* u/g g x xxi eg Junior Weekend Event Committees Depicted in Familar Scenes Being Transposed Into a Land of Fantasy Harriet Sarazin and Junior Class President Zane Kemler. . . . They discussed plans for the Sunlight Serenade. A..cse meiiiwrs oi me junior planning committee posed on the senior bench. (Left to right) Harriet Sarazin, Clarence Peterson, Mar garet Goldsmith, Zone Homier, Kathryn Coleman, Bill Van Dusen, and Queen Virginia Began. -! Elisabeth Stetson and Hal Adams caught discussing plans for their respective weekend duties, the queen’s regin and the water car nival. Chairman Carolyn Dudley . . . She helpd make possible the libe terrace dance yesterday. Burlesque of Canoe Fete Features Water Events; Numerous Prizes Given The sun shone hot on the bleachers, crowded with mammas, and papas, and their University children, east of the Anchorage yester day afternoon when the 1938 burlesque canoe fete displayed a dis continuous stream of horseplay, dunking, and contests. The Alpha Tau Omega-Kappa Kappa Gamma float won the great est amount of applause at the fete and was awarded a plaque. Mary Thatcher was presented the prize for the float, which was a takeoff on a Venetian gondola, gaily bedecked with crepe paper. The prize-winning entry over turned just after it had passed the grandstand, and all its occu pants were soaked including Miss Thatcher. Winetrout Towed Other floats entered in the hi larious competition included: A takeoff on the queen’s float, spon sored by Kappa Sigma and Zeta Tau Alpha, had Queen Clarence Winetrout towed behind a canoe in a bathtub, smiling and waving pertly at bystanders and bailing water out with great gusto. The Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Pi Phi float consisted of a takeoff on famous men, with Mussolini and Hitler playing checkers in front; in back Arleigh Bentley played F. D. Roosevelt, yelling “My friends” in typical Roosevel tian manner. Sigma Phi Epsilon entered a simple canoe act, jig gling and acrobating and finally I overturning1 their green dragon like canoe. A canoe race was held between three boats. The Sigma Alpha Epsilon canoe won first place by a nose, giving its occupants, Ralph Lafferty and' Harry Low, a $1 merchandise prize order at De Neffe’s. The Phi Gamma Delta boat won second place and its oe cupants were given a carton of cigarettes to divide. First event of the afternoon was a race between a canoe and a paddleboard. The paddleboard won, and Willie Harris, its pusher, •was given a prize. A diving exhibition was given by three Duck stars, Ralph Cath ey, Bert Myers, and Johnny Stew art. Bert Myers was chosen as first prize winner and was given a Yardley shaving bowl and a $1 merchandise order at DeNeffe’s. Don Kennedy announced the fete, and awarded the prizes to the winners. In a moment of rest from a busy weekend planning’ the campus luncheon, Marge Goldsmith, chairman, chats with junior class trea surer Brock Miller. nrinMMrittim r* • mm Zane Iiemler, junior class prexy and George Jackson, campus day chairman, demonstrate the spirit of the water carnival. Hal Adams is the victim.