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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1961)
UO Heart Hop Set For Friday; Theme Picked The Heart Hop ,an annual girl nsk-boy affair, will be Friday night. The tcmo of this year's dunce la “Finesse for a Heart." Dancing will begin at 9 p.m. and Alpha Ohl Omega. PI Beta Phi. Zeta Tau Alpha, and Kap pa Kappa Gamma are hostess organizations. Voting for King of Hearts will take place at the dance between 9 and 10 p.m. He will be tubbed at 11 p.m. on the porch of Zeta Tau Alpha by Kay Wald, YWCA senior cabinet president. Tickets for the dance are now available at all women's living organization at 90 cents per cou ple. This year a prize will be giv en to the living organization sell ing the largest percentage of tickets. The winners will receive the King of Hearts and his court for the day. AWS will sponsor a "penny-a rninute night" that evening. Tickets for the dance will also be available at cither of the four living organizations the night of the dance. Festival... (Continued from page 1) national, and international exhib its. Before coming to the Univer sity of Washington in 1945, Du Pen taught at the Carnegie Insti tute from 1938 to 1939 and at Washington in St. Louis, Mo., from 1939-1942. Among the many awards Du Pen has received Is the Saltus Gold Medal, presented by the National Sculpture Society of which he is also a member. His articles have appeared in the National Sculpture Review and in Architectural Forum. AN EXHIBIT of some of his works will be on display in the Museum of Art on Thursday. Also on Thursday's program will be a recital by Jerome Jel inek, cellist, and William Woods, pianist, both on the faculty of the University school of music. The recital will be at 8 p.m. in the school of music auditorium. Included in the works to be performed are Sonata in F Ma jor, Opus 6 by Richard Strauss, Sonata in D Major, Opus 102 by Beethoven, and Rhapsody No. 1 by Beta Bartok. Dads... (Continued from page 1) ketball games. science show, and open house at livjng organiza tions. Attending the Saturday lunch eon as an Oregon Dad was O. Meredith Wilson, former presi dent of the University, who is currently serving as president of the University of Minnesota. Wil son. who returned to the campus to be with his daughter, spoke briefly at the luncheon. ELECTED to positions on the Dad's execvitive hoard during the two-day affair were: Stanley Ha berloch, William Hutchinson, A. M. Rawlinson, Ellis J. Stevens, Dr. Bruce Titus, and James Yeo mans, all of Portland; Neil Mor fitt, Astoria; Dr. Robin Over street, Eugene; Jack Steven's, He lix; Ray Sorenson, Medford; Rob ert White, Oswego; and J. W. Sawyer, The Dalles. Sunday services for Dad’s Day at the Eugene churches and din ner at living organizations com pleted the two-day program. Use Emerald Classified Ads— Phone D1 2-1411, Ext. 618 Young GOPs Plan Salem Trip University of Oregon Young Republican#! will sponsor a one day trip to the Htate capital Tuesday. The group plana to observe both houses of the legislature In ses sion and attend a luncheon at which House and Senate minority leaders will speak. The trip will also include visits to committee meetings and hear i ings ,and a tour of the executive administrative offices where they will meet Governor Mark Hatfield; Secretary of State ! Howell Appling; and State Treas urer Howard Belton. All interested students are welcome to attend. Tickets for the bus trip and luncheon are on sale at the Student Union main desk for $3. The first 40 students to purchase tickets will attend. Departure time Tuesday will be 8:30 a. m. Coed Football Causes Ruckus A mud football game on the quad behind the Student Union Thursday afternoon got out of hand. Both men and women students ; were Involved; it was tackle and observers says the players were so muddy you couldn’t tell who was involved. But, contrary to rumor, no dis ciplinary action will be taken. At least Dean of Men, Donald1 DuShane, Sunday said there was' none contemplated that he knew -• L. A. Mangels, the Assistant Dean of Men, was sent over to' stop the game. This was be cause of the turf, which is sen sitive there and cannot stand that treatment in the rain, Du Shane said. The rumors of discipline ac tion stemmed, according to re ports, frt»m the fact that tackle football between men and wom en students had been declared "out of bounds" earlier in the year. The women were told, one sponsor said Sunday, that “it was not the thing to do.” Shot Circles Earth PARIS (UPI) — A French as tronomer says he believes the Russian Sputnik circled the earth two or three times before launch ing its piggyback rocket toward Venus. The astronomer said the firing probably came several hours after the satellite went in to orbit. He said the time lapse would be to be sure the space sta tion would be launched with the right trajectory. Campus Briefs • There will be no WRA representative meet inn today. • YWCA is requesting men or women interested in helping in swimming clas>es for mentally retarded and slow learning children to he at the Eugene "Y“. Mon day, Wednesday and Friday at 2 p.m. • The educational movie, “Gilbert and Sullivan,” will he shown Wednesday at 7 and 9 p.m. in 1.18 Commonwealth. The movie in in color and is a biography of Gil. bert and Sullivan’s life with excerpts of many of their works. • Panhcllenic petitions for public rela tion?