Appointment Bureau Starts Yearly Work 149 Students Expecting To Teach Next Fall Apply for Positions Applicants Asked To Keep In Touch With Officials Opportunities that the appoint ment bureau, extension of the uni versity operated through the school of education, presents to job-seeking men and women qualified for teach ing positions were explained by F. L. Stetson, professor in education and director of the bureau, yester day afternoon when more than 140 students who expect to be ready to teach next fall met at the Education building at 1 o’clock. bast year the bureau .cooperated in putting 204 candidates in teach ing positions, 200 of them being high school or junior high place ments, Mr. Stetson told the group of future instructors. Candidates who enrolled with the bureau num bered -180, 204 for the first time and 240 as re-registers. Increase of 1928 calls over 1927 calls was 12% per cent while in crease in enrollment of candidates in the past year over 1927 was 23 per cent. Mr. Stetson told the can ^ didates that the bureau has been increasing its range steadily each year. Placements in New York Placements from the bureau have been made as far east as New York, the group learned. Calls from scat tering eastern states are received each year, the greatest number of calls outside of the state coming from Washington, second from Idaho, third from California and fourth from Montana. • The greatest call is for high school teachers, with administrative positions to be. filled coming next in demand. Elementary instructors are third, junior high school teach ers fourth and university and col lege teachers fifth. Mr. Stetson explained to the group the ptoeess of * registration, and emphasized the importance of candidates keeping in close ,touch with the bureau while it went into the work of cheeking records, mak ing up credentials and information for mailing in response, to calls. Bureau Plays Fair “fl is necessary that the bureau play fair to. thosa.Jscekiiig informa tion about prospects and it is neces sary that the prospects play fair with the bureau,” said' Mr. Stetson. “Applicants are expected to refrain from any unethical conduct in writ ing letters of application which ac company the information wo send out. They are expected, also, to keep in close touch with the bureau.” Miss Ada M. Pope, secretary of tlm bureau, was introduced during the meeting. Telegrams Urged for Defeated Oregon Basketball Team (Continued from rage One) few days in the infirmary with the 1 flu, and bv the time they were re-' leased the conference season was less than a week away. Oregon was not so overwhelming ly outplayed at Seattle. The Husky; five, however, was on and the Web- 1 foots were away off. While the! Washington team was dropping j spectacular shots from mid-floor the Oregonians were missing easy crip ples under the basket. The difference in the power of the Oregon team and the Washing ton State team was in the number of free shots converted. The Coug ars turned the whole seven of the personal fouls called on Oregon into points, but Oregon could only drop in two out of their seven. The mar gin of the victory was three points. Oregon will be in a desperate mood against the Vandals tonight. It is a case of “must win.” To morrow night the Oregonians meet Gonzaga at Spokane and then wind up the road trip against Montana at Missoula on Friday. A few telegrams would help a lot. Track Induces Many Freshmen To Early Work Lillie Experience Brings Small Handicap, Says Veteran Cinder Coach As usual, a few freshmen have caught the idea of turning out early, or rather, what seems early to most of them, for track. Kvon though there* are more than .Ifl men out for the frosli team, sev eral places among the track and field events have wrono to fill them. Many of the frosli are recorded as having had no track experience whatever. There are two or three of them, in fact, who have not even seen a track meet. Those with little or no experience, however, according to Coach Bill Hayward, are hut slightly handi capped. Bill pounds the words “hot loin ;ind loumlation into Ins men, fowl means by these terms Hint technique is not always so impor tant as (lie power which pre-season training can give- tliem. Freshmen signed up for track are: Morris Bennett, Virgil