JNDAY, MAY 22, 1927 THE MICHIGAN DAILY £ -11 N V! I 5 ILTATA mw Nam I 0 LANTERN NIGHT AIDES New League Building Will Contribute r o Fuller Life Of Women, Says Pond r nI 10 1~l U~LI lLLAMUR V R~iNU Select Ukh Hirschman, Gladys Appelt, I Elfreda Peterson, Cynthia Hawkins To Manage Aides GIVE MARCMDIRECTIONS At the meeting of aides and leaders ~ of the Lantern Night procession, the following people were elected class captains: senor, Ruth Hirschman; junior, Glady Appelt; sophomore, Cynthia Hawking freshman, Elfreda w Peterson. Those present at the meeting on Friday decided that the leaders of each class would. wear white skirts and the colored class jackets used by the WA"Inter-class hockey teams, and the aides 'would wear white knickers white shirts and ties the color of their class. 1 Captains of classes will be responsible for the purchase of the ties and each aide will be asked to pfy for her own. Directions ForTIe Line Of March As soon aLteance drama is over the aides will go through the aud- fence and request all women to join their class formations on Observatory street. The leaders of the line will go directly to their assigned positions. After the classes have formed four abreast lanterns will be distributed to the seniors, hoops to the juniors, and the flags and torches given to the1 aides. Directions by classes are as fol- lows: Seniors: Form four abreast next to the gate on the hspital side. On sig- nal descend roped path to the foot of the hill; march straight ahead to forward line. 'Atone whistle, turn right and left An ',pairs and go back under Junior arches, then come back down the center again in fours. On two and three whistles the sopho- mores and juniors make changes. On one whistle, again, the seniors come iforward, sepr 'ate in,pairs, go right and left around the outside of the fresh- man and sophomore . lines, coming down inside the double junior lines. The seniors pass the lanterns to the juniors at this point. Juniors: Form four abreast facing the senior line. Follow seniors to the foot of the hill keeping well back of them. At the foot of the hill, separate in pairs and follow marked diagonals, then straight ahead to forward line. Juniors come forward at three whis- ties, turn outwards, march to end lines and come up between the soph- omore lines leaving the hoops with rt them, then turn down the diagonal markings forming the "V" part of the "M". The seniors will come between the junior ;,lines and pass the lan- terns to them. At two whistles the back line of juniors will turn about face and march with the lanterns down the outside of the sophomore and freshman lines to the front. Sophomores: Line up behind the senior line and follow juniors in march to foot of hill. At bottom turn diagonally left to markers and march forward. At two whistles the two cen- ter columns, numbered two and three, turn right aroM"'the front and turn- ing again d4t4ayn the center of the two remaining freshman lines. About face. Freshmen: Form in line behind jun- iors and follow sophomores down hill, turning to the right at the foot, fol- lowing the diagonal and proceeding forward. On two whistles columns two and three, about face, march straight across the back and tur down on either side of the two soph- omore lines to 4the front. On tw whistles again, the inside lines o freshmen march down the "V" After these shifts the block "M will be formed and the concludin songs of the ceremony will be sun accompanied by the Varsity band. Th lines will leave the field in order to ward the nurses. home. Aides and leaders are asked to sav these directions. A "Big Sister's" movement to en list women to assist next year's fresh men has been conducted at the Uni versity of Minnesota. A St. Patrick Daily was publishe by students of the University of Min nesota on Friday the 13th. "The purpose of the architects in planning the new Women's leagueE building was of course to make it vsater tight, spacious, accommodating to the use of the women and the alum- nae, but it was more than that-thet ideal behind the Women's leaguep building was that of a place wheref university women can reach thatl which is most valuable in a full life,f namely tly human relationships founded on a necessary social contact! in an atmosphere truly cultural andt gracious," said Allen Pond, '80, honor- ary, '11, of the firm, Pond and Pond who have been making the final planst for the new Women's league building.I "A true culture," Mr. Pond con- tinued, "does not lie in text books. AE great many people expect to enter the University, take scattered courses inf geology, philosophy;, economics andi psychology, receive an A. B. degree< and leave the institution confident that they have the culture born of a college education, or painfully con- scious that they have missed it. Lift is not wholly intellectual; it consists of intellect; feeling and imagination with the cultural aspects well on the1 side of feeling and imagination." "The class room then, does not of- fer this culture in its broadest sense; it is something which comes more from life than from literature and it is trained through human relation- ships upon a social basis. That is the reason that a Women's league build- ing is more important now than a series of dormitories. The League building must be the central meeting place, refined in tone and gentle in atmosphere where social contacts and training of the emotional and imag- inative will receive the uplifting in- fluence which will lead toward the1 establishment of a cultural influence and a full life for Michigan women."