THE ALUMNUS THE STATE COLLEGE OF

...... _._._...... 0'\...... _ ...... • • • • • ...... _ "

Volume XIX :\Tovember, 1929, P ullman, Washington Num1>er 8 t

Published Monthly by the Alumni of the State College of Washington ~"'I ••••• ...... - ...... • - ...... -- ~- .~--~------.- ...--... -----~...... -~-~-I OFFICERS OF THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION

Executive Committee J. Houston l\IcCroskey, '00, Garfield ...... President C. J. Broughton, '19, Dayton ...... ];"'irst Vice President Frank Jenne, '12, Mount Vernon ...... Second Vice President H. M. Chambers, '1:3, Pullman ...... Secretary C. L. Hix, '09 , Pullman ...... Treasurer

Board of Directors Members-at-Large 1H. P. :iVIcCroskey, '98 ...... Portland, Oregon Catherine Mathews Friel, '23 ...... Pullman W. J. Rusch, '15 ...... ' ...... Spokane J. O. Blair, '08 ...... Vancouver L. B. Vincent, '15 ...... Yakima

Athletic Council • R. C. McCroskey, '06 ...... Garfield Lloyd Gillis, '21 ...... IN ash tucna E. V. Foster, '23 ...... Pullman

Official Publication The AlUlllllUS ...... Pullman (Subscription price, including dues, $3 .00 per year.)

Entered as second-class matter, June 13, 1919, at the post office at Pullman, Vlashington, under the Act of March 3, 1879. THE ALUMNUS A Digest of the News for the Alumni VOLUME XIX PULLMAN, WASHINGTON, NOVEMBER, 1929 NUMBER 8 The Carnegie Report on College Athletics (Alumni Features Service)

No book or article these days on The two fundamental causes of the and simmer down to the desire to reap college education is com'plete without defects in American coJlege athletics, the advantages of amateurism without its sections on athletics, and the au­ says the report, are (I) commercial­ paying the price. thor:; thereof have generally been able ism, and (2) "a negligent attitude to­ As for the recruiting and subsi dizing to find and set forth the conclusions ward the educational opportunity for of college athletics, "those who tempt either that athletics, scholarship and which the American coJlege exists." young men to barter their honesty f9r sound education don't go together and As for commercialism, the report the supposed advantages ·of a college never will, or that they do go to­ says that "few of our colleges and course, dishonestly achieved, are the gether and always will. It has always schools can be regarded as keeping Fagins of American sport and Amer­ depended on who did the writing. their sports free from the commercial ican hi gher education." Actual statistics, however, have a taint." Only 26 of the more than 100 uni­ disconcerting way of putting pet As for the neglect of educational op­ versities and colleges studied were opinions a nd pat arguments to rout, portunity, the report charges that in without trace of recruiting and only 29 and so we look over with interest the three ways both the colleges and their without subsidizing. much-anticipated report on college undergraduates neglect the educa­ Of the thousands of individual cases athletics made by the Carnegie ti onal opportunities that athletics of recruiting and subdizing studied, Foundation for the Advancement of might afford: alumni wcre responsible in only 30 Teaching, just publi shed after three (I) Present methods of manage­ per cent of the cases, administrative and olle-half years of investigation, ment, coaching and play in most col­ officers in eight per cent, and athletic during which 130 A merican and Ca­ lege sports provide "no challenge to officers in SO per cent. nadian univerSIti es, colleges and young and alert minds" because of the R ecruiting is done mostly by cor­ schools were visited and the coopera­ dominance of older persons such as respondence, and recruiting seldom if tion of more than 2000 persons was coaches, paid managers, professors ever exi sts without subsidi es. It is secured. and directors of physical education, estimated that at least one athlete in "It requires no tabulation of stati s­ and others who now bear almost all seven is subsidized. tics to prove that the young athlete of the responsibility. Recruiting and subsi dizing have led who giv es himself for months, body (2) College athletics have expended to much ;;shopping around" by school­ and soul, to training under a profes­ so rapidly that few institutions have boy athletes, a process of auctioning sional coach for a g ruelling contest, full y considered the problems and athletic skill to the hi ghest bidder. staged to focus the attention of thou­ have depended principally on catch­ Although there can be no doubt that sands of people, and upon which many words such as "faculty control" or well-conducted athletics may contrib­ thousands of dollars will be staked, "athletics for all" and on the imitation ute to the physical health of college wili find no time or energy for any of practices at other colleges. students, too few now receive the ben­ seri ous intell ectual effort," says Dr. (3) In the field of morals and con­ efits and too many receive positive Henry S. P ritchett in t'he preface. duct, "vociferous proponents of col­ harm. '"The compromises that have to be, lege athletics have claimed for college After a stati stical study of 18,667 made to keep such students in the col­ athletics far greater benefits than ath­ students in 111 representative univer­ lege and to pass them through to a letics can probably ever yield, and in sities and colleges, the authors find degree give an air of insincerity to the attempting to evaluate these supposed that the C0111mon notion that athletes whole university-college regime. W e benefits have hailed the shadow as the in general are poorer students than cannot serve every cause-scholarship, substance. Commercialism has almost non-athletes, is erroneous. On the science. busin ess, salesmanship, organ­ obliterated the non-material aspects of other hand, they conclude that sports ized athletics-through the university. athletics." requiring very hard training and long The need tod;!y is to re-examine our The bulletin maintains that Amer­ practice hours probably impair the educational regime with the determin­ ican amateurism must be revived as academic standing of certain athletes. ation to attain in greater measure the the very keystone of college athletics Success in life after graduation simplicity, sincerity, and thorough­ in a democracy; that the motives be­ seems to be related less to personal ness that is the life blood of a true uni­ hind al1 infractions of the amateur athletic success in coJlege than to high versity in any country at any age." code are the results of commercialism, academic standing. 2 THE ALUMNUS

Athletics should be regarded as than the average salary of the highest­ Follen, the first professor of German something of a powerful medicamen\, paid full professor. Academic status at Harvard, who inaugurated and to be prescribed for one individual in costs the head football coach on the coached cross-country running in 1824, one strength, for another individual average about $1400 a year, or 28 per may be called the Father of American st rength, etc. cc nt of the salary he receives from the College Athletics. Yale began to de­ The athletic team physician should coll ege. Coll ege administrations drive velop rowing in 1843. Baseball be­ have a medical degree from a Grade A closer bargain s with seasonal coaches fore 1852, had little standing in col­ medical school, should have at least than athletic associations, but the sea­ leges. By 1870 athletics had taken one year's postgraduate surgical sonal coach is appreciably better paid thei r place in American college life. training in a hospital or surgical clinic than the full-time coach with faculty Several pages are devoted to school with a large traumatic surgery prac­ appointment and status. athletics, especially the abuses: tice. and should have taken at least a "Doubtless at an ideal university," "Some of the corruption has come six-weeks' postgraduate course ill the the authors say, "professional coach­ from unwise parenthood. The father hygiene of athletic · training and ath­ ing would find no place. Obviously who would be horrified to find that he letic injuries. the position of a coach whose tenure W~lS forfeiting his own amateur stand­ Coll ege athktics, as conducted to­ depends upon victory is both fortu­ inl-{ a t golf or that his behavior 011 day, "definitely fail in many cases to nate and unfair. A coach who trusts the tennis court was regarded by oth­ utilize and .strengthen such desirable to faculty status and fair words for ers as bad sportsmanship, is not al­ social traits as honesty and the sense safety in the hour' of disapproval leans ways prompt to reprimand and stop of fa ir play, because of the deceit and upon a broken reed." a boy's shopping round for athletic in­ chicanery with which sports arc sur­ "The tendency to assume that any ducements or resenting or whining rounded." abuses inherent in intercollegiate ath­ over defeat." Figures collected sho\\· that al­ lttics will automatically disappear if The authors of the study arc Dr. though the proportion of students par­ a conference is formed and passes Howard J. Savage. staff member of ti cipating in intercollegiate athletics rules of a nature sufficiently lofty and the Carnegie Foundation. and Harold has remained at about 20 per cent for stringent is absurd, no matter how \Ill . Bentley, John T. McGovern and the [la st 30 years, the percentage tak­ much adlllinistrative machinery is pro­ Dean F. Smiley, M. D., secretary of ing part in all forms of athletics, in ­ vided or how many teeth may be the American Student H ealth associ­ tercollegiate and intramural over the placed in regulations. In the course ation. sallle period, has ri sen from about 20 of the present study it has been proved per cent to about 63 per cent. Intra­ again and again that no rule, however AMERICAN SHIPS SELECTED mural athletic s. voluntary or compul­ well intended, can be made binding BY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION sory, now engage on the average al­ without the consent and the active co­ The Lines and the Jl10st 60 per cent of all undergradu­ operation of those to \\·ho\11 it applies. A merican Merchant Lines have been ates. Too often l11ulticipli city of detail in designated as the official Intercollegi­ About 21 per cent of the under­ regulations tends only to drive dishon­ ate Alumni Steamship Lines, accord­ graduates play basketball, about 12 per est practi ces out of sight and to make ing to an announcement by Edward ccnt football, and about 10 per cent them secret, not to eliminate them." T. T. \Villiams, managing direc tor of each baseball and tennis. "vVhatever fin e phrases athletic con­ the Intercollegiate Alumni Extension O ne significant fact about all these ferences indulge in concerning the alll­ Service, which is owned and controlled figures is that few of the sports most ateur status, universitie s a nd colleges by the leading alu111ni organizations popular among undergraduates arc have found that unless th ey relax thei r of the COUlltry. suitable for recreation or diversion af­ rules regarding professionalism and The alumni organizations of 103 col­ lege and universities, including the ter graduation. wi nkat flagral.l t abuses, they cannot women's colleges, will take an active The highest-paid coaches hold their win enough games to satisfy their part in supporting the efforts of the jobs on the average a little over five constituents." United States Lines to build up an years, but "the tenure of the football The origins of American college ath­ American Merchant Marine. Coinci­ coach is coming less and less to de­ letics, say the authors of the study, dent with this announcement, the man­ pend upon victory. The standard de­ go back to Colonial days and the de­ agement of the United States Lines sire at prescnt appears to be a 'fair cline of pioneer life, when athletic skill has assigned the renowned steamship winning average' over a period of was looked upon as somewhat beneath America, of which Captain George from five to 10 years." the dig nity of a serious scholar. Cer­ Fried, of rescue fame, is the com·· The average salary paid to the head tain colleges legislated against athlet­ 111and·er, as the intercollegiate flagship football coach at about 100 in stitu­ ics as earl y as 1761. The Princeton for the sailings next year from New tions was found ot be $6107, while the faculty in 1787 voted formally that York on June 4, July 2 and July 30. hi ghest-paid fu ll professor ill these in­ "there are many more amusements "There are several reasons," ex­ stitution s received on thc average more honorable a nd more useful" for plained Mr. \Villiams, "why the alum­ $5158. When paid by athletic associa­ undergraduates than shinny. ni organizations have selected the tions, full-time head coaches averaged A lthough the first authoritative ref­ United States Lines and the American $6466 a year, and when paid by the erence to fo otball as a college pastime Merchant Lines as the official trans­ college themselves, $5058, or $100 less is to Princeton, in 1820, Dr. Charles atlantic lines. We have been trying THE ALUMNUS 3

