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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1964)
Side'Owner Dies, Rites Wednesday Funeral services will be held Wednesday for Harvey Twite. The former owner of the Col lege Side Inn on the University campus died Saturday. ROIC Cadets To Elec! Board Members of the Army Reserve Officers' Training Corps (KOTO will elect six cadet;, Thursday to serve on the Cadet Mess execu tive hoard. KOTC cadets will vote during the drill period for three sopho mores and three freshmen. Sophomores nominated include Tim Casey, Don Rice, Bill Berry, Bill Eddy, Hugh Harris. Jack Clark and George Smith Fresh men include Wayne Kinosuita. Dave Redman, Don Jensen, Alvin Honda, Lenny Brown and Larry Woods Cary Conklin, board secretary, said the six new hoard members will serve for one year. The Cadet Mess coordinates extracur ricular activities, including the annual Military Ball, for Army KOTC cadets. Students Chosen For Council Seats The off campus council will hold it.s first meeting at 7 p m Wednesday in the Student t'n ion Twenty-five students have been named to the council, ac cording to .lorry LaBarre, ASUO senator at large and chairman of the council. Students selected were: Judy Moorehcad, Kathryn S p e h n. George Austin, Bob Durnetl, Elaine Miller, John Juilfs, Pen ny Schreiner, John Hawkes. Les lie Burkhart. Betty Bowers, Tom English, George Bigham, Barbara Ebner, Bruce Brothers, Bagner Hartman, Gwyn Jones, Handy Taylor, Bill Det'hent, Doug Bray. Heidi Samuelvich, Jim Douglas. Donald McAllister, Jim Beat. Doug Lee and Carl DiPaola The agenda for Wednesday’s meeting will include the appoint ment of committee chairmen and a discussion of business initiated during the remainder of the year. Since the Surgeon General is sued his report on the possible dangers to health from cigarette smoking, the scent of cigar smoke has become familiar in these halls of academia It has come to ob scure the sweet smell of the Ore gon grape and daffodil which herald the coming of spring in the Willamette Valley. Only the eaters of Dairy Queen have re membered how the spring smells without the interference of to bacco. After they finish eating their curl topped goodies they thoughtfully chew upon their Dairy Queen plastic spoons and find no need for cigars. You, too, can exchange your tobacco habit for a plastic spoon one as you smell spring again at 13th and Hilyard. A<lvrMi*rmmt EUROPE Polar Flight—$450 (round trip from Eugene) • Guaranteed Departure • Scheduled Airline • Open to students, faculty, and staff Call 344-3871 evenings Twite, 4fi, was owner-operator of the Bavarian Restaurant in Eugene since the Side was con demned last year and eventually torn down to make way for the Co-op Bookstore addition. Funeral services will be held at 2:30 p.m Wednesday at Cen tral Lutheran Church, 18th Ave nue and Potter Street, with Rev. Olaf Anderson officiating Survivors of the 19 year resi dent of Eugene include: the wid ow, Della; two sons aqd three daughters, Thomas, Carry, Elaine, LaNac, and Charlene. He is also survived by three brothers and two sisters. Concluding services will be at West Lawn Cemetery, Eugene, with members of Elks Lodge No. 357 officiating. SNCC Mississippi Project Rep Due Miss Carole Merritt, Mississippi field secretary for the Student! Nonviolent Coordinating Commit tee (SNCC), will be on campus today to discuss the Mississippi summer project. She will discuss the summer j project at a coffee hour at 3 p m and later in a speech at 7:30 p m Hoth meetings, to be held in the i Student Union, are sponsored by i the campus chapter of the Con gress of Racial Equality (CORE) Applications for the summer project in Mississippi are due Wednesday in the ASUO office, ! third floor of the StJ. Miss Merritt, from Cincinatti, j Ohio, is a graduate of Vassar Col lege, and has worked for the Na tional Scholarship and Service Fund for Negro Students, She went to Ghana in 1961 on “Cross roads Africa.” She has been work- j ing for SNCC since last year. Project Help Wanted Petitions arc now available for the summer Migratory Labor project They may be picked up in the ASUO vice-president's of fice on the third floor of the Student Union and are due by 6 p m April 27 Voluntary workers will assist public health workers in setting up clinics and seeing to the health needs of migratory labor ers and their families. The program, operated in the name of the ASUO, is being fin anced by a federal grant, award ed to the project last month. The grant totals nearly $19,(XX). Salary for the 13 week session is $55 a month plus transporta tion expenses within the state The orientation session for the program will be held at the Uni versity beginning June 15 Tui tion, books, txjard and room dur Grades... (Continuer! from page I) was considerably below the high est average, 2 71, achieved by Chi Psi pledges In winter 1963 Tau Kappa Epsilon pledges led all others with 27, while the fraternity pledge class achieved a 2 19 average. The winter term sorority pledge report has not yet been released. <> oo 11 45 1 :00 2:00 4 00 3 :O0 4 :00 5 :00 (, :,10 7 :00 7 : 0 H :00 9:00 SU Calendar PAD 108 SU Theatre Staff 108 SU Hungry Y 109 Sl* Italian Table 1 SI* Chine*? Table 1 SI* K-n(cr William* Fellowship 110 SU Mortar Hoard 111 SI* Geography Staff 112 SU Student Tiaffic four! 315 SU Consul Ticket* Kennedy Memorial TetVacc 1st ffr SI* N’ickelson Address Mod ( on 101 Sl* Southern