Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Arizona Daily Star from Tucson, Arizona • Page 17

Location:
Tucson, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
17
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

geetlra SOCIAL AND CLUB NEWS 2 Seetloa EDITORIAL SECTION TUCSON, ARIZONA, SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 19, 1939 PAGE ONE Many Tucson Groups Entertain At Social Events During Week-End pjj Afeiaiia Bails 2J Formal, Informal Dances Highlight Campus Week-End Hohokam Will Give Dance At Tucson Hotel El Conquistador Scene Of Many Dinner Parties Before Event End Mr. and Mrs; C. E. Rose Are Honored at Reception Here Teachers of Public School System Give Party Friday at Masonic Temple Honoring Superintendent of City Schools and His Wife Some 350 teachers in the Tucson public schools entertained it a reception Friday evening at the Masonic temple honoring C. E.

Rose, superintendent of city cchools, and Mrs. Rose. The reception was the first given by the entire body of local teachers for Mr. and Mrs. Rose in the history of Mr.

Rose's incumbency as superintendent. Engineers Hold Annual Frolic at Santa Rita as of St. Patrick's Celebration; All-Greek Formal Dance Given Two dances, one Informal and the other strictly formal, occupied the social calendar of the University of Arizona student body this week-end. The Santa Rita hotel was the setting for both events, the first being the engineering students' frolic, or "Kayley," climaxing their annual celebration of- St Patrick's day. The second was the all-Greek Special invited guests were mem- C.

fte jr at rf if 'vi iff 1 ill WiFi a I yM'k i 1 i.A PiL' I'M -After Qampus Glasses The traditional formal initiation banquet of Alpha Rho Tau, honorary art fraternity, was held at the Pioneer hotel Friday evening with Dean Arthur Olaf Andersen as guest speaker. Other special guests were Mrs. Andersen, Mrs. Kather-ine Kitt, James Powell Scott, and Andreas Andersen. The primary colors of red, yellow and blue were carried out in detail in the banquet table appointments.

Blue iris, yellow daffodils, and red anemones were used as floral centerpieces. The 12 new pledges who were initiated preceding the banquet and who were also honored guests were Patty Ferguson, Ruth McKeen, May Mc-Grath, William Kautz, Marjorie Le-Barron, Frankie Mae Luke, Sarah Maxwell, Curtis A. Anderson, Max-ine Grace, Anne Nicholas, Roy Rogers and Betty Cole. Among members present were Dugald Gordon, Fred Northrup, Dorothy Grabill. Doris Howatt, Ralph Brown, Elizabeth Marshall, Mrs.

Ethel Smith, Mrs. Meyers, Le-nore Andrews, Claire Bryant, Eleanor Beckett, Winifred Miller, Jane Oberkamps, Fern Vermillion, Mildred Wood, Betty Woodell, Martha Higgenbotham, Lois Van Dorn, and Helen Mayer. DISTRICT CONVENTION Many plans are being made for the entertainment of delegates, who will attend the district six convention of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority being held in Tucson, Friday, Saturday and Sunday of next week. The guest of honor and speaker at the meetings will be Mrs. Folger Athearn, grand treasurer, from national headquarters.

Another' na tional officer who will be present is Mrs. Dudley Clark, district president from California. Representatives "will attend from Stanford university, University of Southern California, University of, California at Los Angeles, University of Nevada and the Arizona university. Business meetings will be held at the chapter. During the week-end a Mexican dinner is planned at Cosine's restaurant Friday evening.

Saturday a luncheon at El Meren-dero, tea at the Governor's Corner and a formal banquet in the evening at the Old Pueblo club will be highlights of the social events planned for the visitors. Miss Virginia Poindexter of the alumnae association and Miss Betsy Holesapple of the active chapter, are in charge of arrangements. SPURS AND SOPHOS PICNIC Members of the two sophomore honorary societies, Spurs, for young women, and Sophos for young men, will go to Canada del Oro this afternoon for a joint picnic. Approximately 40 guests will attend, and will leave from the Kappa Alpha Theta house at 1:30 o'clock. Swimming, hiking and a picnic supper are planned for the day.

