Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 05, 1953, Image 1

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    YOU. LIV
UNIVERSITY OK OREGON, EUGENE, TUESDAY, MAY 5, 1953
NO. 112
AI Karr Appointed Emerald Editor
Brandsness Wins
Top Ad Staff Post
A1 Karr, junior in journalism, was appointed editor and Bill
brandness sophomore in business, business manager of the Ore
jpm Dady Emerald tor the first half of the 1953-54 school year by
the Student ublications board Monday afternoon.
Karr, who has worked on the Emerald for three years and has
Wrightson Wins Nomination
J om \\ riffhtson won the Associated Greek Students nomi
nation for ASLO president in a runoff election Monday, after
taking a plurality lead in the first election Monday noon
V n£IUson P°,lle(J 626 votes, to 460 for Paul Lasker, the re
tlie lunch-hour primary, Wrii'htson had
■moo, j_a»Ker siu ana Jack Faust
had 333.
P'aust, speaking for himself and
Lasker, said he hopes that the stu
dents who supported him and
Lasker would work as hard to sup
port Wrightson. And, as president
of AGS, Faust dubbed Wrightson
a “fine candidate.” and expressed
the belief that Wrightson would
certainly win next Wednesday's
general election.
Graduate Students Run
Wrightson, a senior in business
administration, will run against
Don Collin, United Independent
Students candidate, also a senior,
in political science. It will be the
first time that the two major par
ties at Oregon put up candidates
who will be graduate students the
following year.
This is only the third year that
seniors have been eligible to run
for ASUO president. One graduate
student, AGS candidate Bill Carey,
served as student body president in
1951-52.
Lasker Re-petitions
Lasker has re-petitioned for sen
ior class president in today's class
office primary, under the AGS
thiee-day step-down system. Faust,
who is technically eligible to do
the same although this is his fourth
year at Oregon, has decided not to
re-petition, since this year's senior
class, not next year's is really his
class.
Write-in votes in the lunch-hour
election were Bob Lacy, 3, and
Waldo, 1. In the dinner run-off,
Faust, though eliminated, still got
6, Lacy dropped to 2, and Waldo
held steady with 1.
UIS Schedules
Kickoff Dinner
The official campaign kickoff
banquet for United Independent
Students party is scheduled for
6:30 tonight in the special dining
room of John Straub hall.
H. T. Koplin, adviser to UIS
and economics instructor, will
speak on “An Independent View of
Campus Politics." Don Collin, UIS
nominee for ASUO president, will
present the party’s platform.
Reservations for the banquet
may be made with Tom Shepherd
at Gamma ball or with Hollis Ran
som at Campbell club. The ban
quet will be a special steak din
ner, at a price of $1.10, and is
open to everyone.
Approximately 75 places will be
available. The dining room is at
the southeast end of Straub.
Duckling Counselor
Petitions Requested
Freshman girls returning to
Oregon next year must sign up be
fore Thursday to become Duckling
Counselor according to Berna
Dean Bartz, co-chairman of Duck
ling Counseling for the YWCA
sophomore cabinet.
♦ ♦ ♦
Second Primary
For AGS Today
Members of Associated Greek
Students will vote on candidates
for class nominations in the second
lunch-hour primary today. The vote
will be preferential voting, to elim
inate the necessity of a run-off.
Under the preferential system,
voters number their choice for each
office according to preference. If
a candidate does not have a ma
jority, the ballots are redistributed
according to second, third, etc.
choices until the required number
of candidates do have a majority.
Running for senior class presi
dent are Wes Ball, Paul Lasker,
defeated candidate for ASUO presi
dential nomination, Clarke Miller
and Alan Oppliger. For representa
tive are Anne Dielschneider, Pat
Gildea, Pat Ruan and Jane Slocum.
Junior class president candidates
are Ward Cook and Jim Light.
Representative contenders are Ann
Blackwell, Yvonne Holm, Virginia
Johnson, Nancy Randolph, Marcia
Tamiesie and Shirley Wendt.
Seeking the sophomore class
president nod are Marty Branden
fels, Jim Duncan, Jerry Farrow,
Bud Hinkson, Jack Lally and
Garry McMurry. The six candi
dates remaining for sophomore
representative after screening are
Paula Curry, Ann Erickson, Janet
Gustafson, Marilyn Parrish, Gerry
Porritt and Barbara Wilcox.
That's Waterf Carol
THIS IS THE FATE for all freshman women who fail to adhere to
the tradition rules and do not wear their green ribbons for the re
mainder of the week. Junior Weekend Traditions Chairman Barney
Holland, center, looks on approvingly as Order of O men Ken Weg
ner, left and Ken Sweitzer, hold Freshman Carol Hansen over the
water of the Fenton pool.
Thirteen File Petitions
For Senator-at-Large
Thirteen candidates have filed
for senate-at-large nominations in
the third and last day’s AGS pri
mary Wednesday.
Candidates defeated in today’s
class office primary may also peti
tion for senate-at-large. They will
be notified after today’s vote, ac
cording to AGS President Jack
Faust.
The AGS policy committee will
Modernized Classics
Bring Fame to Fina
Jack Fina, who will play for the
Junior Prom Friday night,-organ
ized his own band three years ago
after being the featured pianist
with Freddy Martin'sorchestra for
10 years.
It was Fina’s playing of a mod
ern interpretation of Tchaikow
sky’s “Piano Concerto in B Flat
Minor” as "Tonight We Love” that
made music history. The “Con
certo” recording sold two million
copies and is one of the five all
time top recordings.
