Are You Planning To Spend the SUMMER In Los Angeles? COMPLETELY FURNISHED APTS. AVAILABLE— WITH SWIMMING POOL & SI N DECKS IN WESTWOOD VILLAGE —Two Block* from UCLA Campus _ $40.00 EACH for 1 In Apt. TJ X ippQJ m Per Month JXxlL X JZlO . $30.00 EACH for 8 WRITE TO: MANAGER: 901 LEVERING AVE.. L. A. 24 FOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATION mm "The Store of a Thousand Bargains" 666 Willamette PHOXK 4-6366 LawScholarship Interviews Set Candidates from Oregon for the Hoot-Tilden Scholarships offered by the New York University School of Law will he interviewed by Chief Justice James T. Brand of the Supreme Court of Oregon on June 14, 15, or 16 In the Supreme Court building in Salem. Dean Kussell D. Niles of NYU made the announcement and alsc said that the time for filing appli cations for the scholarships ha. been extended to the end of May. Assisting Chief Justice Brand in the interviewing will be E. K. Op penheimer, president of the Oregon Bar Association, and Charles A Sprague, editor anti publisher oi the Oregon Statesman. The scholarships were named foi two graduates of the NYU law school, Elihu Boot and Samuel .J Tilden, and will be offered each year to enable 20 young men to at tend the school. Scholarship candidates are nom inated by a committee in each state and the final selections are made by a regional committee in each of the ten Federal Judicial Circuits. Candidates chosen from Oregon by Chief Justice Brand and his group will be interviewed by a com mittee from the Ninth Federal Cir cuit. Chief Judge William Denman | and Federal Reserve Bank Chair j man Brayton Wilbur, both of Her I Francisco, and E. B. MacNaugh l ton, president of Reed College, will 'be committee members. &4C'cUtA>iu&l*f fjOSi Jlun SHAVING LOTION & TALC $2.00 Richer, creamier, moisture-retaining lather for smoother, faster shaves in this man-size mug of non-drying Shave Soap GOLDT'.X TOXKD DUO—Shaving Lotion and Men’s Talc, or Cologne ELECTRIC SHAVERS SCHICK “20” $24.50 SUNBEAM SHAVE MASTER a wn REMINGTON RAND Models, $22.50 up Edwin Sheely Due to Retire From UO Press Edwin H. Shot-ley, better known ns "Ed" to students working at tlie University Press, submitted hla re tliement papers this week after 311 j years of service to the Univer sity. l Eyes twinkling through his gold ! rimmed glasses, Ed told the Emer | aid reporter that watching the Press grow from nothing into u ! print shop, along with the growth of t u- entire University, had been quite an experience. He also stated I that he had enjoyed working with j most of the students very much, and that, on the whole, they were j very pleasant. Before coming to the University ; Eil worked in the state printing of fice, and at various shops in Port land and around the country. After j coming to Eugene, he liked the [ town and the people so well that he i just couldn't move away. A married, family man, Ed said that now he expects to work at his woodworking hobby, and help out his friends now anil then when they ! need him. Ed assisted in putting out the first Old Oregon, and when the Oregon Daily Emerald came into being he helped with that too. He has continued his work on the Em erald through the years. When Ed began working at the University, the print shop was lo cated in the basement of McClure Hall, and the composing and bind ing room was an old shed attach ed to the side of McClure and the Journalism building. But after one 1 (ire scare when the Woman's Gym ((located next to McClure at that I time), one fire which destroped the Press completely, the Press has (settled in a neat and spacious con I crete structure behind the new sci i ence building. Librarians Plan All-day Meet Oregon Library Association, 1 state association of professional 1 librarians, will hold an all-day | meeting Saturday on campus. Kegistratton is at 9:30 a m. in the Student Union, followed by a | business meeting at 10 a.m. A , luncheon will be held at noon in 1 the SU Ballroom. Marshall Dana, former editor of 1 Lhe Oregon Journal editorial page, | will speak on the ‘‘Romance of the ' Oregon