The Southern California Trojan, Vol. 15, No. 87, May 20, 1924 |
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California
Juniors Are Selling
Class Play Tickets
Commerce Students Cast Ballots Today
Los Angeles, California
Number 87
Clickers Fraternity Becomes the Committee Arranging Program; Forty-First Chaper of To Include History, Music
National Order And Addresses
FOUNDED AT”SYRACUSE LUCILLE WILLS SPEAKER
Members to Found Library of Lower Floor of Audtorium Re-Joumalism at U. S. C. served for Seniors
This Semester ‘ And Faculty
Promising that the Senior Chapel 1 which is to be held on Thursday, June 5, will start and finish promptly within the alloted chapel hour on that • day ,the committee in charge, headed by Margaret Edgin, chairman, and composed of Ruth Bush, Elinor Rogers, Martina Lanning. Frances Vale, and Elizabeth Sewell are arranging an interesting and snappy program for that day.
At 11 a. m. on the day of June 5, members of the senior class from Dental, Law, and Liberal Arts colleges will march with the faculty to the Bovard auditorium. It is probable, acording to Miss Edgin, that the entire floor will be occupied by the seniors and their relatives and friends. Beth the faculty and members o:' the senior class will wear their formal cap and gown dress on that day. The cohi-mittee hopqs that the demand for seat i to the exercises will be very great, in fact they wish it so large as to necessitate the issuing of tickets.
As soon as the seniors are seated and the faculty have taken their places on the stage the University hymn will be sung followed by music which is being arranged by the College of music. President Rufus B von KleinSmid will deliver the invocation. The remainder of the program has not been definitely decided upon, but it is certain that the class history will be read. Miss Elizabeth Kemp is the class historian. Lucille Wills, president of the school of speech, will give the address of the day, “Opportunities and Responsibilities of the College Graduate.”
The programs, twelve hundred of which are being printed, have been donated gratis by the J. A, Meyers Company of this city. This donation, which is one of the chief expenses cf the chapel, has been received by the committee in charge with great pleasure and they wish iO express their thankfulness to J. A. Meyers. The program will go to print sometime this week and definite schedule of music I and speeches will then be given.
Pi Delta Epsilon, the national honorary journalistic fraternity, increased its number of chapter to 41 last Saturday with the installation of the local organization known as the “Clickers.” The local Charter was granted in the fraternity s national convention at Boston last month.
Founded at Syracuse University in 1909, Pi Delta Epsilon has expanded cautiously to many of the larger and best known institutions of the country. The‘fraternity has for its purpose the lending of dignity and standing to journalistic work and study in colleges, and the encouragement of undergraduates to compete for positions on the staffs of college publications. Two years of service on a publication are required before one is eligible for membership in the fraternity.
Professor Charles Raymond of the Department of English in the University of California and the national president of Pi Delta Epsilon, headed the party of seven men who conducted the ceremonies of installation. His assistants all of whom belong to the California Chapter at Berkeley, included Joshua Eppinger. Jr., the sport editor of the “Daily CalifornianA. S. Furth, former editor-in-chief; Jerry Faulkner, managing editor; H. S. Sel-vyn, former director of publicity; S. J. Osborn, former managing editor, and N. G. Locke of the editorial board.
The installation was held in the parlors of the Administration Building late Saturday afternoon. A banquet at the Phi Kappa Tu house followed.
In addition to following and upholding the purpose of the national organization the local chapter has set up several objectives for itself. Principal among these will be the founding of a library of journalism for the University of Southern California. Immediate steps will be taken in con-
(CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR)
Eighty High Schools to Send Representatives to This Annual Affair
LESLIE HENRY TO SPEAK-
A. S. B. Executive Committee Choose Managers Tonight Colburn, Brennan for Debate and Orme and Ott for El Rodeo Manager
Special Music Program Planned; Hunt and Morton Also To Speak
Commerce Club activities will be brought to an end for this year with tomorrow’ night’s Commerce banquet at the City Club. All advance information makes the event sound like the biggest thing that t'he club has ever attempted.
