S NEW DIRECTOR OF ATHLETIC S Anson (Anse) Cornell, 16, who will take over his new duties a s director of Oregon athletics about June 1 . Cornell returns to hi s alma mater after 20 years of coaching and managin g athletics elsewhere .

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Published by the University of Orego n Alumni Association

Vol. XVII May, 1936 No. 9

NEWS AND COMMEN T

By The Editor

T last Oregon 's athletic problems performer on Webfoot grid teams, as ORNELL'S duties, as outlined by A are on the way toward solution . a quarterback, from 1912 to 1915 unde r C the board, will be the "promotion, 'With the appointment recently of th e . He was also shortstop financing and managing of all inter- new board of athletic control and th e and captain of baseball teams at that collegiate athletics ." The new five-ma n subsequent appointment of Anson Cor- time. Before entering Oregon he at- faculty board for the control of all non - nell, Oregon alumnus and former gri d tended and played football at Washing- athletic activities under the recent sep - star, as director of ath - ton high in Portland under Virgil D . aration of the two de- Anse Cornell letics, the stage is now Earl, now a member of the new athletic Appointment partments has not yet set for a speedy re- board. He received his B.A. in 1916 . been announced. It is To Direct adjustment of the dif - Cornell's salary was placed at $300 0 Gets Hearty expected that anothe r Athletics faculties that have beset per year. His first duties will be t o Approval manager for these ac- athletics since the ad- accompnay Dr. H. C. Howe, faculty tivities will be named vent of the optional fee almost tw o athletic representative, to the sprin g shortly after the board has been an- years ago. meeting of the coast conference at nounced by the president . After considerable study by faculty Spokane on June 3 and 4. It is expecte d Hearty approval of Cornell's ap- and student committees, it was an- that Cornell 's office will be located in pointment has been practically unani- nounced early this month by President McArthur Court. mous on the part of alumni who hav e C. V. Boyer that a ten member board to been following the Oregon situation . be composed of five faculty members , On the other hand, those familiar wit h three alumni members and two student the problems involved realize the diffi- members would be placed in charge o f culties of readjustment that face the the athletic program . Personnel of thi s new manager . Not only is it going to be committee as announced a few day s necessary for Cornell to set up an en- later is : Earl M. Pallet, executive sec- tirely new organization but the prob- retary to the president, chairman ; John lem of financing the program on an F. Bovard, dean of the school of physi- optional fee and gate receipt basis faces cal education ; Virgil D . Earl, dean o f him. He has not inherited an easy job , men and former director of athletics ; and alumni and friends of the Univer- James H . Gilbert, dean of the school o f sity can help most by being sympatheti c social science ; and Professor H . C. with the enormity and difficulty of his Howe, faculty repreesntative in the task and at the same time stand ready Pacific Coast Conference. The three to assist in the many ways that they alumni members are : Lynn S . Mc- will be called upon to help . Only by Cready, '20, Eugene ; Basil T . Wil- enthusiastic co-operation between al l liams, ex-'19, Eugene ; and Paul D . those persons concerned with Orego n Hunt, '30. Portland . Student members athletics can the University 's part i n will be : Fred Hammond, president o f Pacific coast athletic circles be expecte d the student body and Gilbert L . Schultz , to prosper and gain prestige . vice-president. * * * The selection of Anse Cornell for the NCE again the state system o f post of athletic director by the commit - O higher education has been forced tee has been hailed throuhgout the stat e to further pare its budgets to meet as an admirable choice . He is to take shrinkage of income ! ATHLETIC REPRESENTATIVE over his new duties about June 1, com- y More Cuts This necessity wa s Professor H . C . Howe, veteran facult e ing from , Fores t representative of the University in th e Forced on brought out at th Grove, where he has been head coac h Pacific Coast Conference and a membe r April budget meeting and athletic director for the past thre e of the new board of athletic control. Pro - State System of the board held in fessor Howes long service to Oregon ath - Ashland on April 27 . years. Before that he spent 17 years a s letics was recognized last month whe n coach at the College of Idaho, Caldwell . Oregon's baseball diamond was name d Having already reduced budgets more Cornell was an outstanding backfield "Howe Field" in his honor. than $1,500,000 since 1930-31, the

z Old Oregon May, 198 6

1)r. Hunter's statements at the recent board meeting are in reality mild com- pared to the true situation that face s the people of Oregon . The unrest and lack of opportunity for true construc - tive research and teaching within the state system is a situation about whic h every thinking citizen and particularl y the alumni of the institution might wel l become alarmed . Means of alleviating this state of affairs must become a major problem of the people of Oregon or else the educational institutions o f the state will depreciate to second rate and inferior schools-an eventuality in - conceivable in a state traditionally com- mitted to superior schools .

Onthank G.oes to Washington Karl W. Onthank, dean of personnel, who has also been acting state directo r of the National Youth Administration since the first of the year, left fo r Washington, D . C., this month to attend CAMPUS SCENES AS CONSTRUCTION PROGRESSES a national conference of state NYA Recent pictures of building activity on four fronts as campus projects progress . To p directors. Before leaving, Onthank in- left: Excavation finished and placing of forms for new gymnasium at Fifteenth an d dicated that is was his belief that the University streets . Top right: Concrete work finished and window casings in on new infirmary at Thirteenth and Onyx streets . Lower left : Bricklaying well started o n employement of student NYA hel p new library located near the corner of Fifteenth and Kincaid streets. Lower right : would continue next year . Several Dismantling front half of old gym preparatory to making it over into a natatorium . hundred students have been aided i n earning their school expenses through the NYA on the campus this year . board was forced to deduct anothe r and E . B. Mittleman, associate pro- During the summer Dean Onthank wil l t $50,000 from the budget for the nex fessor of business administration . The attend a conference on college guidance , biennium as compared to the presen t resignation of Robert H . Seashore was to be held at Stanford University , biennium this in face of increasing en - accepted. Only one raise in actual in- rollment and heavy instructional and where he will be chairman of a discus- structional pay was recorded, although sion section on guidance activities o f . equipment demands several minor changes in staff and per- federal agencies . Most tragic result of the decreased sonnel were made . An adjustment o n budget will be the reduction of the the salary of President Boyer, allow- number of beds available at the Doren- ing him $1200 in lieu of a "president' s becker children 's hospital in Portlan d home" was approved, as was an increas e from 48 to 25 in spite of a waiting list of $500 to the salary of Charles Byrne , of 500 children . Other cuts will o f director of information and secretary necessity be forced throughout the sys- to the board . tem-in some cases resulting in the release of professors and in others th e HE entire situation is not a happy abandonment of important educationa l T one. A steady stream of top-notch and research activities . instructors and professors has been In making his budget report to the leaving the University ever since the board, Chancellor Frederick M . Hunte r first depression cuts-and few replace- pointed out the seriousness of the situa - ments have been possible. Staff mem- tion facing the Oregon schools an d bers have been accept- warned that unless additional revenue s Unrest and ing raises in rank i n are found soon, the state cannot expec t lieu of deserved salary to continue to receive the benefits an d Uncertainty increases, and thos e maintain the assets of its educationa l Damaging who have chosen t o system. He said that he did not believe accept better paying that the people of Oregon would counte - positions at other schools canoe b e nance such a reduction in their produc- blamed for their decisions . Those who tive resources nor such a lowering o f have elected to stay on deserve much the cultu,ral standards in the state . credit for their loyalty through a mos t Changes effected at the recent meet- COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER trying period . But it cannot be expecte d J. Duncan Spaeth, long-time member o f ing and directly affecting the Universit y that even these will be able to withstan d the faculty of Princeton and recentl y included the granting of leaves of ab- the attractive offers from other school s elected president of Kansas City Univer - sence without pay to H . \T . Hoyt, dean much longer, unless some relief fro m sity, who will deliver the commencement of the address at the University in McArthu r school of business administration the present situation is found . Court on June 1 .

