Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 18, 1942, Men's Edition, Page 3, Image 3

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    Quartet
Will Play
Musical
Mozart, Beethoven, and Ravel
will be represented on the pro
gram of the Coolidge string quar
tet in its concert here Monday,
April 20, at 8:15 p.m., in the
school of music auditorium.
.^Quartets by these three com
posers will be played by William
Kroll and Jack Pepper, violins;
David Dawson, viola, and Naoum
Benditszky, violoncello, who com
prise the quartet.
Founded in 1936 under the
sponsorship of Elizabeth Sprague
Coolidge foundation of the libra
ry of congress, Washington, the
quartet has played throughout
Canada, Mexico, Honolulu, and
the United States and are not
ed for their radio programs from
Washington, D. C.
William Kroll, a native New
Yorker, began his musical ca
reer 'at 10 when he began study
• ing under the late Henri Marteau
in Berlin. Back in New York he
continued his studies under Franz
Kneisel at the Institute of Mu
sical Art from which he was
graduated with highest honors.
He was a violinist of the Elshuco
Trio and first violin of the South
Mountain Quartet before helping
to found the Coolidge quartet.
Jack Pepper, also American,
was a scholarship student at the
Eastman school from 1928 until
1930 and also studied with Leo
pold Auer. He played for three
years with the Los Angeles Phil
harmonic under Otto Dlemperer.
% David Dawson of Virginia
studied at the Juillard school un
der Hans Letz and Felix Sal
mond. After graduation he be
came solo viola of the National
Orchestra association under Leon
Barzin; later he was a member
of the Metropolitan Opera orches
tra. Later he was principal viola
of the Minneapolis symphony un
der Dimitri Mitropoulos.
Naoum Benditsky, Russian, at
13 had won a sholarship to the
St. Petersburg Imperial Conserv
atory, and at 16 was solo cellist
of a major Russian orchestra. In
*<he United States he has been a
member of the Gordon string
quartet.
Ticekts for the concert will be
on sale Friday, Saturday, and
Monday at Miller’s. Admission is
$1 for the main floor and 50
cents for the balcony, reserved
for students.
Navy on Deck—
With New Cards
Here’s a new deck of cards for
bridge fiends to translate. There
aren’t any queens, kings, or jacks
in the deck of 66 but they are all
face cards—signal flag cards of
the United States Navy.
On the face of each card is a
flag with its interpretation on the
reverse side along with its
equivalent in Morse code and
semaphore signaling. As all na
val reserve students must be
thoroughly familiar with this sig
naling device they might do a
little pre-school training with the
cards over a coke.
The Co-op has the cards in
stock.
Lost, One Hand;
Who Owns It?
Screams and gasps issued from
the drafting room of the archi
tectural building yesterday as stu
dents suddenly gazed in horror
on a blood smeared human hand.
After recovering from their
first scare, students screwed up
their nerve and took another
look at the hand to discover that
it was actually a plaster of paris
model smeared with red paint.
The “hand” was pushed into
the faces of unsuspecting stu
dents by Bill Cox, sophomore in
architecture and allied arts, who
recently found the object in the
basement of the apartment house
where he lives.
Psycli Convention
Set for May 9
Dr. Lester F. Beck, associate
professor of psychology, announc
es the annual meeting of the Ore
gon Psychology association, to
be held on the campus of the Uni
versity of Oregon, May 9.
Well-known psychiatrists from
Portland, the director of the Ore
gon Public Welfare committee,
representatives from the Univer
sity psychology department, and
other interested persons will at
tend the convention.
“The date of the meeting may
be advanced one week to May
16,” Dr. Beck said.
Grads at Fort Lewis
Lowell Dick and Lloyd Beggs,
both graduates of 1941, report
ed to members of the faculty
that they are now stationed with
the army at Fort Lewis, Seattle,
and expect to be sent overseas
soon. They both majored in jour
nalism while attending the Uni
versity.
3
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Oregon Retail
Meeting Set
In war time retail distributors
have special problems such as
price trends and their effect on
merchants, government regula
tions, inflation, advertising. There
is very little they can do about
these problems except discuss
them, so the merchant-members
of the Oregon Retail Distributors'
institute will meet on the Ore
gon campus for their sixth an
nual conference to discuss their
mutual problems Wednesday and
Thursday, April 15 and 16.
Dr.' Victor P. Morris, dean of
the school of business adminis-.
tration, will preside over the ses
sions, which will open Wednes
day night with a banquet in the
Osburn hotel.
