Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 15, 1948, Image 1

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    WEATHER—Partly cloudy to
day, with an early morning fog.
Little change in temperature is
expected.
VOLUME L
Fiftieth Year of Publication and Service to the University
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, OREGON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15, T948
SATURDAY'S Emerald will bo
distributed in Portland at the
game. No deliveries will be made
to houses on the campus.
NUMBER 22
UO Band
To Perform
For Game
The University of Oregon band
will leave Eugene at 4 p.m. today
for Portland, where it will play a
major part in rally activities this
evening and tomorrow.
According to Director John
Stehn, the entire band will travel
to Portland by Greyhound bus, ar
riving in time for the first big
rally, to be held at 10 p.m. this
evening.
At 9:45 the band will lead a pa
rade from Park and Main, which
will be routed through Portland
streets to the victory center,
where the climax of the rally will
take place.
The band practiced formation
marching all yesterday afternoon in
preparation for the trip, which is
the first one of 1948-49. Director
Stehn is dealing with a number of
freshmen who have never marched
before, but at the last check the
all-male organization was shaping
up nicely.
Tomorrow the band will march
through Portland streets and
stores, arriving at Berg’s by 10
a.m. At Berg’s there will be ap
proximately a half-hour of music
and other entertainment. Pom
poms and megaphones will be giv
en away by the store.
While preparing for the UO
USC game, Director Stehn re
ceived word that the Student Ac
tivities board will finance band
transportation to the November -6
game at Seattle. Previously the
board had turned down a request
for funds.
As it now stands, the band will
be on hand at the University of
Washington stadium to lead UO
rooters at the conference game,
game.
Future trips will probably in
clude Corvallis and California, al
though these have not been defin
itely scheduled as yet.
Warren to Speak
At Court Today;
Major State Talk
Twenty-one radio stations and close to 80 newspapermen
and photographers will cover Earl Warren's speech sched
uled for 7:30 p.m. tonight in McArthur court.
The G.O.Pj vice-presidential candidate will address an
audience of University students and townspeople on current
political topics. He is the guest of the University.
vv alien aeeuinjjcinicu uy ms i
wife and daughter, Virginia,
will arrive in Eugene at 4 p.m.
today aboard a private 14-car
train. Among the newspaper
representatives travelling with
the California governor will be
men from Life magazine, two
newsreel syndicates, and the
major news services.
Following Warren’s talk, the
Lane county Republican groups
will hold an open reception in the
Osburn . hotel at 9 p.m. The Uni- j
versity Young Republicans will
hold a concurrent reception for
Virginia Warren in an adjoining
room.
A torchlight automobile parade
will accompany Warren's car to
the reception. Torches will be dis
tributed to automobiles gathering
outside McArthur court immed
iately after the speech.
Dr. H. K. Newbum will intro
duce the distinguished guests
seated on the platform, including
Lamar Tooze who will present
Governor Warren. The program
will open with the Star Spangled
Banner, followed by the invoca
tion.
Guests of honor include: Mrs.
Warren, Virginia Warren, Senator
William F. Knowland, Harry K.
Newburn, James A. Rodman, Mrs.
Knowland, Walter Norblad, Har
ris Ellsworth, Ruth R. Richardson,
Ralph Cake, Marshall Cornett,
John Higgins, Guy Cordon, Doug
las McKay, Howard Belton, Lamar
Tooze, Clara Curry, and Ed
Boehnke, county Republican cen
tral committee chairman.
Warren has been governor of
California since 1942. He was at
torney general of California from
1938 to his election as governor.
The vice-presidential candidate
was unanimously chosen to be
Thomas Dewey’s running mate at
the G.O.P. Philadelphia conven
tion last July. He had started the
Dewey bandwagon rolling by
swinging California’s large num
ber of votes to the New York gov
ernor after fruitless ballots.
