31 Heed Call For Freshman Casaba ream Starts His Men Out at Fundamentals Of Basketball P I a y Daily Practice Time Set For 5:00 ill Afternoon Thirty-one men turned nnt for ' the first rpgulnr freshman bnslco1-i 1 »:i 11 |>i-Met ice at McArthur court. Iasi night. Spike Leslie, frosh mentor, started tlicon out. on ttio fundament-; ills |inssing, pivoting, dribbling,! shooting, and eondil inning exercises. This work will lie contiimed for -11n* rest of tliis term, and the entire | squad will be carried for 1 lint length of time. The players will work out every night. Practice will start at H:00 j o’clock until the donut tournament j js closed, and then it will begin at •1:00. Those who turned out last night 1 were: (Jerald Murray, Otto Manor, jVlalvin McCarty, .Tames MoOuo, | Charles 'Teague, all from Eugene; j Del.aiiey Brown, Halfway; Jesse Bradley, Klamath Balls; Ceorge McFarland, T’ortb'nd; 1C e n n e 1 h Scales, Portland; bictiard ICneeland, Portland; Don Baird, Portland; Lew Harris, Summer Lake; Howard Dietrich, Medford; Kverett. McGee, Ashland; Howard Dirks, Salt Lake City, Utah. Henry Layoff, Portland; Estill Phipps, Medford; Prank Harrow, Lnkeviow; Prank Schaefer, Port--1 land; Ployd MeKillip, Uebo; Lewis Ankeny, Portland; Kenneth Edick, Portland; Earl Alexander, Portland; George Arvoln, Astoria; Orville Garrett, Grants Pass; Charles Grov er, Portland; Morris Bennett, Ver nonin; Donald Brown, Chehalis; and "Wayne Emmott, Hillsboro. Oregon’s Hopes Against Husky Harriers Rise Jenson’s Recovery From Flu IVj>s Up Hayward; Will Select Five Men Though for a while after the O. A. (\ meet it seemed out of the question to 1»i 11 Hayward to enter the crosscountry team in Hu' northwest meet' at Seattle November £0, Pd Jensen \s rapid recovery from the flu which ki*pt him on his back most of last, week somewhat, brightens the prospect. Oregon is bid ter off with a five man team such as they will have to take to the Washington meet than with a larger one, Hill Hay ward explains, because though the squad is small, there is keen com pel it ion among its members, and its size does not indicate the cali ber president, of Theta Sigma i 111, nniiirii ,s Hon orary journalism l'r;itornity, is nom* dtlicr Ills a Dot .llakor. Dot soys slu' is coming :uul she says il era | • 1111 iru 11 y. “For tliroo yours now J ’vo gone to I lie Jamboree ninl, 1 'in f; o i n o n ”■ n i n. ’I’liink I 'll not a piece of canvas and oo us u tonl.” The cx-oilitor of the Seven Seers > K£2S 'I'ODAV mid KK1DAV LAURA ‘ LA PLANTE “ HOME JAMES” ;i coiuody scrcnm Also COMEDY NEWS £IGHT 25c ■Matinee 20c HEX Music column is still full of wise __P a 11 1 Lnv. ours, t lie long, robust man at t lio shack, says vehemently: ”\ had thought of wearing a habit, but last week-end [ saw such dire happenings fall upon those who wore such, and now i’m in a state of confusion. Shall I lie Cleopatra or go as Helen of Troy?” « * » r Walter Ooovor, prosiilont of Si gum llelta. < 'll l, men’s .journalism frater nity, issues t li is wolenme, “Come one, come all, and be at 1 lio men’s gym at !l masked. Vou ’re d a r n e d right I ’ll be there too, with bells on. Shall I ring you up?” And so on, and on, far into the night——. Co-op Manager Given Post in Book Conclave Salesmen’s Group Slates San Francisco Meeting To Be Held in Spring A conference of till book sellers west of the Rocky Mountains will be held in San Francisco, April 15 to 17, 3 020, for discussion and mutual exchange of ideas. Marion F. McClain, manager of the University Co-op, has been chosen on the advisory committee by Paul Elder who is perhaps, next to .T. K. Gill, considered the greatest pioneer bookseller. Several years ago Mr. McClain was appointed, by the western division of the Ameri can Book Sellers’ association, to attend a conference for national college sellers at Atlantic City. On this trip he had the opportunity to visit U1 college stores and call upoij various manufacturing houses. Owing to the impossibility for representatives of the West to at tend the national conference of Am erican Book Sellers’ association, it has been necessary to form the Western Division. He will be in charge of all college discussioiv which will take place at this con ference. Eleven Pacific coast colleges are members of this division. Member ship is confined to those stores which are owned or operated by the school. They are: University of Southern California, ' University of California of Los Angeles, State Teachers College at San .lose, Stan ford University, University of Cal ifornia, Oregon Agriculture College, Washington State College, Univer sity of Washington, University of British Columbia, Bellingham State Normal, and University of Oregon. Faculty Group Study Methods of College Teaching Comimtlee Reported On Experiments Wednesday Dean Sheldon Chairman The first regular meeting of the faculty committee, on the investi gations of methods of college teach ing was