Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 01, 1948, Page 8, Image 8

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    Music Contest
In Second Day;
2500 Entered
The first state music contest to
include all types of high school mu
sic activity will continue today,
with instrumental groups, choruses,
and majorettes being judged at the
school of music and McArthur
court.
Yesterday 2500 students arrived
for the two-day contest. Out-of
state musicians acting as judges
watched 220 soloists perform.
Have Top Ratings
Superior and excellent ratings in
district contests made the young
musicians eligible to attend. They
are staying in campus living or
ganizations and Eugene hotels.
James Arment, junior in music,
is general chairman of the compe
tition. Other music students work
ing on the contest are Dorothea
Schaer, office manager; Carl Gut
mann, judges secretaries; Allen
Kirk, announcers; and Rodney
Wagner, tickets and admission.
East Contest in ’38
The last state-wide contest in
1938, was held on the Oregon State
College campus, and was open only
to bands and instrumental soloists.
This year 61 high schools are
represented. The event is spon
sored by the Oregon Music Educa
tors conference. Howard Miller,
vice-president, is chairman.
Judges are John O’Connor, Ta
coma; Eleanor Tipton, Vancouver;
Ben Hollgrinson, Cheney; Kenneth
Schilling, Walla Walla; Bert Chris
tiansen, Ellenville, Washington;
George Barr, Sacramento; and Wil
liam Ward, San Francisco.
Junior Symphony
To Play at Theater
Between performances of “Clau
dia and David” the junior sym
phony orchestra of Eugene will
play two short concerts at the Mc
Donald theater on May 5.
The 57 young musicians will per
form once at 7:30 and again at
9:45, under the direction of Byron
Miller, who is in charge of the band
and orchestra at Eugene high
school.
“Claudia and David” will begin
at 6 p.m. Tickets will be available
on Friday before the concert at the
theater’s box office.
Proceeds will go to the Junior
Symphony association.
YW-AWS Petitions
Due by Monday
Petitions for chairmen of the
combined YWCA duckling counsel
or and AWS student life program
may be turned in to Barbara Ste
venson at the Kappa Alpha Theta
house until Monday at 4 p.m.
Chairmanships include file com
mittee, form letter committee,
training program committee, regis
tration committee, and Eugene
summer committee.
Night Staff;
Joyce Good
Jim White
Bob Hemingway, Editor
Annual BA Conference Scheduled
Speakers for the seventh annual
student business conference to be
held May 4, 5, and 6, were an
nounced Friday by Dean Victor P.
Morris of the school of business
administration.
The conference will open at 2
p.m. Wednesday with a choice of
three fields; accounting, real es
Phi Thetas Pick
'Twistie' Heads
Anne Goodman and Ann Morton,
both freshmen in journalism, were
named co-chairmen of the Phi The
ta Twistie sale yesterday.
Others selected by members of
the junior women’s honorary to as
sist with arrangements are;
Eleanor Johns, finance; Connie
Jackson, publicity; Glenna Hurst,
promotion; Ruth Landry, posters;
Donna Mary Brennan and Janet
Wagenblast, house sales.
Jackie Hinds and Barbara Ness,
booth sales; Emily West and Jean
Armstrong, cleanup; Barbara
Hamilton and Carolanne Wall, dis
tribution.
Committee members will meet
with Phi Theta at 6:30 p.m. Tues
day at the Kappa Kappa Gamma
house.
Kwama Petitions
Due on Monday
Kwama petitions are due Monday
to Billijean Riethmiller at the Al
pha Chi Omega house, or Yolanda
Stoll at the Alpha Xi Delta house.
Petitioners should be third-term
freshmen and should have a 2.25
cumulative GPA. The petitions
should list all activities and should
i be accompanied by a picture. The
sophomore women’s service honor
ary will tap at the Mortar Board
ball May 21.
Mary Lou Hill
(Continued from page one)
didn’t like the college the family
moved to Colorado.
After that the Hills bought a
trailer and went to “all the inter
esting places in the country. Dad
picked them out, but we started
and ended up in California.”
Miss Hill mentioned an older
sister and a brother, Jim, who is
a freshman at Stanford.
“Kind of nerve-wracking” was
Mary Lou’s description of the con
test finals. “Standing before the
judges made you feel that you
were being sentenced for prison or
something. The hardest part of the
contest was trying to smile.”
I tate and foreign trade. Floyd K.
Bowers, Salem CPA and former
assistant state auditor, will speak
on public accounting in 105 Com
merce.
