Sunshine Today... • . is the forecaat from the U. B. weather bureau. Foggy in again forecast for tonight. High tem perature today will be 55 degrees, ‘ wilh a low of 34 degrees tonight. VOL. LV Bone Benders ... • . . face Washington State lege in a wrestling contest this af ternoon at 4:00 p. m. in McArthur court. See Sport page 3 for line ups. \o 7a Ticket Sales Open For Senior Ball rickets for the Senior ball will t>'° on »ale Friday morning at the f fitudent Union main desk and in imn’s living organizations, ac cording to Bob Berry and Jack McClenahan, co-chairmen for tic ket sales. Living organizations representa tives are Bryce Keimer, Alpha Tau Omega; Mike Jeffries, Beta Theta ?1; Bill Veatch, Campbell Club; John Prag, Chi Psi, Milan Foster, Oelta Upsilon. 1 Jack Murray, Kappa Sigma; J)i(k Wyss, Lambda Chi Alpha; *>ob Kubcck, Phi Gamma Delta; .fv Stiles, Phi Kappa Psi; Gordon Nobriga, Phi Kappa Sigma; Bob Enright. Phi Sigma Kappa. . Hon Mount, Pi Kappa Alpha; Bill Battcrton, Pi Kappa Phi; Don .Bonime, Sigma Alpha Mu; Joe Anstett, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; •-ohn Tonack, Sigma Chi; Ward Cook, Sigma Nu. Forest Easton, Tau Kappa Ep ,Bil°n; Leo Naapi, Theta Chi; Carl P- res. Detla Tau Delta; A1 Oppli .ger, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Jerry Froebe, Phi Delta Theta; Gary Moll to Lecture On Writings In SU K. G. Moll, professor of English • nn'l pwt laureate of Australia, . #'H speak at the browsing room lecture Thursday from 7:30 to 9.30 p. m. on one of his poems, •"Jonah at Ninevah.” . This poem is from Moll's book, . “Tbe Lifted Spear,” which was published in 1903 by Angus and Robertson of Australia. Moll will • read and discuss his poem, giving his reasons for writing it and its biblical relationships. The poem is ' based on the book of Jonah in the Bible. Following the lecture will be a discussion session led by Hoyt ’Trowbridge, professor of English. • This week's browsing room lec .ture is scheduled for Thursday in stead of the usual Wednesday -date because of the conflicting Wednesday evening basketball game. West, French hall, Gary Stanton, Sherry Ross, and Jack Harmon, Susan Campbell. Men living in Gamma hall should contact Ted Goh for their tickets and Leo Nutman is in charge of sales in Hale Kane. Merrick and Nestor halls should contact Jack McClenahan, or buy their tickets at the SU main desk. A contest for ticket-selling among the representatives will be held, according to Berry and Mc Clenahan. All those selling 20 or more tickets will receive a free ticket, they said. Tickets will cost $2, and will continue on sale all next week. Schedule Set For SU Board The Student Union board will meet at 4 p. m. today in the SU board room, according to Chair man Andy Berwick. On the agen da will be: • Introduction of new board member; • Perpetuation plan changes; • Interview with SU director ate committee chairman; • Announcement of dances dur ing the state high school basket I ball tournament; • Special events report, and 0 Announcement of board peti tioning. Congress May Attempt Coffee Price Requlation By Associated Press Congress may try to clamp the lid on perking coffee prices by government regulation. The head of the Senate agricul ture committe, George Aiken of Vermont, predicts his group will approve the necessary legislation and quickly start it on its way through Congress. Joseph Mehl, head of the Fed eral Commodity Exchange Auth ority, told Senate investigators un warrented boosts in coffee prices could be stopped by government supervision. Lobo Not Sure But the head of the New York Coffee and Sugar Exchange isn't so sure. Gustavo Lobo told the Senators Federal control of cof fee trading might bring lower sup plies and still higher prices in the American market. The Senate group is holding pub lic hearings on coffee prices. The committee may act today on a bill by Democratic Senator Guy Gillette of Iowa. The bill would add coffee to the list of commod ; ities the government now tries to keep out of price manipulations and cornered markets. Meanwhile a Brazilian coffee of ! ficial said coffee prices rnay hop j even higher in the next 18 months. He blamed the possible rise on a short supply caused by a frost last spring. Sympathizes The spokesman, Horacio Cintra Leite, is the U. S. representative of the Brazilian Coffee Institute. He said he sympathized with American coffee drinkers but saw no hope of a price reduction until late in 1955. Leite said Brazil produced only 14 million bags of coffee last year, 3 million less than normal, be cause of the 1953 frost. He says his country is exporting 1,200,000 bags a month, which means the supply will run out be fore a new crop is harvested next July. Brazil is not holding back anything, he maintained, and the investigations will show that high prices have been caused by coffee scarcity. Two Confess Dynamiting O Two University students, one of whom has already been charged with attempted extortion in an other case, have pleaded guilty to charges of disorderly conduct in connection with the blowing up of the "O” on Skinner’s Butte in June of 1952. John D. Daily, senior in mathe matics, and Richard A. Bray, graduate student in geography and geology, will be sentenced by Municipal Judge John Barber at 8:30 Friday morning. The pair were arrested Monday evening and entered their pleas at that time. They were released on $50 bail. A third man, identi fied by the police as a Rex Grif fith, is also being sought on the same charges, but he is reportedly in the armed forces at the cur rent time, and it is doubtful that he will be arrested. The police reported that the three set off a blast on top of Skinner's Butte early on the morn ing of June 7, 1952. The explos | ion ripped up the "O” and show ered debris on surrounding homes. 'A few minutes later the city air raid siren was set off at the Eu gene Water and Electric Board plant near the Ferry st. bridge. 