Junior, Senior Women to Hold Sunday Meal “Innocence Abroad” will be the program theme at the anntial ju nior-senior breakfast Sunday at 9:15 a.m. in the new Carson Hall dining room. The breakfast, sponsored by the YWCA, will include junior and sen ior women on the campus, and all foreign women students as guests of the YWCA. Participating in the program will be Beverly Buckley, YWCA presi dent, Dirk Schepers, and Gisela Schmidt, both special students in Liberal Arts. The breakfast will conclude the campus YWCA’s rec ognition of national YWCA week from April 23 to 29. Tickets to the annual affair may be obtained at the YWCA, Gerling er, at the Co-op, or in campus liv ing organizations. Price is 90 cents per plate. Traditionally, the juniors in each living organization are hostesses to the seniors of that house. How ever, any junior or senior woman niay attend the breakfast whether or not she is planning to attend alone, Karla Van Loan, breakfast chairman, stated. Decorations will center around the breakfast theme, “Springtime,” with May baskets as the featured trappings. Menu for. the breakfast will in clude grapefruit, bacon, eggs, bis cuits, and coffee. Teac/ier Training Study Planned .An expanded elementary teach er training program in Oregon was slowed down Monday night when the State Board of Higher Educa tion in its regular meeting referred the matter to a committee which would report in June. Plans were presented to the hoard to include this training at Oregon State College, the Univer sity, and Vanport Extension Cen ter to help relieve the shortage of teachers in the lower grades. Advocating the change was Su perintendent Paul A. Remus and Dean J. F Cramer, extension di rector, and superintendents of schools in first-class cities of the state. ’'Students Fined As Court Meets Despite constitutionality dis putes, the ASUO Student Court held “business as usual” Tuesday night, hearing seven cases and fin ing five students. Two students were found guilty but fines, were suspended because of extenuating circumstances; five were fined $1 each, and two stu dents posted bail during the week at the Office of Student Affairs. Seven additional cases were turned over to the Office of Stu dent Affairs for appropriate dis ciplinary measures because of fail ure to appear at the court after two warnings. “Appropriate discliplinary mea sures” can include steps up to and including suspension of University registration; however, in practice it has usually meant increased fines, collected by the Office. Campus Policeman J. P. Jensen reported that the alley between Onyx and University streets is. closed to all traffic except physi cal plant vehicles, and that all j parking is prohibited in the con struction area around the new j science building site. This includes j driveways by the infirmary and University Press. , Brazilian Student Gets Camp Trip Maria Teresa Junqueira Ayres, graduate student in mathematics, was awarded a trip to the “Y" summer camp, Seabeck, by the YWCA sophomore commission, at a special benefit dessert held in Alumni Hall, Gerlinger, last even ing. Conference chairman Jackie Wilkes introduced Miss Ayres, who came to the University from the University of Brazil. Freshman women voted funds left over from the Freshman com missions be used to supplement money raised from the dessert to send Miss Ayres to Seabeck, June 11 to 18. “I am sure it will be a wonder ful experience,” she said. “I have never been to a summer camp be fore.” A special skit honoring World YWCA week was presented. Oth er entertainment included imita tions by Bob Shetterly. Guests Named For Banquet Speakers for the Library Day banquet, scheduled for May 13 in the Carson Hall dining room, have been named, according to Miss Ber nice Rise, library circulation head, who is in charge of Library Day activities. Dorothy O. Johansen, associate -professor of history at Reed Col lege, Portland, and director of the Pacific Northwest Economics Rec ord Collection, will be the guest speaker. She has chosen "Ex Li bris” for her topic. . . .. * Toastmaster for the dinner will be Burt Brown Barker, University vice-president emeritus. Library Report Due Carl W. Hintz, head librarian, will report on the state of the li brary, and James H. Gilbert, presi dent of the Association of Patrons and Friends of the University Li brary, will also give a report. Guests at the dinner will bg the nine winners in the Library Day contest, and the house librarian representing the living group win ning the Josephine Evans Harp ham silver cup, to be awarded the organization which has developed the best reading program among its members. In charge of dinner arrange ments is Mrs. O. F. Stafford, repre senting the Patrons and