I Bridge Sharks t To Get Trophies I k F i i ► I t I \ k i Trophies will be awarded to the men's and women's living organi sation with the highest scores in today's all-campus bridge tour nament to be held from 7 to 10 p. m. In the Student Union. Straight contract bridge will be played in the tournament which is being held under the sponsor ship of the SU board. Last year's Novelty Pairings Slated tor Rally Something new in the way of pairings will be tried in the pre OSC game rally, scheduled for 0:30 p. in., February 24, in the Student Union ballroom. The Rally Board has decided to pair the campus organisations according to their geograj>hic lo cations. The "Milirace,” "Hilltop." "Campus." "Lower Alder" and "Upper Alder" houses Will be pit ted against each oth«-r in hopes of getting more enthusiasm. A> a further incentive to yell, the board is planning a perpetual trophy, which will be held Jointly by the houses in the winning scc on of the University. Unlike any ordinary gold or silver trophy, this one will be made of paper mar he, ■with room on it for the names of all winners. Bill Bowerman, assistant ath letic director, has been picked by the board as its first adviser. "We will be able to w'ork closer with the athletic department, now' that ve have a coach as an adviser," it:ally board chairman Sally Stadcl nsan said. In a meeting Tuesday afternoon, the group also decided to plan skits for rallies In the future, and also to sing more songs at athletic events. winners were Alpha Delta Pi and Sigma Phi Kpsilon. The University will be one of 172 colleges and universities in the United States participating in the National Intercollegiate Bridge Tournament to be held Thursday in the SU. The tournament will l>e played in official tournament style with pre-determined dupli cated hands. Trophies will be awarded to the school winning the national title. A plaque bearing the names of the four individual campus champions will also be awarded, and certifi cates will be given the individual 1 winners. More than 4000 men and women undergraduates across the coun try are expected to participate in the tournament, playing on their own campuses. Hands which have '-‘■en prepared in advance are mail ed to the participating schools. The tournament is now in its i eighth year. National titles last i Vear were won by Princeton and Purdue universities. Cressmon to Speak On Indian Cultures In Browsing Room "Pre-Colombian Mexico" is the subject of tonight's browsing -oom lecture, which will be held 'rom 7:30 to 9:30 p. m. in the Student Union. L. S. Cressman, anthropology lepartment head, will speak on he Indian cultures in Colombia >nd Mexico before the Spanish onquest. Special emphasis in the pro gram will be given to the Toltec, Mayan and Aztec cultures found n Mexico. A feature of Cressman's :alk will be ,colored slides show ng archeological ruins of the :ouotries. The slides will also ill jstrate various art forms. Following Cressman's speech here will be a discussion session ed by Chandler Beall, profes sor of Romance languages. Next in the lecture-forum series vill be a lecture by M. R. Sponen mrgh, assistant professor of art, m the "Architectural Sculpture of he 19th Egyptian Dynasty,” Feb. 24. Discussions will be led by 3. VV. Little, dean of the art school. SPECIAL ACTS Water Show Set “Popcorn and Lemonade” will open the water pageant, “Under the Big Top," to be staged Thurs day and Friday by Amphibians, , women's swimming honorary. The i production is scheduled both: : nights for 8 p. m. at the men's ! pool. , Tickets for the event cost 80 ! cents and will be sold today from I 1 to 4 p. m. in the Student Union They may also be purchased at the booth outside the pool on the evenings of the performance, or from any Amphibian member who is in the pageant. Written and produced by Am LWUS Asks for People ■ To Help in Experiment I [ by Sally Jo Greig Emerald Reporter Workers are needed to partici pate in an “experiment for inter national understanding’’ conduct ed by the World University Ser vice, according to Sue Shreeve and F. E. Dart, assistant profes sor of physics, chairmen of the experiment on this campus. The University has accepted an invitation from WUS to partici pate in this experiment, which is .separate from the fund raising drive which will be held in the spring. SCfVnyone interested in working on ihis project should turn in their petitions by Feb. 22 at the Stu dent Union. “This project