DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 33, No. 17, September 25, 1941 |
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Season to C<
am
pus
-rjQfr*--'
m
;uule is on the Trojan social cal-
f the university’s 15 social sor->dge classes. Four of the pre-i yesterday afternoon, when Pi nma Phi Beta, and Kappa Delta
"h!
;; mi
Y Events Outlined
Offering a wide range of opportunities for women interested in campus activities, clubs sponsored by the Trojan YWCA will begin meetings at the Y house during the coming wc^k.
Tomorrow at 2:30 p.m. the world friendship club will outline its plans for the year under the leadership of Elizabeth Somers. This group brings together students from various countries and assists with war relief work.
FRESHMAN CLUB
New women will meet Miss Helen Hall Moreland, counselor of women, and members of the YWCA cabinet at the Freshman club meeting at 3:30 p.m. next Thursday. Directed by Barbara Douglas and Editha Finch, this group will sponsor fashion shows, luncheons, and informal discussions for freshman women.
Meeting at chapel hour on Mondays, members of the hostess club greet guests and assist in the office at the Y house. Martha Livingston sponsors the club.
The Sophomore-Junior club, which will act as a big sister organization for freshman women, will hold a short meeting at noon Monday, Oct. 6. Elizabeth Wells, leader of the club, plans luncheon meeting for following Mondays.
FLYING SQUADRON
ith the first meeting planned [for Tuesday, Oct. 7, at 2:30 p.m., he Social Service club will do work or the Red Cross and the Chil-Iren’s and Orthopedic hospitals. 3atricia Wiese will direct these ac-;ivities.
The Flyin Squadron, which caries messages about YWCA activities to the sororities, fraternities, (and boarding houses, will meet on [onday afternoons. Betty Coman, |chairman, will announce the time Later.
Further announcements about :lub meetings will appear in the >aily Trojan.
-—Courtesy L. A. Examiner.
CELEBRATING—Trojans gatnered in Pasadena Saturday night as guests of the Engineers to celebrate the victory over Oregon State. Sitting out a dance were Mary Lou Edwards, Theta, and Bill Caldwell. Dancers found the annual dig following the first game of the season, its usual exciting affair.
Campus Personalities Confuse Pledge as Greek Open Presentation Whirl
By a Pledge
Honestly, I don’t know why I’m so confused!
Really, it’s just terrible. I got introduced yesterday. Just to a couple of hundred people. Really, it seemed like 3,000,-000, but I never saw them before, and I’ll never see them again . . . that is, unless we get stuck at the same window for section cards next February . .
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seems like everybody else always does. Hot, isn’t it?
But anyway, I got introduced. Sort of. They said, Miss McGilli-cuddy, Mr. Goldwyn. Miss McGilli-cuddy, Mr. Mayer.
Mother warned me about going Hollywood — but I didn’t know it wrould be forced on me. REMEMBERS NAMES
Names are funny. I never could remember names. Gee I couldn’t remember them yesterday. Once it was embarrassing. I mean, it can be. You know? Anyway, my feet hurt. And then it happened. Johnny Somebody that goes with one of the actives came by, and introduced himself as Mr. Smith—I still can’t remember if that’s his real name—and then he lifted my formal so everyone could see my stocking toes. They laughed at me cause I had my shoes off. I mean, it can be embarrassing. You know?
It’s funny how everybody looks the same after the first 10 minutes. I asked the girl next to me what she thought about it, and she said they got to look so much alike it was just as if they were the same people coming through over and over again.
MORE ABOUT NAMES
I laughed when someone who was real big and brawny like a last year’s football player came by and said he was Mr. Blitzbaumgarten. The rush chairman frowned at me real hard, and I began to feel sort of bad cause I thought gee what if it was his name?
Some of the most interesting people came to our present. I felt like sticking my tongue out at Mr. Hitler and Mr. Mussolini (they were right together and I kept waiting for Stalin but he didn’t show up). But when Clark Gable came by, somehow I didn’t feel like swoon-I ing. Gosh, I’d even have preferred a Delta Chi to that fossil-face.