Miss Mary Margaret Huntington is in charge of arrangements. AGGIE HOUSE HAY RIDE Two farm wagons loaded with hay and topped by a crowd of university students were seen by residents of tjje River road last evening. The occasion was the hay ride and picnic planned by members of the Aggie house. Members and guests attending were: Misses Virginia Kengla, Betty Cole, Ethel Isaacs, Helen McGeorge, Agnes Boss, Mary Virginia Sum- (Continued to Page 3, Column 2) HOSTESS AND HONORED GUESTS at two of the largest parties of the week were Mrs. Arthur Hamilton Otis-(center), and her daughters, Mrs.

Robert Barber (Mary) and MrsrAlbert Gibson: (Eunice), both recent brides. Mrs. Barber is at left, Mrs. Gibson at right MrsJOtis entertained -for at teas both Friday and Saturday afternoons at the Otis home on Park avenue. (Photo by Robert Burns.) Woman's Club Plans Final Regular Meet for Monday Many members of the Hohokam Museum association are planning dinner parties to precede the association's subscription dance, which will be held at El Conquistador hotel next Friday evening at 9:30 o'clock.

The dance is being planned to promote the society's activities in connection with anthropo. logical research, the support of museums, etc. It will be open to all members and friends of the association. Entertaining at dinners at El Conquistador before the dance will be Mrs. Charles Sumner Bird, Mr.

and Mrs. Robert P. Bass, Mr. and Mrs. H.

H. d'Autremont, Mr. and Mrs. Fred McCormick, and Mrs. Arthur W.

Thompson. Patronesses will be Mrs. Robert Perkins Bass, Mrs. Charles Sumner Mrs. H.

H. d'Autremont, Mrs. Melville H. Haskell, Miss Florence Pond, Miss Laura Lansing Page, and Mrs. Arthur W.

Thompson. Lecture Planned A feature of the Hohokam associa. tion's annual lecture series will be an illustrated lecture which Paul Coze, ethnologist and artist, will give this Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock at the Pioneer hotel. The subject will be "Magic Power of the Indians," and the talk will be open to the public. Coze, who is not only known as an artist in black and white, water colors, and oils, and as an ethnologist, but also as an.

author, is stopping at Camelback Inn in Phoenix. He has spent part of every year in the southwest since he first came here in 1934. His last trip to this country he made by way of Canada, where he went to take pic tures and collect ethnographic material under the auspices of the French Society of Ethrfographic Research, American Indian section. Born in Beirut, Syria, the lecturer is the great grandson of Dr. Rozier Coze, founder of the Faculte of Strausbourg.

'His mother was the Syrian Princess Dabija (the royal family of Dabija were rulers of Serbia, Croatia, and Muldavia in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries). When he was 11 Paul Coze, then living in Paris, started the first Boy Scout troop in France. He received his education in Egypt and France, studying for four years at- the National School of Decorative Arts in Paris. For 10 years he studied all forms of painting, and especially chemical reactions of colors, with the Italian painter, G. F.

Gonin. Coze specializes in animal pictures, water color sketches, and portraits, many of which are of Indian subjects. He has just returned from Hollywood, where he executed portraits of Charles Boy-er, Dorothy Lamour, and others. He has exhibited in Montreal, New York, Santa Fe, recently in Phoenix, and other cities. His writings include "L'Oiseau-Thonnerre" (The Thunder Bird), a book of Canadian and American Indians which deals particularly with their magic power; and, in collaboration with Rene Therenin, "Moeurs et Histoire des Peaux-Rouges," a book which was recognized by the French academy.

In 1930 he came to the United States on a mission for the National History museum of Paris, heading an expedition which spent six months studying tribes of western Canada, collecting more than two thousand objects, numerous recordings of Indian songs and chants, hundreds of photographs, and many hundreds of feet of motion picture film. In 1931, when he was in Paris before returning to America, Coze arranged an exhibit of "Indians Yesterday and Today" at the Tro-cadero museum in Paris." MRS. G. M. SIMONSON of Piedmont, international vice-president of Gamma Phi Beta, who will visit the University of Arizona active chapter and Tucson alumnae chapter tomorrow.

formal neiu iasv evening, wilQ Jimmy Greer, nationally known orchestra leader, as master of cere monies, and his band furnishing the dance music. Chaperons and special guests of the engineering students Friday night were Prof, and Mrs. F. C. Kelton, Prof, and Mrs.

