SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 1936 THE MICHICGA N D AILY All ull . 011111- H., Ill Fill. F , , . ill 1111111111 1 Ill 111 1 11 . I I I I I - . .. ........................ . . ........ . .......... .. . .... - , .-- - 1, 11 -- ..... . . .. .. ...... - ---- -- Commitee Announces Patrons For Second Annual Assembly PAGE FIVE Bali . I Annual Dance Poetry, Chess Prove Greatest I' Will Be Given On March 13 Tickets May Be* Obtained Frain League Desk Or Central Comiittee Programs Selected Enjoyment F Several Have' After Breakfast Parties Been Planned For Ball Patrons and patronesses for the second annual assembly ball to be held from 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. March 13 in the Ballroom of the League have been announced by Helen Jesperson, '37, chairman of the patrons committee. 'Included in the list are: President and Mrs. Alexander G. Ruthven, Dean and Mrs. Joseph A. Bursley, Dean and Mrs. Edward H. Kraus, Dean and Mrs. James B. Edmonson, Dean Alice C. Lloyd, Registrar and Mrs. Ira M. Smith. Prof. and Mrs. Fielding H. Yost, Prof. and Mrs. Bennett Weaver, Dr. Margaret Bell, Dr. Helene Schutz, Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Rea, Mrs. Byrl Fox Bacher, Mr. and Mrs. Donal Haines, Miss Ethel McCormick, Miss Jeannette Perry, Mrs. George M. Todd, Miss Isabelle Dudley, Mrs. Frederick G. Ray. Miss Sarah Rowe, Mr. and Mrs. George Stanley, Miss Anne Vardon, Mr. and Mrs. George McConkey, Mrs. Katherine Parsons, Mrs. Florence L. Preston, Miss Ruth Donielson, Miss Kathleen Hamm, Mr. and Mrs. Giles Kavanagh, Detroit, Mr. and Mrs. K. A. Karlson Detroit, and Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Heitsch, Pontiac. Tickets On Sale Tickets for the ball may be ob- tainedfrom any member of the cen- tral comjnittee or at the main desk of the League. Tickets are on sale for all independent women, and the sale will be opened to sorority women during the last week if there are still any remaining, officials stated. More than 200 tickets have already been sold. The number to be sold has been limited to 320. They are priced at $3. Programs for the dance are to be made of white leather and trimmed in gold. The first inside-page will be gold as will the Michigan seal on the cover and the small cord tying the program together. Decorations Announced Decorations for the ball are to be centered around three unusual chan- deliers according to Florence McCon- key, '38, chairman of the decorations committee. Each chandelier will be made in a hexagonal shape and are to have the effect of stained glass windows. The designs for the panels in the hexagonals were made by members of the decorations committee. In ad- dition, the orchestra platform is to be banked with flowers, Miss MConkey said. A number of breakfast parties have been planned by individual groups for after the ball. These are to be held in the League as well as two local eating houses. Dhmes To Sponsor Annual Style Show "A Cruise to Hawaii" will be the title of the style show sponsored by the homemaking group of the Mich- igan Dames to be given at 8 p.m, Tuesday in the Grand Rapids Room of the League. This is an annual af- fair. Mrs. Howard Dickee will act as master of ceremonies, and Mrs. R. W. French is in charge of the music. Models will be Mrs. W. L. Hindman, Mrs. Irving Palmquist, Mrs. Clifford Kiehn, Mrs. Carleton Brickell, Mrs. Paul H. Crampton, Mrs. Francis Dorner, and Mrs. Alfred Armstrong. Mrs. C. S. Magee and Mrs. K. R Hodge will act as ushers. POLLOCK TO SPEAK Prof. James K. Pollock will be the main speaker at the Graduate Club luncheon to be held at noon Wednesday, March 4 in the Russian Tea Room of the League. Professor Pollock's talk will consist of an in- formal discussion of the subject, "Government by Merit," according to Miss Jeannette Perry, who is in charge of the program., We regret that on the days directly preceding the BY RUTH SAUER "Poetry is my greatest enjoyment in life-poetry and chess," says Keith Borden Campbell, '36, pros- pective teacher and