Business Meeting Set for Thursday “The Business Community’s Stake in Education” has been sel ected as the theme for the an nual West Central Oregon Busi ness-Education conference here Thursday. E. B. MacNaughton, chairman of the Board of the First National Bank of Portland, will address the luncheon meeting on “The Busi ness Community’s Stake in Edu cation—How Can We Cope with the Problem?”.' Victor P. Morris, interim president of the Universi ty, will preside over the luncheon session. Eugene Caldwell, vice-president and general manager of the Hys ter company, and John Richards, vice - chancellor of the Oregon State System of Higher Educa tion, will discuss “The Problems of the Next Years.” Also participating in the con ference will be Clifford E. Maser, dean of the school of business and technology at Oregon State col lege, and William C. Jones, ex ecutive director of the Western interstate Commission for Higher Education. Jones was formerly dean of administration at the Uni versity. Poetry Contest Open to Women In conjunction with its Febru ary publication of the late Dylan Thomas, verse play “Under the Milk Wood,” Mademoiselle maga zine is offering two $100 Dylan Thomas Awards for best poems by young women writers. One prize will go to a woman college student under 30, the other to a woman under thirty who may or may not be a college graduate. Deadline for entries is April 15. According to the rules of the contest, poems submitted to the magazine may not have been pub lished previously except in college publications. No writer may send in rhore than three poems. Thomas’ manuscript was given to Mademoiselle magazine only a week before his death at the age of thirty-nine. The first publica tion is illustrated by pictures of Thomas at home in his native Welsh village which inspired the play. Pre-Med Students Face Examination Candidates for admission to medical school in the fall of 1955 should take the medical college admission tests in May, the Edu cation testing service has announ ced. The tests will be given May 8 and November X . ' The examination, which cpnsists of tests of general scholastic abil ity, the understanding of modern society, and achievement in sci ence, is required for applicants by almost every medical college in the country. Application, forms and a bulle tin of information are available from pre-medical advisers or from the Educational Testing Service, Box 592, Princeton, N. J. Deadline for the submission of applications is April 24. Chinese Art Exhibit Now in SU Gallery An exhibit of Chinese art is now on display in the Student Union art gallery, according to Barbara Johnson, art gallery chairman. On display until Feb. 13 will be paintings by Sze-Kew Chen, graduate in geography. Miss Chen, from Formosa, received her train ing in art from Professor Juin Van Huang, who was art instruc tor of Madame Chiang Kai-shek. Besides Miss Chen’s paintings, a show case of the materials which she uses in her paintings is also on exhibit. JHuienimf. On ...Oh KWAX I l MONDAY— 6:00 p. m. Sign On 6:03 Piano Moods 6:15 Guest Star 6:30 Guest Star 6:30 News Till Now 6:45 Four for a Quarter 7:00 Showtime 7:30 Chicago Roundtable 8:00 Campus Recital 8:30 University Radio Forum 9:00 Kwaxworks 10:50 News Headlines 10:55 Tune to Say Goodnight 11:00 Sign Off WRA Award Cup Put on Term Basis An experiment to award the Women’s Recreation association cup on a term basis, rather than annually as has been done in the past, is being initiated winter term, according to Mary Jordan, WRA president. The cup will be given at the beginning of this spring term. The participation cup is award ed to the women's living organi zation which participates most ex tensively in the WRA sports pro gram. Points for winning the cup are based on the percentage of girls in each house participating in WRA intramurals, plus each girl's amount of participation, Miss Jordan said. In the past, it has been awarded during Junior j weekend. Formerly, the number of games won and lost also figured as a basis for the awards but this is being discontinued, she said. “WRA is taking these steps in an effort to make the cup more accessible to houses with a small membership, who participate but do not win,’’ Miss Jordan said. “We are attempting to work out j a more comprehensive program to meet the desires of women stu dents in the field of athletics.’’ Sports offered this term on the WRA program include badminton 1 and basketball. If any living or ganization has not received ad-; vance material on the program, ; they are asked to contact Betty Waters, head of sports, at the physical education office in Ger linger. California Teachers To Interview Here Teaching candidates interested in and qualified for California teaching positions should contact the Teacher Placement service im mediately, according to Earl M. Pallett, placement director. Representatives from San Di- j ego, Sacramento, Oakland, San Francisco, Fall River Mills, Long Beach and Bakersfield are sched uled to visit the campus soon and it is necessary for the placement office to know which registrants wish to be available for inter views, Pallett said. SELL IT THRU THE WANTADS ROOMS — Clean, warm, quiet. 