Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (April 4, 1931)
SOCIETY By CAROL nURLBURT “Does Easter Bunny Really Lay Colored Errs?” “Does the Easter bunny reallj lay eggs?” and “Will every co-ed have a new bonnet by Sunday?” are questions which will greet us tomorrow, and all of ns are pray ing for fair weather, for Easter is the one time when every college student, who is not particularly devout, attends chureh ceremonies and blossoms forth in alt his spring finery. * * * Phi Gamma Delta To Give Easter Breakfast What Is without doubt the most elaborate and beautiful of the sea son’s social affairs will be given Hal Leonard tomorrow morn ing when Phi \ Gamma Delta en tertains with Its annual Easter breakfast. The Easter brea k f a s t is a tradition which i is celebrated in i every chapter of ! Phi Gamma Del ! ta, not only ac Itive but alumni, jit was estab llished in 1910 at the University of Washington, ana was rirst od served on the Oregon campus in 3913. The breakfast, which will be held from 9 until 10:30 o’clock in the Eugene hotel, has been worked out to the finest point of detail by Hal Leonard, general chairman, and by Paul Townsend, chairman for the committee on decorations. The table is to be 110 feet long in the shape of the cross, and will be decorated with lilies, iris, tu lips, cineraria, and daffodils, em bedded in moss. The walls are to BETWEEN MEALS When the appetite calls, remember 'f 1110 (JKKKN PARROT aiv(I you’ll be able to last, until dinner. You Can Phone 1379 And have thick malted milks, delicious, toasted sandwiches or what you wish delivered promptly. A service for your con venience. « Green Parrot COFFEE SHOP Colonial Bldg. Miss Marguerite Kpath, Alphii Gamma Delta, whose engagement to Hoy G. Bryson, instructor in voice, was announced in Portland during the holidays. The wedding j will he held in June. be hung with purple and silver, and all invitations, place-cards, and menus will be carried out in I the same purple and silver. | The grace will be said by the | Reverend Maxwell Adams, pastor of the Central Presbyterian church. | Music throughout I the morning will j be furnished b> I a stringed quar tet, composed ol a harpist, Doris Hellen Patterson; a violinist, Mar tha Patterson; | and a cellist, Roberta Spicer. The Universitj quartet, com posed of Gifforc Nash, Don Eva George Bishop and Merland Tol Paul Townsend letson, and directed ny jonn suiik Evans, will feature. All music will be of a classical nature. The menu consists of: salted al monds, Florida grapefruit cn mar aschino, filet mtgnon, long branch potatoes, egg lily, hot cross buns, jelly, marmalade, Easter surprise, and coffee. About one hundred and twenty six will be present. The guests of honor will be: Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Cake of Portland, the Reverend and Mrs. Maxwell Adams, Dr. and Mrs. Edmund S. Conklin, and Dr. and Mrs. Donald M. Erb. Flowers will be furnished by Wilson Crout and Gehr of Port land, and will be arranged by Thomas A. Carney. * * * Miami Triad Will Be Annual Costume Ball A costume ball, where every thing from gold cloth lounging pa jamas to hula skirts will be in or der, is thi- Miami Triad, annual dance of Beta Theta Pi and Phi Delta Theta, which will be held tonight at the Osburn hotel. The ballroom will use flood lights, thrown from the corners at oblique angles, ns the main color effect. Palms will form a scenic background. Amos Lawrence, P h i Delta Theta, is general chairman. The patrons and patronesses will in .-SEE-. THE NEW STANDARD GENERAL # ELECTRIC CLEANER Step out with a smile at your saving In the G-E cleaner are found so many features you’ll won der how it can be sold for Tin* iVcu Slniulanl Model liu tutdnl auction, rnuurducu, beauty ut llie old price. Power’s Furniture Co. i llth Street and Willamette elude: Dean David Faville, Prof, and Mrs. Eyler Brown, and Mr. j and Mrs. Ben Reed of Portland. * * * Evelyn Hotispr and Delbert Kimberling Wed The wedding of Miss Evelyn | Houser, junior in business adminis I tration, to Delbert Kimberling, al so a junior in business administra 1 tion, took place on Friday, March 20, at the home of the bride’s par I nnts, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Houser, in Roseburg. I Mr. Kimberling is from Prairie City, Oregon. He and Mrs. Kim berling are, however, now living at the Colonial apartments in Eu gene while continuing with their work at the University. * * * Jaequoise Kirtley Is Bride