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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1961)
Rally parade to highlight homecoming A full agenda of homecoming events will greet students when they return to the University following the Thanksgiving holi day this week. Pairings for the Friday night rally parade will be announced this Saturday. The parade will assemble at 13th and Kincaid. ONLY ONE torch and one sign will be allowed per pairing. Uni versity officials have announced that no cars or firecrackers will be tolerated. The Vibratones, a rock and roll band, will provide music from 5:45 to 6:15 p.m. while the pa rack* assembles. The University pep band and the Frosh 200 will also appear. The traditional bonfire will be held at 7 p.m. on the baseball practice field. The Junior Inter fraternity Council will be in charge of the fire. CROWNING of the homecom ing queen wall be the highlight of the rally. Coach Len Casanova will also speak. Crowds will then proceed from the bonfire to the dance, featuring the Vibratones and the Stragglers. The two groups will alternate on stage. Partners for YOUR FUTURE So Mony Conveniences Available for You 1. Only 6 blocks from 5. Checking & savings Campus accounts 2. Courtesy parking 6. Offices: Eugene & 3. 24 Hour deposit service Springfield 4. Personal & auto loans Home Owned—Home Operated j THE STRU G <i L E It S are a I sing-along group from the Red Garter in San Francisco. Students are urged to wear | grubbies to the event. Admission | is 75 cents or a 50 cent homecom I ing button. Health grants offered students University students are eligi ble for 103 National Foundation | Scholarships in the fields of med I ical social work and medicine. RECIPIENTS will be award ed $500 a year for four years, with the obligaiton being the in tention of completing their edit | cation and of serving the health field. Deadline for filing application? ! which may be picked up in the scholarship office in Emerald ! Hall, is April 1. 1962. APPLICANTS for medical so cial work scholarships should be sophomores in regionally accred ited colleges who will enter theii junior year in the fall of 1962 and plan to complete study for ' their master’s degree in social work in a school that provide? I field instruction in a medical fa ; cility. STUDENTS APPLYING foi I grants in medicine should be un dergrads in regionally accredit ed colleges and planning to en ter an accredited school of medi ! cine in fall term of 1962. They j must be accepted in such a school by April 1, 1962. Grandmother lands OKEMAH. Okla. (UPI) — A Pennsylvania grandmother set a 1 new woman’s balloon flight en i durance record Monday. She land I ed near Okemah, Okla., after a I 40-hour trip over three states | Mrs. Alford Wolf says she made the trip because she’s "sick and tired” of Russian superiority claim. Use Emerald Classified Ads - Yes, you’ll be proud to say, "It Came from Carl Greve” MATRIMONIAL MINDED TWOSOME tor ttie girl with ner neaa in the clouds and romance in her heart. If an engage ment is in the offing—if wedding bells will ring shortly thereafter—consider these matched pairs to symbolize the events. TOP: WEDDING ENSEMBLE $340 WEDDING ENSEMBLE $450 Jasater 731 S. W. MORRISON PICK UP THE PHONE . .. CALL CARL GREVE CA 2-7121 TAKE A YEAR TO PAY! NO INTEREST! NO CARRYING CHARGES! Girl tells story of ship MIAMI (UPI) An 11-year-old girl has told Coast Guard investi gators of a night of horror spent iboard the ketch Hluebelle that sank last week off the Bahamas. Terry Jo Duppcrault said she found her mother and brother lying In a puddle of blood in the cabin just