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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1941)
Leathernecks K** r?°> : t!' Receive Bars Two June ’41 Oregon grad uates have been commissioned as second lieutenants in the IJ. S. marine corps and are now taking advanced training in the reserve officer class of the marine school in Quantieo, Virginia. They are Maurice John Kelly and Warren Ellison Smith. Commissioned when they com pleted preliminary training No vember 1, Lieutenants Kelly and Smith were both awarded medals * for their outstanding ability with the rifle and pistol. Upon comple tion of current training in the reserve officers class, they will be assigned to duty with active marine units. Kelly, a major in business ad ministration, was graduated with a B.A. degree. Smith, a major in physical education, was graduat ed with a B.S. degree. Smith is the son of Dr. Warren D. Smith, head of the University geography and geology departments. Ruby Jackson (Continued from page one) Phi, national women’s journalism honorary. Permanent copy desk staffs were also announced by Schrick, as a part of his ^‘midterm shake up.” New desk appointments will be permanent, Schrick said, and assistant desk editors will be ap pointed soon. Meet Thursday Persons on the revised copy desk will meet at 7:15 p.m. Thursday in the Emerald news room for further instructions and for general discussion. Fritz Timmen, sbphomore in journalism, will head the Mon day night copy desk as city ed itor. Persons working with him will be Margaret Brooke, Bette Miller, Susan Huffaker, Bob Fow ells, Maureen Conklin, Jeanne Borglum, and Marjorie Robinson. Bill Hilton, assistant managing editor of the Emerald, will be city editor Tuesday night. Assisting .him will be Janet Wagstaff, El don Wolf, Dick Shelton, Betsy Wooten, Mary Jane Wilson, Bud Churchill, John Mathews, Mona MacAuley, and Margaret Barrett. \\ ednesday The Wednesday night copy desk will be supervised by Dun can Wimpress, sophomore in journalism, as city editor. Persons on his staff wili be Don Dill, Yvonne Umphlette, Carol Evans, Erl Erlandson, Peggy Wright, Marilyn Wiley, and Don Mc Intosh. Hal Olney, associate editor of the Emerald, will be city editor Thursday night. Assisting him will ne Edith Newton, Barbara Younger, Joanne Dolph, A1 Gould, Carol Greening, and A1 Larsen. Herb Penny, assistant manag ing editor of the Emerald, will be city editor Friday night. Mem bers of his staff are Jack Billings, Thorn Kinersly, Fritz Giesecke, Barry Boldeman, and Hariy Glickman. First Day Adds Six Six men students were pledged by five fraternities on the first day of pledging, Friday, Novem ber 7. They were: Philip George, Alpha Tau Ome ga; Tom Kay Boylen, Kappa Sig ma; John C. Noble, Jr., Kappa Sigma; Robert Wells, Sigma Phi Epsilon; George Dugan, Delta Upsilon; and Stamford Borden, Beta Theta Pi. LEATHERNECK WEBFOOTS Recently commissioned as second lieutenants in the U. S. marine corps are Warren Smith, left, and John Kelly. Both are Oregon graduates of 1941. They are now stationed at Quantico, Virginia. Naturalists Go Afield In Mushroom Quest The natural history club will take a field trip Sunday to the Elmira district to search for mushrooms. They will leave at 2 p.m. from Condon hall. The group will collect the natural specimens for identification and study. Members of the club are invit ed to a study meeting in the laboratory of Frank Sipe, head of the botany department, on the third floor of Deady hall, Monday evening at 7. The mushrooms collected on Sunday’s field trip will be identified and discussed. Webfoot Studies South of Border Betty Jane Poindexter, senior in journalism, is spending fall teerm studying at the University of Guadalajara, in Mexico. Spanish is the main course be ing taken by Miss Poindexter, with the exception of business law which she is getting from the University of Oregon exten sion service. Miss Poindexter will return to the Oregon campus for winter and spring terms, after spending a week or ten days traveling about Mexico. Soldier Hits Books; Then Goes Broke “I’d rather be broke and be busy than have money and sit around feeling sorry for myself,” wrote a young man to the exten sion department requesting a correspondence course to be sent to him on the payment plan to the Presidio of San Francisco. The extension service complied and sent him an extension course in American history. Last week the final payment came for the course. The young man is now busy—and broke! Music School To Air Program A singer and two pianists will be featured on the music school radio programs over KOAC next week. There will be no program Armistice day. Margaret Zimmerman, soprano, will sing Monday, November 10, at 8 p.m. Her program will in clude “Hear Ye, Israel," from the oratorio “Elijah" by Mendel ssohn; “Sheep and Lambs” by Homer; and “Suicidio" from the opera “La Gioconda” by Poncielli. The same evening at 8:40, Phyllis Gray, pianist, will play Schuman’s “Papillons” ana Giuon’s “Harmonica Player.” George Hopkins, professor of piano, will give a Spanish pro gram on Wednesday evening, No vember 12, at 8:40 p.m. Numbers to be played are “Cradle Song" and “Dance of Spain” by Jose Iturbi, “Tango" by Albeniz-Hop kins, and a rhumba, “La Com parsa,” by Leucuona. Dr. and Mrs. Russel L. Johns rud, ’30, M.D. ’33, are the par ents of a daughter, Nancy C., born July 28. GLORIA and BARBARA BREWSTER Popular twins of stage and screen To five yo« <he and only ciian,U kinds of th be8tfromourown srr—-- i • • • and listen to this • ,f takes the Right c , . "*S ‘h«e best cigarette0^"13'''0" ^^canUeco^T'^' Chesterfield ,b„ * "-•‘ogive Pleasure that raakes^m r*** THEY SATlSFV °kerssay Copyright 1941, Liccsrr & Mims Tobacco Co. The Milder Better-tasting Cooler-smoking cigarette