JUNIOR WEEKEND-MOTIEEE .S D .A Y A kaleidoscopic view of canoe floats . the campus luncheon, visitin g mothers, the weekend queen and other activities attending the 193 5 edition of s gala and traditional Junior weekend . If

and comfort and: Beauty, comfort and performance will be yours in performanc e full measure when you buy your new Master De combine to Luxe Chevrolet for 1935. It is beautiful in every give: fine car detail of its Fisher bodies. It is comfortable, too, quality for it has every modern improvement to make your - ride smooth-safe--pleasant . And in performanc e it will be a revelation to you. All these advan- tages combine to give fine car quality-the highes t quality Chevrolet has ever offered . . . yet Chevrolet prices are low and Chevrolet operating economy i s greater than ever before: May we suggest that you prove these facts by your own tests, and choose Chevrolet for quality at low cost. CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGA N

Compare Chevrolet s low delivered prices and easy C . M .A .C. term s A General Motors Valu e

TURRET-TOP BODY BY FISHER WITH FISHER VENTILATION SYSTEM) . . .IM- PROVED KNEE-ACTION RIDE . . . BLUE-FLAME VALVE-IN-HEAD ENGINE .. . . WEATHERPROOF CABLE-CONTROLLED BRAKES . . . SHOCK-PROOF STEERING

Published monthly except July and August by the Alumni Assucitm,. of the University of Oreerm . and entered as second this-s ma t at the postoitce at Eugene, Oregon. under the act of March 3 . 1S7 : . Treat under Form 3575-P . Return Postage guaranteed.

Published by the Alumni Association

Vol. XVI May, 1935 No.10

NEWS AND COMMEN T By The Edito r The Chancellor Issue Again to replace Dr . Kerr, and others less di- ent system until it has been given a Dragged out of the closet again las t rectly, are as follows : thorough and further test. " Merle R. month was higher education 's trouble- April 13-E. C. Sammons, chairman Chessman, president of the state asso- some skeleton-the chancellorship . The of the board finance committee and a ciation, immediately made clear that the calendar of events in this new outburst member since the board's inception, was action of the Portland group did no t against the present incumbent and th e reappointed by Governor Martin fo r necessarily reflect the attitude of the en - circumstances surrounding his pro-- another term (9 years) . tire alumni and that that body had take n longed stay in the position reads like a May 1-Mrs. Walter M . Pierce wa s no action nor made any expression n stenographic report of a good cat and removed from the state body by th e the subject of the chancellorship . dog fight. Charges and counter charges, Governor and E. C. Pease of The Dalles , May 27 - Dr. Frederick Mauric e Hunter, chancellor of the University o in some cases carefully camouflaged and a former member of the hoard, was ap- f in others subtly distorted, have serve d pointed to succeed her . Cause for Mrs . Denver, arrived in the state on the invi- to bring before the public eye once agai n Pierce's removal was the fact that i n tation of the chancellor selection com- the cankerous source of higher educa- her capacity as secretary to her con- mittee of the board to " look over thing s tion's struggle to definitely establish a gressman husband, her continued ab- in connection with the chancellorship ." On the same day the board met an workable system of higher education i n sence from the state rendered her unabl e d Oregon . to conscientiously serve the state as a heard the pleas of the parents groups . Events in higher education, some o f member of the board of higher educa- Earle Wellington . president of the Ore- gon Dads and acting as spokesman fo them linked directly to the new effort s tion. In reply to the Governor's orig- r inal request for her resignation, Mrs . both groups, stated : "These resolutions Pierce roundly flayed her remover fo r were passed before there was an intima - attempting to manipulate the policies of higher education and expressed fea r that changes in the personnel of the board might result in the selection o f "a reactionary, dictatorial chancello r who will put Oregon education in a straightjacket ."

Office Under Fire May 11 - The Oregon Mothers adopted a resolution at their annua l campus mass meeting calling on th e board of higher education to abolish th e office of chancellor in the interests o f economy and efficiency. This action was made public in conjunction with a sim- ilar resolution passed by- the executiv e committee of the Oregon Dads . Author- ization was made for the presentation o f these resolutions to the board at its nex t meeting. May 23-In a joint resolution the executive boards of the Portland chap- ters of both the University and State REAPPOINTED College Alumni Associations went on . E . C . Sammons, long-time member of the record as opposing the abolition of the BOARD MEMBER AGAI N state board of higher education who was chancellorship, stating that "due to the E . C . Pease, The Dalles, appointed by Gov - recently reappointed at the expiration o f agitation to abolish the position of chan- ernor Martin to take Mrs. Walter M. his term by Governor Martin. Sammons Pierce's place on the state board of highe r is chairman of the finance committee and cellor" the groups "wish to go on record education. Pease served on the board sev - the chancellor selection committee. as favoring the continuation of the pres- eral years ago,

2 Old Oregon May, 193 5

Lion that a change was in mind, and chancellorship of Oregon 's system, and Willard Marks, president of the board , there is nothing I can do except presen t that in case he would, that the positio n defended the hoard's policy in this mat - thew., lacking any other authority. But would be formally offered to him. ter by stating : "that the selection of a I have talked with officials of the var- May 29-The report of the specia l chancellor is a highly important matter , ious clubs over Sunday and I feel sur e committee of the American Associatio n one vitally affecting the whole future o f that you will find us cooperative i n of University Professors which investi- higher education in Oregon. The boar d whatever setup the board thinks best , gated the chancellorship situation mor e felt it important enough to want to sur- provided we can have some assurance than a year ago following the Nelso n vey fully the field of available educa- of action on these changes which we be- episode was released . In the main, afte r tors and check thoroughly the ability , lieve are vital ." Previously Wellington a lengthy discuss ion of contributing fac- personality, experience and record of had stated that had the groups know n tors to the unhappy situation, the repor t achievement of men under considera- of the invitation extended Dr . Hunter concluded that "the election of Dr . Kerr tion." He further stated that the un- that perhaps the resolutions would never as chancellor was a stupendous blunder " certainty of board finances until re- have been presented ; that the situation and that "the University cannot have a cently made it impossible to do mor e was obviously embarrassing ; but that healthy and normal life until the chan- than continue its investigation of possi- the groups were irrevocably committe d cellor retires ." The report went into ble successors to Dr. Kerr. toward the restoration of pure scienc e detail as to the committee's procedure at the University and an administrativ e and its reasons for believing that "the Kerr Makes Rejoinde r setup that would give the presidents o f early retirement of the chancellor i s June 1-Dr. Kerr, himself the focal the institutions real power for educa- imperative ." In an addenda to the orig- point of the entire controversy whic h tional leadership . Later the board an- inal report the conirnittee reiterated its has continued intermittently since hi s nounced its intention of retaining th e stand and explained that its purpose in election in September of 1932, made chancellorship system and proffere d withholding the original report was due reply to the published A.A . report. r .U .P "careful attention" to the demands fo to the hope that the speedy cooperation Said Dr. Kerr : "My responsibilities are greater freedom for the presidents and of the chancellor and the state boar d to the board of higher education, to al l t the re-establishment of pure science a would not make necessary the issuanc e of the institutions in the state system the University . of the report to the public, but that sinc e and to the people of the entire state ." He that time, except for the announced in- pointed out that his resignation had bee n Hunter Stays Over tention (more than a year ago) of th e in the hands of the state board for more May 28-Postponing his schedule d chancellor to retire "as soon as a : suit- than a year and that he had been givin g return to Denver, Dr . F. M. Hunter, able successor could be chosen, " little every assistance possible toward the se- visited the campuses at Corvallis, Mon- or no indication had been given that an y lection of his successor. He amplifie d mouth and Eugene accompanied by E . progress toward the hoped for change these remarks in a lengthy statement i n C. Sammons, chairman of the chancel- had been made . which he criticized the method by which lor selection committee . Although n o May 31-Declaring that the boar d the report had been released and mad e commitments were made, it is believe d "has consistently refused to be stam- personal reply to some of the statement s that Dr. Hunter had been asked to repl y peded into hasty, ill-considered action" (no definite "charges" were made by as to whether he would consider the on the selection of a new chancellor, the committee) contained in the discus- sions and opinions which formed the hulk of the report . Dr. Kerr's statement was made to "acquaint the public wit h issues involved in the report and to re- assure the people as to the fundamenta l soundness of higher education in the state . . . " June 1-The Oregon State Alumn i Association, at its annual Commence- ment meeting, passed a resolution de- nouncing the A .A.U.P . report as an "unwarranted attack on the state board of higher education ." Only One Issue In the present situation there is only one outstanding and important fact, an d that is : As long as Dr. Kerr is retaine d or as long as he remains as chancellor there is faint hope that Oregon 's higher educational institutions. can functio n with distinction or efficiency. It is regrettable that the present tur- moil has involved the subterfuge of a n attack on the office of chancellor (al - GRADUATES OF FIFTY YEARS AGO though anyone who knows of the de- Members of the class of 1885, who will hold their fiftieth reunion on June 15. They spair with which the Dads and Mother s are, left to right : Royal F. Reasoner, deceased ; Henry F. McClure, deceased ; Daniel W. Bass, Seattle ; and Anna Patterson Potter, Eugene . Pictures of the members of th e organizations view the continuance o f normal school graduates of 1885 will be printed next month. This picture was loaned present circumstances, their search fo r to Old Oregon by Mrs. Potter, and will be on display during Commencement . some "out" is entirely understandable) .

May, 1935 Old Oregon 3

Likewise it is regrettable that the on e new chancellor, the situation has not Oregon Women to he held at the Oshur n and only actual conclusion of th e altered in the least. Hotel at 8 :15 Saturday morning . All A.A.U.P, report (namely, that the Uni- Attacks on the A .A .U.P. report only women graduates of the University an d versity cannot have a healthy and nor- add to the preponderant evidence that senior girls are especially invited . The mal life until the Chancellor retires) has there is a most unhealthy situation prev- semi-annual meeting of the entire Al- been lost sight of in the scramble to jus - alent in higher education and that th e umni Association will he held in Guil d tify and overemphasize and camouflage cure can only be found in the remova l Hall at 10 :30 with President Merl e the discussions leading up to this con- of the basic cause. Chessman presiding. Following thi s clusion . Also, it is regrettable that both To attack or defend Dr . Kerr, to ar- meeting will he the annual University the appearance of the Dads and Moth- gue technicalities of a report, to pro - luncheon, at which reunion classes wil l ers before the board and the publication pose or condemn the abolition of hi s he seated together and at which a rcpre- of the report had to come at a time when office, to condemn or defend the state a candidate for the position was visiting board of higher education-all of thes e the state for the purpose of looking ove r activities together with their multitudin- the chancellorship . ous ramifications serve no real purpos e other than to define more clearly and Situation Still Unaltered convincingly than ever the need for im- Up to the arrival of Dr . Hunter no mediate and forthright action toward indication of tangible effort to obtain a bringing to Oregon a new chancellor o f new chancellor had appeared . In the sound educational background, capabl e long months intervening between th e and energetic, and one above suspicio n chancellor's announced desire to retire of partiality or susceptible to political and the arrival of Dr . Hunter, Univer- influence . sity friends and friends of higher edu- That accomplished-then Oregon i s cation had been growing increasingly ready to proceed with its admirable ex- suspicious, as had also the highly im- periment of unification . Until then no partial A .A .U.P. investigating commit- real progress can be hoped for and mil - tee. Unfortunate though it may hav e lions of dollars in human values to the been that patience broke coincident with state are being lost through inaction , the hoard 's first open move toward a bickering and political manipulation .

