Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 19, 1951)
OREGON’S 75th YEAR Starting lineups and pre-game story appear on sports page 4. n Daily EMERALD VOLUME LIU UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, WEDNESDAY , SEPTEMBER J9, 1951 NUMBER 2 Ducks Set to Battle Indians * UO's Pay-as-you-phone Plan TWO CAR-SON HAIJ, freshman girlw try out thr new pay phones recently Installed in all living organizations. I'atay Marion, left, drops a nlrkle in while I'at Kllsworth looks up a number. Pay Telephones Installed This Fall In All Campus Living Organizations A new feature in the dormitories, j co-ops. sororities, and fraternities I this fall will be the pay telephones ; for student use. The pay telephones are to be used by students for their personal j calls, with the non-pay telephones in the living organizations being reserved for business calls only. These calls will include trans actions such as those carried out by the presidents and house man agers of the organizations. The change is in line with a ruling made by the Public Utilities Commission in Oregon which re quires pay telephones in any pub lic buildings where the probable users number more than half dozen persons per instrument. This is known as the telephone tariff. The only reason the pay tele phones have not been installed sooner was lack of necessary facil ities, such as coin lines and cables, Louis Bade, manager of the Eu gene Telephone Company, has stated. KWAX to Broadcast Tentatively Oct. 1 KWAX, the University FM radio station, is tentatively sched uled to begin broadcasting Oct. 1 from its third floor Villard studios, according to Jim Blue, chief an nouncer. Although actual broadcasting will not commence until Oct. 1, much work is to be done right now in preparation, Blue said. Students are being recruited for various jobs. Male students interested in an nouncing may contact Blue at 4-8381 to make appointments for auditions. Other departments of the sta tion needing workers are conti nuity, which includes writing j scripts, spot announcements, and commercials; business, which will want typists; publicity, which in volves contacting school clubs and 1 other organizations for promotion; and technical, which is seeking technicians who hold third class (iadio-telephone degrees. Duckling Picnic Scheduled Tonight; ASUO Assembly Follows ot 7:30 The Duckling picnic for all new students will be held at 5:30 p.m. this evening on lower Howe Field. Campus clothes will be in order. Phi Theta Upsilon, junior women's honorary, and Skull and Dagger, sophomore men's honorary will serve. Dick McLoughlin will be master of ceremonies for the program, which will include the Delt Trio, Marilyn Patterson with an imita tion of Beatrice Kay, and Alan Barzman, comedian. Following the picnic an ASUO assembly will be held, at 7:30 p.m. Bill Carey, ASUO president, will be master of ceremonies. Various activity leaders on the campus will be introduced. Merv Hampton will speak on the Constitutional form of student government. Following the assembly there will be dormitory meetings and Druids, junior men's honorary, and members of the senate will be present to answer any questions any students may have. Thursday afternoon open house will be held by the Emerald. YMCA and the Student Union committees. A rally for the Oregon-Stanford game will be at 6:30 p.m. Thursday outside the fishbowl of the SU. Thursday evening from 9 to 12 p.m. the annual Hello Dance will Old Student Registration Begins Registration material for aid students will be available Wednes day beginning at 8 a m. in the Student Union. The procedure for registration will be similar to last year's pro gram, according to Cilfford L. Constance, registrar. After obtaining registration ma terial, lower division students will receive adviser assignments from the chairman of lower division ad visers, Varlyle Moore, in Fenton Hall. Upper division students will go directly to deans and depart ment heads. Study programs are then to be built with adviser approval and students will enroll for classes with the various departments, check with the student affairs office, and obtain and pay fee assessments. Several different forms arc in cluded in this year's material. Con stance said, one being a statistics card for the filing of majors and home towns. Also the filling out of cards for the news bureau, student directory, Dads and Moms Clubs, and campus religious organizations and churches will be speeded up by the use of carbons. This last addi tion is an experiment to save time and will only be successful if used carefully, Constance cautioned. be held for everyone on the cam- ' pus.. This is a "no-date" dance, and i closing hours will bo extended un- j til 12:30 p.m. The freshmen orientation com mittce, under the general chair manship of Jean Gould, has been in charge of this week's freshmen program. Other chairman are: Nancy Allison, women's chairman: John Akers, men's chairman; Joan i Renner, public relations chairman; j Betty Moshofsky, evaluation chair- I man; and Ancy Vincent, Eugene chairman. Phi Theta Upsilon members are i in charge of information booths j set up on the campus. Athletic Cards May Be Obtained At Portland Game i Tardy Docks wi! he given an j nther chance to get their ath- j letie cards the morning of the j Stanford game in Portland, the. ! Athletic office revealed todday. Regular issuance of athletic Wednesday, September 19 and continue through 