Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 14, 1940)
Reduced Prices Announced for Goodman 'King of Swing' Mag Be Heard For $1.75 Down Frosh Glee Heads Announce Single Tickets for $1.00 An opportunity to dance to Benny Goodman’s “king of swing” orchestra at special re duced prices was unfolded yes terday when Jeff Kitchen and Lyle Selleck, co-chairmen in charge of Frosh Glee, revealed that bargain rates will be given all students who purchase their tickets before May 25, night of the dance. Advance prices for the general student body will be $1.75 and all frosh card holders will be given a rate of $1.25. According to Kitchen, definite announcement regarding sale of tickets in liv ing organizations will be made in the next few days. “We expect to fill the Igloo for Goodman’s appearance,” Kitchen declared yesterday, “and these special rates are to enable stu dents to do their share of packing the court that night.” General admission May 25 has been set at $2 for couples and $1 for single tickets. The $1 admis sions will replace usual “specta tor” tickets and entitle holders to dancing privileges. Cuthbeft to Speak At Seaside Meet Associate Professor F. A. Cuth bert, landscape architecture in structor at the University of Oregon, has been invited to speak to members of the league of Ore gon cities at their 15th annual meeting at Seaside on May 23 and 24. The topic on which he was asked to talk is "Proposed Chang es in City Planning." Among other speakers sched uled for the two-day meeting are Dr. Paul Raver, administrator of the Bonneville dam project; Or mond R. Bean, Oregon public utilities commission member, and Richard Graves, president of the American Municipal association, according to William O. Hall, act ing executive secretary of the league and acting director of the University of Oregon Bureau of Municipal Research. WALTHAM * \ PIIEMIEIt \ American • Mad# for Accuracy ind Beauty ) $1975 HILLSBORO your choict n Both hav* ^ • !.*»!» LBRISTOWS 620 Willamette I Dr. Baird to Talk At Westminster Luncheon Today Dr. Jesse Baird of the San An selmo theological seminary will be guest speaker at the Tuesday noon luncheon being held today at Westminster house. Students may arrange for con ferences with Dr. Baird in the afternoon. These conferences will be held at Westminster house. Reservations may be made for the luncheon for 25 cents, and should be made early with Mrs. J. D. Bryant, hostess. Students spend 21,000 hours a year standing in line during regis tration periods. Eight Pass Exam In Foreign Trade Eight senior men students in the school of business administra tion have successfully passed the written examinations given this year by the foreign trade advis ory board and will go to Port land Wednesday for the oral ex aminations to be given there by the board. John P. Dwyer, Dayrl L. Evans, George H. Jackson, Jack L. Mc Clung, Chris Madera, Donald A. Marcy, Dip Gaycid, and Darold Windsor, all members of the for eign trade marketing class, are given the opportunity to take ex aminations given in Portland by the board. The foreign trade advisory board is composed of a number of Portland business men inter ested or affiliated with foreign trade. Of these few -who pass the written test, usually about three pass the oral examination given and they are issued a certificate stating that they are qualified foreign trade people, according to Alfred L. Lomax, professor of business administration. Both Professor Lomax, and Assistant Professor A. G. Dudley are mem bers of the board. Eight signers of the Declara tion of Independence were Har vard graduates. Vocations Books In Browsing Room On display in the browsing room of the University library are a number of books dealing with “vocations.’' Several types of material have been used in the display, includ ing booklets on preparations for vocations, how to obtain a job, and facts about men who have made good. How nine famous men such as Theodore Roosevelt, Abe Lincoln, and John D. Rocke feller began their careers is told in “How They Started,’’ edited by Elizabeth B. Hamilton. Total investment in the campus of the University of California at Los Angeles is $12,000,000. CHESTERFIELD’S MARION HUTTON In Glenn Miller’s Moonlight Serenade all Columbia Stations... Tues., Wed., Thurs, Smokers by the millions are making Chesterfield the Busiest Cigarette in America. ... It takes the right combination of the world’s best tobaccos to give you a cigarette that is definitely MILDER, BETTER-TASTING and COOLER-SMOKING... all at the same time. For real smoking pleasure,. buy Chesterfields every day. Copyright 1940, LiCGHJ & MYERS TOBACCO CO.