area. Most of the roads closed Sunday afternoon are now open. Highways 99S, 58 and 97 are open as is high way 36 to the coast. Highway 99E is open going north while state highway 38 is closed by slides from Drain to Reedsport. On the Oregon coast, highway 101 is open to Coos Bay, but closed just south of Coquille. The coast highway is also closed north of Depoe Bay. All roads in the imme diate vicinity of Eugene were re ported open at 5 p.m. Monday. SU Student-Faculty Social Hour Today Students and faculty will have a chance to get together on an in formal basis today in the Student Union from 4 to 5 p.m. The event is the Associated Women students Apple Polishing party, being held this year for the first time. Light refreshments will be served. Gov. Patterson Slates Address To Oregon Dads Paul Patterson, governor of Ore-, gon, will be the guest speaker at the Dad’s Day luncheon Feb. 7 in the Student Union ballroom, John Gamiles, general chairman of Dad’s Day,, has announced. “A Date With Dad,” submitted by Marilyn Patterson, junior in j speech, will be the theme for the weekend. The theme will be car ried out in the sign contest and decorations, Gamiles said. Miss Patterson is also writing the letter to d4d which will be published in the Emerald later in the week. Deadline for petitions for com mittees is 5 p.m. today. Petitions ! may be picked up in the ASUO box j on the third floor of the SU, and returned here or in room 303 of the SU, the special events office. Committees to be petitioned for j are reception and hospitality, sign j contest, ticket sales, luncheon, pro motion and publicity. Gamiles urged all students to write personal letters to their dads, in addition to cutting out the Em erald letter when it is published. The letter will be an open letter to Dad, with space reserved for a per sonal note to be added by the re spective senders. Erich Mendelsohn, Architect, To Speak On Oregon Campus An internationally known archi tect, a pioneer in contemporary style, will be the guest of the art and archcitecture school next week on campus. He is Erich Mendelsohn, who is being brought to the school as part of its policy to bring outstanding people in architecture to the cam pus for lectures and criticism. Mendelsohn will arrive Thurs., Jan. 29, and remain for the rest of the week. The architect will speak on ‘‘My Contribution to Contemporary Ar chitecture” Friday evening, Jan. SO, at S p.m. in the auditorium of the science building. The Einstein Tower, designed by Mendelsohn, brought him interna tional fame in 1921. Previous to this time he had made a series of sketches which were widely ad mired. Receiving his degree in ar chitecture in 1912, Mendelsohn de signed new stores for the Schocken department store chain, which are considered to be among his best work for that period. In the early ‘30’s, he went to England and, in conjunction with Serge Chermayeff, he designed the DeLaWarr Pavilion at Bexhill. Mendelsohn came to the United States in 1941 and settled in San Francisco. He has designed works in St. Louis, Cleveland and San Francisco since that time. Mendel sohn is also the author of a num ber of books and articles on mod ern architecture. STUDENTS TOO BUSY? . Two Dances Cut By Committee The Mortar Board Ball and the Military Ball were abolished by the student affairs committee Monday. The two major dances will be eliminated beginning with the academic year 1953-54. The decision was made after a student sub-committee rec ommended a decrease of the number of student activities be cause they acted as a drag on a student’s time and en ergy.” A sub-committee recommen dation that all class dances, with the exception of the Jun ior Prom, be eliminated in favor of a single dance put on by the combined classes was referred back to the sub-commit tee for further study. Marian Briner, president of Mortar Board, senior women’s honorary, said Monday night that a Mortar Board Ball is planned for this year. Concerning elimin ation of next year’s ball, Miss Briner said: Look First “We had hoped that we might look at the success of this year’s ball before deciding. We wanted to let next year’s group decide for themselves.’ ’ Alan Babb, president of Scab bard and Blade, military honorary and sponsor of the Military Ball, said Monday: “Because of the lack of funds this year I really had no argu ment.” Babb said that the mili tary honorary still desired to re tain the privilege of holding the dance Tom Wrightson, senior class president, and Bob Summers, jun ior class president, expressed op position to an all-class dance at the student affairs committee meeting. Elimination of the Mortar Board Ball and the Military Ball leaves the number of major all-campus dances at 4. Splif-ballof Talk Continues Today The faculty-student constitution al committee, meeting Monday to consider the constitutionality of the freshman "split ballot” meas ures, adjourned until 3 p.m. today without making a decision. According to E. S. Wengert, head of the political science de partment and newly appointed committee member, main reason for postponement of a decision was the absence of one of the commit tee’s student members. He said he expected a decision would be reached today. The committee is considering the ballot measure at the request of the ASUO senate, which passed the ruling Nov. 6. At that time Mrs. Helen Jackson Frye, ASUO , vice-president and head of the freshman election com mittee, objected to the split ar rangement, whereby the ballot is divided into two sections, one for candidates for president (with the runner up to be vice-president) and one for class representatives. The minutes of the Nov. 6 sen ate meeting state that she “pointed out that the constitution stated the candidate with the highest number of votes will be president and the candidate with the second highest number vice president.” In her opinion if the ballot were di vided "we would be electing two presidents and two vice presi dents.” Appeal of Deportation Set for UO Chinese Prof The appeal of Shu-Ching Lee, associate professor of sociology, will be given a hearing before the Board of Immigration Appeals Jan. 28. Lee, whose request for suspen sion of deportation was refused by Congress, will be represented at the hearing in Washington D.C. by J. H. Krug, former secretary of UO Theater Holds Tryouts for Comedy Tryouts for Oliver Goldsmith's comedy, “The Mistakes of a Night”, will be held today at 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. in Villard 102, Mrs. Ottilie Seybolt, director of the pro duction, has announced. The tryouts are open to all uni versity students. Previous acting experience is not essential. The play, University theater’s fourth production of the current season, will be presented in the arena theater Feb. 27, 28, March 2, to 7 and 9 to 12. the interior, who is now practicing law. “There is not a serious likelihood of immediate deportation, however, even if all appeals fail,” Joel V. Berreman, professor of sociology reported, adding that it is not the policy of this country to deport a person to a country that the U.S. does not recognize. If all appeals should fail Lee would not be deported until such time as the U.S. recognizes the new regime in China, or until an other regime is in power. “But this leaves Dr. Lee in a state of some uncertainty,” Berreman said. There is also a long-range pos sibility, Berreman said, in a bill that is now being considered to give political asylum to citizens of unfriendly countries. This, how ever, would involve quite a length of time and would be uncertain. “The Portland office has re assured us,” he added, ’’that the immigration service does not de port Chinese citizens to Formosa.”