' S~yrURVDAV, APRIL 23, 1938 T E MC IA AL PAGE FItVE Forestry Club Dance Patrons Are Announced Night Riders To Furnish Music For 'Log Drive To Be GivenApril 29 Patrons and patronesses for the "Log Drive," "semi-formal dance to be given by the Forestry Club from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, April 29 in the Women's Athletic Building, were announced yesterday. President andaMrs. Ruthventwill head the list of dance patrons. Others will include Dean and Mrs. Joseph Bursley; Dean Alice Lloyd; Dean and Mrs. Samuel T. Dana and Dean and Mrs. Walter B. Rea. Patrons Listed Prof. and Mrs. D. M. Matthews; Prof. and Mrs. S. W. Allen; Prof. and Mrs. Leigh J. Young; Prof. and Mrs. Samuel Graham; Prof. and Mrs. Wil- liam Kynoch; Prof. and Mrs. W. F. Ramsdell; Prof. and Mrs. E. C O'Roke; Prof. and Mrs. H. M. Wight; Prof. Robert Craig. Jr.; Prof. Dow V. Baxter and Mr. Frank Murray. Special guests for the dance will be Dr. and Mrs. Max L. Durfee; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Behrens; Miss Ina M. Rankin; Miss Mabel G. Train and Miss Myrna o. Wallace. Tickets for the dance will be on sale exclusively to foresters until Tuesday morning it was announced by Frederick Geib, '38F&C, general chairman. The sale will be limited to 100 tickets and are available at the recorder's office of the Forestry School Night Riders To Play The Night Riders Orchestra will furnish music for the dance and a program of specialty numbers, in- cluding special arrangements of log- ging songs has been planned, Geib stated. Other members of the central com- mittee are Karl Leonhardt '39F&C, publicity chairman; Frank Becker '39F&C, ticket chairman; Orvel Schmidt, '38F&C, decorations chair- man; Morris Morgan, Grad., favors chairman; Herman Hermelink, '39- F&C, music chairman; Robert Buch- man, '39F&C, head of the building committee and Charles Spooner, '38- F&C, refreshment chairman. This is the second annual dance to be given by the Forestry Club. Social Group Aides Named Juniors To Have Charge; Of Teas And Dinners Elizabeth Allington, '40 , Pattie Haislip, '40, and Ruth Coler, '40 have3 been appointed junior assistants on the League social committee, Bar- bara Heath, '39, chairman announced Jackets, Skirts Ideal Sports Costumes Debate Groups Slump In Dances Pit(eh And Putt Club Will Continue Follows Vacation; Will Hold Contest Only Three Tod 1 The Piuch and Putt Club.Univer- Se'les Todayisity women's golf club, will open the The dance list for this week-end spring season with a putting con- seems to indicate a sharp drop in test at 4 p.m. Tuesday, according to Four Team s To, Com}Lpet vetosdne.Ol he postvacations dances. Only three Mrs. Stewart Hanley. faculty adviser. In DisuIssing Problm1n are being given tonight. This event is open to all women Of Armament i U.s. I Chi Ofega wii initiate its new golfers in the University and will be radio, a gift from the seniors, at an held on the putting green adjacent Four first round debates in the ihformal dance tonight. Mr. and to the Women's Athletic Building. wdmen's intramural contest will be Mrs. Fred H. Livermore and Mrs. hield at2 p.m. today in Angell Hall. .Granville Mitchell will chaperon. The issue for debate is "Resolved: iMr. and Mrs. S. Lewin and Mr. and!TWO IN That the Proposed United States' Mrs. L. Gunsberg will chaperon the WO KIN Mtary Peprenes ogm Phi Beta Delta Joe College radio D R E I Should Be Adopted." Confstruction Drone speeches will take ten minutes: re- danc'e. Special Drone buttals will be permitted four miii- The Ethel Fountain Hussey Room Dry Hair utes. of the Women's League will be the - Regular Drene l Z { t 1, .. Y {. :. r +1 $ ' Teams Are Listed Changes have been made in the isteams as originally announced, and \Fr /} today's schedule consists of the fol- lowing: affirmative (Mosher Hall), Jane Sapp. '41, and Norma Blair, '41, vs. negative (Jordan Hall), Edith Leveene, '41, and Mary Pattie, Room' 1025 Angell Hall: affirmative (Gam- ma Phi Beta). Helen Jean Dean. '39. and Jean Tibbets, '40. vs. negative (Kappa Delta), Sue Kerr, 40, and Florence Lightfoot, '38. Room 2003 Angell Hall. # Affirmative (Collegiate Sorosis). New pleated skirts, gay plaid jackets, bright soft sweaters are the Elizabeth Allington. '41, and Nina kerfect combiriations for warm spring days. "Mix them or match McLellan, '40. vs. negative (Chi them" is the motto of a well-known manufacturer and is now the i Omega), Elizabeth Mullin, '39, and creed for campus styles. Any number of colors may be combined or the Faith Watkins, '39, Room 2029 Angell outfit may be of one shade with perhaps just a touch of contrasting color I Hall; affirmative (Alpha Epsilon for accent. Soft angoras and cashmeres lend a delicate note to rough Phi). Helene Rumizen, '40, and Ruth tweed skirts and man-tailored jackets. Dressmaker styled jackets Jacobson. '40, vs. negative (Ann Ar- bor Independents, Bernice Cohen, too, have become quite popular. brIdeedns) em3 oe. too,.haebcome.quitepopular..... ....,' 39. and Mary Tilk. '39Ed., Room 2016 Angell Hall. " ' Timekecpers Needed W m an MnI Each team is to bring a timekeeper, stated Miss Olive Lockwood, adviser fo the teas Geodesy Is A.S.C.E. e rI Winners of these debates will meet immediately after the contests in the By ELLEN CUTH IERT Mary received her A.B. degree from Speech Office, Angell Hall, to deter- EDITOR'S NOTE: This feature is on Albion College by transferring her mine sides and opponents for the of a series of interviews with women credits back, so she will be given a . next elimination, which will take students of the University who are BS.degreerom tUnestin place at 4:15 p.m. next Thursday. studying in unusual departments. beio ie~nvi~y n __________ June. She belongs to the American- Six miles of carrying a surveyor's Society of Civil Engineers, one of " tripod and poles is not every woman's the reatively fe woen mber n idea of a perfect day, but such a jaunt holds no terrors for Mary Bas- Opportunity Scarce tin 38,o Ab .Opportunity, in the form of the ,-ar e ei tian, '38E, of Albion. United States government, refuses to Miss Bastian, who is majoring in knock at the door of a woman with geodesy and surveying, spent eight surveying ambitions. Governmental weeks last summer at the University field work in surveying is an occupa-SS surveying camp in Jackson, Wyo.