Reception for Tirza A. Dinsdale, New . Y. IN. Secretary, to Be Held Tomorrow Tina A Dinsdale, new secretary of the University Y. W. C- A., who arrived in Eugene Sunday evening, was introduc ed yesterday afternoon to the members of the advisory board and cabinet of the Y. W. C. A. at a tea given by Mrs. Frank Chambers at her home. Miss Dinsdale is the house guest of Mrs. Chambers, j- Her work on the campus begins imme diately. Miss Dinsdale, who is a graduate of Lawrence College at Appleton, Wig., >. 1 was Y. W. C. A. secretary at the Univer j sity of Wisconsin for two years and has been in city work in La Crosse, Wis., and Keokuk, Iowa. “I am glad to get back to the student work,” she said, “and I think the University of Oregon is equip ped for good Y. W. C. A. work.” Miss Dinsdale's home is in Galena, Illinois. She came straight through to Oregon. This is her first trip this far ‘ west. | An opportunity is being given to all University girls to meet Miss Dinsdale at a reception to be given for her on Wednesday afternoon from 4 to 0 o’clock at the Bungalow. A lottery system has been used to choose partners for the af fair. All girls are urged to find their 1 partners and come to help in extending a welcome to Miss Dinsdale. The results of the lottery follow: Helen Wells .... Jeannette Kletzing Mildred Garland .. Florence Powers . Ruth Rose . Dorothy Dunn Emma Stephenson Mildred Steinmetz Mabel Rankin ... Ruth Roche . Helen Rhodes .... Aline Johnson ... Carrie Stephens . Era Hanson. Lorain Taylor ... Lillian Porter .... June Beebe . Irene Strowbridge , Grayce Sage.. Frances Mann .... Louise Manning . . Iva McMillan Caroline Montague Myrtle Tobey . . . . Helen Brenton ... • Mary McCormack . .Marian McDonald ..Harriett Garrett .Jennie Yoder .Nellie Reidt .Mary Truax .Hazel Rasor ...Joanne Driscoll .Ruby Steiwer ...Ruby Steinberg . Ada Hall ... Miriam Tinker ....Hazel Rankin Catherine Johnson .... Tula Kinsley .Mildred A. Brown . Estelle Talmadge .Ruth Connell Dorothy Dunniway .Marjorie Williams .Mellie Parker .Clystie .Meek . .Marjorie Muclien .Echo Zahl .Ethel Murray “The machine you will event ually buy” Special Rental Rates to U. of 0. Students $2.50 per month Underwood Type writer Co. Phone 373 691 Will. St. GET YOUR Films At the Peter Pan Tiie Kodak Shop Opposite Rex Caroline Taylor .Helen Flint Elizabeth Peterson.Ailcy Church Emily McOandliss .Barbara Chamberlain Jeannette Moss .Cleome Carroll Rosie Hall . Helen Masham Evelyn Foster.Louise Allen Marian Chapin.Mildred Pegg Dorothy Parsons .. 7... .Helen Engberg Bess Coleman . *.Carman Swanson Florence Brosius.Zetta Mitchell Elizabeth Hales .Helen McDonald Clarabel Williams ....Adrienne Epping Jeannette Calkins .Fanny Winehel] Loveline Brown .... Ruth Montgomery Ella Ehmsen .Jennie Maguire Helen Anderson .Gladys Smith Mae Lynch.Doris Slocum Hertha Hanssen .Sara Barker Belle Messiek .Dorothy Collier Lucile Stanton.Lucinda Cochran Harriet Polhemus.Vera Olmstead Ida Carson .Helen Purrington Mary Baney .Levicy Hamilton Clara Knoop .Olga Soderstrom Doris Medley.Ruth Pearson Mildred Broughton.... Gertrude Cowgill Marian Neil.Juanita Gibson Catherine McCallister.Helen Reed Eulalie Crosby.Grace Service Amy Carson .Edythe Braeht Leta Rhodes.Grace Williams Pearl Craine . Ethel Waite Margaret Mansfield .... Opal Whiteley Rosalind Bates.ICrcel Goehreud Brownell Frasier .... Helen Withycombe Fanny Chase.Hazel Radabaugh Bernice Gaylord . Hazel Neal Lillian Bohnson . Helen Dull Delilah McDaniel.Mary Warrack Ellen Anderson .Margaret Gray Clarabel Grimm . Philena King Gene Geisler.Ethel Ewer Caroline Alexander .Ida Barr Evangeline Kendall ..Miriam McDonald Wary Chambers.Alene Philips Myra McFarland.Delphia Meek Frances Blurock.Alice Baker