nTUJ.DAs MAY 7, 1lJ4sJTHE 1 ICHIGAN DJiTy PAGE FIVI Mosher Hall Takes First Place in Lantern Night Sing I Phi's, Kappa Kappa Gamma's Win Honors in Posture, Sports * * * * Mosher Hall was awarded the thirty-fifth annual Lantern Night song cup for its presentation of "In the Month of Maying." Runner up was Alpha Delta Pi with its song "The Galway Pip- ers." Singing "Some Folks" and "Sing We and Chant It" and "Charm Me Asleep," Chi Omega and Martha Cook residence cap- tured third and fourth places re- spectively. Awarded for the first time last year, the posture cup, given by the, Women's Physical Education Department to the group having the best posture, went to Pi Beta Phi. Collegiate Sorosis placed sec- ond, while Gamma Phi Beta and Delta Delta Delta took third and fourth. Dr. Margaret Bell, director of Women's Physical Education and the Women's Division of Health Service, made the awards. RECOGNITION certificates for residence participation in campus activities went to Jordan Hall, which held highest place among the dormitories; Kappa Kappa Gamma, first in the sorority divi- sion and Mary Markley, which had the largest number of points of the league houses. Individual sports honors went to Marge Ingram of Jordan Hall, with a total of twelve ac- tivities. Ann O'Connor, Stock- well; Irene Straub, Alpha Xi Golf Match Senior physical education majors have challenged the fac- ulty of the Women's Physical Education Department to a golf match which will be played at 8 p.m. tomorrow on the Univer- sity Golf Course. Delta and Nancy Sommer, Chi Omega had eleven activities each. Mary Lou Hook of Alpha Xi Delta and Stockwell had a total of nine activities, and Jeri Mulson of Kappa Kappa Gamma participated in ten. Marian Bruneau of Stockwell, Betsy Bousfield, Sally Goodyear, Helen Gerdler, Marjorie Sutfin and Doris Buser, all of Kappa Kappa Gamma had eight activ- ities to their credit. Katherine Geigenmuller, Chi Omega; Marilyn Howell, Gamma Phi Beta, Mary Riggs, Mary Buckmaster, Joan Kampmeier and Janet Dewey, Kappa Kappa Gamma, each had seven. * * * JUDGES FOR THE song com- petition were Philip Duey, as- sociate professor and vocal in- structor of the School of Music and director of the men's glee club; Geneva Nelson, assistant as- sociate professor of music educa- tion and Thelma Jervis, associate professor and vocal instructor in the School of Music. Preceding the competition in Hill Auditorium, the participants continued the thirty-six year tradition of marching around the University's original "forty acres." ORIGINALLY all the seniors carried lanterns, from which the name Lantern Night was taken, and the juniors carried : hoops through which the freshmen jumped. Today. only the first five women leading the proecession carry lanterns, and each class wears its traditional colors. The juniors wear yellow hair ribbons, the sophomores have red, and the freshmen sport green. Each, senior is flanked by four underclassmen. THERE'S A SONG IN THE AIR-As Delta Delta in the presentation of its Night competition. -Daily.-Carlisle Marshall Ruth Campbell leads Delta song in the annual Lantern PUDDING PLEASES PERLE: Women's National Press Club Gives Awards As President 7 By RUTH COWAN, A.P. Leading figures of the United States and other nations went in for a femine ribbing recently at, the annual award dinner of the! Women's National Press Club. Winston Churchill was shown trying to sell King George The Pyramid Club plan to lift Britain out of its austerity. Josef Stalin was offered one U.S. communist a month-free. Club members impersonated the statesmen in a series of skits at their annual award din- ner attended by the President and Mrs. Truman. During the evening Mr. Truman presented the club's six 1949 achievement awards. THE TOP AWARD, that of "Women of the Year" went to Mrs. FranklinD. Roosevelt in rec- ognition of her work as chairman of the United Nations' Human Rights Commission. The wife of the late President is a member of the Women's Press Club herself. Others to whom Mr. Truman handed awards and their fields of achievement were: Art:-"Grandma" Moses-more formally, Mrs. Anna Robertson, Eagle Bridge, N.Y., -88-year-old painter who started her career at 7q without a single lesson. Theatre: - Madeleine Carroll, Hollywood and Broadway actress. Government: - Mayor Dorothy 'ruman Attends Annual Dinner McCullough Lee of Portland, Ore. Author:-Mary Jane Ward of Evanston, Ill., who wrote "The Snake Pit." Business: - Marjorie Child Huste, Minneapolis, Minn., execu- tive. MRS. PERLE MESTA, one of the capital's leading hostesses, heard Ruth Montgomery of the New York Daily News assert in the course of the program "it takes Perle's ready dough and politics" to cook up one of her parties. Her prize was a year's supply of Mrs. Truman's "Ozark Pudding Ready Mix." Throughout the skit ran a de- tective story theme on "Who, Knocked Out The Elephant." Finally, amidannuproar, a bat- tered up elephant appeared on stage and said he has spotted I Ir/ The ORIGINAL They end that maddening hunt for glasses .A .* SPEC-BANDS come in cords and rib- bons, also chains. They are available in all colors with large and small grip- pers to fit all temple bases of most glasses SENIOS PLATE INCLUDED MODERN LETTERING STYLES HIGH QUALITY VELLUM PLAIN OR PANELED Let us show you our complete ..,*c.0s. of samples today. HALLERS . .. Jewelers 717 North University "NEAR HILL AUDITORIUM" "Can you send me a Gibbs secretary?" Employers made 9,067 such requests during pad year. For illustrated catalog write College Course Dean. s 1 Ensin- 1949 You must purchase your copy NOW - or wait until after distribution. Distribution is expect- I I