Campus fcotauL By Gail Savage Emerald Reporter At Alpha Delta Pi Carol Shellenbarger is wearing the pin of Delt Dick Weakley, now in the army at Fort Lewis. Jean Smith is pinned to DU Lynn Jen sen, and Nancy Uhrhammer came home pinned to Bob Palmer, gradu ate of the U of W. Fran Neel an nounced her engagement to Vance Johnson. Theta Chi now at the U. of W. At Chi Omega The engagement of Jeanne Hall and Roz Hunt, Phi Psi, was an nounced at a senior party. Fresh man Betty Fackler was pinned to Stan Savage, SAE, last week. Patty Kemmerer is now wearing the Delt pin of Jerry Brown. Bob Crities, Beta now in the Coast Guard, left his pin with Bonnie Bressler. Donna Blum would like to add that she has been pinned to Beta Jim Moore since March 23, 1952. At Sigma Kappa Gail Savage is now wearing the Phi Sig pin of John Waugaman. Peggy Miller and Sonia Dalton are new spring term initiates. Pauline Merrill, Beulah Johnson and Pat May are wearing Sigma Kappa pledge pins. At Orides Janice Hollister, Dixie Lucas, and Kathy Harris are new Orides initiates. Willma Woodford is a new pledge. Sally Hayden was re cently installed as president of the University Religious Council. Kay Lucas announced her engagement to Wayne Musgrove. Dixie Lucas is planning an August wedding to Ward Sherman. Phi Sigma Kappa at Oregon State. At Kappa Kappa Gamma Earlene Smith announced her engagement to Tom Tarbell, Chi Psi now in the Air Force. A July wedding is planned. Ancy Vincent is engaged to Dave Fletcher, Phi Delt now at Stanford. Their wed ding is planned for Christmas. An other Christmas wedding will be that of Ann Chambers and Marty Hankinson, ATO. Sally Palmer is engaged to Beta Jack Southworth. Janet Miller is wearing the ATO pin of Jim Jones. At Gamma Phi Beta... A teach in honor of Mrs. Paul Patterson, wife of Oregon’s gov ernor, was held Sunday at the chapter house. Mrs. Patterson was a Gamma Phi at Oregon in the class of 1924. Georgene Porter is engaged to Bob Jones. Jean Henderson has an nounced her engagement to Jim Pinninger, ATO at Oregon State. Jean Webb, presently working in San Francisco, is pinned to Jack Taylor, former ATO at Oregon State. Psychology Club Talk Set Tuesday Dr. Hermann Mannheim, visit ing professor from London, will be the guest speaker at the Physchol- ’ ogy club meeting Tuesday at 8 p.m. at the Student Union. He will speak on “The Role of the Psychologist in British Penal Institutions.” A brief business meeting will be held prior to the lecture. The Psychology club will hold its annual spring picnic at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Robert Leeper on Friday evening, May 29. All psy chology majors are urged to at tend. Those who plan to attend should see the department secre tary in Condon hall, according to Dr. Leeper. Two Frosh Women To Talk on YWCA Geri Porritt and Becky Fortt will speak on “The Advantages of Affiliating with a Campus YWCA in the Freshman Year in College” at a tea for the graduating seniors of Y-Teen groups from Eugene and Springfield. The tea will be Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Virgil D. Earl. TERMINAL TAXI Phone 5-4311 Day or Night MOVING ST0RA6E PACKING Your Local MAYFLOWER Warehouseman Williams Transfer Co. 83 East 5th Ave. Eugene, Ore. Ph. 5-3134 Across the Street - Across the Nation t®S5S« mayflowb) Regional NFCL Seen Approaching Reality By Joe Gardner Emerald Auiilant New* Editor A regional organization of Northwest colleges came closer to reality with the trip to Tacoma made last weekend by Sophomore Class President Bob Summers. Summers spoke Saturday to a meeting of the Evergreen Confer ence of Student Associations held at Pacific Lutheran college on the feasibility of a plan to consolidate their organization with the Oregon Federation of Collegiate Leaders. He heads a special committee of the ASUO senate which is study ing a proposed Northwest Federa tion of Collegiate Leaders. The new organization would in clude schools in Oregon, Idaho, Washington and Montana. Sum mers told the Emerald Tuesday that such a group would consoli date schools with similar problems, improve public relations among the schools and give more power and efectiveness to Northwest col leges. At present there are two groups in the Northwest which attempt to accomplish these ends. Oregon withdrew from one, the Pacific Student Presidents association, last month because the organiza tion was thought to be inadequate. The University has never been a member of the other, the National Students association, which is a nation-wide group. Major criticism of these two groups is their size and expense. At present nearly 130 schools are included in PSPA. The problems of these groups, Summers said, are too national in scope to be of value to thq Northwest. NFCL would haxe approximately 40 member schools, he declared. Other student groups in the Northwest are of a more local na ture. ESCA, addressed by Sum mers last week, is comprised of eight smaller Washington schools including the University of Brit ish Columbia. Washington State college and the University of Washington are not represented. OFCL is an exclusive Oregon group of which the University has been a member for ten years. The biggest problem now facing the proposed reorganization is, ac cording to Summers, a reluctance on the part of these two organiza tions to lose their individual identity. Nevertheless, ECSA., passed a resolution favoring the new group and will send repre sentatives to an OFCL conference to be held in the fall at Reed col leeg. Main item on the agenda will be the drafting of an NFCL con stitution. The move for regional organiza tion was started by Ken Strand, student leader at WSC, who spoke last fall to the Oregon