SIXTY-NINTH ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT

Graduation Exercises

T uESDAY MoRNING, MAY T HIRTY- FIRST

MEN's GYMNASIUM, TEN o'CLocK

MCMXXXVIII

Oregon State College

Program

PRELUDE-I. Overture "Egmont" L ...... Ludwig von Beethoven 2. "Parting from Leonore" Symphony...... J Raff Second Movement The RO.T.C. Band H. L. Beard, Conductor PROCESSIONAL-"March et Cortege," from "La Reine de Saba" ------Charles Gounod The audience is requested to remain seated throughout the processional, rising when the Band takes up the next number, the National Anthem, and continuing to stand until after the Invocation. THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER INVOCATION-The Reverend Ernest William Warrington, M. A., Professor of Religion "Vainement, rna bien aimee," from "LeRoi d'Ys" ...... Eduard Lalo "The Last Song"------.lames H. Rogers Lorance Dossett, Tenor Paul Petri-Accompanist GREETINGS- The Honorable Willard L. Marks, B.S., President of the State of Higher Education ADDRESs-"Commencement-What Now?" Joseph Mason Artman, B.A., B.D., Editor of "Character in Everyday Life" Chicago "Che faro senza Euridice," from "Orfeo" ...... C. W. von Gluck "Russian Lament" ------Teresa del Riego Matilda Holst, Mezzo Soprano Paul Petri-Accompanist CoNFERRING OF DEGREEs-George W. Peavy, M.S.F., Sc.D., LL.D., President of State College CHARGE TO THE CLASS-Frederick Maurice Hunter, Ed.D., LL.D., Chancellor of the Oregon State System of Higher Education ALMA MATER PosTLUDE-Grand March, "The University" ...... Goldman The R.O.T.C. Band THIS booklet, containing the program of the graduation exercises, is designed to be an official memorandum of the aca­ demic year. It records, in addi­ tion to the degrees granted, the honors conferred, distinction in scholarship, prizes and awards received by students, and gifts and grants made to the institu­ tion or its departments. Senior Honor Students

Elections for June 1938 Senior honors are conferred by the faculty Administrative Council upon those members of the graduating class, candidates for a bachelor's degree, who throughout their entire college course have maintained the highest scholastic standing in their respective schools. A student to be eli~ible to such honor must have made a grade-point average of 3.25 or higher. Election is hmited to ten per cent of the graduating members of a school.

SCIENCE

DOROTHY FRANCES REVELL CLARA JANE CHAPMAN }OHN KEPLINGER FISHER WILFRID }OSEPH DIXON }OHN REUTER PERKINS THOMAS FRANCIS O'NEILL

AGRICULTURE

IVAN RAE BIERLY HARRY }AMES ENDICOTT ROBERT WILCOX ELDEN DWAYNE YEOMAN GERALD RAYMOND KuBIN ELizABETH KATHARINE LATHROP TURNER HANKS BOND

EDUCATION

HARRY EDWIN DAWSON EVANGELINE MILNE RussELL HoLCOMB GoDARD VIOLA MAE SMITH

ENGINEERING

HENRY Cno MEINERS ALF HUNDERE JAMEs CHASE HowLAND MILAN KNEZEVICH VICTOR STUART CARSON BRITT MAGRAW SMITH RussELL WHITTINGTON REVELL GEORGE WRIGHT BENNETT HoLLY ADAMs CoRNELL FRANK DouGLAS MoRGAN PHIL R. BROWNELL

FORESTRY EuGENE GoRDON TowER OscAR HEINTZ, ]R. ERNEST PoLLARD TAYLOR SAM BERTRAM TAYLOR PAUL 0SMO TOLONEN RoY C. BRADY CHARLES P. SAMSON

HOME ECONOMICS

ETHEL MARGARET MAXWELL JOAN ORR }EAN MACKLIN WHITELAW VALERIA ANNA COON FRANCES }ENSEN ROBERTA ALICE }OHNSON EMMA MAE DENYER LENORA HESSLER CoNSTANCE M. NoRTON KATHLEEN AsToN MARY LoursE CocKEFAIR

PHARMACY

PHILIP GuLICK AcKERMAN MARY pARMELEE HALL

SECRETARIAL SCIENCE

RAYMOND FREDERICH SIEGENTHALER HAZEL RAY PLUMMER EDNA MARGARET IIAMS MINNIE LEONA MooRE BARBARA ELIZABETH WATERMAN

( 3 ) HONOR GRADUATES, MILITARY DEPARTMENT

Under the regulations of the War Department, each college or university maintaining a Reserve Officers' Training Corps unit may designate at the close of the academic year as h onor graduates five per cent of the total number of students enrolled in each unit. The students designated must be graduates of the institution and of the Reserve Officers' Train­ ing Corps, selected on the basis of character, academic grades, and demonstrated efficiency in military work.

R.A YMOND FREDERICH SIEGENTHALER Infantry Unit J ENE EARL MILLS HOLLY ADAMS CORNELL CHARLES P. SAMSON STANLEY ROBERT KELLEY Field Artillery Unit Engineer Unit

1tt. .;J-t. tJrt. v.

( 4 ) Baccalaureate Degrees

School of Science

Earl Leroy Packard, D ean The School of Science in the Oregon State System of Higher Education, located at the State College, provides major curricula in science for students whose objective is a liberal education, and professional preparation for students planning to enter some scholarly occupa­ tion in the realm of science. Students major in general science and in the special sciences of bacteriology, botany, chemistry, entomology, geology, mathematics, physics, and zoology.

BACHELORS OF ARTS

PEARL ALBERT JoHN MARTIN PIERSON, JR. Portla nd Portland HELEN ALDRICH ELIZABETH REEVES Seaside Oak Grove HOWARD LEGRANDE CHERRY LAURA ESTHER REICHEN Corvallis Portland WILFRID JosEPH DrxoN RoBERT LEoN RosE Portland Parkdale CYRIL FELDSTEIN b .VIN BARRY TARSHIS San Francisco, California Portland JoHN KEPLINGER FrsHER CoNSTANCE M. WILLARD La Grande Portland LEROY WILLIAM JENSEN FREDERIC HARRIS YouNG Portland Sheridan

BACHELORS oF SciENCE

CONRAD AUSTANCE ANDERSON HowARD EARL McCURDY Cove Portland LoGAN ELLSWORTH ANDERSON, JR. IAN DONALD MACDONALD Cove Milwaukie DoNALD WITHERS BAILEY CLARK wALTER MILES The Dalles Portland ALBERT 0DEEN BARTELL AARON MILLER Portland Portland JAMES TREVOR BRYANT RICHARD HoDGEs MoTE Portland Corvallis \VILLIAM NELSON BURNS MAURICE JoHN MuNDORFF Corvallis Cornelius WILLIAM ROBERT CAMPBELL DoNALD WILBERT NEILSON Portland Medford CLARA JANE CHAPMAN !VAN KAYE NICHOLS Portland Oregon City GEORGE ROBERT COE THOMAS FRANCIS O'NEILL Sacramento, California Forest Grove JAMES FREDERICK COOK MAX HORTON PARROTT Myrtle Creek Portland CONRAD ALPHONSE DELATEUR JoHN REUTER PERKINS Hoquiam, Washington Roseburg IVAN MERWIN DUNCAN LENN MORRIS PIERSON Burns La Grande LoYAL MooRE FELTS DARIO MICHAEL RASCHIO Portland Portland CHARLES WESLEY FLUKE N oEL BuRDETT RAwLs Portland Corvallis WILLIAM GRAF D o ROTHY FRANCES REVELL Shedd WILFRED LAWRENCE GRENFELL 'WILLIAM WESLEY RICHARDSON McMinnville Portland WILLIAM EDWIN JoNEs JonN ALviN RowLAND Kelso, Washington Eugene WILLIAM MARTIN KAHN LoYD OTTo ScHAAD Portland Newberg RoBERT WINDLE LAWRENCE RoGER ScoTT Corvallis Etiwanda, California BEN YrM Lru RUTH ZONA SMITH Portland Portland RrcHARD HARDING McBEE THOMAS JEFFERSON TAYLOR, JR. Eugene Olympra, Washington ( 5 ) School of Science-Continued

RoscoE CLARENCE WILSON HERBERT HARRMENN WYMORE Portland Oregon City

School of Agriculture

William Alfred Schoenfeld, Dean

The School of Agriculture offers major curricula in general agriculture; in agricultural economics and in farm management; in animal industries, including animal husbandry, dairy production, dairy manufacturing, fish and game management, and poultry husbandry; in plant industries, including farm crops, horticulture (landscape construction and maintenance, pomology, vegetable crops), and soils; in agricultural education; in agricultural engineering; tn food products industries; and in agricultural technology.

BACHELORS OF SciENCE

RICHARD WALTER BAILEY CHARLES ELDON HUTCHINSON Milwaukie North Powder IVAN RAE BIERLY GEORGE LEIGH HYSLOP Gervais Corvallis GEORGE MARTIN BLAKELY, JR. LLOYD RussELL JAcKsON Redmond Union MELVIN ERNEST BoAK WALTER JOHN JENDRZEJEWSKI Bandon Hermiston TURNER HANKS BOND RonERT DEAN JONES La Grande Corvallis WILL HARTLEY BROWN EARLE FRED J OSSY Roseburg Portland JAMES RALPH CALLAWAY CHESTER EDWIN KEBBE Long Beach, California Mohler PROSSER EvERETT CLARK 0RME STERLING KELLETT Portland Vancouver, Washington ROBERT LAGRANDE CLARK JAMES WILLIAM KERNS Portland Klamath Falls FREDERICK KARL CRAMER GERALD RAYMOND KuniN The Dalles Salem WILLARD NELSON CRAWFORD KATHARINE ELIZABETH LATHROP Corvallis Central Point KEITH EDWIN DAVIS GENE MAURICE LEAR Lincoln, Nebraska Condon JoHN D . DuRR JAMES R USSELL LEEKLEY Bellingham, Washington Lake Grove GEORGE 0. ELLE WILLIAM MONROE LEVEE Mtlwaukie Corvallis HARRY JAMES ENDICOTT MUREL ALLEN LONG Springfield Malin PHILLIP WARD FARRELL JoHN ALLAN McCoRMICK Gateway Portland NORMAN FLETCHER GEORGE STANNARD McCRACKEN Salem Corvallis MAURICE GILBERT FRAKES JoHN WESLEY McKEAN Ontario Roseburg PAUL ANTHONY FRASER WILLIAM PRESTON McKINNEY Moro Wasco ANDREW OSCAR FREDERICKSON RoBERT EARL McMAHAN Portland Hillsboro GEORGE TATSUO FUJINAKA CARL JAMES McMuRPHY Portland Palo Alto, California VIRGIL MAURICE GARNER JAMES DEWITT McWILLIAMS Albany Portland E. LYNN GUENTHER M ERLE HINRICHS MARKLEY Hillsboro Hood River HUGH PoMEROY HANNA ALPHONS RICHARD MELIS Independence Mist ROBERT w. HENDERSON GERALD NIBLER Hermiston Aurora BAYARD WALTER HILLWAY MARVIN BOONE NOBLE Sheridan Corvallis RonERT CLARK HoLLOWAY DEAN EDGAR PAINTER Portland Corvallis MARION GEORGE HosKINS FRANK JosEPH PAVELEK Dundee Woodburn ( 6 ) School of Agriculture-Continued

GEORGE LEWIS PENROSE EDWIN ]AMES STASTNY Corvallis Malin HERSEL WILLIAM PEYREE WILLIAM LowELL STEEN Independence Milton LowELL RoBERT PFARR Rov EDGAR STOUT San Francisco, California Corvallis WALDO ASHMEAD RICHES EDWIN Lours STRACK Turner Portland JIM RIDDERS DoN H. TELFORD Albany Troutdale RALPH CLIFFORD RITTENOUR PALMER STANLEY TORVEND Portland Silverton ROBERT WHIPPLE ROOT STEPHEN HENRY VAN WOUDENBERG Medford Corvallis HARRY RuDOLPH SANDQUIST ROBERT WILSON WILCOX Roseburg Oakland RoBERT HowARD SAWYER HARVEY LOMAN WOLFE De lake Antelope EDWARD HAROLD SCHEIFER ELDEN DEWAYNE YEOMAN Corvallis Tillamook GEORGE DIXON SHAMBROOK CECIL JuLIUS YouNGSTROM Roseburg Prin'eville DAVID STANLEY SHEPARD Salem

School of Education

James Ralph Jewell, Dean Carl Walter Salser, Assistant Dean

The School of Education at the State College offers major curricula preparing for teach­ ing the biological and physical sciences, mathematics, agriculture, home economics, industrial arts, secretarial science, and approved combinations of subjects, and for educational and vocational guidance.

