Sweetland Seeks Protection For State Scientific Material Slat** Senator Monro** Sweet land hua recently Introduced n bill In the Mtate legislature which will strengthen present laws re lating t*> the removal of seien tlfli; material from stale-owned lands. The Senate bill will give the state board of higher education Jurisdiction over the areas In which materials of scientific value have been found. U also restricts permission to excavate to persons who an gathering ma terial for repute hie scientific or educational Institutions. It Is hoped that the bill will stop digging hy unqualified Indi viduals which has resulted In the loss of many articles. It is Im possible to estimate the amount which has been carried away, but areas on the Oregon coast and near the Columbia river have Art Exhibit NowShowing Original painting* from the Solomon K. Guggenheim Muse um of New York City are on exhibit in the gallery of the school of architecture and allied aits for an extended showing. This collection of ten works of art ia one of 17 such collec tions that the- Solomon K. Gug genheim Foundation is lending to institutions throughout the nation. Th« loans are designed to make available a long-term show of contemporary art in centers where such original paintings are not commonly on display The display on this campus will con tinue till June. Represented in the collection nre works by March ('hagull. Km 11 Rilla, Vasily Kandinsky. Paul Klee, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy. Otto Buller and K. Vordembergc Glldewart. The display Is a part of the Festival of Arts program. A bib liography of booka and articles on these artists represented is now available at the art srhool foi those who wish to make a background study of the exhibit. Gallery hours during the Gug genheim exhibit are from 9 a m. to 5 p.m. daily. been completely destroyed by amateur excavators. The bill which was introduced wan the result of Senator Hwect land'H work on the interim com mittee on Historical Institutions. Today's Staff THIS SECTION Makeup Editors; Paul Keefe, Sam Vahey. Night Staff: Elton Engstrom. News Office; Anne Hill. Admiral Hubert Peary reached the North Pole on April 0, 1909. r Camp Positions Now Available for Summer Positions for administrative personnel, unit or troop leader#, assistant unit leaders or living group counselors, waterfront, di rector#, maintenance personnel and specialized craft# and music are available for the coming sum mer. Students interested In any of the camp counseling positions should contact Miss Marian Per ry at the women's physical edu cation department, Gerlinger 117, ext. 226. When the US flag is displayed on the staff of the White House from sunrise to sunset, the Pres ident is in residence. Unusual . . . Insulting . . . Adorable SEE OUR NEW LINE OF STUDIO GREETING CARDS! CARDS FOR EVERY OCCASION! MAKE FRIENDS! LOSE FRIENDS! FOR OLD FRIENDS See Them On Display at FLOWERS UNLIMITED 193 East Broadway Phone 4-0244 CASH For Your Old Books Mr. Lair from Long's College Book Company will be in the Co-op Next Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, March 16, 17 and 18, to buy Used Books. Beginning Monday, March 14, and all next week The Co-op will also buy Books needed for Spring Term classes. jj — UNIVERSITY CO OP "THE STUDENTS OWN -STORE:" / Few Tips From Your Travel Agent %_ Take advantage of the free service offered by your travel agent for airline, steamship, tour, resort or hotel reservations. 2— If you are considering Europe this'summer we must tell you that it will be next to im possible to secure tourist or cabins class steamship reservations during the peak months of travel, except with tours. 3 Many European tours are already fully booked-but with 30 or 40 to pick from we can secure space if you act now. 4 Group or individual travel can be arranged to areas in the Pacific, Latin America or South America. Some of this travel is "off season" with reduced rate transportation. 