1928. THE MICHTGAN DAILY a 1 aL. araa....a aavs as . ......_... a - - rr rrrrrs .... __. -- I ILVAVA 1, ..,...._._ : G'1 + t :.7 -- LIFE1MEMBERSHIP IS OFFERED TO SNIORS Add tion To Tuition Of Women Stu-l dents Counts Toward Member- ship I Leaguea WILL INTERVIEW SENIORS The attention of all senior woment is called to the fact that if life mem- bership pledges in the Women's1 league are paid for by the time of3 graduation they may be had for $40.E The ruling which was made at the re- . quest of. the undergraduate women to t pay $10 on the tuition fee toward lifeF membership was pas'sed by the Reg- ents, so every woman student whG entered this year has paid $10 on her membership. From now on, undergraduate wom- en, if they remain in college for four years, receive life membership in the league when they are graduated. The same opportunity 4is offered all seniors, providing the $40 is paid by commencement. This applies also toi all members of the Nurses Training school and to all University School, of Music 'students of collegiate age. Marie Hartwig, '29, is chairman of a committee to interview all seniort women who have not already signed1 for life membership. The Alumnit council office is very desirous of re-1 ceiving .as many pledges as possible according to Mrs. Wm. D. Henderson', in order that no further campaign will be necessary when the seniors leave college. If the pledges already made are not paid before graduation, they will be $50. Provide Lunches For Lantern Night Picnic To Be Held Tuesday For those who do not live in organ- ized houses yet who wish to put up box-lunches for the Lantern Night picnic next Tuesday night, a commit- tee is preparing 'some for sale. They will contain, among other things, po- tato salad, several kinds of sandwich-t es, fruit, and cake, the entire box to be priced at 50 cents. Coffee'will also, be served with them at Palmer field. These will have to be ordered be- fore Monday noon by signing on bul- letins posted for the purpose at the candy booth, Barbour gymnasium, and the athletic building, or by telephon- ing Bernice Shook, dial 21616, chair- man of the committee. They are to be obtained on Tuesday night from tables set up near the old field house on Palmer field. Seniors Overwhelm Sophomore Baseball Team By_14-3 Score In the interclass base ball game, which was played yesterday at 4 o'clock, between the seniors and sophomores, the senior team gained the overwhelming victory of 14-3. Errors were made by both teams, but the senior batting, and general co-operation was better, than that of the sophomores. The pitchers on both teams were efficient but the work of the senior battery, Robinson, pitcher, and Child, catcher, both speedy and sure. The game was played outside in spite of the uncompromising weather, and both team's wero considerhly handicapped in this respect. NOTICES There will be a meeting of the Board of Representatives at 9 o'clock tomorrow morning in room 102 Li- All women wishing to enter the{ bowling tournament should sign up on the bulletin board by noon today, or if it is impossible to do this, call Louise Cody, '30, at 6517, as quicklyj 's possible so that plans for the tournament can be completed. Busses will run to the golf course Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, and very likely on Friday. and Saturday. They will leave in front of Barbour gymnasium at 2:10, 3:10, and 4:10 o'clock. They will re- turn from the course at 3, 4, and 5:45 o'clock. Anyone may use the busses. Several college's already have or- ganized amateur motion picture com- panies. There are active groups at the University of California and at Rochester.. ..........0-0. . . ............... .........":. The Permanent Wave Is the Only Solution! For keeping the hair attrac- tively waved during the warm weather. Trend Of Lantern Night Tradition Is Shown In Gradual Changes Through Michigan Mavdays clq ? (By X. E. F) Iors leading and carrying lighted lan-I Atthi artia tE ' terns. The grand climax was a huge At this particular time it is ap- bon-fire and the singing of songs im- propriate to review the slow develop- promptu. ment of the tradition of Lantern Night. Some phases of the first Lantern It is oftentimes hard for us who are lays have been dropped, such as the at Michigan for a fleeting four years field day and the bonfire; added fea- to catch the spirit of its traditions tures have taken their places, the until it is too late to get the full forming of a block M, the Freshman benefit from them, and it is time for us pageant, and last year the dance to graduate. drama. Ideas and practices which That this is not mere philosophizing eventually become most firmly fixed but a fact which is proved year after !are the ones that are unpremeditated year is evidenced by the fact that on I and hint at spontaneity. Who knows each succeeding Lantern Night nearly but some unexpected twist in the plans every senior woman is to be seen on for Lantern Night next Tuesday