BACHELORS OF ARTS

JEAN DoROTHY CooPER KATHRYN ELDORIS RowE Corvallis Salem BETTY KIMMEL FRANCES STAVER South Pasadena, California Portland EvANGELINE MILNE Lors DELPHINE TAYLOR Corvallis Forest Grove

BACHELORs OF SciENCE

DoROTHY HARRIETT BAILIE EvA MARv KLENK Klamath Falls Eugene CLEM c. CLARKE VroLET McMuRTREY Butte Falls Portland SHERMAN PAUL CROW RICHARD ELDON MARTIN Joseph Hermiston CHARLES LAUGHERY DAWSON ARTHUR DITTMAR MERRYMAN Corvallis Corvallis HARRY EDWIN DAWSON THELMA AGNETA MILLER Joseph The Dalles MILDRED EVELYN DEAL BrcKtE GAvEL MoE Alsea Corvallis AARON CORNELIUS FUNK FRANK MICHAEL NIHIL Corvallis San Francisco, California GRETCHEN MARION GAMER OLIVER ERIC RAIKKO Salem Portland GEORGE ANGUS GILLIS Lors MAUD REEDY Portland Klamath Falls RussELL HOLCOMB GoDARD MARY MARIAN ROMITI Tillamook St. Helens JAMES CHARLES HEARTWELL RoBERT GEoRGE RosENSTIEL Long Beach, California Portland DOROTHY CAVANAUGH HILL LLOYD GLENN SEELY Portland Beatty VroLA MAE Sv:rTH Mayville ( 7 ) School of Education-Continued

DORIS EVELYN SUTER }OHN LUDWIG WATTS Corvallis Burlingame, California THOMAS ALBERT SwANSON RICHARD 0SMOTHERLY WELLINGTON The Dalles Portland ERLING HENRY THORSEN MELVIN CLAYTON WILSON Bellingham, Washington Independence

School of Engineering

Richard Harold Dearborn, Dean

The School of Engineering and Industrial Arts offers major curricula in chemical engi­ neering with an option in industrial chemistry; in civil engineering with an option in high­ way engineering; in electrical engineering with options in power and communications; in mechanical engineering with an option in aeronauhcal engineering; in industrial arts educa­ tion and in industrial administration; with business options in all the engineering curricula.

BACHELORS OF SciENCE

DUANE WRIGHT ACKERSON JAMES DENMAN DARBY Milwaukie Roseburg KENNETH WARD ANDERSON CLYDE RoBINSON DEAN, JR. Portland Portland ROBERT VINCENT ANDREWS LAWRENCE MERTON DELONG Portland Portland AUSTIN WILLARD ANGELL, JR. Lours REYNOLD DIETRICH Portland Portland DWIGHT IRWIN BAKER STEARNS DAVID EASON Gresham Salem MELVIN LEE-ROY BARMETTLOR NoRMAN EsTBERG Portland Portland ARTHUR WALLER BAUM REO RAE FAUS Roseburg Merrill FRED HERMAN BEHRENS WILLIAM HENRY FISHER Baker Medford .,_ GEORGE WRIGHT BENNETT EINER Jo$ FLOOD Portland Portland STANTON D. BENNETT THOMAS ROBERT FORSTER Forest Grove Portland ROBERT CALDWELL BLACKLEDGE THEODORE NEVILLE FRAZEE Corvallis Albany JoHN HALBERT BoNER JOHN HUBERT GALLAGHER, JR. , California Portland RoBERT WESLEY BROWN RICHARD CHARLES GEARHART Baker Portland PHIL R BROWNELL EDWARD ZIGMUND GRAY Salem Portland CECIL SAMUEL BUCK HARRISON GREENOUGH Eugene Coquille HENRY LEE BURNS ROBERT NELSON HACKETT Corvallis Hood River MARION EuGENE CARL JACK IRVING HALL Hubbard Schenectady, ORRIS ALVIN CARNEGIE Louis PHILIP HANSON Albany Paisley HowARD FRANCIS CARNES THOMAS BURKE HAYES Roseburg Pendleton VICTOR STUART CARSON HERBERT FAHY HIATT Corvallis Portland CARL HAL CHAMBERLIN ROBERT EUGENE HILL Portland Vale HowARD WAYNE CHRISTENSON JoHN MEIER HILPERT Portland Bethlehem, CLAUDE BERT CHRISTIANSEN WILLIAM CHIPMAN HOLLEY Ontario Klamath Falls FREDERICK BETZ CLAUSSEN LAWRENCE MERRIL HOOVER Portland Hood River CLIFTON THEODORE CLEMENS JAMES CHASE HOWLAND Corvallis HOLLY ADAMS CORNELL AL~rlf~~D;;~ Portland Seaside THOMAS NELSON CREACY DoRAN A. HusToN Corvallis Prineville GEORGE MURRAY CUNNINGHA}( JOHN WINKLEY IRVINE Portland Corvallis ( 8 ) School of Engineering-Continued

LEONARD GEORGE JEWETT WILLIAM PITTAM Portland North Bend RICHARD HENRY JoHANNSEN EMORY ELBERT REITZ Lebanon Salem \VILLIAM SHIRLEY J oNES RussELL WHITTINGTON REvELL Corvallis Bonanza STANLEY RODERT KELLEY HARRY \VILBER RICHARDS Portland Molalla LEONARD MARTIN KLEIN JAMES J. ROBERTSON Medford Oswego MILAN KN EZEVICH FRANCIS HAROLD RosE Portland Oswego LLOYD MILO LANDWEHR VERNON HART ROSEBRAUGH Astoria Aloha EMMETT PATRICK McCoRMICK BERT RoRICK ScOTT, JR. Wapato, Washington Avalon, California MILTON MAEDA VERNON EDGAR SEELEY Portland Independence FRANCIS JosEPH MARKS CLYDE KEENER SHERMAN Portland Klamath Falls JACK MARTIN BRITT MAGRAW SMITH Hermiston Milwaukie LAWRENCE WILLIAM MAYER KENNETH JAMES SMOUSE Helena, Montana lone HERBERT JoHN MEIER DoNALD SNYDER Corvalhs Glendale HENRY CJTO MEINERS CHARLES EDWARD STOCKMAN Portland Baker LAURENCE REGNELL METCALF MALCOLM WINSTON STRANSKY Hood River Milwaukie HERBERT ADOLPH MOHR SAMUEL DIETRICH TABER Hillsboro Los Angeles, California FRANK DouGLAs MoRGAN WILLIAM RICHARD TAYLOR Hermiston Portland RoBERT DEWAR MoRRIS u. LAYTON UPSON Portland Portland JOHN EDWARDS MOWICK LESTER OscAR VAN BLARICOM Hammond Corvallis HAROLD CHANDLER NELSON FRANKLIN HENRY VAN PELT Durkee Salem ALBERT PETER NICOL SELM ER 0LENE WAKE Corvallis Corvallis THOMAS GILBERT NocK ROBERT WELTY Baker The Dalles BURTON FLOYD O'MEALY STILLMAN JosEPH WEsSELA Portland Scottsburg TURE EDWARD OTHMAN GORDON WONG Astoria Portland ELIOT ROOT PECK FREDERICK ZtTZER Corvallis Portland DoNALD EARL PHELPS JoHN WILFRED ZwicK McMinnville Portland School of Forestry

George Wilcox Peavy, Dean Earl George Mason, Assistant to the Dean The School of Forestry offers major curricula in the following fields: technical forestry (with an option in forest recreation), logging engineering, and wood products.

BACHELORS OF SCIENCE

KEMUEL KENYON BLACKER WALTER HowARD CAMPBELL Corvallis Prairie City RODERICK KENYON BLACKER JonN LEwis CARLICH Corvallis Portland RoY C. BRADY HOMER EUGENE CARSON Silverton Corvallis JoHN SEBASTIAN BRANDIS EDWARD ALEXANDER CoNGDON Portland KENNETH ARTHUR BURKHOLDER WILBUR DAVID COOPER Portland Parkdale JOSEPH CALLAGHAN MELVIN EMERSON CRAWFORD Alturas, California Corvallis

( 9 ) School of Forestry-Continued

HAROLD ANTHONY DAHL EDWARD H. McLEAN Troutdale Medford RALPH WILLIAM DEMPSEY JENE EARL MILLS Rickreall Zigzag RoY CLIFFORD EutGREN JENE Moss Portland Somerton, Arizona CHARLES RICHARD FISHER GEORGE THEODORE MUELLER La Grande Pasadena, California MAURICE KELLY Fox FRANK RoDNEY PHILLIPS Portland Corvallis CHARLES DEMOTTE FREELAND WILLIAM McDoNALD RIGGS Portland LaFollette, Tennessee HEATH VALE HALL DONALD CARL ROHN Salem Weston • FORREST RAYMOND HANSON CHARLES P. SAMSON Grants Pass Corvallis GEORGE HIGH HARRINGTON FLOYD \VINPIELD ScoTT Oregon City Marshfield OscAR HEINTZ, JR. HowARD JAMES SLONECKER Portland Corvallis CHESTER DoUGLAS HOLE HARTWELL SPRINGER Jennings Lodge Dierks, Arkansas GEORGE PACKEY HowATT BERTRAM SAM TAYLOR Corvallis Corvallis ROBERT LINCOLN HUDSON ERNEST POLLARD TAYLOR Pendleton Portland JOHN LAURENCE JEFFERSON GLENN ANDREW THOMPSON Upland, California Salem WALTER RoBERT JoHNSON PAuL OsMo ToLONEN Portland Astoria EvAN ENNis JoNES GoRDoN EuGENE TowER Eugene Salem DAVID HUGH KERR STEPHEN D. WAITE La Porte City, Iowa Toledo FRANK KINCAID J. MILO WALTER Portland Portland ROBERT MARSHALL KING CLAYTON NEET WEAVER Oregon City Myrtle Creek RAYMOND WALTER KNUDSON FRANK CAROL WHEELER Glenns Ferry, Idaho Corvallis DoNALD RoYcE LANG CLIFFORD LESLIE WHITTEN Sweet Home Pondosa JoHN EowARD LETOUII:NEUX Ross WooDROw WILLIAMS Portland Corvallis LEONARD BRUCE LoGAN FRED ELMER WoOLF Portland Pasadena, California BERNARD McCLENDON HERBERT AusTIN YocoM O'Brien Myrtle Creek FREMONT McCoMn Ross ANDREW YouNGBLOOD Portland Corvallis WILLIAM THOMAS McGREER Redmond

School of Home Economics

Ava B. Milam, Dean

The School of Home Economics offers instruction in the arts and sciences, particularly as applied in the home and family life, through departments of clothing, textiles, and related arts; foods and nutrition; home economics education; household administration, including chila development and parent education; and institutional management. Two types of major curricula in home economics are offered, one emphasizing the liberal, the other the profes­ sional phases.

