oi^ec}c>r7f 1 «n*«4way Nauu Bin :< /H > HEQOLD Vol. I/VII L’nlvrrMty of Orrflon, ICuK<-ri<-, Turn., Oct. 4, 1055 No. \t Barnett to Give Talk On Dutch New Guinea H. O. Barnett., professor of anthropology, will deliver the first Browning Room lecture, "Modern Dutch New Guinea.” at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Browning Room of the Student Union. Colored elides will illustrate tiie talk. Barnett worked last Hummer In Dutch New Guinea for the Dutch government. He inspected Theatre Entertains Oregon Students With Open House Tonight University student* will be entertained by the Uni versity Theatre group with a free dance and night club entertain ment. At 7:30 p.m. in the University theater student* will be taken on guided tours of the whole UT enterprise. It i* judged by expert* a* the bent-equipped theater of any University on the coast. Stu dent* will have a chance to see the back stage areas, the work, costume, makeup, dressing, and scenery room*. ftnncing Planned Dancing to the music of Ralph da Courcy and hi* orchestra, will follow the tour. High point of the evening will be the appearance of Mary Pack, featured entertainer of Club In time. She will present several of her supper club acts. A demonstration on stage light ing will also be offered. Scenery from the Broadway hit, "Member of the Wedding." will be used to show the difference textures of color make in a production. Women Can Join YWCA This Week Freshmen women will have an opportunity to join the YWCA this week, as the women's organ ization conducts its annual mem bership drive. Members of the sophomore cabinet will go to the freshmen women’s dorms this evening from 7:30 to 10 p.m., according to Mary Gerlinger and Nan Hage dorn, membership co-chairmen. Membership may be purchased during this time. Dues are $1.50 a year. Additional memberships may be obtained, beginning Wed nesday. at the YWCA office or from YWCA officers. The office is located on the first floor of Gerlinger hail. Commission meeting times are as follows: Monday at 4 p.m., Tuesday at 3 and 4 p.m., Wednes day at 4 p.m., and Thursday at 3 and 4 p.m. Field areas which will be cov ered in YWCA work this year are service, public affairs, wor ship, international affairs, and religious growth. House solicitations will con tinue through representatives in the living organizations all this week. Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs day senior cabinet members and YW representatives will make flying speeches at the living or ganizations. the government welfare pro grams for the native population. Barnett flew from San Fran cisco to Hollandia, the capitol of Dutch New Guinea, at the invita tion of the Dutch, who needed outside exaluatlon of welfare in education, farm practices, and health. Dutch New Guinea, in the news as is French North Africa because of Asian-African efforts to put both on the agenda of the United Nations, is a colony of Holland and the remainder of an empire that is now mainly Indo nesia. Barnett was also in the Pacific from June 1951, to January 19.02 heading a six man team of an thropologists in the Marshall, Mariana, and Caroline Islands, who helped shape American re lations with the Islanders. The discussion leader will he R. S. Wengert, head of the po litical science department. Barnett received his AB from Stanford and Ph D. from Cali fornia and has been teaching at Oregon since 1939. Dancing on Friday Will Bring Money Pairings for Friday night's Bunion Derby will be announced I in Thursday’!! Emerald. The annual get-acquainted dance, sponsored by the Associated Wo men Students, will start at 7 p.m. Each man will be charged five cents at each house he attends during the dancing. All proceeds go to the AWS scholarship fund A rotating trophy will be awarded the men's organization with the largest percentage of members attending the dance. A trophy will also be awarded to the women's organization which collects the most money per capita. Last year's winners were Alj>ha Gamma Delta and Phi Kappa Psi. Campus Violations Handled By Court Parking violation)) occurring on University property arc un der Jurisdiction of the Student Traffic court, which will meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. Due to the traffic problems resulting from the more than 2,000 student cars on campus, five students appointed by the A8UO president and approved by the senate meet to hear students that feel they unjustly received a ticket. If the person receiving a Uni versity ticket does not wish to j content it, ho should pay the fine at the Office of Student Affairs in Emerald hall. If the ticket, is not paid prompt j ly and the student does not ap pear in court, the amount, of the fine plus a 50 cents handling charge is deducted from the stu dent’s breakage fee. The following parking lots are i open to students: the Emerald hall lot, the music building lot, the Vets dorm lot, 14th and Kin caid, 15th and Agate and the lot behind Gerlinger annex. The University hires a Eugene patrolman to check for violations and issue University tickets. The following is a fine schedule for violations on University prop erty: Speeding, reckless driving $5 Fire hydrant or posted fire lane . $5 Student Union drive (east side) . 52 Blocking driveway, entrances or alley ..... $2 Parking in yellowed zone $1 Parking in alley. $1 Loading zone parking.$1 Parking in service entrance . $1 Failure to display student registration sticker. $1 Improper parking (in re served spaces, more than one space) .