for several years to get the alumni 111 various cities in Europe and will any now 111 operation or even con­ and alumnae of our colleges together be controlled from the Paris office templated, will be added to the Unit­ socially under conditions that would of the United States Lines where Mr. ed States Lines' fleet together with promote common interest in, and com­ Tilbrook is associate director of the mon understanding of, the current company for Europe. distinctive cabin ships that will make problems of higher education. Be­ "Mr. Tilbrook is not only well this American premier trans-Atlantic causc of the fact that there has been known abroad but is prominent among line one that will be envied by all. a tremendous interest in European alumni college men in this country. "The Intercollegiate Alumni Exten­ travel since the war and because ev­ He was a member of the administra­ sion Service selected the United States ery year the number of college alumni tive staff of the Carnegie Institute of Line not for patriotic reasons only. going abroad increases, we feel that Technology and was a leading spirit in The organization made a thorough the concentration of American college the development of Carnegie ath­ survey of the trans-Atlantic steamship alumni on American ships will create letics." business with the idea of recommend­ many pleasant social contacts that will Owen A. Smyth, passenger traffic ing the best method of travel for its be of material assistance to us. The manager of the United States Lines, members. We have been fortunate in United States Lines were designated stated that the management of his having among our patrons· a large as the official lines, not only because company considered it an honor to be number of college graduates and of the fact that they provide excellent designated as the official Intercollegi­ undergraduates and during the last facilities for transatlantic travel, but ate Alumni Transatlantic Carrier. He few years have studied their requisites also because the colleges realize the explained that the cooperation between and supplied them. For example, ves­ absolute necessity of fostering an his company and the alumni organiza­ sels of the United States Lines' fleet, American Merchant Marine. tions should prove to be of inestima­ during the summer months, always add "There are cleven ships on regular ble value in building up an American to the ships' personnel a college or­ chestra. The Tourist Third Cabin ac­ schedule operating between New Merchant Marine. York, and ports in England, France "The United States Lines have car­ commodations, now used extensively and Germany-the only large Ameri­ ried thousands upon thousands of sat­ by the professional class in this coun­ can transatlantic line in that service. isf:ed patrons back and forth across try, have constantly been improved so that today this type of travel gives 'T\l e feel that their efforts should be the Atlantic every year," declared Mr. supported, not only by the colleges, Smyth. 'T\le have gained the confi­ the maximum in service, comfort and hut also by all intelligent Americans dence of the American people and are cuisine for a nominal transportation who understand and appreciate th'e now on the threshold of a new era in charge. opportunity which is presented to the American shipping. The action of the "We have already started upon our United States to build up its Merchant Intercollegiate Alumni Extension work determined to make the first sail­ Marine. The fl eet of the United States Service gives us an additional inspira­ ing of the America next June as flag­ Lines includes ·the S. S. Leviathan, tion. ship of the Intercollegiate Alumni one world's largest ship; Geo. Washing­ "New ships, faster and finer than that will be a great success." ton, largest American cabin ship; America, one of the fin est and most Working Through College popular ships on the Atlantic; Repub­ There seems to be a late-born conspiracy to discourage young men lic, renowned cruise liner; the Presi­ from trying to work their way through college. The surprising part dent Roosevelt and President Harding, of it is that . this attitude has developed among the school officials. fastest cabin ships sailing from New The University of Illinois has given this advice: "It is foolish for York. One of the five sister ships of a student to work his way through the university unless it is abso­ the American Merchant Lines sails lutely necessary. Seldom if ever are students who work their way each week from New York to London. at any advantage." The same sort of warning, or advice, is con­ "The United States Lines staff, both tained in the catalogue of St. Bonaventure's college. Here it is said: in Europe and the United States, will "In most cases it would be better to borrow money than to draw cooperate with all members of alumni on college time to earn money." organizations planning to make trips This advice sounds sort of hollow. It evidently represents a con­ abroad by furnishing all information dition-the condition of colleges having more students now than required not alone for the voyage but they want, so they are beginning to discourage rather than encour­ for land tours in Europe. The steam­ age young men ambitious for a college education. ship company has offices in the largest They do not like a student drawing on college time to earn money, cities of the United States and sub­ but probably they are quite willing for him to draw on college time agents throughout the entire country. to play football, basketball, and baseball, and to travel all over the In Europe, Gilmore L. Tilbrook, for country to do so. Very few colleges discourage the idle sons of many years identified with the Car­ wealthy men to go to college to have a "big time," and who make negie Institute of Technology as al­ the roads hum every night with their autos while the students work­ umni secretary and assistant to the ing their way are busy earning the necessary money. president, will maintain a card index When a student finishes a secondary school with high credits and System giving the names of American an ambition to go on, it is the duty of the state and nation to give college alumni residing in Europe. them the chance, even if he has not a nickel to his name.-The. San These card indexes will be maintained Matean. • THE ALUMNUS NEWS OF T HE ALUMNI l W ho, When, Where J. Houston McCroskey, Garfield, Chelan, vVa sh., Housewife. VVash., Farmcr. 1918 ALUMNI WHO REGISTERED 1911 1. S. Collin s, Spokane, \,y asl1. HOMECOMING DAY Thomas T. Fishback, Chehali s, R. L. Gilliam, Oakesdale, vVasb., \'Vash. , Farmer. V eteri narian. 1899 Charlotte Davis N ortb, , Troy L in dley, Dayton, vVash. , \V. Scaton Van Doren, 902 Campus \Vash. , Homemaker. Farmer. Ave., Pullman, vVash., Florist. 1912 . 1903 1919 A. J. Turncr, East 105. 22nd Ave., V . H.. Hyslop, Decpcreck, vVash., Charlcs Ada lll s, Fairfield, \,Vash. Spokane, vVa sh., Civi l E ngineer. Farmer. E. O. Gunkel, vVaitsburg, vVasil ., 1904 Bertha E ng1c lland J3arthels, Kel­ Salesman. vrank T. Barnard, Pullman, vVash., logg, Idaho, Teacher. 191 3 1920 Registrar. E. M. H. M. Chambers, Pullman, vVash., Blev in s, North Bend, \,yash., 1905 Sup t. of Schools. B. A. Stiml11cl, Trail, B. c., M ining Assistant Registrar, \ I\l . S. C. M r. and Mrs. R. B. lvlcElroy, Spo­ Henry De Young, Lewiston, Idaho, E ngineer. Prin cipal of Schools. kane, \Vasb., \V. \ V. P. Co. 1906 J. c. K nott. P ullman, vVash., Fac­ R. C. McCroskey, Garfield, \Vash., 1914 ulty, W. S. C. " George E. Harter, v,r enatchee, varmer. Fred S. ~!far li n, P rosser, vVash., C. C. Todd, Pullman. vVash., Chem­ vVa sh., State Departmcnt of Agricul­ Agri culture Instructor. ist. ture. H. R. lV[ ewhinney, vVa ll a \Vall a, M rs. A. J. Turner, East l OS, 22nd T . VV . Lukin, P ullman, vVash., \IVasll. , State Departmcnt of Agricul­ Ave., Spokane, \Vash., Homcmakcr. Druggist. ture. 1907 Leil a E. Moore, Tulsa, Oklahoma. 1921 E . F loyd C. Ross, V"enatchee, vVash. , Mrs. Hattie Stimmcl, Trail, B. c., i\l[ rs. Fann ie Kyle Dunlap, Pe E ll , Otto H. Ross, Orondo, v\!. ush. Homemaker. \ \Tash., Housewife. L. T hayer, Davenport, \Vash., 1915 J. J ohn \ 'V. Goddard. Cheney, \i\rash. , Civil Engineer. Mr. and Mrs. H . J. Dana, Pullman, Teacher. 1908 Vlash., Faculty. W. S. C. Corine Ott Hunter, Everett, \,yash. N . Aiken. Pullman, "'''ash., Fac­ M rs. C. L. Hix, P ullman, YVa sh. , J. \,y ilbur L. King, Spokane , \,yash., ulty, W. S. C. Homemaker. \Y. W. P. Co. Beryl F lood, Garfield, vV ash., Far1l1­ A . F. "Moore, Spokane, vVa sh., Con­ M !'. and M rs. F. H . Schroeder, cr. tractor. \ Vena tchee, \,y a511. H . F . Golds\\orthy, Rosat'a, \;\Ta sh., R. N . O'Day, 1903 B . St., P ullman, Mrs. 'vVillll a Porter Yoder, Pull ­ Farmer. \,Vash., United Stales Army. Inan, \Vash., Housewife. Pearl Flood Goldsworthy, Rosa lia, M r. a nd Mrs. vVill iam J. R usch, \'Vash., Homemaker. Spokane, \IVash. , Insurance Speciali st. 1922 Lewis A. Lewis, Spokane, vVash., Mr. and j\l[rs. 'vV. H. Schroeder, Ya­ E . Lee D nnlap, Pe E ll , \ \Tas h. , YV . \V . P. Co. kima, \i\Tash., I nsurance Specialist. Banker. Eugene Logan, Spokane, \Vash., L. B. Vin cent, Yakima, \;\Tash., \,Va ll er E. Haun , E lberton, vVash. \V. W . P . Co. Lawyer. H. ]. Hunt, Pullman, vVash. H. \V. Reaugb, Manson, "'''ash., 1916 J. C. Lili enthal, Spokane, vVash. , County Agent. O . E. Barbee, P ulllllan, \Vash., Fac­ I li surancc Specia li st. E. E. vV egner, Pullman, \Vash., ul ty, \ i\r. S. C. Ralph Marbl e, StlInner, \ .vash., Faculty, W. S. C. Horace Hol lenbeck, \'Va lla vValla, State Department of Agri culture. 1909 \Vash. Martha :McCall Pollard, Hay, \Vash. C. L. Hix, Pullman, vVash., Ac­ M:rs. Said ie McKenzie Holl enbeck, 1923 counlant, \ V. S. C. 'vVa ll a vVa ll a, \Vash., Homemaker. John Cionston, Pendleton, Oregon. Ray L. Price, Spokanc, \Vasll., Juanita Gregory UDay, 1903 B. St., Billie A. Funk, Sunnyside, Wash. Druggist. Pullman, \Vash .. Housewife. Gladys E. He!J ncl', Hoquiam, 'vVash., D. R. Redlll

