Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 09, 1953, Page Seven, Image 7

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    I I/O Exchange Assembly
Sets First Performace
('There’s no business like show
business that’s the opinion of per
formers In Oregon’s second annual
1 exchange assembly which will
I. travel to Willamette university for
a performance April 16.
•The show, "Webfoot Impressions
• of ’03,” will be. presented at Ore
| gon State college April 22, and on
this campus sometime in May.
Oregon Slate will present an ex
change assembly here April 14.
The Webfoot show is directed
by Joanne Forbes, exchange as
sembly chairman and senior in
- speech.
^ It is produced under the aus
> pices of the ASUO entertainment
k commission.
The Oregon show includes a cast
i of 25, and is built around the com
edy sketches of A1 Barzman, the
“poor man’s Jerry Lewis,” and
Advanced Air
I Blanks Asked
! The air force department is now
[ accepting applications for the ad
, vanced officer training program,
I Lt- Col. I. L. Ungerleider, Air
Force adjutant, has announced.
All those interested in the pro
gram are urged to turn in their
applications as early as possible
* to the military department office.
All those who qualify physically
and have satisfactory scholastic
standing will be given personal in
terviews by the selection board
starting Monday. Those students
who are accepted will be given
automatic defermeftta for the sum
mer months.
Students who start training in
the advanced ROTC unit next fall
will receive a general course of
study rather than one of the four
specialized fields from which a
cadet must now choose. This new
program is going to be the speci
fied policy of the Air Force in all
ROTC units, Lt. Col. Ungerleider
said.
Upon receiving a baccalaureate
degree the advanced student auto
matically is commissioned as a
regular second lieutenant and then
serves a minimum of two years on
active duty. Tht remainder of his
military obligation is then ful
filled by remaining in the active
reserves for a period of six years.
Anyone accepted into the pro
gram is offered in addition to a
scholastic deferment, a monthly
remunerance as a financial aid.
The cadet must in turn maintain
a good scholastic standing, must
attend a summer training camp
between his junior and senior
years.
Preview Housing
Plans Complete
Registration and housing ar
rangements for high school sen
iors who will visit the campus for
Duck Preview, April 24 and 26,
have been completed.
According to Rosemary Hamp
ton, registration chairman, Kwa
ma, and Phi Theta Upsilon, sopho
more and junior women’s hono
raries respectively, will register
seniors in the main lobby of the
Student Union. Registration hours
are from noon to 10 p.m. Friday
and from 8 a.m. to noon Satur
day. Additional program informa
tion will be given the visitors at
this time.
Visiting seniors have been sent
cards on which they may show
their preference for housing— fra
ternity, sorority, co-op, or dorm
itory. Each house has compiled a
preference list which has been sub
mitted to the office of student af
fairs. A personal letter will also
be written to the high school stu
dent inviting him to stay at the
living organization to which he
has been assigned.
. iimu. iwmm* ihiiihhii j ijji rm*--' mmm "wm r
A talented group of Oregon students are shown here rehearsing the exchange assembly which will be
presented at Willamette university April 16 and Oregon State college April 22. The enraptured sing
ers are Nancy Randolph and Gordon Green. Members of the combo are Dick Baranovich, Harvey Hixon
and Marv Young. Pat Bingham, Gloria Lee, Joan Bambauer, Donna-t laire Ringle and Loanne Mor
gan are the smiling ladles of the chorus. The Interested spectator is A1 Barzman.
straightmen Gloria Lee, Patrick
Henry and Bill DeLand.
Master of Ceremonies is Neil
Tardio, transplanted New Yorker
who has also played varsity foot
ball.
The show opens to the jazzy
music of Dick Baranovich and his
combo including Marv Young, pi
ano, Doug Ruhlman, trumpet, and
Harvey Hickson, drums.
As all shows should, this one
has a chorus line. It includes Pat
Bingham, Nancy Randolph, Lo
Anne Morgan, Donna Claire
Ringle, and Joan Bambauer.
_—ii ..TT
Dressed in formals the chorus
line does a number to the tune
of “Lullabyc of Broadway” with
new words. Wearing white shorts,
and white helmets the girls go
military with their impressions of
ROTC, a number which features1
the*lap dancing of Ken Hicken
bottom.
Other acts in the show include:
Allison LeRoux, doing a toc-tap
number in top hat and tails, and
singing “Bye-Bye Blues,” accom
panied by Mary Sweeney.
Baritone Gordon Green crooning
"Don't Blame Me.”
.Balladier Spencer Snow sings
such Burl-Ivish melodies as “Blue
Tail Fly” and “Rock Candy Moun
tain” to the strumming of bis
“git-tar.”
Jeanette Stone, who exhibits an
exuberant Sophie Tucker-type
style doing such numbers as “Loy
er Man,” and "A Good Man Ts
Hard to Find.”
Red-haired Nancy Randolph
with a torchy rendition of “Hold
Me, Thrill Me.”
Anne Moyes and Jim Blue with
a routine on what an Oregon blind
date is like. Comment by Miss
Moyes: “What could be blinder?”
Sophisticated piano renditions of
such numbers as “Laura” and
"Tenderly" by Don Bonime.
A jack-in-the-pulpit is an Amer
ican plant common in moist, shady
woods, usually bearing two lea yes
of three leaflets each.
OPEN TO SENIORS ONLY...
There’s a letter to all Seniors on its way
in the mail now explaining how you can
halve at least one item in your future cost of
living. It has nothing to do with inflation,
nothing to do with taxes—but it does point
out that a TIME subscription today will cost
you just half the price that Old Grads
normally pay.
The secret, of course, is timing. For today
you can still qualify for the Special Student
Rate which brings you 52 issues of TIME
for less than six cents a copy.* But once you
have that degree — you’re fair game for the
regular rates.
It’s an open secret, too, that we’d like to
have you as subscribers—now and in the
future. And if we make it easy for you now,
we think you’ll get into the habit of wanting
TIME around the house.
So if you’re going to read TIME anyway
(and most college graduates do**), why not
subtract $3 from the cost of your "news
education” and place your order now?
All you need do is keep your eyes peeled
for that letter and return the card enclosed.
Or if you’d like to get the jump on the post
man, place your order today with your
campus TIME representative or the college
bookstore. You pay for it later when we bill
you—at S3 per year instead of the usual $6.
—And you don’t need a graduate degree in
finance to see that this offer makes sense.
4
An adventure in
good reporting,
good reading
* It’s hard to figure a way to stretch six cents farther
than across the world and back in TIME’S 23 chapters,
some of which you see spelled out around this ad.
** Today 78% of all TIME readers are college-trained.
And incidentally, ’52 graduates recently voted TIME
“the most important magazine” and their own first-choice.
vy A R [N| A '■