Donut Track Finals Begin At 3:30 Today Hayward Field Will Be Scene of Elimination Meet This Afternoon Many Frulcrnilics Euler Men Into Competition T'l i mi tin t inn 11 i :i 1 s for flip intra mural I lin k meet finals will lid held at ;;:.:n this afternoon mi llaywanl field. Twelve track and field events are scheduled, two incn from each organization lining allowed 1 '<> com pete in am one event. Last en tills were in Iasi night anil thosi who wifi coni|iete are as follows: loil-vard dash: Hughes, 1 ’lli India Theta; jMcKennon, Tliot.n ('hi; Sehrneder, Alpha Tail Omega; Hill, Sigma (fh i; Dirks, I’si Kappa; Oharlsoli, Hill, Meta Theta Hi; Sig miind, I!et a Theta Hi; Anderson, Sigma Chi; It.vnearsnn, McCormick, Zeta hall; i,’rench, Alpha, hall; Kuykendall, T’lii Sigma Kappa* Wil son, Sigma I’i Tan; Fisher, Sigma Alpha Kpsilon. 000-yard dash: Harrington, Theta Chi; Makinen, Theta Chi; Stevens; Dunaway, Jennings, Nerenu, I’eta Theta I’i; Norman, Sigma Chi; Oardner; Calef, Camma hall; Hand ley, Alpha hall; Yates, Chi I’si; Allen, Sigma I’i Tan. Hole vault: Manlthy, Beta Theta Hi; Hracher ,Heta Thida Hi; French; Hob Robinson, independent. High jump; Hughes, Kershner, Dunaway, Whisnant, Anderson, Moeller, Naslund, Hendricks, French, Morrison, Kmmolt, Curry. (50-yard (lash: Hughes, Whisnant, Tee, TuTtieh, Hill, Hendricks, Mc Cormick, Minsinger, French, I ’ 11 i 1 - lips, Nelson. Three-fourths mile: Borhill, Alpha hall; Kimlierliiig, Hob Allen, Hen ,'ogin, Hob Smith. HOO-ynrd dash: Ihalcy, Theta Chi; McKeimon, Norton, Chi Hsi; Ilall ings, (till Hsi; Corot, Alpha Tail Omega; Schroeder, Hill, Tuttich, Henland, Heta Theta Pi; Brown, Neal, Huny.’in, McDonald. 80-yard high hurdles: Whisnant, Henland, Sigmund, Hendricks, Moel ler, Jackson, independent. Broad jump: Ann ter, Neal, Sig mund, Hill, French. Shot put: Hildreth, Tuttich, Moel ler, West, Byington Kcknian. Officials for the meet as announc ed yesterday are: referee, Bill Hay ward; starter, Spike Leslie; judges, of finish, Ralph Hill, Hat Beal, Leonard Steele, Hal Kelley; field judges, Dickson, Crawford, Winters, MVlloe; timers, Scott, Hcrmance, Lent; clerk of the course, (leorge Scliade; ;.ouncer, Harks; Ncorer, Don Heck. A y\8|)iraius lor 6Oh Dear’ Cast Dazzle Judges Sin^iiip; Will No! B<* Askrtl Of Girls; Kruuiimlt-r of If oiim*s lo Try Today Several (l07.CH of Ill(> lie.lilt ies of the campus mounted the stage in the assembly 1(111111 of Villard hall yesterday afiornoifn and demon strated their a 11 met iveness and t In-i r dancing abilities before the judges, who sa! wideeyed and open mouthed in the room below, mark inj; down tlie particular charms of each one. (lirls from approximately two thirds of the women's houses on the campus tried out for positions in the beauty and pony choruses of “Oh I tear,” the musical comedy to he presented under the auspices of the junior class May it and I. It was decided that the contestants would not lie reipiircd lo sing, as was previously announced, and they were judged solely on the basis of I heir dancing. Independent men and women who wish to try out for parts in the Junior Vodvil may do so today. Members of the remainder of tin' women’s houses and of part of the men’s are scheduled to appear All Her Life She Wished for Her Oivn Bungalow With Little Garden By It. N. All lior life slip wanted a house wit 11 a. garden. Ami now Hint she has come nil the way from Paris to Oregon slip lias found it. Pound it in a little brown bungalow with a green roof and a garden where eager green growing things are bursting up through the idotty blaek ea rt h. “She” is Mrs. Pierre Thomas, wife of the rosy-eheeked I'reneh professor, and she lias vital auburn hair, long, with glints of the sun in it, and i|Uud, steady eyes, and she has deft, hands. If you think there is something sentimental abou^ her dream ot a house with a