' Straub Recalls Early Games In Oregon Gridiron History “Oregon’s first football game was played in March in 1894 with Albany college,” said John Straub, emeritus dean of men. “The foot ball field was on the campus east of the Co-op store where the Ore gon building now stands.” Dean Straub, better known to all the students as “Oregon’s Grand Old Man,” has been on the campus for 52 years, coming here when the University was only a high school. He is the only living per son to have served on the original faculty and the first board of re gents. Because of his great in terest in the new students, he has become the special friend of the freshman class. “The second football game that Oregon played was in the fall of 1894,” Dean Straub continued. “I imagine that it was either the lat ter part of September or the first week in October. The game was played on Stewarts field at the foot of College Hill. The field was so deep with mud that at the end of five minutes no one was able to recognize the players.” The manner in which the play ers were taken to the field seems unusual to us with all our means of transportation. There was a small street car drawn by a one cylinder gray mule and guided by a darky named Wylie. It was by means of this car that the team reached its destination. “Homecoming, as we know it now, is not more than 10 or 15 years old, as they did not start until after the late war,” Mr. Straub said. “Before this com mencement was the time that all the grads came back. “These earlier Homecomings were not characterized by noise as they are today. The bonfire was the main event, each class want ing to beat the preceding class. The members would come to me and ask if I thought that their bonfire was as big as the one be fore, and of course I always said yes. All the lies I've told because of those fires! The fires were not on the butte but were built on the campus. The boys would take two big telegraph poles and rope them together. Then, they would gather wood and pile it up until it reached the ‘op of these poles. This took 40 or 50 cords of wood and all the oil in town. The blaze was so big that students stood on the roofs of the buildings to keep the sparks from burning them. “We had a parade, but a lot quieter than now. The boys! dressed in their old clothes, not pajamas, and serpentined down Willamette street yelling and sing ing songs. However, there were not any of the noisemakers that were so predominant in this last Homecoming parade.” Old Stage Coach Arouses Interest At Health Meet\ The campus was neither prepar ing for a Trail-to-Rail celebration nor a wild west show yesterday. The real reason for the presence on the campus of the old stage coach, formerly owned by Cal Young, Oregon pioneer, was in connection with the meeting of 30 representatives of the Lane Coun ty Public Health association held on the campus. The delegates were from various centers through out the county, and they met here in the preparation for the staging of a successful county-wide sale campaign of the seals. Lilian Tingle, department chair man of household arts, and her home economics class served a luncheon to the representatives, at which time Sadie R. Dunbarr, ex secretary of the Oregon State Health association spoke to the delegates. The old stage coach belongs to the Trail-to-Rail committee and the purpose of its use in the seal campaign is in relation to the 1931 Christmas seal design, which de picts an old stage coach drawn by four horses. The coach will be sent to Portland after it has been used here for publicity purposes for the campaign publicity there. FOUR IN INFIRMARY One new patient, Jack Kneeland, is confined to the infirmary. Oth ers who are ill are Helen Parish, Harr'lette Chase, and Bob Riddle. Dean Schwering Comments On Sleep Problem at Oregon By BEAN HAZEL PRUTSMAN SCHWERINO (This is the second of a series of articles on some phase of Health week written by prominent people on the campus.) In conjunction with the Health Week program, I wish we might have a “campus sleep week”—-that Is sleep at regular and reasonable hours at night and not in classes during the day. The strenuous life of college students is a drain on the whole nervous system emo tional reactions, and straight thinking and certainly a handicap to the physical well-being. The artificiality of living in large groups leads to constant interrup tions and irritations. Students do not become as fatigued from the class room work or extra curricu lar activities, as from the difficul ty under which studying and out side work are done. To attempt to study with the jangle of a rau cous telephone bell, the high pitched voices of thirty or forty people and a radio plus heavy Armishaws clattering on the stairs, is indeed no easy task. It is these things that irritate and tire people without their con