Oregon Daily Emerale VOLUME XXIV. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON. EUGENE, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1922 NUMBER 3 CALLISON DONS SUIT, BRIGHTENS TEAM'S PROSPECT Center Soon to Take Regular Position; Cog Campbell Out for Tackle SALEM ELEVEN IS STRONG Willamette, Reported Better Than Last Year, Ready For Coming Tilt Prince Callison, one of the best cen ters that ever wore an Oregon suit, turned out in uniform last night and will workout with the team for a week or two .before taking his regular posi tion at center. Prince is rapidly re covering from the injury to his legs received while working this summer and expects to be able to get in most of the games this season. This is his third year and his return greatly strengthens an already strong line. With Dick Peed and Byler also out for cen ter, this position is well filled. Cog Campbell, who was out last night for the first time, got into scrimmage right off the bat and proceeded to tear the first string line up. Cog is rather out of condition, but with a couple pf weeks’ work will be one of the most valuable men on the squad. Cog has a great deal of respect for the first-string backs after his experience last night and says they have more drive than any four mbn he has tackled for a long time. , Prospects Still Improve Oregon football cliances are growing brighter every day with the return of old men to college and the rapid re covery of the men injured in early sea son scrimmages. Tiny Shields, two-year letterman and one of the best linemen on the coast, will also be ready for hard work in a few days and will .add to the speed of the line. The team which will start against Willamette here Saturday has not been picked yet, and most of the men out will probably get a chance unless the Methodists prove stronger than expect ed. They held the Varsity to a 7 to 3 score last year, and have a stronger line this season so may prove a tougher proposition than is expected. The Salem team is rather in the na ture of a dark horse so far as this is the first game of the season for them, so their hopes are high. Dope from their camp is to the effect that the line is stronger and the backfield faster than any previous team put out by that institution. Showing Pleases Coaches The coaches are elated over the show ing of the team in last night’s scrim mage, and say the men have more drive than any that have represented Oregon for a long time. The new ruling requiring that after a touchdown the ball must be put into play on the ten yard line will evidently cause Oregon little trouble this year, as Hal Chapman in practice last night was sending five out of every seven at tempted place kieks over the bar. The kicking end of the game" is also adequately taken care of with both Chapman and Latham in the backfield as both are capable of good lengthy boots at any time. The entire outlook is bright, and unless unexpected injur ies hit the squad they should turn in | a goodly list of wins. ■ Land Where War Threatened Visited by Member of Faculty Kemal, the Turkish dictator, who is parleying with the British following his success against the Greeks, is vigor ous and able and possessed of unusual force of character, is the belief of Pro fessor Barnes of the University history department, who spent part of Febru ary and March in Athens and Constan tinople, and visited Smyrna for a day when the Greeks were garrisoned there •after their defeat at Angora. Kemal, says Barnes, plays his cards with the assurance of an expert in a poker game, resorting to “bluff” when necessary to win. This is the opinion of the Otto man leader that is held by a number of Americans in the Near East. “A Harvard graduate who was in Angora when the Greeks advanced to storm the town told me that Kemal outbluffed, as well as outguessed, the Constantine troops,” said Professor Barnes. “This American, who served on a government commission because of his linguistic ability and knowledge of Near Eastern affairs, declared that Kemal was in dire straits because of insufficient supplies and inefficient troops. But Kemal, if he had any doubts of success, never let any one into his confidence. On the day of the principal engagement he asserted that never was Turkish morale better or victory so certain.” When Barnes, who toured Europe as holder of the Bayard Cutting traveling fellowship in nistory at Harvard, reach-1 ed Smyrna late in February the Greeks! were guarding the city closely and for eigners found difficulty in entering the town. At that time the impression pre vailed, Professor Barnes says, that the Greeks were reconciled to the loss of the hinterland of Smyrna and that the, war was over; men simply being heldi under arms until a peace settlement could be arranged. ‘‘I was told by an American who held a position in Constantinople col lege that chaos reigned