CLASSIFIED I'lMd your ad at the Student I Union, main desk or at thn Shack, In person or phone ext. 219, between 2 and 4 f m. Monday-Frlday. Kate*: First Insertion 4c a word; NulMeqiieat Insertions, 2c per word. 'OR RENT: CHARMING rcdcc. 3 rtri. unfurn. upt. Lovely kitch, with eating a.ca. Fine location. I’rlv. bath. Adults (52.50. Ph. 4-0270 or 4-7181. 108 WANTED: Companion: long, red haired shaggy dog. Slightly un conventional and shy. Contact H Dec Witherspoon 6-1775 after 10 p.m. H. Dee. 108 1-OK SALK: Satin wedding gown, size 18. Original cost $100.00, w ill sell for $40 00. Phone 43980. 108 i OK SALE: $20 Zenith portable radio. Plastic ease battery of house current. Originally $46.00. 6-4257 ufter 6. 108 J/OST : Electric razor Remington threesome. Reward. Ph. 4-2894. _ 110 hi I960, there were about four j>aft< Mger cars for every commer cial vehicle in the United States, but the average commercial car traveled nearly four tiraea as far as the average pleasure car. Yet there were 32,140 passenger cars involved (n fatal accidents, and only 9,320 commercial ears. HAND DIPPED Chocolates & Fudge Made in Eugene SUGAR PLUM 63 K. Broadway fUVibiaiU by Tom Burns, Jr. Reasonable Guaranteed Call 5-5137 HEIUG A 9311 Spencer Tracy Joan Bennett Elizabeth Taylor 'Father’s Little Dividend” “Hit Parade of 1951“ Judy Holliday “Born Yesterday” LAN E*c* i “West Point Story” with James Cagney, Virginia Mayo also “Three Secrets” with Eleanor Barker , Patricia Neal MCKENZIES^ I I’l ‘•P^NOFIE.tD 7-I201 Jane Powell Fred Astaire “Royal Wedding” Alexis Smith Scott Brady “Under Cover Girl’ V'ns'ru,,.. Pat O’Brien “Johnny One-Eye” Dan Duryea “The Under World Story’ CASCADE Drive In Theatre “Winchester 73” with James Stewart, Shelly Winters also “Peggy” with. Diana Lynn, Charles Coburn Gen. Gray — an Oregonian VA Chief Finds 'Homecoming' in Willamette Valley Visit The gravel-voiced Adminlstra tor of Veterans' Affairs was in Eugene Monday night, and the visit was like an unannounccil homecoming for hirn. Buck in the days when the Ore gon Electric and the Kouthn ri Pacific Railway lines were fight ing a track-laying battle up the Willamette Valley, with Kan Fran cisco the destination, young Carl It. Gray was heading the Oregon Electric forces. His contribution was the construction of the Oregon Electric track from Salem to Eu gene in 1912. Today 62-ycar-oia Carl R. Gray is a Major General in the United States Army and over-lord of the massive Veterans' Administration, having succeeded Gen. Omar N. Bradley to the position in Novem ber 1947. As VA administrator Gen. Gray is watchdog of the larg est medical program, educational and rehabitational systems, and in surance business in the world. Gen. Gray, stopped overnight at | the Kngcnc Hotel, while enroutej from .Seattle, where he officiated! at ttie opening of the new VA hos-! pital there, to Kan Francisco.} While in Portland Monday he in-! spected the facilities of the Vete- ■ rans' Administration there. Tues day morning the 'General left by! automobile for Koseberg, Medford, Klamath Falls, and San Francisco. He expects to stay on the West Coast until May 1 at which time} he will return to Washington, L). C. estimate* (if Benefits Gen. Gray estimated that there! were still 1,500,000 veterans of World War II receiving GI educa-1 tional benefits. This figure repre sents a irop of 500,000 since 1948. Wrhen he stepped into his present Job Gen. Gray set about streamlin ing what he considered to be the inefficient handling of the huge task of administering the National Service Life Insurance program operated by the YrA. The former railroad executive and veteran of i two World Wars called in Frank-, lin D'OIier, president of Prudential1 Life Insurance Company, to do the ' job. He said Monday night that as a result of his efforts the insur ance program had been operating, smoothly for quite some time. "Ask Congress, they pass the: bills, I just administer them,” the ! General said when queried about1 possibilities of a more stringent' handling of veterans affairs. Kccalls Kauroad History The ruddy-faced military man enjoyed recalling his part in the historic Willamette Valley railroad construction race! At the time he participated in it (1911-12) he was, only 23-years-oId; but he left his’ mark on the local countryside in the form of the Oregon Electric ! trackage from Salem to Eugene, the railroad's single-span lift 1 bridge over the Willamette between Fa-risburg and Junction City, and the Oregon Electric depot now' controlled by the Spokane, Po t land. and Seattle Railroad ISP & S) at Fifth and Willamette m Eugene. The general recalled that he "built the depot about 39 years ago'i According to R. V. Mills, assist ant professor of English and ex peit on Oregon railroads, Gray was forced to build the expensive singie .‘■pan lift bridge (similar to the Steel Bridge in Portland) across the V\ illamette when the river was declared navigable to Eugene. After the OE had built its com plicated bridge the river was ce clared unnavigabie allowing t'.e SP to build a simpler and cheaper type bridge. The steamer employed by Giay to haul steel to the bridge site from Portland was the last river boat to navigate the Willamette to Harrisburg. The Oregon Electric, though 'o longer electric, still operates an the Portland-Eugene run. Major Norn Hays, Oklahoma A&M, *401 -Aviation Executive, US. Air force! | A native of Grove, Oklahoma, Norman Hays graduated from Grove High School in 1935. The following year he entered Oklahoma A&M, where he majored In engineering; also took puBlic speaking. Sent to an RAF Navigation School in Canada, he graduated with the highest possible rating of Specialist. Norman served overseas for 18 months' in the Aleutians, Italy and Saipan. —* fiSsajir" 1 Active in national 4H Club work -while in college, he helped organize its statewide activities, won a national 4H champion ship in Public Speaking. In 1940 he re ceived his BS degree in engineering. Accepting a regular commission after the war, he was assigned to development of navigation instruments; navigated the B-29 “Pacusan Dreamboat” on its famed Hawaii-Cairo non-6top flight in 1946. A month later he began navigator train- < ing as an Aviation Cadet. In 1941, ha received his navigator's wings and s commission as Second Lieutenant . , , j married his college sweetheart. ■'A Typical of college graduates who have found their place in the U. S. Air Force, Major Hays is Chief. Navigation Section, at Headquarters in Washington . . . with a secure career ... a promising future. If you are single, between the ages of SO and 26bs, with at least two years of college, consider a flying career as an officer in the V. S. Air Force. You may be able to meet the high physical and moral requirements and be selected for training. If you do not complete Aviation Cadet training, you may return to civilian life or have opportunity to train for an important officer assignment in non-flying fields. Air Force officer procurement teams are visiting tunny colleges and universities to explain about these career opportunities. Watch, for their arrival or get full details at your nearest Air Force Base, local re cruiting station, or by writing to the Chief of Staff. U. S. Air Force, Attention: Avia tion Cadet Branch, Washington £5, D. C. U. S. AIR FORCE ONLY THE BEST CAN BE AVIATION CADETS!