Michigan's Welcome to the Junior Hop Guests. The Junior--Hop Edition -1l4r > 1%WWI 11 IV n Lt Day I The DAILY Mailed for the Rest of the Year, $1.50. lr.,.r..... Vol. XXV-J-Hop Extra ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1915 Price, Five Cents RESURRECTED 1916 JUNIOR HOP BLAZES IN GORGEOUS RIOT OF COLOR IN CAMPUS FIRMAMENT By Carlton Jenks girl from the Pacific coast, sheathedI Impressionism, futurism and imag- ism gone mad could be the only verdict passed on sight at the opening tableau of the J-Hop, by leading exponents of those fascinating cults. It was as if some tropical sunset had been trans- posed to Waterman gymnasium and there a few more tints added to make a great delirious splash of color, never conceived of by the discoverer of the chromatic scale. Overhead a mantle of leafy green, contrasted here and there with great stars of a delicate pink, created the impression *of a tea garden along the Riviera, pervaded by a langourous sense of beauty and grace. And then to an extravagant harmony of color add the perfect harmony of music, and the picture is complete. No soft strains of music came floating down from a balcony, but wave after wave of stirring strains surged down in redundant effects as the band struck up the Victors. And students, who had marched down Harvard's hostile stad- ium to that same piece, followed a leader through the, intricate wander- ings of a grand march. Who is to say that their march was not as valiant a one as the padded gridiron warriors} performed? But an impending change felt in the very atmosphere of the room, surcharged with a feeling that surely could not find outlet in the formality of the march, and, as if in answer to this subconscious sentiment, the orchestra swung abruptly into the in a flaming gown of the tango red, was easily the cynosure for the greedy, restless eyes of the unhappily mated on the floor. That J-Hop was not only an occa- sion for enjoyment of the senses in; the dances, and of the intellect in theE Whispered frothing nothings that tra- dition bids one pass to one's partner. It was more truly a study in Fine Arts, the effect of the whole being so stu- pendous that even an ambitious Mich- ael Angelo would have paused aghast at the Herculean task of working out its reproduction. Perhaps a perfect har- mony of color would have been im- possible of achievement, for each gen- tle guest has her own ideas of the tint that shows off form, complexion and feature to greatest success, but out of that pandemonium of color some har- mony was actually wrought, and the grand result with the vari colored gowns of shapely feminine forms, and the sober black and white of the es- corts, with the green and pink of the over head decoration and the subdued illumination, created an artistic whole, tilat while perhaps not appealing to the hypercultivated senses of the aesthete was panaceatic boon of color for the less cultured and more human critics. Of course some fool rushed in where angels fear to tread and essayed the choice of the most beautiful hop girl, basing his judgment on the fine points of that American beauty appraised by aI Grand Duke. Assuming that GrandI and clusters of the same flower decked the skirt. Uneven strands of rhine- stones hung from the girdle reaching nearly to the hem of the skirt. The hair was coiffured after the custom or the period of 1830, brushed upon the crown of her head. The skirt, very, full was rather short giving a glimpse of silver slippers with little bows or old rose. The nosegay of lillies of the valley and pink rosebuds enlightened the effect of quaintness and of superb taste. What a pleasant sweet con- trast such a costume offered to an- other on the same floor, flaunted arro- gantly by its wearer in that gay tur- bulent mass of color! Here all that was daring was exploited for the sake of effect, in choice of color, in the low cut of gown, and the effect of cling- ing to a shape rather than being sm- ply fitted, all primordial, and surely not representative of the modern trend' of costuming, engendered by the mod- ern dance. Rather let us fill this role with the girl who made good taste and old fashioned styles rise rampant and successfully against the ultra modern tendency of the other. Much different in many ways was P:.:\NiSYLVA NIA'S RiELAY TEAM J4)ISTANCES MICIGAN QUARTET Pennsylvania's experienced runners were far too fleet for those whom Michigan. sent here to compete against them at the sixty-fifth armory games tonight. The Wolverines went back to Ann Arbor thoroughly whipped. "(Old Penn" won in the proverbial walk. Captain Harold Smith of Michigan alone proved a match for his man, J. e. Lockwood. They ran in the 220 yard division, and after alternating in the lead, Smith finished about two 'yards ahead of his competitor. W. E. murby was Michigan's candidate in the 440. fle was pie for F. Kaufman who ran in about 30 yards ahead of him, settling the victory for Pennsylvania. A. ..Dorsey stretched the lead for the Quakers in the half mile, and when Ted Meredith started the mile, Walter I-. Lynch was more than 50 yards behind him. UNAFILITEDJOIN 7IN HOP FESTIVITIES U nusual Number of Independent Men in Attendance at Juniors' Function PLAN SPECIAL ENTERTAIN fENTS More men, unaffiliated with frat- ernities and house clubs, than ever be- fore were in attendance at the J-Hop this year. In past years the number PILOTS GRANB MARCH FROM NEARA FAR, EACH LOCALITY