May, 1936 Old Oregon s

A L U M N I

COMMENCEMEN T the group. Representatives of the six honored classes and the senior class wil l Class Reunions Se t be called on . Tickets will be 60 cents . The reunion of members of six Uni- The annual flower and fern procession versity classes on Saturday, May 30th, at the site of the Pioneer Mothe r Alumni Day, will be the high spot o f statue will wind up the events of th e Commencement activities this year. day. Added enthusiasm has been given t o On Friday, 3 to 5 P.M. will be held arrangements for the event this year b y the annual tea benefiting the Paulin e the fact that the entire weekend o f Potter Homer collection of beautiful events is to be held while regular classe s books, and in the evening at 8 P .M. the are still in session, affording alumni the annual Failing-Beekman orations wil l opporunity of returning to a fully popu- be held in the auditorium of the School lated campus, and giving undergraduate of Music . students opportunity to participate i n Commencement events for the firs t OHara, Spaeth to Speak time. Baccalaureate services are schedule d Classes to gather for reunion events , for 11 A.M. Sunday, May 31st, at Mc- the climax of which will be the reunio n Arthur Court . Bishop Edwin V . dinners at 5 :30 P.M. on Saturday are : O'Hara of Great Falls, Montana, and 1886, 1896, 1906, 1911, 1916 and 1926 . formerly of Eugene, will give the ad - Letters from permanent class secre- dress, entitled : "The More Excellen t taries have been sent to all members Way of these classes and reports indicat e J. Duncan Spaeth, long-time membe r that a larger number of alumni than of the faculty at Princeton and recently usual is planning to be on hand. Al- elected president of the University o f though in some cases final arrangements Kansas City, will deliver the Com- for the reunion dinners of the six cele- mencement address. Commencement brating classes have not been made, th e exercises will also be held in McArthu r information will be available at th e Court, at 8 P.M. on Monday, June 1 . alumni registration booth in Johnso n Dr. Spaeth, who has been a frequent hall all day Saturday . campus visitor and a professor at num- erous summer sessions in Portland, ha s Annual Breakfast Planned chosen as his topic : "Training fo r Two other strictly alumni events ar e Freedom ." listed for the day. First, the annual meeting and breakfast of the Stat e Association of University of Oregon. EMPLOYMEN T Women to be held at the Osburn Hotel Graduates to Be Aided at 9 A.M. Mrs. Ella T . Edmunson, '03, Approval of the state board of higher is president of the organization and education was given during May to th e general chairman in charge of the af- establishment of an employment servic e fair. Honor guests will include Mrs . for graduates and former students o f Frederick M . Hunter, Mrs . C. V. the University . The work will be car- Boyer, women members of the class o f ried on in connection with the presen t 1886 and all senior women . Reserva- employment service conducted by the tions may be made at the hotel . Ticket s University for its undergraduates . The will be 50 cents. new service was designed by Karl W . The other alumni event is to be th e Onthank, dean of personnel and Presi - semi-annual meeting of the Universit y of Oregon Alumni Association to be held in Guild Theatre, Johnson Hall a t CANOE FETE WINS PRAIS E 10 :30 A .M Top: Orchestra and queen's throne set - . with President Ben R . ting for annual Canoe fete held recently Chandler, '13, presiding. in connection with other traditional Jun - ior weeked activities . Second : The win- ning float, "In the Shade of the Old Ap- Luncheon at Noon ple Tree," entered by Alpha Delta Pi and At noon on Saturday, the annua l Theta Chi. Third : "Kathleen Mavour- University luncheon, honoring the neen," second prize, entered by Alpha Chi Omega and Phi Sigma Kappa . Fourth : alumni of the anniversary classes an d "Oh Suzannah," third prize, entered by graduating seniors, will be held at th e Hendricks Hall and Sigma Hall . Bottom : John Straub Memorial Building . "On a Bicycle Built for Two," awarded Alumni President Chandler will presid honorable mention, entered by Alph a e Gamma Delta and Beta Theta Pi. Song as toastmaster. Chancellor Frederic k titles furnished the theme for the fete M. Hunter has been asked to address this year.

4 Old Oregon May, 199 6

dent C . V . Boyer, and will be under the check for $600, raised by Oregon moth- direction of Miss Janet Smith, present ers, to Dr . C. Valentine Boyer, univer- employment secretary . sity president, to he used for scholar - The new work will differ from that ships for university students. already being carried on in that it wil l A record attendance of mother s attempt to place in permanent position s thronged John Straub Memorial hal l those graduates and former student s for the Mother's day banquet in th e who seek permanent employment . It evening. Mrs. Mable Holmes Parsons , will concern itself chiefly with person s noted Oregon writer, outlined the cul- whose courses of study while in•schoo l tural and spiritual phases of education . were not in the professional schools , where employment services are already Eight Phi Betes Named being conducted by the schools them - selves, such as journalism, law and Phi Beta Kappa, national scholastic education. honorary, recently named eight senior s at their regular spring term elections . Small Fee Charged Those elected were : Margaret Mar y Cass, Eugene ; Harold E . Davis, Gres - A $3 registration fee, similar to the ham ; Jack Whittier Huggins, Port - fee required by the placement bureau Iand ; Robert Douglass Johnston, Eu- of the school of education, will be gene ; Mary Kessi, Harlan ; Mary L. charged, according to Dean Onthank . Nelson, Junction City ; Margaret D . An additional fee of twenty-five cents Rugh, Eugene ; and Leland Thiele- will be asked when credentials are sen t mann, Portland . to prospective employers . An aggres- sive campaign to interest employers i n CUP WINNERS the service is being planned by Directo r Martha McCall, Portland, president of Mortar Board, Friars Elec t Smith . Both alumni who would like to the Associated Women Students, and Del - A feature of the annual Junio r register and alumni who are in a posi- bert Bjork, Astoria, football captain . Mis s Weekend campus luncheon was the tion to employ University graduates McCall was awarded the Gerlinger cu p traditional pledging to Friars an and Mr . Bjork the Koyl cup as the out - d have been asked to get in touch wit h standing members of the junior class . Mortar Board, senior honoraries . Miss Smith . The co-operation of th e Mortar Board elected : Mrs. C. Val- alumni office has been extended Dea n entine Boyer, Helen Bartrum, Margilee Onthank and Miss Smith in this new versity. He was the first Oregon grad- Morse, Virginia Endicott, Martha Mc- project. uate to enter the Massachusetts Insti- Call, Mildred Blackburne and Elain e tute of Technology which he attende d Comish. Friars elected : Frank Nash, after graduating from Oregon . Roberts Gives Book s Don Thomas, Clair Johnson, Fred In 1892 he returned to the Northwes t Hammond, Jim Hurd and Fred Colvig. Fourteen books and reports contain- and three years later joined the faculty ing writings by Wililam J. Roberts, of Washington State College, where graduate of 1886, have been receive d he taught engineering for 13 years . In Oregana Praised by the University library and added t o recent years Mr . Roberts has been a The 1936 edition of the Oregana, the University of Oregon Collection . consulting engineer and has done con- student yearbook, was distributed to Mr. Roberts, a member of the clas s siderable writing in his field . His special student subscribers during the Junior that this spring celebrates the 50th anni- field has been flood control and water Weekend, and the book was declared versary of its graduation, is a consultin g and sewer systems . He put in and oper - to be the largest and best ever to b e engineer of Tacoma, Washington, an d ated the Medford, Oregon, system and was the first of his family, which ha published by the student body . The s during the war built the water an d volume was divided into four section been represented on the Oregon campu s s sewer system at Camp Lewis, Wash- instead of the usual ten or twelve, and since that time, to attend the Univer- ington. contained almost twice as many pictures as usual. The first section of about 80 pages was almost entirely pictures, re - C A M P U S produced by offset printing, heretofor e unused in the Oregana. George Root , editor, and Ralph Schomp, assistan t MOTHER S of the executive committee : Mrs. Roy graduate manager in charge of publica- T. Bishop, Mrs. W. B. Shiveley, Mrs . tions, received many congratuations o n Mrs. Peets Elected 1 . Lubersky, Mrs . Rudie Wilhelm, the excellence of the book . Oregon mothers elected Mrs . E. C. Mrs . Noble Wiley Jones, Mrs . A. C . Peets, Portland, president of their Greenwood, Mrs. George Cornwall, al l If William O . Hall of Portland, Ph i group at their annual meeting held o n of Portland ; Mrs. M . D . Latourette , Beta Kappa and winner of the Koyl the campus in conjunction with Junior Oregon City ; Mrs. Ben Chandler , cup his junior year, was awarded the Weekend, May 8 and 9 . Mrs. Walter Marshfield ; Mrs. Frank H . Spears, coveted Albert cup last week by hi s M. Cook, Portland, was again name d Salem ; Mrs. J. J. Bauer, Pendleton ; fellow classmates . The Albert cup i s honorary president. Mrs. George A . Keyes, Bend ; Mrs. awarded each year by vote of the senio r Other officers chosen were Mrs . G. C. Pauling, Astoria, and Mrs . N . B. class to the member deemed to have Warren D. Smith, Eugene, vice-presi- Drew, Kiamath Falls . made the "greatest progress toward the dent ; Mrs. A. R. Starbuck, Dallas , The chief feature of the annual meet- ideal of character, service, and whole- treasurer, and the following members ing this year was the presentation of a some influence.

