UFA BUDDY Itllllllllllllllllllllllllll iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiintn MEET A BUDDY 11IIII1IIIIUUIIIIIIIU By GLORIA MALLOY Well, from all reports this next week should mark the return of the ROTCs. The date or hour is still indefinite but it’s a sure thing we’ll all be glad to see them back. Just think, girls, that will make just forty-five more chanc es for you to have a date this term. The marines at USC are begin iMUg to get their furloughs now. ipTO Tom Oxman pulled in yes terday much to the delight of Marge Cordon, Pi Beta Phi. Ma rine Jim Benningfield woke up the DeeGees bright and early Sun day morning to give them his re gards before directing himself over to the Kappa house to see Lois Twining. Sit, Gentlemen Officers’ training is no cinch! At least that is what we gather from communications received by us. Officers’ Candidate Clinton Paine comments on the whole sit uation, “Don’t get me wrong, they’re pretty darn nice to us. Why, they let us sit down all of three times a day—breakfast, lunch, and dinner!” Our boys are going places! Phi Delt Tippi Dyer of those marines has been promoted to platoon sergeant, and frat brother Don Bridenstine is really showing. He i^«:adet lieutenant in the Leath WRcks. Those navy V-12’s back at Parkville, Missouri, have gotten right into the swing of things. Ex-columnist Fred Beckwith’s “talents” have been recognized, and he is now writing a column for the Parkville paper. ATO Don Lonis is doing some thing in the journalistic form also. What I’ve been trying to figure out is what is the signifi cance to the nickname they have placed on ATO Bill Wood. They now call him “Beachcomber” Wood! Wounded Chi Psi Tom Houston and Len Barde, junior ROTCs, are still back at Fort McClellan recuper ating from gunshot wounds re ceived during target practice. Dee Gee Betty Sturgeon is now well on her way to see Jim Gowans, Chi Psi, who is in pre engineering training at the Uni versity of Michigan. Sigma Nus Bill George and Bud Houston are back at Park ville, Missouri, and their motto is, "There’s no place like home.” They Get Around It seems they had a but inter fraternity informal dance down at UCLA and invited all the Navy V-12ers to attend. Their school newspaper, the “Claw” says,” Sprague Carter and his Oregon boys were there 100 per cent.” Our boys get around no matter where they are. MEN IN SERVICE PROTECT YOUR CASH Cash is safe from loss or theft when you carry AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVELERS CHEQUES. Your money is always in readily spendable form, and if lost or stolen, you receive a prompt refund. Issued in denominations of $10, $20, $50 and $100. Cost 75f! for each $100. Minimum cost 40( for $10 to $50. For sale at banks and Railway Express Offices. AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVELERS CHEQUES EXCITEMENT! THRILLS! SPILLS EUGENE ICE ARENA % ICE SKATING DAILY Evenings 1:45-10:00 Weekday afternoons 4:00-6:00 Saturday,and Sunday afternoons, 2:30-5 :00 Any organization may rent the arena for a private party any evening between 10-12 p.m. for only $20. 1SMJ West Otli Ave., Eugene INSTRUCTORS FOR-BEGINNERS The World’s News Seen Through The Christian Science Monitor An International Daily Newspaper Published by THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING SOCIETY One, Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts is Truthful—Constructive—Unbiased—Free from Sensational ism — Editorials Are Timely and Instructive and Its Daily Features, Together with the Weekly Magazine Section, Make the Monitor ar Ideal Newspaper for the Home. Price $12.00 Yearly, or $1.00 a Month. Saturday Issue, including Magazine Section, $2.60 a Year. Introductory Offer, 6 Saturday Issues 25 Cents. Obtainable at: 86 West Broadway, Eugene, Ore. Christian Science Reading Room Ex-Ducks Win Mention in Army Publication The Benning Bayonet, Fort Benning paper, recently carried news of two former Oregon stu dents, Warren Finke and Brad Ecklund. Finke is 50-meter backstroke champ of Fort Benning, Georgia. He attended the University last year. Ecklund will play with one of the Fort Benning football teams. He left school in 1940. Alums Returning From Jap Camp Returning to the United States on the Teia Maru are Mr. and Mrs. Berry Eastham, both Uni versity of Oregon alumni, who were interned in Shanghai