OCE LAM RON VOLID.LE XXV COLLEGE OF EDUCATION, MONDAY, MARCH 29, 1948 NUMBER 20 New Students Listed MothersTo Be ProminentEducators Honoredat OCE Advance plans are being made By Registrar'sOffice for Mother's Week-end which is To ConductClasses Last Thursday morning the • • • • • • • • • • • • scheduled for Friday, Saturday, • • • • • • • • • • • Prominent Oreg on educators number of new students at QCE and Sunday, April 30, May 1 and • .NOTICE! will be a part of the Oregon Col- totaled 24. Of this numo-er six • CALENDAR • 2. This major event is the Spring • claimed Salem as their home • Monday, March 29 • term is sponsored by the Associ­ • _The Editorship of the Lam- • lege of Education staff during town. Following is a list which • IVCF, 7, CH 222 • ated Women Students. Jane Yant • ron is open. If anyone wishes • the 1948 summer session begin­ contains the names of t:b.e new • ASB Council, 6:30, CH • and Vivienne Hannah are co­ • to apply for the position, • ning Monday, June 14. Dr. Rex • please turn in your applica- • students, their home towns, and • Tuesday, March 30 • chairmen in charge of the affair. Putnam, superintendent of public • tion to the president of the • the schools last attended: • Assembly, 11, CH aqditorium • This event will be similar to instruction, other members of the • student council, TOI!l Jones, • James Elmer Armstrong, Salem, " Caldwell Library presenta- • Dad's Day which the students will state department, and a number • before the student council • Pacific college; Neil C. Boehmer, • tion (11 o'clock classes will • remember was a big success last of leading educators and admin­ a be omitted. • • meeting today in order that • Salem, Salem high school; Bill J. fall. Mothers of all the students istrators from Oregon public • class meeting, • • your name may be considered. • Butler, Roseburg, Salem high Freshman CH are invited and both men and schools will be instructors on the a auditorium, 7:30 p.m. • • Last term's editor, Joseph • school; Philip C. Caricof, Hono­ women students are asked to sign OCE faculty according to an an­ 11 Allen, has resigned his post in • lulu, Honolulu high school; Rob­ a Senior class meeaing, CH • the slips_ that will be posted on nouncement by Dr. Louis Kap­ • order to have more time to de- • ert G. Cox, Dallas, Dallas high 11 113, 7:30 • the bulletin boards if their moth­ lan, chairman of the education • vote to his claSSf's. • school; Walter V. Esch, Sale~, • Music Hour, 8, Todd hall • ers will be able to attend. department and director of the Salem high school; Marie J. Dil­ • music room • Next time you write a letter • • • • • • • • • • • • summer session. • Wednesday, 31 ley, Glenwood, Oregon State col­ March • home, ask your mother to come; Many new courses will be offer­ ~ Movie: "Cluny Brown," lege; William W. Gast, Salem, Sa­ 8,. or, better yet, write a letter today ed during the 1948 sumll).er session I CH auditorium lem high school; James A. Hand, • and tell her that we will be ex­ WoodwindFive at OCE. Leading Oregon educat­ Salem, Salem high school; Loren • • • • • • • • • • • • pecting her. ors, visiting instructors, and mem­ E. Helmhout, S a 1 em, Oregon bers of the regular staff will teach State college; Faye Knox, Mon­ Present Programcourses not scheduled during the mouth, Mills college. ConferenceCalls AccidentHalts Oregon College of Education regular school terms nor in pre­ Shirley Larimer, Salem, Wil­ ' was honored Thursday evening, vious summer tenns. lamette university; Donn a B. March 25, by an excellent per­ A course in Child Development Lu d he, Portland , Powellhurst Dean of Women Astoria Trip formance of the Portland Sym­ will be given by Mr. Allan East. Bible institute; Shirlie C. Mc­ phony Woodwind Quintet. Mr. East is the field secretacy and Miss Joan Seavey, dean of wo­ While motoring to Astoria on cartan, Eugene, University of The ·quintet, consisting of Ar­ psychiatric social worker for the men at the Oregon College of Ed­ Tuesday, March 23, Dr. Henry M. Oregon; Calvin C. Peterson, Eu­ thur Haberman, flute; Albert child guidance extenison centers ucation, left Sunday, March 28 Gunn, president of OCE, and