Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 13, 1961)
Dukes Selected For Yell Squad The AM HO Semite approved Thursday night the rwnmmen ded yell dukes for next year. Ted Miller, Delta Tau Delta, is yell king. The new yell dukes are John Atkinson, sophomore, I'hl tiain ina Delta; Doug Mimmons, freshman, Sigma Alpha Kpsl lou; Steve Itothert, sophomore, Theta fill; anil Jim Del’aolo, junior. Sigma Chi. Job Opportunities ' Interview!! for positions at < iarrien Grove Union High School, Garden Grove, Calif., will be held ^<>n Wednesday, May 17. Positions are open for English, ► math, instrumental mimic, girls' PE, buaineas education, apecial ’education, homemaking, indus trial arts (wood I, and foreign lan guages (French, German and i Spanish 1. Jefferson Union School District of Santa Clara, Calif., will hold interviews for Kindergarten, ‘fourth grade, math-science, reme dial seventh and eighth grade, special education (mentally re garded) and school psychologist positions. Interviews will be held on May 17. St MMKK Job openings listed with the Student Employment Office in Emerald Hall this week: Lifeguards and swimming in structors for the Portland area: .applicants should have W.S.I. or at least Sr. Life Saving Certifi , cates. Management trainees for an i optical company. The summer Job will be in the Eugene area; Ju niors majoring in business ad ministration or liberal arts, in terested in sales, offmc manage ment, are preferred; permanent location after graduation could be anywhere on the West Coast. Jazz Festival... (Continued from page 2) ate that if a program is a gam ble it should be scraped for a safer one. Surely this kind of attitude will stiffle the growth of the Student Union's pro gram. and, more importantly, will stifle the intellectual and cultural growth of the indivi dual student. The Jazz festival would, it is likely, give a national propl nance to a university that has recently been noted for its smut ty stories and flurries of stu dent picketing and that noted only within a limited area. SOME at the University would like to see the University be established as the art center of the Northwest. (Please, no nonsense about jazz not being a legitimate art form.) This might be the beginning of the beginning of the establishment of such a reputation. It is unfortunate that the first horn of the festival may never be blown because of the spirit of adventure of certain student and faculty groups. r World Nows IN BRIEF Conference Delayed GENEVA (UPI) A dispute over the seat mg of Communist I’athot Lao rebels has delayed the Geneva peace conference on I.rfio* until the start of next week. Secretary of State Rusk has arranged to talk with Soviet For eign Minister Gromyko today in an effort to settle the seating dis pute. Support Pledged SAIGON (UPI) — The presi dent of South Viet Nam says the U.S. has pledged its total sup port to help in the battle against Communism in the strategic na tion. The statement came after a round of talks with U.S. Vice President Johnson. U.S. Accused MIAMI (UPI) — Havana radio wild today a U.S. aircraft car rier launched five jets and fired several "hoth inside Cuban terri torial waters. The U.S. Navy says its only carrier in the area was well be yond the territorial limit dur ing maneuvers and carries no jets aboard. Merger Still Stands WASHINGTON (UPI)—The Civil Aeronautics Board h;is re fused to reconsider its approval of the merger of United and Cap ital Airlines into the nation's big gest airline. The CAB also turned down de mands by Northwest and Delta Airlines that it delay the mer ger 15 days so they could chal lenge the merger in court. Grants to England Now Available Application forms for M a r shall scholarships for study in England are available from Roland Bartel in Room 103, Johnson Hall. These are two-year scholarships for study in any university in the United Kingdom. They are spon sored by the British government in appreciation for the American aid following World War II, Bar tel said. The scholarships are open to any man or woman who will have received his bachelor’s degree by this June. The maximum age lim it is 25, but married students may apply. Twenty-four of the scholarships arc given each year. Further in formation may be obtained from Bartel. Infirmary • Entertaining their mothers in the in firmary today arc Elizabeth E. Robertson. Nancy Ix'c Holcomb, Timothy E. Keating. Diana Childress, David S. Pool, Richard H. Lorraine, Bruce A. Fredstrom and (ieorg** K. Ice. 1 Bring Your Shoes in now to be prepared for the strenuous activities of Junior Weekend. CAMPUS SHOE SHOP -ACROSS FROM SIGMA CHI Museum Friends To Hold Dinner The director of the Phoenix Art Museum, Forest M. Hink house, will speak at the annual dinner of the Friends of the Mu seum May 15. His topic will be “A Dynamic Museum in a Dynamic State.” Hinkhousc, an author and lec turer as well as director of the Phoenix Museum, has studied at Coe College, the University of Mexico, Harvard University and New York University. In 1952 he received his doctor of philosophy degree from the University of Ma drid. The dinner will begin at 8 p.m. in the Student Union Ballroom. The cost is $7.50 per person. Tick ets for Friends of the Museum and their guests may be obtained from the museum. Italian food will be served. The two painting exhibits will be displayed in connection with the dinner. The second exhibit, on loan from the San Francisco Museum of Art, will be at the University Museum. Honorary Takes 14 New Members Alpha Kappa Delta, national sociology honor society, initiated M undergraduate members in a ceremony at the Student Union. Dean Robert D. Clark of the College of Liberal Arts award ed membership certificates to the new initiates. Two of the initiates. Dee Staats and Eileen Hogan, were re cipients of the National Science Foundation’s newly established undergraduate research participa tion program grants in sociology. Others initiated were Linda Blakely, Shelby Burgess, Carol Friedrich, Diane DuFault, San dra Johnson, Katherine Knowlton. George A. Kuhn, Susan Lathrop, Zola Peterson, Patricia Reinecke, James Sittser and Marina Velliou. J-School to Hold 'Family' Banquet Winners of the largest num ber of scholarships and awards ever offered by the University of Oregon School of Journalism will be announced Tuesday, May 16, at the annual journalism “family dinner/' The dinner, scheduled for 6 p.m., in the Student Union, is for all journalism majors and pre majors and their families and School of Journalism faculty. Phone DI 2-1411, Ext. 618. Notice To SENIOR and GRADUATE MEN Students who will complete their education and commence work thi* year. It you urgently require fund* to complete your education, and are unable to tecure the money eltewhere, Apply to STEVENS BROS. FOUNDATION INC. A Non-Profit Educational Corporation. 61&412 ENDICOTT BUILDING ST. PAUL 1, MINN. DDIRV QUEEN Welcomes Mom to the U. of O. Two unidentified patrons pause to enjoy the tantalizing treats found at the Dairy Queen, corner of 13th and Hilyard. and while she's here treat her to a ^ STRAWBERRY ^ SHORTCAKE A freshly baked shortcake topped by moun tains of delicious, creamy Dairy Queen ice cream, and garnished with spoonfulls of fresh, plump strawberries. Try it to believe it. The tastiest corner in Eugene Dairy 13th & HILYARD