J. B. Cunningham, Prof, and Mrs. E. S.

Borg-quist, Prof, and Mrs. H. A. Jimer-son, Prof, and Mrs. Paul- Thorn-berg, Mr.

and Mrs. William Howe, Mr. and Mrs. C. G.

Foster and Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Fitch.

Ernie Lewis and his orchestra entertained the followers of St. Patrick with special Kayley music and green was the predominating tone in decorations. The Tau Beta Pi cup for the largest attendance at the picnic yesterday was awarded the American Society of Civil Engineers chapter and the Theta Tau cup was also awarded to the society for the championship baseball team. Engineers and guests attendang were Mr. and Mrs.

LaMont West, Mr. and Mrs. Otta Bejeck, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Andreas, Mr.

and Mrs. Angus McVicar, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Garrett, Mr. and Mrs.

Harry Kotecki, Mr. and Mrs. Hilton De-Selm. Misses Leuita Uhlman, Agnes McGillicudy, Evelyn Houston, Margaret Tinsley, Mildred Belsher, Helen Moore, Betty Willard, Aileen Conley, Virginia Little, Irene Wilson, Genevieve Atwood, Vivian VanLoo, Rosalie Freedman, Margaret Killen, Barbara Baker, Virginia Kengla, Beatrice Krent, Mimi Hoeltzel. Ruth Davis.

Betty Howe, Mary Margaret Waugh. Misses Edna Hall, Helen Bueno, Pat Atkinson, Janet Clisby, Eleanor Smith, Margaret Cooper, Birginia Yost, Florence Carothers, Kathleen List, Ethel Cahill, Daisy Kern. June Mattingly, Pat Ruth Burcher, Jean Jaggers, Inez Lamb, Lela Cole, Evelyn Bolin, Betty Garrett, Marion Gore, Kitty Dickinson, Ann King, Dorothy Flynn, Elizabeth Standring, Gloria Lively," Norma Lee Stuermer. Misses Helen Fogg, Winifred Krentz, Mary Virginia Summers, Dorothy Moore, Eleanor Robert, Betty Marston, Gene Omer, Anne Nicholas, Aileen Warren, Betty Brown, Louise Willweber, Mary Alice Murrell. Betty Harvey," Helen Fink, Elaine Burruss, Elaine Eller, Helen Gray, Peggy Robertson, Marjorie Barrego, Martha Denson, Jeanne Niewold, Lillian' Christen-lon and Emilie Fried.

Messrs. Charles Nicholas, Charles Chase. Bill Van Loo, Doug Stevens, Earl Peugh, Lewis Lowe, Arnold Johnson, Jay Medford, Merl Rich, John McPherson, Edbridge Morrill, Leonard Brown, Elliott Cushing, Horace' Babcock, Morris Bolzer, Henry Sohrn, Fred Marston, Tom Wilson, John McKay, Clyde Stauf-fer, Jerry Caldwell, Harry Garret. Messrs. Bill Marum, John Gray, John Schlissler, John Cody, Bernard Oliver, Fred Clark, Al Daubin, Al Fink, Renny Mella, William Peters, Neil Fishback, Richard Bly, Pat McGinley, Nils A.

Jensen, Paul L. Russell, Ralph Bamerio, Arthur Lewis, Richard High, Frank Avis, Sam Berger, Bill Kelly, Carmelo Pelusi, Will Chapman. Messrs. Ed Chapman, G. Smith, Russell Bates, George Barr, Bill Bishop, Clate Gatlin, Hal Stewart, Al Wallach, C.

