HEC20LD Vol. LVI. I nlvcrtlty of Oregon, K»g**nr, Tiif*. Mar. 29, 193ft. No. 97 First Greek Week Begins Saturday The University's first Greek Week, sponsored by the Inter Fraternity council and Panhellen ic, will be held .Saturday after noon and evening. The day's events will center around ath letic contests, an exchange dinner and a barn dance. The athletic contests will be gin at 1:30 p.m. and will consist of a marathon bicycle race, and a chariot race with pledges act ing as horses. The sororities will participate in a tug of war and a football game with the houses north and south of 15th street competing against each other. The afternoon events will end Preview Housing Lists Due Today Preference lists for Duck Pre view housing for women are due today at 2 p.m. They should be turned in by house representa tives at their meeting this after noon. The lists should be made out In triplicate and should be typed and alphabetized. Legacies must be marked by each house. The lists should also include informa tion as to the maximum number of girls who can be comfortably housed. House representatives should call Mrs. Wickham's office to find out where the meeting will be held. Purpose of the meeting is to eliminate duplicates, set up rules for housing and cover send ing invitations, according to Nan Hagedom. with three-legged races and soft ball games with both fraternities and sororities competing. There will be no official pairing for these events. Trophies will be given. Exchange Dinners Set At 6 p.rn. the houses will ad journ for exchange dinners. The dinner will be from 6 to 8 p.m. with the fraternities and sorori ties exchanging entertainment. The barn dance will be the last feature of the week. The Whisperers are scheduled to play at the danoe, which will be held In the Student Union ball room The presentation of awards for the athletic contests will fur nish intermission entertainment. The dress will be levis and shirts for the men and pedal pushers for the women. Pairings listed The pairings for the exchange dinners are as follows: Delta Gamma, Beta Theta Pi and Lambda Chi Alpha; Alpha Phi and Sigma Chi; Alpha Ch4 Ome ga and Phi Kappa Psi: Delta Del ta Delta and Sigma Phi Epsilon; Kappa Kappa Gamma and Phi Delta Theta; Kappa Alpha Theta and S'gma Alpha Epsilon; Delta Zeta. Chi Psi and Tau Kappa Epsilon; Alpha Omicron Pi and Delta Tau Delta: Alpha Xi Delta and Phi Kappa Sigma. Pi Beta Phi and Alpha Tau Omega; Gamma Phi Beta and Theta Chi; Sigma Kappa, Phi Gamma Delta and Sigma Nu: Al pha Delta Pi. Phi Kappa Alpha. Sigma Alpha Mu and Phi Sigma Kappa; and Alpha Gamma Delta, Delta Upsilon and Kappa Sigma. ASUO Senate Plans Spring Essay Contest The ASUO Senate is sponsor ing an essay contest on the sub ject, "The Role of Student Gov ernment on the University of Oregon Campus," and all stu dents who desire to submit an essay must do so before Wednes day. April 20. Essays, which are to be judged on content, organization, appro priateness, and language, must be from 1000 to 1500 words long. AH papers should be typewritten and double spaced. The purpose of the contest is twofold. It Is intended to stir up thought about student govern ment at a time just prior to the Bpring elections on campus. The essays will also help the Senate in evaluating its work and per haps get some concrete ideas for improvement. The essays need not be favorable to the present role of student government. Arts Workshop Calls for Petitions Petitions for chairman of the University Creative Arts Workshop are now being calhul for by the Student Union hoard. The Workshop is a combined program of student-created drama, music, dance, and liter ature to be presented late in May. Petitions should be turned in to the SU petition box on the third floor of the SU Ity April 4. There will be three prizes awarded. The first prize is $20. the second $10 and the third $5. Contest judges are the three fac ulty members of the Senate, R. D. Horn, professor of English; Victor P. Morris, dean of the school of business administration, and Donald DuShane, director of student affairs. All regularly enrolled Oregon students are eligible to enter. Entries can be turned in to the ASUO offices on the third floor of the Student Union and none will be returned. American Poet, Critic Speaks in SU Tonight Allen Tate, American critic and poet, will apeak tonight at 8 In the Student Union ballroom In the third of thin year's Failing Distinguished Lecturers series. , Thc topic' of Tate's lecture . is "Modern Poetry: The Aesthetic Historical Mode." Tate will also give a public j reading and discussion of his ALLEN TATE, distinguished poet-orltir, will lecture tonight in t. .N,V Hn "Modern Poetry: The Aesthetic Historical Mode.’ Spring Open Rushing Begins April 4 for Men, Women Oregon fraternities and soror ities will begin their spring term' rushing for a three week period beginning Monday. Rushing requirements for men and women are subsequently the same, except that women must .sign up to rush before this Friday at Student Affairs office in Em erald hall. Men can sign up at any time during the period with a deadline of April 25. An'addi tional restriction for men is that sign up must be at least one week (five class days) before pledging takes place. Open rush procedure is on an informal basis. All interested per sons, when they sign up indicate what houses they are interested in. The houses then issue all invitations to dinner to the rushee, with the whole schedule on an individual basis. The fee for those who have not rushed previously is $5 00. Dates for the rushing period are as follows: Monday, April 4, first day of rushing. Saturday, April 9, first day pledging can take place. Women's rushing will end on Monday, April 25. This is the last day men can sign up for rushing. Men s rushing will end on Satur day. April 30. All people who desire to rush must have a 2.0 in their last term of school, or have a 2.0 accumu lative GPA. Term Cards Not Issued Athletic cards for spring term will not be issued and will not be necessary for attend ance at baseball games and track meets. Regular student body cards may be used. AT NEW YORK COLLEGES RO Lovalfv Oath Under Fire A compulsory ROTC loyalty oath, enforced at many colleges all over the country, has come under fire from a student group, according to the Syracuse Daily Orange, the newspaper of Syra cuse university. In a recent edition the paper reported that the National Stu dent association, at a New York regional conference, passed a res olution calling for elimination or change in the loyalty oath provision. The present oath, in operation at most colleges and universities, requires that ROTC students in the basic course state that they have never belonged to any or ganization on the Attorney Gen eral's subversive list. The Daily Orange had this to say on the matter: “As many colleges, including land grant schools, require the basic ROTC course for all en I rolled physically fit males, the group felt that the oath was interfering with college adminis tration’s freedom of choice of students.” The paper also brought out that the association thought that "the present oath was negative in its approach." It suggested a simple oath of loyalty to the United States government and Constitution. The main problem in the past has been that some of the organ izations on the Attorney Gen eral’s list have been recognized on several campuses until re cently. Now many of these or ganization members arc being re quired to sign the loyalty oath. Represented at the conference >vere NSA member colleges from New York state with the excep tion of New York City. According to the University ROTC department, Oregon is currently using the loyalty oath program and is requiring fresh men to sign it upon entering the basic course. roetry at 4 p.m. in the Dari’s Lounge. During his career, Tate has been a free lance writer, profes sor, lecturer, and editor of sev eral literary journals. He has lec tured and read poetry at many American universities and in for eign universities such as the Uni versities of Rome, Lege, Louvain, Sorbonne, London and Oxford. Since 1952, he has been senior fellow in the school of letters at Indiana university. His writings include Works on Stonewall Jackson, and Thomas Jefferson, several volumes of his own poetry, and many editions of poetry and criticism. Tate entered the editing field as editor of 'The Horn and Hound” from 1930 to 1934. In the past 15 years, he has been editor of “The Swanee Review” and ad visory editor of “The Kenyon Re view,” both distinguished literary journals. GPA Disqualifies Board Chairman The disqualification of Bob Pollock, senior in economics, as Student Union Board chairman was announced Monday by the office of student affairs. Pollock iailed to attain the required 2.0 grade point average winter term. Andy Berwick, senior in busi ness, will assume the position of board chairman. Berwick, now assistant chairman, was chair man of the board last year. A new assistant board chair (man will be elected at the Wed nesday SU board meeting, ac cording to Berwick. Berwick will also take over Pollock's ex-officio duties as a member of the ASUO cabinet, the student affairs committee and the Eugene-Umversity Civic Music association board. He will serve until elections are in May. for next year's board of ficers. Berwick termed Pollock’s res ignation as board chairman a “great loss to the Student Union and to the University of Oregon.’’ "Pollock has contributed ac tively to the board program for the past four years and certainly has been one of the most out standing students in the SU board’s history,” he added. Berwick currently is serving on the SU advisory board and executive committee. He was the first student chairman of the executive committee for the re gional student union conference. His other activities include membership in Friars and chair manship of the Millraee council. He is also a former president of Beta Theta Pi and is on the mili tary education committee. Five Law Students Make Honor Roll Five University law students made the law school honor roll for winter term. John R. Gill was the only third-year law stu dent. Second year students are William E. Hurley and Elizabeth S. Risley, First-year students are Edward N. Fadcley and John H. Kottkamp. The law school honor roll is based on the cumulative grade point average covering all work done at the University law school and includes those students hav ing a 3.0 or higher accumulative GPA and carrying a full study nogram.