Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 05, 1955, Page Three, Image 3

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    WUS Plans Firesides
With Foreign Students
The World University Service
firesides will begin tonight ;it
0:,;o Firesides will also be hold
Wednesday and Thursday nights
tit womrn'ii living organizations
with campus foreign students as
speakers.
Paired for tonight are Kappa
Kappa Gamma and Kappa Sig
ma to hear Crete Qreig, Norway;
Alpha Phi and Delta Upsilon will
hear Sunjhtt In, Korea, and Su
san Campbell will hear Alfred
Okeka, Nigeria.
Wednesday Pairings
Wednesday night Ann Judson
house and PI Kappa Phi are
paii ml to hear Chandra Joshi
from India; Alpha Delta Pi and
Delta Tail Delta, 8ei Yung Cho
from Korea; University house
and Tan Kappa Epsilon, Crete
Orelg from Norway and Carson
hall. Rolf Panny from Germany.
Thursday night Gamma Phi
Beta will hear Llselotte Georgi
Job Opportunities
•I. C. Penney Company. Trainee
Program. Calvin Smith will in
terview on campus today.
Sears Roebuck C a m pan y.
Trainee Program. J 8. Ambrose
will interview interested stu
dents April 0.
Iteniingtoii Hand, Ine. Physics.
Mathematics. Carry Reid will in
terview on campus April 7.
Cnitcd States Marine Corps
Women Off leer Procurement. 1st
Lieutenant Frances H. De Vos
and Sergeant Mary Kelly will Is
on campus April 7 and H.
W alker-Voglia General Insur
ance Agency. Representatives
wdl interview on campus April
7. for man interested In general
Insurance in Oregon.
Appointments for the above In
lutervlew should be made
through Karl W. Onthank, direc
tor of graduate placement, in
Emerald hall.
r
arUn from Austria: Delta Zeta,
Oscar Frlal from the Philippines;
l'l Phi, Sej Yong Clio from
Korea and Chi Omega, Rolf Fan
ny from Germany. Highland
house and Philadelphia house are
paired to hear Trinidad Talag
from the Philippines.
WhiteCaps toHear
Registered Nurse
“New Experiences As A
Nurse," will be the topic of a
talk to be presented to the White
Chips, pre-nursing club Wednes
day noon in the Student Union
by Mrs. I^eonard Jacobson.
Mrs. Jacobson, a registered
nurse and a graduate of the Uni
versity of Oregon school of nurs
ing, is the president of the Ore
gon State Medical auxiliary.
Anyone who is interested, re
gaidlers of membership in White
Caps, is invited to attend the
meeting.
Dicken to Attend
Geographers Meet
S. N. Dicken, head of the Uni- i
vorsity of Oregon geography and
geology department, will attend a
national meeting of the Associa
tion of American Geographers in
the Peabody Hotel. M.-mphis, j
Tenn., April 11 through 15. He
plans to leave Eugene Friday.
"The Use of Aerial Photographs
in Geographic Research," is the
title of the conference panel in
which Mr. Dicken will participate.
A staff position in the geogra
phy-geology department will be
open in the fall, and he plans to
interview applicants for this posi
tion while attending the meeting, j
Patronize Emerald Advertisers
HISTORIC FERRY BUILDING FIRE
FLAMES LICK AT PIEBS and heavy smokf engulfs historic
Ferry Building, gateway to Man Francisco. Damage is estimated
at nearly *1,000,000. Fire believed to have started from work
man’s acetylene torch in World Trade Center. (International)
Pierce First Speaker
In Coffee Hour Series
Jack Pierce, graduate in an
thropology, will be the first speak
er in a newly - planned Friday
night coffee hour series this Fri
day.
Ann Ogle, chairman of the
browsing room committee, said
that the purpose of allowing stu
dents to speak will result in good
experience for the students. Too
often, she declared, students are
confined to presenting their ideas
to their own circle of acquant
ances.
To Feature Students
The coffee hour series will fea
ture a student speaker each Fri
day night at 7:30 in the browsing
room.
The subject of the first talk will
be "Homeostasis and Hokum."
Pierce, a cultural anthropolo
gist, claims that self-regulation
lets students accept a lot of
hokum.
Students Gullible
Pierce was confronted with this
situation as a grader. He sat in on
a freshman anthropology class all
last year and observed the easy
way in which students accepted
what the teacher said.
Pierce said that students should
subject scrutiny to what their
teachers tell them. They do o dis
service to themselves and to edu
cation when they do not, he added.
Miss Bernice Rice, browsing
room librarian, said that any stu
dents desiring to speak at future
coffee hours should contact her.
Sanborn to Open
YW Leadership
Training Week
G. A. Sanborn, instructor in
speech, will give the first speech
in a series of lectures included
in the annual YWOA leadership
training week.
Sanborn’s lecture deals with
effective leadership of group dis
cussions. He will, explain the
goal of most discussion groups
and the way these goals may
best be attained. The role played
by the group leader will be em
phasized.
The second in the series of lec- -
tures will be given Wednesday
afternoon by Herbert Bisno, as
sistant professor of sociology. • .
Bisno will speak on group dy
namics, using demonstration
j groups to emphasize various
types of group meetings. He will
; stress the role of each member
of a group and explain group
interaction.
This ‘Y‘” sponsored leadership
training program is held to help
those who are now holding cam
j pus offices to become better
! leaders. This year the program
■ will take place April 5, 6 and 7.
Tuesday and Wednesday's lec
tures will be held in the Student
Union from 4 till 5 p.m. and are
open to the public.
Wilson to Address
Banking Meeting
University President O. Mere
dith Wilson will be guest speak
er at the Friday evening banquet
of the Northwest Banking con
ference which will be held April
7 and S, at Pullman, Wash.
E. C. Robbins, instructor in
economics, will participate in a
discussion of a paper on mone
tary policy which will be de
livered by Allan Sproul, presi
dent of the Federal Reserve Bank
at New York.
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