°f F1 , p C IIGA DAILY TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY .- f~ I low SALE OF TICKETS FOR SENIOR SUPPER WILL BE'HELD. NEXT REEK WOMEN WILL ALSO RECEIVE r RESERVED SEATS FOR "FORWARD MARCH" SUPPER HELD AT UNION New System Of Alloting Seats Will Do Away With Confusion Of Previous Years Tickets for the Senior Supper, which is to be held at 6 o'clock Monday, March 18, in the Union ball room will be on sale from two to five next week from Monday, March 11, to Friday, March 15, in Barbour Gymnasium. Senior wo- men may obtain their tickets for the supper., at the same time that they purchase their caps and gowns if they wish to. The tickets will be $1.65 and seniors are all requested to be prepared to make cash payments as no checks will be accepted. In connection with the sale off the supper tickets, the seniors in charge of the event are planning an innovation in the customs that y have become traditional for this first night that the senior women don their caps and gowns. This year, in addition to their ticket for the -supper, they will receive a reserved seat ticket for the first performance of the Junior Girls' Play, which as in previous years will be given in honor of senior women, immediately after the sup- per. This new system which the seniors have organized themselves will do away with the general rush and confusion that has been, known to take place at the doors of the Whitney. The seats will all be allottedl :ahead of time, and seniors are urged to buy their tickets as quickly as possible as the first ones to buy them will be given the best seats. As this first produc-i tion of "Forward March" is com-' plimentary to the senior women there will be no charge for theI extra ticket, and the only reasonI for their distribution at all is to. add to the convenience and* , E . , ? Alpha Gamma Delta Athena And Portia And Adelia Cheever Give Annual Deb Tie For Originality "Orthodoxy," a play by Wilcox Putnam was presente The third Penny Carnival is Eleanor Coryell, '29Ed., . and; now a thing of the past.It shone Barrett, '29Ed., at the wekly n brilliantly for a night, however, ing of Athena literary so before it fell into the has-beens. Tuesday evening. This play S RHOSV SIIOWCLASS' Professor Jack Compares The Best- bate '' Sellers As Written By Men And Women 1 iir rnn A rn Nina! d by Faye meet- ociety is a! I --. __ , It was by far the most successful satire on attending church, and of the Carnivals, according to Dor- the characters speak out their real othy Touff, '30, general chair- thoughts instead of what they man. The announcements of the ordinarily would say. amounts taken in by the booths Next Tuesday in their annual will be made later. debate Athena will take the neg- The Golf school, the booth offer- ative and Portia the affirmative ed by Adelia Cheever residence side of the question, "Resolved, ' and the "Go To Hell" booth of the that a federal department of edu- Alpha Gamma Delta sorority, were cation should be established at judged a tie for originality. As Washington with a secretary in yet the booth winning for having the president's cabinet." A cup is the most sales has not been an- awarded.to the winning team every nounced. year, which Athena has kept sol Kappa Kappa Gamma was win- far. The debate will be held on iter over Alpha Xi Delta in a fast! the fourth floor of Angell hall. 'and well-played basketball game' The members of the Athena which gave them the women's In- team are: Dorothy Weed, '29Ed., tramural championship. The game, Grace Darling, '30, and Florence although it was the first event on Clement, '30. The Portia team is the program, was attended by a composed of Dorothy Graham, large and enthusiastic crowd. '29Ed., Jean Grigg, '30, and Oriel The Traveling Tent Show, in Endelman, '29Ed. Sarah Caswell Angell hall proved'_ to be an even greater success than The Women's League will receive was predicted for it. The acts were I a 5% commission on all goods pur- all well-received by applauding chased at Goodhew Flower Shop audiences. The circus idea was dmtoGies an Foores and carried out and the tumbling acts by dormitories and sororities-and were exceptionally well-done. The all goods purchased at Jacobson's circus clowns provided a goodly providing the Women's League is share of entertainment as they mentioned. mingled with the crowds around - the booths, selling tickets and ad- Formal initiation of two women,; vertising the show. Lillian Green, '30L, and Doris Fen- The b o o t h s themselves were neberg, '30L., comprised the pro- more original than ever and caus- gram of Kappa Beta Pi, national ed much merriment as well as honorary legal sorority for women, taking in their full quota of pen-. on Thursday, March 