• The Nation and the World... Eke, Truman Schedule Washington Confab Compiled by Valera Vierra Emerald Assistant Win* Editor ,-7>) The Eisenhower-Truman conference at the White House will be1 >-ld next Tuesday afternoon at 2 p.m. (KST), it was announced Wed-1 n. day. It is one day later than the date tentatively arranged in the oi inn! exchange between the president and the president elect. * ''"fore the White House session, Eisenhower has scheduled a meeting . W|,h Thomas Dewey, governor of New York. The talk will cover Eiscn tie. er's intended trip to Korea. Dewey will stop at Eisenhower's vara I ^i"n headquarters in Augusta, Georgia, Friday afternoon enroute to his l" own vacation in Florida. ♦ ♦ * Successor to Lie under Debate I* |,T’i The potentially explosive subject of naming a successor to t'i‘.tecl Nations' Secretary-General *'J igve Lie is headed toward open *h ussion in the general assembly, „f,n the U.N. steering committee’s unanimous recommendation. * Some delegates feel the solution I- to the problem is simply to per j-i ‘de Lie to change his mind and I stay on. Lie’s aides insist that he rwants to get out and that he is •“fed up” with ail the problems fac I ing him. » • * -5outh Africa i-Paces Crisis " i.f’i British Commonwealth of '•ficials predict that South Africa’s appeal court will rule that Premier Daniel Malan’s high court of par i Jiament is illegal. The high court Wtl set up to re-enact a white su premacy race law tossed out by tin ordinary courts. South Africa ^tnay be plunged into a new and c-r crisis if the officials are ) ;lit. The nation already is torn "Ly iace rioting. Ti UN debate South Africa tried I ■ block the discussion of racial ffii e growing out of its white sti ff etc y policy. The South African an. if-sador said it was his coun ! try business alone, and the UN •was not competent to deal with it. Jfhcre seemed, however, little .Cha e that South Africa could get i Hie issue tossed out on those j'grounds. * * * Dodge, Starts Work On Future Budget i.T’- D e t i’ o i t banker, Joseph j podge, Eisenhower's representa tive in the budget bureau, has be g gun work in Washington. Dodge flakes it plain that he is just an (Observer, gathering information to ^help Eisenhower make up his mind about next year’s budget, r * Hr says he will not try to give ?any advice and will accept no re Pspc ability fer the budget Presi *dcnt Truman will present to Con gi-i a just before he leaves office. i*T * * * p Bricker Disturbed [By H-bomb Reports T i.'l’t Senator John Bricker of rOh • said Wednesday, he was dis | Ini ' • 1 by a series of reported eye •Aviln-ss accounts of an H-bomb 1 exp!" ion, and will seek an official explanation of the security angles involved. Bricker is a member of the Sen i ate-House Atomic energy commit ter which keeps watch on the atomic program. He told a reporter in a telephone interview he is colu mn to Washington next week and will call for an explanation then. The series of reports, none of them giving names of witnesses, were to the effect that the first American Jiydrogen bomb has been set off, in the mid-Pacific. Bricker com -men’ed that these accounts may indicate that there was a slipup in enforcing security regulations. OOV. THOMAS K. DEWEY To Confer with Ike Casualties Rise; Koreans Attack (A*)-Casualties in Korea in creased by 1,318 this past week, the biggest increase in dead, wounded and missing in a full year. Included in this week’s total were 206 men killed in action. South Korean forces have made n—The first day of parole hearings at ITie Northeastern peni tentiary in Pennsylvania has ended without the case of Alger Hiss be ing reached. It will be late Friday before his application for release on parole is reached. Hiss is the former State department official serving a five year sentence for perjury. He’ll be eligible for pa :'olc on Nov. 21. Campus Calendar 10:80 Kdue. Plang Comm 110,SIT Noon Kiddie Korn lll.SU Drama Staff 112 SU 1:00 YMCA Cabt 318 SU '1:00 Scholarship Chrm III SU AWS Congress 213 SU 6:30 Phi Beta 315 SU Program Staff 214 SU ( hi Delta Phi 334 SU Whlskerino Comm II0SU Young ftepubs 838 SU 7:50 Uni O 3rd FI Gerl Chess Club 112SU Readings Highlight Robinson's Lecture (Continued from parjc one) warn their daughters about, and the scene of cockfights, gambling, ami illicit love making, Robinson said. Kssential Art “This Property is Condemned”, a short one act play which Rob inson presented in its entirety, is a summarization of the Moonlake philosophy and represents, more completely than any of his other plays, the essential art of Tennes see Wililams, he said. "The guarded and faded gentil ity of a Southern woman faced by the realiaztion that her dream world no longer exists and the un requited love of these women are also interwoven themes of the playwright’s best known works,” Robinson continued. “Those who demand a greater variation and wider breadth in the themes of his works will have to wait until deep er experiences of living give Wil liams the.se qualities.” Wililams, Robinson said, faces insecurity when he attempts to create characters outside of those who existed in his own youth. He may be afraid to go further until maturity broadens his own experi ence. Yet Williams continues to create "new masterpieces” with variations on these themes and by lepeating with reverent regularity the lovely names of the old South, including Moonlake casino, Robin son said. Cautions Critics “The blame of the critics, who have been cautious in evaluating this author, may