1263 Patterson, Ph. 3-2003. LOST: Grey Parker ’51, name en graved. Between 13th and Hen dricks. Call Ext. 489 1-28 WANTED: College students for National Educational Sales Or ganization. Average earnings $75 a week. Contact the Student Employment Office to arrange for personal interviews which will be held 10-12 a. m. daily this Traffic Conference Opens on Campus The third annual traffic court conference opened today on cam pus, under the joint sponsorship of the Oregon law school and the general extension division of the State System of Higher Educa tion. Also cooperating in the confab, scheduled to run through Wednes day, are the American Bar as sociation and the Traffic Institute of Northwestern university. Today’s schedule includes a ses sion of “Traffic Court Arrests" this afternoon. Capt. Walter Lan sing, Salem, director of the Ore gon State police, will preside. Capt. Gene Ferguson of the traf fice safety division of the Port land city police, and Robert L. Donigan, counsel for the Traffic Institute, Northwestern university, will also participate. The Oregon Association of Mu nicipal Judges will also meet this afternoon with H. R. Jordan, Ash land municipal judge presiding. Registration began this morn ing at 8:30 and the meeting con vened at 9:15 a.m. Opening addresses by Philip G. Hoffman, vice-dean of the gen eral extension division, Portland; Orlando J. Hollis, dean of the law school, and William C. Perry, as sociate justice of the Oregon State supreme court. This morning’s session was on “The Importance of Traffic Courts.” Presiding was William G. East, judge of the circuit court for the second judicial district, Eugene. Feb. Date Slated i For Alum Confab Professional alumni workers representing colleges in Oregon, Montana, Washington, Idaho and British Columbia will meet on :ampus Feb. 1 and 2. District Eight of the American Vlumni Council will open its an lual convention here at 10:30 a m Feb. 1. Seward J. Marsh of Bowdoin | :ollege, president of the American \lumni council, will be the main i ipekaer for the conference. Other speakers will include Howard Dverback, manager of Taylor and , Company, a Portland advertising 1 firm; Ernest T. Stewart, Jr., ex- i scutive secretary of the American \lumni council, and R. Bronsdon Hams of the University of Wash ngton. Panel discussions on fund rais- i ng, alumni magazines and alumni 1 office registration will be fea- 1 ;ured at the two-day meeting. I 'Mural Bowling Gets Underway Intramural bowling got under way last week with the Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday leagues nil playing their first games. Most of the teams so far have gotten off to a slow start, al though some fairly good indi vidual scores have been marked up. Best team score of the week was tallied by Theta Chi on Thurs day evening when they scored 2489 points. Jim Johnson sparked his team with 525 pins or an av erage of 175 per line. Theta Chi also boasted the best j individual mark of the week. Don Krueger knocked over 214 pins in one line which is the best single one game score thus far. Action will continue this week in all three leagues. Delta Upsilon, Sigma Chi and Hale Kane are tied for first in the Tuesday night league with perfect records of 4 wins and no losses. The Wednesday section is also in a three way dead-lock with Pi Kappa Alpha, Merrick Hall and Delta Tau Delta sporting 3-1 rec ords. Thursday’s league features Theta Chi and Phi Psi with 4-0 records in the top spot. Consumers Resist Coffee Price Jump (Ah—Strong consumer resistance J to coffee prices which have passed 51 a pound was noted in New York ;ity by two associations of retail -nerchants. The associations say retail sales jf coffee have dropped about 50 oer cent. They say they hope that justomer resistance will push :offee prices down. The National Coffee association, neanwhile, has urged Americans lot to waste coffee and has re xirted that it is doing its utmost o urge coffee-producing nations o produce bigger crops. Pi Sigma Alpha Elects Officers Robert Hooker and Martha ^eenaughty, both seniors in po itical science, were elected vice-, iresident and secretary-treasurer, •espectively, of Pi Sigma Alpha, lolitical science honorary. Election of the two officers were leld to fill positions vacated this erm. Roberta E. Koplin, senior in eco lomics, president, and Howard Dean, assistant professor of po itical science, faculty adviser, are lie other officers of the group. Today's Staff Make-up ICdltnr: Jim White Night .staff: Mary Alice Alien Copy Desk: Kitty Fraser, Klsle Schiller READ THE STORY BEHIND THIS LABEL It can save you the price of a new raincoat. When your raincoat be comes so soiled it’s no longer a credit to your good taste and care about your personal appearance, or when it has lost its original water repellency from age or just plain dryclcaning, there's no need to discaiJ it. Send it to us for our ‘■Cravcnciie’' water repel lent service. First, we re move soil and improve appearance by cleaning. Then, we restore water rc pellency with the genuine "Cravcnette” repellent so that once again, your coat will shed rain as it did when new. A service offered locally only by 643 EAST 13th Ph.4-3013 Advertising— Students intersted in advertising work may apply now at the Emerald Shack, or by calling Ext. 219, afternoons. Work on: ' Production Layout Accounts Promotion No Experience Necessary Have fun working on your campus daily, the center of student activity. Work is interesting and gives you valuable experience.