Margaret Spangler .. Genevieve Rowley Virginia Hales . Eleanor Flynn Velma Brunk.Genevieve Dickey Mildred Woodruff .Vivian Pallett Beatrice Yoran.Helen Hall Edna Patchen.Anastsia O’Farrell Grace Hammarstroin ....Grace Gilmore Isa Wasson . Katherine Fraley Dora Birchard . Rena Adam Angela Bowler . Ada Otten Jeanne Franz.Florence Sherman 1 iorotby Bennett. Mabel Cochran Nell Warwick . Lilly Miller Mildred G. Brown. Olive Risley Eva von Berg.Mary Louise Allen Marie Badura . Gladys MeLeod Adelaide Luke . Adah McMurphey Anna Miller.Lucile Watson Esther Furuset . Merle Hamilton Faye Yoder . Vivian Kellems Florence Cutsforth .. Helen Whitaker Kate Flegal . Helen McConnell Melba Williams . Iva Smith Naomi Marcellus.Elsie Fitzmaurice Anita Redmond. Ella Dews Marjorie Kay.Marie Gates Nanna Axtell.Margaret Cornwall Era Godfrey ... .Alive Van Schoonhoven Gertrude May. Goldie Wells True Morris . Vera Perkins Mabel Van Zunte_Marjorie Stearns Lillian Bancroft . Edna Gray Viola Peterson.Freda Sigfrit Mabel Brigham.Marguerite Gross Elnora Gylland.Gladys Wilkins Ruth Westfall.Margaret Rodgers Erma Keithley . Marian Bowen Ruth Itothrock . Marian Grebel Elizabeth Bruere .... Gladys McKnight Lois Gray . Dorothy Robertson Marian Page . Maude Lombard Vera Derflinger. .. .Rosemary Skipworth Myrtle Maberle.Anna Gent Emily Spulak.Winifred Starbuck Bernice Spencer.Inga Winter Ruth Lawrence . Mary Mattley Iva Wood . Erma Laird Grace Edgington . Helen Currey Mary O’Farrell . Martha Tinker Jessie Garner . Lora Simth Mary Cellars . Mae Dominy Annabel Sparkman. Vernie Olson Bernice Perkins.Margaret McKim Margaret Crosby.Helene DeLano Ruth Sweeney . Marian Coffey Lillian Littler.Lorain Mahoney Louise Clausen . Lucile Palmer Mrs. O. P. Parkinson ....Mae Harbert Frances Depew. Roberta Sehubel Frances Talmadge.Claire Warner Frances Garrett . Helen Case Laura Foulkes.Lucy Devaney Helen Braeht.Alice Van der Sluis Marguerite Whitton .. . Dorothy Flegal Joy Gross.Nellie McClure Grace Bingham. .Vera Van Schoonhoven Lois Laughlin . Ethel Newland Frances Fra ter . Jeanne Bell Louise Wilson.Anne Dawson Genevieve Keller.Lucile Johnson Margaret Dixon . Bernice Lucas Martha Beer . Agnes Basler Lucile Woody'. Edna Whipple Ruth Trowbridge_Elizabeth Carson Frances Shoemaker .... Kate Schaefer Ruth Davis . Ruth Susrnan Ludella Whittlesay .. Erma Zimmerman Essie Maguire . Charlie Fenton Zona Vernon . LiHian Boylen Mrs. Kittie Johnson .... Ruth Onthank Helen Wdegand.,.Reha Maklin Evelyn Tregilgas . Selma Bauman Gladys Van N'uys.Marian Tuttle Frances Baker .... Elizabeth Aumiller Maude Whipple.Elva Estes Mary Gillette.Elizabeth Townsend Ada Matthews . Leah Perkins Laura Miller . Mary Morrow Oenone Shaw.Margaret Casey Rosamond Shaw ... Beatrice Thurston Celia Hager. Ada Martin Naomi Bernard.Katherine DeVoe Mildred Black.Myrtle Campbell Dorothy Wheeler. Espar Young Charlotte Banfield. .Jeannette Wheatley Emma Wootton.Ruby Rogue Helen Dresser. Edith Dahlberg Mary Murdock .Clytie Hall Marie Beach .Viola Crawford Sylvia Rowland . Nellie Cox Mildred Parks.Margaret Bailey Anna Calvert . Ruth Wilson on FACES CRISIS Decrease iri State Finances Will Retard University Expansion. Lowered Property Valuations Will Affect All Schools in the State. When the millage bill was passed it was voted on in full knowledge that the average increase in valuations in Ore gon had been $30,000,0(X) a year for ten years or more, or somewhat over 4 p’er cent a year on the 1910 valuation of $844,887,708. It was reasonable to ex pect that the law would give the insti tutions a reasonable and conservatively but steadily increasing income. But the year after the law was passed the schools were confronted with a drop of $22,000,000 between 1013 and 1014. The next year