Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 02, 1955, Image 1

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    41 More Days...
VOL. LVI
56tli Year oj Publication
IMVKKHITY OK OKKOON, EUGENE, MONDAY, MAY 2, 1935
T he Emerald's Choice...
... tor ASUO president and
the nine senator-at-large posi
tions are IKtrd on page two of
today’* Emerald.
NO. 121
Request for Rifle Club
Funds Sent to Senate
A request for student funds
for a proposed University rifle
team was returned to the A8UO
senate and a aubcommittee re
port on student salaries was
adopted Saturday by the Student
Union and Educational Activi
ties Budget committee.
The budget board deferred
consideration of a request for
student funds for the proposed
rifle team pending further con
sideration by the A8UO senate
for two reasons: 1) It was the
hoard's feeling that an alloca
tion of funds from the Student
Union and Educational Activi
ties budget would constitute sup
port of a minor sport; and 2t
the board failed to discern and
consensus of student body opin
ion concerning the rifle team.
Uequest for Money
The lequest for funds was
made by Carl Groth. Jr.. UIS
candidate for junior class presi
dent and a member of the FtOTC
rifle team, and Capt. H. D. Wol
Tickets Available
For Sullivan Show
Tickets are still available In
the athletic ticket office for the
Ed Sullivan show, Tuesday night
at 8 p.m. in McArthur court.
Student prices are *1.50 for
third-balcony seats, $2 for north
bleachers and $2.30 for the main
floor.
Appearing in the show will
be Mata and Hari, international
ly famous dancers; June Valli,
glamorous RCA Victor recording
star; Richard Herne, “Mr. Pas
try,” star of the English Music
hall; Will Jordan, com<*dy im
pressionist; The Rudells, sensa
tional trampoline act; The Amin
Brothers, Egyptian acrobatic
marvels, and Joe Jackson, -Jr.,
internationally famous panto
mime act.
All performers have been fea
tured at least twice on Sullivan's
Sunday night Toast of the Town
television program.
Election Violation
May Bring Contest
Any violation of election rules
may be grounds for a contested
election, ASUO vice-president
Hollis Ransom announced Sun
day. The election rules have been
distributed to each candidate in
Wednesday’s general elections.
Any election protests will be
considered by the constitutional
committee.
Polling booths for the lections
will be at the Student Union,
Co-op, Commonwealth, Friendly,
Library, Men’s pool (science
building in case of rain), square
south of the Student Union
(Straub, if it rains) and Fenton
(steps of Johnson if it rains).
Poll Captains
Poll captains responsible for
the general election include
Mary Alice Allen, Conhie Drury,
Janet Ferris, Galen Mills, Sally
Ryan, Marcia Webb, Ray Wes
tenhouse and Leighton Wilbur.
Two poll clerks will be at each
polling booth during each hour
the polls are open from 8 a.hi.
until 6 p.m. Wednesday.
aver, representing the military
department and non-ROTC stu
; dents who had expressed a desire
| to form a rifle team open to all
| University students.
In a second action the budget
board added the Student Union
board chairman to the list of
those students who receive full
, salaries. Others are the editors
and business managers of the
Emerald and the Oregana, and
the ASUO president.
Joint Committee Action
The action was recommended
by a joint budget board-ASUO
senate subcommittee composed
of Sylvia Wingard Bemis, Bob
Funk and Pete Williams, rep
resenting the budget board, and
ASUO President Bob Summers,
Germaine LaMarche. Jim Light
and Don Rotenberg, represent
ing the senate.
The budget board adopted the
principle recommended by the
subcommittee that the student
body and the University should
not be deprived of the services
of a qualified student who might
be unable to accept an activity
position because of the necessity
of outside work.
This principle is the basis on
which student salaries will be
paid in the future.
Koom, Hoard Arc Hat Is
The manner in which salaries
are to be computed will be a
full year's room and board at
Carson hall plus 50 dollars, an
approximate average between
fraternity-sorority and dormi
tory living costs.
