1w TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1931 THE MTCI-ITGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1931 TIlE MICHIGAN DAI L4Y m WFAV A-um 11,W. must w,-.. - i CARNIVALCHAIRMAN SELECTS DATE AND COMMITTEE HEADS Affair Has Become Traditional Event to Raise Funds for W. A. A. PRIZES TO BE AWARDED Every Dormitory, Sorority and League House Will Have Its Booth. Chairmen of committees for the Penny Carnival which will, be held March 4 in Barbour gymnasium have been announced by Jean Bots- ford, '32, vice-president of the Wo- men's Athletic Association and gen- eral chairman of the Carnival. The committee chairmen are Clara Grace Peck, '33, chairman of publicity; Barbara B r a u n, '33, chairman of booths; Jane Fechei- mer, '33, treasurer, Anna Neberle, '33, chairman of entertainment, and Margaret O'Brien, '33, Daily assist- ant. Elizabeth Loudon, '32, is in charge of the final interclass bask- etball game which is always played the night of the Carnival. Is Sponsored By W. A. A. The Penny' Carnival was first sponsored by W. A. A. four years ago, and since then has become a traditional event. Each dormitory and sorority house constructs a booth where it conducts sales, games, or shows. Prizes are award- ed booths for originality and finan- cial success. A large main attrac- tion or show is staged in Sarah Caswell Angell hall, and usually there is dancing downstairs. Each article sold may be purchased for. the price of one penny, and the proceeds go to the Women's Ath- letic Association. It is largely through the Penny l Carnival and Lantern Night that W. A. A. comes in close contact with all the women in the University. The committee chairmen will hold their first meeting at 2:15 o'clock Friday afternoon, Jan. 23, in Barbour gymnasium. Commit- tee members will be appointed at this time. MUSICAL SORORIT Y HOLDS CEREMON Y FOUNDER OF HULL HOUSE HONORED BY INTERNATIONAL PEACE LEAGUE i- 4ssocw ted Press Photo Jane Addams (right), 70-year-o1d founder of the Hull House in Chicago, shown at a luncheon given in her honor by the New'York branch of the Women's International League for Freedom and Peace. She is shown with Emily Greene Balch, international league president. 'CLUB T RMT UTDOOR ACTIVITY New Group Will be Organized for Women Interested in Spofts. Plans for an outdoor club, to be devoted exclusively to outdoor ac- tivities, were approved at the last meeting of the Women's Athletic! Association board, and organization of the club will be carried out dur- ing the next few weeks, according to an announcement by Audrey Callander, '33 Ed., outdoor chair- man of W. A. A. The group will be known as the Outdoor Club, and in addition to the regular office of president, vice- president, and secretary, there will be a member placed in charge of each sport, with a committee un- der her. Only the outdoor sports, such as skiing, hiking, and canoe- ing will be organized in this way.- The chairman of each sport will co-operate with Miss Callander in forming plans for the club's activi- ties. Letters have been sent to a num- ber of women students interested in sports, and these women will be invited to charter membership. Af- ter the club is formed, any member may suggest students who would fill the requirements for member- ship. These requirements will not be strict, according to Miss Callan- dar, but will include such qualifica- tions as interest in the activities and aims of the group, and willing- ness to come out for the meetings. Plans are also being made for another skiing and tobogganing party, due to the success of the one held Saturday. If the weather permits, the group will meet at 21 o'clock Saturday afternoon, Jan. 24,' at the Women's Athletic building, and will go from there to the Ar- boretum. Refreshments will be served afterwards at the Athletic building. CALENDAR Jan. 20-27. , Tuesday.E 2:30--Ann Arbor's Women Club, League ball room. 2:30-Newcomer's Section 3, Fac- ulty Women's Club, Lounge II, League building. 4:00-Junior Girls' Play Rehear- sal, Chorus A. League committee room. S5:00-Junior Girls' Play, Chorus B, League committee room. 7:15-Alpha Gamma Sigma, ~League cave. 7:30-Zeta Phi Eta, fourth floor, Angell hall. 8:00-Michigan Dames, League building. Wednesday. 2:30-Faculty Women's C 1 u b, Music Section, League building. 3:00-Music Committee, Junior irls' Play, W. A. A. Office, League building. 4:00-Junior Girls' Play, Chorus C, League committee room. 5:00-Junior Girls' Play, Chorus D, League committee room. 7:30-Alpha Alpha Gam ma, League building. 8:00-University Girls' Glee Club, League committee room. 9:30-Faculty Women's Club, Art Section, League building. Thursday. 1:00-King's Daughters, League building. 1:00-Board of Faculty Women's Club, League building. 3:00-Program committee, Junior Girls' Play, concourse of League building. 4:00--Chorus E, Junior Girls' Play, League committee room. 7:00-W A. A. Open DHouse, Wo- men's Athletic building. 