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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 8, 1946)
Variety of Positions Offered to Students The University employment serv ice offers several opportunities for vacation jobs and permanent po sitions, according to bureau em ployees, Senior girls with secretarial training who wish to go into in surance work can confer with Ed ward Averill, insurance company representative, who will be here Saturday morning. A representative of the Firestone Tire and Rubber company will be here next Tuesday to interview ap plicants. Campfire Position Mrs. Phyliss Hann, campfire girls’ representative, will meet girls interested in summer coun selling in the office of the dean of women Thursday between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Oregon Caves and Glacier park offer vacation positions for men as light truck drivers and guides. Both men and coeds with musical ability are needed at several re sorts. These jobs pay from $80 to $100 per month, plus room and Positions with the Libby Mc Neill & Libby company are open to those desiring work in canneries as operators and timekeepers. This work pays 95 cents per hour to both men and women. The U. S. Forestry service needs ex-paratroopers to jump as fire fighters. Additional information about these positions may be obtained by calling University extension 243. loard. Cannery Jobs EMERALD NIGHT STAFF Abdul Mohsin Ted Hallock Phyllis Hallock Ralph Holzwarth Joan Hickey Bernie Engel HOYT FLAYS (Continued from paqc one) school; Hendricks hall and Zeta conditions in Europe, and did not spare Russia from sharp criticism of her news-suppressing policies. World War III ‘‘The spectral shadow of a third world conflict dances unwelcomely on the walls of our minds” he as serted after observing that never has the world so wanted peace as it does today. But referring to the House of Representative’s recent draft bill, Hoyt said that this de sire was not reflected in the ‘‘sup posedly political vote . . . which eliminated the drafting of men in the present political period.” ‘‘There is a vast area in Europe that includes Russia and most of the places east of a line drawn from Stettin to Trieste where the iron curtain still hangs dividing implacably the peoples of the earth. Behind that barrier, honest correspondents are valueless.” Censorship Mr. Hoyt asked how we can know whether Russia’s national ambition is really security or totali tarian expan|ion, and answered his own question by stating that we can only know when we get their news uncensored and undistorted. He deplored the fact that the Russians are in darkness about us, and we in the deep gloom about them. Now the editor and publisher Of the Denver Post, Mr. Hoyt ad dressed the newspaper people in the audience in particular when urging them to press for “the elimination of censorship and the guarantee of worldwide press freedom.” Don Mellett “It is up to the shirt-sleeved editors of America, the kind of editor that Don Mellett was . . .” Earlier in the program William M. Tugman, managing editor of the Eugene Register-Guard, told the story of how the editor of the Canton Ohio Daily News, Don -R. Mellett was murdered on July 16, 1926 for the offense of “disturb ing a status quo.” Tugman, then on the staff of the Cleveland Plain Dealer, covered the aftermath of the Mellett assasination. Hoyt proceeded on his topic by suggesting that President Truman enunciate a doctrine calling for the elimination of political censorships, the worldwide dissemination of information and equal rights for correspondents in all countries. He, remarked that in this matter Harry S. Truman has a chance to make himself immortal. United Nations “So far the United Nations is I just another peace plan . . . The charter must be based on the peoples right to print and the right to read; in other words it cannot exist or even be born with out press freedom.’’ Palmer Hoyt concluded his talk in stressing the importance of re taining world confidence in the ob jectivity of the U. S. news services. He warned against steps which would lead to the control by any government or group of govern ments of the free correspondents of the world thus sacrificing what journalistic freedom has been at tained. Telling the Editor (Continued from page two) and take whatever small measure of punishment is meted out, grimly thinking of the days when we’ll be lettermen and upper classmen. Speaking as one has an amaz ing faculty for getting into trouble, I heartily endorse “O” boys’ actions Goedti... REMEMBER... Clothes look smart only when they're sparkling clean . . . Bring them to us for good, quick, efficient service. 1 EUGENE CLEANERS 245 E. Broadway Phone 75 . . . and any more that, might be necessary to bring old Oregon up to its pre-war standards. Might I respectfully suggest that those who find the going a little too rough transfer to Vassar. It sounds like an ideal setup for some of the old men we seem to have on the campus. When a. lot of us were over seas, we were admired for our “guts . . . don’t tell me some of you boys forgot to bring them home with you? LARRY LAU BROWSING (Continued from page two) conformists to traditions and give a paragraphic endorsement of a bigger and better library contest tradition. . . The 00 hand-printed copies of The House Beautiful (F. L. Wright, Winslow and Gan net) in 1S06 gives these quotes on “Book Furniture". . . "Think what a book means. It means meeting a dime-novel hero, if we like that kind of hero. But it also means meeting the poets, the thinkers, the great men, the genuine heroes, if we like that kind. . . A poet for a table-piece! A philosopher upon the shelf! Tyndall and Darwin, in their works, for members of the household! Browning or Emerson for a fireside friend! Irving or Dickens or George Elidt to make us laugh and cry and grow tender to queer folk and forlorn! . . The Gift Shop 963 Willamette Lovely women depend on this famous cosmetic deodorant to guard their charm, their clothes. You will, too. Gentle to1 the skin and to the finest fabrics. Leaves a M haunting fragrance. Stays^l creamy longer. Hurry to get your jar. This sale happens only once a year! WILL. ST, 61 E. Broadway Men’s Clothing Gifts. Luggage MOTHER'S DAY 1 GIFTS THAT j LAST! 1 BEAUTIFUL, EXQUISITE . . . Compacts Ear Rings Cauico BroocEes Rings Bins Costume Jewelry to please Your Mother JEWELRY STORE 620 Willamette "JUST BEFORE j DAWN" AND "SONG OF THE PRAIRIE" Jjp '' Mm Tcm Wm • <* tIBwk, "SHE WOULDN'T SAY YES" LEE BOWMAN 1 ROSALIND RUSSELL AND "PURSUIT TO ALGIERS" McDonald "CINDERELLA JONES" JOAN LESLIE ROBERT ALDA ALSO "SHOCK" LYNN BARI "TARS AND SPARS" ALFRED DRAKE JANET BLAIR ALSO "FOREST COMMANDOS"