Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, March 30, 1955, Page Six, Image 6

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    Drinking Problem at University of Oregon
Not as Great Now as It Was in 1950
By Anne Ritchey
Emerald Assistant News Editor
Campus coffee shops are pop
ular during breaks from classes,
at all times during the day. Stu
dents cut classes to go to them,
hut not as often as they used to.
There's a reason.
Two of them sold beer by the
glass until 1950.
They aren't allowed to now
because students were cutting
classes to attend their daily beer
drinking sessions, and were also
finding it convenient to have a
beer after afternoon classes in
stead of returning to living or
ganizations for dinner.
Another problem: minors were
consuming beer in alarming
quantities.
•“You had to be able to reach
the top of the counter with your
money." one student in 1950 told
Donald DuShane, director of stu
dent affairs.
The state law that people un
der 21 couldn't buy beer was in
effect at that time, but it was
impossible to enforce when beer
was so close to campus. DuShane
said.
Everything came to a head
during Homecoming weekend in
1950. when the bonfire rally was
held on the Fiji parking lot. Beer
was handed out the windows of
one place indiscriminately. Alum
ni and other groups were so dis
gusted that they brought pres
sure to bear.
WCTU Steps In
One such group was the Wom
en’s Christian Temperance Un
ion, which urged elimination of
beer licenses near the campus.
Then Oregon’s Liquor Control
commission stepped into the pic
ture. first holding preliminary
hearings on student behavior.
The commission then consulted
student affairs, asking for a map
of the campus showing Univer
sity buildings and living organ
izations. They proposed to draw
up a tentative “dry zone" bound
ary to settle the question and
satisfy critics.
A fifteen-day suspension was
levied on the two offending es
tablishments by the liquor com
mission. which charged them
simply with seining beer to mi
nors.
Harry K. Newburn. then Uni
versity president, told liquor
commissioners that in the early
pre-war days students, many of
them returning veterans, needed
“a beer outlet near the cam
pus,” according to a 1950 Ore
gonian article.
The faculty changed its mind,
however, and recommended a
mile limit around the campus re
. striding sales. Newburn told
them.
Student reaction a't that time
I was interesting. Barry Mountain,
then ASUO president, pledged
full co-operation in living up to
' administration and liquor com
mission rules, but asked that the
■ campus establishments be al
! lowed to continue serving beer.
A suggested alternative was to
have student body caids printed
j with pictures and ages, and the
card could serve as identification.
The ASUO'Senate defeated that
plan. .
"Why should I vote for some
I thing that would prove I'm not
old enough to drink ?*’ one sena
I tor said, according to DuShane.
Between 1950 and last spring
the agreement between student
i affairs and the liquor commis
i --
.sion was the one under which the
dry zone operated. Last spring
the Eugene city council voted
approval of the principle of the
zone.
The council has since shown
1 disapproval of the zone, particu
larly last November when they
were forced to deny a beer license
application from a grocery with
in it.
The council felt that the zone
is “unfair" in some cases, a Eu
i gene Register-Guard article at
the time reported. But members
agreed that they don't favor in
discriminate sale of the alcohol,
and that the boundaries are fair
i for the sale of liquor by the
drink.
Where is the zone? Roughly, it
is set at “a block or so from the
' campus and living orguniza
: tious," DuShane said.
Radcliffe Offering
Publishing Course
This summer Radcliffe College
| in Cambridge, Mass., will conduct
the eighth annual session of an in
, tensive course in Publishing Pro
cedures which prepares college
, graduates for jobs in magazine
, and book publishing.
i
The course, which will run from
| June 22 to August 2, will be open
: to recent graduates of a four-year
college or to people presently em
ployed in some branch of publish
ing
Basic Techniques
Besides surveying the require
ments and opportunities in the
field, the course also provides a
basic training in publishing tech
niques. Although primarily con
! cerned with the "newsstand”
magazines and the “trade” book,
the course also deals with such
special forms of publishing as the
reference book and internal house
organ.
The course does not specialize in
any branch of publishing, but it
emphasizes the techniques com
mon to the entire profession. In
struction consists of lectures, dis
cussions. field trips and work
shops. but in general the course
attempts to 'duplicate actual of
fice conditions.
