Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, February 21, 1955, Page Seven, Image 7

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    Men Invited To
YM Open House
r%n trn luniw wwinefKJAy PV<'»
nin|{ will highlight the Young
■Men's Christian association mem
Jjershlp drive for 19f»f>.
Purpose of the open house,
which will begin at 7:30 In KU
318 In for students to meet YM
<’A cfioin'.t members In an in
formal aimcrphere.
The membctbip drive will con
tim through the week, with
ev< ntH planned all week by the
Y office.
Various Activities Offered hv V
.. Five areas In the Y program
tenter around the executive cab
inet and committee council, in
ter-faith activities, freshmen
dormitory educational programs
and films, International students
and varied services to all siu
d» nts.
Activities the YM has partlcl
pated in during the year include
political, economic and social dis
cusidon groups, bi-monthly vis
its iw (1‘fferent churches, trips
Professor Attends
Meeting inChicago
Jennie M. Smith, associate pro
fessor of business administration,
left Sunday to attend the Na
tional Association of Business
Teachers' Training Institutions
conference in Chicago.
The Conference will be held
from Feb. 24 to Feb. 27, and is
In conjunction with the American
Association of Colleges for
Teachers Kducation. Several oth
er groups under its auspices are
holding conferences in Chicago
at the same time.
Miss Smith is the only repre
sentative from the University of
Oregon who will be attending
this conference.
to other cl Men, a photo club, In
ternational activities, and facul
ty-at-home meet Inga.
Tburadiy a film on Germany
will be presented, with h discus
sion led by Elton Engstrum in the
Y conference room.
( nb/net Named
Vivk nt officers are Dave Rob
ertn, p real dent; Dick Bales, vice
president; Roger Miller, troas
urer; Ed Him no, secretary; Bob
Biggs, conference and promo
tion; Grant McCormack, social
chairman; Gordon Ross and El
liot Carlson, publicity, and Dave
Mendenhcll, Don Smith and El
ton Engatrom, special commit
teeit.
Purpose of the rumpus Y la
to have a fellowship of atudenta
and faculty In the Interesta of
nigh ideals of Christian living
and service, and to take part in
making th«se ideals operative on
the campus.
Patronize Emerald Advertiser*
Cadet Honorary
Initiates Eight
Scabbard and Blade, national
military honorary, initiated eight
Army advanced cadets and ten
from the Air Force unit Feb. 17
in the Student Union.
Army cadets initiated were
Bob Fudge, George Schultz, Jer
ry Hamilton, Jack Boettcher,
Bob McCracken, Bob Haar, John
Socolofsky and David Goode.
Air Force men were Justin
Smith, Art Weber, Dick Van Al
len, F.v Stiles, Robert Kubes,
Tom Warnock, Tim James, Ken
Moriarty, Otto Crumroy and
Ken Rosenlof.
Presiding at the initiation cere
monies was Emerson Harvey,
captain of the local company.
The group received a report from
Col. William Thomas, Scabbard
and Blade adviser, on the pro
gress of the Military Ball, which
the group sponsors.
New initiates will receive
"fom ragers," braid worn over
the left shoulder, at the next
meeting of the group, Thursday
at 6:30 p.m. in the SU.
GREA T SAVINGS FOR THE HOUSE OR YOU
AT GRAVES MUSIC & ART
SPECTACULAR CLEARANCE SALE!
Beginning Saturday!
1. Paintings (Perfect for Room, Den, or Living Room)
2. Magnovox T. V. A Radio Phonograph Combinations
3. Some Records
4. Art Supplies (Oils, water colors, etc.)
5. New A Used Instruments
Drop in and check on these tremendous savings for the house
or yourself at
MUSIC CRMS ART
1235 Willamette Street
Lodge Flies to London
For Disarmament Talk
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.
CAP) Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.,
chief U.8. delegate to the United
Nations, flew to London Sunday
to preaa for disarmament in
cloned door five-power talks.
Hhe said in a farewell state
ment that the United States still
seeks a tamper-proof plan rov
ering all countries and all kinds
of arms.
The talks begin next Friday,
The United States, Britain,
France, Russia and Canada are
taking part.
A similar conference deadlock
ed last year over Soviet refusal
to consider an American plan for
rigid controls on a plan of dis
armament by stages.
But since then the Russians
appeared to have lessened insis
tence on banning all atom and
hydrogen weapons before con
sidering reductions of conven
tion arms and armed forces.
Lodge's statement issued by
the U.S. mission here said the
worst stumbling block to dis
armament “has been and still is
the distrust which the free world
necessarily feels for communist
imperialism.”
He added: “This much is basic:
Any real disaimament plan must
cover all the big countries and
all kinds of arms—including
jboth nuclear weapons and other
weapons.''
Lodge said the closed door
meetings, authorized by the U.N.
General assembly and by the 12
i nation Disarmament commission,
| will reduce temptation to make
pi opaganda.
Co-op Book Corner
SOME OUTSTANDING TITLES IN PAPER COVERS
ANCHOR - ANVIL - MERIDIAN - VINTAGE - PENGUIN
Four Stages of Renaissance Style
with 32 pages of illustrations_$1.25
By Wylie Sypher
Growth and Structure of the ENGLISH LANGUAGE_ .95
By Otto Jespersen ,
The Late Victorians: A Short History_:_$1.25
By Herman Ausubel
The Age of Reason ____$1.25
By Louis L. Snyder
Imperialism and Social Classes_$1.25
By Joseph Schumpeter
Democracy In America — 2 volumes, each ■_ .95
By Alexis de Tocqueville
Man and the Vertebrates — 2 volumes, each_.85
By A. S. Romer
irsrt«i'r warf
I "TU fik < '
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