Senior Ball Set for Saturday Night in Ballroom Partly Cloudy . . . . . • In the weather foreeast for today with an expected high of 58 deg. F. and low tonight Of 33 deg. r. High and low tem peratures Thursday were 51 deg. and 3(1 deg. F. VOLUME L1V See Story Columns 4 and 5 Valentine's Day . . . . . . history and similar holidays in foreign countries are de^ c rilied on page 7 of today’s Emerald. /■ijly-joiif lli year of Publication UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1853 NUMBER 7* Group Plans 'Heart Attack' Members <.f tiic »nlor Ball committee get In Id In tlx si hallrn >m Saturday night, ais-i Mike Dally. Seated, left to right, arc l«.rf*s Farris i. .tlrmuirs of tin* committee lyn Silva. together to complete plans for “Heart Attack' t:i he Standing, left to right. are Dick Davis, Joan Marie .Miller Franca Oillmore, I uni \\ rightson, Jane Simpson and Do not pi< lured are Laura FearsOn, Harriet Valley and Caro AWS SENIORS PROTEST Senate Plans Investigation The legality of nominations for officers of the Associated Wom en Students was questioned in a letter read by Jane Simpson, sen ate secretary, before the ASUO senate during its meeting Thurs day night. Signed by 20 senior AWS mem bers, the letter expressed the feel ing that the nominations were not carried out in the spirit or the letter of the AWS constitution. The clause cited in the letter reads as follows: "At an executive coun cil meeting at the first of the win ter term, the president shall ap point a nomination committee which shall include all senior mem bers of the executive council." Miss Simpson made it clear that methods of nominations rather than personalities involved were being questioned in the letter. A committee to investigate the nom nations was then appointed by Pat Dignan, ASUO president. Members of the committee are Mary Alice Baker, chairman, Bob McCracken, Mary Whitaker and Janet Miller. Voting Kxplalned A detailed explanation of the preferential voting system was given to the senate members by Donald M. DuShand, director of student affairs. According to Du Shane, the system has the follow ing advantages: 1> eliminates a series of election runoffs; 2i as sures majority control; and 3) as sures minority representation. Tom Shepherd, junior class vice What Do Y©rj Think... ... of Student Government? Malcolm Montague, graduate student in law, said: “I think it is a very good thing, hut it’s restricted too much |*y the administration. Although the student officers are sincere in their desire to serve the students, the University puts too obstacles in their way.” many Annua! Mystie Safe Set fer Next "Have a Golden Krispie Mystie” lias been chosen as the slogan for -the annual mystic sale sponsored’ by Phi Theta Upsilon, junior wom en's service honorary. The sale is •scheduled for Thursday and Fri day of next week. According to tradition, the item to be sold is kept a secret until the time of the sale. Chairmen for the event are Marilyn Fairish, freshman in( liberal arts, and Do reen Gienger, freshman in educa tion. The sale is to be held in con junction with Women's Day, Feb. 20. president, brought up the com plaint that it was almost impos sible for dormitory groups to schedule exchanges with sororities. Speaking for Gamma hall of which he is social chairman, Shep herd stated that sororities had turned down all offers of ex changes with the dormitory. “This is the type of thing that causes ill feeling between independents and Greeks,” stated Shepherd. Senators-at-large Jody Greer and Francis Gillmore said that, as far as they knew, sororities had formed the general policy of ac cepting the first offers they re ceived without making any dis crimination. Dignan questioned the advisability of further discussion on this point before the senate and asked Shepherd to refer the ques ton to the Heads of Houses. .Hccommendatibns Accepted Earlier in the meeting the sen ate accepted the recommendations of the executive committee of the rally Board as presented by At Goldenberg, chairman, for new board members. New members are Elynor Robblee, Peter Williams and Terry O'Brien. Action of the screening committee in choosing the new members was questioned by several senate members, but lhe movement to accept them car ried by a vote of twenty to two. A special senate investigating committee to inquire into the queston of abolishing the Military Kail and the Mortar Board Ball and the problem of too many campus activities was appointed by Dignan. Springtime Theme Rules Annual 'Ball7 It will be ~prin-tinie in the Student Union ballroom Satur da) night at tlie all-campus semi-formal fiance, “Heart At tack." Combining the themes of St. Valentine’s day and spring, decorations chairman Harriet Vahey and her committee v.ill be working Saturday to transform the ballroom into a pre view of hugene springtime. l-ormals for the women and .