EMERALD VOL. I.V UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, TUESDAY, AI'KIL 27, Itt.Yl NO. 123 ASUO Coffee Hour Planned for SU Today «*< uir'igm imo Hiuaem govern* me-nt, with a chance for the audi ence to participate, will be offered today In the Student Union at the ASUO Coffee hour at 1 p. m. Featured speakers will be the two candidates for ASUO presi dent, Hollis Ransom of United In dependents and Bob Summers of Associated Greek students. I he two will present their own views, according to Bob Funk, AS UO vice-president, and will a ns j Wf‘r student questions following their talks. All interested students are in vited to attend the coffee hour. Funk said. Free coffee will be served, and room number will be posted. In addition to the two speakers, all candidates running for any of 1 fice in either party will be intro duced. Funk said. The candidates will also participate in the dlscus I sion*. Assembly Data, Route Set for Float Parade I he* route to be followed by the combined Junior Weekend Float parade anil Armed Forces Day parade w»* announced Monday by . Mary Wilson and Ann Hopkins, co chairmen. The parade will assemble at 2:15 p rn.. May 15 at McArthur court, and the parade will begin at 3 P. ro. Any floats arriving after 3 p. m. will be disqualified. The floats will pass the judges' stand at the Student Union and then follow East 13th ave. west to Willamette at., north on Wil lamette to Bro/idway, east on Broadway to High st., south on High to East 13th ave., east on 13th to University, and will dis band on the original site Twenty-two floats, three cars with the Junior Weekend court, a sheriffs posse, four humorous skits, 25 marching units, and five bands will march in the parade. All ROTC men will be expected to march In the parade, but "A leasonable amount of the men will be excused to work on the floats," • Colonel E. B. Daily said. Daily, head of the military sci ence department, urged all living organizations to submit the names . of their men who will be working on the floatH. Sub-chairmen for the parade are Kaye Duri.o, judg- ; Germaine La Marche, bands; Jo Kopp, queen's coutt cars; Jerry Kroebe, line-up and trophies; Joanne Jolly, con tact, and John Jensen, humorous skits. 'Reserve a Room' Students Asked Students should make hotel or j reservations now for their mothers who are planning to come down for Mother’s Weekend, May 14 to 15. according to Donna Lory, general chairman. Students are urged to write letters home this week inviting their mothers if they have not al ready done so. ’Although the j weekend will be publicized in home newspapers, the most successful appeal is through personal letters from students to their mothers," j stressed Miss Lory. During the weekend the mothers will attend the annual mothers' breakfast, a tea. and the Junior f Weekend events. Sketch Actress Performance Set Cornelia Stabler, character aet fenH of radio and television, will present her one-woman show. •Personality Portraits,” at a Uni | versity assembly at 1 p. m. today dn the Student Union ballroom. The stage for "Personality Por traits” is set with a table and two : chairs, and all roles are played by CORNELIA STABLER The art of ea\ evJrnpping Miss Stabler. She defines charac ter sketching as "eavesdropping developed into a fine art. * Titles of the character sketches include "Showing the Home Movies,” “The Bird Bath,” “Re membrance of Things Past.” and i “After the Ball.” Miss Stablers show has been pre sented from coast to coast in the United States and in Europe for the USO during World War II. She received her dramatic train ing at Swarthmore college and Co lumbia university. During the .summer, Miss Stabler directs a summer community theater. 298 Sign Petitions to Place Election Amendmenton Ballot by bally Ryan Emerald A»»i»t»nt Newt Editor A total of 298 students signed the 13 petitions returned to the ASUO office for the Associated Greek Student - sponsored elec tion amendment, AS*UO President Tom Wrightson said Monday aft ernoon? Only 200 names are need ed to place an amendment on the ballot. The names are to be checked to be sure they are tho.se of regis tered students and that there are no duplications. AGS has proposed the amend ment to allow political parties to choose their slate of candidates in any manner they choose. At the same time the suggested amend ment was passed, AGS offered plans for a nominating convention as their proposed method. Addition Called For The amendment calls for the addition of section VI to article ,VI of the ASUO constitution. It reads: “Kach political party shall present a slate of candidates for the general election. These candi dates shall be selected as each of the several parties chooses. This amendment shall become effective September 1, 1904, and shall take precedence over ai)y article or section of this constitution dealing with candidacy for office, includ ing section V of this article.” unuea students association in 1952 proposed a campus-wide ASUO sponsored primary election. They also expressed a desire for open membership in both political parties, in a statement in their voter’s pamphlet. The re-organized USA, United Independent Students, supported the open-primary in 1953, with a request to "place nominations for ASUO offices on an optimum of democratic methods with an all campus primary.” Follows Lead AGS followed the lead of UIS a week later with the announce ment in its party platform that “AGS is in favor of the all-campus primary. We feel it would allow the parties to maintain their indi viduality and at the same time would provide a more expedient method of filling party slates.” Early in the term, the ASUO senate refused to refer the open primary plan to the student body on the spring term general elec tions ballot. A two-thirds vote of the body, 14 .to 6, was necessary. The proposal failed on a roll call vote, 13 to 7. In last springs general elec tions, the constitutional amend ment was placed on the ballot when the 200 students required by the initiative procedure signed .1 petition to place the proposal on the ballot. The amendment, with the support of both political par ties, passed by a vote of 1190 to Summers Approves Bob Summers, the AGS candi date for ASUO president, has come Iou*- *n favor of his party's move, jin the U1S platform, announced IIast w-eek, UIS continued support i of the open-primary system, used for the first time in the April 14 i primaries. I LIS favored “the continuance of ' the all-campus primary in its pres ent form because it is an effective means to give the individual stu dent more of a voice in the selec tion of