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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 10, 1933)
University of Oregon, Eugene Richard Neuberger, Editor Harry Schenk, Manager Sterling Green, Managing Editor UPPER NEWS STAFF Oscar Munger, News iLd. Francis Pailister, Copy Ed. Bruce Hamby, Sports Ed. Parks Hitchcock. Makeup Ed. Bob Moore, Chief Night Ed. .jonn t»ross, literary r.a Bob Guild, Dramatics Ed. Jessie Steele, Women’s Ed. Esther Hayden, Society Ed. Ray Clapp, Radio Ed. DAY EDITORS: Bob Patterson. Margaret Bean, Francis Pal- | lister, Drug Polivka, Joe Saslavsky. NIGHT EDITORS: George Callns, Bob Moore, John Hollo peter, Doug Mac Lean, Bob Butler, Boh Couch. SPORTS STAFF: Malcolm Bauer, Asst. Ed.; Ned Simpson, Ben Back, Bob Avison, Jack Chinnock. FEATURE WRITERS: Elinor Henry, Maximo Pulido, Hazlc Corrigan. REPORTERS: Julian Prescott, Madeleine Gilbert. Ray Clapp. Ed Stanley, David Eyre, Bob Guild, Paul Ewing. Cynthia Liljeqvist, Ann-Reed Burns, Peggy Chessman, Ruth King, Barney Clark, Betty Ohlemiller, Roberta Moody, Audrey Clark, Bill Belton, Don 0:<ls, Gertrude Lamb, Ralph Mason, Roland Parks. ASSISTANT SOCIETY EDITOR: Elizabeth Crommelin. COPYREADERS: Harold Brower, Twyla Stockton. Nancy Lee, Margaret Hill, Edna Murphy, Mary Jane Jenkins, Marjorie McNiece, Frances Roth well, Caroline Roger** Henriette Horak, Catherine Coppers, Claire Bryson, Bingham Powell. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Frances Neth, Betty Genr hart, Margaret Corum, Georgina Gildez, Elma Giles, Carmen Blaise, Bernice Priest, Dorothy Paley, Evelyn Schmidt. RADIO STAFF: Ray C'.app, Editor; Barney Clark, George C’allas. SECRETARIES—Louise Beers, Lina Wilcox. BUSINESS STAFF Adv. Mgr., Manr Keymera National Adv. Mgr., Auten Bush Promotional Mgr., Marylou Patrick Asst. Adv, Mgr., Gr a n t Theummel. Asst. Adv. Mgr., Gil Wellington Asst. Adv. Mgr. Bill Russell executive secretary, uorotny Anne Clark Circulation M^r., Ron Rew. Office Mjrr., Helen Stintrer Class. Ad. Mgr., Althea Peterson Sez Sue, Caroline Ilahn Sez Sue Asst., Louise Rice Checking Mjrr., Ruth Storla Checkinsr Mjrr.. Pearl Mumhy The Oregon Daily Emerald, official student publication of the University of Oregon, Eugene, issued daily.except Sunday and Monday during the college year. Entered in the postoffice nt Eugene, Oregon, as second-class matter. Subscription rates, $2.50 a year. The Emerald’s Creed for Oregon There is always the human temptation' to forget that the erection of buildings, the formulation of new curricula, the expansion of departments, the crea tion of new functions, and similar routine duties of the administration are but means to an end. There is always a glowing sense of satisfaction in the natural impulse for expansion. This frequently leads to regard ing achievements as ends in themselves, whereas the truth is that these various appearances of growth and achievement can he justified only in so far as they make substantial contribution to the ultimate objec tives of education .... providing adequate spiritual and intellectual training for youth of today—the citi zenship of tomorrow. . . . “ . . . . The University should be a place where classroom experiences and faculty contacts should stimu late and train youth for the most effective use of all the resources with which nature has endowed them. Dif ficult and challenging problems, typical of the life and world in which they are to live, must he given them to solve. They must be taught under the expert supervision of instructors to approach the solution of these problems in a workmanlike way, with a dis ciplined intellect, with a reasonable command of the techniques that i re involved, with a high sense of in tellectual adventure, and with a genuine devotion to the ideals of intellectual integrity. . . ."—From the Hiennial Report of the University of Oregon for l‘JtU-32. The American people cannot be too careful in guarding the freedom of speech and of the press against curtailment as to the discussion of public affairs and the character and conduct of public men. —Carl Schurs. 1*KAY FOR WAR. BOYS! THE League of Unemployed College Alumni is growing fast. It has a good chance to become the biggest fraternity in existence before the end of the year. Many of us undergraduates are be ginning to wonder if membership ia*ithe unem ployed league is the only position tlraf waits for | us after graduation. The glowing letters which once spelled "Opportunity” above the doors of every I university may soon be replaced by “Abandon hope, i all ye who enter here.” Most of us have ceased to expect from those older and wiser than ourselves the kind of political and economic leadership which will lift the country from the bog of unemployment. Three years • of ' short-sighted bungling at home and abroad give no indication of clearer thinking or more resolute remedial action in the near future. Strangely enough, our national mismanagement as applied to foreign affairs may yet prove to be the salvation if us, the students, "the flower of America’s young manhood.” If Roosevelt and Hull continue the Oiiental policy of Hoover and Stim- i son, and go on speaking loudly and carrying no i stick at all in the Far East the chances are excel- \ lent that u nice new war may start within a con veniently short time after June commencement ex ercises. If war comes, wo need worry no more about.1 ways and means for the balance of our lives. Here's, the formula: As soon as war is declared, rush to the colors i and get on a uniform as soon as possible. The I more days in uniform, the more compensation you can demand later. A.