McChesney Tops Picture Schedule • Leading off next week’s Oregana . picture schedule is McChesney hall. Other living organizations will be photographed by Kennell-Ellis stu ’ dio as follows: October 28: Nestor hall, Pi Kap pa Phi. October 29: Phi Sigma Kappa, • Stitzer. October 30: Tau Kappa Epsilon, Yeomen. October 31: Lambda Chi, Sigma Chi. Freshman Enrollment (Continued from page one) enrollment prediction on this fall’s slim freshman registration. The - drop, he said, was due largely to fewer numbers of veterans enroll ing as freshmen. He expects an even smaller freshman class next fall. . “The over-all freshman enroll ment this year is 25 per cent below last year,” Constance revealed, “and this is pretty much the gen eral national picture.” 4 Many to Graduate Another factor in next fall’s en ATTEND THE CHURCH of YOUR CHOICE ST. MARY’S ESPICOPAL CHURCH ► Rev. E. S. Bartlam, Rector Rev. Hal R. Gross, Student Pastor , Services at 8 and 11 Wednesday at 7 a.m. at Gerlinger Hall Canterbury Club, 5 :30 at Church FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST A Branch of The Mother Church, '■ The First Church of Christ, Scientist in Boston, Massachusetts - 12th and Oak Streets Services Sunday 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. Sunday School at 9:30 a.m. . Testimonial Meeting Wednesday 8 p.m. Reading Room, 86 West Broadway i Wesley Goodson Nicholson, Minister Morning Worship, 11 a.m. Mary S. Grubbs Director of Student Work Student Supper, 6 p.m. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH 12th and Willamette L. O. Griffith, Minister Robt. J. Bull, Assoc. Pastor r~ Morning Worship, 11 a.m. Youth Fellowship, 6:30 Wesley House, on campus . Dave Seaman, director Student supper, 5 :30 Recital, 6:30 Discussion Group, 7:00 GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH 11th & Ferry Rev. W. B. Maier, pastoi Church School, 9:45 a.m. Worship Service at 11 a.m. . Gamma Delta for Lutheran students and friends, Sunday, 5 p. m. CENTRAL PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 10th Ave. at Pearl Rev. Norman K. Tully, Pastor Servicemen, Students, and visitors ► cordially welcomed at Divine Worship FIRST CHRISTIAN * CHURCH 1166 Oak Street >. Hugh N. McCallum, Pastor University Classes, 9:45 a.m. Dr. Victor P. Morris, teacher Town and Campus Group, 6:15 Bible Breakfast Forum, 9:40 a.m. (donuts and coffee) Worship Services, 11 a.m., 7:30 p.m. - - FIRST CONGREGATIONAL « CHURCH 490 13th Ave. East I- Phone 4192 Religious Week Events Cited Sunday: 6:30 p.m.—Campus-Community Union service, Dr. George Hedley, mu sic auditorium. ^ Monday: 10 a.m.—Class lecture, room 20, Friendly hall. Dr. George Hedley. 12 noon—-‘‘The Marshall Plan and World Peace,” Dr. Warren Tomlin son, YWCA. “Religion and Race Relations,” Mrs. Gladys Lawther, WMCA. 2 p.m.—Class lecture, room 206, Oregon. Professor Robert H. Dann. 3 p.m.—“Diversity or Unity in Christianity,” Dr. Hayden Stewart, YMCA. “Religion and American College Students,” YWCA. House Dinners: (Guest speakers) Pi Kappa Alpha, Sigma Nu, Chi Omega, Hendricks hall, Gerlinger hall, University house, Zeta Tau Alpha, Beta Theta Pi, Kappa Kappa Gamma. 7 p.m. (Guest Speakers) Gamma hall, Susan Campbell, Zeta hall, Yeo mer and Orides, Dorm I and Dorm II. Firesides: (Guest Speakers) Alpha Tau Omega, Omega hall, Phi Delta Theta, Sherry Ross and Sigma halls. Reader Cites Disc Statistics (Continued from page two) which have been unobtainable for the past five years. At least Decca, Columbia, and Victor can do this although Capitol, Majestic and the indies will find this difficult because of their limited catalogs. MGM will have no trouble for they can snip the sound track of any MGM picture. As for classical recordings, importations will become more and more popular. Keynote, Vox and English Decca have already started ped dling foreign-made pressings and in most cases, the recordings are technically far superior to any domestic records yet produced. So, no matter how much Hallock argues for the disc ban, he and Petrillo will find that the record industry can't be squelched. And who knows, a temporary ban on band recording might lead to better record ings once they begin recording again. » Sincerely, Jack Vaughn rollment at the University will be the large numbers of veterans graduating this year, with few ex GIs coming in to replace them, the associate registrar asserted. A report drawn up by Constance on probable future enrollment at the University pointed out a possi ble method of offsetting diminish ing student members at the Uni versity would be to lower admis sion (GPA) requirements for out of-state students. The proportion of out-of-state students to resident students now stands at an all-time low of 12 per cent, the report revealed. “Within the last decade this proportion has run as high as 23 per cent,” the report showed. Restrictions Needed The difference, Constance as serted, is probably due to restric tions on out-of-state student en rollment at the University, made necessary entirely by an existing shortage of space and personnel. Lowering the out-of-state en trance qualifications, the report of the associate registrar stressed, would not involve letting down gen eral entrance standards at the Uni versity. Soybeans provide almost half the total value of the nation’s oil crops. Arrow Proudly Presents I Native to a million college top-bureau drawers before the war, Arrow’s famous Gordon Oxford cloth shirts in five classic campus styles are back to deck the neck of the post-war college man. Ask for these models by name: "DOVER” Roll front button-down "SUSSEX” Widespread stay collar "doubler” Doubles for dress and sports — two pockets AT *3.95 "brockly” Medium point collar the new "fenway” Casual, longer point button-dour. ■ P. S. 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