Oregon Daily Emerald NUMBER 168 VOLUME XXIV. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 1923 GOBBLERS LOSE TO PIFELERS IN RRRD GAME, SCORE R-0 Teams Play Real Football in Last Practice of Season; Sax Heads Gobblers PLAYERS SHOW UP WELL Frenchy Du Paul Makes Only Touchdown; Goal Kick Blocked by Mautz The Pifflers won six to nothing. ’ i three or four hundred spectators, vho braved the cold and rain to witness the contest from the sidelines of the sawdust practice field saw a real “fightin” football game on the last day of May and the athletes themselves fin ished their season’s work—yes, it was a great day and a great game. Captain Sax of the Gobblers, called the turn on the coin and elected to have his team kick. Burton unlimbered with a beautiful boot to the ten yard line where Terjeson caught and returned the ball 12 yards before he was downed. The Pifflers organization hadn’t yet seemed to hit their stride for they failed to penetrate the Gobbler’s first line of defense in their three tries be fore kicking. Mays, right end for the Pifflers, was called back to kick. He booted a low, twisting spiral which bounced off Sax’s knees and rolled free. Out of the smoth er of players Frenchy Du Paul, left end for the Pifflers, darted, grabbed the rolling ball and ran for the goal line. Sax was at his heels, but before he could tackle, was brought down from behind by a splendid dive by Sin clair. Du Paul made the touchdown. Score, Pifflers, six; Gobblers, nothing The try for goal was blocked by Mautz. right end of the Gobblers. Gobblers Penalized Five Yards The Gobblers again kicked off and again Terjeson returned for ten yards. Three more tries and Mays was again brought back to kick. Sax caught the ball and was downed in his tracks. This was the Gobblers first opportunity to show their stuff and they made three tries through the line which netted them twelve yards and a first down. Then a five yard penalty for over eagerness resulted in the Gobblers hav ing to kick. The rest of the half the ball moved back and forth and when the whistle blew, was on the Gobblers 40 yard line, in their possession. In the second half, Poulsen of the Pifflers kicked to Kirtley who returned about 8 yards before he was dropped. This time the Gobblers took the first time out of the game while the quarter gathered his men for what must have been a little pep talk—only it didn’t work and Burton was forced to punt. Mays Is Injured Mays,who had been playing brilliant football, was injured and Tamba took his place at end. This left the punting for Poulson and he handled it credita bly; kicking once to the Gobblers four yard line from their 40 yard marker. Then followed an exhibition of real Ore gon fight. Both teams were on their toes—The Pifflers to put aeross ano ther touchdown and the Gobblers to rush the ball out of danger. For two downs the Pifflers held without let ting the Gobblers move the ball out an inch and Burton was called to kick. He barely had time to slap the ball with his foot before an avalanche of players were through and around (Continued on page three) Singer in Swiss Light Opera Role FLORENCE GARRETT FAIRBANKS MEMORIAL FOB 0.A.C. ACCEPTED Aggie Committee Receives Gift Panel; Lunch at Studio The acceptance of the service mem orial modeled by Avard Fairbanks, pro fessor of sculpture, will take place today in the arts building. A committee from the class of 1923 at O. A. C. will be present to receive it. The memorial is a gift of the class of 1923 to their col lege, and will be placed in the library en trance-way. Governor Walter M. Pierce, who is also on the board of regents of O. A. C., will be present and will attend the informal studio luncheon to be given at 12, noon. Guests will include President and Mrs. P. L. Campbell, the O. A. C. commit tee, and the committee for the Lewis and Clark trail memorial association. Smocks will be worn, and the model of the mo ther group which.is to be placed in the niche in the wall north of the Woman’s building, as well as the statue of Aphro dite, which Mr. Fairbanks is executing for Carl G. Washburne, tvill add an at mosphere of their own. The service memoriat, which will be unveiled in Corvallis tomorrow at the commencement exercises, is a relief panel seven feet high and 33 inches wide. An angel, symbolizing the spirit of sacrifice, is upholding a service man who holds in one hand the olive branch that he has won, in the other his gun at rest. He is lifting his face—boyish under the tin helmet—to the eyes of the angel. The names of the dead are engraved on the roll, and at the bottom of the panel is a border of crosses and conventional ized poppies of Flan.!?rs’ fields. The whole composition gives a sense of re pose and a reverence for those senti ments which pay honor to the men who have given their all for the United States and the world freedom. The panel has been cast in plaster here, but the final casting in bronze will be done in New York. The work is notable for being the first service mem orial to be done by an Oregon sculptor for any institution within the state. OREGANAS ARE MAILED Approximately 240 copies of the 1923 Oregana have been mayed to the different high schools of the state.' Every accredited high school in Ore gon is entitled to a copy of the year book, according to Jason McCune, man ager. Several copies have also been sent to libraries over the state. Colonel Leader May Apply For Job as Dean of Music By Colonel Leader VANCOUVER, B. C., May 28.—(Spe cial to Emerald)—It is an appalling thing for me to realize that the Univer sity is now carrying on without my ehaperonage. I wake up shrieking at night imagining awful things that have happened; on three successive nights I have had the following nightmare: 1. That Dean Stranb has told a fresh man class that they are not up to stand ard. 2. That Tiny, on the mound, has sold a ball game for fear of being beaten up by one of the opposing players. 3. That Hunk at third has made errors on purpose, in order to brighten the al ready bright eyes of some coed in the rival institution. I have not yet got over the horror of one of our games at Corvallis in Vt8. Jimmie Sheehy was onr captain, and at noon on the match uay, I found him at one of the O. A. C. restaurants with a most attractive O. A. C. coed. I saved that game by telling Jimmie he was wanted at the diamond—and then taking the siren to another restaurant before he could get back. The University of British Columbia has a vacancy for dean of music, and I am thinking of corraling the job. If I do, I will at once start a new inter varsity competition, and have an annual encounter with us at Homecoming. I can see John Jacob Landsbury burn green with envy when he hears my symphony orchestra rendering Mendelsohn’s “Hail, Hail the Gang All Here,” or Gounod’s “I Wear My Pink Pajamas.” I will never take on the glee club though, be cause John Stark Evans might double cross me by making his team sing “Songs of Oregon.” Things are much the same in British Columbia as they were nine years ago, except that the rule of the road ia changed, and vehicles pass on the right, ■ike in the states. It had to be done, as Americans always—for some reason— seem to get very exhiliarated their first day in British Columbia, and forget to (Oobtinned on page three) TIE! PICTURES SHOW WILD LIFE IN VARIED FORMS i Students are Enchanted b} Wonderland Displayed in Assembly Film LECTURER IS NATURALIST Close-up Views of Deer, Elk, Sea Lions, Sandpipers Portrayed on Screen Weaving a story of entrancing inter est as his audience followed pictures of suspicious elk, of gamboling bear, of chattering chipmunks, of “Wild Life from Tide Line to Mountain Top,” William L. Finley, naturalist, presented to students of the University yester day three reels of motion pictures he has taken while on excursions for the Na tional Association of Audubon Socie ties, of which he is a member. The first scene showed the shore line of the sea, where life began. The shore line is much the same as it was 20, or 30. or 50 thousand years ago. To go to the shore line is like going back thousands of years. Here are found the little sandpipers, the versatile gull and the fiddler crabs which scuttle into their holes at the first notice of dan ger. Going below the surface of the heaving swells, close to the barnacle covered rocks, the delicate anemone sways with the surging currents, its pale tentacles grasping bits of food in their waving hold. The first forms of life. Water Animals Shown An ugly octopus oozed along over the ocean floor, its flowing arms mov ing with sinister intent; now one would curl disclosing the hideous sucking discs lining the length. Giant bull sea-lions and their mates were shown sporting the foam-crested water. The scene changed. A glimpse of Yosemite Falls, in all their majestic heights and then a close view, near the brink, where the water pitches out of sight down and down—and there is a tiny water-ousel, bobbing on a spray splashed rock, then over