rl. 1, THE MTCHTG.AN DATLY I A---MPUS SOCIETY I Autumn Flowers Decorate Tea And Dinner Tables Frosty Days Inspiration For Novel Party Motifs; Tapers Lend Air Autumn days inspire many a house with motifs for rushing parties this year. Breakfasts, dinners, teas, all are set amidst autumn leaves or bows of bitter sweet. Mums and bachelor buttons, zinnias, lend color to tables, or perhaps one finds a blushing rose' or bright snapdragon. Interesting too are some of the unusual themes around which one finds the Satur- day and Sunday morning breakfasts planned. Tapers of various hues lend a festive atmosphere to the dinner and tea tables. PI BETA PHI Pi Beta Phi breakfast menu Sun- day morning will include sausages and waffles and the table decorations will ocnsist of red zinnias and red candles. At the tea a fall motif will be carried out with bittersweet and orange flowers and candles. Mrs. O. W. Haisley and Mrs. G. Carl Huber are to pour. GAMMA PHI BETA Fall colors are to be the motif for the Sunday breakfast at the Gamma Phi Beta sorority. Yellow chrysan- themums and yellow and orange ta- pers will decorate the tables. DELTA ZETAx $mall tables. each decorated in a pastel shade, will be used at Delta Zeta's Sunday morning breakfast. The Sunday tea, the sorority colors, pink and green, will predominate and the flowers wil be pink roses and snapdragons. KAPPA ALPHA THETA Sunday breakfast decorations at the Kappa Alpha Teta house will be in maize and blue, with yellow mums a sd bi edbachelor buttons. Pink roses mixed with baby-breath and pink tapers will be used at the tea. Mrs. J. F. Worley and Mrs. Theo Klingman, both of Ann Arbor, will pour, KAPPA DELTA Daisies, yellow buttons and yellow tapers will decorate the Kappa Delta Sunday tea, at which Mrs. Carl Hu ber will pour. SIGMA KAPPA Frosty white and silver will deco- rate the Sigma Kappa tea table on Sunday. Mrs. L. Hopkins will pour for the sorority. They will also have a breakfast which will be a la Aunt Jemima. Yellow and black will be the predominating colors. THETA PHI ALPHA Theta Phi Alpha sorority is having three functions on Sunday. Fall flowers and black candles will be used on the breakfast tables. At luncheon, the color scheme will be orchid and green, and pouring at their tea will be Mrs. George Moe and Mrs. William McLaughlin. DELTA GAMMA Mrs. Phyllis Reynolds, chaperon, is pouring for Delta Gamma sorori- ty on Sunday. Tall tapers and a flor- al centerpiece will be used on the table. CHI OMEGA Slim black candles and gay fall flowers will be used at the Chi Ome- ga tea for rushees on Sunday. Mrs. J. J. Corliss is pouring for the chap- ter, A Sunday breakfast will be Southern style and carried out in bright shades of red and yellow. DELTA DELTA DELTA An English breakfast will be given Sunday morning by the Tri-Delts. Their tea will be a traditional Bos- ton tea party. ALPHA DELTA PI Alpha Delta Pi will entertain at tea Sunday with Mrs. Caleb Smith pour- ing. Black tapers will be contrasted with red and white roses for the table decorations. ALPHA CHI OMEGA Alpha Chi Omega will start its Sunday program with a breakfast to be in old southern decorations. They will continue in the afternoon with a tea, American beauty roses and green tapers will adorn the table. Mi:. Neil Reid will pour. COsLLEGIATE SOR.OSIS Collegiate Sorosis will feature jade cornucopias filled with fruit as, their decorations for the rushing dinner toniight. ALPHA OMICRON PI Fall flowers in golden shades will provide table decorations for the rushing breakfast to be held Sun- day morning at Alpha Omicron Pi. In the afternoon, tea will be served, for the pleasure of the rushees, at a table laden with pink roses. All decorations will be carried out on Campus Politics Arc Menace To Atlekes BLOOMINGTON, mud, Sept, 30.