Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 04, 1954, Page Eight, Image 8

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    Button Sale Monday
(Emerald photo bv Don Turner)
FIRST HOMECOMING BUTTON Is sold by Finance Chairman
Martin Brandenfels to Carolyn Courtemanche. Buttons art' on
sale Monday for 10 cents. Money from the button sale finances
the activities of Homecoming.
Indian Expert
Coming Here
An authority on Indian art
will speak next Tuesday on the
topic, “Cave Sculpture of the
Deccan.”
Stella Kramrisch, visiting pro
fessor of Indian art at the Uni
versity of Pennsylvania, is be
ing sponsored on this campus
by the University Lectures com
mittee. Her lecture will begin at
S p.m. in the Student Union ball
room.
Kamrisch has been profes
sor of Indian Art at Calcutta
for 28 years before her position
at Pennsylvania. She is presently
editor of the Journal of the In
dian Society of Oriental Art in
Calcutta.
She has written several books,
the latest one being “The Art of
Travancore,” which was pub
lished in 1953.
Educated in Vienna, London
and Calcutta, Dr. Kramrisch can
also read Sanskrit.
SU Celebrates
Years of Service
By Sally Jo Quinn
Emerald Feature Writer
“My goodness,” said the fresh
man, “are you really four years
old this year? You are a very
modern looking building, but
everyone is so familiar with you
I thought you would be much
older.”
“Yes, I am only four, but I
have served Oregon students in
many ways during these four
short years,” said the Student
Union. “Nearly every student
comes to me to meet friends for
a cup of coffee or to study be
tween classes. I’m the very cen
ter of campus activities.”
“Tell me, how were you
started?”
“Although I was officially
open Sept. 27, 1950, more -.than
27 years of fund raising and
planning were in back of that
opening. The actual construc
tion was begun in 1948 and fin
ished in 1950.”
“Why are you called the Erb
Memorial Student Union?” the
freshman questioned.
“I was named after Donald M.
Erb, president of the University
from 1938 until his death in
1943,” replied the two-million
dollar structure.
“Who is responsible for all the
activies centered in the Student
Union?”
“A student board controls sev
eral committees which arrange
lectures, art exhibits, coffee hour
forums and other educational
programs. They also sponsor
Sunday movies, the Friday at
Fours and other social activities.”
“Ah, the romances that have
started as coke dates in my fish
bowl,” he chuckled reminiscent
ly. “By my chimes! It’s four
o’clock. Time for students to
drift in from their three o’clock
classes for that afternoon cup
of coffee. Go on down to the fish
bowl and join them.”
Lecture Attacks
Utopian Ideals
When an Utopian ideal is trans
lated in terms of reality, it be
comes frightful, John C. Mc
Closkey, associate professor of
English, told the browsing room
audience Wednesday evening.
Both Edward Bellamy, in
“Looking Backward. 2000 to
1887” and William Dean Howells
in “A Traveler From Altruria"
and “Through the Eye of a
Needle” show how an ideal pro
gresses into a self-righteous ty
ranny, McCloskey said.
“The keys of Bellamy's 'Look
ing Backward' are military or
ganization, discipline, obedience
and one mind directing all,” de
clared McCloskey.
It is an “ideal state," McClos
key said. “There are no labor
unions, hunger, politicians, law
yers, crime, greed, profit mo
tives, poverty, journalists or any
of the other evils of life.”
“It is man's dream of liberty,
equality and fraternity real
ized,” McCloskey said.
“However, Bellamy didn't real
ize that he made everybody a
slave of the state. There was no
divirgence of opinion from the
official creed. The state was per
fect and no deviation was al
lowed. Bellamy sacrificed the i
ideals of democracy on the alter :
of socialism.”
Altruria is a land where there
is no war, patriotism, greed, or
envy. Everybody is equal, except
that the artists are the ruling
class, McCloskey said.
“All phases of life are regu
lated and it is intolerably dull,”
McCloskey said.
Former Cowboy
Elected in Nevada
RENO-f AP)-Rex Bell, former
movie cowboy and husband of
one-time "It Girl” Clara Bow.
was elected Nevada’s Lieutenant
governor Tuesday.
Bell, a Republican, defeated j
Democrat James J. Ryan, presi
dent of the Nevada state federa
tion of labor.
Returns from 330 of Nevada’s
385 precincts gave Bell 24,000
to Ryan’s 16,000.
Ryan repeatedly asserted in
his campaign “Bell’s only quali
fication- for office is his ability
to grin on TV.”
Bell operates a western goods
store in Las Vegas.
'Noted' Cowboy
Has Large Margin
OKLAHOMA CITY-(AP)-Cow-|
boy Pink Williams, of “Obscene” j
post card fame, had a big margin i
in defeating Republican Kenneth •
W. Gray for lieutenant governor j
of Oklahoma.
