Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, April 01, 1937, Page Four, Image 4

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    Elaine Cornish Successfully
Combines Many Activities
And High Scholastic Record
By CLARE IGOE
A wide field of interests and an excellent record in each one—this
is the achievement of Elaine Cornish, who will be graduated this spring
from the business administration school.
Elaine has not only been outstanding in activities since she was a
freshman, but she has made a remarkable scholastic record as well
and, she adds, has managed to have a great deal of fun besides.
“Mv first two years I sandwiched in my activities between my
studying," she remarked, “but now
I find that I sandwich in my study
ing between activities.”
Activities Varied
Elaine is a Phi Beta Kappa, a
member of Senior Six, Mortar
Board, senior women’s service hon
orary, and was president of the
YWCA this year.
In addition, she is also a mem
ber of Beta Gamma Sigma, schol
astic business honorary, and Phi
Chi Theta, business administration
honorary. She served as AWS ser
geant-at-arms, and was a member
of the AWS council during 1930.
Elaine was a member of Kwama,
sophomore women’s service honor
ary, and was a representative from
here to the YW conference in In
diana.
YW Her Interest
She is intensely interested in
YW work, and remarks that it has
been the activity that has meant
the most to her during her Uni
versity career.
"Any girl is foolish to go into
activities that do not mean any
thing to her,” Miss Cornish remark
ed. “They are worth while only if
she is very interested in them. To
go out for things just because of
house pressure, or for any reason
like that, is a waste of time.”
Serving this year as president
of YW, Elaine has attempted to
put into practice some of the ideas
she has had regarding this type of
activity. She has attempted to do
away with groups purely for dis
cussion, and make these groups
more active.
Made Changes
She resurrected the sophomore
and freshman commissions, and
now enthusiastically exclaims that
the YW has the best group of un
derclass girl workers on the
campus.
New groups added to the YW
activities for this year were those
in social eticpiette, which will be
come the '‘life" group for girls
who work in private homeand
whose social life is limited, and a
group to receive knitting instruc
tion.
Elaine’s chief aim has been to
improve the degree of fellowship
among the girls she has worked
with.
"The one thing I think is import
ant,” Elaine commented, "is the
feeling of fellowship, and the culti
vation of a wide acquaintance on
the campus. Everyone should know
and speak to people they meet at
the University.”
After graduation, Elaine plans
QYiih Ofccenf on
WEAR STYLE
If long wear is what you
like Saddle Calf is your
best bet.. . Hugged, dur
able, yet pliant leather,
likable in a man's way.
Saddle Calf clicks with
men who like “extra mile
age”. Why not drop in
this week and look
them over?
Burch Shoe Ga
H‘ IXJNAIO THUTRf BOX, - CS2 WBumf
Outstanding
Elaine Cornish, senior in busi
ness administration, who this year
ends a remarkable scholastic and
activity career at the University.
to attend the school of retailing
at the New York university. There
the students attend classes in
mornings anti evenings, and spend
the afternoons and Saturdays
working in stores, thus getting not
only instruction, but practical ex
perience.
Her ambition is to become a
merchandising manager, or a per
sonnel manager, or perhaps, she
adds, a buyer.
After completion of her course
there, she may either come back
here or continue working in the
past.
Asked despairingly how she ever
found time to keep up with so
many activities, and still be a reg
ular inhabitant of the honor roll,
Elaine remarked that she never
had budgeted her time on paper.
Gets Everything Done
"When I get up in the morning,
I always know just what T'm go
ing to get done,” she remarked,
"and 1 always do it, though some
times I can shift around. I have
always liked to study, and I can
work all day on some activity. I
never get tired of doing one thing.
The more you have*to do, the more
you get done,” she added.
Elnine says that as the year
goes along she realizes more and
more how short the time has been
since she entered school, and how
little time there is left.
“I'm getting to be a regular
sentimental senior," she smiled
"and that's bad.”
(Editor's Note: This is the first
of a series of interviews with pro
minent senior women that will be
run as a feature of the women's
page.)
REED’S
MILLINERY
“famous for hats”
985 Willamette St.
Eugene, Ore.
Coeds” Costumes
Add Colorful Note
To Campus Whirl
By RITA WRIGH'T
Our roving eye was attracted at
the Sigma Chi Easter breakfast by
Kay Bosinger, new Kappa pledge, i
becomingly attired in a white
woolen swagger coat topped by a
white fur- collar.
