IT’S O.S.C. OR BUST for these four men of Cherney Hall, who are set to head for (Corvallis Thurs
day for the Oregon-Oregon State game. Left to right Milo Coffman, Duane Morris, Tom Deans, and
Fred Wilbur.
Hands-Off on Elections
Avowed by DuShane
“The Office of Student Af
fairs has nothing to do with ap
proving or blocking any candi
date for any ASUO office.” Don
ald DuShane, dean of students,
said Tuesday.
“Nothing in the ASUO con
stitution requires approval of
candidates by the administra
tion,” he added. DuShar.e's state
ment was a reply to a letter to
the editor by Edward Fadeley
and an election protest petition
filed in behalf of Charles Ko
burger, write-in candidate for
ASUO graduate representative.
No Administration Veto
Charges had been made that
the administration holds the
power to approve or disapprove
candidates and that therefore
student government is meaning
less.
DuShane said the only check
made upon candidates’ petitions
is made by ASUO officers and
not administrative officials.
ASUO officers check University
records to make sure all candi
dates have 2.0 GPAs and that
they are members of the class
they claim, he added.
He said the reason the ASUO
constitution does not provide for
write-in voting is that otherwise
persons who do not exist or who
do not wish to run might get
elected.
DuShane said he believed Fad
eley had confused the ASUO
election petition requirements
with those for various campus
committees and activities. To pe
tition for most activities stu
Senator Proposes
New UN Agency
WASHINGTON UR—Sen. Clif
ford P. Case (R-NJ) proposed
today creation of a United Na
tions agency to “keep the spot
light of world-wide attention on*
developments in Hungary.”
“There can be no doubt, it
seems to me, that, could they
keep their dark deeds secret, the
ruthlessness of the Hungarian
Communists and their Sovie
masters would know no bounds
whatever,” Case said in a state
ment.
Case said he has little hope that
the puppet Communist govern
ment in Hungary will allow U.N.
observers inside the country.
dents must get approval by the
dean of men or dean of women,
but this approval means only
that the GPA indicated is cor
rect.
Charges commenced last week
following the election of Gordon
Choice of Party
Needed in South
Says Stevenson
RIDGEFIELD, S.C. Ijfl—Adlai
Stevenson says, "It's about time
that a lot of people in the South
decided whether they are Demo
crats or Republicans."
The defeated Democratic presi
dential candidate interrupted a
hunting vacation here yesterday
to attack Republican foreign
policy.
He charged that the GOP has
no effective policy for handling
Soviet expansion in the Middle
East.
"I have warned for three
years,” Stevenson told newsmen,
"that the Eisenhower-Dulles for
eign policy was headed for dis
aster and I wish I thought the
administration had, even at this
late date, some policy for re
storing Allied unity in the Mid
dle East."
Stevenson noted the strong
backing given the Republicans in
the South in the recent election
and said the people of the South
must decide to which party they
belong.
"If they are Republicans,"
Stevenson declared, “they should
candidly say so and work for
that party. If they are Democrats,
then they should return to that
party and be a part of it.”
Stevenson is visiting a planta
tion near here owned by the Mar
shall Field family of Chicago
McLeod as graduate representa
tive.
McLeod, the only recognized
candidate, received 12 votes. Two
other candidates received more
than 12 write-in votes. These
votes were thrown out because
the ASUO constitution does not
provide for such voting, DuShane
said.
No action of the contesting of
the graduate student election
has been taken yet. according to
A.M. Singer, associate professor
of law and chairman of the Con
stitution committee.
A petition was filed with the
ASUO election committee Tues
day by Charles Koburger, Jr.,
graduate student in political sci
ence, which contested the recent
election for a graduate student
representative to the ASUO sen
ate. The petition has been refer
red to the Constitution commit
tee for action.
Gordon McLeod, first year law
student, received 12 votes for the
position. Koburger received 20
write-in votes for the Senate
seat.
Koburger’s campaign assist
ants claim that the write-in vote
should be counted, as “filing for
the election is just a procedure
and shouldn’t be necessary for
election.”
