Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 29, 1935, Page 2, Image 2

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    .(O're ci on
PUBLISHED BY THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF
THE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON
University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon
EDITORIAL OFFICES: Journalism building. Phone 3300 —
Editor, I*ocaJ 354; News Room and Managing Editor, 355.
BUSINESS OFFICE: McArthur Court, Phone 3300 - Local
214.
MEMBER OF MAJOR COLLEGE PUBLICATIONS
Represented by A. J. Norria Hill Co., 155 E. 42nd St., New
York City; 123 W. Madison St.. Chicago; 1004 End Ave.,
Seattle; 1031 S. Broadway, Los Angeles; Call Building, San
Francisco.
MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS . .
The Associated Press is entitled to the use for publication
of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in
this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights
of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.
William E. 1‘hipps Grant Thuemnael
Editor Business Manager
Bob Moore
Managing Editor
EDITORIAL BOARD
Malcolm Bauer, Associate Editor
Robert Lucas, Aassistant Editor. Ann-Reed Burns, Dan E. Clark, Jr.
BUSINESS OFFICE MANAGERS
Dorns Holmes . assimajh
Business Manager
Eldon Jlaberinan Advertising
Diek ileum, i'hil Gil
strap . Assist-ants
Ed Morrow .... Merchandising
Carroll Auid, M a ude
Bong . Assistants
.National Advertising
Fred Heidel .- Circulation
Eel Priaulx .. Production
Virginia Wellington . -
. Promotion
Patsy Neal, Jean Cecil
. Assistants
Ann Herienkohl .. . Classified
Solicitors: rim
Rod Miller,
George Corey.
John Dougherty,
Rota Wilhelm,
Leu
DEPARTMENT EDITORS
Reinhart Kmidsen . Assistant Managing
Clair Johnson .--. News
Ned Simpson .... bPort5
Miller,
Editor
Editor
Editor
Jt-d Kouuin* .
George Bikman .
Ann-Keed Burns ...
i. eiegi a,»n
. Radio
.. Women
LeRoy Mattingly .
ijii'k Watkins .. E entities :
Marian Kennedy — Brevities
. Chief Night Editor }
GENERAL, STAFF
Reporters: Henrietta Miunmey, William l’ease Phyllis Ailnm.
Leroy Mattingly, Laura M. Smith, Petty Shoemaker, liner ,
ltartruni, Leslie Stanley, Fulton Travis, Wayne Halbert, i
Lucille Moure, llallie Dudrcy, llelene Heeler, Kenneth I
CopyreadeVs: Taurymc lirnckschink, Judith Wodaege, Signe Has- 1
mussen, Ella mac Woodworth, Clare Igoe, Margaret Ray,
Virginia Scoville, Margaret Veness, Hetty Shoemaker, Eleanor
Sports*'*Staff: Hill Mclnlurff, Gordon Connelly, Don Casciato,
Jack Gilligan, Kenneth Webber.
Women’s Page Assistants: Margaret Pelsch, Mary Graham,
Petty Jane Parr, Helen Partrum, Petty Shoemaker.
Librarians . Mary Graham, Jane Lee
Day Editor . Dorothy Dili
James Cushing . Night Editor dins Issue
Night Assistants . Gladys Pattlcson, Genevieve Me Niece
The Oregon Daily Emerald will not be responsible for ,
returning unsolicited manuscripts. Public letters should not be j
more than 300 words in length and should he accompanied by
me writer’s signature and address which will be withheld if
requested. All communications are subject to the discretion ot ;
tne editors. Anonymous letters will be disregarded.
The Oregon Daily Emerald, official student publication of j
the University of Oregon, Eugene, published daily during the .
college year, except Sundays, Mondays, holidays, examination \
periods, all of December except the first seven days, all of ;
March except the first eight days. Entered as second-class matter
at the postoffice, Eugene, Oregon. Subscription rates, $2.50 a year.
—30—
ANATOLI*: France has said that ignorance is
necessary to human happiness. A retiring j
editor experiences, during four full years as the
ward of an exacting guardian like the Oregon
Daily Emerald, the satisfaction of doing some
thing for his University, his fellow-students, his
newspaper and himself. lie experiences the dis
appointments that rewdt from being unable to
do many things he knows would have been bene
ficial. He experiences the thrills and joys that
come only to those who love n newspaper anil the
long, irregular hours a daiy newspaper demands.
He has gained much from his valuable experience.