otfers the students of Oregon a rare op portunity to participate in a pro gram of this type. It will give students a deeper insight of the problems of international rela tions,” commented Miss Shreeve. The purpose of the program is *io arouse students to an aware ness of international affairs and needs. The objective is to deter mine the significant factors in fluencing student and faculty thinking on world affairs. The program will have three parts. The first will consist of a questionnaire to be circulated among students to find out what has most influenced their thinking cn international problems. Chair- i men for this committee will be , Norm Webb, senior in psychology, and Leona E. Tyler, associate pro fessor of psychology. Agnes Weitz, student from Germany, and K. S. Ghent, as sociate professor of mathematics, will be the chairmen for the sec ond group. This group will organize dis cussion groups to talk about rela tions of foreign students to the University. The purpose will be to find what influence foreign stu dents make on the community in which they live. The third group will center around American students who have either traveled or studied abroad. The purpose of this group will be to determine how much the Individual gained from his ex perience and how much he helps the understanding of international affairs after his return. Chairmen of this discussion group will be Richard Biown, freshman in liberal arts, and R. E. Dodge, associate professor of business administration. ihibian members, the water show vill consist of ten main acts, in ermission entertainment and the Hand finale, all portraying phases )f a real circus. Clowns will be eatured at the intermission. They vill also do exhibition diving, ac cording to Sally Stadelman, Am phibian president and general hairraan for the £vent. Scott Lehner, sophomore in speech, will be master of cere monies as a side show barker, and vill •'call" the audience to each ict. ‘ The Greatest Show on Earth,” vill be the title of one of the main numbers in which the swimmers vill perform to the music from the Decide B. DeMille movie of the ■ame name. Helium-filled colored nalloons will be incorporated into -he act. They will be released out nto the audience at the end of .he number. An unusual feature of the pro iuction will be the use of “body ights” by the swimmers in one >f the number.^. Small lights are ittached to the performers’ arms ind legs. All other lights are aimed out. As the performers wim, only the lights can be seen ’lickring around the darkened nool, creating a fire fly effect, Miss Stadelman said. “Three Ring Circus” is the title nf the grand finale, in which the entire cast of the pageant will Participate. Other features are a merry-go-round, the use of “black ights” in some of the numbers, md special solo numbers. SU Gallery Shows Children's Works An art exhibit featuring the work of children in Eugene cle nentary schools is now being held n the Student Union art gallery, :o continue through March 6. The exhibit w a s arranged through the co-operation of Miss Freda Harshbarger, art supervis or of the Eugene public schools. Art work done by children at St. Mary's Academy is also displayed, recording to Barbara Johnson, SU art gallery chairman. Women's Slate Set for Election 'vrBuviiiiea Women Students and the Women's Recreation Asso ciation have released their com plete slate of officers for Thurs day a elections. Voting for the officers of these organizations th» vwoAeId in conJunction with thf? YWCA elections. Rosemary Hampton, junior in speech, and Janet Wick, Junior in history, have been appointed for the A WS presidency. Nominees for secretary of the organization in cMeJanc BerZ»trom. sophomore Ball Ticket Money Due | Ticket salesmen for the Senior | hall must turn in their money and additional tickets today by 7 |P m., according to Bob Berry and ' ^ack McClenahan, ticket co-chair j men. Tickets may be returned to Bcr iy at Delta Jau Delta or to Mc Clenahan at Nestor hall. Addition al tickets will remain on sale at the Student Union main desk, for $2 per couple. j The dance, which is the first aj]-campus formal of the year will ! be held in the SU ballroom Feb. 20 from 9 p. m. to 12:30 a. m. ' "winter Wonderland'’ is the theme, and Bill Becker’s Jantzen : beach band will pjay. Corsages for the dance arc op i Uonal- and dark suits or tuxes are in order for men. Official chaper ones for the evening will be How i ard