.1 ___a_____s_._____________v_______e____Y!_________A CAM~olS Teport Large T"ie4ket Sale For Amt'erican Girls To Be Presented At Court ( 1V - p * Dr. and Mr's. Adolf Loveman, anc Lantern Dance Max Gail's Orchestra To Play At Spring Formal Dance Tomorrow Pleased with the large general campus sale made already, Jean See- ley, ticket chairman, announced that the few tickets left for the all-cam- pus Freshman Lantern Dance will continue on open sale today. The dance is the official activity of fresh- men women this spring and takes the place of the 'Freshman Pageant of former years. It will be held to- morrow in the League, with Max Gail's 10-piece band providing the music. Dress will be spring formal. Tickets are on open sale in Angell Hall lobby, at the main desk of the League, in the West Engineering Building, and by every member of the general committee, as well as ,numerous freshman men and women. The tickets, priced at $1, include dancing in the ballroom from 9 p. M. to midnight, with refreshments served in the garden. At 11 p. m., to enable the Dramatic Festival audi- ence to see it, a program of enter- tainment will be preseneted on the balcony overlooking the garden. This entertainment will consist of a tap chorus, a waltz chorus led by Jane Fletcher and accompanied by Betty Bell on the harp, and a singing chorus under the direction of Mary Ann Mathewson, '34. The choruses are made up of freshman women en- tirely. Although the garden will ac- commodate many people, the fea- tures may also be witnessed from the north windows of the ballroom, which face the garden, and from the windows of the main dining room on the second floor. An unusual and striking system of lighting will be carried out to play on the choruses. Vari-colored spots will be used in addition to lanterns that will hang over the garden. It is an unusual feature that this is the first time in the history of the League that its formal garden will be open to men. In addition to thel garden the entire second floor of the1 League will be at the disposal of the dancers. The Freshman Pageant formerly cost about $200, this amount being assessed upon first-year women and' taken from the League funds. This year the activity is entirely self-sup- porting and the proceeds from it will be put in the Undergraduate Fund of the League. . The central committee in charge of the dance is composed of Mar-c garet Ballard, generel chairman;c Miss Seeley; Hazel Hanlon, finance chairman; Winifred Bell, refresh-1 ment and musica chairman, and Nina Pollock, publicity chairman.c Miss Ethel McCormick, social direc-c tor of the League, acts as adviser., :i -Associated Press Photo Here are some of the American girls to be presented at the British royal court at Buckingham Palace this season: Upper right: Miss Charlotte Lyman, of Boston; left, Miss Mollie Flagg, of Far Hills, N. J. (Photo by Baroness Tony Von Horn); lower right, Miss Virginia Kent of Ardmore, Pa. International Good Will Shown ,YCosmopoitan Club Dance To the many foreign students who are leaving the University for good this June, bound for distant home- lands and new careers, tonight will be a long-remembered occasion. The Cosmopolitan Club is giving a fare- well dance in their honor, inviting at the same time their American friends, to make the occasion one of international friendship and good will. "We want it to serve as an acknowledgment of our indebtedness and a cementing of our bond of loyalty to Michigan," said Sher} Warm W eather Is Incentive To Wear White Accessories 8-WARM pg 5 M1 burt Warm weather calls for a change in accessories. Naturally white is the "most practicable, and the most easily combined color to choose. We have been observing the per- feet sea of white hats that confronts our eyes as we walk in the lecture room. At our left is a parky pique one, with scarcely no crown and im- pudent brim. At the back of the room is a shiny rough straw with a huge brim and a wide band of blue grosgrain ribbon. The Schiaparelli high-crowned effects are gaining prominence made up in numerous kinds of fabrics and styles. As for white gloves, there is a total ! 7 3 C s i y J f t I i 3 c t : dearth of anything resembling a doeskin thus far, or any other leather at all. There are silk piques, cotton piques, organdie, suede, gloves with polka dot cuffs, and more gloves with cuffs to match a floppy picture hat and a purse. There is a choice in length, from the tailored plain va- riety to the dressy short gloves, which, worn in combination with sport bracelets, are charming. We can't resist the new purses so much in evidence, which have white linen covers embroidered with cross- stitch or eye-hole work which slip off and are easily laundered. The idea is practical and we can breath a sigh of relief in knowing that no longer do we have throw away our favorite white purse at the end of the season. If you are the unfortunate indi- vidual with a very narrow foot which calls for expensive shoes, first, last and always, perhaps one pair of white shoes will be enough for the season. Be sure it is a shoe suitable for campus wear with a boulevard heel that can be worn for dressier occasions, rtoo. The new buckskin shoes with the built-up heels are ex- cellent for school or any sport outfit and may be augmented by dressier kid for longer dresses. Quraishi, Grad., president of the club. The affair will begin at 9 p. m. in Lane Hall, and American students are urged to attend. Features of the program will include Russian dances and musical numbers by a Filipino woman student. Refreshments will be served. The students who are leaving are: Joseph Alli, Juna Pian, Kyueh Yang, Wallace Liu, Robert Suez, and Chut- ing Wang, all of China; Tumiko Saisho and Fumi Oi of Japan; Kar- tar S. Gill, Kondathil Idiculla, Ma- thurae Nadkarni, and Bakhtawar Samra, all of India; Sirri Markkanen and Doris Loo, of Hawaii. Maria Kalaw, Purita Kalaw, Cris- pin Matta, Avelino Nagtalcr, and Pura Santillar, will return to the Philippines; Yeh Yen to Java; Haana Khalaf to Palestine; Mary Kil, Evelyn Koh and Pong Lim to Korea; Kamil Toonian to Iraq; and Arsham Stephens to Persia. Other graduating students present will be Guillermo Castrence, Gregorio Mar- quez, Jorge Jimenez, Ramon Mer- cado, Edouardo Guardia, S. S. As- garzadi, and Dr. Peter Soudah. Martha Cook Dormitory Will Give Spring Dance Martha Cook Building is enter- taining tonight at its spring formal dinner-dance, the decorations to carry out the maple-leaf motif with Japanese lanterns adorning the ter- race. Ken Lundquist's orchestra is to play. FRESHMAN LANTERN DANCE Michigan League Ballroom MAY 27 9-12 Tickets $1.00 at League Desk and Angell Hall 11 11 11 s J 1 CON Into a Pair of Connies and Out-of-Doors for a Glorious DECORATIO mr&DoaY Decoration Day means WHITE . . . and in shoes such as these. A dashing "Fifty-Fifty" Tie .waffle pique in a slim sandal, and a smart pigskin "Kiltie" with "oodles"of perforations. You'll love their lightness: on your feet, and you'll hardly believe they're only $3.95t A $5 VALUE I