OLD OREGO N Z W VOLUME XIII . NUMBER 6MARCH, 1931 Nmilmismi TAKE A S ummer Session Cruise with UNIVERSITY INSTRUCTIONand UNIVERSITY CREDIT and at the same time enjoy an ocean voyage . and the thrill of visiting new lands ! The UNIVERSITY of OREGON TWO Cruises This Summe r To ALASKA! To HAWAII ! Cost: $145. This includes summer schoo l fees, round trip fare fro m Eugene to Seattle, fare , berth and meals on Steame r Rogers, exclusively chartere d for this trip . August 3 to August 25 . Th e voyage is preceded by eigh t days of study on the campus. Six hours of Universit y credit may be earned on thi s cruise. Courses in English , History, Art, Education , Botany, Geology, and An- thropology, under an especi- ally selected faculty of Uni- versity professors . Cost: $375. Cost includes summer schoo l fees, round-trip railroa d fare and berth frum Port - land to Vancouver, and fare , berth, and meals on Empres sof Japan from Vancouver t o Honolulu and return ; als oboard and room in note d Punahou dormitory for 3 7 days in Hawaii . Dates: June 19 to August 5, wit h 37 days in the Islands . Credit: Maximum of 12 hours credi t may be earned ; 9 hour s recommended. Classes hel d on ship and in the ful lsummer offerings of th e University of Hawaii . A fac- ulty of picked professors wil l accompany the tour with th e advantages of study enrout e and in residence in Hono- lulu. Dates: Credit: THE REGULAR SIX WEEKS SUMMER SESSION in July 31, with a Portlrnd and en the campus in Eugene will be held fro m post-session of four weeks in Eugene. June 22 to DEAN ALFRED POWERS , [)IRECTOR OF SUMMER SESSIONS UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, OREGON Please send me full information about the a75 Alaska Cruise El Hawaii Cruis a75 Regular Summer Session (Approved by th e State Board of Higher Education 1 Class Name Address THE FAMILY MAI L February 2 . 1931. Dear Editor : I am afraid that I have little of interes t in reply to your request for news of dis- tant alumni . I am taking this year of f for further study and a rest, and a m thoroughly enjoying the change of bein g in my lovely home town after years spen t in the Orient and Oregon . As my interests liealong musical lines , my recreation hours are spent in choir , music club and operatic circles . At pre - sent the opera Boccaccio is occupyin g our attention, then follows an oratorio an d festival work . I am pleased at . the interest shown t o alumni and enjoythe class news an d articles of OLD OREGON . Sincerely yours , Kate Francis Ede, ex-7 , 1417 Beghie Street , Victoria, B . C. 40 January 31, 1931 . Dear Editor : Schofield Barracks is so like any Ameri- can city of 1,500 than 1 almost forget w e are considered foreign until I receive a letter, from the University, too, by th e way, with foreign postage addressed t o "Territory of Honolulu"! Schofield i s Uncle Sam largest army post, ten thou - sand soldiers, plus the thousand officer s and families with every accommodation o f a modern city : talkies, wee golf, gul f courses, dramatic . aria music clubs, etc . Captain Bond, as an engineer officer , builds roads, pavement, parade grounds , gymnasiums, etc ., for the post . I always get a thrill when the divisio n passes in review, regiment after regimen t of foot troops, the carrier pigeons , twenty-four airplanes in formation, an d line after line of motorcycle field artiller y tea-0,1-four abreast ! But we needn go far to realize we ar e in a Western civilization . At Kole Kol e Pass on the west side of the reservation i s the Sacrificial Rock where, when th e Hawaiian maidens were decapitated, th e heads eonveniently rolled on down th e canyon. At Wahiawa, a mile on the east , is the Healing Stone, where not more than three years ago, thousands of Ori- entals and natives daily made the pil- grimage to be healed by touching th e stone! Health authorities had to disinfec t daily to prevent spread of disease-lep- rosy, and such . Seldom do we drive t o Honolulu without seeing the water buf- falo, or a native funeral, or a Filipino i n the picturesque native costume . Only a few of the Japanese wear native cos- tumes; the Hawaiian native dress is no w only leis on the hats for the men, an d around the neck for the women, the olde r Hawaiians wearing the holoku, a Mothe r Hubbard which the early missionaries in . traduced to replace the scanty grass skirt . We love it here . Wish the army didn t move us on in three years . We are al - ready "Oahu id," which is to say, " noth- ing worries ." It is marvelous to go swim- ming most any winter day with air an d water at the same ,temperature, eighty de- grees. Don see why Oregon alumni in Hono- . lulu, of whom Ie heard there are many , don start an alumni organization here . You net a bomb under a resident there , and Il light it . Then perhaps we ca n celebrate with you all at Homecoming i n November . Pau (fini) . Aloha Nui (Many good wishes) , Faye Ball Bond, 3 , Schofield Barracks , Territory of Hawaii . Dear Editor : My March, 1930, number of OLD ORE- GON last winter went to the Universit y of Irkutsk in west central Siberia . I t was taken there by Fabio Fahrig, wh o was the ,mechanic of the Soviet plan e which visited here last year . He and Com- mander Slepnev came here accompanyin g the plane bringing the bodies of Be n Eielson and Earl Borland from North Cape , Siberia . It was there that the America n aviators crashed, and Commander Slepne v and his searching party found the bodies . Commander Slepnev was ordered on th e search by the Soviet government . Mr . Fahrig was interested in the article i n OLD OREGON on Russia . Yours very truly , Cecil F . Robe, 2 , Fairbanks, Alaska . EDITORS NOTE : Mr. Robe refersto W. H. Bur-ton s article, "In the Land of the Soviets," March 1930, Ouo OREGON . January 30, 1931 . Dear Editor : 1 r your March Travel Number . Many peopl e have an interest in Alaska, partly becaus e of the " lure of the North" and partl y because of the unforgettable romance o f the Gold Rush days. I c.anu here in 1928 to teach . Last sum- mer l married, and became a permanen t resident of a place I like very much . M y husband work takes us to Ketohikan fo r several months out of the year, and fre- quently to the States, so we shall neve r become bored with staying in one place . The climate is mild and rainy . We ha d approximately three and one-third hour s of sunshine during December . The wonder- ful scenery makes up for this, however . Rugged, snow-capped mountains are typ- ical of Alaska . Juneau is built at the foo t of two of these mountains, -rising shee r above it to a height of three and fou r thousand feet . From my apartment win- dow I can see the Channel winding be- tween the mainland and Douglas Island . It is fun to see the boats coming up th e Channel with their quota of mail from th e States . We Alaskans enjoy life . We have forma l dances, bridge dinners, hikes up histori c Gold Creek, miniature gulf, and automo- bile rides on the twenty-nine miles o f road which Juneau boasts . I send my best wishes for the succes s of OLD OREGON . Sincerely yours , Gladys Buehler Stabler, 6 , Juneau, Alaska . January 31, 1931 . Dear Editor : I am glad that you desire to includ e Hawaii . in your travel number of OL D OREGON . The story of old Hawaii is known t o every Oregon grad who had . the pleasur e of taking Dr . Clark course in America n Foreign Relations . No sooner had Captai n Cook discovered the "Paradise of th e Pacific" in 1778 than he radioed the mis- sionaries to come over and arrange fo r the tourist . crop that he visioned fillin g the Royal Hawaiian Hotel and .plucking February 3, 1931 . Issued monthly during the college year . Eugene, . Acceptance for mailing at specialrate of postage providedin section1103, Actof October3, 1917 . Subscription .00 ayear Published by the Oregon . 2 OLD OREGON 4 MARCH, 193 1 Alumni Tourists! As you go through Eu- gene on your spring and . summer trips, stop at th e Anchorage on the Mil l Race for dinner, lunch - eon or breakfast . The Anchorag e Open from 8 A . M . to 8 P . M. DIGNIFIE D CREDI T Ira F . Power s Furniture Co. Pay As You Ear n Portland Eugene New Service Laundry an d Dry Cleanin g MODERN EQUIPMEN T MODERN METHOD S FAIR TREATMEN T Call 825 839 High Street the plentiful cocoanuts . This they did - the monarchy was uprooted and th e islands made "safe for democracy ." What du we have today? The fines t climate in the world, sugar mills, pine - apple canneries, poi, chop sui, the hula , Waikiki Beach, prohibition and the we e golf depression . To know Hawaii one must actually se e and feel its presence, for words are in - sufficient . Aloha , Harold Bailey, 9 , Liliuokalani Junior High School , Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii . AP Dear Editor : I have just received your card an d hasten to comply with any request fro m OLI) OREGON . My life, my work, an d my part of the world well, that isquit e a large order . Life in Hawaii, or rather Honolulu, i s quite the same as in any other America n town now . The tourist folders describ e our beautiful surroundings, salubrious cli- mate, warm ocean and wonderful Roya l Hawaiian Hotel . It is all quite true . Aside from dancing and dinner partie s with bridge, our chief amusements are al l out-of-door sports . Golf and swimming ar e the prime favorites for all the yea r around, with football, basketball and pol o in their seasons . We have a large chapter of A . A . U . W., which is a serious organization of lon g standing. The men have a Universit y Club. There is also a City Panhellenic , organized in recent years, which is a pure- ly social organization . Business is carried on in a large way , sugar and pineapples being the greates t of the commodities . All in all, Honolul u is a very busy town-not at all the sleep y village song-writers and novelists woul d have you believe . I cannot give you red] statistics on th e population, in spite of "Jimmy" Gilbert s training . Re can do that, however, afte r sojourning here with the football team . Suffice it to say that the people are ver y cosmopolitan-many races living side b y side in apparent harmony . My work . As I am listed in the censu s as "Housekeeper-no occupation," ther e is little to be said about that . Since th e good old customs of living in grass houses , cooking in im-as, or underground ovens , and eating with the fingers out of a com- mon bowl are no longer in use, house - keeping presents the same aspects as i n all American homes, except that we have- n the fuel and fire problem, and do hav e a fair amount of help available . Oregonians who have visited here, an d there are many of them now, have de - scribed my part of the world better tha n I can, as close vision destroys the per- spective . There are five other mai n islands in the group beside Oahu, and o n them you will find more of the Hawaiia n atmosphere and plantation life . Daily air - plane service, however, puts them in clos e contact with Honolulu, so their isolatio n is at end . I recently made a trill to Mau i by plane in less than an hour and a half , stopping at Molokai and Lanai en route . This trip formerly took from eight oloc k at night until six the next morning, an d even then you could only go twice a week . So you see progress even in Hawaii . Sometimes one feels rather far awa y from old friends and old times and the n along comes OLD OREGON and there yo u are back in Hello Lane or "studying" o n the mill-race . Aloha nut lea , Mrs. Madeline Slctboom Emmans, 1 , 4045 Kahala Cliffs Drive , Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii . February 1, 1931 . .Dear Editor It would be impossible for me to writ e of all the delights of the Hawaiia n Islands, but at least I want to correc t one error that many people ave, an d that is that Honolulu is " The Hawaiia n Islands." People who get off the steame r at the capital city miss more than hal f of the beauties of the Islands . For instance, the island of Hawaii o n which I am located! Wasn there, onl y last November, a volcanic eruption in th e Halemaumau pit which attracted tourist s from everywhere? Also, on this island yo u see Hawaiians living more like their au- cestors. Most of the life here center s about the sugar-cane plantations, so ther e are no large cities . Although Ie never been to Kaui, 1 understand it is called "the garde n island," and is well worth visiting ; the n there is the Island of Maui, where ther e is the largest extinct crater in the world . It is an education in itself to be amon g people of so many nationalities, some o f whom speak no word of English . It i s amusing to hear the broken English an d Hawaiian or Japanese words jumbled in a sentence, which, until you are accustome d to the pronunciation, is very difficult t o understand. I shall never be sorry that my firs t year in the Islands was spent in Milo , Hawaii, for it is beautifully situated o n a. crescent shore, with Mauna Kea an d Mauna Loa, the two highest island moun- tains in the Pacific, in the background , and the water edge lined with cocoanu t palms and luxuriant tropical shrubs an d trees. Since I have bananas growing almos t within reach of my bedroom window, an d lovely hibiscus blossoms growing every - where, to say nothing of roves and numer- ous other flowers-why should I wish t o change my address--at least for a yea r or two ? May everyone who reads OLD OREGO N enjoy the year wherever he may be a s much as I, and may he also enjoy OLI ) OREGON as much as I do ! Sincerely , Myrtle G . Tobey, 7, The Palms , Hilo, Hawaii . FO VALUE EC]EIVE D A GREAT MANY PEOPLE will tell you that th e biggest single service that five cents can bu y today is a local telephone call . Without ques- tion, it is big value . . . and value that steadily grows as new telephones come into you r neighborhood. There are times when telephone service i s priceless . . . when the ability to call instantl y a doctor, a policeman, or the fire departmen t could not be measured in terms of money . But it is not alone the emergencies that giv the telephone its value. There are the common- places of every-day conversation . . . in th e home, the shop, the office . . . whenever yo u wish two-way communication with any one , almost anywhere. The telephone has become such an every - day, matter-of-fact convenience--like runnin g water and electricity-that it is natural to tak e it for granted . It is well to pause occasionall y and consider the nation-wide organization o f men, money, and materials that makes thi s vital service possible, and at such low cost . Here is a system of the public, for th e public . . . run on the barest margin of profi t consistent with service, security, and expan- sion. A service that grows as the communit y grows . . . placing within the reach of an in - creasing number the means to talk back an d forth with people in the next block, the nex t county, a distant state, a foreign country, o r on a ship at seal No other money that you spend can brin g you more actual value . AMERICAN TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY TO HAWAII OR TO ALASKA O N THE SUMMER SESSION CRUISES Alaska Glaciers o r Waikiki Beaches e By GEORGE TURNBUL L OLD OREGO N V ERY probably this article should have been written b ysomeone who has been to Hawaii-James H . Gilbert, fo r instance, or George Godfrey. When one talks to George, on e feels almost that he is talking to a native who misses his Hilo and his three-finger poi . George has been an editor ove r there, and to hear him talk of the Islands you think he wa s still publicity agent for the Hilo Chamber of Commerce-or , if that seems unjust, let us say the one at Honolulu . So w e were afraid even to talk to George . about it. We might mak e it sound too much like advertising. And, besides, Alaska has to get more or less mention before this job is finished. Well, there was still Dr . James H . Gilbert, dean of th e University College of Literature, Science, and the Arts. Dean Gilbert is widely famous for his nicely-balanced poise an d judicial temperament . He could tell us something tha t wouldn sound so much like advertising, perhaps . And how did it turn out ? " Doctor Gilbert, youe been over in Hawaii ." He wa s there with the football team three seasuns ago . "Tell me , what is your outstanding impression of the Islands as a re- sult of your trip ?" "Three things are equally outstanding : "First, the unusual hospitality of the people of Hawaii . We don know the meaning of hospitality-particularly out - side of our own South until we have been to those Islands; "Second, the way in which the mixture of all races ha s taken place-so amicably in every particular . I ll never for - get the impression made on me by the McKinley High School of Honolulu, with its splendid student body made up of al l races and nationalities. I have never seen such sehnol spiri t in my life as was displayed by these McKinley boys an d girls on the occasion of their football game with Weber Junio College of Utah. The Utah lads went over on the boat with us, and it was evident that they were confident of victory . Th e Hawaiians won by three touchdowns, and, as I said, I hav e never seen such a manifestation of it . There is absolutel y no trace of race distinction apparent in the relations of these young people. "And third, it is a new world . New in atmosphere an d aspect e scenery d going into Well, that was that. It was fairly clear that Dean Gilber t regards his assignment as director of the University summer cruise to IIawaii as not exactly a ehore . It is the same lan d of leis and alohas and wistful steel guitars, and moonlight . nights that attracted a steamship load last year on the Uni- versity of Oregon first cruise into mid-Pacific . They all talk that way about Hawaii. Now, as to the educational objectives. Karl W . Onthank, who directed the Hawaiian cruise last year, wrote in the Ore - yen Aloha, published by George Godfreys journalism class on the trip, that there are two principal aims . "The first, " he said, "was the development of a new group of summer school courses of obvious value to teachers, coupled with trave l uLservation related to them, and the opening of an opportunit for a wide range of study in the courses covered in the Uni- versity of Hawaii, which cooperated with the University o f Oregon in the project. The second went beyond the organized class studies for which University class credit is given, an d concerned the less tangible but highly important matter of a better understanding of Hawaii and of the complex problems of the Pacific ." These aims continue as the policy of the trip for this year. So there we have it . Scenery, and sociology, and scholar- ship, and travel And how about the trip over? What are the chances of the students twine oft their feed from ms .[ r ye mer? There was none to speak of last year on the steamshipNiagara . This year the trip is to he made on the largest and fastest steam - ship on the leifie Ocean, the Impress of Japan, grea t Canadian Pacific liner, speed twenty-one knots ; plenty of room . An office, library, and classrooms are pro- vided for the University on the cruise Something about the when of this cruiser The party wil l leave Portland, at midnight of Thursday, June 18, in specia l pullmarnm, arriving in Vancouver, metropolis of British Colum- bia, Friday afternoon . The Empress will sail at 11 o clock Saturday rrrornin. June 20. There will be a short stop a t Victoria, capital of the Province, whence the ship will sail the same day. The 2,500-mile trip to the palmy crossroads of the Pacific will occupy five days, and the stay in the islands o f slimmer will last fr om June 25 to July 31, or thirty-seve n days. This coincides with the greater part of the summe r session of the Un.vetity of Hawaii, with which the University again is collaborating on the educational end of the cruise Now for the courses : Preliminary publicity says that a limited number of courses will he given by the University o f Oregon on board ship going and returningand during the six weeks on the Islands . Because of their longer period th e iivercity of Oregon courses will carry four hours credi t each, and the University of Hawaii courses, three hours. An 6. OLD OREGON MARCH, 193 1 academia load of eleven hours may be taken, or only tw o courses h the University of Oregon and two with the University o f Hawaii. Detailed offerings of the University of Oregon on boar d ship and in Hawaii, together with the names of the faculty , will be announced later. The courses given will he selected , probably, from among the following schools and departments: education, political science, history, sociology, literature, geol- ogy, and art . Students are to state their preferences amon g these courses, as a guide to their selection. The University of Hawaii will offer three courses in art , one in economics, nine in education, three in English, includin one in journalism; one in geography, one in geology, one i n health education, two in history, two in Oriental studies, one in physics, two in political science, six in psychology, an d one in sociology. Prominent in the Hawaiian faculty is the renowned Dr . Thomas A. Jaggar, volcanologist in charge of the Hawaiia n Volcanological Observatory since 1919, the last seven year s under the direction of the United States Geological Survey . Dr. Jaggar is the outstanding American in his line of science Another name well known in Oregon on the Hawaiia n faculty roll is that of Dr . Merton K . Cameron, professor of economics in the University of Hawaii. Dr . Cameron was for several years a member of the University of Oregon faculty , leaving here three years ago for the new position in th e Islands. Another Northwestern name in the faculty is that of Dr . Leland H. Greer, for several years assistant professor of his- tory in the University of Washington, who is giving two his- tory courses. Dr . Creer is a specialist at the two extremes of history-ancient and American . We got the idea from reading the Oregon Aloha of las t year that the students had a lot of fun in addition to gettin g a lot of education on the Hawaiian trip . Read some of thes e headlines on the articles and form your own conclusions : Study, Fun Blend on Hawaii Cruise; Horse With Mustach e Found by Students . . . . Ripley Statement Verified ; Collegi- ate Serenade Enjoyed ; Hawkshaw Liked by Beach Lovers ; Real Thrill Found on 1"olcaaw Trip ; Jo Whitney Finds Real Romance on Boat Trip ; Sports Thrill Many While in Hawaii; Old Hawaii Lore Shown by Natives; Hawaiian Feasts Intrigu e Writer ; Food Tempts All on Hawaii Trip . The volcano referred to, of course, is the great Kilauea ; and the food included avocados, cooking bananas, taro poi , luau, mangoes, guavas, papaya, mahimmai, ulua, opakapaka and American pork chops. No cruise is complete without its side trips, and severa l of these have been worked out for the Hawaiian excursion . There will be the boat trip around the Island of Oahu, o n which the metropolis of the Islands, Honolulu, is built ; the Mount Tantalus and Punch Bowl trip ; the tour of the Islan d of Hawaii, famous as the location of the greatest activ e volcanoes in the world; the tour of the Island of Kauai ; and excursions around the interesting places clustered near Hono- lulu. So, taking it all in all, we might say, in the ordere d categorical style of Doctor Gilbert : In the fourth place, a good time can be had by all in that dreamy land of sunshine. Which leads us to one of the things held in commo n between this Hawaiian cruise and the shorter Alaska trip - the good time Eugene Register, who handled the journalism on the Alaska trip las t year, came back with the declaration that he had had the tim of his life . Ella Higginson got it right when she entitled he r book Alaska the Wonderful Country . It is just that . A lan d of glaciers, and gold, and towering mountains, and grea t rivers; of magnificent distances, of infinite coast line-a lan d for vikings. But if the preceding paragraph should find its way int o a newspaper office in Ketchikan or Juneau, this writer would be criticised for his ignorance. He would be told of the agri- cultural development of Alaska, the land where the sun shine all night-in the summer-and brings the crops on faste r than it can be done farther south; of the beginnings of indus- try ; of great fishing development ; he would he told that th e word Alaska connotes a wider variety of things than the name of any American state, . There is plenty to see and plent y to enjoy. If Hawaiian scenery is exotic, the Alaskan outdoors i s grand. Bigness abounds; and there are oceans of space Alaska also gets us into a world that is different fro m Oregon. Not only physically, but historically . You don g o far up the Alaskan coast until you run into suggestions o f old Russian days paediabritannical about all this, we can hardly mention th e itinerary to be taken this summer by the good old Admira l Rogers, the school-ship of last year, without bumping int o names that are redolent of Russia. Wrangell, and Petersburg, MARCIT 4 OLD OREGON and Juneau, and Sitka ., and Baranoff, and Chichagof f Islands, all have their early Russian connotations. The history professors will have plenty of chance to develop interes t in the subject. And the Indians with their kayaks, and their totems , and their quaint old tribal customs, will be on hand to interest the anthropologist, from Ketchikan north This will be the third Alaskan cruise in three successiv e years. In the first two years a total of 326 students made th e trip. The cruise for this year is planned on a basis of 142, and the preliminary announcementsgive warning that reservations will be made in the order received The Rogers will head north from Seattle Thursday, August 13, ten days after the students gather on the Eugene campus for the first nine days of study . The veesel will cross th e boundary into Alaska at Dixon entrance on the Saturda y and at 5 olock that evening will tie up at Ketchikan, to giv e the tourists six hours in this Alaska town which is mos t like Washington and British Columbia, with its lumbering and fishing and its 4,000 population. On Monday comes Wrangell, with its museum of India n lore, its totems, and its pioneer authority on the Alaska abor- igines, Rev. H. P . Corset, The next day the tremendous Taku Glacier, a living moun- tain of blue ice two miles wide and 300 feet in height, wil l be the scenic feature. Then Juneau, the capital, where eigh t hours will be spent, with the chance of a three-hour moto r trip to Mendenhall Glacier. Juneau has, on the average, bigger and better automobiles than almost any of the small citie s "outside." Lester McDonald, last year editor of the Oregana, is authority for the statement. Then up Lynn Canal to Skagway, the northern end of the trip. Skagway-reminiscent of the gold rush days of 7 an d 98; of the old White Pass with its trail of death to the tender- foot gold-hunters; of "Soapy" Smith, the old gambler-boss , whose grave, with that of Frank H. Reid, the fearless marshal who fought him a duel to the death, is shown visitors t o Skagway. The prospectus promises a ride behind a dog team, for only fifty cents-and mentions the Pullen house, con - ducted for many years by a woman who sent two stalwar t sons to the University of Washington to become, later, football stars and army officers . To emphasize that the phrase "the Frozen North," is a misnomer for this part of Alaska, th e visitors will have a chance to see the Blanchard Flower Gar - den, not to mention the inevitable curio shops. Sitka, the old Rug, ian capital, will lie visited on the return trip. And the students will be told of 1)r . Sheldon Jackson, the first man to realize the possibilities of importing reindeer to Alaska. In recent years many Oregonians have eaten meat. from descendants of Dr . Jackson first herds . Old histori c Russian buildings-churches and forts-will thrill the stu- dent at Sitka. The Indian village of Metlakatia, scene of th e pioneer missionary labors of Father Duncan, will be the las t stop in Alaska on the trip back. Seattle will be reached on the return, Tuesday, August 25. But what of the inevitable faculty, which must accompany the party if there is to be much class work They will be: Dr. Alexander Goldenweiser, noted anthropologist, one of the leading authorities of the world on totemism. hr. Joseph Schafer, superintendent of the Wisconsin His- torical Society, author of History of the Pacific Slope an d Alaska and other books dealing with Northwest history. Professor A . R. Sweetser, head of the Department of Plant Biology in the University of Oregon. Dr. Earl L. Packard, professor of geology in the University cf Oregon. Mrs. Mable Holmes Parsons, professor of English, Port - land Center Miss E . Lenore Casford, periodical librarian in the Uni- versity library, will be ship s librarian, and Dr. Ira A . Man- ville, of the medical school, will be ship doctor-hoping hi s task will be light. Courses, for which a maximum of six term hours may be obtained, will include American literature of the Pacifi c Northwest; anthropology; landscape sketching in water colors and pastels; art of the Alaska Indians ; field botany ; geog- raphy and geology of Alaska ; the Pacific Northwest ; state and territorial school systems ; children literature . Th e Alaska Boatra i periodical, will he issued by the students: There is always, of course, the opportunity for dancing to while away what hours are not used in study or sight-seeing, and the University is to take its own orchestra on the Alaska trip. This is necessarily only a sketchy outline of the two cruises Alfred Powers, dean of the summer sessions, knows all about them, and letters of inquiry addressed to him at 814 Orego n Building, Portland, will bring .prompt forwarding of printe d matter and answers to questions of interested persons. Again-whether it is Alaska glaciers or Waikiki beache s that fill the eye-"a good time will be had by all ." OLD OREGON MARCH, 193 Mariana, or It a n Old Spanish Custo m (Italicized portions are from the diary of Peggy Bethers ) -and shuffle-board. That is, shuffle-board in th e cool of the morning , Up early, and swimming in the tank, lovely an d refreshing, Windy, so more movement to the ship . Into a squall, so nice and coot that I did a littl e laundry . and sewing . Then helped fit out a fe w people with odds and ends for the mas- querade . Great fun getting ready for it . Wonderful what can be done out o f almost nothing . Danced until my fee t ached. And so to bed . a By RAY and PEGGY BETHER S C i OLD, bitter cold, greeted us in Antwerp, wher e we awaited the sailing of the motorship Axe l Johnson . The ship bade Europe goodbye very quietly. No one on the dock but a few longshoremen and the ship agent.. Our passenger list of twelve read lik e the roster of the League of Nations three Dutch, two Swedish, two English, four Americans , one Scotch, and the ship doctor fro m the Tyrol-Austrian, of Italian citizen - ship. We each had a small flag of ou r nationality at our place at the table The English Channel was devilishly rough for our Christmas dinner, bu t Captain Gedda thoughtfully change d the course of the ship to make her rid e a bit easier. She had a combination side- motion and roll, which is as hard t o describe as to experience . At dinne r we had all the fixings, both liquid an d solid, which an American and Swed e could wish for ; also a Christmas tre e decorated with the flags of the world . Eight days out, we sighted a full - rigged sailing ship to port, our first bi t of life since leaving the Channel . Th e Axel signalled Happy New Year by international code flags. Later the Azores appeared, and the red-roofed houses o f Ponta Delgada glittered in the sun. The ship awnings wer e put up, so we felt quite tropical . Officers in white uniforms 1 most interesting day, passin g through the (Vest Indies . Seems wron g to pass them byI What fun to visi t them . The first one, Sombrero, quit e small, and nothing on it but a light - house. Very brown and deserted-looking . Passed quite near St . Croix, and throug h our glasses said a negro run up th e Stars and Stripes . An American island , but most everyone speaks Danish . Ha s hills much like California . Had te a nerved on the upper deck. St . Thoma s Island seem dimly in the distance . Our first glimpse of South America , towering snow-capped mountains . ,Puerto Colorn 1 our first tropical port . A long white beac h with waving cocoanut palms, thatched huts, white with band of blue, yellow or orange. Hopelessly overladen donkeys, with MARCH, 1931 OLD OREGON 9 loads of hay, and negroes perched erosslegged on top . Zopi- lutes, vulture-like birds, in swarms,the sands black with the in places. Took a dilapidated, narrow-gauge train to Barran- quilla, where we bade goodbye to one of our passengers wh o went to Bogota by airplane . Hours by air and weeks, o r months, in the boats on the Magdalena River. Quite a contrast. Mud-thatched huts and seaplanes is quite a ship- ping point to the interior, and even has a residence section a bit on the Los Angeles style, where our Jamaican negro hack driver told us the "high" folks live . I received a counterfei t Colombian dollar in change and had no luck in passing it on, till I bought stamps with it in the post office . And so to Panama . Believe it or riot, but the Atlanti c side of the Canal is further west than the Pacific side . Cristobal, modern docks, roofed sidewalks, cafes, sailors Hindu . shops, and large-hipped negro women in bandana s with baskets of washing on their heads. Little black boys wit h shirts woefully short, and nothing else We had been in Panama before, in August, and found i t oppressively hot, but in January it was exceedingly pleasan t with much less rain. The Canal itself is most interesting, the lucks opening wit majestic precision and the little electric "mules" keeping th e ship steady as we shifted from one lock to another t of the old French canal, and a crocodile splashing about . Papaya trees, and banana plantations, and white-clad figures playing golf . Balboa, trim and shipshape, screened verandas and large government buildings s crooked, narrow streets and vine-covered balconies f old Spain, stately cathedrals and palm-dotted squares. Wha t fun to ride about, shaded by an umbrella, in the decrepi t victorias. The horseshoofs clatter as our beaming negr o driver dodges in and out of the traffic . Nothing very exciting, just a delightful day at sea. Lay i n a deck chair and read . The English-Swedish lessons are i n full swing. Warmer, but not really uncomfortable . I envy th e Scotch girl and her English husband who are going to live i n San Salvador . Saw many dolphins and some large turtles, on e with a seagull riding on its back . Off Costa Rican coast thi s afternoon . Many yellow snakes near the ship . Must have bee n carried out from land by the tide . The captain pretends not t o be able to see them . La Union, Salvador, in the Gulf of Fonseca . A beautifu l hay, filled with jagged islands, and a . volcano, San Miguel , blue in the distance. The harbor has no lights or navigation markers, so it mus be entered by day. We all went ashore and hiked about a mile to the town . On the way the doctor discovered an iguana in a tree, afte r which he climbed in pursuit, begging me to do likewise an d take a picture. No, I didn t get the picture. La Union is real Central America, ox carts creaking ove r the humpy roads, market places occupied by sleepy natives and rangy pigs, colored strips of cloth on sticks supplying shade . Here it i.s possible to buy snake skins, enormous hats, pottery, bananas, gourds, tortoise shell, and so on e prison, and rated a salute from the ragged soldiers on guard, barefooted boys in blue denim uniforms Hot, hot, hot. My crayons melted in my hands while I was sketching, and anyone but a crazy Gringo wouldn t be out in the sun anyway North again, to Acajutla, a cluster of mud and thatched huts on the beach with the usual palms e a thrill, tieing rowed to the iron wharf and hoisted by stea m winch one by one to the dock above . Acajutla (pronounced Aka-hoot-la) has no protected harbor, so the ships mus anchor in the open sea Arel took on bags of coffee fro m lighters towed out by a steam launch t the ship. but the crew shark fishing efforts with a line an d salt pork were unavailing. The first thing we saw on landin g was a much straw-hatted man, with about twenty live, squirm- ing iguanas tied on his back. On his way to tires local mea t market t they can he too rare for me . Isalco Volcano was belching forth smoke, and, as we saile at night, the glow was visible for miles. It is used as a sort of lighthouse by passing ships Champerico, Guatemala, from the sea look very much like Araju .tla, hut on going ashore the difference is at once appar- ent. The going ashore, by the way, is exactly as at Acajutla , per derrick . Whitewashed wooden buildings in rows, wit h scrubby palms, bigger hats on the men, and a much mor e Mexican look to the place . The Virgin in the church is als o wearing a straw hat, and the church hells outside are sus- pended sections of railroad irons, to be Neaten by a hammer. We passed an open schoolroom, where the children were shout- ing their lessons aloud, and the teacher grinned proudly ove his charges. Several "cowboys" were in town, wearin g machettes, and mounted on small ponies, their feet encase d in carved wooden stirrups The police headquarters had a Salvador flag as a windo w curtain, as a gesture to the country next door Champerico was cur last tropical port. The awnings down. San Diego came next, then San Pedro and San Francisco . Nearly six weeks since leaving Antwerp. In our excitement a t seeing the Golden Gate again, we were on deck at dawn, i n our pajamas. So that how I got the cold that stayed with m e for two weeks afterward . Adios . 1 OLD OREGON MARCH, 193 1 Guidance in Nigher By KARL W . ONTHANK, 3Education Dean of Personnel Administratio n G U (DANCE in higher education may be defined as thos einfluences which ai brought to hear upon a studen t for the purpose of aiding him in making the choices neces- sary for proceeding successfully through college and into , or at least toward, a . suitable life career. Guidance of som e sort students will have anyway . A few, fortunate in thei r parents, companions, and college advisers, receive invaluabl aid. For most, however, guidance is likely to be of quite a different sort . Studentsdecisions are apt to be based o n "feeling" quite as much as on knowledge; to be founded o n very meagre actual information . A college freshman, o r senior, faced by the necessity of making a curricular or voca- tional decision, casts about like any other human for infer - ation and counsel, and normally uses that which seems mos reliable. The question is, therefore, not whether or not college students are to have guidance in educational and vocational matters, but whether the responsible educational authorities are to make a systematic effort to provide students with good guidance or are to leave them, ashas too commonly been done, pretty much at the mercy of random influence . Education is tieing measured today mainly in terms o f the social product t its members know. It is concerned in general even more wit h the social uses to which their knowledge is put e has been quite generally accepted in the field of elementar y and secondary education, and the movement toward conscien- tious guidance of the pupil, not only as to conventional school and curricular matters, but also as to social and vocationa l objectives, is in the more progressive public school system s now well under way. Actual performance inevitably lags be - hind plans and aspirations, but already in many cities an d not a few smaller communities, excellent guidance service i s rendered. College teachers of education have been leaders of th e guidance movement since its beginning early in the century , but education is not infrequently most- conservative at th e top, and accordingly it is not surprising to find the highe r institutions only recently giving systematic attention to it . Ten years or more ago agitation began for giving systemati c assistance to college students in their selection of occupations But it was only as college and university administrators be- gan to dig themselves out from beneath the avalanche o f student enrollment which overwhelmed them immediately fol- lowing the war, and learned from experience that neithe r drastic admission requirements nor wholesale elimination s really settled their difficulties that interest in a guidanc e program in higher education became at all general. No reflection is intended on the splendid service of man y individual teachers, deans, and even presidents, in every col- lege in the land, who have aided students toward getting ad- justed in college and choosing and preparing for their lif e work. When almost every graduate entered one of the thre e recognized professions, there was no great need for a guid- ance program, but when college curricula became complex , when enrollment shot upward, when the large colleges be - came great universities and even the small colleges large be- yond the wildest imaginings of their founders, and especially when graduates, instead of entering one of a half-doze n established professions, scattered through a wide and ever - expanding range of occupations, the old comfortable assur- ance that the college was giving each student all it coul d vanished completely No one person could possibly he competent to advise i n all the varied and highly specialized academic fields, muc h less to counsel students as. to vocational choice and prepara- tion among the hundreds of occupations open to graduates . Faced by such a dilemma, preoccupied with his specialty, over- whelmed by the flood of numbers, it is no wonder that th e college professor threw up his hands, invoked the electiv e system, and pretty generally abandoned the giving of advice . This system (or lack of system) simplified the professors problem, and for a time students seemed to thrive at least as well as they had under the old regime of rigidly prescribe d courses After a time it appeared, however, that students, no more than the professors, possessed magic by which they coul d wisely choose the best courses and the most suitable occupa- tions. About the same time it was observed that the enterin g student, especially in the larger institutions now rapidl y growing more numerous, was having serious difficulties i n adjusting himself to the unfamiliar college situation . Various investigators called attention to the fact tha t fully ai third of those admitted to college failed to achieve the objective for which they entered college, Dr . Carl E . Sea - shore in.1926 pointed out that from five to fifty per cent o f the freshmen were being eliminated from college during their first year, and called . attention forcefully to the need for a program to enable the youth to evaluate his