poet of merit. Campbell has been writing poems since he was nine and has attained a great deal of proficiency in the field of verse. His first attempt was on an Indian burial - and he has been trying to forget it ever since. For many years,,he wrote only on morbid, "graveyard" subjects. He later turned his attention to love, in an abstract sense, and philosophy. He began writing sonnets at Duke Uni- versity, North Carolina, which he at- tended for two years, and his first was dedicated to Marjorie Glasson, alumna of Duke University and field secretary of Zeta Tau Alpha. Campbell writes an average of four poems per week. His method of writ- ing is as follows: he sleeps with a "poetry pad" and pencil under his pillow. As the lines run through his' head, he rouses himself and jots them down. These may turn out to be a goo portion, or even the whole of a poem. ~ "I seldom start to write with any definite purpose in mind," he says. Schedule For JGP Practices Is Announced. Practices for the various choruses in J.G.P., start this coming week, Virginia Frink, director, announced. The Gargoyle scene, scheduled for 4 p.m. Monday, consists of Barbara Strand, Grace Woodley, Jane Fitz- gerald, Kay Kerivan, Jane Christy, Betty King, Jane Lesselyong, Jean Hatfield, Sue Willard, Louise Sprague and Betty Parish. The Detective scene, set for 5 p.m. of the same day, is composed of Lois Spreen, Virginia Callow, Phyllis Blauman, Barbara Spenser, Gretchen Kanter and Jo Kavanaugh. Those in the Esquire chorus, which meets at 4 p.m. Tuesday, are Helen Rowe, Lois King, Harriet Hathaway, Jean Harrison, Jacqueline Kolle and Maryanna Chockley. At 5 p.m. Tues- day, practice starts for the photoplay scene, which is made up of Mary Potter, Helen Jones, Jean Greenwald, Jane Rogers, Evelyn Eichelberger, Rosemary McKay, Nancy Berson, Mary Farrington, and Mary John- son. DELTA SIGMA PI Raymond Conrad, '38Lit., acting headmaster of Delta Sigma Pi Bus- iness Administration fraternity, re- turned Friday after a two week's win- ter vacation in Miami. The frater- nity announces the pledging of Jack Erhardt and Norman Stoll, both '38L. of Grand Rapids. or Student Poet He has had about 35 poems pub- lished in Richard Henry Little's "Lineotype or Two" column in the Chicago Tribune. An architectonic sonnet of his composition, entitled "Apology For The Flesh," appeared in R.H.L.'s 1933 Linebook. He has entered many poetry contests; about 13 years ago, he won first prize in a limerick contest sponsored by the Chicago Tribune. Campbell has gathered a large number of his poems into a book, which he calls "A Spring Confession- al." His most prolific work is "Dis- illusionment," a poem on love. A general favorite among the students here is his witty ballad, "The Shoot- ing Of Dan McGink," a parody on that well-known poem of similar name. Gregory, Sawyer Instruct Dancers Douglas Gregory, '39, and Marie Sawyer, '39, local dance artists, are assisting Miss Ethel McCormick, so- cial director of the League, with the ballroom dancing classes which she has recently started. Beginners meet at 7:00 p.m. Tues- days, intermediates, at 7:30 p.m. Wednesdays, and advanced dancers at 8:30 p.m. Wednesdays. Any steps which are requested will be taught. All classes are to be held in the League ballroom, and any student assisting Miss McCormick, will re- ceive regular League points for it. D AILY OFFCA BULLETIN (continued from Page 4) ment." All students and their friends are cordially invited. Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church: Services of worship today: 8:00 a.m., Holy Communion, 9:30 a.m., Church School, 11:00 a.m., Kindergarten; 11:00 a.m., Holy Communion and Sermon by The Rev. Henry Lewis. Union Service: This evening at 8 o'clock there will be a Union Ser- vice sponsored by the Ann Arbor Ministerial Association in The First Congregational Church. Music by St. Andrew's Choir. First Baptist Church: 10:45 a.m., Mr. Sayles will speak on "God and These Times." Church school at 9:30. Dr. Waterman's class at Guild House at 9:45. Zion Lutheran Church: F. C. Stellhorn, Pastor. 