SU Currents Coffee Hour Sets Poetry Discussion James B. Hill, assistant profes sor of English, will speak on “E. E. Cummings and Modern Poetry." at tonights coffee hour to be held in, the Student Union browsing room at 7:45 p. m. Cummings is a contemporary poet noted for his use of lower case lettering for -all names ex cept God. Hall is to show the re lationship between Cummings and other contemporary poets and the poetry of the period which preced ed them. A recording, of Cummings read ing some of his own poems will * * * History Professor To Speak on Jazz William Williams, professor of history, will speak on jazz in Kan sas City, Chicago and New York in the Peter Howard listening room of the Student Union Tuesday, at 7:30 p.m. Williams played the drums in a Chicago dance band before he came to Oregon. * * # 'Streetcar' Slated As Sunday Movie The triple-Academy award win ner “A Streetcar Named Desire" will be shown in the Student Union badroom at 2:30 and 5 p.m. Bun day, according to Barbara Wilcox. SU movie committee chairman. ^ Admission price will be 30 cents. In 1951 the show won the best actress, best supporting actor, and best supporting actress awards for its stars, Vivien Leigh, Karl Mal den and Kim Hunter. The film version was adapted from the Pul itzer-prize winning stage play of the same name. WUS To Award Prize for Sketch A prize will be awarded to the person turning in the best black and white drawing of an emblem to use during the World Universi ty Service drive, April 19-24. The emblem must center around the theme “Hands Across the Sea” and also must emphasize the idea of the university and peace. The drawings are due Friday, March 12 in the YM office, Student Union 318.. j — NOW PLAYING - "MELBA" Dazzle Darling of a Fabulous Era with PATRICE MUNSEL ROBERT MORLEY in Technicolor THIS THEATER HAS BEEN SELECTED FOR LIMITED ENGAGEMENT OF THIS MAGNIFICENT MUSICAL SPECTACLE! - NOW PLAYING - "THE GLENN MILLER STORY" JAMES STEWART JUNE ALLYSON Friday at Four Ends Til April The last of the Friday at Four! programs for winter will be pro- j sented at 4 p.m. today in the Stu-1 dent Union Fishbowl. Stan Smith j will be the emcee. Entertainment scheduled fea-! tures Zy Lower, with a ukulele act, and Don Finlay, magician. Denise Kenyon and Don Smith; are in charge of the program. Organist to Present Afternoon Recital Josef Schnelker, assistant pro fessor of music at Willamette uni versity, will give an organ recital Sunday at 4 p. m. in the music school auditorium. Schnelker, presented by the Eu gene chapter of American Guild of Organists, will play works by Bach, Frank and Schumann, as well as modern pieces. Condon Renovation Nears Completion The renovation of Condon hall to make additional classrooms for the psychology and geology de partments is expected to be com pleted during the summer, ac cording to J. A. Shotwell, director of the Museum of Natural History. The museum has been removed and the space will be used for classrooms and offices. UO Library Forum To Hear Economist An instructor in economics, Ed win G. Robbins, will speak on “Now If I Were A Librarian” at a library forum at 7:45 p.m. this evening. The lecture will be held in the staff room of the library. Coffee will be served. Freshman Dance! Set for Saturday The Frosh Snowball, annual dance presented for the freshmen by their class officers, will be held Saturday night from 8:30 p. m. to midnight in the Student Union ballroom. Don Smith, class president and chairman of the dance, has an-! ounced that a definite theme has not been set. “Decorations are not built around a central theme,” ac cording to Janice Gleason, a mem ber of the decorations committee. Tom Charters and the Candle-: lighters, a band from Oregon State college, will provide music for the dance, which will be semi-formal with men wearing dark suits and women wearing formals, Miss Gleason said. Corsages for the dance, which is for freshmen and their dates only, are not in order, according to Smith. Committee chairmen are Doug Basham, decorations; Darrell Brit tsan, publicity; Marcia Mauney, invitations; Dorothy Barker, pro grams, and Gary West, intermis sion