Huskies Satun „y . . . Ducks In second meet Washington In impn lant game. See page 4. n Daily EMERALD VOLUME LIV Fifty-fourth year of Publication UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1953 No More Snow . . . • . . was the prediction for today by the United States weather bureau. The forecast for today is partly cloudy with some showers. The high temperature Tuesday was 49 with a low of 35. Expected high today is 45 with a low of. 35. NUMBER 7B 'MUSIC TO PLEASE' Stan Kenton Plays At Armory Thursday Music to please both Jazz fans and concert audiences is the aim of Btan Kenton, nationally known band leader, who will appear at the Eugene Armory. Thursday at 8 p.m. Women’s closing hours Thursday evening have been extended to mid night by th$ office of student affairs to allow more students to attend the concert.’All women not on scholastic probation will be eligible for the late closing hours. 1 rogram for the Kenton concert will be divided into two parts: con cert from 8 to 0:30 p.m. and danc ing from then until 1 a.m. The 20 member band is appearing here under the sponsorship of Van Ton kin tours. A special student section in the balcony with reduced rates will be provided for students. An extra charge will be made for dancing. Exact admission charges will not be announced until advance agents for the band arrive in Eugene Wednesday evening. Kenton, who makes his third appearance here in three years Thursday, will have a new group of musicians with him for the con cert. A featured member of his band is Lee Conitz on the alto saxophone. Visitors Banned From Infirmary Visitors will not be allowed in the student infirmary, according to Dr. F. N. Miller, director of the student health service. This re striction will go into effect immed iately and continue until further notice. At present there are 19 patients in the infirmary, all suffering from influenza and allied respiratory ail ments. Capacity of the hospital is twenty-six. The contagious nature of these diseases necessitates the isolation precautions. New patients have been asked to 1 check into the infirmary between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. daily. Co-opera tion in this matter will be of great help to the infirmary staff, said Dr. Miller. UO Speech Squads Speak at Schools The University symposium squad will travel to Tillamook to day to discuss how to combat the “communist menace” in this country, Herman Cohen, director of forensics, has announced. Speakers making the trip in clude Pat Adkisson, sophomore in English, Liz Collins, sophomore in liberal arts, and Forbes Hill, grad uate in speech. They will speak before Tilla mook High school assembly, the Tillamook Kiwanis club and Amity High school. An exhibition debate by the University debaters is scheduled at Junction City High school Thursday morning at 9:30, Cohen said. Participating will be the team of Phil Cass, freshman in pre-law, and Don Mickelwait, sophomore in pre-law, opposing Loretta Mason, freshman in speech, and Elsie Schiller, junior in journalism. They will discuss the question of fair employment legislation on the federal level. Recital Planned By UO Faculty Four members of the school of music faculty will be featured in a 1 faculty chamber music recital1 Thursday at 8:15 p.m. in the music .school auditorium in conjunction with the Festival of Contemporary Arts. The recital will include four numbers “Sonata for Two Pianos" by William Pijper, played by George Hopkins, professor of pi ano, and William Woods, instruc tor in piano; “Phantasy for Violin" by Arnold Schoenberg, played by George Boughton, associate profes sor of violin; “Kubiniana,” a piano1 suite by Hans Erich Apostel, play ed by Woods; and “Three Poems of Mallarme" for soprano and cham ber ensemble by Maurice Ravel, sung by Exine Anderson, assistant professor of music. Boughton will be accompanied - on the piano by Larry Maves, jun ior in music, and Miss Anderson will be accompanied by an ensem ble composed of nine students and faculty members. Moll to Discuss Modern Poetry Tonight in S. U. Australian-Born Poet Views Modern Works E. G. Moll, professor of English, will “light the flares" on modem poetry and its basic characteristics when he discusses "Poetry as Contemporary Art” in tonight's 7:30 browsing room lecture. Representing the field of poetry in the Festival of Contemporary Arts, Moll will attempt to catch the “spirit and purpose” behind the works of recent poets. “I will point out the chief ways in which the modem poet departs from the rock-bed foundations laid by the earlier versifiers,” he said. Moll will probe the works of several minor poets including Empson, Brinnin and Auden in order to “show what the modern poet is attempting” and how the recent verse-makers use imagery to “give airy nothing a local hab itation and a name . . .” I will not emphasize the work of any one poet, he stated, but will attempt to give a bird's eye view of the whole field of modern poetry. Moll will direct his remarks to a “general audience,” avoiding the more technical aspects of poetry. Hoyt Trowbridge, professor of English, will be discussion leader for the session. LUCE FEATURED 7th Allen Talk Set The seventh annual Eric W. Allen Memorial lecture, to be de livered at the Oregon Press Con ference Friday by Henry R. Luce, editor-in-chief of Time, Inc., is giv en as the result of an association formed “ . . in honor of a newspap erman who also was a great teach er of newspapermen.” Eric W. Allen was the founder of the school of journalism at the University of Oregon. From 1912, when he founded the school, until his death in 1944, he gave to hundreds of journalism students an appreciation of the practical demands of journalism, a sense of the importance of being fully in Lobbyist to Talk At Osburn Hotel Sponsored by the University of Oregon Young Republicans, Ray mond Colter, lobbyist for the League of Oregon Cities, will