SUNDAY. MARCH 15.-1931 THE MICHIGAN DAILY fi ILVY*VAM ZWA'wAIM" Annual Senior Supper to be Held Tomorrow ,GRH AM _nAND LEVY APPOINTED GUARDS FORSENIOR HNIGHT Ten Other Juniors Are Chosen to Follow Leading Guards ti on Senior Walk. TO RETURN FOR PLAY Songs From Last Year's Junior Girls' Play Will be Sung During Supper. Jean Levy and Agnes Graham will be the leaders of the junior honor guards who are to escort the senior women on their traditional walk around the campus tomorrow night, following the Senior Supper. These two women were selected from members of Wyvern, junior honorary society. Ten other women have beer chosen to follow the leading guards. They are Agnes Davis, Louise Break- ey, Evelyn Currah, Sarah Bond, Dorothy.Coll, Donna Jones, Wini- fred Hartman, Isabelle Jenkins; Barbara Wright, and Elizabeth Robertson. Will Wear Caps and ,Gowns. Robed for the first time in their caps and gowns, all senidr womer will attend the Senior Supper which will be held at 6:30 o'clock in the lounge on the second floor of the League building. There will be nc speeches included on the program but songs from "State Street," last year's Junior Girls' Play will bE featured. Will See "Came the Dawn." Immediately following the ban- quet the junior honor guards wil lead the senior women on thei customary march bringing then back in time for the first perform- ance of the Junior Girls' Play "Came the Dawn."x Lucille Strauss is general chair- man of, the event and she has beer. assistedtby Jane Yearnd, Marjori McClung, Elizabeth Wood, Hatti( Kreye, and Helen Domine. FIRST GIRL SCOUT ENROLLED IN U. S. Associated I'rcss Photo Mrs. Samuel C. Lawrence, First girl scout to register in this country 19 years ago, who will join 250,000 girl scouts in the United States in birthday celebration of the organization this month. Mrs. Lawrence is from Savannah, Ga. SUNDAY MORNING RIDES TO START Group Rides to be Held Tuesday and Thursday Nights. The first of a series of Sunday' morning rides sponsored by the Wo- men's Athletic Association will be held at 10 o'clock this morning in the indoor riding ring at the fair- grounds. These rides are planned for both beginners and experienced riders, as both can be taken care of in the indoor ring. Instruction will be given to those who wish it, accord- ing to an announcement by Miss Vanessa Glenn, of the physical education department for women. The group riding this morning will meet at 9:50 o'clock in the main lobby of the League building. Transportation to the fairgrounds will be provided. Beginning March 24, group rides will be held at 7:30 o'clock every Tuesday and Thursday nights. ALUMNAE TO AID TEN-YEAR PLAN Wish to Maintain High Standard of! Advanced Scholarship; Foster Research. As its share in the Ten-year Pro- gram, the Alumnae Council of the Michigan Alumni Association had announced a project of raising a fund for graduate fellowships. Its purpose is to aid the Graduate school in maintaining the highest standards of advanced scholarship, to foster research, and in general to uphold and increase the Univer- sity's scholastic prestige. Capital Fund to be Raised. I The tentative plan is to raise a capital fund of $150.000 dollars, making possible ten individual fel- lowships of about $750 dollars a year, and in adition, to raise cur- rent funds of $750 to be spent at once for a single fellowship for a single year. One fellowship fund of $750 is already available for next year, and application blanks for women who wish to apply are available in the office of the Dean of Women. Although the plan is to make the funds more and more elastic, it is felt that this award should go to an alumna of Michigan who plans to work in the Graduate school. Awards will be made on the basis of outstanding scholastic {ibility, desirable personality, and promise of achievement in advanced fields of study. Award Comittee Is Named. All applications will pass through the office of Dean of Women and then through the regular channels of the Graduate School. The com- mittee on awards consists of Dean G. Carl Huber, of the Graduate school, Miss Alice Lloyd, Dean of Women, Mrs. Charles Gore, chair- man of the Alumnae Council, Prof. John Winter, of the Graduate Council, and Martha Guernsey Col- by, alumnae representative. As it is desired to make the award before the end of the present semester, all applications for the fellowship must be in by April 20. The Alumnae Council feels that in the present economic crisis such funds may be of value to superior students. Sculpture Exhibit Honors Memory of Tennessee Anderson By C. M., '32j First of the Chicago women- piano-tuners, the wife of Sherwood Anderson and pre-eminently an ar- tist for the past ten years, Tennes- see Anderson who died a year ago was honored during February with{ a memorial exhibition of her sculp- ture at the Walden Dudensing gal- leries in Chicago.