Daily EMERALD Fifty-fourth year of Publication Vol. LIV. UNIVERSITY' OF OREGON, EUGENE, MONDAY, APRIL 20, 1953 NO. 101 Painting Vandals Hit Six Sororities Six sorority houses were paint ed late Thursday night with black enamel and varnish by vandals. Houses hit were Gamma Phi Beta, Pi Beta Phi, Delta Delta Delta. Kappa Alpha Theta, Delta Gamma and Zeta Tau Alpha. The office of student affairs was notified of the damage by several of the houses. The vandals are so far unidentified. The Theta's, hardest hit, had their windows and pillars “x'd” with black enamel. A side wall was adorned with “CAT house.” One member heard the vandals but didn't investigate the noise. The Pi Phi nameplate was smeared and a black pagoda was painted on the door. “X” 's and other markings were Women's Vodvil Tryouts Begin At 7 p.m. Tonight Vodvil eliminations for wom en’s houses will be held in Ger Hnger annex tonight in two groups, at 7 and 8 p.m., accord ing to Gloria Lee. Participating in the 7 p. m. tryouts are Alpha Chi Omega, “Oriental Fantasy”; Alpha Del ta Pi, “Death of the Play”; Alpha Gamma Delta, “Ali Babl and the Four Thieves”; Alpha • Omlcron Pi, “The Little Dutch Way"; Alpha Phi, “Dig That Crazy Television”; Alpha XI Delta, "Snow White and the Sev en Dwarfs”; Chi Omega, “So What if It Rains”; and Delta Delta Delta, “As Time Goes By.” Scheduled to tryout at 8 p.m. are Delta Gamma, “Magoo Ties The Baby Shoe”; Delta Zeta, “ W o r I d Cruise”; Gamma Phi Beta, “Slaughter on 10th Ave”; Kappa Alpha Theta, “The Real Kudy or Very Valentino”; Kap pa Kappa Gamma, “Take Back Vour Mink”; Pi Beta Phi, “You Must Have Been a Beautiful Baby”; and Sigma Kappa, “Thursday at Three.” Men’s eliminations will be held at 7 and 8 p.m. Tuesday. Themes Requested For Float Parade Living organizations are being asked to choose their Junior Week end float parade chairmen and paired houses are to confer on a float theme today, Parade Chair man Sally Hateltine announced. Themes are to be turned in to the Junior Weekend office, Stu dent Union 303 by 5 p. m. to day. Float costs are not to ex ceed $70 and chairmen will meet May 7 to submit itemized accounts of float construction. In charge of the various phases of the parade to be held the after noon of May 9 are Walter White, line-up and trophies; Jane Slocum, queen’s car; Bob McCracken, bands; Connie Seymour, pairings; Bob Pollack, parade route interim skits, and Lyn Perkins, judges. Pairings were made Tuesday aft ernoon, but will not be published in the Emerald until themes have been chosen. painted on the Tri Delt door and walk, according to the Tri Delt president. Zeta Tau Alpha had a ring of black enamel painted across the length of the house. The vandals strewed the Delta Gamma pillars and door with black painted "X”'s. The front door window panes of the Gamma Phi Beta house were painted with brown varnish. Shefford Elected IFC President Con Shefford, Sigma Nu, was elected president of Inter-Frater nity Council at its regular meet ing Thursday. He replaces Dick Morse, Phi Delta Theta, in the position. Other officers elected were Ted Rubenstein, Sigma Alpha Mu, vice president, and Alan Oppliger, Sig ma Phi Epsilon, secretary-treas urer. Art School Lists Reprint Exhibit Color lithographed prints by such contemporary artists as Pi casso. Leger, Chariot, Barnet, and Crawford are currently on display in the gallery of the art and arch itecture school. The exhibit, “Contemporary Col or Lithography," will continue through Sunday. It is being circu lated by the American Federation of Arts and was selected from the Cincinnati Art museum's second International Exhibition of Con temporary Color Lithography. Hours for the show are 1 to 5 p.m. today through Saturday and 1 to 10 p.m. Sunday. In the catalog for the show, a color lithograph is explained as “a picture on paper printed by hand from prepared limestones." The show contains 60 such prints se lected from the Cincinnati exhi bition. 