Rob­ gene, ; Sam Klinger, clarinet; Arnold Kob­ of the University, of Oregon Med­ for Chicago. Miss Seavey is at­ ert Knox, head basketball coach, P. Ramey, Monmouth, University lentz, oboe; Gloria Solloway, ical School. tending the national convention were injured in an accident of Oregon; Lorene Ann Rasmus­ bassoon; and John Waitt, French Dr. Rex Putnam will conduct a of the Council of Guidance and which occurred 10 miles east of sen, Rockaway, UnivE!'rsity of horn, opened the program with class in school organization. Mr. Personnal Associations and the Elsie. The car, driven by Dr. Or.zgon; Frank J. Richards, Dal­ "Beethoven's Quintet," op. 71, in Walter Snyder, assistant superin­ convoention of the National Asso­ Gunn, went 150 feet down las, · University of Iowa; Mary an tendent of public' instruction, will ciation of Deans of Women. embankment after skidding on an four parts. Ariel Rubstein at the Ruth Roscoe, Portland, Lewis and have a class in the psychology de­ Miss Seavey of OCE and Mrs. icy surface. piano replaced the flutist in "Pi­ Clark college; Charles Richard ano Quintet" b;ir Mozart. partment. Miss Florence Beards­ Golda Wickham of the University Dr. Gunn, who suffered a dis­ Shearer, Monmouth, Oregon State After a brief intermission, the ley, director of elementary educa­ of Oregon are representing the located hip and head lacerations, college; J er a 1 d B. Steinmetz, original five resumed the program tion for the state department, will deans of women of Oregon at the returned to Monmouth Thursday Springfield, University of Oregon; with "Passacaille" by Barthe, Ga­ offer a course in the supervision two national group meetings. and is now resting comfortably at David R. Trusty, Bay City, Tilla­ briel Pierne's "Pastorale" op. 14, of teaching. home. Coach Knox received minor mook• high school; Helen D. Wil­ "Allegro Leggiero" by Charles Le­ A well-known Oregon educator, HEINTZELMAN TO SPEAK cuts. liams, Monmouth, Queens; Mary febre, and concluded their concert Miss Joy Hills, principal of the Mr. Oliver Heintzelman, OCE The two were to speak at an Lucille Wolff, Oakville, Washing­ geography instr1,1ctor, will speak with Milhaud's "La Chemines du Leslie junior high school in Sa­ ton, No.thwest Nazarene college. assembly of Astoria high school lem, will be on the OCE summer on the subject "The Geoconomy students. Roi Rene" in seven divisions. KAPLAN WRITES ARTICLE of Grasse" at a luncheon meeting The recital was attended by an school staff. Miss Hills will teach in the education department. Di­ The March number of "The Phi of the Oregon geography teachers appreciative and unusually repre­ rector of audio-visual aids in the Delta Kappan" has an article by of the Oregon Education Associa­ sentative group of students, fac­ Albany public schools, Mr. Arthur Dr. Louis Kaplan of our faculty. tion on Thursday, April 1, in StudentsEnjoy ulty, and townspeople. E. Palmer, will conduct a course Th,e article is entitled, "More Portland. Grasse is the perfume Collecto Coeds were in charge in the use of audio-visual aids for Me-n for Elementary Schools." center of Southern France. of ushering and, during the inter­ NegroQuintet m1ss10n refreshments were sold elementary teachers and admin­ istrators. The program of the "Musical by members of Staff and Key. Superintendents from four of Geography Department Buys Maps; Notes," Negro quintet which was larger school systems Ore­ presented at the assembly last MISS .JOHNSON BACK ON .JOB the in gon will conduct a symposium in Ueintzelman Compares US and USSR Wednesday, was received with en­ Following several days' illness, school administration for t h e thusiasm by a large audience. Miss Fay Johnson, assistant reg­ Mr. Oliver Heintzelman, ge- 49N); USSR, 30° (40N to 70N.) OCE summer school students. Dr. ' Especially enjoyed wer,e the ar­ istrar at the Oregon College of ography instructor at .the Oregon Area: USA, three million square Wendell Van Loan of Corvallis, rangements featuring the bass Educati~n, has returned to her College of Education enthusi­ miles; USSR, eight million square Dr. Robert r.antz of Woodburn, singer including "I've Been work­ duties. astically announces the arrival miles. (Continued on Page Four) of several new maps for the col­ Population: USA, 140 million; ing on the Railroad" and the ever lege geography department which USSR, 190 million. popular "'Old Man River." "Trees" he says will be valuable assets to Railway mileage: USA, 220,000; sung by the tenor was another Serenaders Feature Popular Music; .