7 3? Von Holt Speaks To Channing Club H. J. Von Molt, assistant pro feasor of psychology, will K'•' m* »p«»kcr at next Sunday's meeting of Channing club. Mr. Von Holt will apeak on “The Implications of Freud." A discussion period will fol low the talk and refreshments 111 be served. The meeting will ■gin at 7 p.m. at the Unitarian church. Miss Bachauer Plays In Mac Court Monday f/ina Bachauer, well-known piantHt who will play in : McArthur court Monday, got an ! early start In rnuoic. MIhh Bachauer will preaerit the j •hint concert program of the I 1954-55 Kugrne-University Civic ! Music association season Monday What have VICEROYS got that other filter tip cigarettes haven't got? THE ANSWER IS 20,900 FILTERS IN EVERY VICEROY TIP Inside every Viceroy tip is a vast network of 20,(MX) individual filters to filter your smoke over and over again. You get only the full, rich taste of Viceroy’s choice to baccos . . . and Viceroys draw so freely. Yes, you get Viceroy's remarkable new tip . . . with 20,000 individual filters . . . plus king-size length for only a penny or two more than cigarettes without filters. WORLD’S LARGEST-SELLING FILTER TIP CIGARETTE ■ New King-Size FilterTip Viceroy I' I' I 1 f VfCEROy sss I I / c,®A»»errej §■ | *INc S/rc Only a Penny or Two More than Cigarettes Without Filt*i» night at 8. Admission for stu dents is by student body cards and for Eugene residents by sea son tickets. Miss Baehauer’s first piano was a toy given her when she was five years old. She showed such enthusiasm that her toy piano was soon replaced by a real piano. When she was eight years old, Miss Bachaiier gave her first public recital, a short program to raise money for wounded vet erans. She recalls that she per sonally gave the proceeds from the concert to Princess Andreus of Greece. "I gave her an en velope with the money. I wasi very proud,” she said. Beginning serious study at the Athens Conservatory while still a child, she considered herself only a part-time music student, j She studied law in college after i completing her work in the con- \ servatory, but eventually devoted j full-time to the study of music after two years of law. After studying in Paris with I Cortot and Sergei Rachmaninoff, j she made her professional debut j in Athens with the Athens Sym- j phony Orchestra in 1935. Since that time she has had a! brilliant concert career in Eu rope, and devoted considerable \ time to entertaining soldiers dur ing World War II. Campus Briefs • student radio station KW AX will go off the air after to night until winter term, to re name broadcasting Jan. 10. A general meeting tor all students now working at KWAX will be held Wednesday at 7 p.m. in stu dio “A.” Anyone interested in working next term should at tend this meeting, Jon Powell, student station manager, said. • Members of the YWCA Sen ior cabinet will baby-sit for fac ulty and University staff mem bers Monday night for the con cert. Proceeds will go to the YWCA fund for attending na tional convention. Interested per sons should call the YW office, Ext. 426, before noon Monday. • Canterbury club will meet Sunday for a discussion with Father Ellis on C. S. Lewis' "Screwtape Letters.” There will be a service of evening prayer at 6:30 p.m., followed by dessert and the discussion. 0 The Sophomore YWCA Cab inet will meet at noon Monday in Gerlinger hall, according to Nan Hagedom, chairman. All members are requested to attend. The Christmas party will be held. • The sudden cold weather has taken its toll as far as the common sniffles are concerned. The infirmary lists a total of eight patients. They are: Lee Blaming, Margaret Bergseng, Reita Jackson, Douglas Wood, Mignon Schrader, Richard Car mody, Melvin Bankhead and Donald Rehfuas. • French club will have Its Christmas program Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Sally Calkins, 606 Kast 19th street. | Everyone interested in the , French language is welcome. • Religious Evaluation Week j chairmen will meet Friday at 4 p.m. in the Student Union, ac , cording to Bob Hastings, chair man. • YWCA Public Affairs com mission will make a trip to Sa lem Saturday to visit the Fair view home for mentally retard ed. Campus Calendar 9:00 School Bldg Conf Reg istration Lobby 2nd FI SU 10:00 Women’s Medical Corps 315 SU Noon School Bldg Conf Lnch 112 SU Italian Tbl Com Lnch SU 4:00 RE Wk 111 SU UIS 112 SU Fri at 4 Fishbowl SU 9:00 Fishbowl Mixer f A CAMPUS-TO-CAREER CASE HISTORY \V. D.^ Garland. E.E. ’52. Univ. of California, is working for the Pacific Telephone Company. We thought you'd he interested in what Don told us about his first assignment. (Reading time: 45 seconds) Here Don Garland, makes noise distribution measurements ' with a Level Distribution Recorder •My job is to help solve problems of'noise and other interference on tele phone lines due to power interference. Inductive co-ordination is the technical term for the work. “First thing the Chief Engineer ex plained to me was that ‘all the answers aren’t in the book.’ He was right. Most of the problems have required a com bination of electrical engineering, a knowledge of costs and generous amount of ingenuity. / like it that way. It’s given me an immediate opportunity to put into practice the theory I learned at school. “In addition to this on-the-job ex perience, I have attended several spe cial training courses conducted by the company. Now I’m breaking in a new man, just like when I started.” • • • Don Garland's work is typical of many engineering assignments in the Bell Telephone Companies. There are simi lar opportunities for college graduates with Bell Telephone Laboratories, Western Electric and Sandia Corpora tion. If you’d like to get more details, see your Placement Officer. He will be glad to help you.