Oregon emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1909-1920, November 02, 1915, Page Three, Image 3

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    ALUMNI SECTION
VOL. II., NO. 5. MATERIAL THIS WEEK FURNISHED BY HARRY KUCK
II. OF 0. CAMPUS TO BE
IN GALA ATTIRE NOV. 20
University to Be Host to Entire
State On Day of Oregon
0. A. C. Game.
WILL SUSPEND BUSINESS;
BAND WILL MEET TRAINS
Festivities Begin Friday, Nov.
19. Class Rooms Will Be
Thrown Open to Visitors.
«S #- # # #• #- * * * * *
^js *
« NOTICK TO ALUMNI. «
* 0- *
g The University of Oregon £
£ urgently requests your pres- ^
« ence at her first big Home- #
# coming Ltay, November 20. £
*
« « « « -*
The University will be host to the
entire state of Oregon on November
2 0. Alumni and people of the state
will be welded into a more intimate
relationship with their University
ana an all round good time for every
one of the 10,000 expected guests
will he provided, according to the
plans of the Home-coming commit
tee.
City and campus will he in gala
attire for what promises to be the
biggest Oregon pageant in history.
Business will be suspended for the
game and the band and automobiles
will meet all trains and carry guests
and alumni to their destination. Ev
ery fraternity, sorority and club on
the campus is sending out personal
letters urging friends to visit them.
Alumni associations throughout the
state are boosting the affair and re
ports are coming in from all sec
tions which say: “We’ll be with you,
November 20.”
Festivities begin Friday, November
19. All classes will be thrown open
to alumni. Old school mates can get
together, visit old haunts, shake
hands with their former instructors
and become young again with a re
injection of the old Oregon spirit.
The biggest rally of the year will
be staged Friday night. It will be
an old-time variety with new-time
pep, a la pajamerino. Short, snappy
speeches celebrities from alumni,
faculty and student body will be de
livered while the enraptured throng
witnesses a unique and unparalleled
substitute for the historic freshman
bonfire. The evening’s entertain
ment will be concluded by a series
of vaudeville stunts by the different
organizations in Villard hall.
The committee is planning to have
a stunt practice for alumni led by
former Oregon yell leaders, Saturday
morning, to prepare a demonstration
by old grads during the game.
An all-Oregon campus luncheon,
cafeteria style, will be the attraction
Saturday noon when stude will meet
grad in a spirit of good fellowship.
The crowd will mingle to the tune
of patriotic Oregon pieces by the
band and orchestra.
And the game! The football clas
sic of the northwest! A battle from
■whistle to whistle for the champion
ship of the state. What Oregonite
■with the price of a railroad ticket
can afford to miss the first Oregon
O. A. C. football game on the Eugene
campus since the memorable affair
in Corvallis in the fall of 1907. Both
teams are eager for the fray and
they are evenly matched.
There will be a big dance Satur
day night in Eugene’s new $80,000
armory, free to alumni. Governor
Withycombe, “Pat” McArthur, Mrs.
George Gerlinger, President Kerr of
O. A. C. and President Campbell will
be in the receiving line.
For non-dancers there will be a
get together reception in the same
building. Rooms will be divided off
according to classes and entertain
ment provided.
The Home-coming committee con
sists of Max H. Sommer, chairman;
Bothwell Avison, Lamar Tooze, Karl
Becke, Don Orput, Louise Bailey,
Echo Zahl, Genevieve Shaver, Marie
Churchill, Merlin Batley, Roland
Geary, Robert McMurray, Jack
Dolph, Walter Church and Leslie
Tooze.
Alumnus to Practice in Eugene,
Wendell C. Barbour, ’12, was
among the successful applicants for
admission to the Oregon bar this
year. Barbour was graduated in the
east last spring with the degree of
Lt. L. B. and will receive the degree
of L. L. M. in June. His thesis for
this degree upon the Theory of Law
and Fact recently received special
recognition from Dr. Melville M. Bige
low of Boston. Mr. Bigelow is editor
of numerous legal texts and periodi
cals. While at Oregon Barbour was
senior class president, manager of
the Emerald and Oregana. He is
practicing law with the firm of Wood
cock, Smith and Bryson, in Eugene.
