Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, January 26, 1954, Page Three, Image 3

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    Waffle Breakfast
Set for Saturday
The annual YWCA waffle
breakfast will be held Saturday,
Jan. 30^ at 9:30 a. m. in the YW
lounge, Gerlinger hall.
Featured at the "waffle splash"
which ia for all university women,
will be a style show. Girls from
the four commissions of the organ
ization will model clothes from
Kaufman Bros, of Eugene. Ad
mission will be 50 cents.
Betty Anderson and Sally Allen
are co-chairmen of the event, with
the four commissions making up
their committees. The religion and
worship commission, under Con
nie Long, is handling publicity.
The service commission, led by
Cynthia Vincent, is in charge of
the style show. Arrangements for
food, serving, and clean-up are
being made by the international
relations commission, under the
direction of Sally Calkins. The
public affairs commission, led by
Luanne McClure, will provide dec
orations and handle ticket sales.
College Capers...
From Coast
to Coast
By Tin* Fisk
Emerald Exchange Editor
Underclassmen at Centenary
college staged a new kind of
raid this fall ... a beanie raid.
Freshmen hid beanies and scram
bled other possessions of the
upperclassmen who had gone to
a meeting.
e • e
The Iowa State Daily com
mented about Homecoming.
"Lest it be a tradition, it's not
Homegoing.’’ The remark was di
rected at "students who love
' their school so much that they
can hardly wait for the week
end, homecoming or otherwise to
make tracks for home."
Honors Students
To Hear Tugman
William Tugman, Eugene Regis
ter-Guard editor, will speak to
sophomore honors students at a
coffee hour Wednesday at 4 p. m.
in the Student Union dad’s lounge.
"Ways of Weighing and Con
sidering --Senator McCarthy and
His Actions” will be Tugman’s top
ic. The Register-Guard editor was
a member of the committee of
newspaper publishers and editors
who reviewed a recent incident
involving McCarthy and the edi
tor of the New York Post.
All sophomore honors students
have been urged to attend the cof
fee hour, according to Vivienne
Brown, secretary of the planning
committee. A fee of ten cents will
be charged for refreshments.
r. %au s
</^THE BEN"'T
MARCH
DIMES
J A N U A RY• ‘X TO 31
Traffic Delegates
Hold Annual Meet
^j/^iuAuudiciy iv uri e g a t e 8
from Oregon have registered for
the third annual traffic court
conference, which opened on cam
pus Monday.
The meeting, scheduled to run
through Wednesday, is being spoo
sored jointly by the school of law
and the General Extension Divis
ion of the state system of higher
education. Also participating are
the American Bar Association and
the Traffic Institute of Northwes
tern University.
This afternoon’s session will
deal with “The Drunken Driver’’.
Robert Y. Thorton, state attorney
general will preside and James
Economos, Chicago, director of
the traffic court program for the
American Bar Association; Dr. E.
D. Furrer, Eugene pathologist,
and John W. Pennington, Eugene
city attorney, will participate.
'Hie morning session today open
ed with a discussion on “Traffic
Legislation: Uniform Tickets: City
and State Problems,” presided
over by H. R. Jordan, Ashland
municipal judge.
"The Speeding Driver” will open
Wednesday’s meetings. At this
session, a demonstration of the use
cf radar for detection of speed
ing will be presented under the
direction of Clyde Warren, Salem
police chief.
John L. Barber, Eugen^ munici
pal judge will preside at-the dis
cussion. Chris Kowitz and Tom
Churchill, Salem city attorney
and assistant city attorney, res
pectively, will discuss legal prob
lems concerning the use of radar
in this way.
Franklin M. Kreml, director of
the Traffic Institute, will speak
at the luncheon at 11:30 a. m.
Wednesday on “Traffic Law En
forcement: Police and Court.’’ .
Secretary of State Earl T. New
bry will preside over the final
session on “Traffic Court Proce
dure” Wednesday afternoon. Also
participating in the last meeting
will be Economos, and Alvin J.
Gray, Bend attorney.
Psychology Professor
Schedules Coffee Hour
S. R. Pinneau, assistant profes
sor of psychology, will be the fea
tured speaker at the Friday eve
ning coffee hour in the Student
Union browsing room, sponsored
by the SU browsing room com
mittee.
Pinneau will speak on “Sulli
van’s: The Interpersonal Theory
of Psychiatry” at 7:45 p. m.
Coffee will be served during the
discussion period following the
lecture. The lecture is one of a
' series of weekly Friday evening
coffee hours.
Hunter Slates
Song Tryouts !
Tryouts for the singing-dancing
chorus for the University theater's
musical production of “One Touch
of Venus’’ will be held Wednesday
at 4 p. m., said Frederick J. Hun
ter, instructor in speech, who will
direct the modern musical come
dy.
Ten to twelve men and women
will be cast in, the chorus, Hunter
said. The musical, which will open
April 23, was written by S. J.
Perleman and Ogden Nash with
music by Kurt WeiL
Special Squeeze
Music, Show Set
I
The “Four Shades of Rhythm” j
will furnish the music for the an
nual Lemon Orange Squeeze to be
held in the Student Union ball
room Saturday night after the
Oregon - Oregon State basketball
game.
Intermission entertainment will
include a tap dance by Donna Aar
is, freshman in art, two vocals by
Ann Stearns, freshman in music,
and Bob Kelly, sophomore in lib
eral arts, will furnish novelty pi
ano numbers. Boyd Harris, fresh
man in art, will be the master of
ceremonies.
Admission to the dance is free,!
according to Stewart Johnson, SU :
dance publicity committee chair
man. i
Jlutenintf 9k >
...On KWAX
---jj
TUESDAY—
6;00 p.rn. Sign On
6:03 Piano Moods
6:15 Four for a Quarter :
6:30 News Till Now
6:45 Sports Shots
7.00 19th Century Italian Mu9.
8:00 Patrioscript
8;15 UN Story
8:30 Voices of Europe
9:00 Kwaxwcrks
10:50 News Till Now ■
10:55 Tune to Say Goodnight
11:00 Sign Off
SWIM
Winter Swim Schedule
Afternoons 2 to 6
Friday, Saturday, and Sunday
Nights 7 to 10
Wednesday, Tbure., Fri, Sat,
BENTON LANE
NATATORIUM
- 4 mi. No. of Junction City
on Highway 99 West
Fhcne Junction City 8-2886
!
PWH m —!
tosU:
Charlene Ber"‘* , Iowa
5tate U^exs.ty ^
When you come right down to it, you
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Two facts explain why Luckies taste
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Be Happy—Go Lucky. Get a pack or a
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L SpriMJ F
Corned
Where’s your jingle?
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Box 67, New York 46, N. Y.
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He^netn .Vs
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jjniveis*‘y
CCPR., THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY
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