THE ALUMNUS 6

1924 1926 I sobel K enney Lebcr, South Bend, Clarence L. A nderson, Portland, Dorothy Bohlke, Yakim a, \l\1as h. "Vash. , J ournalis l11. Oregon, A uditor. Harrie O. Bohlke, Yakima, \Vash., Howard Mann, \i\Ta lla 'vValla, \ i\Tash., Mrs. Lola H odges Armstrong, "Varehouse Manager. Farmer. Bloomington, Illinois. Dorothy Briggs Buchanan, The Phyllis McFaddcn, P ullman, vVa sh., Leona Co nner, Clarkston, "Vash. , Dall es, Oregon, Houscwife·. College L ibrary. Teacher. Lconard H. Gehrke, 243 East \Valter Mikkelsen, Spokane, vVash. Hazel Croshy, Spokane, 'vVa sh. , Tca­ B road\\'ay, Portland, Oregon, T eacher. Mrs. R. N. Mill er, Pull man, V\Tas h., cher. Eugene L. Harms, \Vaterville, ,Homemaker. \Vash., COLl nty Agent. Clare R. Dohler, Everett, \ 1\1ash. Lois N. Smith, P ullman, \Vash. F lorence A. Irle, \Vall a \IVa ll a, Joseph H. Temby, E ll ensburg, Homer Eggerth, Spokane, "'lash., 'vVash., Teacher. "V ash., T eacher. Salesman. Oliva Irwin , E ndicott, \i\Tash. E llery R. Fosdick, Route 1, Vera­ Clara ]. Kincheloe, E ll ensburg, John P . Tholll son, E ll ensburg. dale, \ l\1 ash., Engineer. "Vash. "Vash.. Geologi st. Mi ss Carol Goodri ch, P ullman, Mrs. T. \IV. Lukin, Pullman, \l\1as h., E. \·V. \Voods, Moscow, Idaho., For­ estry. V\Tas h. , Student. Housewife. 1929 F lo Hegg, Sedro \"Toolley, \l\1as h. Clarice L. Shattuck. P ullma n, \ i\1ash. , Student. L yli a Appel, 'vV ilbur, "Vash., T ea­ James Huhbard, P ull man, \l\1a sll. , cher. Hortence S ~ oug ht o n , Toppenish, New York L ife Insurance. \Vash. Laura Boeshaw, Everett, "Vash., \·Va lt M. Irvin e, Seattle, "Vash. Doris Hunt \Vorlh, Tacoma, "Vash., T eachcl'. Mrs. Neil Johnson, Pullman, \l\1as h., Honsewife. H elen E. Bolitho, \Vin ona, vVash .. T eacher. Homemaker. 1927 Mildred Burt, Pomeroy, Wash. Katharine Kemp, P ull man, "Vash. Evelyn B il es, Toppeni sh, V\Tash. , Florence Currie, Ritzille, \Vash., Marion Hackett Magrunn, "Valla Teacher. T eacher. 'vVa 1I a, Wash. E li zabeth Crockett, Tacoma, "Vash., 1\. G. Daubert, 911 'vVest Main Spo­ Don 'Merrin , Suokane, "Vash. 'r eacher. kane, \ Vash., Ac1e rti sing. Ann Briggs Mitchell, Yakim a, Eva Darden, Selah, "Vash. , Teacher. Alice Dawson, E ll ensburg, \ Vash., 'vVa sh. , Housewife. E sthcr L. Frye, Clarkston, \Vash., T eacher. Bernice Roun dt ree, Fairfi eld, V.,ras h. , Teacher. Guy Dejulio, Seattle, \ Vash. T eacher. H. A. Ga rrett, Springdale, \Vasll., Catherine Duggan, Spokanc, 'vVa sh. Lowell G. Schroder, Selah, \Vash., T cachel'. Laura Ed wards, Latah, "Vash. , T ea­ T eacher. Mamie J. Johnson, Spokanc, \i\Tash., cher. E. M. 'vVebb, Dayton, "Vash. D ietitian Dessert Oasis. Alvin E ric kson, \t\' enatchce, "Vash. , Loui se Ott "Vchb, Dayton. \IVash. Ruth K elscy, Clarkston, \Vasll. Draftsman. 1925 Rose D . Kramer, Odcssa, V/ash. Petc Fold en, East Stanwood, \IVa sh. O live A mery, 'vVall a \Valla, 'Nash. A loys La1lfotte, Milan , vVash. Kal Hall, 15 E . St. S. E ., Auburn, Virgin ia Merle Crites, Spokane, Carl A. Larson, P ullman, \Vash. , \,Vash. "Vash. , Teacher. R csearch. Lewis H all , Bothell, 'vVa sh. , Teacher. Mrs. Corneli a Nettlcship Corkrum, Dorothy MacLcod, Pomeroy, \i\Tash. Ruth Ham:lton, A lmira, \Vash., T ea­ Wall a Walla, Wash. R uth McCall Nerig, H ay, "Vash. chel'. Ralph Corkrum, \l\1a ll a V\Ta ll a, Vl ash. May E. Newton, Pasco, "Vash. E loise Harrington, P otlatch, Idaho, 1v1 rs. Louise Dobler, E verett. \ 1\1 ash. , Juanita Piet- sol, 'vVa ll a 'vVa ll a, \Vash. Teacher. Homemaker. Sereta Patton Sayers, Spokane, H. H ergert, Endicott, "Vash. \Vash. Mrs. Penelope Dart Garrett, Sp rin g~ Grace A. Jones, E ll ensburg, \Vash., Paul A. Schumachcr, D avenport, dale, "Vash. T eacher. Burton A. H all, Kennewick, V/ash. Wash. Margaret E. Jones, E ll ensburg, Mrs. V erna Krous Harms, \Vater­ Dorothy \Vebster, Pomcroy, "Vash. \Vash., Teacher. ille, "Vash., Housewife. 1928 A manda J ust. 510 East 12th, Port­ lvi rs. H elen Campbell H oran, Route E ln a Bcste, K ennewick, \IVash. land, Orcgon, Teacher. 2, \Venatchee, \IVash., H ousewife. Mrs. Robert Brul11blay J r. , Chelan, Vera KiJl g, Republi c, Wash., Tea­ 'vValter F. Hora n, R oute 2, W enat­ Wash. cher. ch ee, "Vash., Orchardist. Lois Cain , Moscow, Idaho. Velma McMill en, \Venatchee, \ i\Tash. G. A. Huber, P ullman, 'vVa sh. A nnc Corcoran, P ullma n, \,Vash., Peggy Ness, Sunnyside, "Vash. H. G. McDonald, Pullman, \Vash. Faculty, W. S. C. Josephinc N ims, Bothell , 'vVash. Catharine R. 'Merrin, Spokane, Eva Christie, R it zvi ll e, 'vVa sh. , T ea­ Martha Petcrson, Almira, \Vash., Wash. cher. Teacher. J. C. P hilli ps, Davenport, "Vash. Poll y Eckles, Yakima, \Vash., Bank­ Virginia P hipps, 26 19 Ga rfield R oad, Lcon D. Sayers, Spokane, "Vash. in g. Spokane, "Vash. , T eacher. L in coln Shropshire, L ewiston, Ida­ Arnold B. Leber, South Be nd, Ceci l T. Tuttle, 40 10 Columbia St., ho, Attorney at law. \,Vasll., Transfer Managcr. Vancouve r, "Vash. , T eachel'. .. THE ALUMNUS