The salty-tongued rancher,
making his first race, gained no-1
toriety when federal officials
impounded his mail. They ruled
post cards he sent cattlemen!
ridiculing the Eisenhower farm
program were obscene.
Campus Briefs
• According to hospital rec
ords, bed-ridden infirmary pa
tients Wednesday were: Vyrl Jo i
Hogan, Sally Jean MacIntyre, j
Agnes Marie Thompson, Nancy j
J. Craves, Nita Anne Hamilton,
Shirley K. Flrtell, Patricia Ann j
Herman, Alfred L. O’Reilly and
Robert C. Rutchman.
0 Student Bible study group
will meet at 4 p.m. today in the
Student Union under the spon
sorship of Inter-Varsity Chris
tian fellowship.
0 Phi Theta I’psilon will meet
in the Student Union at 12:30
today.
0 Bill Berry, executive secre
tary of the Portland Urban
league, will speak at an NAACP
meeting next Monday at 7:30
p.m. in the Student Union. He
will speak on "Intergroup Hous
ing in Portland.”
• The Alpine club will meet
tonight at 6:30 in the Student
Union.
£ AU active member* of Al
pha Lambda Delta must pay
their dues to Sally Jo Greig at
Pi Beta Phi by 5 p.m. Monday,
according to Jean Fay, president.
0 Religious Emphasis Week’s
executive committee will hold a
meeting at noon today in room
319 of the Student Union.
0 The newly created Emerald
•photo staff will meet tonight at
7 o'clock In room 318, Allen hall.
Main topic of business will be
Homecoming coverage. All stu
dents interested in taking or
processing news pictures for the
Emerald are invited to tonight's
meeting, said Dick Lewis, Emer
ald associate editor.
Math Teachers
Meet Saturday
The Oregon section of National
Council of Mathematics Teachers
will hold a meeting on campus
Saturday. The Council is an or
ganization of high school teach
ers.
Speakers at the meeting will
be Oscar Schaaf, Eugene high
instructor; John Schofield, mem
ber of the Eugene Water and
Electric board and Wilfred Dix
on, professor of mathematics at
the University.
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Fa'.r
Traded
Language Faculty
Attends Meetings
Four members of the Univer-;
sity foreign languages depart-!
rnent faculty will attend three :
different meetings Saturday at
Heed college in Portland.
David M. Dougherty, foreign
laguage department head, will
attend a meeting of Pacific
Northwest conference of foreign
language teachers.
Attending a meeting of the
Northwest chapter of the Amer
ican association of teachers of
German will be W. A. Leppman,
assistant professor of German.
Representing the University at
the meeting of the Oregon and
Washington chapters of the Am
erican association of teachers of
Spanish will be Patricia M. Gath
ercole, instructor in romance
languages and P. J. Powers, as
sistant professor of romance
languages.
Wilson, Summers
Speak to Alumni
University President O. Mere
dith Wilson will be the main
speaker at the annual Homecom
ing meeting of the University
of Oregon Alumni association,
Saturday, Nov. 13.
The meeting will bfc held in j
the Dads lounge of the Student
Union at 10:30 a.m.
Bob Summers, ASUO presi
dent, will also speak briefly at
the meeting.
CLASSIFIEDS
Lost: Valuable Weimaraner
Pointer pup from 1855 Oak.
3 Mo. Male; Gray coat, amber
eyes, white spot on chest. Six
inch docked tail. Reward. Ph.
4-7105. 10-5
Room and Board: Board alone.
See Mrs. Kyle, 874 E. 13th
Phone 4-0422. 11-4
For Sale: '49 Ford Convertible.
R and H, Overdrive, and other
extras. Ph. 3-4278. 11-10
Tutoring in English — Phone
3-3509. 11-9
7:00 Nowm Till Now
7:15 Sport Shot*
7:30 Muaicul Memoirs
8:00 Student Union Show
8:30 American Ideals
8:45 Windows on the World
9:0® Kwaxworka
11:00 Sign Off
rutronlze Kmcraiil Advert l**er»
Woody's
round the clock
DRIVE-IN
GOOD HAMBURGERS
THICK SHAKES
Waakday Car Sarvica '*» 2 a. m.
Waakandt, 3 a. m.
Watt 6th, Naar Blair
Phona 5-9001
Serve
Better Meals
LESS COST
with
Fish and
Seafoods
FRESH DAILY
from
Newman’s
FISH MARKETS
39 East Broadway
Phone 4-2371
When you pause...make it count...have a Coke
tOTTt'O tINOER AUTHORITY OF THl COCA-COIA COMPANY »Y
COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF EUGENE
2000 Franklin Blvd.
"Coke” is a registered trade-mark.
© 1954, THE COCA-COIA COMPANY