Weather... ...will l»*> partly cloudy with scattered ohnwrin. Hl({h tom pc rat lire today will Hi and th«- low tonight will Im* -15. VOI,. I.V I m KA Is? /to it AT daily EMERALD 56ih Year of Publication t NIVEIWITV OF OHEOON, Kt liKNK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1954 School Spirit. . . ... it dead at Oregon ? Head today’** editorial on page two to find out. NO. II Bunion Derby Set for Friday Flying speeches during the lunch and dinner hour* today and Friday will publicize the annual AWS-aponaored Bunion Derby to be held Friday evening at the reupective women's living organ izations. Campus clothes are in order for the event which will begin ht 7 00 p.m. and end at 10:30. Men will spend seven minutea dancing at each of the twenty two women's houses and have been allowed three minutes trav • el time. Each man pays a nickel at each women's house and the pro ceeds go to the AWS scholarship fund. East year $489.6f> was col lected. To help exceed this . amount, all living organizations are urged to make this a house function. Records donated by Graves Music and Art company will be awarded to the men’s living or ganization having the largest percentage of men participating in the derby. The women's or ganizations collecting the most money per capita will also re ceive records from Graves. Men's organizations competing for the prize must Start with the women's organization with which it Is paired and attend all other houses in the specified order. Each group will be marked off on a tally sheet as they arrive at the houses. Members of the collection committee will col lect this list with the money Sat urday morning and the winners will be announced Monday. Working with General Chair men Margaret Tyler and Karen Kraft are Nan Pierson and Gloria Bekemch. publicity chairmen: Margie Harmon and Marlene Grasse sc he, judging chairmen; Glenna Pearl, prizes; Jean Mr Fherson and Beverly Haller, con tacting chairmen: Barbara Bail ey and Joyce Bearden, collecting chairmen. APPA to Have ConvenfionHere Oregon’s physical plant will be host this weekend to the Pa cific Coast Association of Phy sical Plant Administrators when It holds its third annual meeting Friday and Saturday. Local officials are expecting about 50 members of the asso ciation to attend the conference which will open Friday with reg istration at 8:30 a m. in the sec ond-floor lobby of the Student Union. All association sessions are scheduled fop the Dads' lounge. Dr. William C. Jones, Univer sity of Oregon dean of admin istration, will give the opening address Friday morning. Other speakers to follow him will in clude Wesley Hertenstein, na tional APPA president from the California Institute of Technol ogy; Carroll L. Blacker of Stan ford university, and J. Orville Lindstrom, University of Oregon business manager. Speakers during Friday after noon's sessions will be Wilbur W. Weed and George Pette from the University and Richard Adams of Oregon State college’s athletic plunt. Also scheduled for Friday are a luncheon and dinner in the Student Union. Saturday’s activities will in clude business sessions in the morning followed by an inspec tion tour of Eric Allen Hall, new journalism building to be for mally opened on that day. Houses to Pair For Send-Off The ASUO-sponsored rally board is expecting mor» than 1000 students to attend the .send-off rally this evening at 6.30 p.m. at the train depot, where the football squad will entrain for Berkeley and a game with the California Bears. Rally-Derby Pairs Listed Following is a list of the pair ings for both the Bunion Derby and the California football game rally. Sherry Roan and Barrister Inn at Oridea (third floor of Ger lingeri: Th<-ta Chi at Susan Campbell; Phi Kappa Sigma, Pi Kappa Phi and Pi Kappa Alpha at Hendricks hall; Sigma Phi Kpailon at Gamma Phi Beta. Sederatrom II and Sigma hall at Alpha Phi; Hunter hall and Alpha hall at Rebec house; Lambda Chi Alpha and Sigma Alpha Mu at Alpha Xi Delta; Beta Theta Pi at Chi Omega; Sigma Chi at Kappa Alpha The ta; Phi Delta Theta at Kappa Kappa Gamma. Delta Tau Delta at Sigma Kap pa: Sigma Alpha Epsilon at Pi Beta Phi; Phi Kappa Pai at Al pha Chi Omega; Sederatrom I and Chemey hall at Zeta Tau Alpha; Phi Gamma Delta at Delta Gamma; Sigma Nu at Al pha Qamma Delta. Delta Upailon and Kappa Sig ma at Alpha Delta Pi; Campbell club at Alpha Omicron Pi; Alpha Tau Omega at Delta Delta Delta: Chi Psi and Phi Sigma Kappa at Delta