before the skipper de serted her and the sinking ship. A Const Guard officer who de clined use of his name is of the opinion it was a case of "whole sale murder" in which five oth ers aboard muy have met death by violence. Captain Juliun Har i vey was picked up in a lifeboat but killed himself when he lcarn • ed that Terry Jo also hud been I rescued. • Hmlintors Kopnlrpil I • Snip* anil Ki-rvlpp I /• /n a ix' P Hud In tor I COAK 5 Nprvlca 1 162 Ettwt fitli III 4-0258 I Facts for Conservatives FREEDOM FORUM BOOKSTORE 1079 Oak Dl 2-2521 SHISLER'S OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK—9 A.M. to 11 P.M. BEVERAGES • MIXERS • ICECUBES MAGAZINES • MEATS • FRESH PRODUCE 13th at High Street Dl 4*1342 Classified Ads RATES: 5c per word first insertion; 3c thereafter. Minimum charge 50c. All classified ads must be in before 3:30 p.m. on the day preceding publication. Call DI 2-1411, Ext. 618. HELP WANTED RELIABLE lady over 45 for com panion in exchange for board and room plus $5 per week. Will need car. Send references to P.O. Box 704, Eugene. ARE YOU A GO-GETTER? Aggressive salesmen needed Opening for two upper - class or graduate men on advertising staff of Oregon Daily Emerald. Good earning potential, extreme ly valuable experience for later job references. Contact Lee Turnbull, 301 Allen Hall, ext. 618. FOR RENT MALE students. Double rooms for rent. Kitchen facilities. See 427 E. 13th. or cull DI 2-1935. 1-BEDROOM apartment. 1646 Patterson. $100. j EUGENE CABANA Furnished or unfurnished. Heat ed pool, party room, laundry fa cilities. DI 3-2069. SERVICES TYPING, my home, 310 East 31st. Pickup and delivery if de sired. Electric typewriter. DI 3 1913. Photography Of House Groups House Dances Campus Activities FEHLY STUDIO 1214 Kincaid DI 4-3422 j HAVE a dress designed for the winter formal. Professional seamstress. Inexpensive prices. Slims, skirts, shirts. Alterations. Anne Bradwell, DI 4-9622. TYPING — Experienced. Ann Cain, DI 3-5557. TYPING: Theses, manuscripts, papers. IBM Electric. Frances Ericson, 2206-12 Patterson Dr. DI 3-7696. TYPING Bernice Blakesley. Campus j Apartments, 775 East 15th, Apt. 5. DI 3-0158. BO-PEEP Nursery. 749 West 13th. DI 4-0327. After 6, DI 2-1 i 2328. TUTORING: Math, high school and first year University math. DI 5-4705. i SERVICES PRIVATE instruction in hcII hyp nosis. DI 4*5693. QUALITY Typing. Theses, manu scripts, papers. Special Student Rates. Avenue Business Co., 534 East 11th, Apt. 6. DI 3-2098. SHORT NOTICE TYPING Proof reading my specialty. DI 3-9757 anytime after 12 noon. FOR SALE SAVE 25% to 30% tin profession al quality buffet clarinets and saxophones now being closed out at Wilson Music House, 1070 Willamette. ; ROSSICNOL SKIs! 215cm; 3 years old; complete, good shape. $50. Phone DI 5-3918. j HALLICRAFTER S-38C short wave receiver. Call DI 3-5962. 1901 COMET. Only 2300 miles. DI 3-0936. I MEN'S umbrellas, omy >2 97 t. Lane Sales, 392 High St. DI 3 ! 4.362. AUIU REPAIRS j BALANCE all 4 wheels. Regular $10 value. Student and faculty rate- $1.88. GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 164 West 7th WORK WANTED IRONING wanted. $1 an hour. University district. 1670 East 15th. DI 3-2969. IRONING. 80c an hour. Call be tween 9 n.m. and 6 p.m. 336 East Broadway. DI 4-4338. RIDES—RIDERS WANTED: Ride for 3 to Kan Francisco for Thanksgiving. George Draper, Young Hall, ext. 375. GIRL on River Road needs trans portation to and from Univer sity. Will share gas expenses. If you could help, please call DI 5 3974. LOST & FOUND ___ r> LOST in P.E. apparatus room, a 23-jewel Bulova watch. Reward. Dewayne Ditto, Ext. 236 or DI 5 9396.