Oregon Daily Emerald VOLUME XXTTT UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, THURSDAY, MAY n, 1922 NUMBER 129 MAC GREGOR WINS ELECTION YOUEL CHOSEN EMERALD EDITOR WASHINGTON WHS IN ERRORLESS GAME Pitchers Battle Throughout Eight Innings; Defense Proves Air Tight SPIKE HITS THREE BAGGER Sorsby Pulls Stellar Play; Varsity to Go to 0. A. C. for Week-end By Ep Hoyt Shades of Pop Anson! An errorless “ball game was played between college ball teams yesterday, when the varsity nine succumbed to the superior attack of the Washington Sun Dodgers and went down to defeat 2-1 in the eight round session on Cemetery Bidge. The game was called at the end of the -eighth in order to allow the visitors time to catch the northbound Oregon Electric at 5:35, just after they had -crashed in a run to break the 1-1 tie between the two nines. It was a pitchers’ battle throughout with Gray of Oregon and Leonard for ■the northerners battling it out on every ball, and with both aggregations back ing up their heavers with air-tight fielding. Not a boot, and although .several fielding feats looked like pos sible kicks, the defense in every case tightened and held. Bill Sorsby pulled the outstanding stellar play when in the eighth he hauled down a long fly and hung onto "the ball though the resultant crash with Collins knocked him cold. Spike Les lie in the last of the sixth put Oregon out in the lead when he smashed out a long three-bagger. Spike scored when Gray hit a sacrifice fly to left. This was Oregon’s only tally, although the Lemon Yellow threatened again in the seventh when singles by Zimmerman and Latham looked like potential tal lies. Washington scored twice, in the sixth1 after Gray had walked Maloney to get at Leonard, who had taken the air twice previously on strikes, but the tall heaver turned the tables and laid out a Texas leaguer, sending Maloney to third, the lanky catcher scoring on Torrance’8 screaming single, tying the score. In the eighth the Huskies put over the winning counter when Mar riott singled to center and came home when Zamberlin, batting for Lewis, tore another single to right. Oregon was unable to score in her half of the eighth and the game was over, as it had been agreed beforehand to call it at 5:10. This week-end the varsity will jour ney to Corvallis to face their ancient rivals, the Aggies, and if they are able to put up the brand of ball on tap yes terday, the collegians will find them a, hard nut to crack. Oregon Medical School Has Great Future, Says Dr. Torrey “The problem of medicine today is 1 three fold,” said Dr. Harry Beal Tor- i rey, head of the zoology department. “ These problems are the development ‘ of practitioners, prevention and re- 1 search work. “The practitioner handles cases re sulting from accidents and unknown causes and emergency cases. Preven tion of disease will be a great thing in the future. When disease can be pre vented there will be no need of prac ticing. In research there is constant and profound investigation. “These three departments of medi cine always co-exist; there is always the necessity for the practitioner of skill and good judgment. There is an increasing call for the general practi tioner who will be expected to possess the fine personal understanding of 1 j f i 1 i f i t people, that the other practitioners ex Majority of Tax Reduction Committee Agree to Drop Fight Against Millage Bill A majority of the committee of seven of the Oregon Tax Reduction league agreed Tuesday to eliminate from the so-called Schuebel bill that part provid ing for the repeal of the 1.2 millage of 1920 for the support of the higher education institutions. The bill as finally agreed upon pro vides for cash valuation of all prop erty excepting lands and dwelling houses, which are to be assessed at 50 per cent; provides penalties for viola tion and machinery for enforcement; and specifies that none of the five or six established millages shall be per mitted to produce greater revenues than accrue under the assessed valua tion of 1921. Thus the only effect of this bill on the higher educational in stitutions would be that of a limita tion of millage to the present amount. Upon the agreement of the majority of the committee of seven to eliminate the repeal of the millage, the master of the Oregon State Grange and the president and secretary of the Orgeon Farm Bureau agreed to join them in getting the Schuebel bill before the people in the November election. Neither the master of the grange nor the officers of the farm bureau would subscribe to this bill so long as it threatened to impair the rovenues of the University, Agricultural college and Normal school. The attack upon the 1.2 millage is thus localized to one man, J. C. Cooper of