Davis, Richard Garrett, William C. Isles, Henry Allen, Paul Walser, Warren Welcome, David Orr, Don Stem, Sidney Boom, Earl Travis, H. A- Felix, Al Greene, Lee Morrison, John Sutterland, James Lobdell. Messrs. Fred Sherman, Dan Chey-ney, Ray McNeil, Gilbert Greer, George Orton, Bill Keener, Don R.

Jameson, C. Lamothe, Bouchard Marum, Jim Douthett, Floyd Bluhm, Herb Macia, R. W. HalL Dick Carlise, R. King, G.

Raymond, Jack Brennan, John Kerr, Dan McNabb, John Bork, Lloyd Henricks, Charles Pickrell, James Campbell and William Griswold. All Greek The all-Greek dance is sponsored by Pan Hellenic and the Inter-Fraternity council and was the third annual event of its kind. Chaperons for the evening were President and Mrs. Alfred Atkinson, Miss Emma K. Burgess, Dr.

and Mrs. A. H. and Mrs. Arthur Hamilton Otis.

The committee in charge included Tyler Gilbert, Mary Alice Morrel and Vic David. Preceding the dance the Santa Rita hotel entertained the officers of Pan Hellenic and the fraternity council and their guests at dinner. Carillon Club "Mankind Today as Seen Socio-togically" will be discussed by Dr. D. Tetreau, professor of rural sociology at the University of Arizona, at the meeting of the Carillon club of thP First Methodist Episco pal church this evening at 7:30, o'clock.

The talk will be the fifth lecture in a series dealing with Present trends of civilization. A special piano duet will be pre- oy Misses jeuy ej and 'WcrHunVman'before-the talk. bers of the school board and their wives: P. E. Howell, president, and Mrs.

Howell, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fickett and Dr. and Mrs. S.

C. Davis. The reception, which began at 8 o'clock, included a short program and general dancing from 9 to 12. At the close of the program Miss Alice Vail, head of the English department at Tucson High school, presented a basket of flowers to the honored guests and made a short presentation speech. The St.

Patrick's motif was carried out in all decorations and refreshments. At the beginning of the program a trio of teachers. Misses Kathryn Stevenson, Martha Yount, and Maybelle Wisdom, accompanied by Tom Burges, sang several songs. Mrs. Anne Rogers, for many years a teacher in Tucson High school and other city schools, then gave the talk of the evening, which was followed by a cornet solo by a schoolboy, Henry Mayhew.

Ray Webb, Tucson High school teacher, gave several sleight-of-hand tricks from his repertoire as a magician. Miss Heloise McBride, accompanied at the organ by her father, John McBride, sang, before Betty and Nancy Power gave an Irish dance. During the dancing Paul Joneses, Virginia Reels and other dances of the past generation were interspersed among the more modern numbers. Chairman of the committee In charge of the reception was J. E.

Kyle of the high school faculty. Others on the committee were Herbert Burrows, Rolla Aston, Miss Harriet Rosenfeld (in charge of decorations). Miss Helena Patten (in charge of refreshments), Mrs. Eliza-bet Van Antwerp, Miss Martha Geffs, Miss Ulah Hudlow, Miss Marjorie Vincent, Ralph King. Band Leader Weds In City Double Wedding Features Jimmy Grier and Three Of His Ensemble The leader of a nationally known dance its featured singers and a movie starlet were center figures in a double wedding ceremony performed at high noon Saturday at the Santa Rita hotel.

W. E. McFarland, superior court judge of Pinal county, performed the rites which united in marriage Jimmy Grier, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W.

Grier of Pennsylvania, and Miss Canaille Sorey, daughte- of Mr. and Mrs. Grover Sorey of Lewiston, Idaho. Also united in marriage were Wayne Williams, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Carl Williams of Seattle, and Beverly Martin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Eden Cantrell of Michigan. A Paisley print in shades of rose and blue, worn with, a navy coat. smooth navy straw hat and bag and gloves in rose shades was the smart spring ensemble worn by Miss Sorey, who is known professionally as Julie Gibson.

Miss Mar tin chose as her wedding outfit a print frock, three quarter coat, rough straw hat and accessories all in natural beige tones accented with white. Both brides wore gardenia corsages. Witnesses to the marriage rites were Belle D. Hall, clerk of superior court, and Edward F. Mayer of the Santa Rita hotel.