BACHELORS OF ARTS

ANNA GERTRUDE BAKER GLADYS EMMA HEDLUND Bend Brownsville MARY HoPE CHAMBERLIN LAURA ELIZABETH HUDDLESTON Corvallis Corvallis HoPE HAMILTON CHATFIELD HILDA ETTA MYERS Portland Condon

( 10 ) School of Home Economics-Continued

JoAN ELIZABETH ORR DoRis HELEN SPEARS Pendleton Portland LENORE REYNOLDS ELIZABETH CHELAN WHITE Portland Portland HARRIET RICHARDS SLAYTON HAZEL GLENN WHITTIG Corvallis Caldwell, Idaho

BACHELORS OF SciENCE

EVELYN ANNA ALNUTT SuzANNE HoF Corvallis Pasadena, California COSMA 0VIDIA ARNOLD MARY ELIZABETH HuNT Portland Eugene KATHLEEN ELIZABETH ASTON IIELEN FLORENCE JACOBSON Portland Portland LoLA RUSHING BALLINGER ELLEN JARVINEN Oakland, California Astoria LAURA WAGGONER BAYLES FRANCES JENSEN Salem Corvalhs JULIA MARIAN BENNETT RoBERTA ALICE JoHNSON Portland Portland DoROTHY ELIZABETH BrsHOP NANCY PEARL KARR Portland Portland CAROL ELIZABETH BOYD EMILY MAE KENNETH Bend Astoria PAULA MAE BREUER ARVELLA RosE KuBIN Myrtle Point Salem MARJORIE FLORENCE BRITTON BARBARA ELIZABETH LARSON Portland Marshfield LOIS l. BURCHARD KATHRYN MAY LEGRAND Roseburg Portland HELEN MARGARET CLARK KATHLEEN JEAN McCEAE Portland Monmouth MARY LOUISE COCKEFAIR EsTHER FRANCES McGREw Portland VI~G~~:~n<':o';;~sconsin JUNE MAY MARCH Oswego Corvallis VALERIA ANNA CooN MARGARET ETHEL MAXWELL Huntington Park, California Portland DoLORES MAE DELONG MARY JANE MENIG Portland Portland EMMA MAE DENYER LOIS ELAINE METCALF Turner Portland GENEVIEVE MATIE EASTLING MARJORIE NOREEN METZGER Roseburg Salem MILDRED LILLIAN ECKMAN RuTH JosEPHINE MITCHELL Corvallis Grants Pass SuE !DELL EowARDES ELIZABETH ANN NAYLOR Corinth, New York Portland MILDRED IRENE ETTER MARJORIE EMMA NISH Pilot Rock Mikkalo HELEN BESS FIFER CoNSTANCE BIRD NoRToN Portland Corvallis ANNABELLE PALMER FISHER EDNA ELLEN OTT Roseburg Hermiston CARoL FosTER JEAN AVIS PAULSEN Arcata, California Astoria FLORENCE AGNES FROMHERZ ELINORE SHIELDS PENROSE Lebanon Corvallis MARY SUMIE FUJII GEORGIA CAROL PHILPOTT Nampa, Idaho Coquille VIRGINIA GALLAGHER MILDRED GEORGENE PITNEY Portland Junction City HELEN MARY GEORGE MARGARET LouiSE PoRTER Corvallis Vancouver, Washington MARY ELOISE GORRILL EvELYN GRACE PowELL Oakland, California Tyee MARIETTA GERTRUDE GRANDY PATRICIA PRESTON Tigard Corvallis FERRIS JANE GREEN DoROTHY ALICE PRICE Portland Corvallis EILEEN HEALY HELEN REWA Worland, Wyoming Portland MARGARET CELIA HEINRICH BERNADETTE RICHMOND Corvallis Gardiner LENORA HESSLER MAXINE RIGGS Dayton Portland

( 11 ) School of Home Economics-Continued

LENA SANTORO JEAN THOMPSON Beaverton Corvallis BIRNEY ODESSA SCHEUERMAN MARIGENE TICHBORNE Vernonia Portland MARTHA SCHLAPKOHL LETTIE MARSH WARRINGTON Ontario Corvallis RunY MAE ScuLLEN MARGARET RosA W ASNER Corvallis Portland CATHERINE DORIS SIMMONDS VELMA BERNICE WEAVER Bonners Ferry, Idaho Corvallis VIRGINIA SPENCE JEAN MACKLIN WHITELAW Enterprise Corvallis GERALDINE LENA SPICER MEREDITH GENE WILDER Portland Portland MARGARET DE STEVENSON DoROTHY MAE WITCHER Bandon Cottage Grove NoRMA MYRTLE STORLI CAROL LEE YocuM Portland Corvallis EVELEYN PEARL YOKOM Mt. Vernon

Nursing Education

Richard Benjamin Dillehunt, Dean Medical School

These students in nursing education who have taken their freshman and sophomore work on this campus are receiving their degrees from the State College after completing their training at the University of Oregon Medical School, Portland.

BACHELORS OF ARTS

LUCILLE KATHRYN AYRES ORA MAE JENNINGS Junction City Corvallis MARGARET RUTH PowERS Corvallis

BACHELOR OF SciENCE

ELIZABETH ANN S>

School of Pharmacy

Adolph Ziefle, Dean

The School of Pharmacy offers major curricula in practical pharmacy and professional pharmacy. BACHELORS OF SciENcE

PHILIP GuLICK AcKERMANN GoRDON WILLIAM HAACK Corvallis Portland WILMA MAXINE ARNOLD MARY PARMELEE HALL Corvallis Clatskanie WAYNE BuRNETT BANNISTER JOSEPH YOSliiO KOMOTO Athena Independence CHARLES LELAND BECK 0MA MAY McELROY Blackfoot, Idaho McMinnville CLAIRE BowEN RAYMOND PRINCE McGREw Houlton Portland ELLIOTT R. BRAITHWAITE WILLIAM FULTON MURRAY Portland Baker ARTHUR RICHARD BREITENSTEIN ROBERT BROOKS SULLIVAN Klamath Falls Portland ANNETTE WrLLIA>LS BuDKE EUGENE WESLEY WHITEHOUSJ: Corvallis Lakeview JoHN HARTIG DENTON GEORGE EDWARD WHITHAM Ashland Klamath Falls WAYNE CARLILE FERGUSON Union

( 12 ) Secretarial Science

Victor Pierpont Morris, Dean

Secretarial Science, a four-year major curriculum, is allocated at the State College under the administration of the Dean and Director of Business Administration in the Oregon State System of Higher Education.

BACHELORS OF SECRETARIAL SCIENCE

VIRGINIA BEATRICE ALBRIGHT MrNNIE LEONA MooRE Portland Rainier }OHN ROBERT ALLGOOD, }R. ALicE ELLEN MoRRis Dallas Lakeview VIRGINIA LEOLA ALLISON HELEN WrNrFREn MoRRis Noti Waldport DELBERT A. ANDERSON ELIZABETH JANE MULDRICK Pendleton Baker ANNE TERESA BARRY MARY LOUISE 0LLIVER Lakeview Albany MELVA FAE BULL CATHERINE MARIE OoRTnuvs Summerville Corvallis 0NA MERTlE CARNINE HAZEL RAY PLUMMER Condon Dallas DOROTHY ANN DARLING JAcK ARTHER PouLIN Portland Salem GENEVIEVE Lucv DEVANEY NORMAN HAROLD RANDS Corvallis Portland EDMUND JAMES DooLEY \\'ILLIAM ALEXANDER REYBURN, }R. Albany Eugene EDWIN ELLSWORTH EARP ROBERT PAUL SASSER Albany Fossil FRANCES LOUISE FREDERICKSOK LY>!AN EVERETT SEELY Corvallis Woodburn MAXINE ROSEMARY HENRICHS RALPH SAMUEL SENDERS Moro Albany HAROLD DEWITT HIGGS RAYMOND FREDERICH SIEGENTHALER Burns Portland Lors RouT HoLLEY LENEVE MARIE SIMKIHS Klamath Falls Cottage Grove LoursE HoLZMEYER ELEANOR MARGARET SNYDER Dundee Enterprise MARGARET KASTER HUDSON MAXINE SwENSON Salem Swisshome EDNA MARGARET IIAMS DOROTHY }EAN TRIPP Corvallis Portland NORMA ELLEN KREITZ SYLVIA EDITH TURN Hillsboro La Grande }AMES WALLACE KRusE ALFRED NATHAN VocT Portland Eugene MARIAN ADELINE LEININGER MIGNON ELIZABETH WALL Corvallis Corvallis PHYLLIS JEANETTE McCARTY BARBARA ELIZABETH VVATERMAN Marshfield Corvallis WALDA HARDING MASSEY ROSAMOND JANE \VESTON Salem Grants Pass

( 13 ) Advanced Degrees

The audience is requested not to applaud the awarding of individual degrees but to reserve all demonstrations of approval until the group of advanced degrees has been conferred.

Graduate Division

George Rebec, Dean Willibald Weniger, Assistant Dean The Graduate Division in the Oregon State System of Higher Education has jurisdiction over all graduate work throughout the system leading to other than strictly professional degrees. At the State College is centered all graduate study in the biological sciences, the physical scinces including mathematics, and the technical and professional fields of agricul­ ture, education (phases allocated at State College), engineering, forestry, home economics, and pharmacy.

