CLASSIFIED Place your ad at the Student Union, main desk or at tilts Shack, In nomoii or phone ext. 219, between 2 anti 4 p.tn. Mondu.v-Friduy. Kates: First insertion 4c a word; subsequent Insertions, 2c per word. Two Trailer spaces, private bath room, for rent; one block from campus. Call 5-7182. 98 FOR SALK: By owner thia week. $8300 K.H.A. or G.I. terms; 2 bedrooms; garage, living room, kltchen-diriing apace, bathroom, basement, automatic forced air oil heat, large lot, 95 N. Jeffer son. Mrs. Shecklcr 5-5645 or 5-1511 (Ext. 2561. 05 LOST: Grey gab. overcoat at Crys tal Km. Eugene Hotel night of March 10, between 10 & 12. Find er please call 5-9809 & exchange. 99 FOK SALE: Plymouth coupe 1933 engine good, body not so good. Call Jack 4-8071. 96 Federal Services Need Librarians 4 Attention has been called by the U. S. Civil Service Commission to the continuing need for librarians in the Federal services. Positions in Washington, D. C., and vicinity, at a starting salary of $3,100 a year, arc being filled from the examina tion announced by the commission in 1948. Applications are being ac cepted for the exam. . Applicants must pass a written test and have had appropriate edu cation or library training to qual ify for the jobs. The commission reports good opportunities for ad vancement in this field. Examination applications will be accepted by the U. S. Civil Service Commission, Washington 25, D. C., until further notice. The applica tions are available from most first and second-class post offices. Civil Service regional office#, or from the. Commission's Washington of fice. YWCA Group Meets Today The sophomore YWCA commis sion cabinet will hold its first meet ing of the term at 4 p.m. today. New officers of the commission and members of the cabinet include the chairman and vice-chairman, Ancy Vincent and Cathy Tribe; Sally Haselton, secretary; Donna Hart and Pat Custln, membership chairmen; Barbara Swanson, fin ance; Jean Webb and Jean Gates, social chairmen; Barbara Johnson and Shirley Olson, counseling; Jean Mauro, chaplain; Marilyn Patter son, publicity; and Sue Madsen, e^-rc Kellow, and Mary Bennette, membera-at-large. WRA Officers, Cabinet Slate Annual Retreat Old and new officers and cabinet members of the Women’s Recrea tion Association will hold their an nual retreat at Beachcombers' Rest, Heceta Beach, Saturday and Sunday to plan events for the com ing year. Reports on activities of the past year will be given by outgoing of ficers. President Joan Skordahl and Vice-President Belle Doris Russell urc in charge of the retreat. Chaperone will be Miss Jeannette Masilionis, WRA adviser. Recently appointed members of the WRA cabinet are Shirley Smart, head of sports; Shirley Nichols, volleyball; Bunny Bradley, badminton; Judy Woodcock, swim ming; Beverly Wild, basketball; Harriet Vahey, bowling; Marilyn Wise, tennis; Mary Jordan, soft ball; Judy McLoughlin, publicity; June Nichols, assistant publicity; and Breda Lynch, historian. Representatives for the Amphi bians, hockey, and outing clubs have not been named. • WF % • •- *„ .? *...., J^.:. irnt _ I I AM >IWVtu ll« more than 500 convict* from ai overcrowded, lKtM prl*on to a i.e,, an’ZriuTeT {JT flcer* flinked men before taking them In hu**e* to m Kiel prison 20 mile* south of Salt lake City. Con vict* pi led old mattTense*-and bedding in yard for In .pection. (AI* WIKEPHOTO) Harvard Offers, Financial Aid To BA Graduates I The Harvard Graduate School | of Business Administration is of fering its third annual nationwide competition for Regional Financial Aid Awards. One hundred and ten awards in eight regions of the United States are avalahlc to well-qualified stu- j dents who need financial help to continue their education in the graduate field of business adminis-1 tration, Donald Davis, dean of the Harvard Business School, has an-; nounced. Awards under the Regional Fin ancial Aid Program for 1951-52 provides a maximum of $2,600 for ■ married students, and $2,000 fori single students. The amount is ad justed to the individual need. Applicants are judged on their’ intellectual capacity, character, maturity, and ability to work with other people. Ten awards will be offered in the Pacific Northwest region. Deadline for applications to tliei Committee on Student Financial! Aid at the Harvard.Business School is May 1. Public Welfare Town Hall Topic The Little Town Hall lecture series, under the sponsorship of tjje; Eugene YMCA, will present a forum discussion on "Are We Spending Enough For Public Wel fare in Lane County?" at 8 tonight at the First Congregational Church, 490 13th Ave. E. Speakers and their respective j topics will be Max L. Dudley, ad ministrator for Lane County's Pub lic Welfare Commission, "From the Angle of Public Welfare"; Leslie' A. White, president of the Lane j County Medical Society, "From the Angle of Medical Care"; D. T. Bay-1 ly, county judge and chairman of I the Lane County Board of Com missioners, "From the Angle of i Lane County"; and William Tug- j man, editor of Eugene Register i Guard, "From the Angle of 'Mr. U. Public' ”, Kil l Montgomery, assistant pro-! feasor of speech, will be the forum moderator. YMCA members on the Little Town Hall committee are John Ty seU,'chairman, Jack Foskett, K. E. j Montgomery, Charles Hunt, Wesley | Nicholson, Lloyd DeLess, J. R.