Scheiber, Dudley Spencer,.Edmond Clark, Ray mond- Nereau, Dayton SWirving, Robert Roiling, Fred Norton, Harry Becker, Morton, Arno Rndemachcr, Ralph Penlaiul, William Minsinger, Hubert Allen, Neill Whisnant, Doug las Goodrich, Graham Covington, Wayne Emmott, Tom Moran, Robert Allen, Harry Hoyden, Edmond diar ies,: DeLaney Brown, Will Norman, Claude Carter, Richard Fields, Law rence Rynearson, A1 Brown, James Hughes, Jack Erdley, Virgil Fal leur, Joe Gerot, and Eugene Tar bell. Spring Term Chosen For Opportunity Day “Business Opportunity' Day,” which was scheduled for winter term is to be postponed until early in spring term, according to David E. Eaville, dean of the school of business administration. One of the main purposes of the day was to bring students into con tact with prominent business men, stated Dean Favillc. It is felt that postponing the day until the time of year when students are looking for positions upon graduation, will be furthering this purpose. Morris Talks Tonight To Cosmopolitan Club Victor 1J. Morris, assistant profes sor of economics, is to talk oil “The Causes and Cures of War” at the meeting of the Cosmopolitan club which is to bo held at 7:15 this evening at the Y. M. C. A. hut. Flans for the term’s work^will bo completed at this time. Magazine Writer Hails Return of Religion to American Universities “Only a slur athlete with a smile . like Lindbergh's and a fist like; Oldie Tunuey's euuld put religion, over on a sophomore,” Herbert Par- j i-is'll avers in ‘‘.Religion Ones to j College,” an artiele in the January | "Century” heralding the return of j eolloginte Biblieal study in America.! “The average chapel service is good' l'or nobody.” “Most colleges and universities be-1 gun with religion,” and “the theo logians were as thick as thieves,” writes in sparkling style the rector I of Christ Church, New Brunswick, | New Jersey. Then a mathematics i professor must be a D. Ik, and an astronomer must know his Kxoilus. The pendulum swung away, biol ogy superseded the Bible, clothes I outranked the chapel. .Sophisti cated student bodies regarded a pious lindergrad with a pit# much like that bestowed on those who are not quite right in their minds or who lack that consideration for personal ap pearance that is described as next | to godliness. It is now no longer necessary before matriculation to subscribe to the Thirty-nine Articles or the Westminster Catechism, the decrees of the Kynod of Bolt or the Heidelberg Confession. Suddenly religion is coming back. Young men and women have been pouring out of colleges with plenty of knowledge, but with the familiar and ancient divinities. Mammon and Aphrodite as their deities. Youth classed 'fUealisui, self-restraint, seif sacrifice with—frock-coats, side whiskers, and the .works of Alfred Lord Tennyson. Now, with courses for tlie study of philosophy of re ligion,^ comparative religion, relig ion and ethics, higher criticism and Bible literature, and even evangel ism, J’arrish finds a counter-swing of the pendulum. Students have discovered not only that they must balance their courses with an emotional outlet, but that the world treats them with less sus picion. m Believing that compulsory chapel attendance has a strong case, lie nev ertheless declares that “such relig ions services as are prescribed at the majority of our colleges and uni versities, whether compulsory or voluntary i.would bore even the lad with the long hair and the rather gogglv eyes who intends to become a missionary to Africa.” There is no reaspn, he finds, why a boy should be excused from the exercise of religion anv more than he should drop the prescribed ath letics because he doesn’t like it. There can be no pickers nor choosers in a state of tutelage. What is good for one is good for all. “Early training in tlje con ven lioiial Sunday-school was doubtless absurd enough, for youth,” he writes, “but youth cannot be left to work out its salvation, to develop its character at the most critical per iod of its life without guidance and apart from the environment that ■helps.” Camp Fire Girl Officer Honored This Week-end Reception, Banquet Are Scheduled; Out of Town Girls Expected Friday I - .Timet L. MeKellnr, national as i sistant secretary of the Camp Fire tlirls, is conducting a series of