1 OREGON EMERALD PUBLISHED THREE TIMES A WEHL ‘ UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1914. Volume XVI, No. 17 I OREGON SQUAD PLAYS WILLAMETTE FRIDAY f SATURDAY STRUGGLES KICK OVER DOPE CAN AND OUT LOOK IS UNCERTAIN THREE IN LINE FOR PENNANT Pigskin Logician Befuddled on Dope; No “Ergo’* Forthcoming Until O. A. C.-Washington Jangle By Harry Kuck. The Oregon-Willamette game will be staged Friday October 30, at 3:30 o’clock, on Kincaid Field. The Methodists were originally ^ billed to show here Saturday. Mana ger Tiffany secured the change in or der to allow local enthusiasts' to see both the Willamette game and the 0. A. C.-Washington tangle at Albany on October 31 The latter is expected to be one of the most bitterly fought contests of the season. Oregon’s defeat of Idaho was due to her superiority at open football and her ability to negotiate passes. Both touchdowns were directly due to pass es; Malarkey grabbed an Idaho spi ral out of the ozone and ran 60 yards for the first one, and Captain Parsons scored the other by making a sensa tional catch of a pass from Beckett. Aside from these two “breaks,” it was a hard fought battle all the way through. The Lemon Yellow line yielded but little ground, and there was a noticeable improvement in ^ tackling. Two surprises were sprung Satur day; one at Pullman and the other at Seattle. 0. A. C. was booked to win from W. S. C. very easily, and on the contrary was barely able to regis ter one touchdown. Stewart’s men were even outplayed a good part of the time. At Seattle, Washington was doped to win from Whitman by about a 40 or 45 to 0 score. However, Dobie’s crew failed to beat the Missionaries as badly as Oregon did. All of which goes to show that it is very easy to kick over the dope bucket. The way things stand now, considering relative scores, Oregon, Washington and Oregon appear to be on a par. O. A. C. and Oregon beat W. S. C. by the same score, 7 ^ to 0, and Washington beat Whitman by approximately the same margin that Oregon did. A month more will probably see dope spilled all over. The officials for the Oregon-Willam ette game are: Vamell, referee; Sam Dolan, umpire; Hans Flo, head lines man. ************ * A special train wtfll be run * * over the Oregon Electric to Al- * * bany Saturday for the O. A. C.- * * Washington game. * * Tickets, $1.30. Train leaves * * Eugene at 12:35 P. M. and will * * arrive in Albany at 1:45 P. M. * ************ A __ LEON JACKSON, WRESTLER, VACATES PLACE ON TEAM Leon S. Jackson has temporarily left college because of eye trouble. Jackson is a 107-pound wrestler on the University team, and the wrest ling instructors say it will be impos sible to replace him. He may return for the spring semester in time for the wrestling season. ************ • OREGANA STAFF * 4 All members of the 1916 Or- *j egana staff meet at Kappa Alpha * Theta house, Sunday afternoon •! at 2:30. Important. *} MAURICE HYDE, Editor. *********** "MAY I TAKE YOU CANOEING” ANSWER- “60 ASK THE DEAN1 Popularity of Village Belles Greatly Increased by Latest Edict of Miss Guppy No more will the college co-ed ex ercise her own discretion in accept in (or rejecting, mayhap) an invita tion for a canoe ride up the mill race. Dean Guppy has issued an edict de claring that official permission must be secured before any definite action can be taken. This limitation comes as a climax to a series of rules regarding mill-race parties. A restriction enacted last year prohibited parties on the his toric stream after sundown, because of several near-collisions between boats in the dark. Next. conquW Woes MET BY ROOTERS University Band and Oregon “Osky Wow Wow” Greet the Home Coming Team Two hundred or more rooters gath ered at the depot Sunday night to greet the home-coming team. The University Band played several se lections, and the Oregon Osky Wow Wow was given as the train pulled in, the yell leaders giving their direc tions from the top of the coaches. The team was supposed to have ar rived at 12:25, and the rooters, though not quite as numerous as at night, were on hand and gave the Oregon cheers as the train approached. The band did its duty, too, and did not cease to pour.d out Boola, Boola, until the train stopped and a few straggling passengers stepped to the platform and