Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 22, 1953, Image 1

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    VOL. LIV
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1953
NO. 126
Fall Term Rushing Principles
Adopted by UO Fraternities
By Len Calvert
Em«r«ld AaaitUnt New* Editor
Fall term rushing for freshman
men moved one step closer Thurs
day night with the adoption of a
set of ten principles by Inter-Fra
ternity Council subject to the ap
proval of the office of student af
fairs.
The-principles will become part
of the IFC constitution after
standing for final approval at the
next meeting of the council. The
final vote will be taken after stu
dent affairs takes action on the
proposal.
Principles Outlined
The ten principles as adopted by
IFC were:
1. Rush week will be held
either the first or second week of
school fall term.
2. Rush week—orientation meet
ing will be heHT'the Sunday night
before and rushees will sign up for
their first dates the following
Monday.
3. There will be no prep decile
requirement for freshmen planning
to rush.
4. There will be no “hands off
policy between the opening of
BChool and rush week.
a—Freshman may be rushed on
arrival on campus.
b—Fraternity men will not be al
lowed in freshman dormitories at
any time during the year.
5. Open rushing will be in ef
fect all year with official pledge
period.s for winter and spring
terms starting the second week of
each term and lasting for three
weeks.
6. Initation Requirements:
a—If a pledge does not have a
2.00 accumulative GPA at the end j
of three terms, he will be dropped •
from his pledge.
b—Freshmen entering school
winter term must make his grades
in two terms in order to be eligible
to move into the house fall term.
c—Freshmen entering school
spring term may move into the
house fall term, but must have a
2.00 accum by the end of the fol
lowing winter term.
7. IFC will automatically drop
pledges who have not made their
grades for three terms.
8. Tuesday night will be the
night for all pledge meetings.
9. Fraternities can not hire
pledges to work in the houses.
10. Freshmen may participate in
house activities excepting intra
mural sports and when the dormi
tory may have a conflicting ac
tivity. Freshmen will also partici
pate in house study tables.
Music Fraternity
To Give Army Show
Phi Beta, national professional
fraternity of music and speech,
will present their army show in the
University lab theater next Tues
day at 1 p m. Tickets are 30 cents
for students and 60 cents for ad
ults, and may be purchased from
any member of Phi Beta. No tick
ets will be sold at the door.
Fourteen members of the Phi
Beta cast performed the same pro
gram at Fort Lewis, McChord
Field and Hanford Air Base on
May 1 and 2. Included in the show
are musical numbers, solo acts, and
comedy numbers.
Loughary To Play For Ball
t.: #*- “ipppr — ■»»
WHOMPING UP a rather Ingenious corsage for tomorrow’s Mortar Board Ball are left to right, above,
Geri Porritt, Phyllis Pearson, Llyodene Hurt, and Janet Woods, committee chairmen for the dance. An
award will be presented during the dance intermission for the most outlandish corsage.
Jack Loughary and his band will
provide music for the Mortar
Board ball Saturday night, ac
cording to Janet Woods and Tina
Fisk, general co-chairmen.
The ball will begin at 9 p.m.
in the Student Union ballroom.
Loughary has played for the Duck
Preview dance, the Whiskerino,
and the all-campus luncheon.
Featured with the band will be
Herb Widmer, the tenor saxophon
ist who formerly played with
Tommy Dorsey.
Tickets are available at the Co
op, Student Union, and in women’s
living organizations. They will also
be sold at the door. Price is $1.80.
Mortar Board members and dates
will be admitted free.
This year, for the first time,
five women's living organizations
will sponsor dinners for members
and their dates before the dance.
The houses are: Alpha Omicron Pi,
Alpha Xi Delta, Delta Delta Delta,
Gamma Phi Beta and Rebec house.
Dress will be formal. Males will
wear corsages, and prizes for the
most ingenious will be awarded.
Other events to be given include
a prize for the men’s living or
ganization with the highest per
centage of members attending, and
two traffic court scholarships.
The Least Man on Campus will
be chosen by vote from finalists
Bob Hughes, Ron Sigler, A1 Hard
er, Ed Tyler, Champ Husted, and
Don Lewis. He will be presented
at intermission.
Kwama, sophomore women’s
honorary, will tap 30 freshman co
eds, also during intermission.
Mistress of ceremonies Marilyn
Patterson will introduce entertain
ment by the Phi Delt combo, song
stress Gloria Lee, and Monologuist
Gloria Lee.
