DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 33, No. 94, January 22, 1942 |
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k’ke !W iec =»rip TrTT urer of in speech and psychol-defense classes designed .u- nsn ments also views pecial imber field- llogist DOROTHY LA FOLLETTE—heads new defense committee for lecture series. at Polytechnic High school. Dorothy LaFollette, chairman of j the committee sponsoring the series, urged every woman who can j to attend this series and to take ; advantage of the counseling privi- ! lege with Dr. Stinchfield-Hawke. Those interested in attending the i course may sign up in the office | of the counselor of women. unusual, but to be a privileged Amazon pledge is really news. This is the case of Miss Helen Hall Moreland wno was elected to honorary membership to the service organization last Wednesday night. « Miss Moreland will be presented with the regulation sweater at the time she is initiated with the other newly-elected members in May. Sh will not be rqeuired to wear the regulation white as do the others, during her pledge-ship. Miss Frances McHale, secretary to the dean, is already an honorary member. She was ejected in 1940 and was initiated with that group of pledges. Every graduating senior is to be presented with an Amazon recognition pin which will identify her as a past member of the organization upon occasions when she may return to the campus. Red Cross Requests Sweaters Returned Red Cross sweaters are reqyired to be finished and returned to the YWCA house by next Wednesday, according to Jeanne Cendow, secretary for the AWS unit. Miss Cendow will be at the Y house during Chapel period every day until the deadline to receive the completed garments. Broadway, Eighth and Hill Telephone TUcker 8211 .■I ou a |E DRAPE SPORTS SUIT lhe right, cut like your best beau's! |n buttoned *o the right] Exactly right lare-set shoulders to the straigh back, ned sleeves, pockets, rounded jacket. Sig Ep Barbecue, Phi Sig Theater Party Highlight Fraternity Weekend Dances Informal affairs head the social calendar this weekend with Sigma Phi Epsilon’s barbecue garden party and Phi Sigma Kappa’s theater party at Bliss-Haydn. Sig Ep hosts are George and Jim Mallery, who are entertaining fraternity brothers at their ranch in Encino. Couples Doris McDonald, Beverly Johnson, Members of Theta Sigma Phi, national professional journalism sorority, will initiate four pledges vat ceremonies in the Little Chapel of Silence at 2 p.m. this Friday. Rites will be conducted by Yvonne Cahoon, president. Initiates will be Barbara Best, present will include Ted Cohr.t and Carol Brinkerhof, ADPi; Lyman Lee and Joan Aken, Pi Phi; Bob Berard and Jean Adams, Zeta; Tom Doran and Dicky Von der Ahe, DeeGee; and Trovie Lyons and Margaret Gililland, Gamma Phi. Among Phi Sigs and their dates for the theater party will be Tommie Fredricks and Theta Marilyn Mogan, Louis Kunert and KD Phyllis Pirie; Tommy Taylor and Gamma Phi Betty Mueller, and Ed French and Noel Neil. TRI-DELTS A triple alliance of Tri-Delts and Sigma Chis will have dinner at the Beach Combers Sunday evening. They are Shirley Ann Jones and Ollie Gardner, Fran Riley and Bill Carey, and Dotty Hedrick and Roger Atkinson. Beverly Rodini will celebrate with Paul Knight at the Grove this weekend. She passed candy last Monday evening to announce her acquisition of Knight’s Phi Delta Theta pin. Phi Mus Dixie Wilkinson and Ann Campbell leave for San Pedro today as guests of Sicily Ann Maloy. A Long Beach foursome will include Duane Berryman, Nancy Lupton, and Phyllis Dixon as guests of Zeta Jane Ann Smith. BUFFET SUPPER Buffet supper, dancing, and fun will reign supreme at the Alpha Gam house dance tonight. Filling Phi Tau Jack Gray’s plate will be Barbara Smith. Dorothy Gobie will do same for Bill White, Sig Chi. Elrose Maquar’s partner for the evening is ASSC presidential nominee Jerry Conrad. Ruth Crippen and Bob White, Sig Chi will discuss campus politics with Mary Jackson and Jerry Cermac, Sig Ep. The Theta Xis Don Nelson with June Lusher, George Ellis with Pat McCormack will gather at the Florentine Gardens Saturday evening for dancing. UCLA Alpha Grams Pat Reinicke and Paula Otto will be squired by Paul Wooden and George Wann. Dot Schuyler and Al Cree, as well as Mary Lou Schumacker and Emery Harvey, will also attend the fraternity affair. Why Study?’ Discussed by Y in Panel Group Postponed because of conflict with Religious Emphasis week events, the YWCA roundtable on the topic “Why Study Now?” will be held nex,t Thursday, Mar. 26, and the date of succeeding panels will be advanced one wreek. Dr. Pauline Frederick, associate professor of physical education, will be the faculty leader of the discussion, and students assisting will be Vivian Clarke and Martha Livingston. Fifth in a series on the topic “The Student’s Relationships to the Modern World,” the panel is open to all students and faculty members. It will begin at 4 p.m. The roundtable will emphasize the practical applications of university courses, and it will attempt to answer questions about the reasons for taking certain required courses, the importance of a university education when many persons have achieved success without it, and the reasons for remaining in college instead of .taking a defense Job. The revised schedule for other panels in the series follows: Apr. 2—Keep the Home Fires Burning. Apr. 9—Where Is God While We Fight? Apr. 16—After Victory, What? YWCA club events scheduled for next week include meetings of the Freshman and Social Service clubs. Miss Christian R. Dick, university librarian, will explain the organization and functions of the library at a luncheon meeting of the Freshman club Monday noon. She will also discuss the history of the Doheny Memorial building, the purpose and functions of the separate Women Meet at Candidates Prepari AWS campaigning will st| nominations for the four Touchstone theater. Ballotinj junction with the ASSC elecl Nominated will be candidi AD Pis Induct 10 Monday; Candy Passed Shiny new active pins dot the campus this week as 10 Alpha Delta Pi members culminated their pledgeship with initiation ceremonies conducted Monday night. The new actives are Carol Brinkerhof, Betty Dexheimer, Dorothy Dunham, Miriam Franz, Elizabeth Ar>n Heild, Lois Jones, Betty Jane Miller, Barbara Roberts, Rae Royal, and June Garman. ADPis also celebrated the hanging of Paul Jackson’s Delta Sigma Delta pin on Gloria Lovekin. Faculty members were guests of Pi Beta Phi Wednesday. The chapter entertained Dr. and Mrs. Harold C. Case at dinner. Pi Phi officers for the current semester are Ruth Palmer, president; Barbara Case, vice-president; Trudi Peabody, pledge trainer; Jane Mercer, treasurer; Mary Rose Callicott, corresponding secretary; Inez Fox, recording secretary; and Marjorie Norton, rush chairman. Phi Mus will honor Mrs. Pearl Travis, Panhellenic adviser, at dinner Monday night. Dixie Wilkinson, second vice-president, is in charge of arrangements which will feature pink and white carnations. Alpha Chi Omega exchanged lunch with Kappa Sigma Tuesday, and entertained faculty members at dinner Wednesday evening. Chi Omegas are hostesses for a USO party at a downtown hotel this weekend, to entertain for a former housemother of Chi Omega. The entire chapter is turning out for the affair. Also doing their bit for defense are the Tri-Delts who are entertaining the soldiers Sunday afternoon from 2 to 5 p.m. Guests will play ping-pong and badminton. I mmm i i m Mi 1 Us; JACKIE COMERFORD — direct* AWS nominationi assembly. DAE Head Renamed PORTLAND, Ore.— (CE)— Mrs. William H. Pouch of New York city, president general of the Daughters of the American Revolution, has a new name. And she can best pronounce it “with a sneeze.’* So popular was Mrs. Pouch with delegates from the Umatila Indian agency at Pendleton, that Mrs. Henry Roe Cloud gave her the name: Hi-nook-cho-ni-gah. In the Winnebago language, Mrs. Pouch’s new name means— “the first woman who leads the way.” Spectators Favored They’re in again! White spectator pumps are here for another season. In blue and white, luggage-tan and white, black and white, aligator and white, any combination that appeals to the eye is acceptable in spectators. and Margaret Salskov. Helen Pemberton was initiated into Kappa Phi Zeta, professional library sorority, Saturday, Mar. 14, at the home of Miss Christian R. Dick, university librarian. Frances Jenkins, president, officiated at the ceremonies. Sor-rita Zimmerman and Bonnie Mc-Johnstone were pledged to the sorority the same evening. An informal buffet supper followed. New officers for the Secretarial club are La Verne Nettle, president; Eleanor Britton, vice-president; Betty Mispagel, treasurer; Virginia Miller, publicity chairman; and Janet Simpson, social secretary. Officers were inducted by Mary Princ^, retiring president. Members of Clionian literary society will meet at the home of Doris McDonald Tuesday night for dinner and meeting. This is the annual manuscript meeting when members submit scripts for criticism and approval. WAA Vollyball Contest