she goes to her young ones in that secure home hidden under the very curl of the rush ing torrent. And then appear close-ups of deer, stepping daintily beneath giant trees, of two cubs idly playing together, of a snappy pine squirrel perkily eying these intruders, of a sooty, or blue, grouse, which the guide was able to creep up to and stroke with his finger before it took flight with a thunderous roar of frightened wings. “Birds and animals are wild because' they have been persecuted,” remarked the naturalist, “It is splendid that we have national parks where we can get acquainted with these friends. With the advance of civilization many of them are having a hard time to sur vive.” Mountain Views Seen Pictures of the “roof of the conti nent,” where the elk have been driven to a last stronghold, of prickly porcu pines, of the doughty “camp-robber,” who Mr. Finley says should be called the Oregon jay, of a snow-white cabin far up in the heights, where the guide is shown squatting near a small blaze with a pan of fish sizzling before him; all so artistically by this nature-lover —it is no wonder many of the assem blage could be heard saying as they filed reluctantly from Old Villard, which had been packed to the doors, “Gee, those fish! Say, I am going to try to take a few days out this sum mer and hit for the hills myself. And, enviously, “to think he spends all his time that way-” NEW COURSES OFFERED Extension Division Urges Students to Arrange for Summer Work Students planning to do correspon dence work through the correspondence department of the extension division, are urged to make arrangements at the extension division before the end of this term. Students are also asked to consult their advisors in their major depart ments before taking any correspondence work. Any course taken during the summer should be completed before col lege opens next fall, according to Dr. Dan E. Clark, of the extension divi sion. , New courses will be offered later in the summer and next fall in political science, railway management, American novel, and revised courses in history and one in elementary physiology. Anyone planning to teach school next year, but who has not yet done the required reading circle work can obtain from the extension division a list of the required books before leav ing school. CUSS REUNIONS ARE ON PROGRAM FOR GRADUATION 1 Prominent Eastern Educators Will Deliver Addresses for Commencement FIRST CLASSES TO GATHER Julius Caesar Will be Given on Hayward Field by the Company The program for the 47th annual commencement of the University has been announced and includes in addi tion to the usual number of events, sev eral class reunions which are expected to draw a large crowd of alumni from all parts of the United States to the campus during the week of .Tune 20 to 25. Two prominent eastern educators will be present to give the formal ad dresses for the class of 19211. Dean Edward Ellery, of Union Col lege in New York, will be the speaker at the Methodist church on the morn ing of Sunday, June 24, at the Bacca laureate service and Dr. Henry Bald win Ward, of the University of Illi nois, will give the commencement ad dress the following day when the grad uation exercises will be held in the Wo man’s building at 9:45 a. m. Committees Announced Later Alumni of the University who belong to the classes of 1876 to 1890 will hold a reunion in a group as they represent the first classes which were graduated from the institution. Other classes which will hold special reunions are 1883, 1893, 1913 and 1918. The plans •of the committees which are arranging these special home-comings for so many of Oregon’s graduates will be announc ed later and their presence is expected to add greatly to the impressiveness of the occasion for which they are re turning. Dean John Straub, who has been the father of each of these classes in its turn will be on hand as the cen tral figure of all these groups who re call his loyalty to them during their college days and will welcome an op portunity to renew their old ties on the campus through him. Schedule of Events The schedule of events for commence ment week has recently been printed and will soon be distributed by Uni versity officials in charge of the pro gram. A copy of it follows: Wednesday, June 20 10:00 a. m.—Special reunion of all classes from 1876 to 1890, inclusive, Alumni hall, Woman’s building. Thursday, June 21 8:30 p. m.—Failing and Beekman ora torical contest, Villard hall. Friday, June 22 7:30 p. m.