Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, January 14, 1954, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    VOL. LV
UNIVERSITY OF OREO ON, EUGENE, THURSDAY, JANUARY 74,1954
NO. 64
Elsie Schiller Chosen Emerald Editor
SU Board Considers
Representation Chanae
The Student Union board Wed
nesday considered a plan to
change the method of selecting
new school representatives on the
board each year. *■
Changes, recommended by the
SU board executive committee,
call for the entire board to screen
petitioners. Previously, a joint
committee, composed of appointed
representatives from the SU board
and ASUO senate, has screened
applicants.
Actual appointment to the SU
board would still be made by the
university president, as before.
Board chairman Andy Berwick
cited two reasons for the change:
1. The SU board chairman, in
selecting board members at his
own discretion to serve on the
present joint screening committe,
could possibly control the resulting
appointment indirectly.
2. A position on the board is
considered important enough that
Eclipse Predicted
Monday Afternoon
Most of the United States will
witness a total eclipse of the moon
Monday, according to E. G. Eb
bighausen, associate professor of
physics.
The eclipse will begin at 4 :50 p.
m., five minutes before the moon
rises in Eugene. On Monday even
ing the sun will set at 5:03 and the
total eclipse will begin shortly af
ter. At 6:17 p. m. the moon will
reach the middle of the earth's
shadow and it will begin to come
out again at 6:47 p.m.
"By the end of the eclipse, the
moon will be fairly high in the
east," stated Ebbighausen. No
telescope or other optical aid will
be needed to view the eclipse. An
eclipse of the moon occurs about
two or three times a year and can
be seen over half of the globe.
(the board itself should make the
recommendations for appoint
! ments.
The plan was sent to a commit
tee for further study and will be
read at the meeting next week.
The board will vote on the change
j the following week.
Appointed to the committee to
investigate the plan were Malcolm
Montague, chairman, and Don Col
lin and R. C. Williams. ASUO
j president Tom Wrightson commit
! tee alternate, will take Collin’s
j place if he does not return to
school.
The board also approved revis
ions in the SU house organ. The
old name of “Chattersheet” will
bo replaced by "Union Crier,”
which was selected over "Union
Press” by the board.
"Union Crier,” which will be
distributed tp SU personnel Jan.
25, will have its nameplate print
ed on mimeograph paper by the
University press. Editorial con
tent which will include a few per
sonnel columns and items from
a national union bulletin, will be
mimeographed or dittoed, Berwick
said.
In other business the board sel
ected McArthur court as the loca
tion for the George Schearing con
cert Feb. 10. They set the price
of tickets at 85 cents.
Four petitioners for the board
vacancy of graduate school repre
sentative will be interviewed by
the joint screening committee next
week, according to Virginia Dail
ey, vide chairman of the board.
A change in the special attrac
tions committee was announced by
Berwick. The group, which has
previously selected attractions to
bring to the campus subject to
approval of the board, will take
over the additional job of handling
tickets, publicity and set-up ar
rangements of each attraction.
Centennial Speaker
To Talk on Japan
“Japan: One Hundred Years
After Perry” will be the topic of
tonight’s Perry Centennial talk by
Nobutaka Ike.
The talk, sponsored by the Far
Eastern Studies department is
scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in Com
monwealth 138.
Ike, librarian for Far Eastern
publications in the Hoover Memor
ial library at Stanford university,
is the third speaker in the current
Perry Centennial Conference on
Far Eastern studies.
Born in Seattle, Ike did his un
dergraduate work at the Univer
sity of Washington and did grad
uate work at Washington and
John Hopkins university.
Ike is now on leave Trom Stan
ford under a Ford Foundation fel
lowship to do research work on his
book, “The Anatomy of Japanese
Politics.” He has also written “The
Beginnings of Political Democracy
in Japan” and is associate editor
of The Far Eastern Quarterly.
Final lecturer on the program
will be Jiro Harada, staff member
of the Tokyo National museum.
He will speak Friday at 7:30 p.m.
in the browsing room of the Stu
dent Union.
Museum Features
Tour, Exhibitions
A special tour of the Oriental
Art Museum will be conducted at
4 p. m. today by Wallace S. Bald
fnger, associate professor of art
and museum curator. The tour is
being held in conjunction with the
Perry Centennial celebration cur
rently being held on campus.