· the continent courses which he is USSR, 55,000. highlight of the porgram . teaching this term. Also included Accessibility: USA, excellent by Jubilee numbers, "Oh Noah" Billed for Weekly Dance at lndep. and "Little Children Go and I are three charts showing the con­ land and ocean; USSR, poor by You heard them first at the Will Send Thee" closed the con­ Their repertoire now includes 20 struction of various map projec­ land (isolated bY deserts and Grove talent show, and last week cert. pieces and these have been per­ tions. One of the maps is of the mountains) and oceans, ice lock­ their now familiar theme song, fected by "practicing whenever Pacific Northwest and another is ed. "Moonlight Serenade" opened we get a chance to," according to a la1·ge scale map of the United Faces: USA, Atlantic and Pa­ and closed the Hello dance. That's Jack. A specialty number they cific; USSR, Atlantic Pacific. States. These are also maps of the and CoursesOffered right - we're talking about the have worked up is C-Jam Blues, sections of Europe which include Culture: USA, European; USSR members of Jack Graham's or­ featuring Carmen Westenhouse's • the Scandinavian peninsulas and Oriental and Occidental. In NearbyTowns chestra, those smooth instrumen­ trumpet and Herb Kirby's trom­ Baltic area, the Iberian peninsula, Nationalities: USA, diversified talists who make up the official bone. Italy - Balkans, Central Europe, European; USSR, diversified Or­ Three Oregon College of Educa­ dance orchestra for OCE. The orchestra will be playing at France, and the British Isles. iental and Occidental. tion faculty members are teaching Jack recruited most of his play­ student body dances at college, The Asiatic maps are of the Pacific coastline: USA, 1,560 spring term extension classes in ers from the college band, and and they have a standing engage­ Near East, the Far East, China, miles, not includng Alaska; US­ nearby towns of Dallas, Albany, some of them have had previous ment every Saturday night at the and U.S.S.R. Two other maps are SR, 5,000 miles. and Stayton. experience in dance bands. Paul V.F.W. hall in Independence. of Australia and the East Indies. Climate: us~. favorable; USSR, Dr. J . F. Santee is teaching Krausch, drummer, played with Complete personnel includes: Some interesting comparisons largely unfavorabl-e. History of Western Civilization an orchestra in Chicago where he Scott Thompson, first alto saxo­ tabulated by Mr. Heintzelman, be­ Resources: U S A, enormous III on Wednesday evenings in also won first place in a city-wide phone; David Jaynes, third alto tween the and the (leads in coal, oil and minerals) ; Dallas; Mr. Anton Post! is teach­ drum contest for high school saxophone; Carmen Westenhouse, USSR maps are: USSR, enormous (leads in oil, ing Physical Science Survey III students several years ago. Jack first trumpet; Harry Peters, sec­ Longitude: USA, extends 60° coal and minerals. in Albany on Tuesday evenings; spent two years with an orches-· ond trumpet; Herb Kirby, first (65W to 125W); USSR, 160° (20E Period of economic and · political and Mr. Oscar Christensen is of­ tra in California, but he explains trombone; Jean Schreiver, piano; to 180W.) training: USA, 150 years under fering Oregon History on Mon­ his present band is the fir:;,t one Paul Krausch, drums; and Jack Latitude: USA, 19° (30N to own rul,e; USSR, 18 years. day evenings in Stayton. he has ever organized. Graham, first tenor saxophone. PAGE TWO THE OCE LAMRON, MONMOUTH, OREGON MONDAY, MARCH 29, 194S

THE OCE LAMRON PUBLISHED BY THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF Hartwig-l(eppel JR(O)wii.ng\ OREGON COLLEGE OF EDUCATION, MONMOUTH, OREGON DORM

EDITORIAL STAFF Vows Taken Associate Editors Fern Huntzinger, Marge Tracy R.

