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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 19, 1948)
Music School Concert Tonight The University Symphony or chestra's final concert of the year will be given tonight in the music school auditorium at 8:15 p.m. There will be no admission charge. Featured on the concert will be four members of the Oregon mu sic school and as a guest, Bertram N. Haigh, who is a horn player with the Minneapolis Symphony orchestra. Faculty members who will appear on the program are George Boughton, violinist, George Hopkins, piano, Robert Hord, piano, and Wade Parks, piano. The program for tonight in cludes Bach’s Concerto in D Minor for three Claviers, which will be played by Hopkins, Hord and Parks; Mozart’s Concerto in E flat for Horn, which will be played by the guest soloist, Haigh; Franck’s Variations Symphonique for piano and orchestra, with Hord as solo ist; and Dvorak’s Concerto in A Minor for violin and piano. George Boughton will be the soloist. The guest soloist, Haigh, will be in Eugene this week only, where he is holding a horn clinic for high school students. Dr. Edmund Cykler will conduct the 65-piece orchestra. Sophomore Picked For Eastern Trip Nancy Moran, sophomore in lib eral arts, has been accepted to at tend the Washington student citi zenship semincr in Washington, D. C., this summer in conjunction with the summer projects spon sored by the National Intercolle giate Christian council. The students accepted hold full time paid jobs in government agen cies and spdnd from 8 to 12 hours a week in eminar gatherings. The seminar begins June 21 and lasts for ten weeks. Dean Visits Drain Mrs. Golda P. Wickham, dean of women, spoke yesterday morning to members of the Girls’ League at Drain, her office reported yester day. IF ~-i This belongs to Betty HOW DO WE KNOW? Because those are the exact wordsds euscribed On the corner of her handkerchief. We have hankies with al most every girl’s name. A unique present themselves, they are also clever to tuck in with other gifts. JUST 50c WESTGATE SHOPPE 895 E. 13th Ph. 4323 Architects Survey Landscape On Annual Four-Day Field Trip About 25 landscape architect students last weekend participated in the first annual field trip to be taken since the war. Accompanied by F. A. Cuthbert, professor of landscape architecture, and George Jetty, assistant profes sdr of landscape architecture, the group left last Thursday on the four-dary trip which had Portland as its final destination. At Corval lis it was joined by a number of Oregon State College students. In Salem Friday they inspected the grounds of the state capitol building and Belcrest Memorial park. The Salem firm of Lord and Scriber took them to visit gardens of residential sites designed by it. On Saturday the students visited Vancouver housing projects, later arriving in Portland, where they joined the Oregon Society of Land scape Architects for its annual meeting, which had been planned especially in conjunction with the trip. A committee from the society aided the University group in plan ning its whole trip including enter tainment. W. R. Matsler, Oregon graduate who is now landscape architect for the Portland park system, Sunday morning took the group to inspect new park work now under con struction. The group returned to Eugene Sunday evening. The trip is again expected to be Voting Precincts (Continued from pane one) Phi Beta, Alpha Phi, Phi Kappa P/si, Sigma Nu, Kappa Sigma, Sig ma Phi Epsilon, and Northwest Christian College. Zoned in precinct 24 are Sigma Chi, Alpha Xi Delta, Delta Upsilon, Campbell Club, Phi Gamma Delta, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Chi Omega, Pi Kappa Alpha, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Gamma, Phi Delta Theta, Westminster House, Pi Beta Phi, Alpha Chi Omega, Zeta Tau Alpha, Delta Gamma, Alpha Gamma Delta, Alpha Delta Pi, and Alpha Omicron Pi. Voting from this precinct will be done at Uni versity high school at 16th and Alder Only three living organizations ! are included in the 25th voting precinct: Sigma Alpha Mu, Wes ley House, and John Straub hall. Voting headquarters for these houses will be at the Condon school, 1550 Moss st. The veteran's Amazon housing area and Tau Kappa Epsilon are included in precinct 27, with voting to be done in the Peterson garage at 1790 Alder. Sigma Kappa, Phi Kappa Sigma, Theta Chi, Delta Tau Delta, and the veteran’s dormitories will vote in precinct 28 at the Downes' res idence, 942 E 18th. Included in the last voting pre cinct on the campus, precinct 29, are Delta Zeta, Alpha Tau Om-I ega, and Delta Delta. Voters in these houses will cast their ballots at Edison school, 22nd and Em erald. come an annual event for landscape students as it was before the war, according to Cuthbert, who said I that future trips may be planned for San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Seattle. Editor Stresses Part of Science The value of a sound background in college science courses for stu dents entering the journalism pro fession was stressed by Phillip F. Brogan, city editor of the Bend Bulletin, in talks Monday before both the senior editing and public opinion classes. Brogan returned to the campus Monday for the first time since his graduation in 1923 to tell students that knowledge in scientific fields is necessary to keep apace of this sotentific age. In addition to his editing duties, Brogan is associate director for Oregon of the American Meteor society and chairman of the Oregon Geographic board. His abilities as a science reporter and writer are well known in Oregon. YW Schedules Joint Luncheon A joint luncheon of the campus YWCA cabinet and the board will be held Thursday noon at the Y bungalow. Mrs. Curtis Avery will preside over the meeting for the board, and Laura Olson, president of the campus Y, will preside for the cabinet. The luncheon meeting is sched uled for discussion of plans for next year which will be done jointly with the board and the cabinet, Miss Olson said. The social committee handling HOLIDAY An Adventure in . Good Smoking ktofl'aUC 10 the Pack--; \ |■' HOLIDAY ALSO COMES IN A 16 OZ. HUMIDOR Larus & Brother Company Richmond, Virginia Chess Tryouts Set j Students interested in trying oun for the chess team are asked tol meet in 206 Commerce at 7:30 p.ffiJ Thursday. The next match will be with Pacific university Sunday jn Salem. the food from the board are Mi?s. J. McHugh and Mrs. L. M. Hilt. - A QUART I SERVES SIX . . . and it’s quick to fix! : ' « i mmmjBm&immmmmmam ■ i ■ iii pH p& v i > SURPLUS SALES A-2 JACKETS. $21.50 T-SHIRTS.59c Sheets 81" X 108".$2.59 DRESS SOX, Argyle.39c SUN GLASSES, Aviation type.$3.95 B-15 JACKET 11.95 & 12.95 SHORTS, Jockey type 49c PILLOWS. 59c SHOE POLISH Esquire..2 for 25c Shinola ..5c G. I. TARGET KITES — CONTROLLABLE Spin, Dip, Dive Clime, Bank — will do anything a plane will do $2.95 COME IN AND LOOK AROUND Cascade Mercantile Open every evening 13th and Hilyard Phone 7285-W iCBMpucug '3 £61 0629 auoqd VNIHVd 3NIXVW 3> XN33NIA f9fm*rp*yiJ fvvmvffy rnoij ma# jo uoinirn d job a^--iSY3(II afiesjoa XNIISIPB W WIH aSBaId AAM ASdOiL S,3NTff.T.mA?