sciously realizing it. The constant rushing about under pressure of many tasks to be done without ever a period of relaxation is too much to ask of the human ma chine. Each individual is entitled to a certain amount of privacy where he may have time and quiet for relaxation and meditation or to do as he wishes. The common complaint of mem bers of large living groups is the | constant noise, and the lack of peaceful surroundings and oppor tunity for real study. Many organ izations have taken steps to have the houses and halls quiet by put ting carpets on stairways and halls, hinges on doors to keep them from banging, and a buzzer sys tem in rooms. An attempt is also Be Alert Winter Is Approaching Adjust your car now for battery and carburetor troubles. George A. Halton Battery and Electrical Service Broadway and Olive Phone 1619 made to have certain quiet hours during the day and regulaltions about going to bed. But the en forcement of all these rules de pends on the thoughtfulness and consideration of each member of the organization. Many problems of college stu dents have at their basis lack of sleep. Students become greatly fa tigued, their vitality is reduced, they catch cold, become emotion ally disturbed and irritable, and soon there is a serious health prob lem. College men and women should realize the importance of safeguarding their health, and I sincerely hope the Health week program will make students awa’-e that they should take part, not only in protecting themselves, but others also. Maintaining quiet hours, a restful atmosphere, and securing a reasonable amount of sleep are important items in mak ing for a healthful physical and mental condition. Y. W. FORMS DISCUSSION CLUBS FOR FROSH GIRLS (Continued on Parje Tour) and place of meeting are as fol lows: group one, Ann Baum, Peggy Cullers, 3 o’clock Mondays, Susan Campbell; group two, Dorothy Foote, Mary MacMahan, 3 o’clock Fridays, Y. W. C. A.; group three Barbara Conley, Betty Goodman, 4 Thursdays, YWCA; group four five Florence Tennant, Magdalene Terret, 4 o’clock Mondays, Kappa Kappa Gamma; group six Marian Chapman, Bernice Ingalls, 8:30 Thursday evenings, Y. W. C. A.; group seven, Frances Keene, Cath erine Firebaugh, 3 o’clock Thurs days, Y. W. C. A.; group eight, Margaret Hunt, Dorothy Dibble, 4 o’clock, Tuesdays, Y. W. C. A.; group nine, Virginia Grone, Norma Pickle, 3 o’clock Thursday’s, Y. W. C. A.; group ten, Nancy Thompson, Eleanor Wharton, 4 o’clock, Fri days, Y. W. C. A. All girls not yet members of any of these groups and desiring to join one may see Margaret Ed munson at the, Y. W. C. A. bun galow. Pennington, Reames Join Congress Club Wednesday — New Members Taken In as Result Of Prohibition Talks Because of the quality of their j talks, John Pennington and Ed '■ Heames, principal speakers on the Wednesday evening program of the 1 Congress club, were asked to join | the organization. Contests are con ducted each spring for the mem bers under the sponsorship of Burt Brown Barker, vice-president of the University. The two speakers discussed the present prohibition problem. Pen nington upheld the present situa tion, while Reames maintained that it brought all law into disre pute and that the elimination of the Volstead ^.ct would ease the crime problem and destroy the present drinking drys. The meeting was held at the Col lege Side Wednesday at 7:30, and the next will be held the Wednes day after Thanksgiving. At this ■ time Howard Ohmart, freshman j in sociology, and George Bennett, j chairman of the program commit- ! tee for the club, will debate upon a question to be decided at a later date. Phi Chi Theta To Initiate Women Business Students Phi Chi Theta, national business honorary for women, will hold in itiation of six new members at Su san Campbell hall Sunday morn ing at 9 o'clock. The initiation will be followed by a breakfast at the Anchorage. The girls who are to be initiated Sunday are Maryellyn Bradford, Celestine Balsiger, Gladys Calk ins, Marguerite Tarbell, Dorothy McMillan, and Dorothy Hall. Alice Redetzke, president of Phi Chi Theta, will give a speech of welcome. Miss Kathryn Bailey will speak on the history of the honor ary, and Miss Mozelle Hair will tell of the achievements of women in business. Oregon Debate Excites Howl From Quiet-Loving Radio Fan We who were left at home when the good will debaters left on their Pacific basin jaunt have had to content ourselves with the glow ing tales of their receptions and successes. Judging by a letter sent to Virgil Earl, however, all is not | as rosy as it seems in the Orient. The following is a letter received by Dean Earl recently: Manila, Oct. 14, 1931. To the Dean of the University of Oregon: What is this world coming to when an accredited university al lows its children to cross the ocean and, in the fulness of their abysmal ignorance or vast knowledge, if you like, howl all night in com pany with Filipinos about men’s affairs to be broadcast over ra dios, all with loud speakers, and 300,000 people awake, who never get enough sleep at the best of times, because six boys choose to “holler?” Almost the entire population, bar the broadcasting manager who is still asleep now at 10 a. m. as far as I can discover, has to get up in this place before daylight and sorely needs the little sleep it normally gets, and out come blud geon tongues across the sea and murder that sleep. In America, one would get an ax, blacksnake or revolver and defend one's self, but not here. Therefore, henceforth keep your kids in school where they belong, I beseech you. P. S. I don’t (know) what they said: I don’t care. They couldn’t have said anything worth listening to. All the orators ever born from the days of ancient Greece to Will Rogers couldn’t say anything fit to broadcast to keep a whole city awake all night—part of the time to have to listen and the rest to rage. Kindly pass this to the Dean of the Colorado university, as I hear the same crime is contemplated for December by him, and I don’t want to die as I about did October 13. I shall not sign this as I’m no pride of the movie world looking for publicity—only an outraged person angrier than I thought I ever could be. Dresses Dinner — Tea — Formal New Blue Shades Blacks Castilian Reds in C repes - - - Taffetas Velvets - - - Laces -ALSO HOSE Chiffon and Service Weight $1.00 GILMORE’S Willamette at 10th i TALKIE TOPICS ► Colonial — “Graft,” starring Re gis Toomey. Showing today and Saturday. Heilig—“Expensive Women,” with Dolores Costello. Showing for the last time today. McDonald — "Riders of the Pur ple Sage,” starring George O’Brien. Showing today and Saturday. State — “One Heavenly Night,” featuring John Boles. Showing for the last time today. “Graft” at Colonial “Graft,” Universal’s fast-moving j drama which opens a first run en gagement today at the Colonial, deals with the trickery of crooked politicians and the romance of a boy and a girl. It is told against the background of a seething news paper office in a great city, and is said to be one of the season’s most intensely interesting stories of its type. The cast is headed by Regis Toomey, Sue Carol, Dorothy Re vier and Boris Karloff. * * * “Expensive Women” at Heilig Admirers of Dolores Costello ev erywhere concede that “Expensive Women,” the Warner Bros, picture in which she is appearing at the Heilig for the last time today, is her supreme starring vehicle. Her brilliant career, which really began in “The Sea Beast,” reaches its height in the role of Constance Newton, in "Expensive Women,” her twentieth film. Three leading men support her—Warren Wil liams, Anthony Bushell and Joe Donahue. Dorothy Gulliver, the prize win ning beauty from Salt Lake City, is the featured feminine player in “In Old Cheyenne,” which comes to the Heilig on Saturday only. * * * | A stampede of 500 cattle is one I ~ - George O’Brien, who is starring in Zane Grey’s “Riders of the Purple Sage,” which is showing at the Fox McDonald today and Sat urday. of the spectacular thrills offered in “Riders of the Purple Sage,” new Fox films action-romance, now showing at the McDonald. An added thrill is provided when George O’Brien, featured in the leading role, out-races the herd and, by throwing the leader, stops it just on the brink of a cliff. * * * "One Heavenly Night,” starring John Boles, Evelyn Laye, and Lil yan Tashman, is showing for the last time today. “Dugan of the Bad Lands,” fea turing Bill Cody and Andy Shuf ford is coming Saturday. The sign of a good haircut CAMPUS SiARSCtt SUOP ... SINCE 1920 Across from Sigma Chi “Look for the red clock’’ 50c Turkey Dinner 50c Gossers will serve Turkey Dinner Sat urday from I 1 a. m. until 2 p. m. and on Sunday from 1 2 until 8 p. m. MENU Fresh Oyster Soup Roast Turkey—Dressing—Cranberry Sauce Mashed Potatoes—Brown Gravy Creamed Peas—Vegetable Salad DESSERTS English Plum Pudding—Ice Cream Coffee—Milk GOSSERS Three blocks from Campus down 13th. I CiJ GU LdJ l“J DU Gil [HI CU CU Gii CJ Cfl LU GiJ l*y Cil ail Gil eu Gy irJ LLU lil liU Gy Gy lil l=i Gy Gy liU Gy L. DANCE Friday Nite COCOANUT GROVE Bring your dates to the Grove and listen to the MUSIC BY Carl Collins ^ Kampus Knights SPANISH DANCE — MIDWAY SATURDAY NIGIIT X KNOW I’m never disappointed in Chesterfields — each one is as mild and good-tasting as the one before. No milder, better tasting cigarette than Chester field can be made. That’s why more and more smokers are changing to them every day. In Chester field only the riper, milder tobaccos are used. And the purest cigarette paper. Every Chesterfield has the same good taste. You’ll never strike a‘'bad , one”—and you’ll never tire of the taste.They Satisfy! )p* i _«»