lec tures every day at 4 o’eolek in room 121 of the Woman’s building. Miss McKellar who is an active Camp Fire I worker in the northwest will leave for Walla Walla, Wash., Saturday. The local university Camp Fire Girls are giving a reception in honor Janet McKellar ■of -Miss McKellar in tlie Woman’s buildiiifr Thursday evening at 8, last ing until 11. $ banquet is listed for Friday j evening at the new men’s dormitory, at which Miss McKellar may meet i out of town representatives as well j as local girls. Miss Mildred Crain, | of the pliysicial education depart-j merit of Monmouth will lie present 1 with ten selected officers from her various groups there. Twenty-four I Cottage Grove Camp Fire Girls plan j to attend the banquet with their guardian. A largo council fire is scheduled i immediately after the banquet. Frosli Casaba Team Meets Super-varsity Practice Came Is Planned For This Afternoon The freshman basketball team will play a practice game with the! super-varsity team this afternoon 1 at the regular freshman practice i hour, it was announced by Spike j Leslie, frosli coach, last night. This j will be the only heavy workout for the yearlings before they meet Mod- ; ford high Friday. The supers under .Tost, assistant; varsity coach, have been working out iu the afternoons. They met the frosli in a practice game last week end and defeated them with a last j minute rally. The lineup of the supers has not been decided, but Spike Leslie will probably start the same team that played in the second Medford game last week-end. This combination includes Lilly Keenan and Henry Levoff at for- 1 LEARN THE PIANO IN TEN LESSONS TENOR-BANJO OR MANJOLIN IN FIVE LESSONS Without nerve - racking, heart breaking scales ami exercises. You ! are taught to play by note in regu lar professional chord style. In your very first lesson you will be able to play a popular number by note*. SEND FOR IT ON APPROVAL The “Hallmark Self-Instructor," is the title of this method. Eight years were required to perfect this great work. The entire course with the necessary examination sheets, is bound in. one volume. Tlu? first les son is unsealed which the student may examine and be his oivcn “JUDGE and JURY." The later part of the “ Hallmark Helf-Instruc tor,” is sealed. Upon the student returning any copy of the “Hnllimrk Self-Instruc tor,” with the seal i:u broken, wo will refund in full all money paid. This amazing Self I nsfrpelyr will be sent anywhere. You do not need to send any money. When you re ceive this now method of teaching music. Deposit with the Postman the ‘sum of ten dollars. If you are not entirely satisfied, the money will be returned in full, upon written re quest. The Publishers are anxious to place Ibis “Self-Instructor" in the hands of music, lovers all over the country, and is in a position to make an attractive proposition to agents. .Send for your copy today. Address The “Hallmark Self-Instruc tor” Station G, I'ostofficc, Box 111, New York, N. Y'. Specialist in Nestle Permanent Waves Expert Kinder Waving BEAU MONDE BEAUTY SHOP Over Western Union Ina Garrett, Prop. ward, Don Bagen at editor, ami Vincent Do!p and Kcrniit Stevens at guard. Trip to Europe Given As First Contest Prize The League of Nations Non Parti san association incorporate are of fering to the high schools of the country a competitive examination on “A Short History of the League of Nations,” which is published by the association. There are three prizes awarded to the winners, the first prize is a trip to Kuropc, the second $100, and the third is $50. Besides these, local prizes are given wherever the winner is selected. Council Says Cooperation Agreed Upon With Taylor (Continued from r«gc One) j committee and agreed to by Mr. I Taylor: 1. That the entrance and front bo j repaired. That the booths in the center be removed. That the above space be used for tables. 4. That a proper cloak room be ’furnished. 5. That the shop be thoroughly denned and dusted before each dance. (>. That the roof be repaired. 7. That the decorations be re arranged in a neat fashion. 