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Oakland Tribune from Oakland, California • Page 12

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Oakland Tribunei
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Oakland, California
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12
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OftRlTAND TRIBUNE, SXTURD'AY, MAT 23, 1936 FIRST WOMAN PROFESSOR AT U. ACCORDED HIGH HONORS CAN'T DANCE'm OA A IT II PC TWO W7N HONORS IN ENGINEERING HLL nIVIn I LUIIU ELICWILM Former Hoover Aid, Late Columbia Faculty Member And Botanist Get LL. D. Economics and Neurology Professors Added; Leaves Of Absence Are Granted bnap-Miooters number Picture Boxes in Race For Tribune Awards 'STAFF flTU. t.

MFJS nn PTiYfiTTfi i 1 1 I i i nil i in i flNO THREE IflEN izmz shi nouns feys SlMi i PHDTD CONTEST Jp 1- iirinrirni.nwii.o. fiffjl yijft I IH 1 BERKELEY, May 23. Appoint I 1 BERKELEY, May 23. The Uni-versity of California's first woman professor was honored today with a degree of doctor of laws. Dr.

Jessica Peixotto, 71, shared honors with threedistinguished men but she did not walk with them in ment of two faculty members at the University of California was announced -at a meeting of the Board of Regents yesterday in the office of Governor Merriam in San Francisco. Buchanan, Colgate University, was appointed assistant pro- academic procession. Instead, the veteran woman teacher's automobile was driven to the south entrance of the Memorial Stadium and she was There's plenty of "snap" in the. air these You can both hear and see it, but it's nothing to do with the weather. Rather it comes from the steadily growing army of snap-shooters unlimbering their kodaks and picture boxes and seeking to win awards in the Oakland Tribune's Amateur Snapshot Contest, which' opens.

Monday and closes July 4. You don't have to "own an ex pensive -camera to qualify in this contest. Often simple box cameras capture the. big prizes. Closing date for the first week's contest will be June 2.

Results of this first week's contest will be given in The Tribune of June 7. In tomorrow's 'issue of The i fessor of economics for the academic escorted to a place on the impro vised stage. Also recipients of honorary degrees were: year 1036-37, and R. German, was named lec- Edgar Ricard, 62, mining engineer and former administrative assist turer and research associate in npu-i rology in the Medical School. The appointment of Dr.

Wayland ant to Herbert Hoover in Belgium relief work, a graduate of the State vaugnn as pruicssui i myel University in 1895. ography and director of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, was Dr. Wesley Clair Mitchell, 61, eco nomist and faculty member at Col Tribune, entry blanks will be lj I continued until August 31, when he will retire, instead of July 4, as previously announced. Appointment of his successor, was deferred until September 1. Four resignations were accepted, from II.

A. Borthwick, of the botany F. Poole, of the truck crops division, Branch of Agricul published. Do not send any photographs unless accompanied by one of these entry blanks fully made out. Entrants living In the Eastbay may send entries to the Contest Editor, The Tribune, or take them to their nearest druggists or finishers.

Those living outside the Eastbay must mail their entries to the Contest Editor. The Tribune. f'ritofgTi -iiifiii-i1i-ji'iiiiiiMif -f'rii-iirfc umbia University, a former university teacher. Prof. Elmer Drew Merrill, 59, former dean of the College of Agriculture at the University of Colifornla and now professor of botany and adrpjnistrator of the botanical gardens at Harvard University, TRIBUTE TO CAREER In Dr.

Peixotto, the unl-- versity regents paid tribute to a career which started as an txperi-k ment In teaching and ended with the creation of an emeritus professorship last year. Born in New York, came to the bay region as a child with her parents and attending school in San Francisco, where she was graduated from Girls High in 1880. In 1894 she received her bachelor's Here is Miss Vida Volkhardt of Palo Alto, the only girl member of the 1936 graduating class in electrical engineering who re-, reived their diplomas today atnriuatcommencement exercises at College of Engineering, University of California, tribune pholo. ture, iJavjs, wno resiRiiea 10 the United Slates Department of Ar-riculture; D. C.

G. A. Sch.lieker, assistant professor of military science and tactics on the. Berkeley campus-, and F. J.

Pearson, assistant professor of military' science and tactics Raymond C. Martinelli, 22-year-old Oakland hoy who did janitor work to help work his way through college, today won the Miss Btty Pickering, vice-president of the U. senior class, was supposed to be active in Commencement Week activi- tics, but an injured ankle kept her from" most things r-arid worst of all will keep her from the senior ball photo. University of California gold medal, symbolic of the highest scholar- ihip among 2200 graduates. Graduate Engineer on the Los Angeles Tampus.

Major Srhlieker and Major Pearson have been returned to active service in the army, and were released from Found Work Not Difficult MEDAL WON BY II. STUDENT ITALIAN MTU HEID SPEAKS, The classes in which the picturei will 'be judged are; 1. Children and Babies Any pict(' ture in which the principal interest is a child or children, at play, asleep, laughing, "working," close-ups, iijevery-day clothes or in costume. 2. Sports, Hobbies.