fitness for college education tality in college and the frequent change of occupation of col- lege graduates which suggested the failure of the college t o help them select and fit themselves for a suitable career. H e even went so far as to assert that this indefiniteness as t o objective influenced many promising student e idea of attending college at all . Later studies confirmed these opinions. C . R . Mann re - ported in 1925 that ten years are spent by the average grad - MARCH, 1931 OLD OREGON 4 11 MOUNT HOOD IN THE DISTANC E With one of Oregon fine roads in the foregroun d uate before finding the life work for which he is bes t adapted, and called attention to the enormous saving in human energy that would result from eliminating even a small part o this floundering. The most powerful of the influences toward the develop- ment of personnel guidance was undoubtedly the pressure of numbers coupled with shortage of funds adequately to pro - vide for the numbers . In 1925 Terman and Cowdery cite d figures showing that it was costing Stanford $335,000 a year to attempt to educate unsatisfactory or doubtful student ma- terial, and described the efforts being made toward conserv- ing this waste by selecting better students from among th e applicants and by stimulating the application of better stu- dents by giving suitable publicity to the information tha t "Stanford is in the market for brains." Studies and experiments were begun at many institutions the results of which have already led to educational refor m in a great variety of ways, and which are likely to affec t higher education even more profoundly in the next decade . Even students attempted to take stock of what they wer e getting, measured against their steeds. At a dozen college s undergraduate groups, usually without more than very in - formal contact with faculty members, studied and discusse d the methods, aims, and results of higher education as the y were experiencing it. One of the most significant and widel y commented upon of these investigations was that conducted b a group of undergraduates in the University of Oregon i n 1927, the findings of which were subsequently published unde the title Undergraduate Report, An Estimate of Intellectua l Activity Within the University of Oregon ; Suggested Change s in Administrative Policies . These undergraduate studies di not, of course, determine higher education reform, but . the expressed effectively the spirit of the time and unquestion- ably exercised no small influence in many institutions towar the modification of traditional methods to meet modern needs The majority of these reforms have to do directly or in - directly with better adapting educational opportunity to th e needs of the individual student, that is, with guidance in th e broad sense of that word . Public opinion, at first hostile t o everything which suggested any limiting of educational op- portunity, at least in the public institutions, has become con- vinced, if not through the results of educational experiments, at least by the size of the . tax bills, that there is virtue i n reasonable selection and competent guidance in higher educa- tion. Some of the state universities . are now. taking a leading part in this movement. These institutions are careful not to deny absolutely educational opportunity, but they are sup - ported by public opinion in taking the attitude that a student has a right to remain in school only while he is doing what fo him is a. reasonable amount of school work, and is demonstrat- ing capacity and willingness to take advantage of the oppor- tunity provided. Guidance in higher education is still so manifestly in th e formative stage that any survey of present practice is neces- sarily ineomzllete and inexact. Many institutions of widel y differing situations and objectives are experimenting wit h projects designed to meet their particular needs. Few of th e projects under way can he said to be incorporated as yet i n the life of the institution, although here and there, and espe- cially in the field of admissions, practice has come to b e relatively standardized The selection and admission of students was one of th e first and most pressing problems which arose bearing on the guidance function. The traditional method of admitting stu- dents on the basis either of preparatory school records or o f entrance examinations in specified subjects was long ag o recognized to be inadequate. The use of mental tests, give n tremendous impetus by the war, was promptly adopted by a number of institutions, originally supplementing other exam- inations and later as an integral part of admission procedure The best present method of selecting students for admission is that of applying a standard combined from mental test rating college preparatory school record, and personality rating . Students whose prospects for success in college, on the basis indicated above, are small, are at one or two state universi- ties put into classes especially designed for their limite d ability and are given during a limited probation period th e best possible chance for success, The few who succeed ar e then permitted to proceed regularly in suitable universit y courses . there are many other lines of honorable, satisfactory, and remunerative employment open to them which do not require for success those rather special- ized intelledtual qualities necessary for success in college The most important single factor in any guidance scheme is obviously that of the advisers and counsellors y plan is effective in proportion to their interest in and training and aptitude for this kind of work . Numerous advisory sys- tems for students have been tried. Recently a large numbe r of colleges have given special attention to advisory program s designed especially for freshmen . A few institutions hav e attempted to develop a central advisory organization without depending on teachers as advisers except for academic coun- sel and not entirely upon them for that. In general, however , it has been necessary for economic or other reasons to de- velop a group of advisers from among the staff member s available in the various departments. This method is likely to encounter difficulty in getting the services of a sufficien t number of . instructors who have the necessary time an d adaptability and who are sufficiently impressed by the edu- eational opportunity to devote themselves to the task r faculty nor students are, generally speaking, inclined to take even a considerably re-organised advisor arrangement ver y seriously at the outset. In the University of Oregon this dif- ficulty has by various devices been eonsiderably reduced but by no means eliminated. Among the More important of thes e devices are the recognition of advisers as important Univer- sity officers clothed with substantial authority, and the atti- tude of the President who has on many occasions made i t clear that the advisory function is regarded at this institution as equally important with the teaching and research functions The value to students of personal contacts with inspirin g faculty men cannot easily be exaggerated . The inspirationa l leadership and guidance of the experienced, sympathetic, an understanding teacher is invaluable in shaping the life o f (Continued on page 34) 12 OLD OREGON MARCII, 1931 Include Germany in Your Nex Tour of Europe Says ROSE MCGREW ROCHOLL, 4 IT IS rather a difficult task to talk about Germany and th e in a different world . While I am writing this I must thin k with a smile of reminiscence of the questions which the fresh men in the German class I taught in the U. of O . at the tim e used to ask me. Little enough they knew about my country . They thought of the Germans as of folks constantly in th e habit of eating "Sauerkraut," and who, every one of them , were in the possession of at least one of those bowlegged dog called "Ilackel ." The years have passed and brought a some - what better understanding of Germany, and Americans ar c once more beginning to visit my country, to spend their holi- days in some of those towns and cities so full of beauty an d interest to anybody who visits them with a willing mind an d open eyes. Everybody knows the different slogans of travellin g agencies made to induce people to visit this country or tha t one, beginning with "See America-or any other country - first" and continuing into the far away countries. France ha s done a. great deal to advertise its beauties, and few Americans fail to see Paris or the Normandy or the south of Franc e whenever they are in Europe . Germany, however, has bee n singularly reticent on this point, perhaps on account of th e crisis in which it has been living ever since the war, certainly it need not stand back behind other countries . I have see n quite a little of this beautiful world of ours, I have lived i n America and loved it and I used to show pictures to my Ger- man friends of Oregon, of the Columbia Highway, o f Colorado and the East which I had the pleasure to see o n my travels. Let me tell you "Dont forget to visit German y whenever you are in Europe," it will certainly be worth you r time and your money as well A short article can only give you a few suggestions . I t can give you a mere smattering idea of the pleasures an d pastimes you may find on a trip to Germany . Travel bureaus here in the country will help you any time and most indi- vidually. Twenty-four hours by fast train bring you from Paris either to Berlin or to Dresden or to Munich, three German capitals, most beautiful and interesting cities, each quite different as to its geographic position, its population, history, and cultura l significance. If you chose to begin your trip through Europ e with visiting Germany, you ought to cross on one of th e great German Liners, well-known for their technicaa perfec- tion, their speed, their service, comfort, safety . You wil l land in Bremen or in Hamburg . A few hours by train fro m Bremen and you will find yourself in Braunschweig, ancien t residential seat of Henry V the Lion, the Guelf Prince, an d home of the "Welfenschatz," Guelf treasure, which has bee n partly sold to an American city museum . Only the grea t poverty of the country could induce it . to part with such a treasure. But most fortunately one cannot sell the wonderfu l Gothic churches and the palaces and ancient houses, they ar all there to be seen, a joy for the eye and the mind whic h loves to rove in bygone days . The Liineburger Heide nea Braunschweig is a special treat to any lover of Nature , especially in the late summer and in the fall . Berlin may be reached by fast train in only a few hour s either from Hamburg or from Bremen . It is Germany capi- tal and one of the world largest and busiest cities . In surd - mertime you will notice with pleasure the loveliness of th e surroundings of Berlin, which a sport-loving generation ha s brought to notice. Innumerable lakes are the hunting-ground of those who love water-sports . Canoeing, yachting, motor - boating, swimming-all excellent. After a day of the museum s (Kaiser Friedrich-Museum, National-Galerie, and ethers) and the town sights, you will find recreation on the Wannsee and with the Wannsee by canals. Don forget Potsdam an d Sanssouci-of course you won forget them I-no mat - ter in what season you ma y visit Berlin. I find it especi- ally lovely in the fall, and I believe you will treasure th e sight of the Palais, with it s long staircase and the won- derful park around it, al l your life . Berlin has a "season, " which means that you ma y enjoy a certain amount o f theatres and concerts u should be interested in a fuller program you ought t o visit Germany in winter time. You imay know that eve n small German towns boast of good theatres and orchestras , and it is a sign of the time in which we .are living to watc h these small theatres and orchestras fight for their lives . Th e cream of it, of course, you will find in the cities, especially i n those which have been the capitals of the various Germa n kingdoms of the pre-war period. Generous monarchs endowe their theatres with large sums, contributing by this method t cultivate the taste of the people. Today, without these endow- , ments it is the acquired taste and habit which induce th e people to keep up theartistic life of the country . In Berli n you will find so many world-farnous names on the program s that you may have a hard time choosing your evening enter- tainent y that you may hear some other choice orchestra with world - famous conductors and renowned artists of every kind every evening. And you will be able to pay for it, for it will cos t a lot less than similar entertainments in the U. S. Let me say a few words about . Dresden, Saxony capital. It has been called "Elb-Florenz," for reason of the singula r beauty of its site, monuments, buildings and surroundings . The inhabitants are the art-loving public par excellence an d proud of it . The "International Hygienic Exposition, " which took place in Dresden last year, brought many a foreig n visitor. The Exposition has been prolonged and may be see n from May 15 till October 15. It is situated in the well-know n "Grosse Garten," a lovely Park, which took its origination under a Saxon monarch of bygone days. There are so man y things to be seen in Dresden, not to mention the trips b y motor-bus into the Saxon Swiss which are very popular, that I daresay you will find it worthwhile to visit Saxony, tha t small, busily bustling country Americans visiting Germany should not leave the south of MARCH, 1931 OLD OREGON 13 Germany off their program . Heidelberg and the romance o f its student life is well-known to everybody-the Rhine just a s well. Munich has attractions of its own individuality to attract foreign visitors the Hofhranbans and its special atmospher e and its beer!-and so I find it unnecessary to advertise i t especially You wish to know something about the conditions here . We are all living in a critical time, the whole world is fight- ing against a common enemy . We call it "Weltwirtsehaft- skrise," i. e., Economical crisis of the World . A hitter word , a hard word, and even America has began to feel the mean- ing of it . The only difference is, perhaps, that Germany ha s seen so many hard days, and no peace, since the World War, and America is only now starting to feel them . There are s o many people out of work-for years hunger and discontent- ment are the natural consequence. But the Government i s doing the utmost, and we are all hoping that some day the whole world will recognize and find a remedy for thi s trouble, for it is the trouble of the whole world . Nationa l problems seem almost unavoidable, but the German is n o Bolshevist by nature; he will find a way out, if there is on e to find. At any rate, if you visit Europe at all, you will fin d similar problems everywhere and why not cone and see an d judge for yourself ! This economical crisis is showing onc e more that the whole world ought to hold together and ever y country is connected in some mysterious way with the fate of some other country s widen the mental horizon of a person, everybody who ha s the means to do so should take the chance and travel e the chance and visit Europe, and don forget to plan for a longer stay in Germany. You will become one of those arden t admirers of this country as has many a fellow countryma n before you. Football in the Limelight s NTERCOLLEGIATE football is "on the spot ." Its prom - inence in American sporting life is being paid for with th e customary criticism given any large enterprise. The comments were, at first, genera] . There was talk of "over-emphasis ." Now people are getting more specific . A number of the cus- toms and practices attendant upon the production of a win- ning varsity are being called unethical, economically unsound, and educationally bad . Lewis of Lafayette, Hugo Bezdek of Penn State, Sol Metzger i n theSaturday Evening Post and Frank Schoonmaker inHarp- er have said or written some pointed things concerning the had practices colleges have gotten into lately . The Carnegi e Report, scoffed at though it was, gave the public a prett y clear picture of the sloppy thinking indulged in by colleg e administrators as they promoted or tolerated the growth o f the beloved octopus, football r from the spectator standpoint, is causing a critical analysi s to be made of the whole program of intercollegiate athletics . The college games of two decades ago are, apparently, n o longer the innocent contests between academic institutions . They now have developed into full-sized commercial pro- jects in which victory is an easential asset to the successfu l accomplishment of the ends in view. Football games are now scheduled so as to bring the great- est financial advantage to the college . The location of th e game is often determined by the site of the potential gate . The players are exhorted to win in order that those who have money invested in the football pageant may realize full pro - fits. Football is admittedly big business Its management calls for the wisdom of an able lawyer . The power of money i s strong in its influence, A college town sees its chance . Wi n the game, bring more people in, rent more hotel rooms, sel l more gasoline and souvenirs. It all a part of the game itself . Many a Chamber of Commerce promotion manager has wept as the home team failed to cover a pass that went for a touch- down and ultimate defeat. The coach must win . He is pai d a high salary to do it. If he doesn--out he goes . No expens e is spared to bring in a man whose reputation elsewhere speak of happy homecomings and well-filled coffers . The varsit y must win. It all a bit wearisome these days to try to work up the old pep and enthusiasm over as commercial a venture as eve masqueraded as an amateur sport matic exponent of parenthetical remarks, would have handle the script of one of our rallies in unique style . Can t yo u hear Oeill grim and determined captain telling the cheer- ing crowd that "Wel be out there fightinfor you . We mus t win for the sake of the college (and so a big crowd wil l come to the next game and the hotel receipts will be larger , and the coach can get his ten thousand, and so old Prexy can he thought of as a live wire, and the mortgage can be lifte d off the student body, and maybe the legislature will open u p with a new building)." There are two good reasons for all this-only one of whic h is generally recognized. Dear old Siwash must reign supreme in sport in order to keep alive the old college spirit, and , equally causative, but less apparent, business must show a healthy ledger, n commercial sport . There s no particular disgrace in that e to admit the fundamental purpose . Baseball is an honore d profession and has very few scoffers because the men pla y ball, earn an honest nickel, and the stockholders are pai d dividends e football---only the relationships between the two should h e acknowledged If college football keeps up its present pace then amateur ism must go-it is incongruous in its present atmosphere of half million dollar seasons, three dollar tickets, over-pai d coaches, and college presidents who barter their good judg- ment to be known as the prexy of a successful football college Amateurism hasn a chance-it simply isn compatible wit h the economics of profit-sharing businesses . If the tackle s break up plays and the hacks toss passes that win ball game and draw the "gate," then common sense will some day se e the right of those tackles and hacks to a share in the profit . The football player of today who earns thousands of dollar s for others is as surely entitled to his share as the editor o f the college paper who turns a nifty editorial for a monetar y gain. In the wave of purity that-swept over the country in 1930, players were suspended (by Iowa and Wittenberg) because .14 OLD . OREGON 11T.ARCH,193 1 they had been given financial assistance. Poor devils . Why the handhallers, the swimmers, and all the others, competen t not be fair about it1 They earned it . They earned the coach inst .ruetion in sport. Settle all the money, time, attention, and his ten thousand dollars. They smoothed out the brow of the brains on football and wel produce a nation of spectator s graduate manager. Albie Booth and Wes Fester made many a watching a few skillful athletes perform while we gathe r hotel-keeper happy with sterling play, and yet neither Albie splinters in our national soul . The right of every man an d nor Wes nor Kitz could sell pop at the stadium gate. They woman to play a game without fuss or fetters is more im- must be amateurs because football is an amateur sport . We portant, if we believe in democratic principles, than all th e prove that every year when we raise the coach salary. conference championships put together. To de-commercialize football we will have to lower the ad- No one really wants to see football discontinued. It to o mission prices, pull the coachesalary down and, in all ways, much fun. As a game it has few equals . Its popularity mus t quit trying to make money out of an amateur sport. Football be deserved . It too had it has been cluttered up with all th e is at the crossroads-either it goes admittedly professional, trimmings and ballyhoo of the big tent . and the boys earn ten or twenty dollars a game along with A change is inevitable. It will be led, as President Day o f all the others who make money out. of it, or else it goes ama- Union predicts, by the hundreds of small colleges . The