—Flower and Fern proces sion, campus. 8:00 p. in.—Program of dancing by advanced students in the department of physical education for women, cam pus. 8:30 p. m.—rTwilight concert, combin ed glee clubs, campus. (Audience will be seated on lawn. Bring robes and cushions.) Saturday, June 23—Alumni Day 9:00 a. m.—Annual meeting and breakfast of the State Alumni associa tion, the Anchorage. 9:30 a. m.—Meeting of the alumni council, president’s office, Johnson hall. 10:30 a. m.—Annual meeting of the Alumni association, election of officers Guild theatre, Johnson hall. 12:00 noon—University luncheon to alumni, seniors and invited guests, at men’s gymnasium. Special reunions, classes of 1883, 1898, 1913 and 1918. 3:00 to 5:00—President’s reception, Alumni hall, Woman’s building. 6:00 p. m.—Special reunion dinners. 8:15 p. m.—Commencement play, “Julius Caesar,” by William Shakes peare, given by University Company, Hayward field. Sunday, June 24 11:00 a. m.—Baccalaureate services, sermon by Dean Edward Ellery, Union College, Scheneotady, New York, na tional secretary of the Society of the Sigma Xi, “The Spiritual Evolution of Man,” First Methodist church, 4:00 p. m.—8pecial concert, under the direction of the school of music. First Methodist church. Monday. June 25 9:45 a. m.—Commencement address by Dr. Henry Baldwin Ward, Univer sity of Illinois, national president of the Society of Sigma Xi, Woman’s building. Conferring of degrees on graduating class. Writer of Opera Given Last Night ANNE LANDSBURY BECK TRUCK SQUAD LEAVES TOR MEET AT PULLMAN Oregon Doped to Do Well in Coast Conference Tilt Coach Bill Hayward and 11 track men left Eugene yesterday bound for Pull man where they will represent Oregon at the coast conference meet there Saturday afternoon. Those making the trip are Captain Lar son, Obcrteuffer, Hardenberg, Risley, Lucas, Rosebraugh, Peltier, Koepp, Spearow, Bowles and Kamna. Each team in the conference meet is allotted 12 men, but Coach Hayward decided that the squad he selected would be as strong as the Lemon-Yellow could send this year. The veteran mentor may only en ter 10 men in the meet depending on con ditions Saturday. In the tryouts held on Hayward field, Wednesday afternoon, Oberteuffer sprang a surprise by his performance in the 440 and as a result will be the fourth man in Oregon’s relay quarter Saturday. This will be the first time that Obie has ruu in the mile relay team in an official meet, but from the way he circled the lap in the tryout it is not likely that the team will suffer much from the change. The Lemon-Yellow relay team will consist of Hardenberg, Risley, Rosebraugh and Oberteuffer. Last Saturday at Seattle the same team with the exception of Oberteuffer won the relay event from the fast Washington quartet and indica tions are favorable that they will come very close to repeating in the confer ence relay. While the Varsity’s chances of winning the conference laurels are well-nigh im possible with the national champion Cali fornian squad entered in the competi tion, the Lemon-Yellow should finish the afternoon well up among the leaders. Barring accidents Oregon should cap ture the pole vault with Ralph Spear ow performing as he did in the meet with the Aggies. The blonde field star also will give the rest of the entries plenty of competition in the high and broad .jumps. In the weights Kamna will be the only Oregon man entered. With strong entries in these events from California, Washington and O. A. C„ there is small hope of garnering many points here, but Kamna whirls the dis cus around 120 feet and may take a place. In the sprints Larson and Ober teuffer may spring a surprise and take a few places. In the 440 Vic Risley will be Oregon’s hope. Risley has not been defeated in three meets thus far and it will take a mighty speedy quarter miler to cross the tape ahead of him. Guy Keep!; has not struck his real stride in the two-mile race yet this year and his friends arc pulling for him to stage a comeback and place high in this event Saturday. Floyd Bowles failed to per form in the broad jump against the Huskies last Saturday but it is likely that he will be back in form for the confer ence tilt. Thus with Btrong men in the jumps, the sprints, the quarter, and the two mile the Lemon-Yellow will no doubt be heard from before the day’s competition is over. DORMAN ARCHITECT HEAD Gong and Weights are Proposed to Keep Students Active at Desks Frank Dorman was elected president of the Architects’ club at a