7:30-Mu Phi Epsilon, League building. 7:30-Freshman Girls' Glee Club, League committee room. Saturday. - a I Chicag Dev rtramUral' NEWS, R1esults of Monday's Games. Zeta Tai Alpha 42, Mosher hall 5. This was the opening game of the elimination series of the Intramural basketball tournament and proved a decided victory to Zeta Tau Al- pha. The Mosher team had made a fairly good showing up to this time and had defeated two oppo- nents in order to enter the final rounds but she loss of the jumping center proved too great a handicap for the Mosherites against as strong a team as the Zeta Tau Alphas. The forwards on the Zeta Tau Alpha team played an exceptionally fine game ?nd had a well organized defense. Though it is early in the tournament to predict final results and this game too one-sided to test the strength of the Zeta Tau Alphas, yet it is evident that they will put up a strong fight for the championship. Alpha Xi Delta 18, Helen New- berry 10. Rough playing and a considera- ble amount of fouling marked this game. Helen Newberry put up a strong defense but was not able to withstand the attack of the Alpha Xi Deltas. It was a fast game and the floor was well covered at all times. ;o Art Exhibit 'TEAMS ENTER LAST oted to Women Painters of Note ROUNOf TOURNEY DNCE CHORUSESI WILL MEET TOAY Groups to Assemble at Various I Times Before Beginning Rehearsals.l Choruses for the 1931 Junior Girls' Play will meet for the first time this week, before going in a regular rehearsal schedule. Women who will participate in these chor- uses have all been notified of the group into which they have been placed. At 4 o'clock today Chorus A will meet in the committee room at theI League building, while Chorus B' will follow at 5 o'clock. Tomorrow Choruses C and D will meet at 4. and 5 o'clock respectively in the same place. Chorus E will meet at 4 o'clock Thursday, the place to be announ e;- l1iter. Any one w.'o cannot possibly at- tend this first meeting of the groups, should get in touch with Winifred Root, at 7717. Miss Root is one of the three chairmen of the dance committee which is in charge l of training the choruses this year. Teresa Romani Made Head of W.A.A. Group Teresa Romani, '33, was appoint-j ed swimming manager on the Wo- men's Athletic Association execu-, tive board at the meeting of the board held Saturday, Jan. 17. Miss Romani will take the place of Jean Botsford, '32, who was re- cently appointed vice-president of W. A. A., and will have charge of all interclass and intramural swim- ming activities. Cile Miller, '32. ---- Feminism struck Chicago in the 18 Teams Competing in Final art field during the past week when # Basketball Elimination several of the art galleries opened Series This Week. e x h i b it s devoted completely to 4 wome artsts Perapsthe ost Out of 40 teams entered in the dmvin uartissrk erhaps themsNat Intramural basketball tournament indiidul wrk s tat f Nncythis semester 18 have reached the Dyer who is showing a group of final round and are competing in water color sketches and pastels at the elimination series being con- O'Brien's. With brush and paint ducted this week. The tournament she strikes a refined O'Henry atti- was held according to the schedule tude in the slices of life that she teewo weeks ofpac tice gm es, captures and recreates through her and now a week and a half for the art medium. elimination. If it weren't for the fact that The teams that have reached the Miss Dyer's work is far above the final round are Alpha Xi Delta, average caricaturist's work her Kappa Kappa Gamma, Alpha Omi- name might be associated with that cron Pi, Sigma Kappa, Mosher Hall, field of art work. Her sketches in Adelia Cheever, Martha Cook, Phi their gawky reality recall a realis- Sigma Sigma, Helen Newberry, Al- tic Boz, a Boz that outdoes Boz. pha Chi Omega, Jordan Hall, Jor- If one were not assured of her dan Hall 2, Couzens Hall, League American origin and were only ac- 2, Chi Omega, Kappa Delta, League quainted with her work, a not un- 7 and Zeta Tau Alpha. natural guess would be that she 7 Teams Won 2 Out of 3 Games. with her delightful piquancy had In order to be eligible for the arisen from the gamins of Paris. elimination series the teams had to Following the fad of the would- win two out of three games played. be-smart in their devotion to the The tournament was a Round Rob- canine world with its shifts and in and the lasing of one game did changes in fashion from the pe- not eliminate the team from the kingnesc to the fox terrier, Miss tournament but a second opportun- Diana Thorne who is exhibiting at ity was afforded to redeem them- the Roulier's catches these covered selves. dogs in their most saucy moments. At the close of the elimination However, in spite of the fact that series the interclass tournament Miss Thorne is lead to follow the will begin. Intramural players have dictates