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Daily Iowan, April 10, 1919
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Thursday, April 10, 1919 THE DAILY IOWAN STATE UNIVERSITY OF IOWA PAGE THREE SOCIETY AND PERSONAL Dr. Carl E. Seashore, head of the [psychology?] department, will speak at the freshman lectures today. Frances Garris, Delta Zeta, has [gone?] to Urbana, Ill., to attend the [national?] convention of the Bethany [unreadable]. Evelyn Bracewell, Tri-Delt, when [to?] Des Moines Tuesday to attend the [unreadable]-Curci concert there that evening. Pledges of Delta Gamma sorority will entertain the members at a dancing party at the Burkley Imperial [Friday?] evening. Mr. and Mrs. Leroy [unreadable] and Mrs. M. Ellis will chaperone. [Eileen?] Galvin, junior, is attending classes again after an absence of several days on account of illness. Isabel Naureth, , Alpha Theta, is attending classes after an absence of a week because of illness. Dean W.F. Russell, of the college of education, and Prof. C.C. Nutting, of the department of zoology, will [lecture?] today and Friday at the Cedar [County?] teachers’ institute at Tipton. Dr. and Mrs. Erling Thoen will [chaperon?] at the Belgian Relief dance [in?] the park pavilion Saturday evening. Dora Ohde is visiting in Chicago this week. Phi Delta Chi initiated Tuesday night. David Richardson of Davenport has returned to the University after a two weeks’illness. Daniel Sinclair is ill, suffering from a fall which he received in the gymnasium. Sociological Forum will meet Thursday evening at 7:30 in room [unreadable] L.A. Ina Wilvert will lead the discussion on “Unemployment and its [remedies?].” Any student interested is invited to come and take part.. Mrs. Nellie S. Aurner, dean of women, who has been in Mercy hospital for the last two weeks, was taken to her home Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Aurner has been suffering from a [severe?] case of pleurisy. Lillian Ten Eyck, sophomore this year in the University has accepted a grade position in the Fort Madison schools. Mildred Puffett ‘18 has accepted a position in the high school at [Manil?]. Norman Ringstrom, graduate student in education, has been appointed superintendent of the Charter Oak schools. The Music Study club met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Pratt on Melrose avenue yesterday afternoon. The program consisted of pipe organ numbers. Catherine Timby of Charles City is visiting at Pi Beta Phi house. Veda Miller, a former student, will spend the week end at the Gamma Phi Beta house. Dr. F.A. Roe and daughter [Dor?] of Burlington are visiting Ethel and Miriam Roe at the Alpha Xi Delta house. Marion Smith, Tri-Delt will spend the week end at the morning with her father, who is a member of the Thirty-eighth General Assembly. Elizabeth Malloy of Fort Dodge left Tuesday after visiting her [neices] Grace and Gertrude Malloy at the Kappa house. Sigma Pi entertained at a formal dancing party in the Burkley Imperial ballroom last Saturday night. Josephine Hutcheson and Josephine Plattenburg a cedar rabbit spent the weekend at the Tri-Delt house. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Thurston are visiting Mr. and Mrs. J.R. Eyre. Mr. Thurston received his LL. B. here in 1902. FORMER STUDENT BACK FROM ITALY Lieut. Verle Van Zele Visits University—Has Served Overseas as Aviator Lieut. Verle Van Zele, graduate of the college of dentistry, in 1916, and demonstrator in the dental school the following year, has just returned from seventeen months of active service as an aviator on the Italian and French fronts. Lieut. Van Zele was a demonstrator in operative and dental anatomy technique, when he left in May, 1917, for the first officers’ training camp at Fort Snelling. On his uniform Lieut. Van Zele wears the Italian service stripe and also the insignia of the Italian aviator which is a set of gold wings, worn on the left sleeve. He also wears two gold chevrons on his left sleeve and had he been in France one month more he would have been entitled to three. Genesea, Ill. is the home of Lieutenant Van Zele, who left Fort Snelling, before the course was completed, to enter an aviation school at Princeton University. He was sent in September, 1917, to France where he received additional training in an aviation school. Here he was commissioned first lieutenant. He went to a sea coast town in southern Italy. Lieutenant Van [Zerle?] served nine months on the Italian front as a pilot on a Capronie bombing plane, and later served eight months in France. He was engaged in night bombing in the Piave offensive, and was one of the [firs] [tthirty]-five Americans sent to Italy. Lieutenant