Bi g tour and changes considerably. It can go on as it is now . Ten, the Pacific Coast, and the Southern Conference will b e There is also the notion that football is a great advertiser. the last to balance up because there are too many chrysanthe - Win the ball game and put the college on the map. Beat a big mum merchants involved in the affairs of the big colleges . eastern team and everybody will know about our little alma But the change is coming, and, surprisingly enough it wil l mater. Such pronouncements sound logical enough but are come from within the profession of physical education Maud _ they true? They are-within limits . If we win the ball game ing athletics. Sport writers will be denied the pleasure o f we get on the map-but it s the football map . What comes to wise cracking about jealous professors who want to alter th e a college after a winning season? Increased enrollment? In- football picture . Coaches and directors of athletics themselves creased endowment? Better scholarship? Smarter professors? will take a hand, and when they do, athletics will have not a s No one has yet shownconeretely that any of these more worth- spectacular but a larger place in the curriculum of an insti- while benefits ever come to pass. The evidence shows no car- tution . None other than Hugo Bezdek, the same old "Bez " relation whatever between winning or losing football seasons of a former day at Oregon, startled his associates this Christ - and educational progress. Notre Dame, Alabama, Washing- ions by recommending radicalism in the halls of tradition . ton State, Centre, Columbia, Chicago, and Iowa State, all in His reception was not so kindly . He was five years ahea d the football limelight for having winning, or losing, teams of schedule . But the important thing is that Bezdek, as on e show enrollment and financial figures in a steady trend un- of many hundreds of men who are in athletics, had the em irs related to the footprints over the goal Iines . age to put on paper what he thought should be done. Here they One would admit immediately that the publicity goes to the are in brief : winner but the fair question may be put : Is the price pai d for the -publicity worth the return which the university gets? Put all athletics and physical education togethe r The Rockefeller, Carnegie, or Commonwealth Foundations are under a one head responsible to the president. strangely unconcerned with the results of the Conference 2. Put all athletic budgets under university control . races. A winner is great-everybody likes one-but the win- 3. Put football in there too . ning college football team,in the words of Yresident Bryan of 4. Put the coach on the faculty with an academic rank. Ohio University, puts an institution on the football map only 5. Choose the coach and give him tenure as we do "and the stoner presidents and alumni realize it ., the sooner any other valuable professor they will quit robbing other departments and ballyhooing for {i. Give all coaches salaries commensurate with hi s athletes has just had two undefeated sea- academic ranking in the faculty . sons but not a nickel from the legislature because of it. r" Cut out spring and long football practices . Intercollegiate athletics, and particularly football, is, in s, stop giving athletic subsidies, many colleges, out of step with the larger program ofphysical education. This is not true everywhere . Physical education is Bezdek had others, but those are the main ones . His recom- the fastest growing department in American schools, on mendations can be laughed off . They may not be complete , authority of the Federal Office of Education . It is here to and they may hurt some interests, but they can be laughe d stay. Gaines, sports and recreation will play an important aside . Perhaps if `Bez" were pressed he say somethin g part in our lives . That why college athletics aren over- about pre-season setup games for the larger colleges, eligibil- emphasized t be emphasized enough-not until ity rules, untrained faculty or graduate managers, and som e every man and woman in the college has the opportunity to of the other quaint things about modern athletics . The hi-spore learn a game and to participate in team and individual sports e Football is one of these . So is basketball. But to have a de- a_lot easier on the nervous system of alumni if they will pre - partment set aside from the rest to have a separate faculty, pare now for the shock. separate financial arrangements, is as educationally unsound Through all the evolution, though, athletics, themsel ves, as having a department of Shakespeare set aside from the will stand their ground . They are too fundamentally good t o department of English. It all physical education, and when be chucked out of college life . Wel still have them-but w e administrators will quit separating the two, quit robbing one may not have high-priced ,coaches, graduate managers, three- budget to get an assistant coach in another, cease giving the dollar seats, arc-light practices, or the hull-whip. mass sterile" gymnastics and give everybody a square shot at 40 41 . l h education in recreational skills, then the football picture wil l be less odious Campus Visitor From Calcutt a Physical education is not one thing and athletics another. Dr . IZalidas Nag, of the University of Calcutta, was a One is part of the other . One of the praiseworthy principles visitor ore the campus in February . He spoke on Indian poli- c.f modern physical education is that the focus of administra- tics and India place in international affairs, as well as o n tine attention should be widened to give the hockey players, India art . MARCH, 1931 OLD OREGON 15 New Clinic Open on Marquam I-JillBy SERENA7MADSEN SCHEFFER,o A MODERN, up-to-date clinic, fitted with new equipmen tthat makes it an excellent laboratory for young "doctors- in-training" ; a place where the sick and indigent of Portlan d could receive care and treatment, should as many as a thou - sand of them seek its doors in one day such is the new Uni- versity of Oregon Medical School Clinic on Marquam Hil l which opened on Februar y The new and imposing 00,000 , building replaces its pre- decessor, the old Portland free dispensary, which was -locate d at Fourth and Jefferson streets . The new structure is situate d between the Doernbecher Memorial Hospital for children an d the Multnomah . County Hospital . Its erection was made pos- sible by a gift from the general education board of New York , connected with the Rockefeller Foundation . ne hundred and twenty-five physicians and surgeons , most of them members of the faculty of the University o f Oregon Medical School, comprise the staff of the new clinic . Although plans have been made for treating an average o f 200 or 250 patients a day in the new building, which was th e cumber treated daily in the old free dispensary, present facili- ties are such that a thousand patients could be treated i f necessary, according to Ralf Couch, secretary and busines s manager of the University of Oregon Medical School . The new clinic is the triumphant culmination of a visio n dreamed of and begun, in a small way, before 1908 . The first work of this kind ever attempted in connection with the Uni- versity of Oregon Medical School was carried on in an ol d chapel in South Portland, on First and Carruthers streets . No regular attendant was in charge, and a few bottles o f medicine on a shelf, with patients few and irregular in thei r appearance, marked the beginning of what is now a realize d objective . The dispensary was then moved to a small room in th e old medical school building, at Twenty-third and Lovejo y streets. Here it had the advantages of more regular attendanc e by physicians and students, who made it the "beginnings " of a clinic . I)ue to its location, which was remote from the poore r parts of town, its patients were almost as few and far betwee n as before . Its period of real service to the community of Portland , however, began in the spring of 1910, when it was moved t o the Men Resort on Third and Burnside streets, and its nex t change, to the quarters at Fourth and Jefferson streets, estab- lished it as a very necessary adjunct to the medical schoo l and as a valuable addition to Portland charitable institutions . With its new housing and new equipment, the clinic is no w in a position to render much valuable service to both the med- ical school, as a laboratory for medical students, and to th e city of Portland, as a place where relief can be administere d to sick and needy by competent physicians and surgeons . OREGON BASKETBALL PLAYERS WITH BILLY REINHART, THEIR COACH Left to right (front row) : Roy Hughes, Billy Reinhart, roach, Sam Rotenberg, Kermit Stevens, Cliff Horner, Billy Keenan , Norman Eastman, manager . (Back row) : Walden Boyle, Henry Leeof ,f, (Charles Roberts , Jean Eberhart, iVinsor Calkins, Vincent Dolp . 16 OLD OREGON MARCH, 1931 You Never Can Tell-In Mexic By DONALD DeCOU SMYTHE, g TI-IE revolution was a failure . For six weeks the rebel-tosos had been fighting a losing battle with the govern- ment troops, who had been constantly driving them nort h toward the international line. Agua Prieta, seventy-five mile s to the north, was their Iast stronghold, so we were all expect- ing a violent struggle there when the word came over th e wires that General Escobar, together with a million or s o of pesos, had deserted his troops and fled . Now little is t o he feared from any troops under discipline, but a beate n disorganized army with the penniless soldiers fleeing fo r their lives is a different matter . The first word came ove r the railroad telegraph line, they had sacked a ranch an d murdered the rancher. Then another rancher, an American , rode hurriedly into town after hiding his stock in the hills . He reported that the surrounding country was full of arme d men, hungry and trying to escape with their lives. The ques- tion was, were they hungry enough to attack the town? I f they did, could we hold them off till the Federals came ; and if we could, what might we expect from the Federals? W e had been in Rebel territory throughout the struggle, and s o had been forced to aid them or get out ; but could we con- vince the Federals of that? The general opinion was that w e could try, but they would act first and listen afterwards Needless to say, little work was done that day, too man y rumors to listen to, each wilder than the last . About on e oluck word cause through that a small band of Federals had gotten through Pulpito Pass, and were twenty miles up th e line waiting for a train to bring them down to protect us . Now the best way to a soldier heart is to give him transpor- tation so that he won have to walk. An engine was hurriedly run out of the round house, hooked to some empties on a side track, and the general manager jumped aboard n trains are not noted for speed, but the way that train started up the track was worthy of the Twentieth Century Limited. No use working after that, much better to prepare a wel- come for our deliverers and get ready to viva for Calles . i t was quite a wait, but our interest didn flag ; everyone wa s trying to guess what would happen when they came, or didn At last the engine whistled up by Ben Caballeriza and w e craned our necks to get a first glimpse as the engine cam e around the bend. I was soon satisfied, on the engine pilo t were half a dozen bronzed campaigners with bandoleer s crossed on their chests and rifles pointing, all at me . Th e train manse to a stop amid cheers which we tried to mak e sound hearty but which I fear were rather shaky . The .sol- diers piled nut. of the ears and lined up, no parade soldier s these but hard tough veterans all, nothing you wanted t o meet in a. dark alley either. To anyone familiar with Mexica n fighting the absence of .suddaderac was significant . The y looked friendly, however, and one of the officers had bee n stationed at Pilares before the trouble started, so we antici- pated no immediate trouble e barracks, furnished with food and firewood and we withdrew to the hotel to discuss our good luck We were still talking it over at eleven olock that nigh t when word came from Almazan headquarters in Agu a Prieta where the Federals had taken over . Our Federa l protectors, whom we had welcomed that afternoon, wer e rebels who had hoodwinked its. The real Federals were o n their way down to take over . Our self-congratulations wer e premature, perhaps we were going to see a war after all . Unfortunately, I was not there to see the end, although I understand that things went off quietly . I had received or- ders to make an examination of the -- -- Mine some thirtee n miles to the north. and conditions were such that I could not postpone the trip . I started out the following morning , mounted on the best horse in camp but unarmedA more was with me to show the way but as protection he was worse than useless g bands but there was little I could do. We were but two mile s from town when I met the first of them, three heavily arme d Yaquis, the toughest fighting men in Mexico. The Yaquis d o not use horses so I was safe on that count, and as I appar- ently did not look prosperous enough to rob they let me g o after passing the time of day . I breathed more freely bu t that was just the start . As we approached Clrurunibabi, I spotted another group of soldiers resting along the road , There was brush along the sides and I could disappear int o that, but if they had seen me it would be just too bad as i t was not much protection against . I decided to make the best of it and went ahead . As I approached they got u p and looked me over. These were not Yaquis and I expecte d to be set afoot, as a good horse and saddle were much to b e desired just then. However I stopped and chatted with the m and when 1 started to go on they made no move to stop me , but they sure looked at that horse and saddle . I arrived a t the - Mine where 1 completed the examination in a fe w days without further incident, although several of the nearby ranches had a rather tough time of it . Much is to be seen in the newspapers about the difficultie of mining engineers with bandits . My experience both her e arid in China h5 led me to the conclusion that it is usuall y the fault of the engineer . There may be times and places t o get " hard, but when you are outnumbered and the othe r fellow has the drop on you is a good time to be extremel polite and forget that the I . S. has a strong navy . A littl e "kidding" will often get you by but if you act scared, loo k out. I was once able to get by some Chinese sentries, wh o had held me up at night by poking a bayonet into y guts , by politely and with great formality presenting them wit h my visiting card, which they could not read. Although the present economic condition of Mexico is bad the political situation is better than it has been since the time of President Diaz . The last three revolutions have been fail- ures, and in a country where they say "the revolutionists al - ways win" it is significant . The government is now so strong that there is little chance of anyone starting a revolution. I t is true that the present government is a dictatorship in al l but name, but those of us who have lived away from th e States realize the United States model is quite unsuited i s many countries. The present economic situation is due to seca era] causes e raising country. The only market for the cattle is the State s and the recent tariff has killed that, the best year they hav e had for some time too . Many of the silver mines have ha d to shut down as silver is at the lowest price in recorde d history. The copper trines are in somewhat similar shape , although most of them have managed to continue operation s on a curtailed production basis . To anyone who wants to do some sightseeing, I can rec- ommend Mexico. There is plenty to see, plenty to drink with - out breaking the law, and the further stimulus of a foreig n atmosphere t bandits, in fact it is probably safer than Chicago . T he University Travel Service, organized fou ryears ago by our Alumni Association, has grow n from an experimental venture to an establishedservice feature . During the past year more than one thousan of our graduates obtained travel information by send- ing in request cards like the one on the following page . But they did more than merely obtain information . For, as a result of their interest and co-operation, trave l advertisers now recognize this magazine as the prim e medium for reaching the University large group o f graduate travelers, and their increased patronage o f the advertising columns has released Alumni Associa- tion funds for other purposes than the mere mainte - nance of Association machinery If you are one of the many thousand graduates wh o will travel within the next twelve months, your trip ca have a twofold value y Travel service facilities, you will not only simplify the arrangement of travel detail, but, at the same tim e benefit your University . To every traveler will b e issued a Courtesy Card signed by an agent of th e transportation company n of the service rendered in bringing his line to the fav- orable notice of the University traveling public. UNIVERSITY TRAVEL SERVIC E San Francisco Los Angeles Seattle New York Agents in all principal cities of the U . S. and Canada New York San Francisc Los Angeles Washington, V. C. Portland Philadelphia Boston Chicago Offices in all principal citie s Visit the colorful centers of Latin Culture in South America . Direct roufe to Buenos Aires, Montevideo, and Rio de Janeiro . IN the sophistication of its great citie s nental Europe and Great Britain presenta never to be forgotten picture to American eyes. Wherever you go-Piccadilly Circus , the fabled rocks of the Lorelei, Sweden s quiet canals, Lake Lucerne, an old Breton inn, or the city of the Caesars-you wil l find a vibrant and colorful present etched in bold relief against a background of cher ished history and romance. Whether yo u travel to Europe individually or with a tou this summer, you have in store for you a vacation that will be one of the most en- joyable and valuable experiences of you r life. U . S. LINE S HAMBURG-AMERICAN LINE CUNARD I. M. M. SWISS FEDERAL RAILROAD S AMERICAN EXPRESS FRENCH LINE LIBERA LINEGENERAL S .S . CORP .Pacific Coast Agent s BUREAU OF UNIVERSITY TRAVEL (OFFICES OR AGENTS IN ALL PRINCIPAL CITIES ) FOR FURTHER INFORMATION SEE TRAVEL ADVERTISING SECTION N .Y . K . LIN E San Francisco Los Angeles Seattl e New York Chicago Portlan d CANADIAN PACIFI C Orient Europe Alaska Canadian Rockie s Offices i n San Francisco Los Angeles Seattle New York Chicago Portlan d and all important citie s MATSON LINE-LASSCO LIN E San Francisco Los Angeles Seattl e New York Chicago Portland T 0 the West . . . beyond the Wes t. . . lie strange fascinating landsAl - ways have we looked to them with longing. But always have we denied ourselves o f their charm and instead have followed th well-beaten paths of the millions. But this year with luxurious liners marking the Pa- cific lanes with almost daily schedule and at excursion fares, we can now spend our vacations in the lands that border th e Pacific. Diamond Head at Honolulu, Sydney s matchless harbor, the Daibutsu of Kama- kura, the Sweepstake Races at Shanghai, shooting the Rapids of Pagsanjan in th e Philippines, the lovely Island of Bali, th e famed Taj Mahal-all are now vacation at - tractions. And if we wish, we may retur n home Round the World and prolong th e pleasure and interest of our trip . DOLLAR STEAMSHIP LINE S A N D A M E R I C A N M A I L L I N E New York San Francisco . Chicag o Los Angeles San Diego - Portland Oakland Vancouver, B . C. . Seattle The trip checked below appeals to me, and 1 would like more detailed information concernin git-without cost or obligation on my part . a75 Panama Canal a75 South America a75 Europe a75 Switzerland a75 Hawaii a75 OrientI a75 Round the World Q Alaska a75 Transcontinental E] California Resorts 0 Mexico a75 Canad I have checked the line I want to travel by : a75 Dollar Line a75 Panama Pacific a75 McCormick El U . S. Linea a75 Cunard a75 French Line Q Hamburgmerican a75 Swine Federal R . a75 AmericanBap. a75 Libera Line a75 I.M . M -I a75 Bureau Univ a75 N. Y . IC Q Canadian Pacifica75 Mataon Co. a75 Southern Pacific a75 Canadian National a75 PacificGreyhound a75 Santa Pe R . a75 ChicagoNorth Westerna75 No Line Choice Other trips or places (specify) I I {have) (have not) already booked or inquired about this trip with any transportation line o r travel service If so. name :.