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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (April 5, 1950)
CLASSIFIED FOR RENT—Single rooms for men close to campus, clean and quiet. Ph. 5-4649. STUDENT WILL share: Nice home with couple in exchange for care of toddler and cooking. 5-5222. FOR RENT—Private room and en trance. 1873 East 15th. $15 per month. Phone 4-1875 after 6 p. m. FOR SALE—New Singer electric portable, $89.50. Complete at tachments plus complete sewing course. 1032 Willamette. 4-8431. SPRINGFIELD student may ride to campus 8:00 a. m. M Tu W Th F and 10 Sat. for $.75. Phone 7-9487. f - DOST - Masonic ring on campus I during final week. If found call j Bob Pearce 5-5142. Reward. i._ - FOR RENT—Board & room for 2 men. Mrs. Boyds, 630 E. 13th. Phone 5-6209. 101 FOR SALE—Girls Bicycle. Good | buy. Only $10. Ext. 347. 101 LOS T—B rown horned-rimmed glasses, brown case. Near Co-op Monday. Phone Marilyn Hatch, Ext. 495. 99 SHOE REPAIRING—Our regular prices are lower than other shops’ specials. Men’s neolite soles and half rubber heels $2.25. Bill Ralph Myers, 543 Oak St. 100 MUSICIAN WANTED: For 11 o'clock Monday, Wednesday, Friday dance class. Miss Went worth, Womens P. E. Dept. 101 FOR SALE Tandem bicycle— good condition. Call 4-4118. 102 | ConfabPlanned On Occupations An informal conference on uni versity-level occupations in the public service of the state of Ore gon will be held at the university at 2:00, Apr. 6. The conference will cover accounting, auditing and re lated occupations, personnel, pub lic relations, general business, so cial work, health, and biological science. Agency representives will "be James M. Clinton, acting director, and George Robinson, chief exam iner, of the Oregon State Civil Service: Adam Lefor, division of audits, secretary of states of!ice: Jason Lee, tax commission; Gor don Shattuck, unemployment com pensation commission; Margaret White, state public welfare com mission; and A. T. Johnson, state board of health. Mexican Art Workshop Offers Travel Opportunity for Summer An opportunity for summer travel and art study is being of fered by the Mexican Art Work shop which has successfully con ducted an arts project in Mexico for the past three years. This summer a European Arts Tour will also be started which will combine art appreciation and painting with the experience of living in a foreign country. The Mexican tour covers five weeks of travel, sightseeing, and art study. Carlos Merida, promin ent Mexican artist, will provide in struction in parting and the Span ish language in Taxco. Crafts work is carried on directly in the native silver, tin, and textile shops of Taxco. The seven-week European Arts Tour is escorted by a prominent American painter and will include visits to museums and galleries in Holland, Belgium, Italy, and France for art appreciation and discus sions. A two weeks’ residence in a villa on the Normandy coast for painting and recreation is a special feature of the tour. The Mexican tour is priced at $300 which includes instruction field trips and first class living costs from July 10 to Aug. 14. Tran sportation is not included. Departure for the European tout* by steamer will be June 19 and by plane, July 2. The seven-week trip costs $1107, the steamer trip cov ers nine weeks and costs $1187. A five-week arrangement by air is possible for $982. Information may obtained by writing to Irma S. Jonas, Executive Director Art-Travel Workshops, 238 East 23rd Street, New York 10, New York. Both groups are lim ited in number. Spanish Film Set For Thursday Night Showings of “Auios, Mariquita Linda,” a Spanish musical film, will be held at 4 and 7:30 p. m. Thursday in 207 Chapman Hall. Admission is 35 cents. Tito Guizar plays the lead as the ranch hand who wins the boss’s daughter and clears himself of a murder charge at the same time. Supporting roles are played by Maria Luisa Zea and Chato Ortin. The show is jointly sponsored by Sigma Delta Pi, Spanish honorary society, and the University Span ish Club. CampGroupSets Adviser Meeting Camp directors from the Oregon Section of the American Camping Association will hold their annual counselor recruitment meeting on the University campus from 1 to ■1 p. m. Thursday in Room 101, Physical Education Building. The meeting is open to all in terested