The Nation and the World Sergeant Accused Of Selling Secrets Compiled by Andy Salmins Km*-raid Assistant Wire Editor r AI ’) A Far Fast- Air Forces staff sergeant was charged Monday in Tokyo with conspiring to sell secret military infor mation to the enemy, lie was identified as C.iuscppe Casein of Tucson, At'iz. The sergeant has been charged on sixteen counts with accept ing military payment certificates from a Korean civilian, and the Air Force said Monday night that the sergeant received secret data from staff sergeant John ]’. Jones of the headquarters squadron. The Air' Force doctors have declared Jones insane and no ‘barge has been made against him. The maximum penalty fac ing Cascio is life imprisonment. /Weaf Price Ceilings Off (/V) Monday expired the dead line .set by the boss of the Office of Price Stabilization, Tighe Woods, on action or explanation by his cx fpert.s on a roll back of retail meat 'prices. Woods told his staff last week: "either write out the order 1 ('I tell me why it can’t be done." Tiie experts answered Monday that they were not ready to do either thing and asked for a two day extension of the dead line to have more time to study f reports. A few hours later the OPS lifted ‘4he e< ilings on wholesale pork i rices, which action was followed (shortly by an announcement from Wood.;, government price stabilizer for the last three months, that he v.il! resign at the end of the month. » * » Tax Cuts May Wait Says Taft UP' Sen. Robert A. Taft said Monday in Columbus. Ohio, that .lepublicans probably will not cut faxes at once. ‘‘It isn't desirable," lie com mented, “to balance the. budget before reducing taxes." He add ed that congress could cut about right million In taxes by letting a number of special tax meas , ires die next June. ■Taft said that the measures he ■ fis referring to were taxes on ex %s profits, excess income and bergeney excise taxes. ,rr_:___ j n *tab Man Added 6 Ike's Cabinet I/P) Another westerner was | tried to Eisenhower’s cabinet ; jnday, when the president-elect | jKed Ezra Taft Benson, original of Idaho, now of Utah, to be treUiry of agriculture. Benson was a political backer Senator Taft and he told the eporters that his great-great fandniother was a Taft. Season said also that he goner- j y, tgrees witli the Republican -fii plank and promised that in j t ', cabinet job he will "Do my \ God being my helper.” ofo Schedule ing organizations to have ip and retake Oregana pie taken today are Phi Delta , University house and Alpha, ia, Sigma and Merrick halls, dents ean have pictures tak Kej'.neil-Ellis any time from . to 5 p.m., Jody Greer, Ore associate editor, announced, rceups and retakes will re al'ter the Thanksgiving vaca Vliss Greer stated. Book Review (C ontinued from pa/jc one) which Inc ardent fan has already read. The ten writers in this new volume read hke a who's who of the best SF authors, including Bradbury, Asimov. Neville, Cart mill, Van Vogt and Boucher. The aim of the anthology was to cover in new and unusual man ners all the standard themes, such as time travel, cybernetics, symbiosis, as well as the prob lems of sociology, economics, pol itics and wars of the future. This purpose was comprehensively, if extremely unevenly, achieved. From Sensitive to Stupid The stories range all the way from Kris Neville's beautifully written and sensitive "Bettyann” to the forced and stupid satire of Fenton and Pet-acca, who are Grade B screen writers, not sci ence fiction men. What their story, "Tolliver's Travels” is do ing in a book purporting to be good SF is beyond us. There are a couple of other highly question able items in the collection also, but the rest make up for them. "Bettyann" is the story of a girlhood through the eyes of a super-human, a girl from a race of space wanderers who does not realize that she is not of earth. When she finally realizes her identity and is able to forsake her assumed body, to go wander ing with her people through spate, the ties of earth and her family call her back. A welcome charge from the usual super mutant who finds no use for hu manity. Old Theme A. E. Van Vogt's story "Ful