May, 1936 Old Oregon 6 S P O R T S

TRAC K hurdles to earn its victory . Frank ended last week. As a result of its play "Squeak " Lloyd, versatile Orego n the Wehfoots entered the final week o f Tie for First sophomore, cracked a northwest record the season in second place in the north - Victory in a dual meet with Washing - that had stood for 30 years by leaping ern division conference standings . ton State and defeat in a dual meet wit h 25 feet 4/ inches in the broad jump . Three games, all with Oregon State, the University of Washington placed Dan Kelley set the previous mark o f remain on the Oregon schedule . Should Oregon's varsity track team, coated b y 24 feet 3 inches on old i n the Ducks win all three and the leading the veteran Bill Hayward, in a tie fo r Eugene in 1906 . Oregon State Cougars drop two of th e first among northwest cinder squads . Other Oregon firsts were turned i n four left on their schedule, the 193 6 After trouncing Oregon State i n by Shoemake in the 100-yard dash , pennant race will end in a tie. seven of ten events in the annual rela y Foskett in the shot put, Janak in the meet, the Ducks continued their win- pole vault, McGaughey in the two-mile , W.S.C. Series Split ning ways by edging out Washingto n and Leonard (Dutch) Holland in the Following its 4 to 3 opening victory State, 69% to 61 %, on . discus. over Oregon State the Webfoots wer e Oregon won nine first places to six rained out of their first home game for the Cougars . Four dual meet rec- Oregon Wins A.A.U. Meet with W .S .C. with the score tied at one ords and two Hayward field marks wer e In the first state A.A.U. meet ever all in the fifth inning . A double-heade r shattered by the competing athletes. held in Oregon, the Webfoot cindermen the following afternoon resulted in a George Scharpf won the mile in 4 :21 .3, ran up 79 1-3 points to 21 for the split, O,reogn taking the opener 4 to 0 Marvin Janak high-jumped 6 feet 13/g second-place University of Portlan d behind the fine pitching of Sophomore inches, and Sam McGaughey won the team. Bob Millard but dropping the second two-mile event in 9 :44.6 for Oregon' s Sam McGaughey turned in the out- 9 to 0 with Cece Inman on the mound . share of the new meet records . Bill standing running performance of the Idaho 's Vandals pulled an upset i n Foskett heaved the shot 48 feet 27 day with a 4 :03 .7 time in the 1500 the first of their two-game series on inches for the best mark ever made by meters. His time was equivalent to 4 :19 Howe field by pounding Don McFad- an Oregon man in that event and Bud in the mile . Holland tossed the discus den for 13 hits and an 8 to 7 victory. Shoemake tied the dual meet mark wit h 150 feet 2 inches and Foskett heave d It was McFadden 's first defeat of the a time of 9 .8 in the hundred . the shot 49 feet 9 inches for the longes t season. Bob Millard turned in hi s Other firsts captured by Hayward 's marks made in the northwest this year . second victory of the season in the men were by Janak in the pole vault, Bob Parke, who set an N .C.A.A. jave- second Idaho tilt and Oregon won Fred Sinnette in the low hurdles, Shoe - lin record while wearing Oregon colors handily, 4 to 1 . make in the 220, and Ken Miller in the in 1934, began a comeback with a thro w The annual junior week-end game s 880. of 203 feet 8 inches. with the University of Washington nine saw the same results . The Huskie s Huskies Win smashed out 13 hits in the opener and Hec Edmundson brought his Wash- BASEBAL L won 6 to 5. Again Bob Millard took hi s ington Huskies to Hayward field th e In Second Place turn in the second tilt and aided by good following Saturday to defeat the Web- Even breaks with Washington Stat e hitting rang up his third straight victor y foots, 74 to 57. and Washington and a two-game sweep 11 to 6. The well-balanced Husky team took from cellar-bound Idaho gave Howa,rd The McFadden-Millard combinatio n nine of the 15 first places and swept Hobson's Oregon varsity four victories continued to function in the same man- all three places in the high and low in six starts on its seven-day road trip ner as the Webfoots took to the roa d

LYNN S . McCREADY, 20 BASIL T. WILLIAMS, ex 19 PAUL D . HUNT, 30 These three prominent Oregon alumni have been named by President C. V. Boyer to the Universitys new board of athletic con- trol. They serve with five faculty members and two student members .

