Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, December 03, 1953, Image 1

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    Cloudy . . .
Final* today feature Hale Kane
and I’hi Delta Theta in both the
‘A’ and ‘B’ context*. See story on
P»K« 3.
IM Volleyball...
with occasional shower* u tha
weather picture through 8aM(iMk
high today, 54 degrees.
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, THURSDAY, "BifcEMBER 3, 1953
s
No. TB
Vol. LV
5U Board
Quartet
rinai ruieH ror the Barbershop
Quartet contest, to be held Jan.
22 during Dads' weekend, were ap
proved by the Student Union board
Wednesday afternoon.
Deadline for any male students
wishing to enter the contest is
Friday at 5 p. m., according to Lu
cia Knepper, SU music commit
tee member. Contest entries may
be placed in the committee box on
the third floor of the SU.
In other business. Board Chair
man Andy Berwick announced a
SU personel hour to be held at
6:30 tonight in the Dad's lounge.
Berwick also announced the a
genda for the six Nevada stu
dents who will visit the campus
Dec. 3, 4 and 5. The students and
the Nevada dean of student af
fairs will observe Oregon's SU and
its program for suggestions in
planning their own new student
union.
"Calendar of Events,’1 SU pub
lication, will be printed for winter
and spring term activities, SU di
rector R. C. Williams reported. It
will be distributed to students dur
ing winter term registration in
January.
The board accepted the bid of
9164 from Koke-Chapman com
pany for printing the calendar.
The price provides for 2400 copies
in two colors done by lithograph
process.
Complete barbershop quartet
contest rules include: 1. Only male
students may participate: 2. No
fraternity, sorority or hall songs
may be included and no musical
accompaniment or special musical
effects will be permitted; 3. Dress
should be appropriate to the oc
casion; 4. Selections must be sub
mitted to the committee by Dec.
15 in case of song duplication; 5.
The same two selections sung at
the qualifying auditions are to be
sung for the contest, and 0, ,No
member of a quartet may partici
pate In another entering quartet.
Judging wil be don by one per
son from the music school faculty
and two persons in music educa
tion. The basis for judging will be
20 percent on tonal quality; 20
percent on perfection of perform
ance; 20 percent on blend; 20 per
cent on originality; 10 percent on
stage presence and 10 percent on
appearance.
Qualifying audition will be held
in the SU ballroom from 6:30 to 8
p. m. on Jan. 12. Auditions judges
will include one person from the
music school faculty, one student
in music and one Eugene resident.
Basis for rating will be appear
ance, quality, stake presence and
originality.
An award will be made to the
first place contest winner, with
recognition of second and third
place winners. Tickets for the con
test will be distributed to fathers
registering for Dad's wekend.
Dads will be allowed one ticket
per person in their immediate fam
ily. Tickets remaining after the
close of registration Jan. 22 will
be available at the SU main desk.
Dad's Day Needs
Six Sub-Chairmen
A petition call for sub-chairmen
for Dad's Day, to be held January
23, has been issued by Tom
Wrightson, ASUO president. Pe
titions will be due Tuesday at 5
p. m. in the ASUO office, Student
Union 304.
Chairmen are needed for the fol
lowing committees: promotion and
publicity, reception and hospital
ity, sign contest, special events,
hostess selection and dads’ lunch
eon.
'Juno and the Paycock' Opens Friday;
Seats Available for All Performances
Good seats are still available for
almost all performances of the
University Theater’s final fall
term production, “Juno and the
Paycock,” according to Mrs. Gene
Wiley, theater business manager.
The Irish drama opens on the main
stage Friday at 8 p. m. and will
run until next Thursday with no
performance scheduled Sunday.
Only a few seats are left for Fri
day and Saturday night, but more
are available for the Monday
through Thursday run, she said.
The play, by the modern Irish
tOavwright Sean O'Casey, deals
with the life of an Irish family
during the revolution of the I920's.
The entire production is under the
direction of Horace W. Robinson,
instructor in speech.