MONDAY, MARCH 29, 1948 THE OCE LAMRON, MONMOUTH, OREGON PAGE THREE

POWELL, HILL and Underwoocl Portable Typewriter Dance Welcomes News From the Pianists• Styl~s $76.85 Tax Inc. Conv. terms MORLAN Dean's Office Kullander Jewelry "Insurance" Back And Gift Store · Students The education and psychology Show Variation 240 Main Street, Independence Jack Graham's Moonlight Sere­ library of Dr. V. V. Caldwell, who There are several concert pl­ WANTED: Plain sewing and al­ was professor of psychology naders serenaded new and old at anists today and equally as many terations. Students' laundry.-Mrs OCE before his death, will , be students at Staff and Key's Hello styles of playing. Sch_nabel sec:ms MULKEY'S Guy Deming, 110 N College st. formally pr,ssented to the college Dance last Thursday evening, tomorro.w at 11 a.m. in the Camp­ always at ease when before the GROCERY March 24, in the Rec hall. Per­ bell hall auditorium. instrument. Iturbi doesn't want OUR AIM: IS TO PLEASE! haps it was the music, or just the Mrs. Caldwell will be present to appear complacent when play­ UNION OIL ing unless accomp9.nied by a myr­ thought of spring, anyway the at the ceremony, and it is hopect SERVICE STATION that a large attendanc,e will ex­ iad of pseudo prodigies of the People with itching palms are crowd which turned out reached press the gratitude the students freckle era and at J.east half a suppo..s,eo. to get something. If Corner Main & Knox an all-time high. An added at­ feel at receiving a gift of this dozen up-to-date Gibson Girls. their heads itch, they've got it. traction was the newly installed nature. Rubenstein becomes hysterical by fireplace. Everyone danced unti~ Besides the presentation cere­ the black and white pattern con­ Come in and have us the very last minute before clos­ fronting him, especially with fires, give your car a mony there will be numoors by ing time at the dormitory. the girls' sextet and a solct "On orgies, and rituals somewhere in Complete Check-up! Refreshments were served as the Road to Mandalay" by George the embryonic stage of develop­ far as they went, but the punch Redden. ment. Horowitz conquers th e soon disappeared. Perhaps Jack's piano. :t: :i: :i: orchestra will revive the lagging :t: To be played for Tuesday ev­ ,,--by spirits of the OCE students who Professor P. E. Dustoor, profes­ ening's Music Hour are several are weary of dancing to juke box sor of English literature at the evidences of Horowitz's universal­ YARDLEY MACY music. University of Allahabad in India, ity. Music of Mendelssohn, Cho­ is including OCE in his lecture pin, and Liszt will be offered. Al­ BUILDING ' tour of the western states and will ' -!-?-!- most every expression is repre­ SUPPLY Agent: "I've been trying to see speak in a special ass,embly here sented from the sonorous and you all week. When may I have on April 7 at 10 a.m. pacifying Chopin's Nocturne in F an appointment?" Professor Dustoor, who has to the raucous rumblings and Roofing, insulation, Manager: "Make a date with studied many of the problems of crackling dynamics of Liszt's Hun­ my secretary." present-day India, is sponsored garian Rhapsody No. 6. Almost Complete line of Paint Agent: "I did, sir, and we had by the East and West Association unbelievabla is the performance a grand time. But I still want to of which Pearl S. Buck is the of Liszt's piano transcription of see you." president. the familiar Wedding March of :t: :t: :t: t Mendelssohn. .. The story of "Little Red Riding Tchaikovsky's Sixth Symphony Hood" will be dramatized with (subtitled by the compos,er the COLLEGE GRILL puppets on Monday, April p. at 3 "Pathetique") and the Concerto $250 $1500 in B-flat minor for Piano and Or­ TO ¥, ¥, o'clock in the auditorium. Miss Claggett's puppetry stud,ents, who chestra should offer contrast to PLUS TAX the program. Horowitz will be The Place To Meet and Eat! created the four puppet charac­ THE ters appearin~ in the story, will featured as soloist in the con­ ¥, ¥, SOPHISTICATED AND present the show. certo. The Best of Foods, -!-?-!- REGAL PERFUME