meeting held yesterday in the architecture building. Other officers are Fred Jun ken, vice-president and Katherine Ash mead, secretary and treasurer. The slogan for the drafting room un der the new regime is—“Work when you’re not asleep and don’t sleep much.” By this method the architects expect to get ahead rapidly. They de clare that it will be necessary to install a gong, and weights to be hung above each table so that when one does go to sleep the president can cut the weights loose and sound the gong. “We are organizing on a new basis,” said the president with a smile, “and we expect to have prize-fights and ping pong matches every week-end.” j Swiss OPERA BY BARS. BECK GIVES PLEASING SCENES Plot of Story Hinges on Annual Spring Festival with Sports and Color MUSIC MAJORS IN CAST Dancing Executed with Vigor and Grace; Singing Has Holiday Swing After only five months of work in which time music was composed, words written, costumes and scenery planned, and the performance itself directed, the opera “The Hour Hand,” was pre sented by Anne Laudsbury Beck at the Heilig theatre last night before a large crowd of college students and town people. The historical significance of the opera was expressed in the opening tableau during the overture, depicting the famous oath of Rutli. Parts in the production were taken by University students, many of them music majors. The entire plot of the story took place in a little Swiss mountain vil lage on the annual spring festival day when the flocks were leaving for their mountain pastures, led away by the cowherds who had one last day of fro lic with their sweethearts and ttie vil lage folk before their summer trip. Garbed in holiday attire they danced and sang the characteristic folk songs and dances of the Swiss people. Austrian Plot Involved But while the village whiled away the long day in sports the jovial tyrant of the village, Landholdt von Brune, whose personal ambitions and political - aspirations outweighed his love for his people, was plotting with the Austrian spy. Their machinations were foiled j by the clever theft of a clock by two Austrian messengers and the unhappy tyrant was doomed to disappointment. Bobert McKnight in the role of the tyrant, and Alfred Myers, as Heinrich, the spy, did excellent work. Songs Are Pleasing Johnson in the role of Arnold Er lach, a herdsman, and Florence Garrett as the daughter of the master clock maker, sang together of spring and love and kindred subjects. Particularly pleasing were the songs by the Cheese girl, Ruth Akers, and the Wine girl, Marvel Skeols. The former sang a song of cheese and dair ies, the latter led a chorus who sang lustily of the joys of wine. Aubrey Furry, with his be-braided coat, his prestige as a leading citizen and his big voice was a commanding figure, in the opera in the role of the Master Clock Maker. His songs were well received by the audience. Bernice Altstock as Gertrude Gelir liardt, who served guests at the tavern, and Wayne Aker’s, as Albrecht Furst, apprentice to the clock maker, also scored successes. Maxine Buren as the inn keeper, con corned for “her Gretchen,” when young men hung about, and Curtis Phillips as Reginald Montague, an English trav eler, furnished the laughs for the opera. Chorus Work Good Th chorus work was well done. The songs were sung with the lilt aud swing of holiday lays and the dancing was executed with vigor and grace. The circle of villagers, dancing in their gay greens and yellows and reds, in the village square, with the blue Alps tow ering in the background made an ef fective and colorful picture. The setting for the opera and the scenery were made by Henry Sheldon. The high roofed inn on one side and the clock makers shop on the other were charming and quaint. Members of the University orches tra, accompanied the opera. Charles Runyan, a former University student, who did the orchestration for the pro duction, was the pianist for the or chestra. DIPLOMA FEES ARE DUE Seniors Must Pay $10 a Month Before Time of Graduation Diploma fees for all students who ex pect to graduate in June, must be paid at least one month before graduation according to E. P. Lyon of the regis trar’s office. The fee amounts to $10 for each de gree and is payable at the cashier’s window in the registrar’s office. “No diplomas will be signed until the fee is paid,” says Mr. Lyon, “and ow ing to the fact that some signatures must be secured from out-of-town peo ple, it is necessary for the fee to be paid at once.”