Delegation Mod Conv 108 Sl* Jr. Class Council & Weekend 109 SU ASUO Civil Rights Comm Dad* Km SU SI Directorate 308 SU Mortar Hoard 111 SU AFROTC Cadet Chorus 13 Sl* Jar./ Committee Interviews 109 SU IFC JM SU SU Dance I’omm 308 Sl* Inter-Co-op Council 334 Sl* Mississippi Summer Proj CORK 101 SI Protestant Catholic Discus 108 SU (toldwatrr Staten Chm 112 Sl* Student Publications Hd 337 SU Swahili Clans 204 Chap Iowa Delegation Model Cotiv 110 SU Water Ski Tottrn Meet 113 SU < )rcgon State Curriculum ! levelopment Program Dads Km, SU Faculty Kccital Mus And Oregon Chrintiati Fellowship 110 SU Infirmary Basking under the Infirmary’s sunlamps Monday were: Margaret Bonnnr, Greg Clemmons. Steven Dawson. Chris Howley. Rodger Hunt. Juanita Johnson, Garvin Kimlev. Geoffrey Mac Rac, Vernon Nelson, F«lward Taylor and llarvy Whitaker. ing the training session will be paid for. Each volunteer will be finan cially responsible for his room and board while working in var ious communities. The commit tee estimates that workers should be able to live for $1.50 a day in most cases. The aim of the project is to place carefully selected students into an environment where they will be able to use their energy to improve living conditions. All-Campus Sing Eliminations Set Eliminations for the All Cam pus Sing begin today and continue on Wednesday. The groups will be narrowed down to three men’s, three wom en’s and four mixed. Questions may be referred to Anita Bell, Ext. 1184 Elimination times: Tuesday 7 40 Sigma Kappa 7.50 Highland House 8:30 Wilcox Hall 8 40 Ann Judson House 8:50 McAlister Hall 9:00 Delta Delta Delta 9:10 Thornton Hall 9.20 Carson II 9:30 Hawthorne Hall 9:40 Delta Gamma Wednesday 6:00 Alpha Delta Pi and Delta Chi 6:10 Cloran and Watson 6:20 University House and Campbell Club 6:30 6:40 Kappa Alpha Theta and Tau Kappa Epsilon 6:50 Alpha Chi Omega and Kappa Sigma 7:00 Delta Tau Delta 7:10 Chi Omega and Sigma Chi 7:20 7:30 Pi Beta Phi and Alpha Tau Omega 7:40 Delta Upsilon and Gamma Phi Beta 7:50 Beta Theta Pi 8:00 Sigma Phi Epsilon 8:10 Counselors 8:20 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 8:30 Phi Delta Theta and Alpha Phi 8:40 Alpha Xi Delta and Philadelphia House 8:50 Alpha Omicron Pi International Coffee Slated Wednesday “Happy Unbirthday” is the theme for this Wednesday's In i ternational Coffee Hour in honor of all foreign students' birthdays Foreign students are asked to wear their native dress. The coffee hour is held in Ger I linger Hall, first floor, at 4 p.m. Men’s & Ladies’ ALTERATIONS Mals Custom Tailors Room 205 Over Seymour’s 922 Willamette Tele: DI 4-4871 I Opera Tickets on Sale Tickets for the Kennedy Mem-i orial performances of “The Con sul,” an opera by Gian-Carlo' Menotti’s modern opera, will be on sale in the lobby of the Stu-j dent Union this afternoon The tickets, for the April 24 and 25 performances, are $2 each Profits from the ticket sales will go to the ASUO fund for a j student memorial to the late | President John F. Kennedy. The money will be donated, in the name of the ASUO, to the Ken- j nedy Center for the Performing, Philosophy Budget Difficulties Prove No Worse Than Others BY JANET GOETZE Emerald Managing Editor Just because students are buy ing blue books for tests in philos ophy classes is no sign the depart ments is fiscalling away. Department Head Frank B. Ebersole said Monday it is “quite ridiculous’’ to assume the philos ophy department has a greater budget problem than any other department in the University. Ebersole said because students must buy blue books for tests, which have been issued free pre vious to this year, jokes have evi dently been circulating on campus about the department’s budget situation. The Emerald has received sev eral inquiries from students dur-1 ing the past several weeks. Evi dentally some students have as sumed instructors will leave be cause there is no money in the. budget to pay them. "We have had severe cuts this years, as has any department,” Ebersole said. “There is nothing, unusual about our situation.” Use Emerald Classified Ads— Phone 342-1411, Ext. 1818. Arts, thf! one national monument to the late President. The memorial center will con tain three auditoriums which may stage programs simultaneus ly. The opera premiered in 1950. Menotti’s other works have in cluded “Amahl and the Night Visitors.” Neil Wilson is the con ductor for the production which opened at the University last weekend. Settings for the opera are be ing designed by Peter Gygax, as sistant professor of architecture. Gygax designed the sets used In last year's production “The Threepenny Opera.’ Students Parade About 30 students supporting New York Gov Nelson A. Rocke feller in the Republican Mock Convention Friday and Saturday paraded around the campus Mon day night carrying placards and yelling cheers for the governor IT'S SPRING, AND IF YOUR FANCY IS TURNING . . . you might turn to the Pigger's Guide, chock full of phone numbers and addresses. A limited number for sale at the S.U. Main Desk, and the Co-op. AL'S Auto llpholstory 14th & Oak Ph. 344-2504 "cocA-eoiA" Atm *•©©««•• *•* »ra««»cD ■m>Cm i&CMMnr 0*»LY T»C *«OCJCT Of TM« tOC*-COU COMWi*. I Girl talk. Boy talk. All talk goes better refreshed. Coca-Cola — with a lively lift and never too sweet — refreshes best. uung:>gu better.i ^with Coke Bottled under the authority of The Coca-Cola Company by: Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Eugene