throughout the Turkish empire,” continued the Ore gon faculty man. “The impression prevailed further that the Turks were seeking to gain American sympathy, making a vigorous effort to effect thef impression created by their treatment of the Armenians.” A polygot city swarming with Rus sian refugees, allied officials, Asiatics, Constantinople was the center of poli tical activity in the Near East. Amer ican business men there, according to (Continued on page three.) tl Campus Lords Meet Tonight For Discussion President Hal Simpson of the Sen ior class, lord high wearer of the som brero, supreme chief of the cultiva tors of the mustache and possessor of numerous other official and unofficial titles has called a meeting of his fel low classmen to be held today. The time is 4:15. The place is the Y hut. Hal says every senior ought to be out. Hal says numerous questions of im portance are to be discussed, includ ing plans for the annual Senior Leap Week. Tor the benefit of the inter \ ested freshman reader, Senior Leap Week is not an athletic orgy but a j time-honored tradition. It consists of l one week of suspense for the bashful j males of the class and one week of hectic date making for the women. Hal reports that several women’s or ganizations have already begun to make plans for Senior Leap Week. President Hal is very enthusiastic about the coming year for the class of 1923. At the meeting tomorrow he is going to tell the senior class why. GLEE CLUB TRYOUTS WILL BEGIN TUESDAY — Many Position Open For New Voices on Campus With Nelson English, Herb Pate,! ‘‘French” Moore and Creeene Fariss lost to the organization through gradu-! ation or withdrawal and possibility that! the prevalence of good material may j endanger the positions of some of the! veteran singers, the mens glee club tryouts, which will begin Tuesday of next week should be very interesting, according to John Stark Evans, direc tor. Mr. Evans is enthusiastic over the chances of a great glee club year due to the large number of singers who have entered the University during the past week. Everyone who wishes to try for a position on the club will appear at Mr. Evans’ study Tuesday at four o’clock and then a series of tryouts 'extending over a period of time will be arranged. There are. positions open for every type of voice,” Mr. Evans declares. Jimmie Meek, manager of the club for the coining year, is working with Graduate Manager Benefiel on a trip to Salt Lake. A trip at Christmas to Coos Bay is now assured and if the Utah trip does not mature Eastern Ore gon and probably Idaho will be visited in the spring. That every man in school who can even carry a tune should try for the club is the opinion of those in charge. PRACTICE TEACHERS TO MEET University practice teachers will meet for the second time this year next Monday, October 9th at 4 p. m. in room 2 of the Education building, an nounced H. It. Douglass yesterday. The j supervised teachers in the art, physical education and music departments, how ever, will not be expected to attend1 this meeting. PLEDGING ANNOUNCED Sigma Alpha Epsilon announces the pledging of Floyd McKalson of Port land. LEMIVIY DEMANDS STUDENT SUPPORT IN BIC CAMPAIGN Drive on For Subscriptions To Continue Till Goal of 2000 Reached NEW FEATURES PLANNED Punch Staff Is Chosen For This Year; Hammer and Coffin Elects Six Lemmy craves support! Bated as the fifth best college magazine in the whole United States, with a staff this year that promises a bigger and better comic than ever, success in the present cam paign for subscriptions is not only ask ed, but demanded. Although about 700 students have delved into their jeans for the modest sum of $1.75, Milton Brown, circulation manager, emphatically states that the campaign will continue unabated until every campus occupant is wearing the yellow “Lemmy” tag. The primary purpose of Lemon Punch according to “Doc” Braddock, editor, is to instill humor into the University life, but this year it will be livened by a dramatic page, a literary section, and many other features that will come in the nature of “spicy surprises.” Be ginning with the first issue, which will be available about October 15, Lemmy will be a monthly occurrence on the campus. 