SUMMER SESSION HI 3E12 ms; j Second Hair to be Exclusive for Advanced Work, Says Dr. H. D. Sheldon. The cummer session of the Univer sity will he extended to twelve weeks this year, the Inst six weeks to bo ex clusively for advanced students. An nouncement, of this change was made by Dr. Henry D. Sheldon, dean of the School of Education, who is actiujt di rector of the summer session in the ab sence of Dr. Joseph Schafer on govern ment work in Washington, T>. C. During the first two weeks education al conferences will be held. Problems of immediate importance to teachers throughout the state will he discussed. The summer session lecturers from other states and the superintendents will be invited to take part in the conferences. Definite announcement of the speak ers to come from the east; of the Uni versity professors who will teach in the summer term; the regular courses to he offered and those for advanced students will he ready for publication in about four weeks. Dr. Sheldon said. “Prospects for a successful summer school are excellent,” Dr. Sheldon be lieves. The urgency in the labor mar ket will hpve disappeared, he thinks, and teachers will wish to be relocated He nrges as many students as possible to attend this session. HD ASKED FOR MAGAZINE Stud MU and Faculty to Turs in Items About Alumni. All students of the University are ask ed to turn fa at once items for the Alum ni Magazine, which will go to press in three weeks. The editing class is collect ing the material for the publication with the help of Miss Charlie Fenton, alumni secretary. The class may publish other alumni magazines this year and wants the first issue to he a success and contain every possible item /of interest about Oregon alumni. The editing class and Miss Fenton make this plea: “We are getting out an Alumni Maga zine, a new venture for the University of Oregon. The success of this magazine will depend largely upon the manner in which the faculty responds to our plea for a large amount of personal items. You have been chosen to help us ob tain a good big batch of personal items about former students from whom you have letters or in any way have infor mation. What are they doing? Were they married recently, are they in public of fice? Have any of them done anything to get into the newspapers recently? News about University men who have been in the service and what they will do now; deaths; or any news in general which will be of interest to the Univer sity and its former students. "Th£ magazine will go to press within the next three weeks, which will necessi tate your getting your items in ns soon as possible/’ 78 USED LIBRARY SUNDAY Showing Better than Last Term. Says Mr. Douglas*. A record of the number of persons who use the University library on Sun day afternoon between the hours of 4 and (>. when it will be open, is to be kept. The record, which was begun Sunday afternoon, showed an attendance of 78. The opening of the library on Sunday is an experiment which was he guu last term principally for the benefit of the S. A, T. C. men and is to be con tinued if it proves successful. No rec ord of the Sunday attendance was kept last term, but it is the opinion of M. II. Douglass, librarian, that the attendance Inst Sunday was as large if not larger than those of last term. These hours will also enable the stu dent to do general reading outside the regular required reading. New signs have been posted in the reading room request ing patrons not to return books or mag aziness to the shelves but to leave them on the tables. This will enable the li brary assistants to return the books to their proper places in the stack rooms and shelves. For general reading, magazines have proved the most popular, according to the library assistants. However, some students have done reference reading or have used the library as a quiet place for writing. TEN MEN MAKE GLEE CLUB Material Selected from Fifty Candidates Considered Good. Ihe winners of the tryouts for the Men’s Glee club, which were held all during last week at the School of Mu sic, have been announced. Out of almost fifty who tried out, ten were selected for positions on the club. Following are the winners: George Doust, Wesley I?e harrell, Charles Huggins, George Stearns. Richard L^ans, Stephen Mat thieu, Martin Howard, Arthur Johnson, C. A. Farris and Raymond Osburn. John Stark Evans, director of the glee elub, is well satisfied with the material and expresses the hope that they may soon be qualified to take trips to sur rounding parts of the country. A rehearsal of the club was scheduled for last Monday. Wallace’s (Obak) Cigar Store, 804 Will. Complete line Cigars and Cigar ettes. tf ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ The hand will meet for its first ❖ ♦ practice this term at 7:30 Wednes- ♦ ♦ day evening in Villard hall. Any man ♦ ♦ who can