Recreation, Avocations, Action Baseball, golf, tennis, motor boating, canoeing, sailing, beach fun, airplane, fishing, animal pictures, pets, gardening, farming, etc. 3. Scenes and Still Lire Landscapes, marine views, city streets, travel or country scenes, architecture, "interiors, "still life," picturei of art objects, curios, cut flowers, fruit, etc. 4. Informal Portraits of Adults I C.

HEAD HITS AT RADICALISM BERKELEY, May 23 "The courscMhey received her degree at annual was not difficult I guess it was be-1 commencement exercises, cause I liked engineering so murh." "Everyone tells' me that the But any male stu i't of the 1936. course In electrical engineering at electrical engineering class at the, the College of Engineering is a dif-University of California will say1 ficult one," Mis Volkhardt declared, school service. Leaves of, absence were granted at Berkeley to Lucy W. Stebbins, dean of women and professor of social economics, June 25 to August 18; W. W.

Kemp, dean of the school of education and professor of that subject, August 1 to 15; J. P. Hertel, assistant farm advisor in San Bernardino County, August 1 to October 31; Jessie Lee F. Decker, "specialist in agricultural extension July 1 to August 31; L. C.

Gilbert, in education. August 29 to Septem degree from the University of California and six years later her doctor of philosophy degree. Between conferring of two degrees she studied in Europe, attending the Sor- bonne in Paris for a year. In 1903 Peixotto Joined the university faculty as a lecturer in social economics merely, she says, as an experiment to determine whether she liked teaching. The following year she went abroad BERKELEY, May 22-year-old boy, bom in Italy, who swept out an Oakland school after his (Continued From Page 1.) the nations the great tradition of a Pictures of one or more persons that the course is difficult and will also agree that Miss Vida Volkhardt, 23, of Palo AJIn, the only girl member to graduate this year, does like engineering.

Vida, whose father, Frederick, is a retired efficiency expert, and her mother, Dr. Vida R. Volkhnrril, a rain Alto practising physiciarj. is six feet and one-hair inch in hcicht, an advantage which permiled her to stand "head and shoulders" with the rest of the members of the grad-, uating engineering class today when "but I guess it seemed easier to me because I like engineering so much, I always have and I guess that's the reason I was the only girl member of this year's class." Miss Volkhardt transferred to the Berkeley campus more (hart two years ago from the San Mateo Junior College and Stanford University. She inherited most of her engineering talent from her father, who was associated with a brother, John Volkhardt, a Chicago engineer, for a number of years.

(close up or full figure! in natural and apparently upposed attitude, character genre (illustra free, self-governing people, loving peace, and unwavering-in its championship of the rights and obligations, the privileges and the secur campus classes, today was awarded the University of California gold medal. Singled' out of more than 2200 members of the 19,16 class for having attained the highest scholastic average, Raymond Constantino Martin ber J. T. Allen, professor of Greek, Sabbatical leave from January 1 to June 30, 1937; M. Gerstle, assistant clinical professor of neurology, July 1 to August 15; H.

F. Blum, associate profespfir of physiology, January 1 to June 30, 1937; Patrick, associate professor of. Russian, leave for the academic yeat 1936-37. BERKELEY, May 23. "The values of our college education may be measured best with qualitative rule.

The criteria of accomplishment should be not how many facts of en-cyclopediar- knowledge have we mastered, but rather to what degree have we developed an appreciation and understanding of tolerance, analysis, objectivity, how keen is our sense of values." That statement climaxed four years of undergraduate activity for F. Arthur Harris, San Francisco, retiring president of the University, of California student body, as he spoke at the 73rd Commencement in Berkeley today. tive, of common life) and pictures again and in 1905 she became the first woman assistant professor, on the Berkeley campus. Moreover, In 1918, Dr. Peixotto was the first woman to be app6inted to a full professorship at the university and the also broke other traditions seven years, later when she was made chairman of the department of economics.

WRITTEN SIX BOOKS She has written six books on var- ious phases of economics and has attained a wide reputation as a ity of the individual human being- in v'hich charm and personality of the subject are outstanding. elli, 365 BOlh Street, CtaRland, stood- the supremacy of human values," said President Sproul, all "the shouting and the tumult, the confusioin of thought, and the bitterness of controversy, the people before more than 20,000 persons In the Memorial Stadium to receive the coveted medal from the hands of President Robert Gordon Sprout, DIDN'T STOP WORKINO budget authority, being called to of these United Slates are holding Record Number Completes U. C. Graduate Division Work VALUES RECEIVED Martinelli didn't even stop work-. fast to this fundamental and historic purpose.

The purpose is clear; the "We have received values from the university that are part of us and grow with us, discernible to us, and manifested in our actions," said Harris. Perhaps they may be specific ways and means of its fulfillment are, in the present moment not so clear. Young men and wo eonard Walker, Harper W. T. men, graduates of the Class of 1036, BERKELEY, May 23.

