ments. Others are moving elsewhere in Oakland and a few are moving from the city, Horwinski said. The development is being shut down ip sections and advance warnings to residents have prevented housing hardships, Horwinski said. To date the city has not had to enforce eviction notices, he added. Youngsters still in the development in September will attend Lincoln School at 1016 Alice St.' Third to sixth graders from the area now attend Lincoln. SMALL PLAYGPOUND Auditorium Village Schooll playground, was so small that enough room for the full student body to play at one time--recess periods were run in shifts. Miss Aileen A. McCandless, now Mrs. Aileen Howden, principal of Bella Vista School, was the first principal at Auditorium Village. Others were Thad W. Stevens, Ronald N. Linn, Carl J. Carter, Mrs. Bernice ) M. Alls• good, Pearl D. Palumbo, Arthur R. Wagner and John F. Carolan, now principal. Carolan and his teachers will be transferred to other schools. The last Oakland school to be, abandoned was Campbell School between Fourth and Fifth Sts. on Grove St. It was closed the fall of 1953 after being declared an extreme hazard in -'event of an earthquake. 6 LAST DAYS -Chuck Wong, Mary Jo McFarland and Ethel Ross (from left) and their teacher Miss Betty Yee start clearing out Auditorium Village School on 1 Ninth St. which will be closed permanently this week. Village School Closing for Good An Oakland school, born of a|ring to other authority develop- war-time emergency and without permanent buildings throughout its 14-year life, will be closed permanently this week, its purpose served. Friday the last pupils will leave Auditorium Village School for summer vacation, not to return. The 11 weather -beaten portable classrooms, cramped on half an acre at 29 Ninth St. in the shadow of. the Exposition Building, will be moved. Since 1943 about 4,000 youngsters from Auditorium Village, an Oakland Housing Authority project, have been educated in the temporary school. Now the housing development is being shut down; its residents moving out. PEAK ENROLLMENT The school originally had grades from kindergarten to sixth. Its peak enrollment was 354. By April of this year enrollment dropped to 255 with only kindergarten and grades one and two open, The housing development, scattered from Third to Sixth Sts. between Oak St. and Lake Merritt channel, will be- vacated by the end of the year. At one time it housed 436 families. Today about 320 families still live there but by September more than half of them will be gone, according to Edmund Horwinski, executive director for the Housing Authority. Some families are