The Handout (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, April 16, 1926 Page: 1 of 4
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i-33
\
Orchestra And Glee
Clubs Make Tour Of
Nearby Towns on Trip
\ II r*
Member of the Texas Intercollegiate Press Association
Volume 12
THE HANDOUT
Sophomores Will Cele-
brate Class Week As
Last One In April
S
Published Weekly by Student Body of Texas Woman's College
friday, april 16, 1926
_jS5bi
NUMBER 23
iRPHFSTRA GAFS Y- W.c. A. Will Install j former twc girls on Registrar Back From
TUTmcntv BAD ! New 0fficers So°n H0N0R c™' AT SMUi School In Kentucky
>rnrTTt T"'*•c■ wnl Send Detef"» To
CONCERT TOUR A"m''1„HlTkl£sferen"
Three former students of Texas |
Woman's College, Ruth Carney, Ver-|A Universal Problem Which All
non; Virgie Parks, Clifton, and i
lAppcar In Alvord On First
Night Out; Play In Henrietta,
Bowie, Nocona And Wichita
Glee Club Leaves Soon
Installations of the ''new officers
Marguerite Bass, Walnut Springs, j
have been elected to the Woman's;
Registrars Have To Meet is
That Of College Grading
of the V. W. C. A. will be held Honor Council of Southern Method-
ist University, Dallas.
Ruth was made president in an
election held March 20. This is
the first time that a girl has been
soon, according to present cabinet
members.
Lucille Thurston, Fortales, N. M.,
will be president for the coining year;
Stella Rucker, Cisco, vice ■president;
— I Laura Fa ye Wilson, Cisco, secretary; i elected president of the Woman's
leader And Vocal Soloist Make Charleen Elder, Kilgore, treasurer, j council during her first year in
Trin With Groun Directed !ttm' 1)a'sy Jones, Iowa Park, g( jj. Marguerite and Virgie
n n t url v«ni h j undergraduate representative. were elected junior representatives.
By Dean Carl \ enth Lucille Thurston is secretary of
j the Scholarship Society, secretary to
registrar, member of Life Service
Members of the orchestra, Dean
! Band, S. M. K,, and the junior class.
The Honor Council has authority
over all the girls in the dormitories.
Last year Ruth and Virgie were
/enth, Dr. l.eath and several fine stella Rucker, Laure Faye Wilson sophomores in T. W. C. and Mar-
lit. member1-:, left Thursday morn- j arid Charleeri Elder are members of; guerite was a ireshman. Kuth was
pig for a concert tour. The Glee | the Koro Society. Charleen is also|a member ot the Life Service Band,
Jlub will make a tour next'Week.
On Thursday night the orchestra
members gave a concert in Alvord.
U program was given in Bowie this
j one of the business managers of the j secretary and treasurer of the soph-
Txwoco for next year. Daisy Lee omore class; secretary and tieas-
Jones is an S. M. K. and a member!urer l'10 Y. W. (,, A.; representa-
of the Scholarship Society. As un-1 tiye of the legislative board '24-'25;
dergraduate representative she keeps member of0 the sophomore baseball
the local organization posted on work
of other Y. W. C. A.'a.
Margaret Everhart, Whitewright,
is chairman of the program commit-
tee, and Louise Lanham, Slaton, chair-
man of recreational comtflttee. Opier
members of the commito
btf1 appointed later.
Each year the Y. \V. C.' A. elec-
tion is held in the spring. The cabi-
net takes .office at, tljisNjnfe and
presides- until., the next^spripg elec-
tion. ' ' i
In Mont'ene Arkansas, June 11-
21, the regular summer conference
of the Y. W. C. A. organizations of
Arkansas, Texas, Oklahoma and Mis-
souri will be held. T. W. C. will
ht\ve at least one delegate to this
conference of. which it is a member.
This conference composed of the
four states, Arkansas, Texas, Okla-
homa and Missouri is known as the
"atom" from the first letter .of each
state it represents. It is only one
of the many conferences of the Y. W.
i C. A. held at different places in the
United States.
