56th Year of Publication VOL. LVI t'NIVEKMITY OF OltKOON, EUGENE, FRIDAY, MAY 27, 195.7 No’ 140 Army RO Announces Awards lor Students Outstanding Army ROTC sen- ] lor cadets who will be named Distinguished Military Grad uates upon graduation have been selected, announced Lt. Col. Rob ley D. Evens, head of the mili tary science department. The awards "in recognition of superior scholastic achievement in academic studies and leader ship" will be presented at the military graduation exercises Tuesday afternoon. Robert Arndt, Brad Blaine, Jack Boettcher. Ward Cook, Robert Glasson, Bob Haar, Em erson Harvey, Paul Keefe, Jim Light. Gary McAdams, James Moore, Lloyd Powell, Richard Yates. Bill Schuppel and Dick la-wis are the seniors who will be honored. Awards to Be Presented Other Army ROTC awards will also be made at the Govern or's Day Review at Hayward field Tuesday at 1 p.m. Norman Cole haa been desig nated the outstanding freshman student and will be given the Military Science I Achievement awaid. Carl Groth, Jr., will re ceive the Military Science II Achievement award. The out standing junior student, John Hocolofsky, will be gtden the Military Science III Achievement award. Cadet Col. Emerson Har vey, Jr., haa been chosen for the Military Science IV Achieve ment award. Lloyd Powell haa been desig nated for the National Defense Transportation award, given each year to an outstanding Tranaportation Corps cadet. Arndt Mentioned Th<^ Association of the Army ROTC award, given to an out standing senior, will go to Rob ert Arndt, The Ledbetter Drill Team award will be presented to the Army ROTC drill team for earn ing the moat number of points in its recent competition with the Air Force team. Army cadets also won the annual marksman ship competition with the Air Force, earning for the Army ROTC rifle team the University rifle trophy. Each member of the rifle team will be awarded a drill team certificate. Individual marksmanship awards will be given to Lee Tucker, first place, and to Groth, Jr., second. Tucker, in recogni tion of having the highest con sistent overall scoring average, will be awarded the Rifle Team Silver Medal. Other medals will be given to the next four members of the rifle team, in order of their over all scoring average. Winners are Douglas Gill, second place; Gor don Nobriga, third; Benjamin Kahalukulu, fourth, and Groth. Jr. fifth. KWAX-TV to Present First Dramatic Show K WAX-TV will present its first dramatic television produc tion at 4 p.m. June 2. The half hour program will be shown in the Allen room and the radio lab room on the third floor of Allen hall and on the third floor of Villard hall for all students. The Halwoithy Nall-Robert Middlemans dramatic television show, "The Valiant,” has been chosen as the show to be pro duced. The program is being in dependently produced by the staff of KWAX-TV. This staff has been in rehearsal for three weeks adjusting camera angles, lighting and acting positions in regards to the production. Don Holt will act a.s producer for the show and Jim Jones will direct the production. Audio is being: handled by Jean Smith and Jon Powell. Spencer Snow and Art Huey will do video for the program. Members of the pro ducers staff include Pat McCann, Marilyn Stratford, Dick Coleman and Mary Whitaker. Dyke, a condemned criminal who refuses to reveal his true identity, will be played by Bruce Emmons. Jack Dugan is cast as Warden Porter and Bruce Holt will play Father Daly. “The Girl," who claims to be Dyke's sister, is played by Loanne Mor gan. John Hiekock has been cast as the jailer. Blackburn, Maxwell, Jones T o Attend Republ ican Meet Charles Blackburn, Jerry Max well and Gerald Jones will at tend, as student members, the Young Republican National Fed eration’s convention in Detroit, Mich., June 15 to 18. Blackburn is chairman of the University's group, and Western Council representative for the Oregon YR College League. He is official delegate from Oregon. Maxwell is Oregon College League vice-chairman, and the two will represent the Univer sity chapter at the National Col lege Service Committee sessions. Jones, who is chairman of the eleven Western States YR Col lege Council, will conduct meet ings of his group and confer with other National Young Republi can Federation executive com mittee members. President Eisenhower, Vice President Nixon, U. S. Treas urer Ivy Baker Priest and sev eral Republican governors and Congressmen will be keynote speakers at the convention. Lead ers of labor and industry will also speak. Other features of the conven tion will be a victory ball, tours of the Detroit-Windsor area and a “Miss National YR” beauty contest, in addition to business sessions, panel discussions and election of officers. Distribution Starts On 1955 Yearbook The 1955 Oregana ia being dis tributed today on the first floor of the Student Union from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Students need not present their receipts, according to Bob South well, editor. Distribution after today will be held in the administration of fice, located on the mezzanine of the building. Students who do not receive three stickers for pasting in the senior section of the book should pick them up at the Oregana of fice, third floor, Tuesday from 4 to 5 p.m. Staff members who didn’t re ceive their special stickers for the front may also get these Tuesday from 4 to 5. A iota] of 77 scholarships were awarded to upperclassmen for the 1955-56 school year, accord-: ing to Karl W. Onthank, schol-! arahip chairman. The scholarships and their re- i cipientg are as follows: Judy: El let son Scholarship of $100, Dixie Miller; Jimmy Burleson Jr. Scholarship of $100, Richard Barker; Skull and Dagger-Wil liam C. Fragcr Memorial, James Noble; Rockwell scholarships $165, Bruce Bloomfield, Joan Passmore and Claudia Lee Wurtz; A8UO $165 scholarships, Charles Mitchelmore, Sandra Ann Schori and Ronald Spicer. The $165 Joseph P. Zimmer man and Eva Zimmerman schol arships went to Stephen Che mytsch, Darlene M. Crawley, Karlcen Evans, Germaine La- 1 Marche, Jean Miller, Sylvia S. Sommerer, Richard