Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 09, 1941, Page Three, Image 3

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    Oregon Queen
To Aid Peace
In Pan America
International Idea
Is Radio Theme
Of Program
Plans are well under way for
the Pan-American broadcast, to
be given on Monday night, from
9 to 10 p.m. over station KOAC.
The program is sponsored by
the Spanish department, and Sig
ma Delta Pi, Spanish national
honorary.
The first half of the broadcast
will consist of a play entitled,
“Makers of South America.”
The second half will be a quiz
contest on South America.
Six girls will be chosen to com
pete in the contest and the win
ner will be named Miss Pan-Am
erica of Oregon.
Girls interested in becoming
“Miss Pan-America of Oregon”
should submit a letter of applica
tion to Louis Richter, graduate
assistant in the Romance lan
guage department, telling him
why they think they should hold
that position. The letter should be
in the mail by Friday.
Any students interested in
reading a part in the South Am
erican play, should see Mr. Rich
ter in room 107 Friendly at 3:30
this afternoon. The play will be
read in English.
Weyerhauser Head
Winds Up Search
For Student Help
S. B. Lewis, plant foreman of
the Longview branch of the Wey
erhauser timber company, inter
viewed students for positions with
the company in the employment
office yesterday.
Juniors were offered a few
summer jobs and seniors applied
for full-time positions.
Next employer to come to the
campus represents Firestone
company, Miss Janet Smith, em
ployment scretary, reported yes
terday. He i& G. H. Curtis and
will be here April 28.
Also appearing on the campus
that day to interview job-seeking
students will be Richard L. Sabin,
Oregon Caves representative.
Workers Needed
“We have more odd jobs than
we can fill,” Miss Janet Smith,
employment secretary, reported
yesterday. She sent out a call for
students wishing work to call the
employment office to register
their available hours.
Much of the work consists of
lawn and garden care.
MYSTERY
RALPH BELLAMY in
* ‘Ellery Queen’s
Penthouse Mystery’
— plus —
‘Playgirl’
with KAY FRANCIS
ACTION!
"Roundup"
with RICHARD DIX and
PATRICIA MORRISON
— plus —
"Blackout"
with CONRAD VEIDT
Faculty Members
Wild About Horses
By FRITZ TIMMEN
Dean Morse's horses have a big
place in his heart. If you don't
think so consider what the genial
law school pilot’s beasties did
for him at the weekend horse
show.
Item one: his American saddle
bred stallion won first in the sad
dle class. Item two: a first in the
brood mare class. Item three: a
first in the two-year-old division.
Item four: a fourth in the model
mare class.
And if those victories weren’t
enough to satisfy them, the fam
ily hor ses came through to carry
Mrs. Morse to a first in the la
dies’ 5-gaited class, and to third
place in the $100 5-gaited stake
class.
Daughter Nancy walked away
with third position in the seat
and hands class of 14 riders.
Another faculty member who’s
“crazy over horses,” Professor
Paul R. VVashke, also has equal
cause for rejoicing with the dean.
His standard bred 8-year-old
mare snaffled first in her class,
taking the Dean Harvester tro
phy, donated by Dr. J. Bradley
of Eugene, on Saturday night and
another trophy on Sunday.
Dr. C. V. Boyer, dean of the
college of arts and letters, was
unable to show his 5-gaited horse
because of illness.
Other faculty members who
turn to horses in their spare mo
ments after spending their days
with college students include: O.
J. Hollis, professor of law; A. H.
Kunz, associate professor of
chemistry; K. W. Onthank, dean
of personnel administration; and
Captain H. W. Hall, assistant pro
fessor of military science.
ASUO Nominations
Scheduled Mag 1
Nominations for ASUO offices
will be made at a nominating
assembly Thursday, May 1, John
Cavanagh, director of elections,
announced Friday. The date was
set by the executive committee.
According to most class con
stitutions, nominating assemblies
must be at least a week before
elections, but Cavanagh said that
many of them could be held soon
er than that.
Besides Cavanagh the follow
ing were at the meeting: Bud
Vandeneynde, president of the
sophomore class; Lou Torgeson,
junior class president; Jim Bur
ness, freshman president; and
Chuck Woodruff, president of the
majority class of 1944.