garden, soil would ehnuge vour ctnind if you eonbl hear her tell it. She tells it so simply. She lived all her life in can apart; meat uud she wanted always her own home. She and her professor husband are happy, here in Aineriea. “I know we are happy because we do not have the wish ^o go back,” o’clock this afternoon find try out before tin- .judges. The houses whose members fire to come today tire: Plii Mu, I’i Beta Phi, Sigma Kappa, (Inmma Phi Beta, Hendricks hull, Mary Spiller hall, Susan Campbell hall, Oregon club, Alpha Beta Chi, Alpha Tan Omega, Aplia Cpsilon, Beta Theta I’i, Bnchclordon, Chi Psi, and Delta Kpsilon. The remainder of the men’s houses will try out fit Villard l*’ri d.ay afternoon, and the complete choruses will be announced Satur day morning. Tryouts for the leads of “Oh Dear” will be held tonight in Vil lard hall, beginning fit 7 o’clock. The contestants will be judged prin cipally on the basis of dramatic ability. The judges who will select the lead characters are Constance Both, Don Johnston, Madge Normile, Boone Hendricks, Gordon Stearns, and S. Stevenson Smith. Boone Hendricks, who is director of the music for this year's Junior Vodvil, asks that any students who have written any music that could possibly b(> used in the comedy, hand it in to him at once. “It doesn’t matter just what kind of music it is," le said, “blues or ballads or what have you. All the music of ‘Oh Dear’ is to be strictly original and written on the campus, and we are very anxious that we have fill the material available so that wo | can select the best to be used in I ‘ ’ i You’ll Need l m $ I i © [§ 1 Paint Varnish Lumber Wallboard O O N Phone 782 TWIN OAKS LUMBER CO. 669 High St. Those Yellow Trucks I ?i!if3®sisia)s®ai3i3EEi3®i3iaoiai3i3®Ei^ 51Sf3®S®t.!i REX BIG I )oul>lo BILL ( Last Day ‘ l hs Wreck’ FRIDAY am! SATURDAY ON THE STAGE MANHATTAN PLAY MRS ON THE SCREEN HOOT HIBSON “KING if OF THE 1 RODEO” f in u Three Chapter Story NOVEL-T •HALSTEAD STREET" Matinee and Night NO ADVANCE IN ADMIS3ION tho piny.” Hendricks said tlint, lie expects tn have nil the musical seme for “Oh Dear” arranged by the end of spring vacation. Garages for Students Problem at Stanford STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Cal., March <>.— (PIP)— Following the publication of the results,of an in ipiiry into the car situation on the campus, Comptroller Almon Roth has announced that the garage prob lem will be presented to the board nf trustees in the immediate future. The investigation showed that out of the 2110 students living on the campus, (ifit have automobiles of some description, and of these, :t(>4 want garages tit the rate of $5 per hionth. Boredom Sweeps In as Females Quiz Hal I i burton Lecturer Has List of 11 Answers Ready to Pop Wlien Questions Asked ; “a ho young in.'in with navy Moml hair who set. out- from Princeton in 1 S»l21 to find a life of adventure, variety and amusement, finds him self six years later at the mercy of feminine audiences and perilously exposed to boredom.” And this is ; a description, bv a reporter, of; Kichnrd Halliburton, author and; world wide adventurer, ulR> is toj speak Saturday, MifVch 0, at the Woman’s building, as the third speaker on the lecture series. According to Halliburton, women have, exactly 11 remarks to ques tions which they put to him. He has numbered each, and as he auto matically gives one of the 11 well planned replies, his mind mentally clicks, “Question No. so-and-so.” “And everybody says how spon taneous T am,” he said durinjJ the same interview. “If some woman should ask me question No. If! I should be completely dumb. Hut then, there is no danger that any one will.” Questions Eore Him He is bored by questions about the Chinese social •conditions, and the religion of India arouses no more interest. Calling him a “travel writer” succeeds in irritating