He has acquired knowledge.
Having acquired knowledge he has not known \
complete happiness. He knows perhaps more
about the Oregon campus than does any other
undergraduate. He knows perhaps more about j
its intrigues, its jealousies, its pettiness, and the
thwarted noble ambitions of those who sincerely
desire to help the University; he knows more
about its beauty, its loyalty, its sacrifice. Know- •
ing these things with ideals so far out of reach
an editor cannot know happiness.
In lieu of happiness the editor must be con- \
tent with an understanding of people. Most |
people are understandable and it is impossible
to hate a person that can be understood. It may
be necessary to oppose or imprison persons or
even to kill them, yet if one can understand them i
he does not hate them. Conversely it is im
possible to blindly worship any person who can
be understood. Thus most people are understand
able people not saints and nol arch-devils.
An Emerald editor can do no better than
understand the people who make up the Uni
versity and understand the situations which
center around University people. If an editor un
derstands people he has an antipathy for pub
lishing news stories about these people and the
University merely because they are sensutioliol
and create hysterical comment; lie finds it dis
tasteful to manufacture scandal or blast rumors
and charges under black type screaming across
the front page so that he may be called a fiery
editor.
If an editor understands his University lie
knows he can accomplish more for his University
by refraining from antagonizing the citizens of
the state of Oregon with wild and exaggerated
stories of its internal difficulties.
The editor of the Emerald learns to appreciate
the University and what it offers to society. He
dreams of a great future foi the University. He
hopes his small contribution toward its develop
ment will serve, as have the contributions of his
predesessors, to aid those who will come to the
University in the future in fulfilling his dreams.
Looking to NVxl War
^pms is the Iasi issue of the Oregon Daily
Emerald. The lust opportunity for the ''re
flector" of campus opinion to suggest profitable
and progressive action for the preparation of an
enlarged and improved student body
Very often spring term is conceived as a
time for relaxation, a time for meditation on
the past year with little attention to the future
This year must be different I’rontems stare
the University in ltie face and threaten to do it
harm if not met by foresight and preparation for
the solving. In older to have a united and strong
force with which to protect the interests of the
University there must be a large, choice group
of freshmen attracted. They are the neueleus of
what so often determines the strength and appeal
of a University.
The Emerald suggests that all living group;
look toward the future- and to the plans that
would enhance the future. It is important that
these groups look to their self-preservation in !
building adequate and consistent rushing pro- I
grams. But at the same time these groups should !
cooperate with the alumni and affiliated organi- j
zations in establishing a permanent summer
rushing program that will be an aid in dis
seminating accurate and purposeful information ;
about the University and its manifold advantages, i
It is important that the inerfraerniy council look ;
to the plan for this year's rushing program, and j
recognize the worthwhile changes inserted over ;
the plan used last year.
It is this concerted and well-supervised action
that will not only huild the University enrollment !
next year but will serve as a broad defense for
the University in pending problems.
A Show of Hands
\ T last words have given way to action in the j
campaign for : ueh needed student union j
for the University < Oregon. This afternoon j
fourteen students repr senting the various living j
groups and activity organizations of the campus j
wiil meet to formul ae plans for securing student
support for the student ‘union proposal. The
meeting was called by President Boyer after a
faculty group had laid the matter on the table
pending some show of student backing.
The Emerald, for Ihe past term, has consis
tently advocated serious consideration of the op
portunities financial and otherwise which
make a student union not only possible but
probable. The fourteen students called together
by Dr. Boyer have shown an active interest in
the preliminary plans for a student activity con- j
ter. What is needed now is campus support. Any
and every student can spread by word of mouth
his approval of the student union plan. Each
club and organization upon the campus should
frame resolutions in advocacy of a proposal so
beneficial to their ends. Each student can write
letters to those in influencial positions, and to
others anxious to feel out student opinion.
A student union is for the students, and the
students alone. Only by such unanimous and
demonstrative demand can Oregon students ex
pect faculty and administrative aid in securing a
student union.
I
..! " —
If They Do or They Don’t j
By Dorothy Dunbar Bromley"
Editor’s note: Damned as feather-brained
were the collegians of years gone by. Damned
by their elders are the college students of to
day for thinking too much about fundamental
social and economic changes. Fighting for the
case of youth is Dorothy Dunbar Bromley in
the New York World-Telegram whose article
is reprinted here through the courtesy of
the Association of College Editors.
rpHE college boys and girls aren't getting a
fair break. For years we've been accusing
them of wasting their time and their parents’
money, rah-railing and petting. Now that large
groups of them are beginning to think and talk
seriously about such momentous subjecLs as war
and peace, they are either slapped on the wrist
by some college administrations or accused by
some publicists of indulging in “emotional
“sprees.”