- tion strictly limited to men. So.; Beating Mother Natuie to the doing actual field work. There, the Mary hopes to get a position in a E asi wer the2 tate students' course consisted in all-dayprvt crortn dig pcl punch as it were, the 24 initiates of stuent' curs cnsitedin ll-ayprivate corporation doing special Scabbard and Blade, honorary mili- hikes for the purpose of taking mea- clerical or office work-a field where tary society, burst forth in exotic surements. She found the first week competition from other women will glry Wed y morh in baby "rather tiresome," but after awhile be practically non-existant. But- blue uniforms and pre-Schiaparelli she could keep up with the best of in spite of it all, she still likes to dobea.miecs-antire s ele them, she said. Incidentally,{ hers was field work head pieces-the entire ensemble the distinction of being the only wom- From her association with men faitly reminiscent of Mr. Roosevelt's an attending the camp.unprize CCC outfits. na.students, Mary has reached the con- Under the direction of Bill Cobey. Inspiration Comes Late clusion that men are a lot more full- '38E, the boys have spent the week Science was far from Mary's mind of-fun than women. They joke andlexecuting various initiation feats on in her pre-university days, and chem- wise-crack most of the time, she says, the Diagonal and the library steps. istry was the lone high school con- and don't get as serious about small John Cummiskey, '38, spent Thursday tribution to her present curriculum. matters as the opposite sex does. night auctioning off the Main Li- It was at Albion College during her --brary, Dick Parsons, '39E, crept up freshman year that she first became !.on the cracks in the sidewalk and Lew scene of Tau Epsilon Rho's closed informal dance. Bill McKay and his orchestra will provide the music for the affair which will be chap- eroned by Judge and Mrs. Charles Rubiner of Detroit and Mr. and Mrs. 727 North University Harry Bloom- of Ann Arbor. yesterday. interested in engineering. Three fac- Miss Allington is in charge of the tors operated in Mary's decision to Ruthvea Teas to be given May 4 and enter the pre-engineering school at May 11. Miss Haislip heads a com- the College after her first semester mittee of guides who will escort there. First, none of the common visitors , around the camlus. Ex- women's professions especially ap-, change dinners between fraternities pealed to her; secondly, during that ange dinnes between frratnies yfirst semester, she had found mathe- and sororities will be arranged by matics exceptionally interesting to MissClrndgdher; and lastly, her grandfather was Chairmen of undergraduate and an engineer, which made for thoughts foreign teas will be appointed next running along that line. After two semester and the positions will ro- more years at Albion, she began tate in order that more people may studying civil engineering at Michi- gain experience. gan. Civil engineering is closely related Wonlen's Bowlin Meets to geodesy, Mary says, and led her to an interest in the latter subject. Winners Are Announced Geodesy, for the benefit of the unin- itiated, is surverying that takes into Kappa Delta won the A division of account the curvature of the earth's the intramural women's bowling meet surface. She eliminates longer de- by defeating Alpha Omicron Pi 791 to scriptions and sums it all up by say- 716 and Kappa Alpha Theta defeated ing, "They have to correct it for al-- Martha Cook Building in the B divi- most everything you can think of." sion with the scores being 532 to 514. A summer in Albion doing field work Dorothy Maul, '39, who bowled for for a private surveyor is responsible the Kappa Delta team was high scor- for the inclusion of surveying in her er of all four teams, with the score course. 168 for one line. At the end of her junior year here, ternianI rama' Are On Sale A Tickets for the Germ Konzert," which will at 8:30 p.m. Monday Mendelssohn Theatre i will go on sale today a box-office. The ticket at 35 and 50 cents. This is the third an Play sponsored by the] rein since the World V are also available at office. y- Tickets Bulkley, '38, gave a spirited rendition At League of the Rebel yell, "Yay for the 'Con- 'fedacy!' " ian play "Das An attack upon the crowd lining be presented the library steps was effectively in the Lydia quelled by a bombing squadron led n the League by Scott Royce, '39E, and Hank t the Theatre Fedziuk, '39E, since named "Tail- ts are priced skid," who lost control of his plane, crashed to earth among the campus mal German trees. Deutscher Ve- Saturday morning the initiates will War. Tickets hike out to the Loch Alpine Country the German Club to do K.P. duty and stand guard throughout the night. f 0I I " - 11IFi I I L