Representatives of Business Firms To interview Students This Month RepreserfEatives of several busi ness firms will visit the University campus this month to interview students interested in employment. Following is a schedule of visits released by Karl W. Onthank, grad uate placement director. (Unless otherwise indicated, further information is available at the Graduate Placement office, 2f6 Emerald.) Tuesday, May 2 A Portland loan company seek ing two men for training this spring and summer will hold inter views . from 2:30 to 5 p.m. Only single candidates will be consid ered. Background knowledge in ac counting and economics is desired. The company’s training program offers the chance to achieve a managership within two or three years. Wednesday, May 3 Representatives of the Easter ling Silver Co will hold a general meeting at 9 a.m., followed by in dividual interviews. George Stuart, ^ vice-president of the concern, ac companied by Frank Mang'in and W. E. Watson, will explain the company’s training program and conduct interviews. The Placement Office asks stu dents planning to attend the gen eral session to file their names with the office immediately. Thursday, May 4 .Students of all classes—fresh man through senior—may attend a forum on life insurance career op portunities at 3:30 p.m. in 106 Commerce. W. C. Schuppel, chair man of the board, Standard In surance Co., will address the group. Purpose of the meeting is to provide more information about life insurance work, not to recruit employees. Positions with the YWCA will be discussed by Mrs. Gladys Lawther, YWCA representative, in a 4 p.m. open meeting in Alumni Hall, Ger linger. Senior women may meet with Mrs. Lawther concerning specific jobs by making appointment through Miss Lois Greenwood, ex ecutive director, in Gerlinger. The YWCA is looking for coun selors for teen-age and business girls. Some positions may lead to foreign assignment. Friday, May 5 A United Airlines representative, Pete Mitchell, will speak to women students interested in stewardess work at a 10 a.m. general meeting, followed by individual interviews. To qualify a woman must have finished a minimum of two years of college or one year of college and one of business experience or be a registered nurse. Only single women from 5 foot 2 inches to 5 foot 7 inches weigh ing from 100 to 135 pounds jvill be considered. Vision of 20-30 without Credentials will be required, and should be filed with the Placement glasses is necessary. Office immediately. Special Summer Courses Offered At Oregon College of Education • Oregon College of Education in Monmouth w i 11 be offering 11 courses in special education during the summer session, June 20 to Aug. 11, Dr. Louis Kaplan, direc tor, has announced. Three visiting experts will join the faculty to teach special work in speech correction ad therapy, mental testing, clinical problems of child development, psychology of family life, diagnostic and re medial techniques of reading, ap plied mental hygiene, and the study of the handicapped child. Dr. C. DeWitt Boney, principal of the Nassau School, East Orange, New Jersey, and professor of edu cation at Rutgers, will direct a ^workshop in language arts. Four courses in the area of speech will be offered by J. J. Thompson, speech therapist of the Pasadena, Calif, public schools. Robert L i 11 y, clinical psychol ogist at Lancaster Boys’ School, Lancaster, Calif., will lecture on psychology. The Guidance Clinic will be in operation, and will offer students opportunity to work with children in a clinical situation by study through a one-way screen. Accreditation by the State De partment of Education has been granted the special education pro gram. Teachers can gain certifi cation in this field by summer study and meeting eadditional re quirements. Retailers to Hold Conference Here University President H. K. Newburn and Eric Stanford, retail store executive, will speak at a May 14 banquet opening the an nual conference of the Oregon Re tail Distributors’ Institute. “How to Solve Some Current Retail Problems’’ will be discussed by Stanford before an audience of Oregon merchants. Stanford is secretary-treasurer of the I. Magnin stores, a women’s wearing apparel concern with of fices in San Francisco. He was formerly controller of Olds, Wort man, and King in Portland and of the Boston Store, Milwaukee, Wis. All Oregon merchants have been invited to attend the conference, which will include the banquet in the Osburn Hotel and all-day meet ings May 15 on the University campus. Experienced: “Shall we sit in the parlor?” Co-ed: “No, I’m too tired, let’s go roller skating.” % Welfare Job Talks Set for Thursday Gordon Gilbertson, director of social services for the Multnomah Public We’fare Commission, and Miss Margaret White, personnel director of the State Public Wel fare Commission, will interview students Thursday in Oregon Hall, All students seeking welfare po sitions may attend, no matter what section of the state in which they intend to work. Further informa tion may be obtained from J. R. Parsons, professor of scoiology, in 205 Oregon. Van Rysselbergho Talk For Sigma Xi Group Pierre Van Rysselberghe, Uni versity professor of chemistry, will speak at the organizational meet ing of Sigma Xi science club at the University of Portland May 11. Topic of his talk is “Some De velopments in Thermodynamics and Electrochemistry of Interest to All Sciences.” The material covered in his talk will pertain to research work he is engaged in at the University. Monday, May 8 K. A. Brooks, Montgomery Ward and Co., will talk to students at a 9 a.m. general session, followed by individual interviews. Wednesday, May 10 Senior women interested in com mission as ensigns in the Regular Nhvy may meet with Lieut. Doro thy N. Fields, USNR, who will ex plain the enlisted and officer WAVE programs. Friday, May 12 E. L. Miller, Sears Roebuck and Co., will interview June graduates who wish to enter the company’s training program. Former Student Visits University of Oreaon Oregon alumnus John Robinsor (’44) visited the campus Fridaj on leave from the UNESCO offic< in Paris whei'e he is now employed While at Oregon he was a mem ber of Friars, Druids, Scabbard and Blade, Delta Sigma Rho, and Sigma Delta Pi. RENTALS 'OFFICE MACHINERY & SUPPLY CO. Sales and Service 30 E Uth Phone 4-8035 GIRO S OF BONO BTRIRT WITH SMOKERS WHO KNOW IT’S Yes, Camels are SO MILD that in a coast-to-coast test of hundreds of men and women who smoked Camels — and only Camels —for 30 consecutive days, noted throat specialists, making weekly examinations, reported NOT ONE SINGLE CASE OF THROAT IRRITATION due to smoking CAMELS l