Ticket Sales Open For Theater Year Season tickets lor the Uni* j vcrsily theater's 1053-54 season are now on sale in the Student Union. A booth on the second j floor will be open until Thursday of this week where students ruin buy season tickets and get infor mation about theater activities. A booth will be set up in front of Emerald hall Wednesday of this week. Season ticket holders pay $5 for $7 worth of shows. They get prior-! lty ratings and are able to pur-! chase their tickets befoie the box office opens to the g< neral public. Announcements are sent to season ticket holders only, enabling them to order tickets by mail. Ticket Deadline Set No season tickets will be sold after Oct. 31, according to Mrs. Gene Wiley, theater business man ager. Subscribers who wish to re new last year's season tickets may do so and get a higher priority number if they order renewals im mediately. The 1053-54 season for the Uni versity theater will begin in Oc tober when ''.See How They Run,” a farce comedy by Phillip King opens its run under the direction of Horace Robinson, associate pro fessor of speech. Tragedy Coming Number two on the production list will be “Juno and the Pay cock." a drama by Sean O'Casey scheduled for early December. Frederick J. Hunter, instructor in speech, will direct the Irish dram atist:; work. F. Hugh Herbert’s comedy “The Moon Is Blue' will be given in the Arena style in February. Horace Robinson will direct the produc-: tion. Shakespeare's history of “King Richard II,' directed by Mrs. Ot tilie Seybolt, associate professor of speech, will be presented in March. This will be Mis. Seyboit’s final Women's Rush Opens Friday Women's rushing will begin Fri day with tours of all sorority houses by rushecs. This “open house" will last from 1 to 5 p.m. Members of Kwama, sophomore women's, honorary will conduct the tours. Deadline for rush sign-up is Thursday, Panhellenic President Sally Thurston has announced. Those wishing to rush may sign up in the office of women's affairs in Emerald hall. Rushing proper will begin Sat urday with six dates from 10 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. Sunday's schedule has five dates from 2 to 7:45 p.m. Monday there are four dates from 4 to 7:45 p.m., and next Tuesday is preference day with two dates from 6:15 and 8:15 p.m. Houses will hold breakfasts for their new pledges next Wednesday morning ftt 7. Transfers to Board Twenty-four women transfer students are be mg housed in three sororities on campus, Alpha Xi Delta, Sigma Kappa and Zeta Tau Alpha. A few more upperclass women transfers are expected this week, according to Mrs. Golda Wickham, director of women’s af fairs. This is the first time sorori ties have accepted boarders since Carson hall was completed, said Mrs. Wickham. The transfers will live in the sorority house which they are as signed for fall term. At the end of the term, they may move into a dormitory or, with the consent of the sorority, remain in the houses as boarders. If they have pledged another sorority during rushing, they may move into their new house after the term. production for the University the ater. "One Touch of Venus," to open in April, will be the annual UT musical production. The musical, with book and lyrics by S. H. Per elman and Ogden Nash and music by Kurt Weill, will be directed by Mr. Hunter. The final show will be given in May on the main stage under the direction of Horace Robinson. The title will be announced iater. In addition to the regular shows, season ticket holders only are al lowed to view certain “bonus shows' given throughout the year. Fraternities Add 53 in Spring a total of 5.i mon were pledged j by 16 of the 2J national fraternity, chapters on campus at the close of the spring term rush period,1 according to the office of student affairs. Those men pledged include: I Alpha Tau Omega: Max A. An derson, Myron T. Bagley, John E. Keller and Phil C. Lynch; Beta I Theta Pi: Patrick R. Cross and j Raymond Hill; Chi Psi: Cliff Owen; Delta Upsilon: John Burch am and John T. Rawls; Kappa Sig- j ma: Allen P. Cook, James A.\ Mathison, Ray Stumbo and Keith L. Tucker; Lambda Chi Alpha:; Gerald M. Garouette, William C. i Irving, Jerald H. Maxwell and •Stanley D. Rasmussen. Phi Gamma Delta: John W. Gaily; Phi Kappa Psi: H. Ernest Bergstrom; Phi Kappa Sigma: William C. Baker, Samuel T. Frear, John P. Oliver, Gary Dean Peterson and John D. Winkelman; Phi Sigma Kappa: Jack A. Dante; Pi Kappa Alpha: Harold O. Hack ett, Fred W. Hample, Harlan Hey den, J. Dennis Roach and Richard T. Stingley; Sigma Alpha Epsilon: Philip M. Espeseth, Donald A. Lewis, Gary McFarland and Don ald Hal McGee; Sigma Chi: Morris W. Adams, Robert L. Bond and C. Kent Dorwin. Sigma. Nu: Charles C. Clark, Navarre B. Davis, James C. Hud son, Edward W. Keegan, William Palmer, Richard L. Pavlat and I-o;ilic O. Wolfe; Sigma Phi Epsi lon; Maurice M. Bell, Stanley | Dmochowsky, Milton R. D»ug3 .fames L. Erdmann, W;iiter | Gaffney, William R. Hawks, How jarcI Schureman and Raymond Harry Walker; and Theta Chi; ; Charles V. Phillips. Today's Staff 1 ; Makeup Editor.Paul Keefe Desk Editor. Mitzi Asai Staff . Joan McGrath, Anne Ritchey, Laura Sturges Patronize Emerald Advertisers. When you smoke Chesterfield it’s so satisfying to know that you are getting the one cigarette that’s low in nicotine, highest in quality. A fact proved by chemical analyses of the country’s six leading cigarette brands. And it’s so satisfying to know that a doctor reports no adverse effects to the nose, throat and sinuses from smoking Chesterfield. 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