Betty Lou Drake, Alpha Phi,
was seen nattily attired in a new
sport coat, with extremely tailor
ed lines in an attractive shade of
aqua blue. Worn with the regula
tion Spauldings, it made an ideal
campus outfit.
One of the best looking knit
suits to be worn yet this spring
was worn by Mildred Blackbume,
Chi Omega. It was yellow two
piece suit trimmed with brown
buttons and having a brown knit
coat and white shoes to complete
the attractive ensemble.
Jersey Dress Attractive
Jayne Bcrwerman, Theta, has a
gray jersey knit sport dress trim
med with a red patent leather belt
and a bolero jacket striped in
green, red, and white.
A gray tailored three-piece suit
of Ellamae Woodworth's made ai
good looking Easter outfit. The
suit was a light gray, with a top
coat in a box style striped in gray,
the background in the same cor
responding gray of the suit.
Gamma Alpha Gins spring
formal was the occasion for Mar
garet Goldsmith, Alpha Chi, to
don her new spring formal. Black
net with a wide circular skirt and
some orange flowers at the neck
line composed this simple but ef
fective dress,
Heads of Houses!
To Name Officers1
Old and new house presidents
will meet for dinner tonight at 6
o'clock at the Delta Gamma house,
announced Pearl Johansen, presi
dent of the heads of houses, yes
terday.
The election of officers for the
coming year will take place. Hazel
P. Schwering, dean of women, Mrs.
Alice B. MacDuff, assistant dean,
and Mrs. M. P. Barbour will be
guests of the evening.
At House Dimmer
Little engraved scrolls, passed
to members of Kappa Alpha Theta j
at dinner last Thursday evening, |
told of the engagement of Gerald
ine May to Bill Sayles, Beta Theta
Pi. Later in the evening the Beta
members danced at the Theta
house.
The couple are both sophomores
at the University. The date for the
wedding has not been set.
3 Students Considered
For $300 Scholarship
Charles William McKinney,
Lawrence Baird, and Godfrey La
Plant, students of music, have been
recommended by John L. Lands
bury, dean of the school of music,
for consideration in the receiving
of the $500 McCornack legacy in
scholarship form.
The legacy was left recently to
Dean Landsbury by Mary McCor
nack for assistance to students
planning to study music for religi
ous purposes. .
Pitch your tent at Taylor’s
The Indispensable
Garment . . .
Blouses
$7.25
Stunning: tailored blouses
of satins and crepe — some
diirt waist styles, others with
pleated and tucked shirt
fronts—novelty pearl button
trims—long; or short sleeves.
She Kappa-tnlizes on Hunger
Betty Howell, resourceful Kappa, has set lip a sandwich and coffee
counter in the house, to supply hungry girls with evening snacks, and
to supplement her money supply.
Models Haue Glamourous
Origin During Empire Period
Ey LILLIAN WARN
When fashion makes her debut to the women of America, it is usually
in the glamour of a style review upon the figure of a mannequin
one of the outstanding careers for young women in America today, and
one with a long and fascinating history behind it.
Mannequins first began in the day of Marie Antoinette as a bisqu’
doll. It was Marie who went to the greatest dressmaker of the day,
Rose Berlin, and had her dress the little figures which she sent back
to her friends in Austria. Those dolls were considered great prizes,
because they were the only way people had of seeing how persons of
another court were gowned.
During the Empire, models took
the form of sawdust figures. No
one dreamed of using a human
figure to portray fashion until a
later period, when a group known
as the “Black Satin Girls” was in
troduced.
No Expression, Makeup
These women, without makeup,
or expression of any manner, were
sheated in a black satin covering
over which they displayed the fab
rics and drapings of their cour
turiers. Patrons could bare their
shoulders when they wore the cre
maintain her virtue.
One day Lady Duff-Gordon, a
ations, but the working girl had to
bored socialite, with pronounced
artistic ability, an active brain, and
nothing to do. entered the picture
to revolutionize the mannequin, and
prove the human model an essen
tial to the introduction of new
fashion ideas.
She became a designer who num
bered among her clientele such
names and personal friends as
Ellen Terry, Lady De Bathe (Lily
Lantry), Margot Asquith, queen of
Spain, the Duchess of Rutland, the
Princess of Wales, and Irene Castle.
