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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1948)
Fiftieth Year of Publication and Service to the University VOLUME L UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1948 NUMBER 43 Oregon Whips UCLA, 26-7( See Details Sports Pages I lie mighty University of Oregon Wehfoots kept their PCC slate clean last night in Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, de feating the UCLA Bruins 26-7 to stay in the Rose Bowl race. A slashing Duck ground attack cracked the Uclan defense for the decisive touchdowns, a fid Webfoot Quarterback Norm Van Brocklin completed six of 12 passes when he wasn't send ing his talented backs for long gains. The Bruins scored in the last quarter. Oregon End Dick Wilkins caught three of Van Brocklin’s aerials to set a new Conference reception mark of 25. Bob Sanders scored three touchdowns for the Ducks, while Oeorge Bell went over for one tallv. 'Shaggy Shuffle" Ball Tonight Pick Up Material At Court First Step Begins Today From 8-5 • Advance registration starts today at McArthur ■ Court, ac cording to James Kline, assist ant registrar. To facilitate registration there will be fourteen people issuing registration material from 8 un til 5. Obtaining- material today will be the only way students will be assured of being able to continue with further registration at the first of next week. Those waiting until next week for registration material will have to go to the Registrar’s Office in Emerald hall where there will be only a few workers handing out material in a limited space. Registration steps. 1. Obtain registration material: today at McArthur Court from 8 to 5. 2. Consult adviser in his office: secure his signed certification cov ering your program. 3. Secure department stamp on every Class Card: in department of fices. 4. Secure “housing” stamp: at Office of Student Affairs in Emer ald Hall. 5. Pay fees and secure Cashier’s stamp: at Cashier’s Office in Emer ald Hall. 6. Complete registration and turn in material: at Registrar’s Of fice in Emerald Hall. Registration Card and Class Cards must check with your adviser’s certification, and any alteration or omission or discrepancy will require that you be sent back for its correction. Pigger's Guides Out Next Week Distribution of the 1948-49 pigger’s guides will be handled by Kwama and Phi Theta Upsi lon, sophomore and junior wom en’s honoraries. The booklets will iy given out in the south corridor of McArthur court next Tuesday and Wednesday, November 16 and 17, from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 4:30 p.m. This announcement has been made by Mike Mitchell, business manager. Edited by Dorothy Orr, the booklets will be available to approximately 2600 students who put in their orders during reg istration. A limited number of pigger’s guides will be on sale at the Uni versity Co-op for those students who did not place their orders registration week. The price is 30 cents. Could Be Winners! HOW HAPPY THESE TWO SOPHOMORES WOULD £E if the de picted beards were real. Betty Co-ed finalists bring out rulers to de termine how long these “whiskers” are. Grouped around the two men are from left to right, Glenna Hurst, Barbara Fagg, Mary Knox, Penny Singleton, Jean Beil, and Betty Arnold. Stevedores Walkout; Nation's Ships Tied Up NEW YORK, Nov. 12—(AP)—A complete tieup of the na tion’s shipping industry became almost a certainty last night. At 12:01 A. M. (EST) today a walkout by AKL stevedores will officially begiji in all harbors from Maine to Virginia. Sev eral thousand already had quit. The action follows the overwhelming rejection of 65,000 East V^UdbL UULK WUIKClb UII cl pi U posed wage settlement, Joseph P. Ryan, president of the Inter national Longshoremen’s Asso ciation, said. Gulf Coast stevedores have pledged to follow the lead taken j by the East Coast workers. This would make a three-coast shipping walkout since West Coast CIO longshoremen have been on strike several weeks. Despite the threatened paralysis of all the nation's normal shipping, Ryan told newsmen Marshall Plan shipments to Europe and Army car goes “will go" and New Yorkers need not “worry” about food. He did not amplify. A New York port official, how ever, said Marshall Plan shipments (Please turn to page two) H« H« H« He Music By Jimmy Zito; Select Betty Co-ed, Joe College By Ballot Jimmy Zito and his orchestra. McArthur court, from 9 to 12:30. Short silks and suits. Tickets, for $2.40 