- soon as an armistice is declared, those of us who are left alive and sane must gel together at once and organize the Brotherhood of Retired Pa- ; triots, conveniently known as BORP. With a mem bership of two or three million veterans, BORP could do great tilings for its members. Taking advantage of the natural gratitude of our countrymen for our patriotic self-sacrifice on (he fields of glory, we could with very little trouble organize a BORP lobby at Washington to push this program through congress: tli Ten dollars a day for the time every mem ber of BORP spent in the service of his country. (21 A pension of five dollars a day for every unemployed member of BORP. (3) Free medical and hospital care for any in-1 jury or disease acquired in any way for tiro rest i of our lives. tli Comfortable pensions for wives and chil dren acquired by any member of BORP within ten years after the armistice. (o i Free cigarettes, free beer, and passes on all railroads tor every retired patriot. Pray for war, boys, and have no fear for tire future. God and the Government will provide. FI N OK FORM VI,ITV ? "C' ACULTY dinners have long been traditions on this and other camp!. Their success is spo radic. Sometime they arc very enjoyable affairs where students and professors really gel ac quainted, but just a/ often they are stiff, unnatural formalities that both hosts and guests regard as necessary evils to be gotten out of the way as quickly and painlessly as possible. Now comes a substitute for the faculty dinner I an informal Sunday night supper with food served cafeteria .tyh and conversation groups centered around scattered tables. The very method of get ting the food is conducive to easy convetatiou and informality. I he a G umucUuu« about .lauding i in line with a hungry brother, plate in hand, that defies stilted phrases and forced banality. Sunday is preferable to mid-week nights, as there are no campus activities to make either guests or hosts late to dinner or early to leave. If Sunday night tea is habitually prepared by the house members themselves, an arrangement could be made with the cook to serve a light Sun day noon meal and then have her prepare the buffet supper in the evening for a slight additional fee. This would solve the financial side of the sugges tion. This system of faculty entertainment, is be ing tried very successfully on the campus by one sorority and also a fraternity, and certainly merits investigation by all. LIGHT ON THE SENIOR BALL rpHE Emerald still is occasionally besieged with letters, telephone calls, and personal visits pro testing the lighting at the recent Senior Ball. Many persons maintained that the brilliant illumination spoiled the effect oi the decorations. Somewhat belatedly we decided to investigate the situation. Curious, we called the dean of women's office, who referred us to the dean of men, who referred us to Cecil Espy, president of the senior class. Said Espy; "I am satisfied with the dance and refuse to make any comment on the lighting." The state ment seemed to us to lack conviction so we pur sued our investigations further. The indirect lighting system at the Senior Ball consisted of small flood lights which reflected against mirrors set in the drapes. The whole motif of the dance was based upon this lighting system. Upon arrival at nine-thirty, Dean Schwering or dered these lights turned around to bring more illumination on the floor, but the result far ex ceeded anyone’s expectations. The flood lights at close range made silhouettes from the formal dresses and the effect was that of a Fanchon and Mai co review. However, this was considered preferable to having any unlighted or dim corners It is our contention that lighting at dances should be sufficient for visibility, but not enough to give the effect of a carnival circus; being able to recognize other couples on the floor a test for the former. A certain softness is necessary to give the proper atmosphere to a formal dance. Good taste, not morality, serves as the criterion in lighting, according to Dean Virgil D. Earl. This is rather puzzling, but we are glad to know that the lights were not turned around because the fac ulty suspected that any indiscriminate conduct would take place. TO THINK OB NOT TO THINK npo what, extent are college