SATURDAY, MAY 10, 1930 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE 4. Ns i PLANS BEING COMPLETED FOR LANTERN NIGHT; DOOTHY M TOUFF'30, GENERAL CHAIRMAN, APPOINTS COMMITTEE AIDS Traditional Ceremonies Will be Observed on Palmer Field the Night of May 27. SENIORS TO BE GOWNED Freshman Pageant to be Staged Followed by Serpentine March of Classes.. Plans for Lantern Night, which is to be May 2, have been started by the central committee which had its first meeting yesterday. Dorothy Touff, '30, as president of the Women's Athletic Association, which sponsors the event, is general chair- man. Elizabeth Louden, '32, is ac- ting in the capacity of secretary- treasurer. Other members of the committee are Eleanor Cooke, '31, president- elect of the Women's League; Helen DeWitt, '33, general chairman of the Freshman Pageant; Albertina Maslen, '31, who is in charge of procession properties; D o r o t h y ."Sample, '32, chairman of field dec- oration; chaiman of music, Fran- ces Sackett, '30. Jean Levy, '32, is chairman of publicity; Janet Michael, '31, chair- man of lunches; Lucille Lough, '32, charmano patrons and pa- tronesses; and Helen Domine, '31, chairman of programs. Tradition of Michigan Women. Lantern Night is considered one of the most beautiful traditions of Michigan women, for at this time, by means of a symbolic ceremony, the sophomores bcome juniors, the juniorspass 'to the dignity of sen- rrs and the seniors go safely into '$thewd e, wide, °wVorld." The ceremonies begin when the women :start gathering, at Palmer field about §:30 o'clock, at which time a picnic box lunch is served. Immediately following this, the Freshman Pageant is presented by the first year women. By this time the sun has set, and all the women form in classes under the direction of leaders and aides, chosen from each class. The seniors, in cap and gown, carry lighted lanterns, while the juniors carry hoops, through which the sophomores will eventually pass. After a serpentine march to Palmer field, the seniors pass their lanterns to the juniors, and the sophomores receive the hoops of the juniors. A block 'M" is formed, outlined by the lanterns, and the ceremonies end with the singing of the "Yel- low and Blue." Board of Directors Meeting to be Held At 10 o'clock this morning there will be a meeting of the old and new members of the Board of Di- rectors of the Women's League in the Directors' room of the League building. Plans will be completed for the installation banquet to be held next Wednesday, May 14, which every woman on campus is requested to attend. The method of procedure for the installation service will be discus- sed, and the new Board members will be acquainted with the duties of each office. BASEBALL SCHEDULE Monday at 4 Zeta Tau Alpha vs. Pi Beta Phi. Chi Omega vs. Kappa Kappa Gamma. Alpha Phi vs. Alpha Xi Delta. Delta Gamma vs. Alpha Gam- ma Delta. Monday at 5 1rKappa Delta vs. Alpha Omi- cron Pi. A Helen Newberry vs. Theta Phi Alpha. BANO VET TICKETS PLCDON SA1L Installation of League Officers to Take Place at Banquet Wednesday, May 14. MISS LLOYD WILL SPEAK Tickets for the installation ban- quet of the Women's League to be held Wednesday, May 14, at 6 o'- clock in the League ballroom are now on sale in the lobby of the League building. To this gather- ing, the second open meeting of the League this year, it is customary for dormitories, League houses, and so- rorities to come in a body, and a large attendance is expected. In addition to the installation services for the new League Board of Directors, the program will in- clude a short talk by Miss Alice C. Lloyd, advisor of women, Her- mine Soukup, '31, resigning treas- urer of the Women's League, will read the treasurer's report for this year, and Margaret Bush, '31, will turn over her office of president of the League to Eleanor Cooke, '31. This ceremony will be followed by a short speech of acceptance by Miss Cooke. NEW ACTIVITIES UNDERTAKEN BY ATHENA SOCIETY Arrangements for various activi- ties to be carried out in the near future were made in the last meet- ing of Athena, honorary women's debating club. A bridge party, which will be opened to all women, has been planned for May 17, at the League building. The chair- man of plans for this party is Mad- elon Andrus, '31. A freshman Athena-Zeta Phi Eta debate on some important campus questions will take place at the League May 13, in the fourth floor club room. Olympia LaMarca, '31, has charge of the debate arrange- ments. The exact subject will be announced later. Donna McCaughna, '31, will rep- resent Athena on the committee of arrangements for the second se- mester party