m Daily EMERALD -»oitat 56th Year of Publication 'ol~ ,-'1 I .MYKHMITV OIOKI.OOV, KIOKNK, T1 KS1IAV, (M TOBKK 26, Ii).Vl NO. 24 U. S. Air Force Aggregation to Play Tonight in McArthur Court Concert Sergeants' To Serenade Th«» United States Air Force band will play In McArthur court at 8 p.m. tonight. The band, made up of 100 members, ha* many outstanding performers. Some of them have formerly played with such name band* as the Tommy Dorsey dance band and the Philadelphia Civic orchestra. Col. George S. Howard will direct the band. Appearing as a co-feature with the band will be the "Singing Sergeants," the band's official chorus. Directed by Lt. Robert L. Landers, the chorus is made up of 20 members who are drawn from instrumentalists in the band. The Sergeants will sing many selections ranging from spirit uals to jazz. The chorus appears on all programs of the USAK hand and orchestra and at nu merous other state and national functions. It is the same chorus that is beard over the radio on "Serenade in Blue." Ticket prices for the event are 50 cents for students and $1.50 for adults. They are on sale at McArthur court and at Thomp son's Record and Appliance cen ter In Eugene. Carlson Leaves For New York J. Spencer Carlson, director of admissions and counseling, leaves for New York today for the first of four conferences he will at tf na in the next three weeks. Carlson will be in New York Saturday for an invitational con ference on testing problems. The following day he will attend a meeting for directors of state testing services to be held in Princeton. N. J. Next Monday through Thurs day he will be in Columbus. Ohio, for an administrators of coun seling centers conference. Phi Thetas Open Magazine Sales A campaign carried on by Phi Theta Upsilon members this week will give students an op portunity to subscribe to maga zines at special college rates. Time magazine which regular ly sells at $6 a year will be sold for $3, making the price of a single copy six cents. The regu lar subscription for Life is $6.T5, while the student rate is $4. Other magazines for sale are Fortune and Sports Illustrated. The profit made by this sale will be given to Phi Theta, who has the franchise for magazine sales on this campus, to a spe cial scholarship fund. Inauguration Highlights Presented by KWAX The inauguration of O. Mere dith Wilson will be presented to night by radio KWAX from 8 to 9 p.m. Last week's event was taped and will present the highlights of the inauguration activities. m ^ wemea COL. GEORGE S. HOWARD He leads the band ... Freshmen to Mark Separated Ballots By Jackie Warded Emerald Attoonle Editor This year's freshman class election will mark the first time a divided ballot has been used since the present ASUO con stitution went into effect. With the divided ballot, candi dates indicate if they are run ning for president or representa tive. Then the preferential sys tem is used to elect the two representatives, the president; and vice-president. For the past few years no such indication could be offi cially made and under the pref erential system the top four can didates for the presidential post were elected. This system usual ly defeated those candidates for representative. Passage of a constitutional amendment last spring effected the change in the freshman bal lot. After the top two candi dates for president are elected, the rest of the candidates for : president are declared defeated and the representative candi date's ballots are counted. Another new feature of this fall’s election is two booths or tables at each polling place rath er than one. This is being done to speed up the voting process. Bal lots will be picked up in one spot and deposited in another, thus easing the congestion and con fusion around polling places between class periods. A nomination assembly will be held Nov. 1 at which fresh men will nominate themselves, according to Jerry Beall, cam pus public relations chairman. Sorority Pledges Should Begin Skits All sorority pledge classes are urged to start preparing their skits for this week's tryouts for the annual AWS auction, Judy Carlson, general chairman, has announced. The three outstanding pledge class skits will be chosen to be auctioned to men’s living organ izations at the Auction next Fri day. Rummage collected on cam pus last spring term will also be auctioned. Candidates have to be okeyed by the office of student affairs. Elections are Nov. 10. Petitions for the freshmen and graduate election may be picked up on the third floor'of the Stu dent Union. Deadline for peti tioning is November 3. Thursday's 1 o'Clocks Rescheduled for Today Classes scheduled for 1 p.m. Thursday will be held today at 1 p.m. to enable students to at tend Senator Wayne L. Morse’s speech Thursday. Oregon’s junior senator will speak, in the ballroom, on "The Political Issues of 1954.” He has been asked to limit his discussion to the political issues rather than to the personalities involved in Oregon's senatorial campaign. Independent Renounced GOP Morse, famed for calling him self an "Independent Republi can” after renouncing the GOP in 1952, is currently campaigning for Richard Neuberger, Oregon’s Democratic nominee for US. Senator. The former dean of the law school was first elected to the Robinson to Read Play Excerptions Excerpts from “The Tea house of the August Moon” will be read by Horace W. Robinson, associate professor of speech, in Wednesday's browsing room lec ture. Discussion will follow with Robert D. Horn, professor of English, acting as discussion leader. “The Teahouse of the August Moon,” a successful Broadway play, was adopted by John Pat rick from a novel of the same name by Vern Snider. It deals with attempts of the U S. Army to "enrich the lives” of the na tives of Okinawa during the occupation. The difficulty the army en counters