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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (April 4, 1941)
Benefit Concert Monday to Aid Exiled British Homeless English Will Receive Help From UO Program A benefit concert Monday night at 8:15 in the music auditorium will feature Jane Thacher, pian ist, and Melvin H. Geist, tenor, in a program to aid the movement to assist homeless Britons. Mrs. Thacher is professor of piano in the University music school and well known for her recitals and concerts throughout the Northwest. Mr. Geist will be remembered by Eugene audiences who heard him sing the tenor role in last year’s University Choral union concert of “Elijah” by Mendelssohn. The program for Monday’s con cert, released by the music school Thursday, is as follows: I. Mozart: “Romance” from “Serenade for Strings,” arranged for piano by Egnatz Friedman; Mozart: Ten Variations on “As the Simple People Think” from Mecca”; Chopin: “Nocturne in G Gluck's opera, “Pilgrim from Major” and “Etude in C Major”; Mrs. Thacher. II. Vaughn Williams: “Silent Noon”; Warlock: “Yarmouth Fair”; Handel: “Spirituato Te”; Griffes: “Song.” Mr. Geist. III. Debussey: “Pagodas”; Gra nados: “El Fandango de Candil”; Ravel: “Alborada del Gracioso”; Scriabin: “Sonata in F Sharp”; Chopin: “Grande Polonaise Bril liante.” Mrs. Thacher. Future Counselors To Camp Near Otis The annual Oregon conference for boys and girls interested in camp counselor work v/ill be held April 25, 26, and 27 at Camp Westwind on the coast near Otis. Mr. Guy Miller of the Portland Boy Scouts is program chairman and different phases of camp work will be taken up. Anyone desiring further infor mation may call Marjorie Dibble, 2340 1I r ‘You Don’t Have To Hold Us Up For Service—We Give It Freely’ When Pomeroy’s 1 u b s your ear you’ll find that everything possible has been done to ins u r e smooth driving at every speed. Now is the time for your Moto-Sway lub rication job, under driv ing conditions. Oregon it Emerald Friday Advertising1 Staff: Jean Adams, manager Betty Lou Allegre Norma Baker Marilee Margason Marilyn Marshall Copy Desk Staff: Wes Sullivan, city editor Elsie Brownell, assistant Joanne Nichols, copy reader Herb Penny Kent Stitzer Doris Jones Lee Samuelson Night Staff: Fred Timmen, night editor Mary Wolf Bob Frazier Doris Jones Lutheran Conclave Brings F.A. Schiotz Rev. Frederick A. Schiotz, na tional executive secretary of the Lutheran Student Association of America, from Chicago, Illinois, will be on the campus this week end to hold an area training con ference of new LSA officers of the University, Oregon State Col lege, and Monmouth. This year’s convention will be gin Saturday and continue dur ing most of Sunday, according to Kenneth Erickson, retiring re gional president. Plans are being made for panel discussions to be held during the day in the AWS room of Gerlinger hall, he said. The meetings are open to the public. Evening sessions will feature reading and discussion of new and old programs for each school. The outgoing officers will confer with the newly-elected ones to discuss student problems. Clar ence Lindquist, president of the local student group will act as chairman at the meetings. Rev. Schiotz will come to the Oregon campus from Washington where he has conducted the an nual conventions at Pullman and Seattle. Albany Conference Slated by DeMolay Albany will be the host city to approximately 400 DeMolay boys when the nineteenth annual con clave opens here for a two-day session, April 11 and 12. Harold Horning, conclave manager, and the various committees have ar ranged a varied program for the pleasure of the delegates who will represent the 25 DeMolay chap ters from Oregon and northern California. Special degree teams from the W. A. Johnston chapter in The Dalles, and Chemeketa chapter in Salem will exemplify the de gree work at the Friday evening session. Extensive effort has been put forth in order to provide suit able