■ Bruckart, Stanley Darling', Dean Lobaugh, and A. F. Holmer. . An Oklanoma man saw his wife for the first time in five years. All women like shopping sprees. Marine Biology Institute to Hold Summer Session at Coos Bay invertebrate biology, according to| Lockely. The Institute of Marine Biology will hold its annual summer ses sion at Coos Bay during the regular University of Oregon summer school period, according to A. S. Lockely, instructor in biology. The institute owns about 85 acres of property along Coos Bay and the ( ocean front, including such varied : regions of biological interest as forests, coastar lakes, fossil beds, streams, a river, and the bay itself. Teaching at the Institute will be Ivan Pratt, resident manager of the Oregon Institute of Biology and associate professor of zoology at Oregon State College, and A. S. Lockely from the University. Pratt: will teach vertebrate biology, and; the taxonomy, distribution and ecology of marine and invei te brates of the Coes Bay area. Lockely will teach ichthyology or field zoology, and advanced marine ecology. Ichthyology Ichthyology is the study of the anatomy, classification, distribu tion, evolution, and physiology of fishes. Marine ecology is the con sidcrction of certain biological, i chemical and physical factors in volving marine animals and their environment. This is open to stu dents who have had a course in Oil Company Offers Jobs To BA Juniors Juniors in business administra tion interested in the summer train ing program of the General Petro leum Company will have a chance i to talk about that program with a representative of the company, Bob Powell, Wednesday. Powell will be on campus to in terview prospective job holders for the company. Special opportunities are being offered juniors who can train for permanent assignments in sales work, later working up to managerial positions. Appointments for conferences with Mr. Powell can be arranged with the graduate placement ser vice in Emerald Hall. Henry Villard helped the Uni versity pay off some of its old, debts and donated money which' was needed for certain necessary! tools of instruction which the Uni-! varsity lacked. His donations were | the first of any importance to public higher, education in Oregon. Field zoology is the field and laboratory study of invertebrates of the Coos Bay region, with par- j ticular emphasis on the identifica tion and natural history of cold blooded vertebrates. This course; will be of use to teachers in grade | schools and secondary schools as well as to biology student?. Loeklev ' stated. Also carried out at the institute's summer session will be a study of the methods of collection and the identification of local marine and fresh water forms, as well as some experimental work on the factors limiting the distribution of fishes. This will be useful to teachers and to students majoring in Biology and who have had a course in biol ogy or zoology, he said. fx&’it'miti by Tom Burns, Jr. Reasonable Guaranteed Call 5-5137 WHY PAY MORE? L< >XCf PL.WIN'C, RKC< )RDS (33 1-3 R.P.AI.) i 30C OFF free complete CATALC)C,UE AXD PRICE LIST. ,W rite To: J RECORD HAVEN INC. J (1 >ept. C ) 520 West 48th St.. New York, 19, X. Y. 4-9311 HEIIJG r Jane Powell, Fred Astaire "Royal Wedding” Loretta Young ? “Cause For Alarm” iJMiMai Bette Davis Anne Baxter "All About Eve” 4 04 3! LANE George Montgomery "Iroquois Trail” Gene Autry "Mule Train” MC KENZIE £& I’l SPKlNGriE LO 7-2201 Myma Loy "If This Be Sin” Paul Henried-Katherine McLeod “So Young, So Bad” varsity;^ Spade Cooley "Everybody’s Dancing’ Robert Stockwell “Belle of Old Mexico” Co-Op Members i For your own protection please ob serve the following: 1. Be sure you have a membership. 2. If for any reason you drop out of school during the year please leave your cash register receipts in the proper envelope at the office of the Co-op. have your envelopes turned in to the Co-op before May 20th. The deadline for these receipts is usual ly sometime in the last week of May. 4. Checks will be mailed to students who have dropped out of school. 5. Patronage Refunds will only be paid to students with memberships on record at the Co-op. 6. The refund is paid in cash during final examination week spring term. 7. Turn in 6nly one envelope. If an other is required please staple to gether. Be sure your name, home address and membership number is on the envelope. 8. The last day for purchasing mem berships is May 1st. UNIVERSITY OF OREGQN CO-OP STORE