held Wednesday afternoon. Reports were made of the controll ed experiments in college education made here last year and of the projected work for this year. _De.ni (f. I*. Sheldon is chairman of the committee. Other members are: l*r. Rav I’. Bowen of the ro mance languages department, Arthur R. Stillman of the school of busi ness administration, O. K. Stafford of the chemistry department. Dean Charles K. Carpenter of the law school, Dean Ellis I’. Lawrence of the school of architecture and allied arts, H. R. Taylor of the psychology department, Dean Ilaiirv .1. Gilbert, of the college of literature, arts and sciences, and Stephenson Smith of tiie English department. Committee Does Work hast year the committee carried on a series of experiments in dif ferent departments in the university to determine the values of different types of instruction in classes of college grade. The results of these experiments are being published by tin' University Press in a book en titled “Studies in University Meth ods of Teaching.” The book con tains a foreword by President Ar nold Bennett Hall, “The Relative Importance of Teaching in College and University.” Each chapter con tains the statistical and scientific, information compiled from each ex periment. Chapter Titles Given The chapter titles are: “Controll ed Experimentation in the Study of College Methods of Teaching” by Hail It. Douglass; “The Value of Extra Quiz Sections in the Teaching of English History” by Donald O'. Barnes and Itarl It.. Douglass; “The Relative Effective ness of the Problem and tlie Lec ture Method in Principles of Eco •>— -rgi Oh! Boy! Hero we are again ! The Latest in Records Sonny Boy There’s a Rainbow ’Round.. My Shoulder A1 Jolson Ace in the Hole I’m a Ding Dong Daddy Jay C. Elippen Joane If You Want tiie Rainbow Cordon’s Adelphia Hotel Whispering Orchestra I Wonder ! Why? i The Clevelanders i HEAR THEM FIRST AT LARA WAY’S ! MUSIC HOUSE j 070 Willamette St. j Lb— ---—...--— -is Rooming with a Remington Portable adds to the enjoy O Ifeommate tendency to give this kind of work better marks. ment ot college life. It is al ways ready to help with your work. Long reports and theses can be turned out in far less time, as compared with laborious long-hand methods. Then, too, think of the greater neatness and legibility of type written work ! Any prof, being human, will have a Remington Portable is the recognized leader in sales and popularity. Smallest, lightest, most dependable, most com pact standard keyboard port able. Weighs only S ‘ 2 pounds, net. Carrying case only 4 inches high. You can buy it on easy payments. Remington Rand Business Service Inc. 20G-7-8 Broadway Building Eugene, Oregon tnomics” by "Victor *P. Morris ant ! I furl R. Douglass; “Project Teach ing in College Courses in Eduea jtional Psychology” by Harold Saxe ■'Tuttle and Hnrl R. Douglass; “Prob lem Method in Psychology.” bj Howard R. Taylor; “The Relative Effectiveness of Loeture-Rc(£ta lion and Supervised Individua Methods in the Teaching of Enifiei Mathematics in OHogc” ,by D. R Davis and Harl R. Douglass. Committees Appointed For Advertising Club Vi ork on the organization of an advertising club, membership of which will be open to every student ion the campus interested in adver tising, has been begun by the ap pointment. of four committees. Such an organization will enable everyone to have.an active inter est in advertising, and give them an opportunity to have actual ex perience. jV meeting of the" following com STANG’S DANCE STUDIO Varsity drag, glide waltz, anil all the latest, dances taught in a .SPECIAL BALLROOM CLASS EVERY MONDAY, 7:30 j). m. » Private lessons by appoi ntment Eugene’s only established School SGI Willamette Phone 2813 FLU? FRIENDS THEN A HOOK WILL (TIEER THEM UP — RENT IT FROM THE “HIGH HAT” ON BOOK BALCONY AT UNIVERSITY CO-OP ! mittee, appointed by Jim Hanning, will be held at the Anchorage at 11 o’clock today in order to carry on work which lias been planned. Executive committee: Prof. W. F. (1. Thaeher, Dean David E. Faville, Mr. Carl Tlnimieman as advertising manager, Carol Eborhart, Milton George, Bill Hammond, Bob Warner, Bob Byington, Florence Grebe, Marylielen Konpal, Edith Lake, and i Margaret Long. You Must EAT! but it's nice to save money too Luncheon now 40c Dinner now 50c Steel Cut and Rhinestone I I Buckles for Christmas Gifts Buster Brown Shoe Store c Suoerxes Oxf-.-x JPf-OA-e* O M?MOPl4\N & W/VHBURNE — PHONE 2700 — When You Want a New Tie-You Want it NEW You want to make selection from the new, smart, colorful patterns—you want the kind that is in vogue now or will be in a few weeks, and that is what you get here. $1.00 up to $3.50 Let a new tie dress up your old suit $1.00 to $3.50 If your old suit looks a little drab to you—select one or two of these new ties. Their rich contrasts of color in new cluster stripes will put a new spark of life in it. WADE'BROS. Hart, Schaffner & Marx Clothes