Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 02, 1942, SDX EDITION, Page 8, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Week to Stress
Native Musicians
Music hits Lane county and the nation this week with the
advent of National and Inter-American Music Week, beginning
this Sunday. Oregon will observe this bash in its usual high
toned manner by three events: A University orchestra concert,
Sunday, May 3; a harp recital, Tuesday, May 5; and an ad
vanced violin recital by Verne Sellin and Helen Horner, Thurs
day, May 7.
Carrying out the Mrs. Roose
veltoniaa keynotes of “American
Unity Through Music” and “Mu
sic Maintains Morale,” the week
is designed to '‘emphasize the
harmonizing qualities of music,
and the atmosphere it creates of
sympathetic understanding, com
radeship, accord, and common in
terests.” No comment has been
received from Latin America but
Mayor Elisha Large will perform
the honors when he publishes a
proclamation opening the week
officially Sunday.
Versatile
Along with various other jobs
which he holds, F. D .Roosevelt
has squeezed in the chairmanship
■of the honorary committee of gov
ernors for the affair. On the ac
tive committee are representa
tives of such organizations as the
National Association of Schools of
Music, the Metropolitan Opera
Guild, ASCAP, and the Chamber
Music Society of Lower Basin
Street.
Throughout the United States
groups are being urged to “play
more Latin-American music, and
more music by native American
composers" for it is well known
that music is a truer form of
friendship than aid in war time.
Sunday the University orchestra
will lead off the program of true
accord with their concert at 3
p.m. in the music auditorium.
In Tune
Featured on their program will
be “Symphony Moderne,” by Max
Steiner, and “Classical Sym
phony" by Prokpfieff. Other num
bers will be Nicolai’s “Merry
Wives of Windsor” and the “Em
peror” waltzes by Strauss. All
these compositions are in accord
with the design of the week to
“play more music by native
American composers.”
Next on the music week list
which is eagerly awaited by all
the University is a harp ensemble
directed by Mrs. Doris H. Calkins,
instructor in harp. Those giv
ing Oregon a taste of good harp
music are Dorothy Bruhn, James
Gibson, Lynn Alexander, Maxine
Cunning, and Sally Calkins.
wren
Giving the ensemble needed as
sistance will be the University
quartet and members of the Uni
versity orchestra. Giving the or
chestra needed direction will be
Rex Underwood, professor of mu
sic.
Their program, which also re
flects the native American and
Latin-American influence which
the week is helping to spread, will
include: "Danses Sacree et Pro
fane” by Debussy, "Au Monas
tere" by Hasselmans, “Last Rose
of Summer," and “Two Guitars”
by Horlick, and "Introduction and
Allegro" by Ravel. There is also
“Little Chinaman’’ by Smith.
The observance of Music Week
will at last end on Thursday eve
ning, May 7, when Verne Sellin
and Helen Horner get in their
licks as advanced violinists. The
pair, again stressing the native
American highlight, will present
as main works on their program:
“B flat minor Concerto” by Sa'irit
Saens, and “Concerto in A major”
by Mozart.
Co-op Vote
Begins Soon
A hard-fought election will
take place Tuesday for coveted
positions on the board of the
University Co-op. Three students
will be added to the boar d to give
the weight of their decisions on
Co-op matters. These positions
are: one sophomore post for one
year; two junior posts for two
years.
Nominated to fill the great
policy-forming positions are: for
the sophomore seat, Hoy See
borg, Harry Glickman, Glenn Ma
cy, and Don Stephens; for the
junior positions, Merritt Kuffcr
man, Dorothy Routt, Uly Dorais,
Leonard Barde, Jim Thayer, Og
Young, and Yvonne Torgler.
And Two
Five students and two faculty
members serve on the Co-op
board every year. Two members
of the board are always seniors
who served the previous year.
This year the two “experienced"
members will be Bud Vanden
eynde and Les Anderson. Fac
ulty members on the boards are
Orlando Hollis, professor of law,
and Dean J. H. Gilbert of the
college of science.
The elections will take place
between 9 and 5 next Tuesday,
May 5, on the terrace of the Co
op store. In case of bad weather
or excessive disturbance the elec
tions will be moved inside.
Student’s Father Gets
Medal for Battle
Released by the United States
Army Friday was a list of names
of men in the service who have
received the distinguished service
cross. Among them is Col. Harry
Skerry, father of Harry Skerry,
who was enrolled in the Univer
sity at the beginning of this
school year.
