Costumes to Spark Cosmopolitan Party \ musical costume party is on tap tonight for Cosmopolitan Club members and their guests when they meet from 8 p.m. until mid night at Plymouth House. A. prize will be offered for the best costume. Dancing to Europe811 and South American records will also be featured. Membership in the club is open to all persons interested in foreign languages, culture, and studies. Style Right 9 1~) KF.SSM AKINC. Cy ALTERATIONS AMERICAN EMBROIDERING COMPANY 140 W. Bdwy. l'h. 5-4626 “BKSS & VIC” Scholar Awards (Tendered Four Four Ralph Bunch* scholarships 'worth approximately $350 each will be available to American ami (Canadian students this summer, the Norwegian committee of the Summer School for American Stu dents. University of Oslo, has an ■ nounced. The scholarships will be a ward , ed on the basis of merit by the Association of Electro-Chemical : and Electro-Metallurgical Indus tries of Norway, in honor of Bunche. who was recently present ed the Nobel Prize. The 1951 session of the summer ! school, which opens June 23 and closes Aug. 4. will stress Norweg ian culture. Students can earn six ( semester credits for the six-week ; course. Scholarship candidates can apply to Norman Nordstrand, Oslo Sum . mer School for American Students, , St. Olaf College. Northfield. Minn. Tuition is $S0. -1—.- ~l If fe SPRING FLOWERS TSma ■ I ^ SPRING FORMAL ■ llllc It's time for Corsages at their best from Flowers Unlimited 143 E. Broad wav 4-6214 Sacred Heart Flowers 12th Sr Alder 4-8831 FLOWERS EUGENE HOTEL 4-3119 Maybe This Is It THIS 1'U TI KK of a “skyhook” balloon. 17,000 f♦-<-1 above Minnea polis, was token through u refracting telescope during cosmic ray studies. Look magazine quotes l>r. I rner Lkldel. chief of the nuclear physics branch of the Office of Naval Research, as saying there has Uen no reliable report of a “flying saucer” observation which Is not attributable to these comic balloons. This is u Look magazine photo from the Lnlversity of Minnesota. (AI* WIKKMIOTO) Potential Physicians' Premedical students are asked ! to obtain tlieir applications now j u, room 1 McClure for medical school in 1952 and ’53. The com pleted forms should bo turned in as soon as possible, A. H. Kunz, chairman of the premedical-pre dental advisory committee, an nounced yesterday. These mid-term tests aren t really bad; It’s just the grades that make me sad. ii EMERALD CLASSFIEDS GET RESULTS FOR SALE: Schwinn English type bicycle complete with generator light, 3-speed gear, basket and carrier rack, excellent condition $00. Rhone 4-8715 or 330 E. 33rd. 78 THIS ONE DID! Reach the Student Market through EMERALD CLASSIFIEDS Write Dad Elementary Ed Transfer Plans Okayed for UO The State Board of Higher Edu cation recently approved a pro gram whereby students In the School of Education may transfer to a teachers' college for three terms to fill their elementary teaching major and then return to the University to get their de gree. During the temporary transfer to a teacher's college the students would take elementary teaching courses that are not allocated to the University, such us supervised teaching, children's literature, men tal hygiene, general and special methods courses to complete their elementary teaching major. Before this program was ap proved. students in education would get their degree at the Uni versity, and then go to summer school to study for an "Emergency Certificate." After teaching ele mentary grades for one year they would return to a teacher s col lege to get a full certificate. "Enrollment is building in the , graduate education school, but tbg, j new program won't affect under I graduate enrollment. After stu ; dents have reached their junior i year they usually do not have to , leave the campus for three terms , to study at another school," ac cording to A. A. Sandln, professor of education. Thirty-Five Students Interviewed For Selection as Naval Reservists Thirty-five University students, 1 including two women, were inter viewed by the Navy Reserve Of ! fleer Selection Board Thursday at 1 the Naval Training Center, 1520 : 13th Ave. W., according to Lieut. ! Comdr. George VV. Ennis, center commandant. Students from Oregon College ut Monmouth and one from Lin field brought the total number of applicants for commissions in the Naval Reserve to 41. Lieut. Comtlr. Ennis will with hold the names of Oregon students applying for the program until they have been completely process ed for enlistment. Other freshmen, sophomores, or juniors who wish to make applica tion for the reserve program, lead ing to a Naval commission, are ask ed by Ennis to contact the train ing center. Interviews with the selection board can be arranged for a later date in Portland, he said. Uncle Sammy Calls Graduate Assistant Carl F. Wermine, graduate as sistant in the School of Journal ism, has been recalled to active duty and will report on Mar. 11 to the army psychological warfare division in the office of the assist ant chief of staff, Washington, D. C. Wermine, who has been work ing on his doctorate at the Uni versity, was chief of communica tions of psychological warfare in Algiers and North Africa during World War II. While in Rome, he was also chief of communications in the public relations office. 1,. .. UO Theater Policy Discussed ^Tuesday Or. E. C. A. Le.sch anil Or. Hoyt Trowbridge. professors of English, will lead the discussion at the cof fee hour at 7:30 tonight iu the Library Browsing Room in the Stu dent Union. "What is the ethical value of art with special reference to King Lear” will be the topic under dis cussion. William E. Houston, instructor in English, is chairman of the Kr><« day night coffee hour which is de? signed to help students meet facul ty members. These meetings are open to the public. MAMMY! I'd walk a million miles... ... for a famous 'burger from JUMBO BAR-B-Q 871 !•;. 11th 5-9169