I don’t know why the sororities lie like they do. They kept telling us how presents were all for us, so the fellows could get to meet the pledges. But they just whipped down the line and made funny faces at us, and then the actives grabbed them off the line and threw tea and cakes at them. And who got the dates? Well, you know!
STANDING IN LINE
Anyway. There we were. Standing in line. No romance for us. It was funny, at first. Virginia was the last pledge in the line. She’s the cutest pledge really, I have to admit it even if she does have a nasty temper and borrows all my I hairbows.
CAMPUS
Style-ligbts
by Barbara Leipsic
All dressed up with someplace to go and Troy’s first victory of the season to celebrate were Connie Kivari, Theta, and Ralph Hey wood, Sigma Chi pledge, at the College of Engineering dance.
Connie donned a black date dress for the occasion that was accented by the new mushroom styled hat, while escort Ralph was garbed in a brown beige suit.
Beverly Royston looked mighty pert for the cameraman in her kelly green dress and hat with feather as she danced by with Hugh Mc-Keller, Kappa Sig, who had on a grey chalk stripe suit.
DANCERS
Dancing on the patio was Syd Barton in a navy blue single breasted suit. Also glimpsed on the floor was Barbara Case, Pi Phi, in a chocolate brown picture hat.
Studying in the library were Charlotte Quinn and Don Milligan. Charlotte had on a red cardigan and red, blue, and green plaid skirt with inverted pleats and Don had on a powder blue cashmere sweater.
Sipping a coke at the Wooden Horse during chapel was Marge Weiss, Pi Phi, in a white V necked sweater and blue skirt and companion Ed Heizman in a bird cloth jacket.
Energetically waving her pom pon at the game Saturday was Leta Gallentine, Delta Gamma, in a brown, pink, and powder blue plaid skirt that was topped off with a powder blue cardigan.
SCURRIERS
Rushing to class down University avenue was Jeannie Goldberg in a navy and white argyle sweater with navy blue solid colored skirt. Jane Hopkins, Pi Phi, wras seen a hurrying to an 8 o’clock in Bridge garbed in a brown skirt and pink cashmere cardigan.
Discussing presents in the union with Zeta sisters was pledge Char-leen Keefe in a cherry red pullover with the new extra long strands of pearls.
Engagements, Exchanges Top Social Events
Greeks are getting into the social whirl early in the season even though sororities are finding presentation teas the most important events of the week.
AEPhis are climaxing the weeks
activities with initiation tonight. Candy passings have abounded at the house, last night having seen four boxes circulated. Teddy Sher-line annouced her engagement to Sidney Cagan; Francis Lustig hers to Marvin Pepper, Phi Sig from Colorado; Evelyn Burnett to Bud Laude, and Annette Litman to Fred Slavin, Tau Ep.
Pi Phit, are exchanging dinner with SAEs Thursday evening while ADPis will exchange lunch with the Sigma Nus.
Kappa Alpha Thetas will entertain guests to lunch on Wednesday, and parents will be received at noon on Saturday for a football affair.
Phi Mu mothers are honoring pledge mothers at luncheon on Friday at the home of Mrs. Raymond B. Stringfield, president of the group.
New officers were elected last night at the Phi Mu house with Ann Campbell assuming the secretarial post, Gwenn Wiley the treas* urer.
Foreign Students Honored Today
In honor of foreign women of all races, the YWCA wil sponsor ~ tea from 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. to-
Commence
Professional Groups Plan Gala Affairs
A wide and varied program of parties, dinners and breakfasts has been planned by the professional fraternities as their fall rushing activities begin.
Phi Chi Theta, professional and honorary commerce sorority, began its fall rushing activities with a tea held at the Gamma Phi Beta house, Sunday, Sept. 28. Rushees will be honored at luncheon at Elisabeth von KleinSmid hall Thursday, Oct. 2, and the preference dinner will be held at the Melody Lane, Friday evening.
PHI CHI THETA
Phi Chi Theta was established to band together those women interested in a business career and thosp women already embarked in 'the business world.
Lambda Kappa Sigma, women’s professional pharmacy sorority, will open its activities this year with a tea, Monday afternoon, Oct. 16. The coming year promises to be a very active one for the sorority as more women have enrolled in pharmacy this year than ever before. PHI BETA
The Mayfair hotel will be the scene of the Phi Beta, music and speech professional, dinner Wednesday night. Auditions will be heard Friday night in the Phi Beta studio. Lavendar and gold, the fraternity colors, will be used in the decorations for the dinner. The preference breakfast will be held Sunday morning. The fraternity is for those girls interested in music and speech.
In a romantic "fiesta” atmosphere, Sigma Alpha Iota fraternity will hold a barbecue tonight at the home of Dr. Max T. Krone. Mrs. Krone, an alumna of the fraternity, and a number of patronesses will be present.
SIGMA ALPHA IOTA
Rushees will really have to sing for their supper Thursday night at the “Tommy Tucker” supper when a nursery rhyme will prevail throughout the evening. The dinner will be held at the home of Mrs. Arthur Lang, newly initiated patroness of the organization. Mrs. Lang will view the formal auditions of the rushees. Candlelight and crystals will prevail at the preference dinner to be held at the Chapman hotel next Saturday night.
Clionian literary society will meet in Elisabeth von KleinSmid hall at 7:30 tonight to make plans for the year’s activities. President Virginia Ellis requests members to bring lists of candidates for membership.
I tivii
Mary Gower Attend; Scheduled at Three
‘One of the biggest thrills f< men women is the thought that! delegate to the next Mortar Boj With undiminished enthusiasi Mary Gower, the president of honorary for service and scholarship, commented about the national convention of the organization which she attended this summer in Buck Hill Falls, Penn.
“Wonderful, perfectly wonderful,” and she runs out of words to describe the women from all over the country that she met at the conclave, which occurs once every three years.
“Combine Phi Beta keys with beauty . . . talented, interesting in themselves . . . leaders from their communities . . . well rounded lives” are snatches from the exuberant description Mary gave of the cov1 advisers and counselors and older alumni members of Mortar Board. 0f
ATTENDS FIVE DAYS
And of the many undergraduate for college Mortar Boards like herself Mary said that they were “the kind if girls you made friends with right away.”
Leaving California about the middle of June the Mortar Board prexy journeyed to the convention with Betty Jane Lissner, who represented the UCLA chapter of the senior honorary.
For five days starting June 22 Mary attended business meetings “right and left” to put it in her own words, and gathered information of what thousands of college women are doing and thinking all over the country, especially about national defense.
PLANS SCHOLARSHIP
Delegates to the convention also Wilst made tentative plans for a $1000 ?oi scholarship which Mortar Board will give every year to an outstanding woman graduate student in the United States. The name of the award will be the Katherine Coleman scholarship and will be in honor of Mrs. F. D. Coleman from Nebraska under whose presidency of three terms Mortar Board developed greatly.
“The most inspirational sight I have ever seen,” is what Mary says of the roll call ceremony on the final night of the convention at the banquet.
When the name of each college or university was called every delegate present from that institution bulleti] lit tiny candles placed beside her particij place at the table. When all the and wj roll had been called the darkened additio! hall was like a sea of hundreds of receive
ath]
mg mei
P* mor<
Sil clubj 3:15 ley, dent be bowl
TE;
Alt
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Object Description
Description
| Title | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 33, No. 17, September 25, 1941 |
| Description | DAILY TROJAN, Vol. 33, No. 17, September 25, 1941. |
