Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 08, 1947, Page 3, Image 3

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    Board Okays
May Literator
The May edition for May 24 of
The Emerald Literator, new publi
cation. designed as an outlet for
student creative talent, was ap
proved Tuesday by the educational
activities board.
An experimental first edition of
The Literator appeared in four
page tabloid format with the
April 26 edition of the Emerald
and was generally well-received on
the campus. The staff for the
second edition remains that of the
former, and no mechanical
changes are planned although the
editor, Marguerite Wright, told
the board she hopes plans will be
made to continue The Literator
next year using book quality paper
instead of the inside four Emerald
pages.
Letter From Dr. Horn
Dr. Robert D. Horn, member of
the Literator advisory board, in a
letter to the editor said:
“I should like to express my
satisfaction in the appearance of
the first Literator. I hope it will
be continued and developed, not
only as a medium for writers, and
workers in the arts, but also as
means for encouraging plays, con
certs, art shows, and other such
enterprises. Particularly, I wel
come the Literator as a corrective
to the usual gesturing of a coterie
that marks the traditional ‘liter
ary’ magazine. It reaches all the
students rather than a little cult
of beauty-wj>rshippers, but it
gives an ^Jstlet for original
work . . .”
A meeting for the staff is
scheduled in the editor’s office at
4:30 p.m., Thursday, May 8:
’ SPORTS STAFF THIS ISSUE
George Skorney
Bernie HanSmerbeck
Jim Wallace
Wally Hunter
A1 Pietschman
Wally Adams
AWS Heads to Dine
President and Mrs. Harry K.
Newburn will give a dinner for
comimtete heads of the AWS
I
Weekend and Nickel hop and the j
AWS cabinet and council tonight
at their home. I
The women will meet in front of ,
Gerlinger at 5:15 p.m. Barbara I
Jones, AWS president, will collect
reports on the Weekend from the
committee heads at the if.nner.
ADVERTISING STAFF
Day manager:'
Bob Chaney
Layout manager:
Margie Harrison
Layout and Soliciting Sta%:
Marilyn Turner
Joan Minnaugh
Nan Humphrey
Doug Fetch
Mary Lou Casey
Natl. Advertising Manager:
Mary Ellen Davey
Circulation Manager:
Ann Hite.
» I
SERVE FISH and
SEA FOODS
FREQUENTLY ,
I
Please order early for
'
Friday Delivery
NEWMAN'S
FISH
MARKET
39 E. Brdy. Phone 2309 '
I
Bible Group Continues
Studies at Gerlinger
Informal Bible studies, under
the auspices of the UO Fellowship, !
will be conducted today from 8 to
9 a.m. in the men’s lounge of Ger
linger hall and in the committee ;
room of the University YMCA, j
from 11 to 12 noon.
“Therefore if any man be in
Christ, he is a new creature: old
things are passed away; behold,
all things are become new.’’—II
Cor. 5:17 will be the theme.
EERYTHING IN PICTURES
HOUSE DANCE SHOTS
BANQUET PHOTOS
WHITE SHRIT PICTURES
BAT'S PHOTO SERVICE
“If we don’t please, we don’t charge”
Phone 4685-W 1195- W. Tyler
MiAA, fy>iGnciJza ZchlunA
Personally Representing
FRANCES DENNEY
Extends an Invitation to our
many University customers to
discuss their beauty problems
with her.
Miss Ecklund will be in
our Toiletries Dept,
f One Week.
MAY 5-10
\ r*
ssells
iiiiiiiir.iiiitiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii'iiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiHifiiiiiiiiinniiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
—^
READ HOW THE
GLAMOROUS FAYE
BLESING, NOTED
TRICK-RIDING STAR
OF THE RODEO,
ROPED AND RODE
HER WAY TO FAME
FAYE'S PRACTICALLY LIVED L MIGHT MAKE A GOOD COW
WITH THAT CRITTER THESE > PONY BUT SHE'LL NEVER
LAST WEEKS-HE'S A BEAUTY! ,/CALM HIM DOWN ENOUGH
% THE STORY BEGINS SEVERAL YEARS AGO ON THE’cSSSl
g."[OF FAYE BIESING’S FATHER PURINS A
I SEVERAL MONTHS IATER—THE EL PASO RODEO |
/HTWZX/ffWG A NEWCOMER FO 7HE
W FODF0 C/FCWF—OiAMOMUS EAYE BCE&/V&
|t RfDf/VS FEE W/LP PALOMINO—F/ASH'
t
^STEADY, FLASH! DON'T®
BE FRIGHTENED- jffH
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston*Salem, North Carolina
' IMAGINE DOING THE THAT GROUND \
RUSSIAN DRAG ON A IS AWFUL SLICK—
V^WILD HORSE
i-‘--.I HE DIDN'T THROW HER—1
froLDYOu'soP-yo(j\'rHAT wer ^R0UNC> Jl
THAT GIRL HAS ,^/DIDJAHEAR? NEW YORK AGENT]
^WHATITTOKES^ OVER THERE WANTS TO SIGN J
Fa championship-a
CONTRACT—THAT CALLS
[FOR SOMETHING SPECIAL
YOUR “T-ZONE” r
WILL TELL YOU f
T for Taste... j
Tfor Throat.. I
that’s your proving ’
ground for any ciga>
1 rette. See if Camels
don't suit your
“T-Zone” to a “T.»
^EXPERIENCE IS THE^i
N BEST TEACHER IN RIDING q!
I ...IN CI6ARETTES TOO! I'VE p
i TRIED THEM AU_CAMELS ' %
SUIT ME BEST! I
-^
FAYE BLESING has been .
a star of the rodeo for 5 ‘
years. Her experience with
various brands of cigarettes
dates back to the war
shortage—"That’s when I
smoked a different brand i
every day,” she recalls. ^
"That’s when I learned to
appreciate Camels. ’
Ik
_JA