Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 12, 1951)
CLASSIFIED Place your ad at the Student Union, main desk or at the Shack, in person or phone ext. 219, between 2 and 4 p.m. Monday-Friday. Rates: First insertion 4c a word: subsequent insertions, 2c per word. FOR SALE: 1929 Model A Tour ing. Reasonably priced. Phone 5-7738 874 E. 13th. 79 FOR RENT: Furn. room. Util, paid. Share kitchen, bath with 2 women students. Separate en trance. $30 month or $40 for 2 girls. 1353 Agate. Ph. 4-6148. 77 FOR SALE: ’49 Crosley convert ible, heater. 1800 miles, good con dition. 1251 Emerald. Phone 5-0021 afternoons or evenings. 78 LOST: Gray 10 x 12 notebook with typewritten notes. Finder please return to Taylor’s. Max Dar nielle. 78 Hostess Photographs Due Wednesday 'V' Pictures of candidates for Dads’ Day Hostess are due Wednesday, Paul Lasker, hostess chairman, announced. Married women students or students’ wives are eligible. Photographs must be in black and white and show the candi date only. Pictures should be turned in at the ASUO office in the Stu dent Union or to Lasker at the ATO house. WHY PAY MORE! LONG PLAYING RECORDS (33 1-3 R.P.M.) 30% OFF FREE COMPLETE CATALOGUE AND PRICE LIST. Write To: RECORD HAVEN, INC. (Dept. C) 520 West 48th St. New York, 19, N. Y. Inter-Racial Fraternity Elects Burger President Theodore W. Burger, junior in journalism, has been elected pledge class president of Alpha Phi Alpha, student inter-racial fraternity re cently established on the Oregon campus. De Norval Unthank, graduate student in architecture, is vice-n*<*=i_ ueni or uie group and Chester Dan iels, senior in business administra tion, will serve as secretary-trea surer. The national charter for the new social organization is expected to arrive this week. A petition of students wishing to organize a chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha on the Oregon campus was approved last week by the Stu dent Affairs Committee. There will be no living group connected with the new fraternity. Students who petitioned the committee were Burger, Unthank, Phillip Moore, Daniels, W. E. Johnston, Theodore H. Martin, and Gideon W. Jean-Jacques. Music Honorary Takes Inspection Donald W. Allton, assistant pro fessor of music and province gov ernor of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, men's music honorary, inspected chapters of the fraternity on his trip to Seattle and Tacoma last weekend. While on the trip, Allton organ ized a planning meeting for the province convention to be held in Seattle this spring. Conservative Policy a 'Must' For Co-op Store, Says Henson we mubi use a conservative policy in buying books,” G. L. Hen son, manager of the Co-op, stated Tuesday, when asked why books in demand by the students arc often late in arrivipg from the publishers. The fault does not lie with the Co-op, but with the publishers, who usually allow only a 10 to 20 per cent return value on books not bought by the students, Hen son continued. The Co-op often receives word from the publishers that a certain book will be ready for publication on a certain date. When the date arrives, the publishers do not have the books ready. This negligence on the part of the publishers re sults in late arrival of the books, the Co-op manager explained. The Co-op bases its estimates for purchases on past years, or on i eports submitted by professors. However, sometimes the profes sors’ estimates are not wholly ac curate, Henson said. “A professor may say that he will have 80 students in a class; then 50 students will show up,” the Co-op manager said. The surplus of books left over, with no market, results in a loss to the Co-op, because the books cannot be returned to the publish ers at full value. “This situation causes the price of books to rise to offset the loss suffered by the Co-op, so we fol low a conservative policy when ordering books to protect both the students and the Co-op,” Henson concluded. Skull and Dagger Votes on Change Skull