Opens Eight sorority and non-org teams will compete for the volleyball plague when the WAA volleyball tournament begins Monday afternoon in the Physical Education building. Betty Coman, manager of volleyball, announced that four games will be played every day except Friday for two weeks. The tilts are scheduled at 3:50 and at 4:15 p.m. Each game will last ap- AppiC By^PfOQUCt proximately 45 minutes. Any team that is more than 7 minutes late DOROTHY HEPP—genres as women's election commissioner. will automatically default. Miss Coman urges the contestants to be on time so that the schedule will run as planned. Monday non-org team No. 1 will vie with non-org team No. 2 at 3:30 in court one. The Alpha Gams and the KDs will volley each other at the same time in the second court. DeeGees will display their prowess against the Pi Phis in court one at 4:15. In the sec- May Replace Sugar PHILADELPHIA (U.P)— Chemists of the U.S. Department of Agri- | cuture’s eastern regional laboratory near Cfcastnut Hill say they j have developed by-products from apples which replace some of the uses of sugar. These include a sugary syrup, good either on pancakes or in coffee, and a streamlined pectin which ond court the ADPis will play the js expected to cut preserving sugar Gamma Phis. None of the teams will have to compste in more than one game each day. In order to participate in the tournament a team must have five members who have taken part in six volleyball practices. The other three players necessary can be women who belong to the house, if it it a sorority team, or if it is one of the non-org teams any nonorg may fill in the vacancy. The non-org team members and the complete schedule for the contests will be posted on the bulletin board in the women’s gym next to the equipment cage. by 30 per cent or more. Hold your Partner! ** n Odorono Cream keeps Arthur Murray dancers Sweet" in a close-up Whether the music’s sweet or swing, y o u’ve got to be “sweet. * * Use Odorono Cream—choice of Arthur Murray dancers. Non-greasy, non-gritty—gentle Odorono Cream ends perspiration annoyance for 1 to 3 days! Get a jar and hold that partner —spellbound! 10^, 3#, S9i sizes £ C0*^LA ■ ■ 'i (wA *2 rz ■jU mm fflii y/y/y..
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Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 33, No. 94, January 22, 1942 |
Full text | k’ke !W iec =»rip TrTT urer of in speech and psychol-defense classes designed .u- nsn ments also views pecial imber field- llogist DOROTHY LA FOLLETTE—heads new defense committee for lecture series. at Polytechnic High school. Dorothy LaFollette, chairman of j the committee sponsoring the series, urged every woman who can j to attend this series and to take ; advantage of the counseling privi- ! lege with Dr. Stinchfield-Hawke. Those interested in attending the i course may sign up in the office | of the counselor of women. unusual, but to be a privileged Amazon pledge is really news. This is the case of Miss Helen Hall Moreland wno was elected to honorary membership to the service organization last Wednesday night. « Miss Moreland will be presented with the regulation sweater at the time she is initiated with the other newly-elected members in May. Sh will not be rqeuired to wear the regulation white as do the others, during her pledge-ship. Miss Frances McHale, secretary to the dean, is already an honorary member. She was ejected in 1940 and was initiated with that group of pledges. Every graduating senior is to be presented with an Amazon recognition pin which will identify her as a past member of the organization upon occasions when she may return to the campus. Red Cross Requests Sweaters Returned Red Cross sweaters are reqyired to be finished and returned to the YWCA house by next Wednesday, according to Jeanne Cendow, secretary for the AWS unit. Miss Cendow will be at the Y house during Chapel period every day until the deadline to receive the completed garments. Broadway, Eighth and Hill Telephone TUcker 8211 .