Among the features of the evening will be the presence of ever eighty high school representatives. Most of the arger schools of Soutnern California have one or more members of the’r student bodies present at the banquet.
Music for the evening will be of special interest. Mary Langan will vive a violin solo. “A Chinese Harry Lauder’ will be portrayed by W. K. Tse. Kenneth Campbell promises to showtup wih his Sigma Tau Orchestra for the fest of the musical program.
The principal speaker of the evening will be Leslie B. Henry. Mr. Henry is a forceful and fluent speaker as well as a well known business man. He is manager of the Pasadena Branch of the Blytflii .Witter Bond House and an alumnus of the University of California. His subject will be "The Student. the Business Man and the Citizen.”
Short speeches wil’ be made by Dr. Rockwell D. Hunt, the retiring Dean of Commerce, and by Prof. D. Walter Morton Dean-elect. Lyman Johnson this 3rear’s president of the Commerce Club, and Roland Parker, next year’s president, will also speak.
Special guests of the evening will be the sponsoring organizations of the College of Commerce.
All men, who have signed up to work at the Olympic Tryouts, should report at the east entrance to the L. A. Coliseum not later than ten o’clock, Saturday morning. Anyone wishing to work as an usher Saturday can do so by signing up with the Secretary in the General Mana-i r's office today or tomorrow.
"he following men have been ap-pc ^ted Section chiefs Arthur Metcalfe, H. McCarter, G. Freeman, S. Cundiff, and E. Ross. These men should see Al Swanholm this week and get a section assigned to them.
Gatemen, guards and ushers are the other positions open Arnold Eddy announces.
Phi Alpha Unable to Donate House for Affair May 23
Only four fraternJty houses wil! be available for the second all-University progressive dance w*hich is to take place on May 23. Phi Alpha will be unable to donate their house on that date as it was first planned.
Four orchestras have been selected to supply the necessary jazz for the evening. The Theta Sigma Nu or-cHistra, Jenkin’s from Dental, Gamma Epsilon and W. E. Delplev’s. The men who will preside at the respective houses are Ronald Snavely, Alpha Chi Omega; Boh Green. Phi Beta Phi; Bill Friend. Lambda Psi. and Frank Beckman, Delta Gamma. These men have been selected to promote friendship and to see that every one gets acquainted and is having a good time.
As it has been repeatedly said, dates are unnecessary and are to be discouraged. It will be decidedly informal. Clever favors have been purchased but the committee refuses to reveal them.
Definite Eligibility Ruling Set By U. S. C., Stanford And California
Legal Sorority Gives Benefit for Deserving Girls in Pre-Legal
As a means of sending some liberal arts pre-legai girl to the College of Law for the remainder of her course, law is holding a candy sale at Liberal Arts, Dentistry, and the College of Music today. The sale is sponsired Dy the Kappa Beta Pi sororfty at law college.
The scholarship is one of the most worthy. The goal has been set for $50 and it is hoped that the entire amount will be procured. Beside the sale which will be held Jft all colleges during the day, candy will be sold at the law night school. Trays are to he given to three liberal arts girls besides the regular booth to be maintained in the Arcade.
This is one opportunity for Liberal Arts to support another off-campus college in its activities. The students are asked to spend their extra dimes on candy whicfo will be on sale before and after chapel.
Illustrated Lecture by Noted Ar tist-Composer Today In Room 206
CHEER-COLOR DESIGNS
Musical Compositions to Illustrate Musical Feature Of Art Work
Affair Held at Alexandria With Summer Sport Clothes To Be Worn
SPORT EDITION FRIDAY
Artists, musicians, club women and students of U. S. C. wil be entertained by faculty members of the art depart-ment at 3:30 o’clock this afternoon in honor of Mrs. Beatrice Hubbell Plummer who will give an illustrated lecture on “The Relationship of Music and Art,” in room 206. and composer as well as an artist, will and composer as wel as an artist, will iJ3ustjrate her lecture with designs which she has had worked out by Chinese textile workers, musical compositions being used as a motif for tlhe work.