students seriously puzzled about their future life work? As many as seventy per cent of the graduates of 1931 in a representative number of colleges are still unemployed. Forty per cent of graduates of 1930 are still looking for jobs. Thousands of stu dents now preparing for definite professions prob ably will never be able to find a place in their chosen profession so long as our present system of unplanned vocational economy exists. The As sociation of Unemployed College Alumni is adding new members fast. It is no easy task to find one’s place in the world. The vocations are tremendously over crowded. This is a result not only of the fact that since the war colleges have been turning out more and more graduates each year, but also of the fact that the world's economic foundations have been crumbling beneath our feet. Our whole machine age and our past way of doing things is going through a vast metamorphosis. We of this gen eration are suffering because of it. College undergraduates must learn to discover themselves and their real abilities more quickly and more surely than they have been doing in the past. They must discover what they can do betLer than anything else and specialize in that particular field. This does not mean simply building mouse traps better than anyone else in the world, and that alone, for the world will make a path only to the door of the person who has a broad, cultured education and who realizes the interdependence of the people of the nation and the world. THE DEATH OK TECHNOCRACY HT'KOHNOCRACY is as outmoded as last year’s hal. And that is merely saying that it will appear again in some other form within the next twenty years as fashions have a habit of reappear ing. As ail explanation of or remedy for the de pression it has failed utterly. For a while it fur nished interesting table conversation and kept economists of a more conservative turn poring over pages of inaccurate statistics and technical data. There has been so much written about tech nocracy (even now the mails are cluttered with some two hundred books on the subject) that even at this late date we feel it necessary to at least make a mention of the most highly controversial topic of 1032. That the theory has been completely discredited by the more eminent economists does not make it less of an interesting phenomenon. Kconomists have tried to explain every major depression that has affected civilization. There arc so many interrelated factors that quite prop erly no one has been singled out as the cause of depression. Technocracy does not explain any thing, but only defines a condition that already exists. Following every major war has come de pression so wo could logically draw the conclusion that war and its attendant artificial quickening of production is one of the causes. Depressions occur, however, without war and the interruption of deli cately balanced international relations. Our civilization has within itself the conditions for recovery. If that was not true, it would have broken down long ago under the weight of recur ring periods of prosperity and distress. As in de pressions of the past the situation will gradually r*ght itself in spite of government interference, and the cure come as mysteriously and certainly as the disease. Bu‘ the solution will not be the result of one man's work nor of a particular group of men. We do not believe that even in a Utopian future th" men of science will be entirely able to control the course of production. The variable human factor is too great for that. Undoubtedly there will be many reforms fol low ing this era. but they will come with slowness; as in tile past, t ndoubtcdly, too, there will be a shortening of the hours of labor since that ha • been the tendency within the last fifty years; but the technical improvements of the future will not destroy our civilization nor lead t. an autocracv oi pceial lutere t . I ■ ____' The Vandals Are Coming By KEN FERGUSON ----L ---J By GLENN FRANK (President of the University of Wisconsin) II I ask you to remember that we j could dismantle every federal bu j reau and stop every civil function ' of the national government - with ; the four exceptions of construc tion, relief, loans for shipbuilding, ' and the federal farm board—and sttf! reduce the federal budget by only 8 per cent. The complete cost of the legislative, executive, and judicial activities of the fed eral government absorbs less than ; two-thirds of one per cent of the j ratal federal money. Where, then, I you may ask does all the money go ? Well, for one thing, almost three-fourths of the total expen ditures of the federal government go to pay the costs of our current military establishment and to car ry the obligations incurred in past wars. That is to say, of every dollar we pay in taxes to the fed eral government# about 75 cents go into payment for past wars and preparation against future wars. Think of that the next time you are tempted