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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1949)
6 ^Herald YW Sponsors Gift Collection Christmas gift collection boxes are now in the YWCA, Orides room in Gerlinger, and the Community Center downtown as the drive for cheering foreign students’ fami lies gets under way. Living organizations and individ ual students may contribute items to the drive, sponsored by the YWCA International Affairs com mittee. Deadline for donations is Nov. 15. Arrangements for contributing certain items may be made by con tacting chairmen Pat Williams Brooks at the YWCA, or Delores Jeppesen, at 5-3434 after 5 p.m. Foreign students attending the University have turned in lists of gifts which they would like to send to their families overseas, but Which their limited scholarship funds will not permit them to pur chase. Items from nylons to flower bulbs are included on the lists, with emphasis on food and wearing ap parel. Seniors, Graduates Eligible for Grants Students graduating1 this spring may apply now for Henry Fellow ships to Oxford or Cambridge Uni versity in England. Applications for the Fellowships must be submitted to the Office of the Secretary of Yale University or to the Secretary to the Corpora tion of Harvard University, trus tees of the fund stated. The Fellowships provide grants of 600 pounds ($1680, at present rate of exchange) to five Ameri can students for a year of study in England. Both men and women are eligible to apply. Employees Set Up Branch Association Civil Service employees set up a temporary organization for a cam pus branch of the Oregon State Employees Association Tuesday night. Mrs. Dora Churchman w a s named temporary chairman of the group. Acting secretary-treasurer will be Mrs. Sylvia Harkness. Approximately 35 were present at the meting at which Forrest Stewart, executive - secretary of OSEA presided. The next meting of the campus chapter has been set for Nov. 21. All Civil Service employees of the University are invited. A Good Appetite (and $1.95) is all you need to enjoy our delicious SMOR GAASBORD, served in the Dan ish Cabaret Style. No walking around round tables, no strang ers to glare at, just you and . . . You get for the cold table: roast meat, Danish roll-poise, Liver pate \v. bacon, egg w. tom. smoked salmon, herring steep ed in wine-sauce, wonderful cheese, salad . . . and then a fine warm course, ice-cream and when we say coffee, we mean the best in town. Cozy atmosphere for distinctive people. | SERVED EVERY NIGHT If you want table reserved call 5-9328 Danish Home Bakery So. Willamette KOAC to Present 'Macbeth' Dec. 3 An hour presentation of "Mac beth,” will be presented over KOAC on Dec. 3, in conjunction with a University-wide program commemorating the 1949-50 build ing program. Casting and rehearsals will be held, each Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday at the studios at 3 p.m. A large cast will be needed for the Shakespeare play, which will be the most ambitious undertaking ever attempted by the radio divi sion. Those interested may attend regardless of experience or major interest. Wallace Appointed Circulation Manager Bruce Wallace, junior in business administration, has been appointed General Circulation Manager of the 1950 Oregana by Business Manager Jim Sanders. Wallace has worked on sales and living organization work this term for the 1950 book, and has been in charge of the late sales cam paign in the ten veterans’ dormi tories. Glen Allen, senior in busi ness administration, appointed to the circulation manager's job earli er this fall has dropped from school for the remainder of the term. National Officer To Visit Honorary Phi Chi Theta, business women’s honorary, will be inspected today by Miss Lila Gail Campbell, first national vice president of the or ganization. Miss Campbell, who will arrive from Corvallis today at 2 p.m., in spects business and financial prac tices in Phi Chi Theta chapters all over the West. After attending an afternoon tea at Hendricks Hall, Miss Campbell will examine the business proced ures of Beta chapter at a regular business meeting of the organiza tion today at 4:30 in Hendricks Hall. Formal pledging of future Phi Chi Theta members tonight at 0:30 in the Alpha Xi Delta house will conclude Miss Campbell’s in spection of the chapter. Women to be pledged are Janet Swint, Vir ginia Drake, Frances Lowry, Shir ley Wilson, Betty Jo Carlton, Yvonne Strine, Donna Bernhardt, and Barbara McBee. Miss Campbell will leave for Portland Friday afternoon after conferences with Victor P. Morris, dean of business administration, and Mrs. Golda Wickham, director of women's affairs. Oregana Schedule Following is the rerriainder of this week's Oregana picture sched ule: Today, Nestor Hall. Friday, Sederstrom Hall. Retakes of Oregana pictures are scheduled for Saturday mornings and from Nov. 21 to 23. Tonight's Concert Program I Star Vicino . Che fiero costume. O Bellissimi Capelli . La Danza . II .Salvatore Rosa .Giovanni Legrenzi .Andrea Falconieri Gioacchino Rossini L'Hcure exquise .Reynaldo Hahn Belle Aminte .Traditional French Mandoline .Gabriel Dupont Le temps des lilas.