Flood Aid . . . Wednesday Is the deadline for contributing aid to the flood-rav aged town of Bergen op Zoom in The Neth<>rlunds, home of former University student Wlm Van Kekeren. Hoc the editorial on page two. \ OLl.MK MV I Huskies ... . . . reported to have strangle hold on NCAA tournament berth. See sports page for de tails. NUMBER 70 Dance Instructor Illustrates Talk On 'Movement' 'Emotion Expressed By the Way We Move' "Movement is involved in all aspects of what wc do," stated i ' Betty Meredith-Jones, dance in J. structor at the University of Cali fornia during her SU lecture • Monday. Speaking on "Movement and Dance in the Arts," Miss Mcre dith-Jones added, “We show a tre . mendous lot about ourselves in the way we move.” Miss Meredith-Jones illustrated phases of emotional expression through movement. She comment ed. "The strongest influence on 1 movement is emotion.” Children Uninhibited Children are uninhibited in their early years and it is after other patterns of action have been super-imposed on them that styl ized movement results, according to the dancer. "The time lias come," stated Miss Meredith-Jones, "to find this common denominator of move f- ment among people, which will lead to greater understanding. We must understand uhere movement begins from the inside." elaborating upon the relation - ship of movement to many fields, .» Mi s Meredith-Jones said that the artist must think in terms of • movement and here, as an ex ample, movement approaches the arts. - Three Factors The speaker listdU three factors which must be considered in • movement: creating tension, or the amount of weight or strength in the movement; speed- of move | ment, and terms of space, or the f area of movement. f "These three factors are the Visible oneq," she added. “All movements ;are combinations of them in vaA'ing degrees." In the bag:c scale of movement, the dancer ^explained, there is an "alphabetical" language with (I lease turn to page three) JOHNNY REITZ Heart Attack ♦ ♦ ♦ Tickets On Sale For Senior Ball Tickets for the all campus semi formal senior ball, "Heart At tack," will be on sale all this week, according to general chair man Tom Wrightson. The dance will be held Saturday night in the Student Union ball room. Tickets will be sold in the SU and Co-op at $2.50 a couple and during flying speeches in the liv ing organizations. Johnny Reitz and his band will play for the first all-campus for mal dance this year. Corsages are not in order for the affair, according to Elaine Hartung, campus social chairmart. Weatherman Says More Frost Due Sun may have been shining the past couple of afternoons, mak ing it appear to be spring, but a brief investigation of the tem perature shows it's far from it — at least for a while. More of Monday’s frost and fog is predicted for this morning. The mercury registered 29 de grees in Eugene Monday morn ing. The fog was general over the Willamette valley. High today will be 53 degrees, the low will be 28 degrees. Morn ing fog is to be replaced by some cloudiness in the afternoon. HOWARD LEMONS Who Runs the I/O? Howard Lemons, athletics business manager, has been at Oregon i -in his present post since he grEduftted in 1948 from the University with a bachelor of science in economics, f Lemons will leave the UO at the end of this academic year. He is resigning after five years as ath letic business manager. The athletic business office is re sponsible for all ticket sales, game management and the accounting and budget control of the athletic office. There are two staff mem bers in Lemons’ office. The appointment of Lemons as business manager was made when Anse Cornell resigned to go into business for himself. Lemons took office in April of 1948. During his first year as keeper of the Webfoots’ purse strings, the athletic business manager watched the Oregon team play to some of the largest crowds in history— against Michigan in Ann Arbor and against Southern Methodist ■j[t\ Dallas. \ Taft Informs Radio Audience He Supports China Blockade VP) — Senate majority leader Robert Taft of Ohio said Monday that he will back the Eisenhower administration in any move it makes in the Far East. Taft, during a radio broadcast, said he had no official information coat a blockade of Red China is planned, but stated that he would support such a naval action. After a conference with Presi dent Eisenhower earlier Monday, Taft said that the administration apparently is not- considering a frontal-attack in Korea. He added, "there are other ways of prodding the reds toward peace." The Ohio senator commented that he “personally favors the “Mac Arthur plan" of bombing red bases in Manchuria and using Chinese Nationalist troops. Meanwhile the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, General Omar Bradley, is reported to have said he believes ships bound for Red China could be stopped and forced to unload contraband material without touching off a war. Speaking to the senate armed services committee, Bradley made his comment when asked what might happen if a ship from Fin land now reported headed for China with jet fuel ^rom Romania were bombed. The General stated "Such a move would be regarded as an act of war.” But, he added, the Chi nese Nationalists recently halted a British freighter and forced it to sail into a Nationalist port ROBERT TAFT Blockade What Do You Think... ... of Student Government? Gail Atest, freshman in business, said: “One of the biggest improvements that could be made would be to change the preferential system of voting. I think this system is undemocratic because too many good candidates lost out.” COMMITTEES MEET Ducks Plan Preview Initial plans for the 1953 Duck Preview will be discussed at a special committee meeting in the Student Union today at 4 p.m. The meeting is being called by Sunny Allen and Bob Summers, general co-chairmen, visor to the group, will follow. The following chairmen for Duck Preview have been asked to attend the meeting: Sally Hay den, promotion; Bob Pollock, cam pus promotion; Joe Gardner, pub licity; Martin Brandenfels, and Al lison Le Roux, invitations. Jim Light, program chairman; Patty Fagan, vodvil co-ordinator; Sylvia Wingard, educational ex hibits; Ann Gerlinger and Don Crawford, exchange dinners; Nancy Randolph, luncheon, and A1 Goldenberg, dance. 'Salesman Drama' Attracts Full House Performances of “Death of a Salesman” both Friday and Satur day nights were “sellouts,” accord ing to Mrs. Gene Wiley, University theater business manager. Tickets for Wednesday’s per formance are all sold except for a few singles, but a few tickets for Thursday, Friday and Saturday are still available. Janet Miller, hospitality; Ron Rickets, transportation; Rosemary Hampton, registration; Kay Moore, housing; Dorothy Kopp, women's housing, and Gary Jones, men’s housing. where a cargo of steel intended for Red China was unloaded. No official protest was made against the action. In England, the foreign office has come out flatly against a Red China blockade. A spokesman said that the British feel such a move would be “dangerous, ineffective, politically unwise and possibly more harmful to the western al lies than to the Chinese Commun ists.” Despite such expressions of alarm by England and France, congressional sentiment in favor of the blockade appears to be building up. Oregon Convicts Riot at Salem A riot broke out at the Oregon State prison Monday night when rebellious convicts grabbed four guards as hostages. Guards armed with tear gas are trying to quell the riot, so far con fined to the isolation section, Five Hostages Held _ At press time, five guards were still being held hostage by the rioting convicts and War den O’Malley was still talking to the prisoners. Fifty guards, equipped with rifles and tear gas guns, had the cell block sur rounded. where 30 of the prison’s most troublesome convicts are held. The day guard crew had been called back to the prison late Mon day night, but at that time no calls for state police reinforce ments had been made. Guards did not know or would not say what touched off the trouble. Deputy Warden Lawrence O’Brien and Guard Captain Roy Herder were inside the prison as sisting Warden Virgil O’Malley di rect the attempt to free the hos tages. A guard said it is unusual for all three of the prison’s top officials to be inside the walls during a disturbance. SU Assembly Features Adler Address Today Mortimer J. Adler, professor of the philosophy of law at the Uni versity of Chicago, will speak on the topic “Art and Aesthetics” at 1 p.m. today in the Student Union ballroom. His appearance on the campus is one of the features of the Festival of Contemporary Arts. One of the most important men in the American field of education, Adler has long been affiliated with the Great Books, a 54 volume set of 443 books. Adler’s research and writing have been mainly in the fields of psychology and philosophy. A coffee hour forum featuring Adler will be held at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Dads’ lounge of the SU., according to Karl Harshbar ;er, chairman of the coffee hour MORTIMER ADLER Aesthetics forum committee. Free coffee will be served.