MASTERS OF ARTS CL ... RENCE IRWIN GIBBON Hines B.S., 1936, Oregon State College. Major: Organic Chemistry. Minor: Inorganic Chemistry. Thesis: Investigation of the Oil of Lavandula vera Cultivated in Oregon. DELMER MoRRISON GooDE Corvallis B.A., 1916, University of Minnesota. Major: Higher Education. Minor: Finance. Thesis: The Oregon State Board of Higher Curricula as an Agency for Curricular Control. LEOT,._ LIEURANCE LASLETT Corvallis B.A., 1911, University of Kansas. Major: Education. Minor: Guidance. Thesis: Educational Fates of College Entrants in the Two Lowest A. C. E. Deciles. THOMAS PARKER MARSH Portland B.S., 1936, Oregon State College. Major: Analytical Chemistry. Minor: Agricultural Chemistry. Thesis: A Cerometric Method for Determination of Copper m Paris Green and Ores. WILLIAM HICKMAN MOORE Portland B.A., 1934, . Major: Physics. Minor: Mathematics. Thesis: Installation of a Wood-Anderson Seismometer at Oregon State College. C. GoRDON MoRRis Amity A.B., 1936, . Major: Mathematics. Minor: Physics and Mathematics. Thesis: A Study ~f the Differential Equation d'~ + (m + z') w = o. ANNE KING STOUT dz Corvallis B.S., 1935, Science Oregon State College. Major: Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry. Minor: Physical Chemistry. Thesis: A Study of Inositol in its Relation to Yeast Growth. LuciLLE EuGENIE WALL Monmouth B.Ed., 1928, University of California at Los Angeles. Major: Education. Mmor: Household Administration. Thesis: The Growth and Development of Practice-Teaching Facilities at the Oregon Normal School.

MASTERS oF SciENCE LEA RoY ALoWELL Sonora, Texas B.S., 1935, Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas. Major: Agricultural Economics. Minor: Economics and Animal Husbandry. Thesis: The Management and Financial Condition of Eeastern Oregon Grain Co­ operatives. ( 14 ) Advanced Degrees-Continued

NELLY ANA-MIRTA ARMAND-UGON Montevideo, Uruguay M.S., 1935, University of Montevideo. Major: Food Products Industries. Minor: Chemistry. Thesis: A Practical Method of Commercial Jelly Manufacture. FREIDA MAE BENNETT Burlington Junction, Missouri. B.S., 1927, Northwest Missouri State Teachers College. Major: Clothing and Textiles. Minor: Household Administration. Thesis: A Study of Consumer Buying of Shoes. MAx MARK BocEK Portland B.S., 1937, Science Or.egon St~te College...... Major: Orgamc Chemtstry. Mmor: Chemtcal Engmeenng, Phystcal Chemtstry. Thesis: Studies on the Catalytic Conversion of Borneol to Camphor. Duis DoNALD BoLINGER Corvallis B.S., 1930, Engineering, University of Missouri. Major: Physics Mechanical Engineering. Minor: Mathematics. · Thesis: A Semt-PortaiJle,1 Infra-Red, Vacuum Spectrometer. CLYDE ARTHUR BRIDGER Boise, Idaho B.A., 1931, Whitman College. Major: Mathematics. Minor: Physics, Education. Thesis: On the Numerical Integration of the Second Order of Differential Equation with Assigned End Points. E. SooN CHoi Korea Ewha College, Korea. Major: Household Administration. Minor: Nutrition. Thesis: A Plan for Adapting Principles of Child Development to Meet the Needs of Korean Children. JosEPH WILLIAM CooK Pullman, Washington B.S., 1935, Science, Oregon State College. Major: Chemistry. Minor: Animal Nutrition. Thesis: The Occurrence of Nutritionally Important Sulfur Compound in Alfalfa as Influenced by Sulfur Fertilization. RAYMOND WALDEMAR CooPEY Klamath Falls B.S., 1930, Education, Oregon State College. Major: Zoology. Minor: Geology. Thesis: A Census of Water Bird Life on Upper Klamath Lake. JosEPH ALFRED Cox Monmouth B.A., 1926, Colorado College. Major: Education. Minor: Ph)'sical Education, Psychology. Thesis: The Development of Health and Physical Educatwn for Men at the Oregon Nor mal School: A Proposed Set-Up. EUGENE EDWARD CRAWFORD Corvallis B.S.F., 1935, University of Michigan. Major: Fish and Game Management. Minor: Entomology, Veterinary Medicine. Thesis: A Study of the Food Habtts of Waterfowl in the Willamette Valley. MARGARET SHAMEL CRUMLY Boise, Idaho A.B., 1919, University of Southern California. Major: Guidance. Mmor: General Education. Thesis: A Study of the Children in the Emergency Nursery Schools of Idaho. EDWIN BLUNDELL DAVIS Corvallis B.S., 1935, Education, Oregon State College. Major: Education. Minor: Sociology. Thesis: A Study of the Educational Status and Some Educational Implications of a Local Relief Population. MYRON CARL DAVIS Stafford Springs, Connecticut. B.S., 1935, Massachusetts State College. Major: Food Products Industries. Minor: Bacteriology. Thesis: Heat Penetration in Canned Fish.

( 15 ) Advanced Degrees-Continued

RAY DESCHAMPS Corvallis B.A., 1934, Utah State Agricultural College. Major: Farm Management. Minor: Soils. Thesis: An Analysis of the Farm Organization and Progress of Farm Security Ad­ ministration Clients in Marion County. PRESTON FRANKLIN DauGHTON Dallas B.S., 1927, Commerce, Oregon State College. Major: Education. :Minor: Education. Thesis: Budgeting and Accounting Practices for Extra-Curricular Activities in Se­ lected Oregon High Schools-A Proposed System. CARL RoBERT EKLUND Tomahawk, Wisconsin B.A., 1932, Carleton College, Minnesota. Major: Fish and Game Management. Minor: Botany and Animal Industries. Thesis : Ecological and Mortality Factors Affecting the Nesting Stage of the Chinese Pheasant, Phasianus torquatus Gmelin, in the Willamette Valley, Oregon. JoHN WALTER ERICKSoN Corvallis B.S., 1931, Commerce, Oregon State College. Major: Education. Minor: Commercial Education. Thesis: A Survey of Secondary School Standards in the United States. HERBERT WILLARD EWEN Kimberly, Idaho B.S., 1931, Commerce, Oregon State College. Major: General Education. Minor: Counseling. Thesis: A Study of the Relationship of Academic Training and Subjects Taught by Teachers in Oregon High Schools. KEITH PECK FENNER Corvallis B.S., 1935, Science, Oregon State College. Major: Food Products Industries. Minor: Education. Thesis: Utilization of Surplus Italian Prunes. HowARD GIBSON Corvallis B.S., 1934, Agriculture, Oregon State College. Major: Farm Crops, Minor: Soils. Thesis: Root Development Studies of Certain Genera and Species of Grass with Spe­ cial reference to Soil Types. PHIL A. HoRNER Covina, California. A.B., 1929, Santa Barbara State Teachers College. Major: Industrial Education. Minor: Education Psychology. Thesis: Visual Instructwn Supplementary to Industrial Education. TsAr Yu HSIAO Shantung, China B.A., 1931, National Normal University, Peiping, China. Major: Entomology. Minor: Horticulture. Thesis: Investigation of the Life History and Habits of the Cherry Case-bearer, Cle­ ophora pnmiella Clemens and the Cigar Case-bearer, C fletcherella Fernald, in the Willamette Valley. ALBF:RT MARION HUGHES Salem B.A., 1936, Willamette University. Major: Physical Chemistry. Minor: Organic Chemistry, Physics. Thesis: Heats of Combustion of Hydrazine, Hydrazine Hydrate, and Related Com­ pounds. LORENA NADINE JACK Salem B.S., 1931, Home Economics, Oregon State College. Major: Institution Economics. Minor: General Home Economics. Thesis: An Investigation of Housing Needs of Women Students in Residence Halls. ALFARETTA CLARA JoHNSON Antigo, Wisconsin B.S., 1934, Emmanuel Missionary College, Michigan. Major: Foods and Nutrition. Minor: Institution Economics Education. Thesis: Growth Response of Young Albino Rats to Gradea1 Amounts of Crystalline Vitamin Bt. FREDERICK WALTER JoHNSTON East Cleveland, Ohio B.S., 1936, Civil Engineering, Oregon State College. Major: Mechanical Engineering. Minor: Mathematics, Civil Engineering. Thesis: A Photo-Elastic Analysis of an Airplane Gusset Plate. ( 16 ) Advanced Degrees-Continued

GLADYS SHANK KELTY Corvallis B.S., 1932, Commerce, Oregon State College. Major: Education. Minor: Guidance. . Thesis: Subject Combinations in the Programs of Oregon Htgh School Teachers, Fall Semester, 1937.

MoHAMAD AsLAM KHANMAI Peshawar, India Diploma m Agriculture, 1928, University of Reading, England. Major: Horticulture. Minor: Food Products. . Thesis: Certain Correlations between Leaf Area and the FrUit Production of Red Raspberries. Lxo YuKIO KIYOHIRO Portland B.S., 1937, North Pacific College. Major: Pharmacy and Organic Chemistry. Minor: Physical Chemistrl. Thesis: Some Properties and Reactions of Umbellulone, from the Lea Oil of Coos Bay Myrtle, Umbellularia californica. LEUNG YUK MAAN Canton, China B.S., 1929, Lingnan Universit:L Canton, China. Major: Entomology. Minor: Fish and Game Management, Botany. Thesis: A General Study of the Mint Flea-Beetle, Longitarsus waterhousei Kutsch. RoY HAROLD LIEN Portland B.A., 1936, Reed College. Major: Mathematics. Minor: Physics. Thesis: Numerical Solution of the Second Order Differential Equation. CHARLES MAURICE LORD Corvallis , B.S. 1936, Forestry, Oregon State College. Major: Forestry. Minor: Botany. Thesis: Natural Reproduction in Douglas Fir Stands as Affected by the Size of Openings. LAWRENCE ALFRED LoVEGREN Corvallis B.S., 1933, Industrial Arts, Oregon State College. Major: Industrial Education. Mmor: Education. Thesis: An Investigation of Some Foundational Factors as a Basis for Improvement of the Corvallis Junior-Senior High School Industrial Arts Program. LUK LAI SHEUNG I-Iongkong, China B.A., 1930, Lingnan University Canton, China. Major: Clothing and Textiles. Minor: Household Administration. Thesis: A Comparative Study of the Construction and Quality of Silk Materials Pur­ chased in China and the United States. JoHN RAY MESSINGER Delano, California A.B., 1930, Industrial Education, State Teachers College of Chico. Major: Industrial Education. Minor: Education. , Thesis: Suggested Programs in Evening Classes for Farm Mechanics. ANN CHARSTE MIKKELSON Spokane, Washington. B.S., 1921, North Dakota Agricultural College. !1ajor: Household Administration. Minor: General Home Economics. Thesis: A Study of Housing Requirements of Fifty Selected Families in Spokane, Washington. HERSCHEL KENWORTHY MITCHELL Corvallis A.B., 1936, Pomona College. Major: Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry. Minor: Physical and Analytical Chem­ istry. Thesis: A Micro-Study of the Reduction of Organic Compounds with Hydriotic Acid. PAUL HARRIS MooRE Wasco, California A.B., 1927, Santa Barbara State Teachers College. Major: Industrial Education. Minor: Education. Thesis: A Plan for Integrating a ''General Shop Program." EvA MARIE NEWTON Corvallis B.S., 1927, Commerce, Oregon State College. Major: General Education. Minor: Measurements. Thesis: "A Nation-Wide Study of State Commercial Contests for High School Stu­ dents." ( 17 ) Advanced Degrees-Continued DAx WILLIAMS PoLING Corvallis B.S., 1928, Commerce, Oregon State College. Major: Education. Minor: Psychology. Thesis : A Stud¥ of the Professional Training and Experience of Superintendents and Secondary School Administrators in the State of Oregon. WILMA MILLER RONDEAU Corvallis B.S., 1923, Home Economics, Oregon State College. Major: Household Administration. Minor: Clothing and Textiles. Thesis : Planning the Family Dwelling for a Willamette Valley Village. PRISCILLA ROWLAND Logan, Utah B.S., 1923, Utah State Agricultural College. Major: Household Administration. Minor: Home Economics, Education, Foods and Nutrition. Thesis: An Analysis of the Attitudes of Two Hundred High School Seniors Toward Adjustments in Family Living. LAWRENCE EDwiN RucH Vallejo, California B.S., 1924, Education, Oregon State College. Major: Industrial Education. Minor : Education. Thesis: A Study of Grade Distribution in Large and Small Class Groups, Covering the Same Students and the Same Class Work. BERT SANTFORD RusK Salem B.A., 1936, Willamette University. Major: Physical Chemistry. Minor: Chemical Engineering. Thesis: Studies on the Fractionation of Waste Sulphite Liquor. PAUL JosEPH RYAN Eu_gene B.S., 1932, Commerce, Oregon State College. Major: General Education. Minor: Counseling. Thesis: A Survey of School Transportation in Oregon. E. MATTHEW SKENE Hillsboro A.B., 1934 . Major: Education. Minor: Physics, Mathematics. Thesis : Students who Fail Algebra-A Study of Students Repeating Algebra 1. SZE YEN Po Soochow, China B.S., 1936, Yenching University, China. Major: Chemical En~ineering. Minor: Chemistry, 1-Iechanical Engineering. Thesis: Tests on Vanous Activated Carbons. MARION T. WEATHERFORD Arlington B.S., 1930, Industrial Arts, Oregon State College. Major: Industrial Education. Minor: Education. Thesis: Metal Craft as an Educational Medium in the Industrial Arts Program. JOHN MARTIN WEBER Corvallis B.S., 1937, Education, O regon State College. Major: Education. Minor : Sociology. Thesis : A Motivating and a Disciplinary F orce in Society. ALVIN WILBUR WHEELER Corvallis B.S., 1916, Agriculture, Oregon State College. Major: Farm Management. Minor: General Agriculture. Thesis : Labor Requirements for Certain Oregon Agricultural Enterprises. MARGARET RUTH WHIPPLE Corvallis B.S., 1935, Agriculture, Oregon State College. Major: Fish and Game Management. Minor: Farm Crops, Entomology. Thesis : Artificial Incubation and Brooding of Ring-Necked Pheasants on State Game Farms at Eugene and Corvallis, Oregon. HAROLD H. WHITE Corvallis B.S., 1920, Agriculture, Oregon State College. Major: Farm Management-Agricultural Economics. Minor: Agricultural Education. Thesis: A Survey of the Demand for Agricultural Labor in Oregon. MELFORD ALLAN Wooos Yucaipa, California B.A., 1936, University of Redlands. Major: Organic Chemistry. Minor: Physical Chemistry. Thesis: Selective Oxidation of Organic Compounds Particularly by Iodic Acid.

