FIRST TRACK MEET SET FOR APRIL 26 Multnomah to Precede Contest With 0. A. C.; Hayward Hot Sanguine “We cannot hope to beat O. A. C. in track just on our reputation,” said Bill Hayward, speaking of Oregon's chances to down thp Aggies this year. “O. A. C. is having the advantage of an enclosed armory in which to work during the present bad weather,” he continued. “We must overcome that advantage by hard work on the part of the men out, and continued support of tffe students for track. “Multnomah comes to Eugene a week from today with an aggregation of stars. This will mean that the Varsity will have a real team to run against, and will be a very good ex perience for them. We may be able to get a line on the probable outcome of the meet with O. A. C. from the Mult nomah meet, but that will not give us any idea of the Aggies ’ strength. ’ ’ How the Team Looks “Bill’s” Varsity team, as it looks today, is something like this: In the 100 he will have Mulkey, Fos ter, Schwering, Hollenbeck and Har greaves. Foster, of course, leads the field, but there are several other good men among them, whom “Bill” thinks may prove good running mates for Fos ter. For the 220, ‘ ‘ Bill ’ ’ has lined up Foster, Anderson and Brandon. All three of these are capable of bringing home points for Oregon if they work themselves to their full capacity. Margason, Anderson and Feenaughty are the 440 men ‘ ‘ Bill ’ ’ has to depend on. In the 880, Jamieson, Feenaughty and Armantrout are the likely runners. None of these men have performed up to what they are capable of, thinks “Bill,” and he looks for a great im provement, as the weather becomes warmer and the track dryer. Belding, Parr and Bain are the dis tance men on whom Oregon will stake her hopes this year. None of them have shown much improvement lately, but they probably will as soon as the track dries up. In the hurdles, Ha3rward will have Hollenbeck and Bradason for the high, and Schwering, Foster, and Hargreaves additional for the low hurdles. Dow Wilson Missing Dow Wilson, who showed up so well in the hurdles in the Columbia meet, has not been out since then and may not turn out any more this year. Bill Hayward hates the idea of losing Wil son, but believes that if he has to do : without him, he can get along some how. For pole-vaulters, Bill will have Hargreaves, Chapman, and Starr. Mul key, Foster, and Estes are broad jumpers, and Brandon, Estes, and Har greaves high-jumpers. Bill believes that these men will improve later in the season, and may show up well in the Multnomah meet. For the weight events, Starr, Dresser and Runquist will heave the shot for Oregon; Starr and Brandon, the discus, and Mulkey, Brandon and Foster the javelin. Hayward’s relay team, which in for mer years has always been a big factor in winning meets for Oregon, will be picked from Margason, Jamieson, Fee naughty, Brandon, Foster, and Schwer ing. This is practically the team which will line up against Multnomah in the dual meet with that club which will be staged here Saturday, April, 26. BASEBALL AT 6:30 P. M. Doughnut League Games to be Only Five Innings; “O” Men Barred The Inter-fraternity Athletic Council met in the office of ‘ ‘ Shy ’ ’ Huntington Thursday evening and discussed mat ters relating to spring athletics. It was decided to have the doughnut baseball league an elimination contest with the first games being played next Saturday. The schedule of the first round of baseball will be published in the next issue of the Emerald. The games will be five innings only and will be staged at 6:30. This will fit in with the varsity practice and with the daylight saving scheme, and it will not be hard to stage the games at this hour. It was decided at the meeting that all letter men, regardless of the sport in which they won their “ O, ” should be barred from doughnut baseball. All of the campus organizations were rep reserted at the Thursday meeting ex cepting the Kappa Sigs and the Fijis. Let’s shoot a game of pool. The Club, 814 Willamette street. Society This week-end two houses, Sigma Nu nrd Beta, are holding their annual for ma! nances. Many college girls are g;.i" ts. at these affairs tonight. Vest0' day afternoon members of Sigma < hi entertained at a matinee dance. There were several teas, too, for campus and townspeople. Sunday several houses will entertain guests. Last