Fina’s arrangements of the
classics have sold more than 10
million records throughout the
years. “Bumble Boogie,” Fina’s
version of Rimsky-Korsakoff’s
“The Flight of the Bumble Bee”
was judged the best boogie
woogie selection of 1946. His in
terpretations have won the per
sonal approval of such concert
pianists as Jose Iturbi, Artur Ru
binstein and Vladmir Horowitz.
Since leaving Marin, Fina has
played from coast to coast in thea
ters, hotels and night clubs. In
cluded in his show and dance pro
grams are such favorites as Gersh
win’s “Rhapsody in Blue,” “Kitten
on the Keys” and "Tico Tico.”
Tickets for the Prom are now on
sale in men’s, living organizations
and at the Co-op from 9 a.m. to
5 p.m. daily through Friday. Tick
ets will also be. sold at the door
Friday evening. Dress for the an
JACK FINA
nual dance is formal. Corsages are
optional.
Women’s closing hours were ex
tended to 2 a.m. by the office of
student affairs last week. The
dance is to be held in the Student
Union ballroom from 9 p.m. to
1 a.m.
screen the number of candidates
to 27 tonight if a sufficiently high
number file, Faust said. Nine will
be elected in Wednesday’s primary.1
The thirteen who have filed so |
far are Joe Anstett, rally board,
Skull and Dagger, 2.54 accumulat
ive GPA; Don Crawford, yell duke,
JIFC president, Skull and Dagger,
3.08; Jerry Froebe, Ugly man con
test chairman, Alpha Phi Omega
president, 2.2; Robert Hooker, 3.01;
Dorothy Kopp, AWS treasurer, co
chairman Joe College-Betty Coed
contest, vice-president of Kwama,
co-chairman of Class of ’56 social
committee, 3.2.
Gary Meredith, Dads’ Day sign
contest chairman, radio promotion
chairman for Junior Weekend, 2.2;
Jean Owens, YWCA, Student
Union committees, 2.77; Robert
Pollock, chairman of Student
Union public relations committee,
chairman of Duck Preview campus
prom, Skull and Dagger, track
manager, 2.67; Bob Summers,
sophomore class president, Ore
gon’s permanent interim represen
tative to Oregon Federation of
Collegiate Leaders, Skull and Dag
ger, co-chairman of the sopho
more Whiskerino, Praesidens, co
chairman of Duck Preview, chair
man of Frosh Snowball, chairman
of frosh council, winner of Alpha
Phi Omega trophy for outstand
ing underclassman, Phi Eta Sigma,
3.54.
Patty Teale, YWCA regional
delegate, conference chairman,
2.10; Joan Walker, president of
Red Cross board, YWCA, vice
president of Phi Theta Upsilon,
Kwama, 3.19; Mary Whitaker,
sophomore class representative,
3.62; and Mary Wilson, Kwama,
WRA vice-president, co-chairman
of WSSF, KWAX, YWCA, Am
phibians, 3.05.
oeen managing editor and assistant
news editor, is presently an associ
ate editor. He will take over next
fall and guide the Emerald through,
to the middle of winter term when,
a new editor will be chosen.
Brandness, presently advertising
manager is appointed for the full
year. The two-staffs-a-year policy
set up by the Pub board last year
does not affect the business side of
the paper.
In other action, the board ap_
proved a budget for the Emerald
based on the assumption that the
paper will continue to be published
as it is at present—four page pa
pers five times a week coming out
just before noon. It also accepted
bids on photographing and paper
for next year’s Oregana.
Inside on Econ
Given by Prof
What has to be sold in economic
education is intellectual honesty,.
Frank H. Knight, professor of eco
nomics at the University of Chi
cago, told a crowd of about 200 ■
in the Dad’s lounge of the Student
Union Monday evening.
Knight termed his hour-long
lecture “unorganized samples’’ of
his thoughts on the problems of a
free society. The short, gray-haired
speaker punctuated his talk with
personal anecdotes and quotations
that sent his audience off into fre
quent bursts of laughter.
"Why do we need to defend eco
nomics?’’asked Knight. Largely be— -
cause of the ambiguous attitude of
most people who either “look down .
their noses at economics or claim
it as a solution to all problems,’3
he explained.
The moral status of salesman
ship is either one of lies or one of
telling truth, remarked Knight. He
sees an interesting paradox in this
if truth has to be sold by fraud.
“If people started telling noth
ing but the truth,” Knight sug
gested, “society would be a sham
bles within half an hour.” Knight
believes that truth “cannot be wor
shipped monotheistlcally, because
no ethical principle can be carried
through by completely ignoring
other principles.”
Knight, continuing his survey of
free society, gave his audience a
new commandment, “don’t expect
too much.” Peace and prosperity,
said Knight, are not just around
the comer and are not attainable
(Please turn to page two)
Vote for Queen:
On Wednesday
Junior Weekend Queen elec
tions will be held from 9 un. to
5 p.m. Wednesday at the Co-op
and the Student Union, accord
ing to Joyce Jones, queen se
lection chairman. Announcement:
of the queen will be made at the*
Junior Prom Friday evening.
Students will vote for one of
the following in the election:
Joan Marie Miller, Phi Kappa
Sigma and Phi Epsilon; Diane
Stout, Theta Chi and Phi Kappa
Psi; Carol Lee Tate, Phi Delta
Theta; Cathy Tribe, Campbell
club and Alpha Phi; and Joan
Walker, Chi Psi and Phi Gamma
Delta.