Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 11, 1952, Page Six, Image 6

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    Delts, Tri Delts Produce
Contest-Winning Signs
' Congratulations to the winners
ami thanks to all the living organi- j
nations for their enthusiastic sup
port." said Joan Marie Miller,
chairman of this year’s Homecom
ing sign contest.
The awarding of prizes to the
winners of the sign contest Satur
day night at the Homecoming
dance wound up a month of inten
sive work by Miss Miller's commit
tee consisting of Mary Wilson.
Tina Fisk. Karen Campbell. Janet
Woods and Jean Hendeison. The
contest in the estimation of most
campus observers was an unquali
fied success.
Winner of first place in the
men's division was Delta Tau Del
ta Their winning entrant was en
titled “Come on Sing.” It pictured
a'i Oregon duck leading a chorus
of Cougar football players singing
Oregon songs. A large poster
aliove depicted a duck dropping an
a>. on the red nose of a cougar.
Delta Delta Delta captured first
place in the women's division. Live
models posed in three large show
eases announcing “Welcome Home
Grads.” Across a large sheet of
music in the background was the
refrain “All around the goal post,
the webfoot chased the cougar."
Second and third places in the
men’s division went to Delta Upsi
lon and Beta Theta Pi respectively.
DU's sign depicted a cougar in a
large yellow 'O' being guillotined
by a ducks. A barbershop quartet
singing Oregon songs in another
'O' was the prize-winning sign of
the Betas.
Alpha Gamma Delta, second
place, and Ann Judson house, third
place, were the other winners in
the women's division. Alpha Gam's
sign showed a duck kicking a cou
gar over the goalpost. The cougar
traveled on a wire from the ground
to a second story window. Ann
Judscn's sign was a huge duck
Red Cross Projects
Open to Petitioners
Petitions for chairmanship of
the campus Hod Cross blood drive
are now being accepted, accord
ing to Joan Walker, president of
the tied Cross board. The posi
tion is open due to the resigna
tion of Tom Shepherd, Monday.
The chairman will be in charge
of the drive to be held winter
term, and will work in conjunc
tion with the Red Cioss board.
Co-chairmen are also needed
to head the Roseburg Veteran's
hospital project, which will pro
vide entertainment, dunces and
programs for the hospitalized war
veterans. A man and woman will
be selected. Miss Walker said.
Petitions are to be turned in
to Joan Walker at Kappa Alpha
Theta.
To have a clean handkerchief in
a hurry: Wash, rinse, and blot in a
towel. Pull the hems straight,
square the corners .and “paste”
flat to dry against a tile wall, mir
ror, or over the edge of the bath
tub.
4ft Campus Briefs
0 Scholarship chairmen will
meet at 4 p.m. Thursday, in the
Student Union, according to Laura
Olson, assistant dean of women.
0 The Lane county Young Ite
puUicans club will meet tonight at
7:30 in the Student Union.
0 Pre-Nursing club will meet
s*t noon Wednesday at Wesley
house. Members will bring sack
lunches. Onalee Frost, graduate
student working in the infirmary,
will speak on infirmary nursing.
0 The executive board of the
University theater will hold a
luncheon meeting today at noon
in the Student Union.
0 Kev. Wilma Perry, pastor of
Eugene Church of God, will ad
dress the Inter-Varsity Christian
Fellowship meeting tonight at 7
p.m. in tiie Student Union on
"Christian Psychology of Prayer.”
•}>«:
and Accessory Organs not Adversely
Affected by Smoking Chesterfields
r -4
FIRST SUCH REPORT EVER PUBLISHED
ABOUT ANY CIGARETTE
v
.•iy" •
'V-:V ' •
A responsible consulting organization has
reported the results of a continuing study by a
competent medical specialist and his staff on the
effects of smoking Chesterfield cigarettes.
A group Of people from various walks of life
was organized to smoke only Chesterfields. For six
months this group of men and women smoked their
normal amount of Chesterfields — 10 to 40 a day.
45% of the group have smoked Chesterfields con
tinually from one to thirty years for an average of
10 years each.
At the beginning and at the end of the six
months ne*-'od each smoker was given a thorough
examination, including X-ray pictures, by the
medical specialist and his assistants. The exam
ination covered the sinuses as well as the nose,
ears and throat.
The medical specialist; after a thorough exam
ination of every member of the group, stated:
“It is my Opinion that the ears, nose, throat and
accessory organs of all participating subjects ex
amined by me were not adversely affected in the
six-months period by smoking the cigarettes
provided.” <
SUCumnts
UO Delegates
Attend Student
Union Confab
Kive representatives from the
University of Oregon attended the
third annual conference of the As
sociation of College Unions at Ore
gon State college Nov. 6 and 7.
Chairman of a discussion on
"What Activities are Basic in a
Union Program?" was Sandra
Price. Paul Lasker mimmarzled a
discussion titled "Spotlight on
Leadership", and Virginia Dailey
acted as recorder for a discussion
of "Building Interested Active
Committees." These students are
members of the Oregon Student
Union Board.
Pat Gustin. SU secretary, was
recorder for a discussion on "What
Methods Have Proven Most Fiffec
tive ?".
Regional representative from
the National Association of Col
lege Unions at the conference was
Dick Williams, director of Ore
gon’s Student Union.
'Mooniake Casino'
Discussion Subject
At Student Union
The "Moonlake Casino” theme
which reoccurs in many Tennessee
Williams' plays will be the subject
of discussion Wednesday at 7:30
p.m. in the Student Union brows
ing room.
Horace Robinson, associate pro
fessor of speei h and University
Theater director, will discuss four
plays in which the ‘Casino’ theme
appears; "Streetcar Named De
sire.” "Glass Menagerie," "Portrait
of a Madonna" and “Summer and
Smoke."
Robinson is associated with the
Very Little Theatre in Eugene and
has directed several pageants in
Kugene and^Klamath Kails.
Discussion leader Marvin A.
Krenk is a former speech instruc
tor and local radio announcer. He
is active in the Eugene Very Little
Theatre and is the author of
" I hythnmnia", a play presented by
the group this summer.
The case of the
Unapproachable
A umnus
OR
How Do You Get That Gift
Horse to Open His Mouth?
Once there was a Wealthy
Alumnus who was also a
Soft Touch. Tie an Old
School Tie around your
neck and he’d pive you
his shirt to po with it.
One day he realized
*»ai tins ha bit ol always
saying Yes to the Big Question was costing
him a Pretty Penny. So lie became a Hard
Man to Get I o. Letters, phone calls and per
sonal visits all encountered a secretary with
a face like a flint ami a 4-word vocabulary.
( He 3 out of town.”)
This was Rough on the Olil School, but no
“°'7 had a solution until the football coach,
a Ufaui in his own light, came up with a
Magnificent but Simple Idea, lie dashed down
to the Western I nion office and dispatched a
Jo egram saturated with Old School spirit
am dedicated to the theme that unless some
JNob o Soul came through pronto, the eleven
would he playing barefoot and jersey less.
The ice jam was broken. A Fat Check ar
rived ihe next day. Today things are back
on a Normal Financial Basis,
There’s nothing more practical than usin"
Telegrams to Hurdle Barriers and get to the
Cuy (ot the Ca!) you want to talk to. When
you want something . . . Cash from Home, a
Hate with a Drcumboat, an Interview with the
Man who does the Hiring ... it pays to Make
your Bui via Western Cuion.
870 Pearl St.
Telephone 4-3221