November 23 - 24 2 5 HOMECOMING NOMAD S The top of the pass! To-day, just as in the remot e Biblical age when herdsmen tended the flocks o f Abraham, these nomad tribes drive their flocks eac h season up from the parched desert to the high table - lands of the Caucasus, green with life-giving grass We moderns of the West make no such forced marche in search of food. In our lands of little rain, electricity pumps water to make the desert bloom . Electricity lights the herdsman's home and milks the cows in hi s stable. Electricity powers the great network of trans- portation and communication which binds city an d country into one complex system of civilized living. Yet, as Thomas A. Edison has written, "The electrical development of America has only well begun. So long as there remains a single task being done by men an d women which electricity could do as well, so long will that development be incomplete." GJENERAJ .l EL ECT ~~4 ... This monogram appear s on a multitude of products which contribute to th e efficiency and comfort o f both factory and home . It is your assurance of elec- trical correctness and de- pendability. Contents for Novembe r Advertisers in this Issue - November, ]192 8 M . BoYER, Circulation Manage rANTON PETItRSON, Advertising Manager 2 4 HOMECOMING TIME IS HERE 7 UNIVERSITY PLANS STATE-WIDE SURVEY 8 ENROLLMENT SHOWS INCREASE . 8 DEAN OF MEN RESIGNS . 8 WHO S FROM TIIE VARSITY IN THE LEGIS - LATURE . . By F. H. Young, 4 9 COLIN V . DYMENT Is DEAD . . 1 0 HAVE WE FORGOTTEN ? . . . By W . F. G. Thacher 1 1 LIVING MASTERS IN THE ART OF PROSE . . By S . Stephenson Smith 12 AN ALUMNA WITII THE MORONI OLSE N PLAYERS . By Mary Lou Turnbull, 3 1 4 W Ho ~~llo ? . 1 5 IMPRESSIONS OF THE FROSH PARADE . . By Myron Griffin, 1 1 6 OREGON COMMONWEALTH SCHOLARSHIPS 1 6 OREGON DADS VISIT THE CAMPUS . . By Karl W . Onthank, 3 1 7 LEMON EXTRACT . . . By Helen Daugherty Ellsworth, 2 1 8 THE FACULTY CREW 19 NEWS OF THE CLASSES . . . . 20 OREGON WEBFOOT SPORTS REVIEW FAMILY MAI L FAMILY MAIL FROM CLASS OF 192 8 American Telephone and Telegraph 21 Anchorage 31 J. F . Berger 3 Booth-Kelly 31 Camel Cigarettes Back Cove r Chase GardensCo-op 29Crown Drug Co 32Electric Toastwich 32Eugene Business College 28Eugene Fruit Growers 24 Eugene Hotel 4 General Electric Inside FrontCoverHotel Hoffman 28 John Hancock -Kennell-Ellis I,ee-DukeLemon 0 Pharmacy McMorran Washburn New Service LaundryOffice Machinery Supply "0" LunchOregon Electric Osburn Hotel J. C. Penney 28Peter Pan 3J. K . Pratt 2Preston Hales 82 Richfield InsideBack CoverSigman Fell 8Southern Pacific 27Henry Tromp 2 University FloristsWetherbee-Powers 31H. W. White 32 2 81 25 32 29 28 31 32 22 28 Old Oregon November, 192 8 R ECENTLY President Hal], Vice-President Barker, Dea nAlfred Powers and George Godfrey, as news editor , motored through Eastern Oregon, stopping at the larger town s enroute to meet with Oregon Dads, alumni, and friends of th e University . Everywhere the warm welcome extended to them an d the large and enthusiastic meetings indicated a genuine interes t in the University and confidence in its leaders , Just a day . or two ahead of President Hall s party went a car from the Alumni Office . Checkin g addresses, explaining the Alumni Convention, gettin g nominees for delegates, and news notes for OL D OREGON were part of the duties of the expedition . Ingidentally, the staff photographer snapped th e pictures of some of the alums whose help was mos t valuable. These pictures were not made into cuts i n time for this OLD OREGON, bat they will be printe d in the December issue . Home toHonor Oregon! E DITORIAL comment this issue could well be extended ove rHoover and Stanford-as well as the Oregon alums who were success- ful in elections ; we might thank Eastern Oregon alumni for th e reception accorded us on our recent hurried trip to that part o f the state ; we might argue the student question of having or no t having an Oregana ; we might get excited over rais- ing student fees as a substitute for state support ; we might smile at the studentsinfirmary probe ; we might portray the spirit of the students hoarse , eager Oskeys inspired by a taste of victory and th e promise of more to come . All of these things an d many more we might set down according to ou r views. But Homecoming time is here and in the rush o f preparation we are giving only one brief message t o alumni everywhere : Come back for Homecoming ? Home to Honor Oregon ! This Issu e of OL D OREGO N is th e Homecomin Number Published monthly during the college year the Oregon Alumni Association. Editorial and advertising offices, Alumni Office, University of OregonEugene. Subscription price, $2.00 a year in the United States; 82.25 in for-eign countries. Notice of changeof address must be sentin advanceto the Circulation Manager. Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice, Eugene,Oregon. Acceptance for mailing at special rate of postage provided insectio n1103, Act of October3, 1912. 2 OLD OREGON November, 192 8 THE J. K . PRATT INSURANC E AGENC Y "UP IN THE MINER BUILDING , WHERE INSURANCE SERVIC E BEGINS" Phone 1181 Dear Editor : OLD OREGON arrived this morning an d believe me it was mighty welcome ! The only excuse I can offer for not re- mitting my dues sooner is that my trip t o Oregon this summer, in order to complet e my work for the M .B.A. degree, just abou t ate up all I had saved from last year s salary. However, I think the degree wa s worth the effort, and with it in hand, I ought to be able to pay up a little soone r after this . My address is just plain State College , New Mexico . I am assistant professor o f business administration in the New Mexic o College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts , where I have been since the fall of 1927 . As a diversion I hunt rattle-snakes, taran- tulas, centipedes, etc . All told, though, i t is a mighty healthy place to live-even fo r an Oregonian! Sincerely, LIONEL D. HAIGHT, 26, State College , New Mexico . October, 1928. Dear Editor : I am enclosing the two dollar renewal t o OLD OREGON . I find it indispensable an d look forward to every issue . Seattle isn t far in these flying days, but I find it difficul t to keep up with everything and everybod y without OLD OREGON . I am with William T . Bain and Lione l H. Pries, architects, and am hoping some - time that some Oregon graduate will hav e need of a house by the side of the road . Sincerely, VIRGINIA KEENEY, 27, 1030 Liggett Bldg . Seattle, Wash . October 3, 1928. Dear Editor : Will you please enter my subscription fo r OLD OREGON for the year 1928-291 En- closed is my check in payment . From Christmas until about Decoratio n Day of the ensuing year this place move s up into the Arctic circle, and we "hole in" for the winter . OLD OREGON will fill a much needed want . If I have missed the first issue, hope yo u will send it to me . Here to a successful year on the Orego n campus. Cordially yours , MILTON PETERSON, 5 , .318 Ellis St., Stevens Point, Wis . September 28, 1928 . Dear Editor : Your OLD OREGON subscription cam- paigns are certainly clever! If I were no t such a procrastinator you would have hear d from me long ago . However, the psychol- ogy in your last letter gave me the prope r stimulus and the response manifests itsel f in the form of a check . I had the pleasure of spending my senio r year in the University of Oregon as a majo r in the physical education department . Dur- ing this opening week I have recalled th e happy days on the campus, the colorfu l leaves of the maples, the crisp fall air, an d I too would like to do the year all ove r again. Best wishes to the University of Orego n and OLD OREGON . Sincerely yours, ELAINE MOBLEY,6, Auburn, California . Dear Editor : Enclosed you will find "dos Pesos" i n payment for one year alumni dues an d subscription to OLD OREGON-and don t forget the OLD OREGON . I hope I am no t so late with my remittance that I will mis s the first number . I liked the tropics so well that I decide d to try them another year, but I am seri- ously planning on being present for th e 1929 Homecoming. This is now the rainy season and Orego n showers haven a look in with the tropica l downpours Best wishes for OLD OREGON, an d Young Oregon . Sincerely,T] 11 . POSTON, A.,3, M .D. 7 , Gorgas Hospital , Ancon, Canal Zone . P.S is the best bit o f news I get . R . E. P . Circulation Manager : Please forgive my delay in sending th e subscription for OLD OREGON . I have moved and wanted you to have my new ad - dress. As always it is a pleasure to receive OL D OREGON, and now that I am out of th e state it is about the only way I have o f keeping in touch with University events . Radio returns from last week game wer e thrilling . I hoping for many repetition s this season. Sincerely, DOROTHY MYERS PEIRCE, 6 , 1213 West 7th avenue , Spokane, Washington . Insure Wit Henry Trom p Rooms 26-2 First National Bank Buildin g Eugene, Oregon Acciden t Automobile Fir e Lif e John Haruak Saris entering Colleg e T HOUSANDSof young men andwomen this fall begin their collegecareers. Many of them will be able to finish . It i sa good time to call attention to the fact that a LIFE INSURANCE POLICY can be a guarantee thathey will finish The cost of putting a boy orgirl through collegat the present time is es- timated to be betweefour and five thousand dollars. Nowadays parents arlearning how to providthis educational fun d through Insurance takeout when the children arvery young. But here we are considering onlthe youth just entering college, with high hopes for the future ybe thwarted by the sudden of thbreadwinner. Small would be th e additional cost cient insurance to secure the familagainst needless disappointment. Just another wayof purchasingsecurity. The fatherwill know that he has done his fell part. The mother will be assured that whatever happens she can see her children through Ask us for details as to formof policies, etc. Please give appli- cants date of birth I am interested plan forguaranteeing acollege education. Name Address Date of Birth Oder Stxty-Jiae Years to Business October 12, 1928 . October 23, 1928. November, 1928 OLD OREGON 3 Dear Editor : Having seen a few "slums" last night , thought it . might be of interest to, and i n time for, OLD OREGO N The National Broadcasting company in- vited the University alumni to visit thei r studios in San Francisco last night---th e occasion being the first of a series of Wed- nesday evenings in honor of universities . Our own University was chosen for the firs