Manuscript, Magazine Dummy
Training is built around two
major projects: the development
of a book-length manuscript from
submission to printer, and the pre
paration of a 32-page magazine
dummy. Thus, students perform
all the publishing functions except
for actual printing.
Instructors for the course are
the editors and executives who
direct and staff today's publishing
enterpiises. These practicing ex
perts lecture on their specific
topics, and evaluate and criticize
class work and assignments. In
addition, a number of special as
sistants work individually with
the students to correlate and sup
plement instruction of the visiting
lecturers.
Total Cost $200
Tuition for the course will be
$175. Total cost of the course, in
cluding books and materials, will
be appoximately $200.
Women students will live in a
Radcliffe dormitory. For the six
week term, they will be $108 single
or $138 double. Men students may
obtain a list of rooms available for
the six weeks’ rental.
Athletic Facilities
Facilities for swimming, tennis
and boating on the Charles are
available to members of the Pub
lishing Course, on payment of the
usual small fee, as well as Harvard
Summer School's extracurricular
activities, both cultural and social.
Application blanks may lie ob
tained by writing to Publishing
Procedures Course, Radcliffe Col
lege, 10 Garden Street. Cambridge
38, Massachusetts. Since the en
rollment is limited, early applica
tion is advisable. Applications
close May 15.
ddmerufd...
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fore 3 p.m. for Interview.
$40 per week to start. 3-31
Check your old policy today.
If you are paying a penalty,
STOP. See JERRY BROWN,
your MAYFLOWER
AGENT before you renew.
Ph. 4-9444. Res. 4-2937 or
stop in at 962 Oak street.
GET THE BEST FOR LESS.
IT S GOOD BUSINESS.
3-29tf
Reward for information lead
ing to recovery of phono
graph records which disap
peared from Deady March 7.
Call Bill Roach, ext. 501. No
questions asked. 3-29
ARK YOU PAYING A PEN
ALTY FOR BEING UNDER
25?
If you are married or fe
male and now paying more
than $30.40 a year for pub
lic liability and property
damage auto lnaurance re
newal*. you are throwing
money down the drain. May
flower will give you PL». &
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per 6 month* 3-29tf
Get 1955 high-compression
performance from your old
er Plymouth with this spe
cial aluminum finned head.
Adda gas mileage, power.
Simple to Install. Costs $55,
will sell for $25. Phone Ve
neta 2896.
For Rent. Good 3-room trailer
with stool at Twin Totem
Trailer Court. Call Mrs.
Hermanson, 6-3524. 2-22tf
Let me do your shirt ironing.
446 East 12th Ave. Ph.
3-3872, Mrs. Potter. 4-4
Latest Blast Tests 2 Devices
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (API For
the first time, two atomic de
vices were exploded in one day
Tuesday. One was a whopper
heard “like thunder'' 170 miles
away, the other a pink-tinted
shot dropped from a plane five
hours later.
The nuclear double feature
roared its opening at 4:55 a.m.
when a device estimated to equal
20.000 tons of TNT reduced its
500-foot tower to stubs of twist
ed metal.
It gave Las’ Vegas a mild jolt
and appeared similar in force to
the other major test of the spring
series, held lust March 7. But be
I cause of overcast skies it was
less spectacular, being seen in
only five states in contrast with
the previous spectacle seen bor
der to border throughout the
West.
Six hundred soldiers were
crouched in trenches 3500 yards
away on the Yucca Flat test
site. Then they went in to look
at the large amount of military
equipment exposed to it.
It exploder! at about 8000 feet
and appeared as a quick yellow
flash, followed by a cloud tinted
with pink. It was similar to the
test that opened the spring se
ries las Feb. 18 but wan much
brighter.
SHISLER'S
FOOD MARKET
Groceries — Fresh Produce — Meats
Mixers — Beverages — Magazines — Ice Cream
OPEN FROM 9 A.M.
DAILY & SUNDAYS
13th at High St.
TILL .11:00
p.
M.
Dial 4-1342
Buying?
JUST MU
University 5-1511
Extension 218
Whether you are selling ... or buying,
THE OREGON DAILY EMERALD is the place to
advertise! We are proud of EMERALD ad results
and proud that we can offer you
ad space for as little as 4c per word for
WANT ADS . . . and 63c per
column inch for DISPLAY ADS!
oreqor?
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