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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 9, 1951)
'Anne of the Thousand Days' Stacies Full Dress Rehersal The cast of "Anne of the Thou sand Days" swings into full re hearsals tonight with the May 18 •pening just nine days away. Here begins the ticklish busi ness of polishing and primping, ■bringing unity out of disorganiza tion. working on the weak points, and, in general, producing a good play. Director Fred Hunter and assistant director Phyllis Keller will be in charge of this perfecting. Among the stalwarts of the cast who will soon become familiar with every square foot of the Univer sity Theatre’s stage are the play’s two principal characters, Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, better known to us as Bob Marsh and Avis Lange. Avis Lange is Portland’s latest contribution to dramatics at the University. An alumnus of Lin coln High School, medium-sizer, brown-haired Avis, a first term sophomore, was becoming a veter an stagehand long before the first, ground had been broken for the new University Theater. Miss Lange spent three years with the Portland Junior Civic Theater, the young partner of one #f the Northwest’s best and most widely known amateur theater groups. She has rlso been a fur.c-1 tionarv in the lewis and Clark Summer theater, playing the lead fn "Hotel Universe,” and "Craig's Wife,” and filled in on many other minor roles. Finally Avis has put Avis Lange in time with the Redlands, Calif. Civic Theater group. Earlier this year Avis was Ame lia in the Shakespearian produc tion “Othello." Bob Marsh, graduate assistant in speech, from San Diego, fills j the role of the talented but ruth I less 16th century English ruler. | This is Marsh s first part at the University Theater, but he is no stranger of the works of Maxwell Anderson. Bob had the role of Lord Essex in ‘‘Elizabeth, the Queen,” another of Anderson's English historical dramas while at San Diego State College where he graduated in 1950. This will be both Bob's first and last year at the University. He plans to enroll at Florida State University next year and work for his Ph.D. He is very interested in theater work and aims for the field of directing. Like Avis, Bob has also done his share of community theater work. He spent quite some time with his home town San Diego group and was principally in the technical end of production. Speech Luncheon Today Three speech 113 classes of Rob ert Montgomery will hold a noon luncheon today at the Anchorage Cafe. Lunch will begin at 12 noon, and there will be one person from e*ach class delivering an after-din ner speech. Mistress of Ceremony will be Shirley Boner. Preview Proposal Submitted (Continued from f’lit/r one 1 sity, living organizations, nml the visiting students. Anderson told the council that $1.62 per visitor had been returned to groups who housed students during the weekend. Following Anderson's report the council voted to recommend to the Senate that an ex-officio advisory board composed of the vice-presi dents of the International Frater nity Council, the Inter-Dormitory Council, Panhellenic, the Inter Hall Governing Board, and Fresh man class president work with a Duck Preview chairman to be se lected by the Senate from the gen eral student body early in fall term. Future plans of the Rally Board were presented to the Executivej Council by Joanne Fltzmaurice. The board intends to publish a booklet containing all school yells, Miss Fltzmaurice said, which will be sold for 10 cents a copy. Hlic also told the council thut a rally has been planned for Sept. 13, the Thursday before Oregon's opening football game with Stanford In Portland. The board has suggested that the present yell squad be maintained for the first rally. A yell writing contest will be sponsored by the Kally Board this month. Miss Fltzmaurice said. A , prize of $3 will be offered for the best football yell written by a Uni versity woman and an Identical award will be presented to the winning man. Sooner or later a lot of people discover what is meant by blood relations. They bleed you. ssy-ZHII—-T-- ~ -^1 WHY NOT STUDY IN MEXICO? MEXICO CITY COLLEGE ! Faculty Ideal Climate kr«M'iu»blf Living L'o*t* fjtiartcrl) Scaiimi Summer—Mid-June t*> Mid August Fall—I.atr Srtitcmlwr !«. Mid June Winter—Kcarly January !<• Mid March Spring Mid March to e»rl> June M.A. and B A. DEGREES in: B A. DECREES in: English. Crraiivr Wiitiug. Drama and Sptreh |.iurnall*m. Eilln.ilmn, I'nyillol'*) WRITK I UK ( A I AI K \ >1 »l I t •» *»« I. I. I I I * •-» NOW A\ All.AHU. I MMII * ! '.’ll l.V* Mrxico, D F. \|.j . vc«I 1 j Veteran* LIKE THOUSANDS OF AMERICA’S STUDENTS MAKE THIS MILDNESS TEST YOURSELF AND GET WHAT EVERY SMOKER WANTS fHOTOS TAKCN ON CAMPUi ClAtM HAVSN STANFORD jd d COU-t^S ill HOB*'*5 'P/uS NO UNPLEASANT AFTER-TASTE OVER 1500 PROMINENT TOBACCO GROWERS SAY: "When I apply the Standard Tobacco Growers’ Test to cigarettes I find Chesterfield is the one that smells Milder and smokes Milder." A WELL-KNOWN INDUSTRIAL RESEARCH ORGANIZATION REPORTS: "Of all brands tested, Chesterfield is the only cigarette in which members of our taste panel found no unpleasant after-taste." LEADING SILLER IN AMERICA’S COLLEGES w MMti