Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 02, 1949, Page 3, Image 3

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    Lack of Radio Gear
Stalls Move to Villard
Only the absence of certain nec
essary equipment is keeping the ra
dio department from following the
rest of the speech department intc
Villard hall.
With the arrival of the equip
ment, expected within the next twe
weeks, radio broadcasts from the
university will eminate from foui
modern studios located in Villarc
in the center of the third floor.
Described as, “a large, a medium
large, a medium small, and a small
one,” by Prof. Glenn Starlin, heac
of the radio department, the studios
are constructed in a manner that
will eliminate any strange noises
that may waft in from the outei
halls. The rooms rest on a cork
floor, and are equipped with sound
proof walls. A central control room
will handle broadcasts from all stu
dios.
Campus Sing
Heads Selected
The subcommittee chairman
ships for the all-campus sing have
been announced by Lou Westor
and Sally Waller, who have charge
of the Junior Weekend event.
Bob Hankins will handle tick
ets; Mildred Chetty, decorations;
Jim Sanders, programs; Paul Ed
lund, seating; and Joanne Fryden
lund, judges.
Miss Waller announced that
there will be a meeting of the com
mittee at 4 p.m., Tuesday at the
Theta house.
Graham Wins
In Ad Contest
Welton Graham, journalism sen
ior, received $40 first prize in the
annual Botsford - Constantine -
Gardner advertising contest. Jor
dis Benke, also a senior in jour
nalism, was awarded second prize
of $25, and Tom McLaughlin, BA
senior, took third place with a $10
award. A1 Pietschman, BA senior,
received honorable mention.
The awards are given for the
best solutions to problems in ad
vertising. The contest, sponsored
by the Botsford-Constantine-Gard
ner advertising agency, was con
ducted by Dr. ft. D. Millican, as
sistant professor of advertising.
Wesley House Forum
“What the Church has to Offer
Me” will be the topic of the Sunday
evening forum discussion at Wesley
house tomorrow night at 6 p. m.
Officers for the coming year will
be elected after the discussion.
Supper will be at 5 followed by
chapel service at 5:30.
You learn little from victory—
much from defeat.
An Amazing Offer by
HOLIDAY
Pipe Mixture
The pipe that every smoker wants—DANA, the
modern pipe, with brightly polished alum?*]
J^^r^j^hank and genuine imported briar bowl.
with inside wrappers
from 12 pocket tins of
HOLIDAY PIPE MIXTURE
San 12 nilltr impairs
Gel your DANA PIPE
Send to
HOUDAY. Deal. CN, BictaaaN, Vlreinl*
Offer Limited to USA—Expires
June 30,1949
Art .Adventure in Good Smoking
f Interviewees, used to the large
bare surroundings of the extension
building studio, will find' an atmos
phere more condusive to conversa
tion across a table. The small stu
dio will be used for interview and
round table discussions, with the
next two in size handling drama
programs. Musicians who may have
complained about lack of room in
which to handle full fiddles or tubas
in the extension building, will have
the large studio, equipped with a
console, in which to present their
broadcasts.
A series of record storage rooms
and two workshop classes will sur
round the studios. While broadcasts
are in progress, classes will be able
to go on, oblivious to the screams,
shots, and swing music eminating
across the hall. Remote broadcast
ing equipment will be used by the
classes in producing broadcasts
that will have complete authentici
ty except that they will not be air
ed. The remote equipment will also
i be used for broadcasts from points
about the campus other than Vil
lard.
Under the new situation broad
casts from Howe field, the School
of Music, and other places will be
possible should the university get
more radio time. The latter is a sit
uation controlled by the state board
of higher education.
Besides the physical advantage,
the new location should provide
campus programs with a high cali
ber of acting. Student emoting,
which hitherto has run a wide ga
mut, should be helped by the pres
ence of speech and drama majors in
the same biulding. A quantity of
these, lured into the studios to as
sist radio students, will insure good
Visiting UO and Eugene
MISS KATHARINE KHIN KHIN, vice president of the Rangoon,
Burma YWCA, will be the honored guest at a tea in the home of Dy.
and Mrs. Fred Miller, 2412 Rostein street, Sunday afternoon from
2:30 to 4 p.m. Miss Khin is also a novelist, and paid her way through
college by writing for Rangoon newspapers.
broadcasts should the -department's
program accelerate.
Instructors and students are
anxiously looking forward to the
start of an ambitious program in a
plant described by Prof. Starlin as,
“physically as good' as any on the
Pacific Coast.”
TONITE at 8:00
"LE BOURGEOIS GENTILHOMME"
FRENCH COMEDY BY MOLIERE
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
JOHNSON HALL'S
GUILD THEATER
ADMISSION —$.60
TONITE — April 2
also
Monday, April 4
Prehistoric Snout
Featured in Class
The snout of a dinosaur, which
has on it the oldest known cancer,
will be shown on slides to illustrate
the talk of Dr. Frank Queen in
Room 101, Physical Education
building, at 7:15 Monday, April 4.
Dr. Queen is a widely known can
cer expert from the University of
Oregon Medical school and a mem
ber of the medical section of the
Atomic Energy commission. He
will talk about “Cancer Control.”
This is the second class of a gen
eral extension division workshop in
health education, but the public is
invited to attend, according to the
instructor, Mrs. Jennelle Moorhead,
associate professor of health educa
tion at the University.
ATTEND THE
CHURCH OF
YOUR CHOICE
CENTRAL
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
10th and Pearl
Paul S. Mellish, Pastor
9:45 a. m. Church School
9:45 a. m. University Class
11:00 Morning Worship
WESTMINSTER HOUSE
5:15 Supper, Worship, Forum
Topic : “Are We All Brothers?’'
Film Strip and Discussion.
FIRST CHRISTIAN
CHURCH_
1166 Oak St.
Hugh N. McCallum, Pastor
University Classes, 9:45 a. m.
Dr. Victor P. Morris, Teacher
University Student
Fellowship
6 p. m. YMCA
Worship Services, 11 a. m.
7:30 p. m.
FIRST CHURCH
of
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
12th and Oak St.
A branch of the Mother Church,
The First Church of Christ,
Scientist in Boston, Massachu
setts.
Sunday School at 9:30 a. m.
and 8 p. m.
Sunday Services 11 a. m.
Testimonial Meeting-,
Wednesday— 8 p. m.
Reading Room
86 W Broadway
PUBLIC
ORDIALLY INVITED