2000 Mark Is Goal Today the present campaign, which so far has been more or less disturbed by the bother and fuss of registration, will be resumed with unabated fury. Every student, faculty member and employee of the University will be “hit” at some time, or several times during the day, and by nightfall it is hoped that the 2000 mark will at least be in sight, if not reached. Subscription chasers are being lured to ceaseless activity by the promise of three prizes, a grand prize of ten dol lars ($10.00) and two second prizes, a loving cup each to the man and to the woman who turn in the most names. A bound volume is also to be awarded to each house that comes through 1 ‘ one hundred per cent.” No official standings of prize com petitors are available as yet. Those conceded as having good chances are Mary Hathaway, Margaret Seymour, Inez King, Kenneth Cooper and Ernest Eggleson. Houses already reporting one hundred percent are Alpha Sigma, Delta Zeta, Chi Omega, and Alpha Beta Chi. Hammer and Coffin Elects Prior to the first issue, Hammer and Coffin, publishers of the Lemon Punch, held initiation last night for Ted Os burne, Gus Evans, Kenneth Youel, Stu Biles, and Milton Brown. Inez Fair child was elcted honorary member. Lemmv’s staff, as announced by Doc Braddoek, editor and manager, includes Ted Osburne and Kelly Branstetter as associate editors; Ernest J. Hayeox, Herb Larson and Gus Evans on the board of editors; Owen Calloway, art editor, with Stu Biles and Bee Morrow, associates; alumni editors, Stan Eisman and Kay Betliers; associate business manager, Si Sonnichsen; advertising manager, Inez Fairchild; circulation manager, Milton Brown and Ep Hoyt, feature editors. In a little dialogue staged especially for the Emerald, Doc Braddoek, editor manager, and Milton Brown, circulation m a n a g e r, enthusiastically declare, ■•This is Lcmmy’s greatest year, and with the whole-hearted support of the entire student body, alumni, and facul ty, we will rise high and shine with great brightness.” SAM B. WARNER ON LEAVE Law Professor to Work for Doctorate at Harvard University for Year Sam Bass Warner of the University law school faculty has been granted a leave of absence for the present aca demic school year. Mr. Warner is gen eral director of research work in the held of criminal statistics for the Am erican Institute of Criminal Laws and i riminology. Professor Warner is also working for his doctorate in the Har vard Law sehool having been granted the Thayer teaching fellowship of that j school. Mr. Warner spent the summer in Chicago teaching in the Northwest ern College law sehool. During his leave of absence Mr Charles E. Carpenter has been apointed to Mr. Warner’s position. Mr. Carpen ter held the deanship of the Washburn School of Law in Topeka, Kansas, and prior to that time was on the Univer sity of North Dakota law faculty. He was also affiliated with Dean Hale in le University of Illinois law faculty. OREGON EMERALD WILL BE PRINTED SIX TIMES WEEKLY Sport Articles, Features and Contributions Planned for Sunday E. J. HAYCOX IS EDITOR Paper to Be Delivered in Usual Manner; First issue Will Be Out Oct, 8 There is to be a Sunday Emerald this year. Such is the school of journal ism’s addition to the general prosperity and progress of the University. For two years the Emerald has ben "a daily, and as such has conveyed the news of the campus to its readers five times a week in a readable, and concise man ner. With the addition of a Sunday paper, the Emerald becomes the only one of its kind in the country. Ernest Bayeox is to be the Sunday editor. “We only know in a general way, what the Sunday edition is to be like,” said Haycox. “But this much is cer tain; it will not be, primarily, a news sheet. I mean to say, the time element is not going to play as large a part as in the dailies. On Sunday we sufferers of the scholastic urge relax and sleep to dress for dinner, and ararnge* after through the breakfast gong, rise in time that to pig or to loaf. To pig or to loaf—that’s the question. If you elect to loaf, then the Sunday Emerald wants to help the loaf along. “Meaning by that, the paper wants to follow the example of all good Sun day sheets. “In it we will try to put the very best of the week’s features, written by the best writers now on the campus. On week days the columns of the paper are under tremendous pressure to get in the straight news stories; there’s but little room left for features. The Sunday paper will get these latter.” Good Writers Here According to the faculty of the school of journalism, there are many tine wri ters on the campus who could, if given the opportunity and the space, write very interesting stories of the currents of life, tlie movements of progress and reform, the slow shifting of traditions, the death and birth of new ways of thinking, going on within the boundar ies of the crowded University world. It is the hope of the staff of the Sunday paper to draw these men and women into service. For many years there have been spor adic attempts to start purely literary magazines. Most of them have flour ished for a few issues and then ceased publication. It seems there has been too little of the genuinely original lit erary kind of material to fill a regularly published magazine. According to llay cox the Sunday Emerald will occupy in a way, the place of such a magazine, by publishing the few best stories and essays and poems it can find. Saturday Sports Covered ‘ ‘ We hope to make it hold a wide interest,” added