L- Ramey, instructor in speech j and bis wife. | All ticket salesmen who have sold 20 or pnore tickets to the dance will have their names plac ed on a pass list at the door of the idande, as will all committee chair ! men. This Russian Joke Not Funny to Reds By Associated Press This joke was recently smug gled out from behind the Iron | curtain: A Soviet officer was explain ing to a Czech peasant how Rus sia could deal with the United States. He said 20 atom bombs could be packed into 20 leather suitcases and distributed all over America. The peasant looked doubtful, and the Soviet officer asked him if he didn't believe Russia had 20 atom bombs. The peasant replied, ' Oh, I wasn't thinking. of that. I was just wondering where you'd ever find 20 leath er suitcases in Russia.’ in architecture and allied arts an* Sally Ryan, sophomore in journal ism. Olivia Tharaldson and Margaret: Tyler, both freshmen in liberal arts, have been nominated for ser geant-at-arms. Two other freatt man liberal arts students, Valerio Uersh and Marcia Mauney, were nominated for reporter. "RA Slrfte Listed The Women's Recreation Asso ciation has nominated Sally Sta delman, sophomore in sociology,, and Nikki Trump, junior in busi ness administration, for the pres idency of that group. Judy Counts, sophomore in liber al arts, and Doris Liljeberg, jun ior in physical education, are ir» the race for the secretary's po sition, and Prudence Duciclt, sophomore in architecture and al lied arts, and Charlotte Martin, sophomore in physical education, have been nominated for treasur er. Others Named Also on the slate are Darien* Hammer, sophomore in physical education, and Delores Schleicher*; sophomore in liberal arts, for the. - office of custodian; and Carol Har rison, junior in physical education and Kathleen Morrison, freshma* in liberal arts, for sergeant-at arms. Voting for officers in the thre# organizations will take place at the voting booth in the lobby Ot Gerlingcr hall from 12:30 to fr p. m. i _ Billiards Meei Here Soon The Intercollegiate Billiards Tournament will be held Feb. 1 i . through March 10, according to | Jack Socolofsky, campus chair 1 man for the event. National college team champ ions will be chosen from team* making the highest scores ,r» each of four tournaments, poc kets, straight rail, three-cushion and co-ed pockets. Highlighting this year's compe tition will be a national ' Face-to face" tournament, with the three highest scoring persons in each event receiving an expense pau.1-. trip to the East, where the na tional college individual champ ions will be determined. The University of Oregon placed third in the nation last year behind the University of Wyoming and the University of Washington. Frank Tilly, a member of Oregon * team last year, was second in the nation in the 1953 telephcniu tournament. Moroccan Authority Speaks Here Friday Rom Landau, internationally recognized as the world's leading authority on Morocco, will lec ture in the Dad's Lounge of the Student Union Feb. 19 at 8 p. m. Landau will lecture on Morocco, which he revisits each year and knows intimately. He has also tra veled extensively in the Middle Last, and has written books about that area as well as about Mor occo. Many of Landau’s articles on the country have appeared in Ameri can and British papers, including the London Times, New York Times, the Christian Century, America and the Middle East Journal. During the second world war, Landau was a gunner in the Royal Air Force and later became a member of the Arab Committee of the Intelligence department in London's Foreign Office. Recently he has concentrated exclusively on Morocco, having published five books about the country. He holds the title of of V, the current Sultan of Morocco. On a nationwide tour of lead ing American universities in 1952 53 Landau visited Columbia* Princeton, Yale, Harvard, Calif or I nia, Colorado, Illinois, Chicago and Cornell. Return Label Sales Continue Coeds can buy personal retu; n address labels at booths set up . Gerlinger hall Thursday drain women's elections. Members oi Phi Theta Upsilon, junior wonier. 3 honorary, have charge of the sales. The labels, which cost $1.25 for 300, include name and address. Phi Theta members will take qi ders for the labels, which are la ter sent to each student making an order. The gummed labels can be used on envelopes, books, records, checks and athletic equipment, ac cording to members of the honor ary. a