- Campus politics are no longer a mere nuisance at the University of In- diana but a very serious menace to Indiana's athletic prestige, if student ....- .---- -.' . A 4flt-ri J -+I'n+ h this color scheme. Mrs. Cora Mae Wiedman of Ypsilanti will pour. ALPHA XI DELTA 1arm clocks, pillows, hot water bottles, and other boudoir accessor- ies will help to create atmosphere at a pajama rushing breakfast to be given Sunday morning by Alpha Xi Delta. Mrs. Robert Hall of Ann Ar- bor, a patroness of the sorority, will pour at tea Sunday afternoon. The table will hold orange tapers and marigolds, the orange color scheme being used throughout. To celebrate the victory (or mourn the defeat) of Michigan, a buffet supper will be held Saturday eve- ning after the opening game of the season. The sports motif, carried out in goal posts and footballs, will be used. ALPHA GAMMA DELTA Alpha Gamma Delta will hold a dutch breakfast Sunday morning in honor of rushees. Blue and white flowers set in wooden shoes will form a novel centerpiece for the table, Windmills placed beside these will help put the guests into a Holland frame of mind. Place cards will be cut in the shape of wooden shoes, also. Martha Cook Plans iiiationi For 65 Women elen ellnuth and Jean errini Are In Charge rArrangei enis Martha Cook will formally initiate sixty-five women Sunday afternoon at 5:00 in the blue room of the dor- mitory. The guest of honor repre- senting the alumnae will be Miss Helen Hanlon, '23, of Detroit. Dur- ing Uh ceremony she will give an address and following the initiation will be entertained at dinner. She will be accompanied by Miss Harriet Blum, '23, also of Detroit. Miss Hel- en Hellmuth, president of the dor- mitory, and Miss Jean Perrin, social chairman, are in charge of the ar- rangements. Candelabras and roses will be used for decorations. Fifty-six women from the dormi- tory will attend the play, "Reunion in Vienna" starring Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontaine, Monday evening at the Cass theater in Detroit. The party chaperoned by Miss Margaret Ruth Smith, Social Director of the dormitory, will leave Ann Arbor by bus immediately following dinner. Visitinig AlumsI Flock Back To Campus Houses State Game Brings Former 1 eni>ers Back To Their Fraternities For Day Fraternity houses on campus are doubly busy with entertaining this week-end, for in addition to the reg- ular rushing activities, the Michigan State game has brought hosts of the 'Old Grads' back for the day. Mem- bers of chapters at Lansing are turn- ing out in force, and many dinner parties have been planned. SIGMA NU Alumni guests expected for the game and to assist with rushing at the Sigma Nu house are: Mr. Jewel Cochelon, Mr. Joe Shannon, and Mr. Raymond Watson of Detroit; Mr. Douglass Miler of Fort Washington, N. Y.; Mr. Luther Boes of New York city; Mr. Edgar Racine of Mt. Clem- ens; and Mr. Roy Hudson of Ge- rard, Ohio. PSI UPSILON Saturday's game is attracting the following alumni to the Psi Upsilon fraternity house: Mr. Nathan Rum- ney and party, Mr. Robert Edward Evans and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mc- Math, all of Detroit; Mr. Hickman B r i c c of New York city; David Holmes of Kalamazoo; and Mr. Pen- niman of Battle Creek. C31 Pil Michigai-Michigan State game is bring several alumni to the Chi Phi house who will also stay for rush- ing: Mr. Orville Parker of Detroit; Mr. A. Davidson and Mr. Robert: Townsend of Toledo, and Mr. Henry Pendell of Saginaw, are all expected here. Pi SIGMA KAPPA Deb Barger, '20, of Detroit, Arthur Dyse, '28, of Chicago, Arthur Buf- fington, '22, of Royal Oak, and Carl Tusch, '31, Paul Goebel, '22, and Bob Heemey, '28, all of Grand Rap- ids, wil be week-end guests at the Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity. ZETA PSI A number of Detroit alumni are returning for the week-end to the Zeta Psi house, among them being Herbert