-nits for the men is the dress Beaux Arts Ball Set tor Tonight A Friday-the-thirteenth "Ca tastrophe” will explode tonight at 9 p.m. in Geringer annex, accord ing to Bud Oringdulph, junior in architecture and allied arts, and general chairman of the affair. More formally known as the Beaux Arts Ball and sponsored by the Associated Students of Architec ture and Allied Arts, the dlfnce will feature the music of Ralph Brevic's quartet. Both students and faculty mem bers will be in costume for the ball, and Jim Dobson, junior in architecture and allied arts, re ports that na holds will be barred in the line of attire. Admittance to the Bohemian type affair will be by ASAAA stu dent body cards, which may be ob tained from Oringdulph or J. Car son Bowler, senior in architecture and allied arts, in the east wing drafting room of the art school. tor the affair, scheduled to be gin at 9 p.m., with Johnny Keitz and his orchestra play ing the music. Flowers are not in order for the dance. Reitz is no newcomer to col legiate dances. Ke appeared here last year at the Junior Prom and at the University of Washington tarsity ball. He also appeared this year at the Seattle Univer sity's Homecoming dance. Marce laine Moore, vocalist with the band, will sing novelties and bal lads during the evening. Reity.’ records will be played in the co op today. Tom Wrightson, general chairman, said. "Heart Attack" programs for the senior ball feature a couple silhouetted against a white back ground and surrounded by red hearts, according to program co chairman Laura Pearson and Do lores Parrish. Ticket sales will end in the co op today, but tickets may be pur chased at the SU main desk or at the door Saturday night. Price is S2.50 a couple. Official chaperones for the ball are Capt. ar.d Mrs. H. A. Buckley, ricase turn to page eight) Ballet Russe Presents Classic Dance Tonight The Ballet Russe, de Monte Carlo Concert company, appearing tonight in McArthur court under the auspices of the Eugene Civic Music association, will present four numbers of the authentic classic repertory. The concert, which will begin at S p.m., is open to all students on presentation of their student body cards or a Civic Music mem bership card. Directed by Sergei Denham, linked by legend and experience with Serge Diaghileff, who brought the Russian Ballet from St. Petersburg in 1911, and danced to music re-arranged for two pi anos, the Concert company is making its premier tour, playing in over 110 towns and cities never before visited by an important ballet company. Heading tonight’s performance will include excerpts from Tschal kowsky's “Swan Lake," followed by “The Blue Bird" and “The En chanted Princess," also'-by Tscli&j kowsky. Third number on the program i will be ‘Cirque do Deux" or Cir cus for Two, a comic number set to the music of Charles Gounod’s opera “Faust.” It was designed by Brooklyn-born dancer Ruth anna Boris for the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo in 1947. and has been performed by that company in its coast-to-coast tours of this country and Europe for the pa.rfl five seasons. "Cirque de Deux" is a burlesque of the airs and graces of the" TO?8iarl*t rained ' dancers, translated into terms of the circ us. Leonide Massine's "Gaite Par isienr.e," concluding number on the program, was first given in Monte Carlo and afterwards in New York in 193S. The music is a selected medley of favorite airs from thr ee works of Offenbach; "La Vie Fa, - ■sienne" “La Belle Helen" and "Tales of Hoffman. Scene of “Gaite Pari Bienne-is the famous Cafe Tortoni. from which the name of the ice cream is taken, in Pa-is during- the Second F:m pire. The audience spends an eve ning there, fijsnt the time the scrub girls are busy with their br :shcs cleaning up before th«- guests ar idve until afjei the rousing can tan the customers drift away, two by two,, to the strains of "Bar carole" at the. evening's end. Cos tumes and props by Count Etienne de Beaumont complete the peiiod piece.