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 ...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 smoke for one simple reason , . . enjoy ment. And smoking enjoyment is all a matter of taste. Yes, taste is what counts in a cigarette. And Luckies taste better. Two facts explain why Luckies taste better. First, L.S.-M.F.T.— Lucky Strike means fine tobaa . . . light, mild, good tasting tobacco. Second, Luckies are ac tually made better to taste better . . . always round, firm, fully packed to draw freely and smoke evenly. So, for the enjoyment you get from better taste, and only from better taste, Be Happy—Go Lucky. Get a pack or a carton of better-tasting Luckies today. L SpriMJ F Corned Where’s your jingle? It’s easier than you think to make $25 by writing a Lucky Strike jingle like those you see in this ad. Yes, we need jingles —and we pay $25 for every one we use! So send as many as you like to: Happy-Go-Lucky. P. O. Box 67, New York 46, N. Y. fcS2rs©Ss3U ,,,,), tarn* He^netn .Vs J0.h»S »**'*• jjniveis*‘y CCPR., THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY LUCKIES TASTE BETTER CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER!