THURSDAY, 'MARCH 8, 1928 THE MICHIGAN DAILY W'AGE FIVE! _______- - ~ - - - ---------------.-- -- - - - - Y P/Wi V U""E V CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE RENTS SENIOR GOWNS' Show Boat And Variety of Colors Are. w- "' ', Features For Sec After Conmueneenrent, Gowns Must Returned; Mortarboards May Be Kept MARCH 16 IS LAST D I ,AY Beginning next Monday afternoon the senior women of the colleges of Literature, Science, and the Arts, of Pharmacy, of Architecture, and the School of Education will be given the opportunity to 'rent their senior caps and gowns for their graduation from the Women's league. Last year the league bought the gowns and charged a fee of $10 to each woman for the privilege of using them. This year this same fee is to be charged to each woman of the senior class and this amount is to be paid in cash before the gown is pro- cured from the Undergraduate Cam- paign committee. This committee has charge of the renting of the gowns. Of the fee which is charged for the rental of the gown, half of it is to be for the rental of the gown, $2.50 is to be for the mortarboard which every senior woman must buy and the re- maining sum will be refunded to each woman at the close of graduation. Caps and gowns may be procured any time during the week of March 12. It is probable, however, there will be so many women desiring gown's that certain numbers will be given out and the women will be asked to come at the time that her number indidcates her turn. Ail senior women will have need of their gowns the night of the senior supper whic his to be held March 19, preced-' ing the attendance of the senior wom- en to the Junior Girls' play. No gown will be given out after March 16 so it will be necessary for every woman tof be sure to- be fitted before that date. Lika a shimmering kalaide-scope in- volving every brilliant color of the spectrum, was the annual Penny Carn- ival held in Barbour gymnasium last ~night. From 7 to 10 o'clock people were moving back and forth, tasting the pleasures offered in first one booth and then anothar, buying lolly pops,j and visiting the big Show Boat up- stairs. May we tell you about the Show Boat? Half way up the gang plankl you had to pay, which might have' made you a little sad for a moment or two but never lasted long. Strains off music came to you over the waves as' you ascended, and once you were in- side and seated you forgot all cares. Dorothy McKee, '30, was the an- nouncer, and what an announcer she was! If you don't remember the rest of the show you wil at least remem- br her-or him, for he or she keptI you roaring most of the time. Geneva Beyers, '30, was the girl who whistled so plaintively, and Vera Johnston, '29, did the speciality dances at the first of the program. In fact, everyone performed nobly, and when you left one performance you always wanted to come back to the next one. The Show Boat was in charga of Eloise Avery, '30. And now about all the clever booths downstairs. Every sorority and dorm- itory on campus had one of them in tow, and several other women's or- ganizations had booths also. It would take the rest of this page to tell about, all of them, but we do have room to mention a few of the most interesting ones. The Chinese Honeymoon where, as you will remember, all of the color of the Carnival was reflected ,belonged to Helen Newberry residence. The women of Alpha Phi turned into boot blacks for the evening. Collegiate Sorosis was very cold hearted and sold Eskimo pies to carnival patrons.' ond Annual Carnival Kappa Delta had a musty old museum, Daily Bulletino Pi Beta Phi an up to date motion picture palace, Betsy Barbour house iNTER .WT a guaranteed-to-last for 20 years for- tune telling booth, Delta Gamma a STOP GOLFERS! very wicked gambling stand, Chi- Omega, a beautiful and 'sedate wax Class competition in golf will be works, Alpha Chi Omega an arboretum carried on throughout the indoor sea- without gates, and Kappa Kappa Gam- son, according to a plan set forth by ma a regular candy store. There were Eleanor Treadwell, '28, golf manager, so many more that we have probably in a meeting of the various class man- forgotten some of the very best ones. agers yesterday, on a basis of the in- Margaret Bush, '30, was