Friends. Dan E. Clark, head of the history department, heads the program committee. Mexican Movie At Chapman Tonite “Chata,” a picture filmed in Mexico with a cast of natives, will be shown at 7 and 9 p.m. this even ing in 207 Chapman. The movie, about a small Mexi can girl, is open to all students and faculty. Studehts must show their student body cards for admission. Love making, according to a writer, is a lost art. Okay, so we’ve made it a science. f ^EMERALD TODAY'S STAFF Assistant Managing- Editor: Walt McKinney Desk Editors: Bill Frye, Grctchen Grondahl Copy Desk: Sarah Turnbull, Jean Lewis. NIGHT STAFF Night Editor: Rusty Holcomb Night Staff: Delvan Miles, Fred Moore, Delores Parrish, Pat Choate, Jerry Tucker, Ann Os tenson. Phillip Morris Interviews Set Phillip Morris Company repre sentatives will be on campus to day to interview junior men, not seniors, - as stated in yesterday's Emerald. The company is seeking qualified juniors to participate in a college student training program involv ing summer employment. The program includes two months of sales distribution in struction at a salary, a paid posi tion as company campus repre sentative next fall, and opportunity for permanent employment. Candidates must be juniors grad uating by June, 1951, willing to ac cept assignments in any part of the U.S., ranking scholastically in the upper half of their class, and active in campus activities. Interview appointments may be secured through Miss Shirley Syl vester, Student Employment Of fice. Novelist Slates University Visit Archie Binns, American novel ist, will visit the campus next week, upon invitation of the Uni versity, as part of the school’s new enlarged program in creative writ ing. While here the novelists will talk to students in writing and give a public lecture on the writer and the public. A newspaper man in his earlier years, Binns turned to fiction writ ing and has several books to his credit. Among these are “The Land is Bright,” “The Timber Beast,” "The Roaring Land,” “The Laurels Are Cut Down,” “Back water Voyage,” and “Lightship.” He is a member of the Author’s League and Sigma Delta Chi, na tional professional journalistic fra ternity. Binns is the first in a series of writers expected to visit the Uni versity in the future in conjunc tion with the writing program. Creative writing was recently list ed as a new major subject in the University. Prom Petitions Asked Petitions are being requested for positions on the Junior Prom tick et committee. They should be turned in by 5 p.m., Friday to Jer ry Smith at Phi Gamma Delta, or Jerry Meyers, Sigma Alpha Mu. McClure Elected PE Club Prexy Walt McClure was elected presi dent of the Men’s Physical Educa tion Club at a meeting last Thurs day. Other newly elected officers of the club are Ted Legore, vice-presi dent; Giles Godfrey, secretary; Ralph Dyson, treasurer; and Bob Becker, reporter. Flans were made at the meeting for the annual Men's PE Club pic nic to be held some time in May at Swimmer’s Delight. An open house in the men’s PE building for women in physical education was also discussed. Christian House Elects Mary Alice Baker, freshman in business administration, was elec ted president of Christian House, Christian youth foundation, Sun day. Other new officers are Wall Chun, vice-president; Imogene Spurgeon, historian; Nancy Rada baugh, recording secretary; Arlene Hendricks, corresponding secre tary; Mark Van Voorhis, treas urer; Sherman Holmes, editor; and Bob Peterson, executive adviser. Journal Publishes Librarian's Article Helen Erickson, reference anil map librarian in the University library, has had an article pub lished in the “Good Ideas” section of the Library Journal. The article discusses the ad vantages of a method of index mapping developed in the library. Be happy and you'll be beautiful a beauty expert tells women. And most of them have been trying to be beautiful in order to be happy. • • • THE HAZEL SCOTT recital Has Been CANCELLED Day Room College of the Holy Cross ( Worcester) ■ In < Worcester, Massachusetts, one of the favorite spots of students at the College of the Holy Cross is the Day Room on the campus. They like the Day Room because it’s a cheerful place — full of friendly collegiate atmosphere. And when the gang gathers around, ice-cold Coca-Cola gets the call. For here, as in college haunts everywhere—• Coke belongs. Ask for it either way . . . both trade-marks mean the same thing. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY Of THE COCA-COIA COMPANY BY © 1950, Th# Coco-Cola Company I. !■■■!!■ .ii ■ ■■ . ■■■a COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF EUGENE Never mind me— Place an Emerald classifieds before 4 p.m. and sell my car THEY GET RESULTS