Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 10, 1947, Page 6, Image 6

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    Apple Week
Without Slogan
"Keep Your Eyes Peeled!" This
was the slogan that advertised the
1946 Gamma Alpha Chi apple sale.
Now the Gamma Alpha Chis, mem
bers of the women's national ad
vertising honorary, are looking for
a new slogan and committee chair
men to put over the 1947 apple sale.
An annual affair, the apple sale
will be conducted the latter part
of the month, probably during na
tional apple week, Mary Ann Han
sen, president, announced Thurs
day. The sale will be on a campus
wide basis and will feature indi
vidual house sales as well as sales
from different campus spots.
Petitions for general chairman
and committee chairmanships
should be turned in to Mary Anne
Hansen at the Alpha Phi house by
Tuesday, October 14. Position of
general chairman will be given to
a sophomore or junior, but anyone
may petition for committee work,
Miss Hansen said.
Slogans should also be turned in
to Miss Hansen at the Alpha Phi
house as soon as possible.
Sports Briefs
Michigan State’s football team,
slightly groggy after a rough trip,
flew in from the East late today by
chartered airliner. The Spartans
play Washington State at Pullman
Saturday.
Rain canceled plans for a work
out under the arcs at Gonzaga sta
dium tonight but the team ran
through calisthenics in the Gonzaga
gymnasium. A practice session was
scheduled at Rogers field in Pull
man tomorrow.
Back in their accustomedrole as
underdogs, Coach Dixie Howell's
University of Idaho Vandals en
trained tonight for Corvallis.where
the y come up against Oregon State
Saturday. The Beavers walloped
the Vandals 33-0 last year but the
rejuvenated Vandals were sure it
wouldn’t be that bad this year.
t - - *
Friday Advertising Staff:
Day Manager, Bob Chaney
Asst. Mgr., Marilyn Turner
Layout Mgr., Bob Zeller
Layout Crews:
Carol Vowels
Joyce Bailey
foa/wMit
r IUNC CHRISTY
k ' >
r
Y .
^ Tickets for Table Reser
f nations on sale now at/
r THE
APPLIANCE
r CENTER
70 YV. 10th Street
Admissions limited to
table reservations only
Whenever Clare Boothe Luce steps upon a platform a lively debating
session is in prospect. The brilliant playwright and former Congress
woman from Connecticut is scheduled to-appear on two consecutive
broadcasts of “America’s Town Meeting” over ABC. She will be
heard on Tuesday, October 7, and again on Tuesday, October 14.
Carol Fallin
Kathryn Littlefield
. Frances Reid
Rita Davis
Hank Volk
Joann Ogle
Eleanor Johns
Elaine Sherwood
Martha Piper
Betty Perry
Leslie Tooze
Barbara Stevenson
Sales Crew:
Dorothy Thorssell
Jim Ivory
Marilou Miller
Marilyn Morse
Anne Case
Eunice Royce
Nancy Keller
Anne Harbison
Jacquie Kurtz
Shirley Mahany
Pat Buzzell
Mary Brandt
Dorothy Bouffleur
Helen Michel
Katherine Kuluris
Ruby Reinart
Contract Executive:
Deno Vichas
Aerial Ace
(Continued from pane four)
15 kicks. All these statistics are
based on three games played.
Also among the tops in the coun
try is Lightning Jake Leicht, who
ranks ninth among the colleges’
pass receivers. Leicht has been on
the catching end of nine of Van
Brocklin’s tosses, and has racked
up 124 yards from them. Also
brought out in the figures was that
of Byron Gillory, slippery Texas
halfback who wrecked Oregon’s
chances by snagging three touch
down passes, is rated only 13th in
the country, and has scored only
four times.
Emerald Classified
All classified is payable in advance at the
rate of four cents a word the first insertion,
two cents a word thereafter at the £merald
Business Office.
WANTED: Ride to Pullman .for
U.O.-W.S.C. game, Nov. 8: fur
nish housing. A.H. Askew, Vet’s
Dorm, 378. (20)
FOUND: Silver Ronson “whirl
wind” lighter. Claim by identi
fying initials. Shirlee Jones,
2305. (20)
FOR RENT: Room on the Campus
to share with male student.
$15.00 per month. 1205 Univer
sity.,
FOR SALE: K & E log-log du
plex slide rule; leather case;
Experienced Barbers
INK'S
* ft
' 792 E. 11th
- -
TIFFANY - DAVIS
8th and Willamette
deliberate witchery
M<nc^cc
if
9 Nanaaa Parluma.$( ta Jlta
Manaea Col»|aa ... Il.TI ta tl.|a
all Prices plus tax
insruction book. Charles Rod
man, 30 W. 8th. (19)
LOST: Full jeweled Beta Sigma
Phi sorority pin. Return t o
Gamma Hall. (19)
LOST: Single strand of pearls
near Gerlinger. Ruth Landry.
Phone 3200.
$5.00 REWARD. I allowed our
orange and white cat to follow
me to campus Monday night.
If not returned wife says I go
too. Glenn Meredith. 1235 Uni
versity. (19)
LOST: Gold top of Parker "51’'
pen initialed G.R.J. Phone Art
Johnson, 3074-W. Reward. (19)
LOST: Green Lifetime Shaeffer
pen with name Curt Finch. Call
700.
HAVING GIFT
TROUBLES?
Stop in to see us. We have a great
variety of small gifts for every occa
sion and every purse.
THE GIFT SHOP
NEXT TO THE REX THEATER
1394 N. Will Phone 212
The
I
wearing af apparei
creates far America
■i
M
EVERYIAV ART
w
•
FUNCTIONALLY SERVICEABLE, American
clothes are a means of personal expression. In this
country, the standards of style as well as utility are set
by the needs and preferences of the public.
WOMEN’S CLOTHES IN AMERICA are an
eloguent expression of true democracy; grace and
beauty of apparel are accorded a circulation as broad as
the nation, reaching into every community every
where and available, not merely to the hundreds or the
thousands, but to the millions.
THIS IS VITALLY IMPORTANT to the
nation’s morale, because clothes are one of the few
mediums for relaxed self-fulfillment in a nation of
rapidly-moving commercial competition.
Introducing
? > The Women's and Children** Wear Industry
1% " 1 ^
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‘ A series sponsored by “Women’s Wear Daily,** a \
Fairchild Publication, 8 East 13th St., New York 3, N. Y
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