Country" at the luncheon. ! Victor P. Morris, dean of the j School of Business Administration, 1 will welcome the librarians to the j University. A panel discussion on Pacific . Northwest library development is ! scheduled from 2 to 3:3C p.m. in | the SU. Miss Dorothy Neil, high school librarian, and Mrs. Jose i phine Matslor, Springfield public library, will discuss problems of smell high school and public li braries. Miss Muriel Mitchell, Rose burg public library, will talk on what larger units of service can do. j Mrs. Eva A. Moore, of the Wash ] ington County Library Boar d, will discuss working with the Friends ! of Libraries in Washington Coun ty. C. W. Hintz, University li brarian, will summarize, evaluate, and give recommendations. Miss ; Eleanor Stephens is moderator for ; the panel. Tea will be served rn the library from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m. There will also be tours of the library atu;ax and showings of the fUm, "Kcyr to the Library,” made by Pasadena City College. An attendance of about 150 members is expected, according to Miss Elizabeth Findly, head of the University reference library and president of the association. At the time of the first United States census in 1790, one out of every eight persons was a slave, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica. An expert says flowers can shout shriek or whisper. Maybe it’s a good thing we can’t hear them when we pick them. Jliitenittf 3*-g, ...0«KWAX 88.1 megacycle'll on your FM radio dial Today: 5:00 p.m. Plano Moods 5:10 Gwent Star 5:25 Newa 5:80 Music in the Air 0:00 Through the Bnok nhelve* 0:15 Table Hopping 0:80 Religious News 0:45 Campos Interview 7:00 IHxlograpby 7:80 C’aatell Speaks 8:00 Friday Night Bequest 9:55 Adventures in ICcseurch 10:00 Friday Night Request 10:55 A Tune to Nay (iuodnilCht Sunday: 8:00 p.m. An Afternoon at the Opera 0:00 Songs for Sunday 0:55 News Wc Almost For got Garrett Recital ^ Set for Sunday At Music School Glen Garrett, French horn play er, will be the featured recitalist in a program at 4 p.m. Sunday in the School of Music Auditorium. Garrett will be assisted in the Mozart Quintet for Horn and Strings by Sally Uchty, Larry Moves. Bob Groth, and Marjorie Carlson, on the violin, viola, violin and cello respectively. On tlie Brahms Trio for violin, horn and piano, Garrett's assistants will be Aubrey Brist. violin, and William Wood, pianist. Wood wdl also accompany him in Hinderouth Sonata for Horn and Piano. Garrett was soloist with the con cert band on tour last spring term. He Is a member of Pi Kappa Phi fraternity and also of Phi Mu Al pha Slnfonia, men's music honor ary. He has held the first chair in the horn section for three years now', performing in both band and orchestra, and is also a member of tne chamber music group led by Arnold Elston, associate professor of music. Informal Recital To Be Presented Students of George Hopkins, pro fessor of piano, will give an in formal recital at 10 a m. Saturday in the School of Music Auditorium? Frances Baum, junior in music, will perform Mozart's "Concerto in C Minor,” while Joyce Everson, senior in music, will play Piston's "Concert ian.” Dorothy Pederson, freshman in music, will complete the group by playing Schumann's "Concerto." This is a regular class, but since it is the last group meeting, it will be open to the public to dem onstrate members, progress. Physics Profs Meet at Reed Four University of Oregon pro fessors will speak at the fifty seventh meeting of the Oregon section of the American Associa tion of Physics Teachers which will be held Saturday at Reed College in Portland. Francis E. Dart, associate pro fessor of physics, will speak on "The Detection of Soft X-rays with a Scintillation Counter.” Ron ald Paul, graduate assistant in physics, will give a paper on “Energy Loss of Beta Rays iirV Solid Anthroacene.” E. G. Eggib-^ hausen, associate profesor of phys ics, will speak on "The Systematics of Alpha Decay,” and Will V. Norris, professor of physics, will present the report from the asso ciations national committee.