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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1952)
• Campus Briefs • Help In needl'd on the food booth* for the Women’* Recreation association carnival, the WKA ha* announced. Anyone lnterc*ted may contact Mary Jordan at Highland house, phone 5-t)480. Students in terestod in working on contacts and booth pairings urc asked to contact Barbara Keelen at Kappa Alpha Theta, phone 5-0673. • The regularly seheduled square dance in the Student Union has been cancelled for tonight be cause of the Marian Anderson con cert in McArthur court. • The Voice of America star!* an eight-week series on Thursday of this week over KWAX, at 6 p.m. It Is a fifteen minute drama staring Gerald Mohr. The show is a dramatized story of the how and why the Voice of America was started. 0 The YWCA service commis sion will meet at noon today in the Y headquarters in Gerlinger. Any one interested may attend, Chair man Janice Evans announced. Speakers for the meeting will be Cora I’irtle, Eugene Red Cross chairman, and E. D. Rowell, Cane county Rod Cross drive chairman, who will talk on the Red Cross as a profession und the campus Red Cross drive. • Petitions for Duck Preview committee chairmen are due Fri day to General Chairman Jackie Wilkes at Carson hall or the A.SCO office on the third floor of the Student Union. SU to Sponsor Movie The Sunday rnovie sponsored by the Student Union rnovie commit tee is "The I>ong Voyage Home.” It will be shown in the SU ball room at 2 p.m. and 4 30 p.m. It stars John Wayne, Barry Fitzgerald and Thomas Mitchell as men of the sea. Admission price is thirty cents. CLASSIFIED Plaro your ad at the Student Union, main dmk or at the Shack, In portion or phone ext. 219, between 2 and 4 p.m. Monday to Friday. Hates: First Insertion 4c per word; Kiiboeo,uent Insertions 2c per word. • FOR SALE 1941 BU1CK 5-pa.su, Special. Ex cellent rubber. Newly rebuilt front end. Good clean condition throughout. $350. 2155 Kincaid, evenings. Call 5-9809. 83 GIRL'S LIGHTWEIGHT bicycle. Excellent cond. cheap — Ph. 4- 3416. 79 FACULTY MEMBER" wishes to sell '39 Chev. coupe. Ext. 437 or 438. 80 • M l S CEL LA N E O UT TYPING—Thesis typed at reason able prices. Richards Secretarial Service, 1390 Willamette. Phone 5- 0845. tf •“lost PLEASE — Will finder of Cyma Tavannes black dial wrist watch, cherished Christmas gift from my husband, return for reward. Lost Feb. 2 in or near Mac Court. Mrs. Gordon Lambert, 2030 E. 19th. Phone 4-9190. 81 B-CLARINET "Leblanc" Paris Boehm system. Low priced. K. Laursen. 793 E. 11th. Ph. 5-9541. 81 IT-" . .. School of Law Sponsors Traffic Court Conference "Delegates from 11 western Mtatea have been Invited by the law school to attend the regional traffic court conference on the Oregon campus today through Fri day. Principal speakers will be James 1’. Economos, director of the American Bar association’s traf fic court program, and members of the traffic institute at North western university, Members of the institute are considered authorities in the field of traffic. They have written "Judge and Prosecutor in Traffic Court," the only text on the sub ject. Traffic problems will be dis cussed In an attempt to present a clear picture of the traffic situa tion as it now exists for the law enforcement officers. Conference will officially begin 9 u rn. today with registration in the law- school. J. F. Cramer, of the general extension division, will open the conference w-ith general announcements. The delegates will then be wel comed by Orlando Hollis, dean of the law school; J. J. Quillin, chair man of the committee on improve ment of traffic courts of the bar association; and Franklin M. KrernJ, director of the traffic in stitute. The conference is presented by the law school and the extension division, in cooperation with the bar association and the institute. Bureau of municipal research and the