A L U M N I

COMMENCEMENT tow. 1915-Bertrand Jerard, chairman ; Dr. Victor P. Morris, Ben F . Dorris Classes Plan Reunions and Mrs . Arnold Koepke . 1925-T. R. Ten major events, including Alumn i Gillenwaters and Marie M . Bosworth . Day and the scheduled Class Reunion s Each class will hold a separate re - . The on Saturday, June 15, and Baccalaur- union dinner on Saturday evening COMMENCEMENT SPEAKE R eate and Commencement on the follow- committees are making the arrange- Oswald Garrison Villard, contributing edi- ing Sunday and Monday have been ar- ments for these functions. tor of the Nation, who has been chosen as ranged for the fifty-eighth annual Com- Oswald Garrison Villard, contribut- 1935 Commencement speaker . Villard is mencement weekend honoring the grad- ing editor and former publisher of th e the son of Henry Villard, early University . Ray- benefactor after whom is uating class and former students . Class- Nation and a noted liberal, and Dr named . es to hold reunions are 1885, 1905, 1910, mond C. Brooks, professor of religio n 1915 and 1925 . at Pomona college, will speak to th e Members of both the regular and nor- approximately 500 graduates of the uni t sentative from each class will extend a mal department class of 1885 have sig- versity at commencement services . word of greeting to the new graduates , nified their intention of returning t o Villard, son of Henry Villard, bene- to be followed by a response from a the campus for the activities of the week- factor of the university in its infancy , member of the senior class . end. Mrs. L. H . Potter, Eugene, and and himself a long friend of the school , Daniel Waldo Bass, Seattle, are th e will deliver the commencement address Complete Program Given surviving members of the former group . June 17 at McArthur .court. He has Other events listed on the progra m Ada Osie Walton, Seattle ; Bessie Day, announced his topic as "Youth and th e include a benefit tea for the Pauline Ho- Eugene ; Albert S . Mulligan, Salem ; Republic." mer Potter Collection of Beautifu l and Catherine Powell Wootton, Brook- Dr. Brooks will give the baccalaur- Books, to he held Friday afternoon i n lyn, New York, are the surviving mem- eate sermon June 16 at McArthur court . Gerlinger Hall ; the Failing and Beek- bers of the normal class . All of these Dr. Brooks, who started his ministerial man Orations, scheduled for Frida y 50-year graduates except Mrs . Wootton career at the First Congregational evening at the Music auditorium ; the are expected to be present at the event s church in Eugene, will speak on "The President's-Chancellor's reception, Sat- scheduled in their honor. Challenge of the Present World Situa- urday afternoon from 3 :30 to 5 :30 Committees in charge of the othe r tion. " o'clock in Gerlinger Hall ; class reunio n reunions are : 1905-Albert R . Tiffany, dinners, arranged by the class reunion chairman ; Mae D . Kinsey and Mrs . Alumni Events Liste d committees ; and the traditional Flower Mabel Eaton McClain . 1910-Mrs . Of particular interest to alumni wil l and Fern procession and Twilight Con- Edith Prescott Siefert, chairman ; Iso- be the annual breakfast and dinner of cert Saturday evening at the site of th e lene Shaver Gilbert and Wilshire Bris - the State Association of University of Pioneer Mother statue .

4 Old Oregon May, 1935 S P O R T

CHAMPIONS Numerous possibilities arose out o f series against the Webfoots . The Ore- the tangle as the conference moved int o gon nine took both games at Eugene an d Three Firsts, Two Seconds its final week of competition . The Ducks split a double-header at Seattle . Spring term, 1935, will undoubtedl y had but to defeat the Beavers twice t o With three major league scouts i n go down in Webfoot sports history as assure themselves their second consecu- the stands to observe their efforts, Ray one of the most successful of all times . tive crown, and could lose one encounte r Koch and Joe Gordon juggled the bal l After reasonably successful seasons i n without losing the title if the norther n all over the infield during the first en - both football and basketball, Oregon teams divided their contests - which counter, but McFadden upheld his athletes opened up on the northwest they did not, Washington winning both . pitching record, 6 to 5 . Gordon and sports world and proceeded to display a n Saturday, June 1, was the date of the Hurney each poled out a homer in the imposing array of championship team s final deciding game . Also it was "Rein- first two innings . and champions . hart Day," honoring the last game o f Playing confidence returned the next Following close on the heels of th e the last Oregon team to be coached b y day and the Ducks hit two Washingto n national champion rifle squad came the Bill Reinhart, who goes to George pitchers with merciless intent to pile up northwest championship in swimming , Washington University next fall . The 14 runs and win the second game, 14 t o then golf and finally the second success- previous day at Corvallis, the Webfoot s 1 . Cece Inman, letterman right-hander , ive year as northwest champions i n had slugged out a wild 15 to 6 win ove r allowed the Huskies only three hits baseball, which shares the spring spot - Slats Gill's Orangemen, Don McFadden , while on the mound . Van Vliet an d light for popularity with track . Oregon' s ace hurler and by all odds th e Lewis contributed home runs to the Nosed out by only one point in the greatest factor in winning the 193 5 winning score. conference track meet, Oregon is rated pennant, wasn't up to form due to a A double-header played at Seattle along with W.S.C., her conqueror i n wrenched back, but except for errati c was divided, the Huskies taking the the meet, as one of the nation 's strong- splurges of poor backing from the in- first game, 2 to I, and the Ducks win- est track squads . In tennis Oregon took field and because of two circuit clout s ning the second, 7 to 6 . Stella,r pitching the mythical Oregon championship and netting six runs by Gordon and McFad- by McFadden and Washington 's Dal y placed second in the northwest . den, the game's outcome appeared rea• were features . sonably certain after the fourth inning . Victors in Baseball So coming into the final game Orego n Cougar Series Even The path to the 1935 baseball cham- had but to win to cinch the pennant race . Two wins and two losses was the pionship was beset with trouble for the Reinhart placed Herb Foulk, sophomore outcome of the Washington State series . Webfoots, and until the last game with righthander on the mound . Foulk cam e Opening the series at Eugene, McFad- O.S .C. the outcome of the coast con- through in the pinches, striking out te n den fanned 11 men and allowed but five ference standings was in doubt, wit h Beavers and scattering nine hits to wi n hits while his teammates wielded heav y the performance of four of the five the game and hand the championshi p bats to ring up seven runs as compared teams in the league as factors in the pos- over to his departing coach, 6 to 3 . with a blank for the Cougars. In the sible final standings. One of the closes t second game Oregon outhit the Pullman races in conference annals saw lead s Huskies Lose Three nine, but lost on the momentary wildness held at one time or another by Wash- Washingto n's title ambitions receive d of Herb Foulk in the pitcher's box, 8 t o ington, W.S.C., O.S .C., and Oregon. their sharpest setback in the four-game 7. Foulk again failed to hold the Cou- gars in the third contest at Pullman and lost, 8 to 5, on two home runs by Schoen- ing, WSC third sacker. McFadden hel d the Cougars to two hits in the fina l game, and the Webfoots won, 5 to 2 . Vandals Vanquished Closest scores of the season marke d the series between Oregon and the Idaho Vandals, as shown by totals of 28 runs for the Ducks and 25 for the Vandals , but Reinhart's crew emerged victors in three of the four games . Heads-up playing by Joe Gordon a t shortstop gave Oregon the opening en - counter at Eugene, 5 to 4 . He dashed i n with the winning run from second base after an infield mixup over Lewis' per- fect bunt. McFadden was credited wit h the victory . The Vandals retaliated on a wierd collection of errors, bases on balls . and well bunched hits to win the secon d against Pitcher Foulk, 6 to POPULAR WEBFOOT FIRST BASEMAN WINDS UP VARSITY CAREE R 5. Both games of the Moscow serie s Harry McCall, first sacker, who finished his Oregon baseball career June 1 against O.S.C. The mystery of haw McCall bats .300 with a full choked bat and how he catche s went to the Webfoots . A siege of heav y a ball at all with his sack-like glove has never been solved . hitting worried both teams in the opener ,

May, 1935 Old Oregon 5

Oregon, 493/4 ; and Washington 42 1/2. least the half-dozen performers wh o Bud Shoemake, sensational Webfoo t have already qualified in their events . sprinter, was the toast of the afternoo n Three veterans head the list . Bob with two new northwest marks in the Parke won the javelin title at last yea r's 100 and 220 dashes . His times were 9.5 meet held in Los Angeles ; Warren De- in the century and 21 .2 in the furlon g maris placed third in the same event i n dash. Janak and Stolp tied for first i n 1933, and Bob Wagner crossed the two - the high jump and Janak tied with three mile finish line in fourth place . Beside s others for first in the pole vault . De- this trio four others are eligible to mak e maris and Parke shared first place hon- the trip, including George Scharpf , ors in the javelin at 203 feet 11 inche s half-mile : John Stolp, high jump, Mar - and 203 feet 7 1/4 inches respectively . vin Janak, pole vault, and Bud Shoe - make, who holds a claim on the north - Ducks Out point Beavers west 100 title at 9 .5 seconds . A record-breaking broadjump by Arne Lindgren led the way for Oregon' s cinder burners to accumulate a poin t Mermen Win Title total of 87 1-3 against 43 2-3 in thi s Paced by Jim Reed, whose tireless seaso n's dual meet against Oregon State . strokes alone captured first places i n Oregon 's 17th victory in the 27 year s three events, Oregon 's team of natator s of the meet was marked by 11 firs t won the northwest intercollegiate titl e places for the winners against four . at Seattle April 6 by taking every first Colonel Bill Hayward, now complet- place on the program . ing his 33d year as Webfoot track The Webfoots amassed a sensationa l coach-, was honored before the start o f team total of 61 points in competitio n the meet when the Order of the 0 pre- against four other teams from Wash- sented the University with his likenes s ington State, Idaho, Montana and Wash- clone in bronze by Rex Sorensen, '32 . ington. The Washington team place d Lindgren's leap set a new meet record second with 26 points . of 23 feet six inches . Least expected With the collegiate title tucked away , performance, however, was a record - four of the Webfoot mermen entered threatening javelin toss by Jim Daneri , the Oregon A . A. U. swimming meet Beaver football star, who bested bot h one week later, and emerged from th e Demaris, 1933 northwest champion, and Multnomah club pool with enoug h Bob Parke, national intercollegiate title points to win mythical team honors an d holder. In the sprints Oregon won with- with two new state records . out the use of Bud Shoemake, north - The only conference meet of the year , west sprint king. Miller of Oregon won "IRON MAN" McFADDE N Unquestionably the most valuable playe r individual honors with 11 points, in- on the 1935 championship baseball squad cluding first in the 220 and seconds in was this ace hurler, who pitched mor e the 100 and broad jump _ than halt the games and lost but one . Huskies, Cougars Wi n but masterful relief hurling in the ninth By the narrow margin of one-fifth inning by McFadden gave Oregon a n point Washington State college over - 11 to 9 victory . Three preceding pitch- came an ominous Webfoot challenge t o ers had failed to tame the Vandal bats - win their dual meet 65 3-5 to 65 2- 5 men. In the final contest, McFadde n points . The Cougars came from behin d pitched Oregon into the conference lead in the final event, the mile relay, to pre - with a 7-to-6 victory. vent their first dual meet defeat in three years. TRAC K George Scharpf ran a sensational half-mile against the Cougar 's captain , Surprise at Seattle Ken Leendertsen to break the tape i n An unexpected heartbreaker was th e 1 minute, 54 .8 seconds. Oregon showe d northwest track and field meet held at a fine display of first-place power by Seattle on June 1 . With Washington taking eight of the 14 events . practically conceded first place an d Lightning record-paces in the sprints Oregon allowed a fighting chance by Carson Shoemake failed to stem a against W.S.C. for second, the dop e Washington tide in the dual meet at failed and W .S .C. took the meet from Seattle, and the Huskies romped off Oregon by one small point . Hoped fo r with a 761 . to 54% point victory. Wash- firsts from Wagner in the two-mile o r ington took seven of the 15 events, th e Lindgren in the broad jump would hav e most surprising of them in the shot put , cinched the title for Oregon, as woul d rated an Oregon strong hold . a first in the relay . Even a second in When the finest collegiate track star s RECORD HOLDERS this final would have given the Web - Left, Warren Demaris and right, Bob of the nation gather at Berkeley in Jun e Parke, Oregons sensational duet of jave - foots a tie. Final scores of the thre e for the annual N .C.A.A. competition, lin hurlers . They both throw over 200 fee t leading teams were : W.S .C., 503/4 ; Oregon hopes to be represented by at consistently.

