Article

MAY TRADITIONS

June 1935 W. J. Minsch Jr. '36
Article
MAY TRADITIONS
June 1935 W. J. Minsch Jr. '36

The traditional May activities have been occupying most of the undergraduate interest during recent weeks. The month started off with unusually successful Spring House Parties and Green Key Prom. Then began the series of hums, Senior banquets, Old Timers' Day, and Wet Down, supplemented by baseball and "Grass and blanket" (voted favorite subject in senior preference ballots). On the week-end of the eighteenth, the town was turned over to the visiting alumni class and club secretaries. And then a temporary lull as comprehensives descend upon the unwary.

Last, but certainly not least among the undergraduate activities of the month was "Banned in Boston," the first student-written production put on by the Players since 1931. Written by Maurice H. Rapf '35 and Budd W. Schulberg '36, both of Los Angeles, and with lyrics by Paul M. Siskind '35, of Lawrence, Mass., this musical satire ran for three nights and was a great success. The rumors going around are "on to Boston and New York."