| Full text | Season to C< am pus -rjQfr*--' m ;uule is on the Trojan social cal- f the university’s 15 social sor->dge classes. Four of the pre-i yesterday afternoon, when Pi nma Phi Beta, and Kappa Delta "h! ;; mi Y Events Outlined Offering a wide range of opportunities for women interested in campus activities, clubs sponsored by the Trojan YWCA will begin meetings at the Y house during the coming wc^k. Tomorrow at 2:30 p.m. the world friendship club will outline its plans for the year under the leadership of Elizabeth Somers. This group brings together students from various countries and assists with war relief work. FRESHMAN CLUB New women will meet Miss Helen Hall Moreland, counselor of women, and members of the YWCA cabinet at the Freshman club meeting at 3:30 p.m. next Thursday. Directed by Barbara Douglas and Editha Finch, this group will sponsor fashion shows, luncheons, and informal discussions for freshman women. Meeting at chapel hour on Mondays, members of the hostess club greet guests and assist in the office at the Y house. Martha Livingston sponsors the club. The Sophomore-Junior club, which will act as a big sister organization for freshman women, will hold a short meeting at noon Monday, Oct. 6. Elizabeth Wells, leader of the club, plans luncheon meeting for following Mondays. FLYING SQUADRON ith the first meeting planned [for Tuesday, Oct. 7, at 2:30 p.m., he Social Service club will do work or the Red Cross and the Chil-Iren’s and Orthopedic hospitals. 3atricia Wiese will direct these ac-;ivities. The Flyin Squadron, which caries messages about YWCA activities to the sororities, fraternities, (and boarding houses, will meet on [onday afternoons. Betty Coman, chairman, will announce the time Later. Further announcements about :lub meetings will appear in the >aily Trojan. -—Courtesy L. A. Examiner. CELEBRATING—Trojans gatnered in Pasadena Saturday night as guests of the Engineers to celebrate the victory over Oregon State. Sitting out a dance were Mary Lou Edwards, Theta, and Bill Caldwell. Dancers found the annual dig following the first game of the season, its usual exciting affair. Campus Personalities Confuse Pledge as Greek Open Presentation Whirl By a Pledge Honestly, I don’t know why I’m so confused! Really, it’s just terrible. I got introduced yesterday. Just to a couple of hundred people. Really, it seemed like 3,000,-000, but I never saw them before, and I’ll never see them again . . . that is, unless we get stuck at the same window for section cards next February . . CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Employment SALARIED job while in college — late afternoon employment. Car and phone necessary. No selling. For interview. Phone EX. 3108. Typewriter TANDARD noiseless type-writer. Exceptional condition. Originally cost $125. Sacrifice. RO. 8083. Evenings or Sundays. (14482) 9-30 & 10-3 Tutoring UNIVERSITY TUTORING :RVICE - ALL SUBJECTS. :t an expert tutor :lp you now before UR FIRST EXAMINA->-V 1008 W. 35th PI. (1 blk. campus). RE-8339. (14485) 9-30-1 month Typing UNIVERSITY TYPING 1ERVICE. SPECIALISTS. A., ENGLISH. REASON- LE RATES. 1008 W. 35th (1 blk. from campus).*RE- seems like everybody else always does. Hot, isn’t it? But anyway, I got introduced. Sort of. They said, Miss McGilli-cuddy, Mr. Goldwyn. Miss McGilli-cuddy, Mr. Mayer. Mother warned me about going Hollywood — but I didn’t know it wrould be forced on me. REMEMBERS NAMES Names are funny. I never could remember names. Gee I couldn’t remember them yesterday. Once it was embarrassing. I mean, it can be. You know? Anyway, my feet hurt. And then it happened. Johnny Somebody that goes with one of the actives came by, and introduced himself as Mr. Smith—I still can’t remember if that’s his real name—and then he lifted my formal so everyone could see my stocking toes. They laughed at me cause I had my shoes off. I mean, it can be embarrassing. You know? It’s funny how everybody looks the same after the first 10 minutes. I asked the girl next to me what she thought about it, and she said they got to look so much alike it was just as if they were the same people coming through over and over again. MORE ABOUT NAMES I laughed when someone who was real big and brawny like a last year’s football player came by and said he was Mr. Blitzbaumgarten. The rush chairman frowned at me real hard, and I began to feel sort of bad cause I thought gee what if it was his name? Some of the most interesting people came to our present. I felt like sticking my tongue out at Mr. Hitler and Mr. Mussolini (they were right together and I kept waiting for Stalin but he didn’t show up). But when Clark Gable came by, somehow I didn’t feel like swoon-I ing. Gosh, I’d even have preferred a Delta Chi to that fossil-face. I don’t know why the sororities lie like they do. They kept telling us how presents were all for us, so the fellows could get to meet the pledges. But they just whipped down the line and