'10 REUNION COMMITTEE they often sell for the top price of They report that they are treated BUSY the day. with every consideration for their com­ San Francisco, Cal., We also maintain a herd of 100 pure­ forts and medical attention and are Nov. 4, 1929. bred Shorthorns. We sell the produce outfitted in a way that would make Dear Mr. McCroskey, to breeders throughout this country any American company envious. Each Am sorry to learn that Miss Waller and Canada. We send a show herd to of them is provided with several ser­ will be unable to assist us with our all leading state fairs where they are vants to carry the equipment and to committee work. I do not think it leading contenders for the highest do the manual labor. Both Mr. Freakes necessary for you to appoint another prizes. This year they showed at and Mr. Twiss are on one year con­ member as I believe that the work of Aurora and Springfield, III., Colum­ tracts. the committee has progressed to a bus, Ohio, Indianapolis, Ind., Nash­ place where it would be a delay to add ville, Knoxville, Chattanooga and TO VISIT STATE COLLEGE a new member. Memphis, Tenn., Little Rock, Ark., Y. Baron Goto, extension agent in I have not reported to you our pro­ Dallas, Texas and next week it will Hawaii county, Hawaii, will visit the gress but I believe that we will be able be Omaha, Neb., followed by Wichita, State college extension service about to furnish to you copies of the letters Kansas City and then the grand finale November 19 and 20 to confer on 4 H and plans shortly after the first of the the great Chicago International. club and other extension work in this year. I may get an .opportunity to come state, according to announcements Each member of he committee is out home this winter but there are so from the office here. writing a letter or series of letters many things to look after that I doubt Mr. Goto is making a trip to the and plans for mailing, after these have very much if I should leave. mainland to attend a convention of been received by each member we will Hoping that sometime Wash. State coffee interests at New Orleans early either adopt one or compile a new one will come east for a game, I am, this month and before returning to from them. Allan Atlason, '20. Hawaii will go through the N orth­ I have already received Edgar Lud­ west to study extension methods. The wick's letters and I will say I am BIRTH 4 H club work there has grown rap­ proud of the way "Skeet" has cooper­ Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Clifford C. idly since its start last winter. ated with me and am very much sat­ Jacobs, October 12, 1929, a daughter, Miss Elmina White, '09, assistant isfied with his letters and plan of ac­ Helen Lee. Mrs. Jacobs was formerly director of extension work at the tion. Jean Fulmer, '27. Mr. Jacobs gradu­ State college last year, is one of the Mrs. Hunt is writing a letter which ated with the class of '26. assistant directors in Honolulu now I expect most any time, she is also and has written here of the success of writing personally to all of the girls JAMES W. HUNGATE, '00 the work. of our class. James W. Hungate, 00, is now elec­ I have mailed my contribution and trical superintendent of the Great MR. AND MRS. D. J. STEWART expect the critics to begin very soon. Northern railway with headquarters Donald J. Stewart, who graduated Sincerely yours, at Wenatchee, Wash. His home ad­ from the department of architectural Charles Leidl, '10. dress is 511 Highland Drive, Wenat­ engineering in 1922, stopped for a chee. Mr. Hungate was for many short visit recently while on his way ALLAN "SCOOTCH" ATLASON, years electrical superintendent of the to the coast, where he intends to make '20, WRITES FROM ILLINOIS Inland Empire Electric railway. his home. After graduation he was Sharpburg, Illinois, employed in Portland for two years October 31, 1929 GRADS IN AFRICA and then went to Athens, Greece, for Enclosed please find my check and Stuart Twiss and Archie Freakes, two years. While in Greece and both of the class of '29, are having an please hurry the magazine back as neighboring places, including Con­ interesting time in Africa, where they I'd like to know whats going on up stantinople, he made drawings of an­ are employed by the Anglo-American there on the hill. cient ruins and current architecture. I certainly would like to have been Copper corporation, according to let­ The last three y.ears he has spent in present for Homecoming this year and ters recently received. New York. He now intends to settle met the old gang again. On their way to Africa, they stop­ on the coast and build up a practice I go to all the big games at the Uni­ ped in London for four days and jour­ there. versity of Illinois and my what a thrill neyed from there to Maderia, Teneriff, Mrs. Stewart, who was formerly it is to mingle with the students again past St. Helena, and on to Cape Town. and whoop it up for your favorite There they boarded the "Cape to Cai­ Miss Elizabeth Redington, is also a team. ro" railway and went on to the Kim­ graduate of W. S. C. I am still on the job here on this berley diamond mines, Victoria Falls, big grain and stock farm (Haylands and finally arrived at their destination. MR. AND MRS. J. H. DARST, '29 Farm) and I assure YOll that I cer­ Broken Hill, Northern Rhodesia. Jack Darst, who graduated last year tainly like it fine. \Ve raise as crops, From this location, they have been from the school of pharmacy and pre­ corn, wheat, oats, soy beans, clover sent out on geological parties for pur­ medicine, is now enrolled at the Uni­ and alfalfa. vV e feed each year about poses of exploration and discovery of versity of Chicago and Rush Medical 500 head of commercial cattle finishing certain mineral deposits and the map­ school. He was one of the first stu­ them for the Chicago market, where ping of these. dents to be accepted this year as a THE ALUMNUS 7

freshman. The freshman enrollment is Farmer. Supt. of Schools. limited to 100 students. E dwin I. Bartlett, 490 Post St., San Fred E . Tuttle, T wisp, \Nash., Besides his scholastic work, he is F rancisco, Calif., P hysician and Sur­ Farmer. working four hours daily in the Uni­ geon. Agnes Sorenson, 334 U ni on, Grand versity clinic. Mrs. M. K. A kers, 317 May St., Rapids, Michi gan, County H ome Dem­ Mrs. Darst, who was formerly Dor­ Troy, Ohio, Housewife. onstration Agcnt. othy Matters, a W. S. C. student, is H clcn MacRae, H eald shurg, Calit, .W alter H a nse n, 36 14 N orth 34th, acting as secretary to the assistant di­ H ealth work. Tacoma, \Vash., Supt. of Rccreation. rector of clinics ~nd hospitals at Rush '09 M rs. Florencc Beale Dyc, Pomeroy, Medical College. Arthur E. P rice, Chandler, Arizona, \Vash., House \\·ife. Business E xecutive and Lawyer. '21 COCHRAN-RAY '10 Harold D. Truax, Colfax, \Vash., The marriage of Miss Ena G. Coch­ E dgar L. Ludwick, 461 Davis St., Jeweler. ran, alumna of W. S. and Mr. Le­ c., Portland, Oregon. \Vi th Pacific Co­ man Roy of Dayton was solemnized at '22 operative "Vool Growers. noon Sunday, November 10, at the Luberta M. H arden, Clark Unive r­ H. I. Ellis, Josephine St., Rosali a, home of the bride's parents, Mr. and sity, \N orcester, Mass., Assistant Edi­ "Vash., E lectric Light and P ower. Mrs. George Cochran of Dixie. Dr. tor of thc Clark U ni ve rsity P ress. B. R. H cintzelman, 5151 Graham W. H. Bleakney of Walla Walla per­ '23 Seattle, \N ash., E ng in ce r T cl. Co. formed the ceremony in the presence Lloyd Grecnvill e, 475 Brannan, San '13 of the immediate family. F rancisco, Cali f. , Sales man. Mrs. Albert K ul zc r, Chewelah, The bride received her degree from E rnest L. Muzzall , Ritzville, "Vash., "Vash., H omcmaker. the department of physical education Supt. of Schools. C. M. Howard, 4203 Corliss, Seat­ last spring. She was a member of W. W. C. H all , 4059 39th S. W., Seattle, tl e. "Vash., Civil E ngin ee r with Con­ A. A. and of Mu Beta Beta, being very \'Vash., Junior Park E nginee r. crete P ipc Mfgs. of W estern "Vash. active in 4-H club work. '24 H . B. Bri gham, 609 South Grand, Martha Lowery, Omak, W ash. , T ea­ Los A ngeles, Calif., Osteopath. SUBSCRIPTIONS AND RENEW­ cher of H omc Economics. '14 ALS TO THE ALUMNUS Charles F. Lackcy, 1033 7th, River­ Robcrt C. Hummel, 3728 Rucker, '98 sid e, Calif., Plant Pathologist, U. S. Everett, Wash., T elcphonc Engineer. M. P . McCroskey, 533 East 14 D. A. North, Portland, Oregon, Merchant. M. Inez Douglass, 926 Indian, Bel­ '26 David Arthur Brodie, 2698 Nichols lingham, \Vash., H igh School T eacher. Robert Davison, 3239 37th P lace Ave., S. E ., Washington, D. Supt. Incz Arnquist, 1212 Indian, Belling­ c., South, Seattle, \Vasll. of Farms, St. Elizab:eth's Hospital, ha m, \Vash., H ome Dcmonstration George C. Stap Ie s, \Venatchee, U. S. Department of Interior. Agent. \Vash., Fruit Grower. '01 G. Vivian Duthie, 224 P ine St., Ber­ J ohn F rancis Chctl ain , 7414 Shcri­ Grace Colburn Burch, 715 Oxford lin , N cw H ampshire, T eacher. dan Road, Ch:c-ago, III. , Manager, Ave.. , Calif., Homemak­ '15 Nort11l-vcstern U ni ersity Law School er. Curator of the Better American J. O. Sorenson, R. F. D. No.2, Book Ston':. Speech Department of Ebell of Los Ellensburg. "Vash., Farmcr. F. G. J oncs, E ngineering Depart­ Truman C. Anderson, Shoshone, Angeles. Idaho, Agri cultural Agent. '02 ment, Santa F e offices, Amarillo, '27 L. M. Hatch, Box 174, Alderton, T exas. Assistant E ngineer, A. T. & S. F. Rai lway. E dna L. :Mc Kee, 1407 Opal St., Wash., Farmer. P ullman, \ >\T ash. , Music Supervisor. '05 '16 L. Gertrude MacKay, 729 South Howard C. Burgess. Twin Bridges, Rose D . Kramer, Odessa, "Vash., Aiken, Ave., P ittsburgh, P enn., T.ea­ Montana, County E xtension Agent. Teacher. Roger W. Morse, 2333 A uburn Ave., '29 cher. '06 Baker, Oregon, County E xtension Evelyn Glasco,c k, E ast 1723 Sharp C. C. Todd, 208 Coll egc Station, Agent. Ave., Spokanc, "Vash. A nne L Brunson, Box 186, Chelan, Pullman, Wash. , Chemist. Loren F. Dumas, Dayton, Wash., '07 .Farmer. \Vash., T eaching in High School. W. L. Malony, 333 North M ichi gan. '18 Leland Smith, Box 317, :Marysville, Room 1903, Chicago, Illinois. General Hill Williams, 303 North 8th, Pas­ ·Wash. , E nginee r, P uget Sound Powcr Supt. Nimmons, Carr and Wright, co, W ash., Newspaper P ublisher. an(l Light Co. '19 H enry Buec hel, Box 153 , Chcney, Architects. C. C. Ockerman, 266 St. Joseph, Frank G. Moran, Rollingbay, "Vash., "Vash. Long Beach, Calif., P rincipal Junior H ead, Moran school for Boys (Coll ege J eanette Sievers, 7 E . Pleasant, Am­ herst, Mass.. Sccretary to D ean, Am­ High School. and Preparatory. ) E . R. Pickrell, 230 Fifth Ave. , New '20 herst Coll ege. York, N. Y. , Gcn. Dyes tuff Corp. A ll an. C. Atl ason, Haylands Farm, Melvin Martin son, E . 2206 E mpirc '08 Sharpsburg, III., Farm Manager. Ave., Spokane, \Vash., U ni ve rsal Car­ Harry Goldsworthy, Rosalia, "Vash., E. M. Blevin s, N orth Bend, "Vash., loading Distributing Co., Chi cago, III. 8 THE ALUMNUS