■I ou a |E DRAPE SPORTS SUIT lhe right, cut like your best beau's! |n buttoned *o the right] Exactly right lare-set shoulders to the straigh back, ned sleeves, pockets, rounded jacket. Sig Ep Barbecue, Phi Sig Theater Party Highlight Fraternity Weekend Dances Informal affairs head the social calendar this weekend with Sigma Phi Epsilon’s barbecue garden party and Phi Sigma Kappa’s theater party at Bliss-Haydn. Sig Ep hosts are George and Jim Mallery, who are entertaining fraternity brothers at their ranch in Encino. Couples Doris McDonald, Beverly Johnson, Members of Theta Sigma Phi, national professional journalism sorority, will initiate four pledges vat ceremonies in the Little Chapel of Silence at 2 p.m. this Friday. Rites will be conducted by Yvonne Cahoon, president. Initiates will be Barbara Best, present will include Ted Cohr.t and Carol Brinkerhof, ADPi; Lyman Lee and Joan Aken, Pi Phi; Bob Berard and Jean Adams, Zeta; Tom Doran and Dicky Von der Ahe, DeeGee; and Trovie Lyons and Margaret Gililland, Gamma Phi. Among Phi Sigs and their dates for the theater party will be Tommie Fredricks and Theta Marilyn Mogan, Louis Kunert and KD Phyllis Pirie; Tommy Taylor and Gamma Phi Betty Mueller, and Ed French and Noel Neil. TRI-DELTS A triple alliance of Tri-Delts and Sigma Chis will have dinner at the Beach Combers Sunday evening. They are Shirley Ann Jones and Ollie Gardner, Fran Riley and Bill Carey, and Dotty Hedrick and Roger Atkinson. Beverly Rodini will celebrate with Paul Knight at the Grove this weekend. She passed candy last Monday evening to announce her acquisition of Knight’s Phi Delta Theta pin. Phi Mus Dixie Wilkinson and Ann Campbell leave for San Pedro today as guests of Sicily Ann Maloy. A Long Beach foursome will include Duane Berryman, Nancy Lupton, and Phyllis Dixon as guests of Zeta Jane Ann Smith. BUFFET SUPPER Buffet supper, dancing, and fun will reign supreme at the Alpha Gam house dance tonight. Filling Phi Tau Jack Gray’s plate will be Barbara Smith. Dorothy Gobie will do same for Bill White, Sig Chi. Elrose Maquar’s partner for the evening is ASSC presidential nominee Jerry Conrad. Ruth Crippen and Bob White, Sig Chi will discuss campus politics with Mary Jackson and Jerry Cermac, Sig Ep. The Theta Xis Don Nelson with June Lusher, George Ellis with Pat McCormack will gather at the Florentine Gardens Saturday evening for dancing. UCLA Alpha Grams Pat Reinicke and Paula Otto will be squired by Paul Wooden and George Wann. Dot Schuyler and Al Cree, as well as Mary Lou Schumacker and Emery Harvey, will also attend the fraternity affair. Why Study?’ Discussed by Y in Panel Group Postponed because of conflict with Religious Emphasis week events, the YWCA roundtable on the topic “Why Study Now?” will be held nex,t Thursday, Mar. 26, and the date of succeeding panels will be advanced one wreek. Dr. Pauline Frederick, associate professor of physical education, will be the faculty leader of the discussion, and students assisting will be Vivian Clarke and Martha Livingston. Fifth in a series on the topic “The Student’s Relationships to the Modern World,” the panel is open to all students and faculty members. It will begin at 4 p.m. The roundtable will emphasize the practical applications of university courses, and it will attempt to answer questions about the reasons for taking certain required courses, the importance of a university education when many persons have achieved success without it, and the reasons for remaining in college instead of .taking a defense Job. The revised schedule for other panels in the series follows: Apr. 2—Keep the Home Fires Burning. Apr. 9—Where Is God While We Fight? Apr. 16—After Victory, What? YWCA club events scheduled for next week include meetings of the Freshman and Social Service clubs. Miss Christian R. Dick, university librarian, will explain the organization and functions of the library at a luncheon meeting of the Freshman club Monday noon. She will also discuss the history of the Doheny Memorial building, the purpose and functions of the separate Women Meet at Candidates Prepari AWS campaigning will st| nominations for the four Touchstone theater. Ballotinj junction with the ASSC elecl Nominated will be candidi AD Pis Induct 10 Monday; Candy Passed Shiny new active pins dot the campus this week as 10 Alpha Delta Pi members culminated their pledgeship with initiation ceremonies conducted Monday night. The new actives are Carol Brinkerhof, Betty Dexheimer, Dorothy Dunham, Miriam Franz, Elizabeth Ar>n Heild, Lois Jones, Betty Jane Miller, Barbara Roberts, Rae Royal, and June Garman. ADPis also celebrated the hanging of Paul Jackson’s Delta Sigma Delta pin on Gloria Lovekin. Faculty members were guests of Pi Beta Phi Wednesday. The chapter entertained Dr. and Mrs. Harold C. Case at dinner. Pi Phi officers for the current semester are Ruth Palmer, president; Barbara Case, vice-president; Trudi Peabody, pledge trainer; Jane Mercer, treasurer; Mary Rose Callicott, corresponding secretary; Inez Fox, recording secretary; and Marjorie Norton, rush chairman. Phi Mus will honor Mrs. Pearl