6 Old Oregon May, 1936

at Pullman, Wash . Washington Stat e tory the next afternoon in a thrillin g unusually aggressive style of play stam p collected enough safe blows off Mc - eleven-inning game . Oregon tied the him as a good prospect . Fadden for a 10 to 3 victory in the score in the ninth inning on Millard 's * * * opener, but with Millard on the moun d timely single and won, 7 to 5, in th e Frank (Bud) Goodin, the sophomore the travelers more than avenged the eleventh when McFadden doubled wit h halfback who spent most of last season loss with a lop-sided 14 to 1 victory . Hurney and Goodie on base . on the bench with injuries, and Charle s Hobson changed his pitching routin e Bracher, lanky reserve fullback of the against Idaho at Moscow and the Web- FOOTBAL L 1935 squad, also are due to move abou t foots took both games . Cece Inman won next fall . Neither Mall has been on han d the first as his teammates rallied t o Notes on Spring Practice for spring practice. Goodin holding an score four runs each in the sixth an d Approximately 45 candidates for the infield spot on the varsity baseball nine eighth innings for a 10 to 4 victory . 1936 University of Oregon varsit y and Brachers not in school . Goodin will The following day IIobson sent lank y football eleven wound up the longest move over to fullback, where he i s Earl Bucknum to the mound for his spring practice session in Webfoot his- slated to replace Frank Michel:, whil e first conference start in three years . H e tory last week . The husky gridder s Bracher will return to his original jo b held the slugging Vandals to six hits spent nine of the ten weeks in the sprin g as a tackle. and himself hit twice to aid in a 4 to 2 semester working out daily under the * * * victory. watchful eyes of Prink Callison an d Outsanding backfield performers i n Moving over to Seattle for the final Gene Shields . the practice tilts between picked team s games of the series four Webfoo t * * * which closed the spring session were chuckers were the victims of the hit - Several changes in positions were Dale Lasselle and Jimmy Nicholson, crazed Washington Huskies in the open- noted as the Webfoots played three left halfbacks ; Bob Braddock, righ t ing game there . McFadden, Inman, Bil l intra-squad games in the final tw o half ; Arleigh Bentley, 184-pound full - Marshall and finally, John Lewis, regu- weeks . To holster the weak end posi- back. Standing out in line play were lar shortstop, tried their turn on th e reserve end, was shifted to the right Newcomers Ne'.lo Giovanini, Joh n mound as the Huskies won 15 to 1 . wing post . He has had little experience Pastega, guards ; Ilenry Nilsen, Lenar d Millard picked up his fifth straight vic - as a end-man hut his rangy build and Robertson, ends .

SNAPSHOTS OF SOME OF THE MANY ACTIVITIES THAT FEATURED TRADITIONAL JUNIOR WEEKEN D Top row, left to right : Serving campus luncheon ; Alpha Delta Sigma initiates ; canoe tilting at water carnival ; Prom Queen Peggy Carper and two members of her court. Second row : Friars pledges ; painting the "O" ; waiting to be served; build - ing the floats. Third row : dance contest winners ; Aselepiads pledges; Baseball, Washington vs . Oregon ; being ducke d for wearing neckties . Bottom row : tug-o'-war aftermath ; Mortar Board pledges ; Track, Washington vs . Oregon ; the tennis court dance .