Rich, '31, of Detroit, George Judson, '28, Detroit, Frank Chapman, '22, Ezra Blackwood, '16, G r o s s e Pointe, Jack Frost, '22, of Detroit, James Kranner, '27, Charles Kran- ner, '29, and Herbert Carrow, '02, all of Detroit. ALPHA CHI SIGMA Howard York of Iron Mountain, Michigan, and Fred DeWitt, of De- troit, were guests at the Alpha Chi Sigma house this week-end. Blc away nisce in so mant traili your you to th be af long is ap to th Union Ev richn trimr trast of dc run t to h By CAROL J. IJANAN, '3,4 a beautifully h e a v y appearance, ossom forth in the evening. Lay sometimes even woven with metal everything even faintly remi- and sometimes. in ":low relief" like nt of daytime wear and appear that cut velvet of a few years back. mething long, clinging and ro- Satin is heavy, sometimes brocaded, thinlong Viclinin sndro- with stripes or designs worked in. tic. Look Victorian in softly Paris has used daring in color ng skirts, and big sleeves and cP a i os u oo dhingyenr. O ne escrt il lok wic t se i combinations too this year. One escort will look twice to see if well-known house has taken a to- are the same young lady he took ml-own house has tae ato- 1e game that afternoon. Don't mnato redl pebbly crepe, made it hug fraid of being "too dressed," as the throat in front, cut it low in as the frock isn't a formal it back, given it huge puffy sleeves and propriaterand will add new zest fastened a wide purple velvet belt e dance at the League or the around the waist for a stunning ef- n. fect. Light tones of green and blue, some trimmed with goldlace are very 'ening fashions this year have a acceptable for fall as well as the zess of fabric and a luxury in darker shades. Fashion has allowed mings that is in marked con- use to be individual for our eve- to the almost severe simplicity nings, as long as we look to the best aytime clothes. The materials of our ability quite luxurious, per- he entire gamut from sheer wool haps a little languid, and altogether Leavy brocades. Velvets of all lovely. Romantic Victorian Styles Will Be Worn For League Dance s kinds are good as Well as lace anda satins. These fabrics always have been good, of course, but this sea- son they have been modified. While the chiffon velvet of last year is still acceptable the new uncut velvet is the 1932 version. Lace that we lived in last spring has developed into Michigan Dames Plan First Meeting Next Week All eligible women are invited to attend the opening meeting of the Michigan Dames club, which will be held October 4. The Michigan Dames club, first known as the Organization of Stu- dents' Wives was established in 1914. Its purpose is primarily to furnish enjoyable social relations for those women whose husbands are enrolled as students in any division of the University. Meetings are held the first and third T u e s d a y evenings of each ,month at 8 o'clock in the Grand Rapids room of the Michigan League, r 'I ' i. r, r= Chinese and American Foods (1 E. Williams St., Ann Arbor, Mich. announces the beginning of its unique description contest. . . Prizes are to be offered for the three best 100-word descriptions of the location of this cafe. FIRST PRIZE - $10 or TWO $5 MEAL TICKETS SECOND PRIZE - $5 or ONE $5 MEAL TICKET THIRD PRIZE - $2 Contest starts today and ends Saturday, Oct. 8. Everyone invited to enter. Bring your description.in person to the Campus Cafe. I DON'T FAIL "TO FOLLOW THE REST OF I COMPLETE STATISTICS and up to Date IL-' _q tat EXTRA somet hin... TrIY T IIE iDAILY For its Campus News, its fi Ar ., '- *4 CLICQUOT has it!1 IT'S that smoother, richer mellower flavor that makes Clicquot Club the fair-haired favorite of many a campus party. It blends well with any company because it is a per- fect blend itself. Best of All - Students - Why Not Send The '1 ;. , . 4 '_,,, I The Michigan Daily * A I 11E 11 I 11111 i i I