NEWS OF THE COLLEGE

ATHLETICS The victory over the Oregon Beav­ Buckley and E \1ing:sen during the ers places the Washington State team third quarter netted long gains and it WHITMAN FIGHTS HARD as a serious contender for the N orth­ looked like another Co ugar tal1y, but AGAINST HEAVY ODDS west title and an outside chance for the Orangemen came back and put up Pacific Coast conference honors. The one of the most stubborn offensive Cougars are tied with the University battles the Staters have met this year. A free-for-all scoring bee by the of Oregon for first place in the Owen, Metten and Gilmore started the Washington State Cougars which net­ Northwest division and resting in a fireworks for the losers and caused ted them 58 tallies spelled a sad drub­ deadlock with three others for second the Washington State fans to take a bing for the Whitman Missionaries position in Coast conference stand­ little firmer grip on their seats. from Walla Wa\1a, who crawled from the ficld badly battered and with a ings. Long passes that went for consid­ lone touchdown to their credit. Lucky number (9) paved the road erable gain s by the Corval1i s cleven for the second victory over the Cor­ The game was featured with an broug ht the oval deep into Washing­ val1is crew. Last year Coach Schiss­ overhead attack with both teams using ton State's territory and it looked for ler stormed into Pu\1man with a this system most of the time. A much a time that the first half honors of the husky bunch of lads for the Home­ improved passing route was evident in Cougars might be in vain. But timely the Cougars from other games played coming game and retraced his path interception of passes by Schwartz, earlier in the season with the result that same day with a 9 t07 defeat on E l1ingsen and Docka stopped the ad­ that most of the State scores were ac­ his hands. vances and the Cougars jogged down counted for in this manner. Predictions by the experts were cast the fi eld close to the Oregon's up­ to the winds as the two teams lined up Intercepted 'Whitman passes rights. for action in the Portland bowl. brought tears to the eyes of the Wal­ A I' chi e Buckley, The two squads were so evenly match­ la \\7alia supporters repeatedly when the Cougars' 1929 some Cougar man would spring from ed that it was considered to be a~y­ sensational quarter­ nowhere and stop the flight of the body's bal1 game-and that it was. back, cinched the oval prematurely and dash toward the For the first few minutes of rather game in the fourth goal. Joe Hansen, sub center, and loose playing the day looked quite du­ quarter when he H a rold Yap, end, broke into print by bious for the Cougars. A sudden burst dropped back for a intercepting two of these heaves and of energy by the \\7ashington State long try for a place jogging 30 and 40 yards, respectively, outfit reversed the situation and the kick. The try was a to increase the Cougars' total. A sub­ day turned to a bright crimson and hard one, resting at stitute Whitman halfback, Fetters, gray. an angle on the saved the Preachers from a complete The first half was enlightening for field and approxi­ shutout by intercepting a Washington Cougar fans when Carl ("Tuffy") El­ mately 35 ya r d s State pass and scampering to their lingsen, dynamic Cougar halfback, back from the posts, only score of the game. Holmgren's gave his team a six-point lead by but the bal1 sail ed se renely through the try for point went wide. lifting a 40-yard pass into the waiting air and skimmed the horizontal bar by arms of John Hurley, Hol1ingbery's inches. The midget signal barker COUGARS 9, BEAVERS 0 crack wingman. "Long John" made guided his team like a veteran and A Washington State Cougar that a spectacular catch of Ellingsen's flip skirted the ends continuously for long had pointed for an Oregon State Beav­ and hurdled his way for 10 yards to gains. er for two weeks came fare to face score early in the first quarter. Mel H ein played a stellar game at with its foe in the Multnomah stadium Throughout the rest of the first half the pivot position and was largely re­ in Portland, Oregon, in a gruel­ the Cougars held a dominating power sponsible for the stonewall barricade ling ordeal that culminated in a vic­ over the Beavers, threatening the Or­ that the Cougars displayed in the cen­ tory for the wily Cougars, 9 to O. ange goal lin e repeatedly. ter of the line. Coach O. E . Hol1ingbery's fighting During the half-time period the crimson horde rambled onto the field Washington State band endeared itself COUGARS 41, VANDALS 7 with the reputation of being danger­ to the spectators' emotions with sev­ After battling their way to a hec tic ous and a scrappy bunch of pigskin­ eral snappy musical stunts and was 7-7 deadlock for the first half, the Uni­ ners. The 20,000 spectators that supported strongly by approximately versity of fell beneath thronged the Multnomah park had this 200 ~tudents of the in stitution who the powerful thrusts of the Washing­ fact cl early prese nted to them and journeyed to the City of Roses to wit­ ton State Cougars, who ran rough headed homeward with a feeling that ness the big grid classic. shod over them for a 41 to 7 final their money \\'as well spent. The thrusts of Jones, Schwartz, score all Rogers field. THE ALUMNUS • Playing before a colorful crowd of power plays by the Vandals moved where he was downed by Pederson. 10,000 spectators, the vVashington the ball to vVashington State's 7-yard On the next play Schwartz made the State aggregation, after terminating mark. Wilkie, powerful Idaho full­ necessary yardage and another score. a somewhat listless first half, entered back, tore through his own right tackle Buckley's well trained toe functioned the final period with the customary on the next play to score the one and perfectly and the extra point was Cougar last half drive and rose to the only Idaho touchdown, Diehl, tackle, made. pinnacle of football glory. Outside of converted and the game 'was at a The last touchdown was made when the slight mist that fell early in the standstill, 7-7. " Ellingsen snatched an Idaho pass out second frame, weather conditions The crowel whole-heartedly enjoyed of the hands of Pederson, the Vandals' were ideal and the invigorating breezes the stunts of the Cougar rooting sec­ heady quarterback, on the 25-yard line from the north kept the fans in a tion under the command of Johnny and ran unmolested to the opposition's state of alertness and intense enthusi­ King, State yell king, who directed a goal. Lainhart was successful in his asm. section of woters in crimson and gray try for point. As the Vandals romped merrily off designs and formations during the half the field at the close of the half, there rest period. The audience was equally COUGARS 13, MONTANA 0 was a serious forboding that the Mos­ responsive in praise for the gymnastic An underestimated Montana Grizzly cow crew had been considerably un­ stunts put on by the Idaho cheer lead­ battered the W ashington State Cougar derestimated and that the high hopes ers, Bus Grimm and Douglass Brad­ to a scoreless first half in the Univer­ of the Cougars might be engulfed in shaw. Favorable comment was also sity of Montana homecoming game the huge wave of .trength that the heaped upon the crack Cougar band at Missoula, Mont., only to weaken Idahoans displayed i", the second quar­ that entertained throughout the entire in the second frame, allowing the in­ ter. Although Coach Leo Calland's session. Idaho's small but snappy pep vaders to snatch a 13 to 0 victory in , gridders did show as much, if not band was an added feature of the day's one of the most bitter contests the more power in the last half on the entertainment. Cougars have undertaken this year. offense, their weak defensive game Soon after the opening of the sec­ In downing the Missoulians, Coach accounted for the wild scoring orgy ond half, the sun seemed to shine a Hollingbery's pack overcame its last of the Staters. little brighter for Coach Hollingbery Pacific Coast conference barrier before Scoring honors of the ddy were and it was at this stage of the play it exchanges blows with the Univer­ poured upon Elmer Schwartz, Cougar that the final outcome of the battle sity of Trojans fullback, who garnered 18 points on seemed destin ed to be a Cougar November 30. Cougar stock has taken three touchdowns. Consequently the victory. Carl Ellingsen, on one of a decided jump since earlier in the 200-pound Hercules touchdowned his Hollingbery's mystic puzzlers, some­ season as a result of its four wins and way into a comfortable leadership what resembling a triple fake criss­ only one loss. among the high scoring aces of the cross, skirted around the Vandals' left Major Milburn's eleven found El­ Pacific Coast conference. Carl "Tuf­ end and raced 67 yards for a touch­ mer Schwartz to be one of the most fy" Ellingsen, Hollingbery's handy down. He outdistanced five Idaho potent ball luggers they have encoun­ man, fo ll owed close upon the heels of tacklers who were close behind. tered for some time, and watched the Schwartz with two touchdowns, while Buckley's try for the extra point was 200-pound giant plow across the Grizz­ Archie Buckley, State field general, wide. ly goal line twice in the second half. and Wilkie of Idaho took one each. Porter Lainhart, reserve backfield Co nsequently the \Vashington State vVashington State drew first blood ace, entered the game at the start of fullback fortified himself as king of early in the first quarter when Elmer the fourth per;od and performed sat­ Pacific Coast scorers with 12 addi­ Schwartz bumped over the line from isfactorily. Besides breaking away for tional points bringing his total up the one-yard mark. The score fol­ several long gains, the fle et halfback to 78. lowed shortly after Pederson, Idaho played a smashing game on the de­ Washington State took a terrible quarterback, juggled the ball on his fense and in running interference. jar in the first few seconds of play own 25-yard line, where it was recov­ Schwartz and Lainhart worked the when Morrow, Montana quarterback, ered by Ahlskog. A long pass, El­ ball deep into Idaho territory and returned Buckley's kickoff 72 yards to lingsen to Jones, placed the oval on Swartz again scored on a two-yard the State's 10-yard mark. Four bucks the 11-yard line, and a five-yard lunge dash through center for another at the line nettecl the Grizzlies three by Buckley and a similar one by touchdown. The point after touch­ yards and they lost the ball on downs. Schwartz found the ball resting three down was completed by Buckley. Lainhart punted 34 yards to Carpenter, feet away from the Idaho goal line. Archie Buckley made a spectacular who was stopped on Washington Archie Buckley was successful in his play a few minutes later when he State's 44-yard lin e. Montana began try for point. sprinted from the Vandals' lO-yard another advance down the field and The tide of the battle changed at line on a swceping end run to another worked the ball to the Cougars' 11­ that time and Washington State was Cougar tally. He added a point when yard line. Cox, Grizzly fullback, car­ penalized twice, one for 15 yards and his place kick glanced off the hand of ried the ball five yards on' a spinner the next one placed the ball one yard an Idaho lineman and sailed squarely and added five more on the following from the Cougars' guarded territory. betwee n the uprights. play for a first down. Two jabs at Ellingsen, standing under the cross­ Ellingsen tossed a long floater from the line brought the oval to the Cou­ bar of his own goal posts, punted to the 38-yard mark " to Buckley, who gar one-foot mark. Montana suffered his own 41-yard line. Hard, smashing received the ball on the 2-yard line, a five-yard penalty for offside and the 10 THE ALUMNUS

