Officials to Talk To BA Students Tho final sessions of the eleventh annual student business conference, sponsored by the school of business administra tion, will be held this afternoon. All students. particularly freshmen and sophomores, are in vited to attend this conference. Afternoon classes in the school of business administration will be dismissed today for this pur pose. Today’s program will begin at 12 noon with an informal cafe teria lunch in SU 110. The dis cussion groups will continue in the afternoon with the first three meetings to begin at 1:30 p.m. John W. Soha, associate pro fessor of business administration, will preside at the accounting for industry meeting, SU 214 215. Guest speaker will be Clause R, Groth, assistant secretary and assistant treasurer of Pacific Power & Light Co., Portland. Presiding at the life insurance meeting, SU 315, will be Lyle 6:00 Sign On 6:03 Dinner Hour Serenade 6:45 News Till Now 7:00 Sport Shots 7:15 Gaites^Paris 7:30 On Stage 7:45 Journey Behind the New's 8:00 Best Of Broadway 8:30 SU Table Hopping Show 9:00 Kwaxworks 11:00 Sign Off Campus Calendar 8:30 AF-ROTC 313 SU 11:00 Sculpture Inst Reg istration Lobby 2nd FI SU 11:45 ROTC 114 SU Noon Stu Bus Conf 110 SU AF-ROTC 111 SU Sculpture Lunch 112 SU Soc Dept. Com Lunch SU WUS 318 SU 4:00 Stu Aff Com 114 SU Panhel Coun Com Lnch SU 5:30 Dillard Lnch 113 SU 6:30 City Panhel 110 SU Ski Quacks 214 SU WRA Coun 315 SU Panley & IFC Gerl 3rd FI 6:45 Chi Delta Phi 334 SU 7:30 Delta Nu Alpha 215 SU Scheyer Lect 201 SU Bracewell Lecture Dadsrm SU 8:00 R. Trueblood. assistant professor of business administration. Speakers will be Deane Harger, manager of the United American Life Insurance Co.. Eugene; G. C. Gilbert, manager of the Northern Life Insurance Co., Eugene, and Dalton Treick, agent for the Provident Life Insurance Co., Eugene. The retailing group will meet in SU 333 with Robert E. Dodge, assistant professor of business administration, presiding. The speaker will be Jack Meier, sec retary of the Meier & Frank Co., Portland. Hostesses for the coffee hour, which will be held from 2:45 to 3:15 p.m. in the Dads’ lounge, will be Phi Chi Theta, women's professional business sorority. The last three meetings of the business conference will begin at 3:15 p.m. S. T. Ford, assistant professor of business administration, will preside at the personnel meet ing in SU 214-215. Speakers will be Mrs. Ada M. Blank, traffic employment interviewer for the Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co., Eugene; Darrell L<- Robin son, personnel manager at the Edward Hines Lumber Co., West fir, and Richard C. Williams, personnel director at the Bon Marche, Eugene. Presiding at the casualty and property insurance meeting, SU 334, will be Lyle R. Trueblood. Speakers will be Loren V. Bry ant, insurance agent, Eugene; Thomas J. Fondren, partner in the Springfield Insurance agency, Springfield, and Douglas E. W’al wyn, partner in Smith & Crakes. Eugene. Alfred L. Lomax, professor of business administration, will pre side at the foreign trade and shipping meeting, SU 333. James E. Strowger, Northwestern dis trict manager of the Kerr Steam ship Co., Portland, and David H. Sutherland, president of the Da vid H. Sutherland Co., Portland, will be the guest speakers. University Not Threatened By Portland State College By Bob Robinson Inwilrf AuitUnt N»wi Editor The establishment of Portland State college as a four-year in stitution with degree-granting power will not have much effect on the enrollment of the Univer sity of Oregon. This is the opin ion of University President O. Meredith Wilson. Wilson said In an interview Wednesday that there are two main reasons why the new school will not be bothersome to Ore gon. First, the "desire by most Portland students to go away from home for their college edu cation will continue to prevail,” he said. “And second, people who attend the new school will be mostly persons who otherwise wouldn’t be able to afford a col lege education.” Students Won’t Change Wilson indicated that he thought only a few current Uni versity students—whose homes are in Portland—would change institutions just because they can now get a degree in their home town. Portland State was granted the "four-year privilege” only re cently by the state legislature. The action was taken under a bill proposed by Sen. Rudie Wil helm, Portland attorney, and amended slightly by the House education committee. As passed, BA School to Host Real Estate Confab The school of business adminis tration will be host to a session of the American Institute of Real Estate Appraisers froth Feb. 21 to March 5, according to Dean Victor P. Morns, school of busi ness administration. The general purpose of this session is to teach the theories, principles, and procedures of real estate appraising applicable to the evaluation of all types of real property. BOB'S SUPERETTE Corner 13th and Patterson Sts. NOW OPEN Days a Week! 9:00 A.M. — 10 P.M. Come In and See Us Today! the bill establishes the school with full degree-granting rights but no privileges for becoming a campus type Institution like the University and Oregon State col lege. Final technical arrangements for the-school will be made by the state board of higher educa tion when It meets March 7 and 8. President Wilson said that the board isn't likely to have any objections to the bill as it was passed because it "coincided al most exactly with one of the board’s own proposals. Actually, the board had a proposed bill drawn up which is similar in many ways to the one submitted by Wilhelm." The board's main problem In its meetings will be to make fi nal arrangements on the selec tion of a president for the insti tution. It will also consider the setting of time schedules and the kinds of study to be offered. Although the board hasn't given any indication, who its presidential choice might be, it is generally assumed that the inside track will go to J. F. Cra mer, dean of the general exten sion division of the system of higher education. It is possible that Cramer will be given the choice of holding his current position or taking over the presl dency of Portland HI ate. In hi« present poet, Cramer has 1 been head of the Portland Slate program since 1953. Extension Service Continues The board plans to have the general extenaion division, which has been synonymous with Port land State since 1946, continue its services for adult education courses. The division will use the buildings of P8C during the evenings but the administration will be completely separate from that of the college. The curriculum for the school : has tentatively been set to offer both elementary and secondary teacher training and a limited undergraduate program In lib eral arts to Include the humani ties. social science and science mathematics. The first graduat ing class will be composed of students majoring in elementary education in 1956. The present enrollment at Port land State is about 2500. Wilson expressed the opinion that this would "probably Increase to around 4000 by the time the school starts functioning smooth ly." ' For Goodness Sake, Eat Here Regularly! Quick Snacks . .. 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