The Best of Service New neighbor: "Does' my prac­ Yudley Products (or Amenta arc C"'.&ted ,n [ngll!;ld and ticing the saxophone make you 6nid1cd ia the U.S.A. from C1e originil E,alish formulae. Short Orders, Dinners, and Sandwiches Students Wed "oobirun1 iDiPOrttd and d

Wednesday Night Movies Scheduled Every other week during the CODER'S term a fr,2e movie will be present­ ed in the Campbell hall auditor~ The Students' Store ium. students will be admitted upon showing student body cards. One gues~ will also be admitted I without an additional charge. SCHOOL SUPPLIES The schedule for this quarter includes: "Cluny Brown," to be t,n shown on March 31; "Captain Fury," April !21,; ''Dragonwyck,', FOUNTAIN - LUNCH April 28; "Keys of the Kingdom," May 12; and "Wilson," May 26. /j¢ Continuation of these movies will depend upon the ii.umber of ' students attending them. BUS DEPOT -:- GIFTS -!-?-!- BOTTLEDUNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY Once in a while you see a man COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF OREGON © 1948, The Co

I I, • PAGE FOUR THE OCE LAMRON, MONMOUTH, OREGON MONDAY, MARCH 29, 1948 MHS Wolverines, Runners-upin State 8 Tourney Varsity O to Sponsor Trophy Varsity o has voted to pur­ chase a trophy to be given each year to the outstanding OCE ath­ lete as selected by a committee to be composed of the two coaches, the women's athletic director, the athletics commissioner, the sports editor of the Lamron and the president and vice-president of Varsity o. The club was also instrumen­ tal in starting a plaque for the most valuable player in each sport. The plaque will have space for four names each year. Each name will be decided upon by a vote of the pll}.yers on the indi­ vidual football, basketball, base­ ball, and track squad. As yet the plaque has not been named.

CLASSROOM PLANNING MEET Representatives from Oregon and Washington attended a class­ • room planning conference on the OCE campus on Tuesday and Wednesday, March 16 and 17. The The Monmouth high school basketball team which won th ·e Polk county B-league tournament championship, the District II-B conference, sponsored by the state title and were runners-up in the state B tournammt at Arlington are !}i;tured above. Standing (left to right) coach Budd Gronquist, department of education an d George C~ndon, Douglas McCauley, John Schroeder, John Grund, Ronald Reid, Lyle Ladehoff and Manager Leroy Fleischman; Seated (left OCE, was presided over by Presi­ to right) John Smitb, Buddy Heide, Conrad Howard, James Comstock and Noal Sawtelle. courtesy -Cut dent Henry M. Gunn. Dr. Rex • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ...... ~ . . . . Putnam, state superintendent of public instruction brought greet­ Portland Teacher, Author of Book Wolves' Season ings at the initial session. Featur­ Law Limits Vet ed speaker for the conference was Was First Editor of OCf Lamron Basketball Record Dr. Darrel B. Harmon, consulting educationalist of Austin, Texas. A recent Sunday Oregonian ha ,\ dents of the school's commercial Th e OCE varsity basketball sea- Pay Increase a " write-up of one of the city department. son record is presented below: Only veterans in schools, col­ school teachers, Miss Isabel Mc­ Early in 1924 the paper was OCE 41 Pacific university .... 39 QUILLMANSHIP Ieg,es and universities pursuing Lelland, who recently had a book taken over as a student body ac­ OCE 29 Lewis and Clark ...... 56 Eighth grade student to student full-time courses of education will published. It is a child's book en­ tivity. A prize of $2.50 was offered OCE 52 Linfield ...... 72 teacher: "What do you think of titled "Ten Beaver Road." Miss for a new name for the paper and OCE 64 Lewis and Clark ...... 61 be entitled to increased subsis­ my quill pen?" McLelland's parents left Scotland "Lamron" (Normal spelled back­ OCE 60 Vanport ...... 66 tence allowances under a law re­ The student was complacently dipping a chicken feather into his when she was three years old and ward) was the winning entrant . OCE 55 SOCE ...... 68 cently signed by the president, ac­ came to Oregon, settlin g on inkwell and using the primitive the Miss McLelland was selected as OCE 50 SOCE ...... 70 cording to the Veterans Adminis­ northwest Pacific coast. The the first editor and the first issue OCE 53 Reed ...... 