Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 13, 1952)
Daily EMERALD , Volume LIII Fifty-third year of Publication IMVKKSITY OF OKKtiOV. KKiKNK, TfKSlIAV, MAV IS,' ifffff' M'MHKK 122 Warren Tells Ideas to Big Audience “7 ivarr If Gov. Earl Warren of Califor nia is elected president of the United States this year, he will , favor: A Republican party for all the people, regardless of race, creed, ' color, living site, or economic stat us. Recognition and fulfillment of ■ world obligations. * A forward-looking party. _ A reversal of the present trend toward centralisation of govern ' ment in Washington, D. C. * Eliminate Duplication « An elimination of unnecessary duplication and obsolesence in fed * eral organizations. Establishment of a rigid code of honor and publicity to eliminate present secrecy and corruption in government. Elimination of subversives from government through the Federal Bureau of Investigation. An administration operating within the framework of written law. Balancing the budget and elim ination of financial waste. And a modified universal mili tary training. Those were the chief policies em phasized by Warren in his assem bly talk and question period Mon day in the Student Union Ballroom before approximately 1700 per sons. Accompanied by .Journalists Warren was accompanied by a bevy of newspapermen (including i representatives of the New York Times, Chicago Daily Tribune, San Francisco Chronicle and Portland Journal l news reel and Television Columbia Broadcasting System cameramen, and his wife and two of his daughters, Virginia and Nina. Moving pictures were taken of portions of his talk, sections of the bulging audience and, after the as sembly, of the five students who asked questions in the limited ques tion period. John Tonack, president of the Oregon Young Republicans, pre sented Warren with a grecn-and yellow elephant, gave a duck to his wife, and a small elephant each Virginia and Nina. Serving his third term oh gov ernor of California wince he was flrrt elected in 1942, Warren as serted in his address that govern ment should support private enter prise and encourage competition. Businessmen should have the good will and help of government, he said, farmers should be aided in i avoiding disastrous cycles of: booms and busts, and workingmen j ought to have their fair shares of' security. “We want the unfortunate to be 1 eared for. We want everyone . . . , to have the same fair, honest con sideration he is entitled to by this j government.” Asked later how farm subsidies can be reconciled with dccentrali-1 zation, Warren said he didn't men-1 tion subsidies, and favored price support controls. It is not neces sary to have planned economy, ho •said. Against Centralization Turning to the ill- in govern ment which he said should be at tacked, Warren stated, "It is im perative that we keep right in our communities and states as much of the power of government as pos sible." He denied the belief that "all power, all wisdom, all good ness" is to be found in Washington. When we give up responsibility at home, we give up the oppor tunity to solve our own problems, he asserted. Such a situation could become an "inverted pyramid,” Warren said, with a few men try ( f’leasr turn In /mge s< vrn) Open Hearing Set In Election Muddle An open hearing on "the whole business'* of the contested { ASI O election—including the move hv the contestants to stop i' the installation of new ASIA) officers Wednesday night is f scheduled for 3 p.m. DST today in the law school.* I he hearing was set by the constitutional committee in a i meeting Monday afternoon. All litigants will he present. Men I Baritone Recital ; Slated Tonight Morris Beachy, baritone, will give a recital at 8 p.m. tonight in * the School of Music auditorium. He will be accompanied by Williams Woods, pianist. Beachy is a gradu . ate student in music. ' The program will consist of numbers by Handel, Duparc, Havel, * Wagner, Mahler, Barber, Friffes, i and Vaughn Williams. L The first group is Handel’s “Oh Sleep, Why Dost Thou Leave Me?’’, "Dank Sei Dir, Herr", and “■ "Aria di Radimisto" from Radi ~ misto. Then comes Duparc’s "L’ln ' vitation au Voyage’’ and Ravel’s * “Chanson Romanesque’’, "Chanson Epique”, and "Chason a Boire". Wagner’s “Die Frist ist