Cast in the leads are Donna
Maulding as Juno and Phil San
ders as Captain Boyle. Ken Olsen
and Phyllis Johnson are cast as
the two Boyle children Johnny and
Mary.
Mary’s two suitors are played
by John Jensen and Don Van Bos
kirk. Other parts are played by
Scott Lehner and Floy von Groene
wald.
Fun Fest Petition
Deadline Is Today
Petitions for chairmanships for
the YWCA-sponsored Fun Fest
are due today at either the YWCA
office or Chi Omega, according to
Betti Fackler, general chairman
of the affair.
Chairmanships open are local in
vitations, off-campus invitations,
entertainment, decorations, panel
discussion, housing, transporta
tion, dinner and publicity.
*
Browsing Room Talk
Given By Stephenson
Students, professors and towns
people gathered in the Student
Union last night to hear Wendell
Holmes Stephenson, professor of
history, deliver the last lecture of
the fall term browsing room series.
Much interest was created in
the audience as Stephenson spoke
of some of the “Changing Inter
pretations of South History.” His
lecture attracted many south
erners, and some of them and oth
ers were inspired to posing sev
eral questions in the discussion
afterwards.
In Stephenson’s speech he cov
ered the factors that helped make
the South southern in the ante
bellum period; the changing con
cepts of the South and important
developments in the new South.
EVERYBODY PRESENT
Comedy 'Drama
Featured In Court
oy VICK Lewis
Emerald Reporter
The room was rather crowded
at the traffic court Wednesday
night and yet, something was
ml8sin.g J. Kelly Farris was ab
sent. In the corner a photographer
slouched inconspicuously.
Two cases were quickly settled.
It seems that the students in
volved had unjustly received tick
ets due to a mixup resulting from
old stickers. The court voted to
dismiss the charges.
Then a young man, who had
received a ticket for parking in
a visitor's space, appeared before
the court. It may be recalled that
Farris originally came before the
court charged with a similar vio
lation. Only this time it seems
the young man was a visitor. His
case was dismissed.
At this point Peter Tugman, re
porter for the Eugene Register
Guard, walked into the room.
Pig Feeder Excused
The next case before the court
involved a student who was
charged with four violations. He
pleaded innocent on the grounds
that he was employed by the Uni
versity to feed the guinea pigs in
the science building, and it was
necessary to park his car in the
Science building drive. The court
considered this a logical excuse
and voided three tickets with the
suggestion that the guinea pig
feeder put a sign on his car stating
"service car.” The student pleaded
guilty to the forth ticket and was
fined one dollar.
The reporter from the Guard
then whispered something to the
photographer about “he isn’t sup
posed to be here until 8:30” and
walked outside to make a phone
call.
The fifth and last case came be
fore the court. The young mti
admitted his guilt and was only
interested in where he could pay
his fine. He was fined one dollar.
The court was about over; the
Guard reporter nervously whis
pered something to the photogra
Journalist Nora Wain
To Give Talk on Asia
^rawing rrom personal experi
ences during many years of living
and reporting in the Orient, For
eign Correspondent Nora Wain
will give a “Report on Asia” at 1
p. m. Tuesday in the Student
Union ballroom. Miss Wain’s lec
ture, the final University assembly
of fall term, is open to students,
faculty and interested townspeo
ple.
Miss Wain’s appearance on the
campus is under the sponsorship
of the University Assembly com
mittee. An informal coffee hour
for the speaker will be held at 4
p. m. the same afternoon in the
Dad’s lounge of the SU.
A foreign correspondent for The
Saturday Evening Post and The
Atlantic Monthly, Miss Wain has
recently returned from a three
months tour of interviewing refu
gees along the Russion satellite
border from Turkey to Finland.
Since 1947, she has spent three
and one-half years in the Orient
and almost two years in Europe
reporting for the two magazine^.
Having spent many years of her
life in the Orient, the woman jour
nalist speaks and reads Japanese
Senate to Interview
Dads Day Petitions
Dads Day chairman petitions
are due in the ASUO office, Stu
dent Union 304, by 5 p. m. today,
ASUO Pres. Tom Wrightson has
announced. Candidates for the post
will be interviewed by the ASUO
senate tonight and are to be at
the SU by 6:45, Wrightson saW.