Follow ing the ceremony a reception was held for members of the wedding party and a group of Tucsonans, hosts for the occasion being Mr. and Mrs. Nick C. Hall. The Grier orchestra, which has been nationally known since 1931 and which has established an all time record for attendance during its long engagements at the Bilt-more bowl in Los Angeles, came to Tucson yesterday when it played at the University of Arizona all-Greek formal held at the hotel last evening.

Jimmy Grier, long a favorite with coast audiences, is known as the "Host of the Coast." He has appeared with such stars as Fibber McGee and Molly, and Jack Benny. At the present time he appears with the Joe Penner program each week and with the band regularly. Miss Gibson has been with the orchestra as featured singer for the past year and a half. She does double vocal numbers with Wayne Williams also, who plays first trumpet in the band. Miss Martin is a former movie player.

The two couples will return with the band to Los Angeles today. EXHIBIT Miss Beulah Mary Wadsworth will open the exhibit rooms of her study, 645 East Third street, this afternoon and will show a group of 30 of her pastels which have not been on exhibition before in Tucson. The group includes pictures made in California, Canada and Europe. The public is invited to call from 3 to 5 o'clock today, and from 9 to 12 a.m., Monday, Wednesday and Friday, and Jucson The Tucson Junior League will honor founders of the Service club, which was organized in 1929 and became the local Junior League in 1933, when it meets for luncheon at the Santa Rita hotel Monday. Six of the 10 founders will attend the luncheon: Mmes.

John Mur-phey, Gerald Jones, Harry Bryant, William Bakewell, Julian Crutcher and Miss Doris Oesting. Mrs. Emery Johnson, who recently returned from Portland, where she was delegate from the local league in a regional conference on children's theatre activities of Junior Leagues throughout the country, will report on the conference during the meeting which will follow the luncheon. MRS. OTIS ENTERTAINS 0 In honor of her daughters, Mrs.

Albert Gibson (Eunice) and Mrs. Robert Barber (Mary), Mrs. Arthur Hamilton Otis entertained at tea Friday and Saturday afternoons. The parties were held between 4 and 6 o'clock at the Otis home, and spring flowers were used in decorations. Friday the St.

Patrick's day motif was emphasized. Presiding at the tea table Friday were Mrs. John Ivancovich, Mrs. John A. Worcester, Miss Mary Perry, and Miss Sophie Hart Assisting were Mrs.

Bradford Duncan, Mrs. Theodore Kruttschnitt, Mrs. Elmer Flaccus, Mrs. Delos G. Moore, Miss Betsy Holesapple and Miss Rosemarie SanguinettL Saturday Mrs.

Selim Franklin, Mrs. Bert Underwood, Mrs. C. E. Goyette and Mrs.

C. E. Rose were asked to pour. Assisting were Mrs. John Brooks, Mrs.

John Carroll, Mrs. Ernest Stanley, Mrs. Selim Franklin, Miss Virginia Poindexter and Miss Edith McMahon. INVITE FRIENDS FOR COCKTAILS Major and Mrs. Carleton Burgess have invited a group of their friends in for cocktails at 5 o'clock this afternoon at their home, 1321 East Mabel street.

MRS. BALFOUR IS HONORED Mrs. Donald Balfour of Rochester, was the honored guest at a luncheon given Saturday at the Santa Rita hotel by Mrs. C. A.

Thomas. Eighteen guests were bidden. DINNER GIVEN LAST EVENING Mr. and Mrs. Wilton Lloyd-Smith entertained a small group of their Tucson friends at dinner last evening at the Pioneer hotel.

The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Foster (Continued to Page 6, Column 2) ANNOUNCEMENT has been made of the marriage of Miss Edwina Block of Pres-cott (above) to Robert Bruce Clelland in Nogales February 18. Miss Block, who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Gary E. Block of Prescott, is a freshman student at the University of Arizona and Mr. Clelland, son of Mr. and Mrs William Clelland of Tucson, is a sophomore student. ine ceremony was per formed at St.

Andrew's Epis copal church with the bridegroom's mother and Dr. W. B. Strong of Tucson attending Mr. and Mrs.

Clelland expect to complete their college work and will reside here during the next few years. has announced that an Easter motif will be used on the tea table. Presiding at the tea table will be Mrs. William A. Otis and Mrs.

Ida Reid Leonard, who will be assisted in serving by Mmes. Adrian L. Wheeler, J. L. Sparks, Gertrude Meyers, A.

J. McKelvey, Frank Nelson, Aura Gordon, Florence Armstrong, R. U. Carter, C. R.

Mc-Fall, A. O. Burton and Miss Ethyl C. Lobban. Mrs.

P. W. Hodges, chairman for the "pig roundup," has announced the date as March 27 at 12 o'clock and urges all club members to make reservations early by calling Mrs. J. J.

Bowen, 2933. There will be no charge. The breaking of the pig banks issued early in the club year will take place and a box lunch will be served followed by games for which prizes will be offered. Tucson Women At A.A.U.W. Meeting In Neighbor City A number of Tucson women went to Vah-Ki inn in Coolidge yesterday for a joint meeting of the Tucson and Phoenix branches of the American Association of University Women.

Speaker for the day was Mrs. Frances Douglas De-Kalb of Tucson, who discussed "Spanish Literature of the Revolution." Music was provided by the Phoenix branch, two members of which, Mrs. Neil Cook and Mrs. Norma Rasbury, performed. Attending from Tucson were Mrs.

Alvin Kirmse, Miss Emma K. Burgess, Miss Florence Bond, Mrs. Viola T. Cate, Mrs. Charles White, Mrs.

Stanley Doyle, Mrs. W. H. Daily, Mrs. Wray Meyer, Mrs.

Charles Polasek, Miss Virginia Rufi, Mrs. Ida Reid Leonard, Mrs. F. S. Herndon, Mrs.

M. B. Strong, Miss Bernice Miller, Miss Salome Town-send, Mrs. Foster, Miss Helen Foster. Miss Helen Harper, Mrs.

John Luppee, Mrs. H. S. Ferris, Mrs. Nellie H.

West, Mrs. Ethel Noble, Mrs. A. H. Chapin, Miss Estelle Lutrell, Mrs.

J. G. Brown, Mrs. C. S.

Linton, Mrs. F. O. Reed, Mrs. Elizabeth Reed Payne, Mrs.

Charles U. Pickrell and Mrs. Philip Greisinger. Delta Gamma Has Party, Initiation On Founders1 Day Initiation of 15 new members and a formal banquet in celebration of founders' day were included in the social activities of Alpha Chi chapter of Delt Gamma sorority yesterday. The banquet was held at the Pioneer hotel last evening and honored the following original founders of the sorority who were students at the Lewis school of Oxford, in 1874: Mary Comfort Leonard, Ann Boyd Ellington, and Eva Webb Dodd.

White tapers grouped in threes, with white rosebuds were utilized in table centerpieces. The program-favors were in the shape of scrolls and were tied in bronze, pink and blue ribbons. Presiding as toast-mistress was Mrs, O. K. Yaeger, an alumnae from Washington, D.

C. Representatives speaking from the four classes were Misses Ruth McKale, senior; Ann Nicholas, junior Virginia Yost, sophomore; and Jean Sharman, freshman. (Continued to Pae Column 5) The last regular monthly meeting before the annual sprang luncheon of the Tucson Woman's ciub will be held at 2:30 o'clock Monday the clubhouse" on West Alameda. During the business' session a report of the nominating committee will be heard. Dr.

F. C. Lockwood, professor of English at the University of Arizona and authority on early Spanish history of, the southwest, will be the guest speaker for the afternoon. He has chosen as his topic "Anza's California Expedition." The music for the afternoon will be furnished by Mrs. Rosa Rhodes Larson, who will sing the arioso "Joan d'Arc" by Bemberg accompanied at the piano by Mrs.