* chairman (preferably a Eugene girl), scholarship chairman, social-activities chair man, standards, publicity chairman and member'sat large are due FeU 17. Use reg ular SI’ petitions and turn them into Mrs. Kopp’s office in Emerald hall. Call Barbara Reed, Ext. 771, if there are questions. • Newman club will hold a costume par ty Tuesday from 7 to 10 p.m. The theme will be Mardi Gras, • Orides will meet tonight at 7:30 on the third floor of Gerlinger. • Trip to the legislature sponsored by the Young Republicans will he Tuesday. De parture time and place for transportation will he Student Union, Onyx Street turn around at 8 a.in. • A lecture on the Yellowstone Earth quake of 1951, will be given at 8 p.m.. Tues day in 207 Chapman. Anyone interested is invited to attend. Science Study Set For Summer An institute in the natural | science* for junior high ami high school teachers will be conduct | ed at the University of Oregon ; this summer. The institute will last from June 1» to August 12. Courses will be given especially for teach ers of biology, chemistry, physics and natural science. The institute is being sponsored by the Na tional Science Foundation through the University of Oregon. Stipends will be awarded to 10 participants in the geology and 20 in each of the three other fields, biology, chemistry and physics. Stipends for the eight week session will be $600 plus $120 per dependent and travel expense. In biology, field and laboratory methodology will be emphasized. Recent advances in biology and field botany will be secondary phases of study. The study course in chemistry wtll be divided into lectures and work in design and development of high Bchool laboratory equip ment. The physics program will in- j elude a lecture sequence con-; ceming physical principles, in-; eluding problem-working and: reading assignments, demon strations by the instructor of lab oratory and class techniques, and construction of instruments. Faculty for the institute will j be biology, James Kezer, asso ciate professor of biology at the University; chemistry: Floyd] Reese, associate professor of | chemistry at Chico State Col lege; geology: Ernest H. Lund,! associate professor of geology at the University of Oregon; phys-: ics: John L. Powell, professor and j head of physics department at the ] University of Oregon. Deadlines for applications is Feb. 15. Applications must be; accompanied by a letter of rec- i ommendation from the applicant's immediate supervisor, stating the j applicant's aptitudes for this in stitute. Notification of award of stipends will be made by March 15. Full-time courses will be of- j fered all fields except geology. The courses will carry graduate credit. Prospective participants may I get further information from the Summer Session Catalog, which may be obtained in the Editor’s office. University of Oregon. Eugene. Movies... <Continued ,'rnm page 2) is the laughable plight of the person who has contracted polio just after the Salk vaccine hits the market. The main charac ter will be a nine-year-old girl, j because children are funny all the time, even when they can’t act. The kid’s father will be blind, and in one scene he will be writing a check to the hos pital and will make it out for $100 instead of $1000. I’m going to write another comedy after that, but I haven’t decided where to set it yet. I’m torn between a leper comedy— j I mean colony—and a bar that is a hangout for homosexuals. I just can’t decide. They’re both as funny as a divorce court. LIMERICK She frowned and called him Mr. When in sport he Kr. So just for spite That very night That Mr. Kr. Sr. (Why don’t you Blr. your feet and run out for a delicious Dairy tjueen ?) Shot Time 'Good' WASHINGTON (UPI) U. S. "parte experts say Russia picked up a favorable time for its rock et shot to Venus. They said the position of Venus in relation to the Earth is good for such a space probe. The White House also an nounced Sunday President Ken nedy knew of the Russian space | feat before the official Tass an-: nouncement. Students Demonstrate AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) — Uni versity of Texas students staged a major demonstration against movie theatre segregation in Aus tin Sunday. Lincoln Day sympathy demon strations also were staged by stu dents in at least four other cities. In Rock Hill, S. C., law enforce ment officers kept a Negro pil grimage away from a prison where 11 sit-in demonstrators are jailed, but later allowed the Negroes in for brief visits. PATRONIZE YOUR • ADVERTISERS • Hypnosis Therapy Discussion Topic A Clinical Psychologist from Portland will be the speaker at Tuesday’s regular scheduled Stu dent Union assembly at 1 p.m. John G. Watkins will discuss "Hypnosis as Therapy.” Watkins who received his MS from the University of Idaho in 2936, and his Ph.D. from Colum bia in 1941, has served as asso ciate professor and lecturer at several colleges including the University of Oregon Medical School. Do it Yourself & Save EMERALD LAUNDROMAT 17th and Pearl Behind Hirons & Safeway Eugene's Newest and Finest Coin Operated Laundry. 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