( 18 ) Advanced Degrees-Continued

MABEL ELLEN YouNGBERG McMinnville B.S., 1933, Linfield College. Major: Mathematics. Minor: Education. Thesis: Formulas for Mechanical Quadrature of Irrational Functions. RAYMOND Lours ZOBEL Prospect B.S., 1926 Forestry, Oregon State College. Major: Education.1 Minor: Education. Thesis: Work of the County Health Unit in the Third Class High School Districts, in Jackson County, Oregon: A Proposed Organization.

CIVIL ENGINEER

GLENN s. PAXSON Salem B.S., 1912, Mining Engineering, Orelj"on State College. Thesis: Light Reflecting Characteristics of Various Pavement Surfaces.

MECHANICAL ENGINEERS

WILLIAM VINCENT HANLEY El Cerrito, California B.S., 1933, Mechanical Engineering, Oregon State College. Thesis: A Study of Detonation by Means of Electronic Instrumentation.

JACOB DoNALD KROEKER Portland B.S., 1937, Civil Engineering, Oregon State College. Thesis: Design of Mechanical Air Heating Systems.

ELECTRICAL ENGINEER

EuGENE CARL STARR Corvallis B.S., 1923, Electrical Engineering Oregon State College. Thesis: Storm-Static Radio-Interference Phenomena Originating on Air Craft.

DOCTORS OF PHILOSOPHY wALDO ELIOT CI>RLSON Barnum, Minnesota B.A., 1933, University of Minnesota. Major: Soils. Minor: Chemistry, Bacteriology. Thesis: A Contribution to the Role of Iodine in the Nutrition of Certain Plants.

THEODORE P. DYKSTRA Beltsville, Maryland B.S., 1923, Oregon State College; M.S., 1925, University of Wisconsin. Major: Plant Pathology. Minor: Plant Physiology, Biochemistry. Thesis: A Study of Viruses Infecting European and American Potato Varieties.

JESs RUEBEN KrENHoLz Hood River B.S., 1928, M.S., 1929, The State College of Washington. Major: Plant Pathology. Minor: Botany, Bacteriology. Thesis: Comparative Study of the Apple-Tree Anthracnose and Perennial-Canker Fungi.

JoHN A. MILBRATH Walla Walla Washington B.S., 1934, The State College of Washington. Major: Plant Pathology. Minor: Chemistry, Entomology. Thesis: Tomato Tip-Blight Virus.

LEROY EUGENE WEAVER Corvallis B.S., 1934, Agriculture, New Mexico State College. Major: Plant Pathology. Minor: Morphology, Chemistry. Thesis: Studies of the Crinkle Disease of Strawberry with Special Reference to the Inheritance of Resistance. ( 19 ) Phi Kappa Phi

(Elections 1937-38)

Phi Kappa Phi, national scholastic honor society, comprehending both the liberal arts and sciences and the professional fields, stands for the unity and democracy of learning. It aims not to compete or interfere with any other honor society, but to work harmoniously with all. Selection for membership depends not only on high scholarship (all students whose election is announced this year rank in the upper one-eighth of their class), but also on qualities of leadership, service, and character. (The names of those members of the Class of 1938 who were elected to Phi Kappa Phi during their junior year were announced in the commencement program of 1937.)

Graduate Students

LEA RoY ALDWELL, Agricultural Economics FRIEDA MAE BENNETT, Clothing and Textiles Duis DoNALD BoLINGER, Physics PRESTON DauGHTON, Education LoRENA NADINE JACK, Institution Economics Rov HAROLD LIEN, Mathematics WILLIAM HICKMAN MooRE, Physics

Seniors RoY C. BRADY, Forestry VICTOR STUART CARSON, Engineering BETTY CHANDLER, Home Economics HARRY EDWIN DAWSON, Education EMMA MAE DENVER, Home Economics MILDRED IRENE ETTER, Home Economics EARL RAYMOND FRANKLIN, Agriculture RussELL HOLCOMB GODARD, Education MARY PARMELEE HALL, Pharmacy LENORA HESSLER, Home Economics LOUISE HOLZMEYER, Secretarial Science JAMES CHASE HowLAND, Engineering ALF HUNDERE, Enginee ring GERALD RAYM OND KUBIN, Agriculture IAN DoNALD MACDONALD, Science ALPHONS RICHARD MELIS, Agriculture HAZEL RAY PLUMMER, Secretarial Science JoHN MARTIN PIERSON, }R. Science DoROTHY FRANCES REVELL, Science RusSELL WHITTINGTON REVELL, Engineering MELVINA Ross, Home Economics ERNEST PoLLARD TAYLOR, Forestry Louis LISLE WALKER, Forestry

Juniors

RAYMOND AuNGST, Engineering HAROLD R. BARTEL, Engineering MARGARET BERNHARDINE BussE, Secretarial Science CAROL CARNES, Education BURNETTE CHAUSSE, Engineering RuTH ANNE CRAWFORD, Secretarial Science DARLE W. DuDLEY, Engineering CARL F. FROST, Science DoROTHY HARSTAD, Home Economics FRANK RoBINS HENRY, Pharmacy ARTHUR E. HuTCHINSON, Agriculture THEODORE KIRSCH, Agriculture GENE DAviD KNUDSON, Forestry KENNETH LANGE, Engineering HILDA M. MErus, Secretarial Science CAL GRAHAM MoNROE, Agriculture RuTH M. OLESON, Home Economics MILOSH PoPOVICH, Engineering MAYNARD L. RINGHAM, Science HERDERT CONRAD SAMPERT, Forestry MARGARET SCHELL, Secretarial Science ANSON HENRY S>UTH, Forestry FRANK GILBERT SwANSON, Science ( 20 ) Sigma Xi

(Elections 1937-38)

The object of the Society of Sigma Xi is to encourage original investigation in science pure and applied. The society elects to . membership original investigators of noteworthy achievement and students who show pr01mse of research ab1hty m the fields of mathematics, physics, chemistry, astronomy, sciences of the earth, biology in its various branches including psychology, anthropology, medicine in its various branches, engineering in its various branches, and other closely allied fields.

Faculty

FREDERICK ALTON EvEREST, E.E., Instructor in Electrical Engineering ELMER HANSEN, M.S., Assistant Horticulturist (Pomology) WALLACE HoPE MARTIN, M.E., M.S., Professor of Heat Engineering OTTo HERBERT MUTH, D.V.M., M.S., Associate Professor of Veterinary Medicine ERNEST HERMAN WIEGAND, B.S.A., Professor of Food Products Industries JESSAMINE CHAPMAN WILLIAMS, M.A., Professor of Foods and Nutrition

Alumni

ORLANDO ELLIOTT RoMIG, '22, Assistant Research Engineer, Carnegie Steel Corporation ALBERT NEWTON STEWART, '21, Professor of Botany, University of Cheng Tu (Nanking), China

Graduate Studettts: Members

JEss RuEBEN KIENHOLZ, Botany JoHN A MILBRATH, Botany HERSCHEL KENWORTHY MITCHELL, Chemistry JosEPH BERNARD SPULNIK, Chemistry WILLIAM ]AMES JENNINGS WALSH, Electrical Engineering LEROY EuGENE WEAVER, Botany

Graduate Studmts: Associates MAx MARK BoCEK, Chemistry DUis DoNALD BoLINGER, Physics VERNON HENDRUM CHELDELIN, Chemistry LEROY HANSEN, Farm Crops TsAI Yu HsiAO, Entomology ALFARETTA CLARA JoHNSON, Foods and Nutrition LEo YUKIO KIYOHIRO, Pharmacy RoY HAROLD LIEN, Mathematics KENNETH NEIL McLEOD, Chemistry BANNER BILL MoRGAN, Zoology WILLIAM HICKMAN MooRE, Physics ERNEST F. PRATT, Chemistry JOHN BENJAMIN STARK, Chemistry MAURICE STEINMETz TARSHIS, Zoology and Entomology WILLIAM RoY VARNER, Physics, Mathematics, and Electrical Engineering

S ~niors: Associates VICTOR STUART CARSON, Electrical Engineering CLARA JANE CHAPMAN, Botany HowARD LEGRANDE CHERRY, General Science HOLLY ADAMS CoRNELL, Civil Engineering DAVID WARREN Cox, Electrical Engineering JAMES CHASE HowLAND, Civil Engineering ALF HuNDERE, Mechanical Engineering STANLEY ROBERT KELLEY, Mechanical Engineering GERALD RAYMOND KUBIN, Agricultural Engineering ELIOT RooT PECK, Mechanical Engineering JOHN MARTIN PIERSON, JR., Zoology ELDEN DEWAYNE YEOMAN, Fish and Game Management