$1 The money collected from fines is used for scholarships. Pi Kappa Phi Reveals Details for Expansion Further details of the proposed new $136,000 Pi Kappa Phi fra ternity house were revealed yes terday. and accompanied by a promise of increased campus ac tivity by the group. Colvin Nisbet, president of the Midwest Zoologist To Meet Grads Winterton C. Curtis, Univer sity of Missouri zoologist, will address the biology staff and graduate students of the Uni versity at a seminar Friday at 4 p.m. in room Science 314. Curtis, an emeritus professor of zoology and emeritus dean of the college of arts and science at the University of Missouri, will discuss his experiences as an ex pert witness at the notorious Scopes trial in Dayton, Tenn., in 1923. Issue of the trial was whether or not the theory of evolution should be taught in public schools. At the trial he met Wil liam Jennings Bryan and became a friend of the attorney, Clar ence Darrow. In the early 1900’s Curtis made his major contribution to the field in a study of fresh watei dams in Mississippi in collabora tion with George LcFevre. organization’s local alumni group, said the new house plans are the result of a national expansion program of the fraternity. Nis bet said the majority of financing would he handled by a several million dollar fraternity expan sion fund. This same fund, Nisbet ex plained, is responsible for pres ent construction of a new Pi Kap house at the University of Wash ington, and extensive remodeling plans at OSC and two California schools. Pete Tyerman, president of the fraternity local, said the new house plans would probably aid progress of the group. Last March the fraternity chapter re portedly considered, then reject ed a move to close its doors. At that time the then fraternity president. Gene Murphy, said that inability to compete for members with more affluent fra ternities had caused the group's difficulties. Construction of the new three story fraternity house is sched- i ulcd to begirt this spring. Site of the new structure has not been announced. The group will continue to occupy its present house at 740 East 15th St. until the end of spring quarter. Date of occu- j pancy has been set for next Sep tember. Fire Prevention Week Set Oct 9-/5 President Eisenhower has pro claimed the week of Ovt. 9-15 as Fire Prevention week. Its purpose is to direct public attention to the 11,000 lives and $870,984,000 in property de stroyed by fire in 1954, and to the safety measures which can help reduce these tragic figures in fu ture years. The National Board of Fire Underwriters estimates that hu man carelessness is largely re sponsible for 90 per cent of the nearly 900,000 fires a year. Much Public Can Do Since so many fires are caused by-carelessness, neglect, and lack of understanding, there are many Theatre Plans Party To Tear Down Sets A "strike party" will be held tomorrow from 7 to 10 p.m. at the University Theatre. The object of the party is te take apart the scenery for the summer production of "Member of the Wedding" and to store it. There will be dancing, and re freshments for all. Anyone in terested is invited. All are asked to bring their own work clothes. things that the public can do to prevent fires or at least to reduce fire hazards. Some rules which would re duce the hazards of matches and smoking are: 1. Keep plenty of ashtrays handy- and use them! . 2. Never toss a lighted match away. Blow it out, hold it a sec ond. then put it in an ashtray. 3. Before emptying an ashtray, be sure every match and butt is completely out. 4. Never use a match to light the way into a dark closet or similar space where clothing or other combustibles are kept. 5. Before going to bed see that no butts are smoldering on tables or upholstery. 6. Never smoke in bed! Careful of Stoves Misuse of electricity and care lessness or mis-care of portable oil stoves and heaters has caused many fires, and one of the sea son's greatest dangers is the out door fire. A few simple precau tions should include: 1. Don’t overload the circuits and don’t let a “home handyman'’ tinker with electric cords, wiring and appliances. 2. Be sure stoves and heaters are clean; use them in a safe spot and with caution. 3. Don't start an outdoor fire near a building, a fence, or over hanging branches, or in an area where fires are prohibited. 4. Never start an outdoor fire on a windy day. Clear the ground of all grass and underbrush for three feet around the place where the fire will IV. 5. Never leave a fire unattend ed. The fire should be out and the ashes cool enough to touch with bare hands before it is left. The person who does not take time for safety precautions may find to his sorrow that he is in volved in the next fire, warns the underwriters board. Theatre Tryouts In Second Week Tryouts for the first Univer sity Theatre production of the | season are now in the second | week of elimination. “The Remarkable Mr. Penny I packer,” the forthcoming px-o I duction, has parts for twenty I persons. Fifty-eight tried out. Three Positions Open in ASUO Petitions are now available for three student positions, Home coming Weekend general chair man or co-chairmen, junior class representative and junior class vice-president. Petitions may be picked up in the ASUO office on the third floor of the Student Union and must be turned in by 5 p.m. Thursday at the ASUO office. • All petitioners must attend the senate meeting at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in the Student Union. Applicants will be selected at the meeting. Details will be announced later on interviewing times for appli cants, according to Bud Hinkson, ASUO president. Persons wish ing to apply for the Homecoming position as co-chairmen should staple their petitions together. Frank Evans, 71, UO Printer, Dies A man who guided the work of a generation of University of Oregon journalists has died. George Frank Evans, printer with the University Press for 20 years, died yesterday at his home. He was 71 years old. Frank Evans, ever ready with a grin and a slap on the back for deadline-plagued staffers, worked with the Oregon Emerald through thousands of issues at the old University Press, what is now the Architecture annex. He re tired in 1949, too early to see the new Eric W. Allen journalism building and its streamlined press facilities. Frank Evans’ retirement from the University y.as a retirement in name only. He continued working at the Eugene Register Guard on a part-time basis until last week. Evans, whose looks belied his age, was active in golf ing circles, and was an avid gardener. He was a member of Elks Lodge No. 357, Eagles Lodge No. 275, and the Eugene Typo graphical Union Local 496. Evans is survived by his widow, Leila; two daughters, Mrs. Beatrice Wester, Eugene, and Mrs. Josephine Homes, Ar eata, Calif.; four grandchildren, and a sister, Mrs. Leila Bowen, Portland. Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Veatch England Funeral Home. Inter ment will be in Rest Haven.