. Last year T, W. ^ did not belong
QllOted In IVLa§faZinC ! conference and the delegates
of the local Y. W .C. A. met with
I Does Not Win Prize But Gains a group in Estcs Park, Colorado
Recognition As Author Of Maurine Phifer, Normangee, and
jnorning in chapel. 6Saturday<f»pight
they will play in Henrietta. Sunday
(morning and Sunday night they will
Live :i sacred concert in Nocona and
Wichita Falls.
The soloists for the tour are:
I Louise ^Mentals, violin; Orline Bur-
row, violinfJ Dorotffy Eilenburger,
roice; Margaret Jackson, reader.
The members rtf the orchestra are:
[Roberta. Dedman, piano; Bennie Bur-
row, clarinet; Orline Burrow, Ruth j ,
IChristiansen, Dorothy Eilenburger,
Irhclma Hart, Margaret Jackson,
Janice Jones, Louise Mantius and
Louis Muller, violins.
Next week the Gle©„club will sing
(a Itasca, Hil'lsboro, Hubbard, Grand-
view and Midlothian. On last
Wednesday night some of the mem-
[bersi gave a program in Sanger.
" o
[Silviana Coronado Is
C. M. Howard, registrar, and pro-
fessor of mathematics, returned
Tuesday from Lexington, Ivy., where
he attended a ten-day*' school for
registra rs.
Three courses that Mr. Howard
chose for' special study were: "Uni-
versity Administration," taught by
Dr. McVeigh, president of Univer-
sity of Kentucky; School Survey,
by Dr. Reeves, professor of educa-
tion, University of Kentucky; "Pro-
fessional Duties and Problems of
Registrars," by Professor Gillis, regy
istrar of University of Kentucky.
The most universal problem regis-
trars have to meet, reports Mr,
Howard, is the problem of college
grading. The lack of uniform stan-
dards for student rating is the ques-
tion of greatest importance before
the registrars at this time.
Miss Catherine Arnold, Hood Col-
lege for Women, Frederick, Mary-
land, gave an interesting lecture on
"Colleges in the Near East." A
lecture by Sister Olivet, registrar of
the Loretta Normal Schools, founded
in the early eighteenth century, gave
a report on the complete record kept
in their various schools of all their
teachers since the opening of the
school. These are Catholic schools
for girls and ..are situated all
,Play Hours On Campus °™r Unltcd St"'es- EachWn
J school has an annalist who compiles
and corrects records each year.
team, member of the Glee Club;
member of the pep squad, elected
the Most Typical College Girl in
1925, and elected business manager
of the Txwoco for 192G.
Virgie was a member of the
Korosophian Literary Society. Mar-
guerite was freshman tennis cap-
tain and a member of the Korosoph-
ian Literary Society.
o
Group Will Organize
MRS. WAGGONER
GIVES $10,000
FOR FINE ARTS
Fine Arts Auditorium Will Be
Gotten In Readiness
For May Fete
Plans Well Under Way
Gift Latest Of Several Given
For Building Purposes
Paper On Prohibition
Quotations from an essay on "Pro-
hibition in Mexico Will Insure the
[Future Success of the Republic,
written by Silviana Coronado, and
submitted to the intercollegiate Pro-
fhibition Association, appears In the
[April edition of "The International
| student."
This contest, open to students from
foreign countries attending univer-
sities and colleges in the United
States, was on the general theme,
"The"World Movement Against Al-
coholism." Each writer was free
to choose the particular topic under
the subject in which he was most
interested.
Although Silviana did not win a
prize, she was quoted several times
in "The International Student."
_o —
SIXTY STUDENTS ATTEND
CONCERT OF JOSE MOJICA • lege
Ella Snipes, Roswell, N. M„ were
the representatives.
o
"
PRESS CLUB MATERIAL
GOES TO HEADQUARTERS
All Press Club material, which is
to be entered in the annual contest"
of the Texas Inter-Collegiate Press
Association, has been sent to ' the
headquarters of the organization.