Eugene police department have also assisted. Two Chairmen To Head Vodvil A committee representing ASUO and World Student Service Fund interests Monday night screened petitioners for co-chairmen for the all-campus Vodvil show and selected two from the field of six to submit to the senate Thursday. Joan Dysart, junior in English, and Hex Balcntine, junior in lib eral arts, were recommended by the committee. Other petitioners were Cathy Tribe, sophomore in business; Joanne Forbes, junior in speech; Sharon Anderson; junior in music; and Pat Bellmer, junior in speech. Serving on the screening com mittee were Helen Jackson, Mary Alice Baker, Janie Simpson, Judy McLoughlin and Dave Rodway, representing the senate; JoAnn Sloan, Barbara Swanson, Jody Greer, Sally Thurston, represent ing WSSF; and Jackie Wilkes, Duck Preview chairman. The all-campus Vodvil will be presented during Duck Preview weekend, Apr. 25-26. Primary Discussed By USA Committee Discussion of a proposed consti tution which would contain the primary election plan now before the ASUO senate took place Tues day at a meeting' of the United Students association interim com mittee. Dick Paul was accepted at treas urer for USA and Helen Jackson as secsetary. Donna Buse presided at the meeting in the absence of Virginia Wright, USA interim com mittee chairman. Read and use Emerald classi fieds. Citizen's Committee Organized at Meeting (Continued from frage one) 'he problem after four panel speakers presented views on the situation. Tenor of the discussion wan that segregation of Negroes in the poor living areas on west 11th at. is harmful and undemo cratic. Most felt something ought to be done about it. Near t he end of the discussion I remarks that certain Negroes had [ been denied more decent housing because of their color (in answer , to some assertions that no dis-1 crimination had been made, or j that every efort had been made 1 to prevrnt it) were greeted with' applause. Also applauded was aj remark that the group was erring in trying to be do-gooders, in try- j ing to place blame solely on Ku- : gene realtors. The matter, some! said, was one of "personal dedi- ; cation.” There are TT% miles of rorri- < dors in the Pentagon in Washing- : ton. Chemist Interviews Planned for Today J. r . Phillips, assistant pe rsonnel director, and G. K. Adam, adminis trative director, of the American Potash and Chemical corporation, will be on campus today to inter view chemists for positions in the company's production progrr. m. The American Potash company operates plants in various parts of the United States including the well-known plant in Trona, Calif. Mm who are Interested in de ployment in chemistry at any lev els may make appointments for interviews with the company rep resentatives in the graduate place ment office, Emerald hall. The summer brought was o severe in the hill country of Tex. 3 that many ranchers began feeding wild deer. for clothes GOOD & CLEAN ... G. & C. Washateria 2470 Alder Phone 5-5190 Open 8 to 6 — Six days a week f{o4A£x£ Olivta CANDIES ASSORTED CHOCOLATES A gay Valentine’s Day gift wrap tends holiday atmosphere to everybody’s \ everyday favorite . . . creams, fruits, T nuts and caramels—dipped in milk and dark chocolate. 1 lb. box I” THE HEART-TO-HEART VALENTINE Make your Valentine Gift a heart of gleam ing red foil tastefully filled with creams, nuts, fruits, caramels, toffee scotch, crunch and chewy centers, dipped in milk and dork vanilla choco late. 1 lb. heart box CHOCOLATES and BUTTER BONS in the Gift Box with an INDEX A handsome gift-boxed assortment of creams, nougats, caramels, nuts and nut clusters ... a cellophane index names each piece. 1 lb. box Everybody's Drug Store 986 Willamette — Phone 4-0221 • Want to be her lSUEMWlC Give her Blum’s Lumps 85c LICORICE LUMPS LEMON LUMPS LIME LUMPS CINNAMON BUMPS COFFEE TEENS BLUM’S SQUARE MINTS MAIN DESK . . . ERB MEMORIAL STUDENT UNION