students, both women and men. Introduction to camping possibil ities will be made at this time. Each director will describe the counselor vacancies in their respective camps. Represented will be private, or ganization, church, and special camps for boys and girls. Conferences with individual di rectors will follow the general meeting. Harrison Gets Position .Tames Harrison, a graduate stu dent in the Political Science De partment. has been appointed to a teaching fellowship at the Univer sity of Washington. He will finish his work for his degree at Wash ington. REWARD $25 REWARD TO ANY LIVING ORGANIZATION Which Can Match this record FOR AUTOMATIC HEATING Cost of heat and domestic water $52.69 per month (About $1.50 per member) Actual average of a C. of O. Sorority, year ending l'eb. 15. 1950. using a GENERAL ELECTRIC OIL-FIRED BOILER Installed bv COOPER BROS. HEAT-SERVICE COMPANY DIAL 5-4712 Machine Made By Physicists E. G. Ebbinghausen and Gordon Hoyt of the Physics Department are working on a problem in nuc lear physics in Deady Hall. Thus far the two physicists have been working on an instrument “to measure energies of disintegration products, that is, electrons or Gam ma rays, of radio-active nuclei.” According to Dr. Ebbighausen, Beta rays are high speed electrons emitted by nuclei, while Gamma rays are high energy X-rays. He explains their project as a discov ery of information concerning the energy levels in these nuclei. Sometimes when these nuclei lose some of their surplus energy, they change their structure. The changes keep on occurring till the nuclei becomes stable, that is, can not change. These scientists get their radio active samples from the University of California. They plan to get started in earnest as soon as their machine is ready. Article by Gilbert Printed in'Journal “Ethics at Early Ages,” an ar ticle by Sister Mary Gilbert, gradu ate student in journalism, appeared in the Mar. 26 issue of the Oregon Daily Journal’s magazine section. A full-page account of the Ore gon Scholastic Press’s activities during the past year was given in the article. Forum Series Set Tonight at Library “Arms and Fsee Men” by Van nevar Bush is the topic set for the second in this term’s Lecture Forum Series to be presented to night at 7:30 in the library brows ing room. Dr. Ivan G. Nagy, associate pro fessor of political science, will lec ture on the subject, and Dean Vic tor Morris, School of Business Ad ministration, will lead the discus sion. Jobs Topic of Seminar Dr. R. B. Dean, assistant pro cessor of the Chemistry Depart nent, spoke on “Getting A Job” at the chemistry seminar in 105 McClure yesterday at 4 p. m. YWCA Sates Frosh Dinner To promote interest of YWCA activities in the freshman women, the sophomore commission, headed by Mary Alice Baker, will sponsor a dinner next Tuesday at Gerlinger. Slides on the YWCA camp, Sea beck, will be shown and there will be a presentation of activities for those interested in working with the Y. Tickets to the social meeting will be sold in all women’s living or ganizations this week. “I would like to see every fresh man girl turn out for this dinner,” stated Miss Baker, “so that they might learn where they can fit into the YWCA sophomore program.” RENTALS OFFICE MACHINERY & SUPPLY CO. Sales and Service 30 E 11th Phone 4-8035 NEW collection of EATON'S FASHION LETTER PAPERS Eaton brings creative designing to your letter paper —to enhance the charm of all you write! Among the new Eaton arrivals there is sure to be one paper styling that precisely fits your personality, your taste — a paper whose quality makes you proud to call it "yours." With such a wonderful, complete selec tion to choose from, shopping for your per sonality-perfect paper will be a new-found pleasure, and using it an expression of your personal style! Come in today, won't you? U. OF O. CO-OP STORE EXQUISITE FLORAL WREATH ON FAMOUS FINE CHINA Charming garlands of colorful blue flowers on the exclusive Lenox fluted shape. A service of rare translucent beauty, coupled with amazing strength. Made of the same fine china as the Lenox services selected for the Presidential mansions of the United States, Cuba, and Mexico* 5-piece place setting, $1625 HOFFMAN’S ... Jewelers ... Broadway and Willamette EUGENE, ORE. LENOX CHINA America’s world-famous fine china A