Students to Enact Life of President The life story of the University of Oregon’s first president, John Wesley Johnson, will be drama tized by University students over station KEX, Portland, and KUGN, Eugene, at 9:30 p. m. Thursday. The broadcast is part of the weekly “Campus Headlines” program produced on the campus. Script for the dramatization was written by Paul Marcotte, senior in English. The program will be produced by John Tasnady of Eu gene. Cast members include: Fay Carlson, Robert Croisant, John H. McDonald, Harry White, Paul Marcotte, Marian Macy, William Pickens, and David Waite. ■ Johnson was president of the University for 17 years, and served another five years as professor of Latin and Greek. Vets to Apply For Eligibility Slip Veterans attending the Univer sity under the G. I. bill who plan to continue their education this summer in a different school should apply immediately for a supplemental certificate of elig ibility, Thomas Karnes, Veterans Administration training officer for this area, announced yesterday. Karnes said it is necessary that applications be filed with the VA well in advance of the end of the spring semester so that the vet eran may be sure of receiving the certificate before he enrolls in the second school. 1 Ad Class, Merchants Plan Panel Discussion ■^Members of the retail advertis ing class and managers of Eugene firms will attend a luncheon Thurs day noon in the mirror room of the Eugene hotel. A panel discussion on the value of newspaper and radio advertising to the retail merchant will be led by Lynn S. McCready, manager of KUGN, and Bob Bei'tsch, advertis ing manager of {.he Register-Guard. Approximately 30 people will at tend the luncheon, according to R. D. Millican, professor of advertis ing and journalism, who is in charge. Copy Desk: Misspell Kletzing One Down Wallace Hot Head Heywood Typo Macaulay Jim3 sssBXBxnmm "THE BOWERY" ' ’*J~ —plus— "SUN VALLEY SERENADE" i HELD OVER! 'THE IOLSON STORY" with LARRY PARKS mug Tohnnv In The Clouds ' —Plus Wanted For Murder Composer, Educators To Open Contemporary Music Festival Roger Huntington Sessions, professor of music at the Uni versity of California, will open the Oregon Festival of Con temporary Music this evening with a lecture on "Trends in Contemporary Music in the United States.” The talk is sched uled for S p. m. in the school of music auditorium. Sessions is considered one of the outstanding American composers and educators of con temporary music. At the Thursday student concert his Chorale for Organ, composed in 1940, will be presented. Sessions will play his Concerto for Violin as part of the Friday evening con cert. This will be a piano-violin version, still ill manuscript form, with Barbara Lull of Oakland, Cal ifornia, as guest violinist. Among Sessions’ important works are the Symphony No. 1, first performed by the Boston Symphony orchestra in 1927; Son ata for Piano, presented at the Oxford Festival in Engand in 1931; Suite from the Black Maskers, presented at Smith College in 1923; Three Chorales for Organ. 1934; Concerto for Violin, 1937; Scherzino and March, 1938; String Quartet, presented at the Coolidge Festival in 1937; and Chorale for Organ, 1940. The composer - educator has taught music at Smith college, Cleveland Institute of Music, Bos ton University Institute of Music and Princeton university. From 1925 to 1933 he lived in Florence, Rome and Berlin. He received the Walter Dam rosch fellowship to the American Academy in Rome in 1928-31. He is a member of the American Musical Society, League of Com posers, International Society for Contemporary Music, National In stitute of Arts and Letters, and the American Society of Compos ers, Authors and Publishers. Since 1934 he has been president of the International Society for Con temporary Music. Outbreaks Feared In German Famine BERLIN, May 13 (AP)—United States military government quar ters at Frankfurt expressed fear Tuesday that an outbreak of hun ger strikes and demonstrations may develop in the American zone. Official observers at strategic centers in the zone reported the danger of unrest was “greater than at any time since the end of the war” as the result of the crit ical food shortage in western Ger many. I l!H»M Roy Rogers in "APACHE ROSE"' —plus "THE 13TH HOUR" -1 There are Seventeen House-Dances j This M Weekend— Be ready 1 . for them— ■ Have your W shoes repaired 1 at CAMPUS SHOE SHOP PHILIP MORRIS is so much better to smoke! "It’s always fair weather whep. good fellows get together” . . . with PHILIP MORRIS! It’s true ... if every smoker knew what PHILIP MORRIS smokers know . . . they’d ALL change to PHILIP MORRIS. Yes, the PHILIP MORRIS smoker really gets what other smokers only hope to get . . . PERFECT SMOKING PLEASURE. So for perfect smoking pleasure ... try a pack today! CALL FOR , i . ____„__]