6 OId Oregon May, 1935

despite a heavy prospective schedule swims he broke world marks in the half - Oregon State finished in second place , early in the year, was against Washing - mile backstroke and three-fourth mile though Washington had been favore d ton at Seattle. The mighty strokes o f backstroke distances . He has anothe r to take the meet after defeating th e World Champion Jack Medica failed to year of competition . Webfoots at Seattle in a dual meet . prevent the Webfoots from scuttlin g Your speedy sophomores, along with The Beavers rated even with Oregon the Huskies 51 to 32 . Jiro Reed, were this seaso n's mainstays . after splitting their pair of encounters . The annual major sport letter awards In the northwest meet Bob Chilton too k were this year given to William Angell , first place in the (living events, Hoff - Bend ; Vernon Hoffman, Leonar d man took the 50-yard freestyle swim , Netmen Take Double s ; Wallace Hug , Scroggins won the 100-yard event, an Scroggins, Eugene d Supremacy in doubles and second Salem ; James and Charles Reed, for- Chuck Reed the 200-yard breaststrok e event, the last won by a six-inch mar place in total standings went to Web - merly of Salem and now of Raymond , - foot racquet-wielders May 25 as si Washington ; Forrest Kerby, Mapleton, gin. x northern division members of the coast and Robert Chilton, Canyon City . conference met on the Washington Stat Oregon 's swimming coach is How- e Golfers Win Title college courts at Pullman . Washingto n ard S. "Mike" Iloyman, one of the A decisive 12-stroke margin gave took the meet with 11 points, while Ore- younger members of the school of phy- Oregon's best four-man combinatio n gon emerged in second place with eight sical education faculty, who handle s . the golf championship of the Confer- In the finals of a two clay series o f his coaching duties on the side. ence's northern division over a field o f matches, a pair of Wehfoot stalwarts , six contestants who met on the Eugene Reed Record-holder Toni Mountain and John Economus , Country club course May 25 . The title captured the doubles championshi p Oregon 's outstanding swimmer o f is the second in a row for the Webfoot s against Washington, but failed to gar- the last few years is Jim Reed . In the who won in 1931, the year of the last ner the crown when Henry Rosenberg, northwest meet he won victories in the previous meet. The 1931 team went o n brilliant Seattle star, went through hi s 150-yard backstroke, the 220-yard free - to heat Stanford for the coast title . singles matches without defeat . style, and the 440-yard freestyle, for a The Web foots, paced by Leonard A string of victories, broken only by total of 15 points. He broke two state Anderson, shot a low aggregate meda l Washington early in the season and in- records at the A . A. U. meet in Port - score of 606 in the 36-hole test to finis h cluding seven clear-cut victories over land, in the 220-yard freestyle and the far in the lead . Anderson annexed the other teams within the state, has oc- 500-yard freestyle. individual northern division title b y casioned a claim to the state dual mee t Last year Reed amassed a season tota l shooting 146 to beat out two teammates , championship . Two wins were chalked of 41 points, and set a new Pacific coas t Sid M i 11 i ga n and jack Mulder . Ed up against Oregon State, Willamette , intercollegiate backstroke record in the Labbe held the fourth position on th e and Linfield, while the Ducks beat th e 150-yard hackstroke event . In unofficial Duck team entry . Portland Pilots in their only completed meet.

Prep Track Tourne y An array of 216 Oregon high schoo l track and field stars visited the Univer- sity campus on May 17 to compete i n the eighth annual state interscholasti c meet held on . Five new state meet records were established o n the quarter-mile track as 51 squads from every part of Oregon competed i n the 14 events . The two-day tourney was marked by the pageantry of Olympic games, in- cluding a parade led by a color guar d from . the R . O. T . C. unit. Colonel Bil l Hayward, for more than 30 years build- er of Oregon track teams, officiated a s director, while Toni Stoddard, '30, as- sistant graduate manager, handled ar- rangements for the mammoth gathering . A small group of eight athletes from Roosevelt high school in Portland, le d by sturdy Stanley Anderson with two record-smashing performances in the weights, amassed a total of 22 points to win the meet. Benson high of Portlan d placed second, while Klamath Falls an d Grant high of Portland followed i n third and fourth places . WEBFOOT NATATORS WHO WON NORTHWEST MEE T Record-breaking achievements were These nine splashers and their coach were responsible for a decisive Duck victor y recorded in the pole vault, shot put, dis- in the northern division championship meet held in Seattle April 6 . Reading fro m left to right, they are : Back row-Jim Reed, Vernon Hoffman, Forrest Kerby, Bil l cus, broad jump and 440-yard dash . Angell, Wally Hug, Coach Mike Hoyman ; Front row-Leonard Scroggins, Chuc k Carlson of Benson high, with 13 points , Reed, Bob Chilton and Jim Hurd. won the President's trophy, offered b y

May, 1935 Old Oregon 7

Dr. C. V . Boyer to the individual high A sturdy line, dominated by piano - ecutive committee are two Universit y point competitor . Bob Leslie, sensa- legged Ross Carter of Klamath Fall s alumnae : Mrs. Ben Chandler (Cecil e tional K l a m.a t h Falls sprinter, was playing at guard, and a backfield boast- Wilcox, '11) Marshfield ; and Mrs . robbed of chances for new records i n ing more plentiful and versatile material Frank H . Spears (Sophie Catlin, '11 ) the dashes by a stiff breeze . than last year's were disclosed and ar e Salem. Preliminary meets were held in eigh t already used as a basis for early-bir d districts throughout the state . Four of predictions. Boyer, Morris Speak An intimate picture of the needs an d problems of the University was de - scribed to the Oregon Mothers at thei r mass meeting by Dr . C. V. Boyer, Uni- versity president . He discussed the progress made on campus building proj - ects, emphasizing the recently estab- lished eligibility of the proposed infirm- ary for PWA funds and the expectanc e of an early decision from the PWA board. The encouragement of mothers to keep the vision of a better life before students was urged by President Boyer. He told of the need for scholarships fo r OPENING CEREMONY, PREP SCHOOL OLYMPICS deserving students, as well as funds fo r the University of Oregon was host to several hundred high school track and fiel d loans, and mentioned cases of student s stars at recent State High School Track Meet . facing privation in order to gain a n education at Oregon . these districts were directed by Oregon In the practice tilt both teams showed At the Mother's Day banquet Satur- alumni : Ira Woodie, '30, of La Grande , little on the offensive except for a few day evening, the guest speaker, Dr . Vic- district one, H . R. Johnson, ex-'25, o f ineffective passes, but the varsity demon - tor P. Morris, declared that "parents Bend, district two, Andrew Street, ex- strated its ability to hold before the and faculty people need to know youn g '16,. of Malin, district three, and R . U. drives of more experienced old-timers , people better, to have a knowledge o f Moore, '23, M .A. '29, of Eugene, dis- led by Mikulak, Cuppoletti, Pepelnjak , their abilities and their ambitions ." The trict four. Morse, Bailey, and an ex-St . Mary's topic chosen by the economics professor star, Bardinelli . was "Needed Knowledge for Today's Among the more promising varsit y World ." Gridsters Show Power gridsters were Len Holland, red-haire d A check for $450, the first instalmen t Flashes of power befitting a top-place sophomore end prospect ; Walt Back , of a fund set at $1,000, was given to Dr . conference contender showed through blond-haired, 190-pound left half, an d Boyer by Mrs . E. C. Peets, president of occasionally as Orego n's 1935 football Carter at guard . Bobby King, De l the Portland Mothers club, during the team ended spring practice with a score - Bjork, and Dale Lasselle showed up mass meeting Saturday . When com- less encounter against Mike Mikulak 's well occasionally . The starting varsity pleted the fund will be the source of a improvised team of all-stars on May 17 . lineup included Farrar, center ; Codding The full-length practice game closed a and Carter, guards ; Bjork and Eng- six-weeks' "brushing u p" campaign con- strom, tackles ; Riordan and Walker , ducted by Head Coach Prink Calliso n ends ; Reischman, quarter ; Back and and his staff . Lope, halfbacks, and Michek, fullback .

