THE lMItHIGAN DAILY / DuBey Lecture On NewCounc To Use Rackham Building As Center Of Activities For New Organization Robert Dufey, Grad., explained the organization of the Graduate Council at the weekly Graduate Lun- cheon which was held yesterday in the Russian Tea Room in the League. The Graduate council is a com- mittee composed of delegates of grad- uates recommended by the heads of the various University departments. This body' elected the executive com- mittee which is composed of the of- ficers and chairmen oft he standing committees. The Council is planning to center Mopin On The Mall By Meandering Minnie The arrival of summer is being heralded by the many de-coated fellows, cotton dresses and ice cream cones. Sally Orr, Norene Crotty, Sally Con- nery, Dotty White, Betty Hood, Charlotte Poock and scores of others have been seen wandering around campus very busy licking the cooling cones. The lieat was so oppressive at the W.A.A. Board meeting that Jane Dunbar, Helen Wolf, Mary Richardson, Dorothy Maul, Betty Lou Witters, Alberta Royal, Florence Corkum, Ginny Allen, Irene Sabo, Beth O'Roke, Marjorie Merker and Buffy White all turned thieves and drank thecooling beverage that was there for the fencing club tea. Norma Curtis was quite disturbed during the meeting for friend boardees seemed m'uch more interested in the band and R.O.T.C. which were without, than they did in W.A.A. affairs. Archery Club ran off and evaded the weather when they adjourned to the Island for a picnic after the regular shoot. They are planning big things-a telegraphic meet with the Mid-West section and a meet with Michigan State, Play Day. Hopes for good old Michigan are centered on the Margarets Van Ess and Bowyer who were Foreign Group To Visit School Star To Commonwealth Trip Be TakenSaturday EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the third in a series of interviews with women Who are individual in their selection of courses of study. Reservations for a trip to the Star Commonwealth at 1 p.m. Saturday, must be made today in Room 9 U.H., it was announced by Howard Holland, '38, member of the International Council. The school, which takes care of un- derprivileged children between the ages of 9 and 19, has at present an enrollment of 100 children. Special features of the school are its unique methods of treatment and its modern buildings. The groups which will take the trip will be composed of both foreign and American students, and will meet Saturday in the lobby of Angell Hall. It is being sponsored by the Intra- mural Council. This will be the first of the spring trips following a successful series of similar trips last fall, Holland said. He explained that the trips were in- itiated in order to make it easier for foreign students to gain an under- standing and comprehension of Amer- ican life and institutions, and also to forward relationships between stu- dents of various countries and univer- sities. By BETTIE HOWARD Wearing dirty overalls, tearing greasy motors apart, cutting pipe and threading it are all just interest-r ing parts of the day's work for Jean- netta Campbell, graduate student. Miss Campbell is taking graduate work in electrical engineering and lighting. When she transferred to Albion Collegenafterher sophomore year, she enrolled in the pre-engi- neering course. Perhaps the fact that her father is an electrical engineer influenced her in her decision. At any rate, she plans to work with him after her studies are completed. Miss Campbell thinks that electric- al engineering is one of the better branches of engineering, because there are comparatively few people in it. She means to make certain that she will have a job for she has the unusual combination of art and engineering to her credit. Miss Campbell pointed out that most designers of lighting fixtures have beautiful and artistic ideas but they are not efficient ones; whereas, most engineers have good, practical ideas but the results are very unat- tractive from an artistic standpoint. She has combined art and engineering in her curriculum so as to mee booth of these problems. At Albion Col- lege she majored in art, and now is taking architectural work to gain better ideas of artistic and efficient construction. Most of her time is spent in study- ing lighting design and in actually de- signing fixtures, for it is this part of her work that she enjoys most, she says. Music still holds great in- terest for her, and only recently she attended the National Music Camp. Woman Student Combines Art With Engines To Build Career) A.A.U.W. To Hold Meeting InChicago The sixth biennial conference of the North East Central section of the American Association of Univer- sity Women will be held tomorrow and Saturday at the Palmer House in Chicago. Ii u , School of Social 14 Dancing Taught daily, 10 to 10. Terrace Garden Studio 2d Floor, Wuerth The- ater Bldg. Phone 9695. i c5Yo ther its activities in the Rackham Build-1 ing. Intellectual, social and athletic activities will be organized for grad- uate students. , Thurston Stenson, Grad., described the interior of the Rackham Building. Don P. Reynolds, Grad., explained the Constitution of the Council. The Council is an attempt to coordinate graduate students and will hold fort- nightly meetings for the student body. In the future the members of the Council will' be elected by the students. They will le elected pro- portionally according ,to the number of graduate students in the various schoolsiand departments of the University. high scorers at the meeting. T ri Delt To Swim For Michig ra... k v I , -. , ., ° / WHAT wonderful memories awaken in this magic word - - - MOTHER! Remember your Mother with a Greeting Card - especially pre- pared for, this nationally recog- nized day for Mothers. It will please her. Michigras will be this week-end and lots and lots of people are getting excited about the parade The W.A.A. swimming pool will be featured and the Tri Delts will dress up in bathing suits for the occasion. Harriet Sharkey, Margaret Mulcahey, Louisa Penny, Roberta Leete, Doris Holt, Jane Grove and Harriet Thom will all be dwarfs to escort Snow White, Mary McClure, on the Theta float. Minnie is going to try to be around for the food when Delta Gamma emerges with its pop corn float. Betty Ward will be Queen Popcorn. Also next week-end will see the Rococo Revels and Dottie Barrett, Ann Willys, Kay Roderick, Ibby Bruy- ..ere, Grace Lambrecht, Margaret Whittemore and Ev- -, .elyn Kalk have all been putting in time in the drafting room. TheRuthvens Meld their next-to-last tea of the year yesterday. 'Betty Rouse, Lacy Thomas, Bob Goodyear, and Hank Watson all seemed fascinated by the white snap dragons in the center of the table. Jane Nussbaum and Jean Smith were both holding court with lots of males around. Max Hodge and Hope Petrouleas were both there as was Vi Broadbeck. Charles Frost was running aroundB very ill at ease in the only white coat at the party Professors Aiton and Weaver and Dean Bursley were holding up the faculty end of society. Great Consternation At League...0 MAYER-SC HAI RER Stationers - Printers - Binders Phone 4515 COMPANY Office Out fitters 112 South Main Street h. - Eight Women's Groups Etter Parade Floats Floats will be entered in the Mich- igras parade, which will start at 3 p.m. tomorrow, by seven sororities and Martha Cook building. The proposed swimming pool of the Women's Athletic Association will be featured by Delta Delta Delta and Kappa Delta. The former group will have a pool built on a truck and the women attending it will don bathing suits. Kappa Delta will have women in sport outfits putting coins in a box for pool contributions. Delta Gamma which is having a pop corn booth, will have a huge pop corn ball on its truck.Alpha Phi will be represented by three riders, who will carry banners asking ob- servers to come to the Alpha Phi sho 'shine booth at the Michigras. Kappa Alpha Theta is carrying out, the Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs idea both in the booth and inrthe.parade. Pi Beta Phi will also carry out the same idea in its booth andinthe arade.In the former will be found Esquire dancing and the float will contain a model of Mr. Es- quire. Martha Cook Building will have four bicycles and one tadem on its float, to carry out the theme of the bicycle raffle which they are con- ducting at the Micl'igras Friday and Saturday The women on the tan- depi\ will wear old fashioned clothes Pianist Gives Concert Here~ Helen Haupt Plays Classics At Pettengill Auditorium Helen Haupt, graduate of the University of Washington in 1936, gave a piano recital at 8:15 p.m. yesterday'in the Pattengill Auditor- ium. The numbers on Miss Haupt's pro- gram included: "Partita in B Flat Major" by Bach; "Etudes Symponi- ques" by Schumann; "Capriccio in F Sharp Minor, Opus 76, No. 1,', "In- termezzo in A Flat Major Opus 76, No. 3," "Intermezzo in A Mapor, Opus 76, No. 6," and "Capriccio in B Minor, Opus 76, 60. 2" by Brahms; "Etude in F Major, Opus 25, No. 3" and "Etude in F Major, Opus 10, No. 8" by Chop- in; and "Variations on a Theme of Paganini" by Brahms.k Sponsors of the recital were Mu Phi Epsilon, of which Miss Haupt is a member, Regent and Mrs. Junius Beal, President and Mrs. Ruthven, Vie-President and Mrs. James Bruce, Vice-President and Mrs. Clarence Yoakum, Dean Alice Lloyd, Mr. Field- ing H. Yost, director of athletics, and Mrs. Yost, Prof. and Mrs. Palmer Christian, Prof. and Mrs. John Daw- son, Prof. and Mrs. DeWitt Parker, Prof. and Mrs. Warner Patterson, Prof. and Mrs. Marland Small. Prof. and Mrs. John Waite, Prof. and Mrs. John S. Worley, Dr. and Mrs. Herman L. Blumgart, Mrs. R. Bishop Canfield, Mr. and Mrs. Harry B. Earhart, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Geh- ring, Mr. and Mrs. George Gould, Mr. and Mrs. John Haien, Mrs. Ev- ans Holbrook and others. There was great consternation at the League yesterday when they ran out of petitions for committees. But Jeanne Davis, Una Helley, Margaret Bidlock, Edna Kearney and Nancy Gossard all did well by themselves on improvised sheets. Freshman Project is in full swing now and Ruth Davis with Ellen Rhea, Betty Hepler, and Virgina Kielholtz have all been racking their" respective brains for ideas. Baseball proceedings were somewhat interrupted the other day when the Alphi Chi catcher lost parts of her watch and the game with Jordan was called to find said missing parts. Kappa Delta, Alpha Delta Pi, Tri Delt and Alpha Omicron Pi have all been playing. And also on Palmer Field Melba Marks, Mary Goodrich, Dottie Davis, Francis Flaherty, Genevieve Spurgeon (of the autographed broken leg) and Nedra Lutz were all worshiping at the shrine of the great god,, So1. The University women's hockey club will play the Ann Arbor women's hockey club at 4:30 p.m. today at Palmer Field. The University team will be made up of Mary Richardson, Joan Bevington, Dorothy Cowan, Doris Cran- more, Helen Wolf, Mary Eleanor MacCready, Virginia Storts, Jane Grove, Dorothea O rtmayer, Lola Borgemeister a d Jean. Millard. The 1938 Dramatic Season May 16 through June 18 PAtJLINE LORD - ALINE MacMAHON - JANE COWL "The Ghost of Yankee Doodle"; "Lixiom''; "The Late Christopher Bean;" "French Without Tears;" "Rain from Heaven." 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