Notables Speak
Speakers include Dean Morris;
E. A. Burkitt, president of the in
stitute; Thomas L. Willis, presi
dent of the institute; Thomas L.
Willis, president of the Northern
Wholesale Hardware company,
Portland; Dr. N. H. Cornish, pro
fessor of business administration;
G. Vandeneynde, manager of
Sears, Roebuck, and company,
Salem; Thomas Parkinson, pro
prietor of Parkinson’s Food Mar
ket, Roseburg; Frank Nau, presi
dent of Frank Nau’s Drug com
pany, Portland; Arvin Cole, presi
dent of the Federation of Adver
tising Clubs of Portland.
M. L. Solomon, manager of the
Arden Millinery Shop, Portland;
Lloyd V. Ramp, Lester Ireland
and company, Hillsboro; Claude
E. Hall, proprietor of the Wald
port Market, Waldport; W. V.
Merrill, manager of Murphy’s
Feed and Seed company, Albany;
Roy Morse, manager of Broad
way, Inc., Eugene; W. T. Switzer,
manager of Montgomery Ward
and company, Eugene.
University Delegates
Three University delegates will
attend the meeting of the North
west student scientists, to be
held in connection with the meet
ing of the Oregon section of the
American physics teachers in
Corvallis, April 25, it was an
nounced Tuesday.
According to Monroe Shelley,
chairman of the local science
group, those who will attend will
be Randall Caswell, Eugene;
James Watson, Gooding, Idaho;
and Borys Malkin, Eugene.
Alum in Marines
Lieutenant William R. Curry,
former University student, is with
the fleet marine force in the
South Pacific waters. He went
into service a year ago this April
as a permanent appointee in
the navy. He attended the local
high school in Eugene, and then
the University and later the
North Pacific Dental college in
Portland.
With 13 stations scattered
throughout the state carrying the
program, the University of Wis
consin band is in its fifth year of
broadcasting concert music.
Save Money!
Use the
CLASSIFIEDS
Phone 3300, 354
Mid Terms Due
Week Earlier
Mid-term grades are due today.
Were it not for the '“accelera
tion” of 1942, and a cancellation
of spring vacation, mid-terms
would be still another week
away. Students would still be
dropping courses and starting
such new courses as the follow
ing which were added this spring
term:
Art education, general bacter
iology, Greek prose composition,
history of the book, physiography
of the United States, second-year
Norwegian, trade regulations,
Red Cross home nursing, instruc
tor’s first aid, and human parasit
ology.
The curtailment of mid-term
cramming time by a week, how
ever, permits closing school a
week in advance of the original
plan for 1942. Spring term ends
May 29.
Dr. Ganoe Speaks
Dr. J. T. Ganoe, associate pro
fessor of history, spoke to the
Rotary club at their Tuesday
noon meeting. The theme of the
day was Pan-Americanism and
Dr. Ganoe, an authority on the
Latin American countries, spoke
of the growing solidarity, rela
tionships, the history of the
movement, and ways of improv
ing relationships.
Attends Meeting
Miss Leona Tyler, instructor
in psychology, left Eugene Fri
day, to attend a meeting of the
executive committee of the
Northwest Personnel association,
held in Seattle this weekend. The
weekend committee plans the
program and future meetings of
the association. The association is
composed of persons interested
in personnel work and its devel
opment.
One hundred twenty engineer
ing, science and management de
fense training courses are now
underway in Texas.
Oregon If Emerald
Copy Desk: ,
Fred Kuhl, city editor
Bill Buell
Bill Stratton'
Chuck Politz
Lee Flatberg
Herb Penny
Jack Billings
Ray Schrick
Advertising Staff:
Paul Thurston, day manager
John Jensen
Cecil Sharp
Bill Hunt
Layout Staff:
Charles Politz
Night Staff:
Jim Watson, night editor
Joe Doakes
. . and a bunch of the boys.”
The civilian pilot training pro
gram at Iowa State college has
been granted another unit of 10
men for primary aviation train
ing.
New under-arm
Cream Deodorant
safely
Stops Perspiration
a .
1. Does not rot dresses or men’s
shirts. Does not irritate skin.
2. No waiting to dry. Can be
used right after shaving.
3. Instantly stops perspiration
for 1 to 3 days. Removes odor
from perspiration.
4. A pure, white, greaseless,
stainless vanishing cream.
5. Arrid has been awarded the
Approval Seal of the American
Institute of Laundering foe
being harmless to fabrics.
Arrid is the LARGEST SELLING
DEODORANT. Try a jar today!
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