1700 Students Attend Summer Session The llir.r. University of Oregon Hummer Herndon had over 1700 students from all parts of the United States registered for courses and the educational workshops. Many well-known lecturers w< Ie featured, such as Pltlrim Sorokin, Harvard sociologist; and artists like Arthur Locsser, famed pianist, could be heard. On the recreation side, stu dents played the faculty in a Ni reball game at tho annual pic nic at Armitttge Park. Swim ming parties, terrace dances, re citals, and a trip to Crater Lake were also featured. Byrne leaves Charles D. Byrne left hts post as Chancellor of the Oregon State System of Higher Educa tion on July 1. He whs suc ceeded by John It. Richards, who has served the past two years as vice chancellor and secretary of the board. Theater Active The University Theater pre sented a full summer season of production!* leading off with a 3-day re-run of "Kiss Me Kate.” the musical comedy originally presented In May to full houses. Next came the comody hit. "Kind Sir.” which was presented in the Arena Theater. "Club Intime," the night-club style revue, whs presented weekly In the fishbowl of the Student Union, with a new cast each week. A mystery drama, "An In spector flails," was the next pro duction. followed by "The M-m fcer of the Wedding," which was the last presentation of the group Psych Program Granted The department of psychology luis been approved by the Ameri < an Psychological Association Education and Training Board for a doctoral training program in counseling psychology. This means that the depart ment will have, for the first time, authority to grant d'ictor ate degrees in counseling psy £ ntera Want Ads Used Desks and Chairs. Phone 1-1238. chology. The approval came upon recommendation of a visitation learn which examined the de | partrrierit last February. I .a ml ms Kc tires Edna Landroa, assistant pro fessor of classical languages at CHAKIJRS I». BVKNK Retired ( ham i l lor the university, retired July 1, and will now have emeritus status. Now sixly-five, Edna Landros came to the university in 1928. She is known throughout the state for her activities in poll 4 At UO Receive Fuibright Awards Fulbright awards have been granted to four University of Oregon students to permit grad uate study abroad during 1955 5(1 Fulbright grants are made annually to approximately one thousand U S. students for study abroad. The grants cover the cost of transportation, mainten ance. tuition and books. The four U. of O. students are: Robert Summers who has gone to the University or South ampton, England, to do graduate study in political science. Elena Horn to University of Clermont-Ferrand. France, to study French literature; Kenneth Robert Allan, Jr. to University of Paris. France, to study city planning; Charles Keith Cockbum — to University of Freiburg, Ger many, to study music. tics, educational and women’s j groups, and social problem or-! ganizat ions. As a linguist, she modestly ad mits that she knows 14 foreign languages, half of them ancient. She daily reads French, Italian, and Spanish newspapers. She is planning a year’s trip around the world In a freighter. "X have to go someplace to speak my lan guages, now that I won’t is teaching them,’’ she says. New I’K Program Lynn 8. Rodney, former dis j trict field representative in the | Pacific Northwest for the N’a I-ES ANDERSON Oains .National Ufrn^nition t tonal Recreation Association, will be in charge of a new major program in recreation in the school of health and phys.cal education. The program will be initiated this fall. The program will train stu dents as supervisors and direc tors of camp, playground, and recreation activities. The major Home Ec Department Makes Course Change A change in registration in the Home Economics department this year will enable students to regis ter for all three terms of Cloth ing Selection concurrently. It will also be offered as a one credit per term course, as in the past. During fall term two sec tions of 114, the first term of the sequence, and 116. the last term, will be offered in addition to the total course grouping. IT'S A TRADITION! For 25 Years Seymour's Cafe has been the acknowledged meeting place for Oregon students when downtown. Many of you have parents who were customers of Seymour's when they were attending Oregon. YOU'RE ALWAYS WELCOME % at Seymour's. We provide needed services such as cashing checks, stamps for mailing, rest rooms, etc. Seymour's serve breakfast, dinner, sandwiches, and fountain dishes. Come in soon and get acquainted and make yourself at home. We'll be looking for you! will require a broad liberal back ground emphasizing course work in sociology, political science, and psychology. The professional work required will involve work in music, speech, drama, art and architecture, and physical edu cation. Anderson Heads A AC Lister E Anderson, director of public services, has been elected president of the American Alum-, ni Council for 1956-57. Anderson will take office in July, 1956. The organization numbers 1100 mem bers and represents 700 colleges and universities. A Fulbright scholarship for the academic year 1955-56 has been awarded to Joel V. Berre man, professor of sociology. He will study and teach at the Uni versity of the Philippines in Manila. Grad Assistant Has Art Work Exhibited A University graduate assist ant, Richard A. Muller, is one of four Oregon artists who have work exhibited irr the Santa Bar bara Museum of Art's first Pa cific Coast Biennial Exhibition. "Tribute Money" is the name of Muller’s oil painting. He is a member of the school of architec ture and allied arts staff. Paid advertisement On Campos (Author of ‘-Barefoot Boy With Cheek," etc.) ONCE MORE UNTO THE BREACH Today I begin my second year of writing this column for Ph.iip Morris Cigarettes. Once every week during the coming school year I will take up, without fear or favor, issues that inflame the minds and quicken the hearts of college students everywhere. I will grapple with such knotty questions as: “Is compulsory attendance the reflection of an insecure faculty?” and Is the unmarried student obsolete?” and “Are room-mates sanitary?” W hile each week I make a bold assault upon these burning issues, I will also attempt to beguile you into smoking Philip Morris Cigarettes. Into each column I will craftily weave some Grapple withu tuck matty (Imtloti&i words in praise of Philip Morris. I will extol, ob liquely, the benign mild ness of Philip Morris’s well-born tobacco, its soothing fragrance, its tonic freshness, its docile temperateness, its oh-so welcome gentleness in this spiky and-abrasive world of ours. For saying these kind things about their ciga rettes, the Philip Morris Company will pay me money. This is the Amen* can Way. This is De mocracy. This is Enlight ened Self Interest. This is the System that Made uur uouniry ureat, ana anyhody who doesnt like it is MALADJUSTED. Perhaps it would be well in this first column of the year to tell you a little about myself. I am 36 years of age, but still remarkably active. I am squat, moon-faced, have all my teeth, and am fond of folk dancing and Lotto. My hobby is collecting mucilage. 1 first took up writing because I was too short to steal. Bare foot Boy With Cheek was my maiden effort, andtodav. fourteen years later, I continue to write about college students. This is called “arrested de- | velopment.” But I can’t help it. Though I am now’ in the winter of my life, the prob lems of undergraduates still seem to me as pressing as ever. How to pursue a blaz ing romance with exams coming up next Friday in physics, history and French; how to convince your stingy father that life is a bitter mockery without a yellow convertible; how to subsist on dormitory food — these • remain the topics that roil my sluggish blood. And in this column from now until next June you will raad of such things: of dating and pinning, of fraternities and sorori ties and independents, of cutting and cramming.^of athletes aad average-raisers, of extra-and intra-curriculum, of textbooks and those who write them and those who sell them and those who read them and those who don't. And, slyly woven into this stirring tapestry, tlie story of Philip Morris, America’s gentle cigarette, in the handy Snap Open pack, in king-size or regular, at prices all can afford. ©Max Shulman. 13o5 The makers of Philip Morris are happy to be back with you for another year of pood reading and good smoking — with gentle Philip Morris, of coarse.