TIDE MICHIGAN DAILY C CIT ucl L I V tl Houses Plan Gala Week-End For RusheesI Fraternity and Sor Guests Entertained Football Begins ority As Returning fraternity alumni, and continued sorority functions make for a festive week end. PUT KAPPA PSI Michigan-Michigan State game is bring back Deb Barger, '20, of De- troit; Arthur Dyse, '28, of Chicago; Arthur Buffington, '22, of Royal Oak; Carl Tusch, '31, of Grand Rapids; Paul Goebel, '22, of Grand Rapids; and Bob Heemey, '28, of Grand Rap- ids, who will spend the week-end at the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. THETA KAPPA NU Theta Kappa Nu fraternity Will be host to J. C. William, and R. L. Ti- tus, of Kalamazoo; R. T. Armour, of Grand Rapids; M. T. Taylor, of New York; R. J. Parcels, of Detroit; C. L. Witmer, of Flint. . GAMMA PHI BETA Bronze candles and bronze and yellow mums will be the decorations at the Friday rushing dinner. The local alumnae were: Mrs. Nathan Potter, Mrs. Winnaker, Mrs. Adams, and Mrs. Breakey. At the Saturday breakfast; blue and yellow flowers and blue tapers are to be used. The same alumnae will a s s i s t at the breakfast. KAPPA ALPHA THETA A French motif will be carried out at the Friday rushing dinner. French place cards, ivory tapers, tea-roses and larkspur will add to the attrac- tiveness of the tables. Miss Marga- ret Feaman, Miss Estella Holt, and Miss Marian Widman of Detroit and Miss Venieetia Cook of Birmingham, alumnae, will be present. THETA PHI ALPHA White flowers, black tapers and sil- houettes are the novel decorations to be used at the Friday dinner for rushees. Mrs. W. W. Wederman, pa- tronness, Will be present. The Sat- urday luncheon decorations are to be green tapers, and orchid flowers. The patroness present will be Mrs. George Moe. KAPPA DELTA At their Friday rushing dinner, the Kappa Delta's will use animal place- cards, green candles and green and white flowers. Pumpkins and fruit will furnish autumnal atmosphere at the Saturday rushing luncheon. ZETA TAU ALPHA A rainbow color scheme will fea- ture the Friday rushing dinner at Zeta Tau Alpha. The place-cards are to have women's heads on them and the flowers and candles will be in all the pastel shades. The alum- nae present will be: Miss Charlotte Munch, Miss Helen Short, Mrs. Ed- ward Lemmon, and Mrs. Arthur Hoyt, all of Detroit. Football place- cards, and yellow and blue flowers will decorate the Saturday lunch- eon. Mrs. Wuerfel of Ann Arbor and Mrs. Sanford Cooper and Miss Mildred Cassidy of Detroit are the alumnae to be present. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Baby mums and cream tapers will form the table decorations for the rusliing dinner to be held tonight at the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority house. SIGMA KAPPA Sigma Kappa will entertain to- night with a pirate rushing dinner. The house will be decorated with skulls and crossbones and daggers in keeping with the idea. The patron- esses who will attend are Miss Mar- jorie Moore and Miss Helen Moore of Lansing, and Miss Esther Louckes of Scottdale, Pennsylvania. Yellow roses and tapers will form table decorations at breakfast Sat- urday morning. PI BETA PHI Miss Marjorie Rough and Miss Anna Lyle Sapin of Detroit, alum- nae of Pi Beta Phi, will attend the rushing dinner to be held tonight by the sorority. The state of Vir- ginia will be used as the theme of the affair. Black faced mammies, pine trees, and log cabins will be displayed throughout the house. ALPHA ZI DELTA Mrs. Hugh Keeler and Mr. Mar- garet Buffington will be present at the rushing dinner to be given by Alpha Xi Delta tonight. The deco- rations will carry out the Michigan theme in yellow and blue. Saturday night they are giving a French dinner. The table cloths will be red and white, and blue and white checks, and the centerpieces will car- rv out the red and blue theme. Mrs. Franklin D. Shull and Mrs. A. R. Crittenden wil be present. ALPHA PHI Alumni who will be present to as- sist Alpha Phi with tonight's rush- ing dinner are: Miss Lucile McCal- lum, Miss Betty Knight, Miss Eliza- beth Smith, and the Misses Mar- garet and Ellen Hanson. Fruit, and yellow 'tapers will center the tables, and