fillment” concerns an old theme, the computing machine which finds itself in the position of Des cartes "I think, therefore I am." This machine's thoughts extend to the conquering of the world It makes a fine story. “B plus M” Planet 4” by Ger ald Heard and "In a Good Cause" by Isaac Asimov take up the wide field of solving the world's future sociological and political 'prob lems. The first story does it with i a symbiotic paiiing of the plants, j the bees, and man, borrowed ! from Mars. The second, and the better story, unifies man's solar system through the threat of j outer-Galactic invasion. It also poses a question when the unifi- I cation is achieved, not by the i visionary idealist, but by politi- * cal chicanery. “The end justifies the men ns" seems to be the con clusion. On the whole, “New Tales of Space and Time” will stimulate the old .Sk fan, and should gain a wider audience from among the uninitiated. Veterans' Loan (/P) Veterans of the armed for ces who have served since the out break of the Korean War are eli gible for a second guaranteed loan to buy homes and farms, the Vet- j erans Administration said Monday. Campus Calendar Noon French Table 1J0SU Theater Exec Bel 1I1SU 1:00 Thanksgiving Aably Ballrm SU 4:00 Whiakerino Pmtn 215 SU Hoap & Ins Comm 112 SU Directorate 302 SU Pracxidens U3SU 4:30 Whiakerino 313 SU 0:00 I I E Rep 313 SU 0:30 Prelude Rehearsal Ballrm SU Betty Coed-Joe College 111 SU Scabbard & Blade 1I3SU 7:00 IVCF 333 SU Christian Sci 1st FI fieri Delta Nu Alpha 315 SU 7:30 Pay Club 214 SU Mu Phi 114 SU 3:1.7 String Quartet 2nd FI Gerl Chairmen Sought By Red Cross Ke<] Gross board petitions for' chairmen of the campus blood drive, disaster group, special events and Roseburg trips are due next Wednesday, Dec. 3, Joan Walker, ; Red Gross board chairman, has an nounced. Petitions should be turned in to Miss Walker at Kappa Alpha Theta. Special events will include the I proposed ski safety program and cabinet meetings with the Oregon State board. Blood drive chairmen will handle the campus blood drive to be held winter term. One of the main emphasis of the disaster chairman will be fire pre vention, with the stress on campus living organizations. Roseburg chairmen will send Christmas presents to the Rose burg veterans’ hospital, provide entertainment for the hospital and meet veterans when they come to Oregon athletic contests. Two chairmen will be selected for Rose burg trips. A new project of the board this year is checking that all students taking water safety and first aid classes receive their first aid cer tificates, Miss Walker stated. 'Brigadoon' Cast Selections in Dec. Tryodts for “Brigadoon,” the University theater’s musical pro duction, will be held Dec. 2 at 7:30 p.m. in the music school aud itoi ium, instead of Dec. 7, as was erroneously stated in the Emerald. r— Groucho Marx to Appear in SU Dec. 2 c»roucno Marx, star of NBC’s radio and television show “You Bet Vour Life,” will appear on the campus Dec. 2 at 1 p.m. under the auspices of the University assem bly committee. Admission to the event, v/hich will be held in the Student Union ballroom, is by ticket only. All tickets are pone and the ballroom seating capacity of 1,200 cannot be exceeded according to Dick Wil liams, director of the Student Un ion. Those who gave blood during the Red Cross blood drive held earlier in the term were recipients of the first tickets. The rest of the ticket holders were chosen by lot from those who submitted their names to the assembly committee. Marx began his career as a boy soprano with a Gus Edwards troupe in 190G. At the time he was only ten years old. Soon after wards he was featured in a trio of singers organized by his moth er. L«ater his brother Harpo join ed the act, and after many re visions the famous Marx Broth ers developed as a team. A DEBONAIR in the Service Graduating KOTC seniors! A % military officer is always oat- “ standing in a CUSTOMITJ TAILORED uniform. Details in <•'' contour, style and fit are the magic of his appearance. SPECIAL PRICES NOW! 1 Air Force-Army customed tailored uniforms. • Wherrie Clothes J Avon I'ark Clothes /■<, % Q>ie