by the Japanese since the outbreak of the war. They have spent the last 35 years in .China, Eastham having been a lawyer for the States Steamship company in Tientsin. Their home while in the states was in Portland, but their return now is the first in many years. The Teia Maru is returning 1326 American citizens in ex change for an equal number of Japanese nationals. The exchange is being made in Mormugao, Por tuguese India. Campbell Needs Ten More Men Prospects for Campbell co-op, the only men’s cooperative func tioning on the campus this term, look considerably brighter than at first, Dr. S. H. Jameson., faculty adviser to the co-op board, de clares. “With the addition of three more boys to our membership, we have at least attained a se cure financial foothold. We now have a total of 15 members, but we would like to obtain more, as the house will hold 25. If any men are having housing difficul ties, they should see me in my of fice in the Oregon building.” Men of Campbell recently elect ed Vernon Kisaberth, former Kirkwood man, house president. Book [Collection Donated to Libe A collection of more than 1,000 books and articles, the profes sional library of Dr. P. A. Par sons, was received by the Uni versity library as a gift from Mrs. Parsons and her daughters, Katrine Waggoner Parsons and Mrs. Norman C. Williams, it was announced recently by Willis C. Warren, acting librarian. Dr. Parsons was a sociology professor on the campus from 1920 until his death. He came from Syracuse university where he served as head of the sociol ogy department. While on the campus he directed the annual commonwealth conferences, and was a member of the Oregon estate planning board. In the lat ter capacity he collected a num ber of items which were included in the articles given the library. ' > . 11 UJiLM 'The Sky's the Limit' Fred Astaire Joan Leslie Extension Head Names Stevens In a recent announcement by Dr. V. V. Caldwell, dean of the general extension division of the state system of higher education, Dr. H. E. Stevens was reported as being named administrative assistant in the general extension division. Dr. Stevens, who received his doctor of education degree from the University in 1940, has the rank of associate professor in ed ucation. He has taught summer school sessions in Eugene and Portland in the years from 1940 to 1943. From 1940 to 1942 he was assistant professor of education at the University of Alaska, Fair banks. The new extension assistant has been with the Portland center since February as an instructor in education and psychology. Dur ing the month of September he and W. G. Beattie, assistant di rector of the general extension division, traveled throughout the state visiting schools. Lawrence College is the only member of the Midwest confer ence with a football team this year. Reason: Lawrence is the only school in the conference with a naval training unit eligible to play. Theater Devotees To Meet; Pick Play All students interested in the campus theater group are invit ed to the second meeting of the year Thursday evening at 7:30 in Guild hall. The advisory board will present plans drawn up at their meeting, and the first play will probably be chosen. New under-arm * Cream Deodorant safely Stops Perspiration L'f// A) 1. Docs not rot dresses or men’s shirts. Docs not irritate skin. 2- No waiting to dry. Can be used right after shaving. 3. Instantly stops perspiration for 1 to 3 days. Prevents odor. 4. A pure, white, greaseless, stainless vanishing cream. 5. Awarded Approval Seal of American Institute of Launder ing for being harmless to fabric. * j U the \argest ' Guaranteed by V Good Housekeeping ffowctmo# >V^£4»v»tmp n*£ v % 39* » j« Also in 10^ and S9i jam ARRID THIS Coast Guardsman stands watch over the convoy — telephones warnings that keep it in protected formation — helps to get fighting men and fighting equipment through to their destination. On every battlefront—at sea, on land and in the air—telephone and radio equipment made by Western Electric is seeing plenty of action. For 61 years, this Company has been the manufac turer for the Bell Telephone System. In the impor tant war work that Western Electric is doing today, college graduates—men and women of varied abilities —are finding opportunities to serve their country well. 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