C A M P U S

JUNIOR WEEK-EN D ul.ty leaders, and pas e d resolutions. The Oregon Mothers $ opted a reques t Host to 500 Mothers for the abolition of th office of chan- More than 500 Oregon mothers wer e cellor of higher education to be sent to honored guests on the campus during the state board, and set up a scholar- the annual Junior Weekend and Moth- ship fund of $1000. er's day festivities which began May 10 . Mrs . George F. Brice, Portland, wa s Fair weather greeted the visitors who elected president for the coming year , came from several western states to en - succeeding Mrs. Arthur M . Dibble, joy a three-day cross-section of campus president for the past two years . Other life, featuring a "Melody of Spring." officers chosen were as follows : Honor- This year's series of events included th e ary president, Mrs . Walter M . Cook, traditional canoe fete, junior prom, Portland ; vice-president, Mrs . Robert campus luncheon, water carnival, paint - Betts, Eugene ; treasurer, Mrs . M. D. ing of the "0," and baseball games . L a t o u r e t t e (Edna Daulton) ex -'0$, A crowded social program for moth- Oregon City ; executive secretary, Earl ers failed to prevent business sessions , M . Pallett, Ph .D. '31, University o f A .S .U .O . PRESIDENT James Slais, Eugene, recently elected as the assembled visitors elected officers , Oregon . president of the Oregon student body fo r heard talks by administration and fac- Among members of the Mothers ' ex- the following year.

s Old Oregon May, 193 5

perpetual income for the annual schol- a tropical sea shell, all done in lovel y arship for some student on the campus. pastel shades, and the other was a Chi- "Penny banks " and benefit parties are nese junk decorated with its oriental being used to raise the fund, which it i s trimmings." hoped will be completed next year . Witnesses of the first event recall a s the main drawing card Professor Ar t Mill Race Fantas y Cavil], noted swimming instructor o f Delightful fantasy, stately artistr y the Multnomah athletic club, who gave an exhibition of his skill, particularly i n made a memorable event of this year 's canoe fete, long recognized as one o lifesaving. About 20 high school ath- f letes came from Portland to assist with the most c o l o r f u l bits of pageantry the aquatic program. The climax of th e staged on any American campus. En- meet was to have been a canoe tilting titled "Melody of Spring," the tradi- k tional event might n contest, which was abandoned for lac better have bee of entries . called a medley as eight floats drifte d down the mill race, each dramatizing a popular song. Week-end Winners Sentiment of old Oregon captured i n Winners of the Gerlinger and Koy l "Down by the Old Mill Stream " won cups, the highest honors annually ac- from the judges first place for its build- corded to one man and one woman fro m ers, Kappa Sigma and Delta Gamma . the junior class, were presented at the "The Little Dutch Mill," constructe d Junior Prom to Ann-Reed Burns an d by Chi Psi and Gamma Phi Beta, wa s William O . Hall, both of Portland . awarded second place, while "Alice in Mrs. C. L. Schwering, dean of women , Wonderland," entered by Sigma Nu an d and Virgil D. Earl, dean of men, made Alpha Omicron Pi, placed third . the awards during the dance intermis- The parade of floats followed the sion, ascent to her throne of review of sun - To Alpha Xi Delta, national sorority , tanned Queen Mary Morse and her en- and Sigma hall, men 's dormitory unit , tourage who arrived on hoard a royal went the two scholarship cups presente d barge constructed by the Yeomen, and annually to the living organization s began with the whimsical "Good Ship achieving the highest scholarship aver - Lollypop," entered by Sigma Alph a age during the year. These cups were Epsilon and Alpha Chi Omega . A.S .U.O. OFFICERS awarded by Burt Brown Barker, vice- Unusually fine lighting contributed Newly elected student body ofif cers are, president of the University , reading left to right down the column : During the campus luncheon, Morta r Roland Rourke, vice-president ; Adele Board, senior women 's society, in ca p Sheehy, secretary ; Robert Thomas, execu - and gown, and Friars, the men's group , tive man ; Roberta Moody, executive wo- man ; Cosgrove LaBarre, senior financ e in monks' robes, "tapped" new mem- officer ; Robert Prentice, junior financ e bers. Mortar Board selected Ann-Ree d officer. Burns, Virginia Younie, Hertriette

to the unique beauty of the fete, enjoye d by thousands who jammed the banks o f the mill race . A torch dive from a 50- foot tower featured a fancy diving ex- hibition by Robert Chilton . northwest diving champion, and Bert Myers . First Canoe Fete Origins of the canoe fete tradition, though somewhat beclouded with the years, may be traced back to 1912 whe n the Eugene mill race was the locale fo r "The First Annual Inter-Scholasti c Aquatic Meet " held on June 11 . This second annual canoe carnival-the first actually to take place-was sponsore d by the Varsity canoe club and directed by Harold Young, '14, and Wallace Benson, '14. "Back in 1912 the students decorate d canoes simply with a few flowers o r streamers and lights, " reminisces Kar l W. Onthank, dean of personnel, wh o was a member of the first junior clas s to work on a canoe fete . "During the GERLINGER CUP WINNER s Ann-Reed Burns, Portland, awarded th e succeeding 23 years there are two float KOYL CUP WINNE R Gerlinger cup as the outstanding junio r which stand out most vividly in my William O. Hall, Portland, named the out - woman at recent Junior weekend. mind," he recollects ; "one represented standing junior man for 1935 .

May, 1935 Old Oregon 9

Horak, Mary McCracken, all of Port - Children with speech defects wil l land ; Elaine Sorensen, Margaret An n also be offered instruction under the im- Smith of Eugene ; Dorothy Bergstrom mediate supervision of Professor Car- of Ashland, and Peggy Chessman an d rell of the University speech depart- Ebba Wicks of Astoria . ment. Miss Raynor, Mrs . Montgomery , Friars pledged Edmond Labbe, Cos - and Dr. DeBusk will supervise th e grove I,aBarre, Robert Lucas, Bud d remedial work . Jones, and William Schloth, all of Excavations Planned Portland ; and James Blais of Eugene . Field work in eastern Oregon by a limited number of students in geology SUMMER SESSIO N and anthropology will be carried out this Varied Courses Offered summer under the direction of Dr . L . S. Well-rounded university curricula , Cressman, professor of anthropology. r offering subjects ranging from lan- Starting July 1 and continuing for fou weeks, the party will make excavation guages to the arts, will he available t o s teachers and students at the Universit y at the Wikiup site, a spot of former In- dian habitation south of Bend, and a of Oregon summer session, schedule d t s the cave Scarpnent of Steen's mountain . for six weeks starting June 24, it wa The research trip is a regular summer announced by Dean Alfred Powers , session course with credit . Any arti- dean and director of the general exten- facts found will go to the state museu m sion division . All regular academi c EDITORS AND MANAGERS of anthropology established on the Uni - fields will be included, and in additio n Recent appointments to campus publica- versity campus by recent act of the leg- : upper left, Robert Lu- nationally prominent educators from tion positions are islature . Oregon and other states will visit th e cas, Portland, Emerald editor ; upper campus to give courses on the fast- right, Eldon Haberman, Grants Pass, Em - erald manager ; lower left, George Root, Honorary Names Twenty changing social, economic and industria l Portland, Oregana editor ; and lower right, conditions. Newton Stearns, Portland, Oregana Twenty seniors were elected to Ph i The regular summer term, ending on manager. Beta Kappa, national scholastic honor- August 2, will be held in Portland, and ary fraternity, at the annual spring Eugene, while Eugene will have a post puses, will be held at Oregon State thi s meeting of Oregon Alpha chapter. The session lasting from August 5 to Augus t year, with Lon Stiner, football coach ; list of students to win the highest dis- 30. Oregon State will conduct a sum- Ralph Coleman, intramural athletics di - tinction offered on the campus in the mer session at Corvallis, beginning Jun e rector, and other OSC staff members field of scholarship was headed by the 24. directing courses . law school with four nominees . The majority of courses regularl y Those chosen are Jean Margaret held on the University campus will b e Noted Educators Coming Aiken, history, Ontario ; Nancy Eliza- offered in the departments of the col- Noted visiting professors will in- beth Archbold, English, Portland ; John leges of arts and letters and social sci- clude : Portland s e s s i o n-Lambertus Carlson, psychology, Beverly S. Caver- ence, in the schools of art and architec- Deutschman, Art Industry School of hill, German, Margaret Davidson, busi- ture, business administration, education, Amsterdam ; Merle Hugh Elliot, in- ness administration, Dorothea Finnson , law, music and physical education . structor in psychology at Harvard ; W. sociology, Theodore Lundy, pre-medi- C. Reusser, professor of education at cine, Thomas Mountain, history, all o f Western Art Center Wyoming university ; Walter C . Barnes, Eugene . Malcolm Bauer, journalism, Hilda- For the sixth successive year the Uni - professor of history at Smith college ; Ernest Sutherland Bates, well know n may Hobart, romance languages, bot h versity of Oregon has been designate d of Pendleton ; Robert Brown, pre-medi- by the Carnegie Foundation as the west- writer and critic, and Bernard Hinshaw , head of the art department at Illinois cine, Tacoma ; Laura Olivia Goldsmith , ern center for normal arts training . romance languages, Klamath Falls ; Scholarships have already been granted Wesleyan. Eugene session-Donald M . Erb, as- Helen Soehren Grubbe, English, Dallas ; to 25 art teachers of the northwest fo r Clara Josephine Waffle, English, As- this work. Dr. Eugene Gustav Stein- sociate professor of economics at Stan- ford and formerly of the Eugene cam - toria ; Antone Yturri, law, Jordan Val - hof, director of the national school o f ley ; Frederick Callister, business ad- l pus ; Corvallis session-Dr. William E . decorative art in Vienna, and severa ministration, Albany ; Stanley Darling, leading members of the art school fac- Blatz of the University of Toronto, and law, Bend ; Frances Harland, romance ulty in Eugene will direct courses . Dr. Leston L. Love of the University of Ohio . languages, Juneau, Alaska ; Kennet-ii Courses in remedial teaching, now na - Schramm, law, Milwaukie ; Orval tionally famous, which offer unusual Thompson, law, Shedd. opportunities for teachers faced wit h School for Childre n instructing handicapped or abnormal The University summer school for children, will again be given by Dr . B. children will begin its seventh session Pre-medics Seek Courses W. DeBusk, professor of education ; on June 24 . Non-readers, those with Protesting an inadequacy of science Mrs. Lillian Raynor, of the Los An- partial reading disability and those wh o courses offered on the Oregon campus, geles public schools, and Dr. Elizabeth have difficulty with arithmetic and spell- the student pre-medical society passed a Montgomery, specialist in this field . ing will be taken for individual work . resolution May 16 to be sent to Presi- Eight courses in practical librar y A careful diagnosis will determine for dent C . V. Boyer asking the return of methods will he given, some of them by each child methods best suited to him. numerous courses taken from the cur- Jasmine Britton, supervising libraria n The average gain as shown by standar d riculum since the shifting of upper divi - of Los Angeles public schools . The an- tests is about one year for the six week s sion science to Oregon State college . nual coaching school, which alternates of instruction. Children from Pasadena The petition was referred to Dr. Earl between the Eugene and Corvallis cam- and from Yakima attended last year . Packard, dean of the School of Science

10 Old Oregon May, 1985

committee, the recommendation read : "That more adequate means be fur- nished the University of Oregon for development of its school of social serv - ice so that it may be made to conform to the standards of the American As- sociation of Schools for Social Work. "

Call for Library Bids Bids for the University of Oregon's new $350,000 library are expected t o be advertised for early in June, accord- ing to M. H. Douglass, librarian . Contracts for the building are ex- pected to he let early in July, Mr. Doug- lass states. The building is being erect- ed through a PWA grant of 30 per cen t of the total .