Has New Idea
One day she had a vision. If
she could get one such beauty as
Lily Langtry to model her gowns,
she would be able to give the world
something it had never had before,
but to secure a Lily Langtry was
impossible.
However, she reasoned there
were plenty of other girls in Eng
land, and some of them lovely to
look upon. So she set out, quietly,
without publicity or furor, to find
her models.
She picked six, persons whom at
first glance were mere ugly duck
lings with sunken chests and poor
postures, but Lady Duff-Gordon
was a keen woman with sharp in
sight. She recognized the possi
bilities in those maids, and was
ready to lpegin extricating it.
Training Severe
For six months she taught them
to walk, balancing bookc on their
heads, until they could enter a
room with the smooth-flowing air
of duchesses. She realized the
drama of the right entrance. She
taught them to smile, how to
stand, until finally she believed
them ready for her great experi
ment.
All during this training period
she had marshalled them to art
museums and music halls. Never
before or after were models given
such a thorough background course
to make them feel their part.
With soft lights and music, she
began her little coup before a
galaxy of distinguished guests.
There was silence as a tall, lovely
figure in the shape of the day
emerged from the curtain.
She was another Lily! The aud
ience gasped. But when a Lillian
Russel, a Maxine, a Helen of Troy,
a Cleopatra, and a Beatrice D’este
followed in quick succession, it was
not believable, and the distinguish
ed audience burst into an enthus
iastic round of applause.
These first mannequins were an
immediate success. And they were
the first models to wear the ap
propriate accessories with each
costume the right hat. gloves,
shoes, purse, jewels, perfume, and
the first to have their hair dressed
differently for different gowns.
They revolutionized the dress
making industry and became
Tliis Year’s Crop
Of Pin -Planters
Blooms in Sorimj
Pins on the right and pins on
the left of us and some people have
two pins now this is no scientific
observation but merely spring
term on the Oregon campus.
With the increasing dearth of
pins at the Alpha Phi house, Roma
Theobald now wears a Phi Dolt
pin above her beating heart as the
sorority sisters welcomed mat
tress-clad Ed Strohecker at the
front door while the brothers of
the band rallied in the street
'midst wailing of sirens.
Myra Hulser, one of the Emer
ald’s star reporters, arrived back
on the campus from spring vaca
tion in love again, or what would
you call it as the grapevine tells
us that three long distance phone
calls, special deliverys, and a tele
gram every morning from Idaho
doesn’t mean letters of applica
tion.
Four-point Schramm of the law
school was escorted en masse by
his fellow law students to the icy
waters of the mill stream but quite
willing in view of the number of
enterprising young lawyers not
back in law school this term.
Thoughts while strolling—Cappy
Cummings, Pi Phi, beaming these
days with a diamond on her fourth
finger- Barbara Ward, Alpha Chi,
is football minded again with Chan
Berry, Sig Ep—Kappa Phi Delt
combinations at Gamma Alpha
Chi's spring formal—frantic tele
phone calls due to Jimmy Dorsey’s
postponement—the Kappa Sigma
Chi Dutch lunch (without lunch)
political rumblings of prepara
tion from armed camps—Frances
Fearnley’s Phi Sig pin.
known as the “Golden Girls of
Lucille.” After electrifying Eu
rope, Ziegfeld saw them, and feel
ing their strong effect as they only
paraded before him, conceived his
great idea of the show girl.
This discovered by Lucille and
launched by Ziegfeld in America,
these unusual English beauties, re
fined and charming, and all 5' 8”
to 6’ 1” in height, made brilliant
matches. All of which leads up to
the present day fact that great
mannequins are made, not born.
And that there are 5000 of them in
New York, from France, Russia,
Italy, Germany, and two of the
most popular from Norway.
All of them are 5’ 8” and over.
It takes two years to train them,
and then not one out of 1000 meet
the requirements, according to sta
tistics.
It takes nerve, endurance and
the will to carry on, as well as
beauty, in mannequin work. Mo
dels rpust be able to portray
health, vigor, and enthusiasm whe
ther they model only fashions or
their faces, beautiful hands, teeth,
eyes, throats,, shoulders, backs, or
arms and feet.
The pay ranges from $25 to $100
a week, but the average working
life of a model is 4 years. After
that they marry. New York, Phila
delphia, and Chicago over the best
opportunity in this work, although
?very city employs girls for fashion
work in department stores and spe
cialty shops. For many, statistics
have proven modeling is but the
first step into some other phase
of a business career.
