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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 18, 1948)
Henry Wallace Due Next Week ^uuuoversiai Henry Wallace will speak in McArthur court next Tuesday at 3 p.m. under the spon sorship of the University assembly - committee. No classes will be dis missed for the speech. Eugene will be one of the sched •A,_ uled stops on the two-day tour of : Wallace in Oregon. He will also talk in Coos Bay, Corvallis, and Portland. Wallace has been a controversial figure since his debut in public ser vice in 1933, as secretary of agri YW Bungalow Scene of Movies Featuring Summer Conference Movies of the annual YWCA, „ YMCA conference at Seabeck, Washington, last year will be shown at 7 in the Y Bungalow ^Thursday night. Seventeen Univer sity of Oregon students attended the conference last summer. ' Applications are being taken un til May 25 for this year’s conffer ence which will be held June 13-20 * at Seabeck, Marcia Summers, con ference chairman of the YWCA, t said. Any student, staff or faculty 'person in the junior and senior col leges of Oregon, Washington, Idaho ..and Montana is eligible to attend Bjorg Hansen, past president of the campus YWCA, and Bill Jonas •of the College of Idaho are co chairmen of the planning commit tee for the conference. The pictures to be shown Thurs day night will present typical -scenes of the camp, showing the scenery, buildings, vespers, wor ship, recreation, and the various * speakers, Miss Summers said. The movies are open to any student. Marcia Summers is also a mem - bers of the planning committee. .Lois Greenwood, executive director of the campus Y, Trudy Rogness, and Jack Merner, secretary of the •YMCA, are group leaders for this year’s conference. The program of the annual meet ing will feature Bible study, wTor - * T ■ ‘ 5 < ■< « < l » BJORG HANSEN ship and vesper programs, daily platform messages on major con cerns of Christian students today, study commissions on objectives and actions of the Y, and commit tees to discuss the best methods of campus Y work. Planned and var ied recreation is scheduled for af ternoons and evenings. The worship assemblies, vespers, and the Sunday morning commun ion will be under the leadership of Rev. Robert D. Bulkley. Prof. Ger trude Boyd Crane of Pacific univer sity will address the conference each day. Hansel, Gretel Due Saturday Two acts of Hansel and Gretel will be performed, complete with costumes, by students of the school of music next Sunday evening in the music school auditorium. Other numbers on the program will be scenes from La Boheme and Tosca, also presented in costume and with dramatic form. Students of Denton Rossell sing ing in the program are Barbara Dietrick as Hansel, Mary Hawkins as Gretel, Barbara Hartfield and Don Jordahl as the Mother and Father, and Marilyn Griffith as the Sandman. Carrying leading roles in the ex cerpts from La Boheme and Tosca are James Kays, Janet Nielsen, Millard McClung, and Jean Lichty. Accompanists for the program are Millard Kinney and Helen Hud son. The scenes are being staged by Rossell. The event is open to the public and is free of charge. ~~ - -^■a==a "BE SMART"—WEAR A HAT ---- -, And we have them Dozens & Dozens A A good selection at $2.50 all colors Bonnet Nook * 907 Willamette culture under Franklin D. Roose velt. His agricultural adjustment act was praised as “far-sighted and heaven sent,” and condemned as “a vicious class-ridden measure.” Candidate With Roosevelt Wallace resigned as secretary of agriculture in 1941, to campaign for the vice-presidency. He had won the nomination to run with Roose velt over strong opposition in the Democratic convention. After serving his four-year term as vice-president, a job his father, Henry C. Wallace, had held under Warren Harding, he was appointed secretary of commerce. Opposition to his appointment succeeded in stripping the department of the re construction finance commission, which was the main source of op position. Wallace served as secretary of commerce from 1945 into 1946, then resigned to become editor of New Republci. Editorship was not a new task for the Iowan, who had edited the farm journal founded by his grand father—Wallace’s Farmer -— from 1924 to 1929. Wallace is nationally famous not only as a political figure, but as having done outstanding work in the field of agrarian genetics. Wallace will be the fourth presi dential aspirant to speak on the campus in recent weeks. Preceding him have .been Norman Thomas, Socialist candidate; and Thomas Dewey and Harold S'tassen, Repub lican hopefuls. He who is afraid of doing too much is doing too little. Forensic Group Holds Initiation The first post-war initiation for the University of Oregon chapter of Delta Sigma Rho, national fo rensic honorary, will be held at 6:30 p.m Wednesday at the Del Rey cafe. The dinner and following initia tion ceremony will bring 11 new undergraduate members into the organization Included in the initiates arc Ralph M. Teters, Nancy Peterson, Boyd Peterson, Rex Gunn, William Boyer, Kenneth Neal, Betty Mis ner, James Bedingfield, Walter Mead, Warren Miller, and Winston Carl. The program will be under the direction of W. A. Dahlberg, asso ciate professor of speech, of the University department of speech. Dahlberg has acted as faculty ad-' visor for the group for a number of years. . Delta Sigma Rho members are chosen on the basis of outstanding accomplishment and loyalty to speech work and include only up per division students who have at least two years of active participa pation in speech activities Included in this year's group are first place winners of ten state and regional contests in oratory, extemp, discussion, and impromp tu speaking. General Electric Co. says its dif ferential analyzer can accomplish 17 man-years of mathematical work in two weeks' time. LAST MINUTE HELP | So you can look your best at that house dance P 821 E 13th Phone 740 jj SAE Tennis Team Topples Sigma Chi Sigma Alpha Epsilon trounced Sigma Chi's tennis squad yes terday afternoon on the Oregon courts, to continue undefeated in play. SAE copped all three sets in gaining the victory. Don \V a d s w or t h defeated Bruce Hoffine 6-2 and 6-2, in the first set, while the combined duo of Kay Segale and Guy Mount: earned 6-4 and 6-3 win over Don Gassoway and Millard McClung. In the final set Jim I*opp and Scott Kodderly decisioned Leroy Coleman and Bill IIolm.es 6-2 and 6-3. ENDS WEDNESDAY ^US on the CAMPUS I {; r ENDS WEDNESDAY Stewart Granger Kathleen Ryan 'CAPTAIN BOYCOFT i WANT- AD % 1 FIND THE ANSWER j TO YOUR NEEDS 1 QUICKLY — ECON OMICALLY ..IN THE I CLASSIFIED COL UMNS a