per couple, on sale at the door. Selection of Betty Co-ed and Joe College, anti the best heard. Hilarious entertainment. These will he the highlights of the annual Whiskerino dance, culmination of two weeks of beard-raising, tubbings, and other joyous Happenings, under tne guidance of General Chairman Herb Mill, the 1948 edition of the sophomore extravaganza is slated for tonight. Jimmy Zito and his orchestra, “designed along soft and smooth lines,” will furnish music. Smart stylings without use of strings, cross blendings of trombones and saxes, and well-defined beat with out rafter-raisi*g dynamics are said to characterize the playing of the orchestra. Humorous Decorations Biled as the “Shaggy Shuffle,” decorations have been planned along what has been termed a “hu morous theme.” Entertainment will include variety numbers, selec tion of the best beard grown on a sophomore man's face, and an nouncement of the final vote on Joe College and Betty Co-ed. Balloting will be held at the dance, with bal lots printed on the tickets. Finalists for Joe College are Paul Murphy, Bill Gaflney, Pete Poort, Jim Stanley, Ed Artzt, and Vic Risley. Betty Co-ed hopefuls are Betty Arnold, Penny Singleton, Glenna Hurst, Mary Knox, Jean Bell and Barbara Fagg. Highlights Free Lucky Strike cigarettes, a full 20-cigarette pack for each person or two per couple, will be distributed at the dance. Dress for the affair will be suits, (Please turn to page 2) Dry Cleaning Prices Not High; Comparable With Other Cities By Steve Loy and Chuck Grell A survey has revealed that the high price of dry cleaning in Eu gene is not an abnormal situation. Prices are in line with those of other Oregon cities. Ed Siegmund, owner and opera tor of Best cleaners, cooperated in the survey by obtaining price lists from other cities in the state. With minor exceptions, the prices com pare favorably with those in Eu gene. Siegmund attributed the gener al high prices of cleaning to the rise in costs of overhead and labor. Prices in Eugene are stabilized through the Eugene Cleaners asso ciation, Siegmund said, and are the same in downtown Eugene and Springfield. “I feel that prices are not any higher here than at other shops in the state,” he stated. “The stud ents are fortunate in having good service at reasonable prices so close to the campus.” A price list received by Siegmund from the Independent Cleaners and Dyers of Portland showed that some Portland prices are lower than those in Eugene, but that delivery charges are lower in Eugene. Siegmund said that one Portland association's cleaning prices were 10 to 15 per cent higher than those here. He said that Salem prices were cheaper than those here, and that Corvallis may charge less. A price list from Albany showed prices that were the same as these charged here. Another price list from Sea side revealed prices from 10 to 20 per cent higher than those charged in Eugene shops. Siegmund said he believed that prices in Klamath Falls and Rose burg are higher than those being charged here. Erika Mann US Policy Declares Foreign Stand Not Sound Erika Mann, noted author and lecturer, declared in a radio interview yesterday that she doubted that the United States foreign policy is sound. She was interviewed by Norm Lamb on tape recording Thurs day afternoon and the tape was presented as part of the “Universi ty Hour” presentation of the radio studios. Asked by Lamb if she thought our present foreign policy is a good one, she replied: “I do not think so. I think our present foreign policy is very dan gerous. She added that if we con tinue our present policy against Russia the whole thing might ex plode in our face. She considered the new adminis tration a “hot potato” adding that it was very fortunate that the ex, ecutive and Congress are of one party. This she said, should provide for more harmony in government than we have had previously. The European recovery program, she described as very complex ami involved and mainly for the purpose of fortifying our military, political, and economic interests in Europe. Miss Mann spoke in McArthur Court Thursday night on the sub ject of the German occupation.. Oregana Picture Schedule Changed Pictures for the Oregana will be taken next Wednesday, Thurs day and Friday instead of today, as formerly announced. This includes photographs of off-campus students who have pictures in clubs of lionoraries, or senior pictures, and members of living organizations who have not had them taken yet.