Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 01, 1943, Page 3, Image 3

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    Reveille Review.
Communique
Uniform of the day for all per
sonnel in the three ASTU com
panies is wool OD. This will re
place the cotton khaki uniform
for all classes and formation un
til further order.
♦Army Wives On
Campus Form
Social Group
Army wives whose husbands
are stationed on the University
campus have organised a unit to
provide diversion for themselves
and their husbands, it was an
nounced Wednesday.
At their last meeting they
elected Mrs. Eleanor Karros to
serve as their president. Mrs.
Nancy Anderson and Mrs. Da
,lores Pierzchola will be secretary
“*and treasurer.
On alternate Tuesday nights
the wives plan to gather for an
evening of feminine activity. The
social committee, Mrs. Mary
Worthington, Mrs. Audrey Green
berg, Mrs. Kathryn Kulesh, and
Mrs. Janet Zaeehler, have planned
card parties, games, swimming
"Sessions and other activities for
,hese TtSqsday night meetings.
Open house for GI’s and their
wives or. dates will be held on
Sunday afternoons by the group.
Mrs. Edith Siefert, the hostess
in Gerlinger hall ,is opening the
alumni hall in Gerlinger to the
^wonien and their husbands, as a
sort of campus headquarters,
.Where they may meet, relax, play
the pianos, and generally enjoy
themselves. Alumni hall will be
open from 8 in the morning to
10:15 in the evening, said Mr3.
Siefert; and arrangements have
been made to keep it open par
ticularly during the lunch hour.
College dances and college ac
tivities, stressed the hostess, are
a. pen to GI wives, who are invit
“ ed to participate in social affairs,
the Red Cross, and other such
campus pastimes.
4
Rehabilitation
Program Eyed
Possibilities of a vocational re
habilitation program at the Uni
versity of Oregon for soldiers re
turning from the battlefields was
discussed in Eugene last week by
Hugh G. Grant, vocational reha
bilitation officer of veterans’ ad
ministration, Portland, and mem
bers of the University faculty.
Mr. Grant was in Eugene Fri
* day and Saturday and talked to
Donald M. Erb, president of the
University, F. M. Hunter, chan
cellor of the Oregon state sys
tem of higher education, and
members of the faculty in connec
tion with the possibility of such
a program on the University of
Oregon campus for soldiers who
have been wounded and returned
to this country.
R. W. Leighton, dean of the
school of physical education, is
chairman of the campus rehabili
tation committee. Other members
of the committee are: Dr. W. C.
Jones, Dr. P. A. Killgallon, Dr.
E. H. Moore, A. B. Stillman, K.
S. Wood, P. P. Adams, and Virgil
D. Earl. Andrew Vincent will re
place Mr. Adams during fall term.
The average coed wears a size
14 dress.
Khaki and Ancient Lace
Dear Diary, Come Saturday
night and I was fit as a fiddle
again on account of because my
perfessor lets me sleep in class
all week on account of I look so
tired. So I hops into my convert
ible—that’s short for walking—
and go and pick up my girl Milly.
Milly is the girl I love, and I love
her on account of her left eye
crosses just like my right eye and
when we look at each other, we’re
in perfect focus. Then too, she’s a
uiBiuuer ui a. aisLeriiouu—opposite
of a frat (sexually speaking) —
and going with her kinda makes
me feel like a big shot.
Anyway, me and Hilly decides
to drop down to Lookmour’s for
a few drinks like we do every
Saturday night. Before, we used
to double date with another fel
low and his girl, but he got kicked
out of school for copying his feng
lish out of an encyclopedia,
which is a book which has got all
of the answers in it. But that was
a laugh, cause anyone who knows
anything about getting thru
school knows you got to copy
sometimes from a book which has
got a lot of answers. Anyway,
there wasn’t no one else who
would show his face in the places
we went so me and Milly had to
go alone.
Next, me and Milly decides
we’d kinda like to dance so I
forks over my last four bits—
and Milly forks over hers and
we goes to the Summergarden
where we hear they has a band.
Well, we didn’t find no band but
there was a guy blowing thru a
pipe and a lot of skirts on the
St. Vitus gathered out on the
floor. Socially speakin', it remind
ed me of the box sociables we
used to have back at school, cause
everybody was cutting every
body else’s throat to get the best
dish.
Finally, me and Milly leaves
the Summergarden on account of
the manager who’s so nice and
insistent and on account of the
dance has been over for two hours
already, and I takes Milly back
to her sisterhood. After kissing
her on the forehead—I couldn’t
find her mouth—I leaves her and
goes back to my private apart
ment which I share with my
roommate and six others. But
golly! I can hardly wait ’til next
Saturday nite, cause then me and
Milly are going out to some Dutch
place that they say has a real
floor show and real women!