Mrs. John Clarke will play the musical compositions which illustrate the musical feature of the art work, while Mrs. Plummer explains the designs from the musical and art angle. Mrs. Plummer will use a large number of cheer-cobor designs in1 textiles and rugs in explanation of tlhe various types she will speak of. She will return to China next month to continue her work in instructing Chinese work, ers.
Mrs. Plummer has achieved a unique success .having gone into the interior of Ohina where she has taken girls from the water wheels and tiny tots from the gun powder pits and put them to work in her impromptu shops teaching them the art of textile weaving and embroidery. In this she is being assisted by seme of the expert texti’e workers and weavers of China.
Mrs. von KleinSmid. herself a well known musician, will make the open-
(CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR)
There will be no sport page in Thursdays Trojan, but on Friday, May 23, the sport staff of the Trojan will issue an eight page sport special. Numerous features are being prepared for this issue and in order to defray 'Jhe expense of cuts and materials used a small charge will be made for the paper on this day.
Friday Morning Club Rooms Selected For Sophomore Hop
Ever ardent seekers of new fields of excitement, the Sophomores have selected the new Friday Morning Club of Los Angeles in which to hold their Sport Dance Friday, June 6, according to the information vouchsafed by Genevieve Mulligan, vice-president of the Sophomore class.
To the Sophomores then shall go the credit of giving the first U. S. C. dance in these new club rooms, talked of all over Los Angeles for their distinctiveness and beauty. The club is located over the “Playhouse” on Figueroa.
Due to conflicting affairs on the college date book, the date has been changed from the seventh of June as was previously announced to the sixth of June.
The big feature of the dance is to be a popularity contest which the Sophomore executive committee admits is somewhat complex, but which they promise will be a novel idea and a diversion from the ever present dancing contest.
Details of the dance are still embryonic. but rumors of programs and an orchestra whose jazz is nothing short of sensational are current. Tickets are now on sale, and members of the Sophomore executive committee can be induced to part with the cardboards in their possession at $1.50 apiece.
Since the tickets are limited in number, the Sophomore executive committee reminds prospective purchasers that it is the early bird that catches the worm.
Out of the deep, dark dampish fast- everything else he is superlative, but
nesses of the human spirit, pulled in advertising he contains only the
into shape with the help of a type- usual amount. On this account Wamp’s
writer the Wampus will arise on May papa Mr. O. H. King, feels that it
27 at ten o’clock in the morning, may become necessary to increase the
stretching its arms and yawning like price of admission. However, such
a steam calliope. This is the official mere pecuniary details will be set-
dope. tied later.
Yes, Wamp will march upon the The Great Public has always seized campus 2500 strong, and expecting upon Wamp with terrifying delight, every man to do his duty. He is com- and after devouring the horrible paring out of his gloomy stronghold for ticulars, it has almost invariably the last time this year, 16 pages husk- raised a howl for more. Now it w-as, ier than usual, with the full support Wamp decided, possible to pacify the and endorsement of Willie Live and infants in two ways: (a) by turning other notables. His exterior decora- a machine gun on the campus at tions. of the latest cut and the last large; (b) by becoming bigger and word in what the college man will better. So now you will probably wear this summer, are vouched for by need only three guesses to decide the designers, Banks and Matson. In | which he picked out.
Les Cummins, student body president at the University of California, Los Angeles, will be the speaker of the evening at the regular weekly meting of the Y Council. All men students on the campus who are interested in association work are urgently requested to be present and hear this speaker.
Cummins is well known to many U. S. C. students, and is considered an excellent speaker. All men on the campus should try to near him and get more acquainted with the manner in which the Council holds its meetings by combining grub with business and pleasude. The topic which Cummins will speak on has not been announced as yet.