10 Top SU Posts Open; Bids Due Petition*! for ten Student Un ion directorate posts are due at 5 p.m. Friday. A 2.00 GPA is required. Directorate members are heads of these standing committees: j Art gallery, browsing room, | dance, coffee hour forum, movie, ; music, personnel, public rela tions, publicity and recorded music. Airport Meeting Begins Today About 125 airport officials will meet today at the Student Union for the first day of the Northwest Airport Management conference. Edwin H. Armstrong, executive assistant to Oregon’s governor Paul Patterson, will be the fea tured speaker at today's luncheon. Also speaking at meetings through Wednesday are Joseph P. Adams, member of the Civil Aeronautics board, Washington, D. C.; Joseph K. McLaughlin, Illinois director of aeronautics and president of the National Association of State Aviation Officials and Mike Doo lin, California director of aero nautics. Main topics under discussion will be community airport development, administrative problems, zoning, new trends in aviation and con tracts. The Oregon State Board of Aeronautics and the University sponsor the conference. Weekend Queen Balloting Set Voting on the 12 semi-finalists for Junior Weekend queen to choose the five members of the court will take place Wednesday and Thursday. All students will be able to vote upon presentation of their student body cards at booths in the Co-op and Student Union. The five finalists will be announced Friday night at the All-Campus Vodvil. The queen will be chosen by a second ballot on the finalists May 6. 'Ugly Man" Candidates Picked; Voting Starts The goal in the life of every male student about this time becomes being named Ugly Man during the annual World Student Service Fund week contest. Accordingly the living organizations have se lected 44 candidates to vie for distinctive honor of being UMOC for a year. Students may vote for their can didates today and Tuesday by dropping loose change in the jars placed with the candidates names outside the SU and the co-op. Tuesday night the ten finalists will be selected. The Ugly Man will be announced at the Vodvil Friday night, according to co chairmen Jerry Froebe and Marty Johnson. Candidates Named Candidates include: Bob Stout, Alpha Chi Omega; Duane Best, 1 Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Gamma Delta and Kappa Sigma; Ken Sweitzer, Alpha Omicron Pi; Wes Ball, Alpha Phi; Dick Morse, Al pha Xi Delta; Garry McMurray, Ann Judson and Sherry Ross; Waldo, Carson 2; Jim Light, Car son 3, Sigma Kappa and Phi Delta Theta. Len Krichevsky, Sigma Alpha Mu and Carson 4; Andy Berwick, Carson 5; Cecil Hodges, Chi Ome ga; Jim Crittenden, Delta Delta Delta; Ted Anderson, Delta Gam ma, Kappa Alpha Theta and Al pha Tau Omega; John Jensen, Del ta Zeta; A1 Barzman, Hendricks hall; George Yost, Highland house. More Listed Norman Weekly, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Harlan Mickey, Pi Beta Phi; Malcolm Montague, Rebec house; Tom Shepherd, Delta Tau Delta, University house and Phil (Please turn to page four) WSSF Drive Opens Today The World Student Service Fund drive opened this morning on cam pus with its theme of “Hands Across the Sea” and its goal of $1800. Money collected during the drive which ends Friday, will be sent Greefe’ Pakistan' Syria- Burma, Korea, Japan and Indonesia, It will be used for scholarship assistance, textbooks, laboratory equip ment, hospital and surgical equipment, tuition and examination fees for university students. Working with religious groups of all denominations, the YWCA WSSF Car Wash Tuesday The Day Tuesday is “Car-washing” day on campus, Bob Glass, co-chair man of promotion for the WSSF drive, has announced. Women’s houses have offered to give out with the elbow grease from 2 to 5 p.m. and will wash any and every car for $1 per car with proceeds going to the WSSF fund, he eaid. Pairings for the car-wash (with houses where the cars will be washed first) are Delta Delta Del ta and Delta Zeta; Carson hall; Hendricks hall; Ann Judson house and Rebec; University house and Highland house; Gamma Phi Beta and Alpha Phi; Alpha Chi Omega, Pi Beta Phi and Zeta Tau Alpha; Delta Gamma, Kappa Alpha Theta and Alpha Xi Delta; Alpha Omi cron Pi, Alpha Delta Pi and Alpha Gamma Delta; Chi Omega, Kap pa Kappa Gamma and Sigma Kap pa. A prize will be awarded to the houses in the winning group. A WSSF representative will collect the receipts of the day’s work