1
I
TWO BIG FEATURES
‘Melody for Three*
with JEAN HERSHOLT
— plus —
‘The Man Who Lost
Himself*
with BRIAN AHERNE
and KAY FRANCIS
DRAMA
‘Street of Memories*
with JOHN McGUIRE
and LYNN ROBERTS
— plus —
‘Haunted
Honeymoon*
with Constance Cummings
and Robert Montgomery
Retail Conference
Set for April 16,17
The board of directors of the
Oregon Retail Distributors’ insti
tute has set Wednesday night,
April 16, and all day Thursday,
April 17, as the dates for the
fifth annual conference of the in
stitute to be held on the Univer
sity camupus.
Scheduled on Wednesday night,
April 16, is a lead-off banquet in
the Osburn hotel, Dean Victor P.
Morris of the BA school presid
ing. Addresses are to be given at
the banquet by Dr. Donald M.
Erb, University president; Rich
ard G. Montgomery, president of
the institute; and E. B. Mc
Naughton, First National bank
president in Portland.
All day discussions Thursday
will concern technical questions
related to retailing and the effect
of national defense on the busi
ness. Discussion leaders will come
from Portland, Eugene, Albany,
Lostine, Cottage Grove,, and Sa
lem, announces Professor N. H.
Cornish, BA school professor and
secretary of the board of direc
tors.
Sally Ray and Laurita Christ
offerson are in charge of tickets
and registration.
SIDE PATTER
Pat Taylor
If you ever once’t sing “Ama
pola” and use instead: “Norma
Poland,” you never ever sing it
t’other way . . . Gordy Benson,
of the flying Phi Delts, was
here far a spell on leave after
his graduation from Kelly
Field; he leaves for the Philip
pines the 26th ... So was Kappa
Sig Dean Cadle, on his way to
Alaska — of all place — after
finishing air corps training in
Calif. . . . Ever noticed DG
Marge Turner’s eyes? . . . .
Egad! Scarlett O’Turner, we’d
say . . .
Dou you know what one nos
tril said to another ? . . . “Shall
we come to blows, or shall we
let the matter drop?” . . . Sor
ry. Couldna resist. . . . Patty
Carson, Alpha Phi, is also back
for one small visit wit’ da goils.
. . . Libby Eades’ new auto is
really chintzey ... as is the C.
Side’s new milk chocolate sun
daes . . . Concentrated calories,
but extremely snorky.
There’s a real good expression
making the rounds now; it is
clever, verily . . . original, too
. . . it’s “Yipes!” . . . Isn’t that
smo-oth ? . . . Definite smo-oth
material . . . and you’re prob
ably saying those grapes are
of the sour sort, cause we canna
think of nothing original . . .
and we do mean this column.
Happy Easter, Eggs.
Bailey Memorial
Oak Trees Planted
Two rows of English oaks were
planted along each side of the
new University mall Tuesday, as
a memorial to Robert Bailey,
Oregon senior class president,
who drowned in the millrace Eas
ter Sunday, 1939.
A memorial fund of $1300 was
donated for these trees by Judge
and Mrs. J. O. Bailey, Salem, par
ents of this former student.
Two bronze plaques, telling of
the memorial, will be placed on
the mall within the next few
weeks.
According to F. A. Cuthbert,
associate professor of landscape
architecture, eight of the trees
are the columnar English oak, a
rare and beautiful tree which is
ideally suited to the architecture
of the library and shape of the
mall.
2 & 3 Thread
MOJUD
Sheers
$1.00
$1.15
1004 Will. St.
Phone 633
WfcROS
MMOttsmP
Compare
with $8 Rackets! Wards
NATIONAL
449
Compare these features: 5
pc. beveled ash frame; ta
pered throat; tipped beech
shoulder overlay; silk cord
bindings; black leather grip!
LAWFORD
Try and find its equal for
less than $5! 3-pc. beveled
frame; walnut handle and
shoulder overlay. Bright silk
bindings; leather grip!
BLUE ACE
M ill"!
Wards 1941
Ellsworth Vines
Autographed by Vines! Kas
new 5-ply “Strata Bow”
frame! White lacquered “U”
bend throat and shoulder
overlay! See it!
3 TENNIS BALLS
Approved by U. S.
L.T.A. Save money!
RACKET HOOD
Rubberized materi- ~g
al. Protects! JLcf
RACKET PRESS
Select, hard ash.
Edges beveled.
MONTGOMERY WARD