May, 1936 Old Orego n NEWS O F T H E C L A S S E S

liminarv to the branch meetings of th e Chi on the campus recently . Mrs . Wharton 1887 American College of Surgeons and th e majored in journalism while at the Univer- Frank S . Wright, M .D . 87, has practice d American Medical association, held i n sity and was campus correspondent for th e medicine in Salmon, Idaho for forty-fiv e Kansas City during the middle of May . Portland Tournal . She is a member o f years . Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority . 1916 David A . Byerlee, ex-23, wife and tw o 1889 children were recent visitors to Eugene . . Lewis, ex-16, is employed a s Mr. and Mrs . Sanderson Reed hav e Frank M Mr . Byerlee has for some years been wit h moved from Portland to 765 South Com- ail electrical engineer on the Bonnevill e the Christian church mission in the Bel- mercial, Salem . project . Mr . Lewis is a graduate in elec- f gian Congo, Central Africa . The missio n trical engineering of the University o where he is stationed takes in a territor y 1896 Washington . almost as large as the state of Oregon an d Mrs. Fannie Hammitt Easter, ex- 96 , Dr . Cleveland S . Simpkins, of the Uni- includes five stations with a staff of fort y n of Farmington, Washington, died in Spo- versity of Tennessee, lists his occupatio workers . kane on May 10 . Surviving are her widow- as associate professor of anatomy research , er, George W. Easter, two daughters, Mrs. lecturer and writer. Dr . Simpkins receive d 1924 . from Oregon in 1916 and was af- LaVelle Barger Black, 23, of Spokane an d his B .A An extremely fortunate alumna is Mrs . Mrs . Leone Thompson of Farmington , terward awarded his Ph .D . at Harvard Kathrine Kressman Taylor, ex-24 (Mrs . Washington . University . Elliott Taylor) of Leaburg who is th e Harry T. Drill, B .A . 16, M .A .32, is par t possessor of a new Plymouth sedan whic h y 1902 time instructor in physics at the Universit she recently won in a national radio con - . He expects to receive hi s Oscar Gorrell, prominent alumnus o f of Washington test . Mrs . Taylor has for years done writ- . degree in June . Mr . Drill was in- the University and former Eugene resi- Ph .D ing as a hobby in addition to her duties a s dent, died at the Mercy hospital in Rose - structor in physics at Oregon State College housewife and caring for her three chil- burg April 28 as the result of a hear t from 1920 to 1931 . dren . She was one of the charter member s attack suffered the week before . Mr . Gor- Olin C . Hadley is vice-principal of the l s of the Oregon chapter of Phi Mu, nationa rel] was active in student affairs and ath- high school at Gilroy, California, He i social sorority . married and has two sons, Ronald, who i s letics while on the campus and onc e Harold Davis, husband of Marion Dre- . Keith, who i s played as a star end on the varsity foot - fifteen years old, and W ka Lay Davis, has been declared this year s ball team . He was prominent in educa- seven . Pulitzer prize winner, carrying a one thou - tional work during the past years, havin g 191 7 sand dollar award, for his first novel , been superintendent of schools at Suther- . Huntington, ex-17, coach at "Honey in the Horn" which had alread y . His wife, Lula Hollis W lin and at Reedsport the Salem high school for the past twelv e won the 1935 Harper prize . The Davis , Craig Gorrell, 03, formerly taught in the , years, has resigned his position effectiv e now spending some time in Horn Springs Eu g ene high school and is now teachin g l Tennessee, plan to visit Oregon this sum- d at the close of the school year, and wil at Sutherlin . Surviving are the widow an devote his time to personal business . Mr . mer. - two daughters, Ardis Gorrell, 35, of Oak Huntington formerly served as coach a t Edgar D . Gurney, ex-24, who operated - land, and Helen Gorrell, who is a fresh The Dalles and at Anaconda, Montana . a service station in Eugene for some time , man in the University . has moved to San Francisco and may b e New postmaster at Vancouver, Wash- reached there at 102 Octavia . ington, is E . N . "Ned" Blythe, former ed- 1919 A daughter, Barbara D ., was born on itor of the Clark County Sun and presen t Following the publication early in May May 5 to Dr. and Mrs, Edwin E . Osgood WPA Administrator for Washington s of Claire Warner Churchills new book of 5523 Southwest Menefee Drive, Port- sixth district. "South of the Sunset, " came the announce- land . ment of its selection by the Junior Literary 1909 . The novel features Sacajawea as 1925 s Guild Dr. Mabel M . Akin, of Portland, wa its heroine and emphasis is on Lewis an d A daughter, Winnefred Elizabeth, wa s named president-elect of the Medical Wo- Clark and their party of explorers . Mrs . born on April 14 to Dorothy Dixon Wal l mens National asso-iation at the conven- e (Mrs . W . Arthur Wall) of NKana, North- . Aki n Churchill, after her graduation from th tion held in Kansas City in Mav . Dr University, taught school for six years i n ern Rhodesia, Africa . is president of the Portland Medical Wo- Oregon and Washington before taking u p Barton E . Peden, M .D . 25, has office s c mens club and director of the north Pacifi free-lance writing . in the Stinson building, Seattle . Dr . Pede n region of the Medical Womens National is an eye, ear, nose and throat specialist . Otis F . association . She is the wife of Dr . 1920 Harold L. McEwen, Portland resident, i s Akin, orthopedic surgeon, incoming presi- employed as a salesman for the Multno- . 20, M .A. 21 , dent of the Multnomah County Medica l Dr . Marcus ODay, B .A mah Fuel Oil company . His home is a t will instruct a class in applied electronics , society . 2334 Northeast Forty-seventh avenue . or the theory and practice of radio com- Charles Les l ie Towne is working towar d 1911 munication, in a new course to be offere d his Ph .D . in English at the University o f Ada Boone Coffey, ex-11, died in Port- at Reed College, Portland, next fall . Dr . Chicago . land on Mav 8 . Survivors are a brother , ODay received his Ph .D . from the Uni- 1 . A . Coffey, and sister, Mrs . Ros e versity of California. 1926 Powell . Lucille Perozzi, of Portland, supervises Mr . and Mrs . Roy W . Hall (Helen a 1922 rural training for graduate nurses . Miss Pearl Wilbur) live at 1708 Franklin street , Perozzi received her B .A . in 1926 and he r . California . Mrs . Hall is a sales - Mr . and Mrs . Dewey I . Noblitt (Kather- Oakland , Public Health Nursing Certificate in 1934 . lady in the Office furniture store . ine Morse) live at 1417 Langridge street r . Noblitt is a Lloyd E . Webster is associate professo Guy R . Kennedy, ex-ll, writes that h e Olympia, Washington . Mr of health and physical education and di - y is branch ma"aoer for the Standard Oi l Mrs . Ruth Austin Allen arrived recentl rector of the medical health service at th e e company of California in the Vallejo dis- from Malaga, Spain, to spend some tim University of Southern California, Mr . . She is th e trict . His son . Donald. transferred fro m in Woodburn with her parents Webster is married and has two children , wife of jay Cooke Allen, 11, ex-23, foreign Menlo Junior College last fall to the Uni- Nancy Grale, seven, and Edward F ., wh o correspondent for the Chicago Tribune . versity of Oregon and is working out at is three . member of the high school faculty . quarterback position this spring at footbal l Frances L . Meyer and Jasper V . Craw - McKinlay teaches English in th e practice . Muriel ford, ex-26, were married on April 4 . Th e 1914 George Washington high school, Los An- couple will live in Heppner where Mr . geles . Crawford is editor of the Heppner Gazett e A daughter, Nancy Eula, was born o n 1923 Times . May 8, to Mr . and Mrs, Frank E . Man- a Mrs . Mauna Loa Fallis Wharton, ex-23 , Mr . and Mrs . William M . Foley (Eul ning of Portland . and one year old son, Benson, live Eugene physician , accompanied her husband, Wallace S . Benson) Dr. Merle G. Howard, . Mailing address is route 2 , took special work in Chicago and at th e Wharton, executive secretary to Governo r near Medford Mayo clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, pre - Martin, when he spoke to Sigma Delta box 236. A member of the faculty at the San Fran- cisco Continuation high school is Aubre y G . Smith, member of the class of 1926 . Mr . Smith teaches economics and commer- cial law . Mrs . Irella Fly Crandall (Mrs . Richar d R . Crandall) and family live at 945 Schu- The Largest Fleet macher Drive, Los Angeles . She has thre e small children, Richard Jr ., eight years old , Ann, five, and Bradford, one . of Mr . and Mrs . Ted D . Mays (Helen Den - ham) and small daughter, Mary Carolyn , live at 1225 Twentieth street, Longview , Washington . Mildred E . Bateman is district supervis- Air-conditioned Trains or for the Municipal Bureau of Social Serv- ice of the Department of Public Welfar e for the city of Louisville, Kentucky . A daughter, Sharon Clarissa, was bor n in the West! on April 29 to Mr . and Mrs . Howard M . Hall of Portland . Evan G. Lapham is associate radio en- gineer of the Radio Section of the Elec- trical Division, Bureau of Standards , Washington. D . C. He is married and has a small daughter, Lois Eugenia, bor n March 19, 1935 . John H . Hulvey is superintendent o f schools at Spangle, Washington . His son , Charles, is six years old and daughter, Jes- sie Lee . was born February 2 . Ralph L . Lupher, B .A . 26, M .A . 27, is assistant professor of paleontology a t Washington State College . He receive d his Ph .D . from the California Institute o f Technology . Mrs . Lupher is the former Anna Q . Woodward, also a graduate o f 1926 . They have a small son, Daniel, bor n February 7 . George E . Meisinger manages a strin g of music studios . His home is in Salem a t 1032 Oak street. Milton O. Peterson is sales correspon- dent manager for the Hardware Mutual Casualty Company in San Francisco . Mr . and Mrs . Peterson have a small daughter , Judy, born February 10 . Alden W . Klotz is assistant state chem- ist and assistant state bacteriologist for Idaho . He is married and has three chil- dren, Alice, Jerrie and Bill, who are eight , six and four years old, respectively . French R. Moore, M .D . 