AFTER LONG ROMANCE Eddie, Debbie Trade Vows GROSBINOEK, N. Y. (A Pi Sm^cr Eddie Fisher and actress Debbie Reynolds, who k»■}»! the < .“.how business world agog for a year with their romance, were | married Monday night in a three- I minute ceremony. Eddie klaaed his bride with gusto and she aighed with de light. Hnllivan County Judge Lawr- | erne Cooke performed the simple ’ ceremony in a cottage at the Hotel Grossinger, a Catakill Mountain reaort 100 miles from New' York. Eddie got his atart there aix years ago. Ceremony Held In Cottage The young couple repeated! their marital vowa in clear voices, but Eddie's "I do” was barely audible in the living room of the cottage, crowded with relatives and friends. Six candles burned in a can delabra. The room waa banked with white flowers. In another room, a six-tiered five-foot wed ding cake waa the centerpiece ba the wedding reception. After the ceremony, Judge Cooke told the bride and groom: "I know this ceremony was planned for yesterday. I admire you. Mr. Fisher, for keeping the precepts of your religion, and you, Mm Fisher, for respecting your husband’s beliefs.” He referred to Yom Klppur, the Western Big Three Discuss Strategy NEW YORK Western Big Three foreign ministers begin Tuesday strategy talks to pre pare for Big Four foreign min isters meeting in Geneva. Oct. 27.! Their tentative schedule calls for them to be joined by Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov at dinners Tuesday night and Thursday. Big Three sessions will he held Tuesday attended by Secretary of State Dulles, British Foreign Secretary Harold MacMillan and French Foreign Minister Antoine Pinny. These taiks will deal with West German Chancellor Adenauer's recent mission to Moscow, his talks on German reunification and the role Germany will play In the Atlantic alliance in the face of new disarmament de mands by the Soviet Union. Reports from there said the West had framed a program in sisting on German unification as the major aim of Western strat egy but not at the price of losing a unified Germany to NATO. Campus Briefs • A frri* movie featuring the University of Oregon, Southern California game Sept. 24. will be shown tonight at 6:30 in the Stu dent Union ballroom. Narrating will be Jerry Krei, freshman foot ball coach. • The YWCA executive com mittee will meet at noon today in the lounge of Gerlinger Hall. • Petitions for Bunion Derby promotion, publicity, finance and house co-ordination, general sec retary and committee members are due Wednesday at 5 p.m. This is a good opportunity for freshmen to enter into ‘activities. • YE TABARD INN, men’s literary honorary society will hold a fall term planning meet ing at 8 p.m. Friday, at 767 E. 15th Ave. READ EMERALD WANT ADS I Jewish day of atonement which began Sunday night and ended at sundown Monday night. Kddie la Jewish and apent the day at a quiet religious aer vice and In OSC Enrollment Reaches 5,711 CORVALLIS (API Prelimi nary fall term enrollment at Ore gon State College reached r».7J1 students Monday, an Increase of 17 per cent over the correspond ing day a year ago, Registrar I). T. Ordeman aaid. Classes started Monday hut registration will continue for two weeka. Ordeman aaid the final enrollment last fall wa« 5,211 compared to 4,862 on the first day of classes. That indicates a final enrollment this fall of near ly 6.0(H), he said. The number of new students la up 24 per cent from last year. A total of 2,337 new students have registered so far this year com pared with 1,887 at this time lu t year. A total of 479 men were pledged by the 30 OSC fraterni ties as the first rush period of the year ended. meditation. \\ 'editing luiayed The wedding was delayed foj an hour because the bride's mother, Mrs. Maxine Reynolds of Burbank, Calif., arrived late. Heavy traffic held her up and ahe needed time to dreaa for the nuptials. Judge Cooke, a burly, bespec tacled man, said of the newly weds : "The almighty God has blessed them both with great talent, but the richest gift will come from the joys and happiness that will flow from this marriage.” (■room's Mother Comments The mother of the groom, Mrs. Kate Stupp of Philadelphia, had this to say about the long-expect ed but much-delayed marriage: "If you just leave the children alone, they will always manage all right.” Following the reception at the Hotel Grossinger, the couple left for a one-day honeymoon "some where nearby" in the Catskills. Fiddle is due in Washington at 6 p.m. Tuesday for a singing en gagement. The newlyweds said they ex pected to he in N^w York City for the opening game of the Work! Series Wednesday. STUDENTS! ITS LUCKY DROODLE TIME AGAIN! Got a Lucky Droodle BOWLING BALL fOB CENTIPEDE Ann Bonier Sarah Lawrence I ■LANK VIRSC •John Vnnctni Boston College 1 in your noodle? # Send it in and MAKE $25 Hundreds and hundreds of students earned $25 in Lucky Strike’s Droodle drive last year-and they’d tell you it’s the easiest money yet. Droodles are a snap to do-just look at the samples here. Droodle anything you want. Droodle as many as you want. If we select your roodle, we 11 pay $25 for the right to use it, with your name, in our advertising. And we always end up paying for plenty we don’t use* Dr00fl,e’ comPIete with title, to Lucky Droodle, P. O. Box p,A’ ^t- Vernon, N Y. Include your name, address, college and class. I lease include, too, the name and address of the dealer in your college town trom whom you buy cigarettes most often. While you droodle, light up a Lucky, the cigarette that tastes better because it s made of fine tobacco . . . and “It’s Toasted” to taste better. X3KOODLES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Price “IT’S TOASTED” to taste better! S A T PR0DlJCT OF -'S’nuvan Jv&ccoXZyiay. America's leading manufacturer of cjoarettes 5 \ CMflftkif MCOLLEGE STUDENTS \ V •rlOff O PREFER LUCKIES mmm, > , >/ Luckies lead all other brands, regular or king size, among 36,075 / college students questioned coast-to-coast. The number one reason: Luckies taste better. Molotov Presses Campaign For Disarmament Decision UNITED NATIONS W Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov and his fhief aides pressed a cam paign Monday to get a positive decision on disarmament Rus sian style in the current session of the U N. Assembly. Following up his Friday speech, Molotov has . been entertaining other delegates at. a series rtf dinners and urging action on (them In private talks. Jacob A. Malik, Soviet em bassador to London and the Rus sian envoy to disarmament talks there earlier this year, has been tiding the flank picking up dele gates high and low for talks in and out of U.N. halls. Monday he held a long talk with Anthony Nutting. British minister of state, on Soviet dis armament aims centered about nuclear weapons bans. Delegates Concerned The new S&viet campaign was launched as some U.N. delegates privately expressed concern for disarmament progress in view of President Eisenhower’s ill ness. Paul Martin of Canada opened his policy speech Monday | with an expression of hope for : the President's speedy recovery. Diplomatic informants who re ported the overtures from the Soviet delegation said the Presi dent’s plan for an exchange of aerial inspections between the i United States and Russia was bold and far reaching, but they did not know how far it would get without his personal prod ding. Molotov and Secretary of State Dulles may discuss the disarma ment situation Tuesday night when the Russian attends a din ■ ner Dulles is giving for the for eign ministers of the Big Four i powers.. Diplomats Argue Molotov and Dulles got off to a bad start when Dulles accused Mrtlotov of misquoting him on disarmament taut Molotov tried to fix that with a quick talk last Friday. The United States is pressing for an Assembly endorsement of ■ President Eisenhower's proposal. Disarmament played a central j role in discussions by a number of mediufn and small countries during the day’s debate. Martin noted there had been a relaxation of tension as a result of the Geneva meetings of the Big Four last July. He said there appeared to be some degree of general agreement in sight on proposals advanced in the U.N.