t one. Aside from the fact that we woul d all have adored showing the radio artist s how to put on a real "Oskey," we enjoye d the half hour very much . There were ver y few alums there, but Eleanor Spall Bol t invited us all to their apartment for a goo d old chat . There are too few of such affairs . Those fortunate enough to "get together " were: Mr . and Mrs. John Dierdorf (he mar- ried a South Dakota girl, They have a little Johnny-eight months old . He wit h some large advertising firm in San Fran- eisce) ; Don and Ruth Engstrom Davis (Do n is with Armstrong Linoleum company . The y live in Burlingame and have two sons) ; Florence Furuset McKown and her husband ; Leo and Dorothy Cash Munly ; and Owe n and Aulis Callaway . Best regards to OLD OREGON . Sincerely, Auras ANDERSONCALLAWAY, 23 , 2500 84thavenue, Oakland, California .is October 18, 1928. Dear Editor : Will you please send a copy of OL D OREGON, the October issue, to A . L . Maur- ton, 1493 Cleveland avenue, Portland This is my younger brother whom I a m persuading to enter U . of O . instead o f O. A . C., in January . Thanking you- I am , Very truly yours , LEONA MOORTON NELSON, ex- 2 , 1132 Fremont avenue, South Pasadena ; California . it September 3, 1928. Dear Dorothy : C hope every one has not been as negli- gent as I in sending in the promised sub- scription for the class of 8 to the ar t building. I was so sorry to miss the class reunion , for I had been looking forward to it wit h the greatest joy, but life has a way of tak- ing a back-handed lick at one when we ar e least expecting it . I was so anxious to se e s This letter was received by Dorothy Collier,18, chairmanof her sass in the campaign traise money through the classes for theFine Arts building. everyone, and bear the great clack o f tongues at the campus luncheon, and kno w what each one had done with his or her te n years. You know it would all have bee n particularly stimulating to me, for I neve r see anyone that, I have ever knowu at ol d Oregon, and I do miss that part of life . You would never dream that Ohio is so fa r from the beaten path ; although Hillsbor o is particularly accessible to those goin g east, to Washington, D, C ., or by way o f Washington. However I still live in hope that someone , anyone, from Oregon will call me up fro m Cincinnati, or Cotumbus, saying, " I a m here, with a day (or more) to spare," or " I OM passing through." Except for this isolation from one s friends I Mal Ohio delightful-it is indee d a garden spot . I have made many pleasan t new friends . We have lots of good times ; it is a town of bridge fiends ; for other diver- sion I belong to It . A . R ., and a rathe r exacting literary club, and am particularl y interested in public health work-presiden t of a small group of county men and wome n who raised money for two public healt h nurses and foisted them on the county boar d of health . We shall have to finance the m for a couple years yet . anyway till th e county budget commission is thoroughly sol d on the advisability and desirability of suc h work. The county health board was helples s as to money . But first and most important, I am th e proud and happy mother of two "beauti- ful" children, Constance, who is five an d will start to kindergarten this fall, an d Vernon B ., Jr ., who is three . I have ha d them out at the cottage in the country al l summer. I know of no place in Ohio com- parable to the McKenzie river, the Rogu e river, or the upper Klamath lake for sum- mer cottages . My husband is recovering from his seriou s illness of the spring and early summer, bu t his heart is none too good yet ; the doctor s think it will be all right again within a year if he will take care of himself, whic h for him seems very hard . He has alway s been so strong and active, so he can hardl y bring himself to take life easy for a while . I wanted him to go off on a trip someplace , but he was in Europe three months las t year and says traveling is harder tha n working. If at any time you, or any of our Orego n friends, are in this part of Ohio, I do hop e you can stop over and visit me for a fe w days it would make us very happy . Sincerely yours, TuLA, K1NSLEY r AIRLEY, 18 , (Mrs. Vernon liairley) . Dear Editor : In a trip last month from Portland t o southern Oregon, Dr . Geary and I were in- terested in meeting a number of old stu- dents and graduates of the University o f Oregon. At Dillard, in the beautiful Ump- qua valley, we turned off the great high - way with its rushing traffic into a quie t lane which led us to a little home in a bower of Hewers where we met our ol d classmate, Eva Rice, 0 . Miss Rice, afte r devoting thirty years to the training o f children in the public schools of Portland , followed the example of other wise patriot s and retired to a little farm in the Rice val- ley not far from where she was born . Here , surrounded by relatives and friends, she i s conducting and enjoying a little place pro- ducing fine Italian, petite, and date prunes , broccoli and melons for which the valley i s noted. Needless to say, we had a delightfu l visit and found our friend as gay, alert an d discerning in present day affairs as in th e days of yore . At Medford we were delightfully enter- tained by Mrs . Vawter and other friends . Mrs. Vawter is the widow of the late Wm . Vawter, well known member of the clas s of 86 and prominent in public affairs i n Oregon. The sons, Vernon and William, als o attended the University, Vernon Vawter , 3, crow a regent of the state University , has recently been honored by election t o the Board of Directors of the Federal Ban k of San Francisco . Klamath Falls has many former student s and graduates of the University . Amon g these, of course, we met Everett and Ed - ward Geary and Elizabeth Gallogly Geary , George Stevenson and Myler Calkins Steven - son, Alfred and Andrew Collier and als o Major Robert Kuykendall of Klamath . On our return we visited at the hospitabl e home of Mr . and Mrs . Charles Collier a t Eugene, where we met a delightful visitor , Arthur Collier, class of 8 and now o f Washington, D . C ., where he has been i n the U . S . Geological Survey service fo r many years. He was on his way home fro m a geological assignment in Montana . At Junction we met Senator Edwar d Bailey of the class of 3, and at Alban y interviewed Wallace Eakin, class of 6 , who is a member of the staff of the Alban y Democrat, of which Ralph Cronise, class of 1, is publisher . A mutual interest in the University o f Oregon is a tie that binds its students to - gether regardless of time, distance or cir- cumstance Sincerely, Masi. Ef,W 3RD P . GEARY, 0 , 643 Holly St ., Portland, Oregon . Home to honor Oregon ! -And back to the Peter Pan for the right kind of food! Whether it s afte r the big game or before-or any old time, Oregon alums always know they l find what they want at the Peter Pan . THE PETER PA N WALTER HUMMEL, Proprietor 4 OLD OREGON November, 192 8 FAMILY MAIL FROM THE CLAS S OF 1928 ~~ Q Octoer 21, 1928. Dear Editor : Here I am about 4,000 miles south o f Eugene, and going at about the speed o f 10 knots an hour . Day after tomorrow w e will start going through the Canal, and I will probably mail this letter from Balboa . I want to thank you for the copy of OL D OREGON which I found waiting for me i n San Francisco . It certainly seemed good t o see pictures of old familiar haunts on th e campus; to get bits of news about the open- ing of the fall term, and find out where som e of my classmates are and what they are doing. By way of information perhaps yo u would like to know what my plans are . Thi s boat is booked for the Panama ; Baltimore , Maryland ; Norfolk, Virginia ; and Ne w York . I am getting off in Norfolk, however , and taking the train to Washington, D . C. There I enter George Washington La w School for a three-year course . I can tel l you as yet what my permanent address i n Washington will be-but as soon as I hav e established one and have notified you, I l he expecting to get OLD OREGON regu- larly . Hoping you have a most successful year , I am, Sincerely yours, DON BEELAR, 8 , On Board S . S . Sacramento, Off Gulf of Tehuantepec , Mexico. October 25, 1928. Dear Editor : I have moved again, and for the las t month have been working on the Montan a Standard here in Butte . This paper is th e largest in Montana and we put out a 20 - page daily . My work on this paper takes me to th e schools, railroads and hotels every day . This, of course, is just a beginner, since I have many general assignments also . Hav e come to the conclusion that most people ar e ashamed of their names . After trying t o cipher out some scribbling I have found o n hotel registers, I sure my eye sight wil l fail me . The only recompense that I ca n see, is that I might get a job as a hand - writing expert for some police force shoul I ever need a job . Can say that I like Montana any to o well. Just as soon as anything in the wa y of a job shows up in Oregon Il be righ t back there . I may be there Homecoming a t that. Of course, would have to chuck th e job, but what is a mere job when it come s to an Oregon Homecoming I received the first issue of OLD ORE- GON and it a real nice looking magazine . I like the green sport section . It is a departure from the general run of alumn i magazine sport sections . All Saturday afternoon, I watched th e A. P . ticker for news of the Oregon-Wash- ington game . When I found out that Ore- gon was ahead, I was quite overjoyed . Rut when the flash came that Oregon ha d wan, "my merriment knew no bounds," a s the Seven Seers used to say . By the way , I also won $10 on the game . Sure hop e they can topple over California . Haven seen hide nor hair of an Oregon graduate up in these parts . The closest I came to Oregon was to run into an Orego n Aggie, and even such a person seemed goo d to meet under the conditions . Well, will have to close . Write and giv e me all the dope on school . May see yo u Homecoming. Sincerely, RICHARD H, SYRING, 8 , The Montana Standard , Butte, Montana . w a x October 28, 1928 . Dear Editor : I have not received my copies of OL D OREGON, and it just occurred to me tha t perhaps I gave you my address as Reeds - port, Oregon, as I had intended teachin g there. However, I am teaching at Gervais , Oregon, in the high school . I like it ver y much, too. I am thrilled over Oregon team-some- how I think Oregon has lost its last foot - ball game for quite a while . I trust this will straighten my addres s out. Also that everything is going well . I feel assured of this, however . With best wishes , Sincerely yours , VENA M . GASKILL, 8 , Gervais, Oregon. P.S.-If I may be of any help as a n "Alum"-don forget to call on me . October 10, 1928. Dear Editor : I wish to have my OLD OREGON sen t to the address below instead of Astoria . I have received my October number as i t was forwarded here . I expect to spend th e winter in Portland as I have found idea l employment. I am directing the Januar y senior class play at Lincoln high school ; 1 am also doing relief announcing fro m K .E.X., here, besides taking part in th e Bess Whitcomb Playersnext play, "Mis- alliance." I am certainly interested i n what the drama department does this yea r at Oregon . Cordially, CECIL MATSON, 8 , 332 10th street, Portland, Oregon. October, 1928. Dear Editor: My address at present is Sweet Heine , Oregon, where I am teaching English , French, and music . I would greatly appre- ciate it if you would send my copie s of OLD OREGON to that address in th e future. Would it be possible to have a cop y of the last one as mine has never reache d me Gladys Stofiel is assistant teacher at Oak - ridge ; Dorothy Straughan teaches a t Adams ; Earl Raess is connected with Rea l Silk company in San Francisco ; Georgi a Stone is working at the city hall in Port - land; and Harriet Gould is working in a bank at Coquille . Sincerely yours , ROSALIE PARKER, 8, Sweet Home, Oregon . Distinction The Eugene hotel i s proud of the distinctio n of its guests : It s food . : It service . It is the Choice of Those Who Kno w For this reason, the col - lege alumni and student s of Oregon, have chose n the Eugene as their officia l meeting place . The Outstanding Hote l - of the - Pacific Highwa y I The Eugen e Hote l FRANK A.. CLARK and HARRY HUTTO N Managers November, 1928 OLD OREGON 5 October 28, 1928, Dear Editor : As this is my first teaching experience , everything connected with teaching is quit e a novelty . I am enjoying it greatly and fin d Creswell a refined and friendly community . My sister, Mrs . Abe Ilutehens, nee Jessi e Allen, who was a member of this year s senior class at the U . of O ., was marrie d this fall on September 15 . She and he r husband left Eugene today for Los Angeles, where they will make their home . Mrs . Hutchens will continue her college work a t Los Angeles . Very truly yours , ELSE MAY ALLEN, 28, Creswell, Oregon . x October 28, 1928. Dear Editor : I received your recent communicatio n concerning my copy of OLD OREGON . From now on will you please see that m y issues are sent to the above address as i t is now my home for at least this year t I am living in Coquille but am teachin g in Riverton high school . I have all of th e English classes, general science, and girls physical education which includes the coach- ing of a basketball team which plays abou t twelve outside games a year . Lynn Jackson, a graduate of three o r four years ago, is teaching domestic scienc e and geography in the same school . In th e Coquille high school Oren Rickard, 7, i s teaching English and history, and Be a Peters is teaching English . She is also a 7 graduate I believe . Dale Leslie, 8 , of Eugene, is teaching science ha Bandon , just a few miles down the coast . Thes e are a few of the alums whom I see occa- sionally. Yours very truly , ELIZABETH M . JONES, 28, 352 North Taylor Street , Coquille, Oregon. October 31, 1928. Dear Editor : Your card asking for my correct addres s and news has been on my desk for som e time, but I shall dutifully answer now th e questions asked. You have my address cor- rect for OLD OREGON at 957 Hilyar d street, Eugene, and I received the last num- ber there . As for any news items, well, I am still a reporter on the Eugene Guard the same a s I was while in school, except that now m y work has somewhat expanded . If you haven the item already, Grac e Taylor, also of the class of 8, is on th e Guard staff . Sincerely MARIAN LOWRY, 28, 957 Hilyard Street , Eugene, Oregon. October 22, 1928. Circulation Manager : I was very glad to have forwarded to m e your card announcing that I am entitled t o receive the OLD OREGON during the com- ing school year . My permanent address i s now 1626 Interlaken Place, Seattle, Wash- ington. and I desire that you send my copie s there. I understand that the first issue has al - ready been published, and I look forward to receiving my copy. While in school, I real- ized a great value in the Alumni publication , but I don believe that an undergraduat e appreciates it fully until he has himsel f become an alumnus. If at any time I ma y be of service to the publication, or to ou r University, kindly let me know . Our "crushing defeat" of the Universit y of Washington Saturday was wonderful! I listened in over the radio and certainly go t a big thrill out of every play. You asked what I am doing here . A t present I am in the employ of the Seattle Wholesale Hardware company of Seattle. Sincerely yours , HERBERT SCCOLOFSKY, 8 , 1626 Interlaken Place , Seattle, Washington . October, 1928. Dear Editor : My how glad I was to get my copy o f OLD OREGON! To be sure, it made m e wish I could be back on the campus again , but still I enjoying my work here mor e than words can tell . I am teaching Caesar , English I, II, IV, and world history in th e Silver Lake high school . My principal, Ro y E. Sawyer, is a graduate of Oregon also . Talk about scenery, we surely have i t here! It consists of juniper and pine cov- ered mountains in the distance with sag e brush, rabbit brush, tumble weed, Russia n thistle, and SAND in the foreground . Th e people are very friendly and nice to wor k with. There is also excellent deer, duck , and goose hunting and wonderful fishing . The fish are not like the trout they catc h in the McKenzie or Willamette rivers , either. I saw ono trout that weighed nin e and a fourth pounds and was thirty and a half inches long . Five pound trout are jus t average fish here . It is a common Sunda y occurrence to get a large group of peopl e together and fish and then fry huge pan s full of trout for a picnic lunch. My school building is a modern one-stor y stone structure. In fact, it is built on suc h a plan that even a professor of edueatio n would comment favorably upon it since al l the rooms are reached by sunlight at leas t part of the day . The little first grade boy s dress just as their elders with their turne d up bibless overalls, garrulous blazers, high - heeled boots, and huge ten-gallon hats whic h rest on their noses since their ears are to o small to hold them up . Yes, indeed, it is a real cowboy town an d I am enjoying every minute of my wor k here. Sincerely, JUSTINE E . AcaansoN, 28, Box 21, Silver Lake, Oregon. October 21, 1928. Circulation Manager : I received my first copy of OLD ORE- GON addressed to Austa Graves . You ma y send the rest of them to Mrs . Homer Car - Ion, which is now my name, at Summe r Lake, Oregon, and T will appreciate th e kindness. Sincerely yours, Mils. HOMER CARLON, 8, Summer Lake, Oregon . Solves Are in Tucco October 14, 1928. Dear Editor : Please send OLD OREGON to my new street number as below . I taught for eleve n weeks this summer at the Joint Summe r School (U . of A . and Northern Arizon a Teachers College) at Flagstaff, Arizona, s o could not visit Eugene as l usually hav e clone. Dr. and Mrs . Solve (1914) are here a t Tucson-not at Phoenix as stated in Octobe r OLD OREGON . I might never have know n they were Oregonians if I had not seen OL D OREGON . Hope to visit my old home and U . of O . campus next summer. Sincerely, A . F . HEMENwAY, 2 , Professor of Botany , University of Arizona . FRATERNIT Y and SORORITY LOAN S F. J . Berger, Realto r Real Estate, City Property , Farm Land s Farm and City Loan s INSURANC E 868 Willamette Stree t Phone 59 5 Sigman -Fell Insuranc Agency Insurance of All Kind s Bank of Commerce Buildin g Phone 997 W . P. Fell Chas. L. Sigman Oregon 's 1928 Iomecominn B Directorat e BF.1icr . Mn L1 i.vv .1 >i: IiOL .4UAY , {Ilcorr[irtp and NON, . .lrcr,rnrirod(lt as. Homecoming Time is Her e Volume XI No . 2 FRIENDLY Homecoming! That what the 192 8 Homecoming is going to be. A friendly Homecoming . Aren Homecomings always friendly, you asks Well, yes , we suppose so, yes. But this is different . Every Homecomin g has some particular feature to stress; sometimes it the game; sometimes it the big dance ; or the rally ; once it was th e inauguration of our President . But this year, the friendl y Homecoming is being emphasized; meeting old friends, renew- ing acquaintances, looking over the campu s viewing the University as it is today . Roy Herndon, chairman of th e Homecoming Directorate, says tha t every member of his committee is work- ing toward this biggest and best Home- coming-and it looks at this writing a s if the alums will find a fine welcome , a friendly feeling on the campus-th e Hello Spirit ! It might not he amiss to give th e alums a glimpse "behind scenes." Fe w alumni realize the details involved i n staging a modern homecoming. Whe n Mrs. Alumna puts the family coffee o n to boil let her think of the chairma n of the Campus Luncheon planning t o serve 5,000 cups of coffee, to say noth- ing of the rest of the luncheon! Not s o easy. But that is just one example . There is the committee on printing . Stickers for cars, ribbons for officials , tickets, tags, registration cards are just a few of the items that the committe e on printing must attend to. Equally busy is the dance committee And this year they have announced that there will be only one dance-student s and alumni and Homecoming guests wil all dance under the dome of theIgloo- McArthur Court, in other words. And, of course, there the fresh bon- fire, a flaming "0" on Skinner Butte. But we can not spare space to mention all the committees and their work. Everything must be done on a bi g scale for Homecoming ; the rally, the luncheon, the game, the dances, all must be headed b y equally efficient and conscientious leaders , watchful, tactful, must preside the chairman, appointed b y the president of the A . S. U . 