'England and Confinenf Different Says Haycox (This is the concluding article in a series of four by the author, who toured Europe this summer. Other articles by Mr. Haycox will be printed at intervals.) By Jim Haycox - After being on the continent, England was like a different world. It was nice, too, to be able to read a sign or ask a cop where you were. Just one qualification here which made it England and not the U. S. A.: that business of driving on the left side instead of the right. One really had to be on the ball to keep from getting run down. London is the biggest city in the world and that in itself rules out any sweeping generalizations. The only conceivable impression one might convey was that of an all-over drabness that covered the city and its people. Times are ter rifically rough in England. Ration ing there today is worse than any thing we experienced at the very peak of the war. Clothing, candy, meat, almost everything we asso ciate with as being plentiful, is to JPthem scarce and precious. Seeks Typical Englishman We were all looking for that typical Englishman, the stuffed shirt, monocTed variety with a “don’t-bother-me-now” air about him. We had to look a long way. The British man on the street is a pretty swell guy who—and this surprised me—has a great appre ciation for what America has done for him. Piccadilly Circus, which I sup pose is the one place to go if you can't see anything else, was just a small scale edition of Times Square. You’d see big signs with stuff like “I say, Reggie, Mother looks a bit pale these days. I think she could use a dash of Schweppes Mineral Water, you know.” It wasn’t quite that bad but British advertising is somewhat different if not a little amusing. Now we had just enough time left to stop and see a Shakespeare play in his old home town, Strat ford-on-Avon, and then push on to the last stop, Edinburgh, Scotland. Promotes Festival We had two days and most of it was spent,—and how—on Princess Street, which is supposed to be one of the most beautiful in the world and well could be. Every body with any money left was buying tartans, cashmeres, tweed suits, and the like for sensational prices. I was flat broke. The music festival was in full swing but you had to work hard for a decent seat at anything, so a bunch of us had our own little festival hi the rooming house, formed a chib, and left it at that. The plane was sup posed to take us right home, but we were delayed when one engine threw in the- towel about 45 minutes out. Even with three oth er engines to get us back, the At lantic looked awfully big, awfully blue, and twice as deep as they say it is. The second try was more suc cessful and we were in Montreal in 16 hours, which included time for coffee in Iceland, of all places. Three train days from here was Vancouver; eight boat hours farth er on, Seattle, and then it was just a hoop and a holler to the trail’s end, Portland. After a sum mer in Europe, you’d be surpris ed how much a big booming place like a rut. Foreign Students Expect_ In feresting Homecoming By Billie Hamden “But I don’t know very much about Homecoming yet,” seems to be the unanimous comment of the U of O’s foreign students when asked what they think of our cele bration. Ingebord Vedeler, from Norway, said that though she doesn’t as yet know much about Homecom ing, she is going to participate in the parade and all the other acti vities. Miss Vedeler said that the Norwegian Institute of Technology which she attended has a similar event every two years. During the course of a month-long celebration, IT day is set aside for a big show and reuuion for returning gradu ates. Oscar Hoessl from Munich, Ger many, said emphatically that he would “like to be here for every Homecoming, especially if there were no rain. I can’t leave the house, it’s too wet,” Hoessl re marked. Hoessl said that Univer sity graduates in Germany and particularly from the school of law in Munich meet about once every five years to renew old friendships. Carnival time in Munich comes during the week before Lent, in February, and, said Hoessl, “Every body acts crazy for one week.” Costume or formal balls are given by schools and the occasion be comes a sort of Homecoming for the alumni. In Iceland, high school gradua tion on June I6th becomes a re union date for alumni, said Jako bina Thordardottir. Each class has a special celebration and a big dance is held. In the University, a dance is held every fall to welcome freshman but there is nothing re sembling our Homecoming cele bration. Arne Boring from Sweden thinks the Homecoming celebra tion is a tittle funny, because the atumni don’t know the present undergraduates here. During said that the only thing similar in Swe dish universities is that once each five years, the graduates will meet in a restaurant or club to talk over old times. Dance Dress to be Semi-Formal This year’s Homecoming Dance 1 will be semi-formal dress and cor sages will not be in order, Joan i Skordahl, dance chairman, announ- 1 ced Monday. i This is to be the first Homecom- ] ing dance to be held in the Student Union Ballroom and will start a 1 tradition that may carry on for ! many years. i Male students are urged by Dick ] Davis, ticket chairman, to purchase < their tickets from living organiza- i tion social chairmen before the ] jp&nce. Social chairmen must turn i in all unsold tickets by Thursday < o Dick Davis, ticket chairman. Decorations for the dance pro nise to be “very different from hose of past dances. Three dimen lional forms will be used,” Jeanne Jail, decorations chairman stated. Mu3ic from the dance floor will >e broadcast over the loudspeaker lystem to the Dad’s room, dining oom, soda bar, and lounge. The )ad’s room and dining room will be ipened up to expand the dancing irea of the second floor ballroom. Entrance to the dance floor will be hrough the main building entrance >nly. The outside terrace stairs will Lewis and Clark Sets Playwright Contest Cash prizes totaling $250 will be awarded winners of the second annual plyawright contest being sponsored by Lewis and Clark Col lege. Any person or groups of individ uals may enter the competition, according to Arthur Coe Gray, con test director, but ail plays sub mitted must be original, unpub lished, and unproduced. The college reserves the right to produce any winning play with out paying royalty. Contest deadline is Feb. 1, 1961. Winners will be announced April 10. Manuscripts should be sent to 3ray in care of the Speech. Arts Department. Students Get Newscasting Tips From Bob Thomas, KEX Newsman Yarning: with a group of journ alism students, Bob Thomas, di rector of news and special events for station KEX in Portland, gave them his ideas of the requirements for radio newscasting during "Meet the Press" in the Student Union Thursday afternoon. Thomas is rated as one of the best radio newsmen in Oregon. He has been with KEX since 1941, when he became program director. “Newspaper work is an insidi ous business,” Thomas said before the meeting began. “It seems as if the more yon work with it, the more unfit you become for any other profession." As background for his work, Thomas worked in the editorial department of a small paper far seven years, for the Associated Press in Portland one year, for the defunct Portland News-Telegram, and did freelance writing two years. "Newscasting is nearly as much acting as journalism,” Thomas told the students. "The newscast er must get vitality across by showing that he is interested in his news” He explained that the lack of women newscasters was because most women would rather hear at man talk than a woman; and prob ably most men too. Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests Number 5...THE GNU "I gnu the answers.. .but I wasn’t talking!** 'The debating team couldn’t make much use erf this i non-talkative baby.,. but one look at bk "literary leaning^’ you that tests don’t buffalo hint. ’Specially those tricky cigarette tests ! As a smoker, you probably know, too, that one puff or one sniff— or a mere one-mnaie comparison can i prove very mucn about a cigarette! Why not make the sensible test—the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test. You judge Camel mildness and flavor in your own "T-Zone” (T for Throat, T for Taste) ...for 30 days. Yes, test Camels as a steady smoke and you’ll see why... More People Smoke Camels than any other cigarette!