McMinnville, president of the Ore gon Tax Reduction league, who has from the beginning insisted upon a separate bill to repeal this millage and who has refused to sign the Schuebel bill. In fact there is such division in the committee of seven that Mr. Cooper is going ahead on his own initi ative and the majority of four in the committee of seven is putting out the Schuebel bill under a new name. Mr. Cooper is now proceeding to have the forms printed to get the 14,003. certified signatures that are necessary before an initiative measure can be put on the ballot. To what extent he has the support of his home commun ity is not known. POP CONCEflTS: TUESDAY OREGON FACULTY MUSICIANS IN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Director Underwood Plans Best Hind of Entertainment at Low Price for Entire Student Body With two members of the school of music faculty, Madame McGrew and George Hopkins, as soloists, the next Pop concert by the University sym phony orchestra will be given next Tuesday evening in Villard hall. This will be the second concert of this kind ever held on the University campus, the first being given over a month ago. It has been the purpose of Rex Un derwood, director of the orchestra, to offer distinctly high class orchestral music to the students at an unusually low price. At the concert next Tues day night a new method of admission will be. tried out in the way of an ex periment. All students in the Univer sity will be admitted to the concert who present their student body ticket it the door. No student will be re quired to pay to get in but all who ire willing and financially able will oe given an opportunity to place their lontributions in a box placed at the loor. Faculty members and all towns people are required to pay the regu ar admission price of 25 cents. Mr. Underwood desires that no student shall feel under obligations to con ribute if he is unable to do so, and hat no student shall miss the con :ert if he cannot. Expenses for the >rchestra are heavy and funds must se raised in some way, according to Vfr. Underwood, but it is his chief aim ind purpose that all University stu (Continued on page two.) libited, as well as the best results of □odern training. “Now, the great tendency in medi-. ine is toward specialization along one ine. In the future there will be an nereased tendency toward general iractice under modern conditions. A career awaits the medical student n the branch of public health and hy- j ;iene. It is recognized by the govern nent that this department is import nt and must be increased and encour ged. At Johns Hopkins, Harvard and ’ennsylvania schools of medicine, ad anced training in public health is iven to graduates in medicine. Sim lar schools on a less ambitious scale re being established in other parts of he country. “The great amount of research rork and the number of research (Continued on page four) KAPPA SIGMA WINS GAME ANDRE, LANGRELL, PITCH GOOD BALL; SCORE IS 8-3 Fielding Good; Victors Make Four Runs In Second Frame; Four Games for Today The Kappa Sigma baseball team won from Sigma Chi last night in the only game of the evening by an 8 to 3 score. The Kappa Sigs jumped into j the lead with one run in their half of! the first inning, which was tied by the other team in their half of the same inning. Rol Andre pitched a nice game for the winners and got out of a bad place in the fifth when with the bases loaded and none out he fanned the next three men up. Bliss, behind the bat for the Kappa Sigs, stopped them all. A1 Langrell, on the mound for Sigma Chi, pitched good ball with the exception of the second frame, in which the victors got to him for four counters. Neither team b'atted very consistently, but the fielding of both sides was very good for a doughnut game. The games scheduled for today are: Fijis vs. Oregon club at 4 o ’clock on the R. O. T. C. field, and Chi Psi vs. S. A. E. on the University High field at 4 o ’clock. The two games slated for 6 o ’clock are Delta Tau Delta vs. : Kappa Theta Chi on the University, High field and Alpha Tau vs. Kappa 1 Delta Phi on the R. O. T. C. field. i OREGANA TO APPEAR ON CAMPUS FRIDAY, MAY 12 ! $2.25 Must Be Paid Before Delivery; < Copies Obtained from Houses, and Oregana Office , “Friday afternoon, May 121” i, That is the answer to the numerous ( questioners who have been curious to ( know the exact date and hour when ( the first appearance of the 1922 Ore- , gana is to be made on the campus. The books will be delivered Friday af- ( ternoon to the houses. Those who do . not live in organized groups can get their copies at the Oregana office in j the journalism shack at that time. The second installment of the sub- , scription price, $2.25, must be paid before the delivery of the book, accord- ? ing to the business manager, George 1 McIntyre. One representative in each house has 1 been appointed to take charge of col lections, and will receive and*pay for all copies upon their delivery Friday afternoon. Those calling for books at the Oregana office are urged to bring f the exact change in order that delivery j can be made as quickly as possible. t PRESIDENT IN PORTLAND t President P. L. Campbell was in g Portland yesterday to attend a special s workers’ luncheon at the Heward ho- t tel. The program at the luncheon was g in charge of the Portland school of s Bocial workers of the University. 