9:00 a.m., Sunday school. 9:00 a.m., service in the German language. 10:30 a.m., regular morning worship with sermon, "The Cross A Necessity." 5:30 p.m., Student fellowship and supper. 6:30 p.m., Prof. F. N. Mene- fee will address the Student Club on, -Inroads of Communism in America." Roger Williams Guild: At noon Mr. Chapman meets stu- dents at Guild House. "Christian So- cial Action." 6:00 p.m.. Miss vung-Yuin Ting, '39M, will speak on Confucianism. This is the second special address on great religions. Trinity Lutheran Church: 9:15, Sunday School. 10:30, Church worship with sermon "God and the Cross -- Inseparable." 5:30, Luth- eran Student Club in Zion Lutheran Parish Hall. Prof. F. N. Menefee will speak at 6:30 on "The Inroads of Communism in America." Mid-week Lenten devotional service on Wednes- day evenings at 7:45. Lutheran Student Club: Prof. F. N. Menefee, of the Engineering depart- ment, will speak this evening in the parish hall of Zion Lutheran Church on E. Washington Street on the sub- ject "Inroads of Communism in Am- erica." The program will follow sup- per at 6 p.m. Unitarian Chuch, 5:30 Twilight service, "Our debt to the A-Typical." 7:30, Liberal Students Union. Pre- view of four reels of movies taken recently in Europe and Russia. Scalp and Blade: Dinner at 6 p.m. at the Union. Prof. Hopkins will be the speaker. Varsity Glee Club: Picture at Rent- schler's Studio, 319 E. Huron, at 3:00 p.m. Full dress or Tuxedo coat with white ties. Very important rehearsal at the Union following the picture. Coming Events Chemistry Colloquium will meet Wednesday, March 4, 4:00 p.m., Room 303 Chemistry Building. Prof. J. R. Bates will speak on "An Ele- mentary Approach to the Fluctua- tion of Density." Junior Research Club: Tile March 3 meeting of the club will be held at 7:30 p.m. in Room 2082, Natural Science Building. Papers to be presented are: "Dem- onstration of the large hydrocal," by A. D. Moore, and "The precise deter- mination of standard electrical con- ductivity values," by R. D. Thomp- son. Graduate Education Club meeting on Monday, March 2, 4 p.m., in the Elementary School Library. Dean Edmonson, Drs. Woody and McClus- ky will give informal reports on the activities of the St. Louis meeting of the National Education Association. Contemporary: Meeting of the business staff, 4:30 p.m., Monday, Student Publications Building. Luncheon for Graduate Students on Wednesday, March 4, at 12 o'clock in the Russian Tea Room of the MENEFEE 1TO SPEAK Michigan League Building. Profes- Prof. F. N. Menefee, of the engi- sor James K. Pollock, of the Political veering mcliel siS department, will Science Department, will speak in- address members of the Lutheran formally on "Government by Merit." Students' Club on "The Inroads of Communism in America" at its week- Women's Research Club: Regular ly meeting at 5:30 p.m. today in Zion meeting, Monday, March 2, Room Lutheran Parish Hall. 3024, Museums Building, at 7:30 p.m. Miss Winifred Smeaton will speak on "Experiences in Iraq." SE N Michigan Dames will present their annual style show in the Grand Rap- ids Room of the League at 8 o'clock, Tuesday evening, March 3. Dames and their friends are invited. Th admisuion fee wvill be ten cents. -)- GUI HALLER'S Jewelry dS State and Liberty Watch Repairing- E Tuesday Play Reading Section of the Faculty Women's Club will meet Tuesday, March 3, 2:15 p.m., Alumnae Room of the Michigan League. Johnny Layton, world famous three cushion billiard player, will appear in the last exhibition in the Union billiard room for this year on Mon- day, March 2, from 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m., and from 8:00 to 9:00 p.m. Rog- er Dillon, M.A., '32, will compete against him in the evening exhibition. Admission free. Pistol Practice for Advanced Corps R.O.T.C. students will start Monday, March 2, 4:00 p.m. Ammunition may be purchased at Headquarters for 25 cents a box. 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