marigolds at the side tables will carry out the autumn theme. ALPHA CHI OMEGA Alpha Chi Omega will use the ca- nine species as the theme of their dinner for rushees tonight. Dogs, in settings of moss, will be used throughout the house as decoration. Mrs. D. Neill Read, Eastern province president, and Mrs. Patricia Croute, a patroness of the sorority, will be present. ALPHA EPSILON PHI Emphasizing the coming campaign, Alpha Epsilon Phi will hold a po- litical banquet tonight for the pleas- ure of the rushees. Table decora- tions and place cards wil be carried out with this idea. ALPHA DELTA PI Alpha Delta Pi will use an all white background for general decorations at the rushing dinner tonight. Place- cards, flowers, and tapers will all be of this color. Miss Mary Taylor of Ann Arbor, and the Misses Mary and Dorothy Williams of Ann Arbor, alumnae of the sorority, will be present. Foot- ball will be the theme of the rushing dinner Saturday night. Orange' ta- pers and fall flowers will complement the autumn motif. ALPHA GAMMA DELTA Green tapers and orchid flowers will adorn the dinner table at the rushing party to be given tonight by Alha Gamma Delta. The orchid and green color scheme will be used throughout the rest of the house. Miss Elizabeth McDowell of Bad Axe, and Miss Dora Polk of Ann Arbor, alumnae, will assist. Football decorations and p 1 a c e cards will predominate at the Sat- urday breakfast preceding the first game of the season. Yellow tapers and flowers will be used at the table. DELTA DELTA DELTA Local patronesses assisting Delta Delta Delta at dinner tonight will be: Mrs. Shirley Allen and Miss Ma- rian Stowe. Miss Helen Dahlman of Detroit will also be present. The guests will be treated to a bit of Mex- ico by way of cacti centerpieces, som- breroes as place cards, and gay ta- blecloths and napkins. ALPHA OMICRON PI Stately orange and yellow flowers will decorate Alpha Omicron Pi din- ner tables tonight. Mrs. Cora Wied- man of Ypsilanti will be an attend- ing patroness. On Saturday, au- tumn flowers and colors will be used at both luncheon and dinner. DELTA GAMMA Miss Virginia Olds of Cleveland, Misses Helen Van Loon and Mar- delle Carter of Detroit, and Mrs. Nathan Potter and Mrs. Edwin Mur- baugh will be the alumnae assisting Delta Gamma sorority at dinner to- night. Garden flowers in bright fall hues will be ued as decorations. Saturday at breakfast, old New England decorations will give an early Thanksgiving a t m o s p h e r e. Birch bark, s p r u c e, and colorful leaves will complete the effect. DELTA ZETA Trim bellhops delivering individu- al telegrams, and a dinner carried out entirely in hotel style will typify the Delta Zeta dinner tonight. Mrs. Raphael Isaacs, Mrs. E. Humphreys, and Mrs. Clyde Love will be assis- tant patronesses. Mrs. Jack Coulter and Miss Lynne Fowler will sing at a football break- fast carried out in the traditioal maize and blue, on Saturday. Sat- urdays' luncheon will be a sport party. Noted Aviatrix Planning To Start Divorce Suit. IEW YORK, Sept. 29-(IP).--- MrF Ruth Elder Camp announced today hat she was planning to get a ii - vorce from Walter Camp, Jr., hf- third husbanc:, and her attorney is- sued a statement giving "increasing incompatibility and differences b'e- tween the couple" as the reasons. POUJNT AAJP21N8 Parker, Sheafer, Waterznn, Conklin, etc., $1.00 and up, A large anKI choice assoretne t 314 S. State St., Ann Axrbr Dr. Fishers To Return Horme Fromn Variation Minister To Resume Post As Pastor Of Methodist Chuirch of Ann Arbor Dr. Frederick B. Fisher and Mrs. Fisher, of Cambridge Road, will re- return to Ann Arbor tomorrow from a six weeks' vacation in Europe. Much of their vacation wVas de- voted to study and travel in Ger- many, where Dr. Fisher spoke at the opening of the Theological Seminary at Frankfurt and preached at the American Church in Berlin. Both Dr. Fisher and his wife spent a week in Geneva at the conferences on international affairs, the Japanese- Manchuran question, and European economic and political problems with special reference to Germany. Meet Political Leaders Here they met with representative leaders from India, London, and the League of Nations