gazed about as if they wondered what they had done to deserve so much attention. WORLD PEACE IS AIM Association to be Organized On Uni versity Campus Tomorrow Af ternoon at 4:00 O’Clock Student^, Faculty ^nd townspeo ple interested in the movement to prepare the American nation to £peak an effective word for a permanent peace at the close of the present Eu ropean war, will hold a meeting in Allen Eaton’s room in the Architec tural Building at 4:00 o'clock to morrow afternoon. Steps will be ta ken at this time to form a permanent association and elect officers for the purpose of getting into touch with the leaders in the national movement and to lay plans for the development of public sentiment in Oregon. All interested are invited. EXTENSION COURSES CONTINUE TO ENJOY POPULARITY The average attendance at Exten sion lectures during September and October was 133. According to Miss Mozelle Hair, Secretary of the Exten sion epartment, this average is as large or larger than that of previous years. Freshmen at the University of Ne braska were disturbed by a raid which left the streets of the town covered with hair and their heads lacking any traces of their former locks. This has beep a custom at Nebraska for some time, but it is said that thiB year the work of harvesting Freshman hair was done more thoroughly than ever before. PANORAMA PICTURE!)) BE T ADEN TOMORROW ON BASEBALL FIELD Regular Assembly Hour To Be Given Over To Photographer For Birds-Eye View of Faculty And Student Body—Photo To Be Used For Publicity Purposes And Will Be Reproduced In the Oregana The panorama picture of the Stu dent Body and Faculty will be taken tomorrow morning at 10:00 o’clock in back of Deady Hall, on the soccer and baseball held, at the regular as sembly hour. C. E. Barclay, a photographer of Sheridan, Oregon, who has made a specialty of circuit work and who will take the picture tomorrow moring, says: “If there is no delay about the students turning out, it will not take more than ten minutes to assemble and have the picture over with. The picture itself will be 40 inches long and eight inches wide.” The picture will be used by the Ad ministration Department for publicity purposes and will also be reproduced in the Oregana, besides being a valu able keepsake for each student. Dr. Smith, Secretary to the Presi dent, who has taken an interest in the picture and who worked toward mak ing it possible, said yesterday: “With the publicity given the arrangements, I think it will be safe to anticipate a crowd of 750.” As proposed, the Faculty, Seniors, Juniors, Sophomores and Freshmen will be in sections of three rows in a circle before the camera. The Ser geant-at-Arms of the classes will su perintend marshalling the sections. The Freshmen will assemble in Vil lard, the Juniors and Seniors in Dea dy, and the Sophomores in McClure, for short class meetings. SPIKE-TAILS Sigma Delta Chi Initiates Will Ap pear in Formal Garb on Cam pus Thursday Morning Leslie and Lamar Tooze, Wallace Eakin and Fred Dunbar will appear on the campus in full dress suits and silk hats Thursday morning. The stunt, which is pulled off every year, is part of their initiation into Sigma Delta Chi, the national fraternity for journalists. % The local chapter was granted in the spring of 1913, and the appear ance of the initiates in formal garb is an annual custom. During the year the Sigma Delta Chis expect to have a series of talks from well known journalists and other prominent men throughout the state. ************ * Students who subscribed for the * * 1915 Oregana last spring must * * proqure them from the Y. M. C. * * A. Book Exchange at once. * * On November 1 the remaining * * copies of last year’s Oregana will * * again be placed on sale. For * * quick disposal, they will be sold * * to students on the campus and to * * alumni throughout the state at * * the reduced price of $2.00 per * * copy. • * ANTHONY JAUREGUY, * * Treasurer Senior Class. * ************ GERMAN CLUB TO MEET AT GAMMA PHI BETA HOUSE The German Club will hold a meet ing Tuesday, November 3, at the Gamma Phi Beta house. After the election of new members, the follow ing program will be given: German Song, Paul Sprague; German Jokes, Dr. F. G. G. Schmidt; German Recita tion, Echo Zahl. Later in the even ing