Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, December 01, 1949, Page 7, Image 7

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    State Board Sets
Meeting Date
| The Oregon State Schools Boards
! Association will hold its annual
convention in the University Thea
ter Dec. 5. School board members
from throughout the state have
been invited to the one day meet
ing.
A meeting of the By-Laws Com
t mittee and Executive Council will
I precede registration, which will
* begin at 9:30 a.m. A general as
sembly at 10 a.m. will open the
convention. Edward M. Tuttle, ex
ecutive secretary of the National
School Boards Association, will
give the key address on “Board
of Education—American Plan”
and “In Association, There Is
Strength.”
Workshop meetings will discuss
common problems and members
will pool ideas. Chairmen of the
group meetings are S. E. Brogoit
ti, Helix, for the third class dis
tricts; Lester Green, Milton-Free
water, for the second class dis
tricts; A. J. Swett, Tillamook, for
the first class districts; and Ar
thur Ireland, Forest Grove, for the
union high school districts.
Lewis Orders
Mine Walkout
By United Press
The nation’s 400,000 soft coal
miners began walking out again
last night after United Mine
Workers Chief John L. Lewis
failed to make a deal for a new
contract during a three-week
truce.
The miners waited at the pit
entrances “hoping that the unpre
dictable Lewis” would extend the
truce, according to Frank K. Noll,
United Press correspondent.
This is the fourth major mine
shutdown this year. The miners
have worked 160 days out of 234
working days this year. They have
lost some $1200 each in wages be
cause of the walkouts and the
three-day week period.
WAA Invitations
Extended to 118
The Women’s Athletic Associ
ation will initiate 118 women in an
initiation ceremony tonight in Al
umni Hall, Gerlinger. Bonnie Gien
ger, WAA president, will read the
initiation ceremony.
Girls who have earned awards in
volleyball and badminton compe
tition are eligible for initiation.
Any eligible girl who has not
received an invitation should con
tact her house manager.
A program of entertainment,
community singing, and refresh
ments will follow the initiation
ceremony.
A family budget is what people
straighten out every payday—so
they’ll have something to borrow
from until next payday.
Educators Plan
Panel Discussion
Problems met by new and stu
dent teachers will be discussed to
night at 7:30 in room 2, Education
Building.
A panel of six persons from the
field of education will air the
challenge, “So Now%You Are a
Teacher?”
The panel will include George
Nelson, principal of Roosevelt
High School; Errett Humell, from
Burns; John Miller, principal of
Elementary School in Leaburg;
Howard Townsend, Loraine High
teacher; Mrs. Mildred Williams,
University High teacher; and Mrs.
Ruth Hill Beacon, superintendent
teacher at Eugene High School.
Freshmen and sophomores, as
well as upper classmen and gradu
ate students interested in Educa
tion may attend.
Officials Plan Meet
On Civil Service
A conference on Oregon State
Civil Service job opportunities was
planned for Jan. 26 at a meeting
Wednesday of two Service offi
cials and Karl W. Onthank, Uni
versity graduate placement ser
vice director.
The two officials, James M.
Clinton, assistant director, and
George Robinson, chief examiner,
will be present at the Jan. 26
meeting, aiong with representa
tives of various state agencies.
Interested faculty members will
be given an opportunity to meet
with Civil Service representatives
at a luncheon. Both faculty and
students will attend a general open
meeting and several others on
specialized subjects.
The Civil Service Commission is
cooperating with the University
graduate placement office and
heads of University departments
in planning the conference.
Group Names
Miller President
Dr. Fred Miller, director of the
University Health Service, was
named president of the Pacific
Coast section of the American
College Health Association at a
recent meeting.
Dr. Miller is the first Northwest
man to hold the presidency in the
association. He was selected at
the 13th annual meeting of the
Pacific Coast section at Claremont
College in California Nov. 25 and
26.
More than 60 representatives
of colleges and universities in
Washington, Oregon, California,
and Utah attended the meeting.
The next association meeting
will be held on the University of
Oregon campus in the fall of 1950,
the first to be held in the North
west.
r?2 ^?E?.°,N ^AILY Emerald published daily during the college year except Sundays
Mondays, holidays and final examination periods by the Associated Students, University of
Oregon. Subscription rates: $3.00 a term, $4.00 for two terms and $5.00 a year. Entered a*
second class matter at the no^foffice Eugene. Oregon.
Toav Aftmvattctt. Manage*
Glenn Gillespie, Managing Editor
Barbara Heywood, Helen Sherman, Associate Editors.
Cork Mobley, Advertising Manager
News Editors: Anne Goodman, Ken Metzler.
Assistant News Editor: Mary Ann Delsman.
Assistant Manager Editors: Hal Coleman,
, Vic Fryer, Tom King, Stan Turnbull.
(Women’s Editor: Connie Jackson.
*
Sports Editor: Dave Taylor.
Desk Editors: Marjory Bush, Suzanne Cock
erain, Bob Funk, Gretchen Grondak], Lorna
Larson.
Chief Night Editor: Lorna Larson.
2 New Dormitories Planned at Idaho
MOSCOW, IDA., (UP)—Two
new dormitories to be financed
through bond issues will be built
at the University of Idaho next
summer, President J. E. Buchanan
said here yesterday.
They will be a men's dorm with
a 240 capacity and a women's
dorm for 120.
TODAY S STAFF
Assistant managing editor: Bill
Stanfield.
Desk editor: Lorna Larson.
Copyeditors: Helen Jackson,
Jack Young, Marcille Wallace,
Shirley llstad, and Dolores Dyer.
Wst o few seconds you con Rrove
PHILIP MORRIS
,S definitely lks irritating
than the brand you're now smok-ng.
Iignf
■ PHILIP MORRIS
■ . „ _DON'T INHALE —and
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s-l-o-w-l-y >e , NO\u . . .
light up y°u‘‘
_ present brand
■■ r .kina - DON’T INHAIE.
Do exactly the .ante JJ Quit, o difference
Notice that b.te, that st.ng
from PHILIP MORRIS 1
2
_ MADDKI
nose, easy,
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Remember: less irritation means more pleasure.
And Philip Morris is the ONE cigarette proved
definitely less irritating, definitely milder, M
than any other leading brand.
NO OTHER CIGARETTE
CAN MAKE THAT STATEMENT.
YOU’LL BE GLAD TOMORROW
YOU SMOKED PHILIP
MORRIS TODAY!