in trying to change a civilization by the GI manual forms the basis of the plot. Money supplied for a school house for the natives is used in stead for a teahouse—“The Tea house of the August Moon.” The reading is a Change from the lecture topic announced at the beginning of the year. The pre vious announcement was that Robinson would read from Louis Peterson’s “Take a Giant Step.” Homecoming Royalty Selections Announced Candidates for this year's Homecoming queen were reduced to 12 in the second eliminations Monday night at the Student Union. Co-chairmen of the Homecom ing queen selection committee, Peggy Gathercoal and Mary Sandeberg, announced that the final eliminations will be Thurs day evening in the SU. Then the number will be reduced to five and from these the final winner will be determined by an all campus vote. Nineteen girls competed in the second eliminations Monday and the judging was close, according to the committee co-chairmen. The 12 still in the running and their sponsors are: Audrey Mistretta. University house; Barbara McNabb, Alpha Chi Omega; Betti Facklcr, Chi Omega; Lois Powell, Sigma Nu and Delta Gamma, Ann Erick son, freshmen men’s dorms, Kap pa Kappa Gamma and Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Others were Loretta Mason, Sigma Kappa; Diane David, Su san Campbell; Joyce Bearden, Phi Sigma Kappa and Alpha Tau Omega; Patty Fagan, Chi Psi, Pi Kappa Alpha, Delta Tau Del ta and Phi Kappa Psi; Jill Hutch ings, Phi Delta Theta: Mary Jane Rud, Sigma Alpha Mu, and Loie Meade, Theta Chi. The seven women eliminated Monday night were La Rae Koon, Molly Cashin, Sue Silverthorne, Teddy Croley, Dorothy Kopp, Nancy Leaverton and Joan Price. The final choice will be an nounced at the all-campus vau deville on Homecoming weekend. The queen will rule over all the weekend's festivities such as the dance and bonfire. She will be presented with the Homecom ing crown at the Washington State-Oregon football game. Ann Gerlinger, now Mrs. Ron ald Lyman, was last year's queen. Alumni will be guests at all events during Homecoming weekend, Nov. 12 and 13. Activi ties scheduled for the annual celebration include a noise pa rade, variety show, sign contest, bonfire, barbeque luncheon and Washington State-Oregon foot ball game. Traditions will be en forced during the weekend by Order of the O members. senate in 10-14, and jvas re-elect cd in 1950. After he switched Parties two years later, the sen ate was left with 48 Republicans, 47 Democrats, and one Inde pendent. Morse is also noted for his talking feats on the senate floor. He holds the senate record for the longest speech, orating more than 53 hours on the tidelands oil issue. Wisconsin on Academic. Record He was graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1923, received his master of arts de gree from the same institution in 1924, and his bachelor of laws degree from the University of Minnesota in 1928. A teaching fellowship took him to Columbia university in 1928-29, where he received his doctor of laws degree in 1932. He began teaching at Oregon in 1929, and in 1931 he became dean of the law school. Before his election to the sen ate he served on several state and federal government com missions, and was also a mem ber of the Oregon state crime commission. Hendricks, Sigma Chi Pictures to Be Taken Residents of Hendricks hall are scheduled to have Oregana pictures taken today, according to John Shaffer, photography editor. Oregana pictures of Sigma Chi are scheduled for tomorrow, with 1 Susan Campbell hall scheduled | for Thursday. Members of Phi Kappa Psi will have their pic tures taken Friday. UT Sales Start For'Bernardine Tickets for the University I theater’s production of "Ber nardine” may be purchased for $1 at the UT box office between 1 and 5 p.m. each day. "Bernardine,” the first of the University theater’s productions of the season, opens this Friday, and will play Saturday. It will run Tuesday through Saturday of the following week. The warm-hearted tale is a comedy about teen-age boys, try ing to impress each other with tales of their feminine conquests, while hanging out in the back room of a dingy beer parlor. ' Wormy, a struggling boy who tries to become a ”big wheel” in the eyes of his friends, is played by Scott Lehner, junior in speech. Loretta Mason, junior in speech, plays the role of Bernardine, a sophisticated siren whose favor ite word is "yes.” Sigma Phi Epsilon Selects 15 Swamp Girl Candidates Fifteen freshmen women are still on the eligible list for Sigma Phi Epsilon's "Swamp Girl” after the first eliminations Mon day night at the Sig Ep chapter house. The next eliminations will be held Thursday when the number will be reduced to 10 candidates. The number will be limited to the final five next Monday. The Sig Eps will have a special dinner for the five finalists next Wednesday. The "Swamp Girl” contest is open to only freshmen women, each candidate having been cho sen by her respective living or ganization. The 15 women still competing for the honor are: Cindy Randall, Carson 5; San dra Cooley, Carson 3; Nan Pier son, Susan Campbell; Skip Shearer, Sigma Kappa; Ann Hjort; Alpha Chi Omega; Pat Replogle, Hendricks, and Mar lene Harper, Kappa Kappa Gam ma. Sue Jewett, Carson 4; Betty Lou Boehm, Kappa Alpha Theta; Lorraine Ray, Chi Omega; Silvia Birch, Delta Delta Delta; Sally Hoy, Gamma Phi Beta; Janice Arnason, Alpha Delta Pi; Bev O’Connor, Delta Gamma, and Sue Ramsby, Pi Beta Phi. Sigma Phi Epsilon’s annual “Swamp Stomp,’’ a costume dance, will be held at the chap ter house, Nov. 6. Winner of the contest will be announced at the dance. Last year’s “Swamp Girl” was Sharon Snyder, sophomore in liberal arts, of Pi Beta Phi. The five finalists in the con test will receive necklaces from the Sig Eps and the winner will be given the annual swamp trophy.