IN THE MAIL BA G Club Embassy, 1321 K St . N . W ., Washington, D . C ., Jan. 7, 1938. Alumni Secretary , University of Oregon , Eugene, Oregon . Dear Sir : The following information is tendere d you in answer to questions found on th e enclosed card : Name-D . R . Dimick . Married Oh, no . Address-See above, or care of Nationa l Labor Relations Board, Washington, D . C. Occupation-Attorney for the Nationa l Labor Relations Board . I was appointe d to this position and assigned to the Revie w Section on December 10, 1937 . My attendance at the U . of O . dated fro m September 1934 to June 1937 . I receive d from the U . of O . an LL .B. degree . M y undergraduate work was done in Idaho an d Utah . The latter place awarded me a B .S. degree in the spring of 1933 . I was admitted to the practice of law i n Oregon on September 27, 1937 . While a t the University of Oregon Law School I served as business manager of the Orego n Law Review during my second year an d as Legal Analyst on the United States At- torney General Survey of Release Pro- cedures under the direction of the U . S . Department of Justice and under the im- mediate direction of Justin Miller an d Wayne L . Morse . Yours truly , D . R . DIMICK, LL .B. 7 . 209 Kedzie St ., Evanston, Ill ., Jan. 31, 1938. Editor Old Oregon , University of Oregon , Eugene, Oregon . Dear Editor : I just received your letter requestin g information this morning ; and since I graduated from Northwestern Universit y in 1933 I having trouble being an alumn a of both schools . I like to hear from th e University of Oregon, however . I was married in 1935 and my name i s now Mrs . Spencer Scott Willison . I a m working at Northwestern in the Placemen t Bureau . Dr . John C . Eberhart, 9, is the onl y "alum" I see often . As you may know, h e has his doctor degree in psychology fro m Northwestern and is now teaching psy- chology here . He is also married (a gir l from Northwestern, Sylvia R o t h m a n , Journalism, 2) . DULCE BUTTERFIELD WILLISON , ex-2 . 1020 Winona St ., Chicago, Ill ., Feb . 2, 1938. Circulation Manager , Old Oregon ; U . of O ., Eugene, Oregon . Dear Sir : I am sending in my subscription to Ol d Oregon and you don know how glad I l be to read the news of those at Old Oregon , and particularly of the classes of 3 an d 4. Going to New York to study in 4 fo r several years and subsequently to teach and live there and in the vicinity for seve n years, has placed me more out of touc h with my classmates there than I like to be , but I am like everybody, I guess-inter - ested in knowing where everybody is an d what they are doing . I suppose I supposed to give an ac - counting of myself : Came here in 35 afte r spending 4 in Nebraska at the Universit y there to make some further teaching re- quirement in education, and 33 in Califor- nia and Nevada, where I enjoyed Lak e Tahoe so much . As a surprise to me I wa s asked to join the Chicago Musical Col- lege, and further surprised when the y placed my name on large announcement s with Mary Garden? I am teaching i n two schools, now, managing a privat e class, also, and today applied for thre e new copyrights-so I busy, anyway , even through recessions and all else . Ha d a 100 per cent gain since November i n some of my piano work . I hope the entanglements that the highe r learning institutions were plunged in i n 1 when I was out there are settled in suc h a way that it can not arise again-unlik e family troubles when the old inheritanc e difficulties come on, as so frequently the y seem to! Here hoping we all survive, a t least . Sincerely , ALICE GOHLKE CARTRIGHT , ex-3 . a Boise, Idaho, Jan . 23, 1938 . Karl W . Onthank , Dean of Personnel Administration , University of Oregon , Eugene, Oregon . Dear Dean Onthank : Your thoughtful letter was very grate - fully received a few weeks ago . Although Boise is my headquarters, m y work keeps me in the field most of th e time ; consequently we were living a gyps y life until just before Christmas . We ac- quired an apartment at that time and hop e to be in Boise during the remainder of th e winter . Fortunately the weather this win - ter has been favorable to the continuatio n of our field work, therefore a very smal l portion of my time is spent in the office . Our work in the Water Resource s Branch of the Geological Survey has t o do with the construction and maintenanc e of gaging stations on all the importan t streams . This district covers the state o f Idaho, which may be classified as a semi - arid section of the country where much o f the natural flow is employed for purpose s of irrigation . We do not have any privat e or project interest, but the data on stream - flow which is collected through the main- tenance of these gaging stations is pub- lished for public use . It is available to an y organization or person interested in irri- gation, hydroelectric power, or any othe r allied developments which are dependen t upon a knowledge of quantity and charac- teristics of surface run-off . The organization which conducts thi s work has been in existence for a numbe r of years, having altered little in size o r shape during recent changes in policy an d administration . Consequently it does no t permit of rapid advancement, but it offer s fair assurance of stability . This work of a hydraulic nature is immensely interestin g to me, but it does not lend itself to the es- tablishment of a permanent home sinc e most of our time for the first few years is spent chasing throughout the district . Pa t and I will have to accept the situation an d learn to maintain ourselves on the road . Even so, it is not an unpleasant outlook . An interesting coincidence rests in th e close correlation between my present wor k and the material which Dr . Vic . Morri s presented in his course, "Conservation o f Natural Resources ." I have thought of i t many times and wondered if many othe r fellows who took the course arc using tha t material today . Please extend to him m y best regards when you see him next . Word has often come to me relative t o your extensive activities in addition t o 2?our regular duties at the University . Al - though I am not as well informed as I would like to be, I understand that you r field has covered an area that would ne- cessitate a great deal of traveling . I hop e that this has not been so much that an ele- ment of monotony has crept in . Had someone told me five years ag o when I graduated that I would lose con - tact almost completely from the Univer- sity and its personnel, I would not hav e believed him . Nevertheless, it is quite true . I receive news now and then, but most o f the people whom I meet from Orgon ar e likewise divorced from "school days ." Ou r intentions are the best but it seems diffi- cult to forget our selfish interests and g o back once in a while . For this reason you r letter was particularly welcome, Dea n Onthank . I hope for the pleasure of seein g you again in the not too distant future . Please extend my best regards to Mrs . Onthank and to my friends on the faculty . Sincerely, CECIL ESPY, 33 . Box 85 , Monmouth, Ore ., Jan . 29, 1938 . Alumni Office , University of Oregon , Eugene, Oregon . Gentlemen : I am now located in Monmouth at th e above address, where I am employed in m y father garage . Last August 22, G . Pauline M o r la n (class of 1937) and I were married . The enclosed correspondence was for - warded to me and I am returning it to you for your information . Sincerely yours , GLENN C. HALLADAY, 5. 4234 8th Ave ., Los Angeles, Cal ., Jan. 27, 1938. Dear Bill : I enjoy getting "Old Oregon" eac h month and reading about the present ac- tivities at the University and about th e alumni . It might be of interest to some of m y old friends who receive "Old Oregon" t o know that I was married to Elizabet h Ruggles, Alpha Phi, Oregon ex-6, o n November 19 in Berkeley, California . Charles Bittel, 7, president of the Bet a house, was best man and Ken Smith, ex - 6, was an usher . Mary McCracken, 6 ; Betty Pray, ex-9 ; Betty Jane Burnett , ex-8, and Mrs . Charles B . White (Maud e McCandlish, ex-5), all Alpha Phis a t Oregon, were attendants . At the present time we are living in Lo s Angeles at 4234 8th avenue . I am employe d with the Goodyear Tire and Rubber com- pany here on their Flying Squadron, a training course for sales , It might also be of interest to know tha t Kenneth Smith, Oregon 6, has bee n transferred into sales from the Goodyea r (Continued Inside Back Cover ) Published monthly except July and Augustby theAlumni Associationof the University of Oregon, and entered as second class matter at the postoffice at Eugene, Oregon, under the act of March . Subscription price$2.00 a year. Treat under Form 3578-P. Return Postage guaranteed. OLD OREGO N ELMERFANSETT, Alumni Secretar y Vol . XIX BILL PEASE, Editor February 1938 No . 6 "Tex" Oliver Signs Three Year Contrac t (See Cover Picture ) Oregon reached down to Tucson , Arizona, to pick Gerald A . (Tex) Oli- ver for her 22nd head football coach . Oliver was signed on a three-year con - tract at $6,000 per year . This is th e first three-year contract since "Doc " Spears broke his contract in 1931 . After the Athletic board had offere d Oliver the position, no confirmatio n was received from Oliver, whose con - tract was not yet released by the Uni- versity of Arizona . A hurried trip t o San Francisco by Anson Cornell, ath- letic manager, where he met Oliver , resulted in the signing of a three-yea r contract which will allow the ne w coach to name his own assistants . Som e $8,500 will be available for hiring as- sistants freshman coach's salary ex- cluded . Tex Oliver played big-time footbal l first under Charley D . Daly at Wes t Point . He went to West Point afte r serving in the World War and gaine d entrance to the academy by taking th e army examinations . After finishing a t West Point, Oliver attended the sum- mer sessions of University of South - ern California, where he received hi s 13.A. in 1930 . While at Southern Cali- fornia, he was made a member of Ph i Beta Kappa . The new coach is 37 and is married . Oliver worked for the Santa F e railroad and the Southern Californi a Telephone company . He then coache d for four years in the San Diego hig h schools and transferred to Santa Ana . Fine High School Recor d At Santa Ana from 1930 to 193 2 Oliver's teams won 27 straight games . This record took him to the Univer- sity of Arizona, where in five year s (1933 to 1937 inclusive) he has wo n 32 and lost 11, and tied four games . His powerful offensive teams hav e rolled up a total of 853 points to a n opponents' total of 276 . Tex has attended coaching schools under Warner, Rockne, Sutherland , Bible, Waldorf, Jones, Crisler, Pizer , Kipke, and Lieb . He has used th e Jones, Warner, and Rockne system s on all his teams but admitted that dur- ing his stay at Arizona, the Wildcat s have been using a diversified " razzle- dazzle " that puts the emphasis on th e forward pass . To Use Arizona Syste m When on the campus, Oliver sai d that his Oregon teams would use th e same style of play as Oliver-coache d teams at Arizona . Working on th e theory that more touchdowns are score d from outside the 20-yard line tha n from within the goal-line area, Olive r said his teams used plays designed t o shake men into the clear in a series o f downs for long runs . He uses on occa- sion the balanced and unbalanced lines , short punt formation, and sometime s a spread . Of special interest to alumni is Oli- ver s plan for alumni "Monday Morn- ing Quarterbacks ." "In Tucson we have a club calle d `Town Cat s of them-that meet s once a week and discusses the pas t games . Sometimes we show pictures o f the game and the `Cats comment o n various plays and players . It doesn t do any harm and i ts a lot of darn goo d fun ." Another of Oliver s ideas is to have "football clinics " where he runs con - tests for the players to vie in punting , passing, and other departments of th e game . The spectators can then lear n to know the individual players an d their particular abilities to watch fo r in games . No indications have been made o f possible assistants for coaching staff . It is expected that John Warren, fresh - man coach, will be retained . Bot h "Gene" Shields, line coach, and " Mike " Mikulak, backfield coach, have submit- ted " resignations " to clear the way fo r Oliver to have a free hand . It is though t by many that Mikulak will be retained , and that Oliver will bring with hi m "Bud" Fisher, his line coach at Ari- zona. Shields Resign s (BULLETIN) Gene Shields, line coach for the pas t nine years, has indicated that he wil l not remain at Oregon another year. " When my present year is over I d o not intend to apply for reappointment . (Continued on Page 8 ) This picture of Gene Shields cutting the grass on newly turfed Hayward field was ' taken last fall . It is the latest picture taken of Oregon's line coach, who has announce d that he will not seek reappointment . Old Orego n Alumni to Fete Dr . Erb, Coach Olive r Thursday, March 17, has been cho- sen as the date of the big reception t o be given in Portland by the Orego n Alumni Association to honor Dr . Don- ald M . Erb, and Gerald A . (Tex) Oli- ver as the two assume their new posi- tions as President and football coac h respectively . Bert Gooding, ex- '26, has bee n named general chairman of the affai r and will announce the full details later . He is working with Roland S . Davis , '29, president of the Portland Alumn i association . The affair is planned as the larges t gathering of alumni in the history o f the association . As it will be held dur- ing the Spring vacation, it is expecte d that undergraduate attendance w i l l swell the total to a high figure . Dr . Erb will give the main addres s of the evening and will be honored b y Chancellor Frederick M . Hunter an d Dr . C . Valentine Boyer, retiring presi- dent, who will be in attendance . Landsbury Is Speaker John J . Landsburk, dean of t h e school of music, will be a speaker o n the program of the National Musi c Educators ' conference to be held i n St . Louis ; Mo ., on April 1 . D e a n Landsbury was chosen to cover th e subject of "Cultural and Non-profes- sional Types of Music Training in In- stitutions of Higher Learning ." He has been chosen to cover thi s subject for the conference because o f the conspicuous success of the Uni- versity of Oregon with courses de - signed to give the student not major- ing in music a thorough training in th e cultural aspects of music . Galton Wins Fellowship Herbert B . Galton, third-year la w student, has been awarded a $120 0 law fellowship to the University o f Michigan at Ann Arbor for one year . Galion is student editor of the Ore- gon Law Review, official publication o f the Oregon Bar association . He re- ceived the Phi Alpha Delta scholarshi p award his first year for highest grade s in his class . Three Cities join League The addition of the cities of Gear - hart, Eastside, and Glendale to th e League of Oregon cities brings the to- tal to 129 . The organization as it stand s today joins together every city in th e state with a population over 1,500 and all but three over 1,000 . Over 97 pe r cent of the population of Oregon's in- corporated cities are included . In 1933 when the league office wa s moved to the University campus to joi n forces with the then newly created bu- reau of municipal research, member - ship numbered only 40 cities . Dr. Wm. Boynton Retire William P . Boynton, Doctor of Sci- ence (honorary) 1937, has retired t o emeritus status in the physics depart- ment of the school of science at Ore- gon State college . Dr . Boynton served on the Univer- sity of Oregon faculty from 1903 un- til 1932 when he was transferred t o Oregon State when the Science schoo l was sent there . He has taught mor e years of University and college physic s than any other man on the Pacifi c Coast with one exception . Alumni will remember Dr . Boynto n and his 1921 model automobile whic h he used as an illustration laborator y for his physics classes . Dr . Boynto n still holds on to his beloved first auto - mobile which has taught many a stu- dent the principles of mechanics . H e will devote his time to travel and t o study . UO Scene of Meetings The University will play host t o three important conferences durin g April 18-20 when it will entertain th e annual meetings of the Commonwealt h conference, the State Association o f Chamber of Commerce Executives , and the State Physical Education as- sociation . In the past the Commonwealth con- ferences have been held during sprin g vacation, but it was postponed thi s year so that students might have th e benefit of the conference meetings . Dr . Philip A . Parsons, head of the sociol- ogy department, is chairman of th e conference . 90 Professors in AAU Ninety Universty of Oregon pro- fessors are members of the America n Association of University Professors . Oregon State college has 37 members , Washington State 74, and the Uni- versity of Washington 82 . The Oregon members are affiliate d through a local chapter whose presiden t is Orlando J . Hollis, professor of law , and A . H . Kunz, associate professo r of chemistry, is the secretary . Igloo All Dolled Up McArthur Court is now equippe d with permanent decorations suitabl e for concerts and dances . Some 60 0 yards of cloth were necessary to cove r the blank walls of the huge structure . For concerts there will he a mai n drape of pearl gray sateen behind th e sound shell back of the stage, with al- ternate panels of rust and antique gol d colored monk's cloth covering . Light- ing for dances will feature new shee t metal lamps which will tend to kee p the light down-shading out the uppe r walls and ceiling of the Igloo . The work was done under the di- rection of Horace Robinson, associat e professor of drama ; Eyler Brown, as- sociate professor of architecture, an d Dale King, student in design . Bureau Makes Tax Stud A WPA allotment of $11,114 to th e University 's bureau of municipal re - search, to be used for a study to de- termine the tax-exempt real propert y in Oregon, has been approved by Presi - dent Roosevelt . Work on the project will begin abou t February 1 in Marion, Linn, and Lan e counties . It will include an inventor y of all federal, state, city and privat e tax exempt property, classifying ex- emption by county, comparing the rati o of taxable to non-taxable property an d comparing these findings with those o f other states . This allotment makes more tha n $100,000 which has been allowed th e bureau for special projects since Octo- ber 15, 1933 . Morris to Direct Institute Dean Victor P . Morris, '15, ha s been named co-director of the fourt h annual Institute of International Rela- tions to be held in Portland from Jun e 19 to 29 . The ten-day gathering is designed t o offer an opportunity for citizens of th e northwest to study international prob- lems under the leadership of a facult y of outstanding men and women . It i s under the sponsorship of the Univer- sity of Oregon, Reed college, Amer- ican Friends Service committee, an d the Portland Interfaith council . Highest group in the Fall term grade list were the women's coopera- tive houses with a GPA of 2 .69 ; i n order followed men 's cooperatives, , 2.47, and fraternities with an averag e of 2 .10. [2] Med School Gets Grant The University of Oregon Medica l school has been awarded $100,000 b y the Rockefeller Foundation of Ne w York city for the expansion of the li- brary facilities in Portland . The $100, - 000 will be matched by a like sum sub - scribed by friends of the school . The expansion contemplated is th e erection of a new west wing to th e medical school, corresponding to th e present east wing . The new structur e would house a library of 100,000 vol- umes, reading rooms, storage stacks , a historical section and other facilities . In addition the building would contai n an assembly hall for lectures and sci- entific meetings, including those of th e medical societies . The wing would be three storie s high and would correspond in archi- tectural design with the remainder o f the building . The medical school build - ing would then assume the U-shap e originally designed by the architects , Lawrence-Holford & Allen . Student Union Activity The first definite action toward a student union for the University wa s started in January when ASUO Presi- dent Barney Hall named five student s as a committee to investigate ways an d means of financing Orego n's propose d union . The students named were E d Robbins, chairman ; P a u l Deutsch- mann, Barbara Pierce, Genevieve Mc - Niece, and Bob Dent . In 1924, Claude Robinson, '24, the n president of the student body, appoint- ed Haddon Rockhey, '24, to work o n the student union question . A decisio n was made at that time to put the unio n somewhere west of Kincaid street an d the drive went on . In 1926 some $80,000 had bee n raised toward the new union . Th e ASUO voted to put $50,000 of thi s into the building of McArthur Court . This left approximately $30,000 cas h in the fund . McArthur Court wa s erected in the summer and fall of 1926 , and its bonded indebtedness was re - tired by 1932 . Property bounded by Alder, Kin- caid and 14th streets has been set asid e for the student union . Available no w is $33,313 in the building fund an d $18,000 in the gift fund which may h e used for any purpose . I in 3 Supports Self Oregon students in the main ar e self-supporting is the verdict of th e registrar 's office following a compre- hensive study of student earnings . Les s than one-seventh of the 3120 student s registered fall term were entirely de - pendent upon their parents, while 3 0 per cent were entirely on their own . Only 287 men depend entirely o n their parents, while 741 earn all the money they spend, the survey shows . Of the students on the campus 928 , or 30 per cent, earn their own wa y entirely ; another 10 per cent earn 7 5 per cent ; 433, or 14 per cent, earn 5 0 per cent ; 331, or 10 per cent, earn 2 5 per cent ; while 173, or 5 .6 per cent , pick up 10 per cent by working . Onl y 951 are dependent upon parental sup - port . Of the some $40,000 borrowed fro m the emergency loan fund during th e fall term practically all of it was re - paid by students from their earnings , reports Karl W . Onthank, dean o f personnel . Extension Enrollment U More students are registered in th e Universit y 's general extension divisio n than are in attendance on the campus , according to Miss Mozelle Hair, '08 , organizer of correspondence study fo r the extension division . Three thousan d three hundred forty persons are no w taking correspondence work in contras t to the 3,025 people enrolled at Eugene . Persons in the Philippines, Alaska , and Canada take correspondenc e courses along with those from 25 state s in the Union-there are 93 out-of-stat e correspondents . The Art school will receive the larg e model of the new state capitol whe n the building is completed, Dean Elli s F . Lawrence has announced . February 193 8 NBC Signs UO Symphon The University Symphony orches- tra will go over the coast-to-coast Red network of the National Broadcastin g company on February 28 . The concer t will be from 3 :30 to 4 o 'clock . Rex Underwood, director, has an- nounced that the program will ope n with Smetana 's "Dance of the Come- dians," and will conclude with the fan- dango from the Rimsky-K o r s a k o v "Caprice Espagnole ." The ever-popu- lar Wolf-Ferrari intermezzo fro m "Jewels of the Madonna, " played o n several occasions by the orchestra an d always well-received, will be include d in the program, as will the prelude t o Saint Saens ' "Deluge, " which will b e given by the string orchestra wit h Mollie Bob Small as violin soloist . George Hopkins, professor of musi c at the University and featured solois t of the broadcast, will be at the pian o keyboard in the rondo from Beetho- ven 's famous "Emperor " concerto- a selection he featured in a recent con- certo concert of the orchestra . Jewett Contest Winner Lorraine Larson, Bend, and Dop h Janes, Oswego, won first prizes in th e women 's and men 's divisions in th e winter term Jewett poetry interpreta- tion contest . Rose Allen, Bend, an d Edward Burtenshaw, Boise, Idaho , took second places . Edna L . Bates, '38, is a graduat e student at New York University, Ne w York City . The completed medical group on Marquam Hill in Portland as visualized by the archi -tect . The group is closer to completion with the announcement of a $100,000 buildin g grant by the Rockefeller foundation . The group shown above would include a Uni - versity memorial hospital . [3] Old Orego n Evan Reames, ex-2, Named Senato r Where one Oregon alumnus left off , another took up when Evan Reames , ex-'92, was named by Governo r Charles H . Martin to fulfill the un- expired term of Senator Frederick W . Steiwer, '06 . Senator Reames wil l serve until the next general electio n which is to he held in November . Senator Reames is the first Demo- cratic senator from Oregon in seven - teen years . Senator Steiwer had prev- iously announced his intention not t o be a candidate for re-election, but hi s decision to resign before the end of hi s term came as a surprise to many of hi s constituents . Senator Reames was born in Jack- sonville, one of eleven children born t o pioneer parents who came to this stat e in 1852 . He attended University of th ePacific in San Jose, California, an d then came to the University of Orego n for pre-law work . After finishin g school he established a law practice i n Jacksonville, later moving to Portlan d only to return to Jacksonville . Senator Steiwer was accorded a rousing ovation from members of th e Senate . At the time of this demonstra- tion for him, Senator Steiwer sa t calmly in the Senate barber shop re- ceiving his last haircut there . Senato r Steiwer has been a member of th e Senate for the past eleven years . Senator Reames has one son, Ed - ward L . Reames who attended the Uni- versity law school in 1935 and 1936 . 117 on Honor Rol One hundred and seventeen student s made honor roll grades during fal l term . Requirement for the roll is a 3 .5 average (A is four points and B i s three points) for a minimum of 1 2 hours credit . Eight students made perfect cards o f all A : Loraine V . Gjording, Rober t H . Knapp, and Dorothy L . Johnson , all of Portland ; Wayne O . Gilfry an d George W . Stephenson, Eugene ; Em - ma E . Monroe, Mulino ; Margaret C . Mykut, Springfield ; and Perry J . Powers, Salem . Byrne Back in Eugene Charles D . Byrne, director of infor- mation for the state system of highe r education, has returned to his office i n Eugene after spending the fall term i n the graduate school at Stanford uni- versity . While there he complete d practically all residence requirements of the school of education for the de- gree of doctor of education . Mr . Byrne spent part of his tim e while at Stanford in a study of a num- ber of school systems in California . II e may return later in the spring to tak e part in a survey in this field . UO Library Used Mos t The University library ranked firs t in the per student number of reserv e books used last year . and eighth in th e home use in hooks in a list of 3 8 schools all over the United States , Willis Warren, reserve assistant, ha s announced . Last year Oregon ranke d first in reserves and sixth in home us e of books . This year it outranks al l other Universities on the coast . Belknap Article Printe d George N . Belknap, '26, is the au- thor of an article entitled "Objectiv e Value, " which appeared in the Journa l of Philosophy, January 20, 1938 . Fol- lowing his graduation here, Belkna p was a Sage fellow in philosophy at Cor- nell where he was awarded his M .A. At present he is University editor . Evelyn M . White, '33, is living a t International House on Riversid e Drive, New York City, where man y former Oregon people have lived . Sh e is engaged in graduate work at Teach- ers College, Columbia . Elaine Cornish, '37, is doing gradu- ate work at New York University, Ne w York City . Here is Oregon's new senatorial family . Senator Evan Reames, ex-'92, is. in the centerwith Mrs. Reames to his right . Edward Reames, his son, attended the University lawschool for several years . Senator Reames is filling the unexpired term of Frederic k Steiwer, '06. [4] February 193$ Brimlow Writes History George F . Brimlow, B .A. '33 an d M .A. '36, has completed a book of th e history of the "Bannock Indian Wa r of 1878," and the book will be off th e presses in May . While attending th e University Brimlow worked nights i n the University press as a finotyper an d went to classes during the daytime - and still he found the time to mak e grades fine enough to he chosen as a Phi Beta Kappa . Mr . Brimlow is now in the mechan- ical department of the Chattanoog a Times because "it gives me time t o work on my books ." A recent honor conferred on Mr . Brimlow was election to membershi p in the American Military Histor y Foundation, composed of a group o f high-ranking officials and scholars , with headquarters in Washington, D . C., and New York City . His invita- tion came through an editorial officia l of the Chicago Daily News . In a recent issue the Chattanoog a Times newspaper gave a long write-u p on Mr . Brimlow and his interests, fol- lowing being some of the commen t from the article : "A man with a scholarly mind wh o has worked as a printer in eight state s and tossed logs in a northwest lumbe r camp in order to gain an education an d support himself while he writes book s of history will reach a long and hard - sought milestone in his life when th e first book by George F . Brimlow, wh o now operates a linotype machine in th e composing room of the Chattanoog a Times, is published next spring by th e Caxton Printers, Ltd ., of Caldwell , Idaho . "From material learned by word o f mouth from many pioneers of th e northwest, from the archives of th e department of war, the department o f the interior, the office of Indian affairs , and papers in the Library of Congres s at Washington, and from document s at the Presidio, San Francisco, Mr . Brimlow has written the story of th e last major uprising of Indian band s against the whites in the northwest re- gion of the United States, a thrillin g but little known war . His book is en - titled, "The Bannock Indian War o f 1878." Mr . Brimlow, who was serving as a corporal of infantry with the America n troops in France when but 19 years o f age, is the son of Rev . Thomas Mor- gan Brimlow, miner, merchant, minis - ter, and missionary to the Indians . H e dedicates his book to his father . Mr . Brimlow worked four years o n his book, completely rewriting it thre e times . His mentor and critic in th e work has been Dr . R . C . Clark, head o f the history department at the Univer - Senator Frederick W . Steiwer, '06 ,who retired from the United State ssenate in January to enter privat e legal practice . Senator Steiwer ha d previously announced that he woul d not seek reelection, but his midter m resignation came as a surprise to hi smany friends . sity of Oregon and author of man y historical works . The book was ac- cepted by the first publisher to who m he submitted it . Eaton Prepares Sho w Allen Eaton, '02, was recently aske d by the Secretary of Agriculture to or- ganize an Exhibit of Rural Arts i n the Department in Washington . As a result, he assembled, arranged and di- rected such an exhibition as a featur e of the Seventy-fifth anniversary cele- bration of the establishment of th e United States Department of Agricul- ture . The success and popularity of thi s unusual educational project is indicat- ed by the fact that its closing was post- poned several times . Wall tapestrie s from Oregon, woven coverlets fro m the Southern Highlands, hand-mad e furniture from West Virginia, potter y and pewter from New England, hand - woven blankets from the middle-west , a round-up containing 126 horse s carved by a Montana cowboy, a hug e hooked rug made in New Englan d over a hundred years ago-now re- garded as a museum piece-Kentuck y egg baskets, hand-made musical in- struments, and articles made from th e corn plant, were some of the varie d and interesting articles of handwor k made by rural people from all states i n the Union and from several of the pos- sessions . These were artistically dis- played in the beautiful patio of th e Administration Building of the De- partment of Agriculture in Washing - ton . The object of the display, as stat- ed by Mr . Eaton, was "to give atten - tion to the cultural side of countr y life ." Hundreds of officials in Washingto n and tourists from everywhere visite d the Exhibition daily, and numerou s groups interested in country life an d in handicrafts especially came t o Washington to hold meetings in th e building with the Exhibition as a back - ground . Mrs . Roosevelt made severa l visits and displayed great interest i n the venture . In her daily newspape r column on November 27th, she wrote : "Mr . Allen probably knows mor e about Rural Arts than anybody ." Thi s is not surprising, in view of the boo k which he recently published : "Handi- crafts of the Southern Highlands, " which was issued under the auspices o f the Russell Sage Foundation, wit h which organization he has been asso- ciated ever since leaving the Univer- sity of Oregon faculty . Newspapers i n both New York and Washington gav e wide publicity to this outstandin g event, which is the first of its kin d ever held in this country . Law Quarters Move d Law students returning from Christ- mas vacation were not quite sur e whether to grumble or rejoice . Durin g their absence the 25,000 volumes i n the law library had been moved fro m Oregon hall to the Old Libe, which i s being remodeled into a model la w school . Classrooms and administration quar- ters remain for the present in Orego n hall, so the budding barristers suffe r the inconvenience of a "split shift ." Main features of the new law schoo l will be air-conditioning units and a n especially improved lighting system . The new quarters provide double th e study space of the old, and one quarte r of the students will be allotted indi- vidual study tables-preference wil l be given in order of grade standings . Completion of the project is not ex- pected before the opening of schoo l in the fall, according to Will V . Norris , professor of physics, who is in charg e of campus construction . The library has been completely fire - proofed and the flooring throughout i s of concrete and magnasite . Ohmart Co-op Hea d Howard Ohmart, general manager o f Campbell Cooperative living group , was named to organize a coast federa- tion of the cooperative groups . Ohmart was named to this pos t when he attended the Pacific coas t conference of cooperative living group s at the University of Washington . [S] Old Orego n Laddie Gale Breaks Scoring Recor d The tall championship b o u n d Webfoot basketball team slippe d and fell flat on its face as it rounde d the turn into the home stretch in th e 1938 hoop season, but 6 foot 4 inc h Lauren " Laddie " Gale, high scorin g Oregon forward, broke ex-OSC Wal - ly Palmberg's 1936 northern divisio n scoring record of 187 points in 1 6 games by tallying up 189 counter s in only 14 games . Gale's average for the 14 game s was 13 .5 points per game and Palm - berg's average was 11 .7 points pe r game . Inasmuch as the Oregon sharp - shooter still has six games left in th e current basketball season it is ex- pected that his total score will b e well into the 200's by the final gun . Gale's nearest competitor wa s Lazetich, of Montana, who had a to - tal of 127 points, and Belko of Idah o with 122 points . After having ridden the entir e season at the top in the northern di - vision championship race, the hig h scoring Webfoots suffered two sud- den defeats from the once-lowly Uni - versity of Idaho Vandals . Two suc- cessive nights, February 11 and 12 , on the Moscow court, the Webfoot s were stopped 33-28 and 35-34 . The series left the Ducks tied fo r second place with their victors wit h 9 victories and 5 defeats . Washing - ton State ruled first place with a frac - tion of a game lead . Until the Moscow games the Ore- gon aces had driven their way t o pile up 9 victories and 3 defeats an d to total up an average of 51 to 4 2 per game . The hot part of the championshi p race remained . First on the schedul e for the Ducks was a two game serie s with the Cougars on the Pullma n court ,then two with the Vandals i n the " Igloo " , and then two home an d home games with OSC . Oregon State Series Spli t In the first series with Orego n State, the galloping Webfoots wer e slowed down to a 38 to 32 victor y over the 13 e a v e r s on McArthu r Court and on the following night i n Corvallis lost 36 to 32 to their tradi - tional rivals . The Oregon State zone defens e and ring-around-the-rosy ball pass- ing did not give the Oregon fast - break machine opportunity to clic k adequately in either game . Althoug h the Staters flipped in more field goals By Hubard Kuokka than Oregon, the Webfoots droppe d in 18 out of 21 free throws to win th e first game . Bob Hardy, transfer forward fro m Southern Oregon N o ni a l school , broke an ankle bone in this gam e and had to he taken off the floor fo r the rest of the season . On the following evening, Satur- day, in Corvallis, the OSC slow - down tactics were still more effectiv e on the Oregon speedsters and th e score see-sawed throughout th e game, being tied five times hi th e first half . The Beavers led 14 to 1 3 midway . In these two games Gale had to- taled 19 points to get a head start i n the northern division scoring race . The University of Montana Grizz- lies, conference newcomers, w e r e next on the Duck menu . Althoug h the visitors galloped around with th e hall and shot freely at the basket, th e \Vebfoots outran them and defeate d them 69 to 43 . For the first 20 point s the game was close, but the Duck s soon pulled away and held a halftim e score of 38 to 22 . The following evening, the Grizz- lies staged a second half rally to cu t down the Oregon halftime lead o f 32 to 21 to a 3 point margin of 4 0 tc 37 . Oregon connected with onl y "Slim " Wintermute lays in a follow shot . The six-foot-seven-inc hcenter is second in number of points scored in the northern divi - sion basketball conference . He is outscored only by his teammat e Laddie Gale . [6] 6 field goals out of 44 tries in this las t half, but Wally Johansen staved of f the Montana rally by starting a coun - ter attack . Miller, Grizzly guard, wa s high with 16 points . In this gam e Gale made but one field goal but san k7 foul shots . The night before he ha d made 15 points . Huskies, Webfoots Spli t A week later in the Seattle pavilio n the charging Webfoots were out - charged by Coach "Hec " Edmund - son's University of Washingto n Huskies, 37 to 40, in a wild gam e with 43 personal fouls . Bobby Ane t went out on fouls in the first half . The score see-sawed and was tie d four times during the game . Orego n led 20 to 19 at the half, and the n Washington came from behind t o win . On the following night, Orego n routed the Washington team 51 t o 31 in a powerful last half spurt afte r the score was tied 30-30 in the mid - dle of the last half . At first Orego n had run the ball with the Huskies bu t the successful rally was engineere d by a sudden change to a watchfu l waiting style of play . Johansen start - ed the rally with a court-long dribbl e to slip the tally in from under th e basket . Silver made 13, Gale 12, fo r high honors . Two nights later the Montan a Grizzlies in their own court outrace d the Webfoots 58 to 52 . The score wa s tied six times . But in the secon d canto the Montana team carried th e game to Oregon and kept its lead . Lazetich of Montana was high score r with 17 . Gale scored 25 points to help Ore - gon trounce Montana, 63 to 49, th e next night . Oregon had the lead al l the way . Slim Wintermute and Wal- ly Johansen helped Gale pile up th e score in the early part of the game . However, Lazetich, Montana, mad e 20 points . Ducks Outrun Huskies On February 7, in E u g e n e, th e Webfoots did something which ha d been declared impossible . They out - ran the Huskies in a sweltering firs t half attack in which Oregon could n 't miss, it seemed, a n d Washingto n couldn't hit . The score was 17 to 3 i n the first 6 minutes, then 21 to 7, 29 t o 9, and the half ended with Orego n ahead 32 to 13 . Oregon eased off i n the second and Roy Williamson o f Washington, who had once playe d Frosh ball with Oregon, scared th e Webfoots by an 11 point rally in th e last half . Silver, Gale, and Johanse n stemmed the Washington uprising . Gale and Silver each made 18 points . AWashington uprising was even "Hobby " Hobson, Oregon basketbal l coach, has had the pleasure of seeing hi s basketball team fightingfor the champion- ship of the northern division, and to se e two of his players on the top of th e scoring list . more terrifying in the next day 's game when Williamson, Ziegenfuss , and Voelker of Washington too k Oregon's 33 to 30 halftime lead an d piled in baskets to lead 53 to 44 wit h four and one half minutes to go . The n Matt Pavalunas, substituting f o r Anet, who was out on fouls, sank hi s first try and started a rally by Gale , Wintermute, and himself to bring th e score to 54 to 53 in Oregon 's favo r with a minute and fifteen seconds t o go . Gale canned two free throws t o put the game on ice . Idaho Trips Ducks In their 33 to 28 victory over Ore - gon, the Idaho Vandals resorted t o a slow passing game with an occa- sional razzle dazzle break to com- pletely put the Oregon team off it s stride . The Webfoots could not ca n more than 10 baskets in 57 tries . Ida - ho had the ball two-thirds of the tim e and dominated the backboard . Idah o led 24 to 16 at the half and Orego n cut it down to 28 to 27 in the first par t of the second half . But again Idah o slowed down the Oregon attack an d the Webfoots could not hit one fiel d goal in the last 12 minutes . Sli m Wintermute made o n e free throw , however . Steve Belko, Idaho, mad e 12 points and Gale 8 . Idaho didn 't win the next gam e until the very last second of the ni p and tuck second half . Oregon wa s leading 22 to 14 at the midway mark , but the Vandals stole away the Web - foot lead, the game was tied fou r times, and with a minute to go the February 193 8 score was Idaho 34, Oregon 32 . Gal e sank two free throws in that las t minute to even the score, 34-34, bu t with but a second to go he foule d Idaho's Willis Bohman, who droppe d the free throw to win in the last sec - ond of play . Frosh Hoopers Take OS C The Oregon Frosh hoop team de- feated the Rook cagers 51 to 31 an d 46 to 41 in the first two games of th e 1938 "little civil war" basketball se - ries . The first game, played in Eu- gene, the Rooks did not even threat - en the Ducklings, who held a com- fortable 20 to 13 lead at half time , but on the following evening in Cor - vallis the Webfoot yearlings had a difficult time keeping ahead of th e OSC youngsters . Clayton Shaw, Orange forward , was high point man in the first game , and Archie Marshik, Orego n's 6-foot - 6-inch center, was high with 1 4 points . Earl Sandness, forward ; Ev- ert McNeely, forward ; and Georg e Andrews, guard, were other out - standing Oregon men . Other scores for the season wer e as follows : Frosh 40, Franklin high school 22 ; Frosh 48 ; Franklin high 29 ; Frosh 58 , Commerce high school 27 ; Frankli n high school 23, Frosh reserves 21 ; Frosh 29, Vancouver high school 21 ; Wendling Townies 31, Frosh "27 ; Frosh 51, Longview high school 25 ; Frosh 73, Hood River high schoo l 29 ; Frosh 43, La Grande high schoo l 18; Frosh SO, University high schoo l 39 ; and Frosh 69, Santa Clara Re d Lions 26 . Boxing, Wrestling Retur n The newly formed boxing an d wrestling teams were defeated twic e by the Oregon State leather pusher s and matmen, once in McArthu r Court when the Staters beat th e Ducks 26% to 6% in wrestling an d 30 to 5 in boxing, and two week s later when the Beaver wrestlers wo n 30 to 0 and the boxers 25 to 10 . Smoky Whitfield decisioned Erni e Donovan in the 168 pound class o n the boxing card, and Willie Wil- liams, Oregon heavyweight wrestler , pinned Ted Tibbut in 1 minute 1 4 seconds for the only Oregon win s in the first smoker . Gale Ferris, Oregon, won a tech- nical knockout over Homer Millard , OSC, in the second round of thei r 165 pound event in the later meet . I n the heavyweight division O r e g o n State reserve fullback KO'd Webfoo t reserve fullback, Bill Rach, in th e second round . [7] Old Orego n Varoff Goes by Ai r George Varoff will go by plane t o New York to compete in the nationa l A. A. U . indoor track and field mee tin Madison Square Garden on Feb- ruary 26 .This meet, which will be the firs t ene of the 1938 season for George ,will open his campaign toward a new world record . Also it will mar k the resuming of the fervent rivalr ywhich pushed the pole vault bar wel l above the 14 feet 6 inches mark i nnumerous meets last summer in which Varoff vaulted against Earl eMeadows and Bill Sefton, of Univer- sity of Southern California, and Cor- nelius Warmerdam of the Olympi cclub. Last year Varoff set a new world' s indoor record of 14 feet 4% inches i n the Boston A . A . A. meet. Varsity Swimmin The Oregon State varsity swim- ming team dealt the Webfoot tan ksquad its first intercollegiate dua l meet defeat since 1933 when th e Beavers won 48 to 27 in the new Uni- versity men 's pool . It was the firs tdefeat suffered by the Ducks unde r the coaching of Coach Mike Hoyman .The Beavers won seven out of th e nine events . Oregon's victories cam ein the 200 yard breast stroke, wher e Ralph Lafferty edged out Orego nState 's Howard Rea, and in the div- ing contest, with Ralph Cathey firs t and Bert Myers second for the Web -foots . In a trip into the inland empire th eOregon natators defeated the Wash- ington State swimmers 48 to 27 an d Idaho 66 to 9 . Jack Levy, distanc eswimmer, won first places in the 100 , 220, and the 440 yard free style event s in the Idaho meet and in the 220 an d the 440 yard free style in the WS Cm e e t . Mallory, sprints ; Starbuck , back stroke ; and Myers, diving, als owon firsts . The Webfoots defeated the Uni-versity of British Columbia at Van- couver in the first of a series of hom eand home dual meets . The Webfoot s won first place in every event excep tin the back stroke . Frosh Swimmin g Jack Dallas and Sherman Wet -more, freshman swimmers from Lo s Angeles Polytechnic high school , who were chosen on the 1937 all - American interscholastic swimmin gteam, have tied and broken Pacifi c Coast intercollegiate swimming rec- ords in practice meets this year . Dallas, named as the nation 's num-ber one high school breast strok e man last year, swan the 200 yar devent in 2 minutes 36 seconds t o crack the official record of 2 :36.6. Wetmore, back stroke and f r e estyle swimmer, swam the back strok e in 1 :42.9 to tie the record officiall yset by Jim Reed, former Oregon tan k star . The Frosh have a strong team thi syear and are being looked upon as th e nucleus of another championshi pvarsity team in the next two or thre e years to come . Their meet schedule is as follows : Feb, 16-University high school , Eugene . Feb . 23-Salem Y . M . C. A ., Eu-gene .' March 2-University high school , Eugene . March 5-State A. A. U. meet, M . A . A . C., Portland . March 12 Oregon Varsity, Eu- gene . Oregon Has Ski Tea Three new sports have been added to the University of Oregon curriculum .Besides boxing and wrestling whic h were pushed by the enthusiasm of th e members of the Mitt and Mat Club ,skiing has caught the interest of th e Webfoot students .About 138 skiing enthusiasts in th e University of Oregon ski club are spon- sors of an Oregon ski team which wil lcompete with the University of Wash- ington ski team late in February . Othermeets pending on snow conditions ar e to be with Reed college, OSC, and with the Obsidians and the Ski Laufers, Eu -gene skiing organizations . Ski Team Places The newly formed Oregon S k i team sponsored by the Universit ySki club competed and placed 12t h in the Pacific coast intercollegiat e ski tourney held at Yosemite, Feb-ruary 6 . Sixteen teams were entered .A five man ski team to enter th e northwest ski championships at Spo- kane February 26, is also planned , and a dual meet will be held wit h Oregon State college at Hand Lak ein the McKenzie river recreatio n area sometime in March .The five men who competed in th e Yosemite meet and who will prob- ably go on the Spokane trip are : JimMackie and Walt Wood, outstandin gin the slalom ; Bryan Ryan and Pa t Dolan, downhill ; and Frank Drew , cross country . Alums Coaching Rival s Four "Oregon trained " basketball teams were scheduled to participate i n a hoop tournament at the Igloo durin g Christmas vacation when Ray Hend-rickson, '35, coach of the Universit y high school team, invited Ivan Elliott ,'35 ; Clayton James, '36 : and Earl eVossen, '35, to bring their respectiv e teams up for a tournament to decid e which of the four has developed th ebest team. Bad weather conditions prevente d the realization of the plans. Vossen is atLakeview, Elliott at Canby, and Clay -ton James is coaching the Monroe hig h school team. Dr. Wright Honore Leavitt O . ' fSpanish, has been named United State s representative of the Hispanic Amer- ican Association for Phonetic Orthog- raphy. The society advocates the strict pho -netic spelling of Spanish words an d seeks to influence other languages i n this direction. Dr. Wright read a paper in suppor t of a phonetic orthography for Spanish -American countries before the thir d Inter-American Education congress i n Mexico City last August . He may at - tend the fourth meeting of the con-ference in Bogota, Colombia, thi sAugust. "Tex" Oliver Signs (Continued from Page One ) I do not care to remain under anothe r Oregon football regime ."Shields ' decision ends a brilliant ca-reer as a line coach here - Shiled s coached linemen have broken into top - ranking pro elevens their first year o fprofessional football . His men now i nprofessional football include Bill Mor - gan, "Butch" Morse, Bree Cuppoletti ,Bernie Hughes, and Del Bjork . Shields started his playing career a t Stevenson, Washington, high school . He played at Oregon in 1923 unde rShy Huntington, in 1924 under Jo e Maddock, and in 1925 under Dic kSmith. In his senior year Shields wa s an all-coast guard and played in th e first East-West game in San Fran-cisco. After graduating from the Univer-sity, Shields coached three years a t Commerce high in Portland and the n returned as assistant coach of the Web -foots under Capt. John J . McEwan . In 1930 and 1931, Shields assisted Dr .Clarence Spears and later with Princ e G. Callison. [Si February 193 8 Marion Lay Davis Matrix Table Speake r Marion Lay, '24, (wife of H . L . Davis, who wrote the Harpers an d Pulitzer prize novel, "Honey in th e Horn " ) was principal speaker thi s year for the annual Matrix Table din- ner given by Theta Sigma Phi, wom- en's journalism honorary . The program is given each year t o honor women outstanding in journal - ism and the arts . More than 200 at - tended the banquet . Mrs . Davis discussed the t o p i c : "Writers Are People, Too," present- ing many different and u n u s u a l glimpses of the creative writing field . Mrs . Davis' best story of the evenin g is here reprinted from the column o f Martha Stewart, women 's editor o f the Oregon Daily Emerald : "I'm sorry more of you could n't hav e met Marion Lay (Mrs . H . L . "Hone y in the Horn " ) Davis when she wa s here last week to speak to Matrix Ta- ble. Mrs . Davis, a graduate of the Uni- versity herself, is the sort of woma n who makes one feel rather superio r about graduating from her alma mater . When plied with questions as to her s and Davis' reactions when w o r d reached them that his "Honey in th e Horn " had been awarded the Pulitze r prize Mrs . Davis told the followin g story . The two were staying at a little hote l in the South at that time . One mornin g the desk clerk buzzed them to com e downstairs for a phone call . Thinkin g it something of no importance and no t wishing to awaken her husband, wh o still slept, Mrs . Davis went down t o answer it . "This is a reporter from the Nash- ville Times, " came the voice at th e other end . "How does Mr . Davis fee l this morning? " A bit puzzled but not wishing to b e rude Mrs . Davis replied somewha t hesitantly : "Why all right, I guess ." "Is he excited?" the reporter querie d once more . "Excited? " By now Mrs . Davis wa s completely bewildered . "Why no, I don 't think so . He 's still asleep ." This went on for some time, neithe r having the slightest idea what the othe r was talking about when suddenly some - thing clicked inside the reporter 's brain . "Don 't you know, " he exclaimed , "that your husband was awarded th e Pulitzer prize this morning? " With a shriek Mrs . Davis droppe d the phone ("For all I know," she said , "it may be dangling there still") an d tore upstairs to break the glad news . Their small cocker spaniel, hearin g her coming, came running down th e hallway to meet her . In her excite- ment Mrs . Davis didn 't see him and a moment later she had tripped over hi s wiggling body and fallen face down i n the corridor, while the spaniel leape d around her barking frantically . By that time Davis had heard th e noise and , "A moment later, " his wife tells us , "the Great Author stuck his head ou t the door to see what the commotio n was." "You 've just been awarded the Pu- litzer prize," Mrs . Davis managed t o gasp . Davis eyed her calmly for a moment . "I have?" he queried . "Well, you 're not taking it very well ." Alumni at Conferenc This year's press conference ha s been a reunion not only of the state' s newspaper men but also of Orego n alumni, 24 of the 62 delegates bein g graduates of this University . Following journalists are numbere d among the U . of O . alumni : Merle R . Chessman, '09, A s t o r i a n Budget ; Ralph R . Cronise, ex-'11, Alban y Democrat-Herald ; Mrs . Marie Fletch- er, '14, Eugene Register-Guard ; Henr y N . Fowler, '14, Bend Bulletin ; Harr y N . Crain, ex- '18, Salem Capital Jour- nal ; Lucien P . Arant, ex- '18, Bake r Democrat-Herald ; Alene Phillips, ex - '19, Oregon Blue Book staff ; Adelaid e Lake, '20, Sheridan Sun ; Harris Ells - worth, '22, Roseburg News Review ; Harry Schenk, '33, McMinnville Tele- phone-Register ; John W . Anderson , '23, Eugene News ; Earle E . Voorhies , '23, Grants Pass Courier ; Reube n Young, ex- '24, Curry County Record- er, Gold Beach ; Bruce Dennis, ex-'30 , Vancouver, Washington ; Merlin Blais , '32, Portland Oregonian ; Vinton H . Hall, '32, Oregon Motorist ; Edwi n Cruikshank, '33, Portland Oregonian ; Gil Wellington, '35, Portland ; Jea n Aiken, '35, Ontario Argus ; Larr y Quille, '37, La Grande Observer ; George Haley, ex-'39, Gresham Out - look . Alumna Rescues Siste Jane Whitmore, '36, became a hero- ine recently when she risked her lif e to save her twelve-year-old sister , Nancy, from the ice-crusted waters o f Manhasset Bay at Plandome, L . I ., ac - cording to newspaper reports receive d in Eugene . The child had plunged into the ba y to rescue her cocker spaniel which ha d fallen through the ice a short distanc e from the shore . Miss Whitmore, a n expert swimmer, heard her sister 's cries and crawled over the thin ice t o the spot where, after falling throug h into the water herself, she finally man - aged to get the floundering girl and th e dog out to safety . Almost exhausted , she was barely able to pull hersel f hack upon the ice . The girls and the dog were event- ually pulled in from the ice by a rop e thrown to them by newspaper cartoon- ist Nelson Harding, who lived nearby . Miss Whitmore received her B .A. degree in English from the Universit y in 1936 . These impressive gates around Howe field are to serve as a memorial to University o f Oregon students, alumni, and faculty members who served in the World War . Th e gates are a gift of the classes of 1918, 1919, 1930, and 1936 . [91 Old Orego n Students, Newsmen Honor Dean Alle n Dean Eric W . Allen was honore d here during the press conference i n January by Sigma Delta Chi, journal -ism professional fraternity, on the oc- casion of the Dean 's twenty-fifth yea ras head of the journalism school at th e University . Sigma Delta Chi at th e same time celebrated its twenty-fift hyear on the campus. Climax of the banquet at which Gov-ernor Charles Martin, Chancellor F . M. Hunter, and President C . ValentineBoyer paid tribute to the Dean 's splen- did service was the presentation of agold watch by members of Sigma Delta Chi-both alumni and undergraduate s - and a bound volume of hundreds o fcongratulatory letters from forme r students of the Dean . The newspaper men at the confer-ence joined in honoring Dean Allen , who has had many of the publisher sand editors in his classes . Toastmaster was Henry Fowler, '14, of the Ben dBulletin, who was a member of the first classes in journalism under the Dea n- who was then just Professor Allen . Fowler was also a charter .member o f the group which was awarded member-ship in Sigma Delta Chi . Dean Allen came to the University inthe fall of 1912 after graduating fro m the University of Wsconsin and work- ing on various newspapers of the mid-dle west and the Pacific coast . For a while Mr . Allen worked as a reporte rand news editor on the Seattle Post - Intelligencer.At that time there were no course s in journalism offered at the Universit y and President Prince L . Campbel lasked Mr . Allen to take over the de- partment of journalism . The first quar- ters of the department were in th ebasement of McClure hall. When these overflowed, some classes were carrie dto the little white building that no w contains the educational activities of-fices. Two years later the department wa sraised to the status of a school, an dProfessor Allen to the status of dean . Enrollment increased from the forme r handful and crowded the classrooms .New professors were added to the staff and a new building built to house th e school.Typical of the telegrams and con- gratulatory letters received by Dea nAllen was one from Jay Allen, ex -'23, (no relative but now famous fo rhis work as correspondent during th e Spanish war now raging)- "To th edean in testimony that his name i s spoken with affection, with respect , and with gratitude in far places ." Eric W . Allen, dean of the schoo l of journalism, who was honored during the recent press conferenc e when members of Sigma Delta Ch i presented him with a gold watc h as a token of his 25 years with th e school of journalism . Erb Addresses Student When in Eugene during January fo r the Oregon Press Conference, Dr . Erbtook occasion to address the student as- sembly. He chose f or his topic "Colleg Spirit."Dr . Erb veered from the usual defi-nition of "College Spirit" to tell th e students that three things are essentia l in his opinion for real college spirit .1. Loyalty-not the kind which i s blind or unreasonable but that whic his based on honest belief and affection . 2. Pride-not "the kind which goet h before a fall" but that which is inspire d by valid accomplishments.3. Distinction-the urge to make th ebest of every opportunity which find s its expression in the deeds of students , faculty and alumni ."I do not expect, " said the ne wpresident, "that everybody shall reac h the same level of achievement, but Ido expect that each of you shall mak e the best of his opportunities and nat-ural resources . There will be a fe wwho will not try, who will not be in- terested. I hope those who feel tha tway will depart early ." The last sen-tence evoked laughter and applaus efrom the students . Dr. Erb paid high tribute to th e University faculty and the manner i n which it has conducted itself in th e trying times of depression and the up- heaval and reorganization of the whol e state system of higher education . Th enew president said it was his opinio n that the standards had not lowere dduring this time of stress . He also em- phasized that the University had a lon glist of alumni who have won fame an d distinction through their leadership i nvarious fields . "If I may lapse into the vernacular, " said Dr . Erb, "you have what it takes ;go to it ." Church Residence Give The presentation of the house an d grounds of his $50,000 Eugene hom eby Campbell Church as a memorial t ohis deceased wife, Adelaide Church , came as a welcome solution to one o fthe state board of higher education 's major problems, that of housing th echancellor. Chancellor Frederick M . Hunter's official residence will hence - forth be in Eugene while suitable quar-ters will be maintained for him at Cor- vallis when it is necessary for him t obe on the Oregon State college campus .Mr. Church's gift includes the larg e house, beautifully landscaped ground s and a swimming pool . The only condi-tion is that the property be maintaine dpermanently as a home for the chan- cellor or the president of the Univer-sity . This does away with the possibil-ity that the chancellor's residence might be moved to Portland or Salem . Having the home of the chancello rnear the campus but not actually on i t eliminates the inconveniences whic h have frequently arisen in the pas tthrough the tendency of students an d faculty members to take their affair sdirectly to him . On the other hand i t maintains the advantages of having th e chancellor near enough to keep in con-stant touch with the campus .Chancellor Hunter will take resi- dence in the Church house during th e summer while President-elect Donal dM . Erb will move into the house whic hhas been the Hunter residence for th e past few years upon his arrival in Eu-gene. Campbell Church has long been abenefactor of the University and hi shome has been a social center for th e town and campus . Mr . Church wa sthe son of Mrs . Susan Campbell, wif eof the late President Prince Campbell . One son, Campbell Church, Jr ., G . '29, and two daughters, Mrs . Bett eChurch Darby, ex-'37, and Miss Peg- gy Church, who is on the campus now , have been students at the University . Professor Will V . Norris repre- sented the University at a physics con-ference held at Stanford universit yDecember 17 and 18 . Il0j February 193 8 NEWS OF THE CLASSE S 1890 George H . Marsh, '90, L .L.B. '93, cler kof the United States district court i n Portland, was honored by Oregon at-torneys and friends February 10 at th e Benson hotel. The occasion marke dMarsh's forty-seven years of service i n the federal court offices . 1898 Dr. M . C. Harris, Eugene dentist, ha sbeen in Chicago attending a meeting o f state officers of dental associations . Dr .Harris is president of the Oregon Stat e Dental society .Lewis R . Alderman, B .A. '98 (Oregon) , Ph .D. (Honorary) The American Univer-sity, Washington, D . C ., '33, director o f education division of the works progres sadministration and senior specialist i n adult education, United States office o feducation in Washington, D . C ., wa s awarded an LL .D. by Linfield College a tthe celebration of its 80th anniversar y January 30 . 1901 Mrs. Marie Miller Goffin (Mrs . Octav eCoffin), M.D. '01, while not in active med- ical practice, is always busy with patrioti csociety work, being now a national office r of the Daughters of Founders and Patri-ots of America . Her home is in Portland . 1905 Dr. J .F. Hosch recently announced hi scandidacy for governor in the democrati c primaries this spring, Dr . Hosch reside sin Bend . The Sandy city council has appointe dDr. Alfred Williams as city health office r and he is to have charge of conditions re-lating to the general health of the com- munity . 1906 Herbert L . Arey, husband of Mrs. MaryWarfield Arey, died in Portland Januar y 7 of a heart attack . Mr. Arey was a retire dlocomotive engineer . 1907 Dan E. Hardin, federal referee in bank-ruptcy at Vancouver, Washington, sinc e 1914, was recently reappointed for a two -year term . 1908 Dorilla Somers, ex-'08, is practicing la win Eugene and has her office at 302 Tif- fany building . 1909 Edgar W . Smith, ex-'09, Portland, re-cently resigned his position as genera l agent of the Oregon Mutual Life Insur-ance company to devote his full atten- tion to the management of his 8000-acr ewheat holdings in eastern Washington . 1910 Bertha Comings and her aunt, Mrs .Lydia Moore, of Eugene, left early thismonth on an extended trip that will tak e them to Egypt, Palestine and variou scountries of Europe . They plan to b e away until August . [11] By Vera A. Power 1912 Homer B. Jamison is a partner in th eByles-Jamison Lumber company with of- fices in the Rowell building, Fresno, Cali-fornia. Taking part in the impressive ceremo-nies that preceded the dedication and un- veiling of a statue of General W . H . H .Beadle in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, wer e Ellen Beadle Frink, '12, of Salinas, Cali-fornia, and her mother, Mrs . Beadle Frin k of Palo Alto . Mrs . Frink, daughter of th edistinguished general, spoke briefly o f her father's life before drawing aside th ehuge American flag which concealed th e bronze statue while Miss Frink stood by .Fred Goodrich Frink, husband and fathe r of the two, was formerly professor of rail -way engineering at the University . 1913 Clifford G. Schneider, LL.B. '13, ha sbeen elected by the unanimous vote of th e Multnomah county commissioners to suc-ceed State Senator Thomas P . Graham , Jr. Schneider is an attorney in Gresham .He is married and has two boys . Lida Oakes Garrett lives at the Lansin gHotel, 1936 North Dearborn street, Chi- cago. She is doing social service work .A graduate of the University in civi l engineering in 1913, Richard Scott Carric kis now with the Tennessee Valley Author- ity. He is married, has a son Robert, te nyears old, and makes his home in Knox- ville. 1914 Charles R . Bolland, husband of NettieRankin Bolland,LL.B. '14, of 1732 South- east Forty-sixth avenue, Portland, die dJanuary '12 . He is also survived by on e sister and two brothers in England .A son, Richard Edward, was born o n February 4 to Mr. and Mrs . Frank E .Manning of Portland . Word has been received of the deat hof Wilson B . Miller, Jr ., 21, who is th e son of Mr. and Mrs . Wilson B . Miller, LL .B. '14. 1916 George R. Funk, LL.B. '16, Portlan dcity auditor for nearly twenty-one years , died at the Portland Medical hospita lFebruary 7 . Surviving are his widow, tw o daughters and two stepsons . 1917 Mrs. Margaret Dixon Tuel, ex-'17, isan X-ray technician in charge of th e Portland X-ray Laboratory in the Med-ical Dental building . Emmett Rathbun is in the insuranc ebusiness with the Addison Knapp com- pany in Portland . 1918 Edward Rector Kay,ex-'18, died Febru-ary 7 . Surviving are his wife, Mrs . Zo e Hollister Kay ; a sister, Mrs . Tom Boylen ,and three brothers, John B ., Harvey L ., and Richard Kay . Mr . Kay was a membe rof Kappa Sigma fraternity and had hisA.B. degree from the University o f Beaune, France .Daniel W. Boitnott, '18, M.A. '24 (Jan .) and family are still living in Beaumont ,Texas. Mr . Boitnott has been dean at La - mar Junior College there for the pas tfourteen years . 1919 Mary Mattley, who with Esther Hettin-ger has been operating the Woodbur n hotel, has left for Pendleton to accept aposition in the mathematics departmen t of the Junior high school for the re-mainder of the year . George Duke, ex-'20, former "Register -Guard" employe in Eugene, is now work- ing on the "Oregon Journal, " Portland, a sa pressman . He and Mrs . Duke (Mar y Elizabeth Garrison, '34) live at 382 1Southeast Taylor . 1920 Robert Ormond Case recently returne dfrom a trip to Philadelphia where he went to discuss a new serial he has writte nwith the editorial staff of the Saturda y Evening Post . Mr . Case's current nove lwhich is running in that magazine is en - titled "Wings North", and is being con-sidered by Hollywood . Dr. and Mrs . Frank E . Fowler hav eremodeled the old Dwyer residence i n Astoria into a modified colonial typ ebuilding for their home at a cost of ap- proximately $14,000 . Francis B . Jacob-berger,ex-'21, was in charge of the work . Mrs. Fowler was Marguerite Gross, '17 .Architectural plans for a Monterey co- lonial style home, designed by RichardSundeleaf,'23, and being built in Portlan d for Dr. and Mrs . B. O . Woods, ex-'20,appeared in the Sunday Oregonian fo r January 23 . 1921 Richard H. Martin has been appointe dmanager of the Portland office of Ferri s and Hardgrove and elected a vice-presi-dent of the firm, 1922 George A. Anderson, ex-'22, died Janu-ary 10 in the air crash at Bozeman, Mon- tana, in which ten persons were killed .Surviving are his wife, Mrs . Doris G . An- derson of Bozeman ; daughter, Mar yGrace Anderson, of Spokane ; his parents , Mr. and Mrs. J . E . Anderson ; a brother ,Howard F . Anderson, all of Portland, an d a brother, Harold W . Anderson, ex-'26 ,of Seattle . In response to our appeal for new scomes the following from Mrs . Mary Vir- ginia McDougle of Urbana, Illinois : " Igraduated from the University in 1922 an d while there I was a member of Phi Bet aKappa, Phi Theta Kappa and Kappa Al- pha Theta . My husband, Verne R . Mc -Dougle, M.A. '21, certified public account - ant, formerly taught in the School o fCommerce at Eugene . After his death, du e to pneumonia, I came back to the Uni-versity of Illinois . I am principal of th e Washington school in Urbana and am als ogetting my master's degree here at Illi- nois in June . I was elected to Kapp aDelta Pi honorary educational fraternit y last summer . I am corresponding secre-tary for Kappa Alpha Theta, Champaign - Urbana alumnae . My daughter, Mar yElizabeth McDougle, is eleven and is i n Thornburn Junior high school . She ha sbroadcasted several times this fall ove r the radio both on violin and piano . Sh ealso does much Girl Scout work . She won Old Orego n a trip to Camp Drake last summer b y selling the most cookies in the Twi nCities . My sister, Clara Louise Robinson , was a student at Eugene in 1922 . I se e the 'Albigs ' here occasionally . I hope t o visit Eugene this summer . I knew Donal d Erb's father here . So happy to learn h eis president . Saw and talked to Mr . Fin -ley of Portland recently . He lecture d here ." A son was horn on February 2 to Mr . and Mrs . John Dierdorff of Portland .This is their third son . Mr . Dierdorff i sadvertising director for the Portland Ga s and . Coke company .Ella Rawlings Vandegrift (Mrs . Rol -land A . Vandegrift) heads the departmen t of physical education for women at Chic o State College, California .Elsie Hildebrand Garrity sends her ad - dress as 15853 Appoline, Detroit, Mich- igan, and her occupation as "homemaker ." Her family consists of Fred, Jr ., who i sseven, and Patricia Jean, four nex t month, and her husband, Fred Garrity .Mrs . Grace Snook Wolgamott direct shealth and physical education in the Sa- lem public schools .Mr . and Mrs . George G . Witter (Mari -an Taylor, Delta Gamma) and five-year - old son, George, Jr ., live at 1472 Cardif f avenue, Los Angeles . Arvin Burnett has announced that h ewill relinquish his coaching duties at th e Commerce high school, Portland, after th ebasketball season to accept a position a s vice-principal .Mr . and Mrs . Philip Neu (Maurine El -rod) of Portland are spending a month i n Hawaii . 1923 Forrest E . Littlefield, LL .B . '23, attor- ney, has offices in the Equitable building ,Hollywood, California . Walter W. McMonies, ex-'23, formerl yexecutive vice-president of Metzger - Parker company, property managemen t firm in the Woodlark building, Portland ,has been elected president to succeed th e late B . L . Metzger . Raymond M . Munly , LL .B. '14, will continue as vice-presiden tand will also be treasurer . Webster K. Ross, '23, M .D. '26, ha s been named county doctor for Unio n county, Oregon, with offices in La Grande .1924 Mr . and Mrs . Lee P . Brown (Susan Stewart) former residents of Olympia , Washington, may now be reached care th eU . S . Forest Service at Denver, Colorado .The Browns have two sons and a daugh- ter . Mrs . Brown writes that raising afamily keeps her busy . A daughter was born on January 2 8 to Mr. and Mrs . Russell S. Brown (Doro- thy Evans, '26) of 2159 Alder street, Eu-gene . Don Z. Zimmerman, First Lieutenant , Air Corps, Randolph Field, Texas, re- cently made trips to the North America nAircraft factory, Ingleside, California, an d the Stearman Aircraft factory, Wichita , Kansas, where he tested new trainin gplanes built for the Air Corps and fle w them back to the Air Corps Primary Fly- ing School at Randolph Field .Mrs . Forrest D . Lawrence and he rdaughter, Henryetta A . Lawrence, of Portland, are planning to leave late thi s month for San Francisco whence the y will sail March I for a two months ' cruis e in the south seas, during which they wil l visit in the Fiji Islands, Samoa, Aus-tralia and Honolulu . Mr . and Mrs . John L . Cowan (Pear l Pyritz) and four children make thei r home at Reedsport . There are three husky sons in the family, John, Jr ., Peter an d Robert, age ten, nine, and four years old ,respectively, and a daughter, Viona, eight . Dr . Charles A. Haines, M .D . '24, an d Dr . E . Gaither Everett, B .A. '32, M .D. '34, will occupy a new $6000 medical of- fice building which is being constructe d for them in Ashland, it was recently an-nounced . Dr . R . L . Burdic, dentist, wil lalso occupy the new building . Margaret Mylne is at the University o f Idaho this year as instructor in the de- partment of physical education for women .She is a former faculty member of th e Oakland Technical high school, Oakland , California . 1925 Ivan Houser, ex-'25, and his wife an dyoung .son of Keystone, South Dakota , were visitors in Portland in January . Mr . Houser has been associated with Gutzo n Borglum in carving the heads of Wash-ington, Lincoln and Jefferson out of th emountainside of Mount Rushmore . T. Roland Humphreys, '25, M .A . '2 9 (Aug .) teaches mathematics at the Ry e Country Day School, Rye, New York . From her home at 602 North Ja y street in Tacoma, Washington, Mrs . AdahHarkness Dapper writes that her husband , M. J . Dapper, is being transferred to Eu- gene in June and that they will make thei rhome here after that time . She has bee ndirecting physical education for women a t the Pacific Lutheran College, Parkland ,Washington . From her home at 479 Center street , Chula Vista, California, Mrs. Belle Tag-gart Picklesimer writes : "Saw the U . o f O . vs . Marine game . I believe I'm stil l hoarse! Our- youngest ( a son) goes t oDr . Rieta Hough's Baby Clinic . She is a graduate of U . of O ., Med . '23, I believe . Small world, isn 't it? " Mrs . Augusta Hamilton Clements is assistant probation officer of the Sa nFrancisco Juvenile Court . Charlotte La Tourrette is still living i nAthens, Ohio, where she teaches physica l education for women at Ohio University . Since leaving Oregon she has earned he rmaster's degree at New York University . Stella Haglund (now Mrs . Paul S . Hig- ginbotham) teaches physical education a tLodi, California, in the high school . Jane O'Reilly, ex-'25, who is with th e Ask Mr . Foster Travel Service, Inc ., car eof Frederick and Nelson, Seattle, writes : "I don 't wonder that you haven't my ad - dress because we don't stay long in on e place in this business . The address at 82 7Northwest Twenty-fifth, Portland, is real- ly as much of a permanent address as I have ." 1926 Velma Meredith, ex-'26, and Rowlan d C . Clapp were married in Seattle, Wash-ington, on December 18, 1937 . Mrs .Clapp was a member of Delta Delta Delt asorority at the University . The couple wil l make their home in the country south o f Seattle . Lester Lomax, ex-'26, is with Durha mand Bates, automobile, casualty and fir e insurance firm, Portland . Dr. James K : Hall, B .A. '26 (Jan .) ,M.A . ' 26, president of the Pacific Coas t Economic association, has accepted a n offer to teach in the Eugene summer ses- sion for 1938 . As a member of the facult y of the University of Washington for a number of years, Dr . Hall has specialize din the field of public finance . David A . Royle, ex-'26, manages Safe - way Store number 39 in Portland . Donovan F . Cartwright is superintend- ent of schools at Beaumont, California . A member of the faculty at Arizon a State Teachers College at Tempe i sJanet Wood who is instructor in physica l education . She was formerly with Kansa s State College in a similar position . Formerly a Portland resident, MarionBonney Wiggins now makes her home i n Seattle at 6551 Eighteenth avenue North -east . Her husband, Charles Wiggins, is a University of Washington graduate .Dr . and Mrs . Wilbur C . Hayden andchildren have moved from Aberdeen ,W a s h i n g t o n, to Tulelake, California , where Dr . Hayden will be associated i n practice with his uncle, Dr . J . Randolp h Barr, '07 . 1927 Richard B . Wright, ex-'27, sends his ad - dress at 157 Fourteenth avenue, San Mateo, California . He is with Swift an d company in South San Francisco as as- sistant manager of the by-products divi-sion . A son, Fred William, Jr ., was born o n January 6 to Mr . and Mrs . Fred W . Sal-ing (Eleanor LeFevre, ex-'27) of Dallas ,Oregon . Kenneth J . Ruth, who has been travel- ing in Europe, spent last July, August an d September in Germany . Since October h ehas visited Italy, where he saw Mussolin iseveral times and heard the speech i nwhich the Fascist leader withdrew fro m the League of Nations . At present he i s traveling in France and plans to spen d twelve weeks in Paris, or until the middl eof May . He will then tour England an dScotland until the first of June when he will sail for home . He has studied Italian , German and French during his sta y abroad . Mr . Ruth is a member of th eClassics department at the University .Lynn Allen Jones, two-and-one-half- year-old son of H. Lynn Jones, ex- '27, was found drowned in a pool near hi s home in Portland Wednesday, January 13, after he had been missing five hours .A daughter, Frances Elizabeth, wa sborn on January 31 to Mr . and Mrs . Al - ton K . Effinger (Margaret Swan) of route two, Junction City . Ardath Caldwell Danielson (Mrs .James V . Danielson) has an interestin gposition . She is employed as Coos count ysupervisor of women's projects for th eWPA with headquarters at Marshfield . A daughter, Margaret L ., was born o nDecember 22, 1937, to Mr . and Mrs. Al-fred C. Veazie of 7244 Southeast Ree dCollege Place, Portland . Mary Cogswell, ex-'27 (Mrs . Jean Pau l King) resides with her husband, the wel lknown radio announcer and news com- mentator of the news reel " News of th e Day," at 152 West Fifty-seventh street ,New York City . They have a four-year -old son, Paul, and a big red Chow-Chow ,San Toy . 1928 Mrs . DeEtta Rodgers, assistant record- er in the Registrar's office at the Univer-sity, has announced her resignation fro mthat position at the end of this month .Mrs . Rodgers, who has been in the reg- istrar's office since 1932, was researc h assistant in the school of education i n 1929-30 after her graduation from the Uni- versity in 1928 . From 1930 until 1932 sh e was secretary to Dr . Huffaker of th e school of education . Mrs . Rodgers and he r husband, Kenneth Rodgers, ex- '28, wil l make their home in Portland .C . Kirk Bolliger has joined the firm o fCamp and company, Portland bond deal- ers, as statistician and trader . He ha s been in the investment banking field fo r eight years. [12] February 193 8 Richard G. Ball is engaged in farmin gnear Burlington, Washington, where h e and Mrs . Bali and small son, Richard ,make their home . A son was born on January 8 to Mr . and Mrs . Herbert F . Lundyof 9455 NorthAllegheny avenue, Portland . Gerald D . Plue, ex-'28, manages th eInverness Golf Course in Portland . Mr. and Mrs . Gerald W . Lawlo r(Gladys Foster, '32) are living at 14 2 Henry street, Brooklyn, New York . Mr .Lawlor teaches psychology in Brookly n College and Mrs . Lawlor teaches music i nthe schools . Lucia Wiley, '28, M.F .A. '32, has bee nvisiting friends on the campus and i n Eugene. She has lived in Minnesota fo rseveral years . Mr. and Mrs . Benoit McCroskey (Dori sEfteland, ex-'28) are living in Spokane , Washington, at South 729 Bernard street .Mr. McCroskey is territorial manager o f the Spokane Field Branch of General Mo-tors Acceptance corporation . Dr. John Scheffer is teaching this yea rat the University of Montana . He an d Mrs. Scheffer (Serena Madsen, '30) writethat they are enjoying Missoula ver y much. 1929 Ernest Erkilla, M .A. '29, is now a mem-ber of the faculty of New York Universit y according to a letter received from hi mby Dean Rebec of the Graduate Division . Mr. Erkilla has his B .A. degree from th eUniversity of Montana . A new address received for Mr . an dMrs. William Eddy (Billie Martland, '30 ) is 3801 Grand avenue, Oakland, California .Mr. Eddy is field auditor for the Stat e Board of Equalization, Sales Tax Divi-sion. Edella will be one year old i n March.Clifford Willison, who sends his addres s in Portland as 2546 Southeast Thirty -second avenue, is secretary for the Re- tailers Cooperative Association, Inc.,wholesale groceries . A daughter, Georjan, was born onJanuary 30 to Mr. and Mra . George W . McMurphey (Janet Johnstone, '28) o fPortland . Mr. and Mrs . Rolf Klep (Alice Latture ,ex-'29) live at 128 East Thirty-fifth street , New York city . Mr . Klep is one of Ne wYork's outstanding young commercia l artists. His art work for several Junio rProms will be remembered on the campus . Formerly with the health departmen tat Oregon State Normal School, Ailee n Dyer is now attending Columbia Univer-sity in New York taking a course in or- thopedics .Elda Irene Russell is employed as pro- bation officer for the older girls of Mult-nomah county . She received her Socia l Work Certificate from the University i n1929. Mr. and Mrs . William Hadley Star k(Grace Edmonds) are now living at Te- hatchapi, California .Mrs. Ruth Strong Moyer is a teache r of special education in the Portland schoo lsystem. Her son, Herbert L . Strong, i s a freshman at the University .A daughter was born- on January 14 to Mr . and Mrs . Prince Helfrich (Mar-jorie Peyton) of Vida, Oregon . A daughter, Jane Carol . was born o nJanuary 22 to Dr . and Mrs . Henry H . Norton (Margaret Edmunson, '30) of 49 4Twelfth avenue west, Eugene , Frank M. Learned, Portland, long asso-ciated with Commerce high school ath- letics, has been selected as head footbal lcoach of the high school and majordom o of Stenog sports . Learned takes the plac e [13] 1930 Winifred C . Kaiser is at Maupin, Ore-gon this year, where she teaches in th e high school .Everett Horrell is a member of the hig h school faculty at Haines, Oregon thi syear. Ralph F. Troge, M.A. '30 (Aug .) i svice-principal of the Woodrow Wilso n Junior high school in San Diego .Maynard W. Bell is sports reporter o n the "Roseburg News-Review ."Mary E. Goldsmith, formerly of Port - land, is now Mrs . J . W . Dempster an dmay be found at 712 Third avenue West , Seattle. She was formerly interested i ncommercial art work ; in Portland . Gerald L. Jensen, M .A. '30, teache shistory and has charge of the testing pro - gram in the high school at Bend . He i smarried and has a son and daughter . Bet h is four years old and Peter is two .Mailing address for Dr. Karl Klemm i s 5870 Vallejo street, Oakland, California .He is control chemist for Paraffine Com- panies, Inc .A daughter, Doris Helen, was bor n January 13 to Mr . and Mrs . Clarence Vea l(Martha Patterson, '35) of Albany . Th e baby is a granddaughter of Mr . and Mrs.John B. Patterson (Daisy Dillard, ex-'01 ) of Eugene .Stella Johnson Thompson (Mrs . Ed- mund B. Thompson) teaches music in th ePortland schools . Dr. and Mrs . Lincoln R . Constanc(Sara Luten, '33) are in Berkeley, Califor- nia. where Dr . Constance has a faculty po-sition in the botany department at th e University of California . He formerly wa swith Washington State College as an in- structor in botany .Fred C . Schultze, ex-'30, is branch man- ager in Minneapolis for the Portlan dWoolen Mills, Inc . Frances Ellen White, ex-'30, and Georg eCarter Miller, Jr ., were married in Port - land on January 29 . Mr . and Mrs . Millerwill reside in South Bend, Indiana . Oscar Turner, who has degrees in archi-tecture from the University of Orego n and Chicago Tech, writes that he is open-ing a new school on designing . His mail- ing address is 179 North Wells street ,Chicago. A daughter was born on January 14 t oMr. and Mrs . John McMullen (Clair e Curtis, ex-'29) of 547 Sixth avenue West ,Eugene . Mrs. Phyllis Hartzog Whittlesey i sserving as executive secretary for th e Douglas County Red Cross at Roseburg . Mr. and Mrs . Raymond Hall (Thelm aKitchen, '28) and small daughter, Caro- lyn Lee, live at 2806 Northeast Twelfth ,Portland. Mr . Hall is a jewelry salesma n with Keith-Hall company . Making herhome with them is Etta-Belle Ktchen, '31, Alpha Chi Omega . Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth Lawrence (Del-pha Weisbeck, ex-'30) formerly of Eu- gene, have moved to their new hone nea r Irving. W . Mitchell Jones, M.A. '30 (Aug .)teaches education and physical educatio n in the West Texas State College, Canyon ,Texas . He is married and has two sons , W. Mitchell, Jr ., age seven, and Marshall , who is four .The office address of Mrs . Vera Hughes McCord is 220 Hutton building, Spokane ,Washington . She is field supervisor fo r the State Department of Social Security .William Doyle and Amelia Kibla nDoyle are San Francisco residents . Mr . Doyle is supervisor of agencies for th eNational Surety corporation . They hav e a young daughter, Diana, who will b eone year old next month . Dr. and Mrs . Irving A. Mather (Kath-leen Mahoney) and Patricia Joan, who i s three and one half, live at 1743 Lom astreet, Santa Barbara, California . Dr . Mather, who has his M .S. and Ph .D. de-grees from the University and his B .S. de- gree from Oregon State College, is pro-fessor of science and education in th e Santa Barbara State College .Mrs. Sadie Pondelick Reeder has re- ceived recognition from the State Boar dof Education for an outstanding piece o f work in developing a unit project in firs tterm English which appeared in an ab- breviated form in the "Handbook on Cur-riculum Study" . Mrs . Reeder is the wif e of Francis B. Reeder, '30, who is mer-chandise collection manager for the Port - land General Electric company .Samuel C. Lancaster, M.A. in Publi c Service, '30 (Honorary), was honore dJanuary 11 on his 74th birthday by th e Portland Rotary club at a luncheon meet-ing at the Benson hotel . Mr . Lancaste r is the builder of the Columbia River high -way. 1931 Beverly Simpson, ex'39, and James H .Raley were married in Pendleton on Ne w Years eve . Mr . Raley, who is practicin glaw in Pendleton, is a member of Ph i Kappa Psi fraternity and formerly serve das vice-president of the University of Ore- gon Alumni association . The couple wil llive at 208 South Blaine street . Sol Beadner is a senior this year at th eUniversity of Oregon Medical School . A son, Larry William, was born o nDecember 19, 1937, to Mr. and Mrs . Mar k B. Jenkins (Eleanore Glass, '29) of rout eI, La Center, Washington . A daughter, Dianne L ., was born o nJanuary 5 to Mr . and Mrs. Stanley C . Richmond (Jessie Grippen, ex-'32) o fGold Beach, Oregon . PORTABL E TYPEWRITER S For Ren t For Sal e the "co-OF ' of Arvin A. Burnett, '23, who resigned t otake a job as vice-principal at Commerce . Bayard T . Merrill, B .S. '29 (Aug .), su-perintendent of schools at Juntura, re- cently announced his candidacy for th erepublican nomination for congressma n from the second district .Paul Angstead, graduate in 1929 fro m the school of physical education, has bee n appointed supervisor of the physical edu-cation department in the Klamath Fall s elementary schools . He formerly directe dphysical recreation in a CCC Camp i n Idaho.Mr. and Mrs . Clarence Kester (Ber- nice Lund, '29) are living at 148 Sunse tboulevard, Hayward, California . Mr . Kes- ter is with the U . S . Coast and Geodeti cSurvey. Old Orego n Irene Urfer, social service worker, i s doing case work for the Lane County Re -lief Committee, at present, in child wel- fare supervised field unit . Her home is i n Portland . Marion Reed East, M .D. '31, is in charg eof classes in personal hygiene for wome n and health adviser for Multnomah Col-lege, Portland, since the opening of th e spring semester . Dr . East is a graduat e of Reed College and of the University o fOregon Medical School . Helen Laurgaard and Joseph E . Key-ser, '34, were married in Portland o nJanuary 16 . Mrs . Keyser is a member o f Delta Gamma sorority and has degree sfrom the Universities of Oregon and Wis- consin . The couple will live in Portlan d at .5850 Southwest Terwilliger boulevard . Nona C. Peterson is employed as a typ- ist in the water department at the cit y hall in Portland . Formerly a resident of Portland, Rob-ert S . Poucher has been added to the fac- ulty of the Newport high school wher e he will teach mathematics, business train- ing and world history . Mr . Poucher i s the fifth member of the faculty to gradu- ate from the University .A daughter was born on January 14 t o Mr . and Mrs. William F . Guske of 157 9Walnut street, Eugene . Harriet M . Kane and Emerson R . Bald - win were married in Portland Christma smorning . Mrs . Baldwin is a member o fChi Omega sorority . The couple will re - side in Warrenton, Oregon . A new address received is that of E. Merl Casey, '31, M .S. '32, who is living a t the Leamington Hotel in Minneapolis ,Minnesota . Miss Casey teaches remedia lreading . E . Madeline Snyder receives mail at 55 0North Summer, Salem . She is field super -visor for WPA, state of Oregon .Howard A . Pellon, ex-'31, is regiona l statistician' for the HOLC regional offic ein San Francisco . He and Mrs . Pello nlive at 3029 Hillegass avenue in Berkeley . Nina Zoe Kitts is in Klamath Falls thi s year teaching social science in the Fair - view school . Florence Toman, ex-'31, is advertisin gmanager and saleslady in the ladies 'reaicty-to-wear department of K,aufma n Brothers store, Eugene .A son, James Bradley, was born o n January 19 to Mr . and Mrs . Bradle y Thompson, of Cleveland, Ohio . Howard Stafford, '31, M .A. '35, ha sbeen appointed through the Teacher s Placement Service as a teacher of mathe- matics and science in the Silver City, Ne wMexico, high school . He is the son of Dr . O F . Stafford, dean of the lower divisio n and service departments at the University .Mrs . Stafford is the former Phyllis M .Baldwin, ex-'38 . A daughter, Lucy Lee, was born o nJanuary 13 to Mr, and Mrs . Henry E .Baldridge (Wilma Enke) of Portland . Bernice W . Hector, ex-'31, and Carl H .Coad, '33, J .D. '34, were married in Klam- ath Falls on January 22 . Mr . Coad i s practicing law at Nyssa, Oregon . Glenn W . Kimberling is principal o f the high school at Waldport .Dr. Robert K. Boggs, B.A . '31 (Jan .)is now at 620 Park avenue, New Yor kcity. Dr . Boggs practices surgery and ha s his medical degree from McGill Uni-versity . 1932 Lawrence Opedal is living at 75 River - side Drive, New York city, and is servin g as investigator for the Social Welfare De-partment of New York . Mr . Opedal ma- jored in sociology at the University . Gladys L . Turley may be reached at th eUnited States Naval Hospital, San Diego , California . She is with the Nurse Corps o f the United States Navy . Fremont Smith is employed as a ban k clerk by the First National Bank of Port -land. Eva Ann Davis is instructor of nurse sat St . Vincent's Hospital, Portland, Ore . Ruth Maxine Gaunt, ex '32, is employe din the trust department of Title an d Trust company, Portland .Mrs . Mamie Clark Hendryx is proba- tion officer for the Court of Domesti c Relations in Portland . Jon P . Conder, ex-'32, is employed a snorthwest division sales secretary fo rthe Deep Rock Oil corporation with head - quarters in Minneapolis, Minnesota .Formerly health education director a tthe Boise, Idaho, Y . W . C . A ., Doroth yMacMillan is now in Seattle studying fo r her M .S. degree in physical education .Maud Agnes Hicks is instructor in th eSchool of Nursing at Holy Cross Hos- pital, Salt Lake City . Gaylord H . Cox, ex- '32, is employed i nthe sales engineering department at th eMontgomery Ward and Company store , Portland . He is married and lives at 274 3North Kerby street . Young Dennis Phil - lip celebrated his third birthday in Janu-ary . Charles S. Kingsley, ex-'32, is assistan tauditor for the Charles R . McCormic k Lumber company . He and Mrs . Kingsle y (Laurine Needham, Reed College) liv eat 2023 Northeast Thompson street, Port -land . EIizabeth Chance, ex-'32, who formerl y lived in Washington, D . C ., where she wa s employed by the Home Owners Loa nCorporation, is now Mrs . Richard Davi sSprawls . She and her husband are locate d at 3219 Northwest Nineteenth avenue ,Miami, Florida, where Mr . Sprawls is i nthe steamship business . Louis Wessel, M .S . '32, is assistan tmanager of the Ayrshire Dairy at Grea tFalls, Montana . Miss Evelyn Bragg and Lionel K . Lane were married January 28 and are living i n Seattle at 6306 Phinney avenue . Mr . Lan e is in training for a buyer's position wit hSears Roebuck and company, mail orde r department, Seattle . A daughter, Susan Louise, was born o nJanuary 26 to Mr . and Mrs. Treve J.Jones (Virginia Deifell, ex-'33) of Port -land . 1933 Carl D . Monroe is claims representativ e for the Social Security Board . Mailing ad -dress is 1553 Southeast Poplar avenue , Portland . Formerly employed by the HOLC i nWashington, D . C ., Mary Chance, ex-'33 ,is now Mrs . Carl G . Anderson and, wit h her husband, is living in Lincoln, Nebras-ka . at 2667 South Thirteenth avenue .Willard D . Arant, after four years a s editor of the "Grants Pass Bulletin," ha s gone to Harvard University for graduat estudy and research in economics and jour- nalism . At present he is doing researc h for H . H . Burbank, chairman of the eco- nomics department . His address is 1 8 Little Hall, Harvard University .Mrs . Zulieme Tibbetts Fisher is no wliving at 3538 Second street, Sacramento , California . Her husband, Marvin Le e Fisher (Oregon State B .A . and M .A.) , has been elected to a position in Sacra- mento Junior College . They have a boy , Gordon Lee, awe eight months .George R . Wallmann, B. Arch . '3 3 (Jan .), who has been associated with th e firm of Tucker and Wallmann, Portland architects, was recently appointed to a po-sition in the Walker and Eisen firm in Lo sAngeles . A daughter was born on January 17 t oMr . and Mrs . Wallace D . Baker (Virgini aReid, ' 32) of Everett, Washington .Betty Jane Barr, ex-'38, and Dr . Rosse rPayson Atkinson, '33, M .D. '37, were mar- ried in Portland on January 22 . Mrs . At- kinson is a member of Kappa Alpha Thet aand Dr . Atkinson is affiliated with Ph iGamma Delta . Dr . Atkinson is serving a s an interne at the Multnomah County Hos-pital, Portland . Twins, Lynne and Michael, were bor n on January 21 to Mr . and Mrs . James D . Morgan of 1635 Northeast Fifty-sixth ave-nue, Portland . Mr . Morgan is fire warde nfor Lincoln county and also sells sportin g goods . Mildred Jorgensen does special dut ynursing at St . Vincent's hospital, Portland .A member of the high school staff a tPilot Roc k, Oregon is Mrs . Jenni e Schooley Heimuller, who received ;her bachelor's degree in education in Septem-ber, 1933 . James R. Woodruff, ex-'33, is assistan t traffic manager for Balfour, Guthrie an d company, Crown mills, Portland .A daughter was born in January to Dr .and Mrs . Kenneth J. Scales (Dorothy Ed- lefsen, ex- '34) of Portland . Allie Kemp, B .S. '33 (Jan .) is now Mrs . Arthur W . Welsh and, with her husband , makes her home at 5413 Northeast Twen-ty-fourth avenue, Portland . Elizabeth Keene, ex- '33, is a primar y teacher in the Captain Robert Gray schoo lat Astoria . A daughter, Patricia Catherine, was bor n on September 24, 1937, to Mr . and Mrs .Edson H . Deal (Gwendolyn Shepard) o fNampa, Idaho . Robert V. Turner is a salesman for th e Pacific Steel Warehouse company in Port -land . Mrs . Sarah Steele Laufman, '33, M .S.'35 (Jan .) is living at 321 Oregon street ,'Wenatchee, Washington . She writes tha t she has been ill and is not working at pres-ent . Her last position was that of scienc einstructor and director of education at th eBurnett Sanitarium School of Nursing , Fresno, California . Alan R . Kammerer is statistician for th e General Steamship Corporation, Ltd ., i n San Francisco . A son, Arnold David, was born on De-cember 17, 1937, to Mr . and Mrs . Mont yG . Schnitzer (Rose Ann Bloom, ex-'33) o f 519 Southeast Twenty-ninth avenue, Port -land. Mary Louise Long is employed as a librarian in Oakland, California . She is a member of Delta Zeta and formerly live din Portland . Dorothy MacLean is supervisor of in- tramural activities and member of th estaff of the women's physical education de- partment at the University of Washington , from which institution she has her M .S. degree . 1934 Mr. and Mrs . Robert Van Nice, B.A . '34, B .Arch . '35, are in Paris, France, fo r two months after their stay in Istanbu lsince May, 1937 . Mr . Van Nice is workin gwith the Byzantine institute research as- sisting in the restoration of rare mo-saics . Mrs . Van Nice was Elizabeth Re -bee, '32. Katharine Patten, of Eugene has a stor y in the recent O . Henry memorial awar dcollection . It was her first story and wa spublished originally by The Story maga- zine . Miss Patten received her degree i njournalism in January, 1934 . [14) February 193 8 Mark Temple as accepted a position a shead football coach at The Dalles hig h school for next year . He will replac e Beryl B . Hodgen, '29, who resigned t o take up pea farming near Athena . Templ e is now coaching at Pendleton high school .From Salem, Oregon, Ruth N. Fick is at -tending the Oregon Normal School thi s year . She majored in sociology while o n the campus . According to a recent anouncement fro m George Washington University, James E .Pixlee, football coach and director of phys- ical education, has been granted a year' s !cave of absence . Replacing him as hea dcoach of all varsity teams will be Willia m "Bill" Reinhart, who had previously serve das assistant football coach and basketbal l mentor .Mr . and Mrs . Herbert Simmons are liv- ing in West Los Angeles, California, a t 1505 Wellesley avenue . Their y o u n g daughter, Joan Marie, is just six month old . For the past two years Lowell F . Ander-son has been employed as draftsman b ythe firm of Lawrence, Holford and Allyn , Portland architects, with offices in th eNailing building . Jack Mathews, graduate assistant at th eUniversity from 1932 until 1934, and no whead of the French department at Wash- ington State Normal School at Ellensburg ,has been awarded the Committee for Bel- gian Relief fellowship . Mr . Mathews wil lstudy in Belgium for one year while work- ing for his Ph .D. His wife, Marthiel Duk e Mathews, '31, M.A. '33, is now graduat e assistant in English at the University o fOregon . Alice Wedemeyer is doing secretaria l and journalistic work in the sales depart- ment of the Northwestern Electric com-pany, Portland . A daughter was born on January 18 t o Mr . and Mrs . Louise H . Terrill (Earlen eA . James, ex-'35) of 1009 Monroe street ,Eugene . Marjorie Marcus is family case worke rfor the Marion County Relief Committee i nSalem . Mr . and Mrs. John Hagmeier (Kathry n Liston) have arrived in Juneau, Alaska ,where they are to make their home . The y had been living in Salt Lake City an dvisited relatives in Eugene before goin gnorth . A daughter was born on February 1 t o Mr . and Mrs. Alton C . McCully of 144 2East Eighteenth avenue, Eugene . Miss Mae Beier and John R. McKy, ex - '34, were married in Eugene on January 9 .Mr . and Mrs . McKy will make their hom ein Eugene . A daughter, Vickia Jeanne, was born o n February 4 to Mr. and Mrs . Louis E . Van -nice (Katherine Satterfield, '32) of Grant sPass . Mr. and Mrs. Charles B . White (Mau dMcCandlish, ex- ' 36) and six-months-ol ddaughter, June, are located at 1614 Sa nJose avenue, Alameda, California . Mr . White is assistant manager of a branc h yard for hardwood lumber . The war department has announced tha t three Oregonians, including Alan E . Car - ley, ex-'34, of Medford, and Samuel K . McCaughey, ex- '37, of Roseburg, woul dbegin training March 1 at the Air Corp sPrimary Flying School at Randolph Field ,Texas . Elizabeth Freeman, ex-'34, of Portland , is spending the remainder of the winter i nPalm Beach, Florida . 1935 Philip L . Field, recently connecte d with the Portland office of the Pacific Fi- nance corporation, has given up his po - [15] sition to become business manager of th eFields Motor Car company, Portlan d Chevrolet dealers . Fields was a membe r of Chi Psi when he was at the Univer- sity and later attended Harvard . Old Oregon erred seriously in th e January issue when it announced tha t Mr . and Mrs. Douglas W . Polivka (Jo-sephine Rice, J .D. '34) were parents of a daughter . The child is the daughter o f Mr . and Mrs . D . (Donald) Polivka, a cousin of Mr. Douglas Polivka . The ed-itor of Old Oregon wishes to make a sin- cere apology for the unpleasantness whic h he caused Mr . and Mrs . Polivka . Robert G . Emmens, ex-'35, flying cadet ,graduated from the Air Corps Primar y Flying School at Randolph Field, Texas , in October, 1937 . He is now at the Ai rCorps Advanced Flying School, Kell y Field, Texas, where he is expected t o graduate this month . He is a member o f Phi Kappa Psi . Grace Bialkin teaches physical educatio nat the Kenton grade school in Portland . Elenor Lonergan and John Halderman , LL .B. '31, were married in the Swarthmor ePresbyterian church near Philadelphia o n February 4 . Mrs . Halderman is a membe rof Alpha Gamma Delta and Mr . Halder- man is affiliated with Sigma Nu . Th e couple will make their home in Bucking -ham community, Arlington, Virginia . The new home of Mr . and Mrs. Lyl e Heater (Elizabeth Lueddenrann, O . S . C .)at 7429 Southeast Twenty-eighth avenue , Portland, was designed by Richard W . Sundeleaf, '23, well known architect .EIeanor Teasdale Skelley, ex-'35, an d Richard Lemen were married in Portlan d on December 27, 1937 . The couple will re - side in San Francisco . A son, Peter Harvey, was born on Janu- ary 29 to Mr . and Mrs . Thomas C . Cor- rie (Katherine Harvey) of Westby, Wis-consin . Edgar D. Perry is assistant credit man-ager for Carstens Packing company . H e and Mrs . Perry live at 912 Southeas t Sixty-ninth avenue in Portland . Marshall B . Harrison is a junior sales -man for Columbia Steel company, Port - land .Ruth P . Wollenberg, ex- '35, teaches ar t at the Wilson junior high school in Eu- gene . Hugh B . Currin, M .D. '35, physician an dsurgeon, is now with the Klamath Medica l Clinic at Klamath Falls . He served hi s interneship at the Multnomah County Hos-pital, Portland . Eva Gray, whose home is in Eugene, ha s a position with the Federal Home Loa n bank in Portland .William Boyd Courtney, Jr ., and wif e are living in Denver, Colorado, at 164 4 Lincoln . Mr . Courtney is representing th eChicago Flexible Shaft company . Thei r marriage was an event of December 21 , 1937.Dorothea Finnsson, now Mrs . Edwi n Worley, may be addressed 2333 Channin g Way, Berkeley, California . Her marriag e was an event of last June . Mrs . Worley i s a Phi Beta Kappa and majored in soci- ology at the University . 