next play failed to advance the sphere. the most successful years it has ever third and fourth teams, was not quite Washington State took the ball on its had when it defeated the University so successful, losing one of their two own five-yard line and punted out of of Washington ftosh in Seattle games to the strong Gonzaga fresh­ danger. by a 6 to 0 count. Coach Karl men first string 12 to 0 and defeating Hollingbery's gridders evened things A. Schlademan, varsity track and the strong North Central high school up towards the middle of the second freshman football mentor, has estab­ by a 13 to 7 count in their last game. quarter when Buckley returned Mor­ lished an enviable record by taking the Coach Schlademan is proud of the row's 38-yard punt 29 yards, and conference championship three out of squad he had this year and thinks that Schwartz intercepted one of Mon­ the four years· he has been at Wash. it should give the varsity more men tana's passes. The rest of the first State, one of these years including and stars than any frosh outfit he has half was fairly even with the ball rest­ the championship of the northwest had in his four years here. It has been ing in midfield in possession of the when his team defeated the University the largest squad of good men he has Cougars as the second quarter ended. of Oregon frosh. had and has turned out the fastest and The second half opened with the Out of the fo~r games ·played this most versatile team of any of the four. Cougars taking the aggressive while year by the first string, two victories He thinks that it was probably not Montana's stone-wall defense began to over the two conference teams were quite as powerful an eleven as the one crumble. After a quick exchange of turned in, while Ellensburg succeeded two years ago which took the north­ punts the ball finally was brought to in defeating the Cougars by a 7 to 0 west title but probably the most a halt on the Missoulians' 45-yard line. count. Cheney, the other non-confer­ brainy. Schwartz plugged the center of the ence team played, gave the third win The frosh boss would like to see the line for 17 yards. On the next play, of the year to the Kittens when they schedule arranged next year so that under cover of perfect interference, bowed to the Crimson and Gray squad the winner of the Washington schools the mighty fullback tore through the 7 to O. plays the winner of the Idaho and Montana defense for 28 yards and a Idaho frosh proved the worst victim Oregon frosh outfits for the northwest touchdown. Buckley's attempt for the for Coach Schlademan's attack when title. It is not known for sure if this point after touchdown was a little they bowed 25 to 0 on their own field. can be accomplished however but it wide. However the scrap put up by the Van­ is desirable. Ekegren, substitute Grizzly halfback, dals is not indicated by the score. caused the Staters no little worry in Things looked like about an even SCHWARTZ IS LEADING the second half and through his ef­ break when the Cubs journeyed to CONFERENCE PLUNGERS forts, Montana dragged the ball to Washington to take on the Husky un­ Elmer Schwartz, the versatile Cou­ the visitors' 24-yard line. A long pass derclassmen who were reported as gar fullback, is leading in Pacific over the line was incomplete and the having a plenty tough team. Reports Coast conference individual scoring ball went to the Cougars on their own were not false from the size of the honors. The 195-pound State back 20-yard line. The Cougars were go­ 6 to 0 score and the tough time the took a lead of nearly three touchdowns ing steadily down the field until Cougars had in taking the Seattle over Phil Moffatt, the Stanford scor­ Schwartz dropped a flip from center, team. ing sensation, by virtue of his three the ball being recovered by Cox of The Wash. State yearlings bowed to crossings of the Idaho goal line. Montana. no one throughout the season except Following this Montana tried to buck the husky, experienced squad from El­ the line, but found the Cougar waH lensburg who trimmed them by a 7 impenetrable and reverted to an aerial to 0 score, just a few days before they attack. Frank Mitchell, guard, inter­ did the same thing to the University cepted one of these heaves and anoth­ freshmen in the same way. er Montana assault was checked. An­ In the four years that Schlademan other Cougar guard, Everett Jensen, has been here his teams have lost but reenacted the scene a few minutes lat­ one conference game and tied but one. er when he stopped one of Carpen­ All the rest have been checked in as ter's tosses on Montana's 42-yard line. wins for the Cougars. Last year the In the closing minutes of play, champion University of Washington Schwartz clutched at a long heave of frosh won from his teams while in the Carpenter's and raced 60 yards to the same season the Cougars tied with final touchdown. After grabbing the Idaho. ball Schwartz outdistanced several Nat a point was scored against the Montana would-be tacklers. Lyle Mas­ frosh in the conference while Ellens­ kell, end, added the extra point by burg was the only one to cross their placing one squarely between the up­ goal throughout the season. The Cou­ rights and the fracas was over. gars succeeded in tallying 18 points to 7 for their opponents during the sea­ THE COUGAR KITTENS son. Something that no one has to be MAKE GOOD RECORD ashamed of when the types of teams "Tuffy" Ellingsen, the triple-threat The Washington State college fresh­ they played are considered. man of the Cougars, who plays a half­ men football team completed one of The second squad, consisting of the back position, is third among the coast THE ALUMNUS 11