08010977
Object Description
Description
| Title | The Southern California Trojan, Vol. 15, No. 87, May 20, 1924 |
| Description | The Southern California Trojan, Vol. 15, No. 87, May 20, 1924. |
| Format (imt) | image/tiff |
| Full text | California Juniors Are Selling Class Play Tickets Commerce Students Cast Ballots Today Los Angeles, California Number 87 Clickers Fraternity Becomes the Committee Arranging Program; Forty-First Chaper of To Include History, Music National Order And Addresses FOUNDED AT”SYRACUSE LUCILLE WILLS SPEAKER Members to Found Library of Lower Floor of Audtorium Re-Joumalism at U. S. C. served for Seniors This Semester ‘ And Faculty Promising that the Senior Chapel 1 which is to be held on Thursday, June 5, will start and finish promptly within the alloted chapel hour on that • day ,the committee in charge, headed by Margaret Edgin, chairman, and composed of Ruth Bush, Elinor Rogers, Martina Lanning. Frances Vale, and Elizabeth Sewell are arranging an interesting and snappy program for that day. At 11 a. m. on the day of June 5, members of the senior class from Dental, Law, and Liberal Arts colleges will march with the faculty to the Bovard auditorium. It is probable, acording to Miss Edgin, that the entire floor will be occupied by the seniors and their relatives and friends. Beth the faculty and members o:' the senior class will wear their formal cap and gown dress on that day. The cohi-mittee hopqs that the demand for seat i to the exercises will be very great, in fact they wish it so large as to necessitate the issuing of tickets. As soon as the seniors are seated and the faculty have taken their places on the stage the University hymn will be sung followed by music which is being arranged by the College of music. President Rufus B von KleinSmid will deliver the invocation. The remainder of the program has not been definitely decided upon, but it is certain that the class history will be read. Miss Elizabeth Kemp is the class historian. Lucille Wills, president of the school of speech, will give the address of the day, “Opportunities and Responsibilities of the College Graduate.” The programs, twelve hundred of which are being printed, have been donated gratis by the J. A, Meyers Company of this city. This donation, which is one of the chief expenses cf the chapel, has been received by the committee in charge with great pleasure and they wish iO express their thankfulness to J. A. Meyers. The program will go to print sometime this week and definite schedule of music I and speeches will then be given. Pi Delta Epsilon, the national honorary journalistic fraternity, increased its number of chapter to 41 last Saturday with the installation of the local organization known as the “Clickers.” The local Charter was granted in the fraternity s national convention at Boston last month. Founded at Syracuse University in 1909, Pi Delta Epsilon has expanded cautiously to many of the larger and best known institutions of the country. The‘fraternity has for its purpose the lending of dignity and standing to journalistic work and study in colleges, and the encouragement of undergraduates to compete for positions on the staffs of college publications. Two years of service on a publication are required before one is eligible for membership in the fraternity. Professor Charles Raymond of the Department of English in the University of California and the national president of Pi Delta Epsilon, headed the party of seven men who conducted the ceremonies of installation. His assistants all of whom belong to the California Chapter at Berkeley, included Joshua Eppinger. Jr., the sport editor of the “Daily CalifornianA. S. Furth, former editor-in-chief; Jerry Faulkner, managing editor; H. S. Sel-vyn, former director of publicity; S. J. Osborn, former managing editor, and N. G. Locke of the editorial board. The installation was held in the parlors of the Administration Building late Saturday afternoon. A banquet at the Phi Kappa Tu house followed. In addition to following and upholding the purpose of the national organization the local chapter has set up several objectives for itself. Principal among these will be the founding of a library of journalism for the University of Southern California. Immediate steps will be taken in con- (CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR) Eighty High Schools to Send Representatives to This Annual Affair LESLIE HENRY TO SPEAK- A. S. B. Executive Committee Choose Managers Tonight Colburn, Brennan for Debate and Orme and Ott for El Rodeo Manager Special Music Program Planned; Hunt and Morton Also To Speak Commerce Club