made funny faces at us, and then the actives grabbed them off the line and threw tea and cakes at them. And who got the dates? Well, you know! STANDING IN LINE Anyway. There we were. Standing in line. No romance for us. It was funny, at first. Virginia was the last pledge in the line. She’s the cutest pledge really, I have to admit it even if she does have a nasty temper and borrows all my I hairbows. CAMPUS Style-ligbts by Barbara Leipsic All dressed up with someplace to go and Troy’s first victory of the season to celebrate were Connie Kivari, Theta, and Ralph Hey wood, Sigma Chi pledge, at the College of Engineering dance. Connie donned a black date dress for the occasion that was accented by the new mushroom styled hat, while escort Ralph was garbed in a brown beige suit. Beverly Royston looked mighty pert for the cameraman in her kelly green dress and hat with feather as she danced by with Hugh Mc-Keller, Kappa Sig, who had on a grey chalk stripe suit. DANCERS Dancing on the patio was Syd Barton in a navy blue single breasted suit. Also glimpsed on the floor was Barbara Case, Pi Phi, in a chocolate brown picture hat. Studying in the library were Charlotte Quinn and Don Milligan. Charlotte had on a red cardigan and red, blue, and green plaid skirt with inverted pleats and Don had on a powder blue cashmere sweater. Sipping a coke at the Wooden Horse during chapel was Marge Weiss, Pi Phi, in a white V necked sweater and blue skirt and companion Ed Heizman in a bird cloth jacket. Energetically waving her pom pon at the game Saturday was Leta Gallentine, Delta Gamma, in a brown, pink, and powder blue plaid skirt that was topped off with a powder blue cardigan. SCURRIERS Rushing to class down University avenue was Jeannie Goldberg in a navy and white argyle sweater with navy blue solid colored skirt. Jane Hopkins, Pi Phi, wras seen a hurrying to an 8 o’clock in Bridge garbed in a brown skirt and pink cashmere cardigan. Discussing presents in the union with Zeta sisters was pledge Char-leen Keefe in a cherry red pullover with the new extra long strands of pearls. Engagements, Exchanges Top Social Events Greeks are getting into the social whirl early in the season even though sororities are finding presentation teas the most important events of the week. AEPhis are climaxing the weeks activities with initiation tonight. Candy passings have abounded at the house, last night having seen four boxes circulated. Teddy Sher-line annouced her engagement to Sidney Cagan; Francis Lustig hers to Marvin Pepper, Phi Sig from Colorado; Evelyn Burnett to Bud Laude, and Annette Litman to Fred Slavin, Tau Ep. Pi Phit, are exchanging dinner with SAEs Thursday evening while ADPis will exchange lunch with the Sigma Nus. Kappa Alpha Thetas will entertain guests to lunch on Wednesday, and parents will be received at noon on Saturday for a football affair. Phi Mu mothers are honoring pledge mothers at luncheon on Friday at the home of Mrs. Raymond B. Stringfield, president of the group. New officers were elected last night at the Phi Mu house with Ann Campbell assuming the secretarial post, Gwenn Wiley the treas* urer. Foreign Students Honored Today In honor of foreign women of all races, the YWCA wil sponsor ~ tea from 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. to- Commence Professional Groups Plan Gala Affairs A wide and varied program of parties, dinners and breakfasts has been planned by the professional fraternities as their fall rushing activities begin. Phi Chi Theta, professional and honorary commerce sorority, began its fall rushing activities with a tea held at the Gamma Phi Beta house, Sunday, Sept. 28. Rushees will be honored at luncheon at Elisabeth von KleinSmid hall Thursday, Oct. 2, and the preference dinner will be held at the Melody Lane, Friday evening. PHI CHI THETA Phi Chi Theta was established to band together those women interested in a business career and thosp women already embarked in 'the business world. Lambda Kappa Sigma, women’s professional pharmacy sorority, will open its activities this year with a tea, Monday afternoon, Oct. 16. The coming year promises to be a very active one for the sorority as more women have enrolled in pharmacy this year than ever before. PHI BETA The Mayfair hotel will be the scene of the Phi Beta, music and speech professional, dinner Wednesday night. Auditions will be heard Friday night in the Phi Beta studio. Lavendar and gold, the fraternity colors, will be used in the decorations for