COMMITTEE IS VIGILMIT Wrath of Classmates Aroused by Evil Doing of Negligent Freshmen. Certain members of the freHbmen class, who have seemingly discarded the symbol of their greenness and have formed a hahit of appearing on the cam pus adorned ini headgear unbecoming to a freshman, had better look out. So say the Frosh. The freshmen vigilance committee has its eyes open and the offenders who have been congratulating themselves on getting by without wearing the little greener will be spirited from their beds some night and either heaved into the roillracc or taken far into the country Smart Separate Skirts SMART SEPARATE SKIRTS A variety of latest models for dress, street and sport wear. Our assortment is ex ceedingly smart and there is a style suitable for every figure. Silk taffeta, wool velours, French serge, wool poplin, Chuddah cloth, worsted checks. ' Price $k.00 to $12.50 Large’s Cloak & Suit House 865 Willamette Street Phone 525 where they will be left to make their way home as best they can. Fair Warning Given The weather is bad and it is no fun plodding to college in the morning with rain running down the back of one’s necks but the members of the vigilance committee say the traditions of the Uni versity must be preserved and if they are not it will become the painful duty of certain members of the freshmen class to punish the offender in some ap propriate way. Several of the culprits have been spotted coming from the library at night and instead of pulling a small green cov ering from their pockets a real cap has made an appearance and thle wearers have been seen to slink away lamong the shadows of the trees on the campus with other than the little verdant shingle cov ering the place where their brains should be. “It’s an old custom of the University and it must be lived up to. Those who have been careless about the caps take this as a warning. One might get by a few times but there are a good many eyes watching and one has only one’s self to blame if a cold plunge into the millrace is taken,” says the Eye-That Sees. _l Winning Miss Winner (Continued from page 1) Tetrazinnin, Anna Held and other no table visitors to Portland. Interviews Parnunt. One time Miss Winner was sent to interview Dustin Earnum, the actor, who went down with the Lusitania. The night that she talked with him he seemed rather out of sorts. lie sat on the trunk in his dressing room,! answering questions glumly with “yes” and “no.” Finally she asked him if the' reason he portrayed western parts so wcdl was not on account of his having Indian blood in his veins. “A bomb could not hhve started him more quickly,” said MWs Winner. “He told me about every New England ancestor that he possessed.” Most Interesting Thing In the World. “To ine the newspaper is the most in teresting thing in the world. I would rather he a newspaper woman than any thing else. I think that is n great career for the woman horn with thei essentials that make n journalist. A college educa tion will not give n girl more brains than she has but it will help train them,” she said. “If a girl loves the newspaper life she should go into it. If she is not n success the city editor will toll her so by promptly dismissing her. Rhc should go out of her way to answer questions and to accommodate people; Ishe should always try to make friends flor her pa per. If you are invited out t