Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, February 07, 1955, Page Eight, Image 8

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    ELECTIVE, APPOINTIVE OFFICES OPEN
YWCA Petitions Due Today;
Slate Selected by Interviews
Today at 5 p.m. is deadline for
YWCA petitions for the senior
and sophomore cabinets, for both
elective and appointive positions.
Petitions should be submitted at
the Y office in Gerlinger hall.
Freshman women may petition
for the sophomore cabinet elec
tive positions of chairman and
secretary, with the runner-up for
chairman becoming vice-chair
man. Appointive positions on the
sophomore cabinet are member
ship, finance, service, social, pro
motion. and publicity. Co-chair
men for the Duckling counseling
program will also be chosen, as
will several members-at-large.
YWCA president, second vice
president, secretary and treas
urer petitioners must be a sopho
more or above. Runner-up for
president will be first vice-presi
dent.
Appointive Offices
Appointive offices on the se
nior cabinet are program advisers
for worship, religious growth, in
ternational affairs, public affairs
and service; membership chair
man; house and social chairman;
conference chairman; promotion
Spinsters to Give Show
For Benefit of Children
Eugene Spinsters will present
a benefit style show and enter
tainment Tuesday night from 8
to 10 p.m. at the Bon Marche.
Proceeds will go to the Pearl S.
Buck school for mentally re
tarded children.
The Spinsters, a welfare or
ganization of 30 unmarried Eu
gene girls between the ages of
19 and 25, will model outfits cour
tesy of the Bon Marche. Sally
Bangs is chairman of the event.
Entertainment will consist of
numbers by the Phi Delta Theta
quartet and a special flapper
style show by Delores Tye, Ber
nadine Bartz, Bonnie Bracken,
Barbara Bailey, Anna Branham
and Billie Bartle. Narrator Sally
Cummins will give a humorous
reading.
Models for the regular style
show include Barbara Kennedy,
AWS Petitions
Due Wednesday
Wednesday, Feb. 9, is the dead
line for submitting petitions for
AWS offices, according to Janet
Wick, president of Associated
Women Students.
Cabinet positions include presi
dent, who must be a junior at the
time of her election, secretary
and treasurer, who must be soph
omores, sergeant-at-arms, and
reporter, who must petition as
freshmen.
AWS officers will be elected at
the general women’s elections
Thursday, Feb. 24, at which time
the revised AWS constitution will
also be presented to the women
voters for approval.
Petitions may be turned in to
the box on the third floor of the
Student Union or to Miss Wick
at Pi Beta Phi.
Today's Staff
Make-up Editor: Sam Vahey.
News Desk: Anne Ritchey,
Anne Hill.
Copy Desk: Marcia Mauney,
Kathy Morrison, Sally Ryan.
Night Staff: Janet Kneeland.
CLASSIFIEDS
Attention Married Students: Ex
cellent child care — lowest
rates. Kiddy Park Nursery.
Phone 3-1725. $25-30 per
month. 2-7
For Sale: ’39 Chev 2 door. Ex
cellent running condition. See
at Parking Lot on 18th by
Music Building. Ph. 4-2981
after 5:00. 2-9
LOST: Liban wrist watch at SU
Saturday. Finder return to
Greg Ripke, Ph. 5-6866. 2-8
Attractive bachelor apts. Near
campus. Phone 4-1527. l-24tf
Joan Price, Mary Lou Teague,
Ann Erickson, Evelyn Reed, San
dra Williams, Margaret Tyler,
M a r 1 y s Johnson and Roberta
Toner.
Admission will be one dollar.
Tickets will be on sale at the
door or may be obtained from
members of the group on campus.
chairman; publicity c h a i r m a n
and sophomore cabinet advisor.
Also included on the list of ap
pointive senior cabinet positions
are junior advisors for next year's
freshman commissions.
Eileen Lindblad, executive di
rector of the YWCA, will be
available for any help with peti
tioning and for descriptions of
each job.
Interested women should con
tact the YWCA office immediate
ly at Ext. 426 for further infor
mation, or call Camille Wold,
vice-president in charge of elec
tions, at 5-6626.
Interviews This Week
Interviews of the candidates to
determine the final slate will take
place later this week and next
week. Voting will be held Feb.
24 during the general women's
elections. Officers for Associated
Women Students, Women's Rec
reation Association and Young
Women’s Christian Association,
will all be elected at that time.
Patronize Emerald Advertisers
m
omen
on the
C„
Emerald Women's Page
mpus
Sally Jo Groig and Marcia Maunay,
CMdilon
Student-Faculty Party Planned
Students and faculty members
will have an opportunity to get
; to know each other at the in
formal Apple Polishing Party
; Tuesday at 4 p.m. in the dad's
lounge of the Student Union.
Rob Roy, freshman in miiRic.
will entertain the students and
' professors with piano arrange
ments. Refreshments will be
served during the open house par
, ty, according to arrangements
co-chairmen Gloria Begenlch and
Doris Allen.
"Campus clothe* are In order
for the party and «^eryone la In
vited to come," stated Ann Bur
llngham. general chairman.
Other committee chairmen
working on the party are I'atay
Cuahnie. Judy Holmea, and Bev
erly London, invitations, and Sal
ly Byan. AW8 adviser to the
committee.
SHISLER'S
FOOD MARKET
Groceries — Fresh Produce — Meats
Mixers — Beverages — Magazines — Ice Cream
OPEN FROM 9 A.M. T|i ■ «i am P.
DAILY Si SUNDAYS I ILL I llUU M.
13th at High St. Dial 4-1342
Put a SMILE in
f
SMOKING!
7*y CHESTERFIELD^^
You’ll smile your approval of Chesterfield’s
smoothness — mildness — refreshing taste.
You’ll smile your approval of Chesterfield’s
quality-highest quality-low nicotine.
ueem4
VffO
LIKE CHESTERFIELD
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