in charge of dividual's daily record for clean the organization of the booths. drives, mashie shots in regard to ac- Betty Smither, '29, was the general curate placing ability to use a nib- chairman in charge of the Penny lick shot in getting out of a sand Carnival, , and she was assisted by trap, and accurate putting. Doris Renkenberger, Spec. Ed., Mar- The class teams, which will un- garet Bush, '30, Dorothy Tauff, '30, doubtedly be composed of four per- Dorothy Flynn, '30, Eloise Avery, '30, sons, will be chosen directly after Jessie Church, '29, and Dorothy Mc- spring vacation. Two scores will be kee, 30. required from each candidate for a position on a class squad. They may have been obtained either on the Uni- Iversity golf course or on a home course during spring vacation. 1%r1 It has been announced by Miss M4Ic- I P1.1411NI Cormick that a'ny woman golfer who goes around the University course inI 50 or less this season will be given an coptngtescoati-vr opportunityr to play on a Detroit In computing the scholastic aver- i pcourse at opo thundtyh eao. h crsatthe t end of a the season. The age of thme women belonging to Kaply- gt hof or the semnesngtr endig ,trip will be planned if possible, at some time when Mrs. Stewart Hanley June, 1927, Beatrice Johnson, adviser is in Detroit. to women, finds it to be 81 per cent. There arc still several hours in Kappa Beta Rho is a society that wa's re ay si seal or in ;which golf may be learned or pr ac- " recently organized for the women that tired at the field house open to those, are working their way through col- I who have not yet taken part in golf as lege. Due to the fact that it is not a national organization and that it does a. class activity. There are a limited -number of places open in theTues- R T S of Sportswomen from 3 until 5 on Friday. In order to be enrolled as a class contestant, an individual is required to play during two half hour periods every week. However, more than two scores will be counted if one goes out for golf more often in a single week. A sys- tem of filing cards which each individ- ual fills out every time that she plays will be used to record the scores in the tournament. Within the next three weeks, the indoor tourney will be completed. When Phi Beta Kappa, the national fraternity for scholars, voted to ad- mit Charles Eastman o. Dartmouth PURIA AS NITAJIN NO I CE5 Tryouts for Orchesis will be extend- edIuntil Saturday, March 24, for those who have not been able to tryout be- cause of the Junior Girls' play re- At te metig hed Tursay nght' harsals. Initiation of -new members At the meeting held Thursday t will be held on March 28 in Sara Cas- at Holen Newberry residence, Portia well Angell hall. literary society initiated the foiolwing into membership: Loraine Gay, '29 There will be a rehearsal of act 1 Ed., Helen sMcComb, '29 Ed., JuliaMc- of the Junior Girls' play Thursday eve- , ee m, Eh ning at 8:30 o'clock. lKinley, '29 Ed., Helen Cheevor, 3, iga :0ocok Jean Griggs, '31, Dorothy Graham, The Sally chorus of the Junior '29, G-race Hawkins, '29, Dorothy Cox, Girls' play will meet for their pictures '30. at Spedding's at 3 o'clock Friday. The next meeting of the society will be devoted to a program on Thomas UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON- Hardy, a-s a poet and novelist. Hand organ music minus the tradi- tional monkey, but plus a few stu- SAN ANTONIO-Manager Moriarty'! (lent monkey shines is being used has decided to carry 10 pitchers on as publicity for the sale of the Uni- the Tiger hurling staff this year. versity of Washington year book. to membership, he wrote a letter to the local chapter asserting that col- IBREPA lege marks were meaningless, and that he did not consider it an honor We sell and service all to belong to the fraternity. The Largest and Best stock viel -backed by skilled service. Evidentlyjunjping is the latest wo- men's activity since one was seen f at Rider's recently leaping from a window of Newberry auditorium where she was Phone locked in. I _ _ _ __k,_ALLM - l makes Typewriters. to select from in Ann Arbor, Pen Sharp 8950 tAKE V LJiU% Eo%'M R% f f i i 4'd 1 M I NG MI- ' :LT~' B , .........,...,...... ......... .,.