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May 10, 1942 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1942-05-10

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

A J..L~LJ. J3.~aJL1JkkI~ IF4IL 1

Lantern

Night

Sin
Palmer Fie

Will BFe
Id Heads Music Contest

[eld Tomorrow

-O

25 Groups To Hold Dinners, Teas
In. Celebration Of Mother's Day

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Scene

c and

Whether the weather is warm and
sunny or cold and stormy the pros-
pects for the various Mothers' Day
celebrations on campus this weekend
are singularly bright. Dormitories,
fraternities, and sororities are hold-
ing dinners, teas, and many other
activities to entertain their fathers
and mothers.
Adams House is having a tea today
from ? p.n to 6 p.m. Mrs. R. E. Mat-
tern of Detroit, Mrs. Charles Keuhn
of Highland' Park, Mrs. Smart of
Winnetka, Mrs. Rodgers of Grand
Rapids, Mrs. McCarger of Detroit,
Mrs. Jackson of Rochester, Mich.,
and Mrs. Dobbie of Buffalo will pour.
Plan Varied Entertainment
Acacia is having Parents' Day to-
day and has plannedseveral enter-
tainments. Alpha Chi Omega and
Alpha Delta Pi are entertaining their
mothers at dinner today. Alpha Xi
Delta will hold a tea for mothers.
Betsy Barbour residence is having
a Mother's Day breakfast at 9 a.m.
Mrs. Mary C. Mitchell, house direc-
tor, said that one grandmother would
be present. Chi Omega's Mother's;
Day banquet will be held today at
the League.
Delta Delta Delta is holding a
Mother's Day weekend. They had a1
buffet supper for the mothers at 6
p.m. yesterday, and today they will;
hold a dinner for both the mothers]
and fathers.'
Hold Annual Tea
Delta Upsilon will hold their an-
nual faculty tea from 4 p.m. to 6
p.m. Mrs. E. A. Giard, Mrs. Warren
Cook, Mrs. John Laird, and Mrs. A.
H. White will pour. Jordan Hall is
another dorm that is having a break-
fast for the mothers.
Kappa Alpha Theta is holding a
Mother's Day weekend. There was a
luncheon at the League yesterday,
and they will hold a dinner today for
the parents. Kappa Kappa Gamma's

Mother's Day luncheon is at 1 p.m.
today.
Kappa Sigma has ten guests for
the weekend. Among the entertain-
ments planned are the May Festival
concerts, and a banquet today.
May Festival On Program
Lambda Chi Alpha is another
group which will entertain at dinner
today. Mosher Hall is holding a
breakfast. Phi Gamma Delta is hold-
ing a houseparty. They had a Bingo
party yesterday and attended the
May Festival concerts. Phi Kappa Psi
is also having a houseparty yesterday
and today.
Phi Sigma Kappa's banquet will
he at the house today, and Pi Beta
Phi is having twenty or thirty guests
at their dinner today.
Sigma Nu mothers are being en-
tertained for the weekend. Concerts,
visiting, sightseeing, picnics, and a
banquet are among the activities
planned.
'Sing' Far Their Mothers
Sigma Phi is having twenty-two
mothers at their houseparty. Sigma
Phi Epsilon is holding a Mother's
Day dinner and will entertain with
a ."sing" in the afternoon.
Mothers staying at Stockwell Hall
this weekend and attending the
Mother's Day breakfast this morning,
number seventy-eight. One entire
dining room in Stockwell is reserved
for girls and their mothers. Theta
Delta Chi is having a houseparty, and
Theta Phi Alpha is having a dinner
at 1 p.m. for the mothers.
WAA SCHEDULE
Softball: At 4:30 p.m. Tuesday,.
Jordan vs. Chi Omega; Kappa Al-I
pha Theta vs. Alpha Chi Omega.
At 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, Kappa
Delta vs. the winner of the Jor-
dan-Chi Omega game.
Tennis: Club will meet at 4:15
p.m. Thursday at the Palmer Field
tennis courts.

Of Song Fest
University Band Will Escort
26 Participating Organizations
At 7 P.M. From Main Library
Donned in caps and gowns, in
keeping with tradition, the women of
the class of '42 will be the honored
guests at the annual WAA Lantern
Night Sing to be held at 7:30 p.m.
tomorrow at Palmer Field.
- Everyone is invited to attend the
event in which 25 campus organiza-
tions will present group songs, ac-
cording to Nancy Filstrup, '43, gen-
eral chairman of the affair. No
house participating may have more
than 35 people in its song group, and
each group is limited to three min-
utes on the program.
To Wear Jlair Bows
As is customary. the members of
different classes will be distinguished
by the hair bows that they are to
wear. The juniors will wear yellow,,
the sophomores are to have redj
bows, and green is the freshman
color.
All those taking part in Lantern
Night must meet at 7 p.m. at the
Main Library from which, with the
University Band leading, they will
march down to Palmer Field. The
seniors will be in double column,
earrying lanterns and flanked on
either side by underclassmen.
Juniors Inherit Lanterns
The group will then form a huge
"M, and under the direction of Pa-
tricia MacFarland, '42, president of
the band, the "Star-Spangled Ban-
ner" and "Yellow and the Blue" will
be sung. Then the senior women will
pass their lanterns on to the juniors
and each house will take the place
designated for it.
Each of the participants will sing
in the order, which was decided byI
a drawing. The final group of singersI
will be Kappa Sigma, winner of In-
tcr-Fraternity Sing, which house has
been invited to sing as honored
guests.
Feature of the evening will be the
presentation of the cup to the house
judged as winner of Lantern Night
Sing, and also, the awarding of the
WAA Participation Cup. In case of
rain all houses are to meet at 7 p.m.
at Waterman Gym, where the affair
will be staged.