Hoods and. fentir, Nllkanth Mnnohnr Phatak, Clyde Slpphen certificates were tn'rlav in I-POrand liasmusscn, II. Rayner, I Wang, Eth. uau.iiiaies PSSCMIOn Brtire I)oiiKla Rindlmib. Pauline Schult- Richard el Marguerite Waters.

AValter atson. Paul Freeborn Weidon- summed up in the general phase, the spirit, the personality of the university. The spirit, to which I number of heimer. John William Welch, Herbert vi recorn-DreakinK a record-breaking hess. George Spencer Sellers.

service on various aiaie ann national committees Interested in standards of living. In honoring Edgar Rickard, the University gnve official recognition to a career of one of its former students which has taken the recipient to all parts of the world in pursuit of his profession. After a year of graduate work at the university in 1890, Rickard was engaged in work in the United States, Mexico and Australia. In 1906 in San Francisco he married Ablgal Church of Oakland and for the next 10 years published technical mining Selh Albert Edward Smith, Elhert tlaylnh Smith, Wal ing to join in commencement fes-tivities. This time, however, he out classrooms.

He wasfoing special work in the Col-legj of Engineering preparatory to1 acting as a teaching nssistnnt in mechanical engineering while working for his master's degree next year. Martinelli came within a few decimal places of making a straight, A Jiverage. in electrical, engineering and physics. At the same time he had not only himself to'finance in college hut he contributed to the support of a mother, grandmother and brother, Ernest, 16. Rorn In the province of Tuscanv.

refer should not be. confused with the raccoon coal, pennant-waving version of cinemas. It is ter Carl Stall f. Benton William Martin llphnlt, Henry James Vaux, there lies the task of your maturity." DIFFERENT TENDENCY OPERATING ELSEWHERE President Sproul told 'the graduates that the University had tried to, teach them the scientific method, namely to get facts, to illumine them with ideas and to proceed by experiment to seek, with' the humility' of scholarship, logical, but rather the personalities of men and students cnmpleUng work in the graduate division at tle University of California. Certificates were lows: CURRICULUM IN SOCIAL SERVICE Crnre Hilma Anrlcrwin.

ln.1,..,.. iteginald Wessenherg, Robert Huntley Whilacre.1 David DaMgren White. Gerald Jaylnr White. Ruth Carolyn White, Elien Eslelle Willse, Juanila Caroline Woerner, Nancy Wright. Jean Louise Wyllie I.ynda Barbara Yageman.

Shin.ll Ynmamolo, Alice Weber Yates, Hachiro Yuasa, Maria Luigia DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF LAWS (JURISPRUDENCE) Ben R. Aiken Harold Alan Block, the campus scene." $3 PRIZE WEEKLY For the bestj)icture in each of the four classes nolcd, above The Tribune will award $3 weekly. At the close of the contest The Tribune will award a grand prize of $10 in each of the four classes for the best pieturtnectived during the entire contest. By winning the first. prize.Jn one of the four classification's you will be eligible to have your picture entered in a National contest, In which 50 newspapers -are cooperating with the Eastman Kodak Company in offering $10,000 in prizes.

The grand National prize will be $1000. Then there will be four class prizes of $500 each, four second prizes in the Jour classes of four third prizes of $100. and 112 honorable mention awards of $50, Certificates of merit will be given the remainder of the entries. RILES OF CONTEST, Here are the snaprhot contest rules, under which the local contest will be conducied and irhder which four pictures to be submitted to the National contest art ''to be selected: 1. Your Snapshot may be made -oivany type of film, but must not made on glass-plate negatives.

Any make of camera, film, chemicals or paper may be Devel- oping and printing may be done by-a photo finisher or the entrant. 1 Harris, relating the storyof four years in me university, branded California as the men their teach ings, measured qualitatively not quantitatively, their interest in the Italy, voting Martinelli was the son of a professor of a district industrial institute. The latter came to Cali search for truth and understanding, as the connotation of the institution from which he was graduating. Attempting to evaluate the four fornia at. the insistanee of his wife, Adele Mai-lineHI, a native of San Francisco, who met and married her husband while, traveling in Italy.

The senior Mnrtinelli was years of university work in statistics, Harris' said: "The average journals in San Francisco ana London. When the United Stales en-tered the World War he joined his friend, former President Hoover, as administrative assistant to the United States food commissioner and chairman of the commission for re lief in Belgium. POSITIONS HE HELD At present Rickard is president of various private enterprises as well as the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers and the Mining and Metallurgical Society of America, He is also treasurer of the White House Conference on Child Health and Protection. Rickard is a chevalier of the man who has not received a col Fllen lnsa nerk, MarcaiTt Susannp Hlark, Mnmnrpt. Merr.vwpalhrr Billiard.

