Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 08, 1953, Page Four, Image 4

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    Air Force ROTC Unit
Reviewed by Officers
Six hundred of Oregon's appren
tice birdmen spent an hour ou the
.ground Tuesday afternoon as the
local Air Force ROTC unit passed
in review before a team of inspect
ing officers from the Air university
in Montgomery, Ala.
Taking the salute from the re
serve cadets were Col. John A.
'.Cosgrove, chief of the inspecting
party; Col. Emory L. Bruns, head
of Oregon’s military department;
Major D. L. Hartley and Dean of
Administration W. C. Jones.
The visiting officers are con
ducting the annual examination
of Air ROTC installations in the
Pacific Northwest. According to
Col. Cosgrove, they gave “high
est possible rating" to Oregon’s
unit.
The examination took in the
training and administrative ac
tivities of the unit as well as the
students’ ability on the drill field.
The inspecting team spent Monday
and Tuesday sitting in on class
room lectures, interviewing stu
dents and studying other phases of
ROTC operations here,
i Yesterday's review was ushered
| in by a brief shower, but the
; weather cleared soon after the
| student squadrons massed on the
! ROTC drill field. Preceding the
review ing ceremony were an in
j spection of the cadets and march
ing exhibitions by the band and
I drill team. Col. Cosgrove made a
! formal inspection of the drill team
i after the review'.
\SUCurrmfs
Dance Concert
Tonight at 8 p.m.
A Studio Dance concert will be
presented tonight at 8 p.m. in the
dance room of Gerlinger hall by
tne concert dance group.
A program of four dances, com
posed, choreographed and danced
by members of the group is
planned. The program is under the
direction of Bettie Jane Owen, in
structor in physical education.
Krs. Rachel Reilly will accompany
the dancers.
Thursday Deadline
For Contest Leaders
Petitions for special events
hairmen of the bowling tourna
ment and bridge tournament
should be turned in at Clyde Fahl
man’s office in the STJ before 5
P in. Thursday. Trophies will be
■ warded at the SU Awards ban
quet to the champions. Students
‘wishing to petition for chairman
of the intermural bridge tourna
■ment, do not have to be experts on
bridge. Award for the winners of
this tournament will be selected on
a theoretical basis.
Vocational Guide
Available at SU
A vocational guide file, located
in the Student Union and spon
sored by A.VV.S, will be available
to students beginning Monday. i
The file, a result of question- j
naires filled out by women stu
dents from Oregon, California, '
Washington, North Carolina, New
York and Hawaii, will aid students
in finding jobs and inform them
of wages, working conditions and
opportunities for advancement, ac
cording to Judy McLoughlin,
A.W.S president.
From secretarial work to camp
counseling, the file includes vari
ous types of employment in many
cities of the U.S. and will be open
at all times for the convenience j
of job-hunters.
SU Terrace Dance
To Be Held Friday
The first SU Terrace dance will .
be held from 9 to 12 p.m. Friday, j
Jackie Steuart is chairman of the |
affair, and Jerry Farrell is taking 1
care of reservations. The entertain- ■
roent committee is composed of
Carol Oakley and Phyllis Pearson j
and Doug Ruhlman will MC. Pub
icity committee is Becky Fortt,
Geri Porritt and John Schaffer,
and arrangements are being made
by Dawn Kest and Donna Hill.
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Accident Victims
In Good Condition
Nancy Garrison, junior in edu
cation, is reported to be in "good"
condition in Sacred Heart hospital
following an auto accident at 13th
and Chambers Monday night.
Miss Garrison, a passenger in a
car driven by Margaret Doherty,
junior in history, suffered a broken
pelvis and shock. Miss Doherty
was reported to have received fa
cial cuts and bruises.
According to the police accident
report Miss Doherty's 1952 Stude
baker collided with a logging
truck driven by Wilbur Nichols,
Eugene, at the intersection result
ing in total damage to the car.
Portland Gallery
To Show UO Art
Four University students are
among the fifteen Eugene artists
whose works have been accepted
for the annual Artists of Oregon
exhibit opening April 19 in the
Portland Art museum.
The Oregon students and their
works are E. S. Gordon. “Cosmos
and Dahlias" and "Yellow Squash.”
both oils; Cordon Kensler, “Table
Top,” oil; William Lea bo. untitled
oil, and David Marsh, "Fox Hol
low Road,” water color.
Greek Primary
(Continued from (ocie one)
against the principle now being
followed by AGS which allows stu
dents who are defeated in one elec
tion to run again for some other
nomination. As it now stands,
Faust stated, AGS is able to nom
inate a better election slate by
giving more qualified people a
chance to be nominated for more
offices.
In other action taken by the
group, Jane Simpson, Della Delta
Delta, was elected to act as chief
election clerk during the primary
election.
TODAY'S STAFF
Night Staff: Makeup Editor.
Paul Keefe; Night Editor, Gordon
Rice; Night Staff, Barbara Bou
shey and Roger Miller.
Bing Crosby once attended Gon
zaga university in Spokane, Wash.
Industrialist to Speak
At Institute Banquet
Oregon alumni will hear a talk
by woman industrialist Vivien
Kellems in the fifth annual alumni
institute banquet Saturday in the
Multnomah hotel in Portland.
Miss Kellems, an Oregon ulum
na, is head of a large lndustiial
firm in Connecticut. She is na
tionally known for her opposition
to the Federal withholding tax and
was selected one of the ten top
women of the year for 1952 by the
Associated Press.
The alumni institute program
will begin at 2 p.m. with a talk
by James H. Gilbert, emeritus pro
fessor of economics, who will Uis
Clark College Choir
To Perform April 17
The Clark college choir of Van
couver, Wash., directed by Eleanor
Tipton, will appear in the school
of music auditorium April 17, at
4 p.m.
The University Singers will host
the choir and show them the
Oregon campus.
cuss America's economic situa
tion.
Roy c. McCall, head of the
speech department, will describe
recent developments in speech
education.
In a talk o.i “The Universe in
Time and Space,” F.dwin G. Eb
blghausen, associate professor of
physics, will discuss modern sci
entific discoveries.
The alumni will hear of recent
accomplishment* at Oregon from
Dean of Administration William C.
Jones, who will tell how "Your
University Is Going to Town.”
Gov. and Mrs. Paul Patterson
both Oregon graduates, will ho
guests of honor at the evening
banquet, which will conclude thi.s
year's Institute program. The ban
quet will begin at 6:30.
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STARTS THURS. APRIL 3
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