-.Ernest Chausson Aria: Devant la Mjaison, from “The Damnation of Faust’’ Hector Berlioz III Evening .Robert Schumann goarding . Robert Schumann Why .Robert Schumann Whims . Robert Schumann Jacob Hannemann at the Piano IV Aria from “Benvenuto Cellini’’.Eugene Diaz INTERMISSION V Ar Hyd Y Nos Rhyfelgyrcli Gwyr Harlech Dafydd Y Gareg Wen Cyfri’r Giefr .Traditional Welsh VI Live and Dream .Vera Eakin Susan Simpson .Tom Waring Sweet Li'l Jesus Boy.Robert MacGimsey Jeri-Jericho .Robert MacGimsey They Want Good Stuff Style, Quality Important To Most Student Buyers By Phil Wolcott Oregon students buy quality goods. That’s the opinion expressed by campus merchants in a recent store-to-store canvass by The Em erald. “They want real quality. Con trary to popular belief, students don't want gaudy stuff,” one cloth ing store owner stated. Nationally advertised goods are popular among Oregonites, accord ing to another merchant. “They look for good prices, but once they make up their minds they will pay almost any price,” was the comment of a men’s shop manager. “Student clothing customers are more selective than the average buyer and want up-to-the-minute styling,” he said. “However, their tastes are more on the conserva tive side and they don’t like exces sive colors to achieve style.” Another business man declared that “the average male student likes different type clothes than most buyers.” They like snappy suites, extreme cuts, and looser fitting clothes. Most campus men will buy a larger size article than you are.” Most merchants agreed that summer school students, mostly teachers, are less extravagant than the average regular-session stu dent. The teacher - students buy only bare necessities and indulge in bargain hunting more than un dergraduates. A pharmacist complained that his customers from the campus were far healthier than meat pre scription buyers, but a shoe repair man was quite satisfied that stu dents were so “young and healthy” because they wear their shoes out faster. The consensus was that student business averages anywhere from 50 to 65 per cent in campus estab lishments, with extremes from 30 to 90 per cent. Restaurants were We invite you to check with us for your banking needs U. S. NATIONAL BANK highest in University business. Summer school trade drops to an average of 30 per cent of the total in most business houses. Many eat ing establishments close during the summer slack period. When asked about student cus tomer’s behavior, a drugstore pro prietor summmed up the general opinion with, “A college student is a college student, no matter where their downtown counterpart. Liebe New Secretary Ellen Liebe, sophomore in music, has been elected secretary of Del ta Phi Alpha, German honorary. 'Shop Talk' Set ^ For Journalists A “shop talk” to acquaint pros pective journalists with methods of working harmoniously with the mechanical department of a news paper will be presented Sunday at 4 in 105 Journalism under the sponsorship of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity. Barney Shaw, University Press shop foreman, and Nick Cavag naro, night compositor and Emer ald make-up man, will present the “back shop’s” viewpoint in an in formal discussion with the stu dents. All interested students are in vited to attend the discussion. Refreshments will be served. "Ivan the Terrible" On Screen Dec. 6 “Ivan the Terrible,” a Russian film, will be shown in 207 Chap man, Dec. 6. Starring Nikolai Cherkassov as the awe-inspiring Czar Ivan IV, and directed by S. Eisenstein, the movie was produced in Russia in 1947. Dialogue is in Russian with English subtitles. Sets and lighting in “Ivan the Terrible” have been used to pro duce the sense of horror appropri ate to the story. The use of sounds builds an oppressive atmosphere. Sponsored on the University campus by the Russian club, ad mission charge will be 25 cents. Lose Your Specs? Pair Found in Cafe If you can’t read this item, this may be just the item you should read. A pair of glasses, with blue shell rims, were discovered Sunday in the Dixie Cafe, Tangent. A Uni versity student is suspected of having abandoned them. If they’re yours, apply at the Dixie Cafe, Tangent. BOW PETITE RAYON MOIRE Flounces take a I [ triple whirl on the' [ dance floor. The self1 tubing shoulder’ straps tie in a bow.' Deep turquoise,' red, American beauty, black. 9 to 15. #l 11 * w 5TTS AT THIRTEENTH &pl&uZf C^ute^^f4e CVMtShr