to be given by the combined, group of Athena, Zeta Phi Eta, Adelphi, and Alpha Nu. This party will be in culmination of the year's work and is a regular semi-annual affair. WOMAN SELECTED MANAGING EDITOR I Adriana Orlebeke. Recently appointed managing editor of the Cardinal, University of Wisconsin student daily, is the first woman to hold this post. Miss' Orlebeke is only 19 years old. University Writer Gives! Les Miserables' Is Subject Literary Program Planned for Sunday. PROFESSOR N LSON WILL GIVE READING ' of TO TELL AUTHOR'S AIMS Les Miserables by Victor Hugo will be the subject of Prof. J. Raleigh Nelson's reading to be given Sunday afternoon, May 11, at the League building. For those in- terested in the novel, this program ought to be particularly valuable, as Professor Nelson will discuss it from many standpoints, emphasiz- ing especially the unity and har- mony of the book. By bringing out the author's un- derlying idea, he will try to explain' why Hugo placed in his novel ac-I counts of the convents of Paris, itsl sewers, and other things that may not seem altogether necessary to some. The book also will be discuss- ed from the thought of its being a} social thesis, dealing as it does so minutely with the life in France at the end of the eiahteenth yen- TRADITIONAL FETES MAKE OXFORD UNDERGRADUATE LIFE INTERESTING Mrs. Leonard Manyon, graduate tower at dawn. The tower would ' of Oxford who is now residing in sway when the chimes were rung Ann Arbor, describes the "city of to hail the rising sun; after that towers and spires" as a magic city we went into the meadows to pickI where life is delightful and gay. the purple Oxfordshire flower, then Mrs. Manyon graduated from the for a gigantic breakfast at an inn," last of the five women's colleges to she continued. be founded and stated that at Ox- "At Oxford one had a room of! ford the college replaces the Amer- one's own, though we nearly froze' ican sorority as far as social, mat- to death during the winter. The ters are concerned. women lived rather a bachelor's "Every afternoon was a holiday," life, as the social life was not par- stated Mrs. Manyon, while describ- ticularly a busy one, the big event l ing life at Oxford, "but we worked being the boat races that came the hard as well as played hard, there- second week in May. by striking the half-way mark that "One of the traditional spots near makes life interesting. On these aft- Oxford was a place called Binsey ernoons we used to play the games where a spout of clear water spark- that are so popular among English led out once long ago, when 'St. women, or take a boat ride on the Frideswide, the abbess, prayed for nearby river. Sometimes we would rain in time of drought. If one walk in the hills that surround Ox- throws a pin into the well andI ford. It was pleasant to lie on the makes a wish, the wish supposedly grass and look down on that 'sweet comes true," concluded Mrs. Man- city with the dreamy towers.' The yon. enchanted names of the places about, Bablock, Hythe, Hinksey, The Swan club at Ohio State uni- and Goodstowe with its ruined versity will present a pageant this haunted abbey and charming inn, week in the natatorium. Dances, are prominent in our memories. water drills, pyramids, unusual div- "There were certain old customs ing, clever costumes, and swim- which we observed. On May morn- ming to music are features of the ing we would go down to Magdalen program. NOTICE. Since the Freshman Pageant is less than four weeks off, it has been requested that every . freshman woman who is par- ticipating in the dances, should report regularly for group re- hearsals. Miss Sylvia Adams, ad- * visor, will answer any questions concerning the time and the place of practices. t4 I \. { I' Information on Dieting tury tlliI tIlll 11111111111111111111111111111111 liii lIii 1 ,1 The hour will include areading - Those who cling to the vain hope of some of the more dramatic of losing weight by diet and exer- scenes from 'Les Miserables.' Tea = cise may read the following report will be served at the end of the pro- = of Mrs. Catherine Blunt, of the Uni- gram. versity of Chicago:_ _ _ "College girls today are taller OHIO WESLEYAN-Female ty- and larger than their predecessors outs for the Wesleyan Transcript of a generation ago," she says, "be- outnumber the male thirty nine to ,. cause of a better diet, and more two. Of the 41 who are trying out outdoor exercise." for positions 35 are trying out for- Miss Blunt compiled her informa- the news staff, 4 for society, and= tion from statistics at Smith, Vas- only two for sports. 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