tnsemble Program Will Begin at 8:15 Several Instruments Will Be Featured At Recital An unusual ensemble program, featuring several instruments, will be presented in the University mu sic auditorium, tonight at 8:15 p. m., under the supervision of Mrs. Lora Ware, professor of cello, and John Stehn, assistant professor of music. The ensemble program will be gin with the Brahms sonata for the clarinet and piano, in which Phoebe Breyman and Mrs. A. C. Breyman will participate. A second feature on the concert will be a group of selections by Mayo Sorenson, flutist; Charlotte Plummer, a clarinetist; and Wen dell Gilfry, who will play the bas soon. The group of numbers will include the Mozart “Minuet.” A Brahms trio for the clarinet, cello, and piano will be given by Charlotte Plummer, Madge Cona way, and Edith Farr. The concluding selections of the ensemble recital will be the Vivaldi concerto for the cello with string quintet accompaniment. Howard Jones will be featured with the cello, and the quintet will consist of Audrey Aesen, Jack Powers, James Bailey, Mary Booth, and Norman Gaeden. The wood-wind department is one of the strongest in the entire group, with Mayo Sorenson, who has been on the campus four years, and Miss Plummer, Gilfry, and Miss Breyman. The. public is invited. University Business Manager Is Author The inventory system at the Uni versity is dealt with in an article “Inventory Procedure for Capital Equipment,” written by J. O. Lind strom, University business man ager, for the April edition of “The Educational Business Manager and Buyer.” Mr. Lindstrom has described how the University system is set up and administered, together with an ex planation of the procedures fol lowed in maintaining up-to-the minute data. Budget items, also, are carefully considered. The Carnegie corporation has given more than $1,500,000 to the University of Chicago graduate li brary school for research. Fewer Withdrawals (Continued from page one) Health was given as a reason for withdrawal more than any other. The next greater number of requests listed finances as the withdrawal cause. Other reasons. included lack of interest, employ ment, changing courses, and one' this year gave too much absence from school on account of football as the cause. The spread of withdrawals, Con-1 stance said, is entirely logical, since people who come to school on very limited means will be forced to leave at the end of a term or two, and those who stick it out till spring term are much more apt to finish, although a large num ber of withdrawals are usually not ed near the end of the term, he said. Kemler Will (Continued from page one) t of Oregon has sent a representa-1 tive to the conference. In addition to the discussion of problems, the student leaders will visit the Boeing factory in Seattle, where the flying clippers are built. They will visit Mt. Rainier and other points of interest in the vi cinity. Other features scheduled for the delegates are the University of Young Chinese Learn Three R's in a New Tongue » In addition to learning the three R’s in their own language, young Shanghai children have a new lan guage to learn. These three young Chinese students are getting an early start in Jxipanese at a newly established primary school inaugurated by the Japanese in Shanghai, where Japanese instructors are in charge. Journalism Society Initiates Nine Men ♦ Nine pledges were initiated into; Sigma Delta Chi, men’s journal- j ism honorary, at a meeting at the1 Anchorage Sunday morning. Bill Tugman, managing editor of the Register-Guard, and Bill Phipps, Emerald editor in 1934-35, spoke at the following breakfast meeting. The nine men taken into the so ciety were Dick Litfin, Elbert i Hawkins, Bill Norene, George Pa- j sero, Bud Jermain, Homer Graham, I Larry Quinlin, Bob Emerson, and j Bill Pengra. Tugman spoke of his “cub re-: porter days” on the Springfield, Massachusetts, Republican. Phipps, who recently left a position with radio stations KOMO and KJR in Seattle to work on the McMinn ville’ Telephone-Register, told of his work with the United Press bureau in Seattle. Washington campus carnival, ancr two dances in Seattle. Climax of the convention will be the election of association officers on a yacht- j ing trip on Puget Sound Saturday night. Kemler will make the trip with Bob Walker, new president of the associated students of Oregon State college. 'Mr/ McCarthy (Continued from page one) Delta Upsilon, “We had nothing taut good recommendations from the Northwestern chapter where Charlie lived for several yearaj while working Bergen’s wayS$ through school there. We hearcff that he wasn’t very sharp, bum dummies have been pledged to Del-3f ta Upsilon for over 100-years and; most of them have turned out all| right.” 