JUNIOR WEEKEND QUEEN | Voting Booths Open At SU, Co-op Todav Voting for Junior Weekend queen is being held today from ® ,fl 5 p. in, at booths located in the Student Union and Co-op. Offl ria! announcement of the queen will tie made at the Junior Prom Friday night, when ahe in crown ed by University President O. Meredith Wilson. The finalists, who will be mem bers of the court, are the follow ing. Dorothy Kopp A brown-haired member of Kap pa Alpha Theta Is Dorothy Kopp, the candidate of Carson 3 in the queen contest. Dorothy is 5 feet 7 inches tall, and counts reading and playing bridge among her fa vorite pastimes. Active In almost every phase of student activities, Dorothy has been Associated Greek Students' secretary and a member of Phi Theta Upsilon this year. She will serve as senior class representative next year, and 1-. ' urrently president of her house The things she likes best about the University are "the people,1 and the academic opportunities." A business major, Dorothy' plans to use her business training in personnel work or counselling. Janet Miller Janet Miller, a member of Kap pa Kappa Gamma, is sponsored by Campbell club in the contest. She' is also 5 feet 7 inches tall, and has almost - black hair and brown, eyes. She attended Grant high school I in Portland, and now lives In Ore- i gon City. Favorite hobbies include! swimming, horseback riding, play ing the piano, drawing and sketch ing. A member of the Homecoming i ♦ « MHBPPT rfl'; court last year, Janet attended ! Portland State college winter term. She waa in Kwama during her sophomore year. Janet plana to teach in Kurope after ahe graduates, and prefers teaching displaced children in France or Germany. Concerning the campus, ahe thinks the trees and other physical features are •'impressive,” and adda that the new Student Union building is "quite an asset." Nancy Murrow Spokane, Washington, is the home-town of Nancy Murrow, brown-haired candidate of Gamma 1 hi Beta. A political science ma jor, ahe had planned to work for the state department until she be came engaged. "Now Pro planning to be a housewife," ahe said. Nancy transferred here from the University of Washington win ter term, and said that Oregon is "more friendly than Washington i ■ • • you get to know more people." School spirit is also better h.-rc, she said, because the University is smaller than Washington. The 5-foot, 4-inch Gamma Phi is sor.g leader for her house, as she was at Washington. She was also in the sophomore honorary there. Alma Owen Blonde Alma Owen, an Alpha Chi Omega, is the candidate of Alpha Chi Omega, Sigma Nu and Sigma Phi Epsilon. She is from Poitland. where rhe attended! Washington high school. Now president of her house, Alma is secretary of Heads of Houses. She is a major in speech correction, and as part of her work in the department' is conducting! f-linical correction practice with (Please tur» to fa/jc four > Phi Beta Kappa Elects Eighteen Eighteen seniors were elected to ■ membership in Phi Beta Kappa, national scholastic honorary, Tues day night. They will be initiated in ceremonies at Cerlinger hall Tues day at 5:30. New Phi Betas are Mitzi Asai, ; English; Janet Bell, English; Jack Goebel, mathematics; Karl Harsh barger, speech; Phyllis Helmcrs. music; Dagmara Hill, foreign lan guages; Jtobert Johns, foreign lan- j guages; A1 Karr, journalism, and Arnold Levin, liberal arts. Gordon MacPherson, history; Lawrence Maves, music; Robert Moursund, general science; Joan Nelson, history; Mark Patterson, I history; Vanda Randall, English; Hollis Ransom,- political science; j Catherine T. Seigmund, business > administration, and Harold Watts, j economics. Following the initiation cere monies, Phi Beta members will join with members of Sigma Xi national science honorary, for a joint banquet. Speaker at the ban- i quet will be Wendell Stanley, di- ! rector of the virus laboratory at the University of California and Nobel prize winner for chemistry: in 1946. George Wilkins, sophomore in physics, was awarded the Phi Beta Kappa book award for the sopho more student with the highest; grades. Earlier this year, the honorary announced its annual selection of the "Senior Six.” the top six sen-! iors scholastically. They were Wil liam Hall, Warren Bachelis, Ron ald Lowell, Shirley Shupe, Harold Toliver and William Walker. All the students picked for membership in the honorary had \ a GPA of more than 3.25. One of these five women will ses will reign over all events in of the court are (from left to become Junior weekend queen the Junior weekend celebration, right) Dorothy Kopp Janet Miller when the balloting ends tonight at and will be crowned at the Jun- Nancy Murrow, Janet Wick and 5. Tile queen and her four princes- ior Prom Friday night. Members Alma' Owen. Bunche to Speak At UO Assembly