Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 01, 1953, Image 1

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    Group Insurance
Available Friday
Additional students and faculty
members may sign up for the
ASUO sponsored group accident
coverage Friday in the SU, when
the insurance committee, headed
by Wes Ball, will maintain a table
for that purpose.
Late registrants and others who
have not yet had an opportunity
to buy the insurance have neces
sitated this re-establishment of
the desk for one day, said Ball.
The plans pays all expenses such
as doctor bills, hospital bills, medi
cal fees, nursing charges and oth
er incidentals, up to $500 on any
one accident, at a group cost of
$4.50 for an entire 12-month per
iod. Ball stressed that this fee in
cluded vacation periods, and add
ed that the services could also be
purchased at a one-term fee of
$1.50.
Students and faculty who will
not be able to purchase their in
surance Friday may do so by fill
ing out one of the application
blanks left at Emerald hall’s bus
iness office for that purpose.
These applications are to be mail
ed to the Mutual of Omaha in
surance office at 992 Willamette
st.
RE Week Petitions
Needed by Oct. 9
Deadline for petitions for Re
ligious Evaluation week is Oct.
9, according to Barbara Swanson,
chairman. Chairmen are needed
for the personal conference, as
semblies, and arrangements com
mittees.
Members are also needed for the
following committees: arrange
ments, assemblies, book display,
classroom, finance, fireside, hos
pitality, luncheon, personal con
ference, promotion, publicity, Sun
day night dinner, and worship.
Petitions may be turned in to Miss
Swanson at Carson hall or the
YWCA office in the Student Un
ion.
'Juno' Tryouts
Tonight, 7-9.
Sean O’Casey's modern drama
"Juno and the Paycock," will be
the second major production for
the University theater's current
season. Tryouts for the Irish
drama will be held from 7 to 9
p.m. today in Villard 102, accord
ing to Frederick J. Hunter, di
rector.
The play features six roles for
women and 13 for men. Copies of
the play may be borrowed from
Mr. Hunter's office, Villard 213.
J-School Groups
Form Press Club;
To Meet Tuesday
A University Press club for all
students interested in the news
editorial-photography portions of
newspaper, radio, and magazine
work will hold its first organiza
tional meeting next week.
The club will be sponsored by
two journalism fraternities. Theta
Sigma Phi and Sigma Delta Chi.
Membership will be open to all
university students, regardless of
year or major.
The first meeting will be held
in the Student Union at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday. In addition to organiza
tional details it will feature a re
port on the East German uprising
in Berlin last June, when East
Germans revolted against Soviet
domination.
Speakers will be Jurgen Dob
berke and Lothar Loewe, both
from Berlin newspapers and both
special journalism students here
for their paper this year. They
covered the r e vo 11 of the
Soviet line of demarcation be
tween eastern and Western Berlin
several times in the process. Dob
berke will show photographs he
took of action during the riots.
The Press club will meet on the
first Tuesday night of each month
during fall quarter. The Novem
ber meeting will have as its speak
er Robert B. Frazier, prize-win
ning star reporter of the Eugene
Register-Guard, who has recently
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UIS Constitution
To Be Ratified
United Independent Students,
campus political party, will meet
at 3:30 today in the Student Un
ion to ratify its new constitution
and to lay plans for the coming
year. Interested independent stu
dents have been invited to attend
by President Hollis Ransom.
Members last week decided to
poll independent students to dis
cover how their representatives in
student government should act,
Ransom said. Norma Glazier and
Bruce Bloomfield volunteered to
take charge of preliminary ar
rangements and will report today.
A committee to make final re
vision of the proposed constitu
tion included Gordon Rice and
John Vasbys, and Ransom.
A secretariat has been formed
and at present includes Jim Mur
ray, Lois Larsen, Germaine La
Marche and Dennis Davis.
Russ Cowell will report today on
the financial condition of the or
ganization.
Admission Exams
Offered Fall Only
For Med School
The medical college admission
test, required of all students wish
ing to enter a medical college will
be given only during the fall term
this year, according to the science
department.
The test must be taken during
the final year of pre-medical
studies in order to gain admit
tance to any medical school which
is a member of the Association
of American Medical Colleges. It
was formerly given in the spring
also but beginning this year Ore
gon will offer it Nov. 2 only,
while Oregon State college will
give it during spring term.
All applications for the test
must be mailed to Princeton, N.J.,
before Oct. 19. Further informa
tion may be obtained by inquiry
at the science building office.
Two seniors and ten sophomores
have petitioned for the two va
cancies on the ASUO senate and
will be interviewed at tonight’s
senate meeting which begins at
6:30 in the Student Union. Three
petitions for Homecoming chair
men were received and petitioners
for this position will also be in
terviewed tonight.
Dick Hollenbeck and Ben
Schmidt are the seniors seeking
spots on the senate. Sophomore
senate aspirants are Gwen Zin
niger, Jane Bergstrom, Jackie
Jones, Edna Humiston, Sharlene
Warren Appointed
U. S. Chief Justice
UP) - Governor Earl Warren of
California was named Chief Jus
tice of the United States Wed
nesday by President Eisenhower.