to applaud the blath erskite or jingo who denounces ev | ery intelligent attempt to outlaw ! war as puling pacificism. The more deeply we analyze the problem of public expenditures, j the clearer it becomes that it sim-1 ply is not the scientific, social, and > educational services of the nation j that are bending the American; back. And yet, throughout the na- j tion, we are trying to balance bud-' gets by cutting the very heart out! of the only things that make gov ernment a creative social agency. We slash scientific bureaus. We drastically shrink our support of social services. We starve librar ies. We reduce hospital staffs. We squeeze education. And we call this economy. And actually think we are intelligent in calling it that, j How the gods must be laughing at us! And how our grandchild ren will damn us! While we are bleeding white the! only things that make government socially significant, we go gaily on with political and economic policies that are surely setting the stage j for further wars and thus fasten ing securely upon us three-fourths or more of the existing federal budget. And state governments throughout the nation are commit ting' the same blind sin. In our states we lay the* ax at the root of the tree of all the civilizing agencies evolved during the last half century and at the same time blandly tolerate the multitude of unnecessary and criminally waste ful forms of local government which, essential and unavoidable in the days of bottomless mud roads and the one-horse buggy, arc indefensible in this day of good roads, automobiles, telephones, ra dio, and the varied new forces that have conquered both time and dis tance. W’e could balance the state budget of Wisconsin and make un necessary the surrender or starva tion of a single socially significant service if we had the vision and the courage to effect an intelligent reform of our system of local gov ernment. But to effect real econ omics (a that sort is to call for. a kind of thought and action we have yet to display. The real issue confronting us is not economy versus extravagance. That question is well on it. way -'Itlcmeut. Leaders who footer extravagance will be broken. The issue is real economy vs. bogus economy. The sword that hangs over education and all tne other social and cultural enterprises of government is the danger of bo gus economy. In the achievement and adminis tration of real economy every re sponsible schoolman must stand ready to cooperate with the lead ership of community, state, ami nation. If even one drop of water can be found in any educational stock, now is the time to dehy drate. If there is-anywhere in our schools a service that has measur ably outlived its usefulness, now is thd time to eliminate it. If there is anywhere anything that has been over-developed, any phase of our program that has been over specialized, any over-coddling of the student where we might prop erly ask him to indulge in a little more self-education, now is> the time to correct such errors. Now is the time to declare a morato rium on vested interests and vest ed ideas that may, in more normal i times, have slowed down healthy! processes of educational recon-1 struction. But even so utterly sincere and statesmanlike a facing of tne chal lenge to real economy as I have suggested may leave the future of education seriously endangered throughout the nation. It will not \ be enough to foster economy. Bo gus economy must be fought. Not to save their own skins or to safe guard their salaries, but to dis-1 charge their responsibility to the j American future, educators, once j they have come with clean hands j on the issue of real economy, must be willing to put their breasts tc the guns in the battle against bo gus economy. There is under way a higli-pow- j ered drive, national in scope and manned by able leaders who are determined drastically to slash the national bill for education at any cost. It is important, for all Amer icans who want to see the signifi cance of education for the national future safeguarded, to understand the forces back of this drive. The more obvious forces back of this drive are, I think, three, viz: (1) The epidemic of fear that grips the nation as it watches its income fall lower and lower. (2) The weakness of a taxation system that, in most places, puts an undue part of the tax load on real and personal property, and prompts millions of harrassed Americans to strike blindly out for relief without any too much dis crimination about what they hit. (3) Groups which have always been opposed to adequate support for education and are now taking advantage of the real necessity for economy and the epidemic of fear to achieve their niggardly and anti social objective. I suggest three broad lines along which I think educators are obliged to move if they are to dis charge their responsibility to the future of community, state, and nation. (11 Educators should see to it that the teaching profession and the public are put in possession of all the pertinent facts about any short-sighted and anti-social forc es that may be operating in an un ci itical drive against educational expenditures. This is not say, let me make clear, that educators should set themselves in opposition to sound economies. It is only to say that they must not permit, if they can prevent it, a blind assault on the enterprise of education by limited and anti-soc’al interests bent upon taking advantage of the time to slash the heart out of education in the cold interest of their pocket- j books. 