Proceeds from the dance go to
the Mortar Board scholarship fund
for an outstanding junior woman,
No scholarship has been awarded
for the past several years.
U.N. President
To Speak Here
The President of the United Nations general assembly will
speak here Tuesday. He’s Lester B. Pearson, and he’ll be worth
hearing.
Hes flying here from New York especially to address the
University, and flying right back Tuesday night.
At 1 p.m. Tuesday he will speak on “The New Common
wealth Bridge Between East and West,” in the Student Union
ballroom. A coffee hour forum will be held for the UN chief
Tuesday at 3 p.m.
Pearson, a Canadian, has been president of the general as
sembly since 1952. He’s also considered a good bet to become
prime minister of his nation.
Time magazine has called him: “His country’s first home
grown diplomat and a skillful advocate of Canada’s growing
demand to be heard in its own right.”
. He has said that the U. S. struggle against Communisnv
does not mean an automatic response ‘ready, aye, ready’ ” t<>
everything Washington proposes.”
Pearson is another of the top-flight national and internation
al figures who have lectured on campus in the past two-years
men such as historian Arnold Toynbee, and Labor Leader
Walter Reuther.
The Canadian and his wife will be guests of President H. K.
Newburn while in Eugene.
Legislation Panel
Debates Picketing
Thursday afternoon’s panel on labor-management legislation
broke at one point into a battle over the pros and cons of the
recent state law prohibiting organizational picketing.
James Marr, secretary of the Oregon state federation of la
bor, quoted Democratic state senator Phil Brady (also present
at the discussion) to the effect that if management wishes to see
Panel Winds Up
Industrial Confab
An afternoon panel session to
day winds up the two-day Third
Northwest Labor - Management
conference session was also held
this morning.
A cafeteria style lunch in the
Student Union is slated from noon
to 2 p.m. today, with on speaker
scheduled.
Anyone interested in the panels
may attend today's final sessions.
“The Know-How of Education
Procedures'' is the topic of the con
ference panel beginning at 2 p.m.
today in the SU. Discussing the
job of educational institutions in
the field of labor-management re
lations will be students including
Donald Barber, OSC; Robin Lin
stromberg, Pacific university; Joe
Rickenbacker, UO; Frank Seelye,
Lewis and Clark; and Virginia
Wakeman, Linfield. Karl Harsh
barger, junior in speech, will mod
erate the panel.
The panel this morning dis
cussed “The Know-How of Griev
ance Procedure,” led by Roy D.
Mahaffey, professor of speech at
Linfield. Labor and management
members served on the panel.
Conference adjournment will
take place after the afternoon
session.
The'Idols' Winner
Of Poetry Contest
The Julia Burgess poetry prize
of $25 has been won by Dick Bro
naugh, freshman in liberal arts,
for his poem "The Idols,” P. W.
Souers, head of the English de
partment, has announced.
Judges for the contest were T.
F. Mundle, assistant professor of
English, John Sherwood, assistant
professor of English, and S. N.
Karchmer, instructor in English.
| socialistic control of industry -
| in England, all it has to do is con
tinue the kind of attacks now being1
made against organized labor.
Marr opposed the bill partly ojv
the grounds that legislation won’t
cure the basic cases of conflict.
William Lubersky, attorney, dis
agreed with Marr, expressing tho
view also that present labor leg
islation in the country is not un
duly restrictive. His panel col
league, C. E. Miller, personnel
manager for Birdsye Snyder divi
sion of General Foods, had pre
viously said labor would make
more gains in its program if it
would refrain from abusive attacks
against management.
George Brown, secretary of tho
Oregon state industrial union coun
cil, asserted that the recent law
was really passed to hinder labor
organization, but that its propo
nents repeatedly said their only
purpose was to prohibit organi
zational picketing.
This discussion arose froth a
floor question by Brady.
Brown contended that the state
of Oregon has the best labor-man
agement relations in the country,
and that this law has served to
destroy much of the gains.
In the panel talks, Miller said
that the best attitude management
can take toward labor unions is to
treat them as another business,
treating them with businesslike re
spect.
But, as said, this is difficult
to do when unions call manage
ment “plutocrats” and “profit
pigs” during an election, then ex
pect immediate good feeling
around the bargaining table.
“I haven’t yet met an employer
who didn’t think he was being
fair,” Miller said, “nor have I met
a labor representative who didn’t
feel that his demands were reason
able.
No Paper Monday
There will be no Emerald pub
lished Monday. The paper will be
distributed Tuesday as usual.