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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 17, 1951)
Freshman Rally Slated Saturday A special rally for the freshmen class will be hel dat 8:30 p.m. Sat urday in the Student Union ball room, it was decided at the ral1'’ board meeting Tuesday. Feature of the rally will be the Introduction of a new fight song. Written by John Epley, the song will be introduced by a trio con sisting of Don Jordahl, Max In gerson and Gordon Green, with Ep ley playing the piano. I The rally squad will also lead i the freshmen in several yells. Following the rally will be a dance at 9 p.m. In the Fishhowl for all students. The team will be arriving by plane at the airport at 9 p.m. from Los Angeles and their game with UCLA and will urrive at the Stu dent Union about 9:45 p.m. The rally squad will lead yells for the team, the new fight song wil be sung, and Head Coach Casa nova will make a few comments on the game. Copies of the new song will be mimeographed and handed out to the students at the dance. Study jHamfil Goose-Neck LAMPS-2.50 and up We give S. and H. Green Stamps flolwtion fyuSuiituAe Qa. 649 Willamette Ph. 4-2281 CAMPUS CALENDAR WEDNESDAY, OCT. 17, 1051 10:00 High School-College Bel IIhiH Room SIJ Noon Tiffin Table 110 SC Athletic Comm 111 SC 2:30 YWCA Gerllnger Hall 4:00 Skull ami Dagger 110 SC Halloween Tarty Reps 334 SC 6:15 Freshman Dessert Ballroom SC 6:30 Dance Comm 813 SC 7:00 Movies 207 Chapman Young Republicans UOSC 7:30 Student Court 315 SC Lecture Browsing Km SI! Square Dancing Ballroom SC Betty Coed-Joe College 334 SI! 313 SC 9:00 Music Comm Indians, Means (Continued from page one) and cooperation is needed," Mehta stated. Paul B. Means, head of the de partment of religion ami recent!; returned from an 18 months tri! in southeast Asia, called the assas sination pai t of the opposition o fanatical religious groups agains' the cooperative and compromise policies of the western democra cies. Means suggested that previoir incidents in Irar and Egypt indi cate the spread of religious dislike to compromise of the type prac ticed by Liaquat. "The assassination will compli cate the solution of the Kashmi problem,” Means said. "Liaquat acted as a moderating and con structive influence. The inciden' may tend to embitter the situa tion." The relationship between Indi; and Pakistan will not be decidee by the common people, Mean stated, but by fanatical group' who draw their code of honor fron their religion. Extreme element in both governments will male agreement difficult, he said. Sophomore Whlskerino—Oct. 27 ONLY 15 SHOPPING DAYS BEFORE BIG GIVE-A WAY LEONARD DEEPFREEZE LEONARD REFRIGERATOR LEONARD ELECTRIC RANGE Approximately $100 Value On Display at Rubenstein's Furniture Company —No Obligations— No. 1 Tepee — 11th and Oak — Dial 4-1151 DOUBLE S&H GREEN STAMPS EVERY WEDNESDAY No. 2 Tepee — 6th and Blair — Dial 5-9254 SAVE 3c PER GALLON ON YOUR GASOLINE! No. 3 — Automatic Heating Oil Service — 4-1151 SPECIAL PREMIUMS or 3% DISCOUNT FREE! YWCA to Honor Directors Today In Gerlinger Hall A reception honoring Miss Mary Stewart, executive director of the downtown YWCA, and Miss Mary Elizabeth McDowell, director of the campus YWCA, both new to their jobs this year, will be held today from 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. in alumni hall in Gerlinger. The event is being sponsored by the advisory boards of the commu nity and campus Y groups. Handi ng arrangements are Mrs. H. T. (Jre, social chairman of the camp is advisory board, and Mrs. Edgar Joodnough, president of the com nunity group. Following the reception, the ampus advisory board arc holding t potluck dinner for the campus { cabinet. Featured at the dinner vill be talks by students who at ended various summer Y projects. Myra Wood, in charge of the pro flam, announced that Jackie Vilkes would talk of the National tudent Y council, Nicky H&ralu >n the students in industry can lery project, and Janice Evans and Cathleen Fraser will give theii mpressions of the regional confer ence held at Seabeck. MFC