there was a gain of only $2, 000,000 and last year a loss again of $56,000,000. This means a loss of income to the University of at least $70,000 a year less than could be reasonably ex pected on the basis of the average growth of the previous years. So Presi dent Campbell sums up the present financial predicament of the University. “The decreased income, due to lower property valuation, and the large increase in enrollment of students make a crisis in the institution's affairs which in some way must be met,” he declares. “If a reasonable appropriation cannot bo made to cover the extra cost of the suddenly increased demand for extension work throughout the state, the University’s regular campus activities will have to be kept within the decreased income through radical economies.” Even this appropriation would not do more than to bring the total income of the University up to the amount which enter# I into the legislature’s es timates at the time the millage bill was passed. “It is clearly realized now, since the passage of the tax limitation measure that the funds available for appropria tion apparently will not meet all the needs of the state institutions, and the University expects to bear its part in any necessary reductions. It has not asked for special appropriations since the mill age bill went into effect, and is not now asking anything beyond the amount con templated in the estimates when the hill was passed, although the responsibilities of the University have grown much great er.” ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ SIGMA DELTA CHI ♦ ♦ ELECTS ♦ ♦ MAURICE IIYDE ♦ ♦ HAROLD NEWTON ♦ ♦ ROBERT McXARY ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Newspaper Sport Writers (Continued from page one) search for all-American candidates must include the great Northwest.” Writing as special correspondent for the Philadelphia North American, J. Howard Berry gave all credit to the Ore gon boys, but added that no team from the east could “travel to the other side of the continent after the close of its regular schedule and do itself justice in a post-season game.” “The victory of the web-footers, as men of Oregon are nicknamed." said Berry, “was clean-cut and based on superiority.” The Philadelphia Ledger commenting on the game editorially, laid the defeat at the door of poor training but contin ued that “to the victors all honor and Pictures, Picture-Framing, Books and Stationery Church and School Publishing Company 832 Willamette St. Our Welcome to Your Football rw^\ leam Is a welcome to all the students of the University of Oregon. We have missed you during the holidays and it now pleases us to see you back again. We are proud of our University and its students. You can always depend upon us to back you to the limit. Wade Bros. The Home of Hart Schafner & Marx Clothes unstinted congratulation are to be ac credited * * * 'Pile spirit of Amer ica seems larger and the magnificent distances are less for this historic athlet ic transaction. What would the statesmen in tile fore part of the nineteenth cen tury who required weeks to get to Wash ington have thought of such a journey for an hour of sport? The result was not merely to make tw< touchdowns and kick two goals, hut to augment the mu tual esteem and admiration of lovers of fair play East and West.” An organized schedule so correlated that the championship team of the I’nit ed States would be positively determined by inter-sectional contests is advocated by the Philadelphia Press in their lead ing editorial for January I!. That this must soon come about is the prediction of other Eastern papers, because of the steadily increasing interest in football. ‘‘Oregon had the strongest eleven ever developed on