activities will be brought to an end for this year with tomorrow’ night’s Commerce banquet at the City Club. All advance information makes the event sound like the biggest thing that t'he club has ever attempted. Among the features of the evening will be the presence of ever eighty high school representatives. Most of the arger schools of Soutnern California have one or more members of the’r student bodies present at the banquet. Music for the evening will be of special interest. Mary Langan will vive a violin solo. “A Chinese Harry Lauder’ will be portrayed by W. K. Tse. Kenneth Campbell promises to showtup wih his Sigma Tau Orchestra for the fest of the musical program. The principal speaker of the evening will be Leslie B. Henry. Mr. Henry is a forceful and fluent speaker as well as a well known business man. He is manager of the Pasadena Branch of the Blytflii .Witter Bond House and an alumnus of the University of California. His subject will be "The Student. the Business Man and the Citizen.” Short speeches wil’ be made by Dr. Rockwell D. Hunt, the retiring Dean of Commerce, and by Prof. D. Walter Morton Dean-elect. Lyman Johnson this 3rear’s president of the Commerce Club, and Roland Parker, next year’s president, will also speak. Special guests of the evening will be the sponsoring organizations of the College of Commerce. All men, who have signed up to work at the Olympic Tryouts, should report at the east entrance to the L. A. Coliseum not later than ten o’clock, Saturday morning. Anyone wishing to work as an usher Saturday can do so by signing up with the Secretary in the General Mana-i r's office today or tomorrow. "he following men have been ap-pc ^ted Section chiefs Arthur Metcalfe, H. McCarter, G. Freeman, S. Cundiff, and E. Ross. These men should see Al Swanholm this week and get a section assigned to them. Gatemen, guards and ushers are the other positions open Arnold Eddy announces. Phi Alpha Unable to Donate House for Affair May 23 Only four fraternJty houses wil! be available for the second all-University progressive dance w*hich is to take place on May 23. Phi Alpha will be unable to donate their house on that date as it was first planned. Four orchestras have been selected to supply the necessary jazz for the evening. The Theta Sigma Nu or-cHistra, Jenkin’s from Dental, Gamma Epsilon and W. E. Delplev’s. The men who will preside at the respective houses are Ronald Snavely, Alpha Chi Omega; Boh Green. Phi Beta Phi; Bill Friend. Lambda Psi. and Frank Beckman, Delta Gamma. These men have been selected to promote friendship and to see that every one gets acquainted and is having a good time. As it has been repeatedly said, dates are unnecessary and are to be discouraged. It will be decidedly informal. Clever favors have been purchased but the committee refuses to reveal them. Definite Eligibility Ruling Set By U. S. C., Stanford And California Legal Sorority Gives Benefit for Deserving Girls in Pre-Legal As a means of sending some liberal arts pre-legai girl to the College of Law for the remainder of her course, law is holding a candy sale at Liberal Arts, Dentistry, and the College of Music today. The sale is sponsired Dy the Kappa Beta Pi sororfty at law college. The scholarship is one of the most worthy. The goal has been set for $50 and it is hoped that the entire amount will be procured. Beside the sale which will be held Jft all colleges during the day, candy will be sold at the law night school. Trays are to he given to three liberal arts girls besides the regular booth to be maintained in the Arcade. This is one opportunity for Liberal Arts to support another off-campus college in its activities. The students are asked to spend their extra dimes on candy whicfo will be on sale before and after chapel. Illustrated Lecture by Noted Ar tist-Composer Today In Room 206 CHEER-COLOR DESIGNS Musical Compositions to Illustrate Musical Feature Of Art Work Affair Held at Alexandria With Summer Sport Clothes To Be Worn SPORT EDITION FRIDAY Artists, musicians, club women and students of U. S. C. wil be entertained by faculty members of the art depart-ment at 3:30 o’clock this afternoon in honor of Mrs. Beatrice Hubbell Plummer who will give an illustrated lecture on “The Relationship of Music and Art,” in room 206. and composer as well as an artist, will and composer as wel as an artist, will iJ3ustjrate her lecture with designs which she has had worked out by Chinese textile workers, musical compositions being used as a motif for tlhe work. Mrs. John Clarke will play the musical compositions which illustrate the musical feature of the art work, while