E. W. Carroll. Club songs composed by club members will be sung by a group of clubwomen under the leadership of Mrs. C.

B. Colburn and a selection of the composition will be voted upon by all the club members. Mrs. W. B.

Cummings, chairman in charge of the tea arrangements, Annual Banquet To Be Held Here Tuesday Evening The annual world wide banquet of YWCA business girls will be held at the Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock. Messages from other clubs in the 419 cities where there are YWCA's in the United States are arriving and will be read at the banquet. Mrs. Helen Traylor, chairman of the program committee announces the program as follows: Mrs. Sophie Hagerty, president of the Otonka club, will preside and greet girls of the other two clubs attendipg.

Miss Margaret Schumak. er, president of the Tuesday Business Girl's club, and Miss Lillie Franklin, president of the Thursday Night club; respond to Mrs. Hagerty's greeting. Group singing will be a special feature of the evening. Dr.

Esther Closson, Miss Barbara North, and Mrs. Whitlock will be in charge. Miss Bernice Miller will introduce the speaker of the evening, Dr Richard Harvill, assistant professor of economics at the University of Arizona, who will speak on "Economic Trends in Our Democracy." Mrs. E. E.

Gill, president of the Tucson YWCA, will close the program. The table decorations and seating arrangements will be in charge of the Otonka social chairman, Miss Hazel Home. Members of the Tuesday club are making favors. Reservations must be in by Monday evening. All business girls mem.

bers of the YWCA and its clubs are invited," as are members of the YWCA board of directors. Active, Alumnae Sorority Qroups Have Special Events This Week-End A. I. M. E.

Group Entertained At Lunch, Meeting The members of the Woman's auxiliary to the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers met in the home of Mrs. Thomas L. Chapman at the St. Anthony Mine in Mammoth, Thursday afternoon for luncheon and a business meeting. Assisting Mrs.

Chapman were Mrs. David Orr, Mrs. Fred Evans, and Mrs. John Wood. Guests from Mammoth were Mmes.

Sam Fields, J. D. Haymer, E. Daggett, George Peters, K. V.

Geib, W. L. Howes. Members and guests making the trip from Tucson were Mr. and Mrs.

F. W. Denton, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Phelan, Mmes.

E. P. Mathewson, M. B. Spears, T.

G. Chapman, J. B. Cunningham, E. D.

B. S. Butler, Robert Her-non, M. E. Williard, O.

L. Ketten-bach, O. H. Metzger, Arthur Houle, J. B.

Teney, Nels Peterson, E. A. Pike, and LaMont West, Misses Nellie Kemp and Dorothy Gardner. The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Arthur Houle, with Mrs.

J. B. Tenney and Mrs. E. P.

Mathewson assisting. VAIL VILLAGERS The Vail Villagers 4-H club entertained the Pantano 4-H Stitch in Time club at a special program Wednesday in celebration of the new radio which they received as a state award in social progress. The guest group gave a skit telling the story of several songs. The Pantano Baking club served cake and candy. ELECTION HELD Beta Iota chapter of Pi Rho Zeta sorority held an election of officers Friday at the Arizona College of Commerce.

New leaders are Dorothy Nagel, president; Ailene Line-han, vice-president; and Myrtle secretary-treasurer. Gamma Phi Group To Have National Officer On Visit The Tucson alumnae chapter of Gamma Phi Beta, and Alpha Ep-silon chapter of the sorority at the University of Arizona, will have as a guest tomorrow the international vice-president of Gamma Phi Beta, Mrs. G. M. Simonson of Piedmont, CMrs.

Simonson is visiting several chapters while on her way to the biennial conference of province five of Gamma Phi Beta, to be held at Colorado Springs, April 14 16 Mn'ia Mrs. Fred Nave, retiring president of the Tucson alumnae chapter, will entertain Mrs. Si-moron's honor at an informal luncheon at ner nome road. r.mm. aium.

Her guests, aU, TLinfon Mrs Andrew Tol- Martin Baldwin Mrs. A Van son. 1V1IS. Mrs. Clarence Falk, Mrs Robert Picard, Mrs.

J. Armer..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Arizona Daily Star
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Arizona Daily Star Archive

Pages Available:
2,187,790
Years Available:
1879-2024