will Palmer field while the percentage of be handed down to our children and the other classes represented is pro- to our children's children? portionately smaller. Lantern Night Abolished in 1913 . The Michigan woman with a sincere The performance of Lantern Night wish to accumulate as rich a store of is pretty well assured, for it was put memories as possible to take with her to a severe test from 1913 to 1919, when she graduates familiarizes her- when it was abolished. Its future hung self with the traditions as early in her in the balance, and each May the college life as possible. question as to whether or not the Festivities Dedicate Palmer Field custom should be renewed was an- The very earliest group of women swered in the negative. Dean Myra on this; campus set aside one May B. Jordan gave the encouragement afternoon and evening each year for that had been lacking, and since its the purpose of seeing Ann Arbor at revival in 1919 Lantern Night has its best and for recreation. This was never been discontinued. "the modest beginning of a tradition About the same time, the more us- as vital to women as Cap Night is to ual May-pole dance gave way to the men. In 1910 George Herbert Palmer Freshman pageant. This too is becom- presented a women's athletic field to ing traditional. And last year a dance the University in memory of his wife, drama by Orchesis, the dancing club, Alice Freeman Palmer, '76. This was! was added, which may or may not ex- the occasion for festivities very much ist as a tradition after as many years like those which marked the opening as Lantern Night has continued. That of the new athletic building last Wed- a song contest was held three or four nesday. The program included a field years ago before Lantern Night is a day program in the afternoon, a pic- fact that has been gleaned from the nic lunch on the slopes of the ridge files of The Daily. But apparently and, after twilight had fallen, a pro- songs untried by time did not "take" cession around the field, with the sen- as well as the familiar songs of Mich-' igan. At any rate that practice was one of those that was discontinued. Many -3eanings Given to Lanterns At present Lantern Night includes a box supper at about 5:30 to which everyone in the University of Michi- gan, and in Ann Arbor or its vicinity, both men and women, is welcomed, a dance pageant by the freshman wo- men, a dance drama by Orchesis danc- ing society, a march by all of the college women on the field, only the men and townspeople remaining as spectators, the passing of lighted lan- terns to the junior women by the senior women, and of garlanded hoops to the sophomore women by the jun- ior women, the formation of a block M and singing. The ten leaders of the line of march are selected by the wo- men's organizations on the campus assisted by the faculty as those who have been, in general, the leaders of the class during the year. Various interpretations have been assigned to the lanterns from which the ceremony takes its name. They have been said to represent the bright- ness of college days which the seniors are leaving for the junior class, the responsibility of the seniors' which is to be assumed by the juniors, or the progress of the classes. Probably nothing definite is embodied in the lighted lanterns. They simply have a meaning for the Michigan woman which can be grasped by no one else, and by no one who has not actually either received a lantern as a junior or given it away as a senior. It is this meaning which the woman who only stands on the side-lines is missing, a valuable treasure from which she is cheating herself if she does not take part. i SPORTS CONFERENCE A sport's conference for high school girls, which is being sponsored by both the W.A.A. and the department of Physical Education for women, will be held in Ann Arbor, .Tuesday, and Wednesday, May 15 and 16. The purpose of this conference is to interest and help high school 'students with athletics in their own schools, and to show them what women here are doing. This conference also pro- vides an opportunity to lessen the gap between college and high, school life, and at the same time will give them a chance to learn about campus activities and institutions of the Uni- versity of Michigan. The program, which has been ar- ranged to entertain the members of the conference during their brief stay in Ann Arbor, will include exhibi- tions, by the students of the major school, luncheons, teas, meetings, dis- cussions, and various inspections and tours of the university. The delegates to the conference, 84 of whom have accepted the invita- tions, will be greeted by Miss Alice Lloyd, adviser to women at Michigan, and immediately following this they will be addressed, by Dr. Margaret Bell, head of the department of phy- sical education*for women, Gladys Appelt, '28, President of the W.A.A., and Mary White, '29, President-elect of the Women's league. President Little will be unable to speak