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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 30, 1949)
Groups Plan _____ (Continued from page one) and Pearl streets, beginning at 7:30. President Bob Robinson also announced that dancing, refresh ments, and other forms of enter tainment will be featured. Westminster House, 1414 Kin caid, wil hold open house starting at 7:30 and will have mixer games, dancing, skits, and other forms of entertainment, it was announced by Mary Nelson, chairman of Church Night activities. Refresh ments will be served throughout the evening. During the football broadcast, there will be no planned recreation. Scheduled activities will start immediately following the game. PLYMOUTH CLUB The Plymouth Club will have its party at the First Congregational Church, at 13th and Ferry, in the Wheeler Room. A tour through the new student house that is being re modeled next door to the church is on the program. Wesley Foundation’s party will have as its theme “The Millrace,” and its activities will start at 8:30 although the broadcast of the game, starting at 8, will be turned on the house radio. At all groups, campus clothes will be in order. Dancing and or ganized ‘parlor-games’ will feature the “Mill Race” party. NEWMAN CLUB All Catholic students and their friends are invited to the Newman Club’s fall dance to be held in Gerlinger Annex starting at 8:30. And all students are invited to the Baptist Youth Group’s party to be staged at the Baptist Church, Broadway and High streets in downtown Eugene. Channing Club, affiliated with the Unitarian Church, will stage its activities at the Unitarian church, 11th and Ferry, starting at 7:30. Religious Council President Sherman Holmes urges all students to visit the various houses and re ligious clubs on the campus in this annual affair, planned to acquaint students with University religious groups. Holmes stressed that both old and new students are invited to visit any group of their choice. Today’s Staff Assistant Managing Editor: Tom King. Desk Editor: Larry Meiser. Desk Staff: Dianne Bekins, Sue Lichty, Jo Ann Priaulx, Deanne Smith, Karin Sundeleaf, Sally Reingold, Jackie Wilkes, Vern Lidtke. Night Editor: Mary Hall. * KOAC Schedules First of Series Oct. 6 for Oregon Classrooms The first broadcast of the “Lets Sing America” series for 1949-50 will go out over KOAC to an aud ience of 35,000 in classrooms of countless Oregon rural schools on Thursday Oct. 6 according to an announcement by the Univer sity Radio Division and the School of Music. Especially aimed at the one room school where music facilities are limited, “Lets Sing America” assists teachers in bringing the pleasures of group singing to pupils. Under the direction of Maude lGarnett, associate professor of public school music, youngsters will become familiar with the folk and national songs or America and f foreign lands. Last year, after singing along in their small groups with Miss Garnett, 4,000 youngsters and their teachers gathered at McArthur Court for the big program that ended the season. The children gpent the day at Eugene, eating lunch in the bleach ers while they watched the first band concert many of them had ever seen. Later their massed voi ces carried such favorites as "Oh Susanna’’ and “America the Beau tiful” over KOAC to thousands of others who could not make the trip. Twenty-nine Thursday broad casts are listed for the series. MCHESTERFIELDS ARE COMPLETELY SATISFYING. THEY'RE MILDER... MUCH MILDER. .IT'S MY CIGARETTE.” STARRING IN "EASY LIVING HER LATEST RKO RELEASE Illllip Copyright 1949. Liggett A Myers Tobacco Co.