"Scholarships for high school grad- uates, made possible by act of the last legislature, will be extended to 147 pros- pective students in the Oregon higher educational system, it was announce d by E. B. Lemon, chairman of the inter - SEMI-CENTENNIAL FOR TWO CAMPUS LANDMARK S institutional committee on high schoo l Left, the stately fir, planted fifty years ago by the class of 1885 . Right, the ivy contracts . The University will be given covered gateway given by the normal department class of 1885 . Both sections of the 50-year class are to hold their reunions on June 15 . 55 of the scholarships. The amounts will range from $18 to $54 each, an d at Oregon State, who must give his ap- Town, attending the University of Stel- will go to students from the upper third of their class who need financial assis- proval before it reaches the curricul a lenbosch, and later the University o f committee of the state board of highe r Zurich . For the past five years he has tance in taking college work , education . In an explanatory statement , been dean of science at Stellenbosch . President Boyer declared that financia l ff Mrs. J. E. Snyder, chaperon fo r conditions would probably prevent th e the past two years at Delta Delta Delta desired additions to the University cur- Press Imperille d sorority on the campus, died May 2 1 riculum. Extinction of the University Pres s following a 'brief illness . She was born The request was not an attempt to once more became a possibility as Stat e in Fairfield, Towa, in 1866, and came to take courses from the Corvallis campus, Printer E . C. Hobbs launched an in- Eugene from Seattle . Max Carter, group president, explained , vestigation of printing plants at fiv e but merely an effort to secure course s state institutions with a view to con- required of pre-medical students b y solidating all work at Salem if saving s many medical schools . A repeated call could be effected . for more varied science courses ha s The University Press, under the man- been sounded by students since the re - agement of Robert C . Hall, carries a alignment of schools in 1932 . heavy load of rush printing orders fo r all departments, in addition to the print- South African Coming ing of the Daily Emerald., Old Oregon , Commonwealth Review, and numerou s Dr. C. G. S. de Villiers, dean of the bulletins . It is used as a laboratory for EDITOR AND MANAGER ROBmIT K . ALLE N News EDITOR faculty of sciences of the University of typography classes and the fine printin g MERLIN BEMs Stellenbosch, South Africa, will be visit - classes which have attracted with thei r CIRCULATION MANAGER VeRA POWERS ing professor on the 'Oregon campus excellence the friendly interest of Joh n November 18 to December 14 . The Henry Nash, world famous printer o f South African scholar will be sent b OFFICER S y San Francisco . the Carnegie Endowment for Interna- University of Oregon Alumni Association tional Peace, and will be one of several professors from foreign countries to b e Expansion Asked Merle Chessman, 09 Presiden t brought to the campus next fall . A recommendation for the develop James H. Raley . Jr. 31 Vice-President "The purpose of these visits," writes ment the University school of social Henry Fowler, 14 Three-Year Directo r Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, head o f science, , presented to Governor Charle s Omar Palmer, 32 Two-Year Directo r the endowment and president of Colum- Martin's committee appointed to probe Robert K. Allen, 32 Secretary-Treasure r bia university, "is to multiply and the use of federal relief funds in Ore- strengthen the bonds of intellectual an d gon, was included as a suggestion i n Subscription price : One year, $2 ; three years , $5 ; Alumni subscribers to OLD OREGON are granted scholarly understanding b e tw e en the that committee's official report submit- full membership in the Alumni Association . Two weeks notice required for change of ad- different countries and to perform suc h ted late in May. dress . When ordering a change, please give bot h academic service as the authorities o f Presented to F. A the new address and the old address. . McCornack of Eu - Address all communications to : OLD OREGON , the several universities may desire." gene and Grace Phelps and Verne Du- University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon . Dr. de Villiers was born near Cape senberry of Porland, members of the

May, 1.935 Old Oregon it N E W S O F T H E C L A S S E S

are active in that city now . Among them 1880 (there is a class picture in some of their of- 1906 Mrs. Rose Scott Brown, ex-'80 (Mrs. D. fices) are ex-Governor Julius Meier ; Arthur George W. Murphy has been named su- S. Brown) a resident of Condon, Oregon , C. Spencer, general counsel for Union Pa- perintectdent of schools at Ryderwood , for fifty-five years, died on May 23 fro m cific in Portland ; Henry J. Schulderman , Washington, for 1935-6. burns suffered when kerosene used in start- corporation commissioner ; Gustave Ander- Dr. and Mrs. Cloan Perkins (Grace W. ing a kitchen fire burst into flames . Sur- son, former circuit court judge in Bake r Gray, ex-'08) of Portland who were unabl e viving, besides the widower, are three sons , county for twelve years, now an attorne y to attend junior Week End, were campu s S. S. Brown, Alturas, California, Pember- in the Board of Trade Building ; George B. visitors later in the month . Two of thei r ton Brown, Kinzua, Luther Brown, Con - sons, James and Norris, are attending th e don, and a daughter, Mrs. Frances Laugh- University . rige, Portland . Mrs. Brown was a daugh- t 1907 ter of W . J. J. Scott, a member of the firs Editor' s Note Louis A. Henderson, of Oregon City, has board of regents of the University . been appointed chairman of the Clackamas If your class is missing from county better housing program committee . 1882 these columns, you can help to give Seymour W. Condon, B .S. '82, died on it a place. This department shoul d 1909 May 17, in Pasadena, California, where h e be one of the most interesting fea- Mac Cormac Snow had been living for some time . Mr. Condo n is an attorney in th e was at one time district attorney of Lan e tures of Ot,n OREGON, but it is nec- Platt Building, Portland . At the Pacific county, afterward moving to Californi a essary to rely upon the alumn i coast law meet held in Eugene last winte r n he was a prominent speaker. where he became assistant corporatio themselves to make it so. Please Mr. and Mrs. Ralph McEwen (Adele counsel of the city of Oakland. Due to il l send in news notes about yoursel f Goff) reside in Walla Walla, Washington . health, he returned to Oregon, later becom- ing an orchardist at White Salmon, Wash- and your alumni associates and hel p Mr. McEwen is with the Federal Lan d to make your magazine more read - Bank and Mrs . McEwen is society edito r ington . After spending some time in Wash- for the Walla Walla Bulletin ington, he returned to California and be- able and more complete. . came an editorial writer on Los Angele s papers. He was a son of the late Dr. Thom- 191 1 as Condon who will be remembered as a Miss Daryl Belat, teacher at the High famed pioneer geologist of the Oregon Cellars, prominent Mason, holding th e School of Commerce, in Portland, in afte r country and former member of the Univer- thirty-third degree, attorney in the Failing school hours is president of Portland Teach- sity faculty after whom Condon Hall is Building ; George S. Shepherd, attorney , ers' Credit Union, one of the new and in- named. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. also in the Failing Building ; Roscoe R. teresting investment and loan organiza- Mary Dorris Condon, '83, two sons an d Morrill, McKay Building ; Otto J. Kraemer, tions. The group does business with mem- one daughter, two sisters, Mrs . Ina Con- attorney in the American Bank Building, bers of the teaching profession only . don Bean, ex-'81, of Portland, Mrs. Clara and W. P. Sinnott, retired. Major and Mrs. Charles M. Taylor Condon Nolf, '90, of Seattle, and one broth- (Mary DeBar) who have been stationed a t er, Herbert T. Condon, '92, dean of men a t West Point, New York, will leave this fal l the University of Washington. 189 7 to live in Honolulu . Mrs. Taylor has been Genial Judge Clarence H . Gilbert, court visiting her parents, Dr . and Mrs . Georg e 4 of domestic relations in Portland, has of- O. B. DeBar, in Eugene. 188 fices on the fourth floor of the Multnoma h Oregon will have another Edgar H. An- Mrs. Nellie Brown Swift died in Ala- Court House . meda, California, where she had made he r derson next fall when Dr . Anderson's son , home for a number of years, on May 5. She 1900 Junior, registers in pre-medics . He will be is survived by one son, Samuel Swift, als o The Drew P. Price family is well repre- graduated from Jefferson High school , of Alameda. Mrs. Swift was a graduate o f sented in alumni classes of the University . Portland, this year . the Normal Department of the Universit y Mr. Price, attorney in the Oregonia n John R. Dickson, ex-'11, is employed i n with the class of 1884, the class having ob- Building, Portland, has for his secretary the business offices of the Roesch Brewin g served the fiftieth anniversary last Com- his daughter Margaret, '31 . Joe, '30, deput y Company, Pendleton . Mr. and Mrs. Dick- mencement. district attorney, Portland, has a son , son have one daughter, Dorothy. Thomas Parker, aged three years . Elliott , 1888 ex-'34, was married in December to Ro- 19121I Mrs. Alberta Shelton McMurphey (Mrs . berta Mills, ex-'34, and they live in Camas , Mr. and Mrs. James Johns (Pearl Albert McMurphey) of Eugene, who fell Washington, where he is employed by th e McKenna, ex-'12) make their home in Pen- and broke her shoulder in Los Angeles , Crown Willamette Paper Mills . dleton where Mr. Johns is with the Hart - early in May, will be confined to the hos- man Abstract Company. He is a forme r pital in that city for several weeks becaus e 1901 president of the Pendleton Chamber o f of the accident. Her present address i s Commerce and is prominent in busines s 2629 Griffin Avenue, Los Angeles . In government service since 1897 is the record of Ralph F . Barnes, LL .B. '01, dep- and civic affairs. uty collector of customs in the U. S. Cus- Charles Z . Randall, ex-'12, is now a 1889 toms House, Portland . He came to Port- member of the firm of Fee and Randall , Dr. J. Phillippe Tamiesie, who receive d land in 1892, starting in the marine divisio n Pendleton attorneys . his M.D. degree from the University of as a clerk . He has a son, a daughter, an d Mrs. Addie F. McIntire, of Salem, moth- Oregon Medical School in 1889, died at hi s two grandchildren . er of Ross T. McIntire, M .D. '12, died o n home at 21 Southeast Floral Place, Port - Mrs. Margaret M. Edwards, wife of Fred May 27. Dr. McIntire is personal physicia n land, on April 29 . He had practiced medi- A. Edwards, of 2325 Northeast Twentiet h to President Roosevelt . cinein Portland for the past twenty year s Avenue, Portland, died in May. She also Robert M . "Bob " Alton, ex-' 12, is trus t and was a specialist in diagnosis. Surviving is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Margie Ed - officer for the United States National Bank are his widow, a son, Kenneth L . Tamiesie, wards Gray, ex-'31, and son, Donald J. Ed- of Portland . both of Portland, and a daughter, Mrs. wards, of Portland . 1913 Lura Tamiesie Lansinger, ex-'20, of Chi- Ralph H . Cake, executive vice-president cago. He also leaves two sisters and fou r 1903 of the Equitable Savings and Loan Associ- brothers ; one being George W. Tamiesie, George William Wilson, LL.B . '03, of ation, has been named general chairman of M.D. '02, of Portland . 3007 Northeast Fifty-third Avenue, Port- program for the six-state session of th e land, died on April 22 . Mr. Wilson, wh o North Pacific conference of savings, build- 1895 practiced law in Portland for a number o f ing and loan to be held in Portland Jun e Some members of the class of 1895, who years, is survived by his widow, Mrs . Agne s 14-15. went to school to Professor Thornton i n V. Wilson, a daughter Julia and son, Lind- Edgar H. Whitney, LL .B . '13, B.A . '24, the old Goodnough building in Portland, say Wilson, all of Portland . is now first assistant superintendent of city

