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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1962)
V«l. J XIII 1NIVEKSITT OF OREGON, EI GENE, MONDAY, MAY 21, 1962 No. 128 Betty Co-ed, Joe College Winners SI E FORTE and ( lark Nlrvi ni wrrr wjrclcd a- Betty Co-ed and Jia* College ul the Sophomore Spring Fling Friday evening. Miss Forte, a Miphnmorr In areliltwture and allied arts, Is affiliated with Alpha I’ll! sorority. Stevens Is a sophomore In business ad ministration and a member of Beta Theta 1*1 fraternity. (Photo" by Don McClure) In the Block* Reports Indicate Profit On Junior Weekend The Junior Class will probably show $500 profit on the activi ties of Junior Weekend, accord ing to 8U assistant direc tor Jack Cross. Junior Weekend activities in cluded the Junior Prom. All-cam pus Sing, and the All-Campus Luncheon. 'I he ('anoe Pete is considered an all-campus activity, and the Mo ther's Breakfast is a function of the Oregon Mothers Club. 0 THK JUNIOR Prom grossed $3970.50, Cross said, and will probably lose $800. Main expenses of the Prom are entertainers' fees, which will run $2500 for Jimmy Rodgers and the Fair monts, and $600 for the dance band. ^ The All-Campus Sing will show a profit of about $2000 on a gross of $4194 11, Cross said. Main expenses will be for deco rations, publicity, and University physical plant wages. 0 A $400 loss Is expected from the All-Campus Luncheon, which grossed $1795.05. Cross said 3132 meals were served, and that ticket sales for the event had ceased at 4 p.m. University time, Friday afternoon before the event. 0 The Canoe Fete will prob ably show a profit on its gross of $<$602, the assistant director said. More than 5556 people who paid admission, watched the event, as no admission was charged after 8:30 (DST) when the Fete’s 4886 bleacher seats were filled. Pro gram sales grossed $315, Cross sHid. Main expense item for the Canoe F'cte is University Physical plans wages. Expenses "usually” run $5500, he said. 0 The Mother’s Breakfast will show a loss on a gross of $684, he reported. Comparing this year’s figures with 1961 s. Cross said, the Canoe Fete gained $500 puid admissions and the Sing 200 for a total of ubout 5000. The Breakfast lost attendance, but the luncheon gain ed attendance while losing mon ey. Cross said this was due to a (Continued on pa tic 7) - . i ^ ' ' , Vl ,v' " , #5 t.' < W&it&S THE PERSHING Rifle Drill Team made up just a few of the 2,000 participants in Eugene's Armed Forces Day Parade last Saturday morning. The University was also represented by the Army and Air Force. SU Addition Will Be Ready For Fall Use The addition to the Student Union will probably be ready for use next fall, A. L. "Si" F.lling son, SU director, Raid Sunday. Thr project i« currently running slightly behind schedule, but thip should be made up during the summer. A student - faculty planning group wihch was scheduled tc plan the interior of the addi tion has not been able to meet because it has not received de signs from the architects to work with. Final decisions on the interioi design will probably be made this summer by Ellingson and h i t staff. He added that he will prob ably have the help of a skeleton SU Board which will also be available during the summer. 350-seat dining room and nine other meeting rooms will b< housed on the first floor of the new addition. A barber shop eight bowling alleys, a combe practice room, and a sport shop are being constructed In the base ment. To Influence Solons Senate Plans Lobby at Salem By MKKKIK WHITESIDE Emerald Nnvs Editor Phil Sherburne, chairman of the ASUO Senate committee on lobbying, said that plans arc now underway for lobbying in the next session of the Oregon State Legislature/ Sherburne said that he has met several times with the | chairman of the Higher Education Committee at Oregon i State University to formulate lobbying plans. , Sherburne said, We will work together the earlier part of this summer and then send letters to the other state col ' leges and universities.” He said that during the last session of Legislature, other Honors Comprehensive Signups Due Today Students planning to take Honors College comprehensive* must sign up for the tests to day. Comprehensive examina tion in the six core areas have been scheduled for May 24 to June 1. AWS Honors Assembly, Legislature Set Tuesday AWS honors assembly and an open legislature meeting will be held tomorrow. The legislature will meet at 12 p.m. <DST> in the Student Union and the assem bly will be held at 4 p in. (DSTi in the SU Ballroom. The legislature will vote on rules suggested at the last open meeting. Suggestions made at that time have been taken to the reference board and will now be voted on. THE RULINGS concerning women visiting mens' living areas, study hours, and freshmen walk outs will be among the subjects discussed and voted on. Margo Noall, AWS president, urged all women to attend the meeting. She explained that, to enter into the discussion, wom en should be able to present rea sons for disagreeing with the pol icy being discussed and be able to offer alternate suggestions. Approximately 32 awards and scholarships will be presented at the honors assembly. The newly tapped members of Alpha Lamb da Delta, Kwama, Phi Theta Up silon, Mortar Board, and Phi Beta Kappa will be presented. WOMENS’ Recreation Associa tion awards will also be present ed at the assembly. Leadership awards will be given to sopho more., junior, and senior women nominated by their living organ izations. Dormitories will make presen tations to their outstanding mem bers. Watching with Concern CLEVELAND (UPI) — A State Department official says the U.S. is watching with concern the flight of refugees from Red China to Hong Kong. Other awards to be presented include the Panhellenic scholar ship. the Co-op Alumni and Ja net Smith scholarships, the Ha zel Schwaring scholarship, and three cultural awards in the fields of speech, music, and art. entertainment will be present ed by freshmen women MARY SI E WOOLFOLK, ju nior in speech and a member of Pi Beta Phi Sorority, was se leeted as Miss Eugene Friday night at the annual Miss Eu gene Pageant. Miss Woolfolk, a former Rose Festival Queen, presented a talent seleetion of interpretations of selections from (ieorge Bernard Shaw’s “St. Joan,” and Maxwell An derson’s “Joan or Lorraine.” She will compete for the Miss Oregon title in July. (Photo by Karl Broom). colleges and universities gave their recommendations to the committees from Oregon State University and the University of Oregon. Sherburne said that he hopes the other schools will ac tively participate in this year's lobbying. ASUO President Neil Gold schmidt said that it would be ad vantageous to have all the state schools working together, as it would be a more influential body and represent a greater number | of students. AT THE PRESENT time, the committee is gathering back ground information in all areas of education that might come be | fore the next session of Legisla | lure. With the background infor mation available the committee will be able to proceed with lob bying plans on any subject that may come up. University President Arthur S. Flemming has a committee which is now studying on the use of classrooms here at the Universi ty. The committee intends to show that the classrooms are used over the State Board re quirements of 30 hours per week, so that the legislature will allot more money for classroom facili ties. ONE OF THE main objectives of the ASUO Senate committee will be lobbying for support of community colleges in Oregon. If the community colleges are passed, the University and o‘her state colleges and universities will be able to raise their admis sion requirements. Students not admitted to schools with the higher admission requirements would be able to at tend the community colleges. A community college for Clackamas County was voted down in the primary elections Friday. THE TUITION fee for the elev en-week summer session begin ning this summer is now $350. The State Board of Higher Edu cation budget director, Richard L. Collins, told Sherburne that the board wants the tuition fee cut down to $90 in the future. If the eleven-week summer ses sion is continued, the University will be. in effect, on a regular system of four terms per year. The Senate committee will at (Continued on page 6) Co-op receipts for patronage refunds art' due at the Co-op today. Co-op Receipts