0 . The heads of all the various committees compose the Direc- torate-eleven in all . But there will be at least 75 student s on important committee work under the direction of th e Directorate. And the entire student body will welcome th e returning grads at Homecoming, November 24. On Friday, November 23, the Alumn Convention of the Board of Delegate s will meet on the campus as are advance guard to Homecoming. These delegate s are elected from the twenty-two districts into which Oregon is divided. The dele- gates from each district are determined by the number of alumni residing there- in, At the Alumni Convention the Board of Delegates listens to and discusse s reports from the President of the Uni- versity or his representative, from th e Alumni officers, and from such othe r persons as are called upon at the meet- ing; and transacts such business for the general welfare of the Alumni Associa- tion and the University as it deem s necessary. In addition, the Delegate s nominate at least two candidates fo r president of the Alumni Association an at least three candidates for the tw o offices of vice-president The districts with number of dele- gates follow : Baker and Grant 2 ; Ben- ton and Lincoln 1 ; Clackamas 2; Clat- sop and Columbia 2 ; Douglas 1 ; Hood River 1 ; Jackson 2 ; Jefferson, Crook, Deschutes 1 ; Jose- phine 1; Klamath and Lake 1 ; Lane 4 ; Linn 2 ; Malheur and Harney 1; Marion and Polk 3 ; Multnomah 7 ; Sherman, Gilliam and Wheeler 1 ; Tillamook and Yamhili 2; Union and Wallowa 2; Uma- tilla and Morrow 3 ; Wasco 2 ; Wash- ington 1. and November 9, 198 . To the Alumni of th e University of Oregon : The Inter-Fraternity Council has just adopted by a unanimous vote a resolution requesting their alumn i who return for Homecoming not t o bring any kind of intoxicating liquor . The boys feel that it is not a whole - some influence to bring into frater- nity houses, that it is unfair to th e other alumni and members who ar e kept away because they do not car e to participate in a situation whic h involves the violation of a fundamen- tal law, and they also feel that i t gives the University a bad reputatio n from which the students suffer an d which injures the University goo d name before the people of the state . I think the boys are sound in al l three of their contentions and f wan t to urge upon all alumni, men an d women, that they show their respec t for the students and their regard fo r their Alma Mater by refraining fro m turning the Homecoming celebratio n from a wholesome event into a saturn- alia of inebriation . We want all of our alumni back ; we have a good team that deserve s your support ; we wilt miss you if yo u don come-but come dry ! Faithfully yours , ARNOLD BENNETT HALL , President, University of Oregon . OLD OREGON November, 192 8 University Plans State-Wide Surve y a COMPLETE survey of the state of Oregon, encompas-sing every field of industry and business that come swithin the scope of the niversity, is proposed by Dr. Arnol d Bennett Hall, president, and is outlined in his report made to the University regents Saturday, November 3. Details of th e proposed survey include the estimation of coat, which is se t DR. HALL . AND DR . SPENCE R at the Oregon-Washington football game in Portland . Both president s appear to be enjoying the battle . at between $50,000 and $75,000 yearly for five years, the field to be covered, the method to be followed, and the suggestio n that the work be made the basis of a ten-year constructiv e program for state development The state is not to be asked for funds to conduct this fo r the first year or two, and the money for this is expected t o come entirely from outside. sources . Hall feels, however , that after the initial work has been done the people of th e state will be willing to complete the project, although the y will be under no obligation to do so The survey would include phases of every section of th e state, and would he along lines similar to that of the Lan e county industrial survey, recently completed by the bureau o research of the University school of business . It would in- elude a geological survey, something which the state has never had and which is believed would prove of great value; survey of schools and school systems ; fishing in all its branches ; public finance, including taxation d state, and many phases of business and industry A committee of faculty members has been working on pre- liminary plans for the survey, and much data has alread y been assembled f many of the large survey concerns in the United States. Or. Hall will take up the natter with sources that are ex- pected to furnish the funds on his next trip East, and follow- ing this, definite announcement on the project is expected to be made Enrollment Shows Increas e C HE University of Oregon now counts its total enroll -meat at 7,357, according to figures compiled here fo rPresident Arnold Bennett Hall report to the Regents meet- ing on November 3 . This is a nine per cent increase ove r the fall term enrollment last year, according to Dr . The enrollment on the Eugene campus alone to date i s 3,008, an increase of five and one-half per cent over the fal l quarter last year. The growth this autumn, according to Dr . Hall, has been somewhat in excess of that last year in nearly every department, despite the increasing difficulties which ar placed in the way of registration of non-resident students and the stiffening of standards in all fields of the University s work. Dr. Hall report to the Regents shows a comparison i n enrollment in all divisions for the fall terms of two years a s follows: This Year Last Year Eugene campus 3,008 2,85 Medical school 226 227 Total residence students 3,234 3,07 Extension (Portland) 2,100 2,08 Extension outside Portland._ 315 172 Total extension 2,415 2,257 Correspondence 1,708 1,422 Grand total 7,357 6,757 The number enrolled in correspondence for the year i s necessarily estimated "The most satisfactory feature of the enrollment increas e this year is the fact that a considerable portion of the ne w students are transfers from other institutions coming to th e University of Oregon for advanced and professional study , evidence of the growing recognition and prestige of the in- stitution as a university," said Dr . Hall . Dean of Men Resign s e hIthER L. Shirrell, dean of men and professor of poli-tical science, recently resigned his position to enter busi-ness in California . The serious illness of Mrs . Shirrell s mother, a resident of San Francisco, in addition to the busi- ness opportunity decided Dean Shirrell to go to California. Coming to the University a year ago from Stanford, h e was very active here, taking a leading part in the erectio n of the new men dormitory and in personnel work . He served with the army in France, and after the war was direc- tor of educational rehabilitation in the veteransbureau . Following that he was dean of men at the University of Ari- zona, and later a member of the political science faculty a t Stanford. At a meeting of the Board of Regents on November 3, a temporary arrangement was made to fill the deanship . Ear l Pallett, registrar, was appointed acting dean, and Hug h Biggs, 27, assistant dean of men November, 1928 OLI) OREGON 9 Who's from the Varsity in the Legislatur e By F . H . YOUNG, 4, Associate Editor Oregon Vote r PANFORI) has its "Who But" Hoover safely on hi s way to the White House, and the University alumn i didn lose any ground in the 1929 Oregon state legislature . Fact is, for those readers of OLD OREGON who deman d the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, ther e were exactly eighteen graduates and former students of th e University of Oregon and its law school in the 1927 stat e legislature, and there will be exactly eighteen members of the same description in the 1929 legislature. That, we say, is maintaining the status quid pro duo to a nicety. Of course if you insist upon gauging the Universitys posi- tion in the coming session by the number of Oregon Dads t o be contained therein as well as by the graduates and forme r students, the Varsity has the ball on the one-yard line, firs t down and Kitzmiller poised for a line smash. In other words , the school seems to be fairly well heeled for friends. If it more detail that you wish : The University lost one law school graduate from the sen- ate, W . W . Banks, Portland, and did not gain a new mem- ber. That leaves the school representation in the upper legis- lative branch as follows: Senator George W . Dunn, 6, Ashland, representing Jack- son county. Senator Jay H. Upton, law 2, Bend, representing Crook, Deschutes, Jefferson, Klamath and Lake counties Senator Edward F . Bailey, 3, Junction City, represent- ing Lane county. Senator Fred E. Kiddie, 7, La Grande, representing Mor- row, Union and Umatilla . From the 1.927 house of representatives, five graduates and former students of the University will be missing next Janu- ary, when the gavel bangs . They are Representatives A . S . Roberts of The Dalles, James W . Mott of Astoria, Archi e McGowan of Burns, Dal M. King of Marshfield, and Mark A . Paulson of Silverton. Of this group, Representatives Robert s and McGowan were not candidates for re-nomination, "Jim- mie" Mott ran for Congress and didn make it, Dal Kin g aspired to he district attorney for Coos county but stubbe d his toe, and Mark A . Paulson just missed re-nomination t o succeed himself as representative from Marion county. Of the University affiliates who were members of the las t session, the following were re-elected Representative E. 0, Potter, 6, Eugene,. Representative Lynn S, McCready, 0, Eugene. Representative Walter S. Fisher, 3, Roseburg. Representative Charles T. Sievers, Oregon City. Representative Earl C. Bronaugh, Jr., 6, Portland . Representative Wilber Henderson, law 1, Portland. Representative John B. McCourt, ex-2, Portland . Representative Andrew M. Collier, 3, Klamath Falls . Members of the 1929 legislature who were not members o the last session, will be: Dr. W . Carlton Smith, 6, Salem . Representative Smit h was president of his class his senior year at the University , and has been an exceptionally useful and patriotic citizen o f Marion county Representative Homer D . Angell, 0, Portland . Home r Angell is one of the best and most favorably known alumn i of the University in the state, intensely loyal and a har d worker for every University cause . He is an attorney . Representative Allan A . Bynon, ex- 16, Portland. Mr . Eynon, now connected with a prominent Portland law firm, at- tended the University two years before graduating in la w from another institution. Representative K . K . Kubli, 3, Portland . "Kap " Kubli is an experienced legislator, having been a member of th e 1917, 1919, 1921 and 1923 sessions, and was speaker of the House duriuc his last session. When the Order of the "0 " parades on Hayward field, youl find "Rap " well up in front , if not leading the procession . He played baseball befor e "Babe" Ruth was born. Representative Charles W . Robison, 1, Astoria . Yeah , this is none other hut Charley himself, making his first bo w in big-time state polities. What was an old time rally withou t "Beauty" Rubicon, we ask? The best extemporaneous vocifer- ator and quoter of Shakespeare ever produced under the com- bined tutelage of Professor Howe and Professor Mary Wat- son. Now wel hear him thunder or make you weep in legis- lative halls. Representative A, V . Swift, Baker, attended the Univer- sity in 1896, 7 and 8. He had a brother, Lon L . Swift, who graduated in 1904 . Mr . Swift is a farmer near Baker , and as a vice-president of the National Farmers Union, is said to have visited every county in every one of the 48 states . We say that Arthur Valentine Swift has complied literall y with the travel adage, "See America First ." If we have left out members of the 1929 legislature wh o can lay claim to any student affiliation with the University i t is because our microscope failed us. At any rate, in view o f the Hoover avalanche, wee glad Senator Ed Bailey, forme r big right tackle, and Representative Walter Fisher, didn ge t swept into the abyss along with the head of their democrati c ticket, thus reducing the roster of alumni and former students to a mere sixteen. 