Loading Resumes
On Portland Docks
PORTLAND, Nov. 20 Wl—Load
ing and unloading resumed today
in Portland and Columbia River
ports on some 15 ships idled yes
terday by a 24-hour stop-work
meeting of longshoremen.
Members of the International
Longshoremen’s and Warehouse
men’s Union returned to -the
docks this morning.
Snack Grill
• Quick— • Delicious—
Fountain Luncheons,
Service Dinners
"Near the campus — to serve you"
1858 Hours . Phone
13th Ave. E 6:30 a.m.-8:00 p.m. Dl 3-2811
Anglo-American
Opinions Heard
In SU Debate
By EVELYN OLSEN
Emerald Staff Writer
In what the British debate
team termed “u preview" and
display of "exhortation’’ instead
of debate, Anglo-American rela
tions were given u good knock
■ ing-about in a wise-crack-filled
debate between Oxford University
and the University of Oregon
Tuesday night in the Student
Union Ballroom.
George Boyet. graduate stu
■; dent in political science, and Ed
Fadeley, third-year law student,
debated with Alec Grant and Hoy
Dickson of Oxford on the question
"Resolved: NATO Has Outlived
its Usefulness."
The Oxford team, taking the
affirmative, charged that NATO
has not done anything to pre
serve Western unity, and has
failed to meet its military obliga
tions. Criticizing Dulles’ foreign
policy role in NATO Grant
charged "Dulles is known in 1-on
don as the only bull who carries
hir China shop around with him."
Dickson called the organization
"a platitude." He maintained that
no NATO ground force would be
usefnl, since if the USSR were
1 to invade Western Europe, re
taliation weuld be by atomic war
fare.
In proprising an over-a'.l Euro
oean pact *n place of NATO,
i OickKJn emphasized that "unless
| there is settlement in Europe,
there is no hope for peace.
The University debate team,
, Boyet speaking first, maintained
! that Western powers must re
tain NATO to retain its military
| strength. Boyet cited common
; small arms procedure and lines
| of communication as examples of
NATO unity.
Fadeley said the trouble in
Cyprus and Iceland is not due to
failure of NATO but to the Brit
ish. He also charged we "must
keep NATO to save England from
a bumbling foreign policy.”
PATRONfZE YOUR
• ADVERTISERS •
SU, Library Slate
Holiday Schedule
The Student I'nlon will clone
lit fl:S0 p.m. today and will re
open Sunday at I p.m., accord
ing ti: Si KlllnifMon, SI’ direr
tor.
Kcvlned library nehcdulc for
the holhlnyn Ih an follow*: To
day, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m,; Thurn
day, cIoihmI; Friday, II a.m. jo
b p.m.; and Saturday, H a.m.
to 13 noon. The library Hill lie
cloned all day Sunday.
MJR UNION STATION
2115 FRANK* IN B«VD.
■msjMMjrnBR
Old Mini Winter Ih here!
Protect yoar car with Antl
frfeif. Attention Students:
Free car washing fact title*.
ih Open 12:15
YOUR PERFECT
HOLIDAY
ENTERTAINMENT
HI’K-Su . aiIACY
KOHKKT YAGNEK
THE
mountain!
\ IttUvlxion T«*chnlcolor
Co-Hit—“Cry In th«* Night”
"DIABOUQUE ’-Next VY-d.
SHISLER'S
FOOD MARKET
Groceries — Fresh Produce — Meats
Mixers — Beverages — Magazines — Ice Cream
OPEN FROM 9 A M.
DAILY & SUNDAYS.
13th at High St.
.TILL 11:00 £
Dial Dl 4-1343
Water
84T
Water Grand Opening
Thanksgiving Day
Winter Swim Season
Wed. & Thur: 6 to 10 Fr; 6 to 11
Sat: 1 to 11 Sun: 1 to 6
SWIM NOW
GIANT WATER SLIDES
Heated floors in bath house and lounge
SWIM & PICNIC around 8' island fireplace.
NO CHARGE, just your swim admission ticket?
Ering your own food. We furnish FREE COFFEE,
wiener sticks, grill and skilled. *
BENTON LANE POOL
Hiway 99W - - 4 mi. N. Junction City - WY 8-2836