Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, February 02, 1954, Page Four, Image 4

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    '54 Press Meet
Set for Feb. 19r 20
The 1954 Oregon Press Confer
ence, held annually on the Univer
sity campus, is scheduled for Feb.
19 and 20.
The conference, co-sponsored by
the school of journalism and the
Oregon Newspaper Publishers As
sociation, will feature a number
of well-known journalists as guest
lecture speakers.
Except for the annual banquet
scheduled for the Eugene hotel, all
of Friday’s sessions will be held
on the campus. Saturday’s meet
ings will all be held in the Eugene
hotel, including the final Satur
day luncheon meeting of the news
men.
Included among the speakers
will be William F. Johnston, man
aging editor and editor of the
editorial page of the Morning Tri
bune in Lewiston, Idaho; Miss
Gladys Bowen, society editor of
the Portland Oregonian; State
Senator Stewart Hardie of the
Condon Globe-Times and the Fos
sil Journal; Robert W. Chandler of
the Bend Bulletin; Philip N. Bla
dine of the McMinnville News
Register, and Giles A. French of
the Sherman County Journal in
Moro.
In connection with the Press
Conference, an ONPA mechanical
conference is planned for Satur
day afternoon. It will begin at 2
p. m. and coincide with a dinner at
6:30 at the hotel. The guest speak
er will be the head of the Univer
sity of Oregon speech department,
Roy C. McCall.
Columbia Teacher
To Speak on Music
Jacob Avshalomov, instructor of
music at Columbia university, will
address music school students at
8 tonight on “New Directions in
Music — Their Media and Impli
cations.”
Avshalomov, who will speak in
the music school auditorium, will
accompany his talk with tape re
cordings.
Cant Cm to?
SELL IT THRU THE
WANT ADS
Don Wenzel, Classified Advertising Mgr.
LOST—British Prose and Poetry
Jan. 25, 6 p.m., in Straub dining
hall. Please return to John Bu
chanan, 302 Susan Campbell.
Men’s heavy, grey overcoat, size
34-36. Price new 3100. Sell for
$35. 794 E. 11th, Apt. 3. Mehta.
Will tutor in English by the hour.
Telephone 33509. 2-5
IT PAYS TO PATRONIZE
EMERALD ADVERTISERS
George
Shearing
and his quintet
playing
Wednesday, Feb. 10
at
McArthur Court
7:30 to 10:00 p. m.
Tickets 85c
Now On Sale At The
S. U. Main Desk
Spanish Teachers
To Hear Dougherty
D. M. Dougherty, foreign lan
guage department head, will speak
before the Northwest Chapter of
the American Association of
Teachers of Spanish at the Uni
versity of Washington Saturday.
Dougherty, president of the Ore
gon chapter, will speak on “Re
cent Developments in Foreign
Language Study.” This includes
the teaching of languages in grade
schools and the foreign language
program of the Modern Languages
association.
TODAY’S STAFF
Makeup Editor: Kitty Fraser
News: Dorothy Her
Night Editor: Mary Alice Allen
Copy Desk: Bev Lemmon, Gloria
Lane, Ted Goh
Play Ducats Available
Only on Cancellations
All tickets for the University
theater’s current production, "The
Moon is Blue,” have been sold out,
according to Mrs. Gene Wiley,
theater business manager.
However, students and faculty
members who still wish to see th<»
production may possibly be able to
obtain seats through concellations,
said Mrs.'Wiley.
«— Gloria Lee
Cast in the lead role of Patty
O'Neil, in the comedy which open
ed Friday, are Gloria Lee, junior
in speech, and Helene Robertson,
freshman in liberal arts.
Playing the young architect,
Don Gresham, are Donald McDon
ald, sophomore in speech, and Har
t i, senior in speech. Glar
;liter, senior in speech, will
pin; ' nvld Sluter, the protagonist,
while Tom Angle, senior in polit
i ul science, will portray Michael
TT e '
The production, directed by Hor«
ace W. Robinson, associate pro
( of speech, is scheduled to
run through Feb. 18.
Badminton Meet Today
Badminton tournament per
ticipartfl will meet today at 4:30
p. m. in Cerlinger hull gym. The
meeting will be brief if partici
pants arc prompt, emphasized
Jean Stevens, badminton manager.
Liggett & Myers
Tobacco Co. says...
T^OR more than thirty years we have used
research day in and day out learning about
tobaccos and cigarettes in the public’s interest.
Continuously we and .our consultants have
analyzed, experimented with and smoked all
kinds of tobaccos... especially Southern Bright,
Burley, Maryland and Turkish cigarette to
baccos.
Our own cigarettes and competitive brands
have been submitted to the most exacting
scientific scrutiny including thousands of anal
yses of millions of pounds of tobaccos.
From all these thousands of analyses, and
other findings reported in the leading technical
journals, our Research Department has found
no reason to believe that the isolation and
elimination of any element native to cigarette
tobaccos today would improve smoking.
For four years we have maintained in the
smoker’s interest an intensified larger scale
diversified research program. A half-million
dollar 30-ton machine, the world’s most
powerful source of high voltage electrons,
designed solely for our use has tested tens of
thousands of cigarettes. This program has
already given to us direct and significant in
formation of benefit to the smoking public.
Our consultants include Arthur D. Little,
Inc. of Cambridge, Massachusetts, “one of the
largest and most reputable industrial research
organizations in the country” (From Business
Week Magazine) and eminent scientists from
leading universities.
Today the public can confidently choose
from a variety of brands —by far the best
cigarettes ever made by the tobacco industry.
Many scientists within our
laboratories are analyzing
cigarette tobaccos every day
3 Brands
Tested and Approved by
30 Years of Scientific
Tobacco Research
Copyrighi 1954, Liccm & Him Tobacco Ca