MarKnret Cerelin.niissio, GrrtnidR Chemnlrk, Hclrn Victor Clausen, Alice Louise Cox, Lillian Crfislrr, Klma Louise Pay, niadvs Mary Fibnali ick. Marlon Cureton Knwler. Milton Leon Ooldhem. Muriel C.nod-hart, Marenret Lucille H.nn, Jc.mnotle Clnire Harris, Muriel TIikcIow Hunter, Golrtie Dri'ln lvener, Elina Ollie Jalo, Florence Cierlina Jewell, Nathalie Ellr.a-hcth Kennedy, Ida Klrhannff. Iilita Alice Long.

Mary Elizabeth Macomher. Ruth lniella Molander, Marion K. Morse. Ruth Helen NewhorKh. Kalhlccn Patricia O'Brien.

Virginia (lahriel Par-rolt, Missa Pnlissnr, June Alleene Reynolds, Ada Panelz Rosenhouse, Kalherine-Emlly Ross. Jean Allen Ryan. Marcus Wesley Srherhacher, Llija Ron-field Schneider, Dnrnlhy Frances' Shana-han, Vivlenne Roberta Slrehl. Vida Slruirn. Jean Symes.

Francis Marion Tay. lor, Edward John Teierian. Ann Tilm, dalle Elizabeth Van Wye, Paul Vernier. Ellis Flower Walhhan, Wells Alan Webb, -Charles Wilson. Clarence Floyd Winchester.

Milhurn D. Wright. Joseph Sluart Yuill. George Aubrey Zentm.ver Jr. William Lewis Alrlerson, Warren Dwight Allen, George Walenlt Ames Oria Ethel Anderson.

Trannulllino Bantlsta Anuino, Daniel I. Ajselrod, Ernst Bacon, Evelyn Booth Bailey. Mildred Caroline Barels. Ellen Jane Barndollar, Mamie Barrett, Samuel Burhridge Batriorf, Andrew Parley Bales. Susan Blanche Baxter, Edith Marjorie Real.

James Fisher Beckwith, Jack Parsell Benjamin. IiVerne Means Benntt, Latty Bennett, George G. Bennltl, Virginia Margaret Bever, Kenneth William Blankenburg, Stanley Evans Borleske, Dorothy Anne Bostrom, Charles Henry Bowen, Alrlen Lorin Brock. Esther Brooks, Robert Willard Browning. Alice Gnmer Calleri, John t'randall Carlisle, Betty Myrlis Carr, John Denton Carter, Elizabeth Verne Cawlhorne.

Gladys Valehtine Chapln, Florence T.n-rile Chapman. George Williams Clark, John Crisp Coleman. Lloyd Myron Cnoki Kenneth Cnonerrider, Charles Gregory Cramplnfi. Elizabeth Ellis Creed. SalHr-nino Mien Damascn, Louise Marie Darling.

Homer Wrrodhull Davis. William B. Davjs, Coman Dean. Leonardo Calderon DeMorelos, Ijauto Antonio de Rn.las, Robert Dlnman. Marie Louise Dufrenoy, Mary Adrienne Dumas, John1 W.vatf Durham.

Freeman M. Eakin. Florence An Ehrenkranz, Evelyn' Bernice Emerson, Elizabeth Sriuire Engelke. Alfred Ruben Everest, Hortense Lorraine Faneuf. Raymiindo Acosta Favila, on has, at age 40, an secretary of the Italian Chamber eduratl of Commerce In San' in come of $2000.

But at not predetermined, goals. "You will find a quite different tendency operating in many places to launch a muddled idea with a hopeful prayer and to declare complacent self-satisfaction that it-has reached the shining goal even though all the evidence is to the contrary," the speaker said. "Facts alone are relatively useless unless you know what to do with them, but even so they are a bettcr'spring-board for actiorvthan are prejudices. Facts that have been illumined By ideas, by understanding, and intelligence, are the bricks with which the edifice of human'welfare must be built." Times like the present, the president, said, encourage feeling rather age 40, the college man is wprlh $4000 a year, provided of course, he Alfred Joseph Borsleln, Robert Harvey Canan. Ross Albert Carkeet, Augustus Linas Castro.

George A. Cavalletto. Henry Nelson Cowan. John Joseph Crowley, Gunther Richard Deterl, Paul George Dobbins. Alvin.

Jerome Fabris. Robert Parsons Forbes, John Robert. Friborg. Charles Harlan Frost Vaughn Stuart Garahedian, Marquam Charles George, Sam Scott Gilt, Lynn James Gillard. Allan Mark Goldsmilh, Ralph Goluh, Whitney Rohson John- Hampton Hut-ton.

Frank Kennedy Jackson Merlon Alvin Jacobs, James Johnstone, Jack Phillip Kaetzel, I.aurcnce Donald Kearney. Albert Harold Kessler, Leslie Myron Kessler, James K. Koford. John Raymond Locke Bertrand Frederick Lurie. Turner Hudson Mc-Balne.