The Lane county central com
mittee, the Republican Women’s
club, the Lane county Young Re
publicans and the campus G.O.P.
group have actively participated
in preparing for Warren’s arrival.
Low GPA Women
Asked To Meeting
All University women with a
grade point under 2.00 are expect
ed to attend a meeting with the
scholastic chairmen of all women's
living organizations in Gerlinger
hall October 19 at 7:00, said Golda
P. Wickham, director of women’s
affairs, yesterday.
This includes:
1. Women with a cumulative av
erage below a 2.00.
2. Women with a last term aver
age below a 2.00.
3. Transfers with grade below
a 2.00.
University Hour
Features Talk
Inflationary aspects of a nation
slowly returning to a peacetime
economy will be discussed by Mer
ryle Stanley Rukeyser, nationally
known economist, in a radio inter
view on station KOAC today at
4 p.m.
The tape recording on which he
was interviewed by Paul Ryman
last Monday will be presented over
the station to top the list of en
tertainment on he “University
Hour” presentation of the Uni
versity radio studios.
The effect of housewives’ buy
ing strikes, government spending,
Broadcaster Gets Interview Then
Decides To Change All Question
Have you ever said something you wish you hadn’t? Or perhaps
you have not said something you wish you had.
That is what happened to Paul Hyman who interviewed Merryle S.
Rukeyser on a tape recording the evening the economist spoke at Mc
Arthur court.
Hyman, however, is one of the few people who ever managed to
take back what he said and insert what he did not say.
He did not like the way he phrased the questions in the interview
so he re-recorded the tape using Rukyser’s answers and substituting
new questions for the ones he considered obsolete.
Th interview' with the new questions will be aired on station KOAC
this afternoon at 4.
'Must Correct Things that Menace the Human Race'
Words of Dr. H. E. Hogue, Popular Religious Speaker
1 m not living in heaven—I live in Claremont, California.
'The people there are not perfect—there are many things wrong
with the way they live. But we cannot waste time with minor
faults in those about us—we have to direct our energies to
correct the bigger things—the things that menace the human
race.” Those were the words of Dr. Harlan E. Hogue, re
ligious evaluation speaker from
Claremont, California.
Popular Speaker
Dr. Hogue has been one of the
most popular of the speakers on
campus for Religious Evaluation
week. A brilliant speaker, he has
addressed classes and living or
ganizations as well as regularly
scheduled forums.
Dr. Hogue has a particularly
varied background. After receiv
ing three bachelor degrees from
as many colleges, he was minister
of the First Presbyterian church
at San Diego from 1933-37. In 1936
he made a tour of Europe and Pal
estine, during which he gathered
Inuch of the material he now uses
in his talks.
Religion Prof
At the present time Dr. Hogue
is an associate professor of re
ligion at Scripps College and
Claremont graduate school, in
Claremont.
An author of some reputation,
Hogue has had articles published
in Motive and the Journal of Bible
and Religion.
One of Hogue’s most interesting
talks was on “When is Conduct
Religious?” which was given in
Gerlinger hall on Wednesday.
He pointed out as a common er
ror of thinking the tendency of
most people to compare their own
desires with the moral thing to do.
“We equate our own selfish will
with the will of God. In this way
we convince ourselves that re
ligious wars, etc., are right and
even necessary.”
No Christian War
“There is no Christian war,”
Hogue declared. He went on to
explain that in time of war many
men are torn between the loyalty
to their country and a background
of Christian teaching which is
based on the principle of “Thou
shalt not kill.”
At firesides held at various cam
pus living organizations, Dr.
Hogue has discussed among other
things the pros and cons of the
Palestine question.
Israel Trouble
“One solution of the present
crisis in the Holy Land would be
the lifting of immigration restric
tions in several countries—per
haps the US, Brazil, and Argen
tina. I find that most Jewish
people do not want to go to Pal
estine, but are going there for
lack of any other place. The west
ern hemisphere should be open to
both the Jewish displaced persons
and their Arab counterparts in
the near East.”