Mrs. Plummer explains the designs from the musical and art angle. Mrs. Plummer will use a large number of cheer-cobor designs in1 textiles and rugs in explanation of tlhe various types she will speak of. She will return to China next month to continue her work in instructing Chinese work, ers. Mrs. Plummer has achieved a unique success .having gone into the interior of Ohina where she has taken girls from the water wheels and tiny tots from the gun powder pits and put them to work in her impromptu shops teaching them the art of textile weaving and embroidery. In this she is being assisted by seme of the expert texti’e workers and weavers of China. Mrs. von KleinSmid. herself a well known musician, will make the open- (CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR) There will be no sport page in Thursdays Trojan, but on Friday, May 23, the sport staff of the Trojan will issue an eight page sport special. Numerous features are being prepared for this issue and in order to defray 'Jhe expense of cuts and materials used a small charge will be made for the paper on this day. Friday Morning Club Rooms Selected For Sophomore Hop Ever ardent seekers of new fields of excitement, the Sophomores have selected the new Friday Morning Club of Los Angeles in which to hold their Sport Dance Friday, June 6, according to the information vouchsafed by Genevieve Mulligan, vice-president of the Sophomore class. To the Sophomores then shall go the credit of giving the first U. S. C. dance in these new club rooms, talked of all over Los Angeles for their distinctiveness and beauty. The club is located over the “Playhouse” on Figueroa. Due to conflicting affairs on the college date book, the date has been changed from the seventh of June as was previously announced to the sixth of June. The big feature of the dance is to be a popularity contest which the Sophomore executive committee admits is somewhat complex, but which they promise will be a novel idea and a diversion from the ever present dancing contest. Details of the dance are still embryonic. but rumors of programs and an orchestra whose jazz is nothing short of sensational are current. Tickets are now on sale, and members of the Sophomore executive committee can be induced to part with the cardboards in their possession at $1.50 apiece. Since the tickets are limited in number, the Sophomore executive committee reminds prospective purchasers that it is the early bird that catches the worm. Out of the deep, dark dampish fast- everything else he is superlative, but nesses of the human spirit, pulled in advertising he contains only the into shape with the help of a type- usual amount. On this account Wamp’s writer the Wampus will arise on May papa Mr. O. H. King, feels that it 27 at ten o’clock in the morning, may become necessary to increase the stretching its arms and yawning like price of admission. However, such a steam calliope. This is the official mere pecuniary details will be set- dope. tied later. Yes, Wamp will march upon the The Great Public has always seized campus 2500 strong, and expecting upon Wamp with terrifying delight, every man to do his duty. He is com- and after devouring the horrible paring out of his gloomy stronghold for ticulars, it has almost invariably the last time this year, 16 pages husk- raised a howl for more. Now it w-as, ier than usual, with the full support Wamp decided, possible to pacify the and endorsement of Willie Live and infants in two ways: (a) by turning other notables. His exterior decora- a machine gun on the campus at tions. of the latest cut and the last large; (b) by becoming bigger and word in what the college man will better. So now you will probably wear this summer, are vouched for by need only three guesses to decide the designers, Banks and Matson. In which he picked out. Les Cummins, student body president at the University of California, Los Angeles, will be the speaker of the evening at the regular weekly meting of the Y Council. All men students on the campus who are interested in association work are urgently requested to be present and hear this speaker. Cummins is well known to many U. S. C. students, and is considered an excellent speaker. All men on the campus should try to near him and get more acquainted with the manner in which the Council holds its meetings by combining grub with business and pleasude. The topic which Cummins will speak on has not been announced as yet. 08010977 |
| Filename | uschist-dt-1924-05-20~001.tif |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume200/uschist-dt-1924-05-20~001.tif |
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