12 Old Oregon May, 1955

schools in Portland. He is also an instruc- surance business . He is active in the Ore- investment securities . Mr. Harpham was tor in education at the University of Ore- gon National Guard and is aide to Gover- for eight year connected with Peirce, Fai r gon Portland Center summer sessions, a nor Martin, and Company's Portland office and for th e position he has held for the past severa l 192 last three years was a member of the firm years . 0 of Baker, Fordyce, Harpham & Company . 1914 Donald T . Robinson, ex-'20, owner of Mrs . Myrtle Copenhaver Ludwig (Mrs . the Domestic Laundry, at Pendleton, i s Clarence C . Ludwig) whose address is 173 6 Harry B . Fogarty, LL .B . ' 14, is living at vice-president of the State Laundrymen' s 4814 Loma Vista Avenue, in Los Angeles . Association . Mr. and Mrs. Robinson hav e East Eighty-third Place, Chicago, writes : George H. Oberteuffer, Boy Scout ex- "I have just returned to Chicago after vis- one daughter, Rachel . iting in Seattle, Portland and California fo r ecutive for Portland Area Council, recentl y three months . My husband is now a mem- moved quarters to the Oregon Building . 192 1 ber of the headquarters staff of the Inter Mr . and Mrs . Oberteuffer (Mildred Healey , - ex-'15) live at 7601 Southeast Twenty - John A . Gamble, Jr., member of the per- national City Managers Association her e eighth . sonnel department of the Pacific Telephon e and assistant editor of "Public Manage- and Telegraph Company in Portland, ha s ment ." We like Chicago but hope to ge t 1915 two daughters, Joanne, seven years, and back to the Pacific coast some day-which Mrs . Bertha Williams Aitchison, wife o f Caroline, eighteen months . we shall always think of as home ." Clyde B . Aitchison, of Washington, D . C ., Sprague Carter, formerly in the sho e died on May 6, of pneumonia, following a business in Pendleton, is now in the in- long illness surance business there . 1924 . Mrs . Aitchison is survived b y Norborne Berkeley was executive secre- her husband, interstate commerce commis- tary for the general committee in charg sioner, a daughter, Beatrice, and son , 1922 e Bruce of the meeting of the Synod of the Prov- . They all formerly lived in Portland . Lyle P. Bartholomew, Salem architect, ince of the Pacific in Pendleton May 22-24 . Tom Boylen, Jr. makes his home i n has been appointed by Governor Marti n A daughter, Jean C ., was born on Apri l Pendleton and is in the sheep business . Mr . and Mrs with the approval of the board of control, 29 to Maud Gorrie Fay (Mrs . Elery Fay ) . Boylen have two children , on a committee of three Salem men, to of 2738 Northeast Hancock, Portland . Tom Kay and Jeurene , work with the state planning board i George H. n Circulation manager of the Portland Gannon, ex-'15, of Pullman , locating, designing and financing a ne w News-Telegram is Benjamin M . Reed . has been appointed Washington state' s capitol building . Francis "Fran" Altstock is now in New work progress administrator, according t o Gwladys Bowen, ex-'22, society editor York City. Home address is 747 Nort h word from Washington, D. C. of , lives at 2774 Southwes t Orange Grove Avenue, Los Angeles . State director of transient relief work i n Fairview Boulevard, Portland . After spending five years in Sydney , Oregon for out of state families is Rev . Australia as director for the Jantzen Knit- Clarence W. Reynolds . This spring Ore- ting Mills, Paul M. De Koning has returne d gon maintained, under Rev. Reynolds' su- 1923 to Portland to live . pervision, eight camps for men and boys . Mr. and Mrs. Henry Judd (Vera Temple , ex- '19) reside in San Francisco where Mr. Warren C. Hunter, B .A. '20, M .D. '24, An attempt is made to locate transien t of Portland, recently purchased a new home families as quickly as possible rather tha n Judd is assistant treasurer for Standar d send them to camps . Oil Company. They have two sons, Henry , at 2231 Northeast Thirtieth Avenue, i n Jr . and Freddy . Dolph park. Dr . Hunter is a member of Nat Kimball, ex-'15, makes his home i n the faculty of the University of Orego n Heppner and is with the Federal Lan d Mr. and Mrs. Floyd W . Maxwell (Mil- Medical School . Bank. dred Lauderdale, ex-'23) live at 2730 South - west Old Orchard Road, Portland A son, Richard A ., was born on April 8 . Thei r to Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Butner, of 83 6 1916 daughter, Judith, was five years old o n Northeast Laurelhurst,Portland Martel I . Mickey, ex-'16, writes that h e May 19 . Mr. Maxwell, Emerald editor i n . is now working as chief draftsman of th e 1922, is now secretary to Oregon Petro- California Economic Survey, 9535 Brigh- leum Industries, offices in Yeon Building . 1925 ton Way, Beverly Hills, California . Mr. and Mrs . Roland A. Andre (Jane Jessie Olds, ex-'25, is on the copy desk o f Mr. and Mrs. D . D . Hobart (Glady s Temple, ex-'22) reside in Fort Peck, Mon- the Portland News-Telegram. Graybill, ex-'l6) reside in Pendleton wher e tana where Mr. Andre is engaged in wor k A son, Paul J ., was born on April 29 to Mr . Hobart is with the Pendleton Branch on the government dam . Dr. and Mrs . J. J. Frahm, of 1802 South - of the United States National Bank . Thei r Mrs . Ione Beale Harkness, whose ad - east Twelfth Avenue, Portland. daughter, Hifdamay, is a senior at the Uni- dress is 1418 South Norton Avenue, i n Rev . Walter O . Benthin, M .A. '25, is pas - versity of Oregon . Los Angeles, writes that she is lecturing t o tor of the Community Church at Parma , Merlin Batley is in the laundry busines s a class of business girls on art each wee k Idaho . His small son, Bruce Mitchell, i s in La Grande. in her home. The Art Association, o f three years old . which she is a member, recently met t o Mr. and Mrs . Edward D . Smith, Jr (Mar - 191 7 honor the memory of her husband, Edwi n garet R. Stahl, '26) live in Portland wher e Robert George Colton, fifteen year ol d K. Harkness, B .S. '23, M .S. '25, who die d he is advertising manager for Oregon o f son of Mr. and Mrs . George T . Colto n following a heart attack, in February, 1934. the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Com- (Helen McCornack) died at his home, 193 5 Several of his paintings are now being ex- pany . Southwest Edgewood Road, Portland, o n hibited in California . rs . Mary Hardy Hobbs (Mrs . Ira L. May 14, following a ten-day illness . He i s Tom Murphy, ex-'23, is engaged in sur- Hobbs) is living at 20 West Pershin g also survived by three sisters and tw o veying work in Clear Lake, California. Drive, Clarendon, Virginia. brothers . Miss Bernice Woodward and Jesse A. Mrs . Adah Harkness Dapper (Mrs . M . Automobile editor of the Portland Ore- Digman, ex-'23, were married at the Stan- J. Dapper) is head of the women's physica l gonian is Albert Lee Bostwick, ex-'17 . In ford University chapel, on May 9 . Follow- education department at Pacific Luthera n private life he is father of a family of three, ing a trip to Hawaii, they will reside in College, Parkland, Washington . Mrs . Dap- Geneive, twelve years, Nancy Lee, eight, Portland . Mr. Digman is assistant sale s per graduated from Oregon in 1925 an d and Catherine Ann, two . manager of Closset and Devers . has since had graduate work at the Uni- Mr. and Mrs. Howard Buell (Pegg y Frank F . Dickson, ex-'23, is secretary of versity of California and at the Universit y Boylen, ex-'19) live at Fossil, Orego n the Pacific Coast Joint Stock Land Bank , of California at Los Angeles . where Mr . Buell is engaged in sheep rais- in Portland . John W. Southworth, ex-'25, who wa s ing . Arthur W . Tuck, ex-'23, police sergeant , with the Shell Oil Company in Seattle fo r is in charge of the Redmond office, whic h several years, has been appointed sale s 1918 has been made headquarters for all stat e manager of the company's Portland office . A daughter was born on April 5 to Dr. police stationed in central Oregon. Mr. Due to rapid expansion of business, Port - and Mrs . F . B . Godbolt (Martha W . Tink- Tuck recently captured the two bandit s land has been made a division headquarter s er) of Red Bluff, California . This is their who had robbed the Dairymens Bank a t of the company with sales jurisdiction ove r third child. Redmond . the entire state of Oregon and southwest- Gladys M. Everett, Portland attorney , ern Washington . 1919 has been appointed a member of the stat e Mr Walter J. Coover, ex- '25, for nearl y . and Mrs . George Dutton (Nina welfare commission, succeeding Dorr E. seven years reporter and news editor o n Hunter, ex-'19) live in Portland where Mr . Keasey, whose term expired in January . the Eugene Register-Guard staff, has as- Dutton, the " Scooty Dutton " of Oregon Everett Harpham of Portland has joine d sumed a position as telegraph editor and State College football fame, is in the in - the sales staff of Ferris and Hardgrove, assistant editor with the Albany Democrat-