Under this principle, the pres
ent yearly salaries of $636 will
bo cut to approximately $624.25,
according to Bob Summers,
ASUO president and spokesman
for the budget board.
It was also agreed that all
salaries other than the afore
mentioned full salaries shall be
held to a minimum. Such sal
aries will be computed as a per
centage of the full salaries in
the cases where they are au
thorized.
Students Have Voice
The SU and Educational Ac-!
tivities budget committee;
(Budget Board) was set up last
fall in order to give students a
voice in the control of student
funds.
The committee has three vot
ing faculty members, William
Jones, dean of administration;
J. O. Lindstrom, University
business manager, and Donald
DuShane, director of student af
fairs. A. L. Ellingson, secretary
of the committee, is a non-vit
ing member.
Student members are Funk,
Mrs. Bemis, Summers and Wil
liams.
WANTED
Prom Loses Band
A broken contract which left
the Junior Prom bandless was
the cause of a flurry of hurried
action this weekend. The junior
class bar! contracted for the 10
piece band of AI Donahue for
the Junior Weekend dance.
Late last week they were no
tified that Donahue would be un
able to keep the engagement.
Meanwhile, dance co-chairmen
Patty Fagan and Jack Socolof
sky, have been working with
Sandra PHce Rennie. Student
Union program director, to ob
tain another band.
Two Portland bands have been
located and the committee fs
investigating the possibility of
getting a better-known Califor
nia band from one of two agen
cies. Definite word on the band
is expected sometime today.
The agency with which Dona
hue was contracted is the same
one which arranged for Charlie
Spivak to play for last year’s
Prom. The contract fell through
in a .similar manner and Ernie
Field's band was obtained.
The contract with Donahue
■was signed here April IS and
went to the agency to be for
warded to Donahue. A telephone
! call to Mrs. Rennie verified the
j contract, and Mrs. Rennie was
jtold that if she was not notified
by April 22, that the contract
! would be alright. When she was
I nf>t notified, it was assumed the
| contract was in effect, and pub
licity was released accordingly.
A possibility of legal action
against the agency was squelch
ed Sunday night by Bud Hink
son, junior class president.
Hinkson reported that while
such legal action had been con
sidered, it would not be carried
out.
Allen Tate
Reads Poetry
Allen Tate, distinguished poet
critic, will read his own poetry
for this week's University Radio
Forum on KOAC tonight at 8:30
p.m.
In March Tate spoke on the
campus as a guest in the Uni
versity lecture series. Tonight's
broadcast will be a recording of
one of his appearances then.
E. A. Kretsingcr, assistant
professor of speech, will be mod
erator. There will be no panel
members, as is usual in this
series.
Robert Quentin to
Speak Tuesday at 1
Assembly speaker Tuesday
will be Robert Quentin, English
play director and leeturer. Quen
tin will speak at 1 p.m. in the
SU ballroom.
Recently appointed director of
the Shakespearean Festival
Theater School at Statford-on
Avon. Quentin has directed plays
in many cities across Europe.
He has also directed productions
in South Africa and Australia.
Educated at Lacing and Ox
ford, Quentin returned to Ox
ford as director of its University
Experimental Theater club.
Quentin has lectured at the
Universities of Wisconsin, Utah,
and Colorado, and at the Am
erican Academy of Dramatic
Art in New York City.
Lehi II Now Doing Fine
SAN FRANCISCO (API—The
five men aboard the drifting raft
Lehi II who radioed earlier Sun
day night the vessel was “break
ing up" some 25 miles off the
Monterey Peninsula, coast were
reported "doing fine” as they
awaited rescue by Coast Guard
ships.
Coast Guardsmen in a four
engined P4Y plane circling
above the raft while directing
the rescue ships asked the Lehi
II crewmen at 8:38 p.m. PST,
how they were doing. ‘‘Doing
fine,’’ was the response from the
raft.