11 W. D. WHEELWRIGHT, PORTLAND PIONEER, WILE SPEAK TODAY Assembly Topic Will Deal with Solving of Modern American Problems MESSAGE IS OPTIMISTIC Filipino String Orchestra Will Appear in Several Special Numbers An optimist in the first degree is William D. Wheelwright, of Portland, veteran lumberman of the Pacific slope, who will speak before the assem bly this morning at 11 o’clock in Vil lard hall. While the morning papers flare head lines of “Trouble Brooding in India— Natives Rise in Rebellion,” amidst the babel of tongues and the confusion and “isms” following the war, as they have followed every war in history, William D. Wheelwright, and men of his kind, some with the typically American mes sage that “All is well as it is made well; that the world must work, and cease for at least eight hours a day to listen to wayside haranguers.” Mr. Wheelwright in an interview with The Timberman, just after his return from the Orient, said: “In Cal cutta, I saw no evidence of the dis satisfaction which is said to be below the surface of things in India. The genius of American leadership in straightening out the business of the world will be needed as much after the ratification of the arms conference treaties as before the conference was ■ailed. The means of re-establishing the interchange of commerce on a iuitable basis, 1 think, must soon be found. . The right direction has been taken in securing the guarantee of peace, and the next thing is to start luildiug on a basis that peace is as sured for years to come.” The part that Mr. Wheelwright has ilayed in the building of the west is lot small. Born in Valparaiso, Chile, in the far west coast of the southern inntineut; a son of an old New Brig and family, of the kind which made lie American flag famous on all the vaters of the world before the Civil var almost completely wiped out the lorthern shipping, William Wlieel vriglit comes to the sunset of life on lie far western coast of the northern sontinent, while the star of the Ameri :un merchant marine is again in the iscendant. As testified by the words >f his associates, and the record of lis life in the list of the leaders of the American commonwealth, he has been me of the builders of the nation. Using the often apparently perverse erms, with which we Americans dub iur great men, this lumber king, this nerchant prince, sat quietly in the of ice, his deft fingers on every channel >f trade, weaving the whole scheme of liings commercial into a strong net, rhich today binds America and Asia. Lt his bidding, ships set sail for the >rient and at his bidding ships called t little known harbors of that hemi phere and opened the way for fresh ife to flow into the artery of trade. Mr. Wheelwright may be only a man in the lumber business,” but et in the eyes of the discerning Amer :an of today, he may lie a weaver ofj estinies, a diplomat of diplomats, and lie outcome of such conferences as that (Continued on page two.) MITTS ARE STOLEN FROM GYM Two catching mitts have been stolen rorn the men’s gym, according to Bhy tuntingtou, one of them being Shy’s ersonal property and the other the sgular frosh mitt. Coaches Hunting in and Bohler state that unless the loves are returned at once a rigorous iareh will be instituted for them and iieir possessors punished. They Hug est that the present holders of the :oleu property slip them back where ley got them at once. OWEN CALLAWAY VICE-PRESIDENT IN HEATED RACE Velma Farnham Wins Editorship of Oregana over Dorris Sikes by Four Votes; Larson, Rockhey and Zimmerman, Senior Men; Jack Myers and! Pat Irelan Junior Men; All Amendments Carry By a majority of 367 votes, John McGregor of Portland was elected to the presidency of the A. S. U. O. yesterday. Owen Callaway was elected vice-president by a majority of almost 150 over Dick Sunde leaf, while Ken Youel was handed the job of Emerald editor by a two to one lead. Margaret Jackson was elected secretary without oppo sition. For a sheer neck and neck race, furnishing the excitement of the ballot counting, the contest for editor of the Oregana took the honors, with Dorris Sikes and Velma Farnham running