Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 12, 1949, Page 2, Image 2

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    Mortar Board
Petitions Asked
Freshman and sophomore wom
en interested in helping with dec
orations and cleanup for the Mor
tar Board ball may submit peti-l
tions to Anne Woodworth at Kap
pa Alpha Theta or Laura Olson at
Delta Delta Delta, according to
General Chairman Beth Basler.
Members of the senior women’s
honorary- are taking charge of
their annual girl-take-boy dance,
Instead of acting in an advisory
capacity. They will be assisted by
freshman and sophomore women.
The ball will be held June 4 in
McArthur court.
Graduate Assistant
Receives Position
Andrew L. Wade, graduate as
sistant in the sociology depart
ment, recently received a teaching
assistantship at the University of
Wisconsin for the coming academ
ic year.
Wade received his bachelor of
' science degree from Linfield col
lege in 1948. After finishing work
; on his master’s degree, Wade will
leave for his new position.
& WINNER OF 3
XACADEMY AWARDS
EUGENE PREMIERE
WEDNESDAY
MAY 18th
WS**
coior by TECHNICOLOR!
A 1 ARTHUR RANK Presentation
AN EAGLE HON FILMS RELEASE
McDonald theatre
May 18-19-20
TICKETS ON SALE NOW!
Mats Daily at 2:30 $1.20, 150, 1.80
Evenings at 8:30—$1.20, 180, 2.40
University students $1.00
all performances
Clog Dance Honors Queen
New Music Scheduled
For Aesthetics Meet
Two programs of contemporary
music will be presented by the
University of Oregon school of mu
sic May 12, and 13 in the music
auditorium. These programs are
in conjunction with the annual
meeting of the American Society
for Aesthetics, West Coast divi
sion, which is holding its annual
meeting in Eugene, for the first
time.
The first program, which will be
•held Thursday, May 12, at 8:00
p.m., will consist of numbers by
War Danger _
(Continued from page one)
the UN as proposed, don't break it
up, but leave the door continuous
ly open to those who choose to re
main outside in hopes we can even
tually grow sufficiently attractive
to entice them in.”
The program proposed by the
UWF can be acccomplished, he
said, only by support from “the
vast majority of the people.” The
most effective opponents of the
program are not Nationalists or
Communists but “despair and res
ignation to inevitable war.”
LOST—Brooch between Mac court
and Hendricks. Reward. Norma
Allen, Susan Campbell. 132
ATTENTION - Fellows! Tired of
the books ? Would you like to
make $100. for 10 hours or better.
Call Jim Schwartz at phone 35.
133
LOST - Plastic rimmed glasses,
brown case on campus Tuesday.
Call Lee Wade, ext. 323. 131
TYPING 766 E. 15th Ave., first
trailer down the alley from Del
ta Gamma. Ula White. 131
FOR RENT Single room for gill
Reasonable. 767 East 15th.
132
FOR SALE 1941 Nash Ambassa
dor Deluxe business coupe, R&H,
write or see at No. 3 1160 Em
erald street. Highest offer takes
it. 132
FOR SALE 1941 Chev. 4-door se
dan, special delux. Radio and
heater, good paint $825.00. Con
tact 220 Cherney hall Vets dorm
No. 2. 135
the U. of O. band under the di
rection of John Stehn, numbers by
the women’s chorus of University
singers and the whole chorus of
University singers under the direc
tion of Donald Alton, accompanied
by Anne Hopper, pianist. Last on
the program is the UO orchestra,
Edmund Cykler, directing.
Though no effort was made to
set up an all American program,
the majority of the music is by
living Americans, some of whom
are among the most advanced and
representative figures of contem
porary music in America. Some of
these are: Carl Ruggles, Walling
ford Riegger, Charles Ives, and
Aarorn Copland.
The second program is to be pre
sented Friday, May 13, at 4:00
p.m. This is devoted to more intri
cate music, including chamber
music. This will be more interna
tional in character, featuring the
neo-classic style of Albert, and ex
pressionistic songs by Schoenberg
and Webern.
