CH 13, 1934 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Freshman Women Will Meet Tomorrow To Decide Class Projec Fraternities, Sororities Initiate Many At Week-End Ceremonies Hiarriet Jenitings Vi Be; Pi Holds Service At Chapter House For 25 New Members Alumnae House entertained Presi- dent and Mrs. Alexander G. Ruth- ven, Dean and Mrs. Edward Kraus, and Dr. Margaret Bell at dinner Sun- day. Miss Edith Barnard, director of the House, was assisted by Rosa- lynn Chaped, '35, Rose Offley, '34, and Dorothy Bolton, '36. Mary Walker, '37, and Victoria Tateff, '35, entertained the guests with several piano selections after dinner.I Alpha Omicron Pi Stella A. Glass, '35, was in charge of a rushing dinner Saturday. Alpha Omicron Pi gave a formal dinner, Friday under the direction of Mary A. Baxter, '36. Patronesses attend- ing were: Mrs. James C. Cristy, Mrs. William W. Krag, Mrs. Earnest F. Lloyd, Mrs. Charles T. Olmsted, and Mrs. William E. Underwood. Laura J. Zimmerman, '36, Edith M. Forsythe, '36, and Thais J. Bol- ton, Spec'., attended the Beta Gamma fraternity dance at Lansing this week-end. Fraternities Last week-end marked the climax of spring initiation activities, with ceremonies and b a n q u e t s at 17 houses. Alpha Omega Alpha Omega fraternity held for- mal initiation Sunday for five men. After the initiation a banquet was given at the house which was at- tended by several Detroit alumni. The new members are Joseps Foote, '36D, Flint; Louis Gans, '36D, Ansonia, Conn.; Milton Kamler, '36D, New- ark, N. J.; Julius Ribyat, '36D, Utica, N. Y.; and Sam Stone, '36D, Detroit. Alpha Tau Omega Alpha Tau Omega fraternity an- nounces the initiation of Warren Bade, '35, Plymouth, Wis.; Tom Clarke, '37, Cincinnati, Ohio; Arthur Cutler, '37, Detroit; William Flem- ming, '37, South Bend, Ind.; Sam Maxwell, '37, Canton, Ohio; Burton Miller, '37, Ardmore, Penn.; Donald Patterson, '37; Detroit; Elijah Pox- son, Jr., '35, Lansing; Daniel Ma- honey, Steve Remias, '36, Chicago. The initiation ceremony took place Saturday afternoon. Saturday night a banquet was held in honor of the initiates, returning alumnae, and also in celebration of the Founder's Day of the fraternity. Decorations were in blue and gold, the fraternity col- ors. Stew Daniels, National Executive Secretary, Champagne, Illinois; and Mackey, Province Chief, Chicago, were here for the week-end celebra- tions. Alpha Xi Delta Initiation was held at Alpha Xi Delta sorority, Saturday, for Theresa Jaycox, '37, Hammandsport, N. Y., Ruth Hoefer, '35, Kenosha, Wis., Lu- cinda Smith, '35, Pittsburgh, Pa., Mary Shaw, '37, Freeport, Ill., and Jean Field, '37, Aliquippa, Pa. Following the initiation ceremony was a banquet, at which Martika George, Grad., presented the alum- nae speech, Jean Cowden, Grad., the scholarship talk, and Jean Field a speech in behalf of the pledges. The decorations consisted of roses and white candles. Chi Psi Chi Psi fraternity held initiation ceremonies Saturday, March 3, for John S. Becker, '37, Grand Rapids; Walter Murphy, '37E, Chicago; Wil- liam Oliver, '37, Detroit; John Otte, '37, Grand Rapids; John Palmer, '37, Grand Rapids; and Richard Snyder, '37, Gary, Ind. A banquet was given Saturday night by the Detroit