Dr. Hogue concluded his part in
the religious evaluation program
yesterday afternoon, when he
spoke on “Architect of a Tre
mendous Future.” He shares the
Religious Evaluation week lime
light with six other speakers from
the Pacific coast states.
and discussions on the economic
stands of three presidential aspi
rants, Truman, Dewey, and Wal
lace are matters which are elab
orated on in the interview.
At 4:15, immediately following
the Rukeyser interview, “Some
thing For You,” with the campus
all-stars featuring D u g b c r t,
Skippy, Hogan, and Delbert.
“All You Need is One Good
Break,” a comedy starring Bob
Croisant and Anne McGeorge is
scheduled on KOAC Friday at 4:30
p.m. It is directed by Norm Lamb.
The play portrays Marty Roth
man (Croisant) strolling the street
in search of that one break which
he never seems to be able to find.
If he ever does—“socko!”—it’s
right to the top of this struggling
world for Martin S. Rothman, esq.
—according to Marty, that is.
But until he does reach the top,
if ever, Marty finds it necessary to
cross the street to avoid people he
owes money to, and to employ
shady, if not clever techniques to
fleece a buck or so from those he
knows. The buck, of course, is
played on that thousand-in-one
shot at the racetracks. Maity has
hopes, though.
The cool reception he receives
when he drops in on Diane, an old
flame (Miss McGeorge) is rather
discouraging, also.
Webfoots
Plan Big
City Rally
by GRETCHEN GRONDAHL
“Portlanders expect a terrifio
rally Friday night—better than
Oregon State's two weeks ago—
because of the high rating given
the Webfoots this year,” stated
Alex Murphy, rally board chair
man, yesterday.
“If we have the cooperation
shown in the early morning Mich
igan rally, wo can show them
plenty. Last week’s game was
close. Though we are favored to
win against USC Saturday, wo
need a successful rally to carry
the spirit of the night before over
to the rooting section of the game.”
The rally proper will be held at
10 p.m. tonight in Portland's old
victory center. At 9:45 a pro
rally parade, led by the UO band,
will form at Park and Main and
march down Broadway and back,
up Sixth street to the victory cen
ter.
“We expect to have Jeff Cra
vath, USC coach and Bill Bower
man, Oregon freshman coach,
speak at the rally tonight,” Murphy
said. Student entertainment, as
yet a secret, will also be featured.
“Although sound equipment merit
do not believe we’ll need equip
ment sufficient to reach 1500
people, the rally board expects
more than that number there,”
said Murphy. He urges that root
ers meet their friends before tho
parade because more spirit is
shown when yellers are with per
sons they know.
The rally chairman added that
he has heard that there will bo
secret agents at the Tap Room,
Press Club, Aero Club, and other
places popular with pre-game
looters, Friday night, to see that
these establishments do not serve
Oregon students. This will insure
a big rally turnout, Murphy said.
Student drivers are asked to
park their cars near the Park
Blocks to avoid traffic jams Fri
day night.
Saturday’s Plans
The UO band, which will leave
today for Portland by chartered,
bus, will also lead a parade Sat
urday morning from the Imperial
hotel up Sixth street to Charles
F. Berg. Beginning at 10 a.m.,
Berg’s will give 1000 free pom
poms to cheering coeds and 1000
megaphones to men rooters. This
equipment will be distributed by
Kwamas, and “first come, first,
served” will be the order of the
day.
Gate B, Multnomah Stadium,
will be open at 12:30 Saturday.
Oregon students will be given,
priority and are expected to fill
their rooting section by 1:15, when
the general public will be ad
mitted.
Women Wear Suits
To Portland Game
Women’s dress for the game in
Portland will be suits and heels If
the weather is good, Ann Fenwick,
campus social chairman, an
nounced Thursday. Optional dress*
will be worn if it rains tomorrow:
aftenoon, she said.