Zeta. Tau Kappa Epsilon and Sigma hall at University house; Nes tor hall at Highland house: and French and Omega hall at Car son hall. Emerald Appoints Feminine Editors Several new members of the Oregon Daily Emerald upper staff were announced at the weekly Emerald staff meeting held Saturday. New staff members on the campus daily include: Valerie Hersh, chief night editor; Kath leen Morrison, 'morgue editor, and Sally Jo Greig and Marcia Mauney, co-editors of the wom en's page. In order that all women's or ganizations will have a chance to find transportation to the pep rally, houses will be paired off. The men's organizations have been instructed to pick up the girls before 6:30 p.m., so that they will have ample time to make it down town to the depot. Freshmen pledges will have a choice of attending the rally in the company of either their sor ority or fraternity, or with their dormitory. la either case, there will be ample transportation, ac cording to Sally Stadelman, rally board chairman. Ray Walden, student director of the pep band, will have his musicians on hand for the depot send-off. As a special attraction, for both the team and the students. Mr. "Creswell Charlie” Cham bers, Lane county bear-trappmg authority, will issue bear hunting licenses to all the team members and the coaches. These special licenses state that ''During the weekend of | Oct. H through 10, the holder shall have authority to get one (1» bear pelt, by any means. Since this is a special season, this license is also transferable to the state of California.” Portrait of Late Dean Hangs in Allen Hall A colored oil portrait of Eric) W. Allpn has been hung in the seminar room of Allen hall in | memory of the University’s first dean of journalism. The portrait of Allen was painted by David McCosh, asso ciate professor of art at the University, from a black and white photograph. There will also be a portrait of Sally Allen, wife of Dean Allen. The other three are of Robert C. Hail, W. F. Goodwin Thacher and George S. Turnbull. The former two are living in Eu gene. Turnbull is now editor of the Albany Democrat-Herald. Drives Combine In United Appeal For the first time in the Uni versity’s history, the Lane Coun ty Chest and the Red Cross will be combined in one drive under the name of United Appeal. A quota of $1000, 55 cents or more per person, has been set for this year's drive, according to Janet Gustafson, general stu dent chairman of the campaign. The drive opened officially Oct. 4 and will end Oct. 13. As in the past, collections will be handled by members of Kwa ma and Skull and Dagger, soph omore men’s and women's service honoraries. Members of the groups have been assigned to each living organization to take contributions. Helen Ruth Johnson, president of Kwama, has been appointed chairman of women’s houses. Chairman of men’s houses is Doug Basham, president of Skull j and Dagger. For those living in Amazon: flats and Skinner’s Butte devel-j opments, a box has been placed j in each grocery store for dona tions. The United Appeal supports the activities of 31 organizations. About 70 per cent of the Lane County Chest budget goes to the Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, YMCA, YWCA, the community center, Association for the Aid of Re tarded Children, and the sev eral youth funds throughout the county. The Red Cross includes the first aid and water safety, as sistance to service men and wom en with the armed forces, their home service activities, and the blood program. A permanent plaque and a miniature duck will be presented to the men’s and women’s organ izations who contribute the high est amount per capita. The winners of last year’s < Community Chest drive were Al pha Chi Omega and Alpha Tau ; Omega, who contributed aver- j ages of 55 cents and 51 cents per person, respectively. McKay Speaks In SU Ballroom University students will have :he opportunity to hear the lat est political and non-politic?