- She follows in the footsteps of many of her contemporaries in that she delights in the conventionally unconventional. Hence ever since she turned the Bohemian artist, she K'ias been fertile ground for the re- porters of the unusual. Her first four heads were carved out of clay with a hair pin and a paring knife! But all of this in no way effects her art. The dominating quality of her figures is that she entertains a decided Rabelesian humour. None of the frailties of men find a sym- pathy under the searching power of her modeling tools. And yet by this, one must not infer that she has no sympathy. She has; but also she catches the gods' caricature in all of us from her self-satisfied Well-to-do, to her Old Scholar, from her Labor, the head of a sensitive woman ground down by hard work to her They Are Squarer With Kids GOODWILL CIRCLE G1IS CHARITY TEA. Many Attend Affair Given by Local Group in Ballroom of League. Four hundred students, faculty members, and townspeople attend- ed the charity tea given by the Goodwill Circle of King's Daugh- ters yesterday afternoon in the ballroom of the League building. The tea is an annual affair spon- sored by this organization. Theodore J. Smith contributed the main part of the entertainment. giving a group of Spanish dances with his partner, Miss Esther Grim- show, which "were very well receiv- ed by the audience. Dorothea M. Torbeson, '32, sang a group of songs. "The Old Lady Shows Her Med- als" was presented by students in the Play Production department, including Dorothy H. Pastoret, '31, Margaret R. Durst, '31, Nellie Lai Rue, '31, Janet Woodmansee, '32,' Richard R. Purser, '31, and Alan# Handley, '32.1 Those who poured were Mrs. Alli- son Ray Heaps, Mrs. John Schlee, Mrs. Edward Staebler, and Mrs. W. B. McMillan of Ann Arbor and Mrs. A. W. Coxon of Detroit. Those in the receiving line were Mrs. Julio del Toro, Mrs. John Schlee, Mrs. M. P. Turner, Regent Esther Cram, Mrs. Junious E. Beal and wives of all the ministers in Ann Arbor. VARIOUS SOCIAL EVENTS INTEREST WOMEN STUDENTS THIS WEEK-END Initiation Ceremonies, Dinners, ority is holding its formal initiation Rushing Parties, and ceremonies, to be followed by "a. TeasAre eld.banquet at which many of the De- Teas Are Held.troit alumnae are to be present. Alpha Xi Delta wish to announce This week-end reflects the latter the pledging of Anna Ratliss, '32, part of last week in its variety of Winchester, Ky., and Mildred Haz- social events in the sororities. Ini- elwerdt, '33, Rochester, Mich. tiation ceremonies andbanquets, Alpha Omicron P gave a rush- patroness dinners, rushing parties, ApaOirnP aears and teas all feature on the list of ing party for four guests qn last entertainments. Thursday night. Alpha Gamma Delta gave a for- mal dinner last Thursday night in . honor of the following of their STODDARD patrons and patronesses: Mr. and! BEAUTY Mrs. Walter Ford, Mr. and Mrs. H Walter Badger, Mr. and Mrs. G ro- SHOPPE ver Grismore, Mr. and Mrs. Julio del Toro, and Mrs. W. R. Curtis. 1 nnounces This afternoon, Alpha Gamma Del- A Special Price in ta are honoring the Ann Arbor PeW mother's club with a tea to be given ermanent aving at the chapter house. Mrs. L. D. Until Easter, April 5th Shunen will pour, and Mr. Robert A $1O Wave for Crandall is to entertain at the piano. $7 and$5 Honor Faculty Members. TEST CURL GIVEN FREE Last Tuesday evening Phi Sigma Sigma gave an informal guest din- STODDARD ner at which the guests of honor BEAUTY SHOP were Mr. and Mrs. 11. B. Ullian, Mr. and Mrs. William Angell, and Mrs. Call 2-1212 317 So. State St. R. Silbert. This afternoon, the sor- -- and I Don't Know Why.a Announcing.. A Two Week Extension of Our Specials in PERMANENT WAVING $10 PERMANENT WAVES FOR 5 THIS MEANS A SAVING OF $5 TO YOU The DIm mATTIA BEAUTY S-HOPPE 338 South State Street Dial 8878 (ABOVE THE PARROT) OPEN EVENINGS More than 106,000,000 books and pamphlets were turned out by the government printing office last year, representing a value of about $14,000,000. Ii FL IT'S. YOUR PLAY And that's not a lot of pub- licity bunk. It's produced by YOUR co-eds, it's set on YOUR campus, its char- acters are YOUR pet aver- sions as well as YOUR favor- ites and its songs. have the catchy rhythms that appeal to YOUR sense of beat. Don't be in the dark; see this spark- ling musical comedy. .r I SCI 4' MORE THAN ENTERTAINMENT! VIVID CHARACTERIZATION ! DON'T MISS Ii PRICES FIRST EIGHT ROWS ................... 2.50 I II ~BLOCKS OF 15 OR MORE $2.00I ®a Starts TOMORROW 11 Through REMAINING FIRST FLOOR...... BALCONY............... ....... $2.00 .$1.50 11 li 11 II I III LI .d4 e%/% III IIH