of Frank Learned Miss Jacquoise Kirtley, Pi Beta Phi, became the bride of Frank M. Learned, Pi Kappa Alpha, last Sunday afternoon. The ceremony was performed in the First Christ ian church here, the Rev. S. E. I Childers reading the service. Only ! members of the immediate family i were present. Both Mr. and Mrs. Learned are graduates of the University. They 'are now making their home at 1801 Moss street. * * * Marriage of Arvilla Davis | To Myron Blackwell Announced Myron Blackwell, Oregon Yeo | man and pre-medics major, was , married on Friday, March 27, to j Miss Arvilla Davis of Eugene. The j ceremony took place at the home , of the bride’s parents. Mr. Blackwell is continuing with his school work, and he and his bride are making their home here. Helen Chaney Chairman For Alpha Xi Delta Dance Alpha Xi Delta is entertaining tonight with a formal spring dance which will be held at the Eugene hotel. A profusion of spring flowers will festoon the ballroom: Tall pink and blue tapers will burn throughout the evening, and palms will line the walls. Helen Chaney is in charge of the affair. Chaperons will be: Dr. and Dean Charles Leslie Schwer ing; Mrs. Charles Grey, house mother; and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Veatch. * * * Janice Hedges Elected President of Heads of Houses Janice Hedges, Kappa Kappa Gamma, was elected president of Heads of Houses, at a dinner which was held Wednesday evening at the Alpha Chi Omega house, and Lois Johnson, Gamma Phi Beta, was elected secretary. All of the newly elected presi I dents as well as the retiring presi dents were present. Other guests were: Mrs. Charles Leslie Schwer ing, dean of women; Mrs. Nelson Macduff, assistant dean of women; and Karl Onthank, executive sec retary of the University. The newly elected presidents are: Alpha Chi Omega, Helen Louise Mart indale; Alpha Delta Pi, Dulcie Lytsell; Alpha Gamma Delta, Eva Nelson; Alpha Omicron Pi, Flor ence King; Alpha Phi, Janet Young; Alpha Xi Delta, Frances Jordan; Chi Omega, Barbara Con- I ly; Delta Gamma, Oneita Jantzen; Delta Zeta, Kathryn Allison; Gam ma Phi Beta, Lois Johnson; Hen dricks hall, Velma Powell. Kappa Alpha Theta, Beth Ann j Johnson; Kappa Delta, Margaret Daly; Kappa Kappa Gamma, Jan ice Hedges; Phi Mu, Mary Ellen Bradford; Pi Beta Phi, Mildred1 Collins; Susan Campbell, Emma Belle Staden; Theta Omega, Dor othy Sherman; Zeta Tau Alpha, I Alice Redetzke. * * * Bernice Williamson Reported as lJottor The many friends of Bernice Williamson, Gamma Phi Beta, who was seriously injured in an auto mobile accident on her way to Cal ifornia during the holidays, will be glad to know that her condition is reported as rapidly improving and that it is possible that she I will return to school in the near | future. * * * T. W. Douglas Marries Miss l.oo Patricia Bohan Spring affects the faculty just; as it affects the students, it would seem, for another instructor to fall: (victim to Mr. Cupid is Theodore | \V. Douglas, Instructor in English, whose marriage to Miss Lee Pa tricia Bohan of Mexico City took place on March 21 in Los Angeles. Mr. Douglas is a member of Delta Upsilon at Miami university, ! Oxford, Ohio. His bride received her M.A. from the University of Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas are now living at 1889 Kincaid avenue. * » » Kilttli I-ake Weds \t Lovely Ceremony One of the loveliest of the spring weddings was that of Miss Edith Lake of Portland to Marvin Braden of Corvallis, which took .place at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bry ant Lake, in Eastmoreland, Sat urday evening, March 28. Miss Louise Storla, graduate of the University, sang “I Love You Truly” preceding service, which was read by Rev. Edwin Leake. The bride was charmingly at tired in a gown of white satin, with a veil of lace and tulle ar ranged with orange blossoms in a cap affect. She carried a shower bouquet of bride’s roses and white sweet peas. The bridesmaids, sis ters of the bride, wore old-fash 1 ioned frocks of yellow organdy with green sashes and carried nose-gays of garden flowers. Miss Lake is a member of Chi Omega, and Mr. Braden, a gradu ate of Oregon State college, is a member of Kappa Sigma. After a short wedding trip in the north, Mr. and Mrs. Braden will be at home at the Wilder apartments in Corvallis. Library Gets Braille Books for Collection The University library has re ceived five new volumes of Braille books which will be added to the collection for