The senate will hold a regular
meeting beginning at 6:30 p. m.
The agenda includes the following
items:
0 Homecoming report.
• Dad's Day chairman selec
tion.
0 ASUO election date.
Football award recommenda
tions.
• OSC football jersey discus
sion.
• Basketball seating arrange
ment.
and five dialects of Chinese. Dur
ing her stay in Japan she lived
with 23 Japanese families; she
was, at one time, officially adop
ted into a Chinese family with
which she was living.
Miss Wain is also the author
of several books. Her latest work,
“Sliding Doors,” is to be pub
lished simultaneously in 11 lang
uages early in 1954. It is a sequel
to an earlier book “The House of
Exile,” which told of her years
in China.
pher. As the last case was con
cluded, the photographer went up*
to the bench and started asking
some involved questions concern
ing special parking privileges fe
behalf of his photography Work.
This discussion was interrupted
by quick footsteps in the hall . . *
J. Kelly Farris had arrived.
Farris Softened
Then the Guard reporter ex
plained that he was doing a story
on the court and had asked J.
Kelley Farris to cone up and havd
hie picture taken with the court.
The first picture was J.
Kelly Farris and Carl Weber,
chairman of the court. Fare-id
posed with his finger dramatically
extended (close to the tip-of Web
er’s nose) making a point.
Next there was a picture of Har
ris making a point (or perhapd
the same point) in front of th»
whole court. Finally the reporter
asked to have a picture with Far
ris and the young lady member of
the court. "Kelly, pretend liVo
she’s softening up,” the reporter
instruction. "And she is, too,” Far
ris admitted,
Farris Leaves
During the taking of the picturo
Weber had attempted to makd
small talk with the law student,
but Farris cut him down with an
aloof, legal retort. Anger shewed
momentarily as one of the court
members took objection to some
thing Farris said and uttered a
fe wsharp words ending curtly,
"Well, you just keep it up, Mr!
Farris.”
While Farris did not bring any
business before the court, he did
mention that he was “definitely"
going to bring his complaint of
extortion before the U.S. district
attorney in Portland over Christ
mas vacation.
Business Manager
Submits Resignation
Bill Brandsness, junior in jour
nalism, has submitted his resigna
tion as Emerald business manager
to enable him to accept a position
with the Eugene Register-Guard
advertising department winter
term.
Petitions for business manager
will be accepted from noon to
day until noon next Wednesday by
the student publications board.
They may be turned into R. C.
Williams, board secretary, in the
Student Union office on the SU
mezzanine. The board plans to in
terview petitioners for the posi
tion at its regular monthly meet
ing Wednesday evening.
The new business manager will
take office beginning winter term.
The first Emerald will be out
Tuesday, Jan. 5, 1954.
Brandsness, whose resignation is
effective Jan. 1, worked as an
Coffee Hours Slated for
SU Board, Directorate
A coffee hour for all members of
all committees of the Student
Union board and directorate will
be held tonight from 6:30-7:15.
The coffee hour is sponsored by
the SU public relations committee
and will be held in the Dad’s
lounge of the SU.
Entertainment will be provided
by the Friday at Four committee.
Emerald advertising salesman last
year before his appointment asa
business manager. His work on tho
Klamath Palls Herald and News
during the summer and his build
ing up of the Emerald advertising
brought him the position, with th»
Register-Guard.
IFC Meets Tonight
To Discuss By-laws
Action on the issue of allow
ing fraternity men in freshmen,
dormitories is expected at to
night’s Inter-fraternity council
meeting, according to Con Shef
fer, president. The- issue will in
volve a discussion cf the ccntt
tution and the by-laws of the or
ganization. The meeting is sched
uled for 6:30 p. m. in the Student
Union.
Metropolitan Alumni u s
Honor New President
The New York City branch of
the Unievrsity of Oregon alumni
organization will hold a dinner
meeting tonight in honor cf incom
ing-President O. Meredith Wilson
and Mrs. Wilson in the eastern
metropolis.