suitable candidates." USA used a general nominating assembly, similar to the one sug gested by AGS, in 1951. The as sembly, open to all students, was held in McArthur court. Only those with USA membership cards could vote. Nomination procedures pro vided for nominations from the floor, provided there were 10 sec onds to the nomination. Approximately 275 USA mem bers, including the nominees, at tended the assembly. Merv Hamp ton defeated Virginia Wright, who was nominated from the floor, by 26 votes. Hampton was defeated in the general elections by Bill Carey, the AGS candidate. One Vets To Come Dorm Down by Dorothy Her Emerald Atiietanf Newt Editor One of the two Vet’s dorms will be torn down this summer. Approval for the razing of Vet’s dorm No. 1, which includes Mer rick, Nestor and French halls was given to the University by the State Board of Higher Education Building committee Monday. Offi cial approval by the entire board is expected today. Vet's dorm No. 2 will not be torn down but kept for use at least through next year in case of peak student loads in the near future. This was the recommendation of | University President O. Meredith Wilson to the state board. Termed Fire Traps Both the dormitory units, now used to house freshman men, have been termed fire traps by Eugene hue Chief Ed Surfus. Tn an inves tigation in February, the Vet's dorms were rated as the most dan gerous group of buildings in the city, from the point of view of fire. Their danger as fire traps lies in the fact that they are constructed of plywood. If they caught on fire, j "thc-y would burn down in about two minutes,’’ according to Fire \ Chief Surfus. The two buildings were pur | chased twelve years ago from the federal government as surplus structures and have been regarded as “temporary" the whole time. They were used to house 600 stu dents during the enrollment in crease following World War II. Men Object to Mice Residents of Merrick, Nestor and French halls issued a com plaint to the office of student af fairs in March about the presence | of mice in the dormitory. The of j fice of student affairs said action Vivas to Discuss Literary Topic ‘ Literary Criticism and Aesthe ' tics'' will be discussed by Eliseo Vivas, writer and teacher of phil | osophy, in a University lecture to ! night at 8 p. m. in the Dad's I lounge. Vivas, professor of moral and in tellectual philosophy at Northwes tern university, is the author of a book entitled "The Moral Life and the Ethical Life," and has con tributed numerous articles to liter ary and philosophical journals. Vivas served as Venezuelan con sul to the United States in 1929. He was born in Colombia of Vene zuelan parents and received his education in the United States. Vivas received his A. B. degree at the L7niversity of Wisconsin in 1928 and his Ph. D. from the same university in 1935. He taught philosophy at the Uni versity of Wisconsin, the Univer sity of Chicago, and Ohio State university before going to North western. Jr.-Sr. Breakfast Planned for Sunday Sunday is the date for the an nual Junior-Senior breakfast spon sored by the YWCA, according to Nancy Heine, general chairman. The breakfast will be held in the Student Union at 9:15 a. m. Traditionally, all juniors in wo men's living organizations escort the seniors in their organizations. Tickets are on sale for $1 in each living organization and at the SU main desk. A 'May' theme will be carried out for the breakfast. Speaker will be William C. Jones, executive director of the Western Interstate Commission of Higher Education. Committee chairmen for the breakfast include Gwen Ziiniger, tickets; Joyce Bearden, publicity; Sayra Story, programs; Nancy Cottingham, invitations and Jackie Robertson, decorations and cater ing. had been taken by the Lane Cou/v* ty Rodent Service to nd the budd ing of mice. However, H. P. Barnhart, direc tor of dormitories, said there wa.* no "cause for alarm.” He blame*" the presence of the mice on pack ages of food being left open in the rooms. The construction of the new Vir gil D. Earl hall was expected to make possible the elimination cf the Vet’s dorms entirely. The new $1,250,000 men’s dorm, now under construction, is an addition to the present John Straub hall and will house 328 students. Construction of the new building is expected Xo be finished by September, 1955. Work was begun in March by tho W. H. Shields Construction Co. Deferred Living Approved Approval for the construction of the building was given by the* State Board of Higher Educaticn >n November, 1953. In sanctioning a new men's dormitory the state board stated firmly that it v/aa approving for all time the defer red living policy of the Univer sity. The investment means that the ruling that freshman meiv must live in dormitories, rather than fraternities, is no longer ex perimental, but has the tacking of the state board. The University will advertise for bids to tear down Vet s dorm No. the unit nearest Alder street^ according to Orville Lindsrtrom, I University business manager. After the building is remove-*, the area will be landscaped. Genetics Discussed Monday by Snyder The practical application of tho study of genetics to public health was discussed Monday night Laurence H. Snyder, dean of th© University of Oklahoma graduat©. school, at the regular meeting of Sigma Xi, national science honor ary. Snyder broke down the applica tion of genetics into four cate gories prevention, diagnosis, prognosis, and inheritance of blot-i : groups. uenetics. he stated, "has most Ito °^er >n the field of prevention. When one member cf a family has a known inherited disorder, other members of the family can to treated before they are harmed. * In diagnosis, Snyder stressed tho importance of the family history. Prognosis, he explained, was tho giving of information to families* of the chances of appearance of genetic traits. The study of blood groups, he pointed out, has been invaluable in making transfusions. Quote Wrong, Says Ransom The statement in Friday’s Em erald concerning the United Inde pendent Students' platform was in correct in part, according to Hol lis Ransom. UIS candidate for AS UO president. Speaking before a Monday meet ing of UIS members and candi dates, Ransom said he had been quoted as saying "the party ha i 'workable solutions to all the is sues involved.’ ” "I would like to repeat that wo have solutions to most of the prob lems presented in the platform, ’ he said. In other business Lent Calvert, Sam Frear Ray Westen house, Carol Eldridge, Jackie War den and Russ Cowell were namerf to an organization committee for the general elections, May 5.