Warren succeeds Fred M. Vinson,
who died of a heart attack Sept!
8. His formal nomination will be
sent to the Senate when it re
convenes in January.
Warren will be the second Re
publican on the bench. The 14th
man in history to hold the post,
Warren has been governor of Cal
ifornia for 10 years. His present
term does not expire until Jan
uary, 19o5. Lt. Gov, Goodwin
Knight will assume Warren’s for
mer office.
Ex-Emerald Ed
Heads Journal
Arden X. Pangbom, 1929-30 ed
itor of the Emerald, was named
Tuesday as editor of the Oregon
Journal. Taking over his duties
about Nov. 1, he will also serve
as vice-president and a director
of the Journal Publishing com
pany.
Pangborn, who served as Em
erald editor during his sophomore
year at the University, succeeds
the late P. L. Jackson, who was
editor and publisher until his
death in February. He will assume
supervision of the Journal's news
and editorial departments and its
editorial page.
A versatile journalist, Pang
born served on the Oregonian
staff as general reporter, editor,
city editor, executive news edi
tor and managing editor.
Stewart, Barbara Gilpin, Gordon
Rice, Bud Hinkson, Martin Bran
delfcls and Jerry Farrow.
Homecoming chairman petitions
were submitted by Russell Cowell
and Robert Kelly, sophomores and
a co-chairman petition by Dorothy
Kopp and Bob Pollock.
The senate agenda will also in
clude a report on orientation by.
the chairman, AWS President
Judy McLoughlin; a report from
the Millrace committee by E. G.
Ebbighausen, associate professor
of physics and faculty member of
the senate; a discussion of tho
proposed campus chimes by Dick
Williams, Student Union director;
presentation of the budget by
ASUO Pres. Tom Wrightson and
discussion of the graduate student
amendment.
Embossograph !
Made Available
The embossograph machine,
owned by the Student Union,
again will be made available t<*
use by all campus agencies, the
SU board voted Wednesday after
noon.
The equipment previously bam
been used by all groups, but it
reverted to the SU board last
spring term because of mishand
ling of the machine.
Included in the 3-part motion
are: 1. hiring a student as the
embossograph operator, who will
be paid on a commission basis; 2.
setting deadlines for poster orders
from campus groups, and 3.
charging a nominal fee to cover
depreciation of the machine and
operator costs.
The board added that the Stu
dent Union publicity committee
will continue to be allowed to cp
ate the machine, in addition to
the paid operator.
Operator to be Hired
Members of the executive com
mittee will have charge of hiring
an operator and putting the em
bossograph room into operation.
In other board business, Bar
bara Wilcox, sophomore in liberal
arts, was selected as movie com
mittee chairman. Miss Wilcox,
who has been serving as acting
chairman of the committee since
September, won the position over
Carol David, sophomore in liberal
arts, the only other petitioner.
Proposal to Rebuild 'O' Under Consideration
THIS LAST SPRING REPAIR ATTEMPT FAILED
by Anne Ritchey
Emerald Feature Editor
As soon as men’s rushing is
over there is going to be some
action taken on the Oregon “O”
atop Skinner’s Butte.
According to Ray Hawk, direc
tor of men’s affairs, a proposal
for reconstruction will be made
at the first Inter-fraternity coun
cil meeting, in conjunction with
the ASUO senate, and the propos
al will be submitted to the city
council of Eugene.
The reason for all the concern
about the “O” by top officials of
both the University and the city
dates back, most recently, to last
spring term. As usual, the “O”
had been cleaned and painted in
connection with Junior Weekend
activities. Under the general
chairmanship of Milan Foster, the
members of Delta Upsilon frater
nity had undertaken the job.
The rejuvenation process went
off smoothly and with no more
conflict than usual, until prank
sters, said to have been from Ore
gon State college, decided to cause
trouble. They set off several series
of dynamite blasts, the most ef
fective of which changed the "O”
into a perfect “C,” and then they
painted it orange.
The dynamitings were quite se
vere, and one of them scattered
cement and stone into the lawns of
neighboring houses, with the re
sult that 123 indignant citizens
presented a petition requesting its
complete removal.
This petition was taken before
the city council, then under the
direction of Oren King, city man
ager. Attending the meeting as a
representative of the student body
was Craig Weatherford, who had
served on the repair committee.
At this meeting, held at the
end of spring term, the council de
cided upon a policy which will
govern all such matters in the
future, and which the University
is taking into consideration now as
a proposal is being formulated.
This policy, in King’s words
is and will be that we “don’t want
the O obliterated, but we must
face the realistic problem of paci
fying the citizenry.” This would
seem to indicate that there must
be some change in the construc
tion of the controversial object,
and with this in mind a student
committee, formed last spring,
named two alternatives.
One is that the “O” could be
made of tin or a light sheet metal,
and fastened securely to the
ground. This would discourage
dynamite attempts, as would the
other alternative, which is that it
could be made of wood, instead
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