Ilaycox. ‘‘We will cover the Saturday sports, thus elimi nating the hold-over to the Tuesday paper. We want to cover the shows down town; wo want to review the oc casional good book that falls within the University's horizon. In fact there is but one limit—it' must be well written, and it 'must carry the punch of supreme i interest. ’ ’ Some of the writers uow engaged to write for the Sunday edition are Ed .in | Hoyt, laid Fraser, sports; Earle V-mr j hies, Jessie Thompson, Arthut lludd ind! Mary Lou llurton, general feati res. There is a great store of good, lively and interesting stories now being writ-j tin for the Sunday edition, according to 1 the editors. The pap-*r will come out Sunday morning and be distributed to the var ious organizations by the usual method, for the subscribers outside of houses a box will be placed outside the co op where they may get their copy. DATE OF TEA IS CHANGED All Women Urged to Attend This An nual Affair and Get Acquainted Due to the conflicting events on : lay, the tea 0 the Di Women and Women’s League will be hostesses to the women of the Univer ; sity has bene postponed two weeks.! and will be held on Saturday, October! 21, in Alumni hall of the Woman V1 building. All University women are invited, and particularly the freshmen women, as the tea affords an opportunity for all to meet and become acquainted. It is an annual affair held at the begin ning of each Fall term. Mrs. P. L. Campbell, Dean Flizabe Fox DeCon, and the officers of Women V ■ League for this year, will receive. 1 in tea hour will be from 3:30 to 5:30. * ICE CREAM TOO MUCH FOR OREGON WARRIORS Doings of Oregon Gridsters in Hawaii Related in Spicy Comment In Annual An echo of Oregon's past exploits is found in the Annul of the University of Hawaii for the year 1022. Excerpts trom that publication show that the Oregon football team created a favor able and friendly impresison on its trans-Pacific trip last voar. Among other things the calendar of the annual devotes nearly a page of spiey comment to the doings and activ ities of the team and coaches. Begin ning with December 20 when the squad arrived at its island destination, the reading proves interesting. December 20: Coach “Shv” arrives with Mrs. “Shy” from U. of O. with the Oregon squad. -1: Trainer Bill Hayward puts the kibosh (>n a lot of innocent amusement. -2: Too bad, girls, that big Oregon tackle has been married for four veasr. 2’3: Mrs. Edmondson entertained Oregon team. Bill Hayward allows the men to eat half a dish of ice cream. -4: The campus sleuth has unearth ed the fact that Tiny Shields of Oregon chews from the old plug. According to the Honolulu Ad vertiser, Yonder Ahe, Oregon tackle, weighs two pounds less than a horse. Such commoiuts prbve conclusively that Hawaiian students differ little, in modes of expression at least, from their \ ankoe neighbors. NEW STYLEls COPIED FROM INDIAN FLAPPER Authority on Native Redskins Gives Interview Modern dress seems distinctly the creation of some of the foremost mod istes of the day, yet in reality, the long side drapes aer but a copy of the flapper of the Indian's garb. This, ^li s. Ada B. Milhcan, who has for the greater part of her life held a most remarkable interest in the Indian, dis closed the dress relationship of the In dian to our present style. When the Indian folds his blanket around him, ho allows the long point, or flapper, as it is called, to hang at the side, and walks with much dignity. The latter Mrs. Millican demonstrated. The “all seeing oyo,” is the princi ple-figure, woven in the Chilkat chief’s blanket, the head pieco of a most no table Indian -collection, loaned to the University by Mrs. Millican. The blanket, recently woven by a woman of about 50 years, is one which can never be duplicated. The fringe on this blanket is woven from the hair of the mountain goat, but the law now prevents the killing of these animals to obtain the hair for this use. Native ilyes are used in decorating the blan ket, a lemon-yellow and turquois being the predominating colors. A blanket, similar to the one owned by Mrs. Milli enn, was in the possession of Vice Pres ident Fairbanks. Mrs. Millican is a well known club woman from Prineville, and for years, journalism has held a keen part of her interest. 1 was the first woman reporter in Kugcne,’’ said Mrs. Millican. Mrs. Mil lican worked on the Kugeno Journal. 