1936 Benito Padilla, M.S . '36, is visiting th eUniversity campus for a few weeks be - fore he returns to the Philippines . Mr . Padilla graduated here in 1936 .A daughter was born on January 5 to Mr. and Mrs . Upton Bickford (Elizabeth Tur- ner) of Kohlatu, Washington . Jim Reed, ex-'36, who starred on Web -foot champion swimming teams when h e was in school, visited in Eugene recently . Reed is a second lieutenant in the arm y air corps and is stationed at Barksdal efield, Louisiana . Kermit D. Stevens, '33 , is also in the air force at Barksdale field . Jane Myers is in Portland working fo r her M .A. in biochemistry at the Universit y of Oregon Medical School . Guy H . Taylor is employed as a civi lengineer by the Truscon Steel company , Portland . Miss Daryl Jean Smith and John E . Milligan, Jr ., ex- '36, were married at th e Little Church at the Crossroads, in Hono-lulu, on January 22 . Mrs . Milligan is a graduate of the University of Honolulu . Mr . Milligan, who was a star athlete o n the campus, is a member of Phi Delt a Theta fraternity . The couple will mak e their home at Kaunakakai, M o 10k a iIsland, Hawaii . Jack Bollerud is a member of the clas s of '39 at the University of Oregon Medica lSchool in Portland . A son, Robert Earl, was born on Febru- ary 6 to Mr . and Mrs . Ronald McNut t (Norma Skeie, ex-'38) of Eugene .John C . "Jack" Woodard, former Uni- versity baseball player and University hig hschool coach, has been elected coach at th e Lebanon high school . He replaces Reed Clark, '30, successful mentor there for th epast six years, who recently resigned to be- come associated with Sears, Roebuck an dcompany in Klamath Falls . Mr . Woodar d coached at Maupin last year and his foot -ball tearn won nine of eleven games . Present address of Mr . and Mrs . Richar d F, Miller (Velvo Lucas) is 1616 Forty - third avenue North, Seattle . Mr . Miller ,who has his A .M. degree from Columbi a University, New York, is a teaching fel- low in English at the University of Wash- ington . -'A . l for Western Hospitality i np9RTLAND OreAote s R S'Cit y53 0 uxuriousROOM S { 3r 50 WI !?b fh h p Wi thoutBr/ h fm ,j,7 5 IIEATHMAN Old Orego n Miss Mary Hazel Gibson and Robert W .Garretson were married in Yakima, Wash- ington, on December 29, 1937. Mr. Garret -son is a member of Sigma Chi fraternity . The couple will live in Yakima .Floyd V . Barrett has been re-electe d principal of the Halsey high school fo r1938-39. Cosgrove LaBarre writes from Wash-ington, D . C .: "Quite a group of Orego n alumni met in New York New Year's, in-cluding Tom Tongue, '34 ; William "Bill " Schloth, '36 ; Maude Long, '36; Ann-Ree dBurns, '36; Jean Aiken, '35 ; Mary-Jea n Warner Angell, ex-'32, and myself, an dadded their bit to the general hilarity a s only true Oregonians can . Best of luck t oOld Oregon and all loyal alums for th e New Year."Erwin Lange, M.S. '36, is now teachin g mathematics in the Pendleton junior hig hschool. Mildred L . Chapman is employed a sbookkeeper for the Eugene Fruit Grower s association.Dorothy W. Howell and Harold E . Ol- sen, ex'38, were married December 31, 1937,and are living in Portland at 3035 North - east Pacific, apartment 4 . Mrs . Olsen is amember of Alpha Xi Delta sorority on th e campus . Mr . Olsen is attending the Nort hPacific College of Optometry in Portlan d and expects to graduate in June .James C. Kennedy, of Multnomah, Ore- gon, is a senior at the University of Orego nMedical School. Ruby L. King, M . S . '36 (Sept .) and A .W. Cole were married December 23, 1937 , and are living at Klamath Falls, route 2 ,box 523. Mrs. Cole teaches English in th e Henley high school. She has her B .A.from Iowa Wesleyan College and is af- filiated with Zeta Tau Alpha sorority . Mr .Cole has a M.S. degree from Oregon Stat e College. 1937 Delbert Bjork has taken over part o fthe activity classes of Gene Shields o n the campus who gave there up to tak ethe coaching class vacated by the resig- nation of P . G. Callison. Bjork will handl eadvanced handball and volley ball classes . Dr. Beatrice Aitchison, M.A. '37, i snow lecturer in statistics and mathemat- ics in the School of Public Affairs of th eAmerican University in Washington, D . C.Naomi Cuddeback is enrolled at th eUniversity as a graduate student in Eng- lish.Charles F . Bittel is doing graduat e work in journalism on the campus .Martha McCall, who is a graduate stu- dent at the University of Nebraska, ha sbeen made assistant in the department o f history.Charlotte Plitt is attending the school o f social work at the University of Souther nCalifornia in Los Angeles . Clifton Wilson, who was at the Uni-versity 1936-37 for graduate work, is ad- vertising manager for the Crescent En -graving company, Kalamazoo, Michigan . Marian H. Smith, of Portland, wa samong the high school teachers re-electe d at Halsey for another year .Barton Clark has obtained the princi- palship of the high school at Pine City ,Oregon. Walter E . Naylor, ex-'37, has a positio non the advertising staff of the "Astori a Budget." He formerly was on the Emeral dadvertising force . Marjorie K. Smith, ex-'37, is secretar yand assistant to a doctor and a dentist i n the Weatherly building, Portland . He rhome is at 2325 Northeast Flanders . Alice Kettle teaches in the Junior hig hschool at Ashland . She is teaching Englis h and is head of the art department .A daughter was born on January 25 t o Mr. and Mrs. Rex Hamaker(Lucille Skeie,ex-'34) of 1243 Hilyard street, Eugene . Don F . McFadden, ex-'37, is employe das transport operator f o r Consolidate d Freight Lines, Portland . He was marrie dlast June to Lyla Marie Reek and lives a t 1965 Northwest Raleigh street .Wilfred Burgess, who has been doin g graduate work at the University, has bee nplaced at Maupin, Oregon, as high schoo l teacher and coach .Willard McClure, G .S. '35-'37, teache s high school English at the Edison Boys 'School, Portland . He is taking wor k through the Portland Center toward hi smaster's degree . Eleanor Norblad has been appointe dsecretary of the Y . W. C. A. at Astoria and will take office March 1 .Helen Nickachiou, of Portland, has bee n named English teacher at the Crow hig hschool to succeed Louise Latham,'37, who was married recently to R. Alan McClung,'37. The McClungs are moving to Seattle, where Mr . McClung has a position wit hSears, Roebuck and company . Ernest Jacobsen, who did graduate wor kat the University in 1936-37, is dean o f the school of education at Utah State Agri -cultural College . Dean Jacobsen has hi s A.B. and M .A. degrees from Brigha mYoung University, Utah . Grace M. Peck is teaching English an dis the dean of girls at the Ashland hig h school this year .MargeryKissling is living at The Mar- tha Washington, Portland, and has a posi-tion with Meier and Frank company . Pearl Heath, M.S. '37, teacher in the ar t department of the Oregon Normal School ,has gone to Holland in the interest of wor k for the blind children, and will visit he rtwo sisters, who live in Holland, whil e she is there . 1938 Peggy Hayward has been appointe dhealth education director for the Y . W. C.A. at Yakima, Washington . She writes that the work is very fascinating as it is no tlimited to one branch but takes in the en - tire association.Robert C . Millard, ex-'38, is attendin g the North Pacific College of Dentistry i nPortland. Winifred Henry, ex-'38, is secretary fo rthe Booth-Kelly Lumber company in Eu- gene.Ross T . Weldonwill receive two degreesthis spring, a bachelor of science degre e from the University of Oregon and M .D.degree from Duke University school o f medicine, which he is now attending . AfterJuly 1 he will be serving his interneship i n the department of medicine, University o fChicago. Mr. and Mrs . Anthony Grubb (Marcel lJackson, ex-'38) are living at 845% Mapl eavenue, Bellflower, California. Mrs . Grubb has a position with Montgomery War dand company and Mr . Grubb is employe das tank tester for the Vultee Aircraft Man- ufacturing company .Margaret Young has accepted a positio nin handling remedial work in the hig h and grade schools at Ontario, Oregon .A daughter, Shirley Ann, was born o n December 31, 1937, to Mr. and Mrs . LorneA. Wheelonof Portland . Mr. Wheelon ha s a position with Butterfield Brothers a ssalesman in the optical department . Ernest V. D . Murphy, Jr ., ex-'38, is asecond lieutenant in the Infantry Reserv e of the U . S. Army now on duty with th eCCC at Camp Northwestern, Willits, Cali- fornia.Wayne F. Smith, ex-'38, is serving a sclaim deputy for the Unemployment Com- pensation Commission in Dallas, Oregon .Frank G. Breuer, ex-'38, is studying la w at Yale University .Violet M. Jones, ex-'38, is doing steno -graphic work in Klamath Falls . Her hom e is in Eugene .Harold H. Berg, ex-'38, has a bookkeep- ing position with the First National Bank ,Eugene. Elizabeth McGirr, ex-'38, is continuin gher studies at the University of Californi a at Berkeley . Remember THE ERB - OLIVER RECEPTIO Portland March 1 7 X0 .7nealkOptometris t 14 8th W . Eugene, Orego n Portland's most modern hotels--locat-ed in the center of business and social activity, convenient to theatres, shoppingand financial districts. Rates start a t $2.50 with bath or shower . Harry E .Heathman, General Manager. The HEATHMAN NEW HEATHMA N Park at Salmon Broadway at Salmon [16] 1939 Winifred Alice Grimes, ex-'39, and Ray-mond Lester Briggs were married in Port - land on January 28 .Mary Dodge, ex-'39, and William "Bill" Foskett, ex-'39, were married New Year 'seve at Reno, Nevada . Mrs . Foskett is a Delta Gamma and Mr . Foskett belongs t oChi Psi . Foskett was the champion sho t putter of the Northwest last year and las tfall was given "iron man" honors on th e Webfoot football team for putting in th emost playing time of anyone on the squad . He was also star weight man on the trac kteam . The couple will make their home i n California.Priscilla Mackie, ex-'39, of Portland, i s spending three months in Honolulu . Ac-companying her were Mrs . Frederic k Drake and her daughter, Betty Lou Drake .Doris McConnell, ex-'39, has a clerica l position in San Francisco with W . P . Ful-ler company . James H. Ousley, ex-'39, of Lakeview, isemployed as a furniture salesman . Marjorie Zane, ex '39, is attending th eBerte School of Fashion in Philadelphia . Guy Hoyt, Jr., ex-'39, is working for th eUnited States . National Bank of Portland . Ruth Fayle Buchanan, ex-'39, and JackH Hazlitt, ex-'39, were married in Fores t Grove on January 16 . Mr. and Mrs . Haz-litt will make their hone in Eugene . Robert Bechtell, ex-'39, may be reache dat 4304 Northeast Second street, Seattle . He is doing display work for the Hoove rVacuum company . William B. Crane Jr ., ex-'39, is em-ployed in the machinery division of th e Western Stopper company, San Francisco .Marcelle E. Murphy, ex-'39, resides a t Stayton, Oregon, and holds a stenographi cposition. Judith Anne Hampton,ex-'40, and Joh nE . Bowers were married in Portland o n New Year's day . Mrs. Bowers is a mem-ber of Pi Beta Phi sorority . Mr . Bower s is completing his studies this year at th eUniversity of California in B e r k e l e y , where he is a member of Beta Theta Pi .E. LaMoyne Black, ex-'40, and William M. Peterson, ex-'40, were married .,nSpringfield on January 21 . Mr . and Mrs . Peterson wilt reside in Eugene at 155 0Olive street . George Simmons, ex-'40, has a positio nwith Olds Wortman and King, Portland , as stock clerk in the drapery and rug de-partment . Gordon Mehl, ex-'40, has gone to Ne wYork, where he will be employed by th e Dollar Steamship company .Margaret Fanning, ex-'40, is in Port - land attending the Behnke-Walker Busi-ness College . IN THE MAIL BA G (Continued from Inside Front Cover ) squadron and is now a store manager i nLos Angeles . You're doing a fine piece of work on th emagazine, Bill, and feel sure that the res t of the alums enjoy reading it as much a swe do . Sincerely, JAMES A . HURD, '37 . * * * 401 23rd N. W .,Washington, D . C ., Jan . 9, 1938 . Editor Old Oregon ,Eugene, Oregon . Dear Editor :John King, '33, and Mary Katherine Fen - ton King, '32, had a fine housewarming in Arlington, Virginia, today, attended b y such eminent Oregonians as Robert "Bob "Thornton, ex-'37, and Dorothy Haberlac h Thornton, '34 ; Jesse Douglas, '31, an dFlorence King Douglas, '32 ; William A . "Bill" Fowler, '27, and Sherleigh Gla dFowler, ex-'28, and the two lone bachelors , Francis Pallister, '34, and myself . Yes, th eDucks still gather in flocks . COSGROVE LaBARRE, 36 . Liberty Building ,Yakima, Wash ., Feb. 14, 1938. Dear Mr . Fansett : Today in the mail I was very happy t oreceive the Alumni information card . I t is enclosed .I say that I was happy to have hear d from you, and I mean just that . My day sand associations at the University wer e and are so dear to me that receiving an ycommunication from the campus is a real pleasure .Please send me the current number o f Old Oregon and bill me for a year's sub-scription . The first of the year I went into part-nership for the practice of Law wit h Senator George F . McAulay and Roy C .Stroud. Mr . Stroud is a graduate of Ore- gon-his class being 1922 .There are two other lawyers here fro m Oregon : Isham N . Smith and Georg eMullins, '11 . Since I moved to Yakima in July o flast year, I have looked up as many of th e Oregon graduates as I could . To date th enumber is twenty-three graduates an d former students, and there are undoubted-ly some that we have no record of . I n December, when Dean Jewell was in ou rcity, we had a small dinner for him . H e was here on a Saturday, so we had asmall turnout because of the conflict wit h other affairs . What we lacked in num-bers, we hope we made up in enthusiasm . William Bolger, ex-'27, formerly o fMedford, is manager of the downtow n Penney store here . He is prominent i ncivic affairs, and is in demand as a speak- er on chain-store management, and ge-ology. In the latter field, he has made a thorough study of the geology and India nlegends regarding Crater Lake, and I un- derstand that some of his work on th elegends has been accepted as authoritativ e by the Federal Department of the Interio r(Geology Division) . He might make a n interesting write-up for Old Oregon .When Dean Jewell was here, he men- tioned particularly the unusual street dec-orations that adorned Yakima Avenue fo r the Christmas and Holiday season . W ewere proud to tell him that Oregon wa s shining once more, as it was the work o fW. W . (Bill) Nettleship, ex-'25, who op- erates the Yakima Sign Service .The other day I learned that Rev . Or- val D . Peterson, pastor of the Christia nChurch, had taken some work at Ore- gon. I don't know whether he is a gra dor not . He did his theological work a t the Eugene Bible School . Peterson i smaking quite a name for himself here . H e is also quite in demand as a speaker . Las tsummer he was in Europe . Consequently , most of his addresses are on topics hay-ing to do with the economics and publi c affairs of European countries . Bates-Portland Garag e R. C . BATES, Telephone BEacon 812 9 5th and Salmon Sts . Portland, Oregon The School of Journalism is well rep -resented here, in that Bill Marsh, '37 ; Fulton Travis, '37, and Arnold Anderson ,'22, are on the staff of the Yakima Dail y Republic and the Morning Herald .Outside of practicing law and giving a boost for Oregon whenever and whereve rI can, I have been spending some time i n fraternity affairs, having organized th eYakima Valley Alumni Association o f Sigma Alpha Epsilon . I seem to be th eonly S . A . E . from Oregon, and sad t o relate, there are two from Oregon State .I'll have to import another Oregon ma n to square the matter .All of us appreciate your fine endeavor s in the Oregon Alumni Association, an dhope that -you will continue with the goo dwork . With kindest personal regards, I a m ROBERT C . THURSTON, '27 . Feb . 5, 1938 . University of Oregon Alumni Assn .Eugene, Oregon . Gentlemen :Enclosed is check for $8 .00. Pleas e credit dues for Mrs . Keene and mysel fand annual dues for each : Margare t Keene, '37, 507 W . 24th street, Spokane ,Washington ; Frances Keene, '33, Port - land, Oregon, care of Powell Shippin gCompany, Railway Exchange Building , and Elizabeth Keene, ex-'33, 546 Harriso nstreet, Astoria, Oregon . Very truly yours , C. W . KEENE, M .D. '01 . (Note : I have one dollar (cold cash )waiting for anyone matching the recor d of the Keenes for paid up family mem-bership.-The Ed .) ENGRAVING COMPAN Y 935 Ooh Str. .t Eug.n ., Orego n 1940 Cc;-;right 1938, LIGGEIT MYERS TOBACCO Co. Mrs . Fcuby Henri t%s Goodrich , 263 BROADWAY AVE W. G 03 Eugene, Ore . te1d s Sa