Yon can always do better at
fyukun sJhiiA\
FURNITURE COMPANY
Delegates from 39 Colleges
Arrive Todag lor WAA Meet;
Lunch, Meeting First Ecents
By MYRA HULSER
Delegates from 39 Northwestern colleges will convene here today,
Friday and Saturday for the Northwest sectional division of the Ath
letic Federation of College Women’s conference. Two outstanding girls
from each school and one physical educational instructor will be Offi
cial delegates.
Registration begins at 10 o'clock in the lobby of the Eugene hotel and
continues until noon. Following the luncheon the first mass meeting
will be called in the dining room
of the hotel. Frances Watzek,
president of the western section of
AFCW, will preside. Miss Florence
Alden. and Miss Warrine East
burn, instructors in women's phy
sical education at the University
of Oregon, will aid in the discus
sion.
Speakers Slated
Dr. John F. Bovard, speaking
on “Cultural Aspect of Athletics”
and Miss Eva Seen, director of the
women's physical education at
Oregon State speaking on “Sports
and the New Social Order” will
conclude this meeting.
The afternoon will be spent
touring the campus. All delegates
will be guests of AWS at the fash
ion show and tea in Gerlinger
lounge at 4 o'clock. Sorority houses
will entertain the women at a 6
o’clock dinner. Exhibitions of bad
minton, fencing and dancing will
be given in the women’s gym this
evening, following the dinner hour.
Friday Events Listed
Friday’s program will begin at
7:30 with a breakfast served at the
hotel. Discussion groups will take
up the rest of the morning, and
after luncheon, the second mass
meeting will be held. Dr. H. H.
House, professor of physical edu
cation at Washington State col
lege will address the conference
on "A Man Looks at Women's
Athletics.” Miss Velda Cundiff,
members of the AFCW advisory
council and director of women's
physical education at San Fran
cisco college will give her idea of
the “Future of WAA.”
Ideas for WAA initiation will
be discussed at the 3:30 meeting,
which follows group discussions.
At 4:15 canoes will be available
for the delegates to take trips
up and down Oregon’s millrace.
The formal banquet, one of the
highlights of the entire affair, will
be held at the Osburn hotel at
6:30 o’clock Friday evening with
Miss Florence Alden as toastmist
of Montana, U.C.L.A., Santa Bar
will talk on “Function of WAA
from the Standpoint of a Dean.”
Colonel John Leader, will tell of
the “English Idea of Sport."
Dr. J. B. Nash, professor of phy
sical education of the New York
university will be featured speaker
of the mass meeting Saturday
morning. A closed mass meeting
will be held at 9:45 o’clock at
which time reports of all commit
tees will be given, and a vote taken
for the hostess of the 1938 confer
ence. The noon day luncheon will
conclude the conference.
As Friday will be the day for
the most discussion, colleges have
been chosen to prepare topics.
These include Pacific university,
Lewiston state normal, University
of Idaho, University of Oregon,
University of Wyoming, Idaho
State college, Stanford university,
San Mateo junior college, Pomona
college, University of Nevada, Uni
versity of California, Montana
State college, Dominican college,
Fresno state teachers' college,
University of Arizona, San Fran
cisco state college, Mills college,
Phoenix junior college, University
o fMontana, U.C.L.A., Santa Bar
bara college, Humboldt state
teachers’ college, and College of
the Pacific.
Committees Named
Betty Mushen is general chair
man of the entire program. As
sisting her are Gretchen Smith,
finance; Phyllis Adams, registra
tion; Jean Ackerson, housing; Jane
Bogue, discussion; Irene Schaupp,
programs; Dorothy Mihlalcik, cor
respondence; Jeanne Aronson, ar
rangements; Dorothy Magnusson,
hostesses and guides; Frances
Johnston, banquet.
All women working on the host
ess committee are to be at the
Eugene hotel at 2:30 today to go
on a sightseeing trip of the campus
with guests, announces Dorothy
Magnusson. Cars will be provided.
After the sightseeing trip and the
AWS fashion show, the women
will meet their guests for dinner
at the individual houses. After
dinner hostesses will take their
guests back to Gerlinger for the
exhibitions.