Van Allen, Gail West and Judy Counts. Wil liam Stoner received the $135 Phi Gamma Delta-Robe rt C. Jones Memorial scholarship. State Fee awards of $120 went to the following: James Albert, Special Rush Period Planned for Fall Term By Ann« Ritchey EimttM AtiiiUnl Ntwi Mittr A special rush period, for wom en above second-term freshman .standing, will be held next fall before New Student Week. It will begin Saturday, Sept. 17, and end Monday, Sept. 19. Open house will be held from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on the beginning day. Signup for the special rush ing will begin immediately, and should be done in Mrs. Wick ham’s office before students leave for the summer, according to Olivia Tharaldson, Panhellcnie president. The women who participate in this rushing period will stay in Carson hall starting Sept, it, and will be able to move out Sept. 19 or 20. They will live on the second floor, so will not interfere with freshmen women, who will move in Sept. 18. Upperclasswomen who will live on the second floor will not be able to register un til Sept. 21, Wednesday, so will probably not fill the second floor from the beginning of the week. "This rush period should oper ate to the mutual benefit of transfer students and old stu dents here, and the sororities,’’ according to Mrs. Wickham. Regular rushing for fresh man women, will begin Friday of New Student week and end the following Tuesday, which is preference night. Some question concerning sign ing of contracts with dormitories next year arose in the course of Conservatives Win LONDON (AP) — Prime Minister Anthony Kdcn and the Conservative party scored a smashing victory in Thurs day’s election. They won a new five-year term with an indicated house of commons majority of 50 or more seats, against the scant 17-seat margin they had in the last parliament. Scholarships Announced discussion of the uppcrclass rush period. Such contracts will definitely not be used, according to both Ray Hawk, associate director of Student Affairs, and H. P. Barn-1 hart, director of dormitories. A possible connection between the upperclass and contract dor mitory systems, such as those used at other universities, would be that the dormitories will have a more consistent number of residents throughout the year, instead of the usual fall-term peak with gradual declines dur ing the year. Doris Allen, Annell Anderson, Beverly Jean Anderson, Robert Beatty, Beverly Joy Bellarts, Samuel Bennett, Janice Bennet, Lucy Anne Bond, Mary Lou Ca diz, Alice Max'ra Cashman, Joanjic Chambers. Marlis Claussen, Marie Cocker ham, Alvin Denham, Patricia Fagan, Roberta Jeanne Gess, Sally Jo Greig, Erik Hansen, Harriet Hombeck, Dorothy ller, Richard H. Johnson, Diane John ston, Helen Knight, Alice Ko matsu, Sandra Lien, Sharron Lea McCabe, Elizabeth Ann Mcll veen. Jean McPherson, Mary Ann Megalc, Marsha Marie Meyers, Joan Mobert, James Noble, Rod ger O’Harra, John Passmore, Sharon Pederson, Jerome Pool, Barbara Proebstel, Karen Rice, Charles Richardson, JoAnne Rogers, Jim Russell, Susan Ry der, William Sinclair, Cora Standley, Martha Ann Gosnell, Myrtle Johnson, Mary McCros kcy. Barbara Nyberg, Esther Strom, Arlen C. Swearingen, Olivia Tharaldson, Agnes M. Thomp son, Nolene Wade, Dorothy West, Sandra Dee Williams, Marian Winters and Carolyn Velguth. IFC Postpones Action on Fund A decision to postpone action on the use of the controversial S3 rush fee in the pre-freshman week account until the ASUO Senate has acted upon IFC sug gestions was marie by the Inter fraternity council Thursday night. The fraternity presidents voted to accept the recommendations submitted by Bob McCracken, (Continued on paste six) Students, Faculty Affected by Bills By Don Osborne Emerald Reporters Six bills were passed during the last meeting of the Oregon legislature which will directly and indirectly affect students and faculty members of the Uni versity. The faculty benefited by the passing of Senate Bill 47 which grants retirement privileges to University employees. J. O. Lind strom, business manager,, said that the bill “is a great advan tage to employees and a very fine arrangement for securing faculty personnel.” The benefits start after 35 years of service and amount to about one half of the employees average wage dur ing the time employed by the University. Architecture to Gain The Legislature, under House bill 731, granted the University 5550,000 which will provide for a new extension to the architec ture building. Plans are now un derway and construction will be gin next spring. The new addi tion will be north of the science building and will adjoin the old heating plant with the architec ture bulding. House Bill 398 enabled the Uni versity to increase the amount of bonded indebtedness that the state board of higher education can incur for self liquidating projects such as dormitories and married students’ housing. Plans for a new dormitory, to be built east of the Virgil D. Earl dormi tory on the tennis court block, are now under consideration. A study of married student housing facilities showed recent ly that despite the fact that there now is housing for 375 families, by 1963 250 to 350 more units will be needed. Need May Decline Senate Bill 302, abolishing the state law of compulsory physical education will have little imme diate effect on the University. The state board has established almost identical laws as the state maintained on compulsory edu cation. If, however, the board is unable to enforce these laws then the need for PE instructors may decline. The reduction of the budget request, House Bill 70, by the state board of higher education resulted in a raise in tuition fees for students attending state in stitutions. A ten dollars per quar ter increase was incurred on resident students and $20 on non residents. The sixth bill, House Bill 12, passed by the Legislature affects University personnel. It provides for the deduction of two cents per day from employees to pro vide for better insurance cover age for employees and their families. The deduction formerly amounted to one cent per day.