entertainment. Sigma Chi Idea Helps Fund Drive The Ked Cross fund drive Thursday was richer by $8.95 the price Chi Omega paid for the sophomore class of Sigma Chi. The fraternity offered the class to the women’s living organizations, with the sophomores going to the high est bidder. The men washed., cars and Cleaned the yard at Chi O. Bob Pollock. Sigma Chi president, re ported Thursday afternoon that the fraternity has set a house goal of $50 for the drive. Their assign ed quota was $9. Pollock suggested that the whole campus follow the idea, perhaps by carrying out a work program of their own and donating the money that would have been used to pay for it. Librarians to Offer $150 Scholarship Applications for the Marsha M. Hill scholarship should be submit ted to Eleanor Stephens, State Li- j brarian, Salem, Oregon by April, 15. This scholarship for $150 award ed to a college graduate who is j able to satisfy University of Wash ington School of Librarianship: entrance requirements for one i year's study at the University of j Washington. The applicant must. also indicate his intention to take a library' job in Oregon for at least one year after receiving the ! library degree. Winner of this scholarship will be announced at the annual meet- j ing of the Oregon Library Asso- , ciation, held April 30 and May 1. ! Art Educator To Talk Here Viktor Lowenfeld, chairman of art education at the Universityi of Pennsylvania, will be guest; lecturer at the school of archi tecture and allied arts next Thurs day and Friday.' A public address “Art and the Creative Life of the Child," will be given by Lowenfeld on Thurs day night in his only public ap pearance here. The remainder of his time will be spent assisting students in art education. Lowenfeld will also be honored ! at a reception Thursday to which faculty and students in psychology and education have been invited. Following his visit to the West Coast, Lowenfeld will return hom6 i to begin a sabbatical leave which will take him to Europe for a similar lecture tour. Campus Calendar Noon Supvsry Nurses Lnch host; Lib Arts Lnch 111 SU ’ l'tal Tbl 112 SU 1:00 Supvsry Nurses Meet 315 SU 4:00 Fri at 4 Fishbowl SU 5:30 Livingston Din 112SU 7:00 Livingston Lect 123 Sci 7:45 Fri Eve Cof Hf Brs Km SU 8:00 Newcmrs Brdg 214 SU 9:00 Fishbowl Mixer Richard II' Production Termed Difficult Task' f Continued from rage One) any University theater production, Ramey said. Crew for the produc tion includes carpenter, Sylvia Hill; electricians, Ula Mae Hostet ler and Helene Robertson; flymen, Dace Sherman and Tom Gaines; props, Spencer Snow; and crew, Phillip Sanders, and Delcse Peter con. The costume department of the University theater will accomplish one of its moat, difficult jobs of costuming tonight when the aud ience sees the production of "Rich ard II." Wilma Sundahl, graduate assistant in speech, says this is the largest costuming job she has ever done. Mrs. Sundahl, who came here after four year at Chico State college, says, "The costumes are a? authentic as we can make them, using modern patterns.” Marlene Jewell, freshman in lib eral arts, has assisted "Mrs. Sun dahl in the construction of many of the costumes. According to pic >IHS. OTTILK SEYBOLT Shakr. William K. Uvlngstou, professor of surgery at the Uni versity of Oregon medical school, will speak on "Visual Perception” tonight at 7 p. m. in the science amphitheater. The lecture Is open to the public and Is sponsored by the school of architecture and al lied arts. • “Faith of the College Stu dent” will be discussed from 9:30 to 10:30 a. m. Sunday ^ Gorling er hall. Free coffee will be served, according to Rose Warner, chair man of the YW religion committee which sponsors the uffalr. • The Sophomore Skip plan ned for today and Saturday has been postponed until Apr ! 16 and 17 because of the number of con flicts, according to Janice Fortner, publicity chairman. A WORLD OF MUSIC 30 MINUTES OF FINE MUSIC MON.-FRI. AT 9:30 P.M. AT THE STARS ADDRESS CBS FOR EUGENE KERG 4,000 RECORDS OH STARTS TONIGHT! 73 & 45 - 7 FOR A DOLLAR — GRAVES — 1235 WILLAMETTE OUT OF REGULAR STOCK! 78 & 45 ALBUMS FOR 75c — GRAVES — 1235 WILLAMETTE