TWO COUNTIES ARE MECCAS
Oregon Students (Farmers, Teach
ers and Business Men) Swarm
in Woods Around Pendleton.
Union and Umatilla counties and
especially the country around Pen
dleton is a veritable mecca for for
mer Oregon students. When word
was reecived in this neck of the
woods that Oregon would play Whit
man October 23, tyro farmers, teach
ers and business men prepared to as
semble at Walla Walla and root for
the Lemon-Yellow,
j Irwin Brooks, assistant cashier in
the Athena National bank; Francis
Beebee, teaching in Wlalla Walla;
Delbert (Cupid) Easterwood, farm
er; Nat Kimball, of Pendleton; Claud
Still, of Milton; Clarence Brotherton,
of Athena, and Sam Lieuellen, of
Athena, united with the Oregon camp
followers: Chester Fee, Bill Bur
gard, Jack Dolph and Harry Kuck
and the cosmopolitan group cheered
the Oregon team on to victory, with
numerous famiilar yells.
Two former Oregon women wit
nessed the game. They were Edith
Still, of Milton, and Beatrice Little
field, who is teaching school at Mil
ton.
Alumni and ex-men welcomed the
chance to greet the team and talk
over some of the campus news.
4‘GET-TOGETHER’’ DINNER
HELD AT ENTERPRISE
A “get together” dinner was held
by the teaching alumni of Baker,
Union, and Wallowa counties last
week at Enterprise. Chester Kron
enberg ’13, superintendent of schools
at Elgin, had charge of the dinner.
Among those present were James
Donald T5, principal at Muddy
Creek; Florence Bowden, ’15, who
is teaching at Berkeley; Sara Rid
dle, ’12, teaching at Alicel; Mr. Achi
son, Aubrey G. Smith, principal at
Union; Mrs. Margaret Bannard Good
all, ’04, of Union; Luton Ackerson,
T5, principal of the Richmond high
school; Eva Roche, ’13, of Richland,
and Miss Edith Crockatt, of Union.
Mr. Kronenberg, in writing of the
dinner, says:
“We did not attempt to make any
sort of an organization on account
of the few present, but those who
were there express themselves as be
ing very glad that they had even the
amount of time they did in which to
renew old acquaintances and to tell
about the old school. It will be al
most impossible for any of us from
here to come to Eugene on Novem
ber 20, but we want the school and
the faculty and the present student
body^to feel that we are interesed in
them just as much as if we could be
there. We all find the alumni col
umn in the Emerald very helpful in
keeping in touch with each other and
hope that the management will find
it worth while to keep it up through
out the year.”
Carlyle Geisler, ’15, is studying at
Cornell. He visited his brother
Raphael, who is at Columbia univer
sity, preparing for the consular and
diplomatic service, recently. Carlyle
Is well pleased with Cornell. He
says the campus is beautiful and the
school finely situated.
OLD GRADUATE MAKES GIFT
University Given Complete Pile of
Oregon State Journal By W. R.
Kincaid; Will Help Seniors.
The University library, through
Professor P. G. Young, head of the
department of economics, has come
into possession of a complete file of
the old Oregon State Journal.
The file was given by Webster
Kincaid, ’08, son of H. R. Kincaid,
the founder and publisher of the pa
per. Professor Young says the file
will be bound and used for reference
in historical and economic research
work and that it will be particularly
helpful to seniors in their prepara
tion of theses.
The first issue of the paper appear
ed on March 12, 1864, from the
Washington hand press, now in pos
session of the journalism department
in Eugene, and according to the pub
lisher’s valedictory statement, was
published weekly without fail for
45 years and 22 months. The last
issue appeared May 2'9, 1909.
The names of many men who be
came famous in Oregon history ap
pear in the news columns and adver
tisements.
GEORGE NOLAND, 1880, DIES
Klamath Falls Judge Was Graduate
of the University of Oregon, En
tering as a Freshman in 1870.
Judge George Noland, 1880, of
Klamath Falls, died of apoplexy,
while driving in his automobile with
a party of friends, late Sunday aft
ernoon, «n his 58th birthday.
Judge Noland was a graduate of
the University of Oregon, having en
tered as a freshman in 1876. He re
ceived his B. S. degree in 1880, B. A.