At Hunter College live girls are still locked
out ol the classroom, and one is an honor student.
President Eugene A. Colligan has refused to
parley with them, insists they bring their parents
along as though they were still tied to their
mothers' apron strings.
Out in Los Angeles a 20-year-old girl has
been sentenced by the courts to twenty days in
jail for distributing anti-strike hand-bills cer
tainly not a criminal occupation. Anti at Con
necticut State College the board of trustees has
forestalled future anti-war strikes by ruling that
any teaclhers or students who demonstrate on
the campus against military instruction will be
subject to removal.
If it hi ii Constitutional Rights
The honorable gentlemen forget that the
United States Supreme Court, in ruling adversely
oil the case of the two California students who
objected to ROTC training, conceded that the
Constitution gives individuals "the right to enter
tain beliefs, to teacli doctrines and to adhere to
principles opposed to the theory of military train
ing."
The college authorities who are cracking down
on the anti-war strikers ought to come clean and
admit they are conducting not educational in
stitutions hut adjuncts of the army.
Here's a New York newspaper that scathingly
says “sentimentality and ignorance" are poor
weapons “with which to tight Mars." Whose
sentimentality and whose ignorance, may 1 ask?
A mere housewife, on the other hand, points out,
"It is just possible that these young people have
done some studying.''
Luckily for the students, there are still a
few grown-ups in then right minds. A California
man, a World Wai veteran, writes that he "is
poorer and wises by season of his service and
rather ashamed of is is pugnacious ‘patriotism’
of that period." He has a sois who is opposed to
war, aisd he says he is “proud of his judgment,
which is far sssperios to what Isis own was at
his age." He thinks his son "has. perhaps, profited
by lus dad’s mistakes "
t Hight tti /><> Kilnratt'd
The other day a "self-made business man'
suggested in a letter that students should thank
their stars tor the elionoe to sudy in "well-ap
pointed colleges" which have been made possible
by lie'll men's endowments.
If that isn't hysterical leasoning 1 don't know
what is. The great universities of h'rance and of
seltdespooling countries like Denmark are sup
ported by the slate, not by rich men's beneficence.
Thest ci untnes realize that all young people have
an inherent right to education as long as they
can take it.
As people grow older they grow more coward
ly. Too many arc afraid to strike out into new
paths Let the oldsters keep their hands off the
young people win are trying to make this a
better and a safer world to live in They prove
that nr aren't stuck f.i.d in yesterda;
Anything Goes
___ By Dick Watkins —
W ELL, being as how this edition
seems to be the end of the line for
us this year, v.-e'l) proceed to toss
in all the various and sundry items,
within our immediate reach, so
1111 A MISS
nere goes
PICK-CPS — HEAR N THERE—
WHAT HAVE YOC — . . . Griff
\\ illiams’ band moves out of the
Mark Hopkins shortly, to take over
eastern dates . . . Gus Arnheim af
ter a mediocre barnstorm tour will
hang out for the summer at the
Santa Monica Miramar . . . Bart
Woodyard breezes into town to
night from Portland, for a one
night show out at Willamette Park,
before proceeding on his way to
Seattle for hia new engagement
there ... a “Swiss Navy” which
actually did exist, composed of val
iant men who played a stirring
part in the French Revolution, will
be an interesting feature of the
“Strange as; it Seems,” program
this eve over CBS . . . the official
opening of the California - Pacific
International Exposition, in San
Diego’s world-famed Balboa Park,
will be broadcast over the CBS
and NBC hookups . . . Inasmuch
as most expositions are usually
erected miles out in the suburbs at
best, the San Diego affair is very
unique in this respect, for its beau
tiful park setting is practically in
the heart of the city . . . Enrie
Madriquera’s celebrated dance or
chestra renowned for tango and
rhumba interpretations, currently
playing in Chicago’s smart Chez
Paree nite club, are now also ap
pealing on Phil Baker’s weekly ra
dio shows, each Friday eve . . . the
Russians seem to be trying out all
kinds of odd ideas in their efforts
and experiments to improve real
ism in stage technique, and right
now. the youthful director of Mos
cow’s Realistic Theatre is making
stage history, by making use of
mechanical contrivances, with the
audiences seated in revolving
chairs, with the action shifting
from stage to stage, taking place
on all sides . . . some noteworthy
Radio pictures now being filmed
include, “East Days of Pompeii,”
. . . “Jalna” . . . "Old Man Rhythm”
. . . and two biographies, “U. S.