26, is a medical IT WASNT long ago when you took hot weathe r lowest roundtrip drectlyi east and back . In officer in the U . S . Navy . Mailing addres s d for granted on summer trips . You just sat an effect, a free ticket through California . is U . S . N . Hospital, Great Lakes, Illinois . sweltered, no matter what kind of conveyanc e Summer roundtrips are surprisingly low . K . R. Blakeslee is educational adviser to you were riding in . For example, from Portland and Seattle t o C.C.C . company 1912, Mariposa, Califor- But this summer all that is changed . Even if Chicago and back : $86 in standard Pullmans nia . the temperature outside is so hot that you ca n (plus berth), $68 .80 in tourist sleeping ears fry eggs on the rocks, Southern Pacifics air- (plus berth) and $57 .35 in coaches and chair 1927 conditioned trains will be delightfully cool an d Ardath L . Caldwell and James V . Dan- cars . Leave any day from now until October 15. . Dan- . back by ielson were married on April 4 . Mrs clean, with no dust or dirt to soil your clothes Be midnight October 31 . ielson is dean of girls and mathematics in- Every Southern Pacific train to California and structor at the Oregon City high school the east is completely air-conditioned . this year and Mr . Danielson is with th e Cool Weather FIee t Sperry Flour company at Marshfield where This summer Southern Pacific will offer yo u the couple will later make their home . A daughter was born on May I to Mr . the largest fleet of air-conditioned trains in th e and Mrs . William C. Stonebreaker of Oak - west : ridge . Cascade, Klamath and Shasta (Portland - Ralph Tuck is employed as a minin g San Francisco), West Coast (Portland-Lo s geologist by the Alaska Railroad . He re- Angeles), Overland Limited and Pacific Lim- ceived his B .S . in 1927 and M .A . in 192 8 ited (San Francisco-Chicago), Sunset Limited front the University and has since bee n (San Francisco-New Orleans), Golden State awarded a Ph.D . degree by Cornell. He i s and , married and makes his home in Anchorage . Limited Apache (Los Angeles-Chicago) Free Travel Servic e and many more . Charles J . Murray, M .D . 27, is in charge Our new folder "Low Summer Fares East" i s of the admitting department, physiother- Free Ticket Through Californi a just off the press. For your copy, write J. A. Or - apy and jail wards for the Los Angeles On your roundtrip east from most western mandy, Dept . SU-6, 705 Pacific Building, Port - county general hospital . Oregon and Washington points, you can in- land, Oregon- We will be glad to answer an y Leon E . Kienholz, M .D . 27, is a psychia- chide California on either the going or return - travel questions, or prepare a detailed itinerary trist at Sing Sing prison and also has a pri- ing journey for not 1t more rail fare than th e for you . No charge, of course. vate practice in medicine and surgery. Hi s mailing address is 39 Ellis Place, Ossining , New York . 1928 Southern Pacific Dr . Jesse B . Helfrich, physician and sur- geon in the Medical Corps of the U. S . Army, is stationed at Fort Sam Houston , College, where she was affiliated with Kap- Alaska where Mr . King has a position with Texas . Dr . Helfrich is married and has two pa Kappa sorority . the Warnick Construction company . small children, William and Julia . Howard T . Jones, 3215 Northeast Fifty - A daughter . Karen P ., was born on April A daughter was born on April 26 to Dr. fourth avenue, Portland, husband of Goldi e 30 to Mr, and Mrs. Wallace C. Shearer, Jr. and Mrs . Darrell C . Bollam, of 3237 North - Campbell Jones, died May 11 . of Portland . east Fifty-eighth avenue, Portland . A son, George Reynolds, was born o n Irene Moore, music teacher in the ele- Dr . Everett N . Jones is living at Wol f April 24 to Mary Reynolds Story, ex-30 mentary and high schools at Lebanon , Point, Montana . He is married and ha s (Mrs . George W . Story) in Portland . plans to take a two-month course thi s three small sons and one daughter . Dr. Alice M . Bahrs is head of the scienc e summer in musical theory and pedagog y Margaret Woodson is practicing law i n department at St . Helens Hall junior col- at the Rochester conservatory, Rochester , Pasadena, California . Her address is 800 lege, Portland . New York , First Trust building. A son was born on May 2 to Mr . an d Harold Hatton has been engaged to Marian M . White is working for her M . Mrs . Carl H . Smith of 1361 West Elevent h coach football, basketball and track an d A . in retailing at New York University . avenue, Eugene . to teach physical education at the Coquill e Miss White is a member of Alpha Xi Delt a Mrs . Eleanor Hatch Howell, husban d high school for the coming year . Mr . Hat - sorority . and small daughter, Amy Jane, live at 2 7 ton has been coaching at Hermiston hig h Esterby avenue, in Santa Cruz, California . for the past two years and was a star ath- 1929 Amy will be one year old in June . lete while at the University . Mrs. Gertrude Bass Warner, M .A . 29 A son, John Frederick, was born o n (Hon .) and Mrs. Mabel l(lockars Garner , 26, left April 30 for New York to atten d 1931 the annual meeting of the American Asso- Douglas F . DeCew has a position as ciation of Museums . auditor with the Division of Audits, Secre- A . Murray Fowler, M .A . 29, is Englis h tary of States office . Mrs . DeCew is th e instructor at Purdue University, West La- former Helen B . Hieber, ex-33 Their fayette, Indiana . small son, Mark Gordon, will be one year Mr . and Mrs . E . Marvin Finzer (Elean- old in June . or Eastman) and two small daughters hav e A son, Michael Alexander, was born on moved from Seattle to snake their home i n April 26 to Janet Alexander Reagan (Mrs . Portland at 3914 Northeast Hazelfer n Elroy E . Reagan) of 2927 Northwest Ra- Place . leigh, Portland . Pauline Guthrie and William Lawson Howard King, ex-31, wife and daugh- cgin.e Lvr Baugh, Jr . were married in Los Angele s ter, have moved from Westfir to Cordova, Zadividuallv-Tailoted on May 1 . Mrs . Baugh is affiliated with Phi Mu sorority and Mu Phi Epsilon, wo- men s national music honorary . She i s choir director and soloist of the West Adams Presbyterian church in Los An- geles . Mr. Baugh is a graduate of Colum- bia University law school, New York, an d is practicing law in Los Angeles, where th e couple will live. Frances E . Notz, ex-29, grade school teacher at Gladstone the past year, ha s been elected to teach at Lake Grove 1936-7 . Dr . and Mrs . William C . Panton (Susa n M . Herington, ex-26) have purchased a home at 1600 Northwest Thirty-secon d avenue, Portland . Dr . Albert H . Schwichtenberg, fligh t surgeon in the U . S . Army Air Corps, i s stationed at Wright Field, Dayton, Ohio . Edvin Tingelstad, M .A . 29, of Parkland , Washington, is editor of the Pacific Lu- theran Herald and part-time teacher a t the Pacific Lutheran college . IT Mailing address for Harold F . Guide is 6703% Stafford avenue, Huntington Park , TAKES California . Mr . Guide is in the traffic de- partment of the Firestone Tire and Rubbe r company, Los Angeles . QUALITY Wilma V. Parish is now Mrs . Harry A . Wilson and lives at the Clinton Arm s apartments, Yakima, Washington . He r TO GET marriage was an event of December 25 , 1935 . TO TH E 1930 Shailer Peterson, B .A . 30, M .A . 32 , TO P head of the science department at the Uni- versity high school, has accepted an invi- tation to teach at the 1936 summer sessio n of the University of Minnesota . He wil l teach special methods of science and als o a course in chemistry. Marjorie Seiple and R . Wayne Steven s were married in Portland on May 9 . The couple will live at 329 East Alta street, i n Pendleton . James R . Sharp, ex-30, of Greenville , Illinois, is associated with C. E . Hoiles i n the practice of law, the firm known a s Hoiles and Sharp . Mr . Sharp has his Ph . l Mobilgas and J .D . degrees from the University o f Chicago . Marianne Ruth Long, ex-30, and Holli s P . Franklin were married in Kelso, Wash- ington on May 2. Mrs . Franklin attende d the University of Oregon and Whitman April 4 to Leone Barlow Edgar (Mrs . Joh n Edgar) of Wallace, Idaho . Carvis Artrip has been engaged to teac h social science and history and as athleti c ( WOMEn CH I LDRE instructor iii the Creswell high school fo r Ken and n 1936-7 . Mr . Artrip is now with the forest service . c7vavel atone, A daughter, Carolyn May, was born on May 2 to Sarah Rayburn Sunkler, ex-3 l ,.they find the luxury, comfort (Mrs . Clarence . Funkier) of Rout e and protection of home life, plus Three, Eugene . Walter C. Beck has resigned his positio n real economy, at either of the as a member of the faculty of Creswel l high school, to which he was elected fo r another year, to accept the principalshi p of the Mapleton school . John F . Putnam is engaged in the stock I-I.EAT MAN business at Fossil, Oregon. He is married and has a small son, Theodore, who wil l soon be four years old . HOTELS Ida J. Markuson, 31, M .A . 34, has been Portland s newest and finest elected to teach in the Junction City high school another year . Miss Markuson is a hotels. . .located in the hub of member of Phi Beta Kappa, honorary . the shopping and recreational Mildred and Miriam Swafford, of Ore- gon City, plan to spend their vacations o n district . . .are the unquestioned a tour of the British Isles, France and choice of experienced travelers. Belgium . Both are high school teachers . Jerome C . Lillie, ex-University lineman and for the past five years in charge o f athletics at St . Helens high school, ha s been named high school coach at Bend fo r 1936-7 . 1932 A Chi Psi legacy, Daniel Norman Long- aker III, was born March 12 in the Alta Bates hospital, Berkeley, to Mr . and Mrs . Daniel N. Longaker, Jr . Charles "Chappie" King, former Orego n baseball and basketball letterman, brough t his second team in the four years he has coached at Franklin high in Portland to the state tournament this year. His team ,

