Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 14, 1954, Page Three, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    SU Board Chooses Student Delegates to Conference
Representatives to t <• Prudent
Union Northwest Regional con
ference were chosen Wednesday
in the first HU board meeting
of the year,
The conference Is being held
on Whitman college campus at
Walla Walla, Oct. 29-30. The four
HU board representatives are
Sonia Edwards, Bob Pollock,
Andy Berwick and Phyllis Pear
son. Jack Socolofsky, Lucia
Knepper, LMck Gray and Donna
Schafer will represent the SU
directorate. Garry MeMurry Is
! the alternate representative. Two
| staff members will also be cho
| sen to attend.
Six petitions have been turned
in for application for the 8U
hoard. Applicants are Lucia
Knepper and Jack Bocolofsky an
member for college of liberal
arts; John Shaffer and Jerry
Farrow, business administration;
Bob Funk, law school and Merv
Hampton, graduate school. The
applicant* will appear before the
joint ASUO-SU screening com
mittee to be interviewed some
time next week. After this the
committee will recommend one
person for each vacancy to the
president of the University wTio
will make the final appointment.
In other business the board
passed the budget for the school
year. The total budget income Is
$5,251; the expense total Is the
same. Actual board income Is a
$3,000 appropriation, however.
The other $2,251 income is bal
anced by expenditures.
Patronize Emerald Advertisers
How is an oil well like a cow ?
In many ways the similarity between an oil well
and a cow has a great deal to do with the future
security of your children.
Both well and cow give us vital products—
petroleum and milk. But unless we withdraw
those products at an effioient rate we can ruin
our source of supply.
For it’s as economically unsound to take a
year’s supply of oil from a well in a month, as
it would be to try to obtain a year’s production
of milk from a cow in a day!
It’s equally bad economically to ?/wdcrproduce
p well or a cow. Yet, today, the American petro
leum industry is underproducing—to accom
modate the oil coming into this country from
far-off places.
Obviously, if our own industry is to maintain
its capacity to produce it has to be able to sell
its products. Whatever interferes with this
jeopardizes its ability to continue to satisfy
America’s need for oil.
Nor does it have the financial resources to
drill wells and then shut them in until needed.
You have to do business to stay in business.
What’s worse, oil from distant shores creates a
dangerous dependency. In a national emergency
it could disappear overnight. And we can’t slow
our production down too much and expect it to
be adequate when we want it.
In our opinion, there is only one safe way to
keep this nation’s rate of petroleum production
up to any challenge it may have to meet. That’s
to encourage our domestic oil industry to con
stantly find and develop new fields in the
Western hemisphere, where we can get at them if
we need them.
Union Oil Company
OF CALIFORNIA
Your comments are incited. Write: The President, Union Oil Company, Union Oil Building, Los Angeles 17, California