May, 1935 Old Oregon 13

Herald. Mr. Coover is a member of Sigma two-year-old son, Joseph Allan, Jr. Mrs. from Portland to the Spokane office of the Delta Chi, men's national journalism hon- Benson lived for six hours following th e Farmers National Grain Corporation . His orary. fire but the child was suffocated before h e mailing address is S. 2109 Grand Boulevard . Frances L . Cochrun, seventh grade teach- could be removed from the burning build- Joe T. Tamura, graduate of the Univer- er at Oswego for the past seven years, ha s ing. Dr. Benson, in attempting to sav e sity in 1929, will be a candidate for the been promoted to teach social science i n their lives, was severely burned about th e Ph.D. degree at the University of Cincin- the Oswego high school next year . face and arms. The family had lived i n nati's commencement on June 7 . Mr. Ta- Ernest J. Losli, B.A. '25, M.D . '28, may Westfir since 1929 . Dr. Benson is a mem- mura, recently elected to membership in be addressed at the U. S. Veterans Hos- ber of the Pacific Hospital staff in Eugene Sigma Xi, national honorary society fo r pital, Columbia, South Carolina , and is resident physician for the 'Wester n the promotion of research at the Ohio uni- Gerald C. "Jerry" Crary, ex-'25, writes Lumber Company at Westfir . versity, received his M .S . degree fro m friends on the campus that he is kept quit e that institution in 1932 and is now a grad- busy managing the King George Hotel i n 1927 uate assistant in bacteriology . San Diego, where he and his family hav e - Robert Jackson, University graduate in lived for the past four years. He also does Frances Burnett, ex-'27, and W . A. Dahl 1929 and holder of the Rhodes scholar - some life insurance business for the Con- berg were married in Eugene on May 3 . ship, has been granted a teaching fellow- necticut General Life Insurance Company . The couple will live at 1993 Onyx Street , ship in mathematical physics at Harvard His two sons, Jerry and Bill, are now five Eugene . Mr. Dahlberg is on the University for next year . Finishing his work now at and three years old respectively, A Sister, faculty in the public speaking departmen t Lincoln College, Oxford, Mr. Jackson i s Mrs. Marion Crary Fay, '23, and husban d and is a graduate of the University o f a mathematical specialist . He majored in are living in Los Angeles . Michigan , both physics and mathematics at the Uni- Joe Clark, ex-'25, is principal of the junio r Miss Leone Davidson and Laurence H . versity. school of the Hill Military Academy, i n Osterman, ex-'27, were married at Indian Aubrey Walker is working with the Portland. Hill, near Salem, on May 1 . The coupl e United States Geological survey on topo- A son was born on April 22 to Dr. and will reside in McMinnville where Mr . graphical mapping. The work, which wil l Mrs. Maurice F. Gourley, of 3610 South - Osterman has established a law practice . last until fall, is the mapping of the Cas- east Forty-ninth Avenue, Portland. Webster "Web " Jones is one of the busy cades east of Cottage Grove . members of the Oregonian staff in Port . A son was born on May 10 to Mr. and land. As literary editor, he writes the book Mrs. Prince E. Helfrich (Marjorie Pey- 1926 review page ; is the aviation editor ; officia l ton, '30) of Vida . Dr. and Mrs. George Hoffman (Edna title is staff writer : Word has reached the campus of the re - Murphy, '26) live in Union, Oregon, where A son, John Lawrence, was born o n cent marriage, in Portland, of Luella Marie Dr. Hoffman practices dentistry. April 17 to Mr. and Mrs . Lawrence O. Markley and Paul H. Mockett. Mr. Mock- A daughter was born on May 7 to Mr . Riddle, of Portland . ett is a graduate of Stanford Universit y and Mrs. Gene Shields, of 485 East Thir- Mr. and Mrs . Calvin P. Horn (Helen and has also studied business law at Har- teenth Avenue, Eugene . Mr. Shields is as- Faust, ex-'29) of Portland, now have a vard University . They will reside in Sa n sistant football coach on the campus . household of four . The children are Cal- Francisco. Mrs. Mockett was for six year s Mrs. Helen Hershner Plant, assistant vin, Jr., now three years old, and Suzanne editor of Child Health, a magazine pub- dean of women at the San Jose Teachers ' Carol, born December 17, 1934. Mr, Horn, lished in Portland. College, was recently the guest of Mrs. C. formerly Oregon supervisor of long dis- Mr. and Mrs . Morris Temple (Shirley L. Schwering, dean of women on the cam- tance sales and teletypewriters, Pacific Rew, '30) reside in Pendleton where Mr . pus. Telephone and Telegraph Company, i s Temple is manager of the Dorion Hotel . A daughter, Alice Taggert, was born o n now in the general office and doing adver- He is active in the Junior Chamber o f May 7 to Mr. and Mrs. John B . Seabrook, tising for that concern . He is a forme r Commerce and won the trophy this year '(Philippa Sherman, ex-'26) of 2817 North- OLD OREGON advertising manager . given by the Chamber for the outstandin g east Sixteenth Avenue, Portland . This is A son, George W . Jr., was born on May citizen between the ages of eighteen an d their third daughter . 2 to Mr. and Mrs. George W. Mimnaugh thirty-five . Mr. and Mrs. Fred Merryfield (Mildred (Lois La Roche, ex-'27) of 2849 South - A (laughter, Marilyn R ., was born on Berkeley, ex-'26) now make their home in east Sixty-second Avenue, Portland . Mr. May 2 to Mr. and Mrs. William S. Shenker , Corvallis where Mr . Merryfield is a mem- Mimnaugh is executive secretary for th e of 3624 Northeast Klickitat, Portland . ber of the faculty of Oregon State Col- Portland Executives Association with of- Wendell Gray, ex-'29, graduate of th e lege. They returned recently after a trip fices in the Multnomah Hotel . Northwestern College of Law, 1934 class , abroad. is an attorney with Raffety and Pickett , A son was born on April 29 to Mr. and Mead Building, Portland . Mrs. Joseph W. Peak (Fern Perry) o f 1928 A daughter was born on April 23 t o Klamath Falls. Thelma L. Alley, who received her M.A. Sally Hughson Reynolds (Mrs. Charles L. Jalmar E . Johnson, ex-'26, of Portland, from Oregon in 1928 and served as a grad- Reynolds, Jr.) in Seattle. Oregonian reporter and assistant on the uate assistant in the Latin department o n Miss Charlotte Elizabeth Walker an d city desk, has a small son, Harry Hegeman , the campus, expects to receive her Ph.D . Milton L. George, ex-'29, were married at whose first birthday occurred April 30 . degree from Columbia University, Ne w Dobbs Ferry, New York, on May 3. Mr. Beldon C . Taylor, ex-'26, who has been York, in June . Miss Alley was a membe r George was business manager of the Em- stationed at McMinnville with the Associ- of the faculty of Carlton College, North- erald for 1927 and 1928, and has for some ated Oil Company, has been transferred t o field, Minnesota after leaving Oregon but time been engaged in advertising work i n Eugene as a salesman for the company . has spent the past three years at Columbia . the east. The couple will reside at the La Mr, and Mrs . Leo S. Gosliner (Helen V. Lieutenant Eugene C. Howe of Eugen e Baranca Apartments at Hastings-on-Hud- C. Park, ex-'26) who were married in Jan- is in command of a detail of twenty-fiv e son, New York . uary live in San Francisco, California, Mr . men from CCC Company 611 preparing th e Thornton Gale, ex-'29, is temporary edi- Gosliner is an engineer on the aqueduct t o site at Silver Creek Falls state park, near tor of the Lakeview Tribune, taking th e Boulder Dam. Mrs. Gosliner was formerl y Salem, for the main body of Company 61 1 place of Harry E. Dutton, '28, who is mak- in the drapery department of the Olds , now stationed near Port Orford . The com- ing an extensive trip east . Mr. Gale wa s Wortman and King Store, Portland. pany is expected to occupy its new cam p editor of the 1932 Oregana . Rupert R. Bullivant, LL.B . '26, Portland about June 1 . A daughter was born on April 24 to Mr . attorney, has been appointed by the stat e A daughter, Donita Lynn, was born o n and Mrs. Frederick Beck of Marcola. Mr. supreme court as a member of the stat e March 11 to Bernita Lamson Fraser (Mrs. Beck is superintendent of schools at Mar- board of bar examiners . Donald A . Fraser) of Yakima, Washing - cola. Mrs. Pauline Yeon Mifflin and George ton. H. V. Adix, Jr., B.A. '29, M.D. '30, ha s W. Joseph were married in Portland o n Letha Opal Jenks and John T . Glase r moved his offices to 1011 Medical-Denta l April 30. The couple will live in Portlan d were married, on April 20 . They will live Building, Portland. where Mr . Joseph is practicing law. in Tangent, Oregon, where Mr . Glaser i s r A son, Thomas A ., was born on March 6 in the grain business. Thomas Thayer is an assistant professo to He'-en Kiblan Leemon (Mrs. G. A . Lee- in geology at the Machay School of Mine s in Reno, Nevada . His wife, Marjorie mon) of 2116 Southeast Twenty-ninth Ave- . Mr. Thay- nue, Portland . 1929 Clark, is an Oregon grad of '28 Fire which destroyed their home at A son, Stewart Denny, was born o n er received his Ph .D. degree in geology Westfir early in the morning of June 1 , April 7 to Josephine Ralston Johnson (Mrs. from California Tech last June. claimed the lives of Mrs. Joseph A . Benson, Harold A . Johnson) of Medford. Miss Ellen Lawrence and John C. Em- wife of Joseph A . Benson, '26, M.D. '29, and Alexander R. Scott has been transferred mel, ex-'29, were married, in Scappoose,