University of Oregon Summer Sessions

The regular six-week session at Eugene will start June 22 ; the session at Portland will begin a week earlier, June 15, with a week's recess for the N. E. A. meeting. Special leave will be arranged for Eugene students who wish to attend the N. E. A . The Post Session at Eugene, serving both regular sessions, will be held from August 3 to 28. Courses will be given in the following departments and professional schools : Anthro- pology, Archaeology, Architecture, Art, Athletic Coaching, Bacteriology, Botany, Busines s Administration, Chemistry, Drama, Economics, Education, English, Geography, German , History, Journalism, Latin, Law, Library Methods, Mathematics, Music, Philosophy , Physical Education, Physics, Physiology, Political Science, Psychology, Public Speaking, Romance Languages, and Sociology.

Other summer sessions in the State System o f For bulletins and information, addres s Higher Education are : Alfred Power s OREGON STATE COLLEGE, CORVALLI S Director of Summer Sessions OREGON NORMAL SCHOOL, MONMOUT H EASTERN OREGON NORMAL SCHOOL, LA GRAND E State System of Higher Education SOUTHERN OREGON NORMAL SCHOOL, ASHLAND 814 Oregon Building, Portland, Orego n

Authorized by State Board of Higher Education

which placed as co-champion of the Port - land league, finished in second place in th e state tournament . His 1934 champio n Portland team placed third in the stat e Do as the tournament . Ray Jewel of the Orego n squad and Arba Alter, Darell Leavens, an d Pat Patterson of the S .O .N .S . team ar e some of Chappies former basketball play- ers . In addition to his basketball duties , factory specifies Chappie took over the football coachin g duties at Franklin last fall and this sprin g is baseball coach for the Oregon Institute of Technology of Portland . He teaches the commercial subjects at Franklin . He di- vides his summers between teaching, play- ing professional baseball, and acting a s boys counselor at summer camps . Mr . and Mrs . Treve J . Jones (Virgini a E . Deifell, ex-33) have moved from Sale m to 2533 Northwest Marshall street, Port - land . Miss Helen Gordon and Wallace 3 . Campbell were married in Tuckahoe, Ne w York on April 11 . Mr . Campbell receive d his B .S . degree in 1932 and M .S . in 193 4 from the University . He is assistant secre- tary of the Cooperative League of Ameri- ca, in New York, where they will live . William T. Starr, M .A. 32, graduate as- sistant in Romance languages at the Uni- versity for the past two years, has bee n appointed instructor in French at the Uni- versity of Arizona . Mr . Starr received hi s B .S . in Education from Northeast Mis- souri State Teachers College and is no w working toward his Doctors degree. Mrs . Starr, to whom he was married in 1934, s the former Mega Ann Means, ex-35 . Dr . Alexander T . Ross is practicing med- icine in Ann Arbor, Michigan. He is mar- ried and has a small daughter, Judith, bor n last December . Elizabeth Shields Hall is teaching ele- mentary school at New York Institute for Aid of the Blind . Miss Hall received he r B .A . in English in 1932 and is a membe r of Phi Beta Kappa honorary . Nada L. Stocks, ex-32, is employed as occupational therapist at the Menninge r There is no safer Sanitarium, 3617 West Sixth, Topeka , Kansas. 1933 lubrication Mrs . Miriam Stafford Hamilton, daugh- ter of Dr . O . R . Stafford, dean of the lowe r There are about 40 places on your car that call for Iubrication at regu- division and service departments, has ar- lar intervals . If but one of those 40 points is missed, you are heading rived in Eugene from the University o f Iowa, where she has been doing graduat e for trouble-repairs, or perhaps a serious breakdown . work for the past two years, and will spend the summer with her parents . Her hus- When you take your car to the Smiling Associated Dealer who dis- band, Dr. Lyle Hamilton, who accompan- plays the "Factory-Specified" sign he lubricates it exactly as the manu- ied her, plans to leave shortly to accept a . He uses the individual factory lubrication chart o f position with the Standard Oil compan y facturer intended at Paulsboro, New Jersey. your car. Ile cant miss a single lubrication point. Also, he sees to i t Miss Dagne S . Lindholm and Clarence the battery, steering gear, lights, spark plugs, fan belt, and tires are J. Lundquist, ex-33, were married in Marc h and are living at 3715 Northeast Forty-sec- checked-that everything about your car is right for you to enjoy all ond avenue, Portland . the pleasures of Associated motoring . Miss Vivien B . Hammond and Philip A. Cogswell were married in Portland on May 8 . Mr . Cogswell is a member of Delta Up- silon fraternity on the campus . The coupl e Another Associated Sportcast will reside in Portland . Mailing address for Mrs . Jessie Ireland Track meets throughout the West are being presented on the air by Hanson is Demonstration Mines, Baguio, Smiling Associated Dealers. Another friendly service by those wh o Philippines . She was married last June t o Kenneth H . Hanson, formerly of Clacka- for eleven years have brought you football, basketball, crew races - mas, now connected with a mining com- and other amateur sports. pany at Baguio .