5 Your travel agent represents you—his success depends on your satisfaction—you will re ceive full and impartial information on your travels because your travel agent represents many different companies. . . . AND YOUR TRAVEL AGENT IN EUGENE IS THE . . . EUGENE TRAVEL SERVICE EUGENE HOTEL LOBBY PHONE 5-8431 EUGENE, OREGON Let Us Serve Your BANQUETS AND PRIVATE PARTIES MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS NOW . . . DIAL 5-9064 Special Dinners—$1.50 to $3.50 (Your Choice of Steak, Chicken or Seafood) Open Every Day Including Sundays and Holidays. LOTS OF FREE PARKING! New Lynwood Cafe (One-half Mile North of the Overpass on 99 North) On Campos (Author of “Barefoot Boy tVttA Chtok," ote.) THE CARE AND FEEDING OF BOOKS You busy college people —you with your classes and your studying and your social activities and your three-legged races — it is no wonder that you have so little time for reading. I mean reading for the pure pleasure of it, not to cram for exams. It is a sad omission, and my heart goes out to you. I do, however, take comfort from the fact that the graduation season ap proaches. Many of you will soon leave the hurly-burly of college for the tranquility of the outside world. Oh, you’ll love it on the outside! It is a quiet life, a gracious and contemplative life, a life of ease and relaxation, of plenty of time to enjoy the treasures of literature. It is with you in mind that I sit now in my cane-bottomed rocker and close my kindly gray eyes and smoke a mellow Philip Morris cigarette and remember books that made me laugh and books that made me cry and, remembering, laugh and cry again. It is, I say, with you in mind that I sit thus and rock thus and close my kindly gray eyes thus and smoke a Philip Morris thus and laugh and cry thus, for I wish to recom mend these lovely and affecting books to you so that you too may someday sit in your cane-bottomed rockers and close your kindly gray eyes and smoke a mellow Philip Morris and remember books that made you laugh and books that made you cry and, remembering, laugh and cry again. Sitting and rocking, my limpid brown eyes closed in reverie, a plume of white smoke curling lazily upward from my excellent Philip Morris cigarette, i remember a lovely and affecting book called Blood on the Grits by that most talented young Southerner, Richard Membrane Haw. It is a tender and poignant story of a sensitive Alabama boy who passes safely through puberty only to be devoured by boll weevils ... A lovely and affecting book. I puff my splendid Philip Morris cigarette and close my danc ing blue eyes and recall another book, a thrilling true adventure, lovely and affecting, called I Climbed Everest the Hard Way by Cliff Sherpa. Mr. Sherpa, as everyone knows, was the first man to reach the peak of Mt. Everest by tunneling from below. In his book he gives a lovely and affecting account of his trip, which was not as easy as it sounds, you may be sure. I light another merry Philip Morris cigarette and close my lambent hazel eyes and recollect another book — Life on the Farm by Dick Woolly. This is a short book — only 55 words — and rather a dull one. It would not be worth mentioning here were it not for the fact that the author is a sheep. I exhale a cloud of snowy white smoke from my bracing Philip Morris cigarette and shut my laughing green eyes and think of the vast, vast array of historical novels that have given me pleasure. There is Blood on the Visor by Richard Membrane Haw (he w’ho wrote the lovely and affecting Blood on the Grits). There is Cold Steel and Hot Flashes by Emmaline Prentiss Moulting. There is The Black Shield of Sigafoos by Wruth Wright. There is Four Quarts in a Galleon by William Makepieee Clambroth. There are many, many others, all lovely, all affecting. But sitting here, drawing on my matchless Philip Morris cigarette, my saucy amber eyes closed tightly, I am thinking that the loveliest, most affecting of all historical novels is May Fuster’s classic, / Was a Serf for the F.B.l. Mrs. Fuster, justly famed for her rich historical tapestries, has outdone herself in this tempestuous romance of Angela Bodice, fiery daughter of an entailed fief, who after a great struggle rises to the lofty position of head-linesman to the Emperor of Bosnia and then throws it all away to lead the downtrodden peasants in a revolt against the mackerel tax. She later becomes Ferdinand Magellan. But the list of fine books is endless, as you will soon discover who are about to leave the turmoil of the campus and enter into the serene world outside, where a man has time to read and rock and close his rakish taupe eyes and smoke good Philip Morris cigarettes. ©Max Shulman, 1055 The makers of Philip Morris, tcho bring you this column, tell you that in our book, PHILIP MORRIS is the mildest, testiest cigarette anybody ever made.