Students Slow In Completing Registration No more than 25 students had completed registering by the end of the second day of advance reg istration, it was reported yester day afternoon by the registrar’s office. Approximately 2,245 have picked up registration material at Emerald hall. Indications were that new pro cedures for enrollment in the col lege of liberal arts have brought advance registration to a near standstill. The new procedure re quires students enrolling in classes in the liberal arts college to wait until March 1, 2, and 3 for confer ences with advisers, and until March 4, 5, and 6 before securing departmental approval of class cards. Registration for classes such as English composition, required in most freshman programs, is pre vented by the liberal arts ruling. Dean Eldon Johnson of the col lege of liberal arts was not avail able yesterday for comment as to the reasons for the new procedure. Students hired by the Co-op as extra help in the expected rush for spring term supplies were said to have been released. Only a very few books have been sold so far, it was reported. The number of students picking up registration material at Emer ald hall is still behind schedule, Registrar C. E. Avery stated. Nor mally, the registrar’s office expects heavier registration on Tuesday, when fewer classes are held. Material will be available at Em erald hall through Saturday noon. Advance registration will continui through March 6. Oregon Alums Make Stage By DON SMITH Donald Cook, Oregon graduate of 1925, recently completed an en gagement playing opposite Tallu lah Bankhead in Noel Coward’s "Private Lives” in Chicago. The play had the longest run of any re turn engagement in the history of Chicago. Cook was a BA graduate and went into banking. He left life amid the teller’s cage in favor of vaudeville. In Kansas City he again entered business, serving a lumber corporation by day and the com munity theater by night. He went from Kansas City ama teur to New York professional the ater. He played leading man parts there for several years. After approximately 30 films in Hollywood Cook returned to the < — Foreign v-ounrry (Continued from page one) at 9:30 a. m. at the “Y” bungalow and speakers will include Gordon Cook, sophomore in liberal arts; Helen Sigismund, sophomore in lib eral arts; and Nancy Peterson, junior in journalism. The Saturday luncheon to be held at the Eugene hotel will feature Ernest Haycox, Portland author, as guest speaker. Haycox has recently returned from a trip to Greece where he served as special assist ant to Dwight Griswold, the presi dent’s emissary to that country. His speech topic has not yet been announced. Tickets for the luncheon will be on sale at the YWCA bungalow from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. all week, Marjorie Petersen, ticket chair stage to play opposite Gertrude Lawrence and Dorothy McGuire. While on the campus Cook was a member of Phi Kappa Psi. A BREAK BETWEEN STUDY PERIODS ... By stocking up on easy-to-prepare foods— Drop by and choose from a large variety of groceries PINEAPPLE - _ ELLIOTT’S ONE-STOP GROCERY 13th & Patterson Phone 95 'Outsider' Tickets Available for Ball A limited number of Beaux Arts Ball tickets are stih available to non-art school students, Ken Wol lenweber, publicity chairman an nounced yesterday. Tickets to the [ man, said yesterday. They will sell ! for $1 each. Miss Petersen urges 1 that interested people reserve tick | ets as soon as possible since the luncheon quota is 150 people. Swimmers' Meet Set A short meeting of swimmers - who will compete in the telegraph ic swimming meet will be held at 4 p.m. today at the Gerlinger pool Ball, to be held February 28 in Gerlinger Anex, are $1.75 per couple. $1 for stags. Friday night is ticket deadline. The music of Herb Widmer and his band, plus “unusual spot en tertainment” throughout the dance was promised Ball-goers by Chair man Ralph Bonadurer. ■ ■■ "■ ’• BALLERINA SKIRTS Yes ... a full 120 inch flaring swirl skirt with hi-rise waist band . . . black faille. _s ' DENIM - PEDAL PUSHERS Your favorite in faded blue ... or barn yard red with gay trim . . . WESTERN DENIM JEANS Budget Shop-Sports Heavy Blue Denim wear with rivited OCR T I % V re-inforcements J j(J —I II « and wide belt J IflCHCVS loops .... "" €/ 1004 Willamette RCA Victor’s rising star of the keyboard — Larry Green — scores another hit . . . "GONNA GET A GIRL" QMEL * is the - cigarette ■ for me! WITHIN the past few months, Larry Green has climbed right up with the top bands of the land! If you ask Larry how he did it, he’ll light up a Camel and say: "Experience is the best teacher in the band business — and in cigarettes. I know from experience that sweet music suits my band, just as I learned from experi ence that Camels suit my ‘T-Zone’ to a ‘T’!” Try Camels! Discover for yourself why, with smokers who have tried and compared, Camels are the “choice j of experience”! £ And here’s another great retort/— ^ A f blend Wm ' ' CIGARETTES j 9Bmmmmgtamammssmam y 1 | i < l iii o 5 x y | V R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company r Wins ton-Saiam, North Carolina.