At 7:09 p.m., 2'^ hours earlier,
the Coast Guard had received a
distress call that the Lehi II was
breaking up. The Coast Guard
immediately sent the plane out
from its San Bruno Air Station
and dispatched the cutter Active
and another boat from Monterey.
The Coast Guard said the first
ship should reach the raft in
another hour.
Second Child Dies
After Polio Shot
BOISE, Ida. (AP)—The death
Sunday of a second Idaho school
girl of polio after being inocu
lated with Salk vaccine from the
Cutter laboratories of Berkeley,
Calif., was announced by L. J.
Peterson, director of the Idaho
State Health department.
The child. Janet Lee Kincaid.
7, of Moscow, Ida., died in a Spo
kane, Wash., hospital.
Susan Pierce, 7, of Pocatello,
died of polio last Wednesday.
Peterson said both girls as
well as eight other children
whose cases have been diagnosed
as polio all were inoculated from
i the same lot of Cutter vaccine.
“This means,’’ he said in dis
cussing the cases, “that the vac
cine conceivably could have been
a contributing cause. We will not
know for sure until exhaustive
tests are completed."
Peterson said the Kincaid
child was inoculated April 19,
came under observation on the
27th and the case pronounced
polio on the 29th.
The two fatalities and the
eight other cases developed
among 33.000 first and second
grade children inoculated before
the state program was halted
last Wednesday.
Idaho now is waiting for a
fresh shipment of serum ordered
from the National Foundation
for Infantile Paralysis before re
suming the inoculations.
Peterson said Idaho got two
lots of Cutter serum and that
all 10 polio cases were inoculat
ed from the same lot.
Two U.S. Public Health spe
cialists Sunday completed in
vestigations in Lewiston and
Moscow and will come to Boise
Monday. They are Dr. Gerald
Laveck, from Greeley, Colo., and
Dr. Karl Ecklund, from Hamil
ton, Mont.
Canoe Fete Tickets
Go on Sale Tuesday
A total of 7160 tickets for the
Canoe Fete will go on sale Tues
day morning. Bleacher scats will
sell for SI.25 and ground seats
for $.50. Helen Ruth Johnson,
ticket chairman, announced to
day that tickets will be sold at
the Student Union, the Co-op.
Eugene Lions club, Active club,
Kiwanis club, and through Old
Oregon, the alumni magazine.
No complimentary tickets will
be issued. Participants in the
show and riders on the floats
must all purchase tickets.
Construction work on the
bleacher seating continued Fri
day afternoon. The Delta Upsi
lon fraternity finished the first
bank of bleachers and Lambda
Chi Alpha men worked on the
next bank. The 4160 bleachers to
be erected should be up Tuesday.
The Sigma Chi pledges will be
gin the last work that morning.
Saturday the Phi Sigma Kappa
men worked most of the day get
ting much of the scheduled work
done earlier than had been ex
pected. Jerry Maxwell, property
set-up chairman, and Jack
Marsh, assistant, plan to bring
the 1200 portable type bleach
ers from Springfield high school
to the millrace early in the
week.
Barges for the floats which
will flow down the millrace Sat
urday, April 14, were distributed
to the houses Saturday morning
and the houses will start basic
construction work this week.
The floats will be built around
themes of Canoe Fetes and Jun
ior Weekends of the past. Fifteen
floats will appear in the show,
which is centered around the
Search Continues
For 'Fete' Tickets
If you have recently received
7160 tickets to the 1955 Canoe
Fete please call Helen Ruth
Johnson at the Chi Omega
house.
This is no joke. “The mail
must go through,” but this
time it went too far. Somehow
the tickets for the Canoe Fete
did not arrive at their assigned
designation after leaving the
University Press via interde
partmental mail.
The tickets were to be de
livered to the Student Union
and were to go on sale to
day. A seareh party is now
covering the campus for 7160
tickets to the 1955 Canoe Fete
on the Millrace.
history of the millrace. A Queen’s
float and the comic float will
not be in the competition. Musi
cal background for each of the
floats will be provided by the
University Singers and the Uni
versity orchestra.