Van Zele arrived in this country the latter part of February, and remained in New York several weeks. He is still in the aviation reserve corps and is not likely to receive his discharge for some time. Lieutenant Zele will return to Geneseo the latter part of this week. Is a member of Psi Omega fraternity. NEED MANY MORE BOOKS FOR OVERSEAS SERVICE The American Library Association is sending out urgent calls for books for soldiers. There is a great need for both recreational and educational books for the overseas service. Any donations brought to the University library will be forwarded at once. Do not put this off till a more convenient time—Do it now. [advertisement] NORTHWESTERN TEACHERS’ AGENCY FOR ENTIRE WEST AND ALASKA—THE LARGEST AND BEST AGENCY Write immediately for free circular BOISE IDAHO JOURNALISM STUDENTS TO ATTEND MEETING College Press Association Holds Annual Meeting Friday and Saturday at Colfax At least twenty people from the University who are interested in journalism will leave tomorrow morning at 7:45 for Colfax to attend the annual meeting of the Iowa College Press Association. Those who have announced their intention of being present at this convention are: Mildred Whitcomb, Marion Smith, Ruth Rogers, Nancy Lamb, Romola Latchem, Dorothy Lingham, Mary Rice, Bruce Stewart, Marian Dyer, Elizabeth Hendee, Ruth Huntington, Earl Wells, Charles Brown, Ralph Overholser, Alan Nichols, Vergil Hancher, Earl Hall, Keith Hamill, Frank B. Thayer, Thomas C. Murphy, J. Mel Hickerson, Earl Culver, and Kenneth Noble. An excellent program has been arranged for the occasion. W.E. Battinfield, managing editor of the D morning News; W.H. Powell, editor of the Ottumwa Courier; Charles H. Mitchell, editor of the Storm Lake Pilot-Tribune; and Lee A. White, editorial secretary of the Detroit News and editor of the Quill have been secured as speakers. Frank B. Thayer head of the work in journalism here, will speak on “The College Newspaper,” and Mildred E. Whitcomb, editor of the Daily Iowan will have for her subject, “The Woman as Editor.” Other features of the program will be a production of Stephen Leacock’s, “The First Newspaper,” by the Ames dramatic club, and a concert by the Women’s Glee club of Coe college. J.M. Darling (Ding) the famous cartoonist will give a talk Friday evening. It is expected that twenty colleges of the state will be represented at the convention. Ames and Grinnell will be there with a large delegation. Morningside college and Drake university, neither of which have been represented before, will send delegates this year. R.C. Moore, state geologist of Kansas, visited here Monday, Coe vs. Iowa this afternoon. Coe vs. Iowa this afternoon. Coe vs. Iowa this afternoon. [advertisement] We will employ a few bright resourceful young men for a good vigorous job this summer paying $500 or more apiece. Apply to P.O. Box 280, Iowa City. [emblem] UNDER GOVERNMENT SUPERVISION THE TEST An April comes the real test of Americanism— the Fifth Liberty Loan. There is not likely to be much flag-waving, red fire and martial music attached to this campaign. Citizens are not going to sign up for their share because they are swept off their feet by patriotic impulses induced by brass bands and fireworks. They are going to buy bonds because they know that this country needs money to pay for the war just one. They are going to buy bonds first, because they are patriots, second, because Uncle Sam makes it profitable to be patriots. In April we are going to find out who the real blue Americans are. FIRST NATIONAL BANK [emblem] MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM O, RECKLESS YOUTH Shades of Trotzky! Ghosts of Savanarola! Echoes of Patrick Henry! Listen to this—“TONIGHT WE ARE GOING TO DANCE UNTILL TWELVE O’CLOCK. STICK BY THE SHIP. DON’T GET COLD FEET. UNITED WE STAND, DIVIDED WE FALL.”—it is from the Ames students reply to a recent ruling of their Board of Deans that all college dances must terminate at the modest hour of 11:15. It happens in the best regulated colleges. [advertisement] PASTIME THEATRE Today and Tomorrow BESSIE BARRISCALE in “ALL OF A SUDDEN NORMA” Also 2 reel comedy—Ford Travelogue. ADMISSION 15c [advertisement] Englert Theatre TO-NIGHT’S THE NIGHT OF NIGHTS To See AMERICA’S GREATEST MUSICAL SHOW Klaw & Erlanger’s Supreme Musical Comedy Success Miss Spring Time by Kalman, Bolton, Wodehouse; Staged by Mitchell; Scened by Urban; with a Notable Cast, Chorus, Production, and Orchestra. Despite big advance sale there are still good seats to be obtained. PRICES; 50c to $2.00 [advertisement] Tickets $1.00 plus war tax On Sale at Whetstones Belgian Relief Dance City Park Pavilion Auspices of Delta Gamma SATURDAY APRIL 12
