Fantastic Time of Your Life'
Sceduled to Open December I
By SHIRLEY ANDERSON
Having the times of their lives in
preparation for Saroyan’s “The
Time of Youf Life” are the various
members of the theater guild who
may be seen energetically buzzing
in, about or around the guild thea
ter and worshop these days. The
ambling and almost plotless fan
tasy will be presented to the cam
pus and other drama enthusiasts
the first of next month.
Under the direction of Horace
W. Robinson, assisted by Marilyn
Wherry, the crew in charge of the
stage makeup and setting is as fol
lows :
Stage manager, Kenneth Shores^
assistant stage manager, Jeanne
Myers; switchboard operator, Do
rothy Lee; property manager, Bev
A SMALL
DEPOSIT
will hold any
article until
CHRISTMAS
S
EITHER CASH
OR OLD GOLD
WILL DO
y§irisioiife
JEWELRY STORE
620 Willamette
erly Slaney; assistant property
manager, Jean Norlen; sound ef
fects, Janice Myers; box office
manager, Janette Williams; head
usher, Betty Ingebritson; make
up, Joe Schulberg.
The stage crew for the show is
hard at work with the reproduction
of a San Francisco waterfront
saloon, wherein very nearly all the
talking of the play takes place.
Holding down the leads in the
drama are Lewis Vogler as Joe
and Estelle Shimshak as Kitty,
with Clifton James and Marjory
Allingham running close seconds
as Nick and Mary.
“The Time of Your life” prom
ises to be highly enchanting . . .
“a .prose poem in-ragtime with a
humorous and lovable point of
view,” as described by the New
York Times.
Women's Winter
Calendars Due Today
All campus women s organi
zations should turn in their
calendars for winter term to the
Women’s Coordinating council
today. It is important that the
women’s organizations do this,
as the tentative calendar for
winter term must be ready for
the next meeting of the council
November 29.
Bishop Dagwell to Speak
AtY.W.C.A. Forum Here
The Very Reverend Benjamin D.
Dagwell, bishop of the Portland
area* will be featured as chief
speaker at a forum at the YWCA
November 27 at 4 p. m. The topic
will be “Religion and Personality.”
An informal luncheon for those
who would like to meet the bishop
will be held at noon Monday.
SIDE-SHOW
Come one._come nil. see this JOYCE
HUBRITE sidc-butloncr. See the gracefully
rounded tabbed yoke, the flanged shoulder
and the oh-so-slim skirt. In RAYLA1NE
flannel, 40% Virgin Woo! and 60% Rayon.
Carnival Red, Barker Blue, Fountain Lime
nnd Canvas Bcije.10 to 18.
l6LL
\wa<
20-30 CAST SAO/9fiu//9y
New York Featured
Theme at Formal
“Top-O-Straub” a theme of New
York was carried out at the
Gamma-Alpha hall formal Friday
night at John Straub.
The walls of the hall were a
landscape of blue and black with
one side picturing the outlind of
New York City, made complete
with the Empire State building
and the Brooklyn bridge. Illumin
ated stars, lighted windows, a
moon, and shaded blue lights com
pleted' the transformation.
Refreshments were served dur
ing intermission. Patrons and
patronesses were Mr. and Mrs. J.
C. MeCloskey, Mr. and Mrs. J.
Alan Wickham, Mrs. Genevieve
Turnipseed, Mrs. Edna Stokes, and
Mrs. Alda Stilwell.
Committee chairmen were as
follows: decorations, Betsy Mof
fitt; refreshments, Mary Fletcher:
clean-up, Myrl Sykes; flowers,
Sue Carter; music, Jean Stone;
and Cay Reese as general chair
man.
Dean Onthank To Speak
In Portland Meet
Karl W. Onthank, dean of per
sonnel administration, will attend
the meeting of the Portland
branch of the Northwest Personnel
Management association on Tues
day, November 27.
Mr. Onthank, the principle
speaker, has been asked to give a
commentary on the meeting of the
association which he attended in
Spokane recently. He will place
particular emphasis on labor man
agement relations and training for
labor management.
Women Reign at
Infirmary This Week
It is strictly women’s day in the j
infirmary, as not one man is listed, j
Two men were in Sunday and left
Monday morning: Ralph Riggs,
1240 Mill St., and Jack Sutton,
1306 E. ISth.
There are three Delta Gamma’s
in: Barbara Lucas, Elizabeth
Dean, and Patricia Keek. A girl
from Elmira, Oregon, Margaret.
Smith, has been in one week.
Other's on record are Kay Barit on,
Virginia Garden, and Elaine Blatt
man.
George’s Grotto
wishes you
a
very
Happy Thanksgiving
764 WILLAMETTE
Ph. 4527
Open 10.to 10
It’s more exciting because it’s true
Get your December fptfG at your
? favorite newsstand now
HAS FOOTBALL LOST ITS KICK?
Knute Rockne said, “Give me a good, reli-,
able punter, and I won’t worry about my
offense.” Can’t today’s football players kick?
Why is Lou Little a little sad? Maybe he
remembers when guys really could boot thQ,
(pigskin—17 field goals in one game! A 63
yard drop kick for a field goal! 97 points'
scored by a player who was never officially
in the game! Only 3 field goals missed in
two years of college football! How does
today stack up? Read this true
sports thriller.. •
Leather-Socking Tales
by Gordon M. Atkins
/"YOU WILL BE SORRY,
CAPTAIN KIRILSKI”
H
Iskandar swallowed hard
—he had eaten that
accursed bacon. Then ho
stood there, staring, smil
ing. That was beforo
Joan McNaughtan was
kidnapped, before Ma
jor Yeats-Brown, of the
famous Bengal Lancers,
went up into those
death-packed hills. In his
last Iruc story beforo he
died, Aehmed Abdullah, one
■ -o! tne best adventure story
r spinners of all time, tells a grip
ping tale of mystery, and tall
men with cruel smiles, in India’s
Khyber Pass. Read this great true
book-length feature . . .
Flames on the Border
by Copt. Achmod Abdullah
HALF FISH, HALF HUTS,
THEY CALLED ’EM
v »• You never hoard much about
the IIDT till after the Japs sur
rendered, did you? They were the
|gS~. boys who “fought the war in swim
BrHrunks.” Their story was one of our
JNavy s top secrets. Now it s out—tola lrom tne
inside out—in the true exclusive ..
17 Seconds to Live
by Commander Harold B. Say, USNIf
Sim Webb did jump,
but Casey Jones ^
didn’t. He rode to 1
glory on old 382. You’ve I
sung the song about him. The song is wrong,
you know. Set yourself straight on history’s
most famous “hoghead”—here’s the true,
low-down...
WANT YOUR OWN BUSINESS?
You can start it for peanuts, says
Minnesota's Stubborn Swede. He par
layed a $6 a week failure into a
87,500,000 a year success in 11 years.
“Money’s all around you, sitting and
wistfully waiting to fall in love with
your idea”—that’s what he says. It makc|
sense, in this latest of the popularJruei
Adventures in Busiaess . . .
i John Luther Jones Was a Brave Engineer
L by William Burke
Besides! A-ct-ah, man!
Another Petty Girl each month in
fi%(e and only
An original Petty drawing!
Farmers Friend
by CharUt Samuelt
Watch for the January f?UQ
on sale December 12, featuring
one of the greatest stories of
this war or any war—“Pappy”
Boyington's Own StoryL
Read true,
the man’s magazine
Get your December TRUE
at your newsstand now