Senate Members, Moms' Chairman To Be Selected Petitions Requested For Vacant Offices The ASUO senate will fill two aenate vacancies and Delect a gen eral chairman for Mothers Day at its first meeting of spring term to night at 6:30. Senate positions to bo filled are sophomore class representative and freshman class vice-prcBident. The vacancies occurred when Janet Miller, sophomore in speech, and Mob Buchanan, freshman in an thropology, who previously held the positions failed to make a 2 point GPA winter term and were declared ineligible. Pat Dignan, ASUO president, announced that petition deadline for these offices and for the Moth ers Day chairmanship is 5 p.m. to day. Petitions may be turned In at the ASUO office, SU 304. Any sophomore or freshman who I had a 2-point GPA last term and has a 2-point accumulative GPA is eligible to petition for the va- | cant office of his class. Petitioners for the class offices find the chairmanship are request-! ed to be present at the senate meeting to be held in SU 334 for their interviews, Dignan said. SU Petitions Due For (i Vacancies Deadline for petitions for the six vacancies on the Student Union board is 5 p.m. Wednesday, ac- j cording to Dan Zavin, board as- j sistant chairman. Petitions should be turned in at S.U. board chair man's office, S.U. 310 or left in t ho petition box on the third floor. Only sophomores are eligible to petition for representative posi tions from the schools of music, health and physical education, ar chitecture and allied arts, and the college of liberal arts. Other va cancies include the law and gradu ate schools. Applicants must meet regular University requirements including scholarship, residence here during the two previous terms and be a major in the school they represent, Zavin announced. The board will nominate candi dates April 15 to fill the posts of member at large, a one-year term on the board for two representa tives from the junior class, and a two-year term for a member of the sophomore class. Petitions &re not required for these positions. 6 J-School Majors Pledged by SDX Six journalism majors were tapped Monday for membership in Sigma Delta Chi, national journal ism fraternity. They will be for mally initiated April 17. Men pledged were Dave Averill, junior; Len Calvert, sophomore; Joe Gardner, junior; Bill Gurney; junior; A1 Martin, junior, and Paul Stanfield, graduate student. Ellingson Gives Advice on Draft Freshmen men who have re ceived their physical notices can request draft deferment for the remainder of the term, according to Counselor of Men 81 Efllng son. The draft boards first send the student his notice for a phys ical. After taking the physical, the student must send a personal letter to the board requesting deferment and must request the registration office to verify his registration in school. Then, Ellingson said, the stu dent may get a notice of Induc tion before he receives his re classification to 1-8 or before he receives a notice of postpone ment of induction. Ellingson suggested that any student who has received his physical or induction notice may ! discuss the situation at the of- | flee of student affairs. (JO Air Cadets Schedule Review The annual mass review of all ; Air Force ROTC cadets is slated for the drill field today at 1 p.m. The University's Air Force depart ment will be inspected by a team j of visiting officers consisting of Col. John A. Cosgrove, Lt. Col. Wayne B. Fulton and Major Dewight L. Harley. The detachment will be ranked against the other 200 Air Force! units under the direction of the Air university at Montgomery, Ala. The inspection is to determine the amount and adequacy of training in this unit. Each marching unit will pass the review stand and the visiting team will judge their drill proficiency. That group which ranks the high est in the review will receive an award of merit. Four Professors Qualify For Ford Foundation Aid Total of $25,300 For 'Best in West' All four of Oregon’s candidates for Ford Foundation fellowships have been accepted by that organi zation, Eldon Johnson, dean of the college of liberal arts, has an nounced. Grants of $25,300 have been made to the group by the Fund for Advancement of Educa tion. This year’s winners are Earl Pomeroy, associate professor of history; Bernardo Gicovate, assist ant professor of- romance lan guages; Frank Massey, assistant professor of mathematics, and Francis Reithel, associate profes-j sor of chemistry. Oregon Has Top Record Acceptance of the four nomina tions for the second time in three I years gives the University the best record in the Northwest and one I of the best in the West, Johnson1 said. Two years ago four faculty members received grants from the foundation and last year one award was received. Most of Pomeroy’s year will be spent at the University of Califor nia and at Huntington library where he w-ill study Western so cial and cultural history. He will also tour the United States inves tigating instructional programs in history in various universities. Gicovate Plans Columbia Study Gicovate will study aesthetics and contemporary literature at Columbia university. Post doctoral study of the bio chemistry plants and micro-organ ims at the University of California will be the project of Reithel. Massey, who plans a study of the application of mathematics and statistics to the social sciences, will spend the year of his fellowship at Harvard university. The awards are made to promis ing yopng faculty members to pro vide an opportunity for further preparation for effective college teaching, Johnson said. POW Trade Offer Accepted by Allies