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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 14, 1951)
The world is not alone In being: full of a number of things. An bregou doctor found a pocket knife and a key in a man. We've already seen the biggest fish of the season- sitting right on the bank. SjOtvcL, I "I o-$JLasnjcL VALENTINE GREETINGS V Come in and see our large selection of Volland Valentines. We have special cards with ap propriate messages to suit every need. Make your selection early while our stock is complete. 1 U. of O. CO-OP STORE IF You've been 1 debating ... why keep on writing She'll be your Valentine . —zing Quicker than you | can complete this rhyme BRISTOWS Jewelers 620 Willamette Ph. 4-0211 NW Architects To Meet Friday The Northwest Conference of the American Institute of Archi tects will be held Friday on the University campus. Three questions are up for dis cussion during the conference. They are: 1. What kind of society do you foresee in the future? Will the trend toward collectivism in Eng land. Western Europe and Asia ex tend to the Western Hemisphere or will the system sometimes re ferred to as democratic fret' enter prise be strengthened in the Western Hemisphere? In other words, are we in the United States in a declining phase of an outmoded European social system, or in the process of giving new life and vitality to a system that will be peculiar to our needs and temperament ? 2. How will the social organiza tion of the United States of the future effect the physical form of buildings and the growth of the cities, towns and rural areas? 3. What should be the basis of preparation of men and women fot professional leadership in such a society, with special reference to the place of architecture in that society ? Included among officials attend ing the conference, are Sidney W. Little, Dean of the School of Art and Architecture and member of the A. I. A. commission. SU Committee Positions Open Petitions for 23 positions on the Student Union dance and cultural committees may be turned in un til 5 a.m. Friday in 301 8U. accord ing to Bill Carey, interview and refen al chairman. Interviews for applicants are scheduled for 7 p.m. Tuesday. The eight positions on the dance committee include membership On mixeis. special dance instruction, and set-up subcommittees. Fifteen vacancies will be filled on the cultural committee, includ ing job openings on the record pro grams in the music listening rooms, blowing room program, and mu sical presentations. This is an old one, but a lot of us need to be reminded of it—“If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again!” We've all been doing it all our lives, but it's still doggone hard to get out of bed. A Complete Four Chair BARBER SHOP IS OPEN TO YOU IN YOUR ERB MEMORIAL STUDENT UNION BASEMENT LEVEL NORTH END "Sweets for your sweetie on Valentine's Day?" McDonald Chocolates! $1.65 POUND MAIN DESK Erb Memorial Student Union Women Draft Brings 'Nays' By Helen Jackson Women in the armed services may become quite an issue in Con 1 gress after the 18-year-old draft | problem is settled, or so the news papers report. In view of this fact, j although present plans do not rail : for a draft, today's Inquiring Re porter's question was "Would you approve of drafting women?" Although two of those queried ■ were in favor of drafting women, the general opinion was that such l a plan wouldn't be advisable at j least until an all-out war. I’hylli* Tyo senior in education "Not unless there is an all-out j war. Maybe now it's all right to draft nurses because they are very ; badly needed but I don’t think the need in the other branches of the ! service is so demanding that wom I en should lx* drafted now,” George Boyd senior in archi tecture "I suppose there's a place for them in some branch of the service. Actually I feel they'd do more good in civil defense or the Red Cross." Joyce Langdon freshman in 11b I oral arts "Yes, I do. Women who | have had any training whatsoever ' in the medical field are desperate ly needed. Aside from the medical profession, women should be draft 1 ed for defense work, not necessar ' ily for the armed services.” itnth Bartle senior in educa : tion "I don't think women should i ever be drafted. At the present time volunteer enlistments are I taking care of the needs and if a i demand arises, I think enlistments | will increase accordingly.” Italph Carpino senior in archi tecture -''No, I don't approve. Let women remain women. Women in the service ought to be kept on a purely voluntary basis.” I>. T. Spit/.nogle special student in journalism "Not until it be j comes absolutely essential." Dave Cromwell senior in poli tical science—“I certainly approve. I don't see why women should be any more privileged than men. | Women thought they had become equal with men when they per i sisted in getting the right to vote; | now why shouldn't they assume an equal share in the defense of the ' nation ?” Jean Peterson freshman in lib ; eral arts "I definitely do not | think they should be drafted for ' the armed services. Some system ] of registering women for civil de i fense work may have to be work I ed out, but they shouldn't have to ! go into the armed services.” Student Court Changes Time The regular meeting of the Student Court will be held at 7 p.m. today in 315 SU. The court has moved the meeting time ahead of the usual 7:30 p.m. in order that student violators may attend the IJO-YVSC basketball game. Mike Adams, chairman of the court, said that students are warned to have their cars re gistered at the student affairs office if they have not yet done so. Student parking stickers must be displayed on any student car parked on a campus lot. There is no cost for the stickers. Committee to Show Opera Excerpts Well known arias and favorite scenes from famous operas will be shown at 7 and 0 p.m. tonight in 207 Chapman, under the spon sorship of the SU movie committee. Excerpts from “Don Pasquale,” “Naughty Marietta,’’ “Barber of Seville,” and “Marriage of Figaro” will be shown. The pictures are being shown as part of a seiies of educational movies. Reds Try to Split UN Defense Lines Compiled by A1 Karr From the wires*)! the Associated Press Chinese Communists shifted tlie direction of their massive at tack in central Korea Tuesday, and headed down mountain corri dors in an effort to split the allied lines between \\ onju andt oju. C.eneral McArthur visited the western front and warned, on his return to Tok\ o, that the enemy still has plenty of manpower and supplies. 