Show STUDENT LIFE LOGAN UTAH JANUARY 271938 HERE’S MORE ABOUT As the Cannons Roar (Continued from page one) Installations j Calendar Compkted Thursday: Lambda Rho meeting — Kappa Final installation rites were Delta house 7 :30 IRC meeting — men's lounge given sixty eight active and alumni members of the local Delta 4:00 Nu fraternity by national Sigma Special speaker — 1:00 Nu Saturday in the Logan L D Blue Key — Cafeteria 12:00 noon S First ward amusement hall Friday: Frank A Smith headed the ritual dance — 9:00 teart) Other members of the ritual Student assembly 1 :00 team included Rendell N Mabey Walter D Nebeker Jr Richard Saturday: Basketball O'Rourke and Fred Harris Music game — Smart Gym during the ceremonies was fur- 8:00 Beta Kappa skating party nished by the Epsilon Lambda of Tuesday: quartet R E McWhinnie Dramatic Arts club meeting 12 Laramie Wyo acted as general noon chairman for the Installations Alumni and actives who 'English Club Meetnig — M i s 4 home 7:30 p m the national joined organization Kyle’s Women’s P E party —gym 8:00 include: Bliss Rush Crandall Budge Fred Baugh R J Cran-ne- y Sylvan Needham Jess Allen Henry R Cooper Walter Fuhri-CaE Nelson Carl Fonnesbeck Fred D Richards R Burns Phi Kappa Iota a takes great Crookston Kingsley Stewart pleasure in announcing the pledgFrank A )nnesbeck Frank ing of Clyde Hart and John Rail Ray Ball Ross C Shurtliff Wessler Ray Lillywhite LaRue Yeates C B Shotford the Beta Kappa announces Joseph M Thomas Monte Swenson Leon Swenson pledging of Carl Hebofg Abel Niles Christensen Wallace Nell Ekins Coulson Parish Keetch 0 Sherman Anderson William B VanOrden and Ray Van Orden Averett Monte D Bailey Norval H Bailey George Wm Ball Ross Chi Omega announces the pledgC Barney Jay R Bingham Frank ing of Cleo Christensen Jerry J Bringhurst Elmo A Brough Morgan Mildred Weston and James Robert Bullock Sherman Mary Lindsay A Bert "H: Butler the Cherrington Kappa Delta announces Nathan L pledging of Afton Ford Elvira Floyd W Crandall Crookston Lon E Dunbar Ray Bird Evelyn Snow Ruth ChristHansen Finch Owen S Gardner ensen and Beulah Larsen William Glasmann Jr Gavin M Goudie Jr Melvin J Greaves E Duane W Griffin LaVan ceremonies Iinal initiations Hendricks Wm Dale Hendricks Richard S Hill Lorin W Hogan were held Sunday evening at the DeWitt Jacobsen Theris J Jen- Gamma Epsilon chapter house of sen William T Krueger Ted B Pi Kappa Alpha for the following seven men: Larsen Dick Larsen John L Malin Angus Mitchell Rex Roy Hill Bliss Mehr McMax R Muray Maughan Dale Redd Stephen Harrison and McClister George ‘A Carthy Aaron Amacher Ebert T Norton Vurge Smith William R Lynn E Sorenson were Final initiations rites Swenson George D Tanner Carl conducted at the Beta Kappa J Taylor Harmon B Toone house for Rex Yeamen Vranes Vern H George J Weatherston E Dean Webber Final initiations were conducted Raleigh F Williams and Robert at the Kappa Delta house SunD Young Hill day evening for Theressa Edith Doutre Beverly Deardorf and Elna Clark Dan-sant- Pledging rl ' Sigs Initiate Sunday Social Chls and their partners attended the first Sig Sunday evening hour last Sunday night at the chapter house A short program movies and games were scheduled Light refreshments were served during the evening Mr and Mrs Asa Bullen and Coach and Mrs Joseph Jen son were patrons and patronesses The next Sunday evening hour will be held February 6 Frank Fis ter is chairman of the affairs with Wade Miles and Clair Nelson assisting Twenty-fiv- e Sigma Phi U Rites Conducted Phi Upsilon Omicron national home economics honorary fraternity held Initiation services Sunday morning January 23 for eleven new members the largest group of girls to be initiated at one time by Kappa chapter This brings the membership of Phi Upsilon Omicron up to thirty-fiv- e girls The new members are Mildred Bowers Mary Rae Christiansen Melba Dansie Le Arta Griffiths Grace Jennings Helene Harris Dorothy Montrose Ardelle Putnum Alberta Turner Anna Beth Reeder and Alta Wilson