Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 21, 1953, Page Three, Image 3

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    Industry Relations
Conference Starts
H. K. Newburn, president of the
University, welcomed delegates to
the third. .annual -Northwest In
dustrial Relations conference on
the "Know-How of Labor Manage
ment Relations" at the opening
session in the Dad’s Lounge of the
Student Union this morning. Paul
L. Kleinsor^e, professor of eco
nomics and conference coordinator,
acted as chairman for the first
session of the conference scheduled
for today and Friday.
Four panel discussions will be
presented during the two-day meet.
All sessions will be held in the
Dad's Lounge and students are
invited to attend th" panels which
arc open to the public.
Director to Talk
Highlighting today’s events will
be an address by William S. Hop
kins, director of the Institute of
Labor Economics at the Univer
sity of Washington, at a 6 p.m.
dinner scheduled for tonight in the
Veterans Memorial Building in
downtown Eugene. Hopkins will
speak on "The Free Enterprise
of Labor Relations."
Oregon’s new anti-picketing law,
recently passed by the state legis
lature, will come under discussion
at the afternoon session on "The
Know-How of Building Confidence
in Labor-Management Relations.”
The panel will open at 2:00 fol
lowing a cafeteria luncheon In the
SU at 12:30. Charles T. Estes, spe
cial assistant to the director, Fed
eral Mediation and Conciliation,
will act as moderator for the panel
which will include speakers repre
senting both labor and manage
ment.
Negotiations and Grievances
"The Know-How of Contract
Negotiations” was the topic for
discussion at the opening panel
held at 10:30 this morning. Dave
Darland. dean of the graduate
school at^Pacific university, serVed
as moderator for the discussion
period.
Friday morning's session at 10
Pearson Lecture
(Continued from page one)
He received his education at the
University of Toronto and Oxford.
He served during- World War I in
the Canadian army and the RAF.
Pearson is a family man with a
son and daughter in their early
twenties. He met Mrs. Pearson as
a seminar student when he was as
sistant professor of history at Tor
onto.
External Affairs Secretary
In 1928, Pearson became the first
secretary of Canada's department
of external affairs. Other high gov
ernment positions he has held in
clude Canadian ambassador in
Washington and counselor to the
Canadian high commissioner in
London.
Pearson saw the birth of the
United Nations at both the Dum
barton Oaks and San Francisco
conferences. In 1952 he was chair
man of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization conference held in
Lisbon.
Canadian Advocate
Among Pearson’s hobbies are
baseball, tennis and hockey He
played hockey and lacrosse for Ox
ford and coached Toronto univer
sity in hockey and rugby football.
He is an outspoken advocate of
Canada’s rights to be treated as
an equal with England and the
United States. In regard to Korea
' he said, “The special responsibil
ity which the US has accepted—
in the struggle against Russian
Communist imperialism, does not
■ mean an automatic response
‘ready, aye, ready' to everything
Washington proposes.” He pro
tested the use of Canadian soldiers
in quelling prisoner of war riots on
Koje Island.
is entitled “The Know-How of
Grievance Procedure,” with Roy
D. MahaffeyfprofeHsor of speech
at Linfield college, serving as mod
erator.
Students on Panel
The final panel will be held from
2 p.m. to 4 followed by adjourn
ment. Karl Harshbarger, Junior in
Hpeech, will act as moderator for
the discussion on “The Know-How
of Education Procedure.” This
panel will be made up of five col
lege students including: Donald
Barber, Oregon State; Robin Lin
stromberg, Pacific university; Joe
Rickenbacker, University of Ore
gon; Frank Seelye, Lewis and
Clark college; Virginia Wakeman,
Linfield college.
The purpose of the annual con
ference is to promote understand
ing of the problems involved in
the industrial system -~and to
achieve a high level of industrial
relations. Previous conferences
were held during the summer, but
this year the sessions were sched
uled for spring term to give in
terested students a chance to at
tend the meetings.
The Industrial Relations con
ference is presented under the
sponsorship of the University eco
nomics department.
Dance Money
Goes to Award
Proceeds from Saturday's Mor
tar Board Ball, traditional dance
sponsored by the members of the
senior women's honorary, are the
main source of funds for a schol
arship awarded to a deserving
i junior woman, according to Mary
Kllen Burrell, Mortar Board pres
ident.
The award, which used to be as
traditional as those made by
Kwama and Phi Theta, has not
l)een made for the past two or
(three years according to Miss Bur
i rell.
Theme of this year's dance will
not be revealed until Saturday eve
ning, beyond the general hint of
"Follow the Yellow Brick Road."
! Something unique in decorations
, for a campus dance has been
i planned, according to June Brown
ing, decorations chairman.
Only two days remain for the
; women to purchase the tickets for
i the affair, reports Lloydene Hurt,
tickets chairman. The tickets are
now on sale at all women’s living
organizations, the Student Union,
and the Co-op.
Dress for the dance is formal,
long or short formals for the wom
en and dark suits, dinner jackets
or tuxedos for the men. Held in
the Student Union Ballroom, the
dance will begin at 9 p.m.
Housemother
Plans to Retire
At the end of summer school this
year Mrs. Edna Stokes, head resi
dent at Carson hail, will retire
ending nine years of being a sub
stitute mother to countless girls
on campus.
A tea honoring Mrs. Stokes will
be given from 3 to 5 p.m. today
in the Carson living room. All
present and former dormitory res
idents and friends are invited to
attend. General chairman is Bar
bara Dspain, Carson president.