sometime after 5 p.m. Tues day from the house WSSF repre sentatives. Women’s houses are asked to provide the facilities for the wash job, Glass added. Beauty and Talent Auction Charted Campus talent and beauty will be auctioned off on the SU ter race during the WSSF auction Friday at 4 p.m., according to Don Gartrell. Auctioneer for the highlight of the annual WSSF fund-raising drive will be Spencer Snow, fresh man in liberal arts. The committee plan to auction off to the highest bidder such campus attractions as the Homecoming court, the Sweet heart of Sigma Chi and a variety of Kwamas and Skull and Dag gers, according to Gartrell. . 'YM' to Discuss UO Campus Politics “Behind Campus Politics” will be the subject of this week's Thursday noon meeting of the YMCA in the Student Union. Featuring speakers from United Independent Students and Asso ciated Greek Students, campus po litical parties, the meeting will be gin at 12:25 and is open to all men, according to Russ Walker, executive secretary of the YM. Tuesday night, the second in the series entitled "This I Believe,” has been scheduled by the YM. Stu dents and faculty members inter ested in attending must contact the YM office in the SU for de tails, Walker said. Also scheduled for Thursday evening is the third in the series of inquiry groups on the “Problems of Religion.” This week’s topic is “Why Does Man Believe in the Existence of God?” and will fea ture L. R.' Sorenson, assistant pro fessor of history, as discussion leader. The meeting will begin at 7:30 in the SU and is open to all interested students, Walker said. ana ijvkja, WSSF offers a world wide program of mutual assist ance among students according to Barbara Swanson, education chair man of the drive. Belief Administered Relief is administered on eco nomic lines. Except where students are physically unable to work, money is used as capital to start self-help enterprises, Miss Swan son said. In his recent evaluation of cam pus charity drives, John Talbot, campus public relations chairman,, gave special consideration to WSSF because it “is the only stu dent to student giving in colleges.”' Talbot reported that WSSF col lections at Oregon had been out standing in the nation. With an •average yearly collection of $1800. over the past three years, Oregon ranked 25th out of 681 contribut ing schools. Drive Kept Separate Convinced of the importance of ’ the WSSF drive, Talbot recom mended in his report to the ASUO' senate that the drive be kept sep arate from any proposed campus chest or united fund. Special money raising projects are now in progress and will con tinue until the All-Campus Vod vil Friday night at which time the winner of the Ugly Man con test will be announced. Pictures of candidates submitted by men’s living organizations are on display at the Co-op where vot ing will take place. Guess The Number ‘Coin Count,” the juke box con test, will continue through Thurs day. The contest's object is to guess how many nickles are put in the juke box in the fishobwl of the Student Union in one week, according to Sally Thurston’ WSSF publicity chairman. Chances for the contest will be on sale at the main desk of the SU for five cents. Prizes will be awarded at the WSSF auction Friday at 4 p.m. in the SU. Millrace Cleanup Termed Success “Quite successful” said Dave Todd, organizer of Saturday’s Mill race clean-up. "We didn’t have as many people as we expected but the work got done,” he added. Todd estimated that 200 students turned out for the Millrace clean up. The 200 were divided into nine teams with each team as signed a specific section of the ’Race to clean. Tex Matsler, Eugene superin tendent of parks and playgrounds, said Saturday afternoon that he was surprised at the cooperation of the students. “I’ve had perfect cooperation from everyone, all day,” he said. Most of the work on the Mill race was done before noon but a few people worked east of the Al der street bridge in the afternoon. Because the area behind the Sigma Phi Epsilon house was not drained and could not be worked in Saturday, Matsler said the Mill, race would remain empty for a - few days so this can be done. He said all other areas were well cleaned. 4.