There were 56 officers and 44
enlisted men in the list in which
Colonel Skerry was included.
YOU CAN'T BUY THEM—
BUT YOU CAN RENT THEM
TYPEWRITERS
KENT A TYPEWRITER—PITT IT TO WORK
$3.00 l’ER MONTH
OFFICE MACHINERY & SUPPLY CO.
30 East lltli Phone 148
Buck Named
Class Hotshot
He’s been chosen outstanding
male journalism graduate of 1942
by Sigma Delta Chi—refund, glo
riously-publicized Buck Buch
wach.
Honorabull Buchwach is one of
the most unassuming fellows . . .
he still wears tin pants although
he is graduating Phi Beta Kap
pa, Friar, hotshot promotion man.
Biggest Buchwach exclusive
was an AP-circulated shot of
himself draped in an apron, with
a pair of campus queens on each
shoulder, and beaming full-face
at the camera—only man in the
University home ec cooking
course.
Forthright Buchwach has spent
an ennobling year guiding SDX
policy. Jaunty, superconfident, he
has promoted Junior Weekend,
Dad’s Day, a host of SDX ban
quets, weekends, dances, et cetera.
Economics Student
Answers Dictators
Charles Stryker, a senior mi
nus a few fizzed credits, is the
author of “Out-Dictating To
morrow’s Dictators,” a book deal
ing with economic theory.
Stryker, who attended the Uni
versity a few years ago, is reg
istered this term in Dr. Crum
baker’s course in the economics
of business organization and fi
nance.
Ed. note: A simple tribute to a fell ow member of Sigma
Delta Chi, Kent Stitzer, who was killed in a plane crash re
cently in South America. ^
To Kent
As onward runs the course of life,
My thoughts of the past will fade.
The joy and strife of a college life
Will be lost in the mess I’ve made.
Perhaps collegiate life will dim
And sink into the pall.
But memories clear of afriend so dear
Will linger the longest of all.
—J.W.S.
SDX Reports:
Calender Full
Second in the nation in 1941;
(past record: first '39, second ’40)
the University chapter of Sigma
Delta Chi picked blackhaired
Dotty Havens as the Perfect
Type in a contest October 10.
Ex-Emerald man Jay Allen
rambled on about his foreign cor
j-esponding to a University as
sembly October 10, monopolized a
banquet that night.
Old-grad Palmer Hoyt climbed
to the SDX national presidency
last fall, found suitable revelry at
a monster banquet in Portland
February 6. Well-fed SDXers
gathered again March 10 after
another assembly to listen to al
umnus Ruel Moore, fresh from
bombed London.
The current school year, punc
Sunday Sees
YW Breakfast
The annual junior-senior YWCA
breakfast will take place .this
Sunday, May 3, at 9:30 a.m., in
the Osburn hotel. Junior coeds
will escort the more infirm sen
ior women to the affair. Each
ticket is 45 cents for the Os
burn breakfast.
Chairman of the meal for early
risers is' Betty Kincaid. Abbie
Jane White, YWCA president,
will make a very nice speech wel
coming all to the breakfast.
tuated with initiations and pro
motion dreams, was kissed o£f
March 27 with the General Mae
Arthur dance.
Colorado university has added
500 seats in its fieldhouse, bring
the capacity to 5,600.
Enjoy Spring Sun
Decorate Your Lawn
Add lawn table, chairs and swings ... they'll add glamour
to your spring term house dance or rushing parties.
AWNING
GLIDER
An attractive outside furniture
item that will bring' praise from
fellow students. Study outside
these spring days but be com
fortable. Choice of colors. Prices
* 29.50
and
$34.95
Suntan cot with inner
spring mattresses, t'ol
ors, blue, green, red.
Built for hours of sun
ny comfort on your
summer lawn. Adjust
able for sitting, reclin
ing. or lying. Equipped
with wheels for easy
movement from one
part of the lawn to the
other. Deep leatherette
cushions.
Lawn Chairs
Eastern hard maple lawn chair, double strength canvas,
$V75
X and Up
Also
CANOPY TOP LAWN CHAIRS
$4.75 to $6.50
JOHNSON
F URNITURE CO.
649 Willamette St.
Phone 1188.