+ "Whether man is the imperfect spontaneous creation of the funda-I mentalists belief, or the result of cen- turies of development beginning with a worm and progressing until at last the rou1-legged creature stood on two legs and asked. 'What is it all about?' which in itself was a rather thrilling event, he remains a living being con- scious of his surroundings and in- , fluenced by them. To the sensitive man, a great building carries a mes- sage. The Parthenon carries the Greek ideal of simplicity and adequacy with- out superfluity and the Gothic cath- edral speaks of a highly emotional people with great ambitions, uncon-I trolled and groping. Both the Greek and the Gothic succeed in expressing their message and it is our ideal that an American building may some time express that which is best and most potential in American civilization." "The Michigan Union was built to express an ideal of sturdiness and strength inherent in young manhood. It was aimed to influence young men in the good and full development of [iflT LA I FT'high point honors equally, both taking1 to first places. The various events resulted as fol- lows: 50 yard dash, Sauborn, '29, Becker, '29, Tuke, '29 ; 65 yard hiur- OS TO UOPMO dies, Doster, '27, Walter '27, Snell,'30; basketball throw, 67 feet, 9 inches., In the inter-class track meet held' Zauer, '29, IHeilman,'30, Treadwell, yestrda atPalmr feld firt pace'27; baseball throw. 161 feet, 4 inches, yesterday at Palmer field, first place'j McNally, '27, Levine, '29, Morton, '29; was won y the sophomores with 42 1ciall, '7 eine , Mt on, points. The seniors were runners-up, discus, 81 feet, 8 inches, Stephenson, having 28 points; freshmen placed '30, Tuke, '29 Renkenberger, '30; hop- third with 19, and juniors, fourth with step-jump, 29 feet, 11 inches Baird, 10 points. The sophomores took five 28, Lingel, '30, Morton, '29; running out of nine first places, and are cred- io 2 jump, 14 feet, 8:5 inches, Sa - 'ted with having more women compet- horn, '29 Becker, '29, Muff ley, '30, high ing than any other class. Anna Zauer, jump, 4 feet. 1:75 inches, Muff ley, '30. ingtha an oter las. Ana aue, lThe seniors easily led the field iii '29, and Jeanette Sauborn, 29, divided, Te nisalldte edi s ine relayAruning?- in. .oiiowe WILL PLAY FINAL NO T IC E S GAMES THIS WEEK \itomplete dies idehearsal of the 7 a:calt t'l 1f hrIl a 4 o'c'lock to- inal games of the baseball SCiH om w at Brbour gymnasium. will be played this week with Kappa aball gamnes scheduled for Mon- Delta, Betsy Barbour house, andH Helen ay are as fkllows: at 4 o'clock P1 Newberry residence the potential run- Y!,i s. Cou il-a1l, at 5 o'clock Civha(ook B'uiilingvs. Delta Zeta. ners-up for the claipionship. In the Inter-clasis baseball managers are contest between Helen Newberry res- k-e! to report, their teams to Miss idence and Ka'ppa Kappa Gamma Sat- C 1mpbll, and also to the manager be- urday afternoon the former team prov- for 5 o'clock tomorrow. ed the stronger and won by a score_ _ of 18 to 5. Martha Robinson, '28Ed, A 48-hour bill for working women of the winning side and Esther Tuttle, Icently passed the New York state '27, of the Kappa Kappa Gamma team legislature. were the outstanding players. As a result of this game a game has _ __ been scheduled between Betsy Bar- bour House and Helen Newberry res-F idence, the winner of which .will play ,2;% to 50% Iiscoiunt Kappa Delta Friday, May 27. BURR, PATTERSON & CO. f__o th nhersity at Forest Patronize Daily Advertisers 11 1 11''m-m nil-111-11111 I bthe their emotional and imaginative qual- "" ities. The Women's league building re will be more gracious and more fem- relow inane in its atmosphere but the under- lying strength will be there. The day of the purely charming young lady is past. Such a building will offer organ- ized social activity in a beautiful place where a sensitive person will i feel the underlying strength and char- acter and benefit thereby. Those were our ideals in designing the building," concluded Mr. Pond. relay, running it in 44:6, follWe l the sophomores in second place; freshmen were third. The senior ay team was composed of the fol- aiyg: Field, Walter, Marston, Drei- ,nMcNanly, and Doster. You can Duplicate the Typewriters Elsewhere, but not Rider's Service '' . WHITNEY SUNDAY NIGHT i SEASON'S SUPREME ATTRACTION ___. If you should issue a questionnaire at the next I party which you attend, asking the girls where their hair was dressed, a convincingly large per cent would name the BLUE BIRD HAIR SHOPPE I COLLEGE MEN AND WOMEN When in the vicinity of State and Packard, will find the PACKARD RESTAURANT, American cooking, a good place to eat. 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