in discussion of the Indian situation. Late news of Mahatma Gandhi and the National- ist movement was relayed to Dr. Fisher and Mrs. Fisher by Charles P. Andrews and Dr. S. K. Datta iell-known Indian statesmen, who are old friends of the Fishers. Mr. Andrews has gained the repu- tation of being "the best loved white man in India," and is an intimate friend of Gandhi, while Dr. Datta is president of the Forman Christian College at Lahore. is a member of the Government National Assembly, and last year was a delegate to the London Round Table Conference on India. Widely Feted Many social affairs were given in honor of the Fishers by friends from Palestine, India., France, and the United States. Mrs. Fisher was a student in the Geneva S c h o o.1 of International Studies, presided over by Prof. Al- fred Zimmerman. She attended daily lectures and discussions on world problems. Upon her return to Ann Arbor Mrs. Fisher plans to resume her local responsibilities, a m o n g which are the chairmanship of the State A. A. U. W. Committee on In- ternational Relations, and the lead- ership of one of the State Round Tables on the Cause and Cure of War. Dr. Fisher is minister of the Meth- odist Episcopal Church here. He will take up his duties in the pulpit Sunday with the customary morning sermon. Iowa Professor's Talks 'Go On Air' This Year IOWA CITY, Sept. 29.-UP)-Six University of Iowa professors will de- liver their lectures before a micro- phone the first semester of this school year. Last year the university broad- cast three courses, and three more have been added this fall. Courses to "go on the air" include argumentation and debate, com- mercial geography, the French revo- lution, the English novel, nineteenth century music and general astron- omy. Woman Wants Maiden Name hI Her Campaign WASHINGTON, S e p t. 29-(U)- The right of. a married woman to use her maiden name in running for public office is being agitated by the National Woman's Party. The cam- paign is directed toward Connecticut, in behalf of Miss Elsie Hill, of Nor- folk, 11 years married to Prof. Albert Levitt. To See State .rnae Governor Wilbur H. Bucker who Iwill be the guest of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity Saturday. Gover- nor Brucker will arrive in tan Arbor in time for luncheon and will then go to the game. He will probably have a box. Immediately after he will leave for Detroit where he is to speak. R H th vens Feted HillsMlagawk, Regents Will Entertaiil Week-End Guests From Various Parts of State This week-end is proving excep- tionally entertaining f o r faculty members and their guests, as far as trips to and from Ann Arbor are concerned. Regent Junius E. Beal and Mrs. Beal are entertaining Regent Rich- ard Smith and Mrs. Smith of Grand Rapids, and Regent Ralph Stone and Mrs. Stone of Detroit as their house guests this week-end. Friday night Regent and Mrs. Beal ,rill be hosts to a few friends at dinner. President Alexander G. Ruthven and Mrs. Ruthven, and Vice-presi- dent Shirley W. Smith and Mrs. Smith will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kahn this week-end, at his home in Bloomfield Hills, Detroit. Professor Hugo P. Theime and Mrs. Theime sailed a week ago today for an extended trip abroad. Professor Theime expects to spend the year on the continent, studying in Paris and other cities in France. He is working now on a new edition of his biblo- graphy of French literature. Annual Dance Of City Officers To Be Nov. 7 The Policemen's and Firemen's Ball will be held this year on Nov. 7 at the Masonic Temple on Fifth Avenue, it was announced yesterday by Harold E. Gauss, chairman of the affair. Last year Dean Alice H. Lloyd ex- tended the hours for women students so that they might go to the ball. It was considered immensely successful then with two bands, one playing popular dance tunes and one devoted exclusively to old-time music. Both floors of the building were used. The bands for this year have not as yet been decided on but the coin- mittee on entertainment is now open for bids PRE-SCHOOL KINDERGARTEN For Chlldren From Three to give Years FRANCES MacNAUGHTON 7m E. 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