( 21 ) Prizes and Awards 1937--38

THE CLARA H . WALDO PRIZES The Clara H . Waldo Prizes, totaling $140 annually, are awarded in the proportions of $50, $40, $30, and $20 respectively to the woman of highest standing registered as a regular student in the senior, jun1or, sophomore, and freshman year. The committee having char~e of the award of these prizes is guided by the following points: (a) proficiency in scholarship, (b) success in student activities, (c) qualities of womanhood, and (d) qualities of leadership. Senior: Junior: First Honor- DOROTHY LOUISE HARSTAD MILDRED IRENE ETTER (Home Economics) (Home Economics) }EAN MACKLIN WHITELAW Honorable Mention­ CAROL CARNES Honorable Mention­ (Education) EMMA MAE DENVER LOIS ELIZABETH BROWN (Home Economics) (Secretarial Science) MARY pARMELEE HALL (Pharmacy) Freshman: Sophomore: First Honor- }ULIA DUNCAN }EANNE HARTMAN (Secretarial Science) (Education) Honorable Mention- Honorable Mention­ DORIS AUTRY THOMPSON BETTY-SUE McCREADY (Home Economics) (Education) }UNE ELIZABETH MORSE MARGARET LOUISE }OHANSON (Home Economics) (Secretarial Science)

THE LIPMAN WOLFE PRIZES The Lipman Wolfe Prizes, totaling $100 annually, are awarded in the proportions of $50, $30, and $20 r~sp~ctively to the student of highest staf!ding registered as a regular stu­ dent in the senior, JUnwr, and sophomore year. The commtttee hav1ng charse of the award of these prizes is guided by the following points: (a) proficiency in scholarship, (b) qualities of manhood or womanhood with special emphasis on unselfishness

( 23 ) Prizes and Awards 1937 -38-Continued THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERS A WARDS The American Institute of Chemical Engineers (national organization) awards a each year to the junior member of the chapter who made the highest record during his freshman and sophomore years. MILOSH POPOVICH The local student chapter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers awards a pin each year to the sophomore in chemical engineering who during his freshman year made the highest scholastic record. MARVIN WILLIAM WILSON The local student chapter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers awards annual prizes for the best technical papers submitted by student members. First Prize ($10.00)- Second Prize ($5.00)- ALFRED TROMMERSHAUSEN FRANK WILLIAM WOODFIELD Third Prize ($2.50)- HAROLD RICHARD BARTEL THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS AWARDS The Oregon Section of the American Society of Civil Engineers awarded prizes of $15 and $10 for the best technical papers presented by Oregon State College students in civil engineering. First Prize- Second Prize- THOMAS NELSON CREACY HOLLY ADAMS CORNELL

THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS A WARDS The Portland Section of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers makes an annual award of one year's associate membership ($10) in the Institute for the best technical paper presented by an Oregon State College student in electrical engineering. First Prize- Honorable Mention- JACK IRVING HALL VICTOR STUART CARSON

THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS A WARDS The Oregon Section of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers awarded prizes of $25 and $15 for the best technical papers prepared and delivered by Oregon State College students in mechanical engineering. First Prize- Second Prize- ALF HUNDERE ELIOT RooT PEcK THE SOCIETY OF AUTOMOTIVE ENGINEERS PRIZES The Oregon Section of the Society of Automotive Engineers awards annual prizes for the best technical papers submitted by student members of the Society from institutions in Oregon. First Prize ($25 in ca.rh)­ Second Prize ($15 in cash)­ ]OHN HALBERT BONER BRITT MAGRA w SMITH LLOYD MILO LANDWEHR Third Prize (Merchandise $15)­ Fourth Prize ($10 in cash)- ALLEN DuNBAR McLEAN HOWARD WAYNE CHRISTENSON THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR METALS A WARD The American Society for Metals (Oregon Chapter) awarded a cash prize of $10 and a one year's membership ($10) in the Society for the best paper prepared by a student member of the Society. ELIOT ROOT PECK

( 24 ) Prizes and Awards 1937-38-Continued THE CHARLES LATHROP PACK FORESTRY PRIZE Through the generosity of Mr. Charles Lathrop Pack of New Jersey, the income from a gift of $2,000 is awarded annually to students in forestry who produce the most interesting, logical, and technically significant papers for publication. First Prize- Second Prize- GEORGE MATHEW HANSEN RoY ELMGREN Third Prize- LOUIS LISLE WALKER

THE LEE SCHOLARSHIP This award, denved from the annual mcome from a fund of $1,000 bequeathed as a memorial to J. B. and Minme E. Lee, is awarded annually to a woman student in home economics in recognition of meritorious record i.n scholarship, activities, and general all· round worthiness. MARGARET LOUISE WEST THE OMICRON NU PLAQUE This plaque is awarded each year to the senior woman who has best lived the teachings of home economics throughout her college career. JEAN MACKLIN WHITELAW THE HOME ECONOMICS PRIZE This scholarship, consisting of units of $100 or less, is awarded to an upperclass student in home economics whose scholastic average is equal to or above that of the student body. ALICE PEARL CUNNINGHAM THE A. GRACE JOHNSON MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP This scholarship, consisting of units of $100 or less, is awarded to an upperclass student in home economics whose scholastic average is equal to or above that of the student body. MARGARET FERN BUMP THE INTERNATIONAL FRIENDSHIP SCHOLARSHIP The international Friendship Scholarship of $500 is awarded annually to a graduate foreign student to study home economics at Oregon State College. (RuTH) TsrNG-MIN SuN THE OREGON HOME ECONOMICS ASSOCIATION AWARD An award o£ $25 is made annually by the Oregon Home Economics Association to an Oregon girl majoring in home economics who is a sophomore and needs financial aid to continue her education. EVELYN MARIE LARSEN THE OREGON HOME EXTENSION COUNCIL SCHOLARSHIP

The Oregon Home Extension Council awards $25 annually to the junior or senior ~irl who shows sincere interest in and promise of leadership in extension work, who stands btgh in scholarship, is active in school affairs, and is in need of assistance. JULIA MARIAN BENNETT

THE BLUMAUER-FRANK SCHOLARSHIP This prize of $50, contributed by the Blumauer-Frank Drug Company of Portland, is awarded annually to the outstanding student in pharmacy. MARY pARMELEE HALL THE ROTANA SCHOLARSHIP An award of $25 made annually by the Rotana Club of Portland to a sophomore student in home economics on a basis of scholastic protnise, qualities of personality, and leadership, coupled with need for financial assistance. MARGARET MAy BROWN

( 25 ) Prizes and Awards 1937-38-Continued THE GOODWIN ORIENTAL GOOD WILL SCHOLARSHIP A scholarship of $750 awarded annually through the generous provision of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Goodwin of Seattle to a graduate foreign student from an oriental country to study home economics at Oregon State College. Hsi-HsuAN Yu THE KAPPA DELTA PI AWARD An award of $25 is made annually to the sophomore enrolled in education who as a freshman in that school made the highest scholastic average. ELIZABETH pARKER THE WOMEN'S AUXILIARY O.S.P.A. PRIZE The Women's Auxiliary of the Oregon State Pharmaceutical Association contributes a prize of $25 annually to be awarded to the outstanding woman student in pharmacy. ANNETTE WILLIAMS BUDKE THE LEHN & FINK MEDAL This medal is awarded annually to the senior student in pharmacy who is adjudged the most outstanding in scholarship, leadership, and character. MARY pARMELEE HALL DAUGHTERS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION AWARD A prize of $25.00 is awarded to the senior woman in the State College whose attain­ ments and example distinguish her as an exponent of good American citizenship. EMMA MAE DENYER ALTRUSA AWARD An award of $50 given by the Altrusa Club of Portland to a senior woman whose per­ formance during her college years has shown the qualities of integrity, loyalty, and firmness of purpose in making the most of her opportunities. PEARL ALBERT MORTAR BOARD SENIOR AWARD An award of $50, provided by Mortar Board, is presented to the woman who, in adversity as well as good fortune, has demonstrated the qualities of fortitude, confidence, and resourcefulness that make for progress. ARDYTHE WILSON NORTH PACIFIC BRANCH OF THE AMERICAN PHARMACEUTICAL ASSOCIATION AWARD This award consisting of a year's membership in the American Pharmaceutical Asso­ ciation and a scholarship certificate, is made annually to the outstanding junior in pharmacy. FRANK ROBINS HENRY THE ALPHA ZETA SCHOLARSHIP CUP The Alpha Zeta Scholarship Cup is awarded during the first term of the sophomore year to the student in agriculture receiving the highest grade average in the freshman class. WILLIAM CARL WEIR ]. A. HANSON SCHOLARSHIP The J. A. Hanson Scholarship of $75.00 is awarded annually to the outstanding junior student majoring in poultry husbandry. ALLEN FRED MILLS

SWIFT & COMPANY ESSAY AWARD An award of $130 is given to the student registered in agriculture who submits the best essay on any phase of the methods employed by the meat-packing business in marketing meats poultry, eggs, butter, and cheese. The award is used for traveling and other expenses in makmg1 a trip to Chicago to attend the International Livestock Exposition and participate while there in a market study program under the direction of Swift & Company. DoN H. TELFORD

( 26 ) Prizes and Awards 1937 -38-Continued NATIONAL AND REGIONAL ENGINEERING AWARDS TAU BETA PI NATIONAL AWARD Tau Beta Pi, national honor society in engineering, awards each year six fellowships in the amounts of $650 each to outstanding applicants from its sixty-seven chapters in the United States. Students receiving the awards can study for an advanced degree at any recognized college or university in the United States. JAMES CHASE HOWLAND THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS DISTRICT AWARD For the best technical paper prepared on an electrical ei!gineering subject in the North­ west District (Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana, and Utah) a prize of $25 in cash is awarded. Honorable Mention- PETER ALBERT DEPAOLO STATE AND REGIONAL FORENSIC HONORS LINFIELD FORENSIC TOURNAMENT (Twenty-three colleges and universities from Oregon, California, Washington, Idaho, Montana, and Utah participated in the 1938 Tournament, second largest forensic tourna­ ment in the country.) Sweepstakes trophy won by Oregon State College First place and second place in Men's Debate Division won jointly by two teams, tieing for first place, composed, respectively, of- LOWELL STEEN LAWRENCE JOHN RASAKA ARTHUR HERBERT NELSON NATHAN NORMAN DIRECTOR First place in Women's Junior College Debate Division won by team composed of- RHODA MAXINE DUTTON JEANNE HARTMAN J BETTY JEANNE BONE BEATRICE ANNE HYLAND First place in Men's Oratorical Division won by­ GLEN s . FAXON First place in After-Dinner Speaking Division won by­ TRUXTON RINGE Third Place in Men's Junior College Debate Division won by team composed of- HOWARD BLOM HOLT HECTOR MACPHERSON, JR. INTERCOLLEGIATE FORENSIC ASSOCIATION OF OREGON (Six colleges and universities in the state of Oregon are at present members of the Association.) First place in State ~Vom en's Old Line Oratorical Contest won by­ JUNE ELIZABETH MORSE First place i11 State After-Dinner Speaki11g Contest won by­ TRUXTON RINGE First place in State Women's Extempore Speaking Contest won by­ JEAN ELIZABETH DEWITT Second place in State Men's Old Line Oratorical Contest won by­ JoHN ALLAN McCoRMICK Seco11d place in State Peace Oratorical Contest won by­ RAYMOND FREDERICH SIEGENTHALER PACIFIC FORENSIC LEAGUE (Twelve leading colleges and universities in Oregon, California, Washington, Idaho, Nevada, and Arizona are at present members of the League.) Second place in Pacific Forensic League Oratorical Contest won by­ GLENs. FAXON

( 27 ) Gifts

Oregon State College makes grateful acknowledgment of many evidences of good will toward the institution and examples of constructive support of its educational program, by individual citizens and by both private and public organizations. Such evidences often denote intangible benefits which are of deep Significance, but are not readily reducible to concrete terms. The following list of gifts, which cannot, of course, include all individual gifts or donors, is indicative of the scope of donations made to the State College during the past year.