night the Y. W. C. A. cabinet were hostesses at a dinner party at the Bungalow for Miss Edith Haslett, national secretary for the student vol unteer workers. The dinner party was very informal. Those present were: Miss Haslett, honor guest, Joy Judkins, Jeannette Moss, Vivian Chandler, Leta Kiddle, Helen Wells, of Oakland; Helen Brenton, Gladys Hollingsworth, Helen McDonald, Essie Maguire, Ella Raw lings, Mabyl Weller, Mary Moore and Florence Riddle. * * • Gamma Phi Beta is holding initiation today for Alice Wherity, Rena Hales, Helen Nelson and Katherine Wilson. After the ceremonies there will be an initiation banquet at the house. * * * Wayne Barber, a member of Phi Del ta Theta, has returned to school. Bar ber has been in the service over seas and has just been discharged. * * # Thursday evening the upperclassmen of Phi Delta Theta were hosts at a charming dinner party to several girls of the campus. The table was decorated in spring flowers. Those invited were: Clara Calkins, Margaret Studor, Reba Macklin, Madeline Slotboom, Dorothy Manville, Lois Hall, Mildred Apperson and Marjorie Kay. * * * Yesterday afternoon from four to six a number of college girls danced at the Sigma Chi house. The affair was very informal. Punch was served to the guests. Mrs. E. M. Holden acted as chaperone. The girls present were Dorothy Manville, Lucile Evans, Mar ian Lawrence, Katherine Wilson, Bula Smith, Virginia Giles, Lucile MeCorkle, Adah McMurphey, Dorothy Donlon, Marvel Skeels, Genevieve Haven, Flor ence Riddle, Blanch Wilson and Jose phine Conners. Sigma Nu men are hosts at a delight ful supper dance at the house tonight for several girls on the campus and a few additional guests. The house is decorated with ivy, palms and spring flowers. Patrons and patronesses for this party are Dean and Mrs. John Straub, Dean Louise Ehrmann, Mr. and Mrs. Luke Goodrich, Dr. and Mrs. S. M. Kerron and Mr. and Mrs. Dean Walker. The guest list is made up of Geraldine Pilkington, Genevieve Haven, Dorothy Donlon, Eleanor Chapman, Helen Du Buy, Alice Wherity, Helen Day, Lois Macy, Ila Nichlos, Edna Bushman, Ella Dews, Madge Calkins, Mrs. R. L. Teggart, Dorothy Graham, Marion Coffey, Margaret Mansfield, Josephine Conners, Dorothy Dixon, Gertrude Livermore, Norma Medlet, Robert Goodrich, Richard Dixon, Mor ris Snooks, Mike Hoefler, John Bryson and George Steele. N. Wilderman, of San Francisco, a member of the Ohio Wesleyan univer- j sity chapter of Sigma Alpha,. Epsilon, j was a guest of the U-Avava club at din ner Thursday evening. Mr. Wilder man is on a business tour of his com pany. Invitations to the wedding of Walter Enos Church and Beyniee Elizabeth McGregor, at Astoria, Thursday even ing, May 1, have been received by friends on the campus. The wedding is to be in the First Presbyterian church, of Astoria, at 8:30 in the even ing. President and Mrs. Campbell will go dowu to attend the wedding, and the bride's sister and brother-in-law from California will also be in attendance. Mr. Church will take his bride to Florida on a wedding trip, after which they will be at home in Portland for the summer. In the fall Mr. Church plans to go east for graduate work. * * * Dinner guests of Delta Gamma Thursday were; Mr. and Mrs. Ben Mac Lellan, Dr. and Mrs. W. E. Moxley and Georgiana Perkins. # * * Mary Packwood, Margaret Conklin, Marion Mitchell, Lorna Meissner and Evelyn Smith are spending the week end in Portland and Lee Fortmiller at her home in Albany. Tonight members of Beta Theta Pi are entertaining at a dancing party at the hotpl Osburn. The dining room and palm room where the Betas apd, their guests will dance is decorated with black and white checked pannels and the fraternity colors, shades of light blue and pink. Light refresh ments are to be served during the evening. Patrons and patronesses for; this charming party are Dean and Mrs. D. W. Morton, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. McDonald, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Bovard and Dean Louise Ehrmann. The guest list includes Clara Calkins, Evelyn Foster, Evelyn Fitzgibbons, Helen Stansfield Campbell, Margaret Spangler, Wanda Nelson, Agnes Brooks, Marvel Skeels, Melba Williams, Mary Townshend, Barbara Shepherd, Mar guerite Gross, Lueile Evans, Marjorie Kay, Theodora Stoppenbach, Bula Smith, Laurel Canning, Dorothy Man