Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 12, 1951)
OREGON’S 75th YEAR Partly Cloudy . . . . . . today. Saturday In Port land, showers. I loth days, high 65, low 45. /:ifly-third Year of Publication UNIVERSITY OK OREGON, EUGENE, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1951 VOLUME Mil NUMBER 17 Journalists from 86 High Schools To Arrive for 25th Annual Meeting The 25th annual hi^li sellout press conference will open at 1 p in, today w hen I2h students and 7(> advisers from 86 of Ore gon's lii^li schools will hepin registering at the Student I'niun. Sponsored by the Oregon Scholastic I’ress and the Asso ciation of Journalism Advisers, the conference Friday after noon and Saturday inornim' will lie made no of t.anel /Ik Cartoonist Bibler To Visit Emerald, Talk at Conference Dick Bibler, the creator of the "Little Man on Campus ' cartoon, will arrive on campua this morning to attend the high school journal ism conference. At noon, Bibler will lunch with the staff of the Oregon Daily Em DICK BIBLE It: A Self-portrait eraltl Fn the Student Union. He is to be drawing cartoons for the Emerald during the afternoon. Saturday noon, he will present a chalk talk as the featured speaker at the final event of the confer 0 e.nce, a luncheon in the SU ball room. The ‘'Little Man on Campus” cartoon runs in 21 daily and 96 weekly school papers, the Emerald being one of them. Gordon A. Sa Want a Cartoon? Cartoonist I)iek Bibler will be at the Emerald Shack today drawing cartoons for the Emer ald. Any campus organization wishing a cartoon may make ar rangements to have him draw one by railing the Shack, ext. 217. A small fee will be cltarged for each cartoon. bine, dean of the journalism school, suggested the cartoon title. Bibler is studying at Stanford University, preparing to teach. He studied education at Colorado State college last year and the year before, received his master of fine arts degree from the University of Kansas. SU Music Rooms To Open Today The music listening room in the Student Union will be open today, Carolyn Welch, SU music commit tee chairman, has announced. Hours for the room, which is ad jacent to the Browsing Room, are 3-5 p.m. and 8-10 p.m. Monday, ♦ Thursday, Saturday, and Sunday; and 3-5 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday. Missions moderated by University Journalists. Friday afternoon will also feature a group of "bull sessions” for discussions of prob lems relating to papers and year books. Friday at 6:30 p.m. there will be a banquet in the SU ballroom at which H. C. McCall, head of the speech department, and L*n Casa nova, head football coach, will speak. Sabine to Speak Gordon A. Sabine, dean of the journalism school and director of ! OSP, will act as master of cere monies. Following the banquet, the delegates and their advisers will ! see the movie, "Call Northside 777,” which concerns the exploits i of a news reporter. "Journalism Over the World" will be discussed by Wilhelmus A. Van Eekeren from Holland. M. S. Venkataramani of India, and Wal ter Schwarzlose of Germany at a breakfast Saturday morning at 8 i a m in the SU ballroom. The three speakers are foreign students do j ing special work in journalism here : at Oregon. While the students arc attending panels Saturday morning, the ad : visers will meet for a series of dis I Missions of their own. Awards Announced I Presentation of the first place ! awards in the 1951 Newspaper Im j provement contest will be made at the Saturday noon luncheon in the i SU ballroom. Slated to receive the awards ore the Milwaukie High Milwaukian, the Sandy High Pio neer Press, and the Parkdale Sat I ellfte. Featured speaker at the lunch ! can will be a chalk talk by Dick i Bibler, creator of "The Little Man , on the Campus" syndicated car I toon. 'THIS IS KWAX../ KEN WARREN, left, KW.W news and talks producer, and D. Glen Starlin, station faculty adxiser, are shown as they evened the VO radio station's first broadcast of the year Monday night. Photo by Pt tc Moe PORTLAND PRE-GAME ACTIVITIES SCHEDULED student activity in Portland in connection with the Oregon-Wash ington football game Saturday aft ernoon will include a rally Friday night at the Paramount Theater and a car parade to precede the game, Cy Newman, yell king, an nounced. The rally in the Paramount Theater will begin at 8:30 p.m. Students are urged to get to the theater early, however, Newman said. There will be 1,000 seats saved on the main floor. Admission will be 65 cents with a student body card. Several acts will be presented by campus groups, and the rally squad will lead the songs and yells. Roll Call of living organizations will also be taken. See Films Following the rally, a sneak pre vieiw of a top film 'will be shown plus a studio preview of "People Will Talk” starring Jeanne Crain and Cary Grant, x The car parade will form Satur day at 11:45 a.m. in Holiday Park. Led by the rally squad, the parade will move down 10th to Burnside, Burnside to Broadway, Broadway, to Jefferson, Jefferson