the Pacific coast,” Clifton X. (Put) McArthur is reported in the Philadelphia North American to have said the night of the game as he watched it play by play at the American office. "Pennsylvania need feel no humiliation at having lost to such a wonderful team.” “Pat” McArthur was at one time man ager of the Oregon football team, and the American gave some little space to Mc Arthur’s analysis of the game. It is probable that no athletic contest ever staged on the Pacific coast has brought an equal amount of publicity to the college athletics or to the west in general a., the game at Pasadena a week ago. While the Eastern papers devoted column after column to the story, the California and northwest papers gave whole pages of detailed play, photographs and editorial comment on the significance of the victory. Pennsylvania Victory Ends (Continued from page one) era heads, a day that vindicated Pacific coast football. That game was won long before the two teams ever met on New Yean/ day. Oregon had studied Pennsylvania’s var ied attack—they knew the plays better Cut Down Your Light Bill Save 67 per cent by using the Peerless Mazda Lamps, from the Eugene Gun Co. They give more light for less money. Prices are: 10-40 watt lamps.27<* 60 watt lamp. 100 watt lamps.65^ “MAZDA C” 100 watt lamps .$1,00 200 watt lamps.$2,00 Eugene GunCo. ARTHUR HENDERSCHOTT Manager 770 Willamette St. than the Quakers themselves. Pennsyl vania was “outfoxed" from the start. In a fanning bee after the game Coach Colwell of Penn, gave all the credit to Oregon and their style of play. “Those westerners have a great team. We never expected them to spring the attack they did. I looked for them to pull Carlisle ; formations they didn't their style was ! new it was different. They’ve got an i eleven that: could lick either Harvard or ; Yale.” i The game itself was picturesque. Ap- ! proxinmtely 27,000 people, forming a 1 riot of color under the blue California j skies, staged a wellnigh perfect setting.' It was a wealthy crowd, interested, ex cited, and ready at all times to hack Ore- ! gon to the limit. It was the biggest single piece of advertising that Eugene ever j received. The season's record is imposing. The varsity went through S smashing games with but five substitutes. All told they tallied "14 points, representing "o touch downs. 28 goal kicks and two place kicks. Shy Huntington was the leading gunner having scored 115 points single-handed. Opponents were able to gather but 1” measly aces. California put the ball be hind the varsity chalk lines for the only two touchdowns registered against them. Durham, of Washington State, is res ponsible for the other three markers by virtue of a. well-directed drop kick on Multnomah field. Hloyd Teg,art and Johnny parsons are tied for second honors in high scoring with ’iO points to their credit. Each put the hull behind the opposition’s goal on five occasions. H. Huntington, Monticth, Iteckett, Mitchell, and Jensen follow in the order named with 24, It), 14, (1 and 11 points each to honor the family name. JormJit COLLARS are curve cut to fit the shoulders perfectly, ly cents each, bjoryy CLUETT. PEABODY HCOUHC/Mihri WANTED—Don’t give away your old clothes, old rags for nothing. Get all you can. Highest price old stoves, ranges, cook stoves, old furniture, carpets, rugs. Telephone for the night man, 704. 56 Eighth avenue west. CHAMBERS’ HARDWARE STORE_ 742 Willamette Street Patronize Home Industry And use Butter Manu factured by The Lane County Creamery Always Fresh and Sanitary Phone 117 48 Park St. Dunns BaKery For the Best Cup of Coffee in Town We Are Now Serving Light Lunches The Best of Everything OREGON MEN SMOK! at The Ciub Cigar Store Phone 771 881 Will. St.