within 15 votes of each other during the entire count, Farnham finally capturing the prize by four votes over Sikes, 422 to 418. At eleven o’clock last night the vote stood 619-620, but a recount revealed the mistake. A total of 1269 ballots were cast. Inez King won the position of senior woman on the executive council by a vote of 850 to 407 for BeaJjj-ice Morrow. Ole Larson, Haddon Rockhey, and Don Zimmer man led in the race for senior representatives on the Student Council, Ellen McVeigh, and Hallie Smith for senior women representatives, and Pat Irelan, and Jack Myers are the new junior men on the coun cil. ijony jrnae Deal oui nenryena Lawrence for junior representative by 18 votes, leading 648-600. Don Wood ward set a fast pace in the contest for jophomore man on the council, the final result showing his vote 510 to the 324 )f Price Sullivan, his nearest opponent. Dio candidates for the three uncon ;ested positions came out on top, with Margaret Jackson for secretary and Dutch Gram for junior man of the Executive Council registering 1171 ■'otes, and Art Bosobraugh, candidate for yell king, registering 1154 votes. The Emerald race took third place n the landslides of the election, with Ken Youel receiving a vote of 683 to 111 for Ep Hoyt, and 291 for Curly jawrence. Youel took the lead early RESULTS OF A. S. U. O. ELECTION President: George King .210 Chuck Lamb .240 John MacGregor .879 Vice-president: Owen Callaway . 699 Dick Sundeleaf .565 Secretary: Margaret Jackson .1171 Editor, Oregon Dally Emerald: Ep Hoyt .311 Curly Lawrence .291 Ken Youel .683 Editor, Oregana: Velma Farnham .622 Dorris Sikes .618 Executive Council— Senior Woman: Inez King .850 Beatrice Morrow .407 Junior Man: Dutch Oram .1171 Student Council— Senior Men (three): George Adler .259 Sid Hayslip .475 Olo Larson .713 Bill Purdy ./.571 Hadden Rockhoy .786 Don Zimmerman .879 Senior Women (two): Dorothy Cash .442 Ellen McVeigh .761 Mary Parkinson .527 Hallie Smith . 665 Junior Men (two): Hal Berry . 455 Alfred Erickson .220 Pat Irelan .718 Jack Myers .881 Ernest Richter .186 Junior Woman: Henrietta Lawrence .600 Betty Pride .618 Sophomore Man: Joyle Dahl .249 Chappy King .201 Price Sullivan .324 Don Woodward . 510 Yell King: Art Kosebraugh .1154 i in me evening, ana guinea constantly. r The amendments were all passed by • largo majorities, the affirmative vote ■ of each averaging about 1000. 1 The presidential race was decidedly ' in MacGregor’s favor from the earli ■ est returns, and his majority grew ’ steadily, leaving little doubt oarly in the evening us to the final result. Chuck Lamb received 248 votes and 1 Georgo King was third with 215. The returns from the vice-presiden tial race kept the watchers of the bul letin board in suspense unitl late in the evening, by its fluctuation. Cal laway finally registered a slight lead, which ho maintained and increusod un til the final count. The race for senior man on the Stu dent Council was hotly contested, only i one man dropping below the 400 mark, | and in the race for senior women on tho council, only one dropped bolow the 500 mark. The balloting for junior j men on the council was widely scat tered, tho highest amount being 881, i Jack Myers’ vote. Henryetta Lawrence and Betty Pride, in the race for junoir woman on tho student council, ran closely, Miss Lawrence maintaiining a stand of ap proximately 15 votes behind Miss Pride, in the race for junior woman on nouncements, when her total began to drop slowly. A large crowd of students constantly i filled the east entrance to Villard and jostled about the bulletin board on which the returns wero posted. The crowd expressed sentiment freely, now and then cheering certain of the can didates. The interest of one or two of the closer races for office held them until the final returns were given out, about 11 o’clock. Calls were received throughout the evening by the Emerald for returns and these were filled as rapidly as the re turns wero received from the board room. Bulletins were supplied every half hour. BOTTLED FLUID NOT WINE Stuff Found on Campus Contains But Little Alcohol Tho bottled fluid found ou the cam pus a few days ago and supposed to bo port wine, is not win© at all, ac cording to Prof. H, O. Tanner of the ! chemistry department. When lie ana lyzed the stuff yesterday he found that its alcoholic content was but 1.6 per | cent. “The alcohol in that stuff was not sufficient to eveu make a good beer,” he declared. What the balance of the ■ supposed wine contained Prof. Tanner did not care to prophesy, and the work neces j sary to determine the other contents would not be worth the effort. “I’ll pour the stuff in tho sink,” declared .John L. Hanna, who has charge of the i spurious wine since its discovery.