to 10th, 10th to Burnside and then to Mult noham Stadium. Parking will be available at the stadium Newman said. Stadium gates will be open at 11 a.m. Saturday, Howard f^ipons, athletic business manager an nornah Stadium. Parking will be B and Lemons encouraged stu dents to be in their seats by 12:45 p.m. Students Seated The student section will be in the west bleachers in front of the main grandstand and the south bleach ers in front of the Multnomah Ath letic Club. Admission will be by athletic activity cards only, which may be picked up at the athletic ; department in McArthur Court un til 5 p.m. today. No athletic cards • will be issued at the stadium. Dress for women students will be campus clothes, Karla Van Loan, campus social chairman, has announced. This was decided by a I vote taken in all women's living organizations. Gillmore Named Weekend Boss, Senate Confused Francis Gillmore was ap pointed Homecoming chair man and Karl Ilar-hhargcr assistant chairman at Thurs day’s senate meeting but par limentary procedure turned out to be the evening's hottest : item. Also appointed were eleven nevsr members to the P*ally board and a new senior class representative, Jean Gould. Rally board member a are Lyn Hartley, Sunny Allen, Pat Booth, Bob Glassen, John Gram, Davia Saul, Paul Weller, Janet Shaw, Jack Nicols, Eob Stagefceig and Joan Lawson. Procedure Debate Debate on procedure followed a vote which confirmed Gould's ap pointment as senior rep. President Bill Carey turned the chair over to vice-president Mem Hampton in order to voice his own opinion. A roll call vote was taken with Hampton still in the chair confirm ing Gould nine to eight. Then Virginia Wright, member at large, challenged the action. "Was it necessary for the chair man to resume the chair before the vote was taken ?” Nobody, includ ing parlimentarian Tom Barry, could say for sure. It was later learned that Carey had done the correct thing. Rob ert's Rules of Order says that once the president leaves the chair to speak he should not return until the question is disposed of. This would mean until the vote was taken. Voting Discussed Informal discussion following ad journment also disclosed the chair man (apparently anyone in the chair at the time of a vote) can cast two votes on occasion. Tho chariman, as a member of the sen ate can cast one vote to tie a de cision and another, as chairman, to break it. But Hampton, who was 1 Please turn to page seven) UO Blood Drive Collects 609 Pints The two-day campus blood drive ended Thursday as the Portland bloodmobile left the Student Union with a total of 609 pints, 9 more than the University quota. The drive fell slightly behind Wednesday with only 281 pints, but Thursday's total of 328 more than compensated for the Wednes day mark. Donations of non-srtudent Lane j County residents definitely helped to fill the quota, but student dona tions also played a major role. Mrs. Cora I. Pirtle, manager of the Lane County chapter of the Red Cross, stated Thursday night that she was very grateful for the assistance of Bill Strong, county blood drive chairman, Gerry Pear son, campus blood drive chairman, all others who voluntarily assisted with the program, and all who gave blood during the bloodmobile ! visit. Audience Approves Marine Band; Mac Court Nearly Full for Concert The United States Marine Band, sponsored by the Student Union Board and directed by Major Wil liam F. Stanlemann, performed a very well received program before an almost full house at McArthur Court Thursday night. The first pait of their program consisted of the Star-Spangled Banner, the Overture "Carnival Romaine" from the opera "Bene venuto Cellini" by Hector Berlioz; "Rumbalero” by Salvador Camara ta; a harp sold “La Rougette" by David Bennett, transcribed and played by Claude Pcdicord; and Eduard Lalo's "Norwegian Rhap sody.” ... A march by Car] Teikc, (a Ger man competitor to John Philip Sousa, according to the program], "Old Comrades”; the "Andante and Rondo Capriccioso” by Felix Mendelssohn; a trombone solo by Robert Isele, "Atlantic Zephyrs” by Gardell Simons; Waltzes from "The Bat" by Johann Strauss; and, I leaving the best till last, according to some band members interview ed, Peter Tschaikowsky’s "Capric cio Italien," made up the second portion of the program. The response was so great that there were encores after every number, including the "Halls of Montezuma” (the Marine Song); the Sousa "Washington Post' March; “Believe Me If All Those Endearing Young Charms" and the "Florentine Music Box" (harp solo encores) and "Connecticut Nation al Guard." In the second half the encoreo were Kenneth Alfred's “Army of the Nile,” Arthur Pryor’s "Arms of America;” two trombone solos, the first, "Alexander's Ragtime Band," (a novelty number done with the foot being tied to the trombone slide) and "Tenderly” and "Semper Fidelis," another Sou sa number. The final encores were the Sousa "Stars and Stripes For ever," featuring piccolos and trom bones, and “National Emblem” Marches. " ’