Vatdcmar- Archibald MacDonald. Charles Parjter McIIarr.v, James Ross MacKa. Edgar-Alen MrNulty. William Benton Mead, George Francis Meyer Jack Alexander Montgomery. Douglas, Moraghan Moore, John Hillis Moskowitz.

Everett Lee Mossman, John Parker Mul-ler, Van Coll. Niven, Thomas Warden Norton. Mark James Clayton Orr, William Burleigh Pattce. Arthur Sylvester Powell. George Wilbur Robinson.

J. Kerwin Rooney, Ri-naldo Charles Sciaroni. Leonard Raymond to his death in 1928. WINS SCHOLARSHIP Mrs. Mnrlinfilll turned to bookkeeping to support her family and to give her two sons an education.

In 1932 Raymond was graduated from Technical High, Oakland, and, is nicny enougti to get a job. At ace 50 he is- worth approximately $.1000 a year. Tills would undoubtedly prove, among niher things, that we mature at compound interest." SUBDIVIDING $2000 "If we Were to subdivide $2000, the value which C.eornlana While, June Russell White, An- ncue Williams. winning a freshman scholarship there, entered the University. He CURRICULUM IX HOSPITAL DIETETICS than thinking.

But, he pointed out, revolution destroys more than it Ruth Henrietta Ekhnlm. SCHOOL OF LlRRARIANSHir Ressie Abend. Elizabeth contribution of educa Legion of Honor In France, officer of the Order of the Crown in. Belgium and holder of other decora-tionsin Poland, and Austria. Dr7 MfichcliniljslDand "Wtsucy Sprague Mitchell, onetime dean of women at the University of California, is a graduate of University of Chicago.

After a year in the census office in Washington, D. he became an instructor in economics at the University of Chicago, coming to the' University of California in 1902 as assistant, pco- tion snouia be to'evoiution slow- Elinor Muriel Alexander, Frances Sarah' Alexander, Winifred Mar.v Tlamett. Cer- from our college education at age 40, we might attribute proportionately to our freshman year, $400 to the sophomore, $500 as 'juniors, and a senior experience worth at least $800." A master's decree, said H.n Vaughn Brown- Ferguson. Mildred R. Finch, Ilamdcn Landon Forkner, Emily Foster, John Samuel Fox, Walter Smith Frederick.

Herman Friis Lorraine Daniels Fuller, Kathryn Ethel Gaddis, Alice Merlins Garcia. Gilberte, but sure. Care in prcpartioh, he admonished, patience in progress. I Seaman. F'red M.

Snider Effie Cook Sparling, Ralph Warren Suuier, Harold i O. Taber, Howard Berkeley Thomas, John Wjckson Thomas. Willard Brewster Tread, -well. Robert Irwin Trnxell. Thomas Charles Warren.

Thomas Harold Werdcl. i Robert Jerome While. Bruce. Hihn alrline Hee. Clen Hurch.

Zoldn Adelaide Cart man, Edwin Castacna. Olive Elizabeth was Rented a scholarship a year next three "years of college work as a result of his high scholastic standing. To supplement this and to aid in support 0f other members of the family, he obtained a job as janitor at F.merson School, Oakland, where he went every afternoon after finishing work on the campus. Martinelli Is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, national scholastic llaKneau, Lofllso Marie Darline. Ilnchpl and restraint in adventure as well Daviria Dent.

Marcaiet Elizabeth Dobbrl. as daring and determination, in ac lion, is the way of wisdom, heroism, wniun mean a few additional coins, and a Ph. would really not the student into well-naid nositions. Younger. CharlesiAlhprt Zcller.

DEGREE OF DOC TOR OF MEDICINE (MED It) A Ii SCHOOL) Arthur Charles Alleh. George Roland and courage. Catherine M.ncella EnKeln, Charlotte Louise Fnlsom, Dorothy Ellen Oetz. Jean Elizabeth Gilmnre. Dornlhy Louise Haiiue, Arthur Alfred llakcl, Gladys Loynd Harrison, E.

Winifred Hawcs, (Irani Wallace Heil, Louise Erlene Hill, Dorothy Ethel Hitchcock, Susan Filch Horn, June Fran- i NEEDS- AND DESIRES Carrying the analysis to what he fessor of commerce, later being made professor of political economy. He left the Berkeley campus in nonor society, and an associate member of Sigma Xi, national honorary research, sHcleTy. Boyb-Girls Week termed 'its logical conclusion," Harris said that, university professors, considering their wealth of college education, would be, the very epitome of capitalism. performance In Ihp Me. Frances Galignnl.

Carl Ernest Gericke. Gordon Gibbs, Marjorie Burn-side Givons, Herman Gilbert Goldheck, Gann Chittenden Goldsmith, Walter Val-mar Gottlunri, Leonard Greenberg. Gale Ward Greenwood. Thomas Hoag Greer Cecilia Margharita Grossi, Margaret Susan Guilford. Ralph Waldo Guilford, Shirley Harriet Hannah, Marion Arthur Hawk, F.lwnod Vernon Hess, Earl R.