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Thursday, April 10, 1919 THE DAILY IOWAN STATE UNIVERSITY OF IOWA PAGE THREE SOCIETY AND PERSONAL Dr. Carl E. Seashore, head of the [psychology?] department, will speak at the freshman lectures today. Frances Garris, Delta Zeta, has [gone?] to Urbana, Ill., to attend the [national?] convention of the Bethany [unreadable]. Evelyn Bracewell, Tri-Delt, when [to?] Des Moines Tuesday to attend the [unreadable]-Curci concert there that evening. Pledges of Delta Gamma sorority will entertain the members at a dancing party at the Burkley Imperial [Friday?] evening. Mr. and Mrs. Leroy [unreadable] and Mrs. M. Ellis will chaperone. [Eileen?] Galvin, junior, is attending classes again after an absence of several days on account of illness. Isabel Naureth, , Alpha Theta, is attending classes after an absence of a week because of illness. Dean W.F. Russell, of the college of education, and Prof. C.C. Nutting, of the department of zoology, will [lecture?] today and Friday at the Cedar [County?] teachers’ institute at Tipton. Dr. and Mrs. Erling Thoen will [chaperon?] at the Belgian Relief dance [in?] the park pavilion Saturday evening. Dora Ohde is visiting in Chicago this week. Phi Delta Chi initiated Tuesday night. David Richardson of Davenport has returned to the University after a two weeks’illness. Daniel Sinclair is ill, suffering from a fall which he received in the gymnasium. Sociological Forum will meet Thursday evening at 7:30 in room [unreadable] L.A. Ina Wilvert will lead the discussion on “Unemployment and its [remedies?].” Any student interested is invited to come and take part.. Mrs. Nellie S. Aurner, dean of women, who has been in Mercy hospital for the last two weeks, was taken to her home Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Aurner has been suffering from a [severe?] case of pleurisy. Lillian Ten Eyck, sophomore this year in the University has accepted a grade position in the Fort Madison schools. Mildred Puffett ‘18 has accepted a position in the high school at [Manil?]. Norman Ringstrom, graduate student in education, has been appointed superintendent of the Charter Oak schools. The Music Study club met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Pratt on Melrose avenue yesterday afternoon. The program consisted of pipe organ numbers. Catherine Timby of Charles City is visiting at Pi Beta Phi house. Veda Miller, a former student, will spend the week end at the Gamma Phi Beta house. Dr. F.A. Roe and daughter [Dor?] of Burlington are visiting Ethel and Miriam Roe at the Alpha Xi Delta house. Marion Smith, Tri-Delt will spend the week end at the morning with her father, who is a member of the Thirty-eighth General Assembly. Elizabeth Malloy of Fort Dodge left Tuesday after visiting her [neices] Grace and Gertrude Malloy at the Kappa house. Sigma Pi entertained at a formal dancing party in the Burkley Imperial ballroom last Saturday night. Josephine Hutcheson and Josephine Plattenburg a cedar rabbit spent the weekend at the Tri-Delt house. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Thurston are visiting Mr. and Mrs. J.R. Eyre. Mr. Thurston received his LL. B. here in 1902. FORMER STUDENT BACK FROM ITALY Lieut. Verle Van Zele Visits University—Has Served Overseas as Aviator Lieut. Verle Van Zele, graduate of the college of dentistry, in 1916, and demonstrator in the dental school the following year, has just returned from seventeen months of active service as an aviator on the Italian and French fronts. Lieut. Van Zele was a demonstrator in operative and dental anatomy technique, when he left in May, 1917, for the first officers’ training camp at Fort Snelling. On his uniform Lieut. Van Zele wears the Italian service stripe and also the insignia of the Italian aviator which is a set of gold wings, worn on the left sleeve. He also wears two gold chevrons on his left sleeve and had he been in France one month more he would have been entitled to three. Genesea, Ill. is the home of Lieutenant Van Zele, who left Fort Snelling, before the course was completed, to enter an aviation school at Princeton University. He was sent in September, 1917, to France where he received additional training in an aviation school. Here he was commissioned first lieutenant. He went to a sea coast town in southern Italy. Lieutenant Van [Zerle?] served nine months on the Italian front as a pilot on a Capronie bombing plane, and later served eight months in France. He was engaged in night bombing in the Piave offensive, and was one of the [firs] [tthirty]-five Americans sent to Italy. Lieutenant Van Zele arrived in this country the latter part of February, and