Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 30, 1949)
Physical Science Aid Exams Due In Washington Office by Dec. 13 Applications for the U. S. Civil Service Physical Science Aid ex amination must be received in the Commission’s Washington office by Dec. 13, according to informa tion received here. Positions paying from $2,200 to $3,100 will be filled from registers compiled from .the examination. For positions paying $2,450 and above, applicants must have had from one to four years of appro priate experience in the physical sciences. Pertinent education may be substituted for required experi ence. Registers established from the examination will also be used to fill ■positions as technical aid, technical and scientific aid, laboratory help er, scientific aid, computer, ob server, museum of exhibits aid, cryptanalyst, and other subpro fessional scientific positions. Optional branches covered are chemists, physics, metallurgy, ge ology, mathematics, and other branches of physical science except meteorology. Vacancies to be filled exist in Federal agencies in Washington, D. C„ and vicinity. Further information and applica tion forms may be obtained from the University graduate placement office, Room 216, Emerald Hall. Bridge Tourney Open to Students Oregon students will be eligible to play in the 1900 Intercollegiate Bridge Tournament, Lester Jones, Student Union Board chairman announced Tuesday. Regulations concerning entering the congest will be made public by the Student Union Board in Janu ary, Jones said. A preliminary round will be played by mail in February, with finalists meeting in Chicago on April 21 and 22. Expenses of the finalists will be paid by the Intercollegiate Bridge Tournament Committee w h i c h sponsors the contest. Tolerance is a word which has several shades of meaning; to some people it really means con descension; to the Christian it ought to mean sympathetic un derstanding.. CLASSIFIED FOR SALE 1947 Pontine 8 taper. 4 new tires, radio, heater, spot, low mileage. Private party, call C-16S4 after 6:00. 40 FOR SALE — Corona portable. Cheap. Rm. 4, Sherry Ross. . 46 WANTED—One man student to share two rooms with 2 other students. One bedroom, one study room. Linens furnished. 1485 Hilyard, phone 4-0297. 47 RIDE— Married couple driving to L.A. during Christmas vacation. Take 2 riders. Share expenses. See Walt Graydon, 1543 E. 15th, Trailer No. 50. 47 FOUND — Lady's diamond ring. Call 4-9233. 48 WANTED Ride to Coos Bay this weekend. Eunice Peterson, Ph. 4-9233. 471 RENT Attention off campus stu dents. House available for co-op,! club, or group. 2 blocks from! campus. Description 4 sleeping' rooms inch porch, complete! kitchen and bath upstairs. Ac-1 commodations 0-S men or worn-1 cn. All new furnishings. 720 E.1 13th. phone 5-3181. 49 Young Republicans To Elect Delegates Campus Young Republicans will meet this afternoon at 4 upstairs in the Side to elect state conclave delegates. The conclave, according to Young GOP President Beldon Ow ens has requested that members of the organization pay yearly dues at today’s meeting to be eligible to vote for the delegates. Book Debtors Get Two Alternatives Fall term purchasers of the 1950 Oregana who have already paid $2 down on a yearbook are reminded by Jim Sanders, busi ness manager*, that they may take one of two alternatives in completing their payment before Jan. 15. The fee assessors in Emerald Hall have been instructed to ac cept during pre-registration: 1. A $2 payment which will hold the 1950 book leaving $2 to be taken from the student's breakage fee. 2. A $4 payment which when added to the down payment will complete the full $6 cost of the book. The Oregana purchaser must tell the clerk which plan he wants to use. Students are urged by San ders to note that whichever plan the student chooses he must have paid a $4 minimum to the Oregana before Jan. 15 or for feit the original $2 and his book reservation. Standards Studied A special faculty committee for the study of academic regulations has bee n named by President Harry K. Newburn. Members are C. F. Weigle, chair man; P. E. Eiscrer, K. J. O’Con nell, E. S. Wengert, VV. J. Dixon, A. H. Kunz, Robert Leeper, R. D. Clark, and John Stehn. Art Johnson To Represent Oregon at NY Art Johnson, student body pres ident, will represent students of the state of Oregon at the 54th annual Congress of American In dustry in New York City, Dec. 7, 8, and 9. Johnson is among 49 college students—one from each state and the District of Columbia—invited to the conclave by the National Association of Manufacturers. He will leave for New York on Dec. 3. While in New York, Johnson will meet with University of Oregon alumni in that area. The college students, whose ex penses, including transportation, are to be paid by the NAM, will have a chance to win one of six prizes offered by that organization for the best essay appraising the meeting. Speakers who will be heard at the three-day session include Sec retary of Defense Louis Johnson, Carlos P. Romulo, president of the general assembly of the United Nations, and Paul G. Hoffman, head of the Economic Cooperation Administration. 'Quartet' Billed By Movie Club “Quartet,” the British produc tion of four stories by W. Somerset Maugham, and the second picture in the Foreign Movie Club series, will be shown at the Mayflower Theater from Dec. 4 to Dec. 7. A matinee will be given on Sun day afternoon, with two evening showings on each pf the four nights. Student pledge cards may be ob tained until Sunday. The Foreign Movie Club was or ganized earlier in the fall by Rene L. Picard, assistant professor of Romance languages, to make pos sible the showing of first-class for eign pictures which could not be brought to Eugene without an or ganization of this sort. We’ll skip the item about a Connecticut doctor being held up by a patient. Why rib the whole profession. This Week DESSERTS: Alpha Chi Omega — Delta Tau Delta Stitzer Hall — University House Carson Number Two — McChesney Alpha Xi Delta — Phi Kappa Sigma Rebec House — Preference Lambda Chi Alpha — Gamma Phi Beta Delta Delta Delta — Beta Theta Pi Delta Zeta — Merrick Hall Kappa Sigma — Alpha Omicron Pi Hendricks Hall — Yeomen Alpha Delta Pi — Chi Psi Kappa Alpha Theta — Phi Psi Sigma Phi Epsilon — Alpha Gamma Delta Carson Number Five — Sederstrom Kappa Kappa Gamma — Sigma Nu Chi Omega — Sigma Alpha Mu Alpha Tau Omega — Alpha Phi Delta Upsilon — Preference EXCHANGE DINNERS: Pi Beta Phi — Phi Delta Theta DANCES SATURDAY, DEC. 3: University House Delta Delta Delta Alpha Delta Pi Alpha Omicron Pi Sigma Chi Highland House Orides Zeta Tau Alpha Hendricks Hall Ann Judson House FIRESIDES, FRIDAY, DEC. 2: Alpha Phi I.S.A. Mixer Club Elects Officers New officers for Les Thelemites, French club, are President Mari lyn Carpenter; vice- president, Winfred Eggert; secretary-treas urer, Alice Garrigus; publicity, Coralie Nelson; and song-leader, Madeleine Michel. Les Thelemites will hold a rec reational meeting Jan. 9 at Wes ley House, to discuss plans for a Montmartre party. The meeting will feature French songs and re freshments. CHRISTMAS SUGGESTIONS Any Name and Address On U. S. PENNY POSTALS 75 for $2.00 Inc. Cards, Stamps, Mailing SHOEMAKER EXT. 381 GALS For that Extra Special For that Extra Special STOP IN AT THE MAN'S SHOP CAMPUS 881 East 13th DOWNTOWN 32 East 10th LIKE T-V WHO UNDERSTANDS PORTER KUGN & KUGN-fm MON. THRU FRI.—11-12 MIDNIGHT SATURDAY—9-1 A.M. SPONSORS—CERTAINLY LISTENERS?—YEAH!