STATE COLLEGE AND STUDENT WELFARE Value From the Oregon State College Mothers Club of Corvallis, for Beavers, ~~dee::s ~~ffa~~at-~~~--~~~-~~~-~--~-~-~~-~~-~~-~-~-~~--~-~-~-~~~-~-~~-~:--~~~~-~-~-~~~~-~-~~--~-~~ $395.00 From the Oregon State College Mothers and Dads Clubs of Portland, for women's cooperative houses ------90.50 From the Oregon State Dames Club for the Associated W omen Students emergency loan fund ------······-····------·······------7.50 STATE CoLLEGE CAMPUS From the classes of 1926, 1928, 1929, and 1931 gift funds for materials used in the construction of the Memorial Wrought Iron Gates at the Madison street entrance to the campus. All the labor and some of the materials are supplied through WPA from Federal sources. Contributions toward the cost of materials received thus far are as follows: Class of 1926·---···--··--·------·-·--· --- ·------·-·------·------$ 71.89 Class of 1928------··------·------·---·------31.76 Class of 1929------·------·--··------I 00.00 Class of 1931..______64.45 The gates when installed will have an approximate value oL.... ------·------$15,000.00 From the class of 1936 and from other organizations, gift funds as contribu- tions toward the cost of the Wood Mosaic Murals in Commerce Hall. Three wood-mosaic murals, constructed as a WPA art project, have just been completed and installed in the main vestibule of Commerce Hall. Aimee Gorham, artist, of Portland, is the author of the design, and has had supervision of the craftsmen who made the murals. The central mural develops the theme "Wisdom is the principal thing" (Prov. IV: 7). One of the wing panels depicts the spirit of the Oregon Pioneers; the other, the spirit of the development of Oregon State College as a scientific insti­ tution. Each of these two panels portrays certain types of leaders and some of the principal characters in the history of Oregon and Oregon State College. The principal cost in the murals is the labor, furnished by WP A. Gifts received thus far toward the cost of the n1aterials include $165 contributed by the class of 1936 for the central panel, which will be dedi­ cated as a gift from this class. The murals have an estimated value of more than·------·····-·-·----········ 3,000.00 STATE COLLEGE LIBRARY From Dr. Frederick Berchtold, Professor Emeritus of English, Oregon State College, his personal library, containing more than 900 volumes of English texts and classics ··------······-····------···-·-··--·-···-·-·-·----·····-·····-----·························---· $1,149.00 From the Hispanic Society of America, 26 volumes on Spanish history and art 75.00 From President George W. Peavy, 111 volumes on forestry, including among others a set of the Forestry Quarterly, Journal of Forestry, and Proceed- Fro~n£ '1£. tWii~~~:e2'o~;a~i~e~ics~~ ~tc~~~~~--c~",;£;;··i9o 3-·th-;~;;·g;h·-y;,;~~~Y 380.00 19 28 ·---··-·-·----···---····--········--·------·······-··-----········--····--·-····-·--·-··----·----·-·-······-·········---- 50.00 From other donors as follows : American Telephone and Telegraph Company, The Collected Papers of George Ashley Campbell; Donald H. Black, old issues of the "Barometer" a~d the 14 Beaver"; Mrs. Grace Hall Blashfield, the Works of Edwin Howland Blashfield; Mrs. B. F. Irvine, Portland, copies of the Oregon State College 41 0range" and "Beaver" and other documents; Society for International Cultural Relations, "A Glimpse of Japanese Ideals," by Jiro Harada, formerly visiting professor at Univer- sity of Oregon and Oregon State College; H. A. Lindgren, a Swedish ed1tion, published 17 53, of a church liturgy by Martin Luther; Library,_ old text-books and treatises on engineering subjects; Dr. W. Weniger ";:,cience Abstracts, Section A, Physics." 1936. Many other individual1 gifts, including textbooks, unbound periodicals and documents, too numerous to record in detail, were received from faculty and friends, or anonymously through campus delivery ...... ---···· -············-··· 250.00 THE HoRNER MusEUM OF THE OREGON CouNTRY From the Gen. U. G. McAlexander estate, !ami' and tappa-cloth wall hanging; Col. Frederick C. Test, Corvallis, collectwn of Alaskan Indian articles, tappa-cloth wall hanging; Mrs. John Cerny, Dallas, collection of Grand Ronde Indian baskets, old glass, and other obi ects; Mrs. Flori bel Bru­ bacher, Indian implements from Oklahoma, Alaskan Indian baskets; Mrs. ( 28 ) Gifts-Continued

T. B. Foster, Portland, collection of Indian baskets; A. R Harrison, Cor­ vallis, Alaskan carved stone Indian pipe; I. F. Waterman, Corvallis, transit and tripod used in laying out the Northern Pacific Railway; Mrs. H. L. Herse, Corvallis, Bible used in the old Plymouth Church; Dr. A. G. Prill, Scio, collection of bird eggs ; Mrs. J. B. Horner, Corvallis, copy of Gilbert Stuart's unfinished portrait of George Washington, Currier print of Washington; Douglas johnson, Port Orford, collection of agates; Nancy and Tommy Teutsch, Corvallis, collection of agates; Ralph I. Thompson, Heppner, collection of shells and coral; H. C. Howe, Port­ land, old coins and paper money and signatures of celebrated persons; fossils, old money, and other small gifts from various sources. In addition to the gifts there have been many loans, including_ among the outstanding articles: Ray DeMoss, Corvallis, the famous Holliday stagecoach; Homer H. Hillebrand, Corvallis, Indian beaded garments and stone axes; Mrs. A. B. Cordley, Corvallis, collection of Indian baskets and moccasins; Melvin Crawford, Corvallis, collection of arrows and other Indian relics; Iris Gray, Corvallis, silver jewelry made by Alaskan Indians, gold nuggets, old 1vory beads, mintature Alaskan insignia; Stanley Bishoprick, Shanghai, China, collection of Alaskan Indian baskets; J. H. Baldwin, ancient stone implements from Northern China; Miss Jo Janelene Test, Indian patchwork shawl, Kashmir shawl, Algerian shawl, carved ivory, collection of Spanish,__ French, Italian, and Japanese fans; Mrs. Henry Voss, RFD Albany, Jjurdett organ; A. L. Thomas, E . S. Ruddiman, and George Wait, Newport, agate crown; Mrs. David S. Arnott{ Corvallis, homespun articles from Ireland and Scotland, hand­ made aces, pictures and photographs, fabric from France; Mrs. A. A. Hull, Corvallis, Paisley shawl, four coverlets, Navajo rugs, Indian baskets, Japanese print, antique brass lamp, Eskimo articles, old glass and china, antique castiron coffee grinder, tappa cloth, books; Naomi Black, Corvallis, large Japanese float; William Schaefer, Ft. Smith, Canada, and Lloyd E. Schaefer, Scio, Oregon, northern timber wolf skin; Mrs. M. A. Stephenson, black bear skin and Mexican woven articles; Capt. R. A. Ellsworth, Corvallis, German gas mask used in World War; C. B. Montgomery, Corvallis, old books; Charles D. Sullivan, Burns, antique implements; Miss Frieda Cooper, Corvallis, zephyr wreath; American Legion Auxiliary, Corvallis, pnze-winning historical doll repre­ senting Tabitha Brown; Fred L. Pankey, Jacksonvllle, journal of general store in Jacksonville in gold-rush days; G. I. La Dow, Corvallis, Mexican feather pictures; C. E. Ingalls, old letters and literature concerning the I College; Mrs. C. E. Woodward, Corvallis, daguerreotypes and tintypes; Mrs. Claire Starr Smith, wooden chest of pioneer days; Mrs. J. T. Becker, collection of petrified woods; ~1iss Pauline Kline, Corvallis, old-time household implements; Mrs. John Cerny, History of the Willamette Valley (2 volumes); and many other single articles...... $3,500.00 • SCHOOL OF SCIENCE To the Herbarium: From C. C. Parsell-500 Ea•tern Oregon plants. From Drs. B. F. Dana and Roderick Sprague-collection of Eastern Oregon plants. From Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Looff-collection of Alaskan olants. To the Physics Department: · From the Electric Co.-Vacuum tubes, relays, amplifiers, repeat coils, condensers, and other radio equipment...... ·-····················· 300.00 To Research: From the Rockefeller Foundation to Dr. Roger J. Williams, third year...... 20,000.00 "Studies of Pantothenic Acid." From Dr. Lyle B. Kingery and University of Oregon Medical School to Dr. Roger J. Williams -··············--·········································-····································· 250.00 "Studies of Yeasts and Molds." From Standard Brands Company to Dr. Roger J. Williams.·-······-····················· 1,200.00 '~Growth Studies of Yeasts." From Mead and Johnson Company, Evansville, Illinois, to Dr. Rosalind Wulzen, Department to Zoology, yeast..·-··············-·-·············-························· 25.00 To the Chemistry Department: From the Rainier Pulp and Paper Company, Rainier, Washington, Sulphate L1quor ...... 20.00 ScHOOL OF AGRICULTURE, AGRICULTURAL ExPERIMENT STATION, AND ExTENSION SERVICE To Department of Agricultural Engineering: From the /gricultural Engineering Research Foundation, for research in the To theulei-I d~'bctE~:~~s\~nat~~':!:~:,~;;(;·······························-····································· 4•800·00 From the Local 4-1-1 Club Leader's Association of Portland, a truck for the use of the Portland Club Agent...... ·-··················· 150.00 To Department of Entomology: From the Douglas County Court, for research in Prune Thrips...... 350.00 To Department of Farm Crops: From Af!"ricnltural Research Foundation, for research in sngar beet seed pro- duction ·············-······························-······-·········---·-·····················-·························· 97.00 ( 29 ) Gifts-Continued

