TRACK MEN TO STAR! 0. A. C. Cross Country Mee1 To Be October 19 First call for track aspirants! Var sity candidates and those who hope to wear the green numeral alike. With a cross country meet against the Aggies staged for the nineteenth of October actual training has been scheduled to start next Monday according to Bill Hayward, varsity trainer and track trainer. Training will continue throughout the fall, three days a week. Monday. Wed nesday and Friday at 4, and the call is issued, to include all track men in school as the cross country work is fall training for spring track. Bill anticipates a large turnout and wishes to make it absolutely clear that the call does not merely include cross countrv men but every man in the University who intends going out for track in the spring. O. A. C. won the meet last fall in spite of the fact that Walkley and Koepp of Oregon placed first and sec ond respectively but with Walkley, Koepp and Nels English in line and with the material available from last year’s frosh aggregation the varsity should have a good cfTance of topping the collegians next month. JVIING ENTERS OREGON LIFE New Face is Seen on By-ways o University Campus Have you met Ming? If not yoi have missed one of the most interestins of the new faces on the Oregon campus Ming arrived from Manchuria only twi weeks ago but is already able to ex press his approval of America in th< best Dogese. Yes, Ming is a dog bui most certainly not “Just Dog.” Minj; is a Chow who makes up in quality for what he lacks in size, and belongs to Fergus Red die, head of the Depart ment of Drama and the Speech Arts 1 You may see him about the campus at 1 the endof a very fine leather strap that • is held by some admirer. If you fail { here and really wish to meet an un j usual specimen of dog aristocracy go to Mr. Reddie's office as Ming will be “At Home” to visitors there. How j ever there is no use to apply for the privilege of taking Ming for his daily : walk because there is already a wait ing list for that honor. S. C. DOUGLAS IN PENNSYLVANIA L. C. Douglas, who received his master's degree here last August, is ^attending the University of Pennsyl vania, at Philadelphia, this winter. Mr. Douglas will study in the department'of Education toward a doctor’s degree. He has been given a graduate assistant ship in that department. Bowden We wish to announce the opening of our new store for Confections and Lunches. We are ready to serve the students at all times with LUNCHES, DINNERS AND FOUNTAIN DRINKS We also serve Chop Suey and Noodles. BOWDEN’S 734 Willamette, Guy Bowden, Prop. : 44 MEMBERS OF '21 CLASS SERVE AS TEACHERS NOW ! State High Schools Claim Majority THREE NAMED PRINCIPALS Former Students Hold Varied Positions Forty-four members of the 1021 graduating class are holding educational positions this fall: most of them as instructors in high schools; there as high school principals, and a few as graduate assistants at the University, according to statistics given out by the appointment bureau at the school of education. Following is a list of the graduates, the places where they are working, and the subjects they teach: Newton Bader, Olympia, Washington, Y. M. C. A. secretary; Read Bain, Uni versity, assistant in sociology; Wanda Brown, Klamath Falls, science; W. H. Buxton, Culver, principal. P. E. Christenson, Eugene high school, history; Beatrice Crewdson, McMinn ville, Latin and biology. Leroy Betling, Wallowa, romance languages; Laura Duerner, Marshfield, mathematics. Positions are Varied Vincent Engeldinger, Vale, music. Brownell Frasier, Baker, art; Janet ; Frasier, Marshfield, history. Lester Gladden, The Dalles, mathe matics; Carl Gregg, Clatskanie, athletic coaching and commerce. Helen Hall, Burns, English; Alice Hamm, McMinnville, English; O. W. Hays, Cottage Grove, superintendent; Marjorie Holaday, Vernonia, Languages, and science; Victor Husband, Raymond, Wash., commerce; Eve Hutchinson, Baker, English. Harold King, Mapletoi), principal. Enid Lamb, Eugene Bible University, mathematics and English; Herman A. Lender, University high school, history; Alice Mary Lighter, Grants Pass, mod ern languages. Lois Mary, Rainier, modern lan guages; Leona Marsters. Ashland, mu sic: Laura Moates, University,' assist ant in English; Mary Mobley, Rich land, home economics; Mary Moore, University, librarian. Elmer Pendell, Klamath Falls, history and economics; Edith Pirie, Umatilla, science. Marie Ridings, Ashland, mathe-1 matics; Naoma Robbins, McMinnville,! physical education; Leota Rogers, Ash land, English. Carlton Savage, Glendale, principal; I Freiderike Schilke, Wallowa, music; Madeline Slot boom, 'Monmouth, science; Ulala Stratton, Bandon, romance lan guages; Ollie Sloltenberg, Medford, physical education. £ ormer Graduates Promoted Tihetta Templeton, North Bend, Span ish; Mary Turner, Redmond, French and Latin. Trene Whitfield, Coquille, Fnglish; Howard Wines, Klamath Falls, com merce. Isabel Zimmerman, Molalla, mathe matics and history. Among the graduates of other years who are high school instructors are Harry “Shinny” Hargreaves, who is principal of the Cottage Grove high .school, and Loo Cossman, instructor of sciencce at Vale. Lajst year Mr. Coss man was instructor at the University high school. BROAD EDUCATION URGED Gregory Advises Student Teachers To Become Versa'ile : | Students v.