A SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1950 - TIE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1950 PAGE Quad Features Xmas Theme At Yearly Hop Two thousand artificial snow balls will help to carry out the theme of "Christmas in Many Lands" at West Quad's annual Ho- ly Hop from 8:30 to midnight Sa- turday, Dec. 2. Not all of the decorations will be snowy ones, however. Yuletide festivities in milder climates will also be represented. Displays will depict Mexican and Japanese, as well as English and Dutch, Christ- mases. Carrying out the theme of a cos- mopolitan Christmas, intermission entertainment will feature Japan- ese and South American dancing. Joe Simpson will act as master of ceremonies. Carolers will welcome early ar- rivals at the -semi-formal dance and will put them in an appropri- ate holiday mood. Even corsages will be in keeping with the "Christmas in Many Lands" theme. Each woman at- tending the dance will be present- ed with an Hawaiian orchid. Music for the Holly Hop will be provided by Ted Smith's orchestra. The dance is being sponsored by the West Quad Council. The com- mittee in charge of this year's Holly Hop is headed by Geoffrey Leigh. Joe Simpson is in charge of music. Don Edwards, Remus Boila and John Der Derian are in charge of decorations. Finances will be handled by Don Anderson. Marshall Hershon heads the publicity committee. Programs and favors will be the responsibili- ties of Fred Teague. Ralph Puc- halski is in charge of buildings and grounds and ticket sales will be managed by Noah Fischman and Nick Adams. WAA Notices Officials Club - Members will meet for practice in officiating at 5 p.m. tomorrow (Mon.) and at 7 p.m. Wednesday at Barbour Gym. Camp Counselors' Club - An open meeting 'will be held at 7:15 p.m. tomorrow at the WAB. All coeds interested in underprivileged children's camping are invited. Miss Ruth Harris, director of a Michigan underprivileged child- ren's camp, will speak. Badminton Club-The organiza- tional meeting will be held at 5 p.m. Wednesday at Barbour Gym. All interested coeds, regardless of experience, are invited. ,Fencing Club - The club will Imld its organizational meeting at 5 p.m. Thursday at the WAB. Be- ginners, and experienced fencers are welcome. Basketball Club-All coed bas- ketball enthusiasts are welcome to the meeting at 4 p.m. Friday at Barbour Gym. Read Daily Classifieds Ladies' and Children's Hairstyling - a specialty - Courteous, experiened personnel 7 Hairstylists-No Waiting The DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty near State FORMAL DRESS-In preparation for the Lloyd Hall Christmas dance new dorm residents, Dolores Silver and Eleanor Sipero- witz, iron their favorite formals. The dance, entitled "Winterlace Ball," is scheduled from 9 to midnight Friday in the dormitory. Volleyball Games Scheduled Senior Project Petitions Due Petitions for positions on last year's new committee, Senior Pro- ject will be due at 5 p.m., Dec. 1 in the Undergraduate Office of the League. Members of the committee plan and make arrangements for Sen- ior Night, which is held the open- ing night of JGP. Preceding the performance, given only for senior women, is a traditional march and banquet in their honor. Senior Project was created to improve ar- rangements for the march and din- ner. Positions open for petitioning in- clude: general chairman, coordina- tor and general planner in charge of the senior march; assistant chairman, in charge of dinner ar- rangements and reservations; tic- ket chairman; patrons and invita- tiohs chairman; publicity chair- man and decorations chairman. Entertainment will be planned by the general chairman of Sen- ior Project working with last year's JGP general chairman, Jane Top- per and director, Jennie Quirk. Because this is a comparatively new committee there is opportuni- ty for new ideas to expand and improve the present plcns. T'at Breon, chairman of interviewing and nominating committee, urges all seniors interested in Senior Pro- ject to petition. 