70 Sticks Used According to police reports, Daily obtained some 70 sticks of dynamite from a site on Goodpas ture road north of Eugene and set up the blast. The reports indica ted that Bray actually set off the explosion by wiring the dynamite caps to the police transmitter on top of the butte. Police also believe the third man set off the siren a few minutes later. At the time the blame for the explosion was placed on Oregon State students. A carload of OSC students was halted and question ed, but later released. Daily was arrested last week by Eugene detectives on an extor tion charge, but was released on mUSTRATIQH MAY END What's Behind That Locked Door? by Gordon Rice Emerald Astiitant Newt Editor * Remodeling work now being * planned for the Art Museum may * eventually open the locked doors in that building which have been 'frustrating students for so long, . but until that time students of . Oriental art will have to guess at fie contents of the various closets * and locked rooms. * Students wandering aimlessly in * the museum first run into trouble . when they try to open the door *1'' ft '"om diagonally across the ccn.idor from the museum cur * ator’s office. ' The student's curiosity would * probably be satisfied if he knew , that behind that door was a small, closet-like room which contained * several rows of framed Japanese ‘ prints which were being stored af , ter being taken off exhibit in the _ main galleries. On the second floor, across the * main corridor from the large main . gallery another locked door con fronts the wandering student, but . a look inside would probably re veal less of interest than the lock . ed door itself. This small gallery was one of the mistakes made by the last re modelling crew. For some un known reason, this room, unlike its twin gallery on down the cor ridor, was never refinished. Torn burlap hangs from the ceiling, and the bare walls are visible in other places. With the limited storage capa cities of the museum now, how ever, all this space is not being wasted. Sitting on the floor or on a low shelf are a number of pieces of Chinese and Japanese works, all in need of repair. Buddhas with missing arms, swords with handles that fall off, and other such ar tifacts are all present. Some of the most unusual works of art are locked securely behind the doors of two closets under the stairs that go up to the third floor. The contents of the closet under the south stairs are of spe cial interest. This closet, which is not more than five by nine feet in area, contains a Chinese Buddha of ma jor importance in Oriental art, and a collection of Chinese pewter which has not been shown since its first exhibition many years ago. The latter will be placed on exhibition again soon. Nude Statue Hidden One article which has never been displayed to the public is also in this closet. It is a nude human figure which was used as a Chinese tomb statuette. The late Mrs. Gertrude Bass Warner, who was in charge of the museum for many years, would never display, this figure for fear she would be criticized. The closet under the north staircase contains a collection of Chinese porcelain. Another door leads out of the closet and into a display gallery, where a large vase and other works are hidden behind some large screens which are on exhibit. Even when the wandering stu dent ascends the stairs to the third floor, he must turn around and go back down. The doors at the head of each stairs are locked, too. The gallery on the north end of the third floor is being used as a meeting room for a local organi zation concerned with museum work, but the room in the south end contains objects of real value. Hanging in large tents to keep out light and moisture are clothes worn by the Manehu emperors of China, some of which were design ed to be worn only by the emperor after death. Clothes Worn by Rulers Also hanging up are garments worn by the aristocracy of the Ch’ing dynasty. Boots, ornate hair dressings and a large amount of jewelry are packed in large bar rels which stand on the floor of the room. But only a small part of the ar ticles which the museum has in storage are found in these rooms. In the basement of the building is one large storage room, which in cludes, among other things, a col lection of Japanese and Chinese slides, many of which have never been catalogued. Wallace S. Baldinger, curator of the museum, plans to use this room to house all the material in storage after the addition of more facilities there, but until that time, students will remain frustrated by the locked doors. $2,500 bond. He was bound over for Grand Jury action Saturday, following a preliminary hearing in a case involving the' attempted extortion of a Eugene housewife. New Events Develop Meanwhile, events in that case took a new turn when the ROTC department here verified the fact that Daily had been in his 2 p. m. ROTC class on time on February 4, 8, and 11, the days when some of the actions in the case were supposed to have taken place. However. Col. E. B Daily, head of the department of military sci ence, denied the rumor that the department had filed a signed statement with . the police saying that Daily had been in class when some of the events in the case occurred. At the same time, it was rum ored that a business concern for which Daily worked had also filed an affidavit stating that he was W’orking at the time other actions were supposed to have occurred. Officials of the company could not be reached by the Emerald Tuesday afternoon, and the Eu gene police department would nei ther confirm nor deny that such a statement had been filed. Eugene Police Chief Ted Brown was not available for comment on either case. Oregon Accepts WUS Invitation The University of Oregon ac cepted the invitation of World University Service to particioate m an "experiment for internation al understanding.” The experiment was explained by Bill Kitchen, executive secre tary of WUS, to a group of about 30 campus representatives Tues day. The purpose of the program jg to arouse students to an aware ness of international affairs and needs, Kitchen said. The objec tive of the experiment is to de termine the significant factors in fluencing student and faculty thinking on world affairs. ‘ Three Projects The program will have three specific projects, Kitchen said. A questionnaire will be circula ted among students to find cut what has most influenced their thinking cn international prob lems. Discussion groups will be or ganized to talk about relations foreign students to the University. The purpose of this is to find out the thoughts of foreign students on the United States. The third step concerns dis cussion groups revolving around American students who have eith er travelled or studied abroad. The purpose of this group will be to determine how much the individ* ual gained from his experience and how much he helps the under standing of international affairs after his return. Separate Project This WUS educational project will be separate from the fund raising drive which will be held by the organization during spring term. The WUS drive will replace the World Student Service Fund ' (Tlease turn to page jour)