5>inQ Program £e*uosi Redid Takes Shape Entries Due Drawings for order on the all campus sing program will be made as soon as the entries are in, according to Oge Young, sing chairman. The deadline was announced last week as Tuesday, April 6, a day also noteworthy as “M” day fcr the ERC. Entries must be in j^e Emerald news room or turned in to Ted Goodwin by 5 p.m. to day. Information should include the name of the house, the song, the song leader, and the number in the chorus. The competition for men limits choruses to from 10 to 18. Women may have from 16 to 20. Songs chosen must be only one song, or if a medley, should be sung through without stop ping. The sing will be held Friday, April 30, in McArthur court fol lowing the coronation of the Jun ior Weekeend queen and her court. The drawing will deter mine order of competition. Ad mission will be 40 cents and tick ets may be purchased at the edu cational activities office in Mc Arthur court. Trtusic Students Air KOAC Concert Frances Brobert, soprano and sophomore in music, will be ac companied by Betty Bennett, freshman in music, when she presents a program of songs over KOAC at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday. Her program will include: “The Wren,” by Benedict; “Obstina tion,” by Foutenaille; “Song of India” by Rimsky-Korsakov; “Les Berceaux,” Faure, and “The Lass With the Delicate Air.” On Wednesday evening at 7:30 Jean Phillips, sophomore in mu sic, will play Chopin’s Nocturne in D flat; Bach’s Prelude and Fu ,gue in D minor, and the first jAovement of Beethoven's “So nata in G minor,” At 7:45 p.m. Ruth Baker, sen ior in music and pianist, will play Prelude and Fugue in B Flat, by Bach, “The Spinner’’ by Roff, and “Etude de Concert” by MacDow ell. Univ. of Tex. has 108 petroleum engineering graduates in the armed services. It's the Last Call... —dance chairman, to or der your dance programs. Place your orders TO DAY to insure the best possible design. Take the responsibility off your mind and put it on our shoulders. Programs of Distinction * Valley Printing & Stationerg Co. Phono 470 76 W. Broadway Leone LaDuke, pianist and senior in music, will be present ed in her senior recital this evening at 8 in the school of music auditorium. Program follows: Bach.Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue Braluns.Intermezzo, Op. 117, No. 1 Brahms.Capriccio, Op. 76, No. 2 Schumann. Sonata in G-minor Presto Possible Andantino Scherzo Rondo Debussy...Gardens in the Rain Ravel.Minuet (from Sonatine) Chopin ...t.Nocturne in C-sharp minor Chopin.Polonaise in A-flat Zino Francescatti Ends Greater Artist Concerts By BETTY LU SIEGMAN Closing the University’s Greater Artist concert series for 1942-43, Zino Francescatti, French violinist, will play before an audience in McArthur court Thursday at 8 p.m. The career of this artist includes the following steps—at five he made his first public appearance, at ten he scored a musical triumph in the Beethoven concerta, and at twenty established nimseu among me iew reany great violinists through the suc cess of his formal debut with the Orchestra of the Concerts de Conservatoire at the Paris opera. His second debut was the be ginning of his career in Europe, followed by similar successes in South America. In the fall of 1939 Francescatti came to the United States for the first time. Three Orchestras In the course of a limited but sold-out tour he appeared with three of America’s most impor tant orchestras—the New York Philharmonic symphony, the Chi cago symphony and the Cincin nati symphony—each of which immediately re-engaged him for the following season. After this first tour of the United States he was hailed in the press as being “worthy of the mantle of Papanini.” Francescatti’s 1941-42 tour was sold out the preceding spring. It included an appearance, his third in as many years, with the New York Philharmonic symphony as one of four major violinists to appear during the centennial year of America’s oldest orchestra. The other violinists chosen for this honor were Menuhin, Heifetz, and Busch. Third Appearance During this season Francescat ti also makes his third consecu tive appearance wTith the Cincin nati, Pittsburgh, and Rochester orchestras as well as appearances with the San Francisco, Toledo, and' Tri-City symphonies. Francescatti, who began to play the violin when he was but three years old, grew up self taught in music, except for the IF .... Bells Are Ringin' . . . for you and your gal! Make yours an inexpensive as well as a beautiful e n - gag-emeu t, with a ring from fJrisioMfe JEWELRY STORE 620 Willamette ERC Men