at the conference as he will be out of town. Tuesday evening, the delegates will be guests to the Lantern Night pro- gram and the Freshman pageant. On Wednesday, a Play day has been planned for them. This activity has already been used in other schools to take the place of intercollegiate com- petition, for instead of teams being made up of only members of one school, different members from all schools will be on one team. The competition will lie interscholastic, I but have mixed teams. -- I CHILDREN'S MAGAZINE ACCEPTS FAIRY STORY WRITTEN BY WILMA GREEN, '291 Wilma E. Green, '29, is the author maturely and turns them into little of a fascinating fairy story, "Captain machines. Bobbie Shafto," which has just been It is Miss Green's hope to write accepted by "Child Play," a children's more stories of Bobbie Shafto, telling magazine published in Cleveland. Miss further adventures of the little here. Green, who is a junior in the literary The writing of fairy stories is a type college and a member of Chi Delta of writing which particularly appeals Phi, writes under the name "Billie to her, she remarks. Green." The story of Bobbie Shafto is based on a nursery rhyme which Miss Green A CORRECTION quotes as follows: "Bobbie Shafto's gone to sea, Silver buckles on his knee. ' Special busses making the trip Someday he'll come back to me- I to Detroit for the University of Pretty Bobbie Shafto." } Michigan day at Ford airport w1il Miss Green has written of Bobbie ( leave the Union at 8 o'clock Sat- I Shafto's adventures when he sailed } urday morning and at 1 o'cock, with "Pirate Robinson" to fairyland. not at 8:30 as previously stated. The story is remarkable for its whim- sical descriptions, especially the de- scription of the home of the fairies. WS IGNA-A rhsr Miss Green says that in writing the WEST VIRGINIA - An orchest'a story she sought for elfin-like phrases made up of talent from the Univers- and tried to make her expressions ity of West Virginia will sail for pretty, thus appealing to the child's Europe in July where they will play mind more than if she had tried to in the principal cities in the British make everything absolutely true to Isles, France, and Italy. They will be nature. * employed by the Cunard Steamship The condemnation which is frequent- company and will furnish music on ly made of fairy tales for children, the way over. Miss Green considers quite ill-found- ed. She has arrived at this conclu- TEMPLE UNIVERSITY-Construc, sion after discussing the question with tion of a stadium which will hold a number of teachers. It hai often 34,200 people has begun here. The been maintained that the reading of structure will cost approximately fairy tales is likely to make children $350,000, and will be so constructed untruthful and dishonest. Miss Green, as to provide for a second tier of however, is of the opinion that bring- seats if needed. This addition would ing children up on stories of "How increase the capacity of the bowl to Rubber Is Made," etc., ages them pre- 75,000. WILL HOLD REHEARSAL FOR PAGEANT, SATURDAY All members of the cast for the freshman pageant are required to be present at a rehearsal to be held at 2 o'clock in Sara Caswell Angell hall, Saturday, May 12. This rehearsal is very important and no excuse except, illness will be accepted for absence. The entire pageant will be gone over, and costumes will be finally arranged for and distributed. At this time also the fines for prev- ious absences from rehearsals will be collected. This money will be used to provide for refreshments to be served at the dress rehearsal Monday after- noon.. r DO .irrr~rr. r..r s y. rr.ar. rr., a fl ( '- . i b L i r r i 1 v z 3 1 ti , ti Fresh Bakery kuouus Tasty Cakes and Pies and Real Home-Made Bread PURITY BAKERY SHOP "You'll Be Satisfied" 707 PACKARD DELUXE MOTOR COACHES Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti, Toledo Terminals--Ann Arbor, City rharmacy Ypsilanti, Huron Hotel Toledo, interurban Station one way, $2.25 round trip Arbor Leave Toledo C1G", /d. A d 1d . / "d . / "d, / ' d . ' I ' d d d d d d d. / '. 0 ". Id d d d d . // % 1 d, /. / d d d d. / J r. /. / " d 1 . Y d d l J . .+"~lr ... ... - - Soda Fountain Between Classes Drop in for a Refreshing Drink at 3(12 SOUTH STATE (Formerly Juilleret's) L Candy 1 SaadS $1.25T Leave Ann 1' 8 A. M. 12 Noon 4 P.M. 8 P.M. Stop at Union 5 Minutes later THE BLUE BIRD Phone 9870, 8 A. M. 4 P.M. COACH LINE, 118 Fourth St. i p I Toasw ches /J oGe. w e s wwrwrrw. . ww .w . rr .. 1.0.~ll./"0.i111../"./Ylll1.I". /1J./.. .~./1 !/.'%..Il././1./././l /Y1ls DRESSES L . 11 Hundreds of new dresses for street, afternoon and evening wear. Sizes 13 to 46. $5.00 $9.95 $14.95 / N N O UR fashions are advanced in mode but re- SUITS - Closing Out All Suits at $11.50 and $17.95 strained in price. Fashions for any Blouses, 1.95. Sweaters, 1.95. Skirts, 5.95. Jackets, 5.95. Hosiery, 69c Pair 1 ' ;p figure at any fig- ure are coming in daily from New 'I