remained in New York several weeks. He is still in the aviation reserve corps and is not likely to receive his discharge for some time. Lieutenant Zele will return to Geneseo the latter part of this week. Is a member of Psi Omega fraternity. NEED MANY MORE BOOKS FOR OVERSEAS SERVICE The American Library Association is sending out urgent calls for books for soldiers. There is a great need for both recreational and educational books for the overseas service. Any donations brought to the University library will be forwarded at once. Do not put this off till a more convenient time—Do it now. [advertisement] NORTHWESTERN TEACHERS’ AGENCY FOR ENTIRE WEST AND ALASKA—THE LARGEST AND BEST AGENCY Write immediately for free circular BOISE IDAHO JOURNALISM STUDENTS TO ATTEND MEETING College Press Association Holds Annual Meeting Friday and Saturday at Colfax At least twenty people from the University who are interested in journalism will leave tomorrow morning at 7:45 for Colfax to attend the annual meeting of the Iowa College Press Association. Those who have announced their intention of being present at this convention are: Mildred Whitcomb, Marion Smith, Ruth Rogers, Nancy Lamb, Romola Latchem, Dorothy Lingham, Mary Rice, Bruce Stewart, Marian Dyer, Elizabeth Hendee, Ruth Huntington, Earl Wells, Charles Brown, Ralph Overholser, Alan Nichols, Vergil Hancher, Earl Hall, Keith Hamill, Frank B. Thayer, Thomas C. Murphy, J. Mel Hickerson, Earl Culver, and Kenneth Noble. An excellent program has been arranged for the occasion. W.E. Battinfield, managing editor of the D morning News; W.H. Powell, editor of the Ottumwa Courier; Charles H. Mitchell, editor of the Storm Lake Pilot-Tribune; and Lee A. White, editorial secretary of the Detroit News and editor of the Quill have been secured as speakers. Frank B. Thayer head of the work in journalism here, will speak on “The College Newspaper,” and Mildred E. Whitcomb, editor of the Daily Iowan will have for her subject, “The Woman as Editor.” Other features of the program will be a production of Stephen Leacock’s, “The First Newspaper,” by the Ames dramatic club, and a concert by the Women’s Glee club of Coe college. J.M. Darling (Ding) the famous cartoonist will give a talk Friday evening. It is expected that twenty colleges of the state will be represented at the convention. Ames and Grinnell will be there with a large delegation. Morningside college and Drake university, neither of which have been represented before, will send delegates this year. R.C. Moore, state geologist of Kansas, visited here Monday, Coe vs. Iowa this afternoon. Coe vs. Iowa this afternoon. Coe vs. Iowa this afternoon. [advertisement] We will employ a few bright resourceful young men for a good vigorous job this summer paying $500 or more apiece. Apply to P.O. Box 280, Iowa City. [emblem] UNDER GOVERNMENT SUPERVISION THE TEST An April comes the real test of Americanism— the Fifth Liberty Loan. There is not likely to be much flag-waving, red fire and martial music attached to this campaign. Citizens are not going to sign up for their share because they are swept off their feet by patriotic impulses induced by brass bands and fireworks. They are going to buy bonds because they know that this country needs money to pay for the war just one. They are going to buy bonds first, because they are patriots, second, because Uncle Sam makes it profitable to be patriots. In April we are going to find out who the real blue Americans are. FIRST NATIONAL BANK [emblem] MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM O, RECKLESS YOUTH Shades of Trotzky! Ghosts of Savanarola! Echoes of Patrick Henry! Listen to this—“TONIGHT WE ARE GOING TO DANCE UNTILL TWELVE O’CLOCK. STICK BY THE SHIP. DON’T GET COLD FEET. UNITED WE STAND, DIVIDED WE FALL.”—it is from the Ames students reply to a recent ruling of their Board of Deans that all college dances must terminate at the modest hour of 11:15. It happens in the best regulated colleges. [advertisement] PASTIME THEATRE Today and Tomorrow BESSIE BARRISCALE in “ALL OF A SUDDEN NORMA” Also 2 reel comedy—Ford Travelogue. ADMISSION 15c [advertisement] Englert Theatre TO-NIGHT’S THE NIGHT OF NIGHTS To See AMERICA’S GREATEST MUSICAL SHOW Klaw & Erlanger’s Supreme Musical Comedy Success Miss Spring Time by Kalman, Bolton, Wodehouse; Staged by Mitchell; Scened by Urban; with a Notable Cast, Chorus, Production, and Orchestra. Despite big advance sale there are still good seats to be obtained. PRICES; 50c to $2.00 [advertisement] Tickets $1.00 plus war tax On Sale at Whetstones Belgian Relief Dance City Park Pavilion Auspices of Delta Gamma SATURDAY APRIL 12
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