Two special exhibits are being
featured this week at the museum
as part of the celebration, which
is sponsored by the Far Eastern
Studies committee.
The first exhibits features Jap
anese color prints, depicting the
state of the Japanese mind before
and after the Perry expedition one
hundred years ago. An exhibition
of books written by Nobutaka Ike
and Jiro Harada, who are speak
ing on campus this week, is on
display at the museum reference
library.
Senate Session Sel
Petitions on Tab
The ASl'O senate will hold
Its first meeting of winter term
tonight in the Student Cnion.
at 6:30. The vaeant senate-at
large position will be filled dur
ing the meeting following inter
views of the petitioners. Peti
tions are due in the ASl'O of
fice, SI’ 304, by 5 p. m. today.
Agenda for the meeting as an
nounced by ASUO Pres. Tom
Wrlghtson is as follows:
• Wads Day report
• Senate vacancy interviews,
• “O” insurance report,
• ASl'O budget,
9 Constitution revision com
mittee and
• Student court appointments.
Klsie Schiller, senior in joi
editor at a meeting of the stud<
day night. She will assume the
Under a policy established a
board, two students fill the pos
fall term until the middle of 1
takes charge for the remainder
A1 Karr, senior in journalism.
Miss Schiller transferred to
Harbor junior college. She wa
paper and member of Phi Thet,
scholastic honorary. She served
her freshman year.
Previous to this, Miss Schilh
school paper, the Acosta Wilde
On the Emerald, Miss Schiller
worked as a reporter last year and
served as associate editor this
year. She also worked at the Uni
versity news bureau.
A member of Mortar Board, sen
ior women’s honorary, Miss Schil
ler is vice president of the senior
class and ASUO senate secretary.
She is president of the coed coop
council and of University House,
her living organization.
Miss Schiller is a member of
Theta Sigma Phi, women’s jour
nalistic fraternity.
Only other petitioner was Kitty
Fraser, senior in journalism. Miss
Schiller was elected on the twen
tieth ballot of the pub board.
Faculty Adopts
Course Chanae
Starting next fall, all majors
in the college of liberal arts will
have to fulfill six-course group re
quirement as the result of a decis
ion made at the University fac
ulty meeting Wednesday after
noon.
In other actions at the meeting,
the group laid on the table a mo
tion by A. H. Kunz, head of the
chemistry department, to estab
lish a major in medical sciences
leading to the degree of bachelor
of arts or bachelor of science.
A motion to allow the substitu
tion of English for one of the for
eign languages required of foreign
students for the doctor of philoso
phy degree was passed. The mo
tion will affect only foreign stu
dents whose native language is
other than English and whose na
tive language is essential to their
research program, G. N. Belknap,
University editor, stated Wednes
day evening.
The new requirements for liberal
arts majors will mean that stu
dents will be required to complete
two sequences in each of the three
groups: science, social science and
arts and letters. Two upper divis
ion courses may be used to satisfy
the requirements.
Under the current system, with
a requirement of four-course
groups, students take one sequence
each in the three groups and a sec
ond sequence in any group they
choose.
Exactly how the new program
will go into effect was not known
by Belknap Wednesday. Whether
the program is effective with in
coming freshmen or includes stu
dents now enrolled in the Univer
sity will have to be decided by the
faculty committee, he said.
Oriental Art Topic
Of Harada Talk
Jiro Harada, staff member of
the Tokyo National museum, will
speak on “The Art of the Priest
and of the Gentleman in Japan’’
at this week’s Friday evening cof
fee hour, according to John Wells,
chairman.
Harada's speech is scheduled for
7:30 p. m. in the Student Union
browsing room. He received an
honorary doctor of literature de
gree from the University of Ore
gon in 1936, and spoke on Japan
ese art and culture here before
World War II.
Sponsored by the browsing room
committee, Harada is being pre
sented in conjunction with the
Perry Centennial conference on
Far Eastern Studies now on cam
pus.
irnalism, was named KmeraUf
nt publication’s board Wednes
ofiice jan. 26.
year ago last spring by the pub'
tion each year. The first serves
he academic year. The second
of the year. Outgoing editor is
Oregon last year from Oray’3
s editor of the Gray’s Harbof
t Kappa, national junior college
as associate editor of the papei;
r worked as editor of her higft
at.
