Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1943)
Oregon Dads BIgin Weekend (Continued from page one) awarded again this year for the groups with the greatest turnout of fathers. Nelda Rohrbach and Bob Mueller are in charge of these awards. To the living organization hav ing the highest proportion of Bads registering today will go the A. W. Norblad trophy. The Paul T. Shaw trophy is awarded annually to the living organiza tions winning second place for the highest roportion of dads here. The C. O. Laurgaard trophy w^^be awarded to the organiza tion with the highest proportion of freshman dads registering. Legal guardians -will be con sidered dads for purposes of this competition. If the same organ ization wins a trophy for three successive years the trophy will become the permanent possession of that group. winners ui me tropmes win oe announced tonight at the bas ketball game. Bob Henderson and Mary Bush are in charge of hospitality for dads. They have arranged for open houses this afternoon. Dads have been especially invited to visit the University library, mu seum of art, museum of natural 1 history, physical education build ing, student health service, and Chapman hall, the nev/est addi tia^to the campus. ^lurs of the campus will fol low the annual meeting of Oregon dads in the Guild theater in John son hall at 3 p.m. Dads arriving on the train that leaves Portland at 8:45 a.m. and arrives here at 12:35 will be met by members of a special com mittee headed by Joyce Clark and Martha Jane Switzer. They Oregon HEmerald Desk Staff: Ross Yates, city editor Art Carlson, assistant Lila Howe Kelly Snow Norris Yates Roger Tetlow Bill Lindley Night Staff: A1 Howard, night editor R. Thomas Tetlow Bill Buell have worked in cooperation with Eugene Dads and Mr. Fred Stick les, president of the Eugene Dads An attempt has been made to furnish transportation from the depot to the luncheon for dads arriving on this train. Assisting the luncheon commit tee in decorating the table for the 1 o’clock meeting are Jean Fitzgerald, Signe Ecklund, Bar bara Bealer, Flora Kibler, and Dorothy Frideger. Coat checking will be handled by Kelly Snow and Jim Campbell. Leon Benven iste has made all the place cards for the luncheon. Tonight fathers will be enter tained with a double-barreled program that will start with the varsity game between Oregon and Oregon State. All reserved seats for this event have been sold, but general admission tickets may be purchased either today or to night at McArthr court. Following the game will be a special presentation for dads of the University Guild theater’s latest production, "The Whole Town’s Talking." Tickets are 55 cents and should be purchased in the box office in Johnson hall. Sunday morning old and new members of the Oregon Dads ex ecutive committee will have breakfast at 9:30 at the Eugene hotel. Former Actor Reviews Play Rehearsal for “The Whole Town's Talking" received a sur prise visit recently when a for mer Guild Hall player, Dick Tur ner, reviewed the performance. Turner is now a junior ensign in the navy and is returning to his home in Portland from Wash ington, D.C., where he was sta tioned. Opens Saturday A transfer from Whitman col, lege, Walla Walla, Washington, Turner attended the University during his junior and senior yeais. He was an honor student major ing in advertising and was active in dramatics, appearing in “The Taming of the Shrew,” and having leads in several plays. He is a member of Phi Delta Theta fra ternity. “The Whole Town’s Talking” opens today with performances after Saturday’s basketball game with OSC, and continues on Wed nesday and Thursday of next week'. The box office in the lobby of Johnson hall is open from 10-12 m. and from 1-5 p.m. Tickets are 55 cents and all seats are reserved. This is the third production on the season ticket. Mrs. Ottilie Seybolt, director, announces that if a fourth play is produced, hold ers of season tickets will be ad mitted at a reduced price. If a Buddy (Continued from page two) Santa Ana army air base dedi cated a brand new gymnasium recently when its stellar basket ball squad defeated Loyola uni versity. Laddie Gale, center for the University of Oregon's 1939 national basketball champions, is a member of the Flyers’ team. Milk Is at War • Total war includes milk on the lists of essential products. It is up to the consumer and distributor to work together. Re member to place your orders early and take only your just share so that all may have the benefits of dairy products. Ice Cream . . . Medo-Rich Homogenized Milk . . . Double - Rich Buttermilk... Butter . . . Flav-R-Pak Frosted Foods. Medo-Land Creamery 675 Charnelton Phone 393 CAMPUS CALENDAR Dr. L. B. Bee will lead a forum Sunday at 6:30 p.m. at Westmin ster house. The topic will be “Some Neglected Aspects of Dur able Peace.” Handball Tourney Nearing Completion The intramural handball elim ination tournament is rapidly nearing the day when the 1943 victors will be heralded. In the upper bracket, the first semi-final game is slated for Fonday at four. It will pit the winners of today’s ATO-Sigma Chi contest against the-DU four some. Quarter-final competition in the lower bracket will end with the Kappa Sigs and Sigma Nu featured in Monday’s five o'clock rubber-ball chase. Ad Lib (Continued from page two) Sammy Kayes from house li braries and trade them even-ste ven to the stores for truly fine stuff that has been turned in by the undiscerning. Yesterday I hauled in the Goodman trio’s “Where or When, ’ Bob Crosby’s “Prayin' Humble,” and a Dixie opus by the Herman Herd. You might find some fa vorites of yours in the back room of the Radio Lab if you aren’t afraid of a little dust on the paws. mmm Li be Previews 'Figaro’Excerpts Highlights from Mozart’s com ic opera, “Marriage of Figaro,’’ will compose the seventh Sunday afternoon browsing room concert held February 14 from 4 to 4:45 p.m. in the browsing room of tho University library. Visiting dads and mothers are invited to at tend. Records will be presented by, Dr. Arnold Elston, assistant pro fessor of music at the Univer sity. Preceding the playing of the records, Dr. Elston and Sig urd Nilssen, professor of voice, will give brief talks in order that the audience may understand the music better. The “Marriage of Figaro” re cordings have been chosen for the concert Sunday as a preview to the opera, which will be pre sented the following evening, February 15, by the Nine o’Clock opera company as a Greater Art ist series attraction. Hostesses for the concert will be Mrs. J. M. Miller from the Mu Phi Epsilon patroness group, Mrs. Buford Roach from the Mu Phi Epsilon alumnae, Miss Ruth Merritt from the Mu Phi Epsi lon active group, and Mrs. Willis Warren from the library commit tee. Camouflage is being taught at Queens college and Columbia university in New York. Charles N. Pace, president of Hamline university, St. Paul, tossed a Civil war saber, onto the university's scrap pile. SEE YOU AT THE GAME, DAD! • You’ll enjoy those streamlined Ducks with their speed, accuracy and depend ability—just as Mother would enjoy a streamlined white enameled automatic gas range that combines those very same qualities. • SEE THEM NOW at the show room of the Northwest Cities | Gas. Co. 931 Oak Phone 28