Travis, Panhellenic adviser, at dinner Monday night. Dixie Wilkinson, second vice-president, is in charge of arrangements which will feature pink and white carnations. Alpha Chi Omega exchanged lunch with Kappa Sigma Tuesday, and entertained faculty members at dinner Wednesday evening. Chi Omegas are hostesses for a USO party at a downtown hotel this weekend, to entertain for a former housemother of Chi Omega. The entire chapter is turning out for the affair. Also doing their bit for defense are the Tri-Delts who are entertaining the soldiers Sunday afternoon from 2 to 5 p.m. Guests will play ping-pong and badminton. I mmm i i m Mi 1 Us; JACKIE COMERFORD — direct* AWS nominationi assembly. DAE Head Renamed PORTLAND, Ore.— (CE)— Mrs. William H. Pouch of New York city, president general of the Daughters of the American Revolution, has a new name. And she can best pronounce it “with a sneeze.’* So popular was Mrs. Pouch with delegates from the Umatila Indian agency at Pendleton, that Mrs. Henry Roe Cloud gave her the name: Hi-nook-cho-ni-gah. In the Winnebago language, Mrs. Pouch’s new name means— “the first woman who leads the way.” Spectators Favored They’re in again! White spectator pumps are here for another season. In blue and white, luggage-tan and white, black and white, aligator and white, any combination that appeals to the eye is acceptable in spectators. and Margaret Salskov. Helen Pemberton was initiated into Kappa Phi Zeta, professional library sorority, Saturday, Mar. 14, at the home of Miss Christian R. Dick, university librarian. Frances Jenkins, president, officiated at the ceremonies. Sor-rita Zimmerman and Bonnie Mc-Johnstone were pledged to the sorority the same evening. An informal buffet supper followed. New officers for the Secretarial club are La Verne Nettle, president; Eleanor Britton, vice-president; Betty Mispagel, treasurer; Virginia Miller, publicity chairman; and Janet Simpson, social secretary. Officers were inducted by Mary Princ^, retiring president. Members of Clionian literary society will meet at the home of Doris McDonald Tuesday night for dinner and meeting. This is the annual manuscript meeting when members submit scripts for criticism and approval. WAA Vollyball Contest Opens Eight sorority and non-org teams will compete for the volleyball plague when the WAA volleyball tournament begins Monday afternoon in the Physical Education building. Betty Coman, manager of volleyball, announced that four games will be played every day except Friday for two weeks. The tilts are scheduled at 3:50 and at 4:15 p.m. Each game will last ap- AppiC By^PfOQUCt proximately 45 minutes. Any team that is more than 7 minutes late DOROTHY HEPP—genres as women's election commissioner. will automatically default. Miss Coman urges the contestants to be on time so that the schedule will run as planned. Monday non-org team No. 1 will vie with non-org team No. 2 at 3:30 in court one. The Alpha Gams and the KDs will volley each other at the same time in the second court. DeeGees will display their prowess against the Pi Phis in court one at 4:15. In the sec- May Replace Sugar PHILADELPHIA (U.P)— Chemists of the U.S. Department of Agri- | cuture’s eastern regional laboratory near Cfcastnut Hill say they j have developed by-products from apples which replace some of the uses of sugar. These include a sugary syrup, good either on pancakes or in coffee, and a streamlined pectin which ond court the ADPis will play the js expected to cut preserving sugar Gamma Phis. None of the teams will have to compste in more than one game each day. In order to participate in the tournament a team must have five members who have taken part in six volleyball practices. The other three players necessary can be women who belong to the house, if it it a sorority team, or if it is one of the non-org teams any nonorg may fill in the vacancy. The non-org team members and the complete schedule for the contests will be posted on the bulletin board in the women’s gym next to the equipment cage. by 30 per cent or more. Hold your Partner! ** n Odorono Cream keeps Arthur Murray dancers Sweet" in a close-up Whether the music’s sweet or swing, y o u’ve got to be “sweet. * * Use Odorono Cream—choice of Arthur Murray dancers. Non-greasy, non-gritty—gentle Odorono Cream ends perspiration annoyance for 1 to 3 days! Get a jar and hold that partner —spellbound! 10^, 3#, S9i sizes £ C0*^LA ■ ■ 'i (wA *2 rz ■jU mm fflii y/y/y.. |
Filename | uschist-dt-1942-01-22~001.tif |
Archival file | uaic_Volume1218/uschist-dt-1942-01-22~001.tif |