Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 23, 1930, Page 3, Image 3

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    Honoraries
Set Initiation
For May 23
Chaney To Give Address
At Banquet Which W;ill
Follow Ceremony
Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi
Will Elect
May 23 is the date which has
been definitely set for the joint
initiation of Phi Beta Kappa,
scholarship honorary, and Sigma
Xi, science honorary. At this time
members of the two fraternities
who are yet to be elected will be
^ initiated.
Dr. Ralph W. Chaney, who has
recently returned from a trip to
South America where he was mak
ing researches for the Rockefeller
Foundation, has been secured to
make the principal address at the
banquet following the initiation
ceremonies. Representatives of
the new members of the two or
ganizations will also make speech
es in response to toasts.
The registrar’s office and the
personnel department are now
working on figures to determine
what seniors are eligible for elec
tion to Phi Beta Kappa. This re
port is due this coming Saturday,
and Thursday, May 1, has been
tentatively set as the day when
the election will take place. The
usual number taken at the spring
election is about 30, although this
^.varies.
Sigma Xi elections will take
place next Tuesday, April 29, at a
meeting which is to be held in
Dehdy hall at 7:15. Following the
elections the regular meeting will
be held, at which time Dr. Ernest
Gellhorn, professor of animal biol
ogy, will give the address.
Graduate Has Position
With Jantzen Company
Gregg Millett, a winter term
graduate from the school of busi
ness administration, is now em
ployed in the credits and collec
tions department of the Jantzen
Knitting mills in Portland. A re
cent letter to David E. Faville,
dean of the business administra
tion school, gives the information
that Millett is well satisfied with
his position, and in a few weeks
will take over the work of han
dling all foreign orders received at
the Portland office.
Start the Leap Week right by
taking your boy friend to the
Kappa Koffee Thursday afternoon.
CLASSIFIED ADS
PIANO* JAZZ—Popular songs im
mediately; beginners or ad
vanced; twelve-lesson course.
Waterman System. Leonard J.
Edgerton, manager. Call Stu
dio 1672-W over Laraway’s Mu
sic Store, 972 Willamette St. tf
WANTED—Student laundry done
lower than standard price. Silk
garments a specialty. Mrs. M.
Boissian, 601 E. 8th St., Eugene,
Oregon.
DRESSMAKING AND ALTER
ING—Prices reasonable. For a
short time only, suits made for
$5.00. Mrs. Gilbert, 145 East
13th Ave.
LOST—Red slicker from old li
brary with name inside. If
- found please call Allan Palmer,
703. Reward.
Society
By DOROTHY THOMAS
Chi Delta Will Have
Formal Tea
In joint honor of Mrs. Mary
Dumble, of Los Angeles, national
inspector of Beta Phi Alpha, Mrs.
Warren D. Smith, patroness, and
Miss Margaret L. Daigh, house
mother, Chi Delta sorority will en
tertain with a formal tea at the
chapter house on Wednesday,
April 23, from 3:30 to 5:30 o’clock.
About two hundred invitations
have been issued for the affair.
Miss Ruth Clark is chairman of
arrangements.
Mardell Herman Tells
Of Engagement
At an Easter breakfast held at
the Phi Mu house, Miss Mardell
Herman announced her engage
ment to Clyde Quam. Miss Her
man, who is a sophomore on the
campus, is a member of Phi Mu.
Mr. Quam is a student at Oregon
State college and is affiliated with
Beta Kappa. No date has been
set for the wedding.
Miss Lucille Quam, of Portland,
was a guest at the breakfast.
* * *
Home Science Club Is
Entertained
A program composed entirely of
Russian music was given for the
Home Science club by the mem
bers of Phi. Beta, national profes
sional music and dramatic honor
ary, at the home of Mrs. Robert
Prescott, Monday afternoon. Mrs.
James H. Gilbert and Mrs. Frank
Jenkins assisted Mrs. Prescott.
The Russian atmosphere was
carried out by the hostesses, who
wore costumes of that country.
Russian tea and confections were
also served.
Taking part sin the program
were Mrs. C. H. Grant, Cecil Coss,
Mable Kullander, Katherine Starr,
Estelle Johnson, Theresa Kelly,
Irma Logan, Ruth Bryant, and
Marguerite Spath.
Graduate Assistant
Teaching In Normal
Edward G. Daniel, graduate stu
dent in economics, has been elect
ed for the remainder of the school
year to fill a vacancy in the facul
ty of the Eastern Oregon Normal
School at La Grande. He is teach
ing classes in economics, history,
and sociology.
Danial was assistant to Dr. Vic
tor P. Morris in the economics de
partment duiing the fall and win
ter terms. He plans to finish work
for his master’s degree at the
University summer session.
Two Gettysburg college students
decorated their rooms with quar
antine signs. The authorities ob
jected and placed them under ar
rest.