N. Thomas Stoddard, vice-presi
dent of Commonwealth co. of Port
land, will be in charge of the ses
sion on real estate to be held in
106 Commerce. H. H. Wrightson,
general agent for Coast Wise
Pacific-Far-East lines of Portland,
and Charles P. Haney of F. P. Dow
and co. of Portland, will share the
section on foreign trade and ship
ping.
From 3:15 to 3:30 p.m. Fhi Chi
Theta, women’s business adminis
tration fraternity will serve cof
fee in the YMCA lounge.
Traffic, Advertising, Too
At 3:30 p.m. Frank S. Clay of
the Portland Traffic association
will speak on traffic and transpor
tation in the YMCA lounge. Ad
vertising will be tlD topic for
Harry Burton, Pacific Northwest
manager of McCann-Erickson ad
vertising agency of Portland in
the YMCA recreation room also
at 3:30 p.m.
These men, representing suc
Queen Dudley Walton I
(Continued from page one)
to any great extent, although he
said he “did a fair to middlin’ ren
dition of ‘Dangerous Dan Mc
Grew’.”
Combining coordination with
beauty, the queen said he enjoyed
all spectator sports—with the ex
ception of bridge, of course, which
he plays but never kibitzes.
Queen Dudley’s court includes
Princesses Neil “Loophole” Brown,
who was a favorite way back in the
fifth grade, and sylph-like Jack
Wagstaff, former brigadier general
in the salvation army.
Flower girls will be Bill “Slightly
Bald” Cramer and Edward L. “The
nisi prius Nymph” Nininger.
Queen Dudley will be gowned in
a flowing robe of royal blue tulle
designed by Tristram Door. The
gown is daringly cut and is
trimmed with Brussels lace. She
will carry a corsage of skunk-cab
bage.
Princesses Brown and Wagstaff
will be attired gaily in finger-tip
length negligees, and the flower
girls will show uneven sets of teeth
from under pink and blue sunbon
nets. ^
Dud I is looking forward to his
reign, especially the baseball game
with the BA school. “Victory is a
foregone conclusion,” he said. But
he quickly modified his statement
by adding, “if those clerks and
bookkeepers get their noses out of
their profit and loss statements
| long enough to show.”
GOOD LUCK
DUCKS
On your out-of-state
baseball games
-..
Municipal Electric and Water Utilities
1116 Willamette
cessful figures in the fields of bus
iness and industry, will give stu
dents an opportunity to get practi
cal answers to their questions
regarding employment qualifica
tions, job opportunities, and trends
within the fields.
Speeches Short
Each speaker has been allotted
an hour and' fifteen minutes.
Speeches will be short, allowing
the main part of each conference
to be reserved for student qnes
tions and group discussion.
Although the meet is sponsored
by the business administration
school, students from other depart
ments are invited to attend. All
ministration classes on the after
noons of the conference will be
cancelled.
The conference program with
Wednesday and Thursday speakers
will appear in a later issue of the
Emerald.
Bicycles
repaired
and
rented
RENT - A - BIKE
Across from Kappa Sigma
- — ■ _
Athletic Minded^ \
WAA Needs You
Petitions for managers of wom
en’s intramural sports and public
ity chairman of the women’s ath
letic association are due Monday at
5 p.m., WAA President Bep Mc
Courry announced Thursday.
The petitions may be turned in
to the women’s physical education,
office in Gerlinger hall or may be
given to Miss McCourry at the Del
ta Gamma house before the dead
line.
Sports managers and the public
ity chairman will become members
of the WAA executive cabinet.
Manager positions are open for
golf, tennis, softball, basketball,'
volleyball, badminton, and swim
ming.
I 7th and Willamette
If you should want pic
1 tures of your house
dance, we have an ex
k cellent line of flash
f photography supplies.
Warren K. Viclh* Switched to Wildroot Cream-Oil
Because He Flunked The Finger Nail Test
DON’T be a pig. You’ll only end up a ham. Don’t selfishly
spend all your money on your girl. Spend some on yourself.
Start grooming your hair with Wildroot Cream Oil and look
doggy! Just a little bit of Wildroot Cream-Oil grooms your
hair neatly and naturally without that greasy, slicked-down
look. Relieves annoying dryness and removes loose, ugly dan
druff. Helps you pass the Finger-nail Test! And Wildroot
Cream-Oil hair tonic is non-alcoholic — contains soothing
Lanolin. Get a tube or bottle of Wildroot Cream-Oil at any
drug or toilet goods counter today. And ask your barber for
a professional application. Don’t be piggish — get the large
economy size so your roommate can sh.'jreit—(he will anyway).
4: of 23 Hamilton Drive, Snyder, N. Y. —"
W'ildroot Company, Inc., Buffalo 11, N. Y.
_