The material consisted of a last
year's annual, four consecutive is-
sues of the Handout, a feature story,
an essay and a news story. This
material will be judged with similar
material from other colleges which
are members of the association and
prizes will be awarded to the 'Win-
ners.
The association will hold its an-
nual meeting in Brownwood at How-
ard Payne College. Several delegates
plan to g^ from Texas Woman's Col-
The delegate which is to
represent the college in the associa- j
tion will be elected soon.
o
To Secure Practice In Com-
munity Entertainment Is Pur-
pose Of Recreation Hour
•',>
Members of the playground class
will give and direct recreation hours
in each dormitory and in the Pan-
ther City Club room in the near
future. Two girls from the class
will conduct the entertainment in
the dormitories on different nights.
The class has completed the study
of kindergarten, primary, second-
ary and high school work, and they
have started the study of major
sports. Community recreation is in-
cluded in the study of major atli'-
letics. To secure .practice in com-
munity entertainment is the reason
the girls will conduct the dormitory
recreational hour according to Miss
Lorena Parrish, instructor in physical
education.
The class is planning to invite the
people of Polytechnic to a recrea-
tional hour on the campus with the
playground workers as hostesses.
"This will give the girls experience
in handling a mixed group of peo-
ple, both old and young," states
Miss Parrish.
B O
At this meeting, registrars at-
tended from thirteen different states.
Miss Schultz, secretary of the regis
On Wednesday,- April 14, President
H. E. Stout received a check foe
$10,000 from Mrs. Ann Waggoner,
which mone^ -to bo toipj. to fur-
nish and equip the Fine Arte Audi-
torium in the Ann Waggoner Fine
Arts Building.
The spacious auditorium mil be
furnished with opera chairs and the
floors and walls will bo refinished.
The choir lofts on either side of the
stage will be changed into dressing-
rooms and the organ will be moved
from the stage. An orchestra pit
will be built and various persons,
studyfhg and noting the changes, say
that the auditorium, when completed,
will be one of the best in the city..
It is thought that', with rapid work,
the auditorium will be ready for the
initial opening the latter part, of
May, at which time the May fete will
be given.
This is by no means Mrs. Wag-
goner's first gift to the College. A
number of years ago she gave $8,000
toward the remodeling of Ann Wag-
trar of West Texas State Teachers i goner Hall. Dan Waggoner Hall,
College, and Registrar Howard of
Texas Woman's College, were the
only ones attending from Texas.
BASEBALL GAMES WITH
T. C. U. TEAM CANCELLED
Over sixty students of Texas
Woman's College attended the con- PPATF1^ ATTEND
evening inTheXtUt0auditoHumay| CONFERENCE IN TEMPLE
Spanish. He was accompanied at the: structor and Vera Tutiumova *tu
piano by Troy Sanders. For his Span-, dent in . • wi npi meet
ish folk and love songs, Senior Mo-1 graft, at the s.xteentli_«»nual ^
i f o <?tv»nish: imr of the Central Texas Coniei-
wore rt COStUme °f " P !ence M. E. Church, South, which
meets April 28-30, Wt the First
Methodist Church, Temple, Texas.
Miss Mann wilLJiave charge of the
devotional setgNf ort Friday eve-
Hei' sulpt will be, "PcHow-
Cavalier of the early nineteenth cen-
tury. This costume was trimmed in
silver ornaments, some o^, which
were old family heirlooms.
Amonj/ the selections were songs
"Tfom Tour different Spanish coun- _ ^
! tries. Columbia, Argentine, Spain ship \VM God. k^ollece
and Mexico. The encores were trans- Vergil speak
ning.
in America and of how
lations of popular Spanish songs,; lite heie
such as Marcheta and La Paloma. ! she came to be m school in T. W. C,
WEEKLY CALENDAR
"
Friday, April 16:
T. W. C. radio concert.
Friday-Saturday, April lt!-17:
Dean Isely attends biological
meeting at 'tJenton.
Monday, April 19:
*Miss Hammock's recital.
Madame Schumann-Heink sings.
Tuesday, April 20:
Fine Arts recital, Minnie Willis
recital.
