Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 22, 1954, Page Four, Image 4

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    Traffic Court Voids
Tickets Wednesday \
At the traffic court meeting j
Wednesday evening three previ
ously issued parking and registra
tion tickets were voided. The stu
dents having the tickets were Lee
Rogers, graduate student in law;
Art Bamohl, also a graduate stu
dent in law, and Joseph L. Anstett,
junior in Business.
No Senate Meeting
THE AS VO Senate will not
meet tonight, according to AS
I'O President Tom Wrightson.
The next senate meeting will be
Thursday, April 29.
Last week the senate could
conduct no business because it
lacked a quorum. Only 17 mem
bers of the senate attended the
meeting.
Selective Service Test
Given to Men Thursday
A passing grade of 70 per cent
in the selective service examina
tion given Thursday morning in
Commonwealth 138 is needed to
qualify for college deferment.
A student may be defered by
making specified grades during the
school year, or by passing the
selective service examination, ac
cording to J. S. Spencer, director
of the counseling center.
(antf/Aztt?
SELL IT THRU THE
WANTADS
Den We nil. Classified Advertising Mgr.
FOR SALE*— One set golf clubs
with bag. 3 woods and 9 irons.
S50. Ph. 5-1602. 4-22
LOST—Cigarette lighter between ■
Collge Side and Lemon “O.” Ini
tials J.P.T. on lighter. Call John
at University Cleaners. 4-23
FOR SALE: *36 Plymouth Cpe.
Good shape. Ph. 5-7801. Price:
$29. 4-24
FOR SALE—Light weight bicycle \
$20. Phone 4-3682. Between 6
and 7 o’clock. 4-24
IT PAYS TO PATRONIZE
EMERALD ADVERTISERS
Minister Talks
To Chaplains
Reverend Berlyn Ferris, presi
dent of Eugene Ministerial Asso
ciation. will address the house
chaplains tonight at 6:30 p. m. in
the Student Union, according to
Maurice Bell, president.
The new officers of the campus
house chaplains are: president.
Maurice Bell, sophomore in liberal
arts; vice-president. Joan Havland,
junior in sociology: corresponding
secretary, Gwendolyn Endicott,
sophomore in education; recording
secretary, Bonnie Brackin. soph
omore in liberal arts, and treasur
er, Dick McDaniel, sophomore in
pre-law.
WUS Collection
Deadline Friday
World University Service solic
itors must turn in collections be
fore 5 p. m. Friday at the YMCA
office, Student Union 319, accord
ing to Germaine LaMarche, soli
citations chairman.
The total amount collected dur
ing the WUS fund drive this week
will be announced at the Vodvil
show Friday night, Gail West, ed
ucation chairman has announced.
Funds collected for WUS will be
used to help university students
in other countries, Miss West said.
WUS money is used to finance
such items as student hostels, tu
berculosis sanitoriums, health cen
ters, mimeographing equipment,
books, pencils, paper, and student
recreation centers.
Norton to Interview
For College Board
Lipman, Wolfe & Co.’s fashion
director, D. A. Norton, will be on
campus Friday to interview pros
pective college board members.
Undergraduate girls, preferably
sophomores and juniors, will be se
lected on the basis of their college
activity records, personality, poise
and their desire to become en
thusiastic Lipman, Wolfe College
Board members.
Interested students should make
appointments immediately' with
the graduate placement office, 206
Emerald hall. Interviews will be
held from 10 a.m. to 12 noon and
from 1 to 4 p.m.
Caught in the Spring Term Rush?
We Feature
Fast Service
for
Formal
and
Party Clothes!
821 E. 13th
Ph. 5-6321
Novelist to Speak
To Faculty, Classes
J. F. Powers, novelist and short
story writer, will meet with facul
ty members and of members of
writing classes during the week of
April 26, according to J. B. Hall,
assistant professor of English.
Powers' visit is sponsored by
the English departments of Ore
gon, Reed College, the University
of Washington, and the Pacific
Coast Committee for Humanities.
He is the fifth in this series, which
included W. C. Williams, Walter
Van Tilburg Clark and Elizabeth
Bowen.
Hall and S. N. Karchmer, as
sistant professor of English will
serve as hosts for Powers during
his stay on the Oregon campus.
Powers will deliver a browsing
room lecture Friday, April 30, at
7:30 p.m. The subject has not yet
’ been announced. The public is in
i vited to .attend the lecture.
—
Foreign Souvenirs
Shown at Carnival
Souvenirs of several different
foreign countries will be on dis
play at the World University Serv
ice carnival Friday from 9:30 to
10 p.m. in McArthur court.
The carnival, exhibitions of
: clothing, leather goods, foreign
coins and many other articles dis
1 played by foreign students on cam
pus. Many items will be for sale
and the profits will be given to
the WUS fund drive, according
to Ingrid Meijling, WUS carnival
chairman.