speak tonight at 7:30 in the Os burn hotel. Colter will discuss general leg islative procedures, including cur rent measures before the state legislature. A question and answer period will follow the speech. All students and townspeople are invited, according to Bruce Holt, president of the sponsoring group. formed, and a solid respect lor ethics and ideals. Fund Started A year after his death the Ore gon Newspaper Publishers as sociation set up the Eric W. Allen Memorial fund. The general goal was to undertake any project that would have positive, practical (Please turn to fage tzeo) Pat Ruan to Head Red Cross Drive Pat Ruan, junior in English, will serve as general chairman of the annual Red Cross membership drive, the Red Cross board has announced. - __ Other chairmen selected to as sist in the drive to be held the last part of February include: I Cynthia Long, freshman in bus iness, general secretary; Marilyn Call, freshman in liberal arts, Rhoda Wolfe, freshman in liberal arts, and Janet Bell, junior in English, promotion. A group of student entertainers will go to Roseburg on Sunday to present a program at the Veterans’ Memorial hospital. Included in the program are: Spencer Snow, freshman in liberal arts, master of ceremonies and guitarist; Diana Starr, freshman in liberal arts, singer; Sharon Moran, freshman in speech; pantomimer, and Ro berta Hackworth, freshman in English, tap dancer. Prof Blasts Oaths; Calls Objectional “Negative loyalty oaths are like a disease. After you once take one, they get worse,” said Charles G. Howard, professor of law, in his address Tuesday in the Student Union dad's lounge. Howard, speaking on “Loyalty Oaths and Academic Freedom," said that there are two kinds of loyalty oaths. The first, an oath of allegiance, should be taken "by anyone living off the taxpayers’ money,” he admonished. This type of oath is simply a promise to uphold the constitu Direct Mail Ads Sell, Bells Says “I never read it—it goes in the wastebasket.” Anyone using di ; rect mail advertising should ig nore that objection, a Portland ad vertising man told an audience j Tuesday night in the Student : Union Dads' lounge. The speaker, Milton Bell, said | direct mail is effective even if it brings results in a small percent age of cases. He gave a graphic visual dem onstration of direct mail advertis ing principles, using a poster board to illustrate his points. One Tool “Direct mail is one more tool I use in selling. You want peo ple to react with orders.” The more you know about your prod j uct and your market, the better ; you do,” the stocky, greying advertising executive said. Testing results is the only way to tell how effective direct mail | advertising is, Bell said. Persis tence is the key to success in di rect mail campaigns, he declared. Bell listed four main advantages of direct mail: (1) It fits any budget. (2) It goes direct to the indi vidaul customer. (3) It is versatile. (4) The advertiser can get help from experts in preparing it. A Vital Element A good mailing list is a vital element in direct mail advertis ing, Bell said. —“You can’t sell garden tools to an apartment dweller.” He listed five questions for an advertiser to answer when he has a good mailing list: 1) What is the ad’s objective? (2) How many mailings will be needed ? (3) What type of piece will be used? (4) What is the main sales ap peal ? (5) What is a practical expen diture ? Ed Placek and Bob Hoeppner won first and second door prizes respectively. Placek’s was a ball point pen, donated by Shelton Turnbull-Fuller. tion and certain principles of a particular organization, the pro fessor explained. Negative Type It is the “negative type oaths that make you swear you’ve never been or done something” that are found objectionable and unconsti tutional, he said. The constitution is violated in three ways by these oaths, Howard said. They are bills of attainder, ex post facto laws and are self incriminating, he asserted. Stating that such oaths are the first step toward totalitarianism, Howard added that this “purging of oneself to be safe in the future” leads to perjury. Indoor Sport “Our great indoor sport of to day Howard said of the current perjury trials. So far, said Howard, Oregon ed ucators have avoided these unde sirable oaths. Academic freedom is not, how ever, a reward or a special priv ilege. It is an extension of all freedoms of the individual into in stitutions of higher learning, the law professor said. Academic freedom, he said, is the right of a scientist to discov er a cure for a disease. “It’s a climate or atmosphere.” The discussion was sponsored by the YWCA public affairs commis sion. Two Universities Win Speech Meet Linfield college and Willamette university shared first place hon ors in the annual state contest in oratory and fireside discussion held on campus Tuesday. The com petitive events in speech are spon sored by the Intercollegiate Foren sic association of Oregon. Paul Little, Linfield, took first place in oratory with a speech entitled “The Great Design.” Sec ond place went to James Wood, Willamette, and Kirby Brumfield, Oregon state, placed third. First place in the fireside dis cussion was awarded to Thomas Schiedel, Willamette. Alfred Cave, Linfield, took second place and Pat Adkisson, sophomore in Eng lish from Oregon, won third. AWS Fashion Show To Be Held Friday Bridal gowns and trousseau clothes will be modeled during the AWS-sponsored bridal fash ion show Friday at 4 p.m. in the Student Union ballroom. A feature of Women’s Day, the show is under the chairman ship of Sharon Brown, sopho more in art. Clothes will be furnished by Hart Larson’s. What Do You Think... ... of Student Government? Bill Frye, senior in journalism, said: “It is interesting, beneficial and worth while to the student body. If there is any problem that is in student government, it lies with those who make student government function.”