AREERS IN INSURANCE FOR COLLEGE"GRADUATES Eqg NATIONA L COLLEGIATE PERSONNEL BUREA U - rise Penn Mutual Life Insurance Compan y Independence Square Philadelphia ASSOCIATED OIL COMPANY Frances V . Drake, ex-33, and Willia m Delta Kappa, national education honor so - A . Palmer were married in Portland o n city at the Teachers College of Columbia April 22 . Mrs . Palmer is a member of Pi University . Mr . Bryant is working for hi s Beta Phi sorority and Mr . Palmer belongs Masters degree in music . to Sigma Chi fraternity . William L . Brown, ex-34, is employe d Dr . Donald M . Long, who has been as- as a news reporter on the Coos Bay Times . sociated with Dr . Melville S . Jones a t Miss Maurine Mattoon and Grant S . Springfield for the past three months, has Levins, ex- 34, were married at Drain o n left to practice in Marshfield. March 22 . They will live in Toledo, Ore- Dr. Glenn Ten Eyck, who is connecte d EDITOR AND MANAGER ROBERT K . ALLEN gon . with the Gebo hospital, Gebo, Wyoming . CIRCULATION MANAGER VELA Poweaa Margaret G . Canning, who lives at 233 was a recent visitor to Eugene , 0 OFFICER S Northeast Brazee, Portland, teaches at th e Georgie Boydstun in completing he r Woodmen- school. third year of teaching in the high school a t University of Oregon Alumni Association LaGrande D . Houghton, ex-34, formerl y Lakeview . with the bank of California, in Portland , Among new addresses received is tha t Ben R. Chandler, 13 President Arthur M. Geary, 10 Vice-President is now associated with the Standard Oi l of Mrs . Adele Wedermeyer Jones (Mrs . Willis S . Duniway, 33 Three-Year Director company . Madison R . Jones, Jr .) at 1324 East Mar- Henry Fowler, 14 Director Omar C quette Road, Chicago, Illinois . . Palmer, ex-32 One-Year Directo r 1935 Robert K . Allen, 32 Secretary-Treasurer, Andrew F . Murray is working in Lo s Grace N . Jernstedt, Elmira high schoo l Angeles for Richard Neutra, outstandin g Subscription price : One year, $2 ; three years, teacher, has been elected to teach commer- $5 ; Alumni subscribers to Ow OREGON are granted exponent of modernism in architecture . full membership in the Alumni Association . cial subjects next year in the Creswell hig h His address is 633 Fourteenth Street, San- National Advertising Representative : The Grad- school . ta Monica . uate Group, Inn, New York, Chicago, Detroit, San Francisco and Los Angeles . Clara M . Fuson, ex-35, and Russell D . 1934 Two weeks notice required for change of ad- Davis were married in Medford on Apri l dress. When ordering a change, please give bot h 19 . Mrs . Davis is a member of Delta Gam- the new address and the old address . Don K . Gordon, ex-34, died at the Goo d ma sorority on the campus . Mr . Davis at- Samaritan hospital, Portland, May 11, fol- Address all communications to : OLD OREGON , University of Oregon. Eugene, Oregon. tended Washington State College, late r lowing an operation for a ruptured appen- studying law at Oklahoma University an d dix . Mr. Gordon, who was widely known is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon . as a bridge instructor, won a state bridge at Tenth and Olive street, Eugene, from A . Harold H. Myers has a position with th e title while in his teens and annexed a Ralph Gray . Finzer Office Supply company in Seattle . championship in 1931 . He was a member Mr . and Mrs . Laurence B . Fletche r His mailing address is 2230 Fourth avenue . of Delta Tau Delta fraternity . Survivin g (Ruth G . Sammons) live at 2147 South - Marvel Read and sister, Margaret Read , are his parents, Mr . and Mrs . Sam Gordon , east Yamhill street, Portland . They wer e 31, are in San Francisco, living at apart- of Portland . married February 8 . Mrs . Fletcher is a ment nine, 1086 Bush street . Marvel i s Mr . and Mrs. Victor Bryant (Grace Bur - public health nurse on the staff of Portlan d working with A . Wilbur Woodruff, interio r nett, 32) are leaving New York City Ma y city schools . decorator, and Margaret has a positio n 28 to spend the summer in Eugene wit h Mr . and Mrs . Earl Raffety (Jane Carter, with Getz Brothers, exporters . their parents . They will be accompanie d ex-34) live in Stockton, California at 112 0 Announcement of the marriage Marc h by Mr . and Mrs . George F. Barron (Freda Virnal Way . Their small son, Charles, wa s 23 of Mae Schnellbacher, ex-35 to Mark E. J . Stadter, 33) . one year old in December . Cory, ex - 35, in San Francisco, has been re - Percy J . Edwards, Jr., ex- 34, has pur- Victor Bryant, whose home is in Eugene , ceived on the campus . Mrs . Cory is a chased the Cash and Carry grocery store has been elected to membership in Phi member of Alpha Gamma Delta sororit y and of Phi Chi Theta honorary . Mr. Cor y is a member of Phi Kappa Psi . He is no w with the RKO film company in San Fran- cisco where the couple is living , Tames Emmett, who received a scholar - ship to New York University school of re - tailing last year, was the only student fro m that University accepted by William Ran- dolph Hearst for ten positions offered b y him to eastern college students . The place will be general advertising work in eithe r WHAT YOU you acquire home, radio, magazine or newspaper field . Mr. furnishings, busi- Emmett is a Sigma Nu . HAVE ness, automobile Miss Lois Mathews and James K . Watts consumer 1912 b y A and other posses- INS. CO. OF NORTH AMERICA were married in Vancouver, Washingto n sions, see to it that your protective program on May 2 . Mr . Watts is a member of Ph i Gamma Delta fraternity and is teaching keeps pace with your property gains . Protect and coaching in the high school at Thurs- ton . what you have with dependable insurance, Herbert L . Large, who has been em- ployed by the United States National bank as typified by the policies of Insurance of Portland, has been transferred to th e Eugene branch of the bank . He is a so n Company of North America, oldest Amer- of Mayor Elisha Large of Eugene . Eliza Hardman, ex-35, is studying as a n ican fire and marine insurance company, interne at the Harbor View hospital i n Seattle . founded 1792 . Consult the North Americ a Caroline Rogers, ex 35, is society editor of the Spokane Press at Spokane, Wash- Agent in your section . . . he will advise ington . you regarding a proper insurance Lloyd G . Humphreys, who received hi s program . B .S . last June, and Frederick A . Courts , who received his M .A . in September, hav e been appointed to the psychology depart- ment of Stanford University . Mr. Court s Insurance Company of received a fellowship and Mr. Humphrey s an assistantship . Both were assistants i n psychology at the University fast year . Mr . Humphreys is at present working unde r North America Dr . Edmund S . Conklin, former head of the psychology department here, at the PHILADELPHI A University of Indiana, and expects to re- ceive his M .A . there this year . Mr . Court s and its affiliated companies write bractically every form of insurance is an instructor in psychology at Ree d except life College .

Mabel Maule, M .A. 35 (Sept .) teache s in the Franklin High school, Portland . Miss Maule has her A .B . degree from th e University of South Dakota . Gilbert A. Wellington has a position o n the advertising staff of the Oregon Jour- nal . in Portland . Rolla Stoddard Goold, B .S . 35 (Sept . ) has enrolled for graduate study in socia l work at the University of Washington . 1936 When the Fenger-IIall company, Ltd . , national newspaper representatives, ope n their Portland office in June, Ralph S. Schomp, ex- 36, will act as manager. Sinc e 1934, he has served as assistant graduat e manager at the University and while in school was assistant editor of the Oregan a during his senior year and also did con- siderable work on the business staff of th e Oregon Emerald . He is a member of Ph i Delta Theta fraternity . Nancy Weston, ex-36, and Howard H . Hosken, ex-38, were married April 11 an d are making their home in Portland . Mrs . Hosken is a member of Pi Beta Phi an d Mr . Hosken belongs to Alpha Tau Omega . Mabel E . Eidson, ex-38, and E. Garfield Rear, ex-36, were married in Eugene on May 1 . Eleanor L . Norblad, ex-36, and he r mother, Mrs . A . W . Norblad, of Astoria , sailed from San Francisco, in April, on a world cruise . They plan to be gone si x months . Virgil C . Larson, B .A . 36 (Jan.) is at - tending the University of Oregon Medica l School . His home address is 2525 South - west Sixteenth Avenue, Portland .

KEEPS MOTORS CLEANER . . . HAS LONGER LUBRICATING LIF E Made i. Poo aae-St el Pwceas

TRITON does everything any fine carbon to cause knocking with anygrad e motor oil can do to protect your moto r of gasoline that was satisfactory at th e -and in addition gives you a plus fea- start . ture found in no other oil . No wonder so many new car dealers , It keeps your motor cleaner-prevent s fleet operators, mechanics and other ex- the accumulation of carbon that cause s perts are enthusiastic about Triton. the motor to knock. Use Triton in your own car . Not e Triton is so pure, due to the Propane - how it smooths out your motor in a Solvent process by which it is refined , few thousand miles-improves your gas- that it forms almost no carbon in the oline and oil mileage and reduces oper- combustion chamber . Previous carbo n ating costs . It costs only 30e a quart deposits burn, peel off and blow out in sealed cans . (35c in Nevada, Arizon a the exhaust as you drive . and New Mexico . ) Tests have proved that a new car ru n with Triton will never develop enoug h UNION OIL COMPANY

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