scorers, tied with Duffield 6f U. S. The English department receives the clerk, division of Farm Management; c., both having 43 digits. largest share of newcomers. Among Frank C. \V1oodw.ard, Electrician; The leading conference scorers are: those associated with the department Heat, Light and Power Plant; Miss Schwartz, W . S. C...... 66 are: O. E. Briggs, Mrs. Arthur E. Agatha T eske, Clerk, Registrar's of­ Moffatt, Stanford ...... 49 Bonn, A. J. Driscoll, Mary Jo Walker, fice; Miss Naomi Walker, assistant E\1ingsen, W . S. · C...... 43 Dorothy Dakin, Karl K. Pfeiffer, Ar­ Bursar's office; Mr. Marion Winiecki, Duffield, U. S. C...... 43 chie Stewart, Lewis Buchanan, Le­ Teaching Fellow in B. A.; Miss Edna Smalling, Stanford ...... 42 land Mathis, Muriel Carr and Royal Thorall, Nurse, College Hospital; Miss Saunders, U. S. C...... 36 Gettmann. Gala Peed, First Assistant in Corre­ Pedersen, Idaho ...... 36 Following are the teachers who will spondence office; Miss Margaret EI­ Shaver, U. S. C...... 35 instruct in the Sciences: M. G. Hoff­ lefsen, secretary to Registrar; Miss Music, U. S. C...... 32 man, instructor in Petrology; Carl C. Helen Howard, Clerk, School of Mu­ Rice, California ...... 32 Branson, instructor in Paleontology; sic; Miss Ann Corcoran, instructor in Harry F. Clements, assistant professor Commercial Education. FIELD HOUSE COMPLETION in Botany; Dr. John Kater, instructor Mrs. Eva S. Williams, Director "The Cougars' New Cage" is no in Zoology; Charles Mahaffay, in­ Nursery School; Mary Agnes Jeffries, Instructor in French; Gertrude Griffin, longer a mere skeleton, a framework structor in Physics; Harvey W. Star­ Clerk, Registrar's office; G. R. Sawles, of metal and cement, but is rapidly be­ ling, Sociology; Kenneth F. Fitzsim­ Instructor in Auto Practice; Vivian coming a spacious structure-an ap­ mons, Physics; J. P . MacDonald, Kidwell, assistant in Fine Arts; Mar­ propriate home for the fiery Cougar. Chemistry; Robert Forrester, Chem­ jorie Rowlands, Night Nurse, hospital; According to the foreman of the istry; Robert McWherter, Teaching Fellow in Veterinary Medicine; Mar­ 'Gwen Davies, clerk, Registrar's office; construction crew, the building will be shall A. Search, Teaching Fellow in Mrs. Lorna Herman, Fellow in Edu­ , ready for use by December 20. Thou­ Geology; Catherine Ulrich, Instructor cation; T. LeRoy Martin, instructor sands of feet of steel, barrels of ce­ in Bacteriology; R. B. Heflebower, in Accounting; and Ruth Barnum, ment, tons of brick and other mater­ Assistant Prof. of Economics; Frank stenographer, general college of ex­ ials have been used in forming this G. Hinman, Colloidal Products Re­ tension. enormous structure. Scores of men search; J. Paul Miller, Teaching Fel­ Miss Marguerite Wilmer, instructor have been working for many months low in Zoology; Harvey W. Starling, in Piano; Professor W. T. McDer­ on the preparations for the field house. Research Fellow in Rural Sociology; mitt, head of department of Fine Arts; Although the building is nearly com­ Doctor Gordon Cadisch, Professor of and Mr. R. U. Nelson, instructor in pleted, painting and a few other small Economics; Charles K. Eckles, Assist­ pipe organ and music theory are the construction jobs are yet to be fin­ ant Professor of Physics; Harold Hay­ three faculty members who have re­ ished. ward, Assistant Professor of Philos­ turned from leaves of absence. Uses for this great building are al­ ophy; Russell L. Taylor, Instructor most innumerable. All sports will be in Pharmacy. FIRST WOMAN "VET" benefited by the oppcrtunities afford­ Haakon Bang, Graduate Fellow in AT STATE COLLEGE ed by the field house. Military drills Pharmacy; Cloyce F. Bradley, Teach­ And now we introduce the latest in­ will also be conducted here. ing Fellow in Bacteriology; Marjorie vasion into the male field of endeavor This gigantic indoor stadium is no Elton, Instructor in Psychology; Len­ W . S. C.'s feminine "Vet'.' major. She longer a dream of loyal State college na Baird, Instructor in Bacteriology; is Mrs. Elizabeth Roberts, Seattle, a alumni, faculty and students, but is a L. A. Mullen, Fellow in Botany. freshman in the college of veterinary great reality as it stands, . overlooking Many other departments of the medicine. She plans to specialize in Rogers field. school are represented as is shown by animal surgery. ,the following: John S. Biggerstaff, L. "It sort of runs in the family," the G. Butler, Miss Florence Johnson and State college co-ed explained, as she Campus Progress Clarence Ross, instructors in Mathe­ laid down her instruments and turned matics; Miss Carrie M. Brown and from the laboratory desk. "My step­ NEW FACULTY MEMBERS Miss Lois Carell, instructors in P. E.; father is a veterinarian, and my moth­ Seventy-seven new members of the F. W. Candee, assistant professor in er aids h:m in his work. He has told State College of Washington faculty Mechanical Engineering; Dr. A. L. me enough about it to arouse my in­ were given appointments by the board Hafenrichter, assistant professor of terest, so this fall I chose the State of regents this fall. Three members Farm Crops ; Edward C. Kundert, in­ College, because I had heard so much have returned from leaves of absences structor in Spanish; W. B. Lockling, concerning the splendid college of vet­ to resume teaching duties. instructor in B. A .; Miss Margaret erinary medicine to be found there, Appointment of three new depart­ Mighell and Miss Irene Stanton, as­ sal medical laboratories, Seattle, and ment heads has been made. Dr E. L. sistant D ietitians. her work there helped to heighten her Overholser will head the Horticulture Miss Agnes E. Smalley, reference enthusiasm for work of a medical na­ department, Dr. G. F. Cadisch be­ librarian; Miss Venona W . Swartz, ture. That, coupled with a love of comes director of the School of Busi­ ~esearch Specialist; Mary K. Paulson, animals, decided her in favor of the ness Administration and Miss Ethel B. A .; Thomas E. Aspinall, Poultry; veterinary branch. Clarke is to serve as managing dieti­ Miss Virginia Shaw, instructor in P . She believes there is a big future in tian of dormitory dining halls. E . for women; E. F. Landerholm, her chosen fi eld. Before entering she 12 THE ALUMNUS checked up to find that only 150 stu­ Jefferson ...... 0 0 the committee are: Dean A. A. Pot­ dents graduated in veterinary medi­ King ...... 17 50 ter, Purdue University; President J. cine in the United States last year, and Kitsap .... __ ...... 1 3 A. Burrus, Virginia Polytechnic Insti­ of this number only four were women. Kittitas ...... -.-­ ... _-_ ...... __ ..._-_ .... 3 tute and Professor W. A. Bevan, Pur­ She enjoys the distinction of being the Klickitat ...... 1 2 due University. first woman "Vet" in the history of Lewis ...... 3 8 the State college. Lincoln ...... 4 10 DEAN JOHNSON BACK Mrs. Roberts has nothing but scorn Mason ._-- ---...... 1 0 FROM EXTENSIVE TRIP for the squeamish type of woman who Okanogan ...... 3 5 Dean Edward C Johnson of the faints at the sight of bloo'd, and ex­ Pacific ...... 3 1 'vV. S. C. college of agriculture re­ pects to have no difficulty along that Pend Oreille ...... 1 0 turned the first of this week after a line. "I don't mind because it's "all in Pierce ...... 7 18 several months' period in \Vashington, the cause of science," she declares. "I San Juan ...... 0 0 D. C, preparing a report on under­ think I can stand it a lot better than Skagit ...... 5 3 graduate instruction in agriculture most of the boys." Skamania ...... 0 0 among the land grand colleges and Following her four years at Wash­ Snohomish ...... 2 16 universities of the country. ington State Mrs. Roberts plans to Spokane .-.-_------.--.­ ...... 23 41 Dean Johnson attended the annual ·enter into active practice, .ialthough Stevens ...... 4 2 meeting of the Association of Land she may possibly take further study at Thurston ... "...... 2 3 Grant Colleges and Universities N 0­ some other institution. Wahkiakum ...... :...... 2 0 vcmber 12 to 15, on the return trip. Walla Walla ...... 10 18 His report is to be part of an ex­ ENROLMENT IN THE SCHOOL \Vhatcom ...... 7 11 haustive study of every phase of the OF BUSINESS ADMINIS­ \Vhitman ...... 20 11 work, organization and administration TRATION Yakima ...... 14 27 of the land grant in stitutions of the An analysis of the enrolment of stu­ country, being conducted by the bu­ dents in the School of Business Ad­ 156 306 reau of education at the request of ministration shows a total of 491 stu­ Students Out of State the Association of Land Grant Col­ dents, the largest in the history of the California ...... 0 12 leges and Universities. Specialists institution. Of this total 329 are men Idaho ...... 1 4 from the land grant colleges were in­ and 162 are women. Enrolled from Montana ...... 2 0 vited to help plan and study and pre­ the state of \Vashington are 306 men Minnesota ...... 1 0 pare tentative rep orts, under a special and 156 women, with a total of 462. Oregon ...... 0 1 appropnatlOn from congress. The King county is represented with the Alaska ...... I 0 study is divided into 20 parts. largest number, i. e., 67 students; Spo­ British Columbia ...... 1 0 kane county is next with 64 students, China ...... 0 2 PROF. W. T. McDERMITT Philippine Islands ...... 0 4 while Whitman county occupies third If you will accept French life as position and is represented with 54 French life, French standards as 162 329 students. All but four counties in the French standards; avoid comparisons state are represented in this enrolment. with life and standards of living to HOLLAND MADE CHAIRMAN Island, Jefferson, San Juan and Ska­ which you have been accustomed in OF IMPORTANT COMMITTEE mal1la. America; take what they have in the California, with 12 students, sup­ Word has just been received of the kindly spirit in which they give it, plies the largest number of students appointment of President E. O. HoI­ then you cah live reasonably and hap­ from out of the state. Idaho is next land of the State College of Washing­ pily in France without following the with five students. ton as chairman of a committee on tourist routine and can avoid artifice A complete analysis of the enrol­ aviat:on formed by the American As­ and exorbitant living costs. ment is as follows: sociation of Land Grant Colleges and The French people face life hon­ County Girls Boys Universities. estly and from an economic viewroint Adams ...... 1 3 Dr. Holland has left for Chicago to and are not hypocritical, being Olen Asotin ...... 0 5 attend the annual meeting of the as­ and frank in all their dealings, he as­ Benton ...... 5 5 sociation which is now in session. As serted. Contrary to the general be­ Chelan ' ...... 6 13 chairman of the new committee he will lief that Paris is the very heart of the Clallam ...... 0 1 direct a study of what the land grant world's wickedness, Professor Mc­ Clarke ...... 2 4 institutions of the United States are Dermitt stated that moral conditions Columbia ...... 0 1 do:ng in this new field. in New York are worse than in Paris, Cowlitz ...... 0 4 Homer Dana, assistant director of the and that in the smaller communities Douglas ...... 1 0 engineering experiment station of the he found a church-going and God­ Ferry ...... 0 1 State College of Washington, has been fearing people, with a moral tone less Franklin ...... 2 1 appointed secretary, and has made a loose than that in America. The Garfield ...... 1 2 study of the various courses of­ church maintains a strong hold on Grant ...... 0 1 fered in all of the institutions these so-called rural people and they Grays Harbor ...... 7 10 of the United States in aeronautics have developed a certain fear of Island ...... 0 0 and aviation. The other members of wrongdoing which tends to prevent it. THE ALUMNUS 18 Cd Return from Elba i . . )& 12_­ t L / /7/ /, ~

