Classified Ads NOTICE—Dar’s Hobby Supply 41 E 14th St. Bearer of this ad en titld to 10% discount. 70 LOST—Heavy gold wedding band. Initials from FAB to AAB from AAB to RLB. Notify Bob Blood worth 5812, 7589. 66 ROOM—For man. House and kit chen privileges, fireplace. Near campus. Inquire at Freindly House, 11th and Ferry. 67 WANTED—Passengers to Seattle this weekend. Leaving Friday noon. Ph. 2782-R. 67 FOR SALE—’47 Chevrolet Fleet line Aero-Sedan. All extras $1975. Also wooden B-flat Pedleo Clar inet. 1433 Patterson. Ph. 1853-J 69 Realty Board To Honor Aiken As their nominee for the first citizen of Eugene in 1948, Jim Ai ken will be honored at a banquet Saturday given by the Eugene Realty Board. He will speak on •‘Citizens Are Built on the Foot ball Field, Too.” “The Historic Crisis of This Day” will be given in absentia by Doro thy Thompson. Ernest Haycox will talk on “The Spiritual Source of the Free and Lighted World.” An adult Social Science society, the Eugene Realty Board studies citizenship and will give a sum mary of their findings at the ban quet. Tickets are available from Harvey Blythe. Team members may obtain tickets at Jim Aiken’s office. The dinner will be held at the Osburn hotel at 6:30. Festival Petitions Due Friday International Festival petitions will be due Friday at the YWCA, announced Marjorie Peter sen, co-chairman of the internation al affairs committee of the Y. The petitions are to be filled out on regular ASUO petition forms. Committees open are luncheon, reg istration, publicity, promotion, in vitations, hospitality, and tea. Un der the tea committee will be chair man of cleanup, food, program, cfec oiations, and costumes. li il >w To look smart, to feel smart, shop Hailes ml*9 AMI—1044 WA OSC Psychologist Marriage Speaker Dr. O. R. Chambers of the OSC psychology department will deliver the second lecture in the series en titled “Majoring in Marriage,” which is being sponsored by the YMCA and the sophomore commis sion of the YWCA, at 7:00 Thurs day night at the YMCA. Dr. Chambers is well known as a speaker to student groups on the subject of courtship and marriage, and lias done counselling in the field. The half hour talk will be entitled "Anticipating Marriage,” and will be followed by a discussion period. Students who have signed up for the series will be seated first, but any student may attend. To Hold Tryouts For French Play Tryouts for a French play, “Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme,” will be held in room 120 Friendly hall at 3 today and 7:30 Thursday night. The play is under the auspices of the French and drama depart ments and the music school, and will be presented on Guild hall stage April 1 and 2. All students interested are urged to attend the tryouts. Library Asks for Missing Periodicals To complete its files, the Univer sity library will welcome the gift of copies of the following periodi cal numbers: “American Photog raphy” (Apr. 1948); “Arizona Highways” (Sept. 1948); “Camp ing Magazine” (Feb. 1948); “Cred it World” (Dec. 1947); and “Des ert Magazine” (Sept. 1948). Among other periodicals needed are “Editor and Publisher” (Oct. 9 and Oct. 16, 1948); “Hygeia” (July 1948); “Inland Printer” (July, Aug., and Sept. 1948); “Journal of Health and Physical Education” (May and Sept. 1948). The library also wants copies of the "Consumer's Union Buying Guide for 1948.” Bigger They Come The Larger the Haul TOKYO, Jan. 18—(AP)—It is too much trouble, union bank work ers said in effect today, to count 100 yen notes. To cut down on their work, they asked that 1,000 yen notes be is sued. The 100 yen notes are the larg est in circulation now. II .—' — Plan Completed Union By Winter Term, 1950 The blueprints for Oregon’s stud ent union are all drawn and the building itself should stand com pleted by winter term, 1950, accord ing to Dick Williams, director of the union. Covering 105,000 square feet of space and extending 335 feet from north to south plus a 78-foot service entrance, the union will have a basement, a mezzanine, and three floors which will include almost everything from a formal ballroom to snack kitchens. In the basement there will be eight bowling alleys, ten tables for pool, billiards and snooker, | six ping-pong tables, and a four j chair barber shop. The main desk and lobby and a leather lounge occupy positions on the first floor along with a U.S. postoffice and a classified station which will handle every thing that goes through a regular branch office. In addition to this, there will be a University post office to take care of campus mail. A combination soda fountain cafeteria will seat 375 persons at one time. Continuous short-order service is planned, and cafeteria lunches will be served at meal hours. Also on the first floor will be a sack lunch room, containing 80 lockers, expressly for the use of students who commute to and from the University daily. Five rooms will be available for various gatherings, including small lunch and dinner meetings. These rooms, each one accommo dating 24 persons, may be opened into one large area by means of folding walls. On the mezzanine will be union administrative offices, alumni and Old Oregon offices, and lockers for the employes. The second floor will hold two music listening rooms in .which records may be played, and a pi ano practice room which may be used for composing and rehear sal of skits. An art gallery will furnish con tinual exhibits, including both stu dent work and traveling art ex - hibitions. A lounge browsing li brary, a salon for such functions as teas, three additional meeting rooms with dining service, and a ballroom complete the second floor. The ballroom will be divided into several sections which would hold from 400 to 500 couples. Electrically controlled folding walls enable it to be opened into one large room in which 1000 cou ples could dance. This area will if Perfection! ; \ In V 9 Ice Cream • Medo Rich Milk • andCreamore o o CREAMERY COMPANY be used also for banquets seating up to 650, assemblies for as many as 750, small concerts, and mov ies. Student offices, Oregana offic- j es, and a room to be used for im portant student union board meet ings will be located on the third floor which will hold also four more meeting rooms, a projection booth, and an area to be used for making posters and various dec orations. Two of these meeting rooms will have kitchenettes which will be available for concocting snacks. The projection booth will show movies in the ballroom on the second floor. Among the services provided in the student union will be a lost and found department, a desk where checks may be cashed, and West ern Union service. Of Oregon’ student union ser vices, Dick Williams boasts, “Name it—we’ve got it. If we haven’t, we’ll get it;" Senate Confirms Acheson Appointment FORT LEWIS, Wash., Jan. 18— (AP)—Two army escapees were still at large tonight after a break from the post stockade Saturday. A third member of the trio who eluded army guards was appre hended within two hours after the break, which was disclosed for the first time today. INVESTMENT ' OPPORTUNITY Either large accumulated funds or very small monthly savings can be safely invest ed through a Balanced In vestment Trust Fund which for 15 years has yielded over 5% plus an appreciation of the investor’s capital. Plan a conservative investment pro gram. Consult Edward G. 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