Insurance Policy Sales Near 300 Wednesday Nearly 300 policies under the new ASUO insurance plan had been sold by Wednesday evening, according to Wes Eall, insurance committee chairman. This figure was approximately 20 per cent of the number of students who had gone through the registration pro cedure. The accident insurance, which was approved by 88 per cent of the students voting in spring term’s ASUO election, may be purchased either in the Student feeding -50. Air travel coverage Shoeshine, Tom? AS TO President Tern Wright son Is looking for a shoeshine kit that can lie purchased cheap. He may have to use it to polish the shoes of the Oregon State college student body president at halftime of the Oregon-OSC game Nov. 21. This humiliation to the Ore gon student body could come about If the percentage of Ore gon students purchasing new AS fO insurance policies is souther than the percentage of OSC students purchasing sim ilar policies at the other school. Union ballroom this week or at the office of student affairs next week. Cost of the policy is $4.50 for full 12 month coverage or $1.50 per term. Coverage up to $500 for hos pital care and doctor bills on any one accident and $500 for accident al death is provided. Intramural sports, luus skiing and swimming, are covered by the policy. The policy does not cover inter-schol astic sports, eye glasses, free ser vice rendered by the school health service, injuries covered by work men's compensation, war or any act of war or injury to teetli ex i« limited to regularly scheduled airlines. The new Insurance plan is a direct outgrowth of a study made last year by the ASUO senate of a similar plan in effect at Oregon State college. OSC this week challenged Ore gon to a contest based on insur ance plan sales. The school with the highest percentage of students purchasing the plan will be de clared the winner. Theater Schedules Final Summer Play “The Man,” University thea ter's final summer production will be presented September 25 and 26 as a bonus show for season tick et holders only. There will be no reserved seats for the bonus show, said Mrs. Gene Wiley, theater business manager. Invitations will be mailed to those who ordered season tickets last spring or this summer, but stu dents who have recently purchased tickets wlil be admitted upon bowing their receipts at the door. No regular admissions will be sold. Alums to Watch Games on Movies University of Oregon alurnni in nine cities will have a chance to see movies of this year’s Oregon football games. The* films will°be shown under the sponsorship of the University of Oregon Alumni association. The football movies will be shown in Bend, Coos Bay, Klam ath Falls, Moro, John Day, Pend leton, and The Dalles in Oregon and in Los Angeles and San Fran cisco, Calif. Be Sure To Read . . . Bob Funk returns to his 7,00 tor the fifth year to describe campus traditions for the Fresh man he finds there. Page 2. Lyle Nelson receives achieve ment award for outstanding public relations work at the University of Oregon. Page 2. Bill Hammer, who coached at the US Coast Guard Academy last year, is the new frosh foot ball mentor. Page 3. Fall Enrollment Increase Seen A slight increase in overall en rollment is forecast for fall term, by Clifford L. Constance, regis trar. Last fall's enrollment reached a peak of 4231. Registrations to taling approximately 4250 arc ex pected this term. A marked increase in the num- i ber of veterans is expected how- j ever. The influx of Korean veter-! ans is expected to offset the de- i dine in the number of World War II veterans, Constance reports. With admissions running al>out four per cent ahead of those at this time last year, new students should reach a total of approx imately 1631, 63 more than last fall term. A total of nearly 104S freshmen are expected to complete registration this term, along with about 115 special students. Both of these classifications show an increase from last year. The fresh men registration is expected to increase from last fall's total of 1027, and the special students ■ category is expected to rise from ! last year’s total of 110. The complete breakdown of cn-! rollment figures will not be avail-1 able until early next week, Con- i stance said. The number of stu dents registering ordinarily reaches a peak fall term, with lesser numbers enrolling for the winter and spring sessions, he added. When McClure Came Down McCLURE HALL as it appeared in early August when it was being razed to make room for the new $559,000 journalism building which will be completed in late 1954. The first permanent building ever to be torn down on the campus, McClure was completed in 1900 at a cost of $28,000. It was the third oldest building on campus.' Oregon Halts Stadium Plans Even though Eugene doesn't have it yet, the effects of televi sion are being felt by the Univer sity of Oregon in its athletic build ing program. The University’s plans to build a new football stadium were shelved for the time being in ac cordance with retiring President , K. Newburn’s recommendation to the state board of higher educa tion that it be postponed for the next 10 to 15 years. A statement from the University to the board said that “with the development of television and its effect upon attendance, we believe we need further experience before committing substantial funds to the construction of a permanent stadium. The experience should ex tend over the next several years and should indicate the nature and size of crowds we can expect to attend the games here in Eugene ” Newburn described the move as “hedging against the future’’ in an interview following the board's Tuesday meeting. The move has the approval of the faculty and ad ministration also. Seating Capacity Enlarged In place of the stadium, the seat ing capacity of Hayward field will be raised to 26,700 by raising the east grandstand, moving it back Students Meet Morris Tonight Both old and new students will have an opportunity to meet Act ing President Victor P. Morris to night at 8:30 at the president’s re ception. Faculty members will also be present at the event which is scheduled for the Student Union Dad's lounge. Also on the agenda for tonight is the SU open house from 7 to 10:30. Jim Blue's production of "Hamlet'' will be shown, coffee will be served in the Fishbowl and new students will be able to tour all of the SU. Rushing for women students will begin Friday at 1 p.m. with guided tours through the 16 cam pus sororities. Formal rush will continue through Tuesday. Annual “Hello Dance’’ will take place Saturday from 9 to 12 p.m. in the Student Union ballroom. Campus clothes are in order for the event which is open to both old and new students. Sunday has been designated as “Go-to-Church Sunday.” Students will at this time have their first opportunity to attend the church of their choice in Eugene. Open house for YMCA; YWCA; Women’s Recreation association: Oregana, student yearbook, and Emerald, campus newspaper, have been scheduled next week. Today Deadline For Rush Sign Up Deadline for women to sign lip for rush is 5 p.m. today, accord ing to Panhellenic President Sally Thurston. Prospective rushees may sign up in the office of women's affairs in Emerald hall. * Women going through open house and rush week will meet at 6:15 p.m. tonight in Gerlinger Alumni hall. Miss Thurston added. Rushees will be given final in formation on rushing. Open house in the 16 sororities on campus will be held Friday from 1 to 5 p.m. Any women in terested in lushing may visit the houses Friday, regardless of whether they have signed up for rush week. Rush dates are scheduled on Saturday, Sunday and Monday, with Tuesday as _preference day. Rush week closes Wednesday with 7 a.m. breakfasts at the sorori ties for their new pledges. Campus clothes will be worn for open house and rush dates from Friday to Monday. Short silks are in order for the two pref erence dates Tuesday. and adding steel bleachers Iij front. The seating capacity of Me-. Arthur court will also be increased hy the addition of a second balcony slated to hold 1500 people. This will bring the seating capacity of the building to around 10,000. Money for the changes will com® from the athletic fund which is made up of game profits and gifts. Estimated cost for the changes ia $135,000 for the stadium and $120, 000 for Mac court. An additional $40,000 is being kept as a reserve and $75,000 is being held for pos sible purchase of land for later stadium development. Pavilion Activity Scheduled Work on Hayward field will start no later than February. The addition to the basketball pavilion is scheduled to start soon after the state high school basketball tour nament next spring and to be fin ished in time for the 1954-55 sea son. The property east of Agate street, which the University has been acquiring for a stadium site for several years, is already be coming impractical because of in creased traffic and parking prob lems, according to Newbum. He also stated that the land should be held “for other and more im portant uses of the University.” Newbum stressed that the delay did not mean a change in the Uni versity’s athletic policy, but is be ing done on the practical basis of possible future game attendance here. Other questions, besides televi sion involved in the decision, were the future growth of Eugene, the possibility of a four-lane highway fi om Portland to Eugene and how well the coming games in Eugene with California schools will be at tended. Emerald Seeks Staff Members, Circulation Boss Applicants arc needed for the position of circulation manager of the Oregon Daily Emerald, ac cording to an announcement by Bill Brandsness, business manag er. All students interested in the position should see Brandsness this week at the Emerald quonset next to Deady hall. Other new staff members are needed by the campus daily, re potted Editor A1 Karr. Positions open include reporters, sports ami feature writers, night staff per sonnel, copydesk workers and ad vertising salesmen. Students interested in reporting and feature writing are asked to contact News Editor Joe Gardner at the Emerald offices or at Phi Kappa Psi. Sports writers may apply to Sports Editor Sam Vahey at the Emerald or Campbell club.' Hours for copydesk workers are 4 to 5:30 p.m. or 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. one day a week Sunday through Thursday. Night staff personnel work from 8 p.m. to midnight one night a week, Sunday through Thursday. Applicants for night staff or copydesk are asked to contact Managing Editor Jackie Warded at the Emerald quonset or Carson 2. Lauber Appointed Library Assistant John F. Lauber has been ap pointed to serve as administrative assistant in the University libraiv, according to Carl V. Hintz, li brarian. Lauber succeeds Robe:£ W. Croyder, who resigned. A grad uate of the University of Wash ington, Lauber holds master’s de grees in both English and librar ianship from that institution. Other appointments announced by Hintz include Robert D. Mar shall. also a graduate of the Uni versity of Washington, as social science librarian, and D. Kathleen Eads, who was formerly with the library of the University of Mis souri, as cataloguer.