Job Opportunities MliNMftChUNCttH Institute Of Technology. Physics, Math. David Drown and William Lone will In terview on campus today, Mrlrr <V Prank Company, Inc. Merchandising. Cheater Duncan will Interview today. Itiirrougli* Adding Machine Company. Hales. W. H. Klynn will Interview on campus Thurs day. Students Interested in apply ing for these position a should contact Karl W. Onthank, direc tor of graduate placement, in hla office on aecond floor of Kmer ald hall. Chart Jobs Open Map-and chart -making posi tions undei the U.H. Civil Service conimisaion afe now open for work In the Washington, D.C., area. Kntrance aalariea for the posi tiona arc $3,410 a year, and appli cants may qualify If they have had four years of cartographic experience or college study with 21 aeincstcr-hours In cartog raphy. mathematics, physics, en gineering. astronomy, geology, geography, photogi ammetry or photo-interpretation. No written test is required in the application, and details are given in civil service announce ment number 375. which may be, obtained from the placement of fice in Kmerald hull. Applications should be filed Immediately with the U.S. Civil Service Commission, Washing ton 25, D.C. Among the agencies in which vacancies exist is the Office of Research and Liaison, USAF Aeronautical Chart and Infor mation Center. This center performs researeh and provides information for the aeronautical charts and related materials required by the U.S. Air Force. Projects Available Wilton Hartzler, field repre sentative for the American Friends Service committee, will be on cam pud today ami Tues ilay to Interview persons inter ested In working at a Friends sponsored summer project or work camp this summer, Hartzler has alldea that he will show to any Interested group or individuals. Appointments may be made by calling the YWCA at ext. 420 or the YMCA at ext. 42b. Friends work camps arc in the United States and Mexico as well as Kui ope. Foreign Lecturer Scheduled to Talk Hurtndar Suri, foreign crtrres- j pendent, lecturer and author i from India, has been scheduled to apeak at a University aaaem- j bly next Tuesday. Feb. 22, at 1 p.m. In the Student Union ball- i room. Suri is a foreign correspond ent for several Indian period!-' cals, including the "Independent India" in Bombay and "Mysindia” in Bangalore. At present he is sIso a research consultant for East Asiatic studies at the Uni versity of California. A-Bomb Claims Victim, Japanese News States HIROSHIMA. Japan (APi Kyodo News Service said Sunday that the atomic bomb dropped on this city nearly 10 years ago may i have claimed another victim. It said that Masao Kagawa, 16. the only one of 48 students to sur- 1 vive the 1945 blast, went to a hos- , pital with leukemia, cancer of | the blood, Jan. 10 and died last i Thursday. State Department Believes MiG's Came from N. Korea Washington <ap» state Department officials said Sun day they believed some or all of the Fted fighter planes involved in a clash with American fight ers over the Yellow sea a week ago had come from Communist North Korea. They declared that the presence I of jets in North Korea would violate the Korean armistice. At the same time officials con ceded they were baffled by a lack of detailed information and had so far been unable to make out the kind of case which would be suitable for a protest to one of the Communist governments in the area -Chinese, North Korean or Russian. MiG’s Attack Plane The Air Force announced in the Far East on Feb. 5 that a flight of eight Russian-built MIG 15s had attacked an RB45 re connaissance plaije over “inter national waters” of the Yellow sea west of Korea. _ The Yellow sea lies between1 the Korean peninsula and Red China. Two MIGs were shot down by American sabrejets es corting the reconnaissance plane.; Six others fled. The State Department an- i nounced hours later that it had opened an investigation to de termine the nationality of the planes — that is, whether they were North Korean, Chinese or Russian. Thereupon the depart ment lapsed into a silence that lasted all week. Meanwhile, the Communists in North Korea charged that Amer ican aircraft had violated their territory and demanded that the Neutral Nations Truce Super visory commission investigate. Command Denies Charge The United Nations Command, holding the line in Korea, denied the violation charge, but UN authorities indicated they would cooperate in facilitating an inves tigation. The Reds said some gas tanks allegedly dropped by U.S. jets were found on Communist soil south of Pyongyang. State Department officials would have liked to make a pro test by midweek at least, but their effort was hamstrung by lack of adequate information from the Air Force. Facts Come in Slow Some speculated that the facts were simply slow in coming in. Some thought perhaps there was not sufficient evidence available as to the actual nationality of the planes. The attack occurred, inform ants said, about 10 to 12 miles off the West Coast of North Korea. 6nce the fight developed, offi cials said, some American planes might have maneuvered through the air over a corner of North Korea. ‘Stock Market* NEW YORK (API—A major drive ahead last week sent the stock market to a new historic high. Old records of the great bull market of 1929 were eclipsed by the forward surge, and prices continued to climb to the end of the week. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks was up $2.50; the close was $159,70. At that level, the average is $2 higher than the 1929 high of $157.70 reached on Sept. 3, 1929, At the bottom of the depres sion in 1932 the average stood at $16.90, Smoking Can Injure Heart CHICAGO <AP) — The Jour nal of the: American Medical as sociation said Thursday “there seems now to be definite evi dence" that smoking can damage the heart, muscle. An editorial set forth: "There seems now to be defin ite evidence that smoking, even though it may not directly af fect the coronary arteries, can have a damaging effect on the myocardium muscular part of the wall of the heart. "No patient with coronary dis ease should incur the added risk to his heart imposed by smoking without first discussing thor oughly the problem with his physician.” The same issue of the Journal carries two articles on the ef fects of cigarettes on the heart. — Grad's Poem Wins Award An Oregon graduate, Walter j K. Kidd, is represented in the' Poetry Awards of 1954 with his lyric poem "Honey in Rock,” which first appeared in the Vir ginia Quarterly Review. Kidd sponsored a prize in an annual competition for under graduate verse at the University for many years. His stories, reviews and poems have been published in the Na tion, American Mercury. Com monweal, Saturday Review of Literature and many other pe riodicals. His book length collection of poems entitled "Slow Fire of Time” recently was awarded first prize at the Southwest Writers conference. Zhukov Visit to US Possible in Future SHANNON AIRPORT, Ireland Oeorgl N, Zarubin, soviet am bassador to Washington, replied “Why not?” Sunday when asked whether he thought it likely that Marshall Georgi K. Zhukov, new Soviet defense minister, would visit the United States. “He and Mr. Eisenhower are very good friends," he told air port reporters. “I can't say if he will visit the United tSates—but why not?" ODERN SIZE FILTER TIP TAREYTON MTINTS MNDINO An entirely new concept in cigarette filtration. A filter tip of purified cellulose, incorporating Activated Charcoal, a filtering substance world-famous as a purifying agent, notably for air, water and beverages. PRODUCT OP I * where’d you get this coffee? ' Xf you’re like 9 out of 10 Americans, the answer’s easy. You saw or heard it advertised. You compared the advertised value. You shopped—and you bought, just as you select the hundreds of brands of items you use every year. For in a free economy where people compete for your business, advertising multiplies your freedom of choice by keeping you abreast of the best buys. In so doing, advertising benefits you, advertising benefits everyone! T (• Advertising Recognition Week, Feb. 13 to 19