47 equipment to write with. trat ion. theme of the book is based on under the new name and student OCE 48 St. Martins ...... 66 Student Teacher: "Quill pens were used 100 years or so ago this experience. sponsorship was March 31, 1924. OCE 49 Linfield ...... 64 Par t -time stud,en ~s, on- th e-j ob be­ The book is published by the It appeared as Volume 1, Number OCE 43 Vanport ...... 72 train ees and others will not be fore pens were common." Stude nt, with distorted sense of Henry Holt company . It was Mi,gs 15, previous "humbers having been OCE 48 Pacific college ...... 41 entitled to the increases, th e VA time: "Did they have pens when McLelland's first attempt at book issued as the ONS Breeze. OCE 46 EOCE ...... _,...... 51 ruling h eld. The bill S. 1394, sign­ production and she was surprised Business manager was Irving EOCE ...... 54 you were a boy?" OCE 46 ed into law, amends the Service­ to have it accepted and used Swenson. Otto H. H. Petersen was OCE 77 Pacific college ...... 40 man 's Readju stmen t Act ( Bill) where first off,ered. The book had assistant manager and Frederick OCE 60 Willamette ...... 58 GI and the Vocational Rehabilitation a favorable review in the New Beck was circulation manager. OCE 58 EOCE ...... 63 THE VOGUE York Times and seems headed to­ Alice Enquist was society editor OCE 65 EOCE ...... 58 Act (Public Law 16) for the dis­ abled. Exclusive Ladies Ready to Wear ward a successful future. and Melvin Ray was sports editor. OCE 53 SOCE ...... 57 Of interest to OCEans is the Miss McLelland has taught in OCE 44 SOCE ...... 62 The new payments will be at fact that Miss McLelland went to the BEach and Arleta schools in OCE 50 Pacific university .... 55 the monthly rate of $75 for a vet­ this institution and she was the Portland and is now library teach­ eran without dependents , $105 for first editor of the Lamron, student er in the Boise· school. She and a veteran with one dependent, publication of the Oregon Normal her widowed mother live at 4123 Attend Salem Meeting and $120 for a veteran with more Betty Crocker Steam school. been N. Vancouver Av-enue, Portl and. than one dependent. The paper had start­ On Saturday evening, March 20, ed earlier under the name of the She is planning a trip to Scotland The higher rates are applicable the following faculty members at­ Irons and Pressure "ONS Breeze," originated by stu- this summer. to periods of training on and af­ tended a meeting of . the Alpha ter April 1. However, since sub­ Cookers at • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Tau field chapter of Phi Delta sistence allowance checks are not , Kappa in Salem: Mr. O. C. Chris­ due until the end of the . month in Forgotten Inventor tensen, Mr. H. Kent Farley, Dr. which the veteran is in training, GORDON & GRAGG Louis Kaplan, Mr. R. E. Lieuallen, most of the eligible veteran-stu­ FARM STORE Mr. William Nutting, Dr. J. F. dents will receive their first Santee, and Mr. Everett Van checks at the higher r ates on or · . Maanen. Also present were Dr. C. shortly after May 1. A. Howard, former president of ··-80y1t;~ ·. OCE, and Mr . A. c. Stanbrough, BU!lO£.,e ~·••MAtA9N'£,fy ··..rU~ru,<>£Af.4,yUf:4tru~£.,e now a Pacific college faculty "l'<>Q-,e"6'lV£ 410 IJMfrt,ty P,l>t)bU, ... member, but formerly with OCE. 1s2e...eulL1, ,ER... Speakers of the evening were Dr. Strand , president of osc, and Dr. BARNEY'S 1830 RONWOR/(S INIJ4L7IM01rE.1 Ziran, head of the OSC education Pa1...::.Dt'f!f~-coNJ~r£o .fAb department. 1 , !Urj~ vAf THUMB".... i."44(LOCOAfo.r/Jf" 41'MQ,vlCf.P /; f ducators ,To Teach GROCERY ~A l'PI/Nb£R°" ""'1itcev STEEi. fNDusrRt- fl ' and Mr. Frank Bennett of Salem will be the participating superin­ :f, :f, • . Af4KfJ6'Qoo~~P.,' OPPO-fl'UN,,r~. ,,,_.,,4 ~~ . tendents. ~( p~nf ~'( <::,;;,~ These leading Oregon educators F . MF will be a part of the Oregon Col­ Prices and Quality, Guaranteed To Please w---- lege of Edu·catioh summer school ~-· in addition to visiting instructors and members of the regular staff. :f, :f, MODERN CLEANERS FOR SERVICE THAT SATISFIES, AND DYERS BARNEY'S IS THE PLACE TO BUY! TRY DRAX-STAIN RESIST- ENT & WATER REPELLENT