Postwar Planning
Committee to Meet
Plans for post-war readjust
ment and development in Oregon
will get under way scon when a
state committee headed by Dr.
Victor P. Morris, dean of the
school of business administra
tion, begins consideration of the
subject.
Dr. Morris announced that the
committee will meet in Salem
October 7 to study various spe
cialized fields. Men representing
industry, labor, finance, agricul
ture, public works, forestry, edu
cation, and livestock raising in
the state are on the committee.
G. I- Jive
Hits Hard
seema no matter what a man
tries to do he gets mixed up with
music ... he goes through life
. . . ‘school days’ . . . ‘this is my
first affair’ . . . 'school days’
.. . now from here you may either
sing ‘praise the lord and pass
me my commission’ or ‘i took
my basic at salt lake city’ . . .
music in hendricks hall hits such
highs and lows it is nearly im
possible to please everyone . . .
the"'record-player in the day
room wails from reveille to taps
. . . (from song of nearly the
same name) . . . with a variety
of music ... murder he says
. . . and the echo comes back
with brahms’ lullaby . . . then
there’s not one of the boys but
had a spell of eating his meals
in cadence with ‘why don’t you
do right’ . . . then after dark
john brennamen uncovers his
schubert’s unfinished and the
boogie boys retreat . . . music
hath charms . . . unquote, is a
.hunch of tripe . . . the music
from the buglers at 0600 f’r in
stance has anything but charms
. . . and whitey at the piano is
something solid but hardly
charming . . . and then there is
this business of recalling songs
. . . ‘oldies’ remember, ‘life is
just a bowl of cherries’ . . . ‘bi
mir bist du schoen’ . . . ‘the 1am
beth walk’ . . . ‘i must see annie
tonight’ , . . -where do all those
songs go? . . . remember when
the military first arrived at Ore
gon u . . . dances . . . the soror
ities threw open their doors . . .
and now they’re remembering
those carefree days when there
was lots of free time to gaze at
the coeds parading past the win
dows . . . and go back to the time
before ... or need one . . . the
attitude of these Oregonians is
fine: they accept us as students
in uniform . . . they seem to
realize that a few short months
ago we stalked about in our nat
ural habitat . . . unquote.
Coming to the University in
1942 from the military depart
ment of Oregon State College,
Colonel Sampson became well
liked by his military colleagues
and students here. The war de
partment has not yet appointed
hi3 successor.
wiltihVieh
WE HAVE
NO
CAMERAS
for the duration
but
Invite you to visit our
store in the Register
Guard Building.
We have an attractive se
lection of figurines, artist
and architect materials,
and greeting cards. You
are welcome to visit our
engraving plant.
Next to Register-Guard
iviStifuieb
Staff
CO-EDITORS
Bob Stephenson
Warren Miller
Scribes
Tye Simpson
Gail Myers
Major Blythe Enters
Army Combat Service
Major Harvey Blythe, for 11
years a member of the Univer
sity of Oregon military depart
ment, has departed to enter com
bat service, according to Colonel
C. L. Sampson, commandant.
Coming to Oregon in 1932, Ma
jor Blythe served as assistant
professor of military science and
tactics. He enlisted in the army
23 years ago at Camp Robinson,
Arkansas, coming ,o the Univer
sity from Vancouver Barracks.
While here he coached three in
tercollegiate teams in rifle shoot
ing to victory in 1935, 1937, and
1939. He coached three drill com
panies which won every match
against Oregon State college.
r
Daffy-Nitions
Or a Pocket-Guide on Army
Slanguage
The average frosh has as much
trouble understanding military
abbreviations as a G. I. (mod*
ern dough-boy) has in cashing a
personal check. As a part of the
orientation program, we present
these explanations:
AAFTTC in official circles
means Army Air Force Technical
Training Command. All men
wearing the Air Force insignia
here on the campus are in the
AAFTTC. However, they are
commonly referred to as Pre
Mets—Pre-Meteorology students.
The engineers are ASTU men
enrolled in the Army'Specialized
Training Unit. And these rugged
individualists with the bearded
chins and broken accents are
FALS. These letters stand for
Foreign Areal and Language
(NOT for Arabian language as
several people have learned to
the accompaniment of red
cheeks and stammered apolo*
gies.)
(Please turn to page four)
WARDS PRESENT
BRADLEY’S
SWEATERS are “musts” to mix or match
with your casuals for back to school or off to
business! 50% wool zephr and mohair in
bright red, maize, natural, powder blue or dusty
pink. Sizes 32 to 40.
2.98
... sliponi
cardigans ... 3 • 2^^
v> lV«.v; ;■ .»v '• < 'wtiw,,
ontgomery
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