ville, Mary Ellen Bailey, Margaret Phelps, Velma Boss, Audrey, Roberts, Nell Gaylord, Louise Sheahan, Miriam Holcomb, Carol Montague, Hope Me Kenzie, Marjorie Delzell, Bernice Craig, Rutli Montgomery, Nora Manrud, Ann Shea, Vivian Hopson, Virginia Giles, Pauline Coad, Helen Houghton, Mary Hegart, Madeline Slotboom, Nadine Bohlander, Leila Marsh, Doris Dezen dorf, Katherine Wilson, and Robert McKennett, Ted Sheahan, Harold Mann, Jack Montague, all of Portland; Owen Calloway of McMinnville; Her bert Darby of Salem; Eugene Kelley and Ray Moores of Eugene. « » • Members of Pi Beta Phi were hos tesses this afternoon to a number of Eugene maids and their mothers and several other guests. The affair was in the form of a sewing party and tea when the guests and hostesses sewed for Belgian babies. Those invited were Marian Linn, Gertrude Livermore, Helen Day, Mar garet Carter, Mrs. G. D. Linn, Mrs. A. W. Livermore, Mrs. F. M. Day, Mrs. F. M. Carter, Mrs. W. E. Jewett, Mrs. W. P. Fell, Mrs. C. E. Stocker and Mrs. Raymond C. Baird. Phi Delta Theta "Fraternity held ini tiation last Sunday evening, April 13,, for Ben Ivey, George Blaek, Pierce Cumings, John Gamble, Claire Keeney, Russel Meyer, Martin'^ Parelius, Fred Mann, Roscoe Roberts, Wilbur Hoyt, George Stearns and Marc Latham. John Kennedy, Bay Fox and Bruce Hollingsworth, alumni, were back for the event. At the close of the ceremonies a ban quet was held in the chapter house in honor of the new members. Yesterday afternoon from four to six members of Pi Beta Phi were hos tesses to the members of the new local sorority, Sigma Delta Phi, at an in formal tea given in the chapter house. During the afternoon the girls danced. Those invited were Alice Hamm, Anna Vogel, Florida Hill, Lois Gray, Vera Tobey, Dorothea Boynton, Elsie Marsh, Metta Olson, Bernice Robb, Mary Tur ner, Marion Andrews, Leola Green, Germany Klemm, Margaret Mansfield, Frances Blurock, Dorothy Prairie, Irva Smith, Leah Wagner and Helen Gronholm. 110 APPLICATIONS FOR DEGREES FILED BY SENIOR CLASS (Continued from Page One) Kathryn Johnson, Portland, Romance language. Iaith Kaye, Portland, English litera ture; Georgiana Kessi, Harlan, English literature. Mabel Laing, Corvallis, mathematics; Erma Laird, Pleasant Hill, English literature; Eunice Lamson, Palo Alto, Cal., natural science; Lois Laughlin, Carlton, rhetoric; Eloine Leighton, El gin, rhetoric; Maud Lombard, Eugene, physical education. Nellie McClure, Eugene, education; Vena McCully, Eugene; Helen McDon ald, La Grande, jouralism. Essie Maguire, Portland, economics; Clyde Mason, Eugene, chemistry; Mary Mattley, Oregon City, mathematics; Clistie Meek, Coburg; Bernice Miller, Portland, history; Ruth Montgomery, Eugene, rhetoric; Kenneth Moores, Sa lem. Hazel Rakin, Eugene; Mabel Rankin, Eugene; Nellie Reidt, Portland, Ro mance languages; Leta Rhodes, Astoria, rhetoric. Dorothy Sanford, Portland, econom ics; James Sheehy, Portland, commerce; Donald Smythe, Eugene, mathematics; i Paul Spangler, Eugene, (natural sci ence; Emily Spulak, Can by, education; \ Glen Stanton, Humboldt, Iowa, archi- j tecture; Lucille Stanton, Humboldt, Iowa, economies; Emma Stephenson, j Eugene. . George Taylor, Vale, physics; Lloyd Tegart, Portland, commerce; Annie Hales Tegart, Portland, education; Ern est Thum, Dundee, mathematics, Mary Elizabeth Townsend, Portland, Ro mance languages; Harold Tregilgas, Portland. Annette Vaughan, Eugene, rhetoric; Ethel Waite, Sutherlin, English litera ture; Claire Warner, Eugene, history; Wayne Wells, Edna Whipple, Belling ham, Wash., education; Marguerite Whitton, Eugene, economics; Frances Wiles, Eugene, education; Melba Will iams, Eugene, physical education; Dwight Wilson, The Dalles; Louise Wilson, Eugene, Romance language. Jennie Yoder, Dagene, rhetoric. Erma Zimmerman, Eugene, journal ism. Four Members of Faculty on Program at Portland Meeting Three members of the faculty, Presi dent Campbell, John C. Almack, Mrs. Mable Holmes Parsons and the alumni secretary, Miss Charlie Fenton, went to I Portland this morning to attend the J annual University of Oregon meeting of the Civic league of Portland which held a luncheon at the Benson hotel at noon today. The Civic league of Portland devotes one session a y^ar to the interests of the University and the announcement for this meeting reads; “To render an account of