Grant,” and “Dr. Samuel Johnson”
. . . Eddie Duchin winds up his
Central Park Casino engagement,
in N. V. this weekend and heads
out for tiie coast on a 16-week
tour, with Leo Reisman probably
following him into the Casino . . .
the most popular song-hit on the
air last week, was "Life is a Song,”
with “Grow Too Old to Dream,”
and “Lovely to Look at,” close
runner-ups . . . the competition
among name bands in Manhattan
this summer will be pretty stiff,
despite the exodus of numerous
other outfits . . . among the lads
staying around Broadway include
Guy Lombardo, Ray Noble, Jack
Denny, Hal Kemp, Clyde Lucas,
Henry Halstead, Will Osborne, and
Vincent Lopez . . . Ben Bernie is
now at the Catalina Island Casino,
to be followed in by Jan Garber in
July . . . RIXCOMMENDED —
Charlotte Henry’s acting in “The
Hoosier Schoolmaster,” . . . she’s
due for more important parts in
the near future, or we miss our
guess . . . the Theatre Guild's "Ro
meo and Juliet” opening this eve
ning on the Terrace pavilion . . .
one of the finest of all Shake
speare’s plays, and being admir
ably produced in the very capable
hands of Mrs. Seybolt and her as
sociates . . . WELL, this is our
‘swan song' so we must bid you
adieu . . . We thank our dear pub
lic for the many comments we have
been favored with, both pro and
con, and for the various letters
and notes of inquiry we were flat
tered to receive from time to time,
(sometimes, they were not so flat
tering, however) . . . Anyhow, Al
lah be praised! Our work is done
Hasta La Vista, mis amigos
. . . A DIOS . . .
Hunter Visits
(Continued from Page One)
where he formerly taught. Before
he has been quoted as saying' that
he's “liked Oregon for a long
while."
He arrived here shorty after 3
o'eloek and left for Portland with
hoard member E. C. Sammons be
tore t>. From there he will continue
on his return to Denver. While here
he also visited briefly with a group
of faculty members.
This was not Dr. Hunter's first
visit to the Oregon campus. He was
present at the time Arnold Ben
nett flail was inaugurated as presi
dent of the University.
System Different
He explained that the system at
the University of Denver is one ot
six colleges with his office as
chancellor there similar to that ot
president of the University here
Exceedingly easy to talk to. Dr
Huntc answered all questions
rapid'v. punctuated most of them
with his catching chuckle, appeared
very much at ease, appaiently was
enjoying himself, and seemed very
The Original Faculty of Corvallis College
Above is the original faculty of Corvallis College, reading front left to right: E. E. Grimm, pro
fessor of agriculture and director of experiment station; Mrs. Ida B. Callahan, assistant in preparatory
department; it. L. Arnold, president; Benjamin -J. Hawthorne, professor of language;:; Dr. Joseph Emery,
professor of mathematics and natural science; YV. \V. Bristow, principal r,t' preparatory department and
i*prvfp««iinr nf ;;‘rriniltiiiT
Again I See in Fancy
7 ■ — i 7 By Frederic S. Dunn -
‘Here I Stand, All—’
No doubt that is just the way j
they felt, almost like condemned j
fugitives, standing up before a fir
ing squad, with their backs to the
wall. One of them had faced the
cannon at Gettysburg, yet here he
is as timid and as embarrassed as
any youngster before the camera’s
awful eye. It was a drastic ordeal
in the early days of photography,
when you were told not to breathe
or move while the executioner held
watch in hand for interminable
seconds.
THE EMERALD is sincerely in
debted to Miss Bertha E. Herse,
Reference Librarian at Oregon
State College, for the loan of a
group photograph herewith repro
duced, which our Associated Stu
dents here at the University should
treasure as a priceless bequest. In
this group of Corvallis College's
original Southern Methodist Fac
ulty, the tall figure third from the
right, standing beside his even
more self conscious President B.
L. Arnold, is our own Benjamin J.
Hawthorne.
