CAMPUS
CALENDAR
8 p.m.: Westminster open house.
9 p.m.: One World club party at
YMCA.
10 p.m.: Date night and open
house at Wesley house.
Sunday
i 9:15 a.m.: Westminster house
discussion group. Coffee and rolls.
9:15 a.m.: Lutheran student Bi
ble study at YWCA. Breakfast
served.
9:30 a.m.: Wesley college Sunday
[school class at First Methodist
church.
5 p.m.: Buffet supper at Wesley
liouse.
5 p.m.: Lutheran student asso
ciation meeting at YWCA.
► 5:30 p.m.: Lutheran communion
Service at YWCA, Pastor H. Aal
*bue officiating.
^ 6 p.m.: Westminster house Sun
day evening forum.
6:30 p.m.: “University of Life”
discussions at Wesley house.
Monday
1:15 p.m.: Housemothers’ meet
ing at Gerlinger hall.
1:15 p.m. nupj ....;! **6....N —
4 p.m.: Heads of Houses meeting
in Gerlinger hall.
, 9:30 p.m.: Fireside sing at West
’minster house.
Tuesday
i Noon: Westminster house lunch
eon. Sign up Monday.
Veterans Need OK
To Change Schools
Veterans going to school under
the provisions of the GI bill cannot
transfer to another institution
without prior approval from vet
erans administration and still ex
pect VA to pay tuition and sub
sistence, Richard Mengler, training
officer in this area said yesterday.
Veterans who plan transfers and
still wish to receive educational
benefits of the GI bill must contact
their VA. regional office or VA
training officer to obtain approval
for the change and to insure their
continuance on the subsistence
rolls.
Mengler emphasized that in most
cases there is no objection to vet
erans changing schools. In order to
prevent delays in payment of sub
sistence allowances and to elim
inate unnecessary paper work, VA
must be notified in advance of any
contemplated change.
Harold E. Stassen
(Continued from page tzoo)
the Marshall plan and also said
that it would fit in with a sound
economic and agricultural system.
He said that the Marshall plan
would work better in Greece and
Turkey than the Truman plan,
which he termed a negative policy.
In the question period that fol
lowed Stassen’s main address he
came out in favor of universal mili
tary training with the proviso that
the best course would be for the
opposition to think in terms of
what more moderate program could
be worked out. “We must act and
not stay in a position of drift,” he
said.
Governor Stassen also spoke in
favor of a thorough inspection of
the atom bomb resources before
giving out its secrets. He also
favored a $3,500,000 across-the
board income tax reduction to
come from the $7,000,000 govern
ment surplus. $3,500,000 would also
be applied toward payment of the
war debt.
Governor Stassen called for an
exposure of all communistic activ
ities, which he stated were on the
wane all over the world and asked
for full respect for civil rights and
constitutional liberties.
A jitterbug is not an insect. It’s
a human being acting like one.
I Ga+ice/it P>io<f,'iam j
Winifred Heidt, contralto, will sing the following selections Monday
evening at 8:15 in McArthur court:
I
V adoro pupille, from “Julius Caesar".George Frederic Handel
Hist, Hist.Dr. Samuel Arnold
Col jnio sangue comprerei .Alessandro Stradella
II
Traum durch die Daemmerung.Richard Strauss
Staendchen.Richard Strauss
Ruhe Meine Seele..,.Richard Strauss
Cacilie.Richard Strauss
III
Aria: Una voce poco fa, from “The Barber of
Seville”.Gioacchino Rossini
On the Steppe...Alexander Gretchaninoff
Hopak.Modeste Moussorgsky
Two Songs.Francis Poulenc
El Vito.Fernando Obradors
IV
Black Roses.Jean Sibelius
Was It a Dream .Jean Sibelius
The Old Woman.Daniel Wolf
Deborah.Howard Fenton and Gene Bone
Serenade ......John Alden Carpenter
UO Chorus to Sing
On Weekend Trip
University singers start on a
two-day tour today with concerts
planned in Medford tonight and
Klamath Falls tomorrow. Donald
W. All'ton, assistant progessor of
organ and theory, will direct the
group.
The singers will also perform at
Game Broadcast
The third game of the annual
Oregon-Oregon State hoop series
will be broadcast tonight from
the Corvallis gym on station
Hash, 1600 kc., at 8 p.m.
Portland high schools Thursday.
They were heard by a University
audience Thursday night when
they sang in the music school audi
torium.
Sick Bay Inmates
Down to Fifteen
Fifteen students were hospital
ized in the University infirmary[
Friday.
Those hospitalized are: Dorothy I
Dougan, Pat Campbell, Joan Si-!
monsi Forencen Guthrie, Charlotte
SKIEKS MEET
Newman club skiers will meet
at the Side at 7:40 a.m. today for
the trip to Willamette.
Gargini, Janet Standring, James
Myers, Spencer Hanief, Stan
Smith, Alfred Staples, Joseph Nel
son, Steve Button, John Ellis, Donn
Gassaway, and Edward Goffard.
BASKETBURGERS
BOXBURGERS
Delicious
salads and 4
an excellent
fountain—
steaks- too.
We’ll meet you
at the Rendezvous
"I II be
up there soon!”
nMBMBIH—aOi^
Op where the ceiling’s unlimited and the
horizon’s as wide as the world! Up where there’s,
freedom and adventure — and a man can dare to do
what no man’s done before!
You’re on your way up there when you join the
Aviation Cadets. After a year’s pilot training, it’s
silver wings for you —and a commission as Second
Lieutenant in the U. S. Air Force Reserve.
You are eligible if you’re single, between 20 and
26V2, and have completed at- least half the require
ments for a degree from an accredited college or
university (or can pass an equivalent qualifying
examination).
You’ll fly the very best planes during your 12
months of pilot training. Then, after graduation,
you'll pilot jet fighters and bombers. And you’ll get
a starting salary of $336 a month. During your three
years on active duty you’ll be given a chance to win
a commission in the Regular Air Force.
This is a priceless opportunity for alert young
P* men with the urge to carve their future in American
aviation. Ask for details at your U. S. Army and U. S.
Air Force Recruiting Station. Or, write to Head
quarters, U. S. Air Force, Attention: Aviation Cadet
;; Section, Washington 25, D. C.
'*//■* •
U. S. ARMY AND U. 8. AIR FORCE RECRUITING SERVICE