International Relations League Officers THESE HIGH SCHOOL students will direct activities for the third annual International Relations League conference on the campus this weekend. Students from higli schools all over the state will be on hand for the three-day meet. League officers, from left, Wayne Carothers, Klamath Falls, president; Marilyn Bush, Forest Grove, vice-president; Jack Halstead, Medford, historian; and Janet Lane, Eugene, secretary. Class Reps to Discuss Junior Weekend Plans First all-class action for the 1951 Junior Weekend — May 12, 13 and 14—will take place Monday after noon at 4 when Barry Mountain, class president, meets with junior house representatives in room 3, Fenton Hall. Each living organization presi Fun Fest Slated Here Saturday Some thirty foreign students from Oregon State College, mem bers of the Cosmopolitan and Chinese student clubs, are expected for tomorrow’s International Fun Fest on the Oregon campus. Pat Williams Brooks and Dol ores Jeppesen, co-chairmen of the YWCA International 'Affairs Com mittee, which is helping sponsor the event, estimated Thursday that 35 foreign students from the Ore gon campus will attend. After registration and get-ac quainted coffee hour period from 2 to 3 p. m., foreign students from both campuses will put on an hour and-a-half talent show. The chairmen urged those who have not replied to their invita tions to the 5:30 p. m. dinner to make reservations by calling the YWCA before 5 today. Charge is 50 cents a plate. Other students interested in the program or foreign students who have not been notified may also call the Y for reservations. The program for the talent show will include a version of the Ore gon fight song as Mozart, Bach, and other composers would play it, by Ernst Lutz, Austrian music major. (Please turn to page six) dent is requested by Mountain to appoint a junior to represent the organization at the Monday meet ing. Positions Open Positions open for juniors who wish to head and work on the vari ous committees will be explained at that time, when Mountain makes the first call for petitions. Petitions will not be accepted until later in the week, after representa tives have reported back to their houses. “The class officers hope to give juniors the first chance at work ing on their weekend,” the class of ’51 president remarked. “We know there are many competent, quali fied persons in our class who have not yet had the opportunity to work on an all-campus function.” Short Meeting Set The meeting Monday will be a short one, Mountain said, in which he will explain to the representa tives the procedure for petitioning. The representatives are then to carry this information back to members of the junior class in each living organization. The importance of having each dorm and house represented was stressed by Mountain. Other officers of the class help ing with Weekend arrangements are Ed Peterson, vice-president; Anne Case, secretary; and Anne Goodman, treasurer. Weather . . . Rain for today and Saturday is the word from Weather Bureau forecasters. Low temperature last night was 45. High today, 52, and the low tonight, 40. Death Takes Former U.O.ROTC Instructor "Harvey Blythe, 47, who for many years was connected with the University Military Science De partment, died of a heart ailment early Thursday at a local hospital. Lt. Col. Blythe enlisted in the Army in 1921, and came to Eugene for duty in July, 1932. He served as rifle team coach and drill in structor, as assistant professor of military science and tactics. He left the University for active duty at Camp Adair late in 1943. Services will be Saturday at 3:30 p. m. at Poole-Larsen Mortuary. Internment will.be at Rest Haven Memorial Park. Gof on Extra $5? Don't Read This! Deadline for completing the first three steps in spring term advance registration is 5 p. m. today. Advisers and depart ment clerks will cease all reg istration work at that time. These steps include securing material, building study pro gram with adviser's approval, and enrolling in courses with departments. Thursday's registration fig ures showed 134 students com pleting the process, bring the total for advance registration to 440. Students have until noon on Mar. 4 to complete steps 4 and 5 (checking with Student Ar fairs and the registrar). Any full-time* undergraduate stu dent attending the University winter term who doesn’t com plete step 5 on Mar. 4 will be assessed the full late fee of $5. Regular spring term regis tration will be held Mar. 27 through noon Apr. 8. Webfoot-Beaver Game Set Tonight at Corvallis Oregon s basketball quintet has its final chance to win a game away from home tonight, when the Ducks meet the Oregon State Beavers at ('.ill Pavilion, Corvallis. Came time is 8 p.m. Students tickets, at $1.50 each, are on sale at the McArthur Court ticket office. Saturday night, the two teams return to McArthur Court for the final (. ivil \\ ar game this year. 