our stwardship of the Uni versity during the war and to tell of the new changes that have come to the school on the heels *f the war. ’ ’ The - program for the luncheon in cludes four speakers from the Uni versity, President Campbell on ‘ ‘ The University as Affected by the War;” Mrs. Mable Holmes Parsons on “A Square Deal for Oregon’s Young Wo men;” Dr. Kenneth A. J. MacKenzie of the school of medicine, on ' ‘ The New Tasks and New Goals set before the Medical School;” and Dr. George Rebec on “New Departures in the University Work in Portland.” Other persons who were expected to be present and speak are Colin V. Dyment, of the department of journal ism of the University of Washington, and Earl Kilpatrick, assistant manager of the northwest division of the Red Cross. A quartet composed of Herald White, Curtiss Peterson, John S. Evans and George Hopkins accompanied the fac ulty to sing Oregon songs at the luncheon and to lead in general sing ing. The forum, a weekly publication of the league will give a brief synopsis of the work done in the medical school, the army training classes and what will take place in the summer school on the campus this year. TENNIS DELAYED THIS WEEK Few games were played off in the girl’s round robin tennis series the last of this week because of the rainy weather. Those who did play and won their sets, thus placing them higher in the list, were Dorothy Reed, Laura Rand, Marjorie Kay and Lucile Elrod. HASTY MESSENGER CALL 4 0 7 Messages and parcels, but no jitneys Schwering & Lindley BARBERS 12 East Ninth St. -Arrow COLLAR CLUETT PEABODyflCCo-.lwc: TROYNY For Real Fuel Economy, Use GAS COOKING LIGHTING HEATING MOUNTAIN STATES POWER 00. ° PJ10NE 28 881 OAK 8T. GIRLS HEAR MISS HASLETT American Committee for Devastated France Wants Money A drive for funds for the-American | committee for devastated France, in which several University girls are as ; sisting is being put on down town this ; afternoon, under the direction of Mrs. P. L. Campbell. Booths are stationed ! on the streets and bonds are being | sold from them. This fund is for the purpose of re building the homes in the devastated part of France, known ns no man’s land. New homes will be built as well ns old ones restored and an agricultu rist will be employed by the commit tee to help these people to reclaim the land for agricultural purposes, to show them the best way to farm it. The fund I also provides for some livestock such as pigs, a few chickens or a horse, j with which to plow. In addition to the home building the ! fund cares for orphans found in that: part of France without homos and they are to bo cared for in institu tions. The bonds sold are “for shares in the rehabilitated homes of France,” and the dividends are to be payable in everlasting affection and gratitude. The slogan of the committee is ‘ ‘ to change no man's land into some man’s home. ’ ’ The American committee is under the direction of Myron T. Herrick, Ameri can ambassador to France for the two years preceding tho war. R. O. T. O. EQUIPMENT ARRIVES The R. O. T. C. is ready for action so far as equipment is concerned. Great boxes containing canvas tents, khaki shirts, trousers, leggings and hats were unpacked Thursday and stacked on shelves and benches in the supply room at the barracks. The rifles are ex pected soon. ¥ TALC 1 » onteel qy ( ) gives every woman ^ who loves a rare per fume, the opportunity to know and enjoy a talc having a wonderful, costly odor at a price unusually low. Take Jonteel home with you today. Kuykendall Drug Store, Eugene, Ore. Far Away or Near at Hand Distance is all the same to our famous Kryptok Double Vision Glasses. Two pairs in one. Ask for details WE UNDERSTAND EYES Sherman W. Moody Bring your Prescriptions Here EYE SIGHT SPECIALIST AND OPTICIAN 881 Willamette Street Factory on Premises I Enough Lead for a Quarter Million Words Inside the Eversharp is enough lead to write a book. You never sharpen the point, yet the point is always there. Eversharp is always sharp. Eversharp with its eighteen inches of lead, sells for $1.00 and up. Costs 25c to reload, handy eraser under cover and a built-in pocketclip EVERSHARP ALWAYS SHARP—NEVES SHARPENED Large assortment of Pencils, Leads and Erasers always on hand Luckey’s Jewelry Store Reliable Goods at Prices in keeping with the character of the merchandise