4 * # # i By KATE RADOVAN "The raw material, the energy, is here," said Dean of Women, De- borah Bacon, referring to the at- mosphere prevailing at the Uni- versity. She has studied in Paris at the Sorbonne, in England at Oxford and received her Ph.D in English at Columbia University. She feels that the atmosphere here at the University is one of "extreme vi- tality and energy." LARGER CITIES with which Columbia, Oxford and the Sor- bonne are associated, she believes, are so filled with their own vitality that it is difficult for the students to retain their identity. Before assuming the position of Dean of Women at the Uni- versity, Miss Bacon spent a year in Alaska as a missionary nurse. For three and a half years she served in the army nurse corps with a unit attached to an evacua- tion hospital of the Third Army. This unit landed at Omaha Beach and continued its service through- out France, Germany and Czecho- slovakia. * * * RETURNING to the United States after the war, she spent a year as a superintendent for a small hospital in the Kentucky mountains. difference. Organized undergradu-J ate sports and academic work both! have their place and Dean Bacon! did not see how these two could! conflict. "The wonderful thing is ,to have the university that can do both. There is room for more such universities," she explained. * * * A CRITICISM, not against the students or the University, but against our form of democracy to- day was voiced by Dean Bacon in reference to the recent Student Legislature election. She believes that the students reflected the culture about them when upon tabulation the final number of votes east were en- tirely out of proportion with the "noise" issued before the elec- tion. "I believe that 'you can't fool all of the people all of the time'," she said. "Supply and demand will equal itself," and she hopes that sometime the active interest the rest of the year will equal the pre- voting noise. Dean Bacon has no definite plans for thefuture. "I would much rather wait and see and fit my- self into the powerful background, rather than try to move the back- ground." But she is not averse to taking a strong stand on some- thing she believes in. "Strong stands should be taken rarely and wisely," she warns and only after one knows when and where he is going and what the meaning of the place is. Natural Look Stressed Contrary to the much publicized "doe-eyed look, fashion experts still advocate the soft, natural look for eye make-up. They say to use very little make up; heavy penciling is just for photography or the stage. A slight pencil touch is desired for em- phasis, however. I ATMOSPHERE OF VITALITY, ENERGY: New Dean of Women Gives Her Impressions of University -Daily-Roger Reinke DEBORAH BACON * *,* Regarding w o m e n' s hours, Dean Bacon feels that a good deal of the agitation comes from the men. The women as a rule willingly conform to the regu- lations. When asked if the emphasis here fell on the same things as at other universities, Dean Bacon said she thought there' was not too much The WAA volleyball tournament has reached the semi-final stages. The schedule for this week s as follows: Monday at 5:10 p.m. - no games, at 7:15 p.m.-Alpha Xi Delta I vs. Stockwell IV, at 8 p.m. -no games. Tuesday at 5:10 p.m.--Cheever vs. Alpha Epsilon Phi I, at 7:15 p.m.-Newberry II vs. Alpha Phi II. Jordan VI vs. Chi Omega I, at 8 p.m.-Stockwell XV vs. Stock- well XVI. Wednesday at 5:10 p.m. - no games, at 7:15 p.m.-Newberry III vs. Delta Delta Delta III, Palmer House vs. winner of Alpha Xi Del- ta I vs. Stockwell IV, at 8 p.m.- Mosher I vs Alpha Kappa Alpha, Couzens vs. winner of Chi Omega I vs. Jordan VI. Thursday at 5:10 p.m. --' games, at 7:15 p.m. Alpha Omicron Pi vs. winner of Newberry III vs. Delta Delta Delta III, winner of Newberry II vs. Alpha Phi II vs. winner of Mosher I vs. Alpha Kap- pa Alpha, at 8 p.m.-Martha Cook II vs. winner of Stockwell XV vs. Stockwell XVI. I n Mf4RGY BOOS Mf4RTI-Wf4LKER MODELS r LOVELY Margy Boos, Pi Beta Phi, displays this short formal to advantage. Margy is a sopho- !iii