SENDS ITS QUOTA OF MERRY MAKERS an impression of the hop after 12:00 of independents who attended the hop o'clok wmesnthe phas always been decidedly in the min- o'clock, when the growing popularity ority, but the number who were in at- of booths, and tiring feet drove all s tendance at last night's affair reached but the insatiable of dance devotees over the half hundred mark. This Is' one of the features of the "denatured" hop which has met with almost uni- versal approval. This greater attendance of inde- pendents was largely made possible through the efforts of Dean Myra . ;Beach Jordan, who provided for the Miss Hefen Oppermann, of Saginaw, who with R. C. Jeter, '16E, led the grand march last night, was especi- ally qualified to fill the duties of that position. She is considered to be one of the best dancers in the state. Be- sides knowing the new steps in the modern dances she has made a study of Russian, Egyptian and Greek dances, which she has exhibited in many cities including Detroit and Chicago, Miss Oppermann has not attended the J-Hop previous to this year. group making merry at the Packard academy. It is also expected that the annual dance of the Cercle Francais, which is to be held in Barbour gym to- night, will attract a number of the hop guests. It is expected, however, that the guests of the French society will be confined to Barbour gym, and they will not be allowed to use the J-Hop decorations. The performance of Pomander Walk, which is to be staged by the Comedy club this afternoon at the Whitney the- atre, will be attended by practically all of the men and women who have at- tended the other hop festivities. This performance is being staged by the Comedy club at this time as a special compliment to the hop attendants and their guests. lodging of a number of guests of the unaffiliated nen in the Women's League houses. The housing proposi- tion has always been a troublesome one for those hop attendants who had no fraternity affiliation, and the arrangement provided by Dean Jordan has been one of the most important features in obviating this objection. Replacing the regular individual fraternity dancing parties which are scheduled for the Hop guests tonight, the independents will divide into two groups, one group holding a party at Granger's academy, and the other (tiest list Inclides Meibrs of Fir Sex Recruited from North, South, East and West TOTAL MILE AGE OF VISITORS ESTfiWA VTED AT NEARLY 100,000 Pasadena California and Portland Maine Send Represetaiti es to Function By Verne E. Burnett Michigan's hop last night was a vor- tex in the society season, which swept in representatives from as far as Port- land, Maine, to Pasadena, California, from Boise, Idaho, to Buchanan, Vir- ginia, and from Ioughton, Michigan, and Windsor, Canada, to the southern part of Oklahoma. Railroad clerks will work overtime calculating the shekels from a mileage of nearly 100,- 000, which the hoppers piled up (omit- ting the pedometers' secrets of last night, which we dassn't divulge here). The Theta Delta Chi guests topped off a score of 4,951 miles traveling each way, while booth number 19 totaled less than 500 units of trackage. Remembrances of the Harvard expe- dition of last fall are apparent in the coming of Gladys Trombley, from Springfield, Massachusetts. Other easterners attracted by the fame of the Wolverine Maulbetches are Helen Patterson of Portland, Maine, helen Burnell, from Hartford, Conn., and Anna MacMaster of Newark, N. J. The little old town on Manhattan sent Jean Milliken, and Rocereller's home city of Tarrytown, N. Y., sent Helen Ely. The colonial south sent Julia Barks- dale and Bess Gills of Portsmouth and huchanan, respectively, in Virginia. Maryland's representative was Eliza- beth Engle, of Chautauqua. Only one guest came from a foreign country, and that was Martha Cal- houn, of Windsor, Canada. 'ho far west was roped in as far as Pasadena, California. Irene Greenbaum came through from Boise, Idaho, and Lenore Haimbaugh, from Denver, Colorado. Booth 24 entertained Margaret Walsh of Oklahoma, and the Phi Delta Theta party was chaperoned by Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Barton, from Louisville, Ky. Two dancers, Norma Dee and Keitha Bol- (Continued on page 4) WRITES FEATURE SONG Lillian M. Abbott, '16, is the author of "My Girl of the U. of M.," the feature song of the hop. The song, dedicated to the women students of the univer- sity, was written especially for the occasion by Miss Abbott, who com- posed the melody and the words. She received her training in the musical art writing dance music for use In kindergartens with which she was connected in Detroit. The piece will be sung by the Varsity Glee club in future concerts, and will soon be published. 