HewtK. Marion Loretto Hogan. Emmet. Thm-man Hooper, Robert Francis Hoover, Ruth Elliott, Houston. Charles Hit.

Lloyd Harris Hughes, William Albert- Hunter. Mary Elizabeth Iredale. Brand Thorman Johnson. David Horn Johnson: Hazel Berry Jordan. Hope Fran-res nnedy, H.

Stewart Kimball. Jiro Kimura. Eric Everett Kolberg, Nicholas E. Koshell. Neil William Lamh, Mary Kathleen I-tnham.

Eleanor Josephine athrop, Frederick Carleton Lehman. Robert Walton Leonard, Elwin James I Tendre. Arthur Emanuel Terey Philip Lorey, Richard V. Loosley, Minnette Kersli Loveen. Oliver McCam-mnn.

Norman Harold McCollom, Ruth McGnvncy, Jean Graham McKay, Maur- Alpert. Edward, Vyhici Avakian. Gerald Francis Ranks. Philip Ross Bill. John Blum.

Walter Harold Brignoli, Edmond Dana Charles Cnlgrove Caulkins. John Squires Chain, Wayne Purnett Ches-bro, Edwin George Clausen. Frank Cohen. Joseph Copeland, Gerald La Verne Crenshaw, Joseph Americo Danicle. Nathan Arthur Duhin.

William Brooks Dublin. James Stannard Elliot; Lloyd Marvin Earner, Morris Lawrence Fink. Atlico Ghllotti. Rubin Leonard Gold, Joseph Gilbert Hamilton, G. Kenneth Hargrove.

Joseph Hiltleman, peorge Hill Hodel. Wayne Stanford Hume, Roland Regahl Jantzen. J. Harold Kay. Jer tor 1937 Is Planned BEYOND MATERIALISM Continuing, President Sproul said: "This University should have taught you that there afc needs and deskes utterly beyond the satisfaction of science and materialism! Scientific progress and tecbnological achievement are not prophylactics against decay.

You, who have the priceless gift of youth must revivify the spirit of your country. The time is ripe for your ardor and idealism to restore its balance to the staggering world and work our new roads to progress. "If democracy is to come through unscathed, every man "must do his share; but you should lead. If the people are not to fall prey to the' 1912 to join Columbia faculty, and has returned here! as Hilchcork lecturer since that He has served on various national committees and author a half dozen books on financeand economics and is a member of a number of academic bodies. OUTSTANDING CAREER Returning 'to the 'campus where he served for seven years as dean of the College of Agriculture, Professor Merrill received ho'nors for an outstanding 'career.

A graduate of University of Maine in 1898, Professor MerrilJook his master's degree from the. same institution in 1904. Although he was still studying, from 1899' until 1912, he held 2. Pictures must have been made after. May .10, 1936.

1 3. No prints will be returned. Entrants should keep all negatives from which pictures submitted art made. Send no negatives unless requested by the Amateur Snap- shot. Contest editor.

This newspaper assumes no responsibility for un-solicilcd negatives which may be sent to 4. No print or enlargement more than' .10 inches in th'e longest dimension will be accepted. No art work or retouching is permitted on prints or the negatives from which they are made. Pictures should not be mounted or framed. 5.

To enter the contest, mail a print or prints of.s many pictures as you desire to "Amateur Snapshot Contest Editor," Oakland Tribuflc. On the back of each pic- ture, print your name and address clearly in ink and the name of the class in which you wish the picture entered. Entrants may submit as many pictures as. desired at any time during the period of the content. 6.

Each week The1' Tribune will pay $3 to the winners in each classification. In addition, at the close of the contest $10 will be paid to the final winner in each of the four classifications. These four winners then will be '-entered in the National Awards, where they compete for prizes totaling $10,000. 7. Before' receiving The Tribune's final prizes of $10 in each of the four the entrant must sign a statement that his pic- ture has not and will not be en tered in any other contest 8.

The contest is strictly for amateurs. Anyone living in the' United States is eligible except em-- ployees of The Tribune and individuals or members of families en- gaged in the manufacture of, sale, commercial finishing or professional use of photographic, goods. cos Hove. Goldie n. Leech InRles, Adele Madeleine Kohn.

Virginia Ruth l.andrum. Carolyn M. Leavitt, Florence Mabel Little, Maria Snlcdad Ijincz, John JorKensrn Lund, Grace Melva Mahin. Dorothy Flolse Maslow. Ida Fay Ballard MilliKan, Forrest Laird Mills, Marion Calder Murdoch, Elizabeth faterson, Flora Elizabeth Reynolds, Alice Venise Robison, Lucile Jane Soule.