The Initiation breakfast was held at the Bluebird following the services The committee in charge of the breakfast was Catherine RomBarta Siddoway ney chairman and Vera Esplin Marie Cooley was in charge of the initiation ceremonies e Initiations THETA CHI HEAR PROFESSOR Members of Theta Chi women’s honorary business fraternity met Tuesday night at the Alpha Chi house Trofessor D P Murray gave a talk on “Minimum Wage Law” Mar Jean Tyson played two piano selections Plans were completed for the new project of the organization that of beginning a secretarial bureau on the campus n Refreshments were served by and Bott Meredith Bodily Wanda Fonnesbeck Macphail Speaks Honor Members Tau Zeta Tau local social sorfraority joined the Lambda Chi ternity in honor Mr and Mrs Arthur T Henson at an informal dancing party held fn the social hall of the first ward chapel last Thursday night Thirty couples were in attendance Dr and Mrs F B Wann Professor H S Carter and Miss Vera Clark were present as special guests Engagements Chi Omega to Ruth Wright Thain Carlisle Pi Kappa Alpha Florence Jackson Tau Zeta Tau to Howard Boulton Lambda Alpha Chi Agnes C Macphail Canada’s first woman member of parliament’ and still the only woman in the house to have been elected will speak today at 1 p m in the auditorium under the auspices of the lyceum committee on "Us— the Good Neighbor" Miss Macphail has served her country for 15 consecutive years and has never lost an election First elected in 1921 she has been returned to parliament every time there has been an election In her fifteen years of service she has been a champion of right To her there are but two sides to a question the right and the wrong She has always fought with her keen mind and her brilliant wit for the side which to her has been the in classified body-welde- rs right A leader in women’s affairs an advocate of peace a champion of prison reform and old age pensions Miss Macphail has ever been in the front rank of progress Coming to parliament as a country school teacher she rapidly became what she is today one of the foremost political personages in her country Chapter Dinners Members of TK fraternity held their weekly banquet and meeting last Sunday in Preston Idaho Dramatic Arts Announce Meeting was electDarwin Evans HERE’S MORE ABOUT Professor Milton Merrill will be club meeting in the men’s lounge Thursday at 7:30 p m officers of the All club announced Wednesday history majors and all others who are interested are invited to attend HERE'S MORE ABOUT B PREXEY & ft ft JO & 1 - & cqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqq sooooqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqpqqqqqqqqqqqqq I & TheTIome of 5 Hamburgers WISHES BEST OF LUCK TO SIGMA NU! o- coqqqoqqqqqqqyqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqvqqqqqqqqqqq’q WOODRUFF DAIRY SUCCESS Federal Ave Phone 864 Ice Cream Specialties for Parties SIGMA NU’ WE OFFER 70 TO UTAH STATE’S CHAPTER of SIGMA NU JOHN WILSON YOU CONGRATULATIONS 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DESERVES CONGRATULATIONS SIGMA NU lO V hr O’ - - :WE OFFER WISHING SIGMA NU - " ' THE BEST! f t j Special Party Caterers - The “KEY’kMah iat AL’S BIKE & SPORT ECCLES HOTEL i ' (U CONGRATULAIONS 15000 Keys in Stock 46 West 1st North — Phone I j jKoggsggggqqqqgqoggqgoopqobqvgqgMiiiggsgg'M j ACHIEVEMENT DESERVES SUCCESS AND BEST WISHES TO SIGMANU--- - PWSIPMANU- GEORGE B EV! t WiCKEL S r s ffit i (hi ill Mtmm I 4 Yf i’t X i t v ’ e MiinoHHMHiHi Sii ' f j i! i ' l ' ! - Hi H ’ n ’v’ v i All Makes of Typewriters iumt H J j i j&qqqqqqqqqqqqqqqgqqqqqgqqWqqqqqgqgqiifr 'if WE’RE HAPPY TO OFFER SIGMA NU ’ CONGRATULATIONS ' Congratulations Sigma Nu Your tionMembirs forever in pictures DEGN & BRUNSON Repaired Rented Sold - noqaosoqqqqqqqqqqgqqqqq'i'aqqftqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqgqqqfts ’'“‘-- HI ‘‘Portraits of Personality” 5 SMITH CLOTHING CO “Becker Distributor” —— AAI f ft 3- CARDON JEWRLRY CHARLES OLSEN —w vs A r BEST WISHES $$0iOiSiqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqq'qqqqqq$$I$'-I1II''N'S- f v : 24- ftiebon CONGRATULATION SIGMA NU ! ' t qooaooooqqqqqqoooqqqoqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqftgdyw Meet EnglishclubClub To will be tr ‘The place where eollege’TSEtfpftrmeet1 EXPRESSES A HEARTY $qqqqqoqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqnqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqpqq!6tt R ReyProfessor and nolds were dinner guests at the Kappa Delta house on Sunday meeting English held Tueeday evening January 31 at 7:80 p m at tha home of Miss Charlotte Kyle A program that merits the attendance of every member ia being prepared Thoee planning to Attend pleoae contact Mary Paterson Grace Jensen ft ft Success! i Special weekend guests at the n Kappa Delta house were Maur-iMurdock Alice Todd' Bonnie Ashby and Mary Veone Riggs officers of the BYU student body and Mias Fern Fisher who is a teacher at the McCammon high school & & & CASPER’S Congratulations to Sigma Nu and Best Wishes for Continued Special Guests Mrs H tK francs and the counYet there war try is ready for seems to be no need to chastize neighbors! If the United States covering almost an entire continent could play "hands off’ as well as these people amidst the growling cats and dogs - it should be highly profitable But if I don't go to bed now Ralph will have to insert an extra “ sheet into Student-LifYours George "Piranian ) o- - - January CHOCOLATES his neighbor for he values TO ing well more than being better Ice than all others Nor does he go ! into the houses of his acquain-tananctheir to carry away children and to eat them or take TO his neighbors’ slaves by force v that they may serve him for ! SIGMA he says to himself: “This is not Q the business of man but this is it to live well” Pupils Work Precisely oqqggg$gqooq oq° o o Here are four million people 0 c 0 c c 0 0 g g 0 0 0 g o g o g g $ $ g g g g $ g $ g $ $ $ $ g thousand within forty living square kilometers speaking four " and languages without quarrel S each attending to his work Higher education is difficult to atTO tain But visiting a seventh-grpd- e geometry class I observed that !r the object of the class was less 3 4 i ( i? that the teacher should Inculcate conof methods the principles and structing triangles than that the pupils should acquire the ability to work precisely and rigorously o " when the temptation is to judge Qooooqqqqqqqqgqqqqqqqgqq siqqqqqfrssfrsfrsfrqqqqqqqqq a$ainqqqqqpqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqq6'qqqqq‘Aqq'— I— - — from the appearances $qqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqq Lear Trade At Young Age r For the overwhelming majority ’SIGMA the of Swiss boys and girls eighth or ninth year of school marks the end of formal education It is customary to go about learn- - ed: J Robert Bullock eirminent commander Jack Malin lieutenMelvin Greaves ant' commander recorder Richard Hill' chaplln George Tanner marshall Raleigh William’ sentinel Gavin Goudie Finch house manager’ Ray Bill Ball treasurer reporter McClister alumni conGeorge’ twenty-fou- r S be- Brigham Young would hearily approve of such a plan Voiced Appreciation At the close of his visit here Mr Rogers voiced his appreciation for the treatment which he and the other guests from the “Y” had received here: Friendly Spirit "We have never before had a more appreciative audience nor more courtesy and delightful enshown to us The tertainment friendly spirit between the Utah Is rarely something colleges found among state schools These exchange assemblies were a novel idea to the rest of the nation and have received a great deal of publicity Because of this friendly spirit I am sure that the three student bodies can unite to make student opinion within the state a real force” At the first meeting of Sigma Nu the f'ollowing men were elect- tactor (I had to pay delinquency-taxes- ’ AjyitP N SNAPPY SERVICE (Continued From Page One) (Continued From Page One t BRAND