< Pre-Dental Students Get Advice . V?ood Lib Arts Course Suggested Dr. Ellis B. Jump, professor of anatomy at the University dental ' l.Vhool in Portland, was on the cam pus Tuesday to advise pre-dental Btudents during registration. Over 46 students received this aid which was formerly given by members of .Eugene faculty. ' The requirements for dental stu dents are similar to those for med -students with one year of physics, one year of zoology, and a year and a half of chemistry being manda tory. As the dental school is high ly specialized, Dr. Jump suggested .tliat the students get a good lib eral arts program in addition to filling requirements. Available Soon .Mimeographed copies of the cur Jjculum will soon be made. They will be available in room 1, Me Schedule Changes Announced Late changes of the time sched ule were announced yesterday. Among them were the scheduling of the classic my ths class at 4 p.m. Wednesday in 105 journalism building and the addition of a Shakespeare section taught by Dr. E. C. A. Lesch at 9 a.m. Monday, Wednesday, and Friday in 301 Con don hall. The course in play writing was dropped from the schedule. The general chemistry laboratory from 8 to 11 Monday and Wednes day was dropped, the 1 to 3 labs changed from 1 to 4, and the 2 to 4 changed from 2 to 5. The organic - chemistry laboratory section from 2 to 5 Monday and Wednesday was also dropped. A new class in versification (Rht 316,8,9) was added. The two-hour course taught by A. Ernst is sched uled for 3 p.m. Tuesday and Thurs day in 108 Villard. Section Dropped Changes in clothing selection in clude the dropping of section at 10 Tuesday and 10 Thursday and the re-scheduling of CT 114 for 3 Fri day and 8 Saturday The 9 Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday section of general sociol ogy was dropped. Berreman will instruct the fall term sociology seminar and Moore the winter term course. A three-hour course in philosophy of education (Ed 586) has been scheduled for 2 to 4:30 p.m. Thursday in room 3 education building. Stevens will be instructor. A 3 Monday, Wednesday, and Friday section of backgrounds of publishing has been added. It will be taught in 104 journalism build ing by Price. Clure hall or by writing to the den- ' tal school in Portland. Also the • first catalogs *o be distributed by the school will be available shortly after the first of the year. Dr. Jump, the chairman of the | faculty committee of admissions, emphasized that all professsional schools are now oversubscribed and that students are admitted into the dental school on the basis of thehir scholastic record, the amount of previols schooling, and personal factors. Although it is possible to enter dental school after two years of preparatory work, a three-year pre dental course is recommeended. Students are accepted from all ac credited schools in the state on the same basis. Clinical Approach The University of Oregon dental school prepares students for the clinical approach to dentistry with j regard for the immediate need in Oregon and the Northwest. .As official adviser of pre-dental students liaison between the dental school in Portland, Dr. Jump will be glad to help any students who wish to write to him. He served in a similar capacity for four years preceding February, 1947 when he was liaison between the University of California and the San Francisco Medical Center where he headed the department of anatomy. According to Dr. Jump it is prob able that arrangements will be made to have represen tatives of the dental school meet with University students during the school year. City Helps Ease Housing The University’s student housing problemts have been eased this fall, but not entirely solved, by the re sponse of Eugene townspeople to a current radio-press campaign in this area urging home owners to rent rooms to students, according to Mrs. Alice B. Macduff, Univer sity housing secretary. Over 260 offers to room or board students have been received by the housing secretary since the radio stations KUGN, KORE and the Eu gene Register Guard launched their “rooms for students” campaign early this month. Mrs. Macduff as serted that virtually all the offers came as a result of the publicity afforded the University’s housing needs through these radio-press re leases. The housing secretary pointed out that close-to-the-campus hous ing for both single and married students is still urgently needed, and a few faculty members are still searching for apartments. Rememer to reserve your copy of This Year’s Oregana when you register Geologists Complete Research Dr. Warren D. Smith, retired head and professor emeritus of the University's department of geology and geography, and Dr. Lloyd Sta ples, associate professor of geol ogy and geography here, have re turned to Eugene from south Coos and Curry counties where they have been conducting investigations concerning the Indian lands case preparatory to testifying at a hear ing slated for October 20. Appraisal Made The month's investigation con sisted of an appraisal of the value of territory obtained by the United States in a treaty with the Indians made in 1855. The Indians were later moved to reservations. A decision in favor of the orig inal owners was recently handed down by the U. S. supreme court, and is now in the hands of the court of claims. The investigation made by Dr. Smith and Dr. Staples was ordered to estimate the value of minerals present in the territory at the time of the treaty. Aids Project; Historical work for the project was done by Miss Nadie Strayer, daughter of the late Senator Stray "er of Lake county, chairman of the 3tate mining board for many years. Accompanying Drs. Smith and Staples was Wilfred Wasson of the Coquille Indians, a student at Ore gon College of Education in Mon mouth. Wasson was elected on the death of h.is father in July of this year, as chief of all the Coast In dians. Campus Life Slates Meeting Tonight An explanation of the AWS “Campus Life” program will be given at a meeting for faculty sponsors, student leaders, and their assistants tonight at 7 :30 in alumni hall at Gerlinger hall. The year’s schedule will be out lined at the meeting and it is asked that sponsors, leaders and assist ants attend. They will receive the handbook, directory, and the names in their respective group. The wives and husbands of faculty sponsors are requested to attend the meet ing Songs by the Alpha Phi trio and piano numbers by Gloria Merten will form the entertainment for the evening. Refreshments will be served. Co-chairman for the meet ing are Mildred Chet'ty and Mario Lombard. The "campus Life" program was planned by Barbara Johns, AW3 president, and Golda P. Wickham, dean of women, to help orientat-' freshman women and transfers to social and scholastic phases of campus life. Football Band to Meet All former members of the foot ball band are asked to meet at the band room at 1 p.m. Saturday. They will play for the game Sat urday afternoon. Social Heads to Meet Old and new social chairmen of all living organizations will meet at 4 p.m. September 24 in Gerlin • ger hall. House dances and other social activities will be planned and scheduled at that time. Women teachers in New York schools are absent twice as often as men teachers, a study shows. Home economics enrollment at Hunter college has more than doubled in three years. Simmons college freshmen ob serve May Day by hanging May baskets on the doors of thelr junior sisters. Man with a system Simply pick up your telephone and you can route your voice through any one of thousands of central offices—some with dial mechanisms so complex they stagger the imagination, yet so efficient they seem to work like magic—others staffed by compe tent, courteous operators whose standards • of work have long been a fine tradition. You command, in effect, millions of miles of telephone wire and cable. You can direct your call —one of some 110,000,000 that will he made today — to any one of some 53,000,000 telephones here and abroad. The operation of this vast system is big business. It is a complex, many-sided busi ness in wh h thousands of college trained men are v orking in their chosen fields— development or research, engineering planning, accounting or statistics, public contacts, supe- vision of operations or other phases of management. These men have found highly interesting and rewarding careers. BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM r