lo lpHllll II VIII IllilllllllNNIIIHHIIIIIIIlhIIINHNINiNIIHNINIINIIINIIIIINIIINIIIIINNNIIINNNNINIIINNNIIINNINHMI9NII g nIIINIHNIIINNINNININNINNNINNll1111111lIII I IDIIIIIIIIIIDkIIIEI IIDVlI I 1111 11111 1111 11111 hill 1 1 IIII I Ill) 11111 11111 IIII Nil ; I 1 111111 11111 111,111111 1111 1 11111 IIl1 111111 III ; 111111 IIII IIII 11111111111 VIII Im I I I1 III I 111 1!II IIII 1111111 1111 II 1111 VIII 11111111 I11I I " k!T 4 ;1 !!1 111 b !!I lbl ;, l, d!p ni Illb ! l In i! lIIi I k III IkV I I . . l .1111 II I I ` l IIII 1 CHAMPIONS FROM NORTHERN CALIFORNIA aseies California 's Varsity hasehallers grabbed the 1933 Coast Conference championship, andhave designs on another title in 1934 . " Ill make the Indians and the Bears a sportin g proposition," says Chief Ed Wynn . "For this years Big Game back-fields, Il loan Graham McName e to Stanford and my horse to California and guar - antee youl forget all about Ernie Nevers and Brick Muller ." `Bla ling Ben" Eastman. . . Stanford's be-spec- tacled speed merchant, holds the world's 440 - yard record at 46 .4, and the 880 at 1 :50.9. We suspect "The Chief" has football con - fused with polo or badminton, so we l skip the suggestion and fine him a week s pay . The point is that Texaco Greate r FIRE-CHIEF Gasoline is a champion, too , the 100% anti-knock champion Tune in on The Fire-Chief Program Tuesday nights, Coast-to-Coast N.C. of regular priced gasolines.Always packed with speed, power, pick-up and mileage, FIRE-CHIEF, with its new maximum anti knock smoothness, is now, e best performing non-premium fuel it i s possibleto make.Youbethe judge. THE TEXAS COMPAN Y A CALIFOI NIA CORPORATIO N a J healPh TEXACO FIRE-CHIE F THE 100 ; ANTI-K-HOCK "REGULAR GASOLINE November, 1933 O L D O R E G O N 1 LETTER S wherever they are,the old faculty I know.University Women May the University increase its powers and To the Editor: lift Oregon into increased love of learn - EDITOR AND MANAGE^R -ROBERT K . ALLE N CIRCULATION MANAGER_ _so-VERA POWER S Published monthly except July and August by the University of Oregon Alumni association, and entered as second-class matter at the post office st Eugene, Oregon, under the Act of March 8, 1872 IN THIS ISSU E Letters ................................ This Month We Honor 2 News and Comment 3 BY THE EDITO R Rambling Reporter 5 By WILLARD ARANT, 33 Alumni 6 HomecomINC ; Bend too Remote ; Overcrowded Luncheon - PORTLAND: Candid Snap Ns YORK : Hear Glowing Ac - count -- PERSONALS. Sports ................................ 8 FOOTBALL : Tied on Top ; Radio Hud- dle; Lesser Lights Shine; Possibilities for ; Frosh --- BASKETBALL : Frac- tured Cheekbone Campus . ..._..--.- 10 Research 11 RATS : Who Wears the Pants? By JI M BROOKE, '34 - Fishinin Solution Faculty 12 News of the Classes 13Marriages 15Births 15 Deaths 16 ADVERTISER S The Texas Company Inside Front Cove r Betty Cook, Travel Agent 15 Eugene Advertisers 16 The University Co-o pCampus Barber Sho p Electric Cleaner s Elliott Grocer y DeNeffe, Inc .The University Florist s Valley Printing Company 16 Modern Engraving Company Inside Back Cover Heathman Hotels Inside Back Cover Chesterfield Cigarettes Outside Back Cove r OFFICER S University of Oregon Alumni Associatio n Homer D . Angell, 0 Presiden t Joe Freck, 1 Vice-Presiden t Henryetta Lawrence, 4 DirectorGeorgia Benson Patterson, 4 Director Donald Woodward, 7 Directo r Robert K . Allen, 2 Secretary-Treasure r Subscription price : One year, $2; three years, $5; when husband and wife are both alumni o fthe University, $1 is added to the regular amount . Alumni subscribers to OLD ORESAN are grante d full membership in the Alumni Association . Two weeks notice relred for change of ad -dress. When ordering a change, please give bot h the new address and the old address . Address all communications to : Olt OSSUON , University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon . Several of us who graduated from th eUniversity this past June are wondering about the American Association of Univer- sity Women-what qualifies you to becom a member, dues, how to join, etc We would appreciate it if you could tel us something about it Ruth Smith, 3, 1919 S . 43d Avenue, Portland, Oregon. This letter reprinted because it ask s question that many recent graduate s who wish to maintain University con- tacts ask . See heading "A . A . U . W ." under News and Comment this issue . -Editor . Exciting Work To the Editor : I am sorry to have delayed so long i n sending in my renewal toOLD ORgoow be- cause I have certainly enjoyed reading eac issue during the past year Having finished my master t N. Y . U . last June, I had every intention of coming back to the Pacific coast, bu t somehow I find myself still working dili- gently in the adjustment department a t Bloomingdale Bros teresting and like other positions in the retail field, it often becomes quite exciting. I am looking forward to the next issue of OLD OREGON. Alice Redetzke, 2 , Brentwood Hall, 43-06 45th Street Sunnyside, Long Island, New York . Found Familiar Name s To the Editor: I want to thank you for interesting and delightfulOLD OREGON. I looked throughou for familiar names and found good many There was Elma Hendricks as librarian an R, S. Bryson, city recorder, and Roy Bryson teacher of voice on the campus . How I would love to hear his singing and see his direction. And here is Anne Whiteaker . And so I come down the columns and stopto talk a little with every name I see---Mrs. R. S. Bryson e I saw her. I used to know Lawrence Harri and Jennie Beatie Harris (bless he r heart). So I come down the column-Edith Kerns Chambers-as familiar as yester- day. And there is Mary McCornack an d then David Graham l this company secho to me many dear visits and conversa- tions. Such memories do not fade. May this new University library be fin- ished soon and enlarge the work of the dear University. Indeed I read every copy o f ban OREGON with great enjoyment and satis-faction. The beautiful picture of old Deady hall is very familiar to me e years I enjoyed meeting classes there Best wishes to you all-the past graduates ing and of character. Luella Clay Carson , Porter Hall , Claremont, California. Park Historia n To the Editor : We recently moved from Washington , D.C. to Georgia where I am employe d as historical technician for the Nationa l Park Service of the Department of In- terior. My historical work in connectio n with the Chickamauga, Stones River, For Donelson, and Kennesaw Mountain Na- tional Military Parks of Tenessee an d Georgia is extremely interesting. The climate of northern Georgia i s very much like that of western Orego nso of course we are enjoying our loca- tion here very much,Congratulations on the exceedingly fine football team of 1933H. C . Landru, 8, Camp Booker T. Washington, Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia . Geologist To the Editor : I now working here in Conroe i nthe production department of Humble Oil and Refining company and have been for a little over a month . Hope to get o n the geological staff of the company some time in the future. I spent the summer in Cody, Wyom- ing doing geology under the direction o f Princeton University Research counci l and while there met Paul Starr, wh omakes his home in Cody. I search avidly each week for Orego n football news. M. Meredith Sheets, .A.,2 Box 247, Conroe, Texas. Indispensable To the Editor :I am enclosing my subscription fo r OLD OREGON. I want it sent to Grange-ville, Idaho. I am teaching in Idaho thi s year but think often of Oregon . I was certainly glad to receive th e issues last year and decided that it wa s an indispensable magazineNadine Gilkeson, 1, Grangeville, Idaho. It is hoped that the " Letter " depart- ment of OLD OREGON may become a more lively department than hereto - fore. The Editor would like to se e alumni write more -often for publica- tion, write criticism of magazine, ex- press alumni - ideas on education , sports, etc. Further hope : that alumni will attempt to make criticisms con- structive, not just criticize for sake of criticism.--Editor . CHARLES A . HOWARD, MA . 3 STATE Superintendent of Public Instruction for Oregon.Received his B.A. from Baker University in 1907, for- mer ex-officio member of the Board of Regents of the University, president of the Oregon State Teachers Asso- ciation, superintendent of several school systemsin th e state before his election to present position in 1926 and again in 1930 interest of public instruction in Oregon. Vol . XV November, 1933 No. 5 NEWS AND COMMEN T By the Editor Diary of Embrogli o DAY-TO-DAY happenings in highe r educational circles during th e month of November are in themselve san exciting and dramatic succession o f events, irrespective of their seriou s nature . Before attempting to commen t on the "situation, " as the educationa lfracas has come to be known, it woul d be well to review for OLD OREGO N readers the diary of Oregon highe r education for the past month . Nov. stirring and stinging de- mand was made today by Roscoe C . Nelson, chairman of the state boar dof higher education, for harmony i n higher education for Oregon . H e broadly and thoroughly flayed a "self -appointed few" . . . . "men of boundles s egotism and minds tainted by unsate dambition, who even determined tha t the unified system adopted by th epeople should not succeed and who ar e sabotaging the efforts of W . J . Kerr , chancellor of higher education ." He labeled as "Catilines " a "little coterie "which he declared was seeking to frus- trate the aims of the unified system .He was speaking, he thought, of a min- ority of persons on and off the campu swho delved in rampant and unchecke d "carping, critical censoriousness " ofthe chancellor and the unified system . From Eugene Mr . Nelson went t o Corvallis ; there addressed a gatherin gof Oregon State students and faculty , more fully flayed "the little coterie " at Eugene . Nov.3-Bitterness ran high toda yon the Eugene campus against the re - marks of Mr . Nelson . "Unjustifie dcriticism" . . . "doesnt know the facts " . . . "we aren just a few, but a unite d whole"-such remarks floated fro m office to office, from dean to dean , from student to student . "How can w e get the true story to the state board o fhigher education when our one avenu e -the chancellorship-is closed to us by our own objection to the fitness of th e man holding that office ?" This wa s the common question .Nov. 4-Today Wayne L . Morse , dean of the Oregon law school, vol-unteered unofficially, to stake his job , his future, for the interests of th e University . At first refusing to spea kto alumni at their annual Homecomin g luncheon, he now felt the facult y needed more than ever before a spokesman who would say the thing s that had been fomenting in facult y minds. Courageously, on his own ini-tiative, taking full responsibility, Dea n Morse appeared before the alumn i gathering, replied amply and force - fully to Nelson s speeches . Said Dea nMorse : "I challenge Mr . Nelson to re - turn to this campus and in meetin gwith the University faculty name hi s victims and prove a case against them . FIGHTS FOR PRINCIPL E Wayne L . Morse, dean, Oregon la w school wants "leadership with a per - spective" for higher education If he cannot do so, then let him, lik e the gentleman I know him to be a t heart, apologize to the faculty and re -sign from the board . . . He was place don the board to bring about harmony . His official acts disqualify him com- pletely as a harmonizer . . . The fac- ulty is not asking for the right to ru nthe University, but we are asking th e right to have a voice in running th e University . . . Does Mr . Nelson kno w that the present budgets of the tw omajor institutions reek with partialit y for the College? . . . What we need i sleadership with a perspective--leader- ship in which both faculties can have confidence. My friends, if you wan t to save your alma mater, I charge yo u to go forth and provide us with tha tleadership ." Nov . 5-Both Chancellor Kerr an dMr . Nelson reply to Morse . Said Dr . Kerr : "No staff member or facult ygroup or committee has ever been de- nied a hearing with the chancellor o n any problems affecting curricula, bud -gets or other matters ." Said Mr . Nel- son: "In the cool dawn of some morn- ing when the partisan cheers subsid e Mr . Morse will feel ashamed of hi sunworthy assault ." Nov.6-The faculty unanimousl y requests the resignation of Mr . Nelson.Says further, that the real difficulty i n higher education is to be found in th e appointment of a chancellor who wa sat the time of appointment bound u p in controversy . Nov.8-Roscoe C . Nelson resign sfrom state board of higher education , declaring that it would be impossibl e henceforth to work harmoniously wit h the University faculty . Dean Mors e releases statement declaring that th ereal issue in higher education is in th e chancellorship, that the chancellor, t o prove his true devotion to higher edu- cation should resign . Nov .6-13--Throughout week a ma-jor portion of the press of the state 4 O L D O R E G O N November, 1931 declares the only solution is to elim- inate the present chancellor . Nov .24--The state board of highe r education today took no action on th e retirement of Chancellor Kerr ; adopted resolution calling for an investigatio n of the action of Dean Morse ; pro- vided for an investigative committee . Nov.25 University faculty hold s closed meeting . Reliable sources state : Faculty unanimously asked that prob e of Morse he extended to include entir e " situation" including fitness of Chan- cellor Kerr ; that proper channels o f protest to board are closed to facult y because object of faculty complain t is that channel itself-namely th e Chancellor. Nov .27 Board members McLeod , Oliver and Brand named to investigat e Morse action . Vice-president Willar d Marks says he sees no reason wh y committee cannot investigate and re - port to December 4th meeting of th e board. Real Issu e W ITHOUT a doubt the real issu eis to be found in Chancellor Ker r himself. Some try to avoid this fac t by saying that the real issue lies in wh o shall have the authority for higher edu- cation. We answer this by stating tha t authority for higher education lie s without a doubt in the chancellor an d the state board-BUT, by law the fac- ulty is given advisory powers and b y educational principle the faculty i s given the right to speak . There is n o objection to the unified system . Ex- cept where the objections to the Chan- cellor himself have blocked its smoot h functioning, the unified system has in- creasingly proved itself to be a better system than the oid separate board set - up. Faculty cooperation between the two major institutions has reached a pea k in the last year that was undreame d of a decade ago . Interchange of ideas , of services, a feeling of unity have al l progressed to an encouraging degree - despite the fact that the University i s openly and frankly opposed to th e qualifications of Dr . Kerr as an educa- tional leader and as an impartial admin - istrator. It is natural that the state boar d should look somewhat askance at th e demands of Dean Morse, backed u p by the demands of the entire Univer- sity faculty . Dean Morse declare d that Mr . Nelson had been " duped," implied that Dr . Kerr had told storie s of non-cooperation and subversive tac- tics on the part of certain faculty mem- bers, and pled for the support of th e new board chairman . There coul d have been no reaction more norma l than that displayed by Mr . Nelson , who did not know the true state of af- fairs, and was naturally disposed t o trust what he was told by the board s chief executive officer . By resigning , Mr . Nelson admitted, by virtue o f Dean Morse challenge to him t o prove his contentions, that he had no t been in full possession of the fact s surrounding the situation . Long-suffering Facult y FOR Dean Morse the faculty ha s deep respect and admiration . It too k great moral strength and determina- tion of purpose to say the things h e said and chance the consequences. Th e faculty was too long-suffering whe n it accepted the deal that placed Dr . Kerr in office . Remarkable self-re- straint has been displayed by the fac - silty in abiding by Dr . Kerr s leader - ship for as long as they have, and i n giving a man they can not trust th e opportunity to prove them wrong . And that is just what they have done . But as Dr . Kerr has missed one chanc e after another to prove his impartialit y to them, as he has failed to gain thei r confidence, as he has failed to sho w convincing leadership, their self-re- straint has slowly begun to crack . To prove charges against Dr . Ker r is not this magazine s purpose . Ampl e material is at hand to present to th e investigating committee of the stat e board, where it properly should be pre- sented. Indictment of Dean Morse o r the faculty without giving them a chance to present their views is heres y of the rankest sort . To continue Dr . Kerr in office, irrespective of charges , is utterly to disregard a situation tha t is sapping the life-blood of higher edu- cation in Oregon . For Dr . Kerr is th e last cord that ties the new unified sys- tem with the wranglings and contro- versies of the old system . Prove Contention ? T HE peace and harmony we hear s omany pleading for is in sight i f but the tethers of the past can be torn away. The most important indictmen t of Dr . Kerr is that he either fails t o see this, or else that he is placing per- sonal pride and ambition above the in- terests of higher education . If h e would make the real gesture to prov e to the state his contention that his life is dedicated to the interests of Orego n higher education, he will resign at once , thus ending all controversy and win- ning back the esteem of the state-at- large as well as of his colleagues o n all sides. BACKFIELD IN MOTION-NO PENALT YGee packs the ball for nice gain against Oregon State ; Parke running interference ; Mikulak plowing into a Beave r defense man. November, 1933 O L D O R E G O N A .A .U .W . S EVERAL inquiries have come t othe alumni office about the Ameri- can Association of University Women , most of these from recent wome n graduates of the University who ex -press a desire to continue their Uni- versity associations . Any woman who has taken tw oyears of work toward a bachelor s de- gree is eligible for membership, and i f desirous of joining should get in touc h with the president of the local organi-zation and make known her wishes o r write to Mrs . Virgil D . Earl, 1025 E . 22nd street, Eugene, who is state pres-ident . Dues vary according to the loca l club. There is however, a fee to th enational of $2 .00 per member .- No Slavish Followin g T O Time, national weekly news -magazine, OLD OREGONthis month pays tribute . OLn OREGON editor ha snot been satisfied with the format use d since the revival of the magazine las t March, this month decided to borro wcertain features of lively, interestin g Time. News of alumni, the campus , higher education is easily adaptable t o shorter, briefer accounts than use dheretofore. Label headings, with cur t sub-headings leave room for mor e complete coverage . No slavish fol- lowing of Time style, but judiciou suse of applicable Time features is th eeditor s wish . Suggestions and criticisms fro m readers will please the editor . His on e wish, to give alumni an organ easil y readable, complete in discussion an dnews of alumni and University . Alter- ations and improvements on this firs t issue of re-vamped OLD OREGON wil lbe forthcoming as later issues appear . New Fac e HOW to get PWA money, how t ouse it, will be told city officials i n both Oregon and Washington by cap - able, energetic William M . Briggs, unti lthis year city attorney of Ashland .Headquarters of the newly created of- fice will be on the campus, where Mr . Briggs will share quarters with Herma n Kehrli, executive secretary of th eLeague of Oregon Cities . Appointe d by the American Municipal associa- tion, the new advisor s activities will b e financed by the Rockefeller founda- tion. Local office will be one of 2 5located in as many sections of Unite d States to aid municipalities on publi c works projects . RAMBLIN G CITY OF CAVEME N Many Civic Leader s THE NEWEST addition to th e large Oregon alumni family resi- dent in Grants Pass is Rex Tussing . 31, who came here in September t o accept a position as managing editor o f the daily Courier . He is married t o Mildred C . Johnson, ex- 31. They ar ethe proud parents of a four months old son . Rex was with the Inter - national News Service in Portland be -fore coming here . E. H . Lister is the oldest Orego ngrad here ; having left the Universit y in 1896. Immediately after graduation ,Lister took a position as deputy sherif f under his father who was sheriff a t that time . Lister has been connecte d with the office ever since, and has bee nsheriff in his own right for the pas t five years . \V. T . Miller, who graduated fro mthe Oregon law school at Portland i n 1901, has a new associate in his la w office. Orval J . Millard, who took hi s1,1, .L . Associated with the schools o f Grants Pass are ten former student s of the Eugene campus . John Franci s Cramer, M .Ed. 32, is superintenden tof the city schools . He has bee n active in the federal vocational re -habilitation work . Jim Mullins, 1 ., principal of Wash-ington junior high school, spent th e summer in a leisurely tour of th e United States, during which he spen t several days at the world s fair . Mul-lins contributes a fierce grunt in th e meetings of the famous Oregon Cave - men. Among the members of the hig h school faculty are Constance Baker ,2 ; Melba E . Macy, 8 ; Lynnett aQuinlan, 5 ; Frank M . Beer, 9 ; and Howard Barrett, who took gradu - ate work on the campus last year . Other schoolmarms are Margare tHammerbacher, 2 ; Louese Sher - wood Howard, 3 ; and Mrs . Kitti e Stockton Crockett, ex-3 . Edward S . Van Dyke, 1, no w practicing law, was a teacher in the Grants Pass high school for a numbe r of years . REPORTE R Sherman S . Smith, 8, is district at- torney for Josephine county . He wa sone of the fortunate hunters to bag a bear recently . Earle E . Voorhies, 23, managin g editor of the Courier, with his wif e (Ruth Giesler, ex- 24) . have just re - turned from an extensive motor tri pthrough the eastern states . Harold Gordon Prestel, who at - tended Oregon in 1914-15, is salesma n for the W . S . Maxwell company, loca lChevrolet agents . Pete Proctor, Jr ., 1, is a printe rin his father s job printing plant . Wilford C . Allen, Jr ., ex- 23, i s affiliated with his father in the South - ern Oregon Development company . Austin B . Brownell, ex- 16, and hi s wife, Ruth Lawrence Brownell, 7 , own the Brownell Electric company . Sid J . Wolke, 30, has recently com - pleted improvements to his servic e station, located just south of th eRogue River Caveman bridge, on th ebusiest stretch of highway in souther nOregon. Homer Lee Wilson, ex- 23, is work-ing with his father in the Grants Pas sGrocery company . Orville Garrett, 32, is working fo r his brother in the auto parts business . Dr. Clairel Leroy Ogle, 16, wh o will be remembered as one of Oregon s star tennis players of his time, resume d his playing two years ago as a mean s of keeping that youthful appearance .This season he was runner-up in th ecounty singles tournament . Dr . Ogl eis a " Colonel" on the local NR Acommittee. Mrs . Ogle (Ollie M . Stol -tenberg) is a graduate of . Mrs . Esther Fell Hammond, 2, i s here with her husband, Ward Ham - mond, local manager of the Calif ornia - Oregon Power company . Harold Cooley, ex-3, is part owne r of the new Grants Pass pharmacy . Howard Bennet, ex- 33, is one o f the star racquet-wielders of the Grant s Pass Tennis club . -WILLARD D . ARANT, 33 6 O L D O R E G O N November, 193 A L U M N I HOMECOMIN G Biggest Since Boo T O THE campus last month re -turned many a former student . Not since the boom days of 1929 has alarger group of alumni come "Back t o Honor Oregon ." More than 300 filled out registratio ncards, almost that many more were o n hand during the weekend, saw Ore- gons green-jerseyed Coast conference -leading Webfoots emphatically trounc e Rocky Mountain conference-leadin g Utes by a 26 to 7 score . Downtown Eugene donned its cele-bration-best to welcome alumni, th e Utah team . Fraternities and sororitie s held open house for their returnin galumni members, held special dinne r programs after the game . Several thousand townspeople, stu-dents, alumni participated in o r watched mammoth Homecoming par- ade night before game . Saw floats pas sin review where in former years il- luminated signs at each living organi- zation had been the custom ; saw beau-tiful flaming "0" made by yellow an d green flares where in years past burn- ing trash forming an "0" had been .Eugene citizens who disliked charre d hillside for months following bonfir ewere pleased with this innovation . Bend Too Remote IN ANNUAL meeting Saturda ymorning alumni nominated Ralp h Cake, 3, of Portland and Henr y Fowler, 4, of Bend for president o fthe Alumni association . Nomine e Fowler was not in attendance, but im-mediately upon receipt of word of hi snomination sent in his withdrawal . Reason : Felt Nominee Cake hom e city of Portland was better head -quarters for an alumni president, fel t Bend was too far away from alumn i population centers ; had been cam- paigning for Cake s nomination ; asked that Cake be named unanimous choic efor president . Other nominations : For vice-presi- dent, Joe Freck, 1, Portland . Fo r three-year director, Omar Palmer, 32, Portland ; Edgar Smith, ex-9, Port -land . For two-year director, Merl eChessman, 09, Astoria . For one yea r director, A . E . Reames, ex- ford ; Carl Nelson, 9, Salem ; an dHarold Warner, 3, Pendleton . Other business transacted : Adopte d new constitution ; re-elected alumn i secretary . To Homer D . Angell, 0, the meet- ing extended appreciation for his ser- vices as president of the Alumni asso - RAT,PH H . CAKE, 13 Portland attorney who will serve as alumni president during 1934 . ciation for the past three years . Sai dthe resolution in part : "WHEREAS his services durin g these years have measured up fully t o the high traditions of faithfulness , loyalty and devotion, characteristic o fthis University, an d "WHEREAS during his period o foffice he has been called upon becaus e of unusual dangers and problems con - fronting the University to give hi s time and energy even beyond the usua ldemand made upon the president o f the Alumni association, a need t o which he has responded with self - sacrificing devotion such as has com-manded the admiration of every Ore- gon alumnus ." Overcrowded Luncheon A LUMNI who walked over to Joh n1 Straub Memorial building for th e Homecoming luncheon and there ex- pected to find tickets for sale, foun d all 200 tickets sold, thought at firs tthey would have to eat elsewhere .Word had been passed around th e campus that Wayne L . Morse, dean o f Oregon law school, would answer ad - dress made by Roscoe C . Nelson , chairman, state board of higher educa- tion, the Thursday previous . Facult y members bought more places than ha d been planned for . Graciously, how -ever, faculty members gave up thei r seats to alumni guests, ate elsewhere ,returned to hear Dean Morse (se e News and Comment) . Other speakers : Burt Brown Barker, vice-presiden t of the University, who said in answe rto his assigned subject "Where is th eUniversity Headed?" that the " Uni- versity is headed like any good ship , into the wind ."Earle Wellington, president of th e new University of Oregon Federation , who said that the new organizatio nwanted peace and progress in highe r education, but was ready if necessary ,like U . S . Navy, to fight for peace . Tom Stoddard, 30, assistant gradu-ate manager, who said "You can hav eyour federations and your alumni asso- ciations and your dads and mother sorganizations, but give me a winnin g football team, and I can solve highe reducation s problems more quickl yand more thoroughly ." Tom Tongue, student body presi- dent, praised alumni for work in be -half of higher education and Univer- sity, welcomed them to campus . Chancellor Kerr, who said he woul dyell for the best team at the forthcom- ing Oregon - Oregon State footbal lgame (score : Oregon 13, Orego nState 3) . PORTLAN D Candid Snaps T HURSDAY prior to Armistic eday, Portland alumni going int o the Georgian room of the Heathma nhotel, Portland, were startled by brigh t flashings, accompanied by clicks . Uponregaining their composure, they dis- covered that the Oregonian candi d cameraman, who haunts luncheo n gatherings, snaps photos of unsuspect-ing luncheon goers, was snapping Port -land alumni . Next morning some ten alumni sa w their surprised faces in the Oregonian .Ralph Cake, 13, for instance, sa whimself with Sam Wilderman, ex-8 , leaning over his shoulder . Lama r Tooze, 6, saw a forkful of sala d half-way to his mouth .Amusing was the cameraman visit ,but more important was the busines s transacted at the luncheon-meeting . The Portland Alumni associatio nadopted a constitution, became thereb ythe first fully organized local alumn i club inthe state in several years . Organized at first to promote plan s for alumni celebration Armistice week- November, 1933 O L D O R E G O N 7 end, when Webfootballers were to pla y traditional Oregon State rivals i n Portland for first time in many years ,the group decided to continue as a per- manent organization . Much credi tgoes to President Bert Gooding, ex - 6, and to Sam Wilderman, ex-8 , for new club s success .Successful also were the weekend s activities . Crowded was the Broadwa ytheatre the night before the game fo r the club s midnight rally preview . Packed was the Masonic ballroom th e night after the game, where Portlan dalumni, friends and out-of-town guest s danced. Begun was a treasury for th e new club. . NEW YOR K Hear Glowing Accoun t T HE ANNUAL, fall dinner o falumni in New York was held a t Town Hall club on October 19, wit h John E . Gratke as guest speaker . Mr .Gratke was introduced by Judge Wal- ter H . Evans, LL .B . 05, who later i n the evening read from the Oregonian , Gregory s glowing account of Oregon svictory over Washington . Mr. Gratke, who is prominently con-nected with the Broadway association , traced the careers of various Oregon- ians in the east . Special welcomes were accorde dMiss Ruth MacGregor, ex-6, wh o had arrived that day from Portlan d for a visit in New York, and to Mrs .Floyd Bowles (Alice Evans, 2) o f Seattle, who had been visiting at th e home of her parents here .A vote of thanks was given Dr . Laura Hall Kennon, 1, who mad e arrangements for the use of a banque troom at Town Hall club, of which sh e is a member . Attending were : Dr . Lawrence E . Loveridge , 7, 117 Scotland road, South Orange, New jersey ; Dr . Joycelin Robertson, a Robertson, 6, 1 Christopher street ; Perry L . Davis, ex- 26, Livingston hail, Columbia univerr-sity ; Carleton E . Sanders, ex-1, and Mrs . San- ders, 95 Vreeland avenue, Nutley, New Jersey ; Francis E . Taylor, ex- . Taylor, 6 8Hartsdale road, Hartsdale, New York ; Ruth Scot t Byrne, 23, 119 West Fifty-seventh street ; Walte r H . Brattain, M .A . 26. 463 West street ; Gordo n H . Ridings, 30, 244 West Tenth street ; Mr . an d Mrs. John E . Gratke and Miss Loris Gratke, 17 5West Seventy-sixth street ; Judge Walter H . Evans, S, and Miss Mary Evans, k avenue; Robert T . Miller, 3, Furnald ball ,Columbia university ; jack Macduff, ex- 35, Web b institute, Webb and Sedgwick avenues ; Dr . Ric k ard Thompson, 0, 630 West 168th street ; Enos L . Keezel, 5, 509 West 121st street ; Sidney H . Dobbin, 30, 244 West Tenth street ; John W . Butler, Ir ., 9, Livingston hall, Columbia univer- sity ; Richard H . Torrey, ex-2, 4322 Forty-fift hstreet, Long Island City ; Leon A . Culbertson, 3 , 10 Willard avenue, Mt . Vernon ; Nancy Dorris , 10, 30 Bank street ; AliceEvans Bow :es, 22,Seattle, Washington ; Dorothy Miller, 22, Ho :el Sevillia ; Mr . and Mrs . Chessor Bowles (Mar y l ane Dustin, 5), 80 duBois avenue, West Ne w ri hton, Staten Island ; John M . MacGregor, 2 3(official bell-ringer for the Oregon affairs), 70 Pin e street ; Kenneth Yovel, 23, and Mrs . Youe l (Frances E . Rose, ex-6), 15 South Calumet ave- nue, Hastings ; Margaret Scott Goble, 23, 18 9 Claremont avenue ; Velma R . Farnham, 6, 24 5East Seventy-second street ; Marian Powell, ex- 32, 179 Fort Washington ; Laura H . V . Kennon, 1 ,206lWest Thirteenth street . PERSONAL S Linoleum Vendors Several years ago Don Davis, 1 ,started to work for the Armstron g Cork Co ., is now Pacific Coast man-ager, with headquarters in San Fran- cisco. Other alumni to follow Davi sinto the linoleum business : Bob Gard- ner, 26, traveling out of the Seattl e office with headquarters in Portland ; Ken Stephenson, 26, manager at Lo s Angeles ; Morris Warnock, 6, bac kat plant in Lancaster ; Paul Wagner , 30, at Detroit . Tragedy Heavy fog lay over Portland, Ore- gon, on the night of November 9 . A nairplane left Swan Island airport fo r the south . A few minutes later radi ocommunication from the airshi p ceased. Killed in crash against nearb y hillside was Dr . Robert C . Coffey, na- tionally known physician and surgeon ,father of three Oregon alumni : Ja y Russell -Coffey, M .D. 3 ; Rober t Mayo Coffey, ex-7 ; Wilson B . Cof- fey, ex-9 . Injured were Jon V . Straumfjord, M .D. 9, assistant t oDr. Coffey, and Floyd H . Hart, ex- 20, of Medford . Governors Appointees Named last month to commission t o study finance and administration o felementary and high schools of Orego n and to report findings to 1935 legisla- tive session were : Dr . Victor P . Mor-ris, 5, Oregon economics professor ; Elwin A . McCornack, ex-8, stat elegislator from Lane county ; Franci s V. Galloway, 7, The Dallies attorney ,former district attorney, Wasco coun- ty. Named to chairmanship was Dr . Morris . Examiner From 1918 to 1925 Vernon W .Tomlinson, 5, served as distric t director of naturalization and examine r in charge at Portland headquarters . He has now moved to Los Angeles ,where he serves as assistant in new co - ordinated bureau there . Illusionist Ten tons of equipment, worth clos e to $50,000, may next year be shippe d to the Orient . This year this equip-ment will travel over western state s with Virgil Mulkey, ex-5 . Advertis- ing posters tell the world that VIRGI L is "America premier illusionist ." A pet illusion : to have Hindu assistan t climb a rope that sticks up in air with - out apparent support from above .Magician Mulkey would mystify class - mates, schoolmates while attendin g University, became successful, no w one of world s leading magicians . Praises Difficult Mrs . Norma Dobie Solve, 4, i sauthor of article entitled "In Praise o f Difficulty" in October edition of Th e English Journal . Mrs . Solve lives i n Tucson, Arizona . Her husband, Dr . Melvin T . Solve, 18, is associate pro-fessor of English at University o f Arizona . To Curacao Russell M . Brooks, ex- l5, formerl yUnited States counsel to London, Eng- land, has been transferred to Curacao ,Dutch West Indies, where he ha s charge of United States consulate a t Wilhelinstad . Merchandiser Maurice H . Hyde, 7, formerly ad- vertising manager, The Emporium ,San Francisco, more recently wit h Loesei Brothers, Brooklyn, New York , and O Connor Moffatt and Company ,San Francisco, is in charge of ne w merchandising service department o f San Francisco News . Teachers Of 36 teachers elected by the Ore- gon City school board this year, 8 are graduates of the University o fOregon, They are : Leslie B . Blakney , 7 ; Alvin B . Cash, 3 ; Mildred E . Dedman, 4 ; Leonard B . Mayfield , 9 ; Mary Cecile Harding, 7 ; Isa-belle Tyson Mann, 2 ; Roy E . Saw- yer, 5 ; and Mrs . Mabel Englun d Christenson, ex-2 . New Deal Doctor Dr. Ross McIntyre, M .D. 2, i spersonal official physician to Presiden t Roosevelt. He took up his duties a t the beginning of the Roosevelt ad - ministration .Dr. McIntyre has been advance d from the naval rank of lieutenant - commander to commander . He ha s been in the United States navy sinc e 1917. He succeeded Dr . Boone, Presi-dent Hoovers personal physician . Matsuoka Aide Charles H . Yoshii, ex- 31, left th eUnited States recently to become a n aide to Yosuke Matsuoka, LL .B. 00, former Japanese delegate to th e League of Nations . O L D O R E G O N November, 193 S P O R T S FOOTBAL L Ticd on To p O REGON students, grid enthusi-asts, gathered about radio s November 25, cheered loudly as Cali- fornia scored a field goal against tra- ditional rival Stanford, groaned a s Cardinals pushed over winning touch -down late in the fourth quarter . Rea - son: Had California held its slende r lead until the final gun, Oregon woul dhave been invited to represent th e West in the annual Tournament o f Roses East-West contest New Years day at Pasadena . By virtue of its vic-tory, which gave it a tie with Orego n for top Pacific Coast honors, plus abetter record (victory over U .S .C., 13to 7), Stanford was immediately of- fered bid for East-West game, immed- iately accepted .Oregon, with eight victories, no tie s and but one defeat, has but one mor e game to go, with St . Mary s in Sa n Francisco Thanksgiving day . Victorie swere recorded over four conferenc e teams : Washington, 6 to 0 ; Idaho, 1 9 to 0 ; U . C . L . A ., 7 to 0 ; Orego nState, 13 to 3 . Defeat : University o f Southern California, 26, Oregon, 0 . Even with the substantial total rolle d up against them by U . S . C., Webfee tstill are out ahead on points, 42 to 2 9 against . Other wins : Linfield, 53 to 0 ; Gonzaga, 14 to 0 ; Columbia, 14 to 7 ;Utah, 26 to 7 . Grand totals to date , 149 to 43 against .Season summary : Nearly whol e squad sent into game at one time o r another, as Oregon trounced light bu t scrappy Linfield eleven, 53 to O . Afte r getting down to Gonzaga 10-yard lin efour times in first half, where Bull - dogs each time stiffened and held, Ore- gon finally pushed over two touch -downs in final period to win, 14 to 0 . Surprise of the year was the narro w victory over Columbia, 14 to 7, whic htook a 52-yard run by Van Vliet, ne w speedster, to pull a victory out of th e fire. Oregon jinx over Washington ,plus superb football by Mikulak an d Temple, resulted in 6 to 0 victory i n Seattle, after Webfeet were pushed al l over lot during the first half . To th edelight of fathers of students gathere d at Eugene from all parts of state , Idaho fell an easy victim, 19 to 0, o n"Dad Day ." Early in U . C ; L . A . game a pass, Temple to Pozzo, gav e Oregon a 7 to 0 victory over Bruins i n torrid Los Angeles . Despite lop-side dscore, the Utah contest was great foot - ball, a game replete with spectacular plays, long passes .Oregon State, played for the firs t time in many, many years in Portland ,started out to duplicate its victor y over Washington State (2 to 0) b y getting a few points (field goal, 3 points) early in the game and the n digging in to hold this lead . Oregon ,riled up by this evident intention, twic e drove 70 yards for touchdowns, thre w back Beaver rushes, barely stoppe d Biancones long run near the end o f the contest, won by score of 13 to 3 .Defensive work by Mikulak, who als o came through with power in the lin eat right moments, and brilliant playin g of Red Franklin, Beaver star, feature d the game . Radio Huddl e A PEX of the season was the No-vember 18 game with USC s famed Trojans . Oregon was leadin g the conference with no defeats, th eTrojans having succumbed the wee k before to invincible drives of Stan - ford s Grayson, Alustuza, Hamilto nand Van Dellen . With Homer Grif- fith on the sidelines, Oregon was con - ceded an even chance ; 65,000 thronge dhuge, gray Olympic coliseum to se e the game . It was the largest crow dever to watch a n Oregon eleven i naction. Oregon student s huddled about ra-dios, hoping to liste n as their team wo n the Coast champion - ship. Three minutes after the kickoff 145 pound s of drive and speed in th eperson of Irvine (Cotton ) Warburton, smallest playe r in the western conference ,had scooted across for a Trojan touch-down. This incit- ed Oregon to it s only march of th eday . The Web -foots, sparked b y Temple, heade d by Mikulak, drov eto the Troja n nine. An incom- plete pass lost th eball. The hal fended 6 to 0 fo r Troy .Then came the deluge . The thir dquarter was only three minutes ol dwhen Haskell Wotkyns, Trojan full - back, bounced out of Pozzo arm s and streaked 19 yards to goal . Hi s CALIFORNIA LOSES FOR Ti The first-string 1933 Web footballers, up as they usually were at the start of half; Gee, right half ; Parke, quarterback : Morse, left c right guard; Frye, ri. November, 1933 O L D O R E G O N 0 feat boosted the score to 12 to 0 .Late in the same period Warbur- ton caught a short pass, reverse dhis field and jogged 56 yards t o touchdown country . And still th eTrojans were not through . I n the gathering dusk Bill Howar d and Brick Bright bombed goal - ward and Howard scored jus t before the final gun . Score, 26 t o0, for USC . Lesser Lights Shine O REGON Smost consis- tent players wer eperhaps its mos t inconspicuous .Both were line- men, One, Gard- ner Frye, 200- pound tow - hea dfrom Long Beach , Cal., home o f Oregon State s famed NormanFranklin, appear- ed at both guar d and center . Scout sand official s agreed he was th eWebfootspre- mier defensiv e bulwark . The oth-er chief exponen t of consistent foot -ball was Raymond (Butch) Morse , rugged end from Benson Tech i n Portland, the only Portland boy o nthe starting eleven . As a high school athlete, Mors eplayed end, tackle, guard, quarter an d fullback. No secret was the fact tha t rugged-jawed Clarence (Doc) Spears ,famed football coach, intended to mak e a plunging fullback out of Morse , predicted he might be a second Bronc o Nagurski . Another peerless performe rfor Oregon was Nicholas (Mike ) Mikulak, burly line - pounder fro m Minneapolis, Minn . He rammed op -posing walls with the drive of an artil- lery team, the speed of a greyhound . Ably assisting in the backfield wer eLeighton Gee, wiry right halfback ; Mark Temple, triple-threat left half - back ; and Robert Parke, long-rang e punter.A capable sub for either Temple o r Gee was Maury Van Vliet, a 145 -pound lad, same size as USC s cele- brated Cotton Warburton . A hard-hit-ting reserve also was Howard Bobbitt , at one time chief Portland high schoo l fullback rival of Stanford s famou s Bobby (the Roomer) Grayson . O n the line Charles Wishard, grim-face dpowerhouse from Dakota s Blackhills ; Alex Eagle, tough-looking tackle, an d Bernie Hughes, a fierce-smacking cen-ter, played havoc with adversaries aspirations.With the most successful season i n years behind them, Oregon will hav ean uphill fight to maintain its co-cham- pionship next fall . Losses throug h graduation : 12 valuable men, 7 fro mstarting lineup- Co-captain Hughes, center ; Bree Cup - poletti, guard ; Dutch Clark, guard ; Biff Nils - son, tackle ; Bud Pozzo,end ; Chuc kWishard, end ; Mike Mikulak,full - back ; Leighton Gee,half ; Mar k Temple,co-captain and half ; Chuc kSwanson, understudy to Hughes a t center ; Howard Bobbitt, reserve fo r Mikulak at fullback ; Jack Rushlow , reserve fullback . Possibilities for 34 PROGNOSTICATORS predicte d Oregons team might line up nex tautumn as follows : Butch Morse an dBud Jones, ends ; Alex Eagle an d Gardner Frye, tackles ; Roy Gagno nand Hugh 11,1cCredie, guards ; Co nFury, center ; Ralph Terjeson, quarter - back ; Maury Van Vliet, left halfback ;Bob Parke, right halfback ; Bill Bor- den, fullback . Should Morse appear i n the backfield, Ned Simpson likel y would play regular end . Expert sagreed this would be a good first team .But where would the reserves com e from, they asked? This also puzzle s Prink Callison . Frot h Oregons freshmen, playing bang-u p football, beat O .S.C. Rooks, 7 to 3 , then were barely beaten 7 to 0 by color -ful Southern Oregon Normal Schoo l which previously had soundly trounce d Rooks, then dropped a game to Beave r first year men, 7 to 0 . Twenty-tw o men were awarded numerals : Phi lPenn, Alan Davis, Portland ; Howar d Adams, Frank Cross, Salem ; Cha n Berry, Bill Estes, Rex Hamaker , Klamath Falls ; Del Bjok, Astoria ; El-more Borden, Dale Hardisty, Olympia , Wash . ; Morgan Burchard, Tillamook ; John Farrar, San Francisco ; Pat Fury , Sand Point, Idaho ; Tom Jacobs ,Reedsport ; Bob Konopka, Columbi a City ; Joe Murray, Seattle ; Elto n Owen, Dick Bishop, Eugene ; Pau lRix, Washougal, Wash .; Forrest Shin- inger, Wheeler, and Alan Wilson ,brother of Washington famous all - American, Spokane, Wash . Likely ma- terial for varsity next year : Borden , halfback ; Murray, end ; Bishop, full -back ; Wilson, like brother, end . Rosg Bowl, INVITATION Oregon's football contests this season . Backfield : Mikulak, fullback; Temple, lef t nle, left tackle ; Hughes, center ; Clark, le; Pozzo, right end. BASKETBALL Fractured Cheekbone EERING up from the cellar, wher ep they toppled to last season (los t 14, won 2) Oregon hopes for a rea l showing this year, with five letterme n back around which to build a team .Real blow is loss of Jim Watts, guard , who in pre-season practice sustained a fractured cheekbone, necessitating lay - Usually in starting liras-ups. 10 CJLD 0 R E G 0 November, 193 off all this season . Other regulars al -ready practicing : Captain elect Gi b Olinger, guard ; John Robertson, for - ward ; Bob Miller, center ; Bill Berg ,guard .To replace Cap Roberts, last year s hard-fighting center, Coach Billy Rein - hart will have Willard Jones, 6 foot 4 inches tall, from Ashland Normal .Other transfers eligible : Bud Jones , gridster, guard from Ashland ; Ro n Gemmell, Eastern Oregon Normal , forward . Most needed are forwards ,and to fill need Reinhart will hav e Henry Kunkle, reserve ; La Grand e Houghton, a good shot ; Rolan d Rourke, reserve . Other likely pros-pects : Glen Sanford, guard, from las t year frosh, fast but short . Coac h Reinhart, fighting illness this fall, no w greatly improved, plans intensive prac- tice from now until season opens i nJanuary . CAMPU S Rhodes Deep in books now are six U O students, James T . Landye, Portland ;James W . Brooke, John R . Dunbar , George Harrington, Eugene ; Rober t Hayter, Dallas ; Irvin D . Hill, Cush -man. Ambition of each : Rhodes schol-arship to Oxford, to be allotted to tw o fortunate youths from Northwest a t finals in Spokane in January . Sinc e190, UO has had nine scholars, thre e of whom are now attending thi s famous old university . Costly Women Actual average per-meal-cost fo rmen in fraternities, 15 cents ; fo r U .S.C. QUIETED IT The new Oregon victory bell whichwas temporarily muffled by a loss tothe Trojans the week after its firs t victorious chiming. women in sororities, 9 cents . Add th e cook pay and incidentals, 18/ cents for men ; 12% cents for women . Ye t add up all costs for men (cooks, laun- dry, rent, etc .), monthly cost for men ,$23.52; for women, $28 .77. Reason fo r difference, women pay most ren t ($12 .01 average per person to $7 .73for men) . No shrinkers from laundr y tubs, these co-eds, who spend an aver - age of but 62 cents per month fo r laundry . Much of this, one co-ed en -lightens, is for cleaning gowns by ex- perts. These and many more fact s found by school of business adminis- tration researchers last spring term . Community Clubs Speech department, school of music , drama department, physical educatio n department, many independent studen torganizations have already joined Dr . P. A . Parsonscommunity club book- ing bureau . Purpose : to provid eworthwhile entertainment . for pro -grams of more than 100 communit y clubs organized in Lane, Linn, Benton ,Marion, Polk and Douglas counties b y University s commonwealth servic ebureau, of which Dr . Parsons is head . "All-American" Oregon s campus will have one all - American this year, chosen by nationa lcritics . Not of football, however, bu t of beauty, is the selection of pretty , blonde Miss Margaret DeYoung, o f Portland . Local judges-members o fOrder of "0"- selected five candi- dates, sent their pictures on to editor s of University and Life magazines .Judges, disagreeing, called in the cove r artist, who cast deciding ballot fo r Miss DeYoung . Presented to her b y fellow students : handsome loving cup ,enscribed " Oregons loveliest co-ed, " at Sophomore Informal ball . (Se epicture) . Treasure Books Bringing with her a number of val- uable and choice books on Oriental art , Mrs . Murray Warner, donor of th eMurray Warner Collection of Orienta l Art and director of the Museum o f Art, returned to the campus recentl y from a stay in the East . Noteworth yexhibit seen at Century of Progress i n Chicago en route : careful, exact an d artistic reproduction of a Chines etemple. Campus to CCC s Colleagues of regular university stu- dents will be several hundred Civilia nConservation corps members in man y parts of Oregon during these long winter evenings . Courses prepared b y extension division, with camp officer s as " teachers" will be given to thos e who desire to further their education .Miss Mozelle Hair, extension division , worked out the plan, has found read y cooperation and enthusiasm amon gmen. Pickups . . . . "Oregon," book issued in German y 50 years ago, recently added to U Olibrary. . . . Evolution in art, them eof UO fine arts school display in Port -land, week of November 12, sponsor - ship of Oregon Artists Professiona lleague . . . . Workable plan to correc tpresent educational ills in state is ai mof Phi Delta Kappa this year . . . .Germany again flayed by ex-Emeral d Editor Neuberger, this time in Ne w Republic, wherein subjugation of Ger-man press is decried. . . . Visitors o fnote : Miss Jeannette Rankin, firs t woman ever elected to congress, wh o spoke on world peace, plead for worl ddisarmament ; Dr . Kaju Nakamura ,Japanese diplomat and educator , stressing international relations, sayin g " Take money spent on navies, buil d bridge across Pacific" ; Dudley Wat- son, Chicago, witty talker on art . OREGON S FAIRES T Margaret DeYoung, Portland, chose n to receive cup engraved with : " Ore-. Bons Loveliest Co-ed." November, 1933 0 L D O R E G O N 11 RESEARC H RAT S Who Wears the Pants ? J UST off the campus on Onyx stree tbeside the infirmary is a little whit e building which, because of its unpre- tentiousness, has been probably un- noticed by many an alumnus . Her e the advertising man would be happ y for he would find in the interior of th e building an aroma pungently exempli- fying the evils of B . O . and halitosis. Literally this small building may b e something at which to turn up you r nose-but not so figuratively . For i n it the crippled program of biologica l research work at the University o f Oregon is being pushed forward wit h unlooked for success . Here three fac- ulty members are devoting time fo r which they are not directly paid, sinc e only the cost of supplies is borne by th e school, in work which rewards the m only with the esteem of their scientifi c colleagues. Dr . R . R . Huestis, professor o f genetics, whom many an "alum" wil l recall as a handball artist "par excel- lence," is deep in an investigation o f hereditary characteristics as demon- strated in the deer mouse . Chicag o packing house methods are applied t o the bodies of the more than 1,900 dee r mice which Dr . Huestis has collecte d or bred through successive generation s in the course of this study . The skin s are used as a yardstick to measur e small but certain racial differences ; the skulls are carefully preserved, thei r vertebrae counted and correlated wit h the number possessed by those of th e parents ; and the structure of th e brain and the endocrine organs studied . O NE of the experiments jars th enaming of the system of the mic e worse than would a Mikulak line-buck . Apparently the names of the dee r mouse family tree will have to grow a bit as Dr . Huestis has obtained evi- dence to the effect that there are in a number of named races, groups of . mice that have small but statisticall y demonstrable differences which con- sequently should be separately classi- fied. When Gregor Mendel propounde d his theory of heredity, he laid th e basis for as much scientific controvers y as there is educational controversy i n Oregon . In the main, his theory ha s been accepted but there are some wh o are slightly skeptical . These latte r have brought forth the theory of cyto - plasmic inheritance-in which th e female of the species exerts a greate r influence on the development of th e offspring than the male . If this theor y were established, wags contend, th e status of the male would be reduced t o that of a mere burdensome evil an d the feminist movement would receiv e a boost from the hands of science . I n order, once and for all, to settle th e problem of who should wear the pants , Dr . Huestis is examining the heredi- tary influence the female exerts on th e young. He crosses long-tailed female s with short-tailed males and vice versa . If the average number of vertebrae , properly correlated, leans toward th e maternal number, then there woul d appear to be something in favor o f cytoplasmic inheritance and the mili- tant feminists could draw on scienc e for support . A SKIN game" could be the titl e applied to the methods of deter - mining species variations. The skins are carefully tanned and then examined a s to the type of hairs in certain sections . Dr . Huestis has devised a method fo r the determination of hair color wit h great exactness, it being merely th e mathematical ratio of the various type s of hair to each other . Incidentally, during the course o f the study, Dr . Huestis discovered a "Japanese dancing mouse" among hi s charges. Inasmuch as dancing mice are nothing more than mice which in- herit a deformity of the balance center s of the ear which cause them to tur n and whirl in one direction but whic h nevertheless command a price as curi- osities, he facetiously suggests com- mercializing this discovery and sellin g the off-spring of the " dancing mouse " in order to scrape together enoug h money to continue his experiments . Farther down the hall is a room ful l of white rats . These creatures are no t so stoical about their fate as the mice . They jitter and squeal, sniffle an d fidget, and engage in strenuous fight s with each other to the accompanimen t of shrill torrents of rat invective . These are the subjects of experi- ments in nutrition conducted by th e Doctors Rosalind Wulzen and Alic e M . Bahrs. The rats are fed on a hig h fat diet and the effect of this deter - mined. Some are fed on olive oil , others lard, or butter, or hydrogenate d cotton seed oil . Even the bane o f anaemic childhood-cod liver oil i s mercilessly administered-but the rat s don seem to mind ! Simultaneously these two wome n are investigating the effects of a vita - min C deficient diet . First guinea pig s are fed on a diet which is lacking i n vitamin C . Then the livers of thes e are fed to planarian worms which loo k like thin animated shavings of the sam e liver . The worms more clearly demon- strate the effects than would a mor e complex animal, hence this business o f "reductio ad w-ormum ." Now to the animal house-in it ar e housed all those larger animals fro m SCIENTIST R . R . HuEsTI s He collects rats, measures skins and preserves skulls . 12 O L D L DO R E G O N November, 193 whose bodies the "demon science" de -rives its principles : rats, guinea pigs , and mice . Beady-eyed guinea pigs are fed o n various diets by the scientists Wulze nand Bahrs . The pigs seem blissfull y unaware that their steps are counte dby an ingenious device . Why? T omeasure the nourishment values of th e various diets as manifested in th e activity of the victims . The more ga syou feed your automobile the faster i t goes, the more you feed a guinea pi g the more he moves about .Although operating on a reduce d budget, the research work is bein g pushed f o r w a r d well . Numerou s papers which have been published i n reputable scientific journals have ha dtheir origin in the interior of thi s smelly little building and it is entirel y safe to predict that numerous other swill be emanating therefrom in th e future . -JIM Beooxg, 4 . department of chemistry energeti c young chemists who are now achiev- ing national fame (Roger Williams , yeast ; Leo Friedman, gels), to who m he has given every aid and encour-agement. Now freed of administrativ e responsibility because chemistry, alon g with other pure sciences has bee n moved to Corvallis, he looks forwar d "GOT His Fisn " Professor O . T . Stafford, chemistr y professor, who has announced import - ant discovery to chemical colleagues , to many research projects . "Research, "says he, "is like fishin . You can spen d hours, days, months, years . Sometime s you pull out a big one-sometimes yo u find out that some one else beat you t othe fish you seek . . . . sometimes yo ureluctantly conclude there are no fis h in the stream . . . ." Fellow scientists say Professo rStafford "got his fish " this time, de-clare it to be a "big one ." faculty : that in future all changes fo r establishment or discontinuance of uni- versity schools, departm .ents, curricula , degrees and requirements be submitte dto academic council of faculty an dfaculty itself before submission t o state board . Former practice : pro- posals submitted to board upon recom- mendation of school or departmen tthrough chancellor . Aim of moves : toclarify regular university procedure . Einstein Have n Noting plight of Nazi - hounde dscholars and scientists (i . e., Einstein ) faculty of University of Oregon , through local branch of American As-sociation of University Professor shave resolutioned President Roosevelt : "It is an integral part of America n tradition to offer asylum to thos e escaping from foreign tyrannies . . . . relax immigration restrictions for th e benefit of the victims of Nazi politica land religious oppression ." Ballot Burdene d Too great a burden is placed upo n the ballot in Oregon, proves Wald oSchumacher, political science profes- sor, in an article in the recent "Com-monwealth Review ." Proof : man yvoters, confused by large number o f measures and complicated language i n which titles are written, fail to mar kballots on proposals they do not under -stand. Result : measures are often car- ried without a majority vote, only to b ereversed at subsequent election . Rem-edy : Amend laws so that no measur e can be_adopted without actual majorit y vote. Thus many measures would b e automatically eliminated, those passe dremain permanent . Low Gea r Educative process at many institu-tions of higher education is "geared t olow ability students," says Dr . Ralp h W . Leighton, executive secretary o f research, in his bulletin "Studies t o Determine Relative Achievement o f Students at Different Potentialit yLevels ." Bulletin itself is less compli-cated than title, blunt in pointing ou t faults in higher education . Institution s are chiefly concerned with impartin g information as a method of instruction ,amassing information as a method o flearning, not concerned with what stu- dents can do with the information, h e declares. Wider use of such devices a s honors courses, segregation accordin g to ability, comprehensive examination srecommended. Aim : to give superio rstudents more opportunity to gai n broader and more efficient education . "Fishin ' . . . in Solutio n A LL life processes occur in solution ,many important industries depen d for their very existence on solubilit yrelationships . Therefore, many scient- ists the world over watch every de- velopment in this field of chemistry . Last week Professor O . F . Stafford ,best known nationally as inventor o f the Stafford wood carbonization pro-cess, best known on the campus as a zealous researcher and interestin g teacher, announced the result of hi slatest investigation : that acetamide , long familiar to chemists, has a wide rrange of solvent powers than an y other known substance . Method o f determination : it is generally true tha ta substance is soluble in another sub - stance closely related to it chemically , so Professor Stafford tested approxi- mately 400 organic and 200 inorgani c substances, found none to equal aceta-inide, found many groups to whic h acetamide related . Immediately following announce - ment of the discovery, details for F A C U L T Ypublication were requested by Associ -ated Press, which distributed stor y by wire to all AP members in U . S ., and by Science Service, which serves In the Fol d principal dailies, many magazines . Probably since its establishment ,Orin F . Stafford received degrees "student advisory committee " has beenof B .A. (1900) and M .A . (1908) vaguely regarded as an administrativ efrom University of Kansas, became a group, most members holding place s member of the faculty of the Univer- "ex-officio." Faculty motion at las t sity of Oregon in 1900, has taught meeting brought the committee in a scontinuously since, except 1908-09, regular branch of this body . Duties o fwhen he studied in the Nernst labora- committee : to investigate student mis-tory, Germany . Busy with teaching behavior, discipline students with and his own researches, he neverthe- "probation," "suspension, " "expul- less found time to bring together in his sion," "loss of hours ." Also voted by November, 1933 O L D O R E G O N 13 NEWS O F THE C L A S S E S 190 7 George W . Hug is recuperating from an operation he underwent in a Portlandhospital on October 5, which prevente d him from returning to the campus fo r Homecoming. Mr . Hug is superintendenof schools at Salem. 1910 Claude Edward Hicks, ex-0, lives a t R. F. D. 2, White Plains, New York, an dis general manager for Wm . Zinsser and Company, importers and manufacturer s of shellac, in New York City . Mr . Hicks is married and has two sons, Edward an John. 1912 Robert M . Alton, ex-2, of Portland , who was assistant trust officer of th e United States National bank for nin e years, was recently promoted to head thebank trust department. Mr . Alton re- ceived his LL .B. degree from the Univer- sity of Michigan in 1915 Forrest E. Dunton is principal of th e Molalla union high school 1916 Mrs. Constance Woodward Bohoskey ex-6 (Mrs . Arthur R . Bohoskey) o f Portland has returned from a visit t o Honolulu. Ralph P . Newland, ex-6, ex-residen t engineer in Spokane, has been appointedstate district highway engineer for Grays harbor and the Olympic peninsula 1917 William P. Merck, who has been Ore- gon City agent for the Standard Oil com- pany for four and one-half years, has bee promoted to a similar position at Everett Washington. 1919 Rev. and Mrs. Randall B. Scott (Ethe l Wakefield, 0) have moved from Lan - caster, California, to 551 Second street , Yuma, Arizona. 1920 Mr. and Mrs . Raymond E . Taylo r (Clementena R . Cameron), who wer emarried last July 25, are living at 120 9Southwest Sixth avenue, apartment 704, in Portland. Mr. and Mrs. H . M. Stevenson (Dor- othy B. Miller) and small daughter, Nora, have moved from Brownsville to Harris -burg, where Mr . Stevenson has opened adrug store. 1921 John A. Gamble, Jr., is district sale s manager for the Pacific Telephone an d Telegraph company with offices in Port -land . He is married and has two daugh- ters, Joann and CarolynMrs . Blanche Wilson Gunther, ex-1 ,(Mrs . Lester Gunther) has been spendin some time visiting her parents . Mr . and Mrs. John T . Wilson, in Portland . He r home is in Paris, France . 1922 Delmer L . Powers, 2, and Mrs . Pow- ers, of Denver, Colorado, were in Eugene for Homecoming . Mr . Powers was for several years chief geologist for the Hud- sons Bay Oil and Gas Co ., Ltd., of Al- berta, Canada, and is now geologist fo rthe Continental Oil company and will be stationed in Billings, Montana, this win-ter Mr. and Mrs . George Buland, Jr . (Anne D . Shea, ex-2) are living at 1 7 Wendt avenue, in Larchwont, New York. They have two children, Nan, who is seven years old, and George III who i sthree. John Dierdorff has a position with th ePortland Gas and Coke company . Mr . Dierdorff was a journalism major on th e campus.Mr. and Mrs . George D. LaRoch e (Lenore Blaesing, ex-2) are living i n their new home at 1725 Southwest Pros-pect drive, in Portland. 1923 Mrs. Mary Ellen Gantenbein. Neil, ex- 3 (Mrs . Charles E. Neil) has been visit- ing in Portland from her home in Ne w York. Mr. and Mrs. Owen M. Callaway (Aulis Anderson) have moved from 569 Victoriacourt, San Leandro, California, to 72 9 Santa Ray avenue, OaklandMrs. Pearl D. Lewis Coles (Mrs . Roddy S. Coles) has been teaching school i nNew York City for the past three years .Her home address is 59 Harbor Vie wplace, Rosebank, Staten island, Ne w York. 1924 Marvin W . Cragun, ex-4, is an in- structor in the English department o f Whitman college at Walla Walla, Wash- ington. Mr . Cragun received his A.B. andA . M . degrees from the University o f Minnesota.lion R . Taylor, M .S. 4, is assistan tprofessor of physiology at Brown univer- sity at Providence, Rhode Island . Mr . Taylor graduated from Reed college i n 1922 and has since received his Ph . de-gree from the University of Pennsylvania. Mrs. Ruth Alderman Tait, ex-4, (Mrs . Sterling L. Tait) lives at 225 South Lex- ington avenue in White Plains, Ne w York, and is home economics teacher i nthe Battle Hill junior high school there . Mrs. Tait is a daughter of Lewis R . Alderman, 8, of Chevy Chase, Maryland 192 5 Julia C. Geogheganwas a recent visitor to Eugene from her home in Los Angeles.She is a sister of Edward D . Geoghegan,ex-5. Mr. and Mrs. James N. Rossell (Dor a E. Hyrup, ex-7) are living at 228 Nort h Tenth street, in Montebello, California .Mr. Rossell is credit manager of th e Dohrmanu Hotel Supply company, of Los Angeles. 1926 Therman R. Evans, ex-6, came by air plane from Boise, Idaho, to attend th e Oregon-Oregon State football game i n Portland. Mr . Evans is managing editor of the Boise Capitol Journal Elmer B. Clark,is a shorthand reportewith E . J . Walton, official reporter fo r the Interstate Commerce commission, in Washington, D. C. 1927 JohnM . Clark gives his occupation as produce merchantand his home address 322 Southeast street in Portland. He is married and has one daughter, Norma Lillian, who is two years old.Mr. and Mrs. Omar G. Hoskins (Althea Dwyer) are living in Bogota, Colombia , South America. Mrs. Hoskins was for- merly a member of the faculty at Com- merce high school in Portland G. Richard Eckman,ex-7, has bee nappointed district manager for the North- ern Life Insurance company of Seattl e and will make his headquarters at 301-2 Miner building, in Eugene. KennethR. Wadleigh is a field workerfor the Washington State Welfare oar d and is living at 2532 Grand avenue Everett, Washington . Mr . Wadleig h graduated from Oregon in January, 1927 and has since received his M .A. degre e from the University of Washington. 1928 Elizabeth Hayter is employed as ste- nographer in the law office of Edwin L.Crawford, ex-0, in the Ladd and Bus h Bank building, in Salem Mr. and Mrs. Hilding A. Rydell, for-merly of Walker, are spending the winter in Phoenix, Arizona, for the benefit o f Mr. Rydells health. His position as prin-cipal of the Walker high school has been assumedby Mrs. Sadie Pondelick , 0.H. Kenneth McClain,who received his Ph.D. degree in chemistry from the Uni- versity of Washington last June, has joined the laboratory staff of the Procter- Gamble company in Ivorydale, Ohio 1929 Mr. and Mrs . Loyde S . Blakle y(Priscilla L . Webb, ex-9), who wer e married in July, are living in the Irvin g apartments at Bend Keith I. Ingalls, who has been em- ployed by the Shell Oil company atBaker has been transferred to their Spo- kane office May to Ruth Strauss who is a graduate of Mon - mouth normal schoolMilton L . George, ex-9, lives at 7 1 Rosedale avenue, Hastings-On-Hudson , New York, and has charge of the adver- tising department for the Hastings News. Ella S . Carrick, assistant cataloger in the University library, attended the con- ference of the American Library associa-tion held in Chicago from October 16 t o21. Mrs. Ruth Field Mimnaugh and smalson, Charles, have been visiting her par- ents, Dr. and Mrs. R. C. Field, in Sheri- dan, from their home at Baker . Frank Mimnaugh, ex-30, joined them for th e Armistice day football game in Portland . Otto M. Bowman,B.A. 9, J.D. 3, ispracticing law with Edwin . Crawford, ex-0, in Salem. Mr . Bowman home i s in Portland. Frederick B Joy, B.A. 9, M .D. 1, is camp surgeon at the Wolf Creek CC C camp, near Roseburg. Dr . Joy was mar- ried last May 10 to Miss Ethel A . Gil-fi lian. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Leonhardt an children have moved from Gladstone to 14 O L D O R E G O N November, 1933 La Grande, where Mr . Leonhardt has a teaching position in the schools . Francis E. Coad, B .A. 9, J .D. 1, i s practicing law at Vale, Oregon . 1930 Arthur L . Schoeni is manager of th e United Press bureau at Olympia, Wash- ington . Mr . Schoeni was recently in Eu- gene to attend Homecoming . Judge James W . Maloney, new col - lector of internal revenue for Oregon, re- cently appointed John B. Chamberlain , ex-0, of Portland ; Dwight S . Hedges , 8, of Oregon City ; and Roy W . Wade , ex-4, of Enterprise, to the processin g tax division . Among those named fo r stenographic duty were Evelyn Fitzgib- bon, 4, and Helen E . Osburn, 1, bot h of Portland . Mr . and Mrs . Carleton A. Hande (Alic e I . Connell, ex-1) live at Silverton, wher e Mr . Hande is engaged in the mercantil e business. They have two children, Jac k who was two years old last May, an d Jane Marie, who was horn April 3 . Mr. and Mrs . William R . Baker (Mar- garet W . Nugent, 9) are living at 11 1 Halsted street, East Orange, New Jersey . Mrs . Baker is director of personnel at th e Berkeley school in East Orange and Mr . Baker teaches physical education at th e Columbia high school in South Orange . Both received their M .A. degrees fro m Columbia university in New York . 1931 M . Meredith Sheets, B .A . 1, M .A . 2 , is in the production department of th e Humble Oil and Refining company a t Conroe, Texas . John Cox, graduate assistant in histor y during 1931-32, is specializing in recen t American history this year at the Uni- versity of California tinder Professo r Frederick L . Faxon, whom he serves a s assistant . Cox obtained his master de- gree in history at the University of Ore- gon in 1932 and spent the year of 1932-3 3 at the University of California in graduat e study. William K . Moore, graduate in busines s administration in 1931, has a position wit h Haskins and Sells, accountants, wit h offices in the Pittock block, Portland . Albin W . Norblad, Jr ., B.S. 1, J .D. 2 , has entered the practice of law with hi s father, A . W . Norblad of Astoria, th e firm to be known as Norblad and Nor- blad. Mr . and Mrs . Francis L . Hall (Aly s Virginia Zan, ex-1) have returned t o Portland to make their home after spend- ing a year and a half in Boston and Ne w York . Mr . and Mrs . C. J. Fulton (Florence I . ing, 1), former residents of Eugene , are now living at 2354% Honolulu ave- nue, Montrose, California . Ronald S. Haines, M .D. 1, is a mem- ber of the health department at Orego n State college . Mary Elizabeth Bowerman is doin g graduate work at the University this year . She is a sister of "Bill" Bowerman, 33, former football player on the campus , who is now assistant coach at the Eugen e high school . Harold H . King is cashier for the Eu- gene Water board . He was married i n July to Lois Brownell and lives at 165 4 Sylvan avenue . Margaret L . Cummings is teaching i n the Lebanon high school . Herbert Gilbaugh, of Portland, has re - turned from a world cruise, in which h e and his parents and two sisters visite d 26 countries . They had been gone sinc e July 1 . Edna C . Spenker, who was dean of girl s at the Silverton high school for two years , has the same position in the Pendleto n high school . 1932 Mary Janet Sheehy, ex-2, of Portland , is expected home the middle of Decembe r after a trip to Havana and several week s spent in New York . Joseph W . Stoll, ex-2, of Portland , was among those registered for Home - coming . Mr . Stoll is a real estate broke r with offices in the Terminal Sales build- ing . John S . Wilson, B.S. 2 (Sept .) has a position with L . M . Travis, Inc ., retai l credit association, in Eugene . Dorothy Lou MacMillan is recreatio n secretary of the Portland Y . W . C . A . Her home address is 1408 Southeas t Knapp street . Ben W . Oesterling, ex-2, is a senio r this year at the North Pacific College o f Dentistry, in Portland . Caryl M. Hollingsworth is vice-presi- dent of the Young Democratic club o f Multnomah county and is also a gymna- sium instructor in Portland . Vinton H . Hall has a position on th e Morning Oregonian in Portland . Mr . and Mrs . Carl C . Webb (Lora Alli- son, 31) are living in Willows, California , where Mr . Webb is employed on the Wil- lows Journal . Jay W . Sehorn, 2, has a position on the same paper . Padriac "Pat " Merrick, ex-2, is th e business manager of the Literary Month- ly, a new magazine devoted to shor t stories, poetry, and reviews, being pub- lished in Portland . Mr . Merrick is a grad- uate of Reed college and is a forme r instructor in the English department o f the University . Kenneth C . Owen, ex-2, is distric t sales clerk at the Medford office of th e Standard Oil company of California . Victor E . Kaufman, ex-2, is office an d production manager for the Robert Smit h Advertising agency in Portland . Edwin A . HoUinshead, Jr ., ex-2, for - me- assistant manager of the Montavill a bank, has been named assistant manage r of The Dallies branch of the First Na- tional bank of Portland . Lawrence "Larry" Jackson, ex-2, is i n the national advertising department of th e Los Angeles Examiner . 1933 Grace M . MacKenzie, an Oregon grad- uate of September, is teaching in th e Portland public schools . Pedro A . Zaragoza is living at San Fer- nando, Masbate, Masbate, Philippin e Islands . He was married on September 1 7 to Miss Paz L . Llacer and is assistan t principal of the San Fernando elementar y school . Margaret Susan Poorman, who gradu- ated in June, has a position as socia l worker with the Portland Public Welfar e bureau. Florence B . Thompson, M .A. 33 (Sept.), is teaching at St . Helens hall i n Portland . Ben F . Tanner, who graduated from th e University in September, is working in a mine in Butte county, California . Hi s home address is 2122 Durant street, Berkeley . Evelyn G . Solum, ex-3, is society edi- tor of the Silverton Appeal-Tribune . Mis s Solu=n is a member of Zeta Tau Alph a sorority on the campus . Helen J. Raitanen, who graduated fro m the University last June, is teaching in th e Silverton junior high school . Among those who returned to the Uni- versity for Homecoming was Oliver Pope, ex-3, now managing a grap e orchard at Lodi, California . Mr . Pope i s a member of Alpha Tau Omega fra- ternity . Rolla E . Reedy, coach of forensics i n the Ashland high school, has been ap- pointed regional director for the Orego n Speech association in Lane, Jackson an d Douglas counties . Mr . Reedy attende d the annual convention of the Wester n Association of Teachers of Speech i n Portland from November 30 to Decembe r 2. Mrs. Vida T . Bennett is assistant direc- tor of the Krasnoff School of Music, i n Portland, and gives her home .address a s 2905 Northeast Forty-sixth avenue . James H . Allen, B .S. 3 (Sept .), i s working for the Urban League of Lo s Angeles as assistant to the executive sec- retary . Francis T . Keltner, who is teachin g and coaching at Scio, was on the campu s for Homecoming . He is a member o f Sigma Chi fraternity . Hugh M . White, who graduated fro m the University in September, is principa l of the grade school at Ely, Nevada . H e was married last June 15 to Miss Ailee n Bath. Robert E . Near is employed in th e sporting goods department of the R . A . Babb Hardware company in Eugene . Raymond W . Field, B .S. 3 (Sept .) , has a position with Haskins and Sells , certified public accountants in Portland . Mr . Field was one of the five Orego n graduates who passed the state C . P . A . examinations last May . Dorothy Clifford is librarian at St . Helens Hall junior college, in Portland . Her home is at 3233 Northeast Maso n street. Mildred Collins, B .A . 3 (Jan .), i s teaching in the Silverton junior hig h school. Among those who returned to th e campus for Homecoming was Ember t Fossum of Klamath Falls . Mr . Fossu m is employed as a reporter on the Klamat h Basin Progress . Leslie M . Chaffee is attending the Uni- versity medical school in Portland . Edgar L . Smith, of Portland, is con- tinuing his law course at the Universit y of Michigan and receives his mail at th e Lawyers Club, Ann Arbor, Michigan . Cecilia E. Brennan is teaching in th e Pine City school at Echo, Oregon . Mildred E . Lawrence, ex-3, is no w Mrs . Robert Pasley and lives at 15 3 Ninth avenue east in Twin Falls, Idaho . She is a sister of Mrs . Alma Lawrenc e Scheuerman, 8, of Portland and of Ruth Lawrence, 1, of Silverton . Henry Culp, ex-3, lives at 1911 Ceda r street, La Grande, and lists his occupa- tion as salesman in the ladies shoe depart- ment of Falks store . Mr . and Mrs . Clarence E . James (Iren e B. Pangborn, ex-3), who were marrie d in August, are living at the Merric k apartments, in Tillamook . John S . Youmans, M .S. 3 (Sept .), i s teaching English and journalism in the high school at Grand Junction, Colorado . Mr. Youmans also has charge of all stu- November, 1933 O L D OREGON 1 dent publications and is on a committe eto study grading and marketing system s with a view to making changes in th e system used there. Arthur Kiesz, received his B.S. de- gree in September. is teaching social sci-ence and physical education in th e Ontario public schools Louese S . Howard is teaching in th eGrants Pass junior high school . 1934 Kenneth F. Lord, ex-4, whose hom eaddress is Route 3, Box 1088, Portland , has a position in the office of the Standar Oil company. Mildred I . Widmer, ex-4, is teachin g physical education in the Newber g schools 1936 Evelyn Beebe, ex-6, of Portland, ac-companied by her parents and sister , Marion, is spending a year in Europe . Miss Beebe is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. MARRIAGE S 1914 Miss Aileen Cardwell to Frank E. Manning, LL .B. 4, in Pomeroy, Wash-ington, on November 8. Address : Sover- eign apartments, 261 Broadway, Portland 1923 Charlotte Therese Howells to Majo r Silas Elliott Finch, in Chehalis, Washing ton, on November 6. 1925 Miss Helen Carolyn Trygstad to Lexro B. Prillaman, r 28. The couple is to make their home i n Portland where Mr. Prillaman is a mein-her of the faculty of Hill M .litary acad-emy. 1926 Miss Barbara McOuat to Charles A. Orr, on August 23. Address: 2307 North east Thirtieth street, Portland . Mr . Or r teaches science at the Grant high schooland is also baseball coach and assistant basketball coach 1927 Virginia Keeney to W . Gordon Smith,in Bradford, Massachusetts, on October 7. Address: Boston. 1928 Mildred G. Vaughan, 9, to Leroy D . Draper, in Portland, on October 26. Ad- . dress: Park Lawn apartments, Portland . Alma Katherine Lawrence to Paul F .Scheuerman, in September. Address: 4712 Southeast Madison street, Portland Miss Lucille D . Owen to Del Monte , ex-8, on July 1 . Address : 1411 South- east Thirtieth, Portland 1929 Agnes Gabrielle Petzold to Carl F . Klippel, ex-9, in Oregon City, o n October 29 . Address ; Klamath Fails , Oregon. Miss Thelma Fitzsimmons to KennetHill Knowles, in Glendale, California, on September 15. Address : 522 D . 14t h street, Santa Monica, California. Alice Mary McGrath to Robert Dean e Clapperton, LL .B. 7, in Portland, o n October 30. Mrs . Clapperton is a mem- ber of Chi Omega on the campus an d Mr. Clapperton is a member of Sigm a Nu.Greta M . Godfrey, ex-9, to Kennet h A. Loucks, on October 28. Address : 214 Northwest Johnson street, PortlandGrace S. Edmondsto W. Hadley Stark, on October 4. Address : Mt . Hood, Ore- gon. Miss Dorothy N . Taylor to Roderic k G. LaFollette, ex-9, in Portland, o n October 8. Address ; 562 ,trtiand. 1930 Marjorie Evelyn Peebles, ex- 30, t o Edward Grant, in October. Address : P eEll, Washington. Miss Carlotta Stearns to Roland W . Coleman, ex-0, on October 7. Address : McMinnville. 1931 Alberta Maxine Rives to Lawrence T . Slauson, in Reno, Nevada, on October 30 Address: Chico, California. Mrs. Milicent Horwege West writes u sfrom Swanguarter, North Carolina . "Can tell you how much Ie enjoye d OLD OREGON--it seems always to h e full of good news ." She was married o nSeptember 7, 1932, to Harold F. West, a graduate of Oregon State college in 1923 and has a small daughter, Jean Anne, wh was born September 12, 1933 Louise Eleanor Pierce to William H .Wright, in Eugene, on October 29 . Ad - dress: Madera, California. Miss Irma Haggart to Albert Ray Mar- lin, in Eugene, on October 27 . Address :1678 Villard street, Eugene. Myrtle Lola Clark, ex-1, to Clarenc e E. Francis, in Portland, on October 14 . Address: 2260 Northeast Twenty-eight h street, Portland. 