senate. At a leadership confeernce held two weeks ago at Marylhurst college under the sponsorship of NSA, several Oregon schools expressed interest in the plan to ASUO pres ident Pat Dignan. Dignan has dele gated Summers, who was recently re-elected to the senate, to con duct further studies. Out of state interest has been indicated by the University of Montana. Idaho schools, although members of NSA, are seriously considering membership in the new organization. "Northwest colleges are definite ly looking to Oregon for leader ship in the formation of NFCL,” stated Summers. "I look for the first NFCL conference to be held a year from this spring, possibly at Oregon,” he concluded. FAHLMAN SATISFIED Report Made on SU's Year The report of Clyde Fahlman, re tiring chairman of the Student Union board for the 1952-53 school year, stated that the SU’s year has been a highly active and suc cessful one. The report pointed out several weaknesses both at the program level, but the overall pic ture was a good one. The report was written under the three-fold heading of ac complishments at the board level, and recommendations. Over 165 single events weer con ducted during the year including movies, dances, art exhibits, Brownsing Room coffee hours, coffee hour forums, and music programs. The breakdown follows: dances, 14; art exhibits, 18; Friday night coffee hours, 10; coffee hour for ums, 21; football movies, four; Sunday movies, 22; educational films, 83 reels, and music, 26 events, including the Sunday con cert hours and campus community sings. The year’s work at the board level was centered around stream Senior in Music To Play Tonight Anna Marie Blickenstaff, pian ist, will present her senior recital tonight at 8 p.m. in the music school auditorium. Included in the first section of the program will be “Partita No. 6,” by Bach; “Sonata in B Major, Longo No. 331” and “Sonata in B Flat Major, Longo No. 498,” by Scarlatti, and “Phantasie, K. 475” and Sonata, K. 457” by Mozart. The second half of the program will consist of “Intermezzo, Op. 117, No. 2” and “Intermezzo, Op. 119, No. 3,” by Brahms; “Noc turne, Op. 15, No. 2” and “Etude, Op. 10, No. 3,” by Chopin, and “Sonata No. 4 in E Major,” by Ross Lee Finney. Following the recital there will be a reception given by Mu Phi Epsilon, women’s music honorary, in honor of Miss Blickenstaff and her sister, Rosalie. Rosalie, a sophomore, was featured in a re cital Tuesday. lining the administrative set-up and program, and the sponsoring of several special events, the re port says. The personnel committee, se lected skeleton committee mem bers, may be merged with the pub ! lie relations committee for 1953- ; J 54 because of the overlapping j duties. The public relations committee published 15 “chatter sheets” dur ing the past school year, but will have a greatly enlarged program in the future, including the con- : ducting of polls and personnel hours. Approximately 20 hospital ity hours were conducted by the public relations committee during the year. Other board accomplishments were the sponsorship of the Don Cossack concert, the instigation and organization of career day, the sending of delegates to the SU national and regional conferences, and the arranging of the SU awards banquet. Fahlman made 19 recommenda tions to the 1953-54 board. He sug gested: preparation for a more ex tensive SU open house during orientation week; attendance of directorate members at board meetings; moving of the board membership selection up to winter term; continued encouragement of faculty membership on commit ittees; endeavoring to fill the va cacncies on the board as soon as possible; and delegation of the bowling and billiards tournament to the administration. New Alum Scholarship Plan Called Successful Less than a year ago the alumni association conceived an idea to help the university by starting a scholarship fund. The idea has taken hold and this year 13 in coming students have benefited to the tune of $4100. The purpose of plan is to seek gifts from alumni mainly to set up scholarships for new students. Di vided into three general categories to raise money, the first type is a general scholarship fund derived from alumni in response to mail appeal. The next plan is the community scholarship program calling for each community in the state to sponsor its own program. Last year the university alumni office ran a test campaign in Bend, a typical community, to 3ee what could be raised and learned from such an undertaking. Over $1,400 was raised and as a result this year five $200 scholarships were awarded to graduates of Bend high school. Under this program the indi vidual community recommends the candidates and makes the final choice based on the candidate’9 background and knowledge. Under the individual alumni scholarship plan, a private person or firm desirous of sponsoring a scholarship, remits the money an nually. Several of these have been given and the alumni association hopes more will be added. The scholarships, in all cases, are awarded by the scholarship and financial aid committee of the university except in the case of the community plan. All scholarship recipients are given a certificate which desig nates them as “alumni scholars.’’ These awards are given at the time of student commencement whenever possible. Les Anderson, alumni director, is quite pleased with the results of the campaign this year. “It is a step in the right direction.” An derson felt the committee had learned! much from its first at tempts. A goal of $10,000 is set for next year. In the case of the individual plan, the alumnus spon soring a student sees his protegee enroll in his alma mater, graduate, and return to the community.