Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 23, 1946, Page 8, Image 8

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    Press Confab
Program Set
The Oregon high school press
conference will begin Friday, De
cember 6 with a general assembly
of the delegates as outlined by the
program released by Warren C.
Price, program chairman for the af
fair.
On the morning schedule will be
an address of welcome by E. M. Pal
lett, assistant to the University
president. R. D. Clark, assistant
professor of speech and dramatic
arts; Jack Billings, managing edi
tor of the Emerald; and Paul
Deutschmann, city editor of the
Register-Guard are among the
speakers on the two-hour morning
schedule.
Friday afternoon forums will
take up high school newspaper edi
torials, advertising, and the high
school mimeographed paper.
Election of officers for next
year’s conference will take place
later in the afternoon with results
to be announced by Dean George
S. Turnbull at the conference ban
quet at the Osburn hotel.
The Friday evening banquet will
include entertainment by Marvin
Krenk, magician, and an address
by William M. Tugman, managing
editor of the Register-Guard. Sigma
Delta Chi, men’s national profes
sional journalism fraternity, will
hold a formal initiation during the
banquet.
Saturday morning forums take up
printing, editing the school paper,
writing techniques, and sports. The
conference will close Saturday
morning with a general meeeting
with Dean George Turnbull, and the
new conference president presiding.
Brown YMCA Speaker
Norman Brown will be the princi
pal speaker, talking on “What
!3hould I Believe About God,” Mon
day evening at the next meeting of
the UO fellowship at the Univer
sity YMCA from 7 to 8 p.m.
Libe Hour Shift
Scheduled Sunday
To allow library employees to at
tend the Lauritz Melchior concert
Sunday at 3 p.m., R. C. Swank, li
brarian, announced Friday that the
library will not open until 6 p.m.
Sunday, November 24. Closing time
is set for 9 p.m.
The library hours for the Thanks
giving period are: Wednesday, No
vember 27, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
Thursday, November 28, the library
will be closed. Friday and Saturday,
November 29 and 30, the hours are
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and Sunday
the library will be closed.
Students wishing to use reserve
books over the holidays will be able
i to take them out, Wednesday at
[4:30 p.m., but the books must be
! returned Monday at 8 a.m.
Metropolitan Opera Star
(Continued from page one)
flying conditions, his chartered
plane was grounded in Oakland,
California, Monday morning. No
vember 19 the Metropolitan opera
star was able to fly to Portland
where he appeared at the Civic au
ditorium that night—minus orches
tra. However, the orchestra is to
appear in the Igloo Sunday after
noon.
The Eugene Civic Music associa
tion is sponsoring the concert which
is open to members of the ASUO
and the ECMA. Melchior is the sec
ond star to appear in Mac court this
term. Helen Traubel and he have
been the Met’s Wagnerian first
team since 1941.
Phi Theta Upsilon and Kwama,
junior and sophomore women hon
oraries will usher at the concert.
Members of the two organizations
are asked to be at McArthur court
by 1:45 p.m. Sunday.
The primary problem at the Ama
zon housing project is sewage.
There are about 35,000 miles of
federal airways in the United
States.
Emerald Advisory
Committee Named
Members of the recently named
“Senior Six” of Phi Beta Kappa
and the editors of Old Oregon and
the Oregana were appointed Thurs
day by Emerald Editor Marguer
ite W. Wright to form the new stu
dent advisory committee for the
Emerald. This committee will re
place the editorial board which re
signed last week.
Roy Paul Nelson, senior in jour
nalism and Oregana editor, and
Harry Glickman, junior in journal
ism and Old Oregon editor, will rep
resent the viewpoints of students at
large and advise the editor of the
Emerald journalistically. The Phi
Betes were appointed because
“their viewpoint is more likely to
be disinterested and detached than
that of students active in campus
political affairs, and they are less
likely to be influenced by pressure
groups.”
The members of “Senior Six” are
Leola Deffenbacher, major in Eng
lish; Margaret Thompson, major in
Romance languages; William Baird,
major in history; Walter Gilbert,
major in mathematics; Ninon King,
major in psychology; and Doris
Spearow, major in English.
The new committee, first of its
kind in the history of the Emerald,
will meet regularly with members
of the upper news and editorial
staffs to discuss problems of the
campus newspaper.
Night Staff:
Kyllis Pholmmler
Arabrab Naej Schmid
Winsome Wiley
Happy Williams
Boan Jabbett
Eelobob Ehyorb
Gub Ezteog
Butch Noslo
Kurlee Laurie
Speed Gillespie
Hansom Gauld
Go-Gettem Crow
Rodger the Loger
♦ Monogramed Playing Cards
♦ Personalized Christmas Cards
♦ Photo Albums
l Jnioersitij ‘CO-OP’
Why Go North
to Travel East?
STUDENTS
Make reservations now and be
assured a seat on Trailways East
bound busses through Bend, Burns,
Ontario, Boise, Salt Lake City and
all Eastern Points
Busses leave Eugene
8 A. M. and 7 P. M.
Trailways Bus System
"A Friendly Line"
Depot 957 Pearl Phone 5408
H. H. Givan, Agent
V.
BOWLING IN THE CLUTCH
T'S THE IO& FRAME OF THE LAST GAME OF A BIG 20-GAME
MATCH. THE SCORE IS TIED! THE CHAMPIONS OPPONENT,
ROLLING FIRST, BLASTS ANOTHER STRIKE. WITH THE
PRESSURE ON, BOMAR MAKES HIS TOSS, . ,
j
AND THE MATCH
IS STILL TIED UP
NOW WATCH! I
IT'S A STRIKE
FOR BOMAR!
11 mm \ / \ -ff ., /.
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, North Carolina
rANOTHER STRIKE!
THE DINNER IS
- buppv 0OMARI
JUST A FEW PUFFS OF
THIS CAMEL FIRST,
BOVS-UM-M—HITS
THE SPOT!
1945 National
Match-Game
Champion.
All-American
selection for
2 years.
Thirty-one 300
games rolled
in different cities.
i've smoked
camels for nine
YEARS. THEY ^
suitmy't-zone' /
toa't.'thereS m
JUST NOTHING
LIKE A CAMEL/
YOUR “T-ZONE”
WILL TELL YOU...
T for Taste...T for Throat.,
that’s your proving ground
for any cigarette. See if
Camels don’t suit your
“T-Zone” to a “T.”
COSTLIER TOBACCOS