6 p.m. Friday, Sept. 21. But cards may also be picked up at gate 19 at the Multnomah stadium between 10 a.m. and noon on Saturday, the office said. Athletic cards will allow hold ers to see all home games this fall and the two Portland con tests, Stanford. Sept. 22 and Washington, Oct. 13. Tickets for the Stanford game at $3.60 eaeh are also available at the athletic office at present. A fair number are still on hand for the east side and in the end zone on the west side of the stadium, the athletic office said Tuesday. General admission tickets for the game will go on sale at the stadium Saturday morning. Dr. Wright Returns to Campus After One-year Tour of France Popularity of General Eisen hower and problems of Europe were aired Monday morning to an Emerald reporter by Dr. Gordon Wright, acting head of the history department, who returned Sun day from a year's sabbatical leave which took him to France. Eisenhower, Wright said, has possibly prestige in Europe today than any other living man. Many Europeans are, in fact, quite dis possibly more prestige in Europe today than any other living man. Many Europeans are, in fact, quite disturbed by the possibility that he may return to the United States to become president in 1952. Ike, Wright related, is a skilled soldier and statesman, always knowing just what to say and never saying too much. Eisen hower’s political advisor confided to Wright that Ike is so expert in this line he (the advisor) has very little to do. German rearmament, according to Wright, must be looked at from two sides. If war is imminent, OB. GORDON WRIGHT then Germany must be given an army, but many are willing to gamble that war will not come for at least several years. This is the general European opinion and goes along with the belief that more money should be spent in the econ omy today and less on the military. Wright said. Wright left Oregon in 1950, spending a summer at UCLA and the succeding fall at Princeton at the Institute for advanced study. Receiving a fellowship from a re search group to study the French peasant, he left for France in De cember. Wright selected several provin cial areas in France for his study. Ho roamed through the country side while his family wintered in the south, and then he went to Paris during the spring and sum mer. Recovery of Europe from World War II, Wright reports is generally steady and remarkably rapid. Though Marshall plan money may not have always been spent wisely, (Please tuni to page three) Car Parade Starts Rady In Portland A giant car parade will kick off student activity in Portland for Saturday’s game with Stanford, according to C'y Xewnian, yell king. The pa rade will form at noon Satur day in Holiday Park and be led through Portland to the stadium by the rally squad. Rally Thursday Thursday beginning at 6:30 p.m., a rally will be held in front of the Student Union fishbowl to in troduce Oregon's new football University of Oregon women will be allowed to leave the cam pus this weekend without count ing it as ore of their threo weekends away from the cam pus for the term. Closing hours are 10:30 p.m. Sunday. roach, Leri Casanova. Members of last year's rally squad, Janet Shaw, Carol Lee Tate, Shirley Do ner, Nancy Miller, Ron Symons, and Arne Simonson, with the new yell king, Cy Newman, will leal the yells and songs. They will also perform at the game. According to Cy Newman, yell king and evidently in charge of arranging weather for football games, said it will be “beautiful” in Portland Saturday. The pessimistic weather bureau reported, however, that it will be “cloudy in the morning, possibly clearing by afternoon with no pre cipitation expected." Gates Open at J1 The gates for the game at Mult nomah stadium will open at 11 a.m. Saturday. Students are to enter gate B on S.W. 18th between Morrison and Salmon and sit in the bleachers on the west side of the field. Athletic activity cards must be presented at the gate for admis sion. These will be available be ginning today at 10 a.m. in Mc Arthur Court, Thursday, and until 6 p.m. on Friday. Saturday, the cards will be issued at the stadium office on S.W. Morrison between 10 a.m. and 12 noon, Howard Lem ons, athletic business manager an nounced. Those students who are not able to complete registration by Satur day. a step necessary to obtain the athletic cards, and who intend to complete registration may get a statement from the registrar’s office to admit them to the game. This statement should be turned in at the gate. High School Bands to Play Portland high school bands from Benson and Cleveland will play at the game. They will sit in the north and south bleachers. Prior to the game Saturday morning in Portland, members of Phi Theta Upsilon and Kwama. ju nior and sophomore women's hon oraries, will pass out pom-poms Oregana Price Hiked to $6.75 The price of the 1951-52 Oregana will be $6.75, Business Manager Jody Greer announced Tuesday. The rise in price over last year's cost of $6 was explained by Miss Greer as an effort to equalize pro duction costs and receipts. Money received from sales for the 1950-51 yearbook was not sufficient to cover expenses, she said. Students may purchase Ore ganas as a part of the regular registration procedure and the amount paid will be included in the fee assesment. Yearbook buyers may pay the full purchase price when they register or may make a down payment of $3.75 and pay the balance later in the school year.