Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, January 22, 1943, Page 8, Image 8

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PROGRAM
FRIDAY, JANUARY 22
Group Breakfasts. Semi-annual breakfast meeting OX PA Board
of Directors. Membership cordially invited to attend.
Registration.
General Session, Room 105 Journalism, Mary Conn (Mrs. Joe
C.) Brown, presiding.
Appointment of Conference Committees, Mrs. Brown.
Appointment of ONPA Committees, Jack B. Bladine, President.
“Rational Rationing: How ft All Works”—F. F. Jannev, Port
land, bead of War Price and Rationing Board in Oregon.
Round-table on Wartime Publication Difficulties, directed by
President Brown.
“Editors as Conservationists”—Charles D. Jarrett, Soil Conser
vation Service, Portland.
Luncheon, The Anchorage, W. F. G. Thacher, chairman.
“A Reporter’s Glimpse of the War in the Pacific"—Wendell
Webb, correspondent Associated Press.
“How Wartime Censorship Looks from the Inside”—W. P.
Steven, Office of the Censorship.
“The Hows and Whys of War Information”—Ben E. Titus,
Portland, head of the OWI in Oregon.
“Can Local Advertising Be Built Up in Wartime? A Few
Suggestions”—R. M. Anderson, business manager Longview
(Wash.) Daily News.
"The Army and the Newspapers”—Lt. CurTice Clark, Public
Relations Office, United States Army, Seattle.
Annual Banquet, Hotel Osburn.
Songs—Eugene Gleemen, led by J ohn Stark Evans.
Charles A. Sprague, retiring governor of Oregon.
“Higher Education Meets the Challenge of the W ar —Dr.
Donald M. Erb, president of the University of Oregon.
Basketball, University of Washington vs. University of Oregon,
McArthur Court.
SATURDAY, JANUARY 23
“Editorial Problems and Policies in Wartime”—Roundtable led
by Henry Fowler, Bend Bulletin.
"National Advertising: An Analysis Based on Symposium of
Outstanding Authorities”—Hal Short, Short 8: Baum, Portland.
“Small Ads a Large Part of Local Advertising”—Walter Srnoldt,
Albany 1 Jemocrat-Herald.
"Legislation Affecting Newspapers”—Senator Merle R. Chess
man, Representative Giles L. French, Harry Schenk, ONPA.
Semi-annual Meeting of Oregon Newspaper Publishers Asso
ciation.
Conference Luncheon, John Straub Memorial Hall.
Reports of Conference Committees.
Election of Conference Officers.
“What's the News in the Neighborhood?”—Dean Allen’s Oregon
Broadcasters—l.ee Barlow, Frances Wimberly, Janet Wagstaff.
"Preserving the Files for the Future’—W illis Warren, acting
University librarian.
“Reverting to Type; Rack in the Old Game"—Robert Ormond
Case, The Oregonian.
—
While the
Snow Flies . ..
X
Wo endeavor to supply
the host service possible.
I Man now to check vour
wiring and plumbing, so
\ oil will be well prepared
when more storms come.
Earle Russell
New Yell King
Earle Russell, senior in Eng
lish, was elected yell king of the
ASUO at a meeting of the execu
tive council in Johnson hall
Thursday.
Russell, who was ineligible fall
term, replaces Ted Loud, fresh
man yell king, who is ineligible
this term. Russell served in the
chief yell post last year, and part
of last fall.
Love and Marriage Out
Two other students petitioned
for the position. They were Ralph
Lynn, freshman, and Tom Haz
zard, sophomore.
ASUO President Les Anderson
appointed Carolyn Holmes, sec
ond vice-president, to head a com
mittee to draw rules for the ser
vice scholarship fund. Miss
Holmes will choose a committee
from the council to assist her.
Council members voted against
a Love and Marriage series this
year, because of lack of response
on the part of students.