in actuality be the virtue of Williams' plays,” he declared. Robinson referred to the fact that Williams bases his writ ings almost entirely on events and characters out.of his own past. He pointed out that Williams' family, including the playwright, is vividly represented in the charac terization of “The Glass Menag erie.” “I like Tennessee Williams,” Robinson stated, “despite the fact that he sometimes seems occupied with sex and decadence. That is his own problem. We can only evalu ate what he has written.” Robinson named Williams as the author for which the 20th Century may well be remembered. Williams has already eclipsed his contempo raries including Sherwood Ander son and Eugene O’Neli. \ Surpassing O’Neil “Although there might never have been a Tennessee Williams without an O’Neil, he is now sur passing 'the old master,” he main tained. The playwright's inexperience in the theater is offset by his dra matic imagination, Robinson said. He listed the success elements of Williams best known plays as the strength of action, the brilliant color lent to the staging effect, and the obligatto of contrasting sounds offstage which did a poignant qual ity to the presentation. The readings for the evening in cluded excerpts from “Streetcar Named Desire,” “Summer and Smoke,” and “The Glass Menag erie.” Robinson also presented li descriptive biography of the play wright. Loyalty Oaths Feared Freedom Threat By UO Law School Professor Howard Charles G. Howard, professor of law, told the Springfield Realty board Tuesday that academic free dom is threatened by "loyalty” oaths. He told the group that theer are two types of oaths: oaths of alle giance and “negative” oaths of loy alty. * • The taking of loyalty oaths solves no problems and reduces the citizen’s respect for self and oth ers, he said. The oath of allegiance is required of public officials and is just, and should be required from all officials to attest thejr loyalty to America, Howard believes. He cited instances of Commu nists taking oaths of loyalty and lying in taking them to .support Spanish Teachers To Meet Saturday The Oregon chapter meeting of the American Association of Teachers of Spanish will be attend ed by five University professors when it convenes in Portland Sat urday. Attending Trom Oregon will be L. O. Wright, professor of Ro mance languages; P. J. Powers, as sistant professor of Romance lan guages; Loretta Wawrzniak, in structor in Romance languages; J. D. Devine, instructor in Romance languages, and D. M. Dougherty, head of the department of foreign languages. Speaker at the meeting will be A. Vargas-Baron from the Univer sity of Washington and a former staff member of Oregon's depart ment of foreign languages. Dougherty is president of the Oregon Chapter of the association. Deadline Listed For Submissions In Essay Contest Students interested in entering the essay contest sponsored by the Peter Pauper Press, publishers of classic literature, must declare their intent to participate be fore Dec. 1. Contestants may sign up. and obtain contest rules from Bernice Rise in the Student Union browsing room. Completed essays will not be due until May 1. Tito's Chief Helper Loses Wife, Position (AP)—For want cf a wife a job has been lost. Last Wednesday. Marshall Ti to's chief helper. Secretary Gen eral Djuric cried out in the Yu goslav party congress that the president of Serbia has stolen his wife. The congress promptly kicked out the injured husband. A few days later he was re moved from the chairmanship of the Yugoslav Reserve Officers association, and then the Com munist party bounced him. Monday it was announced that Djuric had lost his government 'job all because of his wife. his point that loyalty will never be assured by a person’s saying he will be loyal. A proposal to introduce the loy alty oath as requirement for offi cials in public education was de feated in the last legislature, he said, but warned that further at tempts might be made to pass the measure. YW to Sponsor Autumn Fireside The November fireside for all sophomore women is slated Tues day at Delta Gamma from 6:15 to 7:30 p.m. The fireside, sponsor ed by the Y, is the last one sched uled until January. Tickets for the fireside are 10 cents and are on sale now in the houses by Y representatives. They will also be sold at the door. Highlight of Tuesday’s fireside will be a brief explanation of stu dent politics on campus by Helen Jackson Frye, ASUO vice presi dent. Cards and refreshments are planned for the hour. Co-hosteses with Delta Gamma for the fireside are Delta Delta Delta, Delta Zeta and Alpha Gam ma Delta. World Fellowship Coffee Hour Theme A discussion-refreshment hour in honor of World Fellowship week will te held at 4 p.m. today at the YW headquarters in Gerlinger. Sponsored by the freshmen i V, CA international affairs com mission. the discussion will center mound world fellowship and its meaning. Foreign students are to attend to add their views to the discussion. Committees for the event are Donna Fisher, refreshments; Jean Owens, foreign student contact, and Germaine La Marsh, program. Dr. Leland A. Huff Optometrist 43 W. 8th Ave. Ph. 5-3525 For the Best in fish and seafoods Call 4-2371 NEWMAN'S FSSH MARKET Fresh, frozen and canned fish and seafoods 39 East Broadway COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR O Minor Adjustments © Complete Overhauls Guaranteed Workmanship • Loan Car • Pickup Service Dependable Auto Service (New Management) 905 1st Ave West Phone 4-0107.