111 never misrepresented anyone, but I used to get it back on the other fellow. GIFT CAMPAIGN IS SUBJECT OF MS President Campbell, Tooze and MacGregor Explain Plans And Ultimate Aims MEETING VERY COLORFUL Student Group Still as Faculty March to Places; Millican Loan Told About Yesterday for the first time in 37 years a student assembly was held in a building on the campus othor than historic Villard hall; and yesterday for the first, time the students of the’Uni versity of Oregon wore told of plans which have as their ultimate purpose the placing of this institution in that crowned circle of colleges which includo the most notable in the United States. The assembly was held in the Woman’s building and President Campbell, La mar Tooze, field general of tho endow ment campaign, and John MncGrogor, president of the associated student group, explained the purpose of the campaign, methods which would bo used in informing the people of the state concerning tho importance of education, and what it means to the students here. Although statistics had an important place in tho addresses of the different speakers, the assembly was far from being staid, stale, or stereotyped. From two entrances approximately 2000 stu dents crowded into the large hall—a hall filled with seats bearing on the front rows the captions, “seniors,” “juniors,” “sophomores.” Up in tho balcony in the back of tho assombly hall were the freshmen—members of the class of 1926 whom Dean Straub found time in the crowded hour to ro fer to as the “largest and best class in the history of tho University.” Faculty File In Silently After practically every seat in the house had been fillod by the students who filed into the hall through two en trances, the members of tho faculty marched down the south aisle in double column, President Campbell, Lamar Tooze, Rev. J. M. Walters, Dean Straub and John MacGregor, loading the line. As the faculty group entered tho hall from tho sun parlor of tho Woman’s building, tho entiro student body arose, and until tho time when Rev. Walters delivered the invocation not a voice was heard in tho great room. Having prefaced his address with a welcome from the faculty to tho stu dents, President Campbell launched in to an explanation of tho present needs of tho University, saying that this fall school was opening under a now inspi rational idea—a plan to raise ton mil lion dollars in ten years that the Uni versity of Oregon continue toward its goal -one of tho largest and best uni versities in the country. President Explains Endowment Briefly, with statistics, with a largo plat showing the University a dozen years from now, with graphic remarks, President Campbell told the great as sembly about the campaign for endow ments totalling $10,000,000. To show on page two.) (Continued on page four.) Frosh Parade Is on Schedule: Oregon “O” Gleams in Sun 1 ‘ Boll up that pant leg, frosh. Whore’s that green lidf” These and ui.iu . other similar orders punctuated with-the resounding whack, whack, of big paddles, little paddles, thick pad dles, limber paddles, long paddles and short paddles, weilded by willing soph omore arms on as many different types of unwilling “mediums of resistance,” typified the spirit of the frosh parade yesterday afternoon. Once again the big “O” on Skinner’s Butte was to get its annual dressing of brilliant yel low. The column of some 400 trembling newcomers to the University moved off promptly at scheduled time from the library to the throbbing notes of “Rah, Rah. Oregon.” After enriching the insatiable sophs with cigarettes by the hundreds, the line of men, each with one leg gleaming in white contrast to the green campus, somewhat in the style of the kilted Hcots ran a gauntlet of thirsty bats. Truly, an enthusiastic sculptor would have reveled in the perfection of lines shown in the quivering underpinning that was displayed to the startled eyes of the co-eds. The bashful and halting kiss admin istered to the Oregon seal in front of Villard by each timid man was cut short from any long, drawn-out ecstasy of rapture by the reminding swat that duty lay elsewhere and it was time to be moving. A snappy march soon brought tho her*l to tho Rainbow. Here tho crowd wan treated to entertainment by ino dividual members of the class. Speeches songs, and the hula-hula dance by a talented ’L'fi cr were the loading fea tures presented to the joyful specta tors. Artificial precipitation in the form of well filled water-bags and a stream from a dirty fire hose helped lower tho high temperature of the group after the long march. A foot race up Willamette with the fountain as an objective followed. Art Rosebraugh addressed the new students on Oregon .Spirit and explained a number of traditions so that claim of “ignorance of the law’’ will be no excuse for violations in the- future among the men topped with the emerald tinted head covering. Contention that the clas of 1926 is the best were all corrected in short order under the inducement of persua sive sophomore “rebuttal” with but one exception. Yanking a good-natured freshman j from the line, a group of the ’25 class ! demanded the usual question “What’s i the best class. Come on. Out with it!” I His earnest eyes glowrti j with quiet | humor, be responded in solemn toue, “I’ll bite. Which is it?” Ilis return to the line was not ham I pered.