entertainment during the conclave, the highlights of which include a grand ball, a banquet, and a midnight matinee. Philippine-Bound Nysteen Visits UO Norman Nysteen, ex-’40, sec ond lieutenant in the Army Air corps, visited the campus this week before leaving for a post in the Philippines. FRED’S CAMPUS SHOP Men’s Haberdashery by "Wilson Brothers Across from Sigma Chi Cleaning Ph. 3141 Field Secretary Visits Campus Oregon Delegates Accompany Head To Convention Leaving Thursday for Seattle with Mrs. Hazel P. Schwering and other University convention delegates was Miss Margarethe Faulstich, national field secre tary of Zeta Tau Alpha. The delegation will attend the Northwestern Panhellenic con vention in Seattle. Miss Faulstich was president of the local chapter last year, and while on the campus was ejected to Pi Lambda Theta, national education honorary. At Ohio university, Athens, Ohio, she became a member of Mortar Board, president of the YWCA, held three junior offices, was representative at large of the campus affairs committee, and treasurer of Phoenix, junior wo men’s honorary. A member of Phi Beta Kappa, Miss Faulstich had the highest average of all women graduated in the class of 1939, being the second highest in the entire class. Other scholastic honors won in cluded a sophomore scholarship award, the Alpha Pi of Zeta Tau Alpha scholarship cup in 1938 and 1939, and the Women’s League scholarship prize in 1937. She was elected to Kappa Delta Pi, education honor society, and also won the WAA Flying O award. Other campus activities includ ed secretaryship of the student union planning committee, mem bership in dance club, WAA, and Phi Chi Delta. Whisker Dicks (Continued from page one) right, Chi Psi; Paul Eckclman, Delts; Jack Ripper, DU; John Coursey, Gamma hall; Bill Rap son, Kappa Sigs; A1 Samples, Kirkwood co-op; Wally McClung, Omega hall. Also included are Hank Burns, Phi Delts; John Powers, Fiji; Clifton Wilcox, Phi Psi; Willis Caples, Phi Sig; Curt Mecham, Pi Kap; Walt Kaplan, Sherry Ross hall; Chuck Clifford, SAE; Bill Packouz, Sammies; Jim Shephard, Sigma Chi; Ross Har gis, Sigma hall; Dick Ashcom, Sigma Nu; Les Thayer, Sig Ep; Joe Wicks, Theta Chi; and Dick Stanton, Zeta hall. Sophomore students interested in working on the Whiskerino committee should see Ray Pack ouz or Bill Edlefsen, co-chairmen, Vandeneynde stated. CLASSIFIED ADS READER ADS Ten words minimum accepted. First insertion 2c per word. Subsequent insertions lc per word. DISPLAY ADS Flat rate 37c column inch. Frequency rate (entire term) : 35c per column inch one time a week, 34c per column inch twice or more a week. Ads will be taken over the telephone on a charge basis if the advertiser is a subscriber to the phone. Ma'led advertisements must have suffi cient remittance to cover denite cient remittance enclosed to cover definite number of insertions. Ads must be in Emerald business office no later than 6 p.m. prior to the day of insertion. $30.00 CHEV. cab coupe ’29. Ph. 3834-W. 611 East 15th. DELTA PHI sorority pin. Return to dean of men’s office. PINK SHELL-RIMMED glasses in brown leather case. Tuesday nite. Jean Hauger, Ph. 2340. Reward. Hundreds of beautiful and ap propriate designs with the saeredness of Easter contained in the messages are on sale now. Priced from 5c to $1.00. Also some very humorous and clever cards. Drop in today. UNIVERSITY CO-OP Final Exam for telephones l THIS electrical moutli at Bell Telephone Laboratories is putting a new telephone to one of its final tests. Over and over, it can repeat these odd sentences without the slight est variation. They contain all the fundamental sounds that con tribute to the loudness of sound in our speech. This mouth can , also make tests with simple tones of known pitch and intensity. ♦ At the same time other telephones are being steamed, baked, frozen, lifted and dropped into their cradles by tireless ma chines. All this is part of a carefully planned curriculum