h ! daily EMERALD V«*l. I V I MV, ()!■• OKK., I I <.|;nk, \m;|>„ MAH. 31, 1054 No. 104 Local Independents Set For Regional Conclave 1* A regional convention of the In dependent Student* association Will he attended this year by Ore gon studentm, according to Hollis ■ Ransom, United Independent stu 1 dents president. f The convention Ik to be held Fri r day and Saturday at Oregon State college. Students may either ur *>>iange for housing there or may go L the groups leaving from here i Friday at noon and Saturday at 1 7:30 a, m„ he said. . The conference will Include cam Ipua tours, a luncheon at Saekett hall, a banquet In the Memorial •' Union, a mixer dance and a prob lem group discussion. The delegation from Oregon will ■ be responsible for leading a dis 1“ cushion on "Is organization neces sary for participation in student government?" The entire delega tion will participate in this pro | gram, ilansom said. Deadline SU Board The deadline for petitions for | openings on the Student Union board is Apill 7. according to Vir ginia Dailey, SU boaid assistant I chairman. I Positions which will become va I cant this spring are one-year I terms from the law school and the I graduate school, and two-year I terms from the schools of journal I ism, business administration, edu I cation, and the college of liberal I art.). 1 Petitions may be picked up on I the third floor of the SU, and may I be turned In to the board chair I man s office. SU 310. II In addition to the six positions to be filled by petition, three mem ber-at-large positions will be fill I ed through nominations from with I in present SU personnel. | Petition ’Set for Interested students should con tact Ransom at 4-8381 before Thu today noon, and may receive further details on transportation and the discussion group from him. Other items of business at a UIS meeting held Tuesday includ ed planning for the all-campus elections to be held May 5. A platform committee was nam ed. and it consists of Russell Cow ell, Bob Patterson and Germaine LaMarchc. Rules for the primary elections, to is- held April 14, were explained, and will be further dis cussed at the party's next meeting Monday, Ransom said. Petitions for AGS Offices Due Apr. 7 "Determining the party platform and raising the money are the two main points to remember in the coming elections." was the open ing statement of Associated Greek Students president Bob Glass at a meeting Tuesday. Glass emphasized the fact that petitions for those intending to run for offices are due April 7, and urged all house representatives to remind members of their houses of the date. A motion to reduce each house's dues from $3 to $3 was made, causing a discussion of the distri bution of the party's funds. Bob Summers suggested that the change would require a change in the constitution, and Dorothy Kopp, secretary, verified this. The party's platform will be made up at a meeting of the policy, committee which will be held Tues day at 4 p. m. at Kappa Alpha Theta, Glass announced. Capacity Audience Hears Wilson Defend Intellect' win ume mere 18 a tendency to hold intellectual minds and the practice of thinking in disregard and it is the duty of a university to combat such ideas, to "honor the intellect” and clarify the is sues of the day, O. Meredith Wil son, new University president said Tuesday. Wilson, speaking to a capa city audience in the Student Union ballroom, compared the Univcr >oty s task to that of the small SU Board Meet Slated for Today The Student Union hoard will meet today at 4 p. m. in the hoard room. The agenda for the meeting includes; • Treasurer’s report with bud get changes. 0 Special attraction request. 0 World University Service.. 0 Kmhossograph report and discussion. 0 Review of art gallery pro gram. 0 Directorate chairman's re port. 0 Board petitioning report. 0 Special events report. Wickham to Attend Three Meetings Mrs. Golda P. Wickham, director of women's affairs, has left the campus to attend the convention of the National Association of Deans of Women in Washington. D.C. She will be in Washington from April 1 through 8, representing the Oregon Deans association. She will also attend a social function given by Mrs. Dwight Eisenhower. The national convention of As sociated Women Students will be attended by Mrs. Wickham, Janet Wick, AWS president, and Rose mary Hampton, AWS vice presi dent. The meeting will be held in Tucson, Ariz., April 8 through 12. On April 13, Mrs. Wickham will give a talk to Oregon mothers and dads in the Long Beach, Calif., area. [Prize Winning Pianist i Presents Concert Toniqht GRANT JOHANNESEN In Mac Court, the sound of tinkling ivories Pianist Grant Johannescn, who will be heard in concert at S to night in McArthur court, was the first American artist to win a first prize at the International Piano Festival in Belgium. The award, based on the unanimous decision of the judges, was made in 1949. The concert, presented under the auspices of the Eugene-University Civic Music association, is free to all University students upon pre sentation of student body cards. Johan nesen also bears the dis tinction of being the only one of the younger generation of pianists to be featured on the "Telephone Hour.'’ He appears regularly on this radio program, as well as per forming frequently on the "Stan dard Hour" from California and “Piano Playhouse." Born in Salt Lake City of Nor wegian parents, Johannescn began his musical career at the age of five when he began imitating the piano teacher around the corner, and by the age of eight was com posing musical scores and putting on theatrical entertainments. Since his New York debut ten years ago, the young artist has toured Europe and South America in addition to this continent. He has performed with such famous orchestras as the New York Phil harmonic, the Boston Symphony, the Conservatoire Orchestra of Paris, the Colon Orchestra of Bue nos Aires and the Netherlands Philharmonic of Holland. chil'l in the fable "The Emperor’s New Clothes," which he used as a topic for his talk. In that fable only a small child saw through the fraud and realiz ed the emperor wore no clothes. Today. Wilson said, "our streets are full of emperors without clothes and ministers who arc un willing to tell them." Questions Answered Wilson declared that in this complex society a university exists for the purpose of seeing that questions a child can not answer are clarified. Iri his fust speech to University students, Wilson offered "the pos sible blasphemous suggestion" that a bachelor's* degree is not enough. Frequently the wearer of the EA President Gets Little 'Quackers' The two small ducks which AS UO President Tom Wrightson pre sented to University President O. Meredith Wilson at' Tuesday's as l sembly were five days old. ' The little "quackers" are the idea of the rally board. Since there are two of them, lone W’ould get awfully lonely by itself and would grow slower, according to a local feed store man) the rally board declined to name them, leaving that ceremony up to President Wilson's six children. The names "EnT’ and "Lem" were written on the two oyster boxes in which the ducks were pre sented. however, only as a sugges tion. The names stand for Emer ald and Lemon, Oregon's school colors. The two fowls were acquired in Portland over the spring vacation. Although many duck eggs were being hatched at that time, for the Easter trade, most of the little things hadn't come out of their shells yet. The Wilson family's ducks happened to hatch before schedule, though, as the eggs were hatched by a mother hen. The two ducks have been abiding the last three days in the room of Tom Gaines, yell king, at Campbell Club. The ducks are hearty eaters, devouring half a pound of Albers special growing mash in their first four days. They adapted quickly to a stren uous campus schedule, staying awake until 1 a. m. every night. They catch up on their sleep dur ing the day, however, says Gaines. Ducks make fine pets, accord ing to people consulted about the Ducks' diet, and become very at tached to their owners. They are also very messy, the consultants were quick to add. Petition Deadlines Set for Two Events Petitions are now being called for for chairmanships and com mittee positions for two spring term campus activities. The petition deadline for Moth er's Day general chairman is 4 p. m. Thursday, according to AS UO President Tom Wrigbtson. The applications are to be turned in at the ASUO office, Student Union 304. The chairman will be selected by the ASUO senate Thursday ! night. Mother's Day will be held May 15 and 16 in conjunction with Jun ior Weekend. Petitions for workers for Duck Preview weekend, April 23 and 24, are due Thursday at 5 p. m. in the SU petition box. Approximate ly 60 committee workers for the weekend arc needed, according to Jerry Farrow and Don Boniine, co chairmen of the event. Committees which will need workers are invitations, promo tion, orientation assembly, trans portation and program. A sub chairman for registration is also needed. Students petitioning for positions should specify the com mittee on which they wish to work, the co-chairmen said. is as transparently ignorant as I hod had no education at all,” said Wilson said there is often * marked difference between the eat.* alogue description and the "lev^l of education” of graduates. It i -* | the responsibility of both faculty, and student body to “re-examine jthe intentions and ultimate pro ducts, he said. The more concern ed the student is with play an 1 entertainment, the more he contri butes to the "ultimate fraud,” tha president warned. In our time, Wilson told his audi ence, there is a threat to the free dom of people of all races ami I creeds, a threat to the proposition. hat it is possible to solve profc dems of government by reflection iand choice rather than dependin ' , on chance. .Jefferson Cited Citing also the Jeffersonian pre position that a nation can not bn both ignorant and free, Wilson •‘aid that a society which refers to thinkers as "brain trusters” ar. I cf-g heads and regards intellec tuals as inclined to be commun I ists has little chance for demoo ! racy. A trained intellect will honor democracy, Wilson declared, add. ing that the strongest expressic n of faith in democracy is belie * that the intellectual mind will un hold it. A university’s function is to make all men less shallow by teaching them to think and ex press a clear conviction cf the c ; senses, Wilson said. Sorority Picnic Leads to Arrest Of Eight Womea Eight members of Sigma Kappa sorority were arrested Monday eva jning on Fox Hollow Road during a picnic for outgoing sorority cf jficers.^A sheriffs deputy charge*! I seven of them with illegal posses i sion of liquor, and the eighth witA ! givfng liquor to a minor. Each was fined S10 and assess- >\ . •S5 court costs. Judge Chester M. Anderson, in a lengthy lecture, tol.V them "You have hurt your house;' | you have hurt the University, ar «l I You have failed to remember yoi* have an obligation to yourselves and your parents.” The judge said it was the bigge-1 case of its kind to come through his court in three years. These charged with illegal pos session were Beulah May Johnso n, sophomore in art; Joyce McGee* junior in business; Joyce Meppe * sophomore in education; Ronere Miller, sophomore in business j Carolyn Jean Piercy. junior in psy chology; Barbara Wilcox, sopho more in speech, and Janet Wil liams, sophomore in liberal arts. Vanda Randall, senior in Eng lish, was charged with giving liquor to a minor. All are officers of Sigma Kappa. A representative of the dean cl women’s office was present ir| court. She said that the girls will be interviewed and probably place.* on probation. A spokesman for the sheriff ? office told the Emerald Tuesday that his office had had "quite \ few” complaints from people living in the Fox Hollow vicinity con cerning parties being held in drive ways. He said that this was "per haps not such an obnoxious party,” but that some action had to bo taken in view of the numerous complaints.