BLUE BELL PRODUCTS
BUTTER—ICE CREAM
PASTEURIZED MILK
We Appreciate Your Patronage
Eugene Farmers Creamery
568 Olive Phone 638
DR. J. R. WETHERBEE
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Office Phone 1601
Residence 1230-M
801-2-3 Miner Bldg.
Eugene, Oregon
r. _«—•
"Eugene’s Own Store”
McMorran & Washburne
PHONE 2700
Clever—New—Flannel
Campus Coats
$3.95
Multi-colored Diamond Checks
Awning Stripes
Very new—and very different-—these campus coats of
soft' flannel. A straight line, full length eoat with
waglan sleeves—small stand-up collar two large
patch pockets. A splendid utility eoat for general
campus wear. All sizes from 14 to 40. Select yours
now while size range is complete. ery special
at ^3.95.
—THESE COLORS—
j, RED
:■ Green
i
ORANGE
Yellow
SECOND FLOOR
TAN
Blue
Local Girl Wakes Good! Senior Class
President Loses Her Way! Clouds Roll
Back to Find Her Offered a Neiv Job
Going in the wrong entrance of
j a Portland store, being mistaken
for an employee and given firm in
structions to appear for work
thereafter in a dark blue or black
: costume, and eventually emerg
ing from the highways and by
ways of the employees’ depart
ment with a standing offer of a
; position in the store at any time,
i is the experience of Eleanor Poor
man, president of the senior class
and a student of interior decora
tion, who went to Portland Mon
{ day.
Miss Poorman, who mistook the
j employees' entrance for the place
| she was to join the group of in
i terior decoration students, went
1 into the store and found herself
herded with the regular salespeo
ple. Once in, Miss Poorman, feel
j ing like an accident going some
j where to happen, found it was too
| late to get out. Having a sense ol
humor, she followed the routine of
the store and in the course of
events, the commander-in-chief of
that section informed her firmly
that hereafter she should report in
the regulation costume of dark
blue or black.
Meanwhile, her purse and hat
were confiscated and checked and
she was sent about the way all
good salespeople should go. She
finally found her way out of the
maze of the employees’ depart
ment and found a welcome in the
person of the manager of the store,
to whom she was known.
Her identity once established,
the dignitaries of the bargain
basement returned the purse and
hat of the store’s invited guest.
She was congratulated by the store
management for the ability she
had demonstrated in getting
through the difficult place and of
fered a good position in the store
at any time.
Last Vesper Service
To Be Given Thursday
The last Y. W. Five o’clock ves
per service of the year will be1
held Thursday in the bungalow, J
and will be in the form of a for- j
mal post-Easter ceremony. A pro-1
cessional will be sung by the
vested choir, followed by the in-;
vocation, and a violin solo by
Peggy Sweeney. Elizabeth Scruggs,
freshman in English, will give a
dramatization, “The Resurrection,”
and decorations appropriate to the
service will be handled by Jessie
Judd.
Student To Be Heard
In Recital Thursday
Juanita Oskins, violinist and
one of six Juilliard music scholars
on the campus this year will be
heard in her senior recital at the
music auditorium Thursday night
at 8 o’clock. Miss Oskins, whose
home is in Eugene, is the student
of Rex Underwood.
Alice Holmbach, pianist, and
student of John Stark Evans, will
be her assistant.
Miss Oskins’ brilliant work has
received a good deal of attention
here.
Typography Students
Have Work Published
The work of six University of
Oregon students in printing was
featured in the April issue of The
Business Printer, published by the
Porte Publishing company of Salt
Lake City.
A full page spread was given
to reproduce the programs the
students designed for the Oregon
Press conference held here last
February. The six programs were
made by the following students:
Bob Allen, Elizabeth Salway, Bea
trice Bennett, Margaret Under
wood, Ruth Newman, and Edward
Sullivan.
Talks At University High j
Plenry D. Sheldon, dean of the'
school of education, addressed the |
student body of University high
school at an assembly yesterday
on the subject, “Student Life in
Germany.”
Ohio State college Y. M. C. A.
is sponsoring a houseclcaning
school for men.
Baseball practice cost students
$12.50 apiece at Illinois when the
Urbana justice of the peace fined
five tossers for playing in the
street.
Hank Wonders
WHAT "BIRD” MEANS
' Write your conception of the
word on this coupon and mail
or give to Hank dc Rat, Oregon
1 Daily Emerald.
My definition of “Bird” is:
This is a feature appearing
daily in the Emerald to deter
mine the various conceptions of
modern words. Ideas of such
may differ greatly. Hank de
Hat will print the definitions
sent to him daily.
* * •
Dear Hank:
' A “cull” is a newspapah hev
you not heard uv the San Fran
cisco. Cull ?--A. S. U. O. office.
* * *
A "cull” is something that lives
in the bushes. Jack London wrote
something about one in his book,
“Cull of the Wild.” Not signed.