PAJAMA BRIEFS
T)v
• “KAYSER”
arc quite the tiling for
night time wear. Shown in
the new waltz bine—cre
ated of satin stripe rayon
— they are the popular
new thing much in de
mand.
“KAYSER”
Hosiery
Panties
Gloves
Vests
Solo garments
Lastex Weaves in
Close-fitting Garments
THE
BROADWAY
INC.
30 E. Broadway
CATERING TO
INDIVIDUAL STYLES
We specialize in Permanent Waving
A Shampoo and
Finger Wave for only.
40c
Other Hairdresses at Toe and $1.00
MAJESTIC BEAUTY SHOP
Open Friday evenings by appointment
Balcony Tiffany Davis Drug Store Phone 212
EASTER broke on the campus, this year, with
a new aim. It seems as though everyone disregarded
the weather conditions that threatened the morning
and donned their newest and smartest. Among those
that looked especially smart Easter were two AL
PHA PHI'S, CARLINE SCOTT and ROMA THEO
BOLD. Both had on three-piece wool suits with
beige fox collars. CARLINE'S was rose color that
she wore over a sheer beige blouse. With this suit
she wore a pale blue off-the-face felt hat and beige
purse and gloves. ROMA'S suit was bright yellow.
Chaudron accessories add the bit of contrast to
the outfit. This includes hat, shoes, and gloves.
NORMA KOLSTAD, DELTA GAMMA, also
chose a suit of rose wool with grey contrast for her
Easter outfit. The two-piece suit has a leather belt
of grey: under the jacket is a pearl grey silk blouse.
A grey felt sailor hat, grey tie oxfords, and grey
gloves and purse make up the complete ensemble.
ruth wollenberg. delta delta del
ta. and MARGARET PAULSON, PI BETA PHI,
chose prints ami silks for their selection. RUTH'S
costume includes a black sheer crepe skirt that is
topped with a new print. The print is repeated in
two bands that circle the bottom of the skirt. Over
the dress she wears a beige coat that boasts of the
new black belt. Black patent-leather sandals, black
straw hat. and black purse are the accessories, be
sides the violet gloves that she wears to bring out
the color of the print of the dress. MARGARET'S
print is a red and white flowered one that is worn
with red patent-leather sandals and purse, a red
T"^
UP TO SNUFF
---- -
straw hat, and black gloves. The dress is trimmed
with a large sash and a cluster of field flowers that
are worn at the neck. Over the dress, Margaret
wears a black redingote coat.
The Eugene stores have a grand variety of
clothes for the coming spring. Formats, dinner
dresses, afternoon dresses, taffetas, prints, shirt
waists, and even sun suits have appeared, saying
nothing of the clever new handkerchiefs, scarfs, and
flowers. You coeds should really plan on picking
up quite a few of these items here for the coming
term. I know that if you just intended to “look”
that you wouldn't be able to resist some of them.
Have you seen the interesting handkerchiefs
that the GIFT SHOP is displaying now? If you
haven't, by all means drop in there and just peek
at them. They are just what you want for your
new dress or sweater. Some of the new handker
chiefs are following the Tyrolean influence.
SALLY McGREW, GAMMA PHI, was shopping
and she discovered that BEARD'S had an unusual
DIRNDL formal that is an interesting study in con
tradictions. The quaint shirred bodice and peasant
skirt are expressed in a very sophisticated print
chiffon' of wool violets splashed with lime green,
canary, and fuschia. Quaint too, are the soft high
ruffles about the throat that are caught v ith a prim
bow of violet velvet, and the shirred puff sleeves on
the separate bolero jacket. . . . Grand for informal
occasions. The slit to the waist in the black of
the formal makes it decollete for very formal occa
sions and gives it an unexpected air of modern
sophistication.
SIDE SHOTS— ...
Little Henry of Sigma Hall
Took a beating while playing ball,
On his elbow he took a fall
Now we wonder, what's the stall?
There is no point to the last line,
But I couldn't find another to rhyme.
By special request, I am asking that you take
note of this next item!
Easter Sunday, when the Gamma Alpha Chi
dance was a thing of the past, DON CASCIATO
spent most of the day gazing into the mirror trying
to figure why someone hadn't asked him to the
dance. The only logical conclusion that he reached
was that he didn't have a phone. Now DON may
be reached at 3300, local 237, if no answer, call
local 214. He is ready to accept any date for the
Mortar Board ball.