NEO-QUIXOTI- the speaker at the History S C able-bodi- Lewis Suffers Moral Defeat On the other hand the CIO setbacks suffered some serious The steel industry resisted organa ization Ford won at least moral victory from the union men Public resentment was kindof led against the ruthlessness n strike and the the organization campaign that say The best guessers labor must soon present a united front if it is to maintain a position of importance They say that if anyone compromises it must Friday night at a special meeting be the American Federation of Grant Decker Ed Noyes Elmer Labor veteran of half a century Don of industrial conflict Green Lynn Richardson Wright BOl Murdock and Floyd They say that the average man Brown will be formally initiated in- condones Lewis’s end condemns his to Phi Kappa Iota his means yet recognizes tremendous power Announced SUBSTITUTE Denfensive System Strong And never before had I thought that a country could stand so firmly on a basis of realistic politics as does Switzerland without resorting to national ambition The Swiss defensive system is strong 'man is trained every arity Speaker Is THE (TANDY THAT HAS NO living-quarte- junior ed president of the Speech Arts club at the meeting Tuesday to succeed Miss Irma Smith The club was organized in the fall of 1936 by the speech students under the sponsorship of Professor C J Myers The club meets every Tuesday at 12 o’clock in the Little Theatre Membership in the club is open to all persons interested in hcarin or presenting various types of pro grams with students and faculty appearing on these programs - Elections be Then came the industrial revolution and with it the factory system and the first evidence that craft unions could not organize the whole labor group The AL of L was based on craft union principles Lewis Wants Craft Unions that a Mr Lewis contended mnpority of America’s 35000000 vtrkers could not be organized if the craft union system were continued He pointed out that all the carpenters could organize into a union but that there was no agency for the organizing of the or automobile The CIO he said had the only alternative plan — the lumping of all automobile workers into the United Automobile Workers an industrial union which overlooked the old craft union classifications Decrease In Union Membership Furthermore Mr Lewis contended that the federation had failed to take advantage of its and organize opportunities to that during the 15 years preceding the CIO suspension in 1935 the federation had suffered a steady decrease in membership Public opinion said that when John L Lewis forced the suspension of his labor group he was heading the CIO for oblivion But they reckoned without the tremendous ability organizing which the tall heapy fiery coalminer had They could not enfis-io- n drive in him the ruthless which brought his union to a position of power— if not popul- Today At (hie La-vo- Sorority-Fraternit- y not could craft guilds ing a trade after the fifteenth in who And those birthday Logan would later get a bit of Botany Department a dose of with Chaucer a little dabbling sodium carbonate and sulfuric acid and a smell of the Library-buildin- g - intellectualism they! being jn Switzerland instead of in Logan turrt all their powbrs to account in a course of professional or training Switzerland A Modern Nation As a result the Swiss ncoijlc have fine churches good theatres inexpensive concerts efficient systems of transportation comfortable national literature and all the other things to be enjoyed that pertain to civilization to a degree that one would never expect to find in a so densely populated region of the there are earth True enough but factions and disagreements as a whole 'the Swiss people can be pointed out to the world as a sound nation living neither in filthy communism nor under cruel fascism but and unscrupulous truly a republic This not a city like Sparta but a modern nation! br 4 I V' j" Hopssmcriu s'? ! pr-o-? vO(? v X- - a - ' t' Vi 1 ' i M " w |