* * *
College senior men who pay for
their dates on Senior Leap Week
Let's go somewhere
and
do something
NEW”
IN view of this con
stant appeal of the
students ... we offer
the "new” Mammy’s
Cabin . . . remodeled
. . . with new booths,
a cheery fireplace, and
excellent food. This
spring weather invites
exploring, and Mam
my's Cabin will prove
to be a veritable treas
ure.
Mammy’s
CABIN
PHONE 2770
Springfield Highway
An
All
Talking !
Laughing!
Screaming!
A LAUGH IN EVERY
LINE — A HOWL IN
EVERY SCENE!
Every
Time
She
Opened
Her
Mouth
She
Put
Her
Foot
In!!
Her Motto:
“Hear Not”
“See Not”
“Speak
Not”
If you laughed at Marion
Davies in ‘ ‘ Marianne,
you'll howl at her latest
talking riot!
She plays a pretty dumb
bell — but events prove
she’s not so dumb. From
the stage hit “Dulcy.” ^
WEDNESDA\
COMES
The
Comedy
Hit
of the
Talking
Screen!
She
Thought
She
Knew
Her
ISusincHs
* * #
He
Thought
He
Knew
Love
* * *
But
* * *
They
Found
Out
They
Were
Wrong
fit;
fall under the category of "culls." j
Not signed.
* * *
A “cull" is one who takes every- !
thing but gives nothing in return. I
Bill Whitely.
A “cull” is one who gets by on
other people's jvork, one who
oheats his way through college.
Viola Keyes.
“Culls" are of two kinds. There
are those that are thrown out in
shoe factories, and there are those
that are culled out in interviews.
David Olsen.
Students do not read as much
fiction of the lighter variety as
do the professors, the manager of
a book store in an eastern univer
sity finds. Student taste seems to!
run to tho modern classics while
the professors indulge in the latest
“thrillers.”
Campus swimmers may soon
have a new garb for their splash
ings. Coach David Armbruster of
Iowa has invented a skin tight
swimming suit, which Spaulding
will soon put on the market.
COLONIAL
A
Comedy
Carnival
A ILL.
JAIKINC
JACK OAKIE
LOUISE FAZENDA
CHARLES DELANEY
Movies
Evelyn Shaner, Editor
TODAY’S ATTRACTIONS
McDonald- “Young Eagles.”
Rex—“Undertow.”
State—“Lucky Star.”
Colonial—“Hard To Get.”
Heilig—“Show Girl in Holly
wood.”
Senior co-eds, get hot on those
Senior Leap Week dates!
Cosmopolitan Club
ISominates Officers
Nominations for next year’3 of
ficers were made at a meeting yes
terday of the Cosmopolitan cluh.
The election will take place next
Tuesday at a meeting of the club
in the Y bungalow at 7:30.
Those nominated were: presi
dent, Edna Spenker; vice-presi
dent, Florendo Mangavil and Fran
cisco Tubbam; secretary, Clara
Macrtens; treasurer, Blayne
Brewer.
A program is also planned for
the meeting Tuesday, at which
some professor wlil be the speaker.
Who Does Not Like
Clean Clothes
There’s really nothing so completely sat
isfying as a nice pile of clean, neat
clothes, waiting to be worn . . . and on
the other hand, there's nothing > com
pletely discouraging as a big pile of dirty
clothes, dust call the New Service Laun
dry and we promise to keep your clothes
always ready to wear.
New Service Laundry
Dry Cleaning
Steam Cleaning
Phone 825
Charles i'Buddif)
ROGERS
^YOlJNCj
r, EAGLES
/ /. 'With. JEAN ARTHUR
S Jh tfreat as'Win$S with dulofa/*
I LAST TIMES TODAY |
Fox McDonald
STARTING
TOMORROW
S The Trio Who Made Sunny Side Up
"I'm In The Market For You*
"I Don't Know You Well
Enough For That*
"Eleanor*
written by Joseph
McCarthy ond
James F. Hanlty
"High Society Blues*
"Just Like A Story Book” j/0
/y, x\nddir°'tor
,. WlUiAM ^ StJpportecj , '°verj
If lu<^^XDA HOe
41 jo:«c^£%:
Imagine adorable Janet as the
daughter of a socially prominent
family who want their offspring to
marry a titled nobleman—
And think of charming Charles as
heir to millions—and folks who have
no false pretensionsl
When these two decide to fty in the
face of conventions, they find troubles
—and big laughs, too.'
|lp KKMKMHHU—
f PREVIEW THURSDAY
All-Talking
Fox Rex
NEW SHOW
TODAY!
Imagine the terrific drama of pent-up hu
man (motions unleashed. The beautiful
young wife grown hungry for the life of
the eitj ; the husband gone blind—and the
“otlit r man'’ stealing the wife under the
husband’s sightless eyes! And when his
sight returns . . . drama! DHAJLV every
minute.