8. That because of lack of room at the entrance, spectators be pro hibited.” * The dance investigation commit tee included “Squeak” Parks, chair man; Bert McHlroy, Art Anderson, Walter Norblad, and Poland Davis' PLEDGING ANNOUNCEMENT I’an Xenia, professional interna tional foreign trade fraternity, an nonnees the pledging of: Glenn Carter Harold Hildreth Melvin Beliake Arne Strommer. Dinner Dress Formal Gown Is it to bo n Hi'"' one or with a clover now touch will the obi one do? Whatever it is bring it to us. Style Right Price Right SHOP PETITE 573 E. 13tli Phone 1733 Recent Shocks Explained by Dr. E. T. Hodge Geology Professor Says Alaskan Quakes From Strain of Earth Crust Tilt' fourtoon distinct earth shocks Unit tvoro folt in Fairbanks, Alaska, Monday durian a four hour period, catne as the result of a periodic re lease of strain in the earth’s crust, Dr. Edwin T. Hodge, professor of econo..lie geology, said yesterday. ‘‘We constantly think of Califor nia as the only part of the Paid fin coast that is seismic,” Dr. Hedge said. “This might be a happy state of affairs for those of us who live on the north Pacific, coast. Only two parts of the north Pacific coast, Puget Sound and the Alaskan penin sula, are seismic. “Probably the shocks may indi cate a periodic release of strain in the earth’s crust. This strain, if it continued to increase without per iodic release, would eventually have to give way, and a shock might cn i sue that would be of a terrific na ture. The fact that we have only an occasional shock along the north Pacific coast might indicate that these strains are accumulating and awaiting the day when they would be unbearable.” I The question for the future, re If your Formal needs altering take it to— MARGARET M. COMDREN 3rd Floor Miner Bldg. Before the FROSH GLEE Cold Nights call for Hot Food at GOSSER’S TODAY and THURSDAY ROD LA ROQUE in “Love Over Night” "'it'll -IKANKTTIi LOFF TOM KJiNKDY anil MARY CARR DRAMATIC, AMUSING— / Rlorv of a light-lieuitcil boy, a beautiful girl amt a dumb deter- i five—a comedy of the finest type i '—don t miss it. J — Also — | Short Subjects REX MUSIC f *> REX PRICES !Jl()-!)J(j Willamette HI., Kiigene, Ore. Women’s Silk Hosiery Service Weight Setni^S heer Chiffon Three numbers o! full-fash ioned hosiery to meet the smart woman’s needs. A medium weight with lisle top and sole— semi-sheer silk-to-the-top—silk-j to-the-top lovely chiffon — the1 saving way to hosiery smartness.' All the Wanted Shades to Harmonize With Spring Costumes i solves into whet tier or not Oregon, which so fur lies not been seismic, might some day be the scene of a terrific, devnst. ting earthquake that would come as the result of a great accumulation of strain in the earth's crust. “Whether this is true or not geologists can not state, but an in vestigation should be made to deter mine whether the north I’aeific coast is free from strain or is accu mulating strain without periodic re-1 leases,” Dr. Hodge said. Flip/tin To Address Sigma Delta Chi Men T. ,T. Flippin, secretary of the Eugene chamber of commerce, will address the members of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism frater nity, at the regular bi-weekly meet ing of the organization at the An pliorage today noon. Mr. Flippin will discuss the co operation of chamber of commerce bodies with newspapers in the boost ing of communities. iooJg££S2§ WE ADMIT IT! Kveryono soys it’s tlio lll'sl I’ii luro' wo’ve liml in months . . . "i-,,,, •)[ S!'y Hu' some1. if you hurry down. GIVE*™ . TAKE! LAST DAY IT’S NO. 3 OF ' Siojuid Super 8 ’' Specials A Talking Picture Farce Comedy featuring GEORGE SIDNEY JEAN HERSHOLT YOU f STATE STREET SADIE IS ON HER WAY TODAY and THURSDAY HE DARED ALL FOR REVENGE SK/ Knight fjf LOVE' // RONALD COLMAN VILMA BANKY They were children of fate. Who high born lie a gy[isy bandit, lie took hot' by might—for revenge. Uu hold her by right—for love. Hoc Iho moot wonderful of oil Hereon lovers in great moments of love’s embrace. It’s a treat to behold a thrill for the heart— a. joy to remember for many moons to come. Comedy Indoor Golf Acsops rubles THE BEST in SILENT PICTURES EXTRA SPECIAL SPECTACULAR CLEANUP! , FEATURING NOEL THOMAS— , ¥ ~ “who saved tin; nation by the emau eipation of unsanitation. ” \ HARRY WOLF— “ Delerious dean of the dust pan.” BOB McALPIN— “1‘ropellar id' the proverbial plush * *. bottom push broom. CAM PA SHOPPE BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY THEME SONG "COME ALL YE FAITHFUL"