the blind, according to M. H. Douglass, University li brarian. The volumes are “Science and Health With Key to the Scrip tures,” by Mary Baker Eddy. These books for the blind were presented to the library as a gift from the Eugene Christian Science society. Colonial—Saturday, “A dven tures of Tom Sawyer.” Sun day and Monday, Nancy Car roll and Frederic March in “Laughter.” Heilig Saturday, “The Mar riage Playground.” Sunday and Monday, “Behind Office Doors.” McDonald — Saturday, “Lonely Wives.” Sunday and Monday, Ruth Chatterton In “Un faithful.” State—Saturday, “The Paint ed Desert.” Sunday and Mon day, "Drums of Jeopardy,” with Lloyd Hughes. Heilig Has Good Drama One of the most successful in popular appeal of the novels of Edith Wharton, ‘The Children,” has proved to be an entertaining talking picture. Retitled “The Marriage Playground,” the cast includes Frederic March, Mary Brian, Lilyan Tashman, and a half dozen other well-known Hollywood names. Miss Brian takes the role of the oldest of the Wheaton chil dren, who are nearly cast on their own through the selfish attitudes of their estranged parents. It is showing at the Heilig today only. “Tom Sawyer” Goes Today Today is your last chance to see the deliciously human comedy “Tom Sawyer,’’ done from Twain’s book, and with a cast which in cludes Jackie Coogan, Mitzi Green, and other well-liked child stars. The big laughs are still there, with pantomime even increasing the fun. State Has Western Bill Eoyd, in “The Painted Des ert,” is the State attraction for ] Saturday. Chiefly outstanding for some very fine scenic effects, it has little in the way to offer ex cept the usual stereotype western plot.. * * * “Lonely Wives” Goes Today is your last chance to see the laugh riot, “Lonely Wives,” with Edward Everett Horton play ing two roles. If you haven’t heard everyone discussing and laughing about it, you haven’t been around much. It is really a “wow,” with good “American” hu mor interspersed with the rather more invigorating French variety. | At the McDonald. Prize Film at Colonial Sunday “Laughter,” the film that has won wide acclaim among theatri cal reviewers as outstanding en tertainment, and cited often as an example of talkie art, is the Co lonial theatre's feature for Sun Jay. The cast includes Frederic March, most personable leading man today in Hollywood, and Nancy Carroll, revamped for artis tic purposes. The story deals with the dramatic conflict of a wife’s entanglement in scandal. * * * Chatterton at McDonald Sunday A new Ruth Chatterton film at the McDonald, Sunday! Little more than the foregoing sentence need be said, so firmly has she en trenched herself with college audi ences. However, this film ade quately upholds her high standard. It tells the story of an unfaithful English gentleman whose wife dis covers he Is in love with his broth er's wife. Complications make it necessary for her to involve her- >■ self in a ruinous scandal to save the husband. * * * State Has Premier The premier Northwest screen ing of Lloyd Hughes’ starring pic ture, “Drums of Jeopardy,” is the State feature for Sunday. * * * Heilig Thriller Comes Sunday Robert Ames and Mary Astor, who played leading roles in “Holi day,” are co-starred in Heilig's Sunday film, “Behind Office Doors,” a problem film dealing with the crises that face all office help when they find it impossible to remain completely objective to ward their associates. Be Ready for Spring Refuel Your Kodak With a Fresh Film CARL BAKER FILM SHOP EVERYTHING PHOTOGRAPHIC 7th and Willamette A Mali! •'♦a, «•* They’ve hit It thj# time! ^VoU’RE hearing it all around you. You’ve probably said it yourself. Throughout the whole country, people not only are smoking Camel cigarettes in the new Humidor Pack, they're saying how good they are! They're delighting in a new’ mildness; an aroma and fragrance found only in Camels. They’re learning how much smooth cool enjoyment is locked up in fine Turkish and mellow Domestic tobaccos expertly blended, vacuum cleaned and properly conditioned. They're grateful for new throat-ease! Natural moisture, that’s what does it! Factory-fresh Camels, air-sealed in the new sanitary package, which keeps the dust and germs out and keeps the flavor in. Don't take our word for it—try Camels in the new Humidor Pack, and switch back if you can. Then you'll see why the whole nation is saying: "SMOKE A CIGARETTE” ^ H31,1. J. Reynold* Tobacco Company, Wiiuton>Salcm. N. C. IX TOE mnSIDOR PACK 1