Positions in Civil Service Available The Civil Service commission linn announced several examina tlon* for career positions, accord ing to commission officials in Washington, D. C. Among the openings to be filled are specialized Jobs in the field or agriculture which will pay from *7040 to *10,800 per year. The positions will be with the Department of Agriculture in Washington. D. C. Applications should be filed with the Board of f'lvll Service Examiners, 6th floor, Administration building. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. The Board of Civil Service Examiners for Scientists and En gineers has Indicated that open ings for engineers, physicists, electronic scientists and mathe maticians also will soon be filled. Applications for these positions should he mailed to the board of fice at 1030 East Green St., f'asa dena. Calif. The commission will have one Job vacancy in the near future to a dietician. The position will \ets ^ews Numi ioim Inquiries have come from veteran student* as to how payment* received by them from the Veteran's Administration are -affei ted by Federal income tax. The following types of income need not be reported as far as the VA and the Bureau of In ternal Kevenue are concerned: Insurance dividends, training* allowance received under PL 550. public law 16 payment received, by both World War II and Kor ean veterans, subsistence allow ance under f’L. 346, disability compensation and pensions for either service-connected or non service-connected disabilities, giants to seriously disabled vet erans for homes designed for “wheel-chair living," grants for motor vehicles for certain dis abled veterans and death bene fits to families of deceased vet erans including compensation, pension and all GI Insurance pay ments. Newly enrolled veterans are reminded that the result of school applications is greatly de pendent upon the date of filing School registration is insuffici ent and actual applcations should Is- made through the VA office immediately. The office of the VA repre sentative is room 208, 610 Wil lamette street. ArmyEstabhshes Medical Office An army medical personnel procurement office has been es tablished at the army reserve training center, Vancouver bar racks, in Washington. Purpose of the new office is to provide medical service personnel and medical students with infor mation and assistance in apply ing for the various medical pro grams offered by the army's sur geon general department. Among the programs available are military internships and residencies, military dental in ternships, senior dental student program, registered nurse stu dent program, dietetics, physical therapy and occupational therapy training. Additional information may he obtained by writing to Capt. R. M. McBride, MSC, Regular Army Medical Adviser, Oregon Military district, Vancouver Barracks, Wash. cal! for duty In various* federal hospital* throughout the coun-: try and In Panama and Alaska. Information can be obtained by writing to the U. 8. Civil Service ■ commlaslon, Washington 2r», D.C.; Several other ponttlons, which will be filled by examination*, will be handled by individual de partment* of the cornmiHHton. Some of theae job* are in the field* of tax collecting and air way* operation specialization. Two poata are open for cook* and mental hospital attendant*. Information regarding any of thr*e positions can be secured by mall from the commission office1 in Washington. Dane Puffs Win In Pips Contest MONTREAL (AP)-A Dan ish smoker, J. Htelling of Cop enhagen, has been declared the world champion pipe smoker In a lii-nation competition. Sidling kept alive his 3.S grams of hurley for one hour, 3» minutes and 13 seconds to win the championship spon sored by the Maple Leaf Pipe Chili of Montreal. Educators Meet Here Thursday A conference on higher educa tion, sponsored by the Univer sity's Hchool of education, will be held In the Student Union begin ning Thursday. Donald Morrison, dean of fac ulty at Dartmouth college, will be guest speaker. Major topic to be discussed will be the faculty re cruiting problem, on which Mor rison has done a detailed study. The problem of helping new faculty members fit into the uni versity or college pattern will also be discussed. High school principals, school sunperintendents, faculty mem bers and college presidents from the Northwest will attend the conference, for which President O. Meredith Wilson of the Uni versity will give the opening ad dress. Committee for the conference includes Paul B. Jacobson, dean of the school of education; Vic tor P. Morris, dean of the school of business administration, and Gordon A. Sabine, dean of the school of Journalism. The news that Thomas E. Edi son had solved the problem of the incandescent lamp was made public Sept. 16, 1878. Night Classes to Start Extension Enrollment Registration for University night extension classes began Monday with the first class meet 1 ings. ’ No formal admission require ments are necessary to register for night classes, except for ’ those working toward specific degrees. The public is invited to attend the first and second ses sions of any class. Registration and payment of fees must be completed before the end of the second week of the term, j Registrations will be taken at the first two class meetings of each course. After the, second class session all registrations must be mailed to the office of the Department of State-Wide Services, 1250 Emerald street, Eugene. No registrations for credit will be accepted late from anyone who has not attended either of the first two class meet ings. Non-credit or audit registra tions will be accepted at any time, without penalty. Late credit! registrations are subject to pen alty payment and will not be ac cepted after the fifth class ses sion. I Registration fee for all stu- j i dents, regardless of academic j status is $6.00 per class hour. The minimum fee per term is $12. A staff fee of $3 per credit hour is available to all full-time University employees for a maxi mum of five credits per term. Plan Now for Executive Career in RETAILING Unique one-year course leads you to Mwtrr » degree. Indi vidualized training for those C/OI.I.BOK Gtt WM A'rKS who desire top-paying positions, have average or better aca demic records, t>road educa tional backgrounds. Training in nationally known retail or ganizations with pay (covers tuition, books, fees). Scholar ships. ( oed. Graduates placed. Next class begins Sept. 6,1955. Applications ac crptwi now. write for Bulletin C. SCHOOL OF RETAILING UNIVERSITY OF ! PITTSBURGH | PilhWfl. 13, P«. ft What young people are doing at General Electric Young engineer is responsible for design analysis of $3,000,000 turbine-generators The average large steam turbine-generator costs $3,000,000 and takes two years to build. ■** It is one of the biggest pieces of electrical equipment made. Yet its thousands of parts are put together as carefully as a fine watch. Even a small change in design can affect the stresses and vibration of the turbine, and the way it performs. At General Electric, several men share the responsibility of pre dicting those effects before the turbine is built. One of them is 29-year-old E. E. Zwicky, Jr. His job: analytical engineer Here’s what Ted Zwicky does. He takes a proposed mechanical design feature, de scribes it mathematically, breaks it down into digestible bits, modifies it, and feeds it to electronic computers. (It may take two months to set up a problem; the computers usually solve it in twenty minutes.) Then Zwicky takes the answers from the com puters, translates and interprets them so they can be followed by design engineers. 23,000 college graduates at General Electric This is a responsible job. Zwicky was readied for it in a careful program of development. Like Zwicky, each of our 23,000 college graduate employees is given a chance to find the work he does best and to realize his full potential. Eor General Electric believes this: When young minds are given freedom to make progress, everybody benefits—the in dividual, the company, and the country. TED ZWICKY, B. S. in EE from the Uni versity of New Mexico, Class of 1945, joined General Electric after a year in the Navy, completed our Advanced Engineering Program in 1950.