play any band instrument ❖ ♦ is urged to come and bring his in- ♦ strument. ❖ RECITAL HOUR CHANGED The recital which is to be given by the pupils of .Arthur Faguy-Cote, pro fessor of voice in the School of Music, tomorrow evening. January 15, will be gin at 8.30, instead of at S:00 as previ ously announced. The recital will be given in the Y. M. C. A. hut, and the public are cordially invited to attend Wallace’s (Obak) Cigar Store, 804 Will. Complete line Cigars and Cigar ettes. tf ♦ ♦ BAND PRACTICE ♦ ❖ 'Novelty Trio” for dances. Tel. 940. EMERALD CLASSIFIED BUSINESS DIRECTORY PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS G. S. BEARDSLEY, M. D. 410-415 Cockerline and Wetherbee Bldg. Office phone 96 lies. Phone 350 DRS. BARTLE and NEAL Physicians and Surgeons 217 I. O. O. F. Bldg. Phone 3. F, W. COMINGS, M. D. 410-415 C.and W. Bldg. Office Phone 96 lies. Phone 744 OSTEOPATHS AND CHIROPRACTOR DR. H. L. STUDLTY Osteopathic Physician Eugene. Oregon. Office 322 I. O. O. F. Bldg. Phone 5S9-J Nerve and Spine Specialist Phone 410 DR. J. I. FISCHER Chiropractor 317-318 White Temple- Eugene, Ore. HAIRDRESSERS MME. SHAFFER Hairdressing Farlors Over P-iee Shoe Store Phone S8S DENTISTS DR. S. D. READ Dentist. Phone 307 I. O. O. 1\ Bulding. PAINLESS PARKER, Dentist. 701 Willamette St- Phone 28S DR. L. E. GEORGE Dentist Eugene, Oregon. First Nat. Bank Bldg. Boom 7. Phone 1188. DR. W. B. LEE Dentist. 404 C. and W. Bldg. Phone 42-J DR. LLOYD L- BAKER Dentist Instructors Diploma, N. S. V. D. Chicago C. and W. Bldg. / OLIVE C. WALLER ORVILLE WALLER Kirkville Graduates. 418 C. and W. Bldg. Eugene, Oregon Phone 53E Res. Dhane 238-Y Eddie Durno' Off Squad; No Game Yet Arranged for Week End. Another blow was dealt the Oregon basketball quintet Saturday when kiddie Durno, star candidate for a forward po sition on the Varsity five, was operated upon for tousilitis. This will put Dur no on the shelf for two weeks r.t the best, although he is getting over the ef fects of the operation. With “Chuck" (Comfort and Si Starr both out of the contest and Ditruc un der the weather, the prospects for bas ketball are not nearly s•> bright ns they were at the first of the term. Dow Wil son is still opt, and i,t is expected that he will be able to continue on the squad. So far Graduate Manager Dean H. Walker has been unable to get a prac tice game for the. local floor for this week-end. He has not heard from the Multnomah Club manager, in answer to a letter he sent last week. Salem is closed tighter than a drum-head, so there is little chance of getting a game with Willamette tire week. The Chemawa Indians are probably af fected by the “flu" ban, which has Sa lem in its grasp. Without n doubt the Oregon team needs a practice contest this week-end- Much interest shown in basketball this year, and We fans would like to give the lemon yellow rep resenfive the once over before the start of the season. NINE VARSITY MEN BARRED List of Ineligibles for Doughnut League is Given Out. Coach Walker today announced the list of nine varsity men who will be ineligible for doughnut basketball as follows: Lind. Jacobberger, fowler. Durno, Wilson. Medley, Chapman, Brandon and Ilennin ger. It has never been the custom to al low men of the varsity squad to play in the interfraternity games nor men who have won their letter in that branch of the sport. “Shy” who is coaching the frosh has the following additional list of aspirants who will be barred: Beller, U. Mooers, Veatch, IC. Moore, Laraueh, Latham, Cal lison, Dudley. Lorenz, Jacobberger. Titer - ck. Buren and Huggins. Y. W. TO HAVE SONGFEST. Mrs. William Moll Case and Jessie McCord to Help Program. Singing and just singing is to be the order of the Y. W. C. A. meeting to morrow afternoon at o o’clock. “An old time songfest,” Miss Tirza Dinsdale, sec retary, has announced i,t. and she urges that every University woman interested in Y. W. C. A. or singing be on hand at the proper hour. Mrs. William Moll Case will direct the songs. Hymns ev ery girl should know and old favorites will he sung. There will also he s[ eeinl music by Jessie McCord. GREGORY MAKES TRIPS. Professor C. A. Gregory, professor of education, who has charge of the exten sion work ,of the University extension division this term, will make extension trips this week. Tuesday night he will give an extension lecture in Estacada, Thrusday he will lecture at. Gresham. At both places Professor Gregory will conduct educational tests in the puhlie schools under the direction of the Bu reau of Educational Research. Last week Professor Gregory gave the tests at the public schools in Hillsboro and McMinnville. • ♦ Order of the vq” meeting Fri ♦ day, 1:00 p. in. ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ In the neeouTit of Delta Gamma initia tion in Saturday’s Emerald, the names of two initiates, Helen Casey and Helen Tjoughary. of Dallas, were unintention ally omitted.' ■ -- ° ■ " .