7. A dinner,: nies. in honor of the initiates, followed at the Lantern Shpp.1 comfort of the seniors themselves. _-__ __ _ If a group of senior women wish to sit together, it is necessary that0 they appoint one representative from their group to buy all of their tickets at once for if they buy single tickets with their caps, and gowns they will undoubtedly FOR MEN A have single seats. Senior .women who are not going, to the supper, but who wish to at- tend the play will not be allowed to obtain their reserved seat tick- ets until Friday, March 15, as it will be necessary to accommodate - all those women coming in the line of march directly from the Union to the Whitney before others can be taken care of. IlL 1lUll UlUL LL1LJ First Year Squad Makes Brilliant Comeback To Tie Upper-Class Team In Last Minute JUNIORS TRIM SOPHS Fighting desperately to overcome an early lead, the freshman first team tied the leading seniors in the last 30 seconds of play yester- day afternoon, to remain in a tie with the upper-classmen in the tournament standing, the final score being 24-24. In the other first team game, the juniors breez- ed through the sophomores to the tune of 30-9, while the senior sec- and team kept its slate clean by walking away with the yellow-blue combination, 42-10. Sophomores Score First The crucial game between the seniors and freshmen started with Captain Anne Zauer drawing first blood for her team with a free throw, but this was offset quickly by two difficult shots from under the basket by Emily Bates, frosh, forward. The score then sea-sawed 'back and forth until the gun foundl the seniors leading 16-15 at the half. With the beginning of the third quarter, however, the green centers fed the ball to the elusive Emily, who caged four shots before" she was .removed on fouls. The seniors came back strong and with only a minute and a half to play, found themselves in the lead by three points, but the freshmen, undaunted, forced the play for ther remaining seconds, and Dorothy Birdzell saved her team with a basket and free throw. iI "Women have perhaps been more knows about life the better it sells. successful best-sellers than men," Ouida once made a horse win the stated Professor P. M. Jack in his derby twice, when everyone .knows talk on "Best Books and Best Sel- I that the race is for three-year- lers", given at a recent meeting of olds. When Miss Hull wrote "The the Michigan Dames at the Facul- Sheik," .she knew nothing about it ty Women's clubhouse. except what she had read in Hich- "Since the days of Miss May ens' "The Garden of Allah." After R, re, f th she had made her fortune out of . CI Braddon, wo was Queen o he Circulating Library" in 1850, the h Sheik, she went on a pi- 1 world has been drowned out with grimage, as it were, to the snrine, the tears from East Lynne and The and wrote a book on Arabia so Rosary and the romantic mill girls dull that no one has ever-been of Annie S. Swan." And the for- "T able to read it." tunes continue to be made by the E"These books are the perennial i women today, but "the women type of the best-seller," Prof. Jack themselves h a v e changed. The concluded. "The Misses Hull and I charm of the modern hero seems Dell of this generation will be re to be his brutality. Take the hero placed by the Misses Dull and Hell of "The Way of an Eagle," by Miss of the next generation, but the Dell. This hero never speaks; he type will persist-the strong silent snarls. He drinks, or rather, he man and the lady with a misun-. gulps, a stimulant known as "raw derstood past, hero and heroine of spirits"-brandy or gin is neverj a million marriages and a million) mentioned. When hesmitesnhis'murders." hands together, he draws blood." isThe society of Michigan Dames is comprised of the wives of Uni- "Jugfuls of blood are spilled in ,est tdns "The Sheik" and "The Way of an versity students. Eagle." And these," Prof. Jack stated, "were written by what our Carleton College-Freshman wo- simple grandfathers called "the men will give a grand opera en- gentle sex!"' It is left for the t titled "The Lamentable Tragedy of "sterner sex" to carry on the tr.a- Julius Caesar" before an audience dition of the novel of sentiment of upperclass women. and romance, as in Mr. Arlen's lady of "The Green Hat," whose eyes University of Indiana-Because were 'blazing. blue, like two spoon- 98 women in the University Were fuls of the Mediterranean on a put on probation for faulty schol- brilliant noon.'" arship, they will be allowed to have Prof. Jack continued, "It is no- only two dates a week for the rest ticeable that the less a best-seller of the semester. I OSCAR O. M. VOGEL MARTIN H. 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