10 OLD OREGON November, 1 )2 8 Colin V . Dyment is Dea d By W . F . G . THACHE R C OLIN V . hYMEN, newpaper man, and former mem-ber of the faculty of the University of Oregon, died o nOctober 19, at Hayward, California. His illness, which laste d but three days, was diagnosed as pneumonia y disclosed a virulent streptococcus infection, the poison fro m which caused his death. Colin Dyment was born at Cooperstown, Canada, Febru- ary 22, 1879 . He was graduated from the University o f Toronto in 1900, with high honors in the classics , he came to the Pacific Northwest, and entered newspaper work At various times he was connected with the Walla Wall a Daily Union, the Spokesman Review, the Portland Evenin g Telegram, and the Oregon Daily Journal. In 1913, Dean Eric Allen invited Mr . Dyment to occupy a professorship in the newly created School of Journalism . Accepting this offer, Mr. Dyment held that position until 1917 when he was called to the deanship of the School of Journal- ism of the University of Washington. Upon the entrance of the United States into the Worl d War, Mr . Dyment, prevented by a slight physical disabilit y from enlisting in the army, joined the American Red Cros s and was sent overseas as searcher, attached to the Ninety-first Division. Perhaps the most signally honorable, and certainl y the most dramatic part of Colin Dyment life was that spen t with the famous Ninety-first in action at Meuse Argonne, St . Mihiel, and Lysseheldt . In addition to the faithful per- formance of his dangerous duties as searcher, he was tireless in his fforts to record and send back home the last words of dying soldiers, and to collect and return their possessions-- priceless souvenirs-to mourning loved ones . When, after the armistice, Mr . Dyment returned to Amer- ica and to Oregon, he brought with him as his wife, Dr . Bertha Stuart Dyment, whom he had met and known on th e campus of the University. "Doctor Bertha," as everyone knew her, had been head of the department of physical educatio n for women at the University, and had gone to France with the Red Cross, engaged in the relief of women and children i n the devastated area Shortly after his return Mr . Dyment resigned from th e faculty of the University of Washington, to serve, once more , the University of Oregon-this time as director, for the Uni- versity, of the campaign for the millage fund . The succes s of this important undertaking was due, in no small part, t o his efficiency Dr. Prince L . Campbell, president of the University, then appointed Mr. Dyment to the high post of dean of the colleg e of literature, science and the arts . In this capacity he soo n made his influence felt by requiring the stablishment o f definitely higher standards of scholarship for University work. The recognition of the University of Oregon as an institutio n of higher learning of the first rank may be credited to Mr . Dyment action. The next period of his life was not a happy one. President Campbell had died, and Mr. Dyment assumed added responsi- bilities. His health was impaired by an amoebic infectio n which he contracted in France; and the treatment he took in the hope of effecting a cure was almost as severe as the disease itself. After a time, he asked for a leave of absence, and, with his wife, returned to France, where he read extensively in the libraries of Paris, and also spent much of his time in collect- ing records for the completion of his notable history of th e Ninety-first Division. During his absence, a situation arose in the Universit y which resulted in Mr. Dyment retirement, and he abandone forever the career as an educator to which he had given th e most fruitful years of his life . Turning again to journalism , he filled the position of managing editor on the Eugene Regis ter. It was his wish, however, to own a paper of his own . After a long search for a suitable newspaper property, h e acquired the Hayward Journal, at Hayward, California, where he made his home up to the time of his death. The funeral, marked by simple dignity, was held at Eu- gene, and the body of Colin Dyment now lies in the cryp t next tothat of the man to whom, in his life, he was so devoted -Prince L . Campbell The bare recital of the chief events in the life of a ma n who was dear to him who writes and now is gone-sound s cold and unfeeling . It is a natural thing to attempt som e final evaluation-to pay some last tribute . That is not a n easy thing to do . It is too soon, as yet, to seethe man in the relief which time will bring . Colin Dyment was a man of no ordinary quality . Th e standards that he set for himself and for his friends and co- workers-were high and inflexible ones . His rectitude wa s beyond impeachment. He was a wise man---a far-seeing ma n -a man who said little but thought much. Few men have had a wider circle of acquaintances than had Colin Dyment ; fe w have inspired a more genuine affection in the hearts of a fe w -those fortunate few whom he admitted to a fellowship in th e sweeter, more intimate aspects of his nature. He was a sensitive man-and lie suffered much . He dis- dained the thought of compromise. Whether as reporter o r editor; as the last minister to dying soldiers, or the comforter to the bereaved families at home ; as instructor or adminis- trator, he was steadfast in the performance of what he con- ceived to be his duty. If Colin Dyment were to "read copy" on this poor attemp t to set down his life in words, he would say, "Just add one thing: he was a mighty good soccer player." There are those that will mourn the death of Colin Dyment; but there are many more who, unknowingly, have profited by the life he lived . November, 19 OLD OREGON 11 HAVE WE FORGOTTEN ? HE T ENTH anniversary of the armistice, which brought to a close the Great War , has come and gone . In the American forces that were engaged in that war were 2,03 4 students and former students of the University of Oregon . Of this number, 47 lost thei r lives. Today ten years later-there is no memorial to these men on the campus of the Univer - sity-no edifice erected in honor of their heroism-no tablet to perpetuate their names . Ex- cept, perhaps, in the hearts of a few of the older ones, there is not even remembrance . Is it possible to find an excuse for this disregard of zuha .tt among all peoples and at al l times has been held a first obligation? There is no valid excuse . If there had been a will, a way would have been found . In sadness we can but say, we have forgotten . -W . F. G . THACHEtt . HE UNIVERSITY record during the world war i sC one in which every son and daughter of old Orego n must take special pride . The instantaneous response to th e call to arms ; the unquestioned loyalty of students, facult y and alumni the country over; the quality of service rendere d to the nation, all redound . Of the 1,394 men furnished to active service in the Army, the Navy, and the Marine Corps, more than sixty per cen t rose above the rank of private . And forty per cent actuall y became commissioned officers. All told, the University o f Oregon furnished 2,034 to wa r service; of these, six hundre d were enlisted in the Student s Army Training Corps, twelv e were officers in the Red Cros s and other organizations, an d forty were women who did noble service as nurses, reconstructio aides and canteen workers. Fifteen University of Orego n men were decorated or cited for exceptional bravery in action, re- civing the Croix de Guerre o f both France and Belgium, th e Distinguished Service Cross, the Victory Cross, and the Order of the Chevaliere of the Crown o f Italy . That the memory of sacrific e and service in the great wa r might not be forgotten, alumni , faculty and students six year s ago adopted separate resolution expressing their determination t build a lasting and beautifu l memorial to those who died and those who served-a war Memor- ial Court around which the ne w building development on the campus would center It is now ten years since th e World War . Where are th e buildings t Where the Memoria l Court Is Mr . Thacher right ? Have we forgotten? ORTY-SEVEN of the University of Oregon men wh o donned the uniform made the supreme sacrifice e of them died in action ; some in the comparative inaction o f camps and cantonments on this side of the water; some were mentioned-in the dispatches of Allied generals for extraordin- ary heroism in battle; some died as high officers in command of many men; others as privates doing well some humble task All are of equal account for all gave freely that greatest gif t in their possession, that gift that levels all ranks, humbles all cerernony, makes weak and in - effective all attempts at tribute . The University s Honored War Dea d Hansom S. Anderson, 7 Ivan E. Bellinger, 3 Irwin G. Brooks, 14 William Allen Casey, ex- 21 Earl Samuel Cobb, ex-4 Conrad Cockerline, ex-20 George Cook, ex= 1 John Herbert Creech, ex-20 Roswell Holt Dosch, Instructo r William E . Durand Walter MeCrum Eaton, 08Kenneth Farley, ex- 19 Carl B. Pentair, 4 Victor Freed, ex- 21 Charles A .Guerne, 2 James B. Gurney, ex- 1 Fred Walter Hummel, 6 Malcolm McLaren ,Johnstone, ex= 17Kenneth Kellems, ex- 20 John George Kelly, 2 John Eberle Kuykendall,8 Dale Melrose, ex-9 Joseph Chester Miller, 16 Turner Neil, ex- 8 Emanuel Northrup, ex= 22 Louis Pinkhem, 1 Earl Scott Powell, ex-8 James Hill Sargen t Harold A. Sexton, ex- 18Robert A . Sherwood, 6 Richard Shisler, ex- Sanford Sichel, ex-2 Richard Riddell Sleight, 3 Claud RobertStill, 6.