4 HISTORIC 0 LD GYM AGAIN IS SCENE OF JUNIOR FESTIVITY.. swaying chords of "Back to Michigan, 'Dukes are faultless judges of beauty, from the floor. Now instead of that Back to the Farm." Here in tune with and they certainly should be, we can one great blaze of colors tempered by G ONE IE Th believe what we read in the Hearst the black of the escorts, individual the more natural, more sensuous mu- beiv'htw ea nteHas colors made their impression in butter- HV T = sic, the J-Hop really found itself as a Sunday editions, still each individual fly array, and opportunity was taken rediscovered institution and even some hopper will vaunt the particular ex- for all those fancy little steps that nad 'is the day of the younger genera- of the maligned' faculty swayed, hop- cellences of his adored one in the face been practiced with brother and sister tion; the old order changeth and his- ped and slid with approving count- of any blue ribboned by a Grand Duke, at home. No more the simple elemen- tory is in the making. The all im- enances to the refrain, "I want to be even should those particular charms, tary steps in the fox trot and one-step, portant gayly cantering and Bostoning1 there." be not charms of form or figure, but but now the stage was cleared for the junior of two years ago is the staid If the bewildered outsider, standing the more substantial charm of the difficult steps of the Castle Swing and and grave business or professional man on the edge of the moving, rotating house wifely virtues, perhaps not quite the Hop Argentine. of the world. The insignificant, down- mass, visualizes only that one great at their best in the grudging esteem And whatever the intensity of the trodden, underdogged, floor-polishing sea of color, rioting in his sense per- of conscious beauties on the ball floor. dark brown taste the morning after freshman of the previous hop and the ceptions, and blinding him to any crit- Beauties from the southland, from the J-hop, still one can never regret gay evening dressed, fox trotting, lame ical consideration of detail, he has lost the north, from the east and west, all the experience. The fact that part ducking junior of last night-two years much that the careful connolseur of commingled, and passed envious or was taken in that great seething mass, ago you could not by the wildest "les toilettes des dames," carries away superior comments. And it was not under the influence of color and mu- stretch of imagination have conceived as the choicest, most cherished mem- from any peculiarity of dress that the sic must have some weight in estab- it possible-are one and the same man. ory. guest could be geographically located lishing the J-Hop of 1916 revived, and 'Taint what it used to be. As we Were it to be said that the styles each to their respective region, as the resurrected later laying under faculty looked over the happy faces of our created an effect Parisienne, loyal sup- blondes and brunettes from the Rock- ban for a year, as the most wonderful guests, as they tripped the light fan- porters of the dogma, "made in Amer- ies coped with equal modishness with 'experience of a college life marked tastic and gave a rhythmic joy to old ica" would urge exile for the author. the problem that confronted the east- with many high spots and correspond- Barbour's walls, a sigh of grief, of Perhaps, not styles that one would ex- erners. ing hollows. meloncholy regret, escaped our unwill- ., DAYS FOR =ALL BUT NINF ing lips--gone were the dear familiar faces which previous hops-two, three, four of them-had introduced to us. Of all the 300 guests present last night, but nine wore that proud, knowing, glad to be back air, which testified to their previous attendance at the festi- val we call "the J-Hop." The 201 others, who were our guests in 1913, have failed to favor us with their pres- ence this year. Where are they? Why are not more of them with us? 'Tis strange, 'tis strange. At the last J-Hop there were 45 guests present who had attended a previous function. This was 21 per cent of the total, as against the three per cent who found themselves no strangers to the hop last night. And yet, and yet-Miss Josephine Clay, of Detroit, who led the last hop and was also present in 1911 and 1912, returned again last night to find (a rejunevated hop, perhaps), just as much popularity, just as much cordial- ity and even a little more gayety. Two others, Miss Gertrude Patterson, of Ann Arbor, and Miss Ethel Marshall, of Detroit, experienced their third hop. The following guests attended the hop in 1913: Florence Mack, Ann Arbor; Eleanor Clay, Detroit; Anna McMaster, Newark, New Jersey; Eleanor Kinsey, Toledo; Ruth Goddard, Detroit; and Clara Hodges, Detroit. pect to meet in the crowded cafes of the Rue Pigale or the looser Bal Tab- arin, but styles that one would expect to cross the ocean and grace the forms that walk down Fifth avenue and tread the soft carpets of Peacock alley. Paris, in the throes of war and with her shops closed, does not mean that her Pirets do not design for the modish chic American. And here at this Mich- igan J-Hop, the Viennese blues, the Medici purples, and the Apache reds bear mute but ravishing witness to their immortality. The battle was not all to the French, however, for the And in the midst of a sunburst of words, seeking to convey an impres- sion of something that is too over- whelming to be recorded exactly, it is a relief to jaded nerves to turn to a specific consideration of individuals, and of individual's gowns. First the rather tall graceful figure of her who led with her partner, claims it's meet of attention, with its quaint, altogether sweet appearance. The gown of white satin charmeuse was veiled in flesh colored tulle, with a tight fitting body of cloth of silver. Garlands of little French flowers hung from the waist, SIR DOUGLASI ANTARCT Lecture and Ml MAWSON, K. B. IC HERO otion Pictures Friday, February 12 from Detroit. 75, 50 and 25 cents Hill Auditorium Through Carsf Reserved Seats at Wabr's. A 4 I1 Cal for the Taxi's or Limousines 11 Polhemus Taxi and Transfer Co., 207 N. Main St. .,