NANCY FILSTRUP
Women Eligible
For Instruct ion
In Defense Jobs
Interviewing will be continued from
3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday, Wed-
nesday and Friday of this week at the
Undergraduate Office of the League
for all women interested in enrolling
in the full-time, 13-week course in
Surveying, Topographic mapping,
and Photogrammetry for the Na-
tional Defense Mapping Program.
The purpose of the course is to in-
struct students in the principles of
making maps from aerial photo-
graphs, in the operation of stereo-
scopic machines and in the related
principles of surveying and topo-
graphic mapping. Those trained will
be available for employment in the
National Defense Mapping Program,
directed by the U.S. Corps of Engi-
neers.
The essential qualifications for en-
rollment are two years of civil engi-
neering experience or two years of
college training in engineering, archi-
tecture, physics, chemistry, mathe-
matics, forestry or geology. Three
and a half years of college study will
be accepted if the applicant has had
trigonometry in high school or col-
lege.
Further information will be avail-
able at the interviewing Monday,
Wednesday and Friday. Applicat :on
blanks can be obtained at the Office
of the Social Director of the League.

Engagemen ts
Mary-Anna Jamison, '41A, daugh -
ter of Mrs. Charles Elmore Jamison
of Ann Arbor and the late Dr. Jami-
son, and William Burke Hall, '41E,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morrison
Hall of Three Rivers, were married
at 8:30 p.m. Friday in the First Pres-
byterian Church in Ann Arbor.
Mrs. Hall is a member of Kappa
Alpha Theta sorority. Mr. Hall, who
is affiliated with Alpha Sigma Phi
fraternity, is engaged in work as an
aeronautical engineer
Mrs. Eugene Thomas of Detroit has
announced the engagement of her
daughter, Mary Lorene, to David
Moore Weston, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold E. Weston of Pleasant Ridge.
Miss Thomas attended Marygrove
and was a student at the University
last year. She is affiliated with Col-
legiate Sorosis sorority.
Carol Marie Pitcher, '43Ed, daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Pitcher
of Detroit, and John Pryor Emmett,
'44, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert A.
Emmett of West Bloomfield Hills,
will be married on May 29.
Interviewing Begins
For Summer Council
Interviewing of those who peti-
tioned for the positions of secretary,
judiciary chairman, social chairman,
and publicity chairman of the sum-
mer session council will be conducted
by the present judiciary committee
on Monday, Wednesday and Thurs-
day.
Members of the various commit-
tees will not be chosen until the sum-
mer session starts, in order to give
new students a chance to try for
positions.
Heads To Vegetate
Predictions indicate that tomorrow
you'll be wearing garden beanies.
These are felt skull caps made in
such amusing shapesas daisies, tom-
atoes, four-leaf clovers, and so on,
representing each garden product ex-
actly, even to the stem.
ST. LOUIS.-(,P)-A Negro porter,
determined to do a super job of pol-
ishing in the First National Bank's
safety deposit vault his first day on
the job, did it so well the policej
came. He had rubbed too hard on
the burglar alarms.

Tea Musicale
Will Be Given
Benefit To Be Presented Today
By St. Mary's Student Chapel
St. Mary's Student Chapel will pre-
sent a Benefit Tea Musicale, given
by the senior student members, from
3:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. today in the
Grand Rapids and Hussey rooms of
the League.
Singing selections from Victor
Herbert will be Louise Imperi, of
Grand Rapids, and Leo Imperi,
'42SM. Imperi, as music chairman
of the affair, has also arranged to
present a clarinet duet by Mary Mon-
ica Laughlin, SM, and Phyllis Gu-
gino, '43SM.
Background music for the tea will
be furnished by a string trio under
the direction of Prof. Louise Cuyler
of the School of, Music. At the piano
will be William Schottstadt. Lonna
Parker will play the cello, and Miss
Cuylerthe violin. Accompanying the
vocalists will be Anne Alexander,
'42SM.
This tea is to be the first of a
series to be given annually by the
seniors of the chapel, in order to re-I
place the former custom of the sen-
iors leaving the chapel a gift upon
being graduated.
Officers Announced
Druids, junior men's honor society,
announcenthegelection of officers
from the new group tapped and ini-
tiated last week.
Harry A. Anderson will act as presi-
dent, Bob Segula as vice-president,
George Sallade as treasurer and
Dave Matthews will serve as secre-
tary.
May Special
Afo;,.,Ts, I i ,X'cd Only
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