In 1882, and M. A. in 1885. For a !
few years after graduation he prac
ticed law in Astoria, but on account
of his wife’s health was forced to
seek a higher altitude and settled in
Klamath Falls. There he established
a lucrative law practice and became
one of the foremost citizens of the
town. Last December he was ap
pointed judge of the circuit court for
Klamath county, to fill the unexpired
term of Henry Benson, who was
elected to the Oregon supreme court.
He leaves a widow, and a brother,
James Noland, of Creswell. Mrs. T.
G. Hendricks of Eugene is an aunt.
Undoubtedly his death was hastened
by the loss of his only son, Virgil,
who was accidentally burned to death
four years ago at the Sigma Nu house
in Eugene.
Dr. John Straub, who was num
bered among his many friends, at
tended the University at the same
time as Judge Noland. Dr. Straub
pays him this tribute:
“Judge Noland was a man of mag
nificent and high ideals, absolutely
square and fair, a loyal friend and a
strong, hard fighter. Although not
vindictive, he had the tenacity of a
bulldog, and would stick to a point
that he believed right. He was a
clear thinker, logical and powerful.
He was companionable and generous,
and would share his last dollar with
a needy fellow-student.”
GRADUATE IS APPOINTED
D. V. Kuykendall, 1808, to Be Cir
cuit Judge in Place of Late
George Noland, ’80.
D. V. Kuykendall, of Klamath
Falls,, was appointed circuit court
judge by Governor Withycombe on
October 25, to succeed the late Judge
George Noland, who died of heart
failure Sunday at his home in Klam
ath Falls.
Mr. Kuykendall, who was graduat
ed from the University of Oregon
with the class of 1898, is a son of Dr.
and Mrs. Wm. Kuykendall, of this
city, later completing his course of
law at Georgetown university, Wash
ington, D. C. Returning to Oregon
he took up his residence in Klamath
Falls and was prosecuting attorney
for Klamath and Lake counties for
several years.
Rex Putnam, former U. of O. stu
dent, is football coach at the Spring
field high school.
College men
" m0*\: o .
X are the best judges of the cor
rect thing in young men’s
clothes.
Hart Schaffner &fMarx
Varsity Fifty Five Models
< are the most popular styles
in the leading colleges.
Twenty-five dollars
means economy in these
clothes; the label is in
them.
Wade Bros.
The Home of Hart Schaffner &
Marx Clothes.
§T
Copyright IUrt Schgffocr tUin
SHIRTS COLLARS
DOMESTIC
HAND LAUNDRY
Special attention t° Student
trade.
143 7th Ave. West
Phone 252
Cook With Gas
Oregon Power Co.
Phone 28
957 Willamette Street
Send Your CLEANING AND
PRESSING to the IMPERIAL
CLEANERS, 47 Seventh Ave.,
East. Phone 392, or give your
urder to
N JAUREGUY
Elliott's
Grocery
Succesors to Pierce Bros.
Staple and Fancy Groceries.
We always carry a full line of
fresh fruits and vegetables in
season.
PREFERRED STOCK CAN
NED GOODS.
Cor. 9th and Oak Phone 246
Hotel
Osburn
Special Rates for Stu
dent Banquets
Monthly Dinner a Spe
ialty.
Lights Go Outtth*
Panama Pacific Exposition
on
Saturday, December 4
Are you interested in
Mining Manufacturing
Agriculture Science
Horticulture Art
The latest developments in all industries can
be seen here. You cannot afford to miss it.
LOW FARES
for exposition travel are in effect until
November 30 via the
Shasta Route
Write for our booklet “Wayside Notes”
or secure information from local agent
Southern Pacific
John M. Scott, General Passenger Agent
Portland, Oregon.
Telephone 229
UNIVERSITY PHARMACY
Luther Thompson, Prop, and Mgr.
Cor- Eleventh and Alder
Parker Fountain Pens; A. D. S. Goods; Hudnuts Soaps;
Perfumes and Toilet water; Eastman Kodaks; Ensign
Cameras; Seneca Plate Cameras; Kodak Developing and
Printing.
I WILL MEET YOU AT THE
Oregana
Students9 Leading Confectionery
J. W. QUACKENBUSH & SON
HARDWARE
PHONE 1057 160 9th AVE. EAST.