him. but not until an aspiring reporter describes him as “bringing a mes sage,” does Halliburton wax furi ous. On one occasion, he exclaimed, “To h—— with messages. I am only interested in what I can see and experience for myself. T do things simply to please myself; and when I write them I find they please other people, too.” Those are strangely cynical re marks to ho made by a young man who has sought adventure in every guiiuiituiinii;i>iuiiiiii:iiiniiiumiimiiiuiiiiiiiniiiiniimnmiiiiii!iiiiiuimmiiiimiiiii;iiii'£ ! YOU CAN EAT I ANYWHERE L- but there’s only one place you | I can “Dine by the Waterside” p that’s i The ANCHORAGE HllHllUIIUUIllllllUllUlllllllll!ttIllllflllllIillUlllllllillltlllllllllllllItllllllllllll!lllllllllllllll!ill^ Quality Lighting Equipment for Rent ELKINS ELECTRIC STORE 63 E. Broadway Phone 301 Try Our Special Dinners 50c 5 to 8 p. m. Special Breakfasts 35c Noon Lunches Also sandwiches, French pastries, cakes and home-made pies. We are now ready for business and in vile \'ou all. Our fountain drinks and ice cream dishes are unexcelled. College Side Inn for niaiu'o in our oast window—books! it’s positivoly filled—and all at $1.00 or less. Adventure with Conrad. Franek or Reach. Mystery! Romance! What you want is liable to he in that window. the BOOK BALCONY of the ___ UNIVERSITY "COOP*’ part of the world. In brief here is tin- career of Richard Halliburton.: r Ho lias swam the Hellespont where t Lennder and Lord Ityron swam. Hr t has climbed Olympus, Stroinboli, v Vesuvius and Aetna.- No has run i tho marathon ovor tho original < oourso, soalod tho Acropolis walls - at night, and has charged up Mount Parnassus. ] Dances Through Vale 1 He has danced through the Vale of Tempo. He has made a pilgrim age to the grave of Rupert Hrooke, who is buried on a lonely flrecian isle. In the tracks of Achilles and Alexander ho ran three times around the windy walls of Troy. He almost swam the evil straits between Srylla and Chnrybdis. With only Homer for his guide and the Odys sey for hi^ book, he followed to the end the fabulous trail of Plvsses, found the Lotus Land, the Cyclop’s Cave, and tly Aeoleau island of the winds. Hediraved a modern Circe’s ( harms, and looked for sirens in the eaves of Capri. And then, in the summer of 192S, he retravelcd the old Cortez trail in Mexico, dove 70 feet into the Sacred Well of Chiehen Itza in Yucatan, and swam the entire length of the Panama canal. | _ Corvallis Men, Best Girls at Auto Driving ORKC ON STATU COT/LEOE, Corvallis, March C. — (PIP) — For the first time in history women were aide to tell men how to run a ear—- j and not from the back seat either.] I I I DANCE EXAM CARES AWAY Campa Shoppe * SATURDAY NITE ONLY For Reservations Call Hersh Taylor 1849-J Co-eds Inking n course in auto icchnnics for the first, time here liia term explained the principles i) a beginners’ class of nine men ,-ho have just joined the class as icn outside of' the regular college mollmcnt. In a contest between the men and women to see winch could answer the most questions cor rect I v, after the men had been four hours in the class, it was found that the men bad learned os much as the co-eds who had been studying for six weeks. by , 7 7 KAYSER In This Silk Glove Because a glove is new doesn’t necessarily make it smart. A glove must have style and the true interpretation of the mode to be chic, if you are doubtful as to the Spring modes let us show you this Kayser Glove and many others which carry the true embodiment of modernism. $1.00 tQ $^.95 FIRST SHOWING IN EUGENE ONE OF THE TEN BEST PICTURES OF 1928 JOHN FORD PRODUCTION 3 DAYS ONLY THURS. - FRI. - SAT. Matinee Saturday AND— At Usual Colonial Prices c Children 10c BIG AS THE HEART OF HUMANITY/ u win £0 aown m liim History as one oi. tlie screen s best.” - P lintmiloi' Afiiom! ii/-» AESOPS FABLES PA THE NEWS