Kecititl, Margaret W. Jackson
and Sunshine Richter.
Wednesday, April 21:
Fine Arts rectal, Minnie "Willis
and Mrs. Londie Emerson.
Thursday, April 22:
Emily Phillips' recital.
Friday, April 23:
Pauline Buck's recital.
Monday, April 28:
Fine Arts recital.
Wednesday, April 28:
Debate with Weslcyan Institute
(Marion McCaslin's team).
Cancellations of the series of
baseball games to be played be-
tween Texas Woman's College and
Texas Christian University in the
spring have been made. The track
meet, which was to have taken place
on the T. W. C. campus, has also
been called off!
The baseball games will not bo
played because it has been impos-
sible for the T. W. C. squad to prac-
tice, according to Miss Lorena Par-
rish, instructor in physical educa-
tion. Work has started on the May
Fete and ns a number of the team
belong to the Glee Club or to the
orchestra they will make the tours
planned for tho two groups.
"We can not have any .out-door
sports ns long as the weather con-
tinues as it is now, and for this
reason the track meet will not take
place as planned, the tennis tourna-
ment may not be held, and the
swimming u.pool can not yet be
opened," states Miss Parrish.
!—o
LAYMEN HAVE BANQUET
IN COLLEGE DINING ROOM
<*'
in memory of her husband, was built
with the $25,000 which she gave. The
first gift during the present admint
istratiOlxcanSe as $30,000 for the Ann
Waggoner. Fijio Arts Building, which
was opened in 1923. In 1925 she
gave $10,000 for operating expenses
of the college.
"The president and the board of
trustees," said President Stout, "have
already expressed their gratitude to
Mrs. Waggoner for her generous
gifts to the institution. We wish to
add our floral offerings of kindly
words together with the thousands
of young women who will rise up
and call her blessed."
o
Classes Visit Fakes
To See Rug' Weaving
Factory Representative Lectures
As Rug Loom Is Demon-
strated To Visitors
"Come in and see the shuttles fly"
was an invitation accepted by the
2f)-A interior decoration and 32-1
clothing "classes of the home eco-
nomics department oh ^^lesday,
April 13. The occasion was an edu-
cational display of rug weaving, ex-
hibiting the Whittall Loom at Fakes
and Company, Sixth, Seventh and
Throckmorton Streets, Fort Worth.
At' n banquet given in the dining
room of Texas Woman's College
Tuesday at 7:30 p. m„ laymen of
Polytechnic Methodist Church made
reports
lC1Each member of the classes was
Jrequired 'To. take notes on the le*e-
£" ture givtfn by Henry Coley, factory
representative, who demonstrated tha
operation of the machine. The lec-
ture consisted of an explanation
eports on their work in the capi^ ^ the weaving process of the loom
paign begun. Friday for the collec- emphasis on^he^'Kidde^ _qual-
j tion of money due on the church
note. p
Approximately $2,800 is still to be
raised arid Rev. C. Q. Smith, pastor,
states that he believes it can bo done
by April 18.
The campaign thus Tar has' been
carried on by the stewards with the
assistance of one worker each. Lists
ot' church members were assigned
to ench steward and worker last
Friday r.ight.
ity in fine rugs, a factor omitted in
those cheaply made. The loom,
the only rug loom ever constructed
for educational purposes, has been
indorsed by colleges, schools and
(Sivic organizations.
"This exhibition is truly worth
your while. You should p!#u to
see it if possible," stated Miss Ann®
Lois Burdette, professor of horn*
economics.
o . ,
It
¥
•a*
M«i J
.. A. \ i t_ l 1 _ .
ty, Lois Bracewell, Minnie Bedford
onturuuy, junv a:
Summer school be sins.
Miss Katherine McKee Bailey and
t«u T?ll™ Ton,, f I..J
thes
N i those
float a
Nine girls from the training school I grace, making the sw
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Robinson, Elizabeth. The Handout (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 25, Ed. 1 Friday, April 16, 1926, newspaper, April 16, 1926; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth415966/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas Wesleyan University.