----- - .... -- ------- ---- The month I would travel is - ------ The class accommodations I desire are : (Mr .) (Mrs .) (Miss) -- ------- . .. Address Class ( City State ----- Phone TEAR OUT AND MAIL NO POSTAGE NEEDED . NO OBLIGATION IF you cannot go abroad this summer, you can find thelure of foreign lands nearer home. Old France lives in New Orleans and in Quebec ; Spain shadow is ove r all the Southwest, and Spain itself still rules in Mexico . The great cities of the East, the Canadian Rockies, in - comparable Yosemite National Park, Colorado, th e evergreen Northwest and Alaska with its fjords an d glaciers are all easily accessible by fast trains or steam - ers. If you plan to cross the continent, arrange you r itinerary so that you can include many of these sceni c spots. To aid you in your stop-overs at strange citie s you will find leading hotels listed in our advertising pages. SOUTHERN PACIFIC Sen Francisco - Los Angeles Portland Seattle Chicago New York and other principal cities CANADIAN NATIONA L San Francisco Los Angeles Seattle New York Chicago Portlan YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK San Francisco Los Angeles Yosemit PACIFIC GREYHOUND LINE Agents in all principal citie s CHICAGO NORTH WESTERN RAILROAD Chicago New York San Francisco No Postage Stamp Necessary If Mailed in th e United States BUSINESS REPLY CAR D FirstClass Permit No . MI, P. L. R., SanFrancisco, California UNIVERSITY TRAVEL SERVICE, 432 HUNTER DULIN BUILDING, SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA . MARCH, 1931 OLD OREGON 21 Who Who i n This Issue Rose Rocholl, nee Rose Schoenberg-McGrew , 4-, makes her home in Chemnitz, Germany , where her husband, Dr . Rocholl, holds th e position of syndikus (manager) of a Unio n of Employers of Labor in the building trade . Mrs. Rocholl is the daughter of Madam e McGrew, who has been on the faculty o f the School of Music since 1920 . Donald DeCou Smythe is Chief Geologist o f the Moctezuma Copper Company, a subsidi- ary of the Phelps Dodge Corporation, one o f the largest of the American copper pro- ducers. His job is to make money for hi s company by advising as to the amount o f ore that can be expected on properties whic h his company is thinking of purchasing . Als o he is directing the development work in th e Pilares Mine and thus his address read s Pilares de Naeozari, Sonora, Mexico . Delbert Oberteuffer, 3, speaks with au - thority on athletics, for he has studied th e subject from mast of its many angles . A s yell king at Oregon he could bend the mo b at will, and at many a rally he has figur - atively had the rooters "eating out of hi s hand." Since Oregon days, Del has earne d his M .A. and Ph .D. degrees from Columbi a University, and now, as Dr . Oberteuffer, h e holds the title of Supervisor of Health an d Physical Education in the Ohio Stat e Department of Education . Travel stories by Ray and Peggy Bother s have been featured in OLD OREGON befor e this issue, and judging by the enthusiasti c comments, alumni like them. This month no t only the story Manana, or It's an Old Span - ish Custom, is credited to Mr . Bother s clever pen, but also we are indebted to hi m for the original cover drawing on this num- ber of OLD OREGON . Mr. and Mrs . Bether s spent over a year travelling around th e world; travelling leisurely to allo w time for sketching . BACK-FIRE ! "Personally, I have very little sympath y with the alumni movement as it is demon- strated at Oregon . So far as I can judg e it appears to have degenerated into a mutua l admiration society ." -D . D. S . AO "Will you please STOP sending mail t o me? This mail has to he forwarded fiv e times to reach me, and then bulges m y waste basket ." -R . W. H. "The disgust which I get from the cigar- ette advertisements on the back of the jour- nal, depicting the popularity of cigarette s in college life, more than offsets any bene- fits from news items ." Dr. H . D. N . "Kindly remove my name from the mail- ing list of OLD OREGON as I am studyin g at Harvard. . . ." -C . A. "OLD OREGON makes me too doggon e lonesome." -B . C. S . A World-Wid e Travel Organizatio n In this magazine many different transpor- tation companies are advertising thei r facilities. Some have services through the United States, north to Canada, and down through Mexico, Central America, Wes t Indies, and South America . Others tra- verse the Pacific Ocean to Japan, China ; to the Hawaiian Islands, Australia, an d New Zealand . Other transportation com- panies offer services to Europe and othe r parts of the world . rt is possible for you to book for a trip over any of these lines or systems through th e American Express travel offices liste d below. At these offices are experienced trave l men who will offer impartial advice , secure transportation, and arrange you r tours. Their recommendations are base d upon long years of actual experience an d residence in countries abroad. Their ad - vice is well worth seeking . Steamshi p tickets to Europe, Hawaii, the Orient , Africa, and South America will be re - served at regular tariff rates . When you arrange your travel plan s through the American Express you ar e automatically introduced to the ever - helpful service of the world-wide Ameri- can Express organization . To make you r trip all you have a right to expect it to b e merely telephone or call at the neares t American Express office . AMERICAN EXPRES S Travel Departmen t 599 Market St . at Second 609 West Seventh Stree t American Express Travelers SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF . LOS ANGELES, CALIF . Cheques Always Protect 1209 Fourth Avenue 65 Sixth Stree t Your Funds . SEATTLE, WASH . PORTLAND, ORE . At You r Service OLD OREGO N MARCH, 1931 PUBLISHED BY THE Vol. XIII, No . 6 UNIVERSITY OF OREGON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, EUGENE, OREGO N Printed by the University Pres Oi.o ( )RF(os is issued monthly during the college year from October through June . The subscription rate is $2 a year. Flues should be mailed to the Circulation Manager, OLD OREGON, Eugene, Ore . Advertising rates on request . Editor, JEANNETTE CALKINS Circulation, M . BOYER Advertising, ELAINE HENDERSO N Here No O H! what a game ! It doesn tseem to matter now that ther e are still two games to be won fro m 0 . S . C.-or lost-at this writing . The main thing is the way Bill y Reinhart basketball team fough t in McArthur Court on February 2 1 and brought a near defeat up to a smashing victory for the Univer- sity! And its the last four minute s of play ! The rooters went mad ! Ever y Oregon fan in McArthur Cour t went mad! Pandemonium was le t loose. Never had a victory taste d so sweet, for the 0 . S . C . players , sure of the game and stalling t o take up time, slowed down th e tempo of the playing until almos t every Oregon spectator was a nerv- ous wreck ! Slow-stall-slow, but the Oregon side must wait for a break knowing that time was flee- ing, that the precious minutes wer e wasting away . Then came the break . And di d Reinhart men play? Four min- utes to go and they piled up a scor e that passed the Beavers by nin e points . Noise ! Say, if a dru m major had played a slide trombon e in your ear it would have sounde d like the piping of a cricket ! Bu t on the floor the Webfoots, obliviou s to the noise, kept their heads an d feet, and, as old Sam Friendl y would have said, "Victory wa s ours Y Alumni ContribuEion T HE alumni magazine welcome ssigned articles from alumn i when they contain a sincere expres- sion of opinion on questions of in- terest. Such an expression is th e article on athletics in this issue b y Dr. Oberteuffer . It must be remembered, however , that articles in OLD OREGON . do no t necessarily represent either edi- torial opinion, nor administrativ e opinion . They represent only th e opinion of the writer . Planning a Holida y T HERE something about plan-ning a holiday that changes th e most morose individual into a cheery, debonair enthusiast, There s just something about going place s that does it . Next best to plannin g one own vacation seems to us t o be planning a Travel Issue of a magazine . For by the time one i s through, whether it s new lands t o conquer, or just a week-end visit . the open Toad is beckoning and th e travelling bag looks inviting . Nor is this roving spirit to b e deprecated . For to overcome im- mediate barriers and vision far hor- izons is worth while for everyone . Usually it is to benefit by increase d tolerance . And, after all, toleranc e does much to solve the difficult ar t of living . Auld Lang Syn e T HEY are still trying to answe rd greetings that came to Dr . and Mrs . John Straub during the holidays ! Literally hundreds and hundreds o f them. From near and far away ; re - cent students, and grads of man y a year back, all of them wanted t o wish the Straubs the best goo d wishes in the world . If you sent a greeting to them , know that it was appreciated, fo r no one who looked at Dr . Straub s beaming face as he read the card s and reminisced about the sender s could doubt the happiness the y brought . But, just between you and me, i doubt if there enough time befor e next Christmas to answer them all ! A Special Servic e F OR Oregon alumni there is th eUniversity Travel Service . I f you are planning a trip, a postcar d or letter addressed in care of OL D OREroat will bring you the best ad - vice about travel problems . Ther e is no charge for this service, . Two Prize-Winning Editorial s On Trave l Written by students in the University for ou r Travel issue, Each was awarded a $5 prize . By ROBERT H . ALLE N Is a travelled man an educated man? Tha t question deserves a world of comment befor e answering; but before attempting that, let clas s the travelling public into four groups . First are the money spenders who like to pa y out a sou here and a pfennig there . Next ar e those who travel just to prove to themselves tha t no country is better than their own . Third ar e those who seek adventure or a change of setting . And fourth, those who travel with an open heart , seeking to learn from others, and searching for th e soul of countries different from their own . The first three of these types cannot be calle d either educated or in the process of being edu- cated. They are merely tourists, filling the hotel s and resorts of foreign lands . But in the fourth class we find the idea l traveller, the man who visits distant ports becaus e he feels that there is something to be gained fro m contact with people and lands different than hi s own, because he feels that to be an educated man , one who can make a definite contribution to soci- ety, he must see the world through its soul . It is in this man that world peace advocate s see the fulfillment of their hopes . Through him , they say, countries will some day find a mutual . understanding, a basis far world unity . By ELINOR Y Wherever you are is the place to begin . Start with a long walk. You will find thing s you have never seen before, no matter how ofte n you have traversed the way on business bent . Gradually the thing will grow upon you, unti l at last your two legs will not be fast enough no r take you far enough to satisfy your wander-thirst . Then you will resurrect your old geographies an d collect travel literature . This is the stage at whic h most of us must be content, for, as travel broad - ens, so does it flatten . But for you who love adventure above all else , who feel vaguely joyous in strange places an d among strange things, who can forget the dust , and who hear with pleasure the myriad medleys o f sound that fill the sleepless nights-for you ther e are a thousand and one places to be, or to be o n your way from, or on your way to . See the snow-peaks of the Andes ; stand in th e rich valley of the Nile ; go among India trouble d millions; linger in a lazy Basque village ; explor e valleys where cliff-dwellers built their eaves , castles more fascinating, if not more picturesque , than those that stand beside the blue Rhine . Let the Wanderlust hold sway! SAIL to Alaska and back through th e. Ten days of sheer delight! Healthy tan g of salt air . . . placid water . . . and a n endless procession of breath-taking sight s -mountains that rise majestically fro m the water edge-giant glaciers tha t crackle and thunder in the sparkling sun - light, islands in an emerald sea . Finally, Alaska itself! . . . land of th e midnight sun . . . of "sourdough" an d huskie . . . of giant flowers that bloo m with fierce magnificence in a brief summer. A gorgeous vacation, yet the trip ma y cost as little as $go . from Seattle, Victori a or Vancouver and return . (Si 03.16 fro m Portland . $136 .75 from San Francisco . $155.25 from Los Angeles . Equally lo welsewhere .) Alaska may also be include d as a side-trip on the Triangle Tour o f British Columbia . Write for illustrate d booklets. Canadian National takes you everywhere in Can- ada . It operates the fastest train service betwee n Montreal and the Middle West . Takes you across the continent without changing cars . It offers yo u the luxury of the Canadian National hotels, lodges and camps that stretch from coast to coast . I t operates its own steamship lines, tgreat broad- casting stations, telegraph and express services . CANAD IAN NATIONA L( 7 ILe L e l -2actcv-a y~~~~e vic c vn 4cc ~ /Is you near Skaguav, the beautiful Taku Glacier lines the shore . Relentlessly the mountain snow s drive tins river of ice on its stow way to the sea-force it to discharge the little bergs that dot the water . SAN FRANCISCO SEATTL E W. J . Gilkerson, General Agent J . F . McGuire, General Agen t 648 Market St ., Phone Sutter 5092 1,329-4th .Ave LOS ANGELES PORTLAN D H. R. Bullen, General Agent A. B . Holtrop, City Passenger Agen t 607 S. Grand Ave ., Phone Trinity 5751 102 Yamhill St ., Phone Beacon 3424 24 OLD OREGON MARCH, 193 1 ~ News of the Classe s 1890 Alameda, California, is the home o f Nellie D. Swift . Her street address is 180 7 Alameda Avenue . 1893 Clerk in the office of the county aud- itor of King County, Washington, is th e job held down by Jesse G. Mil-er. He live s at 5020 Twelfth Avenue, Northeast, Se- attle . 1894 Irving M . Glen, dean of the college o f fine arts of the University of Washington , died February 18 in Santa Barbara, wher e he had gone several months ago in an ef- fort to improve his health . His wife, Juli a Veazie Glen, 5, was with him in Sant a Barbara . Dean Glen received his master s degree from the University in 1897 . Fro m 1897 until 191 1.he was a member of th e University faculty as professor of Englis h and literature and dean of the School o f Music . He then accepted the position wit h the University of Washington, where h e became director of fin,, arts in 1912 an d dean of the college of fine arts in 1915 . He is survived by his widow and hi s daughter, Juliet, who is now living wit h and studying under Madame Emma Calv e at Nice, France . 1900 Grace Stewart Krebs (Mrs . Harry E . Krebs, ex-0) and her husband have a tourist park at . Sandpoint, Idaho . Their on e daughter, Wilmette, is grown . Mrs . Kreb s attended the University from 1896 to 1897 . James G. Hammond, ex-0, and his wif e were in Eugene during the middle of Feb- ruary to visit Mr . Hammond mother , Mrs. F . A . Rankin . Mr . Hammond is na- tional field secretary of the Izaak Walto n League of America, and spends his tim e motoring through the country servicin g different chapters and state organization s of the League . During the past year h e has covered some 30,000 miles . He is a brother of Major-General Creed C . Ham- mond, ex-6, auditor-general of the Phil- ippines. Ile has been connected with the- atrical activities for a considerable par t of his life, having managed and produce d many theatrical ventures in Boston, Phila- delphia and New York . Later he toure d with his wife, whose stage name is Clar a Turner, as the manager of her company . Mr . Hammond has also made ventures int o the journalistic field and has held posi- tions with chambers of commerce end wit h Rotary International in Chicago . John L . Dillard, ex-5, died in Eugen e on February 5 after a brief illness . He i s survived by his widow and a small daugh- ter, Olive Jane . Two brothers, Walte r Dillard, 0, of Eugene, and Frank C . Dil- lard, 5, of Medford, also survive , 1901 Leon Patrick is a physician in Orange , California ., with offices in the yrnith-Grote Building there . 1902 Everard R . Moon, ex-2, is professor o f missions and history of religions at Butler University, Indianapolis, Indiana, Thre e children make up the family, two of whom , Jesse and Eleanor, are grown . David, th e youngest, is seven years olil . Mr . and Mrs . Moon and their children live on Blu e Ridge Road, at number 137 . 1905 Albert D . Applegate, ex-5, furnitur e dealer in Eugene for twenty years, has ef- fected . a merger of his store with that o f the Ira F . Powers Furniture Company o f Eugene . The consolidation became effect- ive February 15 . Mr . Applegate will be - come an executive officer in the combine d concern. " The merger is in line with th e trends in business and industry the coun- try over, and it means that through re- duced overhead expense we will be able t o pass on to our customers better prices an d better service than ever before," Mr . Ap- plegate said . John F . Frost and his wife have a ranc h near Red Bluff, California . 1909 Connected with the Paul E . William s Company at Portland, which handles Ne w York stocks, is Rabin H . Nelson, ex-9 . His office is at 424 Pacific Building . John, the eldest son of Mr . and Mrs . Nelson, i s sixteen, and Robin, the other son, is ten . Jessie R. Nottingham last name now i s Strong . She and her husband are Seattle- ites, living at number 1615 Thirteent h Avenue . Mrs . Strong is an ex-member o f the class of 1909 . Ellsworth A . Morgan teaches in Havre , Montana, where be is professor in a north - ern Montana school . He received his M .A. and Ph .D, degrees from the University o f Wisconsin. He and Mrs . Morgan have fou r children, Glenn, eleven, Delmer, ten, Phyl- lis, eight, and Marjorie, who is one yea r old. The Morgansaddress is 446 Tent h Avenue . 1910 Edith Prescott Siefert (Mrs . John Sie- fert) and her husband are spending th e winter at Newport Beach, California, fo r Mr . Siefert health . Mr . Siefert wa s formerly a member of the faculty of th e School of Music at , the University . Leland C . Hurd, ex-0, is an engineer and a captain in the United States Arm y Air Corps at Wilbur Wright Field, Day - ton, Ohio . Mrs . Hurd is with her husban d at Wright Field . 1912 Ala Evans Houston is connected wit h the Railway Postal Service in San Fran- cisco. He and his wife have their home a t 3230 Clay Street , Jessie E. Prosser has been Mrs . Alber t A. Stewart since November 12, 1930 . Sh e and her husband make Los Angeles thei r home. Their address there is 2518 Londo n Street . Mabel Lane Reagan (Mrs . E . M . Rea- gan) lives in Portland, at 257 East Lan a herd Street . Jennie Fry Walsh (Mrs . Raymon d Walsh) of Eugene, was called to Salem i n February to attend the funeral of her father, Daniel J . Fry, whose death oc- eurred February 15, after a long illness . Mr . Fry was a prominent druggist in Sa- lem. Furniture is the "stock in trade" of Ed- win F, Fortmilor, ex-2 . Ire has his stor e at Albany, and his home is at 1032 Wash- ington Street there . Word has only recently been received a t the OLD OREGON office of the death o f Ronald Seaforth MacKenzie, ex-2, Oc- tober 25, 1930 . He is survived by his wid- ow and a twelve-year-old daughter, Jean . 1913 Major Edward A . Noyes can be reache d at the Surgeon General Office, Muni- tions Building, Washington, D .C. Claude B . Washburne, vice-president o f the Junction City First National Bank , has been advanced to the rank of major , according to an announcement received b y him from Oregon National Guard head - quarters. Major Washburne served over - seas with the Oregon Coast Artillery . The head of the mathematics depart- ment of the State Teachers College a t Kearney, Nebraska, is Merl S. Pate. Edna May Messenger teaches in Kellog g School in Portland . She lives at 450 Eas t Ninth Street North . 1914 Jesse R . Kellems, accompanied by hi s wife, his brother, Homer Kellems, ex-6 , and Mrs . Homer Kellems were in Portlan d during February conducting an evangelis- tic campaign . Mrs . Jesse Kellems, former- ly Inez Toledano, is a dashing Spanis h beauty and possessor of a $2,000,000 for - tune, according to newspaper reports . He r father was a prominent business man i n Colombia, South America . She and he r husband, Dr . Kellems, have a yacht o n Puget Sound . Harry U. Miller, ex-4, and Mrs . Miller , whose maiden name was Virginia Leach , ex-5, live in Salem, at 280 South Libert y Street . Mr . Miller has a grain mill, an d sells grain and feed . Fred S . Mathias, ex-4, gives his ad - dress in New York City as 25 Nassa u Street, and his occupation as "invest- ments." 1915 Her home, her husband, and her five - year old son, Donald, occupy the time an d attention of Nettie Belloni Miller (Mrs , Earle E . Miller, ex-5) who lives at Sac- ramento, California . The Millers live a t 817 Forty-seventh Street . Mrs . Miller at - tended the University from 1911 to 1912. Edward A . Geary, ex-5, was throug h Eugene the last part of January, returnin g to Klamath Falls after a trip to Portland . Mr. Geary was enthusiastic about th e prospects for business development i n Klamath Falls . 1916 "Take me away from Joseph, Oregon, " writes Grace Edgington Jordan (Mrs . Leon- ard B . Jordan) to the Alumni Office, ask- ing to have her address changed on th e files, "and sot me down in Eureka Land- MARCH, 1931 . OLD OREGON 25 BEAUTY. JOY. HAPPINES ing, Oregon, via Lewiston, Idaho . I stil l want OLD OREGON, often, ardently, an d so forth ." Charles H. Minturn, ex-d is a brea d salesman with the Korn Baking Compan y in Eugene . Mr . and Mrs . Minturn are th e parents of two children, Laurence, who i s fourteen, and Rea, who is eight . The ad - dress of the Minturn is 1799 Columbi a Street . Emma Kleinsmith Marshall (Mrs . Wil- liam Marshall, ex-6) with her husban d and her two children, a boy and a girl , lives at Mulino, Oregon, on route one . Verna Mae, their daughter, is not quit e ten, and Marvin, their son, is two year s younger . Twins, a boy and a girl, were born t o Mr . and Mrs . Henry V. Howe (Ceci l Evelyn Jones, ex-2) of Baton Rouge , Louisiana, on January 31 . The boy ha s been named for his two grandfathers , Herbert James, and the baby girl has bee n named Elinor . The babiespaterna l grandfather is Herbert Crumble Howe , professor of English at the University o f Oregon for many years . The Howes hav e a third child, Patricia Evelyn, who wil l be five years old on March 11 . Dr . How e is head of the department of geology a t the Louisiana State University . 