CLASSIFIED Place your ad at the Student Union, main desk or at the Shock, In person or phone ext. 210, betw'een 2 and 4 p.m. Monday to Friday. Kate*: Flint Insertion 4c per word; subsequent Insertion* 2c per word. • MISCELLANEOUS § TYPING Thesis typed at reason . able prices. Richards Secretarial * Service, 3 390 Willamette. Phorle 5-0845. tf • FOR RENT ATTRACTIVE furnished apt. 3 room* und bath. Heat and water fumiahed. $73 month. 1261 Alder, i Phone, 5-1750, 74 ' ’ • WANTED ' AGGRESSIVE LAW STUDENT wanted as our law brief repre > aentatlve. Earn $100-$300 the first part of next semester. Kor further details, write Terrace Law Publishers lnc„ 829 Mar garet Street, Mint, Michigan. 74 j Race Information Given City (Continued from pagei ne) for improving entrances to Eugene and the waterfront area. ", . . But it isn't up to me,” he explained, "to say what can be done.” The Eugene city council alone can put the bonds up for sale. Money from the bond issue, some senators thought, might be used for Millrace park. They be lieved that little could be done to improve the race from the head culvert under Franklni boulevard. They suggested water in the upper r ace could be speeded up by open ing the overflow gate, located just above the top culvert under Frank lin, and returned it to the Willam ette at that point. The senate took no formal ac tion following the report a mo tion to request the council to sell the bonds being withdrawn. They were to assemble present Millrace park plans into a program to pre sent to the council at a later date. I Flunks Driving Test Without Trouble OMAHA, Neb. (U.R) — Edwin Forte, 37, didn’t make much im pression on workers at the police auto testing station here. Attendants said Forte drove into the station at high speed, ran ^trough a stop sign at the entrance and smashed into the brake test ing machine before stopping his car. Forte was fined $10 and costs for reckless driving. His car still hadn’t been tested. License Plates Tempt Cow's Sweet Tooth WESTON, W. Va. - (U.R) - A Lewis County farmer has an idea that West Virginia's new a temp orary license plates have too much sweetening in them. The farmer reported to the state motor vehicle department that one of his cows had eaten his plates while his car was parked overnight in a pasture. The plates, first issued this year under the state's new motor vehi cle code, are made of cardboard. $850,000 Building Dedicated at OSC ■ Oregon isn’t the only school in < the state with new construction ‘ underway or almost completed. | The $850,000 Food Technology building at Oregon State college was dedicated Monday. The new structure is one of two recently completed on that campus. ■ The other is the Animal Indus tries building, costing $1,190,000. And an additional $360,000 was k spent in alterations to the Home ^Economics building. Rhode Island never ratified the prohibition amendment. Transfers Prevail Among Grads Two-thirds of the 100 graduate students enrolled in the University full term did their undergraduate work at institutions other than the University, according to statistics released this week by Dean Eldon L. Johnson, head of the college of liberal arts and the graduate school. More than half of the graduate students were from outside the btate. Thirty-eight states and 13 foreign countries are represented. Most of the graduate students come from the immediately ad jacent states of California, Wash ington and Idaho. Next to these states, the analysis showed that tlir population centers of Illinois. Michigan and New York ranked next. A break-down of the total fig ure 490 showed that the number of bachelor's degrees from the Uni versity was 166 while the number from the state of Oregon was 238. Chief out-of-state sources, ranked In order, are: California, Washing ton, Idaho, Colorado, Illinois, Min nesota, Michigan, Iowa and Ne braska. The study excluded all students with graduate standing who are still working toward the first pro fessional degree. 'The Unconscious Scholar' or Don't Let College Get You Down By Ann Moyes As we stroll across tlie campus, friends look at us and say, "She hasn’t let college get her down. She still has the carefree attitude and the blank stare of a high school kid”. It has been our habit to observe with amusement the mistakes that other students make at college. The time has come, however, to set people right. The valuable secrets which show the layman how to study without being aware of it are compiled in the following work, which shall be called "How to be an Unconscious Scholar”. I he assignment is important enough to be considered first. An assignment is a dull, repulsive dose of work that is "due Monday”. It is an unbearable chore that adul terates a student's free time. I»one Mechanically The task, if performed at all, is done mechanically; the prescribed number of pages are read, each word is gazed at dutifully. Then 'he student closes his book and is at a loss to remember what text he has been balancing on his knee. The method of avoiding pain and ■stress of assignments is simple and almost magic, though at first glance it may seem to be sheer lunacy. Merely keep yourself one or