Report at 4 All ERC men will report to McArthur court this afternoon at 4 to receive their orders, Dr. Carl F. Kossack said Monday. They are not to bring their suitcases at that time as they will have an opportunity to pick them up later. training he received from his father in both violin and piano. Parents Musicians Both his parents were musi cians, but his father felt that his young son, Zino, shouldn’t have a musician’s career, because it was too precarious. He wanted him to become a lawyer. It was Zino’s mother who saw to it that he developed his musi cal talent even though she agreed to his becoming a lawyer, and it was Francescatti, himself, who later made the decision that he was going to become a musician. Shades of Sky Blue! Sky Scanners Sought Wanna be a sky gazer? This question was brought up by As sociated College Press when they revealed that 1.000 sky-gazers are wanted by Hans H. Uewberg er, assistant professor of meteor ology at Pennsylvania State col lege. He is planning to use the student gazers to estimate the shade of the blue sky. He expects to find out whether the eyes of the average untrained person can be used as a measur ing stick in this type of meteor ological study. The aerologist ex plained that if the large majority of untrained students can agree on the shade of sky blue during simultaneous observations, the usefulness of color estimation would be established. r ► ► ► ► i i EUGENE HOTEL presents Art Holman and his Orchestra 75c Per Person ◄ 4 4 4 Dancing 9 ’til 12 Every Sat. Nite Roseburg Speakers Win Annual Debate Contest By CAROL COOK Roseburg high school's affirmative debate team won first place in the annual state high school speech and forensic tour nament. Jack Horn and Barney Baker argued the winning case. Hillsboro, the runner up, was represented in the negative by Orville Meyer and LaRoy Dillan. naving won Inst place ill the contest for three consecutive years, the champions will take permanent possession of the tro phy, which was presented by Dr. E. E. DeCou, University profes sor of mathematics. It was Dr. DeCou who organized the first tournament. Nevitt Smith Wins Winners in the after dinner speaking contest were Nevitt Smith, first, Salem; Talbert Se horn, Klamath Falls, second; and Tom Brand', Salem, third. Discussion group winners were La Roy Dillon, Hillsboro, first. Dick Stanton, Grants Pass, and Harlalee Wilson, Ashland, tied for second place. Radio Speakers In the radio speaking division Florence Hintzen, Portland (Grant high school), won first; Jacque Autrey, Hillsboro, second; and Dick Stanton, Grants Pass, and Beverly Brunton, Eugene, a tie for third place. Dick Stanton, Grants Pass, won again in the extempore speaking finals. LaRoy Dillon, Hillsboro, placed second; and Harlalee Wilson, Ashland, won third. Measles Fall Behind SpottedPatientsLeg Measles cases at the infirmary are getting fewer and fewer, taut new patients keep coming in with other various and sundry ailments. Some of the boys have been whooping it up, and two concussions have been the result. On Monday Marianne Blenkinsop, Frosh Girls With 3.5 s Will Dine The Phi Theta Upsilon annual banquet for freshman women who have earned a 3.5 accumulative GPA or over will be held tonight at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house, announced Dorothy Clear’, chairman. Members of the junior honor ary who have been in charge of the party are Sue Sawyer, place cards; Nancy Ames, invitations; Barbara Lamb, publicity, and Peggy Magill, songs. Assistant Dean of Women Mrs. Alice Mac duff will be the guest speaker. Freshman women who have been invited are Phyllis Ama cher, Betty Bonnet, Maxine Cady, Janice Carpenter, La Verne Er ickson, Barbara McClung, Ber nice Granquist, Janice Hough, Irene Jolivette, Louise Montag, Janice Nelson, Pauline Sulflow, Frances Wilder, Freda Koehler, and Vena Opie. Campus clothes will be in order, according to Miss Clear. Marvin Borthick, Sally Childs, Rollin Wood, Don Durland, Jeanne Fitzgerald, and June Taylor’ were registered as the newest patients at the infirmary. Jim Thayer, Raymond Krantz, Betty Jane Harding, and Joanne Holstad were discharged on the same day. ask the stoker "BRING ON WAT ICE-COLD COCA-COLA" '"Letters come from war plant managers telling how a pause for Coca-Cola is welcomed by workers. If you had to stand up to a hot furnace, you'd see the word refreshment in a new light. And as for refreshment, that’s what ice-cold Coca-Cola is. No wonder everybody agrees that the only thing like Coca-Cola is Coca-Cola, itself.” » --— BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF EUGENE