1932 Catherine McEntee to George Elme r Will, in Portland, on October 12 . Ad -dress: 1416 Northeast Prescott avenue , Portland. Adelaide Zoe Benjamin to Alden A . Sehwabauer, 3, in Olympia, Washing - ton, on October 20.Miss Katherine Kilkenny to Kennet h G. Edick,ex-2, in Portland, on Octobe r14. Address : 8838 North Dana avenue , Portland. Miss Catherine S. Shaffer to Robert L .Deaver, ex-2, on September 23 . Ad - dress: Huntington, Oregon.ord has been received on the campus of the marriage of Chloethiel B. Wood- ard, of Portland, to Elliott Franci s Wright . The couple is to live at 64 Par k avenue, Bloomfield, New Jersey Helen Deloroes Anderson, ex- 32, t oEdward B. Goeckner, on October 24. Ad - dress: Florence apartments, Eugene Miss Vivian DuBois to Frederick H. Bechill, ex-2, on September 15 : Gresham. 1933 Dorothy Anne Pfeifer, ex-33, to Dr . Lee Kenneth Juhl, in Waterloo, Iowa, o n October 12. Address : Hampton, Iowa . Barbara Frances Denning, ex-4, t oStanley F. Wickham, ex-3, in Van- couver, Washington, on October 5 . Ad -dress: Medford. Mildred Idella Carson, ex-4, t o George Wallis Ohler, ex-3, at the Phi Mu sorority house on the Universit ycampus, on November 9 . Address : As-toria. Freda Josephine Stadter to GeorgeFrancis Barron, 9, in Portland, o nNovember 11. After spending their wed - ding trip in southern Oregon and Cali- fornia, they plan to sail from San Fran- cisco the last of November for Vienna , where they will study for two years.An announcement of the marriage las tMay 5, in Kelso, Washington, of Helena Graham, 1, to Boyd Overhulse, wa s made on the campus recently e is living in Portland . Dorothy Mae McMillan,ex-4, to Rob-.ert L . McCulloch, on September 3 . Ad -dress: Portland .Miss Ida Airaksinen to Arvi Joh n Anderson, ex-3, on September 8 . Ad - dress. 232 Taylor avenue, Astoria. 1934 Jean Elizabeth Beardsley, ex-4, t o Frank Richard Miller, in Eugene, o n November 4. Address : Eugene . BIRTH S 1915 A daughter, on October 12, to Lucil Cogswell Foster (Mrs . Lee W . Foster) o fI-Ialsey . 1922 A son, on October 16, to Mr. and Mrs.William Webster Deadman (Helene Kuy-kendall, 2) in Portland. PACK UP r AND GO ~ T HIS year of all years is the year t otravel. Interesting things are takin gplace in every corner of the world ; travel costs have never been lower ; livin g expenses in foreign countries are ridiculouslcheap . I am ready to give assistance t o any Oregon alum who is contemplating atrap or would be interested in travel infor- mation of any kind. Ask about the popula FREIGHT and PASSENGER STEAM-ERS-also the MOTOR SHIPS . Servic efrom either the Atlantic or Pacific coas t ports to all parts cif the world . INDE- PENDENT TOURS . CONDUCTE D TOURS . AROUND-THE-WORL D . AROUND-THE-PACIFIC . . . WES T INDIES CRUISES . . . MEDITERRAN -EAN CRUISES SOUTH SE AISLANDS . . EUROPE . and ENG- LAND . Make 1934 the year for your travel dreams to come true---and at a low cost Betty Cook, 1 , THE UTMOST I N COMPLETE TRAVEL SERVIC E Serving 700 Ports-On all the 7 Sea s GO BY LAND, SEA OR AI R Any Route -- Any Destination MISS BETTY COOK : At no obligatio n to myself, please send information concern - ing a trip to ... leaving about with in the party . First class : Touris t Class : Third Class Name - Address ------------------------------------- - Mail the above coupon to Miss Betty Cook , General Steamship Corp., Ltd .,200-208 S. W . Broadway , Portland, . 16 O L D O R E G O N November, 193 YEARSof faithful and efficient service to Oregon Student s and alumn i the UNIVERSITY "CO=OP" Elliott s Grocery "Where discriminating college folk find the quality, service an prices they demand 13th and Patterson Phone 95 A son, Donald Soule, on September 2 , to Dr . and Mrs. Harold N . Lee (Norm aSoule, ex- 26) of 1729 Audubon street , New Orleans, Louisiana. Dr . Lee is as- sistant professor of philosophy in New - comb college, Tulane university 192 A daughter, Virginia L ., on October 16, to Mr . and Mrs . Paul L. Patterson (Georgia S. Benson, 24) of Hillsboro . 192 A son, Maurice C ., on October 30, t oMr. and Mrs. Allen H. Mooers, of Ska-mokawa, Washington . A daughter, Patricia A., on October 28to Mr . and Mrs . Kenneth P . Gustin, of315 Northeast Morgan, Portland .A daughter, Sally, on October 12, t oMr. and Mrs. W . Earl Shafer (Eugeni a Zieber, 6) of Los Angeles . 192 A son, Robert Lathrop, on October 17, to Marie Myers Bosworth (Mrs . HarlanP . Bosworth, Jr.) of 544 Conger avenue,Klamath Falls. 1926 A son, on October 28, to Dr . and Mrs. Gordon B. Leitch (Anna Elizabeth War- ren) of Portland . 192 A son, William C . III, on October 17 , to Mr . and Mrs . William C . Lawrenc e (Virginia F . Smith, ex-4) of Portland . DeNEFFE, INC. Men Dresswea r McDonald Theater Buildin University Floris t Member FloristsTelegraphDelivery Association 598 13th Ave., East Phone 654 A daughter, on October 16, to Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester C . Wingard (Edna E . English, 28) of McMinnville . 192 A son, Kenneth Wallace, on Octobe r29, to Mr. and Mrs. Matthew S. Baines of Portland.A son, Robert Courtland, on Octobe r 13, to Katherine Glafke McIver (Mrs . Alexander C. McIver) of Portland . A daughter, on October 8, to Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Beck, of Riverton . 1932 A daughter, Diane C., on October 5, to Dr. and Mrs. G. H. Strickland, n City. 1933 A daughter, on October 28, to Mr . and Mrs. Delbert W . Moore, of 1992 Fair - mount boulevard, EugeneA daughter, on October 29, to Lois El-liott Johnson,ex-3 (Mrs . Bennie John- son) in Eureka, California. DEATH S 1876 Andrew J. Giesy, M.D. 6, of Portland, on November 9. Dr . Giesy is survived by his widow, Mrs . Ida H . Giesy, and on eson, Paul Giesy. He had practiced medi- cine in Aurora and in Salem and was fortwo years assistant physician at the Ore- gon State hospital, later moving to Port - land where he became a staff member of the Good Samaritan hospital. 189 Henry A. Dedman, M.D. 6, of Canby, on October 28 . Dr . Dedman had prac- ticed medicine in Canby for 36 years, wamayor for five years, and had serve d Clackamas county as a representative in the legislature for two terms, 1917 an d1919. He is survived by his widow, Mrs . Blanche Dedman, a son, Craig C, Ded- man, of Sherwood, and a daughter, Mil- dred E. Dedman,4, Oregon City schoolteacher. 190 Albert E . Jenkins, of Portland, brothe of Hopkin Jenkins,LL .B. 2, on Octo- ber 14 1905 George W . Kinsey, pioneer resident of Eugene, died at his home at 382 Eas t Tenth avenue on November 6. He is sur-vived by his widow, Mrs . Mary V . Kin- sey, and four daughters, Mae D. Kinsey, 05, and Ethel Kinsey, both of Eugene , Mrs. BeulahKinsey Pagter, 13, andMrs.Georgia Kinsey Boney, both of Belling - ham, Washington 191 Ludwig Struck, of Hood River, fathe r of Dr. F. T . Struck, of State College , Pennsylvania, on November 1 191 Mrs. Irene Bechtold, wife of C . C .Bechtold,LL .B. 3, of 467 Laurelhurst drive, Portland, on October 5. She is also survived by two sons, Paul W. and Glenn A. Bechtold. ChristmaCards.... The one lin k That Holds Fas t Our Preciou s Friendship s Throughout th e Years . . New Card s and Stationer y Are Read y for You r Choosing . . . VALLE Y PRINTING CO . 4 STATIONERS 76West Broadway . . . Eugene BEFORE AFTE R Bring Your Hair Problems to a Master of the Shear Campus Barber Sho p Leo Deffenbacher, 23, Prop. EUGENE ALUMNI ADVERTISERS NESS 1914 Mrs . Elizabeth J . Morden, of Pacifi c Grove, California, mother of Parks Lor- raine Morden, on October 18 . 1915 Millard F . Hardesty, of Portland , father of Lt . Fred A . Hardesty, of th e U . S . Navy, on October 29 . Mrs . Archie Parker, of Monmouth, o n November 8 . She was the mother of Mrs . Grace Parker Morris, wife of Dr . Victo r P . Morris of the University faculty . 1916 Andrew Sherwood, widely know n pioneer geologist of Portland, died o n October 31 . Ile was the father of Hug h M . Sherwood, principal of the Arlet a school in Portland . 1918 Pat Foley, ex-8, prominent hotel ma n of The Dalles, died on October 28 fro m spotted fever, the result of a tick bit e while on a hunting trip two weeks before . Mr . Foley is survived by his mother, Mrs . J. E . Foley, of La Grande, his widow , Mrs_ Mercedes Foley, and five children . William G . Gilstrap, former Eugen e resident and for many years editor of th e Eugene Register, died at his home in Al- hambra, California, on November 1 . H e was the father of Cosby Gilstrap, 8 . 1923 Wilson E . Sailor, year-old son of Mr . and Mrs . Wilson L . Sailor (Margaret I . Evans) of Crow, on November 3 . Ethel Cusick Wheeler, of New Yor k City, was killed in an automobile acci- dent on October 21 . Miss Wheeler i s survived by her father, O . A . Wheeler , of Portland, and uncle, Henry Stewart, o f Eugene . She was a member of Delt a Delta Delta on the campus and had bee n teaching in New York City for a numbe r of years . 1924 Lawrence Altimus . of Portland, brothe r of Elgie Altimus, ex-4, on July 22 . 1925 Robert Weatherford Lancefield, pionee r resident of Yanihill county, died in th e McMinnville hospital on October 6 . H e was the father of Kenneth Parker Lance - field, M .D. 5, Portland physician . Mrs . Helen Bennett . of St . Helens , wife of H . Omer Bennett, M .A . 5, die d in Portland, on October 27 . 1928 Miss Frances L . Brauninger, of Eu- gene, sister of Julia V . Brauninger, of Prairie City, on September 30 . Horace S . Lynn, of Eugene, father o f Mrs . Clara Lynn Fitch, secretary of th e University graduate school, on Octobe r 21. Mr . Lynn is also survived by thre e grandchildren . Mrs . Mary Fitch Wern- ham, ex-8 . Janet L . Fitch, 3, and Eli - nor M . Fitch, 4 . Henry E . Stevens, of Portland, i n October, father of Henry E . Stevens, Jr., ex-8, of Portland, and brother of Samuel Stevens, ex- 03, of Oregon City . 1929 Joseph H . Ralston, of Albany, on Sep- tember 16, father of Mrs . Josephine Ral- ston Johnson, of Medford, and Stewar t William Ralston, 30, of Albany . 1930 Mrs . M . H . Signor, of Eugene . o n September 7 . mother of George N . Signor , ex-0, of Dunsmuir, California . Virgil M . Signor, ex-2 . of Eugene, and Claude V . Signor, ex-7, of Grants Pass . 193 1 Mrs . Jessica C . Coe, of Eugene, o n September 27, mother of Mrs . Jessica Co e Van Doren, ex-l, of Eugene, an d Asbury C . Coe, ex-9, of Houston, Texas . Edmund F . Green, of Portland, fathe r of Howard Edmond Green, on Octobe r 23. 1932 Raymond C. Griffin, ex-5, of L a Grande, died in a hospital there o n November 11 as the result of injuries re- ceived in an automobile accident whe n the car he was driving collided with a truck. James D . Hancock, of Portland, fathe r of Mary Bel Hancock, on October 26 . 193 3 .Mrs . Jennie O . Haglund, of Albany , mother of Charles B. Haglund, ex-3, o f Coquille, on September 29 . Edward Gettelman, of Portland, fathe r of Eugene Gettelran, M .D. 3, on Sep- tember 10 . 1934 Palmer L . Tales, of Portland, father o f Jane Fales, 4, on October 11 . Mr . Fate s had practiced law in Portland since 1909 . He is also survived by his widow, Mrs . Florence Fates and a daughter, Mary . th e Sign. . . W hi c h designate s quality in printin g plates. H"hcre individua l at te~etion is com- bined with profes- sional skill . 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