•WATER, WATER EVERYWHERE Sprinklers and Fenlon Pool Signs of Spring on Campus Sprinklers strategically placed to water the sidewalks and ian overflowing Fenton Pool were sure' signs of springs on campus this Week. The sprinklers were out in full force Tuesday and have continued to plague students on their way to and from classes. Fenton Pool has also been filled to overflowing since the beginning of the week. However, the physical plant said it had not filled the pool and did not know who had. Physical plant officials fill Fenton Pool only when requested to do so for special occasions, such as Jun ior Weekend. CAMPUS BRIEFS Deadline for item? for this column is at 4 p m. the day prior to publication. ^ Freshman and sophomore members of the command squad ron will meet at 3 p.m. today in the ROTC building, according to Jerry Farrow, president. Fourra geres and ribbons will be issued. Farrow said. ^ Phi Tlieta Epsilon. junior women’s service honorary, tapped Nicki Trump, junior in business. Thursday evening during dinner. ^ The sophomore cabinet of the YWCA will meet at noon Monday at the Y headquarters in Gerlinger. Members are to bring sack lunches, the officers announced. 0 Final deadline for payment of registration fees and for changing courses is Saturday, April 3. at noon. Penalty for late fee is $1 per day beyond that date. Edna Humiston Is New GAX Prexy Edna Kumiston, sophomore in business, has been elected presi dent of Gamma Alpha Chi, wo men’s professional adv e r t i s i n g honorary. Mary Wilson, junior in speech, is the new vice-president. Donna Hill, sophomore in poli tical science, was elected secretary, but she did not return to school this term. Appointed to replace her as secretary was Dorothy Iler, sophomore in journalism. New treasurer is Jean Sar.dine, sophomore in -liberal arts, and re porter is Mary Salazar, junior in journalism. t an? dee it ? SJllIT THRU THE WANTADS Don Wenzl, Classified Advertising Mgr. Three room furnished, spacious, modern apartment for two men. In walking distance of cacmpus and town. $60. Ph. 4-8586 4-1 FOR RENT — Attractive one room furnished house on Floral Kill Drive. $33. Ph. 5-0864. 4-2 New modern furnished apartment. Two rms. & bath. Near U. of O. 1337 Hilyard. 4-2 For Rent — Rooms for men stu dents, double or single. 450 East 14th. Phone 5-3G79 or 4-0537. 4-2 LOST — Billford at art school. Contains important identifica tion papers. Carla Taylor. FOR RENT — Desk able four rm. downstairs apartment, yard, some furniture, fireplace, auto matic heat. 328 12th Ave. West. Ph. 4-9390. Mrs. O. M. Foster. LOST — In science building, ladies Ronson lighter, initialed PMH. Call Polly 5-9345, 4-16 A slight green cast to the water in the pool puzzled both students and the physical plant. Louie Jen sen. building custodian superinten dent, said the green tinge might be caused by paint on the bottom of the pool. Religious Council To Install Officers Newly-elected officers of the University Religious council will be installed at a dinner Wednes day, at 5:30 p.m. in St. Mary’s Episcopal church. Bob Randall, senior in liberal arts, will be installed president, and Bob Adams, special student, vice-president. Liz Mcllveen, soph omore in English, will be the new recording secretary: Mary Lou Sunderland, junior in business, corresponding secretary: Roger Danielson, junior in liberal arts, historian, and Rose Warner, jun ior in 'physics, chaplain. The dinner will be pot-luclc or 50 cents per person. Students planning to attend should contact their religious group or religious council representative to find out what food to bring. Speaker for the occasion will be announced soon. Ed Honorary Initiates Ten Pi Lambda Theta, education honorary, recently held initiation of the following persons: Joan Walker ‘Anderson, senior in education: Elizabeth Beat, graduate in foreign languages: Mary Bennette, senior in educa tion; Elinor Crawford, graduate in physical education; Julia Doherty, junior in education; Beryl Grilley, graduate in education; Joan Nel son, junior in history; Jessie Puck ett, assistant professor of physi cal education; Demetria Pujante. special student in education, and Vanda Randall, senior in English. Kappa Sigs Honor 50th Anniversary Kappa Sigma fraternity will celebrate its fiftieth year on cam pus Saturday and Sunday, accord ing to John Templeton, president. Three hundred alumni members of the University of Oregon chap ter are expected to register at Kappa Sigma Saturday noon. Fea ture of the anniversary celebration will be the opening of a drive for a new fraternity house. The pres ent house, the oldest one on cam pus. is 50 years old. The celebration for alumr.i and present chapter members will in clude a dinner Saturday evening, a business meeting and brunch Sunday morning, Templeton said. 954 ’/v***r/ i From the West’s first successful oil wells of 1879, Standard’s drilling operations have stretched all over the world—even in ocean depths 4 miles off shore—to get the oil which you and our friends in other free nations need more and more. -> -'.v._ Gasoline was a waste product in Standard’s first refinery of 1879, but it’s king today. We’ve developed fuels tluit made better engines possible, used researc h tools like the chassis dynamometer (below) to bring you today’s top gasolines. IK ^ — - * r ^ Before horses gave way to horsepower, Standard’s wagons of the ’80’s brought only kerosene, harness oil and axle grease to Western farms. Now our insecticides, weed-killers, fertilizers help increase crop yields and add to your food supply. First steel tanker in the Pacific, Standard’s SS George Loomis back in 1888 began help ing us put oi^ where you need it. Today 26 tankers, 3,748 miles of pipe line, thou sands of tank trucks serve your oil needs everywhere in the West, Alaska, Hawaii. . //'IIII World s first gas station was opened by Standard in 1907 at Seattle, Washington. Since then, we’ve pioneered the car care you enjoy now—windshield cleaning, tire, battery, lubrication, even “Chevron matic credit cards to save you time.