dancing and refreshments will be enjoyed. EUTAXIAN LITERARY SOCIETY ELECTS SEVENTEEN MEMBERS The Eutaxian Literary Society held a meeting Tuesday evening at the Bungalow. The following new mem bers were voted in: Myrtle Rorden, Ruby Steiwer, Vaughn McCormick, Mary Chambers, Helen Johns, Leld Cushman, Helen Jane Hamilton, An nie Hales, Helen Robinson, Lois Gray, Georgia Kinsey, Callie Beck, Marjorie McGuire, Harriette Polhemus, Helen McComack, Myrtle Kem and Mona Dougherty. STUDENT STEPS SCORED University of Washington Faculty Up In Arms Over Syncopated Style of Dancing SEATTLE, Wash., Oct. 24—(Spe cial)—The style of dancing indulged in by the University of Washington students was denounced yesterday by President Henry Landes and fourteen other faculty members and their wives in a manifesto to the students. The letter says t^e faculty members will decline to serve as patrons of dances unless the style of dancing is at once changed. This will be, in ef fecfy taking away University sanc tion for the social functions of the students. The threat also is implied that dances will be done away with en tirely at the University of Washing ton unless the reform is made. “The style of dancing we have ob served at all University social func tions this year,” reads the letter to the students, “is neither graceful nor refined, and is censured not alone by the members of the faculty, but also by the conscientious students. “Further, it is not countenanced by the National Association of Dancing Masters, and not approved by repu table Seattle dancing masters, who teach a style much less objectiona ble.” MEETING OF 1916 CLASS IS TOMORROW AFTERNOON AT 4 A meeting of the class of 1916 will be held Wednesday at 4:00 o’clock, in Dr. Straub’s room. The meeting will be principally to organize the campaign for selling this year's “Or egana” and to discuss plans for it. A report of the Underclass Mix will be given, and two matinee dance dates will be selected and petitioned for. ADMINISTRATION OFFICE IS CONDUCTING INVESTIGATION The Administration office of the Uni. versity is conducting an investigatior for the purpose of securing statistic! on the cost of text-books and sup plies to the students of the Univer sity. Blanks have been printed which are to be distributed among the stu dents, filled out with the desired in formation and returned to the office So far only a few of these blanks have been returned, so the result o1 the investigation is at present onlj a matter of conjecture. SOPHS HURL CHALLENGE. BUT IT SOUNDS LIKE ‘BULL’ Sophomore Manager Throws Down Gauntlet to Frosh for Football Match Saturday The following defi, which speaks for itself has , been received by the sporting editor of the Emerald: “The Sophomores challenge the Freshmen to a football game, to be played as a preliminary to the Oregon Willamette mill. Players who have turned out for the Varsity squad within two weeks of the proposed inter-class game to be ineligible.” Signed, HOWARD BULL, Manager. 13 GflMlES TEMPI PdlATES OF HEITHHI Oregon Alumni Labor in Foreign Mis sionary Field—Local Y. W. C. A. Will Help Lyman Thirteen Oregon graduates are en gaged in missionary and educational work in foreign lands. They are scat tered from .one corner of the globe to the other, some in government edu cational work, some in Y. M. C. A. institutions, and still others in the missionary field. Harvey Wheeler, '07, and wife, Ruth Balderree Wheeler, also, ’07, are en gaged in educational missionary work at Nagasaki, Japan. During his col lege course, Mr. Wheeler was an ac tive member of the Y. M. C. A. and Laurean Literary Society. This sum* mer Mr. Wheeler and family visited in Eugene and on their return voyage experienced a rather unusual incon venience, as the Japanese ship on which they sailed was without a light aboard, due to the present war sit uation. Mark Wheeler, ’07, a brother of Harvey Wheeler, is now engaged in missionary work in the interior of China. While in college he was also a member of the Y. M. C. A. W. Gilbert Bieatie, ’07, and wife, Willa Hanna Beatie, ’96, are now in the educational work among the Alas kan Indians at Juneau, Alaska. Mrs. Elizabeth Logan Ennis, ’02, is in the missionary field among the natives of the “Dark Continent.’’ Her address is Benquella, West Africa. Clarence A. Steel, ’10, is now Gen eral Secretary of the Soon Itt Memo rial Institute for Young Men at Bang kok, Siam. While in college Mr. Steel was a member of the cross country team, the Laurean Society and the Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. He also took an active part in Student Body agairs. Another graduate to enter this work was Walter Bailey, ’12. He is now teaching the natives of the Phil ippines the English language and American athletics. Mr. Bailey was famous for his height, 6 feet 4 inches, and the Btudents of his day relate not only of his prowess in a basket ball suit, but also of the “pee-rades’’ he led with his high silk hat. Still another man who entered this field is James K. Lyman, Whitman ’06, who came to Oregon for post graduate work. While in college he was a crack wrestler, assistant foot ball coach, and Secretary of the Col lege Y. M. C. A. He took further graduate work at Oberlin College, and is now in Marsash, Turkey, teaching the young Turks Western athletics, , and through his work getting closer to their lives that he may bring Chris tianity and Western civilization to them. At the last meeting of the Y. M. C. A. Cabinet it was voted to send the funds secured here in the University to help Mr. Lyman in the work he is doing. NULL mil 10 BE ELECTED LATER EACH MAN OF REGULAR TEAM WILL HAVE CHANCE IN CONTEST FOR POSITION PRACTICE STARTS THIS WEEK Season’s ‘Outlook Not the Best, but “We Will Come Up Fighting,” Says Bezdek There will be no election of basket ball captain for this year’s team until the season is well along; the regular team picked, pretty well crystalized and the choice of captain decided in the mind of every man. Practice starts this week. Coach Bezdek gave out the above statement today. Instead of electing a captain at the beginning of the year, Coach Bezdek plans to appoint different captains for each game un til the men have had a fair chance to learn the ways of each man off the team, and choose to the best ad vantage. Every man who makes n regular place on the team will be eli gible for the captaincy. Wheeler is the only letter man to return this year. It is possible that “Slim” Koch will return, but no defi nite word has been received. Carson Bigbee was on the squad last year and made a good showing. Chet Fee,- Bill Burgard and Ray Gorman have signified their inten tions of turning out for the guard positions. Brownell and Dudley are expected to show up for a trial at center. Clark will be out for a for ward. There are several Freshmen who look good and are expected to uncover some real stuff. “It isn't the best outlook in the world, but we will come' up fighting and be around for the finish,” jwas Coach Bezdek’s comment on the pros pects. Hard work will not begin until the football season is over. The first workouts are’ in order from now on, however, and some definite showing is expected by the end of the week. “We are too busy with football at presept to talk basketball. We are do ing some planning though, and I can say that it looks like a big year.” This is Bill Hayward’s forecast. Both Coach Bezdek and Trainer “Bill” Hayward seem optimistic over the prospects and feel sure that there is some new material on hand to de liverthe goods. JOURNALISM DEPARTMENT SENDS OUT NEWS STORIES The University Journalism Depart ment has sent news stories to the 150 papers in the state, giving a list of students from the county in which the paper is located who are attend ing the University, and a short state ment of the enrollment of the state institution this year. Acording to the report sent out, 1,976 students are enrolled in the dif ferent departments of the University. Tliis number includes all of the stu dents in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, Medical and Law Departments in Portland, Music Department, Extension classes, Sum mer School and the Correspondence Study Department. This year’s total registration shows an increase of 12th per cent over the corresponding pe riood last year. Lane County is first, MultnomaTb second and Marion third in the nura ! ber of students at the University this year. Only three counties, Curry, Grant and Wheeler, are unrepresen.tr ; ed. I Oregon may arrange a soccer game with 0. A. C. if the latter isn’t care ful.