Mostly Cloudy . . . • . . with scattered showers is the weather forecast for today. High today will be 50 degrees with a low Of 37, according to the United States Weather bureau. NUMBER 75 I TITLES GIVEN Oratory, Discussion Contests Held Today Contests for Oregon college titles in oratory and fireside dis cussion will be held on campus today, Herman Cohen, director of forensics, has announced. The competitive speech confer ence is held annually under the sponsorship of the Inter-collegiate Forensic association of Oregon. It is one of a series held through Prep IR League Sets Conference High school students from Ore gon will -meet on campus for the sixth annual conference of the j Oregon High School International ■ Relations league Feb. 20 through 28. General topic will be "The De velopment of the Underdeveloped Areas." Principal speakers at the con i ference will be Niharranjan Ray, chairman of the department of art and culture of the University -of Calcutta, India, and E. J. Bell, director of the Oregon State Wheat commission and a member of the board of consultants to the state department on the agricultural ] ha -e of the Point Four program. The. conference has been set up in a seiies of roundtables for dis cussion, according to Charles Schleicher, professor of political science and secretary of the Ore gon Education association’s In ternational Relations league. The league, composed of Inter ne lioi.al Relations clubs in the f~ te high schools, is co-sponsor of the conference with the Uni versity. t nfereaCe delegates will be bur. • 1 on campus. Freshman Girl Pledged Patricia Liuer, freshman in mu sic, was pledged Monday morning by Alpha DMta Pi, according to Margaret L. Kopp, Student Af fair® office secretary. the year in which state honors in individual speaking events are awarded. Open to Public The oratory contest, open to the public, will be held at 3 p.m. in Villard 102, The fireside discus sion is scheduled for 7 p.m. in the living room of the Sigma Alpha Mu house. Judges will be the fo rensic coaches from the partici pating schools. The subject for oratory will be “World Peace." Speakers entered in the event include: James Wood, Willamette, “The Reality of Peace"; Thomas Goldsmith, Lewis and Clark, “The Peace Tradition”; Paul Little, Linfield, “The Great Design"; Kirby Brumfield, Ore gon State, “Two Down, One to Go.” Fireside Talks The fireside discussion on the state of the nation is being ini tiated in state competition this year. Speakers deliver extempo raneous speeches in a panel dis cussion on the main topic. Entries include: Donald Berg strom, University of Portland; Al fred Cave, Linfield; Allen Thomp son, Lewis and Clark; Thomas Scheidel, Willamette; Pat Adkis son, sophomore in English, Uni versity of Oregon. Rectangular Holes Do Have Purpose The rectangular holes recently dug around campus do have a purpose according to I. I. \\ right, head of the physical plant. Wooden markers with re cessed aluminum letters will he installed in front of each cam pus building as soon as weather permits. Cement forms have been laid for the signs, which will be about 12 by 24 inches in size and supported by a steel post sunk in concrete. Midnight Closing Hours Set For Kenton Concert Thursday ■ m STAX KEXTOX To play Thursday night Milton Bell to Speak On 'Direct Mail' Tonight Milton Bell, Portland adver tising executive, will speak tonight in the Student Union at 7:30 p.m. on "Direct Mail." Following the talk, students will be able to visit informally with the speaker and other advertising men . An authority on direct mail ad vertising, Bell is a member of Abbot. Kerns and Bell, Portland lithographers and printers. His ap pearance on the campus coincides j with “Advertising Recognition Week," being observed nationally this week for the first time since its origin on the west coast four years ago. Bell will bring with him a dis play of direct mail materials. Re cently the national winners in the foster interest in advertising, association competition were on display in the school of journal ism. Band to Perforin In Local Armory \\ omen’s closing- hours for those attending the Stan Kent on concert Thursday evening will be extended until midnight^ according to an announcement is sued Monday by the office of stu dent affairs. All women except those on scholastic probation will be eligible for the extended hours. Sponsored by the Van Tonkin tours, the 25-member band will play from 8 p.m. until 1 a.m. at the Eugene Armory. The program will be in two parts, with the con cert portion ending at 9:30 p.m. and dancing following. Reduced Student Rates Reduced rates for students will be in effect, provided they sit in the balcony during the concert. There will be an extra charge for dancing. Kenton last appeared in Eugene at the opening of the Arena ball room during the fall term of 1951. Early in 1950 he presented a pro gressive music concert under the sponsorship of the University at McArthur court. For this appear ance Kenton will have an all new band which includes musicians like Lee Conitz on the alto-saxo phone. Last year vocalist June Christy appeared with the band. Flanked by Downbeat magazine as the top band in the nation, Stan Kenton has been referred to as "the savior of American music.” He features a loose, modern jazz with emphasis on section work rather than on soloists. However, in a recent record release of “Pro ! logue,” he introduces members of ; the group, tells something about them, and then they play solos. Two Audiences Kenton is now aiming his music at two different audiences. For one he plays jazz, complete with ‘‘atomic blasts softened with lan guid music,” and for the other he plays concert music. According to Kenton, his band has gone be yond his own technical knowledge in its use of the complexities of modern orchestration. POOR BOY MAKES FORTUNE Luce, Minister's Son, Now Journalistic Giant Henry R. Luce, who will speak at a University assembly Friday at 12:45 p.m., is known as one of the magazine world’s foremost - publishers. As editor-in-chief of Time, Inc., a 5130,000,000 corporation, Luce heads such well known publica tions as Time, Life, Fortune and House & Home. Luce was born April 3, 1898 at . Tengchow, in the Shantung Prov ince of China. His father was a Presbyterian missionary. Meets Hadden At the age of 14 he set out alone for America. Arriving in this country he enrolled at Hotchkiss school at Lakeville, Conn., on a scholarship. While there, Luce met Briton Hadden; the two at tended Yale together and later became the co-founders of Time magazine. Hadden died in 1929, six years after the founding of Time, and Luce carried on the enterprise. A ~ -- year after Hadden’s death For tune was officially launched. It was followed by a number of smaller publications and finally Life magazine. Time’s various publications have a combined circulation of seven million. They wield a tremendous influence in nearly every phase What Do You Think... ... of Student Government? Linda Muhr—freshman in liberal arts, said: “In general, I think the senate is an excellent body for students to represent the student voice and campus policy-making. But I have heard that one of the major class Officers has shown up at less than half the senate meetings. Is this really student rep resentation.” of American life, according to Kenneth Stewart, of the New York university jounalism depart ment, in his book, “Makers of Modern Journalism.” Time magazine soon became known for its style, which utilized cumulative descriptive adjectives like eagle-eyed, lantern-jawed; telescoped words like cinemactress and reverse word order. Hadden was the chief architect of the much-imitated “Time style.” • Time’s Philosophy “No article will be written to prove any special case,” Time’s first promotion said. “But the ed itors recognize that complete neu trality on public questions and im portant news is probably as unde sirable as it is impossible, and are therefore ready to acknowledge certain prejudices which may in varying measure predetermine their opinions on the news.” This credo has apparently been followed faithfully, and has pro duced a wide variance of opinion as to whether its influence is good or bad. Life, which appeared in Novem ber, 1936, was first to develop the reporter-photographer through its extensive use of picture stories combined with printed text. In the summer of 1952, Life took an un precedented step when it published the full text of Ernest Heming way’s novel, “The Old Man and the Sea.”