,

... Lined across the road in a narrow defile near soldier among you who· would shoot his Emperor, Laffray, stood a nervous detachment of Bourbon let him do it. I am here ..." troops. Nervous, because they knew that coming nearer every moment down the winding road from Bewildered Royalist officers saw their ranks melt Digne walked a small dark man who had once been into a mob of sobbing, cheering men, throwing them­ master of Europe, more recently exile-Emperor of selves at the Emperor's feet ... Elba. For this man they had seen their comrades die at Austerlitz and Zena. For him they had bled and Within a few hours towns-folk, peasants and sol­ suffered. And for him they had again gone into battIe, diers were hilariously battering down the locked not once, but many times. But now their officers gates of Grenoble so their Emperor might enter. spoke of him as "the enemy" and he came suddenly Later. a delegation brought him pieces of splintered with a handful of veterans to reconquer his lost wood and bronze. "Since we have no key to the city France. Their duty: to head him off before he we have brought Your Majesty the gate itself . .." reached the discontented city of Grenoble. Their orders: to shoot him the moment he should appear. . . . So in part, had TIME been published Their obedience: doubtful, for the first time. Mus­ in March, 1815, would it have chronicled Na­ kets charged, faces inscrutable, they waited. poleon's first bloodless victory of the Hundred Days, three months before Waterloo. So, too, Behind them, their officers were discussing a re­ treat, when the Little Corporal came in view, paun­ would TIME have told how Napoleon left chier than be£ure but dressed as every soldier in Grenoble thirty-six hours later with seven France had known him, in the old gray surtout, thousand men; how Louis XVIII despatched cocked hat, tri-color cockade. The soldiers paled, hesitated. Napoleon paused, ordered his followers to regiment after regiment to stop him and how, lower their guns. almost to a man, the armies sent to stop the "Usurper" joined Napoleon's army in its march "There he is! Fire !", cried a Royalist captain. In tense silence the click of muskets being cocked towards Paris; how, less than ten days later, a startled even grizzled veterans of Austerlitz. Na­ placard was found on the Vendome column in poleon advanced within pistol shot, walking slowly, Paris: "Napoleon to Louis XVIII. My good alone. Throwing open his coat. he displayed the fa­ miliar uniform. In a strong, calm voice he called: brother, it is useless to send me any more "Soldiers of the Fifth, recognize me' If there be one troops. I have enough." Cultivated Americans, impatient with cheap sensationalism and windy bias, turn increasingly to publications edited in the historical spirit. These publica­ tions, fair-dealing, vigorously impartial, devote themselves to the public weal in the sense that they report what they see, serve no masters, fear no ~oups. TIME The weekly Newsmagazine 14 • THE ALUMNUS Oln the Book--of--the--Month ' Club now-while you can get The First Book FREE A special offer-see reason for it below

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Spokane County King County Stevens County Pres.-Wm. Rusch, '15, Breslin Apts., Pres.-Frank Cleary, '26, Pacific Tel. Pres.-Geo. W. Wallace, '22, Colville. Spokane. & Tel. Co., Seattle. V. P.-Grover Graham, '11, Colville. V. P.-Bert Ritter, ex-'14, Spokane. V. P.-Walt Irvine, ex-'24, Western Sec.-Treas.-Madge V. Witt, Colville. ::lec.-Treas.-Chas. Carpenter, '24, W. Eng. & Colortype Co:, Seattle. W. P. Co., Spokane. Sec.-Treas.-Harold Sorenson, '24, Whatcom County 2423 Everett Ave., N. Seattle. Pres.-Kingsley Peasley, '15, North­ Chelan County west Hdwe. Co., Bellingham. Pres.-Walt Horan, '25, Wenatchee. V. P.-Marvin Allyn, '16, Bellingham. V. P.-Harley Bryant, '25, Wenatchee. Thurston County Sec.-Treas.-Delia Keeler, '12, Normal Sec.-Mrs. Ray Cain, '24, Wenatchee. Pres.-vVm. Duncan, '00, 212 Rogers School, Bellingham. Treas.-Mrs. Benton Bangs, '17, Wen­ Ave., Olympia. atchee. V. P .-Glenna Troy, '18, 113 17th Portland, Oregon Ave., Olympia. Pres.-Milton McCroskey, '98, 533 Kittitas County Sec.-TI',eas.-Fra'nces Lockwood, '25, East 14th North, Portland. Pres.-Dr. Jessie Barnhart, '18, El­ 2018 Capitol Way, Olympia. V. P.-Keneth Bageant, '27, 424 E. lensburg. Broadway, Portland, Ore. V. P.-Earl P . Cooke, '21, Ellensburg. Sec.-Treas.-June Sanders). '22, 756 Pacific County Wasco St., Portland, Vre. Sec.-Treas.-Fred D. Adams, '23. El­ Pres.-Mrs. Otto Roessler, '12, South lensburg. Bend, Wash. Golden Gate Cougar Club V. P.-Daniel Crowley, '23, South Pres.-Rex H. Turner, '24, Standard Snohomish County Bend, Wash. Pres.-Stanton Hall, '14, Hall's Phar­ Oil Bldg., San Francisco. macy, Everett. Vice Pres.-Wm. Moss, ex-'25, San V. P.-Mrs. Ottar Thomle, '09, 606 Francisco. Pierce County Sec.-Marcella Kartheiser, '21, 1531 Laurel Drive, Everett. Pres.-J. H. Binns, '16, Tacoma, Wash. Sec.-Treas.-Mrs. Clair Dobler, '25, Francisco St., San Francisco. V. P.-A. M. Richardson, '11, 3401 Treas.-Margaret Andrews, ex-'24, Madrona Apts., Everett. No. 24th St., Tacoma. Sec.-Treas.- Jessie Kirklan

The work of the State College of Washington is organized into three main groups: Resident Instruction, Experiment Station, and Extension Service. The Resident Instruction Division includes:

The College 01 Agriculture (B. S. and M. S. Degrees) With divisions in Farm Crops, Soils, Animal Husbandry, Dairy Husbandry, Poultry Husbandry, Horticulture, Landscape Gardening, Forestry, Range Man­ agement, Plant Pathology, Farm Engineering, Agricultural Journalism, Agricul­ tural Business.

The College 01 Mechanic Arts and Engineering (B. S., C. E., E. E., M. E., and M_ S. Degrees) With divisions in Architectural Engineering, Agricultural Engineering, Civil En­ gineering, Commercial Mechanical Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Commer­ cial Electrical Engineering, Hydro-Electrical Engineering, Management Engineer­ ing, l\fathematics, Mechanical Engineering, Physics.

The College 01 Sciences and Arts (B. S., B. A., M. S.• and M. A. Degrees) With School of Business Administration, and divislons in Chemistry, Chemical Engineering, Agricultural Chemistry, Botany, Zoology, Bacteriology. English, Economics, History and Political Science, Secretarial Science. Sociology, Foreign Languages, General, Nurses' Training, Pre·Medical, Pre-Dental.

The College 01 Home Economics (B. A., B. S., M. A.. and M. S. Degrees) With divisions in Teachers Training, Household Management, Institutional Management.

The College 01 Veterinary Medicine (B. S. and D. V. M. Degrees)

The School 01 Mines and Geology (B. S., M. S., and E. M. Degrees) With divisions in Geology, Mining Geology, Mining, Mine Management. Metal· lurgy, Metallography, Petroleum Engineering.

The School of Education (B. A. and M. A. Degrees) With divisions in Education. Agricultural Education, Psychology, Manual Arts.

The School 01 Music and Fine Arts (B. A. and M. A. Degrees) With divisions in Harmony, Theory, Voice, Piano, Violin, Pipe-Organ, Orches­ tra, Dramatic Art, Speech, Fine Arts.

The School 01 Pharmacy (B. S., M. S., and Ph. C. Degrees)­

The Graduate School (M. A., M. S., and Ph. D. Degrees)

The Department 01 Military Science and Tactics Including Resreve Officers' Training Corps in Infantry, Engineers, and Junior units.

The Department 01 Physical Education and Athletics (B. S. and M. S. Degrees) _

The Sho" Sessions Including the Summer Session and Winter Short Courses.

Many of the Departments Publish Special Booklets

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