Millroce is Green;
Reasons Unknown
The Millrace was a bright
green today. Why, no one seem
ed able to find out.
A check with the city mana
®tr’ Robert Finlayson, brought
only a chuckle after a rather in
volved explanation of just what
was wrong with the Millrace.
He promised to contact 'the Em
eraid if he found out anything.
No one else came forth with
any explanation. One Campbell
club initiate was fishing off tha
Hilyard street bridge at noon
and evidently caught a couple of
fish. Various fraternities are
holding initiation this week, but
just who turned the water green
is not known.
Japan Influence
Shown in West
"Japanese Ukiyo-e art has had
a definite influence upon Western
art and especially upon the archi
tectural designs of Frank Lloyd
Wright," Wallace Baldinger, as
sociate professor of art, told an
over-flow crowd in the Student
Union browsing room Wednesday.
Illustrating his talk with many
slides of Japanese prints and pho
tographs, Baldinger said that the*
influence of the Japanese may ,b&
plainly seen in the work of famous.
American architect.
Wright has adopted the princi
ple of fusing a building’s form and
function, of making the furniture*’
an integral part of the construc
i tion and of a dependence of inter
ior and exterior upon each other
for an over-all effect.
Discussing the “Art of the Com
mon Man in Japan,” Baldinger
stressed the love of this common
man for nature and for life itself.
Many of the slides were photo
graphs taken by Baldinger last
year when he was in Japan study
ing the history of her art an A.
teaching the history of Wester rw
art at Kyoto.
Dad's Day Hostess Selection
Narrowed to Semi-Finalists
Ten semi-finalists for Dad's day
hostess were named following in
tedviews Wednesday night, Kay
Partch, chairman of the hostess
selection committee, reported. Fin
al eliminations for the hostess
title will be held at 7:30 this eve
ning.
Interviews will last five minutes.
Dress will be short silks, Miss
Partch has announced. Four final
ists will be chosen and they will
be voted upon in a student body
election next Thursday.
The Dad's Day hostess is tradi
tionally a married woman, either
a student or the wife of a student.
The maiden and married names
of the candidates are given in the
following list. Sponsoring organ
izations follow the names.
Semi-finalists include: Cathy
Tribe Siegmund, Carson 5, Hale
Kane and Sigma Chi; Barbara
Keelan Altman, Sigma Alpha Mu,
Carson 2 and Alpha Tau Omega;
Nancy Miller Hawkins, Sigma Al
pha -Epsilon and Kappa Alpha
Theta; Elynor Robblee Schuppel,
Alpha Phi; and Mary Fowler Ak
ers, Kappa Kappa Gamma.
Other semi-finalists are: Bunny
Ivory Hetrick, Delta Zeta; Kay
Moore Stager, Carson 4; Ann
Armstrong Wilson, Delta Gamma;
Diane Hawea, Delta Delta Delta
and Phi Delta Theta and Joan Ful
ler, Yeomen.
Other candidates for the title
included Janet Kregness Almy, Pi
Beta Phi and Theta Chi; Alison
Arndt, Lambda Chi Alpha; Patty
Wright Bowler, Phi Kappa Psi;
Betty-Coe Rilea Eckstrom, Sigma
Phi Epsilon; Barbara Farris,
French hall; Jane Ferguson,
Campbell Club; Rae Sadis Golden
berg, Phi Sigma Sigma; Donna*.
Krisek Hunter, Gamma Phi Beta
and Nana Luper, Susan Campbell
hall.
Additional candidates w e r o
Marge Dedkey, Hendricks hall;
Barbara Bullock Wadman, Alpha
Omicron Pi and Delta UpsiAn
Angela Gaudion Walden, Sigma
Kappa; Joan Wheeless, Phi Gam
ma Delta; Ellen Quibel Courtright,
Alpha Chi Omega and Mary Sause
Bussard, Alpha Delta Pi.
Judges in the first round of
eliminations were Manning Bar
ber, Robert Glass, Melvin Gustaf
son, Paul Keith, Howard Colburn
and George Lowe, all of the Eu
gene Dad’s club; Tom Wrightson,
ASUO president, and Paul Lasker,
senior class president.