two chapters in advance of the class. Studying ahead is pioneer ing; venturing into new territory where you notice the landmarks simply because you haven't been told to look at them. You are your own boss, strolling easily through the book, just far enough ahead of compulsion to be comfortable and receptive. You are eading the class, with exams, at least. Don’t Torture Yourself The second secret involves clo watching. This is where 98 cent of the students torture th< selves needlessly. They com wall clock and wristwatch, c yinced that one timepiece is a di lair. Quarter after, and it must time for the bell. You must ignore all timepiet Bear in mind that knowing w time it is will not make a per shorter, but not knowing will. T has worked so well for me tha have not been conscious of a cl for several months. I am seriou considering asking for a tuition fund. Scheduling of classes should mentioned here. Line up your s jects so you are booked solid fi 8 a.m. until 11 a.m. At at 11.15 when you are just wak up and ready to enjoy the day suddenly realize the worst par it is over. It's really a great f mg. Another major topic the ambi tious young loafer must think about is carrying books. Yes, those texts and notebooks with which you insist upon weighting yourself down. It is absolutely un necessary to bring books to most nIa8» meetings, in spite of this faet, students continue to travel at half speed with an idiotic over load. This is a throwback to grade school, when the teacher said, “Be sure to bring your primers every day, children, because we will be reading aloud in class, all about John and Nancy and their father and mother and their dog and cat and we don’t want to miss a word of it do we? Also, the school owns these primers, and we don't want to be charged two dollars when we show up wihtout one. do we?" Just a Sheet of Paper In regard to notebooks, I can °nh give you a solution that should have been apparent long be fore this. A single sheet of paper for each class will suffice. These may be carried in pocket or purse and put into a notebook as they are filled. You will be in twenty four hour possession of live notes with which yon are currently con cerned. Suppose you are near the library sometime during the week end and happen to remember a reference book you should get. If you were an average notebook wn.iwV*16 nfU11° of the v°iume would be at home. You are a true loafer, however, so the vital notes Mre»r,whnthere in your pocket . . . No . Well, try your purse . . How about those coat pockets? . . . Sav way?klnfl °f E loafer are -vou' any I Astromers to Take Closer Look at Sun BERKELEY, Calif.-(U.fi)-Astron omers will be able soon to take a close look at the sun through pow . ‘J. lnstruments that can create artificial eclipses. Dr. Walter Orr Roberts of the University of Colorado said in a lecture at the University of Cali forma here that an instnunent called a coronograph can cause a man-made eclipse by cutting off the bright light from the sun so its ounter atmosphere can be seen in detail. Roberts said scientists would study with the coronograph the northern lights.- which are be lieved to originate from streams of particles, protons and electrons from the sun. Scientists also would study solar radio static that is often strong enough to upset radio reception. Thief Scorns Judge FORT WORTH, Tex. (UR) -- Things aren't even safe in a judge s office, it seems. Mrs. Ima ddle Kerr, secretary to Tarrant County Judge Gus Brown, reported theft of her purse from her desk while her back was turned. Is he bashful, is he shy? Then here's your chance to get that guy. (Heart Hop Friday.! (/ok Ofifia’UuHiUel The officer procurement office of the U.S. Marine Corps announces its officer candidate course to he held at Quantico, Virginia, on March 17, 1952. Applicants must clear Fort land by Feb. 15. This program is for recent graduates of the University. The Marine Corps headquarters is assigned a quota of 15 men for the class and at the present there are only 6 men accepted. HeyOnd iphysicaK requirements all a candi date has to have is a degree and be between the ages of 20-27^ E^e, an<| deptal jinquire*. nients have been reduced to 13-20 vision for each eye and 18 sreviceable teeth. Tom Marshall, of General Electric's inter viewing staff, will be on the Oregon campus Feb. 4 to interview members of the March and June graduating classes. Although from G.E.’s Hanford plant, Marshall will speak with those interested in the Schenectady operations of the company. Physicists, chemists, and business administra tion graduates arc needed at this time, his company has announced, i tit Jones Returns From Colorado Catherine Jones, instructor in business administration, returned recently from the University of Colorado in Boulder where she completed work for her master s degree in business administration. Miss Jones, who taught typing classes while at Colorado, wrote her master's thesis on the sui> Jcct "The history and present stat us of commerical education in Ore gon from 1863 to 1951.'' HEILIG STARTS THURSDAY Hf LED 200 WOMEN ON A OUT AND DAIING ADVENTURE! 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