'I'he first Ked onslaught dented allied lines as much as IK miles and swept Cnited Nations forces out of the road center of HoenK soi sr, 10 miles north of W'onju and 50 air lines east of Seoul. Hut tin apparent!) was only the eastern wing of a heavier attack gathering momeMituin. I .arlier. American and South Korean troops fought their tut lout of a huge trap sprung by a 100,000 man hed foice in tin ! snow \ mountains of central Korea. A Soviet Demand to Condemn.. . . .. the United States as an aggressor In China was overwhelmingly re jected by the United Nations Assembly Tuesday. The vote was on tin- first of two Soviet resolutions, previously defeated in the Assembly's 60-naUm Political Committee. This proposal specifi cally charged the United States committed aggression against China by sending the* seventh fleet into the Strait of l*orfnoHit. The vote was 5 in favor, -IS against, and 3 absentatlons. Burma, Indo nesia and Yugoslavia abstained. The Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, Fined... ^ . . . $2r>,000 fur a "sick call" strike of switchmen in December, will go | on trial May for a second walkout Jan. 30-Feb. 8. j 'rile union was uccused of contempt of court for both walkouts. The 'government charged that the union violated a tempoiary restraining i order forbidding it to engage in a strike. Federal Judge Michael I. Igoe, in setting the May 11 date I uesday, i turned down the government's request for an Immediate trial on the sec 1 ond contempt charge. 'Complete Agreement' Was Announced. .. j ... by Economic Stabilizer Eric Johnston Tuesday between the Office i of Price St* Oilization and the Justice Department on the court enforcc I ment of price and wage controls. A special assistant United States attorney, dominated by OPS, will i set up in each of the 9« judicial districts to handle price and wage litlga j tion exclusively, Johnston told reporters. Chancellor Conrad Adenauer of Germany... •. . . plans to tuge the Big Four to provide for free, country-wide elec tions to reunite all Germany under a single regime, the West German government press office announced Tuesday. The chancellor is expected to stress this appeal to the four occupying powers when he makes a speech to the federal government some time next week, the announcement said. Soviet Officials Have Concluded Their Talks. .. . . . with East German Communists on the Kremlin's strategy for the proposed Big Four conference, it was learned Tuesday. The conferences were held in Schloss Babelsberg, personal headquar ters of General Vasily Chuikov, head of the Soviet control commission for Germany. A Closed Hearing, With Frank Costello... ... as first witness, began Tuesday. The two-day hearing is being con ducted by the U. S. Senate Crime Investigating Committee. Costello is a nationally known gambler. Costello had no comment as he entered the U. S. courthouse In New York, where the hearing is being held. Senator Estes L). Kefauver (D.-Tenn.i, committee chairman, said that eight other witnesses liad been subpoenaed six from Saratoga County, N. Y., and two from New Jersey. A Possible Compromise Directive... p. ... by Congress for the sending of a "reasonable" number of troops to Western Europe was discussed in administration circles Tuesday. Chairman Tom Connally (D.-Tex.I of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, was reported predicting to administration colleagues that his group and the Senate Armed Services Committee will approve troops to-Europe legislation without strings. Hearings begin on the issue Thursday, with Secretary of Defense George C. Marshall and General Omar N. Bradley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, as the first witnesses. The Oregon Senate Decided... . . . Tuesday that it doesn’t want to change the boundaries of Oregon's four congressional districts. The vote was 22 to 8. The vote was on a resolution by Senator Richard L. Neuberger, Port land, for appointment of an interim committee to study changing the boundaries. Senator Neuberger told the Senate that the boundaries must be changed to give Multnomah County more representation at the ex pense of EasLein Oregon. He said that Congress is considering a bill to force states either to divide their congressional districts up more evenly, or else elect all congressmen at large. The United States Should 'Draw the Line'... . . . against furthei Communist aggression and adopt a "peace through strength” policy, Governor Thomas E. Dewey of New York said Monday night. Dewey, in a Lincoln Day address before the National Republican Club, asserted that such a policy would end Soviet expansion and result in "a new emancipation proclamation" for satellite peoples. The Immediate Filing of All Prisoner-of-War... . . . civilian internee and survivor claims under the War Claims Act was urged by Representative Hugh B. Mitchell (D-Wash.). He warned — that March 1 is the deadline for tiling claims and that after that “they' cannot be paid at all.”