1917 Bethesda, Maryland, is the home o f Mary Warrack Lockhart, (Mrs . Wilber M . Lockhart) . Her husband is a lieutenant - commander in the United States Navy . They have one daughter, Alice, who is al - most seven years old . The Lockhart hom e is on Wisconsin Avenue, at number 6955 . Harold J . Wells is continuing the prac- tice of law in Eugene, where he is in busi- ness with his father, Jesse G . Wells, in th e firm -cif Wells and Wells . He and Mrs . Wells (Bertha E . Shaffner, ex-3) hav e two children, Phyllis Eileen, who is five , and Charles J ., ten and one-half month s old. The Wells family lives at 542 Law- rence Street . 1918 Dr. Amy Nivison Stannard, ex-8, wa s a visitor in Portland in January, a gues t of Esther M . Campbell, 6 . Dr . Stannar d completed her medical and psychiatri c work at the University of California med- ical school and has been for a number o f years on the staff of St . Elizabeth Hos- pital in Baltimore, and is now with th e Department of Justice in Washington, D .C. She is a member of the parole board whic h examines eases at the federal penitentia- ries . Recently she has been at McNeil Is - land and will return again during July o r August . Roy L . Orem, ex-8, is in the bankin g business in Portland, where he is execu- tive vice-president of the United State s National Corporation . He attended th e University from 1914 to 1915 . He an d Mrs . Orem and: their two sons, Preston an d Beige, who are five and two years ol d respectively, have their home at 1575 Sac- ramento Street . Ada Matthews MacKenzie (Mrs . R. R . MacKenzie) gives her home as her occu- pation. Her husband, a graduate of O . S . C., is an engineer with the General Elee- tric Company in Pittsfield, Massachusetts . They have their home at 23 Hazelwoo d Terrace . Manager of the Standard Oil Compan y at Coeur dlene, Idaho, is the "officia l berth" filled by Joseph S. McLean, ex-8 . He and his wife (Julia C . Platt, ex-8) Tf you are looking for peace, jo y and contentment, not to mentio n opportunities for rejuvenation an d intellectual improvement, cease fur- ther search, for Switzerland is wait- ing to graciously offer you thes e comforts. Travel in COMFORT SAFET Y Travel wisely and economically . Ou r 8 day 2nd Class season ticket cost s only $18.50. If you plan to trave l this Summer see Marion F . McClain at the " Co-op," campus sub-agent for many steamship companies We shall lie glad to send you illus- trated literature on the followin g most delightful routes and places : Lugano, St . Gothard, Lucerne and it s Lake District, Zurich, Grisons, St . Mor- itz, Simplon, Loetschberg, Bernese Ober -land, Montreux, Interlaken, dungfrau- inch, Berne, Thun, Zermatt-Gornergrat , Furka-Oberalp, Lausanne-Ouchy, Geneva . Write or clip this ad for packet P . G. SWISS FEDERAL RAILROAD S 475 Fifth Avenue, New Yor k "OREGON" Flower Shop 829 13th Ave . E .-Phone 1281 Member, Florist Telegraph Deliver y Associatio n PRINTING. . . Invitations -- Place Cards-Dance Programs - Formal Announcement s Office Furniture Everything for the Wel l Equipped Office Office Supplies Phone 103 or Call at th e KOKE - CHAPMAN COMPAN Y 75 West. 8th Avenue, Eugene, Oregon 26 OLD OREGON MARCH, 193 1 have a family of four daughters, Marcia , who is thirteen, Jean, who is eleven, Jose- phine, ten, and Laurel, seven . The McLea n home is on Second Street, at number 801 . Lucien P. Arant, ex-S, attended th e press conference on the campus during th e latter part of January . He and Bernar d Mainwaring, a graduate of O . S . C ., ar e co-publishers of the Baker "Democrat - Herald ." Harry Mesner . ex-8, can be addresse d in care of the Big Lakes Box Company, a t Klamath Falls . Leland Haines, ex-8, now is a certi- fied public . accountant of Florida . He ha s had his papers since July of last year . Il e and his wife, Elizabeth Houston Haines, ex-0, and their daughter, Margaret Jane , who is eleven, live at 513 West Yale Ave- nue, Orlando, Florida . Louise Leiter Newell (Mrs . Gilbert J . Newell, ex-S) and her husband call Port - land their home . Mr . Newell is Wester n representative of the Tile Tex Compan y of Chicago . There are two boys in th e family, John, who is four, and Thomas , who is two . 1919 "Among those present" at the editoria l conference on the campus in January wa s Harold B . Say, ex-9, of the publicit y department of the Portland Chamber o f Commerce. His spare time he spend s pounding out fiction for national maga- zines. "Argosy" recently bought a stor y of his . Manager of the W . B . Crane Compan y in Seattle, is the business title of Kenneth A. Moores . Four persons make up th e Moores family, Mr . and Mrs . Moores an d two boys, Kenneth, who is eight, and Mad- ison, who is six . They live at 2610 Thirty - eighth Street . Southwest . The head of the science department a t the Franklin High Scheel in Portland i s Marie Badura Ridgeway (Mrs . Willia m Ridgeway) . Her time is very fully occu- pied with her teaching, her home, and tw o youngsters to look after . Imogene, th e daughter, is Past five and Willard is no t vet a year old . Gertha !lark Lane (Mrs . Denis Lane , ex-9) with her husband and two children , Donis. who is seven years and four months , and John, who is six, live at Adel, Oregon . They have a farm and sheep ranch there . Mrs. Lane also teaches school on the side . 192 0 The press conference on the campus i n January attracted Douglas Mullarkey, ex - 0, from Burns, where he is editor of th e "Times-Herald ." Homer McKinney, ex-0, runs an aut o repair shop in Corvallis . He and his wif e have two daughters, Jean and Joan . wh o are eight and three years old respectively . The McKinney home is on North Nine- teenth Street, at number 6120 . Things were pretty exciting for Herber t Moore, ex-0, state traffic officer, on Jan- uary 24, when he trailed down and cap- tured J . C . Adams, slayer of Patrolma n Sani Prescott of Ashland . Adams was al- leged to be an automobile thief and a rumrunner - He said that he shot Pres- cott rather than submit to arrest . Mr . Moore attended the University from 191 6 to 1917 . left Springfield, the home o f his parents, about four years ago, and ha s since had Medford as his headquarters , working in the state traffic department . OLT) OREGON has just . learned that there is a third member in the James Car - ter Brandon family . That member (ver y important, too, we judge) is Joan, who i~ s seven months old . She was born in Bang- kok, where Mr . Brandon is with the In- ternational Engineering Corporation . The y are electrical and mechanical engineer s and also importers and exporters, being th e only American company in Siam . 192 1 !Field agent for the Montana Children s Home and Hospital of Helena is the jo b held by Arthur C . Jacobson, ex-1 . Ther e are three children in the Jacobson family , Howard, Geneva and Arthur . Mr . and Mrs . Jacobson and . their children live at Mis- soula, Montana, at 230 Brooks Street . Elsie Niles Simm (Mrs . Harold Simm , ex-1) has a son, John I-tall Simm, hor n December 9, 19 :10. Dr . Harold Simm is a dentist. They live at 850 North Occidenta l Boulevard, Los Angeles . Marie Wagers Phillips (Mrs . Harold F . Phillips, ex-1) and her husband and tw o children, Patricia and Larry, are living a t Healdsburg, California . Patricia is te n years old and Larry is seven . "I teaching at Washington High i n Portland and am enjoying it thoroughly, " writes Beatrice Crewdson Johnson (Mrs . F . W . Johnson) on the back of her sub- scription renewal blank . She lists her ad - dress as 727 Hawthorne Avenue . Rhetta TempletonMcLean (Mrs . Mac M . McLean) and her daughter, Margare t Maxine, returned to Seattle February 1 5 after a visit with Mrs . McLean parents , Reverend and Mrs . J . C . Templeton, an d also with Mr . and Mrs . George N . McLea n of Eugene . A certified public accountant, with a n office of his own in Eugene, is Spencer R. Collins. He has an office force of three , two of whom, Robert Ii, Lemon and Floy d K . Bowers, are graduates of the Univer- sity with the class of 1930 . Lena E. Newton, who since 1920 lid s been assistant pastor and secretary at the church office of the First Christian Churc h in Eugene, resigned her position the las t part of January . She has not announce d her plans for the future, but for thetim e being will remaiu in Eugene . Bessie Allison Meyers (Mrs . J . Donal d Meyers, ex 1) and Mr . Meyers are resi- dents of Salem . They and the third mem- her of their household, Ellen, who is tw o years and seven months old, live at 17 3 South Cottage Street . 192 2 Taking . care of their ranch at Nyssa , Oregon, fills the time of Martha Over - street Judd (Mrs . Maurice L . Judd, ex-2 ) and her husband . They have two children , Maurice. aged six, and Ellen, aged three . Research and teaching at Cornell Uni- versity,New York, fills the time of Kath- erine Van Winkle Palmer (Mrs . E . Law - rence Palmer) . She instructs classes i n paleontology and historic geology . Out f such a busy schedule, she still finds time to devote to her house and her two chil- dren, Laurence, who is eight, and Richard , who is not yet one year old . Mrs . Palme r is an ex-member of the class of 1922 . Rosetta G. Gobalet, ex-2, specializes i n all kinds of photography, commercial an d artistic, prints pictures and paints them . She carries on her work in San Francisco , where she lives at 2195 Green Street , apartment six . Reduce d Fare s TO PORTLAN D AND RETUR N via Oregon Electri WEEK END S Co Friday, Saturday or Sunday ; Return Limit Tuesda y Also on Sale Daily-15 Day Limi t OTHER ROUND TRIPS 3o-Da YWeek End Sell Daily Sell Fri Ret Sat . 31 Day Ret. Mon frontSale Date Seattle $13.85 $15.65 Astoria 9.60 11.55 Spokane 23.10 27.70 Tacoma 12.05 14.45 La Grande 19.05 22.85 Yakima 19.65 23.60 O . E . By . Trains leave Eugene for Port - land 7 :15 a . in . and 2 :30 p . m ., arrivin g Portland (Jefferson Street) at 10 :45 a . m. and 5 :50 p . m . Leave Portland, Hoy t Street Station, for Eugene at 8 :00 a . in . and 5 :00 p, m ., arriving Eugene at 11 :40 a. in. and 8 . . m. Choice of Fine Trains Portland to Spokan e North Coast Limited-Empire Builde r 0:30 p . m . from Portland, arrivin g Spokane 7 :15 a . in. Unusual features observation lounge ea r with barber, valet, maid, bath, radio, foun- tain . Latest sleeping cars and moder n coaches. Ease in train movement on trac k of wonderful grade and curves . Columbia River Express by Da y Leave . Portland 8 :25 p . in . Observatio n parlor and dining service and coaches . Panorama of Cascade, Range, Columbi a and Snake Rivers scenery . Full information, tickets, reservations, etc . glsdly supplied y L . F . KNOWLTON, Gen . Agt ., Chamber of Commerce Bldg ., Portland, Ore . F. S, APPEI,MAN, Agent ., Eugen e Oregon Electric Ry. Spokane, Portland, an d Seattle Ry . MARCH, 1931 OLD OREGON 27 TROY ATHENS - CRETE DELPHI ISTANBUL Follow Aenea s with us next sum - mer on our speciall y chartered steamer . Low Cost -- Delightfu l Vacation-Universit y Leadership . May We Send You rotder and May ? BUREAU OF UNIVERSIT Y TRAVE L 100 Boyd Street, Newton, Massachusetts George Radcliffe McIntire is superiuten dent of schools at Brawlev, California . Mr . and Mrs . McIntire are the parents of thre e children, Juanita, Dean and Lloyd, all o f whom are grown . The Melnt .ire home is a t 329 South Second Street, Mr . McIntir e received his M .S, from the University i n 1922. Word has been received at the Alumn i Office of the death of Mildred Braue r Cochran husband, Earl Cochran, in Oak - land, California . Mrs . Cochran is an ex - member of the class of 1922 . 192 3 Whispering Range," the third novel b y Ernest Haycox of Portland, was brough t out in January by Doubleday, Doran, pub- lishers. His ether two novels are "Fre e Grass" and " Chaffee of Roaring Horse ." This latest work, like his two earlie r volumes, is a . story of the West, with a fast-moving plot . It is skillfully writte n from all angles, say these who have rea d it. Mr . Haye .ox has been in the " writin g game" for ten years, and has publishe d widely in the short story field also . Las t fall five of his stories were listed in th e 0 . Henry anthology . Caroline McPherson Wernli (Mrs . l .- A. Wernli, ox-3) who attended Oregon fro m 1919 to 1920, is living in Seattle, wher e she and her husband have their home . They live on Thirteenth Avenue, at num- ber 1833. Ruth Bartle Reed, ex-3, lives in L a Jolla, California . Housewifely duties keep Florence Key t Smith (Mrs . Asa Smith, ex-3) occupied . She has a son, Robert, five months old . Mr . and Mrs . Smith are living in Redding , California, at 1223 Butte Street . Florence Fasel Pitts (Mrs . Forrest E . Pitts), who attended the University fro m 1919 to 1920, is now living at Grand View , Idaho . She and her husband have a so n and a daughter . Willis is four years ol d and Bonnie Lee is a year old . Leith F. Abbott came down to the cam - pus during the three days of the pres s conference in January to "pow-wow" wit h his newspaper friends . He is in charge o f advertising for the Southern Pa-eific i n Portland, with his offices at 707 Pacifi c Building . Floyd E . Shields spends his workin g days selling Buicks at the Buick Moto r Company factory branch in Portland . Mr . and Mrs . Shields are the parents of a bo y and a girl, Joan, aged three, and Robert , aged a year and five months . The Shield s home is on East Nineteenth Street, a t number 780, 192 4 Arthur "Art" S. Rudd dropped into th e Alumni Office on his way through Eugen e the middle of February in connection wit h business for the PublishersSyndicate . Art brought cheer to the heart of the Cir- culation Manager by taking out a Lif e Membership in the Alumni Association . While in Eu gene he spoke beire Dea n F . W . Allen class in editing, stating , :among other things, that in his opinio n the coming year would be a good one i n which to do graduate work, since th e business depression recovery would be onl y gradual and this would make it hard fo r college graduates to enter business . Glen E . Morrow and Miss Lilyan Ai- freda Frank of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma , were married in Siam . iss Frank saile d December 23 from-San Francisco for :Around South Americ a "Cost Us Less than Stayin g at Home! " "A new viewpoint .. .a different culture. . .a fresh experience.. ." Thu s do enthusiastic traveler s marvel at the varied adven- ture awaiting them in Sout America, this neighbor be- low the Equator. Via McCormick you ca n make this cruise"Aroun d South America" for only $450 steamer fare. It would cost more to live and be en- tertained at home Sailings from the principal Pacific Coast ports to the EastCoast of South Amer- ica every 20 days $ 25 0 ONE WA Y Call or writeyour nearest trave bureau or McCormick office fo details . . . Illustrated brochur on request McCORMIC K STEAMSHI P COMPAN Y 215 Market Stree San Francisc Phone DAvenport 3500 123 East Sixth Stree Los Angeles Phone TRinity 5171 NOW! DIRECT TO THE MEDITERRANEA N ON THESE FINE SHIP S. S. CALIFORNIA Largest in direct-to-Europe e S . S. Duchessa DAosta and S .S.Timavo, Entirely redesigned And the Motorships FELTRE , FELLA, CELLINA and RIALT O EVERY MONTH a pop- ular Libera Liner sails ove r this " all-year, good-weathe r route" from Pacific Coas t ports to the romantic Med e iterranean, including th e ports of Gibralter, Genoa , Marseilles, Leghorn, Naple s Venice and Trieste . 30 0 A N D U P First Clas s LIBERA LINES General S.S. Corp., Ltd., Agks. bo BROADWAY, PORTLAN D iio1 FOURTH AVE ., SEATTLE JAPAN, CHINA, AND THE PHILIPPINES . , , STOP-OVER AT HONOLULU Magnificent staterooms and suites. . swim- ming pool .. . gymnasium. . .wide decks . .. culinary seduction that would make a Puritan into a gour- met. Dancing, o f course . English - speaking steward s and an office of the Japan Tourist Bu- reau on board . Regular sailing s from San Francisco and Los Angeles , first class $300 up, cabinclass $250 up. . .from Seattle and Van- couver direct to the Orient on new cabi n motor liners orall Tourist Cabin ships $I25 to $250 up information, write Dept . 23 services of the ASAMA MARU, CHtcHla u MAEU, and TATSUTA MASU, the finest, fastest motor ships from the United States to the Empire of the Rising Sun. In all that per- tains to material luxury and comfort N. Y. K. ships are twentieth century and American . But the Atmosphere of Oriental courtesyis Japanese. The 14 glorious days introduc e you to many Japanese customs by the tim e you are ready to say "Ohio (good morning) , Yokohama." They prepare you for a fulle r enjoyment of your visit to the kingdom o f chrysanthemums,temple bells, and the great Daibutsu. Fourteen days going and comin g add almost a month to your trip to Japan! UMJ O KOYTE g roin ove r iG sec . From over the se a Japan comes to gree t you . . . offering th e San Francisc 551 Market St. Los Angeles 605 So . Grand Ave Seattle . New York, Bridge Street 545 FifthAvenue Chicago 40 No. Dearborn St Or anylocal tourist agent Siam, where the wedding was held upo n her arrival . Mr . Morrow was graduate d with the degree of bachelor of music fro m the University and is also a graduate o f the McCormick Theological Seminary i n Chicago. He is on the faculty of the Bang- kok Christian College under the board o f foreign missions of the Presbyteria n Church. Mrs . Morrow is also active i n music, being a member of Sigma Alph a Iota, musical group at the University o f Oklahoma. John P. Pieroth practices medicine i n Seattle . IIis office is at 220 Cobb Build - leg . John W . Piper solicits advertising fo r the "Oregonian" in Portland . His hom e address is 770 Marshall Street . Mr . and Mrs . Ralph W . Isaacson, bot h ex-members of the class of 1924, live a t Manteca, California . Their son, Ralp h William, is three years and eight month s old. Bessie M . Hunter, ex-4, teaches th e intermediate grades in a school at Esta- cada, in Clackamas County, Oregon . Sh e attended the University from 1920 to 1921 . Bernice Myer Hicks (Mrs . Arthur C , Ilicks) writes that she and her husban d and their little daughter are going to sta y in Palo Alto another year, in order tha t Mr. Hicks may continue his study for hi s Ph.D, at Stanford . Always on the look-out for somethin g that will make a "story" for his paper i s Theodore C . Janes, ex-4, who is news re - porter on the "Burlington Free Press," a t Burlington, Vermont . He writes "No t yet" in the space on his questionnair e which is headed "Married to." His ad - dress in Burlington is 24 Russell Street . 1925 Pauline Bondurant is campaign secre- tary for the membership drive for th e Portland Civic Theatre . Miss Bonduran t knows the campaign "ropes" and the way s and means of "engineering" drives, hav- ing served on several other campaigns . Last fall she worked on the Meier fo r Governor campaign committee . Ray Bethers, whose illustrated articl e of his South American trip appears in thi s month OLD OREGON, and Mrs . Bether s are now living at 1242 Taylor Street, Sa n Francisco . They made the move on Febru- ary first , Henrietta B. Wolfer is supervising criti c at the Oregon Normal School at Mon - mouth. filer home address is 635 Wes t Main Street . Genevieve Phelps Miller (Mrs . A . Glen n Miller), with her husband and littl e daughter, Marche, who is one year an d eight months . old, is living at St . Anthony , Idaho. Taking care of Marcile and keep- ing house fills Mrs . Miller time . Bookkeeper for the Pacific Fruit an d Produce Company in Eugene is the posi- tion filled by Ivan W . Norris, ex-5 . H e and his wife live at 577 East Thirteent h Street . Mr . Norris was enrolled in th e University from 1921 to 1923 . "Electrical estimating" is the occupa- tion of George B. Kenline, cx-5 . He i s with the San Diego Consolidated Gas an d Electric Company . The Kenlines (fo r there is a Mrs . Kenline) have their hom e at Ocean Beach, San Diego, and thei r house number is 4952 Santa Monica Ave- nue. Frances W. Sanford was married at th e home of her parents in Pasadena, Califor- nia, on January 24 to W . Provost Thomas , formerly of Minneapolis . They will mak e their home in San Francisco, where Mrs . Thomas is managing editor of the "Pacific . Coast Journal of Nursing" and Mr . Thomas is connected with the Bank o f America . While on the campus Mrs . Thomas was a member of Alpha Phi . He r husband was affiliated with Chi Psi Fra- ternity at the University of Minnesota . Mr . and Mrs . Ronald IL Williamso n (Kathryn-Jane Seel, ex-6) are in th e Philippine Islands, at Santa Cruz, Laguna . Mr. Williamson is superintendent o f schools there . 