Stepping out of the old family
album, here they are,—five of the
men and one of the women who
gave us our Northwest, quaint in
their now discarded styles, conjur
ing back to us the era of corset
and bustle, the four buttoned coat,
the unpressed trousers, the pon
derous watch and chain. How well
I can recall how almost surrepti
tiously I took a pair of new trou
sers up the stairs to old Chris the
Tailor in order that he might
press out the seams before I would
j dare wear them.
i But Benjamin J. Hawthorne!
looking exactly as he did when he
' came to our own Faculty in 1884,
wounded survivor of Pickett's
i Charge, with his elided ‘r’s and the
| accent of the South and all the
1 charm that goes with it. One mo
: ment more, and you can imagine
; him turning to President Arnold
with a wry grin and a hand to
stroke his beard and some remark
that could be interpreted as mean
ing, “Gettysburg for me. What?
: Another shot ?”
I am willing to wager that nine
out of ten of our old alums, on
seeing this group, will exclaim in
a mixture of delight and tender
; memory and utmost reverence,
many with tears just ready to
spring. “Well - if - there - isn’t
old - Buck - Hawthorne!” Who
started that pseudonym, Buck, no
body now seems to know. It just
grew, like Old Hickory or Old
Ironsides, out of the atmosphere,
out of the realm of sheer, if jocu
1 lar, familiarity. The epithet "Blue
Jay” is more explainable, for that
is simply a punning play upon the
initials B.J.
He Taught Over Forty Subjects
Why is it that, when I want to
talk of Hawthorne, or Bailey or
Collier. I catch myself phrasing
thoughts in terms of the King
James Version? "And it came to
pass in the days of Amraehel, King
.if Shi mu- " Tt primps almost
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISEMENTS
Notice
Student special- Trunk delivery
to depot 50c. Suitcase free with
trunk. Al's Transfer. Phone 1239.
Lost
Brown purse in Gerlinger. Re
turn to U. O. depot. Reward.
Wanted
Transportation with student cast
as far as Black Hills, South Da
kota. Will share expenses. Call
859-W.
F or Rent
Ideal location for* two boys. 3
rooms 2 bed rooms and sitting' or
study room, private bath. Call
1S59 K. 15th. Phone 1652-W. Mrs
Pensiov
involuntarily to my pencil's end,
for they were of our patriarchal
stock, the heroes of our own Gene
sis, who came, as it were, out of
Ur of the Chaldees to found our
inheritance.
Dr. Hawthorne himself, coming
from the South Land where he re
fused the presidency of one of our
southern colleges, humbled himself
to dig ditches, side by side with
his students at Corvallis. Humbled
himself?—that ditch through the
original campus and continued
across the northeast section of the
town “was the first scientific drain
age done by an agricultural school
in the northwest”! So strenuous
were the demands made upon him
and so imperative the needs, and
yet so versatile, so capable, and
so prepared was Professor Haw
thorne himself, that he was a whole
Faculty in itself, teaching at va
rious times over forty different
subjects!
At the time he assumed a pro
fessorship at the University of
Oregon, we too were still in our
swaddling clothes and in sore need
of much coddling. It was again
Dr. Hawthorne who carried the
magic reticule, out of which he
could summon any subject imag
inable. I presume our old-time
catalogs could inform us with pre
cision, but I would not venture at
memory to recall the different
studies over which Professor Haw
thorne was called to preside as ex
igency demanded or the curricu
lum required.
Among the many varied offices
he filled, one might mention, as if
by .way of illustration, that of
Chairman of the Athletic Commit
tee. How infantile they seem now,
those first athletic ventures, as
compared with our giant processes
of today, when we have stadiums,
fields, gymnasiums, equipment to
sponsor our claims or our chal
lenges. But it was Hawthorne's
province to conjure these out of
the air, or in lieu of that, to hyp- 1
notize 113 all into the belief that
we were progressing famously. |
And we were.
It was therefore under Haw
thorne's chairmanship, that we
first began to use dumb-bells and
pulleys up in the attic of Deady j
Hall.—and the little Old Gymna- j
sium, so fatefully burned in later
years, was constructed between
McClure Hall and the Art Build- '
ing,— a cinder track was made in
the south-west portion of the or
iginal quadrangle,—Cal Young to
sweat for us, and "Dad” Trine to 1
“blow the gun,” and last came :
Colonel Bill.