From being housemother at
Gamma Hall, in 1944, to head res
ident at Carson Hall beginning in
1949 is quite a span for a woman
who said that counseling was "the
last thing she ever thought of do
ing” before she began work here.
After two years at Gamma Hall,
Mrs. Stokes moved to Hendricks
and then into Carson "even before
the doors and windows were on.”
“We had three patrolmen with
flashlights watching the building
when I first came,” recalled Mrs.
Stokes.
Plans following her retirement
are rather indefinite, Mrs. Stokes
said. At present she manages to
fill her spare time with reading,
gardening in a window, collecting
dishes and studying natural his
tory. "I am interested in geology
and can hardly pass by a rock
without collecting it,” she said.
A daughter, Elaine (Stokes)
Porter, and a son, Don, also claim
some of her time. Two grandchil
dren, a son and a daughter, will
enter college next year, with the
boy entering Oregon State to study
I engineering. "Of course," said Mrs.
Stokes, “I’d rather have him come
here if he could get enough work
in his major.”
Bach Choral Group
Performs Sunday
The Bach Choral group, compos
ed of University students and Eu
gene townspeople, will give an all
Bach program Sunday evening at
the United Lutheran church, 22nd
and Washington streets.
The program will be a benefit
performance for the Pearl Buck
school for retarded children. No
admission will be charged, but a
collection will be taken up during
the evening, according to E. A.
Cykler, professor of music and di
rector of the group. The program
will begin at 8 p.m.
Featured soloists with the group
of 20 singers and 12 instruments,
will be Larry Maves, junior in
music; W. C. Woods, instructor in
piano; Exine Anderson, assistant
professor of music; Doug Stobie,
junior in music; Clyde Keutzer,
graduate student in music, and
Mrs. Genevieve Holt Hall, Eugene.
The program will include such
Bach selections as his “Cantata No.
18,” “B Minor Concerto for Piano
and Strings,” and the “78th Can
tata.”
FIVE GOOD HOUSES FOR SALE
THIS SUMMER BY BUILDER
All Near 29th and Willamette
1 ready now. 2 bedrooms, fireplace, automatic oil heat,
Youngstown kitchen cabinets.
1 ready in 3 weeks. 2 bedroom with another bedroom over
the garage, fireplace, oil heat, hardwood floors.
3 ready to start; 3 bedrooms each, forcedair heat, fireplaces
NOT ANY BETTER BUYS IN TOWN
Coil Fred Hollister.. .4-1609
OR DROP BY AT 2920 HIGH ST.
Brigadoon Writers
Set Magic to Music
A Scottish village that comes to
life one day every hundred years
is the setting of the Broadway hit
musical “Brigadoon” to be pre
sented by the University Theater
for a seven-performance run be
ginning Friday night. It is the last
production of the current UT sea
son.
Tickets at $2 are still available
for the May 26, and June 3 and 4
performances. All other nights
have been completely sold out, ac
cording to Mrs. Gene Wiley, the
ater business manager. The few
remaining seats may be obtained
at the box office from 1 to 5 p.m.
daily except Sunday.
Such familiar songs as "The
Heather on the Hill,” "Almost Like
Being in Love" and “There But
Fou You Go I” are featured in
the musical comedy production.
Thursday Concert
Scheduled for Band
The University concert band, di
rected by Robert Vagner, will be
presented in a concert next Thurs
day, at 8:15 p.m. in the Student
Union ballroom.
Special feature of the program
will be two arrangements done by
graduate students in the school of
music. First of these will be an
arrangement for trombone solo
with band accompaniment by Rich
ard Ramsdell of “Concertino,”
Movement I, by David. The solo
will be done by Raoul Maddox,
junior.
Also featured will be Gerald
Paine’s arrangement if “Escales,”
by Ibert.
Pan-hellenic association was or
ganized in 1910 by the three local
chapters of Gamma Phi Beta, Chi
Omega and Kappa Alpha Theta.
Campus Briefs
• Junior or senior women in
art must turn in their applica
tions by 5 p.m. Friday for the
Janet Davis memorial scholarship
offered annually by Kappa Alpha
Theta. Applications may be ob
tained in the student affairs of
fice.
0 The Student Union board’s
annual banquet will be held to
night at 6 in the ballroom. Award
certificates will be presented to 58
members, and dress for the ban
quet is suits for men and short
silks and heels for girls.
0 The AWS Recognition dessert
will be held Tuesday evening, from
6 to 6:30. AWS and other schol
arships will be awarded at the
dessert and all women are invited
to attend.
• Propeller elub will meet to
night at the home of A. L. Lomax,
1967 Onyx St., at 7:45. Movies on
foreign shipping, Alaska and the
Orient will be shown. All mem
bers are asked to be present, Lo
max said.
• A meeting of the AWS ex
ecutive council will be held at 6:30
tonight in the Student Union, ac
cording to Judy McLoughlin, AWS
president.
0 YWCA house representatives
will meet today at 4 p.m. in Ger
linger to plan for the URC cloth
ing drive and to begin planning for
next year.
Classifieds
FOR SALE: ’41 Merc coupe. Ex
cellent running, good body and
rubber, R&H, $300. Ph. 5-5735
evenings.
LOST—A pink sapphire ring in
the library. If found, call 5-9614
after five. Substantial reward.
ARE
YOU
SET
FOR
SUMMER?
See
CATALINA'S
"CUFF LINKS"
$14.95
at
The
II LOOK FOR THE \y FLYING FISH
Broadway