One of the outstanding works in
recent years in literature of two
piano music, Stravinsky’s “Con
cert for Two Pianos,’’ will be
played by George Hopkins, piano
instructor and Jack Wittwer. Oth
ers appearing on the Friday pro
gram will be: Mfiss Florence Van
derwiclten, soprano, with Stacey
Green at the piano; George Bough
ton, violin and Stacy Green, pian
ist, playing a sonata for violin and
piano.
These two programs will be open
to the public. No admission will be
charged.
Committee Jobs
Open in USA
Students may apply now for 13
stering committee positions open in
the USA for the year ’49-50.
Positions available are president,
vice-president, secretary and co
chairman of membership, publicity
and promotion, nominations, finan
ce, and policy.
Petitions, obtainable at the dean
of men or women’s office, are due
by May 18 to any present member
of the committee. Some members
are Olga Yevtich, Alpha Xi Delta;
Virginia Woods, Zeta Tau Alpha;
Hans Wold, Campbell club; Walt
Freauff, Stan Ray Hall; Joe Con
roy, Hunter hall; and Ron Phillips,
Phi Kappa Sigma.
For the Best
in FISH and
SEAFOODS
Phone 2309
NEWMAN'S
: FISH MARKET
; 58 YEARS IN EUGENE
IF IT SWIMS
1 WE HAVE IT
1 39 East Broadway
NEW RECORD SHIPMENTS
Riders Tn The Sky—Vaughn Monroe
Cruising Down The River—Russ Morgan
“A" You're Adorable—Gordon MacCrae
Forever and Ever—Russ Morgan
All Right, Louie, Drop The Gun—Cass Daley
45 RPM Victor Players now available.
A new shipment of 45 RPM records.
Radio Laboratory
768 E. 11th St. Phone 1085
Scribe Picks SAE
By John Barton
IM Editor
Phi Delta Theta is already id
the IM softball finals, and the win-* -
ner of today’s game between Kap
pa Sigma and Sigma Alpha Epsi
lon will represent the other half of
the bracket in the championship * -
game. _
Y(9t/A/(7 /Men?
In anybody's book, one of them
is Marion Harper, Jr. of Adver
tising's McCann-Erickson. Said
TIME—late last year:
Just ten years ago, Marion Harper,
Jr., fresh from Yale, got a job as office
boy at McCann-Erickson, Inc., one of -
the six largest U.S. advertising agen
cies. Tall (6 ft. i in.), strapping (190
lbs.) Harper was far from the out- -
Bill Wasson, Cal-Piciures
Adman Harper
He energizes people.
sider's idea of an advertising man. He
was quiet and studious; he did not
wear hand-painted ties, didn’t smoke,,
showed not a single huckster char
acteristic.
But he had been an office boy only *
three months when he was moved into
the copy research department where
he could put his liking for market re- '
search to work. Not long after. Harper -
was made manager of copy research: __
at 28, only seven years after he had
left Yale, he was vice-president in -
charge of research and merchandising. _
By bearing down on market studies,
he helped boost the agency’s billings
from $46 million in 1946 to a 194S rate _
of more than $50 million. Last week in
Manhattan, at 32, Marion Harper was
made president as Founder H. K. Me- -
Cann. 68. moved up to board chair- __
man. Said an awed agency director, in
summarizing Harper’s rise: “He ener- *
gizes people . . . he’s got so much en- _,
ergy himself. The agency has never j
had such good teamwork before.'’ "
On Harper’s team is his wife \ir- _
ginia, whom he met while she was a
clerical worker at the agency and mar
ried in 1942. She is now assistant di- - !
rector of McCann-Erickson’s copy ^ |
research department. Having no chil
dren. Mr. & Mrs. Harper sometimes
1 stay at the office until 2 a.m.. working_ .
together. Says Mrs. Harper: "I think
more than 1,500,000 -
other U.S. college graduates who_
find in TIME the news they can't
afford to miss.
lie’s quite bright.”
Successful adman
Harper reads TIME
each week —as do