12) Educators should meet an 1 unfair propagandizing of the pub- ; lie with a wise education of the• public in the actual facts of the! situation. (To be continued) -, promenade by carol hurlburt By THE SPORTS STAFF (Editor's note: While Carl Hurl bur t is resting up from a bad case of the screaming jitters, contracted at the Dime Crawl when the too mueh publicized Butch Morse came over, the sports staff most gener ously takes over the daily column. At various times Promenade has appeared under the by-line of the sports department but was really written by Neuberger and Hitch cock. This is tile pure quill so get out your French dictionaries and go to work.) As No. 7 in the list of ten best dressed men on the campus the Army and Navy store nominates Alvin McKelligon, the old devil. Always smooth-shaven McKelligon j presents a striking appearance on tiie campus whenever he gets that far from College Side. Yes. A1 is one of those fatal ten. And who cares? k': * * Here's the really startling truth j about the Dime Crawl. 1. The Theta's cut prices to eight cents in the hopes of luring, more men. And at that the Gam ma Phis beat them for second place. 2. Parks Hitchcock swears up 1 and down that Pi Phis didn't have more than -10 men in the house all evening. And they turned in $7. Either someone got short-changed oi we!!, figure ii ’-'ll* fm yourrelf 3. Oh! So the Chi l’su- wuu first prize among the men's houses. The old meanies. They should have stayed home. Do you get it ? * * * J. B. Lowell once wrote: "Earth's noblest thing, a woman perfected." And who cares? * * m From Promenade of Wednesday, February 8: "The latest sensation is from Af rica, that land of surprises. It seems that a very charming wo man, the Comtesse de Maigret, vis ited m Turkey. . . She was en tranced by the fez ...” Such geography! And who cares ? * * * Et comment ca va aujourd'hui ? C’est bien aussi! (Let that be a lesson to you!) * * * Who is this guy Jim Emmett! that he can pick the best-dressed men on this campus ? Thought he was more acquainted with overalls, coming from Oregon State. Here’s the lowrdown, as we have gathered it: $5 worth of purchases gets you in "We select for-.” $10 and you’re one of the fatal ten. And who cares ? For ten cents, on the line, we : select for Promenade: John (Al bie Booth) Yerkovich, for God only-knows-why. If he’d shave he would probably get in the fatal ten and if he dressed up in a suit, he’d probably scare everyone on the campus. And who cares? Malcolm Bauer, Ned Simpson, Ben Back, Bruce Hamby. - i - | l Questionnaire -By BARNEY CLARK ;=! • By BARNEY CLARK George Turnbull, professor of j journalism, submits the following questions with the suggestion that, the answers should be of more or \ less interest to anyone interested ■ in things journalistic: Answers will be found on page 4 1. What was the first newspa-! per published in colonial days in what is now the United States ? and what became of it ? 2. Who made the first typo graphical error that ever appeared in an Oregon newspaper ? What l was it ? And when did he make ' | it? 3. What country in Latin Amer ica has the most daily newspa pers? Which has the next most? the next ? Which daily newspaper has the largest circulation of any published in Latin America? 4. What state in the Union has the largest number of daily news pers ? and which one has the small est number? 5. Who is the author of the fol lowing statement: "In popular governments, a free press is the most important of all agents and instruments. The conductors of the press, in popular governments, occupy a place in the social and political system of highest conse quence. They wear the character of public instructors?” 