- 4 Robert Gerald Stuar t Leslie D . Tome, 6Thomas R. Townsend, 9 Glen V . Walter, ex= 21 John David Boos Luke Allen Farley Roy Johnson, 5 Frederick Kingsbury,ex- 0 Ernest T . MacLeodWilliam Lou Miller, 5 Frank S . Pratt, 8 George Friederick Sanders, ex- 8 Herbert L . Strong, 8 Douglas H. Warner, 8 12 OLD OREGON November, .192 8 Living Masters in the Art of Pros e By S . STEPHENSON SMITH, Associate Professor of Englis h I NEVER have taken much stock in rule sd styles, in writing as in costumes . But as fo r style in the abstract, what is itsIt is a n indefinable something which results whe n the writer, his material, and the occasio n fall into a happy trinity . Some wag re - marked that however mach one might doub t Buffon dictum, that the style is the man , no one would question it, if it were jus t slightly altered to the style is the woman. And- there is something mysterious, capri- cious, and unaccountable about a grea t style. How it was achieved, that is on e question. But the end product is usuall y recognizable, though it is not always at onc e apparent. And it is with the finished produc t that I am concerned , It happens that in my brief list for sum- mer reading there were included recen t works by four writers whom I regard a s among the great living masters in the ar t of prose . So I propose here to conside r their works with some especial attention t o questions of style . I do not mean to at - tempt to achieve the ideal of some beauti- ful ladies : pure form without content ; bu t I shall look at these books with more inter- est in the manner than in the matter . I need not say T have not tried to arrang e them in order of merit . Who could judg e between Shaw, Ga3sworthy, Havelock Ellis ? Not to mention James Joyce . I. Mr . Shaw Farewell to the Ladie s Bernard Shaw has been caricatured i n many styles : as the Modern Pope of Wi t and Wisdom, after Velasquez Innocent X . ; as the last of the Great Puritans, by G . K . Chesterton; as a masquerader, in Ibsen s coat, Nietzsche waistcoat, and Schopen- hauer trousers, by Max Beerbohm ; a s Mephisto and the Celebrated Buffoon, b y himself. The charge that his clothes ar e borrowed is an easy one to make . Actuall y he has put on other peoplesclothes-o r styles-only when they have fitted him . Beneath the apparent disguise, he has re- mained himself . He has never borrowed th e trappings. Why should henHis favorit e role is Mephisto . Oblique eyebrows, tw o horn-like locks of hair, a pointed beard, an d a roguish eye mark him out for devil ad- vocate. He loves to play the Buffoon, alway s with a strong note of seriousness underlyin g his clowning . His plays he may write fo r other actors : his own part he makes up a s he goes along . It is a part so original an d so far out of the usual, that it lends itsel f to caricature , No one has yet pointed out Shaw tru e prototype, What is he but a modern Do n Quixote. with Tittle roly-poly, self-imvortan t Sidney Webb for his Sandia Panzaii In per - son Shaw is very like the Knight of L a Mancha, though in better renair . And ha s he not slashed at the winesaeks, fought wit h chimerical monsters : poverty, sex, war, im- perialism, irreligion, like the dauntless ol d romancing idealist that he is, beneath al l his outspoken cries of realism at any cost ? And now here he is taking a final tilt a t Capitalism, which to him has been one of these horrible giant monsters ever since hi s Fabian Socialist days, back in the middl e eighties. True, the Spanish knight woul d never have lasted so long : this work, Th e intelligent Womans Gahle to Socialism mad Capitalism is a full-dress oration even longe r than you might think from the title-surely , by the bye, the poorest title Shaw has eve r written . Yet for all its length, the wor k is probably the jolliest rehashing of the dis- mal science ever got between the covers o f a book . Mr . Shaw is of course seriou s throughout: but his tone is not . Ile take s the economic fabric apart, and shows ho w he would put it together again in the old - fashioned State . Socialist manner, wit h equal basic incomes for everybody . He doe s this with elegance and dispatch . It is sa d to think that English and American mal e readers could not be trusted to attend to hi s remarks on the disposition of wealth (eve n though he is worth about three million him - self, all made from books and the theatr e and syndicated news and radio articles, an d various other tidy devices) . Mr . Shaw feels , however, that be must get at the me n through the women readers, so he quit e frankly makes his will to the ladies . Ho w many will pay three dollars for the book , T. do not know . Certain it is, I should thin k they would find his slightly condescending , father-confessor manner a little trying . A good deal of the book reminds me of a sub - deb comment on her escort : all very well , but his conversation was a little elementary . However, I must remind myself that it i s with Mr . Shaw style that I am chiefly con- cerned. It is probably the best style for argumen- tative exposition now extant . It is rapid , spare, stripped for action like a boxer - indeed boxing is Mr . Shaw favorite sport . I know no style equal to Shaw, for con- troversy . In this work, as in his prefaces , the swift, staccato utterance, the unequalle d power of phrase, the rapid forward move- ment of the thought, carry one on . It is th e delivery of the practiced controversialist , used to dealing with hecklers . (Shaw is a wonder at it .) Even if his opponent is onl y a straw man, like the old-fashioned Capital- ist individualism, now almost gone, he stil t falls into the crouch, and watches his foot . work, and feints and jabs and undercut s just the same . It is an old habit . He ha s so long practiced putting things in a startling way, that now when he has th e world by the ear, he cannot resist tweakin g it just the same . He admits that he earl y decided to say what he had to say "wit h the most exasperating levity ." Ile has kep t this resolve rather too well . He is a grea t journalist, a great pamphleteer, probabl y the greatest since Cobbett . And this las t book is simply a swollen pamphlet . There are certain limitations to his style . I count myself a Shavian, not even thi s side idolatry, and have dug around in th e newspaper archives of the British Museu m hunting for casual reviews of his as ye t unreseued from their burial in these tombs ; but T aim still forced to recognize these linu- tations. His is a style which for all it s fighting edge, and for all its strength, lack s color and sensuous texture . It is all light and no heat . It may be that this is deliber- ate. "With me," Shaw says, "intellect is a passion." It seems to me that this ha s made him a little inhuman . It is as if b e had decided, Nothing in the senses that ha s not first been in the mind-to transpos e Locke dictum . Since he has crushed th e senses, amid foregone much free expressio n of feeling, one misses in his work the kin d of divine rightness of touch which come s when heart, senses and mind are suddenl y fused by the imaginative reason . It is th e deliberate saerific-e of heart and senses t o the mind which snakes Shaw considere d cold and wintry by many persons . He i s not : but he gives that effect at first read- ing . It in only after many re-perusals tha t one realizes the real depth and intensit y of feeling in him . Somewhere Shaw berates Dr . Johnson fo r sitting about with literary fools in pothouse s and taverns, wasting the time that he shoul d have spent in shaking all England with th e thunder of his great spirit . One reflect s that if Shaw had spent a little more tim e in these taverns, and a little less in trying t o perform the duty which Dr . Johnson lef t undone, he might have written in more ro- bust and human vein . And yet, who else , living or dead, could have coined the fol- lowing line, in reply to a request that h e write a preface for a friend play : "If he wants a preface, let him do as I do : writ e it himself ." I didn need to look at th e signature on that letter . And when an autho r .can east even a casual sentence in a busines s letter into an unmistakable form, it is sur e proof of a highly developed personal style : in this case, I think, a mighty style fo r challenging controversy . II . The Philosopher of Lov e The life of the senses and the feelings , from which Shaw shied away, has been re - stored to its proper place by Havelock Ellis . First by his scientific writings, more latel y by his essays in literature and ethics, he ha s brought about a serene conviction that lov e in its full range is an honor to the dignit y of human nature, once it moves upon a leve l truly human . What a feeling of quiet repose, of augus t serenity, pervades the third volume of Ellis s Impressions and Comments. He has grow n old so gracefully, and has lived and fel t so fully, that the burden of years is n o weight upon him . He lives in his memories , but only as a great elegiac poet might do , permitting the long intervening years t o mellow the impressions of an earlier da y He has a tone just as sustained, and i f anything deeper and more awe-inspirin g than he could command in his prime . I know no other living writer, unless it be th e great Irish mystic AE, who moves one t o such religious feeling : religious in the gen- eric sense of the word, not in any sectaria n intent. Ellis believes in some Divine an d Eternal Energy, immanent in the universe , and expressing itself most intelligibly t o our senses in the higher types of humanity . But his emphasis is upon a full and rounde d life in this world, which is all we know a t first hand . Still, he is open to impressions November, 1328 OLT) OREGON 1 3 from outside the ordinary range of huma n experience. He tells of some experiment s which he observed showing the human aura , a sort of emanation front the corporeal body . But he, makes it quite clear that he believe s all these phenomena to belong to one, orde r of nature, which has unity even if it isn t always uniform . IIe is no dualist . His pictures of countryside and seacoas t in Cornwall, and his recollections of scene s from his early youth are done with movin g effect : a quiet, reposeful spirit