r>.i.. x- . . M Ralph Bundle United Nation VobcI Peace !)r>ze winner and director of th* coffc trusteeship division, will speak at a University i ue.seay at 1 p. m. in the Student Union ballroom X hour forum for the speaker will be held at 4 p m th<, sanie day in the Dad’s lounge of the SU, The appearance on campus by the distinguished educator and state department expert is being sponsored by the University’* a, mg Distinguished Lecturers committee. The SU coffee hour ♦ a a. .forum committee is snnnanr RALPH Bl'NCHE N'olx-I Winner to Speak MomstoMeet At Breakfast The deadline for the purchase of I Mother's breakfast tickets has been set at noon Thursday to al low the committee to plan for a definite number of guests. Barbara Kamm, ticket chair man, has announced that there are only a limited number of the tic kets left. She has warned the stu dents that they should buy tickets immediately to insure a place for their motheis at the breakfast. The breakfast will start at 8:30 a. m., not at 9 a. m. as was pre viously stated in the Emerald and on the posters which have been put up on campus. This event will be a “mothers only" affair, with a talk by Uni versity President O. Meredith Wil son and a business meeting high- ■ lighting the program. Also at this i time. Mrs. C. Elmer Carlson, Port land. president of the Oregon Mothers ,club, will present Pres Wilson with a check for the; amount of the Mothers club schol arships for the coming year. Tickets are on sale at the Stu- i dent Union and the Co-op for $1.25 ; each. Yeli King Tryouts To be Held Tonight Yell king tryouts are scheduled I for tonight at 7 in the Student! Union. All petitions«must be in by j 5 p. m. All candidates will tryout before i a screening committee composed of Olivia Tharaldson, Janet Gus tafson, Maeua-Louise Hair, Sam Vahey, Tom Gaines, Sally Sta- i delman, and interested senate i members. The yell king will be selected I from among two or three finalists j at the first meeting of the new senate. afternoon event. Currently a professor of govern mcnt at Harvard university, Bunche was awarded the Nobel peace prize for his work in tho Arab-IsraeJi armistice in 1949. He was acting UN mediator on Pale stine in 1948-49. Bom in Detroit in 1904, Bunche received his A.B. at the Univer sity of California in 1927. He re ceived his M A. in 1928 and hi* Ph D. in 1934, both at Harvard. Studied Abroad Bunche did post-doctoral work in anthropology and colonial poli cy at Northwestern university, the London School of Economics and the University of Capetown, South Africa in 1936-37. He was an Ozia* Goodwm fellow at Harvard in 1929 an held the Rosenwald fellow ship in Europe, England and North, and West Africa in 1931-32. He also held the Social Science Research council post-doctoral fellowship in Europe, South .and East Africa, Malaya and the Neth erlands Indies from 1936 to 1939 Bunche was a staff member of tho Carnegie Corp. Survey of the Np gro in America, working in tho southern states in 1939. Worked with OSS An educator at the University of California and Howard univer l93n «dUr^g „the late 1920 8 and 1930 s, Bunche worked with the Strategic Service during World War II. He has been a ter ritorial specialist for the U 9 State department and was a mem ber of the U. S. delegation to the Dumbarton Oaks conference in Formerly a member of the U 9 delegation to the U. N„ Bunche be came chief of the U. N. Trustee ship department in 194S. He was awarded the Spingam medal by the National Association for tho Advancement of Colored Peoplo in 1949. Bunche is married and has three, children. He lives with his family in Jamaica, New York. Senior Ride Brings Fines Four University seniors were ar rested and fined at Vancouver Wash., Friday for walking ille gally on a highway after they ha l been taken rn a “senior ride,” ac cording to a report carried by Tuesday’s Oregon Journal. The four men are Llovd Hutch inson. Richard Kesson, Leo Naapi and Gordon Badgley. They were lined $25 and $2.50 costs apiece by Justice Walter Collins of But ton District. The men were reportedly taken to Camas, Wash., about 13 milee north of Vancouver, by freshmen. The four had walked about two miles when they were seen walk ing down the middle of the high way by a state patrolman. Told tp walk by the side of tho road, the men compiled until after the patrolman had driven a shojt distance beyond them, when they again returned to the center, tho report says. The patrolman then returned and placed them under arrest. Five Frosh Coed Violators Caught Five women have been ordered to report to Fenton pool Thursday at 12:30 p. m. to receive punish ment for breaking Junior Week end traditions. Doug Clement, Or der of the O president, has re quested the presence of Carol Aik en, Janet Filbert, Judy Kirk, Adri enne McRae and Karen Rice.