Faculty Members To Scatter Far and Wide for Vacations Recreation Will Play Small Part in Doing of Pro fessors During the Summer Days. WAR SERVICE TO OCCUPY ATTENTION OF SEVERAL Many to Study and Others Remain for Summer School: Farming Popular. The war and its emergencies are to have their effect upon the vacation oc cupations of the faculty members of the l Diversity in much the same manner the plans of others for the immediate future are being moulded by the great strug gle. For very few of the professors, assistant professors and other employees will there be any opportunity for long fishing and hunting trips, or other ap proved forms of recreation. Many of the instructors are planning to engage in some form of war service work for at leaat a part of the summer, some will put in their time at study and research either on the cumpus or in oth er universities and colleges, and no small percentage will go onto farms to assist. Hoover in the fight for more food. Ap proximately one third of the teaching force will be engaged in summer school work. Interviews with all of the faculty members that could be readied regarding their plans for the summer resulted in the following list of wlieres, wli.vs, whens, wliats and hows: To Attend Architects’ Mooting. Dean K. F. bawrenee, of the school of architecture, will leave June 17 for New York to attend a meeting of the hoard of directors of the American in stitute of Architects, lie will also at tend a conference of representatives of the building trades of the nation while Ward Lids ‘The Classy Hat” All shades and shapes. QUALITY f- SILK ; SCAHFS New Spring" Tones THE HABERDASHERY MEN’S OUTFITTERS •* • /.™"""~.- —- ■« Chambers Hardware Store 752 Willamette St o Fine** Housefurnishjngs (, i' and Hardware t there to discuss the federalization of the building industry for war purposes. After the middle of July he will be in Portland. Hoth Professor II. Alfred Schroff and Professor Rosweii Dosch, of the art de partment, are planning to spend their summer in New York, where Professor Hchroff will study pheristoric art at the Metropolitan Museum and I’rofessdr Ilosch will study sculpturing. Clayton Baldwin, who has been taking the place of Frederick Fritsch as in structor in pen and pencil in the school of architecture, will resume his position in the architectural firm of Sutton and Whitney for the summer. Professor P. P. Adams, of the school of architecture, will take a position this summer with the Standifer Shipbuilding company, Vancouver, Wash., as drafts man. To Toacli In Commerce School. Doun 1). \\'. Morton, of the school of commerce, will have charge of the war emergency courses at the evening school of commerce in Portland this summer. The courses open June 24 and close September HI. Professor II. C. Howe, professor of English literature, will teach at summer school this summer for the first time in several years. lie will he at his farm near .Newport during the latter part of the summer. Professor \V. K. (1. Thatcher, profes sor of rhetoric, will teach in summer school. lie has not made plans for the | closing weeks of the summer vacation. Miss Mary II. Perkins, assistant pro fessor of rhetoric, will spend the first part of the summer taking graduate work at Columbia University, New York. The. remainder of the summer she will spend at her home in Alfred, Maine. Mihh Ida V. Turner, instructor in rhetoric, will visit her sister, Mrs. P. V. Caraway, on a large apple ranch near Hood Itiver, for the first part of the summer. Later she intends to visit an eastern university. Miss Mary E. Watson, instructor of Knglish literature, will visit her home in Gate City, Virginia, during part of : the summer. She will be in Kugene for tin1 rest of the vacation period. Professor F. S. Dunn, professor of Latin language and literature, lias made no plana for the summer other than that he will he in Kugene. Miss Thomson Will Farm. Miss 11. W. Thomson, of the physical education department, is planning to stay in Kugene throughout the summer vaca tion. She has an acre and a half of war j garden to care for and will spend her - summer growing vegetables. She will take charge of the Hendricks Hull war garden, and In addition to the beans, po tatoes and corn there, has all sorts of garden “suss" growing in her other plots. The proceeds from the vegetables will be turned over to the Red Cross and the vegetables will he sold in the Eugene market. Professor It. P. Reeder, of the law , school, expects to get some government j position for the summer but has made I no definite decision yet. Hr. It. \Y. DcBusk, professor of edu j cation, will teach during the period of the University summer school. 1 hiring the remainder of the summer and at any ex tra time that lie may have, Ur. He Busk will lecture to the colleges and the Nor mal school in behalf of the Home Ser vice department of the American Red Cross. To Attend Education Mooting. I)r. H. I >. Sheldon, (Iran of the school ! of education, will go to Pittsburg to at tend the eoaventlou of the National Ed ucation association, which will meet to make plaus for re-organization. At the adjournment of the convention Dr. Shel don will (jo into Massachusetts and New 1 iauijKshire to do some writing on Amer ican educational history. Professor C'. A, liregory, of the school of education will leave for Iowa City June 12 to enter the summer school of the Euiversity of low:), which start- June IT. Professor tlregory is working ('n his thesis for u doctor’s ,lo gree. l’rof. K. M. Winger will teach mathe matics in summer school here. As yet he is undecided as to ins vacation plans. Prof. E. E. PeCoti will teach mathe matics in summer school. l’he remain der of Ids vacation will ho speut at the coast or in the mountains. To Investigate Oil Resources. Prof \V. D Smith says tlicit his plans are not definite but he will probably go out on an oil investigation trip in the state, lie also plans on going with the Mazama mountain climbers into the mountains of Eastern Oregon. Later he is planning on taking a t. to South ern Oregon to prospect for rare metals for the government. If the military training camp is established here, he will sir.v lore mid tea h military topography. V It Tiffany, regist-ar, will he in the office all summer long but plans ou luh ing week-end trips up the McKenzie. K. W. Onthank, secretary to the pres ident, does not know whether he will be able to get away for a vacation or not. Dr. John 1’. Uovard, head of the zoo ology department, will teach in the Uni versity of Washington summer school. After that he reports that he may go to work in the ship yards. Dr. W. 1’. B< ynton, of the physics de partment, will teach in the summer school here, and spend the rest of the summer in short trips. Dr. Joseph Schafer, head of the his tory department and dean of the Uni versity summer school, will divide his time between the campus and his ranch on the McKenzie this summer. Professor F. (1. Young, head of the department of sociology, also will teach in summer school and harvest his crop of fruit from his orchard north of Eu- j gene. Members of the library staff will re- ! main during the summer session and then take vacations. Professor R. C. Clark, of the history department will continue his work in Washington, D. C. until the opening of the University in the fall. Miss Hazel Rader will remain at the University during the summer school in full charge of the physical training de partment. Miss Cummings to Study. Miss Mabel Cummings plans to leave about June 9 for 'Wellesley where she will attend a physical education confer ence. That is the beginning, and after that she will tour the eastern physical j education schools and colleges, paying; especial attention to teacher training1 work. East summer Miss Cummings 1 visited almost every college west of Chi cago. The object of this tour is to im prove the department at Oregon and to get the latest methods at first hand. Re construction work also will receive due attention, for the work done with the soldiers is almost the same ns the regu lar corrective and constructive gymnas tics. ,5%*45>%#vvvvvv** ♦ * • ♦ ♦ ♦ * ^ ♦ **^* • ♦ • *^* * * • .'*♦•%**♦•* w-.~*~4-v .*.*. ♦ « •**. • t JIM SAYS: i Wear Neolin Soles and Wing-foot Heels WTaterproof and Noiseless. JIM, THE SHOE DOCTOR. 986 WILLAMETTE STREET. £KX-fr^X~X*^^X~X<<"X"XK"XK~X«XK<