President (Continued from page one) ion. The suggestion was also made hat the group continue as a club n which the pledge-class repre entatives could get together and iiscuss issues common to all louses fo reach house's personal lenefit. The JIFC is hampered in its ight to gain recognition on the ampus by the fact that in the past he council has done practically tothing and has shown no purpose o rexisting, Walker stated. Judge llderkin advanced the theory that he council should not exist as a tervice organization, of which here are already enough, but as n organization to further the in erests and work for the better lent of the fraternity system. The junior council decided to end a committee of four to meet .’ith the Inter-Fraternity council o discuss with that group what he IFC thinks the purpose of the unior Inter-Fraternity Council hould be. The committee is com 'osed of Bill Walker. Sigma Phi Ipsilon; Judge Klderkin, Theta 'hi; Duane Stoddard, Phi Kappa igrna; and Craig Wetherford, Phi tappa Psi. Walker also made the sugges ion that each pledge representa ive talk with his house presi lent and find out if he had any uggestions about what the JIFC ould do. At the next meeting, October 10, the council will meet with a -epresentative from the Office of Itudent Affairs one one from the nter-Fraternity council. Oct. 16, 1921 For the second ime in twenty years, the Univer ;ity of Oregon and the University ■f Idaho football teams battle to a l-l tie. Oregon was outplayed but vas never outfought. ATO Grabs League (Cnn'inueil from pane five) Mint mu was assessed 16 yards for an Illegal block. After thin heartbreaking mull, the twosome <>f Tom and Milton Kotoshitorn successfully scored, while Ray Coley snagged the pig skin for the conversion point. M*\ Muirhead was the recipient of the next two scoring passe* to give the Minturlte* seven more polnta. In the hint quarter Mr. San ton added two more touchdown* to low team's score giving them ,'13 points, while Gamma was unable to cross into paydirt. However, Gamma was not with out a good showing. On numerous occasions Hill Mlkkelson practical ly put the ball In a team mate's hip pocket with his passing ac curacy. Even with as many good passes as he had to his credit, Gamma covered very little ground. This defeat now eliminate Gam ma Hall from the league running. It also means Minturn has one out of the way and a possible five y.-t to go for that cherished title. Today's IM Schedule IM Field: 4 p.m. I*i Kappu £lplui Beta '{hot pr , Field 2: 4 p.m. Theta Chi ATO Lifting Head of Christ (Continued from poye one) dition, but it greatly aggravated it. Miss Edna Dunberg died July 21. 1936. five month* -after the work wai completed, without ever seeing the faces she had worked ho hard to complete. Famous Men of Knowledge The fifteen different face*, each one reproduced three times, are of famous men of knowledge. Ari stotle, a Greek philosopher whose ideas are still widely taught: St. Thomas Aoztiinas, religious phil osopher and writer; John Locke, English philosopher; Thucydides, Athenian historian; Buddha, In dian philosopher and founder of Buddhism. Christ; Mirhelangelo, the Italian painter and sculptor; Beethoven, Prussian composer; Leonardo Da Vinci, Italian painter and sculptor; Sir Isaac Newton, English philoso pher and mathematician; Darwin, English naturalist; Jefferson, third president of U.8.; Oliver Wendell Holmes, orator and associate just ice of Supreme Court; Shake speare, English poet and drama tist; Dante, Italian poet. ASUO Cabinet (Continued front po</e one) Clark and Pacific colleges but pos sibly only two exchanges will take place this year. The assembly com mittee is in charge of all 1 o'clock Tuesday assemblies. Freshmen men's and wmt, ^ hall will have elected officers by Oct. 30. Merv Hampton, vice presi dent reported, in time to partici pate in the second class council meeting. Hampton said the first gathering of that group last week was successful. Oregon won its first football game in January, 1894. Score: Ore gon 44, Albany U. 2. Freshen up your Sweaters