6. Who first gave this bit of ironic advice to his fellow-cubs on the reporting staff of a western newspaper: "Be sure to spell all proper names three ways in every news item of sufficient length; there’s a chance then that one of them may be right” ? Contemporary Opinion . . . Which Group Is Competent to Direct Our Education? "The contribution made by the R.O.T.C. to a young man's general education is sufficient to warrant the continuance of the course as a curriculum requirement." State ment of the Minnesota department of the American Legion auxiliary to the University Board of Re i gents. ; IT may be that women of the aux | iliary are competent to decide j whether or not compulsory mili ' tary drill contributes to a young | man's education. But there is a : remote possibility that this ques | tion ought to be decided not by well-meaning, though misinformed j women, but by trained, profession j al educators. These women of the j auxiliary would not go to a well ' meaning but untrained surgeon for | a medical prescription. Before making statements about the con tribution to education of compul sory military training, they should have considered the informed opin ion of the University of Minnesota Arts college faculty which is on record as unanimously opposed to compulsory drill. They should have consulted the 348 educators who signed the pe tition presented to the subcom mittee of the congress committee on appropriations handling the war department appropriations bill; on January 15, 1932, asking "that the war department be removed from the field of education." They should have consulted such distin guished educators as Dr. Alexan der Meiklejohn, former president of Amherst college, who would have informed them that "The overwhelming majority of our school masters have been opposed to military training,” of Profes sor John Dewey, Columbia univer sity, who would have told them that military training "is undemo cratic, barbaric and educationally wholly unwise,” or any of the I CAMERAS ♦ FILMS I SUPPLIES EXPERT FINISHING — yPICK SERVICE ‘f FREE! H- Enlargement ^ it h eaeh *:5.U0 worth of ijuishhftj. UNIVERSITY PHARMACY A The Students' Drug Store ■ 11th and Alder Phone 111 . ————■ .—r A Decade Ago From Daily Emerald February 10, 1923 —and so young The Frosh Glee, held last night in the Women’s building was not ed for its simple decorations and dim, yes, very dim, lights. * * * ’Nether Gnash The varsity trimmed the Oregon State Aggies to the tune of 31-24 when they met on Oregon's home floor last night. * * * Short Circuit Up at the University of Wash ington traditions are obeyed or the wrongdoer suffers, if the. re port from that campus can be be lieved. Fresh violators are not haled before some upperclass hon orary but have hacks meted out by fellow frosh. * ❖ * Recent advices from the Univer sity of California indicate that all campus publicity there is to be handled through one advertising agency in the future. The pur pose being, the report said, to remedy “mishandling” of certain news. Assault and Battery Hitchcock After the smoke has cleared from the debris left by the Dime Crawl the following anecdotes have come to our attention: 1. Appears someone phoned up the Phi Delt house and said it was the Phi Psis calling, and would the Phi Delt boys come down for the Dime Crawl? 2. An extensive price war loomed after several houses com plained that the Thetas had phoned prominent men’s houses saying that they could gain admission to the Theta dancing school for only eight cents. Thetas indignantly denied these charges, though aver ring that the men were glad to come to see such attractions as Kistner, Hurlburt, Fales, Temple ton, Peterson, Liljeqvist, Latour ette, et al even for a.dime. 3. A man named Kennedy, Hu bert Kennedy, who claims he was present at the Chautauqua fire, fainted on the Tri Delt porch from exposure to the heat. So Commander Neuberger got a medal at last. Congratulations, Commander Neuberger, of the Sal vation Army, or was that another chap? 4* '•!'• 4s Figured it all out how the Pi Phis got the most attendance at the Dime Crawl. Everybody came to watch the Phi Delts dance. * * * Well, here’s the first results on the Emerald's own “Most Popular Man’’ race: Three precincts, incomplete from Corvallis, Benton county: Birken shaw, 234; Kinley, 8; Cate, 345; W. J. Kerr, 23,670; Five precincts, incomplete, city of Eugene: Stahl, 856 (All Fijis and their families), Cate 864; Gen eral Motors 23 1-2 off 1 1-2; Bir kenshaw, 64; Bailey, 789; Gus El bow, 1. More returns every day. Keep waiting. 4* 4« sjs President-elect Roosevelt is out lining a great program for back ward regions of the country. Harry Handball wonders how big an ap propriation Benton county will get. :1: A ON THE POLICE BLOTTER: Rod Lamont yodeling . . . Betty Anne Macduff looking peeved . . . Jack Granger blowing . . . Herb King, the actor . . . Ramona Gros ser giving somebody the aephus . . . Willoughby Dye looking sick. many other nationally-accepted educational leaders who could and would have told them that com pulsory military drill has no legiti mate place in a university. As long as military training in the schools continues to be com pulsory, it will continue to do more harm than good, not only to indi vidual students forced into the subject, but to the whole R.O.T.C. —Minnesota Daily. ^'SISJSJSiSfSJE/SLISrc I GASOLINE I OIL i I SERVICE -- I li The Oregon Service ffl Station’s good will lias been construct ed upon a founda- s tiou well established s 1 bv the quality of services and conuno- a a dities given to its s | customers. ij I OREGON R SERVICE STATION | 11th and Hilyard a Rj