1926 Viletta Willison, ex-6, can be reache d at 1217 Jones Street, San Francisco . Scouting around for material for free - lance articles and stories that will sel l keeps Carl Riesland, ex-6, busy . He i s working in Vancouver, Washington, an d his address there is 2426 H Street . Wayne R . Leland has changed connec- tions in the advertising game in Portland . He is now with the Ham-Jackson Agency , having resigned from the Randolph Kuh n Agency . Secretarial work occupies Dorothy Dodge Olson (Mrs . Ralph Olson) . Althoug h she and her husband live at Eagle, Idaho , she works in Boise, in the office of a n infant and child specialist . Friends of Katherine Nealon, ex-6 , will be interested in knowing that he r name is now Mrs . Donald Huntress an d that she is living in Portland at 637 Eas t Thirty-sixth Street North . Her husban d is a graduate of the class of 1924 . Assistant manager of the Lloyd Corpor- ation of Portland is the position held b y Franz B, Drinker, ex-6 . His office is a t 254 Grand Avenue . In charge of the sales department of th e Hardware Mutual Casualty Company i n San Francisco is Milton O. Petersen . His office is at 801 Insurance Exchange i n that city . Helena Pittlekau Erwin (Mrs . Lincol n Erwin, ex-6) has gone to California fo r a. month. She drove down with her fathe r and mother . 1927 "Home-maker" is the, title which Ruth Pearson McDonald (Mrs . B. B . McDonald , ex-9) applies to herself . She and he r husband and her seven-year-old son, Stan- leigh, live in Indianapolis, Indiana, a t 119 West Forty-fourth Street . "Finance " is given by Allan K . Schmeer, ex-7, as his occupation . He at - tended the University from 1923 to 1924 , and from 1925 to 1927 . He lives at 57 6 Lounsdale Street, Portland . Kenneth R . Wadlei,gh, principal of th e grade school at Halsey, during the earl y tart of February took twenty-one of th e seventh and eighth grade pupils in civic s to a session of the legislature in Salem t o view the "workings" of the legislativ e machinery . Robert W . Neighbor, ex-7, with hi s wife and small son, are being welcome d back to Eugene after having spent severa l months in Portland . Gwendolen Lampshire Hayden and he r husband, Jess Hayden, ex-6, are in Lin- coln, Nebraska . Mrs . Hayden is head o f the departments of violin and publi c school music. at Union College there . Sh e is also an assistant in the English depart- ment . sEdwin Jess, the Haydensson, i s now five years old . 1928 Mildred McAlister of Eugene is no w learning all about shorthand and typin g and other stenographic accomplishment s at the Behnke-Walker Business College i n Portland . She is staying at the Marth a Washington while in Portland . ALL YEA R is you r Yosemit e season . . . Time is forgotten in Califor- nia bright vacation-valley. . . the seasons come, but each i s another holiday. If you plan now for Sprin g (it just turning the corner, you know) you will find all the grea t waterfalls -Vernal, Nevada, Ill- ilouette, Bridal Veil, Yosemite - plunging in full, white majest y from the towering rim . Vivid green meadows . . . a pervasive fragrance of dogwood , oak and evergreen buds . . . the fawns of last summer, browsin g tamely beside the Merced .. . and central to Yosemite in Spring - time, The Ahwahnee, California s most distinguished environmen- tal hotel . Rates, %l9 a day an d upward, American Plan . (Othe r all-year acconmodations fro m $2.50 upward, European Plan .) Come overnight from Sa n Francisco or Los Angeles . Ful l details from any travel agent o r Yosemite Park and Curry Co ., 39 Geary St., San Francisco; 604 W. Sixth St ., Los Angeles ; and Yosemite National Park, Calif . THEAIIWAHNE E in Yosemit e Bert E . Surly writes that his addres s has changed and that his present locatio n is 1425 South Racine Avenue, Chicago . He is with the Bureau of Agricultura l Eeonoanics, United States Department o f Agriculture . Paul Luy was in Eugene during the las t part of January . He stayed at the Ph i Sigma Kappa House . Mr . Luy is Medfor d correspondent for the "Oregonian" an d the Associated Press . He fills up the res t of his time doing free-lance work . A visitor in Eugene during the earl y part of February was Harlow L . Weinric k of Portland . He carne to see his mother , Mrs. F . G. Weinrick . On the evening of January 28th, Glady s Gregory, junior on the campus, announce d her engagement to Kieth C . Fennell, ex - 8. The announcement was made at th e Alpha Xi Delta House, of which Mis s Gregory is a member . No date has bee n announced for the wedding . Announcement of the engagement o f Gretchen Cline of Idaho Falls, Idaho, t o John. "Johnny" Robinson was made at a dinner party given at the Olympic Hote l in Seattle recently . Mr . Robinson, a mem- ber of Sigma No, is welt-known on th e campus as the former leader of the Var- sity Vagabond Orchestra . Miss Cline is a sophomore at the University of Washing - ton. Genera M . Zimmer is health educatio n instructor at the San Francisco Y.W.C.A. Ruth Street, who spent a short time vis- iting .University friends in Eugene durin g February, returned to Portland on Febru- ary 15 . She was one of the patronesses o f the fashion dance sponsored by Gamm a Alpha Chi, women advertising honorary , on February 13 at Cocoanut Grove in Eu- gene. 1929 A candidate for the degree of Ph .D. i n psychology this spring at the University o f Iowa is Herbert Jasper, who is doing re - search work there on the "Measuremen t of Chronaxie of Nervous Impulses ." He i s also studying the "influences of Cerebra l Dominance in Relation to Bodily Sided- nessand tuttering ." Mr . Jasper ha s developed some new apparatus for thes e studies. In December he reported the re- sults of his experimental work before th e meeting of the American Psychologica l Association, which met in Iowa . His wife , Constance Cleaver Jasper, 9, will receiv e her master degree this spring . She i s wo r . Talent in Pre-School Children ." Her wor k in the development of rhythm was consid- ered outstanding by her major professor . Lester L . Bair writes from Dallas, Texas , telling about his work since he left th e University . "I took up public ac-countin g when I left the T" he says, " and the n worked as ariilitofor San Antonia Publi c Service Company . Now I am operatin g my own business . I am the franchise - holder for Orange Eureka Company fo r the city of Dallas ." Mr . Bair street ad- drrss is 1410 Elm . "Please change my address to 534 Sout h Henry Street in Coquille," writes Mary E. Harney . "I am teaching music in the Cit y schools and enjoying it immensely . Th e mill-race never gave one spring feve r more thoroughly than this mild climate . Bandon and the ocean are just clos e enough to give us our wishes for th e beach anti sand in our food ." Robert Walker is now mechanician i n the psychology laboratories at the Univer- sity of Iowa . He is working out the ap- paratus for photographing the eye move- ments in relation to reading . His wife , See California on your train trip East . It costs but little more f you miss California you miss the thrill of Agu a Caliente, San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diego , Hollywood, Yosemit e and all those othe r places that are part o f a Southern Pacific ticket. Start your trip on th e luxurious "Cascade ." There is no finer train . Souther n Pacifi c J. A. ORMANDY -Passenger Traffic Manage r Portland, Oregon 30 OLD OREGON MARCH, 1931 LISTEN all yo u DADS and MOTHER S OF COLLEGE BOY S AND GIRLS ! The West great university of business specializesin preferred posi- tions, for youngpeople. Writs or Call fo rSome Surprising Fritt s Behnke - Walke r Business Colleg e PORTLAN D MORE TR I for flourtravel dollars Those extra week-end trips e ...vacations ., business trips ail the hun- dred andonetrips you would to mak this year can managed- IF you take ad vantage of Pacific Greyhound low. Yo save, yet every modern travel luxury is . For Low Fares and Convenien t Schedules Call Agen t Offices in Principal Coast Citie s PORTLAND Park Yamhil 6th Salmo SAN FRANCISCO 5thMission LOSANGELE5 6th os Angele 5th Los Angeles Myrtle Baker Walker, 7, is a secretar y in the graduate college of the Universit y there. Last month OLD OREGON gave Mil - ton George address as 123 East Forty - second Street, New York City . This ha s been changed to 2 Ashford Avenue, Dobb s Perry, New York . Harriet Adams and Donald V . Flynn , both members of the class of 1929, wer e untrried in Portland, January 17 . c home of the bride s parents was the scen e of the wedding . Virginia Lee Richardson , 8, attended the bride, and the music fo r the wedding was played by Olga n , 7. Mrs . Flynn is a member ,f Kapp a Alpha Theta on the campus . Taioma wil l be the home of Mr . and airs . P :,ue. Miriam Rae Shepard, ex-9, can h e reached in care of Hunter s Hotel, Lake - view . "It is understood," writes George H. Wardner front Boston, "that the egs Diamond and Al Capone gangs arc= . here i n Boston. Anyway I have Changers my ad - dress again---so until further notice kindl y send the copies of OLD OREGON, Go d bless to care of Crain and Ferguson , architects, 248 Boylston Street, Roston ." Lloyd W . Turnbull, who is superintend- ent of schools at North Bend and presiden t of the Oregon State Teachers Association , was in Eugene on his way to Salem durin g the last part of January . He was makin g the trip to Salem in connection with edu- cational matters coming before the stat e legislature . Mr . Turnbull received his M .A. from the University in August, 1929 . The wedding date of Roberta Wells, ex - 9, to John Ii . Barnett of Portland ha s been set as March 14 . Miss Wells, a mem- ber of Pi Beta Phi, has been secretary- t o Harvey Wells Company, dealers in in- surance and bonds . Anna Boesch, ex-9, and Albert R . Jen- sen, Pendleton, were married last summe r at the Church of the Redeemer in Pendle- ton. Mfrs . Jensen is a member of Sigm a Kappa Sorority . Frank M, Beer succeeds Fred Baird a s high school athletic coach at Castle Rock , Washington, this year . Cornelia Robertson, M .D., who has bee n doing hospital work at San Francisco, i s engaged in work in New York City wher e she is serving an interneship . Dr. Charles A . Preuss is a resident phy- sician in the General Hospital at Sant a Barbara, California, instead of in th e Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital, as h e originally planned . Lowell has a new union high school an d Thomas Powers was elected principal fo r the new school . Two assistant teacher s work with trim . Mr . Powers, who has bee n principal at Lorane for the past two years , teaches mathematics and science an d eoaehes the athletic teams . 1930 Frances L . Barnes spends her workin g day teaching grammar school students at , the Kenton School in Portland . Her hom e address is 1260 Laurellinrt Avenue . Mis s Barnes received her degree with the Aug- ust class of 1930 . On the staff of Spencer R . lic accountant in Eugene, with offices i n the Miner Building, is Floyd K . Bowers. John M. Shiach is furthering his medica l knowledge at the University of Orego n Medical School in Portland . His address is 991 Mallory Avenue . Alpha Donaca is teaching grade school pupils in Portland . She earned all of he r credits from the University of Orego n through the Extension Division at Port - land. ller home address is 621 Irvin g Street . "Please change my address on you r mailing list . from Lancaster, Pennsylvania , to 1333 Book Building, Ile :roit, Michigan, " writes PaulWagner . "It looks very muc h as though I am to be a permanent residen t here." Mr . Wagner is wish the Floor Ili - vision of the Armstrong Cork Company h i Detroit . Charlotte Schwichtenberg, who receive d her master degree from the University i n 1930, is leaching science at Canras Hig ;i Scliuol, in Washingt n , Flying is a bobby with Dalton Shinn ,g raduate student in rheruistry, and son o f Dr, F . L. Shinn. Balton owns a sing e-sea t monoplane, which he helped to build him - self. He has been taking flying lesson s for a year and a half, and has en :ugh hours to obtain a pilot license, but doe s not intend to get one until he goes in fo r rommereial flying, he says . The longes t trip he has made so far has been to Port - land. Dr . Shinn is following in the foot - steps of his son by taking pilot lessons , too. Mabel A. Simpson teaches in one of th e Portland schools . She can be reached a t the St . Francis Hotel, where she stays . The high school at Grants Pass has o n its list of teachers the name of Clara L . Jasper. Miss Jasper received her master s degree from the University in August , 1930. "Historical research worker" is the oc- cupation given by Martha Frances Mon- tague of Portland, who received her mas- ter degree from the University in Aug- ust, 1930, having done all her work towar d the degree through the Portland Center . Miss Montague residence address is 67 5 Fourteenth Street, Northeast . Wiliam McNabb has resigned his posi- tion as coach at the University Hig h School in Eugene, and has taken charg e of restrictive sports in the men depart- ment at the University . James Lyons, prominent in Guild Hai l plays on the campus last year, is continu- ing his work in dramatics at Stanford Uni- versity, California, this year . Word ha s come to the campus of his great succes s as Lightfoot, in the play "Wings Over Eu- rope," recently given at Stanford, Woo d Soaves, critic on the "Oakland Tribune " said of his interpretation of the role : "H e gave a magnificent performance ; one tha t will not only stand a professional test, bu t out-distance the best efforts of most pro- fessional players ." Edgar Noel Smith is a sophomore in th e University of Oregon Medical School in Portland . He is Iiving at the Theta Kapp a Psi Fraternity . Edith E. Snere is auditorium manage r in a Portland platoon school . Her stree t address is 550 East Forty-second North . Connected with the department of bac- teriology at Stanford University is Ver a Florence Smith, who received her master s degree from Oregon in August of last year . She is bacteriophage research assistan t there. Harold L . Buhlman, who received hi s master degree in 1930, is high schoo l principal at Grants Pass . His wife and hi s son Dale, who is nine, are with him there . Among the graduates of last year clas s who are continuing their studies at th e University of Oregon School of Medicine MA1WH, 1931 OLD OREGON s1 Fraternitie s Sororities Dormitorie s Restaurant s Hotels Colleeke Cre Phone 1480 Made by E . F . G . A . Serve College Ice Cream . I t would have to be the best o f its kind to be the most popu- lar dessert for so man y people. New special flavor s in brick and bulk each week. The 1-leathman Hotels well known for their good food , excellent rooms, and service at econom- rcal rates PORTLAND, OREGO N Harry Heathman, Mgr . 32 OLD OREGON MARCH, 1931 KUYKENDAL L DRUG CO . 870 Willamette Phone 23 Some of the Qualit Cosmetics We Carr Hudnut DuBarry Preparations . Marie Earle, Helena Rubenstein , Harriett Hubbard Ayer, Arman d and Max Factor Toiletries . Ogilvie Sister Hair and Scal Treatments. TROMP McKINLEY AGENCY "We Insure Anything " Rooms 26-28 First National Bank Bldg . Eugene, Orego n Williamson Co . PLUMBING AND HEATIN G REPAIRIN G Phone 536 153 E. 10th St . General Insuranc J. K . Pratt Insurance Agency 401-2-3Miner Bldg . We Have a Special Life Insuranc e Department Life Membershi With OLD OREGO N FOR LIF E $25 Send your check to the Circula- tion Dept ., OLl) OREGON, Eu- gene . in Portland is Courtney- M. Smith. Mrs . Smith and the little daughter of the fam- ily, Courlyne, who is four years old, ar e also in Portland with Mr . Smith, and ar e living at 861 East Fortieth Street North . Milton Zell is an optometrist in Port - land. His work has to do with measurin g and testing range of vision . Mr . Zell s home address is 360 Washington Street . The marriage of Wanda Lesley of Eu- gene and Loren Culbertson of Medfor d took place February- 20 in the Congrega- tional church in Eugene at eight oloc k in the evening . Mrs . Culbertson is a mem- ber of Chi Delta Sorority on the campus . Robert H. Lemon is employed in the of- fice of Spencer It . Collins, public account - ant, in the Miner Building, Eugene . Sister Eloise Mary can he reached a t the Holy Names Academy, Seattle . Avis Seines became Mrs . Elliott E . Ilur d on January 10 at the home of her parent s in Seaside . Only intimate friends an d members of the family were present fo r the ceremony . Mr . and Mrs . Hurd visite d Portland and Seattle on their weddin g trip and then returned to make their hom e in Seaside . Mrs . Hurd is a member o f Kappa Delta Sorority , 193 1Ralph Wickersham assists with the first - year laboratory experiments in psychol- ogy, and in general keeps busy on the sec- ond floor of Condon Hall on the campus . He is a graduate assistant in psycholog y and is taking advanced work . He receive d his B.A . degree in January . Elizabeth M . Wyland received her mas- ter degree in economies from the Univer- sity in January . She is a teaching fello w in the University of California at Berke - ley . "1 am on the teaching staff of Enter - prise High School," writes Wacyfe Hock- ett, "and am . quite delighted with m y work . In my spare moments I conduct a ladies gymnasium class, clogging classe s for girls and boys, and interpretativ e dancing classes . Altogether I am ver y busy and I like it!" Miss Hackett receiv- ed her degree of bachelor of arts in nor- mal arts in January of this year . Sister Mary Xaverine, who received he r B.A. in French this January, is continuin g her studies at the University, and is work- ing toward a master degree in German . Shelives at 263 West Eleventh . Raymond P . Snick received his LL .B. degree in January of this year . He give s his address as Canyonville . The inhabitants of Berlin are ver y friendly toward Americans, writes Ken- neth Linklater, ex-1, who visited ther e this year, as well as in Cologne, Londo n and Paris . At present Mr . Linklater is at - tending the University of Edinburgh i n Scotland. I-Ie plans, however, to return t o the University to complete his work . A bachelor degree in history was grant- ed to John L . Shields in January of thi s year . Mr, Shieldshome address is 29 4 Boardman Street, Auburn, California . John F . Putnam intends to continue hi s medical training at the University of Ore- gon Medical Sekool in Portland . He wa s granted his B .S. degree in January of thi s year . Nona C . Peterson received her bachelor s degree in music from the University dur- ing January of this year . Her home is i n Portland, at 390 Russell Street . Among the graduates with the class o f 1931 .in January was Jennie Klemm, who received a B .A, in French . She plans t o enter the teaching profession . Myra I. Jordan is working in the comp- troller office at the University of Ore- gon. She received her bachelor degree i n English with the January class of thi s year . Her address in Eugene is 1461 Alde r Street . Edna C. Speaker received her B .S. de- gree from the University with the Jan- uary, 19 :11, tines. She plans to pursue a higher degree, she says . Jack L . Davis holds the position of pur- chasing agent and representative of th e H. B . Davis Iron Steel Company, hi s father company . He received his B .A. degree with the c-lass of January, 1931 , Irving Street, number 735, is the home ad - dress of Mr . Davis . Sarah Elizabeth (Betty) llyn receive d her degree of Bachelor of Science with th e January class of this year . IIer home ad - dress is 441 West Park Street, Portland . One of the teachers on the staff of th e Portsmouth School in Portland is Julia Ann Green, who received her degree fro m the University with the . January class o f this year . Georgia B . Crofoot received the bachelo r of science degree from the University i n January of this year . Her major was edu- cation, and she plans to teach . Her ad - dress is 339 West Jackson, Monmouth . Gladys F . Mack, senior in English a t the University, has announced her engage- ment to Robert H . Hunt, ex-2, of Port - land. Miss Mack is a member of Alph a Delta Pi on the campus . The wedding dat e has not yet been announced . Crosby Owens received his bachelor de- gree in economies with the January clas s of this year . He is now in San Francisco , where he has met a number of Orego n alums, he writes . "We have a mighty goo d time," he says . "All are very much inter- ested in the activities of the school an d relish all news we can get hold of ." H e plans to enter the shipping business . Mr . Owens gives his address as 3360 Octavi a Street . Harriet A . Meyer, who was graduate d with the January 1931 class, is living a t the Biltmore Apartments, 640 Glisa n Street, Portland . She writes that her plan s are to study at the Student Art Leagu e in New York City next year . Ray O. Baker was graduated with th e January class of this year, receiving hi s degree in education . He plans to teach . His wife, Mary Alice Baker, is still study- ing for her degree . He gives their hom e address as Cove, Oregon . Frank S . Icon was one of the graduate s with the class of January 1931 . Baker i s his home town, and his address there i s 1790 Washington Street . Ollie Bessonette Holzgang (Mrs . J. R. Ilolzgang, ex-1) same to Eugene fro m Dunsrnuir the last part of January to visi t her mother, Mrs . C. L . Bessonette of Eu- gene. Felix LeGrand received his bachelor s degree from the University in January o f this year . He is part-time instructor i n the Department of Romance Languages . His favorite haunts on the campus ar e Oregon Hall and the tennis courts . Jean Eberhart, senior in physical edu- cation at the University, is handling th e coaching of basketball at the Universit y High School . He succeeds William Mc - Nabb, who has taken a position in th e department of physical education in th e University . MARCH, 1931 OLD OREGON 33 McMorran & Washburn e - PHONE 2700 THE PARADE GOES B Y There a blare of drums . Columns of me n go swinging along in brilliant uniforms . It s a great pageant . But afterward when it i s all over the carnival spirit subsides and th e people drift away. Some stores are like that . Every once in a while they splurge . Do the spectacular . Attract the crowd . But in a little while th e parade has passed by and one w rulers wha t the excitement was all about . Such store s haven accepted to the full their obligatio n to serve the public . in season and out of sea - son, each day and every day with the bes t in style and value . A personal greeting for as many friends as you may choose to favor Your Photograp h KENNELL-ELLIS STUDIOS NE Outdoor Life na the South Ground sof the Ambassador, Los Angele s No Hotel in the World Offers Such Varied At tractions as th AMBASSADO R LOS ANGELE S "The Great Hotel that Seems Like Home " C ONTINUOUS program of outdoor and in -door diversion, 27 - acre park, play - grounds, open air plunges, tennis courts, 18 - hole miniature golf course, archery and fenc- ing, flowered pergola walks, cactus gardens , ping pong tables, all-talking motion pictur e theatre, world - famous Cocoanut Grove fo r dancing parties, riding, and all sports . Beautifully redecorated lobby . 