broods ove r his pages . He can combine beauty wit h goodness, as few artists are any longer abl e to do . IIe has the same feeling for th e pagan values which Pater possessed, but h e is more at ease than Pater, for he has non e of that great Oxonian donnishness ; also , Ellis has found his way out . of the Victoria n Unfulfillment, and has shown others th e way out . I am not sure but I prefer these broke n notes, these fugitive pensces, of the Im- pressions, to Ellis beautifully ordere d treatise on ethics and the fine art of living , The Dance, of Life . III . A Virtuoso in Prose Style s Since Ulysses, James Joyce has pub- lished various fragments from a ?Fork i n Progress . This new work does not, it seem s to me, mark any technical advances on th e style of Ulysses. But Joyce went so fa r ahead in that book, and made so man y conquests and discoveries in the art o f English prose-or some would say, in an- archic non-art-that it was hardly to b e expected that he could outdo himself . Joyce is probably the most remarkabl e virtuoso in prose style, in command of pros e technique, that has written in English i n half a century . I do not mean that he i s the best writer . That would be too pre - sumptuous a claim. I do mean that nobod y has equalled him in ability to ring all th e changes in his medium, to accomplish mar- vels of pure wordsmithing to obtai n amazing effects by equally astoundin g means. He uses tricks borrowed fro m Rabelais : heaped-up adjectives, repetitio n of sounds, new word compounds of unhear d size and potency, cataloguing of names an d books, audacious ribaldries and cynical iron y in profusion . He has a command of epi- gram which is unusual even for an Irishman . But there is one phase of his virtuosit y which is more remarkable still . His parodies are more than superb par- odies: theyalso satirize the work paro- died. When he is writing in the cadence o f the old Trish romances, he will produce a line so near to their manner, that one is a t first deceived into thinking it serious : "There sleep the mighty dead, as in lif e they slept, warriors and chieftains of hig h renown." This notion of the illustrious of eart h asleep at the switch is so beguilingly an d persuasively insinuated into one mind , that it is an appreciable moment before th e irony sinks in . The long and highly wrought parodie s on Malory, on the Celtic romancers, on th e Ayenbite of Inwit, and so on down to th e withering imitation of Elinor Glyn stick y style-one must read these entire in order t o get the full savor . Joyce is a satirist in th e high Roman fashion, with as savage a thrust as Juvenal ; while his comments o n domestic intimacies are as fearful as Mar- tial infamous epigram on his wife . Not that Joyce would say anything like that i n his own person ; but he can and does mak e his low characters think such swinis h thoughts and utter such appalling remarks . It is because of his gift for combining par- ody with satire, of giving in an echo of som e old writer a complete and biting commentar y on that period, that I call Joyce a virtu- oso in style . He can take on the outwar d form of another tune, without sacrificin g his own essential temper, and without ab- g for a moment his critical wit . He is a conscious chameleon, but never t o protect himself, merely to deceive for th e munient e surface coloration, one sees that so fa r from being protective, the change enable s doyen to lift the hide off the writer he i s satirizing . It may be that you have no tast e for savage Roman satire : if so, better leav e Joyce unread . He is not an author to pro - mote a quiet life . The charge is sometimes made that whe n Joyce resorts to the stream of consciousnes s method, and turns the minds of his char- acters inside out over many turgid an d noddy pages, be looses all clarity ; and ca n indeed in these portions of the work clai m no style whatever . I deny this . It is her e that his great command of the resources o f classical prose style enables him to set th e ordinary rules for structure and form a t defiance, and still achieve some intelligi- bility out of the apparent chaos . If he ha d not mastered the technique of writing in th e first place, he would not dare to snap hi s fingers at the rules with such triumphan t success s as he goes along . And who can fail t o recognize in the apparent chaos of Stephen s mind some of the characteristics of his ow n mind when it is running off at a tangen t Finally, it is worth noting that Joyce ha s a leg in each of two camps . Ulysses belongs, it is true, to the pothouse and tavern schoo l of literature . But it also has affinities wit h the learned tradition in prose, the schoo l of Browne and Burton and Milton . Joyc e gives this learned tradition a slightl y mixed-up, maccaronie twist, but he still ha s the learning . The learned subject matte r is turned into fireside or tavern talk . I know few discussions outside Plato equa l to the talk in the newspaper office over th e DR . STRAUB AND Two FORMER 0HE :G0N STujwNT S Mrs McCain of Spokane, Wash .,end Mrs. Martha Green Saundersof Rathbun,Idaho, who visited the campus this summer. relative merits of the Greek, Roman an d Irish languages and temperaments . Take , too, that quoted Irish oration, drawing a parallel between the Irish and the Israelite s in Egypt . There is an apotheosis of Moses , implying that if he had listened to the voic e of the Egyptian high priest, "he had no t spoken with the Eternal amid the thunder s and lightnings of Sinai, nor had he brough t down the tables of the law, graven in th e language of the outlaw ." And here I leav e Joyce. Any other quotation or commen t would be an anticlimax, after that gorgeou s and rolling period . IV . Balanced, Even, and Seren e One thinks of John Galsworthy arrivin g in top hat and cutaway, with a plain stick , to preside at some Drama Association meet- ing in the most urbane yet simple fashion . He is every inch the gentleman, in the bes t English sense of the term . And his styl e is a gentleman style, simple, correct, un- ostentatious. He never raises his voice t o accent a point . There are no rhapsodies , and few superlatives . He goes the eve n tenor of his way, unharried, considerate al - ways of his characters, thoughtful, courte- ous, and kindly . Ile is polite even when h e clearly thinks a woman a eat-or a man a bounder. Can there be a severer test o f gentlemanlinessI Yet there is never any empty formalit y about Galsworthy writing . It is all deep- ly felt, in The Swan Sony no less than i n the earlier parts of The Fo-rsyte Saga . If anything, the author style has improve d with age . I thought that The White Mon - key and The Silver Spoon showed a fallin g off, but in the final volume, there is show n that sustained power which has carried hi m through the long epic of uppermiddle clas s life in London . Galsworthy here, as always , is able to view his own class critically ye t sympathetically. He does not accept it s ideas on property or art ; but he record s rather than condemns . He has an almos t Vergilian pity . V. End Thought s So here we have four unique and remark - able styles : Shaw great in controversy , Ellis in elegiac, poetic revery and reflection , Joyce a great ironical technician and satir- ist, and Galsworthy showing even, subdued artistry in the central, normal realm of th e writer world . I have not disclosed an y inheritor of the mantles of Browne, D e Quincey, Ruskin, and Pater : all artists i n prose for its own sake, as a rich medium fo r beautiful patterns . I believe there is suc h an artist living, and I shall try to presen t her in a full length study, under the title , The Scholar as Artist .- Circulation Manager : My attention has just been called to you r letter under the date of July 27, startin g "Do Y Think I Fishing for Fun or fo r Fishi" I cannot let the opportunity pas s to compliment you on this clever scheme , but I am going to make one criticism . I n order to maintain your style, you shoul d leave off the "g" in "Fishing" and hav e it read "Do Y Think I Fishin for Fu n or for Fishl" Yours sincerely, L EVENS, Salem, Oregon . en-THANK YO U August 27, 1928. ]1 OLD OREGON November, 192 8 An Alumna With the Moroni Olsen Player s By MARY LOU TURNBULL, 3 O F TILE many Oregon alumnae who have won distinctionfor themsel ves and their University, Janet Young holdsa prominent place . Not only has Miss Young won honor s in her chosen profession, dramatic art, but she has built upa unique organization which is a business as well as a profes- sion; the Circuit Repertory company of the Moroni Olse n Players, which has pioneered circuit repertory presentation s in the West. This year this company will present plays in over sixt y towns in the Rocky mountain and Pacific coast states . Th e growth of the playing organization from the time of its found- ing in Ogden, Utah, in the fall of 1923, has been phenomenal. Not only has it won national recognition as a playing com- pany, but the company has made itself a recognized institu- tion in the cultural development of the territory in which it s influence has fallen. Sponsorship of the plays given is assumed in each town visited by some local organization, and man y Oregon graduates are gladly assisting in securing the appear- ance of the players in their town . In Eugene the America n Association of University Women sponsors the plays. When Miss Young, together with Moroni Olsen and Byron K. Foalger, organized the Circuit Repertory company, under- lined with the name "Moroni Olsen Players," they recognize d a need in existing means of providing theatrical entertainmen in the West . Stock companies could exist only in the large r cities. Roadshow production had been diminishing steadil yfor many years. This Circuit Repertory company is jus t what its name implies, it makes a circuit of the western state presenting plays of distinction, with a cast of players o f ability. In some cases the company has achieved the honor of giv- ing the first American production of plays of distinct im- portance. This was true last year when "Lilies of the Field, " by John Hastings Turner, was given to the West before i t made its appearance in any other city in the United States . This year "Autumn Fire," by T . C. Murray, will be presented for the first time in this country; the right to present the play , a heavy expense Working along the lines of building up a balanced an d distinctive repertory of plays, the company has included in its presentations such plays as "Candida" and "Pygmalion, " by George Bernard Shaw, "Mr . Pim Passes By," by A . A . Milne, "Anna Christie," by Eugene Oeill, "The Taming o f the Shrew," Shakespeare, and other plays of similar valu e and charm. The company began with a circuit of only 15 towns i n Utah, Idaho, Oregon and Washington, and has grown unti l this winter they will present plays in over sixty towns in Utah Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Washington, Oregon, California , and Nevada. The company enters California for the first tim e this year. Not only will they visit several smaller towns i n that state, but following the close of the circuit season Jun e 24, the company will produce plays in Los Angeles and Sa n Francisco until August 20. Before the organization of the Circuit Repertory company, and following her graduation at the University of Oregon , Miss Young played with the Baker Stock company in Port - land. Miss Young next worked for the .Ellison-White Chatauqua, where she was the first woman booking agent to be employe by that organization. She introduced the Ellison-White com- pany in Canada and established it there, and during the war did the same kind of work for this company in Australia. On her return. Miss Young organized and managed her own company. She then went to New York, where she had tw o seasons with Margaret Anglin playing in Greek productions . She was also associated in New York with Moroni Olsen an d Byron K . Foulger who are now with her in the Circuit Reper- tory company. Miss Young also played with the Theatre Guild while in New York . Two years ago she appeared in the Greek play, "Electra," which Miss Anglin produced at the Gree k theatre at the University= of California at Berkeley , Miss Young not only takes leading roles in the plays, an d wins increasing recognition of her ability as an actress, bu t she is the business manager for the Moroni Olsen Players . It is due principally to her business ability and determination that the company has been made possible, and has won finan- cial as well as artistic success Alumni Attend Gold Beach Institut e ~EVERAL alumni of the University of Oregon have fol - lowed the Roosevelt highway into Curry county . Fiv e were present at the annual teachersinstitute at Gold Beach . They were : Vernice Robbins Masterson, 1 ; Madge Hamble Willian , 1, Ophir ; Tom Chatburn, 4, Langlois ; Alma E . Carlson, 7, Langlois ; Carrie Crabb, 7, Gold Beach, November, 1928 OLD OREGON 15 WHO WHO? U UST TRY to guess ! Vt lio who on this page ? l f yon can naive them you will b eawarded first prize, a six months subscription to OLD OR1 ; GON. If you are alread y a subscriber, first prize will be a box of candy . `''rite the navies down and mail to Contes t Editor, OLD OREGON, Eugene, Oregon . Perhaps you deserve e tip on this picture . Well, wel just tell this much : It is a pietur e of the Junior Reception, April 1, 1892 . Now who are they ? TO JOHN STRAUB, first prize for naming the individuals in the Who s Who section of th e October OLD OREGON! Congratulations to Dr . Straub, and first prise herewith . TO WALTER L . GLITTLESRY, 1, first Honorable Mention! He named all of them excep t No . 4. Here s what he says : 1 . Stall of 02 Webfoot ; Isabel Jakway Blythe, George Olive r Goodall, Grace Plummer, Charles L . Campbell, Amy Holmes, Allen Hendershot Eaton, editor- in-chief, and Arthur J . Gamper . N .B.-Artful Allen! No sweethearts, no b . friends or g . friends in the whole lot! 2 . Dr . and Mrs . John Straub prior to 1380, but John never wa s pinched! 3. Hon . J . W . Bene5eL 4 . Not in my day . Here where you save it I (No . 4 was John E . "Jack" Luekey, 13). 5 . Karl W . Onthank with his two little daughters, take n several years ago . 16 OLD OREGON November, 192 8 Impressions of the Frosh Parade By MYRON GRIFFIN, 1 0 AGATHERING at the Sigma Chi corner at eight oloc kSaturday morning, herded by red-ribboned paddle swielders. Coming from all parts of the campus, streamin g in, lockstep . "Rah, rah, Oregon ." Just a little bit eager . With the spirit of the adventure firmly imbedded . One monstrous serpentine. Roll call . Houses vying wit h each other for volume in answers . Laughter . Grim sopho- mores hurrying about with pseudo-serious frowns . "All right . Let go ." "Rah, rah, Oregon!" Over and over . "Rah, rah, Ore- gon." Down Eleventh street, to Willamette, past rows o f grinning townspeople . Grinning, forbearing townspeople , hardened and inured to these outbursts ing the pride of the showman . Still gladly in accord wit h the spirit of the thing . Not greatly bowed down, smartin g just a little . "Rah, rah, Oregon ." Getting tiresome . Hold on to you r leader sweater, shirt . Look out for breaks behind you . That means stinging hacks by the hovering overlords. A littl e horseplay already. One he-knickered unfortunate un-knick- ered. A square box for his pants . "Rah, rah, Oregon ." The naughty song about agriculture with the naughty word . N o rest. Walk, shout . Struggle, running, to catch the brea k ahead of you. Cigarettes, matches The railroad station . The butte looks high . Funny yo u never noticed it before . It is high . Hacks raining faster . Through the gate . "Dimes!" Up the trail, straggling, un- organized. Up to the road . Different neighbors. No differenc e -all freshmen-so many sheep . Line halts . One trouser le g up. "Rah, rah, Oregon ." Getting hoarse . Winding below th e butte, watching the show above. Interested, but not enjoying . Up the butte. Counting men in front of you . Twenty . Ten . Four. On the " O." Wet. Businesslike sophomores, splat- tered. Down with a slithering rush, shielding face and head . Scrambling on the rocks . Free for a moment fro m the paddle. In line again . A few laughs . Not many . Serpen- tine down. "Bali, rah, Oregon ." Below the depot . A doubl e line, red-ribboned, some with but scraps of ribbon . Badge s = divided, perhaps . Waiting again . Smack . No glamour here-oaken reality . Smack. Line moves steadily, slowly. The man in front of you starts . You start. Through, watching them brace to swing . Smack. Smack. Smack. They hurt . The last hack . Stop yourself o n the man in front. Sticky paint . A sense of relief and a sens e of apprehension. The line moves again . Rah, rah, Oregon! No feeling o f showmanship as they wind down Willamette this time. Yellow , stiff. Tired . Up Eleventh to Villard . Hauled unceremoniously out of line . Monkeyshines. Climbing trees . More hacks . I n the straggly line up Villard sidewalk . Hands and toes o n cement . The cool seal strange against lips . Respite again. Talk with other freshman . How much more? Nothin g definite . Singing . Girls laughing . Dull rebel - lion against the freshman women . No pity . Laughing , Green lids out . Scrubbing green painted num- erals. Rah, rah, Oregon? Hacks . Rah, rah, Oregon ! Nex t bunch takes your places, . Sur- reptitious cigarettes Hayward field . Seniors and juniors getting their cracks . 1n the stands, shouting . Oregon. OREGON! Chance for revenge . The mix, Grunts . Fists . Raw shins. Defeat . Absurd ceremony of crowning green lids. All over . Amused smiles from clean, fresh students Home. Tired . Turpentine . Rah, rah, Oregon! -- d Oregon Commonwealth Scholarship s j EOPLE of Oregon are coining to see the real benefit tha can be derived from the Oregon Commonwealth scholar ships, established last year for University students, and more and more contributions to this fund are being received. Th e extreme care used in selection of candidates for the scholar - ships, and the fine showing made by students scholasticall y and in other ways has done much to prove the worth of th e idea. Since all student loan funds have been exhausted, an d since the growing enrollment makes the part employmen t about the campus at a premium, the commonwealth scholar- ships have been real "lifesavers" to the students who hav e benefitted t permits the awarding of the scholarships only to student s who actually need assistance, and in no case has the awar d exceeded the actual requirements of the student. e is also carefully investigated and those in charge have mad e sure that the student was worthy and capable in every way . The scholarships were primarily established for the pur- pose of aiding and encouraging underclass students in th e University whose well-rounded development and interest s gave promise of effective leadership so essential to the de- velopment and progress of the commonwealth . Student s aided are already showing these qualities, even early in thei r University careers. The members of the committee to administer the scholar- ships have been doing splendid work . Not only have the y spent much time in investigating each case, but they hav e also worked unceasingly to build up the original fund. Mem- bers on this committee are the president of the University , Virgil Earl, Dean James H . Gilbert, Earl M . Pallett, an d John C. Veatch. Response for funds has been gratifying .. Oregon Webfoot SportsRevie w SPORT SECTION OF OLD OREGON, EDITED BY DELBERT ADDISON, 1 Volume XI NOVEMBER . 1928 No. 2 Washington Gene Quits, Oregonian sBusiness Forces WEBFOO T Eleven Bow s : coach to Go East By S DELBER T IDELIG`HTS Stopped b y to W eh QO L i } (} tic Vidal . areity backfield Last year Stanford trampled Californi a ~, roach, teas forced to give up his over Oregon with leer seven,lea nand icon, 19 to 0 . This year he rfirst teaw was given ;i mighty hat First Half Play Even , Defeats Northerners bnsirr[~ss matters. Ile ]eft immedi- leered thettglt s drill on one of Bears Score Later ,ately after the California contest, ; the strongest teams in the tinite d States .With 4 Touchdowns Per Washington D . C. Game Ends 13 to 0It took the 4Pebfoots four game s At the first of .the season Vida l sent word that lie would be unable in 11127 to sc m e a lint le teach -I to [oauh . but later reverse[his de- clown . In 198 they cored on th e IS Greatest Trium ph ct,uatand ronsentel to work with first ry of the hr t eonf[tcnne .1 Since First Clash the team until the last of October . game . 7`hen not only scored on th e Although Captain McEwan knew first play of the first game . an un- of Gene s intention to leave at usual feat . although it was a W HEN Oregon met . Washington that time, he had hoped that his break," but they scored again i?-T-%HEhigh hopes for Captain Mc - on Multnomah field, October assistant would stay for the entire later in the game, 131ay nag straight llwsn varsity grid machin e 20, they did what no Oregon team campaign . football, rerciv