Janet SI. Quinlin Strickland. Mortimer Taube. Kathryn Thornhurg, Margaret Travers, Ura Louise Welch, Miriam Oldis Yoder, Willard Oliver Following are higher degrees conferred: DOCTOR OF EDUCATION George Edward Axtelle, Milton Lynn Reunion, Xwwm P. Farris.

Tikhon Ijiviischeff. Leo Gordon Provost, Wai Hon Tarn. Rex Hardin Turner, DEGREE OF CIVIL ENGINEER Franklin Orth Rose, Max Weston Thorn-burg. DECREE OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEER Charles Francis Dalziel, DEGREE OF MECHANICAL ENGINEER Milton Jark Jaknwskv. DEGREE OF GRADUATE IN ARCHITECTURE ALAMEDA, May 23.

Final meeting of the committee In charge of Alameda's recent 1936 Bnvs'snd Girls Week was held yesterday and plans for a similar observance next year were. made, according to the Rev. George Pctrie, committee chairman. The Alameda Kiwanis Club was named directing organization of the 1937 program and a chairman will be selected At a club meeting next week, according to Lloyd Smith, president. Tentative dates of the ome Konigsberg.

Sanford Edgar Levy, George Clough Lowell, Elwood Watson L.vman. Bernard Milnis. George Miya-kawa. Morton James Murphy. Roy A.

Richard Armand Petorfy, Robert R. Radcliff. Margaret Haines Iteese. Ralph Rosenberg, Saul Ruby, Janet W. Sampson.

Jewell Jacob Sawyer. Cyrus Sergis, Albert Shershow. Catherine Smedes Sherwood. Maurice Soknlow. John Arthur-Spencer.

James Gove Terry. Teru morial Stadium marked Harris' farewell appearance as an undergraduate. He served as student body president, since August of this Junior B'nai B'rith To Present Plays Oakland Junior B'nai B'rith will present a program including two plays and social tomorrow in the Castilian Room ot the Hotel Leamington. The two plays. "The Family" and "The Dead Cow," are being directed, by Miss Buolah Levin.

Included in those taking part are Wilma Brown, Queenie Feldman, Celia Schneider, Victoria Rubenstcin, Bessie Seigel, Milton Aaron Nurenberg Ldemagngues, the charlatans, the fanatics, and the witch-burners, they must have sound, courageous leaders. That responsibility is yours!" lne McKeany, Arahelle Maxveell MrKee, William Artluir MeOmie. Abraham Man-ell, Arnold Maurice Martin. Llnvdine Delia Martin, Jerome Rodney Mathews. Harold Macrionnugh Matthews.

Harold Morris Mazur. Forrest Carlton Micholl. Marion Graffam Miller. Manfred Ernst MucHer. Claire Frederick Muncy, Lawrence Alfred Myers.

Newell Dixon Myers, Lurretia Nelson, Earl Holland Newcomer. Muriel Durham O'Brien, Mine Okubo, Clarence Eugene Oswald. Fletcher Grcenleaf Palmer. Vadim Nicholas Pchelkin. Basil H.vrum Feterson.

Dorothea Ellen Petrie. Herbert. Wiley Pierce, Jack Abraham Posin. Gladys Lamb Potter. Trac.w O.

Powel, Siegfried Berthold Puknat, Antonio Bvirago. in Otto Rnuhnt. Vitjam Gerard' Reidy. June Aileene Reynolds. Jeanne Savinien Riegg, Rose.

Marie Shiely Rmne. George Rus-nell Wttli.n,,, week October 30 to November 6, 1937, have beeji set-for the event, it was reported. various positions in the United States Department ofAgriculture at Washington, D. Then he went to Manila as associate professor of botany' at the University of the ingasaKi. Richard Renfro Webster.

Evelyn Mayer Weissross. Ralph Edson White, John Edward Young. DEGREE OF DOCTOR Of' PHILOSOPHY Alastair Martin Adamson, Benjamin Barnett. Archibald Weir Bell. Leonard James Black.

Mary Leohn Bowerman, Muriel Virginia Caroline Agnes Brady, Oliver Leonard I. Brown. Jack Buel. Ben Roy Burmeister, Marion Slil-well Cave, Martha Alexander Chicker-ing, -William Hammerirh Claussen. Russell Walter Cowan.

Ijiwrence Theodore Crawford. Tsahel Parson Creed. Ken Accused Man Found Philippines, hrter becoming head of ann wnaue Kay. Miss Sophcllna Usevlch is chairman. the In 1919 he became Clarence Clyde Hufbauer.

MASTER OF SCIENCE Richard Rnherts Frank Thomas Bowman. Nathan Cheivey T'lark, William Eligible for Parole ALAMEDA, May director of the. Bureau of Science in Manila, remaining there until he Harold Crow. Theodore William Daniel iviuriyn Hennett Dickernian. Eltse Dunlan, William Lloyd Marjorie tK ulhhrrt Rollins.