To Department of Fish and Game Management: From the Oregon State Game Commission for research in fish and game man­ agement problems in cooperation with the uoregon Research Unit", United States Biological Survey ------··-··----··------··------· $6,000.00 From the Oregon State Game Commission, lor research in special fish propa­ gation, production, distribution and handling problemS------­ 600.00 From Amencan Wild Life Institute, for research in fish and game n1anage· ment problems in cooperation with the "Oregon Research Unit", United States Biological Survey ------·------3,000.00 To Department of Horticulture-Food Products Industries: From Agricultural Research Foundation, for research in freezing fruits with corn sugar ------·------2,164.00 From Agricultural Research Foundation, for research in the manufacture of Fror::r.As;;i~~it~~j i:!~:~;~-h--F-~~-;;d~i-i-~~:--£~~-;;;~~~~h--~--th~--h--~~~i;;_·g-~T~{;~-it~ 249.00 and vegetables and in the manufacture of fruit juices------­ 1,365.00 From AgriculturaJ Research Foundation, for research to improve the manu- facture of apple products------850.00 To Department of Horticulture-Pomology: From the Oregon-Washington California Pear Bureau for research in the To De~~~t~~ aofd P~~~~~tii'fu~6a~'~t:;;·------250.00 From Agricultural Research Foundation, for research in the effect of feed on the flavor of turkey meat------·------·----·------·· ------279.00 T o Department of Soils: From the Clatsop County Court, for conducting soil-survey work ______190.00 From the Agricultural Research Foundation, for research in the use of potash 1n agrtculture ------··················-······························· 1,387.00 Frof!l Agri.cultural Research Foundation, for ~esearch in the use of sulphur 10 agr1culture ·····-·····················------·-·····························-····--··············-··-····--····· 151.00 To Southern Oregon Branch Experiment Station: From A~ricultural Research Foundation, for research in sugar beet seed pro- ductlon ---···················-···-········································-·-·--···-··-········------······· 100.00 To Department of Veterinary Medicine: From the Oregon State Game Commission, for research in fish and game diseases ····-·····················--·-······················-·········--························------·····------300.00 ScHoOL OF ENGINEERING To Department of Civil Engineering: From the Engineering Foundation and the American Society of Civil Engi­ neers, aid to a hydraulic research project entitled "Flow Characteristics in Bends of Open Channels." Project is sponsored by the Engineering Foundation under the direction of the Committee on Hydraulic Research of the Ame1·ican Society of Civil Engineers...... ______300.00 From John W. Ash, Corvalhs, Oregon, sixteen bound volumes of "Engineering News'' --·············································------·······-·····-····················------···············-· 100.00 From Mrs. Stella Miller, Turner, Oregon, drawing set, slide rule, engineering textbooks, and miscellaneous items in memory of her son, Glenn Miller, deceased ------·------100.00 To Department of Electrical Engir.eering: From Western Electric Company, New York, miscellaneous communication equipment and supplies ········-·····-·······---····················-··················-·······------500.00 To Department of Mechanical Engineering: From Charles Engelhard, Inc., Newark, New Jersey, repairs to two air-fuel ratio meters ·····-···················-···············-···········--················-·················----··--··········- 30.00 From Ethyl Gasoline Corporation, Detroit, Michigan, series 775 Ethyl demon- strating engine with accessories (used) ...... ------··········------··············----·- 500.00 One Thermocouple plug for demonstration engine.... ----·-···-··························­ 15.05 From Refining Industries, Inc., Portland, Oregon, lubricating oil and grease for use in automotive laboratory ·····--·-·····················--·--··-······-··--·-·········-········­ 15.00 From Houde Engineering Corporation, Buffalo, New York, cutaway shock absorber models ------50.00 From the Bristol Company, Waterbury, Connecticut,-one Model 319 indi- cating Pyrometer ------·------·------60.00 One Model 437 Pyrometer Recorder (used)------­ 125.00 From Western Steel Casting Company, Portland, Oregon, steel castings for four coupling spiders ------·------12.00 From Luber-Finer Sales Company, Seattle, Washington, one No. 300 Luber- Finer complete but without fittings ------·-·-···------·------·--·------­ 16.50 From Echlin Manufacturing Company, San Francisco, California, two IC-55 Spark Coils ------·-·----·------·------17.00 From Young Radiator Company, Racine, Wisconsin, one 18-E-2 Heat Ex- changer Coil ------·-·------·-·------35.00 From Electro Metallurgical Company, Niagara Falls, New York, display samples and accessorres ...... ---·-····-·················-······------·-·------15.00 From Fleming Manufacturing Company, East Providence, Rhode Island one F-35 Fram oil and motor cleaner and replacement cartridge ...... _: ...... 10.00 From Northwest Stove Works, Portland, Oregon, one 12 inch Wesco air-con- ditioning fan with housing and motor______70.00

( 30 ) Gifts-Continued t From Bendix Products Corporation, South Bend, Indiana, one DX-3 Car­ buretor with two extra venturis----·································----································· $ 15.00 From Oregon Building Supply Compnay, Portland, Oregon, one Vaughn 1-ton ammonia compressor with accessories (used)------·-···············-· 200.00 From Pacific Machinery and Tool Steel Company, Portland, Oregon, two pieces of steel for use in constructing certain equipment...... ______4.00 From Cole Draft Governor Company, Seattle, Washington, one Cole Draft Governor ------··········------·-···········--·-·····-·········--····------·---- 25.00 From Beaver Manufacturing Company, Portland, Oregon, one Beaver Oil Burner with controls ...... ______200.00 From Control Equipment Company, Portland, Oregon, five Pyrometer instru­ ments of various makes and types (used)------­ 200.00 One set Minneapolis-Honeywell oil burner controls------­ 30.00 From A~mozone ~ompany, Oregon City, Oregon, one Atmoray Ozone gen- erating machtne ------···········--·····------·····------·------150.00 From W. L Morrison, Portland, Oregon, one No. 10 Monk sawdust burner.... 35.00 One Duro sawdust water heater...... ------····--··-···------·······------35.00 Four heating coils for sawdust hot water heateL------­ 20.00 From Kenworth Motor Truck Corporation, Seattle, Washington, exhibit of motor truck parts ·········-·································--·-···············--···-·----···------··· 35.00 The following items are loans, rather than outright gifts, but the service they render the institution is essentially the same as from a gift. To Department of Civil Engineering: From M. E. T. Ericksen~ Corvallis, Oregon, bound volumes of "Transactions of t~e Atl!er~;an Soct~ty of Civil Engi~eer~", "Engineering News", "Civil Eng1neer1ng , and miscellaneous J?Ubltcattons ...... _ ...... 100.00 To Department of Mechanical Engineenng: From Electrogas Furnace Company, Berkeley, California, one No. 100B Electrogas air-conditioning unit------300.00 From U. S. Air Corps, Wright Field, Dayton, Ohio, One R-1860 No. 29-29 engine (used), cost $8,056.32, present value ------600.00 One 3-blade hub assembly ------­ 135.00 One type D-1 generator ------74.00 65.00 -i?~~ :?~~tlii~ ~~;~!:~~ :::::=::=::::=::=::::=::::::::=::::::==::==::=::=::::::::::::=::::::::::::: 176.00 Two type B-2 air-speed indicators ------20.40 One type D-IR generator ------137.50 One type A-4 flight indicator ------­ 156.00 One type B-1 supercharger gage unit ------16.90 To Department of Industrial Arts : From the Lincoln Electric Company, Cleveland, Ohio, for research and in- struction, one 300-ampere motor-generator welding set...... ·------·------··· 585.00 From the Portland General Electric Company, Portland, Oregon, for research • and instruction, one electric core oven ...... ---·······-----···--···············------···· 40.00 ScHOOL oF FoREsTRY From Portland Garden Club, collection of Kalmiopsis Leachiana plants for Peavy Arboretum ------12.00 From Harold Dahl, twenty-five cascara posts for School of Forestry "Post- Farm'' ·······------·-····-··················--·······-·········------·····-·------·-----····---- 20.00 From 0. V. Matthews, unusual wood specimens for wood collection of Forest School Museum ------50.00 From Herbert Yocum, collection of wood burls of Oregon for Forest School Museum ······------·------······-···--·--··············------····-···------·······--···-·······--·-· 15.00 Fromexperimental Walsh & Rainwater, dry kiJn ______Marshfield, Oregon, supply of Oregon Myrtle for _ 100.00 From Mary J- L McDonald Estate, allowance for purchase of additional land for Peavy Arboretum ------8,967.00 ScHOOL OF HoME EconoMics From the Rotana <:;lub of Portland provision for an annual award to a sopho­ Il!Ore student tn _Home Economic~ on a basis of. scholastic promise, quali­ ties of personality, and leadershtp, coupled With need for financial as- sistance ·······-·-·--·------·········--·------·-···--·····-····-··-·······------··········-----···· 25.00 SCHOOL OF PHARMACY From alumni and friends, gifts and installments toward the completion of the fund of $11,500 subscnbed for the Oregon State Pharmaceutical Associa- tion Educational Fund·------·------236.26 From McKesson & Robbins, Inc., Portland, for the special Pharmacy edition June 1937, of the Oregon State MonthlY------·------: 167.50 From various manufacturing firms, drugs for the Model Drug Store______600.00

( 31 ) • Federal Emergency Cooperation

Oregon State College has cooperated with the Federal Government in various programs of emergency relief. Some of these have been developed on the State College campus or farms; others, state-wide in scope or significance, have been administered by State College specialists or departments. The object of these projects has been primarily to provide employment, but also to carry out needed public works, and to assemble and analyze u seful data as a basis for future development of industrial, civic, and welfare programs.

INSTITUTIONAL PROJECTS National Youth Administration: Employment for need)' students, the institution receiving the benefit of the work performed. Federal contribution ...... $34,812.00 Works Progress Administration: General farm and campus improvement...... - ...... 11,819.00

( 32 ) McDoNALD RARE BooK RooM- The Mary J. L. McDonald Collection of fine books in room 301, Library, is open to visitors this afternoon from 2:00 to 5:00.

ExHIBITS- An exhibit of trophies won by students in the Speech Department in the various forensic contests is displayed as a unit in the Main Corridor of the Memorial Union. An exhibit of the work of students in Industrial Arts, representing original design and craftsmanship, is also on display in the Main Corridor of the Memorial Union.

MuRAL PANELs IN Wooo MosAIC- Attention is called to the three historic mural panels, done in wood mosaic, established in the main vestibule of Commerce Hall. The panels were designed by Aimee Gorham and executed under her direction in Portland, through Federal auspices, with the assistance of contributing organizations connected with the State College. The central panel was sponsored by the Class of 1936. These panels are similar in workmanship to the two panels established last year in the vestibule of the Forestry Building.

ART DEPARTMENT- The Art Department will welcome visitors to the lobby of Kidder Hall, to view the work of students, from 2:00 to 5 :00 this afternoon.

HoRNER MusEUM- The Horner Museum of the Oregon Country will be open to visitors from 2 :00 to 5 :00 this afternoon.

NuRSERY SERVICE AT CovELL HousE- Very young children are not admitted to the Baccalaureate or Commence­ ment exercises. For the care of infants and young children of out-of-town parents who desire to attend these exercises, a Nursery is provided at Covell Honse, corner of Monroe and Twentieth Streets. Parents should present their children in person and register them with the attendants. The Nursery hours on Sunday are from 10 :30 to 1 :00 and on Tuesday from 9 :30 to 12 :30. A charge of fifty cents for each period is made to defray the necessary expenses, including the time of the trained attendants.