Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, September 26, 1941, Page Six, Image 6

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    Jack Bryant Earns
Air Corps Position
Jock Bryant, former student at
the University of Oregon, was
among 229 flyers who were re
sioned as second
ieutenants in the
irmy, air corps at
Kelly Field, Tex
is. He will fly
i Lockheed Pea
shooter, P39, P40.
Bryant, who is
;rom Clatskanie,
\-as a journalism
student on the
campus, and for some time wrote
a popular gossip column in the
Daily Emerald.
Bryant wil be remembered by
many for his famous column "Be
hind the Eight Ball," and for the
time he gained national fame
When mem tiers of a campus group
shaved his head in retaliation for
some published remarks which
they resented.
Foe some time Bryant was
forced to wear a long knit wool
wig about the campus, and as a
result his picture appeared in
“.Life" magazine.
YWCA Breakfast
Slated for Sunday
toe annual YWCA breakfast
for all freshman girls will take
place from 9:30 to 11:00 a. m.
Sunday, September 28, in the
YWCA Bungalow.
Mrs. Frederick M. Hunter, Mrs.
Donald E. Erb, and Mrs. John
Star)' Evans will pour. Mrs. Ha
zel P Schwering, Mrs. Elizabeth
DeCou, Mrs. Alice B. MacDuff,
Lois Norcfling, and a member of
the advisory board will make up
the receiving line.
Boiwie Roehm, vice-president
of YWCA, who is in charge of the
breakfast, asks that girls in the
living organizations follow this
schedule:
9:30 Alpha Phi, Gamma Phi
Beta, Hilward house.
9:i!> Kappa Alpha Theta, Delta
Gamma. University Co-op.
10:00 Alpha Omicron Pi, Alpha
Gamma Delta, Zeta Tau
Alpha.
10:1'* Alpha Xi Delta, Alpha Chi
Omega. Delta Delta Delta.
10 .10 Alpha Gamma Delta, Pi
Beta Phi, Sigma Kappa.
10 f'i Kappa Kappa Gamma. Chi
Omega, University house.
Kitchen to Organize
Campus Time Agency
Time, Inc., announced yester
day the formation of a campus
agency with Jeff Kitchen as man
ager and Jim Banks as assist
ant in charge of sales.
Hunter Van Sicklen, Emerald
dramatic columnist last year,
now serving as northwest circu
lation representative for Time, is
at Oregon laying groundwork for
the agency and launching the
initial drive.
“Time is generally recognized
as a distinct asset in many
courses stressing current affairs,”
Van Sicklen stated. “Some pro
fessors regard it as a text, valu
able because it is an authorita
tive, concise assimilation of vi
tal trends.”
Kitchen and Banks plan to ap
point student salesmen on a com
mission basis in co-operation with
Janet Smith of the student em
ployment bureau.
The agency is authorized to
handle Life and Architectural
Forum on special student and
professor rates in addition to
Time, a weekly news periodical.
Largest Yearbook
(Continued from page one)
time wil be done in lithography.
Editor Explains
Bishop emphasized, however,
that the “fact that the 1942 Ore
ga-na may be the world’s largest
college yearbook is not the all
important feature. The fact that
the Oregana has been rated one
of the top five or six yearbooks
in the nation in the past six years,
and received Pacemaker and All
American honor ratings in four
of those years, is the real source
of the Oregana’s fame,” he said.
Although costs of production
are up, the yearbook will still
sell for $5, with a $1 reduction
allowed holders of athletic cards.
A Painless Payment Plan has
been evolved by the Oregana busi
ness office, which will allow stu
For Your
Oregon Stickers
at,
Cjome’ioyfs
11th & Hilyard
Dinner...
Dancing!
Again we bring you FUN and
Relaxation with
DINNER DANCING
Eddie Gibson's
5-Piece Band
EUGENE HOTEL
DINING ROOM AND COFFEE SHOP
Jents to place their orders now,
paying one dollar at the begin
aing of each term, with the bal
ance to be taken from their
breakage fee, Page said.
At Second Glance
(Please turn to page tzeo)
performance by the kitchen aqua
cade, the dishes are stacked and
tried.”
Of working in a fraternity
louse, the unknown houseboy
says this:
“We lost the silverware, but
probably It was sold to the Japs
for scrapiron. Anyway, the fel
lows all chipped in and bought
a buzzsaw with which to cut
our steaks. The president gets to
run the saw' and all the fellows
hand their steaks up to him. Most
of the time to expedite matters,
the cook makes Mulligan stew.
Or, tiring of Mulligan stew, we
have stew without Mulligan.”
“Of course, we do wash dishes
in fraternities, too, though th^
house dog comes in mighty handy
at times. We dump the forks,
spoons and buzzsaw into the
rinse water and then on to a dry
dishtowel, which formerly was, I
think, the sheet in the guest
room. Then we juggle it around
until it is reasonably dry. I know
that around Christmas time the
whole house gathers around and
we sing ‘Jingle Bells’.”
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