the dinner. The preference breakfast will be held Sunday morning. The fraternity is for those girls interested in music and speech. In a romantic "fiesta” atmosphere, Sigma Alpha Iota fraternity will hold a barbecue tonight at the home of Dr. Max T. Krone. Mrs. Krone, an alumna of the fraternity, and a number of patronesses will be present. SIGMA ALPHA IOTA Rushees will really have to sing for their supper Thursday night at the “Tommy Tucker” supper when a nursery rhyme will prevail throughout the evening. The dinner will be held at the home of Mrs. Arthur Lang, newly initiated patroness of the organization. Mrs. Lang will view the formal auditions of the rushees. Candlelight and crystals will prevail at the preference dinner to be held at the Chapman hotel next Saturday night. Clionian literary society will meet in Elisabeth von KleinSmid hall at 7:30 tonight to make plans for the year’s activities. President Virginia Ellis requests members to bring lists of candidates for membership. I tivii Mary Gower Attend; Scheduled at Three ‘One of the biggest thrills f< men women is the thought that! delegate to the next Mortar Boj With undiminished enthusiasi Mary Gower, the president of honorary for service and scholarship, commented about the national convention of the organization which she attended this summer in Buck Hill Falls, Penn. “Wonderful, perfectly wonderful,” and she runs out of words to describe the women from all over the country that she met at the conclave, which occurs once every three years. “Combine Phi Beta keys with beauty . . . talented, interesting in themselves . . . leaders from their communities . . . well rounded lives” are snatches from the exuberant description Mary gave of the cov1 advisers and counselors and older alumni members of Mortar Board. 0f ATTENDS FIVE DAYS And of the many undergraduate for college Mortar Boards like herself Mary said that they were “the kind if girls you made friends with right away.” Leaving California about the middle of June the Mortar Board prexy journeyed to the convention with Betty Jane Lissner, who represented the UCLA chapter of the senior honorary. For five days starting June 22 Mary attended business meetings “right and left” to put it in her own words, and gathered information of what thousands of college women are doing and thinking all over the country, especially about national defense. PLANS SCHOLARSHIP Delegates to the convention also Wilst made tentative plans for a $1000 ?oi scholarship which Mortar Board will give every year to an outstanding woman graduate student in the United States. The name of the award will be the Katherine Coleman scholarship and will be in honor of Mrs. F. D. Coleman from Nebraska under whose presidency of three terms Mortar Board developed greatly. “The most inspirational sight I have ever seen,” is what Mary says of the roll call ceremony on the final night of the convention at the banquet. When the name of each college or university was called every delegate present from that institution bulleti] lit tiny candles placed beside her particij place at the table. When all the and wj roll had been called the darkened additio! hall was like a sea of hundreds of receive ath] mg mei P* mor< Sil clubj 3:15 ley, dent be bowl TE; Alt grou] the out. oppoi make actn for pj feat Spoi a y ei and point SI St emblej tion are in team by thf of SCI A tiny shimmering flames. banquj What are you doing with YOUR LAUNDRY THIS YEAR?... SHEAFFE Courteiy of Dartmouth “Jack-o-Lantern” A better method is to send it home regularly by Railway Express—and have it returned the same way. Our service is fast, sure—and convenient. Economical rates include Think it over*. Whatever course you choose m Bfe, I will be your major means of self-expression—and is the finest tool for that. Why? Because Sheaff« gives you a hand-slit, hand-ground personalized point that’s handy as your fingers, and fleet as ... Because Sheaffer gives you ONE-stroke filling ing which insures a fulMocd of writing fuel for cU other writing emergency ...And because Sheaffer’s is guaranteed for your life through school and first and last pen you’ll need or want—your every achievement — thesis, exam, love letter, or speech!... See that you are Sheaffer*equipped ... W. A. Sheaffer Pen Company, Fort Madison, lo^ SHEAFFER PENS, ALL COLORS, $2.75 PENCILS, $1 UP. ENSEMBLES, $3.91 _ |
| Archival file | uaic_Volume1226/uschist-dt-1941-09-25~001.tif |
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