1 Charlie said in acoepting tha| pledge button, “Well, there are aft few boys that I don’t like very well,J taut I’ll wear your trinket, because^ after all I’m just a chip off the old;; block.” | Bergen was a DU at Northwest ern, having been graduated in 1927. | * * * "Gripe7 Society ... Junior women at the University j ef Illinois who are top-notchers j but didn’t quite make Mortar i Board content themselves by being j made members of “Shorter Board.” I The organization originally was | formed by three coeds as a "gripe” j society. Now, however, the girls J join “just for fun” and wear “O” shaped pins which stand for “abso lutely nothing.” ; Suspension Will * Face Those Not Paying Fees by 3 Suspension from the Univer sity will be the penalty meted out to all students who have not met the final installments on all their University fees, in cluding student body, out of state, and registration charges by 3 o’clock this afternoon, C. K. Stalsberg, University cash ier, announced yesterday. Matt Kramer Wins $25 Essay Prize Matt Kramer, senior in social science, was winner of first prize in the annual Philo Sherman Ben nett essay contest. Subject of the essays was “An Armament Policy for the United States.” Judges of the contest were: Karl Orithank, dean of personnel, Percy M. Collier, English profes sor in the Portland extension cen ter, and Philip H. Parrish, editorial writer on the Oregonian. Second and third in the compe1 tition were Donald Sorell, junior in law, and Gordon Ridgeway, freshman in journalism. > Prizes of $25 and $15 were of fered in. the contest. A hundred couples attired in sweaters (and other clothes, of course) attended the annual Ren sallaer Polytechnic institute swea ter dance. ! Hal Young to Sing In Concert May 24 One of the final recitals of the year to be given on the school of music auditorium will be the vocal concert of Hal Young, professor of' voice, at the University, who will sing several groups of selections May 24 at 8:15 p.m. Hal Young, before his entrance on the University faculty, was a performer on the New York stage, starring in light opera and musical comedies. Mr. Young's accompanist will be Aurora Potter Underwood, as sistant professor of music. The musical honoraries will be repre sented, with members of Phi Mu Alpha acting as ushers, and Phi Beta and Mu Phi Epsilon mem bers as hostesses. The public is invited to attend the concert. SUMMER ROOMS SOUGHT Mrs. Alice B. Macduff, assist ant dean of women, reports that there are many inquiries concern ing housing for the summer months. A list is being made of rooms available for students for the summer. Anyone wishing to see about housing for the summer months may contact Mrs. Macduff at the dean of women’s office. PAYMASTER ENDS TRIP E. S. Tuttle, University paymas ter, is again in his Johnson hall office, having returned to Eugene Sunday from a three week vaca tion in Chicago. c o LL O R F U 1L DON’T MISS IT! Shakespeare’s Comedy “THE TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA” Produced under the stars in the NEW GARDEN THEATER (Back of Music Building) by combined University and Very Little Theaters MAY 19, 20, 21 Make reservations early at the boxoffice in Johnson hall THE TERM’S GOING FAST Better Get Those Papers TYPED RENT A TYPEWRITER— PUT IT TO WORK We have the kind you like Office Machinery and Supply Co. 1047 Willamette Phone 148 Riddleskrger's Son Dies Unexpectedly W i 1 b u r Paul Riddlesbarger. eight-year-old son of Mr. and Mr3. W. P. Riddlesbarger, died Sunday at the Sacred Heart hospital. Tho death resulted from a. blood clot in the boy's broken arm. Mr. Riddlesbarger is an associate professor of business administra tion at the University. Funeral services will be held to morrow at 2 p.111. in the Poclo chapel. Dr. Victor P. Morris, dean of the school of business adminis tration, will officiate at the ser vices and interment will be in Rest Haven Memorial park. He was born February 3, 1930. in Corvallis and had lived in Eugene for six years. He was in the sixth grade at Condon school. Survivors are his parents, a sister, a half sister, a half-brother, and a gran 1 mother. GRAD VISITS MOTHER. Gilbert Wellington, Portland, class of '33, visited Friday with hie mother, Mrs. Earl Wellington, assistant at the dean of women’s office. There will be an important Phi Chi Theta meeting at 4:30 in lOt Commerce. IRVIN & IRVIN | CLEANING, PRESSING, f» REPAIRING Phone' 317j 643 13th St. £ Do You Want to Dispose of an Overcoat, Suit or | Slacks? You will do best ti! on a trade-in or [| otherwise to first | ' See the UNIVERSITY TAILOR Alder bet. 11th and 12th t Today’s 'Emerald IS made possible by the following advertisers Consequently they deserve your support! Man's Shop Dr. EHiott; University Tailor Medo Land Irvin Off. Mach. & Sup. Washburne’s Eugene Hotel University Theater Kuykendall Chesterfield PATRONIZE THEM