Um" from the opera “The Flying Dutch man” is the third group, followed i by Mahler's “Rheinlegendchen— , “Das Schildwache Machthild", “Wo Die Schoenen Trompeten Blasen", . and "Das Irdische Leben”. I The last and fifth group is mod K ern—Barber’s "With Rue My P Heart Is Laden” and “The Queen’s J. Face on the Summery Coin”, Grif , fes ’“The Lament of Ian the Proud" and Vaughn Williams’ "I * Got Me Flowers” and “Antiphon.” k Bearcats Cancel * UO Assembly The University of Oregon ex <• change assembly which was to have been presented at Willamette University today has been cancel *• led, Andy Berwick, exchange as . sembly chairman, has announced. - The assembly was cancelled be * cause of conflict with a speaker, " Berwick said. At the present time - there is no plan to present the as sembly at Willamette at a later date, Berwick stated. - i .ampton, ASUO vice-president, ! said. What Kind of Action? He did not know, however, what might be accomplished in the hear ing; specifically, if action would be taken by the committee on either ; the petition contesting the elec tion of April 30 or the one request ing an injunction against the in 1 stallation Wednesday. The principals in the case are, as plaintiff, Bob Ridderbuach, and as | defendant, Hampton, who acted* as | chairman of the election commit tee which supervised the voting, i Ridderbusch is represented by law I school students Francis Linklatcr and Fred Kisser; Hampton by John Sabin and Lester Pederson. Legal Signers Others signing the notarized pe | tition contesting the election and | who, according to Hampton, may figure in the hearing, are James Mead, Leland C. Johnson, Richard C. Hansen, B. O. Maharajh, John A. Simmons and Ado Giles. Replying to the charges made in the petition, Hampton said that the ASUO ballot for president, vice president and senators-at-large did follow the regulations outlined by the senate. The Minutes Say . . . The minutes of senate meeting No. 18, at which time the ballot was discussed, state that "Mike Lally (Junior Class president) moved that the parties have pri ority in determining the order of the placement of candidates on the ASUO election ballot. Bill Frye (senator-at-large) made an amend ment to the motion which stated that the candidates’ names in each party’s preference of order be placed alphabetically in alternate positions on the ballot.” “This is the exact procedure that was used,” Hampton said. “The intent of the original motion concerning party priority is clear, however the phraseology of the amendment is somewhat lacking." Alphabetical and Alternating What the amendment meant, he said, was that the first choice of each party (ASUO presidential (Please turn tu page seven) Men's Store Offers Blood Drive Bonus To Every Donor Baxter and Henning, Eugene men's clothing stoic, is offering $10 credit towards the purchase of a suit from their store to every person who donates a pint of blood for the Hec| Cross blood drive on Wednesday. Arrangements for blood dona tions by students are under the di lection of Joan Walker, campus blood drive chairman. Each house is being asked to have at least three persons donate. Miss Walker reminds all stu dents that they eat no fatty food substances for a period of four hours before donating. Each organization is being as signed a specific time for donations and transportation will be avail able at the Kappa Alpha Theta house. The donations will be taken at the Masonic Temple on 10th and Olive. Asklepiad Initiates Collect for Cancer Newly tapped members of Askle pinds, pre-med honorary, will be collecting money this week for the honorary’s cancer fund, which is sent to the University of Oregon Medical School in Portland. Hoffman, Kefauver Assemblies Today ^ s |>i<>111 iinnl Republican F.isenhower campaigner and I)eni"cratic Senator Kefauver in two assemblies today. I ,l"l 1!ofiman, former head of the F.couomic Cooperation association on leave from the Ford Foundation and campaign ing for Ceil. Dwight I). F.isenhower for the C.OP nod, . ill peak at -I p.m. in the Student Union ballroom today And, at 8 p.m. in the ballroom Hon. Estes Kefauver (D.