14 Old Oregon May, 193 5

Oregon, on May 17 . The couple will mak e Miss Helen Stenger and Richard G . H . Hammond, 30, were married in Sale m their home in Scappoose . Harper were married in Portland on Ma y on Easter Sunday. Mrs . Hammond is affil- Miss Ruth Clayton and Robert S . Hol- 3. The couple will reside in Portland . Mr . iated with Gamma Phi Beta sorority an d man, ex-29, were married, in Portland, o n Harper is a member of Phi Kappa Psi fra- Mr . Hammond with Phi Delta Theta fra- May 18 . Following a wedding trip to Vic- ternity at the University. ternity . They will live in Salem where toria, British Columbia, the couple will re - A daughter, Charlotte Jane, was born o n Mr . Hammond is manager of the operators side in Portland . April 28 to Mr . and Mrs. Herbert V . Pate examination department for the state auto - (Elizabeth E . White, 28) of St . Louis , mobile division . 1930 Missouri . Mr . Pate is teaching voice in St . George Christensen, ex-31, pro-footbal l Leroy Hall is one of the bank executive s Louis and also directs the First Presby- captain for the Detroit Lions had a goo d for Northern Trust Company, 50 Sout h terian church choir in that city . year according to friends who visited wit h LaSalle Street, Chicago . He is married Delmas Richmond, B .S . 30, J .D . 32, is him this spring. He is attending a la w and lives at Willmette, one of the exclusiv e an attorney with offices in the Public Serv - school in Detroit . residence sectors there . ice Building, Portland . Helen McCraney Clark, ex-31 (Mrs . Mr. and Mrs . Harry Brock (Editha 11 . Rodney W . Banks, ex - 30, lawyer, is also Dudley F . Clark), accompanied by he r Barthel, 29) of Piedmont, California, ar e deputy county clerk of Multnomah county . mother, Mrs . Harrie McCraney, of Port- the parents of a son, born April 21 . He ha s He is married and lives at 3722 Northeas t land, sailed from Vancouver May 18th o been named Harry Jr . n Thirty-fifth Avenue . the V,mpress of Canada on a trip to Hono- Harry E . Wheeler, formerly of Eugene , George E . Schlesser, Jr ., B .S . 30, M .A . lulu . who has just received his Ph .D degree a t 31 . who has been teaching in the Klamath Dorothy May Stanford University and who was grad- Bell, ex-31, and Dr. Har- Falls High school, has been awarded an old M. Olinger, uated from Oregon in 1930 with the degre e ex-31, were married i n instructorship at Yale, where he will com- Salem on April 27 . Mrs of B .S . and received his M .A . from Stan - . Olinger is a mem- plete work for the doctorate . ber of Gamma Phi Beta sorority on th e ford in 1932, has accepted a position on th e campus and Dr staff of the department of geology at the . Olinger, who also attend- University of Nevada at Reno and will as- 1931 ed the North Pacific Dental college, is a sume his duties there July 1 . Mr. Wheeler, Daphne Hughes has been granted a fel- member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity . The y will reside in Salem . in the meantime, is working with the topo- lowship for next year in social econom y graphical branch of the United States ge- and social research at Bryn Mawr Univer- A son, Raymond B ., was born on Apri l 25 to Mr. and Mrs. Ray G ological survey in the Disston quadrangl e sity in Pennsylvania . Miss Hughes wa s . Edwards (Myr- above Cottage Grove . president of the Y.W .C . A . .while on the tle Mast, 27) of 336 Southeast Forty-fift h avenue, Portland Taylor Eccles, ex-30, has been added t o campus and following her graduation sh e . the staff of E H . Rollins and Sons, Port - attended the University of California on a A daughter was born in Eugene on Ma y 7 to land bond dealers, as trader, according t o scholarship . Pauline Lehman Vaaler, ex-31 (Mrs . an announcement of the company. Mr. Edna Irene Prescott and George Bag - Adrian Vaaler), of Missoula, Montana . Eccles was for some time with E . A . Pierc e nail were married in Salem on May 5 . Mrs . John E. Allen, B .A . 31, M .A . 32, for- and Company, bond house . Bagnall is a member of Kappa Delta soror- merly an assistant in the geology depart- A daughter was born on May 14 to Mr . ity on the campus . Mr . Bagnall is an alum - ment at the University of California, ha s and Mrs . Stuart C . Bowie (Esther M . Bliss , nus of Oregon State College . The coupl e accepted a position with the AAA . He wil l ex-32) of 1237 East Twenty-first Avenue , will reside in Salem . be employed on a survey on erosion i n northern New Mexico Eugene . Constance Maxine Glover and William . Mr . Allen is a so n of Dean E . W. Allen of the University school of journalism and Mrs. Allen. Marshall J. "Dutch" Shields, former wel l known athlete on the campus, .has bee n appointed athletic coach at the Vancouver , Washington, high school . Mr . Shields, four - letter man at the University, was an all - coast guard in 1929 and starred in swim- ming, wrestling and boxing . He receive d his masters degree from Columbia Univer- sity in New York and later was freshma n coach at the Southern Oregon Norma l school . He has recently been in busines s in Portland . . and it is true economy . , low fares James H . Raley, Jr., is a member o f with FAST, MODERN LUXUR Y the law firm of Raley, Kilkenny and Raley , -LINERS, . . . service and cuisine the resul t of Pendleton. He is active in the Junio r Miyajima, japan, with the Great Torii of 50 years experience . Chamber of Commerce, Officers Reserv standing in the sea . e and a number of other organizations and LOW SUMMER ROUND TRIP FARE S was county chairman for the Red Cros s Seattle to- Cabin Class Tourist Cabi n Roll Call this year . YOKOHAMA (and return) $375 $19 5 KOBE (and return) 390 202 Frank Hoover, educational adviser for SHANGHAI (and return) 435 22 5 the CCC at Camp Humbug mountain, nea r HONGKONG (and return) -" 465 23 2 Port Orford, expects, with his company , MANILA (and return) 495 23 2 _ to move to the new site which is being pre - Effective April 1 to July 31 going ; pared for them at Silver Creek Falls, nea r return good until October 31 . Salem, about June 1 . Mr . Hoover, formerl y principal of the Crow high school, wa s transferred to Port Orford from compan y TOURS of every natur e 964, Camp Wimer . available to you this summer-- A son, Sidney F. IV, was born, on Ma y three leaving from Seattle i n 12, to Geraldine Dye Woodbury, ex-3 1 June-all led by experience d (Mrs . Sidney F travelers . Woodbury) of 1021 South - . west Westwood Court, Portland . Sylvester C. Pier, former city commis- sioner of Portland, died at his home at 100 9 Southeast Thirty-first Avenue, Portland , on May 21, following a long illness . He is survived by his wife, Mrs . Alma Thacker Pier, who teaches in the Gregory Height s LINE school, and one son, Stanhope S . Pier. Seattle - 1404 4th Ave. Portland-Powell Shipping Ca . 1932 407 Railway Exchange Bldg . jack Richard Dant returned this spring from a five months business trip east, in -

FRIENDLINES S CLEANLINES S HONEST VALUE S SUSTAINE D QUALIT Y SERVICE , m r rr,

OUR CREED - means a lot to us means better motoring to you

A Creed to work by! An ideal of service to live up our business. SUSTAINED QUALITY PROD- to! That is what our Creed means to us . The words UCTS. They tell their own story in performance. carved upon it express our sincere desire to giv e SERVICE-to us is the pleasure of giving pleasure . you the best there is in us-and to have that "best" That is what the Creed means to us. Won't you please you more than any other service. give us the chance to show what it can mean to OUR CREED. To us it is the good old fashioned you? Ask any Smiling Associated Dealer for a quality of being a good neighbor-expressed in Credit Courtesy Card and for more miles of motor- the friendly interest in you and your car. CLEAN- ing pleasure, use his products and services : Aero- LINESS. It is evidenced in the appearance of each type Flying A and Associated Aviation Ethyl Gas- dealer's station, rest rooms and his person . HON- olines, Solvent-Refined Cycol Motor Oil and Ccr- EST VALUES . They are the very foundations of tifled Clean Comfort Stations.

eluding Boston and south to Miami, Texas, tavus Adolphus college at St. Peter, Minne- and the Rio Grande valley . He works fo r sota, is a member of Chi Iota Kappa fra- his father of Dant and Russell, exportin g ternity. Mr . and Mrs . Lindquist will spen d firm, Portland . the summer in Portland and go to south- Rolf O . V . Bodding is a statistician with ern California to live in October . HOLC, Portland . Gifford "Buck" Nash, who has been wit h A daughter was born on April 30 to Mr. the cast of "Within the Gates " in Ne w and Mrs. John Norris Gregg (Elizabeth York for the past several months, saile d Hopkins, ex-33) of Portland . with his company for Paris early in May , Thelma E . Lund, graduate student in to be gone six weeks . psychology on the campus, has been ap- Helen Louise Owens, ex- 33, and Walte r pointed to assist in the reading clinic of R . Scott were married in Portland on May Colorado State Teachers college at Gree- 7 . Mr. and Mrs . Scott will make their hom e ley, Colorado, during the summer vacation . at 3743 Northeast Twenty-fourth avenue , A daughter, Sarah Elizabeth, was bor n Portland . on April 29 to Mr . and Mrs. Winsor W . Monica M . Brandt, ex-33, and Lieuten- Calkins (Doris Helen Patterson) of 60 6 ant Terry Bell were married, in Eugene, o n East Nineteenth avenue, Eugene . April 27 . Mr . Bell is a junior officer wit h Merlin Biala, formerly managing edito r Company 943 CCC at Oakridge and is a of OLD OREGON, has accepted a posi- graduate of Oregon State College . tion on the Grants Pass Courier as reporte r Miss Ruth Ramstrom and Stanley L. and editor of country correspondence . H e Stark, ex-33, were married, at "Gree n will work under Rex Tussing, 31, city edi- Acres," near Medford, on May 11 . The tor . couple will reside in Medford following a Eva Nelson is secretary of the Youn g short trip to California . Democrats club in Pendleton . 1934 1933 Kathryn Marie Greenwood, ex-35, an d A son was born on May 3 to Mr . an d Curtis Charles Smith, ex-34, were marrie d Mrs . John S . Conway (Lillian L . Rankin , in Portland on May 3 . Mrs. Smith was a 34) of Jordan Valley, Oregon . member of Chi Omega sorority on the cam - Laura M . Hagood, ex-33, and Charle s pus, and Mr. Smith of Sigma Alpha Epsi- B . Atkins, M .D . 32, were married in Port - lon fraternity. land on May 11 . Dr . and Mrs . Atkins wil l Elizabeth Wright, ex- 34, and Willia m live at Camp Odell, in southern Oregon . W. Barendrick, ex- 32, were married i n Margaret Anne Taylor, ex-33, and Ken- Portland on Mav 18. They will reside a t neth J . Rhead were married in Eugene on 1411 Southeast Thirtieth avenue, in Port - May 12 . The couple will reside in Oakland . land . California . Mrs. Ahead is a member o f A daughter, Leah, was born on May 1 3 Alpha Delta Pi sorority . to Mr . and Mrs. Sylvan Campf, of 251 0 Dorothy Irma Thomas and Harold D . Northeast Eleventh avenue, Portland. Lindquist were married in Portland on May 15 . Mrs . Lindquist is a member of Al- pha Gamma Delta sorority on the campus 1935 and Mr . Lindquist, a graduate of the Gus - Eleanor Wharton, who will receive he r degree from the University in June, has been chosen by the school board of Gris- wold High school at Helix, Oregon, to teach English and Latin next year. hen Alan Eugene Yeon, ex-35, senior stu- WO1liE11 and CH ILDREf dent in art and architecture, was found dea d at his. apartment at 1370 Beech Street , IR Travel alone_ Eugene, on May 23, the victim of ga s fumes which had escaped from a gas heater. they find the luxury, comfort Mr . Yeon is survived by his mother, Mrs . and protection of home life, plus Elizabeth Yeon, a sister, Mrs . George Jo- e seph, Jr., and two brothers, John Yeon an d real economy, at either of th Norman L . Yeon, all of Portland , 1936 Betsy Sallee, ex-36, and Malcolm D . Al- REATH MAN mack, ex-37, were married in Eugene o n May 16. Mrs . Almack is a member of Delt a Delta Delta sorority and Mr . Almack, wh o HOTELS also attended Stanford university, is a meni- ber of Sigma Nu fraternity at that insti- Portland s newest and fines t tution . They will reside on Route Two, Eu- hotels . _located in the hub o f gene . the shopping and recreational district . . .are the unquestione d choice of experienced travelers . Kenna-Ellis ARTIST PHOTOGRAPHER S Eugene-Salem-Klamath Falls - Medford - Seattle - Tacoma

College Flower Shop "Flowers of Unusual Distinction" Phone 3018 829 E . 13th Lester McDonald, 30 Willetta Hartley, 32 In every contest there's a winner- one who by perfect coordination of mental and physical faculties ex- PROPANE SOLVENT PROCES S cels in the task at hand. He is th e best-and you can't beat the best. GIVES TRITON DEFINIT E QUALITY LEADERSHI P N every lubricating oil "stock," eastern o r Iwestern, there is a certain portion of 100 % pure parathenes-the best lubricating fraction s -the true paraffin-base oi L Unions patented PROPANE Solvent Process, by which TRITON is made rejects all undesir- able, low-gravity materials from the crud e "stock"--leaving only 100% pure Parathenes .

WHAT IT DOES-How You Gain ! Over 500,000 miles of road testing hav e proved: 1. TRITON has longer life in the crankcase . 2. TRITON greatly reduces carbon and sludg e formation. 3. TRITON reduces engine wear from 22 t o 43%-assuring longer engine life . 4. TRITON is more stable in use-change s viscosity less than other oils . Try TRITON . Only 30 a quart-at thou- sands of dealers . UNION OIL COMPAN Y Manufacturer of 76 Gasoline and Triton Motor Oil (Ln 19,35, LIGGFTT & MYERS TOBACCO CO.