35 smar t shops. Ambassador convention auditorium seat s 7,000. Guests have privilege of champion - ship 18-hole Rancho Golf Club . Most Attractive Rate s OUTSIDE ROOMS with BATH as low as $5per day Write for Chef Booklet of California Recipes and In!urnatia BEN. L. FRANK, Manage r THE AMBASSADOR HOTELS SYSTE M THE AMBASSADOR, NEW YOR K THE AMBASSADOR, PALM BEAC H THE AMBASSADOR, ATLANTIC CITY r. THE AMBASSADOR, LOS ANGELES t + 34 OLD OREGON a MARCH, 1931 OREGON SERVICE STATIO N RICHFIELD PRODUCT S "The StudentsOwn Station" 11th and Hilyard Eugene HAL WHITE RAY MARLATT WH1TE-MARLATT CO . Electrical-Plumbing-Sheet Metal-Heating Supplie 878 Willamette St. Eugene, Ore UNIVERSITY FLORIS T MEMBER, FLORIST TELEGRAPH DELIVER Y ASSOCIATION 598 13th Avenue, East Phone 654 CROWN DRUG CO . (JAMES H . BAKER, '24 ) Agentsfor THE OWL DRUG COMPANY PRODUCT SMiner Building Phone 146 BUTTER ICE CREAM MILS CORVALLIS CREAMERY CO . EUGENE 675 Charnelton Phone393 Guidance in Higher Educatio n (Continued from page 11 ) a student in college and afterward. Despite a deal of popu- lar belief to the contrary, there is little relationship betwee n size of college and contact with instructors. Various survey s have shown that faculty-student contact is a matter of loca l attitude and organization and that, given suitable encourage- ment and facilities, students in a large university can hav e just as valuable and intimate contact with university teach- ers as is had in the best of small colleges . If a universit y falls short in this respect it is because of neglect of thi s interest, and not because of any reason inherent in size alone Discussion has raged in more than one institution o r the question of the function of personal counsel, and th e amount of it which is desirable . The outcome is usually a compromise between the two principal points of view suc h as that expressed in a bulletin for lower division adviser s issued by Dr. Howard R .. Taylor, director of the Bureau o f Personnel Research of the University of Oregon . He says , apropos of certain suggestions for improving advisory serv- ice, "The University does not feel responsible for proddin g or coddling students but we do not want students to fail fo r lack of personal interest, counsel, and guidance, nor for lack of information about the quality of their scholastic work ." It is clear that although adequate provision should be mad e for assisting the student over the otherwise dangerousl y abrupt transition from high school to college, he should h e encouraged as rapidly as possible to develop responsibilit y and independence in thought and action. Before turning to the vocational aspects of guidance i n higher education, a brief reference should he made to a variety of fields in which individual guidance is offered i n different institutions, The offices of dean of women an d dean of men are present on mod campuses and are calle d upon for counsel in every imaginable field of student interest Under a scheme of advising such as that sketched above, the faculty advisers relieve the deans of a large part of th e miscellaneous counselling which they now do, especially that related to academic matters, freeing the deans for more inves- tigation and counselling of problem cases than they now have time for. Guidance as to health has had a rapid growth in the last few years both from the physical education standpoin t through the appropriate departments and in a medical wa y through the health service n the field of mental hygiene has frequently been recognized , but because of the dearth of competent specialists, what littl most institutions have been able to do has generally bee n managed through the psychology departments cooperatin g through central agencies and individual advisers . In a fe w universities, however, there is a recognized mental hygien e service. The selection of a vocation is of fundamental importance . Vocational success ordinarily by no means constitutes th e whole of life, but in the great majority of eases it is a basi s without which other successes and satisfactions are infrequent- ly attained. There is little doubt that most young American s have been motivated more keenly by a desire for occupational success, in a not too narrow sense of that word, than b y almost . Certainly it . would be diffi- cult to find any other motive which can be more readily an d tangibly directed toward educational ends. The professiona l and vocational schools have utilized this motive effectually , although rarely has much assistance been given toward cor- relating interest with ability . Deliberate vocational counsel has until the last few year s been relatively slight . Advisers in various professional an d vocational establishments have, it is true, counselled student coming to them for work in that field, but except when a If You Live too Lon g or Die too Soon --What? Be Prepared With Proper Retiremen t or Life Insuranc e Emery Insurance Agenc y 43 Broadway, Eugene MARCH, 1931 OLD OREGON 35 student's probable failure in a field was so obvious that i t was necessary for an adviser to tell him to get out, the ques- tion of alternative occupational choices was rarely discussed . Not infrequently on these occasions the adviser had evade d the uncomfortable responsibility for helping the student t o find a field in which his ehanee for sueeess would be better Student welfare organizations Such as the Christian Associ- ations have aided somewhat, usually in a very general an d non-specific manner, such as through lectures on vocationa l subjects . Only within the last half dozen years has there bee n any marked development of deliberate vocational counselling . The placement of graduates in positions is perhaps strictl y speaking not a guidance function, but actually a placemen t bureau cannot avoid giving guidance information if it would , and in respect to contact with the market, it is in the bes t possible position to give occupational information . Fe w higher institutions have well developed placement bureaus out - side the field of teaching . Professional school graduates ar e commonly placed through the office of the dean who is nor- mally in touch with the profession and with opportunities fo r employment for graduates . Few institutions have taken the problem of guidance fo r women seriously and none have solved it . Doubtless no reall y satisfactory solution can be found until the condition of rapi d change in the sphere of woman 's activities and in the attitud e toward her participation in various occupations becomes mor e stabilized . It must not be forgotten that women are relativel y new in higher education . Only now are the daughters o f college alumnae beginning fo arrive in any number . Wit h at least eighty-five per cent of college women ultimatel y arriving in homes of their own, with the responsibilities, cul- tural and professional as well as domestic, which that implies , the occupational advice which they receive should obviously b e given a different quality from that given men . Mrs . Alic e Spring-Rice, speaking at Stanford recently, proposed, con- trary to the views of feminist leaders with whom she has bee n associated, that the education of most women should b e directly toward professionalizing the home . Apparently sh e meant by this a . thorough training of a distinctly professiona l character in the care and education of children, on a basis o f general culture and training, all, she made clear, on a leve l distinctly above that of mere deme,tic science . Whethe r women shall really prove it possible to combine some othe r profession with that of the home or shall professionaliz e home-making . remains to be seen . In the meantime, guidanc e will have to adjust itself as hest it can to the current idea s of the ladies . Higher education is only one aspect of the whole of edu- cation and is subject to the operation of the same basic prin- ciples and needs as the rest . If the material is more select an d socially valuable as the term "higher" and other usages imply , the more imperative the reasons for conserving and utilizin g it to the greatest advantage . The evidence adduced fro m many sources shows, however, great waste and loss . Preven- tion of this loss may be had through the application of per- sonnel principles, that is, by the measurement of individua l capacities, interests, and resources, by the analysis of occu- pational requirements, opportunities and compensations, an d guidance in the light of these toward the career which, for th e given individual, has most promise . Such guidance deprive s the individual not in the slightest of his freedom of choice . Quite on the contrary it sets him free from the bonds o f ignorance, misinformation, chance, and prejudice, to exer- cise the choice which will give him ,most fully material succes s and room for free play of those inner aspirations which whe n satisfied make life complete . I .t is highly encouraging t o note the striking advance both in thought and practice tha t is being made at many points in higher education toward thi s goat . euggestion . Books are a neces- sity to those wh o travel . The Boo k Balcony of the " Co - op " is ready to hel p you select the best i n reading matter . Mail orders are give n prompt and accurat e attention . the ., . UNIVERSITY "CO-OP " A doorman to take you r bags and park your car . Just next door to Theatre s f the . shoppirri district- . 540 ROOMS WITH BAT H RADIO IN EVERY ROO M RATES FROM $3. SI NGL Sp/endidDininy Roo m and Coffee Shop 36 OLD OREGON MARCH, 193 Glancing Over th e News of the Mont h Two professional degrees, master of education and doctor of education, will henceforth he granted by the University s School of Education to these who have completed satisfactorily the highly specialized work leading to these degrees gon School of Education has been recognized for some time as a leader in the field of education and many of its researc h projects have won national acclaim. Dr. E. T. Hodge, professor of geology, has been honore d by a special commission from the American Association fo r the Advancement of Science to complete geological studie s of eastern Oregon and Washing-ton t only to finance his own original research, but it will permi t him to correlate findings of earlier scientists in this region . The recognition of Dr . Hodge by the national association has brought him warm commendation and congratulations. Dr . Hodge has been with the University since 1020. The Associated Students have sponsored two major musi- cal events during February. The first was the appearance o f Florence Austral, dramatic soprano, with John Amadio, con- cert flutist, who were enthusiastically received by the audi- enee in McArthur Court . The second event was the appear- ance of the Portland Symphony Orchestra on Sunday after - noon, February 22. This was the third appearance in Eugene during the past five years for the Orchestra, which neve r fails to attract a crowd on the University campus . Wille m van Hoogstraten, conductor, internationally known as one of the ablest conductors in the United States, was honored by th University of Oregon in 1927 when he was awarded the hon- orary degree of Mus.D. Cities in Oregon, by adoption of a standard, unifor m system of municipal accounting, not only can set up a mor e efficient city administration, but such a system can be a distinct y business experts of the University, who have recently re- ceived copies of the uniform system devised by C . L . Kelly , professor of business administration, and a committee work- ing under the direction of Hal E . Hoss, secretary of state . The uniform system was drawn up in accordance with an act of the 1 .929 legislature, and copies are now available to any municipality which applies for them. In the February issue of the Oregon Law Review appears part one of the national survey of the grand jury syste m conducted by Wayne L . Morse, associate professor of law . For the past two years Professor Morse has been working o n the survey under the auspices of the Social Science Research Council of America . The survey is the first objective study to be made concerning the American grand jury system, and it has attracted considerable attention and interest Bishop Walter Taylor Sunnier was on the campus in Feb- ruary for his seventeenth annual visit to the University o f Oregon. Dr. R . H, Seashore, associate professor of psychology i n the University, attended the final sessions of the committee o growth and development of the White House conference o n child health and protection in Washington, D . C . Dr, . Sea- shore was asked to give a report on the development of moto skills and to make recommendations for the practical appli- cation of motor tests. Dr. C . L . Huffaker, professor of education at the Uni- versity, has published a complete survey of the teache r employment situation in Oregon, in cooperation with the stat department of education. Under the direction of Mrs . Ottillic Seybolt, head of th e drama division of the English department, the National Col- legiate Players in collaboration with the Guild Hall Player s presented William ShakespeareTwelfth Night, in Guild Hall the last of February. The Emerald has been featuring during February a series of communications from President Arnold Bennett Hal l addressed to the students of the University . In his firs t letter, President Hall said : "I will hope from time to time t o set forth certain ideas about student life and student problem that I hope will be helpful and stimulating to student thought But I want to say to the students now what I have alway s said at the beginning of my classes when I was teaching-that the purpose of my communication is not to get the student s to think as I think, for I shall be very happy if I can get them to thinking at all and doubly pleased if I can get the m to think intelligently, honestly, and constructively . . . . My first communication to you I want to be an invitation t o discuss with me such problems as will stimulate the students own thinking in the solution of their own problems A chapter of Pi Kappa Alpha, national social fraternity , was granted to Alpha Beta Chi local fraternity . This will b e the sixteenth national fraternity for men on the campus e local group has been organized since 1922 The Eugene Monday Book Club has presented a copy o f Dr. Arnold Bennett Halls Investment in the Future of Orego n to the Headquarters Library of the General Federation o f Women Clubs in Washington, D. C. AVER SHOP IN PIG ALLEY , T huraday.-Landing day !What a revelation,is Shanghai! N owonder all th e about it. It as cosmopolita n as Vienna! Wide Europea nstreets---in the center of tow n -branching off into rabbit - lane by-ways . Chinese swann-ing the place.ln brocaded coats -and coolie cottons. Ricksh abells clanging . Funny trai n cars with no rails . Foreignmo-tors . And the traffic cops! - theyre giant Sikhs in khaki .With beards, and huge turbans on their heads . Its frightfully interesting !Just to walk the streets here . For twenty coppers, we hire d a ricksha this afternoon . Am-hied along Nanking Road . Past ten thousan d great shops . (We were searching for bargains .')Off to the edge of town-to a rag-tag-end of a street -called " Pig Alley ." Here everything santique . And hand-made . Even the pewter . And what ridiculous prices! Oh, such a lovelpewter boat, a junk model . What a stunnin g centerpiece for red roses! And only five Mexs . (A Mex. is about 50c in our money . Ho, ou rshopping pin-money goes twice as far on thi s exchange .) An antique lover would go wild in China ! Old carved woods. Ming china . Cunning snuffbottles, once belonging to a Pekinese princess . We had to hire an extra ricksha to take ou r "vagabond loot" back to our ship . On we went. To the Native City . Narrowe rand funnier st ; eets . Music Lane and Bir d Street . Chineseflutes playing . And food stall scooking right on the street . At ewater-chestnut s on sticks for acopper. We must hav e tea. So we wan-dered over a little zig-zag bridge . To the Willow Pattern Te aHouse (like the design on our plates at home .) Piping hot tea---poured out of a little pot ,shaped like a bird . Jasmine buds in our thim- ble of a cup. As fragrant as a Chinese dream ! Five olock!- Dashed back to our Presi .dent Liner to dress . Big dinner party tonight at the Majestic . What a surprise--these gorgeous hotels In palace . There an ivor y room-a pearl room . Andthe royal suite was once a Man dar i sha rem!ts really a museum . They served ou rappetizers in a rock garde n grotto. All ferns and shade d lights . Talk about swank ! And a sunken dance floo r (of course we danced during our lavish dinner .Twenty-pieceAmerlean jazz.)Oh, what an evening ! Id like to stay in Shanghai a whole year! Friday-More new people on hoard. Boun dfor Hong Kong and India . Never get bore d meeting different people in every port . That sthe great advantage of the President Liners - always taking on new passengers . We mee t globe-trotters wh ove done the world in ever y fashion. They say wee wise to do the Orien t first. Then Europe will mean more . This afternoon-out to the big Shangha i Sweepstakes! First purse a cool 1 millio n Whoops! Iwon-a little . Anyway, it was enough to buy my heart s desire . A mother-of-pearl make-up box with tiny secret drawers for jew elry. And a set of exquisite lingerie fro m Yates Road! Can understand why the women dres s so beautifully . With Chinese handiwork s o cheap. And Frenchtown shops carry Pari smodels, as well . They say you can buy every - thing in the world in Shanghai . I believe it ! What do you think we ate at the Races ? -Eskimo Pies ! In the evening to the New World g China there . Can you imagine a Coney Islan d10,000 mile s from N. Y. a la Chinese? It aroof garden . They charg e the Chinese 2 coppers ni rid eup in the ele- vators. (Its partof the amuse- ment, if yo u please) . Thereare 4 Chines eL 0 W S U M M E ji, vaudevilles going at once . Games and side - shows. We laughed till we were hungry . ThenR 0 U N ll T R I P S we tried a pair of chopsticks . Never knew fried First Class All the Way .. .In Effect April est Prawns were so shi p tothee shp by midnight Grand , Yokohama $450 comfortable, white bed ! Kobe $465 Saturday-Today was a Russian Day Could just as well have been Moscow . We met Shanghai $520 Stepanova .ARussian dancer, theidol ofShang -hai. Our party grew and so, to the Russia n Hong Kong Manila $565 Cafe in Range Road . Peasant music there An d Via Honolulu, No Extra Cost whathorsd'eeirres! On a huge tray like a bare . Weekly railings s/famous Round the World Presi- I counted 24 kinds -Oh.whattempters!They r e dent Liners from Los Angeles and SanFrancisco via called "Sakushka ." Hawaii and the Belt All my life Ie wanted to go these places . from Seattle and Victoria, B ., direct What adream come true !via the Short Route to Japan, China, thevia the andRound the World And now there Hong Kong and Manil a President Liners returnfrom-1 ahead. And Java and India . the Orient to America every week Note : This is the secondof a See the glamorous Orient this series from the travel diaryof a summer at drastically reduce q President Liner passenger, The fares. Let ut tell you the who e- full set in attractive bookle story arm maybe hadby writing Shanghai . They make Manhattan sit up and vacationtrip! o the nearest Passenger stare! The Majestic used to be a private Chinese Gothis year - - >^w, __ Office listed below COMPLETE INFORMATION FROM ANY STEAMSHIP OR TOURIST AGEN T AMERICAN MAIL LIN E A N D DOLLAR 'STEAMSHIP LINE S 604 FIFTH AVE. . . . . NEW YORK 514 W. SIXTH ST. . . , LOS ANGELES 426 THIRTEENTH ST. OAKLAND, CAL. 517 GRANVILLE IT . . VANCOUVER,B. C. ROBERT BLDG. , SANFRANCISCO 33B E. BROADWAY - , SAN DIEGO, GAL. 152 BROADWAY PORTLAND, 4TH AT UNIVERSITY. - SEATTLE, WASH. Low Summer Round Trip Fares to the Orient Begin April 1st . Yokohama $450 ; Hobe $465 ; Shanghai $520 ; Hong Hong and Manila $565 . Via Honolulu, no extra cost . 1931, R .1 o Company, Winston-Salem, N. C. SWING ALONG ! THERE S a thrilling freshness in the smoke of a Camel- a delicately blended fragrance, sunny and mild-that s never even been approached by any other cigarette g along with the modern crowd! Theye graduated t o Camels and real smoke-enjoyment. CAMELS