-Tenn. i will give an address in his own be half. One of Three Ike Men Hoffman, who has been mention ed by some as a possible Republi can candidate himself, is one of three Ike campaigners sent into Oregon to campaign for the su preme commander of allied Euro pean military powers. Others are , Gov. Sherman Adams of New Hampshire and .ltep. Hugh Scott : IR.-Penn.» A past member of such organiza tions as the Department of Com merce business advisory council, honorary chairman of the United j China Relief, and President Har ry Truman's committee on foreign ad, Hoffman resigned from the EC A in 194% to become president I of the Ford Foundation. He has also been president of the Sttidc bakcr corporation. Eisenhower vs. Taft Hoffman's candidate for presi dent, Gen. Eisenhower, is currently battling Sen. Robert A. Taft (Ohio) for the lead in state dele gates to the Republican convention in Chicago this July. Other de clared GOP contestants include California’s'Governor Earl Warren, who spoke here Monday, and Uni versity of Pennsylvania President Harold Stassen, who will give an ! address on campus Thursday night. | Kefauver is best known for his j senate committee's spectacular, ' lo!c vision-spotlighted in vest gat ion of ciime throughout the nation, with such notables as Frank Cos tello investigated. (ioing (jetting Tough The Tennessean, though a fresh - man senator, was a Congressman front 1939-1949. Sporting a coon •kinner! cap on h:s nationwide cam paign. Kefauver vaulted way ahead >f his competitors in early state primaries and covent ions, butis re ceiving stiff going from some of them now. ♦ ♦ ♦ Ten Delegates Picked for Ike By the United Press Ten of the candidates for Repub lican delegates from Oregon were selected for the Eisenhower camp by the Ike backers Monday. Under the dual Oregon primary system, delegate contestants may file by declaration for delegate from a district (eight will be se lected for the GOPi, for delegate at-large (ten), or may petition for cither spot. Those who file arc automatically pledged on the first national con vention ballot to support the date’s choice in the primary. Those who petition are unpledged. In order to combat the eight per sons (two for district and six at (Picisc turn to fayc six) Thousand Cadets Will March Today, Posthumous Award To Be Presented By Paul Keefe One thousand army and air force ROTC cadets will march in a pa rade review on Howe field at 1 p.m. (DST) today in honor of army and air force inspectors visiting the campus military department. The formal dress parade, includ ing the ROTC band, will be re viewed by members of the inspec tion teams and the permanent party staff. Col. Emory Bruns head of the University military de partment announced that all stu dents, faculty members anti towns people arc invited to observe the review. Silver Star Award During the ceremonies a posthu mous award will be made to Eldon C. Barton, former Oregon student, who was killed in action in Korea. The Silver Star, fourth .ranking United States military award, will He given for outstanding gallantry n action at Taeusan, Korea. Heorge S. Barton of Eugene, fath er of Pvt. Barton, will be given Lhe citation on behalf of his son. The army and air force drill Leams wil put on a short drill dem onstration. Cadet Colonel Bob Mas singill, senior in business, will be commander of troops and Cadet Uolonel Leo Nuttman, senior in ge ology and geography, will act as .loop adjutant. Two Inspection Teams Two separate ROTC inspection earns are on campus today com peting a check of the army and air orce ROTC units. The air force earn arrived last week-end from Hamilton air force base, Cal., and s composed of Col. Frank A. Flynn, Maj. Robert L. Nixon, Maj. Charles J. Maloney, and Warrant Officer Lester O. Gardner. The army team arrived from Oregon military district headquar tes in Vancouver, Wash., and is composed of Col. Gamble. Lt. Col. Norris, and Warrant Officer [vamp. .University KOTC Compared The inspection teams checked personnel of the military depart ment, inspected unit files, visited classes and inspected individual cadets. Their findings will be used for comparison and rating of the Oregon military department and other colleges and universities. The teams will visit William Jones, dean of administration, Tuesday morning and look over the facilities of the campus under the direction of Col. Bruns and Lt. Cot. John Cunningham, head of the army ROTC unit.