♦ Campus Briefs ♦ Petition* for special events • chairman of the all-campus bowl Imk tournament are clue Thursday at 5 p.m., Student Union 302 or • 310. The tournament if* scheduled April 27 to May 15. • The Oregon and Southwest ern Oregon professional chapters of the American Institute of Architects and University archi tecture students will hold a joint meeting on campus Tuesday, S. W. Little, dean of the school, has an nounced. A dinner meeting, at which Buckminster Puller, invent or of the Dymaxion house, will speuk, is planned. • Petitions for committer chairmanships of the All-Campus Vodvil must be turned into the main desk at the Student Union by 5 p.m. Tuesday. Petitions are being called for the following com mittees: program, contact, pub licity, tickets, programs, judges, arrangements, lighting and special effects and master of ceremonies. • A noon meeting of all former Hi-Y members will be held today in the Student Union, Russ Walk er, YM executive secretary, has announced. • All living organization repre sentatives for the All-Campus Vodvil show will meet at 4 p.m. today in the Student Union, ac cording to Shirley Wendt, co-chair man of the affair. General themes should be submitted and rules for the acts will be distributed to the representatives. • All women’s living organiza tion presidents and housemothers have been invited to attend the in stallation of the new heads of houses officers at 4 p.m. today at Carson hall. Both old and new offi cers arc to attend. • The first group of the wom en's campus housing list for Duck Preview can be picked up in the office of Mrs. Golda Wickham, di rector of women’s affairs, after 2 p.m. today. • Amphibians, women's swlm ing honorary, will meet tonight at 7 :30 in Gerfinger hall. <9 Program chairmen of Duck Preview will meet at 4 p.m. today in Student Union 311, Jim Light, program coordinator, has an nounced. All-Campus Vodvil, edu cational exhibits, exchange din ners, assembly and dance chair men should attend according to Light. • Freshmen vfomen who have a 3.5 accumulative GPA or above and who are not already members of Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman scholastic honorary, should con tact the office of Mrs. Golda Park er Wickham, associate director of student affairs, as soon as possible. Ducks To Address Bend Civic Groups Three members of the University symposium group left this morn ing on a three day speaking en gagement in Bend, Ore. Students making the trip include Loretta Mason, freshman in speech, Ben Schmidt, senior in speech, and Wil ma Wittenfield, sophomore in lib eral arts. The squad will discuss the pres ent Communist menace in the in ternal United States before meet ings of the Bend Lions, Rotary and Khvanis clubs. The group will re turn to Eugene Wednesday eve ning. Robert Kully, debate coach, accompanied the squad. Officers to Moke Inspection Tour Of AFROTC Unit The annual two-day federal in spection of the University of Ore gon Air Force ROTC facilities be gins today, as part of the pro gram carried on by the newly cre ated ROTC headquarters of the Air university at Montgomery, Ala. Primary purpose of the inspec tion is to examine the training, both in the classroom and on the drill field, of the 145,000 AFROTC cadets now enrolled in American universities in Puerto Rico, Ha waii and throughout the nation. It will note any deficiencies and dif ficulties which need correction in each unit that it inspects. Teaching procedures, adequacy of the instruction facilities, effec tiveness of the instructors and gen eral military bearing of the ca dets are some of the points on which each detachment will be graded. The mass review of all Air Force cadets here will be held on Tues day afternoon. The inspection team visiting the University consists of Col. John A. Cosgrove, Lt. Col. Wayne B. I Fulton and Maj. Dwight L. Harley. Record Library Opens at 3 Today The Student Union record lend ing library will open today at 3 p.m. in SU 206 in the Browsing room wing. Students may check out the available records for a per iod of two days and no late fine will be charged. The selection of records includes semi-classical, classical and some serious contemporary composers. Schedule for the library is now planned with open hours from 3 to 5 p.m. every afternoon from Monday to Friday. The library has been organized under the spon sorship of the recorded music com mittee of the SU. McCall to Teach Night Speech Class A course in public discussion has been added to the spring term schedule of evening classes, accord ing to the office of the general extension division. Roy McCall, head of the speech department, will teach the course from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. in Villard 201. Instruction begins tonight, and the J12 registration fee is payable then or at next Monday’s class session. Easter Morning 2500 Hear Odell (Continued from page one) examples of these he cited the be ginnings of two world wars and the dropping of the first atomic bomb. “Death, the last of the defeats, results in loss of loved ones and loss of leadership,” the speaker said. Christ’s early followers suffered these same three defeats. Yet Christ’s resurrection changed them from a dejected, dispairing group to a dynamic force in the world. He brought a completeness and wholeness into their lives, Odell said. He asserted Christ can help us conquer our defeats, to, if we have the realization that there is eter nal life—the power over death. Report Special music was provided by Exine Anderson, assistant profes so or music, who sang Handel’s “I Know That My Redeemer Liv eth," and the Eugene high school A Capella choir, which sang “Open Our Eyes” by Macfarlane, and the Hallelujah Chorus from Handel’s Messiah.” Forming a white cross on the floor of the court during the ser vice were the Knights Templar, a Masonic order, wearing white hats and black uniforms. What to do till ,, the Dough come* or When HV Springtime on. Iho Campus i maybo Auntio i will start * Springing too' A certain Senior, who shall be ’ Nameless, was all tangled up in ar* Unfortunate Situation. The Big Spring Weekend was just three days* • away; his Number One Girl was lined up; the blueprint called for Substantial Re* sources—and he was, to put it bluntly,.. Busted. Furthermore, his Credit Rating was Strictly Slow Music. Nameless, however, being a man of Consid erable Ingenuity, even though Insolvent, was •• nothing daunted. His strategy was simple: a quick reconnoiter in his book of Family Sta- , ' tistics, two minutes of inspired composition, and a fast call to Western Union. The Big Weekend went like a Breeze. Our Boy cut a Super-Swath—and paid for it. Cold Cash. Sunday night he escorted - his Dream * Girl down to the 10:12, then beaded for bis Cubicle, tired but happy—pausing oply. long ' enough to throw a Heartfelt Kiss toward die .. windows of the local Western Union office, and to gaze fondly once again at a crumpled telegram. It bore this wallet-warming mes sage: “Thank you for your Telegram and for your sweet thought. Even an old lady likes to have her birthday remembered. Hope • the money order will prove useful.” Signed “Aunt Jane.” As we said, a man of Considerable Ingenuity. One of the Nicest Things about a Telegram is that it does More than you Expect of it. • Whether you’re Prying Open the Parental Purse, Greeting Your Gal (or Guy) or Jockey ing for a Job, anytime you want “Yes” for an answer, ask the question via Western Union. WESTERN UNION 870 Pearl St. Telephone 4-3221 DCn V*S