„" • F* Wallace's fObak) Cigar Store, 80-1 Will. Complete line Cigars and Cigar ettes. tf “\oveltv Trio” for dances. Tel. 040. tf Reconstruction Conference Has Unemployment as Issue, Says F. G. Young. With five thousand men out of work iu Portland and the number increasing at the rate of 7n daily, the problem of unemployment loomed large in the con sideration of the reconstruction confer ence held in the Public Auditorium. Port land. last week, according to Professor P. G. Young, who attended the sessions Tt was taken as a matter of course. Professor Young said, that every dis charged soldier should receive the place dffok that he left for the army was taken as a matter of course. I' urthermore the boys under sixteen should be compelled to give up the posi tion they are holding and he turned to ward resuming their school work. The women who have proved themselves capable in their employment and who do not have husbands to support them ate to he continued in employment. . Other questions brought up for dis cussion were the development of con structive policies of land settlement, highway improvement, railway and ship building so as to have sufficient capa city to market timber products that are sure to be in demand. "The whole affair was a sort of three ring circus, said Professor Young. There were a lively development of re construction projects of labor, Oregon (irrigation congress, and the reconstruc tion congress. The latter was the Coun cil of Appeal for the other two. The representative of the Federation of T.n bor came to the reconstruction confer ence with a very pointed message. lie hinted strongly of trouble in recon struction progress unless capital re mains loyal to (he general welfare poli cies that the war conditions have evok ed. The solution is hinged on the as surance of a job for every man who wants work.” The decisions that were reached by the delegates are to be presented to the state legislature. The delegates to the conferenc were from many commercial enterprises of the state. RARE PRINTS TO BE SHOWN Exhibition will be Held Wednesday of Japanose Collection. Many specimens of rare Japanese prints will be on display in the exhibi tion room of the school of Architecture Wednesday afternoon, instead of Tues day afternoon as previously announced, said A. II. Schroff, professor of water colors in the school today. The exhibit is open to the students and townspeople, and is well worth see ing, according to Dean P. F. Lawrence, of the School of Architecture. ‘‘The collection was just recently [brought over from Japan and is unus ually rare owing to the fact that there is no European market this yeur,” said Professor Schroff. The prints will be brought down from Portland Tuesday evening by Dean Law rence, and hung Wednesday morning by the pupils of Miss Helen Rhodes, in structor in home, decoration. The ex hibit will open Wednesday afternoon and continue so until 4 o’clock Thurs ' day. i 80 MEM STILL SEEK WORK Y. M. Bureau Tries to Supply Jobs That Students May Stay in School. According to “William F. Vance, cam pus secretary of the Y. M. C. A-, the work situation at Oregon this semester is not very encouraging. During the past week Mr. Vance was able to place only five men in places of permanent work. There are on the campus this year at least 100 men desirous of se curing steady employment, and 'until the present time but 20 hare been placed. Nothing is available at present but a limited number of odd jolts. About 40 per cent of tlie men at Ore gon are working their way through school. It is absolutely necessary that these men secure steady employment in order that they may continue their college education. Resides this , num ber. about one man vt every ten wishes work in order that he may he at least partially independent. Mr. Vance ir. George Rebec, resident directoi >f the Portland branch of the Univer. iity extension division, is ill with the in 11 uenan. “Novelty Trio’’ for dances. Tel. 9-10. t< Favorite Resort of Student Dinner Dances Teas and Banquets a Specialty We Make Our Own Gandies. The Oregana Confectionery llth Near Alder. All sorts of Pastry, Fountain Drinks and Ice Cream. “Get an Oregon Short—Thick.” Wishing- von all e Prosperous Year EUGENE CLARIFYING AN1> PASTEURIZING COMPANY. 144 9th Avo. West. Phone 390. Eugene, Oregon. Books and School Supplies We have it. If not, we will get it. At your service at all times. Drugs, Candies and Photo Supplies. Let us do your printing and developing. University Pharmacy ON CAMPUS. PHONE 329. You Take the Snaps! We Do the ’Rest j OUR MOTTO: “Every Click a Picture or the Reason Why.” EXPERT PRINTING AND DEVELOPING. Enlargements Hand Colored or Framed to Order. EASTMAN KODAKS AND SUPPLIES Axpert Workmanship. Phone 63. The Best Materials. 964 Willamette St.