Politz Sets Up Idea
-i
(Continued from page one)
their ears in anticipation of a
new ally or enemy, Charles Po
litz, creator-director of the trust,
announced that the I.T. is a
“strictly non-political and blood
stain free” organization.
“The idea trust will confine its
activities to the manufacture of
promotional stunts and the re
moving of Dads’ day bottle
necks,” Politz said. “Through the
pooling of some of the best un
paid creative minds on the cam
pus we hope to emerge with a
real hit program.”
Idea Trusters
Members of the group are: Bill
Buell, sophomore in liberal arts;
Aubry Cromwell, sophomore in
business administration; Jerry
McCroskey, sophomore in law;
and Clell Crane, sophomore in
architecture and allied arts.
The Idea trusters will act as
promotional - ministers - with
out portfolio', and will meet when
promotion problems arise, or new
new ideas are needed.
Non-Voters
Attending but non-voting mem
bers of the trust will include
Edith Newton and Ted . Goodwin,
newspaper publicity heads, and
Harriet Henderson, executive sec
retary.
The trust chairman will report
to Dads’ Day Chairman Jim
Thayer on the activities of the
group.
Press Delegates Arrive
(Continued from page one)
war and the newspaper busi
ness. Presiding was Palmer Hoyt,
publisher of the Oregonian. Pro
fessor C. L. Kelly of the school
of business administration and
Charles M. Hulten, assistant pro
fessor of journalism, now serving
in Washington, spoke to the con
ference.
Today’s sessions will be de
voted to discussions of war pric
es and rationing, army public re
lations, and the solution of ad
vertising problems. Of special im
portance will be the discussions
of the impact of war upon the
press.
Winter Wonderland
Brings Snow, Ice, Fun
By COURTNEY SWANDER
Winter came to the University of Oregon Wednesday night
and left the campus under a soft six-inch coating of white. The
snow, the heaviest in six years, was greeted with delight on the
part of students, while some faculty members grumbled about
the “unseasonal” weather.
Thursday morning snowball — - '
fights and building of numerous
snowmen were common. During
the day part of the snow melted
off leaving the streets filled with
water to the curbs.
Damage Small'
Surveying damage to trees and
plantings on the campus was
George Jette, instructor in land
scape architecture. He reports
several trees have been uproot
ed and many have lost limbs, but
that actual damage can not be
determined until the snow is
gone.
“Most of the damage that oc
curred was a result of the recent
rains which loosened the roots.
A few trees went over with the
weight of the snow, but the ex
tent of the damage wras not
great,” Jette added.
Few Injuries
The infirmary announced that
there were few injuries from the
storm. Two patients were admit
ted—one for an eye struck by a
snowball, and the other for a
bruised knee cap. Attendants re
ported a light day, saying that it
was too early for any cases of
illness attributed to tbe storm.
Members of numerous houses
were up late into the night en
joying the snow as the flakes
fell silently earthward. Thursday
Kirkwood erected a snowman, 16
beling it with a Hilyard sign. The
coeds sought to retrieve it sev
eral times, but succeeded only in
receiving showers cf snowballs
from the boys.
Snowfall General
The snowfall was general
throughout Oregon and Wash
ington, Seattle getting the heav
iest fall in 20 years. One man
was killed in a collision on the
Jasper road near this city. He is
the only storm casualty.
Power )service and telephone
connections were interrupted oc
casionally. Transportation was
somewhat bogged down, trains
running many hours late.
The San Francisco weather bu
reau authorized announcement of
storm warnings on Oregon coast
for the next 12 hours.
A new armory is being con
structed at University of Mary
land.
I
Make Your House
Dance a Big Occasion
A A house dance only comes once a term . . . so
why not make an evening of it? Enjoy one of
our delicious steak dinners in that pleasant at
mosphere over the mill race, before the dance.
.Anchorage
DOWN BY THE MILLRACE
Colonial Dames Campus
Makeup 50c
Victory Mirrors _23c
Ingram's Shave Cream,
Jar ____ 23c