-1 N The annual intramural swim- ming meet will be 11ld at 7 o'clock tonigl't at the Union pool. Each participant may enter two speed avents in iddition to the relays amd(ives, and regu- ation' grevI swimming suits must be worn. i ! { ' j 1 E t not belong to U aellen c,, IL eligible to compete for the scholar- ship cup. However Miss Johnson states that it rates second among the campus organizations. The pins which have just been re- ceived are small and diamond shaped with the Greek letters Kappa Beta Rho. Needlecraft courses in art educa- tion have caused the co-eds at the University of Minnesota to appear on the campus with boxes of ribbons, day at 5 class, or in the two classes OCCUPATIONAL HISTORIES OF COLLEGE' GRADUATES DISCUSSED IN CONVENTION If a single college woman in a full- search workers $3,271. time job makes more than $3,000 a "To a librarian an M.A. degree is year, she belongs to the exceptional worth on the average $193 a year, and minority, declared Mrs. Chase G. P 10 s M Wo s PhDS~t. 4fJV $60 0 A lij. f JtllV White Swan Laundry Co. SPRING IS EK Have your garments cleaned and pressed to make them look like new. The White Swan Luandry Co. can do it for you Gay ,TFrocks So beconaing to certain types easily lose their smartness if not well chosen. Our constant study of indivdiuality makes your selection a simple matter. PRINTS And HIGH SHADES for Every Occasion $975 and $495 thread, needles and samplers. Woodhouse of the United States Bureau of Home Economics when she spoke to the National Association of Deans of Women which met last week in Boston. Mrs. Woodhouse was re- viewing a collection of occupational histories of 7,000 members of the American Association of University women. This collection has been made as a contribution to the cur- rent discussions on the employment of college women. "Out of 3,039 single women in full- time jobs 2,321 are in educational work3 and only 718 in all other fields," Mrs. Woodhouse observ.ed. "And of those in educational work the majority, 2,- 127, are teachers, with only 194 in administrative work. "The best paid women in the group are three college presidents with an average salary of $8,200, followed by nine junior higl school principals with an average salary of $3,859, four normal school principals averaging $3,800, and 52 college deans with $3,- 426. In teaching, the highest average salary is $2,457 for the colleges, and the lowest is an average of $1,632 in tihe grade schools. "Apart from educational work 52 oc- cupation's were reported, in which the best paid woman is an executive in aj commercial organization, who makes $34,000 a year in addition to stock dividends. She had entered a family owned business. This is a practice which we ought to encourage, a step so usual for men and so exceptionalt for women." The usual assumption that business pays better than the professions is contradicted by the report. The man- agers of cafeterias and tea-rooms av- eraged $3,300, interior decorators $31146, but all other women less than $3,000. In the professional groups, statisticians averaged $3,730, lawyers $3,587, physicians $3,551, and re-; LITTLE TO SPEAK AT UNION TONIGHT! There will be an open meeting of the Women's league at 7 o'clock to- night in the ballroom at the Union. President Little will speak and all women on campus are eligible to come, a tI.U ., V , b U IN-1. VU' 1UZU adding, "This is a good interest onF the investment." The University of Minnesota has taken the first step toward an im- portant change- that of supporting the state's finest 'students at the state's expense. TYPEWRITER REPAIRING All makes of ma- chines. Our equip- ment and personnel; Is considered among the best in the state. The result of twenty years' careful building. 0. D. MORRI LL 17 Nickels Arcade. Phone 6615. 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If you think so too, let's get together. -0 Are finished with Scarfs or furs or Grfs grain1 Ribbon 75 to $5950 In our fine collection of spring coats we notice many new style features. Capes appear in great profusion and there is a trend toward the normal waistline. Kasha and kasha type A I 1 5 F 5 F materials are most important. lull finished silks. Fur appea Sports Coats gars The loveliest silk coats are of on collar or cuffs. Dressy Coats () 6 1