VOL. LV UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, NOVEMBER 18, 1953 NO. 46 Dance Plans Near Finish nomecoining aance committee members took one last deep breath as they prepared to wind up final details for the dance,' Nov. 21, in the Student Union ballroom. Dick Schwary and his band has HC Sign Plans, Costs Due Today The absolute deadline for sub mitting Homecoming sign plans and a financial statement is today, at 5 p. m., according to Ann Ger linger and Ann Bankhead, sign contest co-chairmen. The plans and financial state ment may be submitted to either Miss Bankhead or Miss Gerlinger at Kappa Alpha Theta. "Those living organizations fail ing to follow these rules will be disqualified,” Miss Bankhead has stated. An expense limit of $35 has been placed on each sign, she added. Judging of the signs will be based on adherence to the central theme, effort, originality and im pressiveness. Men’s and women’s living organizations will be judged separately and a rotating trophy will go to the winner in each di vision. Second and third place awards will be donated by Eugene merchant*. Far East Professor To Speak Tuesday T. Z. Koo former official in the Chinese Nationalist government and present professor of Oriental studies at Iowa State university * wiil speak in a University assembly next Tuesday at 1 p.m. ' "The War of Ideas in the Ori . ent" be the topic of Koo’s speech. Koo was an official in the de partment of Railways in the Chi » nehe Nationalist government, a rational YMCA and church leader, , and a university professor. Al though he has lived din the United States for some years, he has maded many trips to China and * has current contacts with the sit , nation there and throughout the | Orient. ► In speaking appearances Koo Usually wears his native Chinese ► scholar’s robe. He usually has his Chinese flute along and on re * quest will play a bit before start ing his address. ► \ ~ ' DICK SCHWARY AND HIS BAND Music for Homecoming Slides to Illustrate Art Lecture Tonight Slides of early cave paintings and of contemporary paintings will illustrate the lecture given by Mrs. Chandler Beall as she pre sents the basic principles of anci ent and modern art tonight at 7:30 in the Student Union browsing room. W. S. Baldinger, associate pro fessor of art, will lead discussion from the audience following Mrs. Beall’s lecture. The slides used in the lecture are on loan from the University art school, Mrs. Beall said. Mi*s. Beall, who is well-traveled, has designed her lecture to sug gest a practical approach to the understanding of the abstract art expression of our times. She has visited the great art collections of her native country, France, and those of Germany, Italy, Spain, the United States and Mexico. She studied art in Paris, at the Academie Julian, and at the Acad emic Modeme with Fernand Le ger. Having worked with Hans Hofmann at the Chouivard School of Art in Los Angeles in 1931, she was given a scholarship to Hof mann’s Art Academy in Munich, Germany two years later. More recently, Mrs. Beall has studied with Hofmann again in his New York school. She has also done work with Ozenfant in his Paris school and with Archipenko. In addition she has studied art in' Mexico. School Building Discussion Heads Conference Agenda * Discusion of national trends in i school building construction and ^ school curricula heads the agenda i for the Oregon state conference on ► School Plant Planning which ► opens here Thursday morning. ► The conference, which will run ' Thursday, Friday and Saturday, k is designed to give school superin k tendents and school board mem i bers an oportunfty to discuss pro , blcms involving school plants. i Ray Hamon, chief of the school * housing section of the United ( States Office of Education in i Washington, D. C., will discuss na r tional trends in school plants at the first business session of the ! canference Thursday morning. * “Planning a Program of Long Range School Plant Expansion” ’ will be covered in an address by [ Clarence Hines, superintendent of ► Eugene schools, in the second session Thursday. k Morris To Talk Victor P. Morris, acting presi ^ dent of the University, and Rex Putnam, state superintendent of k Public instruction, will give short welcoming talks at a general ses* L sion prior to the talks. Charles Bursch, chief of the school plant planning section of the California State Department of Public Instruction, will discuss "Planning a Basic School Unit” at a general session Thursday af ternoon. Also during the afternoon, dis cussion groups will meet to cover elementary school curriculum trends and elementary school plan ning, high school curriculum trends and school plant planning, special facilities and site selec tions and development. Demonstration Scheduled Alfred Christensen, planning consultant for Falk & Booth, a San Francisco architectural firm, will discuss “Providing Visual Comfort in the Classroom” at a Thursday evening session. A school lighting demonstration by Chester Jarrett, lighting consul tant for Portland General Electric, will be presented following the talk. Friday morning, “Services of the State in School Building Plan ning” will be covered,in an address by A. L. Beck, director of school house planning for the Oregon State department of Education. Christensen will return to speak on “Budgeting and Cost Control” at a general session Friday morn ing. Slated for group discussion Fri day afternoon are thermal control, problems involved in remodeling and adding to the school plant, consultants and their contribution to school plant planning and more detailed discussion on special