And now that we have you re- !
produced in this irrepressible guise, !
where you can not get away from 1
memory or photograph alike, we
salute you, dear old Professor,— !
regiment upon regiment of your \
students of years agone.
AYE ATQUE VALE.
Emerald Slaves
Received Awards
Five journalism students were!
awarded passes to the McDonald'
theater for outstanding work on!
the Emeraid for the week May 13 :
to 17.
Emerald workers receiving du
cats were: Virginia Endicott, best i
day editor; Ed Robbins, best night |
editor; Wayne Iiarbert, most!
stories; Ellamae Woodworth, best;
proofreader; LeRoy Mattingly, best
reporting.
Students are asked to cail at the I
theater this week for their passes, i
Winners of last week and the two
issues of the Emerald this week
will be posted on the bulletin:
board in the journalism building1
early next week.
Send Yotir
Baggage
Home by
RAILWAY EXPRESS
No need to burden yourself with the transportation of trunks,
baggage and personal effects at vacation time... send them
all home by Railway Express.
Here’s the way... merely telephone Railway Express and
we’ll call for the shipments — whisk them away on fast pas
senger trains, swiftly and safely to destination; they’ll bo
home almost as soon as you are. Rates surprisingly low; two
receipts—one at each end—insure safe handling and delivery.
After vacation, we’ll bring your baggage back again, elimi
nating all worry, trouble and unnecessary expense.
For service or information telephone
.Railway Express Agency Inc.
East (if S. i‘. Passenger Station
'Phone -0
Eugene, Oregon
The best th~re is in transportation
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Campus Brevities
Visits in Corvallis—Jean Steve
ion spent last weekend visiting
Jorvallis where she was a guest
he Delta Delta Delta house. Whi]
here, Miss Stevenson attended tH
3eta Theta Pi dance Saturday evj
ting.
Guest of Chi Omega — Ruth Bj
riy of Portland visited last weelt
nd at the Chi Omega house. Mil
3yerly, a former student at til
Jniversity, is affiliated with ; dbj
\r rnrit’
Leaves for Sun Diego Margai et
3rown, who has been visiting
he past three weeks at the Alpha
iamma Deita house, returned to
rei home in San Diego, Californ .a,
yesterday, iliss Brown is a grad- s
rate of the University and is af
filiated with the sorority.
i
Theta House Guest Barba;
McCall of Redmond, Oregon, w
a weekend visitor at the Kan
Alpha Theta house, and attend
the spring formal Friday evenir
Miss McCall is a member of
sorority and was a former Univ
sity student.
* * *•
Visiting in Portland Jane
is visiting this week with her
ents at her home in Portland aiHj
expects to return to the campus
at the end of the \veek.
Visits in Corvallis—Jane ChaJ
ler visited last weeknd in Corvi
lis, whre she was a guest at tl
Beta Theta Pi house dance Satuj
uay evening.
* «
Visitors From San Francisco-Jj
Jeanne Prevost and Barbara Am
derson of San Francisco have
visiting at the Gamma Phi Bet]
house during the past week. Bot
girls are members of the sororitj
Miss Prevost having been affiliat
ed with this chapter and Miss An!
derson with the University of CaJ
ifornia group.
Honored on Campus —- Theodora
Lundy and Kent Swan, members nf
Sigma Chi fraternity, now attend!
ing University of Oregon Medical
school in Poi tland, were weekend
guests at the chapter house to atH
tend two campus initiation cere-]
monies. Lundy was initiated into;
Phi Beta Kappa, national scholas
tic honorary, and Swan was init
iated into Sigma Xi, national sci
ence honorary.
5k :k
Visiting in Portland Carl Jones
is visiting- this week with his par
ents at his home in Portland and
expects to return to the campus
next weekend.
Lxnmmutions lo 13c Given
Final examinations for master’s
degrees from the school of educa
tion are scheduled next week fur
Hie following students: Jean Fail
ing, William Kidwell, Adolph Phil
lips, Lovisa Youngs, and John
Sheythe.
SAN FRANCISCO
Way $2150 “ $3225
LOS ANGELES
Way $3150“ $4925
SAN DIEGO
Way $3400
Trip** $5375
Including berth and
meals.
Music with your meals, dancin
each night, deck sports. Evei
modern convenience.
GALA INITIAL SAILING
from PORTLAND
Tuesday, June 4th
and every Tuesday thereafter
Steam akipj- in **
Jnhn Brunton. Agent
729 East 11th St.
Phone 758
tc >,