-ho intend to teach should ; prepare to instruct in three or four dif ferent subjects, says Professor C. A. ! Gregory of the school of education. Many high schools in Oregon have a j teaching staff of only two or three in j structors, he says, and it is necessary j that these should be able to teach sov j eral different subjects. Many teaching positions are lost, ar i cording to Professor Gregory, because 1 ! teacher applicants are not prepared to | instruct in athletics and physical train i !!IK- ft is usually necessary in smaller high schools of the state for this in ! struction to be given by instructors in other subjects, Professor Gregroy ! declares. ROGUES GALLERY MAKES DEBUT IN ZOOLOGY Klu Klux Klan Tactics Throw Large I Surprise Into Registrants In Science Department Oh, frosh, page M. Bertillon! The | gentleman who mapped man’s digital differences and measured the expanse between brow and ear is needed in room 206 Heady. Students who have r*-gistef -•! in ai.-v j of tiie courses listed in ti e department iif zoology cull it the --agues’ galk-r . but George Houck and Oscar Richards, tlie gentlemen who assume the appear am-e of kleagb s of the Klu Klux Klan j inf they cover their heads wifh a black cloth and command the victims to hold the pose until the ; -k. explain that room lb-6 is the pi: i- , all students registered in , s of the department of zoology n, a-* com* to j hav their pictures taken. Houck, while making a photographical survey of I short student who had to climb on a I i chair to attain the range of visibility | divulged the information that Dr. H 1>. Torrev, head of the department of ! zoology and director of physical re search at the University, was to use the photographs for the purpose of stu dent identification. The registration card containing the student's present educational status is divided into sections, and one section, the upper lett hand corner, is left blank. Into this blank section is fit ted the finished photograph. In this way names can easily be associated "ith faces and a personal acquaintance is more readily attained, explained the laboratory assistant after admonishiug a very seismic young lady that his . camera was built to take moving pic tures. The zoology registrants were sent down to room 406 without being told to give assigned numbers to the labora tory assistants and await results. Many wanted to know what was the idea of the rogues gallery. One young lady was so surprised when her picture was taken that she said she knew her in structor would never know her from her photograph. Another assumed a beatific smile, forgetting that two desk stools on top of the table directly behind her was a very inappropriate background. Late ■ esterday afternoon Houck said that in "!v Mi 10 photographs had been taken. ADA HALL SENDS THESIS T’ e horary has (received from Dr. 1 . Hull two copies of her published thesis, “Regeneration in the Annelid! Nerve Cord.” Dr. Hall was a Univer- J sitv of Oregon student in 1917 and 1919. r.r I Your Eyes As a | Welcome I to the students and faculty " | of the II. of O., this adver tisement will be accepted in full payment of a complete examination of the eyes. Dr. Royal J. Gick Optometrist - Optician 90S Willamette St. Up Stairs Phone 620. THE KREMLIN, MOSCOW tXCost cf the famous buildings of the world ate equipped with Otis Elevators The KREMLlX is the citadel of Moscow, The walls of the triangular enclosure were built in the year that Columbus discovered America. Much of the history of Russia a dark tale of intrigue, mystery and bloodshed — was enacted in the Kremlin buildings. The present Great Palace dates back only to Napoleon’s day, for his soldiers burned the old palace. There arc two Otis Automatic Push Button Elevators in the Great Palace. There is another Otis Elevator in the Nicholas Palace. This is significant of the world-wide scope of Otis activi ties. From the first crude hydraulic elevators to the mod ern miracle of automatic vertical transportation, Otis has ied the w. y and even now is continually developing new and belter methods and machinery. o T I S E L E V A T O R C O I\ I P A N Y Offices in all Principal Citiea of the World Short Orders II you are hungry and you haven’t raudi time— let us fix you up. FOUNTAIN SPECIALS - We can furnish you with the best of drinks and specials. They mate your mouth water. Our Service-Try it and See. OREGANA The Student’s Shop 1 The Trail Leads to Graham’s F or those College Folks who appre ciate what is distinctive -vi hoot wear. r \ ic ml ,V- 35 sei >*> FOOTWEAR’^fil "''..here College Folks Buy Footwear” li>i] 828—Willamette Street—828