fa cilities. Eugene Visit Slated The conference delegates will visit school buildings in the Eu gene area Friday afternoon. Thomas Powers, superintendent at Bethel and president of the su perintendents of the First Class Districts, will preside at a meet ing of that group Friday evening. The closing session of the con ference will feature Jack Annand, Portland architect, who will speak on “How the Schools Can Work Effectively with the Architect.” ‘Annand is the architect who de signed the University theater. Registration for the conference will begin at 9 a. m. Thursday on the second floor of the Student Union, where most of the sessions will be held. Queen Voting Ends Today Voting for Homecoming queen will end at 5 p. m. today, accord ing to Marcia Tamiesie, co-chair man of the queen selection com mittee. Voting booths are located inside the Student Union near the main desk, inside the Co-op and in Commonwealth Square. Miss Ta miesie urges all students to par ticipate in the elections. Student body cards will be stamped at time of voting. Members of the 1953 Homecom ing court are as follows: Mary Co sart, Ann Gerlinger, Janet Miller Nancy Randolph, Sylvia Wingard and Florence Wright. SU Board Will Meet The Student Union board will meet at 4 p. m., today in the SU board room, according to Andy Berwick, chairman. Agenda for the meeting is as follows: • Board petitioning report and announcement of new board mem bers; • Barbershop quartet contest report; • Treasurer’s report; • Directorate chairman’s re port; 0 Special attractions commit tee report. HC Button Sales Near Half of Quota Nearly half the total sales quota of 5000 Homecoming buttons had been reached by Tuesday noon, ac cording to Milan Foster, finance committee chairman. Public schools sales had topped the quota of 400, and more but tons were put on sale Tuesday af ternoon by Bud Hinkson’s commit tee. Campus sales, under Jean Piercy and Donna Anderson, ap proached the goal of 1500, with 1350 having been sold at the time of Foster’s report. Downtown sales, led by Jane Bergstrom, neared one-third of its 1500 quota. Returns from Spring field had not been reported, with alumni registration sales, which start Friday, expected to in crease this total by 300 more. been scheduled to musically greet alums and students of Oregon an*' Oregon State college, states Boi* McCracken, dance committe chair man. Schwary’s band, rated "Port land’s Newest and Best,” has just completed an engagement at tho Jantzen Beach ballroom. Most of the members have worked for name band leaders such as Jack Teagarden, Les Brown, Charlie Parker, Claude Thornhill, and Charlie Barnett. Schwary, a 1952 graduate of Oregon, played in Portland bands for several years and followed this with New York appearances be fore forming his present group. F’eatured soloists include Don Manning, drums, formerly with Claude Thornhill; Louise Mann, vocalist; Bob Schlicting, sax, for merly with Charlie Barnet; and Fred Keller, trombone, formerly with Les Brown. Recordings released for radio broadcast by the band include "Ruby,” "Melancholy Rhapsody,” “Tenderly,” and : :It’s You or No One,” featuring Louise Mann. Tickets Now on Sale Dance tickets are on sale for $2 at the main desk of the Student Lnion, the Co-op, and all men’s living organizations. Carol Oakly, dance ticket committee chairman, has urged everyone to buy hi») ticket early, even though they w»lL be sold at the door Saturday night. Plans for decorations include a. two-tone green false ceiling of’ crepe paper, according to Jano Flippo, decoration chairman. Around the walls will be black sil houettes trimmed with silver sparkle, depicting scenes from the theme, "As Time Goes By.” Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Vincent will be official chaperones, accord ing to Betty Anderson, chaperenw chairman. There are fourteen members of the faculty and their wives on the guest list. Pollack To Emcee Bob Pollock, general Homecom ing chairman, will be master of ceremonies during the intermission when the Homecoming queen wiii be introduced. Trophys for the sign contest winners and tappings by Druids will also be conducted during this time. Attire for the affair will bo short silks for women and suits for men. Flowers will be optional: Members of the dance commit tee are Bob McCracken, chairman; Jane Flippo, decorations; Carol Oakley, tickets; Diane Edlefscn and Mary Gerlinger, program; Hetty Anderson, chaperones; Jer ry Froebe, clean-up; Don Bonime, promotion, and Travis Cavens publicity. Death Takes Eton Moore Elon H. Moore, for ten years head of the sociology department at the University of Oregon, died* Monday of a heart condition in a Phoenix, Ariz, hospital. He wa» 59. Moore, who retired from his pout at the University in June, was va cationing in Arizona with his wife, Marjorie. He was to have done., part time teaching next spring with the extension division of the Oregon State System of Higher Education. His retirement last June marked the end of 17 years of service cn. the University faculty. He came te the University as a professor of sociology in 1935, and became^ head of the department in 194& Prior to that time, he was a pro fesor of sociology at Oregon State college from 1928 to 1936. Moore was active in the Pacific Coast Sociological society amfe> served as president of that group for one year. He was also a mem ber of the Pacific Coast commit tee on old age research and con ducted numerous studies in Ore gon on old age and retirement. Born May 18, 1894, at Moscow, Mich., Moore married Marjorie Kenney in 1921. Four grown chil dren, two boys and two girls, sur vive.