'Phis Oregon State series in the final basketball action for the Webfoots this year. Acting Coach Don Kirsch will direct the Oregon team to night, although John \\ arren may he well enough to make the trip. See the sports page for further details. IRL Conference Continues Today Two hundred and twenty-five Oregon high school delegates arrived on the campus last night and this morning for the third annual conference of the International Relations League. General conference theme is “Will Present United States Foreign Policy Promote Peace and Prosperity?" The group wilt divide into eight committees, to consider different aspects of this question and present conclusions to the conference at its closing session tomorrow morning. John F. Cange, director of the Woodrow Wilson School of foreign Affairs at the University cf Virginia, will speak on foreign policy in the University Theater today at 4 p. m. His address will be open to the public. Gange also will be the principle speaker at the annual banquet to be held at 6:30 tonight at the Os burn Hotel. Opening Session Mrs. Grace Bok Holmes, liaison officer for the International Chil dren’s Emergency Fund, will speak at the opening session of the con ference this morning. Following her address, the com mittees will meet from 10:30 to 12:30, and again from 2:15 to 4 p. m., after the luncheon and busi ness meeting. Various schools will report on outstanding projects and club activities. Student officers for 1950-51 will be nominated at the evening ban quet, and the entil e delegation will | (Please turn to page three) Lemon-Orange Hop Set Tomorrow Night It’s fun, it’s almost free, and it’s Saturday night, following the Oregon-OSC basketball game at McArthur Court, It’s the Lemon-Orange Squeeze mixer dance, first all-campus in formal danee of the year. Tickets, at 25 cents each, are on sale at living organizations and the Co-op. They may also be purchased at McArthur Court Saturday night. University foreign students will be guests of Junior Panhel lenic and Junior Interfratemity Council at the dance. _ Bloc Accepts Phi Sig Petition The petition of Phi Sigma Kap pa for re-entrance into the Greek Bloc was accepted Thursday by a unanimous vote at a meeting of AGS representatives. The Phi Sigs will send a repre sentative and may vote in the coun cil, but may not submit their mem bers as candidates for office on the AGS ticket for one year, ac cording to the AGS constitution. The fraternity left the Bloc in the spring of 1948, when the US A coalition party was formed. Five fraternities and sororities still re main outside the Bloc. Results of the Freshman election were discussed at the meeting by Jim Hart, Pi Kappa Alpha. He revealed that 30 Greek ballots weie invalid, and 60 Greek freshmen cither did not vote or cast ballots outside the Bloc. He urged representatives to en courage more complete participa tion in elections, and to eliminate the probability of invalid ballots. Hob Deuel, AGS president, ap pointed a committee to consider an all-campus social function, spon sored by AGS, during spring term. Committee members are Jerry Meyers, June Fitzgibbons, Elwirv Paxton, and Ann Gillenwaters. Glen Holden, Beta Theta Pi, urged representatives to stimulate interest in council activities, in order to promote united action and cooperation among all Greek or ganizations. Landscape Architecture Course Now Fully Accredited at Oregon ine university of Oregon be comes one of nine colleges in the United States to offer a fully ac credited _ curriculum in landscape architecture, according to word re ceived by the architecture school from the American Society of Landscape Architects. The society is the national ac crediting agency of landscape architecture. Sidney W. Little, dean of the architecture school was notified that the University architecture school has adequate facilities, cur riculum, and teaching personnel to become one of the few accredit ed schools in the country in that field. The only other accredited went, coast school is the University of California at Berkeley. The other schools are Iowa State College, Cornell, Harvard, Univer sity of Illinois, University of Michi gan, Ohio State University, and Rhode Island School of Design. Dean Little said that accredita tion was made possible by action of the State Board of Higher Edu cation two years ago in the estab lishment of a full five-year unified professional curriculum at the Uni versity. He added, however, that teach ing in landscape architecture has always been above the standards of the ASLA.