^ news of the Republican party ind the national government ■vhen Secretary of the Interior Douglas McKay speaks at an assembly today at 1 p.m. in the Student Union ballroom. McKay, former governor of the state of Oregon who resigned his post when President Eisen hower offered him a post on the president's cabinet, is expected to talk on g. variety of topics, rhe exact subject matter of his speech is pot known but inter ested University students are guessing that his talk will in clude some comments on the con troversial public power ques tion. McKay also may speak briefly in the coming congressional elec tions and their importance to the nation. At the present time McKay is Clark Leads Open Forum "De-Segregated schools: Will They Cost The Negro Teacher j His Job?” will be the topic of' an open forum meeting spon-! sored by the campus chapter of ‘ the National Association of the Advancement of Colored People. The meeting will be tonight at 7:30 in the Student Union and is open to all interested students. | Moderator for the forum will i be R. D. Clark, head of the speech department. Other panel members will be Mark Smith, deputy commission- j cr of the state Fair Employment: Practices commission; Arthur C. Hearn, associate professor of education, and Joel V. Berreman, professor of sociology. on a campaigning tour and his stop at the University is one of two he will make in Eugene to day. He will speak at a luncheon in the Eugene hotel at 11:30 a.m. Robert D. Horn, chairman of the University Assembly com mittee, has announced that all Thursday one o'clock classes will be postponed until next Tuesday afternoon. This change will not cause conflict for any students because there are no regular classes at one o’clock Tuesday, this time being reserved for weekly assemblies during the year. Summers Names Committees Senate standing committees to function for the year were an nounced at Tuesday’s senate meeting by ASUO President Bob Summers. Committees and their mem bers include community chest, Janet Gustafson, chairman; for eign students, Darrell Brittsan, chairman. Hollis Ransom, Loris Lai son, Professor R. D. Horn; Insurance, Jim Duncan, chair man ; rally board, Stan Savage, Germaine LaMarche and Bob Maier. Others are constitution re vision, Ransom, Jim Light, Mai Scott; Honor Code, Gordon Rice, chairman; NFCL, Bud Hinkson; OFCL, Maier. Senate members of the ASUO Student Union screening board are Gary West and Don Smith, AGS, and Harriet Hombeck, UIS. Another junior representa tive must be appointed to fill the vacancy left when Russ Co well did not return to school. Quartet Will Play For Charter Day First event of the forthcom ing two-day celebration of Uni versity Charter day will be the appearance of the well-known Griller string quartet, from the University of California. The quartet will give a con cert Monday, Oct. IS in the Stu dent Union Ballroom. The 1000 tickets for the performance will be available free of charge to students and faculty, beginning Monday at the Student Union main desk. If these are not gone by Wednesday, Oct. 13, the re mainder will be made available to Eugene townspeople. Members of the quartet are Sidney Griller and Jack O’Brien, tdolin players; Philip Burton, vi sla player, and Colin Hampton, .vho plays the violm'cello. Included on the concert pro gram will be Quartet No. 4 1953) by Ernest Block, Oregon composer. It will be the first performance of Block’s quartet in the Pacific coast. The work las been performed in England md at the Tanglewood music ’estival. Other works to be performed ay the string group are the Quar et in D Minor, (K421) *Mozart vith the Allegro Moderato, An lante, Menuetto, Allegretto; and he Allegretto, Ma Non Troppo novements. Principal speaker at the two lay celebration will be Julian luxley, noted English biologist. He will speak at 10 a m. Tues day, Oct. 19. Other speakers for the day will be Zechariah Cha fee, Jr., of Yale university and Clarence Faust of the Ford Foun dation for the Advancement of Education. Other events planned for char ter day are a reception for Presi dent O. Meredith Wilson and Mrs. Wilson at 4 p.m. Oct. 19 in Gerlinger Lounge and an acad emic procession preceeding the president’s inauguration. Gov ernor Paul Patterson will speak at the inauguration ceremonies. UIS Sets First Discussion Meet Monday at 4 p.m. is the date set for the first in series of stu dent political discussions spon sored by United Independent Students, campus political party. Monday’s session will be in the living room of Carson hall and is open to all students, ac cording to Len Calvert, UIS pres ident. The present campus pref erential voting system and its relationship to UIS policy will be included among the topics to be discussed, Calvert said. The meeting will be an open discussion with everyone pres ent participating. Independent freshmen and transfer students are especially welcome, Calvert emphasized.