and Dagger, sophomore men’s honorary, will meet this week to vote on proposed changes in membership rules. The changes have been tenta tively worked out by a three-man committee appointed at last week's meeting. CLIP l CLIP CLIP CLIP CLIP CLIP Ph NH i—3 o CL. M O 1 M o r Letter To Dad Dear Dad, Eugene, Oregon February 12, 1951 You’ve heard of Queen fora Day, no doubt. Well, I’ve got news for you. I here may be no long red carpet or heralds to sound their trumpets but chosen you Oregon’s King for a Day. we ve The reception you’ll get here on campus will be nothing short of a roval greeting. And wait till you see the “palace”! The Erb Memorial Student Union building is new this year, and elegant in every sense of the word Plate glass windows and designs in marble will take the place of embroidered tapestries and big brass statues, but we’ll wager any past monarch would give his crown jewel for a peek at the ultra-modern “S.U.” Yes sir and we ll have a luncheon for you in style there. You’ll be able to see the grand ballroom, art gallery, bowling alleys, anything your royal heart desires (and under one roof!). The Student Union building is the hub of everything on campus. My friends go there for coke dates, com mittee meetings, lectures, concerts, dances, movies, and just plain “browsing” in a room full of books for that purpose. It’s one part of a wonderful school that you should get acquainted with as I have. As King, you’ll be called upon to cast your vote for one of three lovely princesses, who will reign over your stay as Dads’ Day Hostess. I’ll go with you to the luncheon Saturday, and we can see our Webfoots battle University of Washington hoopsters in the evening. Of course, you’ll have official duties such as attending business meetings and electing officers for the coming year’ Your entire domain here on the campus is buzzipg, Dad, in preparation for your weekend Feb. 23 to 25. Please try to make it, won’t you? Fill the gas tank on tne royal chariot, Your Majesty, and roar down here! We’re expecting you Your loyal subject, o r* M ►a o r* o r* o r* o r* HH o r* l-H CLIP f CLIP CLIP CLIP CLIP CLIP Music Majors To Present Joint Recital Ellen Liebe, violinist, and Joyce Everson, pianist, both seniors in music will present their joint pub Mc recital at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the School of Music Auditorium. La Verne Watts, junior in music 1 will accompany both women. The first number is a contempor- ! ary violin-piano duet by Hindemith, i 'Sonata,” in two parts, “Ruhig I bewegt” and “Langsam Sehr beb haft.” I Miss Everson will play the next two numbers, Bartok's “Mikrokos mos, including- movements en titled “Ostinato,” “From the Diary of a Fly,” and “Dance in Bulgar ian Rhythm,” and Debussy’s “Pre ludes,” entitled “Voiles” and “La Serenade Interrompue.” Miss Liebe, accompanied by Miss Watts, will present Bach’s “Son ata" with “Allegro,” “Adagio ma noil tanto,” “Allemanda,” anc Gigue. ’ Then Miss Everson will give three Brahms numbers, “Bal lade in G minor, Op. lig. No. 3,' Intermezzo in A Major, Op. 118, ^T°- !>” and “Capriccio in B minor Op. 76, No. 2.” Miss Liebe and Miss Watts will end the concert with Wieniawski’s 'Concerto No. 2 in D minor, Op. J2, the Allegro movement. Admission is free to the public. Regardless whether you plant radish, beet or lettuce seeds the same kind of weeds seem to up. come WRITE TO DAD And lest we forget—on peace: If they want peace, nations should avoid the pin-pricks that precede cannon-shots. Napoleon. HE1UG 4-9,511 Rudyard Kipling's "KIM” Errol Flynn MAYFLOWER ITS |!o ft MDfP. DM' HOU "Caravan” Stewart Granger LAN E 4-0431 “My Blue Heaven” with Betty Grable Dan Dailey Also "50 Years Before Your Eyes” f K[NZ,f r I 1 5j P R i N G f ! f L D _|S)iu£ S P RiN0 FI f Lo' 71) 0l “Pagan Love Song” Esther Williams Howard Keil flffiiESSMm All Quiet on the Western Front” with Lew Ayres Also “Bayonet Charge” J&Swfy j&. 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