Hitter Declares Germany's Hope (Lies in Armed and United Europe The only hope for Western Ger ;nny is a united Europe a unit ed, armed Kurope which includes I'estern Germany, emphasized lerhard Hitter, prof esse r at the Iniversity of Freiburg, at a Slu licnt Union coffee hour Tuesday. He asserted that no negotiations mid be carried on by the West ern German government with Rus lor German unity. West Ger Hiy is too small and weak to be to bargain with Russia, Ritter plained. Only as part of a Euro lan union could Western Gor an make any impression on iissia. Hitter is the author of numerous books on the Reformation, Renais sance and Germany, and his writ den biographical works on Luther, LFrtderick the Great, the Iron l-hanccllor Bismarck and others. , present project, a history of | lie resistance against Nazism, lises out of his own resistance work during Hitler’s regime. From January 1044 to the liberation in 1945, the Doctor was imprisoned by the Nazis as a political cr im inal. Neo-nazism, as Dr. Ritter sees it, has its main attraction to ex soldiers who feel that the "soldier’s honor,’’ besmirched by the Allied victory, must be repaired. But he saw hope that a new German army, integrated with the Euro pean Defense community, would cause this sentiment to fade away, and thus the threat of a rebirth of Nazism would be cut short. A short, gray-haired man, Ritter speaks English with a soft, but marked German accent, occasion ally lapsing into his native tongue for a difficult word or phrase. His talks on campus and in Eugene have covered such subjects as the roots of National Socialism, Lu ther and Germany today, the po ortland U Wins First iir ROTC Drill Event Drill competition for schools in “the Oregon state area with an Air .Force KOTO program was initiat ed at McArthur Court Tuesday ^ptcrnoon. The competitive pro rum is planned as an annual vent, Maj. N. N. Mihailov, assist ant professor of air science, said. The University of Portland drill placed first in the meet, with illamette university ranking sec d and the University of Oregon jim ranking third. Oregon State liege, the fourth school eligible r the event, did not enter the arnament. I'he three teams were judged the basis of inspection of units, damental drill, and fancy drill, ore than 000 spectators, mostly regon cadets, watched the drills. The cadet drillmaster in charge he University of Portland was ptional,” Maj. Mihailov said. idio Won't Die, iW Man Says elevision will change radio, not it, predicted Portland's KGW ■ ion program manager Donald ■ itmaii in his talk Tuesday eve Ig in the Student Union Dad9’ Rnge. ^Radio will change to a more Bmale approach—one that will a ignore the listeners' demands," nitman said. He explained this nge should have been made ago, because radio standards n’t changed since they were p 30 years ago. lack announcing of musical se ons is one form of the per Phi approach, giving the listener s title after the piece has been tyed,” Whitman said. dio will have to learn to make of the intimate position it has t is present in the home, on ich parties and in the car, hfe A. Vhile the television field is ex iding, radio isn’t, Whitman d. It will be the "young blood” t will revive radio. Offering advice to any aspiring j vTVision directors in the audience, liiman said the best way is to £in at the bottom as a stage And and gradually work up on h production side. "The impact of television adver tisement will be tremendous, be cause of a combination of eye-and ear appeal,” Whitman said. ■Color television should be in use within ten years—just about the time television will need a new lift, \Vhitman predicted. | Whitman was sponsored by the <*wly organized U. of O. Ad club. , "As a matter of fact, he stole the I show.” Judging the drill teams were of ficers from the Oregon state unit, j They included Lt. Col. F. L. Ryan, an force ROTC; Maj. W. E. Hoff man, air force ROTC; Capt. A. A. Joseph, army ROTC, and 1st Lt. W. K. Eranseum, army ROTC. r litical altitude of German youth, etc. Touching on the last topic, the speaker stated that he felt the youth in Eastern Germany knew - what the Communists were teach ing them was "all lies.” He said : the children viewed such tasks as I writing papers on "Stalin, the Lib- j erator of Europe” as pure non sense. However, he admitted, eventually the Communists might ' get a thoroughly indoctrinated youth who would not question their teachings. In case of a third war, Ritter ' averred that there was no ques- j tion but that the Germans would fight with the Western powers. Even in Eastern Germany, he continued, only about 10 per cent oi the people are Communists, and many of these he pictures as "am bitious people” who wanted to get ahead politically. Switching to the subject of Hit ler’s rise to power and the special role of the German military in al lowing his rise, Ritter claimed that the General Staff should be cen sured mainly for not having “po litical insight.” The generals were won over by Hitler's early attitude of respect for them and his enlargement of the army. Unfortunately, Ritter i concluded, most of the generals did not foresee that Hitler was mov ing toward all-out war. Read the Emerald classified ads. Great Missionary Convention Thurs., Fri., Sat., Sun.' % 11 a.m. "THE WORLD DEMANDS" Dr. Clyde Taylor, Washington, D. C. 3 p.m. Dr. Clyde Taylor 7:30 p.m. Rev. Glen Horst FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Bdwv. at High Dr. Vance Webster, raster For Those WARM SPRING DAYS Onjxuf, DUTCH GIRL ICE CREAM 1124 Willamette % m V.J; Wm. 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