Gretchen Muriel Effingcr, Roy. Thomas Wade'Ruhv Ginitle, Richard Adams McGinnls. John Charles Chenoweth McKinsey. Lester De Witt Mallory, Edward Joseph Fritz Melz, Charles Judson Miller, Edwin Seth Morby, Charles Edgar Mortiz. Louis McCorry Myers.

Vernon Aubrey Neasham, George Ryoji Negishi, Andrewa R. Noble. Henry Theodore Northen. Arden Beal Olsen. George Shelby Parsons.

Thomas Clyde Poison, Daniel Posin. Jhn Calvin Potts. John Robert Reid, Roger RevelJe. Oscar William Schalm. Frederick Josef Schmitz, Gilbert Weaver Scott, Alice Irwin Shone.

Bhag Singh. Clifford Edward Smith, Clair Raymond Spealman. Karl Ernest Stromsem, Joseph Henry Taylor, John Murray Thompson. Harold Fabian Underhill, Vertrcss Lawrence VanderHoof, Robert Donald Void, Donald Stevenson Bernerd neth Leon Culver, George Haigft Denison Jr George Devereux. Arthur Watson Dimock, Harold Edson Driver.

Corriell Durrell. Walter Eheling. Clak James Egan, Slanley Ellsworth Flanders, Richard Casper Rudolilli, Virgil Roberto Benaglia SSneinrgi. David Joined the 'TOliverslty-of California factulty in Berkeley to become dieetor ot the New York Botanical Gardens, later joinirjg Columbia. WAREHOUSES BURN rranK srivm.

Isaac Leo Shechmeister. 11a iiessie Uavies Francis. Edwin Ernest Ghis P. A. to Present Song-Dance' Revue RICHMOND, May 23.

With a cast of more than 60 persons, a song and dance revue will "be presented tonight at the Richmond Union High School auditorium by the school's A. unit. The revue Will be held to raise funds for the commencement dance to be held by the A. for members of the graduating class. uarcy, cnaTgea wiin battery by Police Officer AI Hovey, has been found eligible for probation by county authorities and will begin his reports next Friday, according to Police Judge Daniel H.

Knox. Da'rcy was arrested by Hovey on the complaint, of neighbors who charged that he was drunk and funning- about-i'waving- a Darcy aUegedly attacked Hovey when the latter attempted to arrest him. 1 Stanley Ferdinand F.rnf, Wilhelm Syriow Everett. Beverly H. Fisher, Elton Wallers Grenfell.

David Heman Grimm. Everett Raymond Halbrook, Richard Havemann. Henry Joseph Hoef-fer, Lome Elliott, Hu.vckc. Tyr Vladimar Johnson, Sam E. Keeton, Chal Hoon Kim, Emmett Thomas King, Richard Henny Klugh, Janet Elizabeth- Mabry, Duncan Calvin Richard Davis Meyer, Carlaw Robert MoodeyMaur.ii-t Philin Sidney Morgan.

Jane E. Mur-doek, William C.lrard Mvrrv Rubens Vi-anna Neiva. David Alfred Onnenhelm. i.ce hiionk. lms Juliette Simon.

Frederic i elh. Louis Greenberg, Wallace Worthy Simon Simoni, Kenneth Moore Simpson, Hall. John Frederick Halterman, Datus James Steel Smith. Martha Marbury Smy- I Miller Hammond. Olga Hartman.

Mar-ser, Virginia Socolofsky. Solo- jorie Pyles Honzik, Milton Reed Hunter, Wendell Ross Spackman. Rafael Ernest Loeb Inwood, Irving Harry Isen-Scherzer Sriring. David Lloyd Stevenson, berg, James Angus Jenkins, Alex Kan-Flnyd Melvm- Stone. Conrad DcForest 1 'an.

Jacob David Kemp. Edward Lather Swanson. Reuben Anthony Svlva. Kessel. Leo Kirschenbaum.

William Bell Lawrence LaVerne Tabor. Frances I Lanesdorf I. Michael Lerner. Eloanor Taylor, Jacobus tenBroek. Elea- Albert Philip Ludwig.

Ellen Katharine nor Adele Todd. Louis Chapin Valentine. Luomala. Jessie Dunlavy McComb. WU.

Alfred Wetton Vitt, Karl Joseph Waider.llwn Crews McGavok H.irry Mo PETALUMA, May 23. (Burning rubbish sparks cused a fire which destroyed two warehouses, one bousing barrels of oil, here, yesterday, at a Iocs estimated by firemen at 50,000. RUN ON KITTENS Humboldt 9692 rang 12 or 14 time! when Persian kittens were adver Clarke Weber. Waldo Rudolph Wedel. Mathewson Wheeler, Scott Em-ersnn Wood, Sherwin Francis Evangeline Alderman Yarwood, Marjorie Jean Young, Maxine Bardsley Young, Herbert Samuel Zuckerman.

i tised In Tribune haJi JOtn Mli Cordhmbhal Pottl, MatIq tie OUvelra.

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