of fashion's rage, hers is been closely observed not only dur- a truly artistic interpretation of ing the round robin series but also the canine world. during the practice games, and the So far she has lent her hand to interclass tea ms will be chosen the mediums of the painter. But from among the best intramural with her one successful venture in players. a plaster model which also is on display at the Roulier's, we can DEBATE WOMEN'S SKILL safely surmise that she will produce very promising sculpture in the Whether or not women should be near future. In spite of the fact permitted to hold such offices as that the show is predominated by president of the student body, the presence of her pert pup crea- chairman of the Welfare board, tions, she hashno mean ability at and editor of the various publica- catching the shrug-of-the-shoulder tions was the subject of a debate attitude of the cats. I to be held at the University of Cal- Besides these women artists who I ifornia at Los Angeles are taking Chicago by storm this --- ------ week, we have a group of three, Ethel Coe, Anna Lynch, and Ethel Payraud who are exhibiting at the ATTEN TION Chicago galleries Association. In order to determine the most Mosher Jordan popular woman of Butler univer- Girls sity, an election was conducted by Sigma Delta Chi, national journal- Lodge Beauty Salon in istic fraternity. All students cast Observatory Lodge Apts. their ballots in a sealed ballot box. I , ,!. Installation of Patronesses Followed by Musicale. Is Cleveland Woman Visits Prisons to Study Conditions Miss Leona Marie Esch of Cleve- land has visited 67 major pene- tentiaries of the United States and Canada in search for the irritations that cause prisoners to riot. Miss Esch is operating director of the Cleveland Association for Criminal Justice, and has gone into the prisons to obtain views of the inmates, gain their confidence and discuss their problems intimately. From these discussions she has found the chief sources of irrita- tion are the indeterminate sen- tence, idleness and overcrowding. The greatest of these is the in- determinate sentence, which has been put into force in about two- thirds of the states, she says. Miss Esch believes that the pres- ent system of sentencing is "thor- oughly unsatisfactory." 8:30-Zeta Phi Eta, dance, League Alumnae room. Woman Directs Work of LargeOrchid Farm Miss Caroline Barnes, one of the few recognized orchidologists in the country, directs the work of more than four score of gardeners with 500,000 growing plants in a large orchid nursery. From the time she has been a small child, Miss Barnes has been interested in flowers. "The seven years spent in raising a seedling orchid to a plant, full grown, is full of surprises," declares Miss Barnes. i r------- ' Ceremonies marking the installa- tion of Mrs. David E. Mattern and Mrs. James Hamilton as patronesses of the Gamma chapter of Mu Phi Epsilon, honorary musical sorority were held last Sunday afternoon in Martha Cook 35, Phi the home of Mrs. John Worley at ma 6. 1901 Washtenaw. All active mem- As the score would iii bers and patronesses of the soror- was a very one-sided3 ity were present, and a musical weakness of the Phi Si program followed the services. team was due in part,l Genevieve Griffey, '32SM, pre-', the loss of one of their l sented a violin solo, "Preeludium on account of fouling. and Allegro," by Pugnani-Kreisler, and Lucy Keegstra, '31SM, sang four solo selections; "Deh Vienne, Non Tardar," by Mozart; Widmung (Dedication), by Franz; "The Cry- ing of Water," by Campbell Lipton, and "Long Long Ago," by Turner I Maley. A cello solo, "Hungarian Rhapsody," by Popper, was offered I by Ruby Peinert, '34SM. pe Niaodiste Shoppe FORMAL MODES Designed to Express Individuality Alterations-Hemstitching Dial 2-1129 620 East Liberty Street Fifty million. pen points Every Fur Coa Women Request Late Permission at M.S.C. A strong movement for 1 o'clock privileges for women for Friday night fraternity and sorority for- mals was inaugurated at Michigan State College when both the Inter- fraternity council and Pan-Hellenic presented petitions to the faculty social committee. Action on the petitions is expected at an early date, as there has been an under- current of opinion in favor of the change for sometime on campus. TYPEWRITERt REPAIRING All makes of machines. Our equipment and per- s o n n e I are considered among the best in the State. The result of twenty years' careful building. 0. D. MORRILL 314 South State St. Phone 6615 01 0/0 wATE MAM O n 00, w :can't be wrong? \Q n n n nn n n n n n n nflfnnn Long ago Waterman's turned out its fifty-millionth gold pen point. The gold pen point is so important a part of a fountain pen that Waterman's make their own- and have done so since '87 were freshmen! That's one good reason why Waterman's pens write better. 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