Foreign students in their native
costumes will be at the carnival
booths to explain displays and an
swer questions. The exhibits will
also be on display during intermis
sion of the Vodvil show Friday
night.
Committee Chosen
On Terrace Dance
Commiitee members for the ter
race dance have been announced
by Co-chairmen Sylvia Wingard
and Joanne Hardt. Sub-chairmen
are Betty Anderson, refreshments,
Nan Hagedorn, decorations, and
Helen Johnson, publicity.
The terrace ddnee will follow j
the all-campus cleanup. The theme |
of the dance will be "Cleanup
Jamboree.”
The dance, held on the terrace
of the Student Union, will begin at
4:30 p. m. Thursday, May 13. Free!
refreshments will be served at
the intermission at 5 p. m„ when
the Junior Weekend court will be
introduced. The dance will end at 6
p. m. . I
Greeks Outline
Platform Plank
A list, of eight points in support
of the nominating convention pro
posed by the Associated Greek
Students as the objective of the
fifth plank in their platform were
listed Wednesday by Bob Pollock,
a member of the AGS policy com
mittee. Pollock was one of the
four men who suggested the plank.
Designed to answer the question
"What will we do if we do away
with the open primary?" a full
dress convention patterned after
the national political party con
ventions is proposed. Closest cam
pus example of the proposed plan,
according to AGS leaders, wois the
mock political convention held here
two years ago.
The policy committee of AGS
would handle all arrangements
for the convention, with the aid of
AGS representatives.
Representation at the convention
would be based upon one delegate
for every 10 men in the living or
ganization and one representative
Phi Theta 'Mystics'
To be Sold in May
May 5 ami 6 are the dates set
for the Phi Theta "Mystic" sale
this year. This sale, run entirely
by freshmen, is held to raise money
for scholarships for university
students. The article to be sold Is
traditionally not announced until
the day of the sale.
General co-chairmen of the
evert are Betty Anderson and
Sally Jo Grieg. Sub-chairmen in
clude: collections. Rae Bergeron
and Mary Gerlinger; distributions,
Betty Dobler and Helen Johnson;
publicity, Carol Craig and Helen
R. Johnson; decorations. Julie Mil
ler and Lolly Quackenbush; pro
motion, Miriam Vaaler and Pat
Wilkinson; booth sales. Nan Hage
dorn and Mary Sandeberg, and
house sales, Margaret Tyler and
Barbara Williams.
Music Ed Students
Slate Radio Show
A group of music education ma
jors will present a tape recorded
radio program over radio station
KOAC today at 1:15 p. m. The pro
gram is entitled "Lets Sing,
America," and is a part of the
Oregon school of the air series.
The 45-minute program of music
will be broadcast for the rural
schools of the state. R. E. Nye, as
sociate professor of music educa
tion, made all the arrangements
for the program and will direct
the chorus. Douglas Stobie, senior
in music, will act as the master
of ceremonies.
for every "fraction of tO over a
number dlvlitable by 10” The fig
ures would be baaed upon official
Office of .student affaire tublua
t ions,
Delegatee would be Heated In
j designated sections. with the r<>.
mainlng space going to other In
tereated students.
NominatlonH would be made
from the floor, with two .seconds
allowed for each nomination. Much
speech would be of a limited
length.
A special committee would form
ulate the platform for presenta
tion to the convention after the
| nominations. Any AOS member
j could move for additions or re
movals from the platform, which
would have to be ratified by dele
gates to the convention.
The AOS suggestions of the
nominating convention would re
place the current all-campus pri
, mary. In their platform, passed
Tuesday afternoon, the Greeks
urged addition of section VI to
article VI of the A8UO constitu
tion.
The proposed addition calls for
each party to present a slate of
candidates for the general elec
| lions, with the candidates to be
selected as the party chooses.
AGS proposes to use the nomin
ating convention as its method of
choice of candidates.
Tiffany Adviser
For Drill Squad
Oregon's AFROTC drill team Is
now being advised by Maj Louts
Tiffany, who is replacing Maj. N.
X. Mihailov. David Lens, senior
in business, is the student drill
master.
The drill team participated in a
regional competition at Gill coli
seum in Corvallis' early in April.
The participating schools were
Oregon. Oregon State college. Uni
versity of Portland and Willamette
university, Oregon gained third
place.
The drill tram has many activi
ties planned for the remainder of
the school year. They will put on
an exhibition of marching and
drilling for the Boy Scouts of
America on April 24 and will per
form on May 4 for the annual
AFROTC Inspection parada.
Other activity dates for the drill
team this term a:e May 15. the
'annual Armed Forces Day parade.,
and June 3, the graduation review.
At all of these functions, the drill
team will appear in their special
uniforms and will perform a special
fancy drill.
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