Alumni at the University Club, Detroit, in honor of the new members. Collegiate Sorosis Collegiate Sorosis held initiation ceremonies last night for Betty Anne Beebe, '37, Joan Whetstone, '36, Anne Laub, '37, Janet Allington, '37, Dorothy Bolton, '36, Harriet Kan- ous, '37, Josephine. Wilcox, '37, Mary Lou Miller, '37, Jane O'Ferral, '37, Nancy Quirk, '37, Mary Alice Gos- lin, '36, and Charlotte Reuger, '37. Delta Gamma Delta Gamma sorority held a for- mal initiation Saturday, March 10, for the following girls: Sue Thomas, i '36, Dayton, 0.; Elsie Pierce, '37 Ann Arbor; Gertrude Downing, '37, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Lucy Cartozian, '37, Scarsdale, N. Y.; Maryanna Chock- ley, '37, Detroit; Jean Dimond, '35, Flint; Mary Louise Willoughby, '37, Detroit; Kay Bishop, '37, Lansing; Winnifred Arnold, '37, Milwaukee;t Virginia Burt, '37, Ann Arbor; Har- riet Hathway, '37, Blissfield; Mar-, garet Moore, '37, Philadelphia; Kate Landrum, '37, Chicago; Nancy Olds, '37, Cleveland. The initiation was followed by a_ banquet which was attended by many alumnae. The table decorations con- sisted of spring flowers and pink can- dles. '35E, William Pierce, '35E, William Bowers, '36A, Ivar Strand, '36, How- ard Ritter '34E, Howard Moore, '36A,' Ralph Walker, '35E, Leo Walker, '34, Leonard Wheeler, '36E. Ralph Baldwin, '34, is chairman of the initiation. I Kappa Kappa Gamma Initiation was held yesterday af- ternoon for the following 17 wom- en: Betty Ann Barthel, '37, Mabel Campbell, '37, Dorothy Connellan, '37, Jane Edmonson, '37, Eloise Flit- craft, '37, Edith Frederick, '37, Jean Haskins, '37, Jean Hatcher, '37, Rose Hermann, '37, Dorothy Imrie, '37, Janet Jackson, '36, Ruth Loebs, '37, Pauline Mitchell, '37, Frances Odell, '37A, Virginia Rapp, '37, Kathryn Rietdyk, '36, Mary Edna Travis, '35. Elizabeth Allen, '36, was toastmis- tress at the banquet following the initiation ceremony. Among the alumnae returning for the occasion were Margaret Ferrin, '33, Katherine Ferrin, Dorothy Bunce, '33, and An- nette Cummings, '33. Scholarship and service awards were made to Ruth Duhme, '34, and Grace Mayer, '34, respectively. Phi Beta Pi Phi Beta Pi, medical fraternity, an- nounces the initiation of Donald Flynn, '36M, Gladwin; Jerome Web- ber, '35M, Jamestown, N. D.; Car- mine Razzano, '37M, Westbury, N. Y.; and Ned Kalder, '37M. The frater- nity held its 36th annual formal ini- tiation banquet last night for the new members. Phi Delta Epsilon Phi Delta Epsilon fraternity held an informal party for initiates Sat- urday night. The initiation was giv- en Sunday afternoon for: Joseph Feingold, '37, Brooklyn; M e r v i n Green, '34, Toledo, 0.; Joseph Klein, '36, Wilkes-Barre, Pa.; Harold Reese, '37, Youngstown, O.; Lester Segal, '37, Brooklyn, New York; and Jos- eph Skalaver, '37, Mattapan, Mass. After the initiation ceremonies a banquet was held Sunday evening at the fraternity house. Phi Epsilon Pi Phi Epsilon Pi fraternity an- nounces the initiation of Gordon K. Cohn, '37, Indianapolis; Robert J. Fischgrund, '37, South Bend, Ind.; Louis M. Goldsmith, '37, Cincinnati; Shirrel Kasle, '37, Toledo; William H. Klein, '37, Wilmette, Ill.; Bruce E. Kronenberger, '37, Chicago; Lloyd S. Reich, '37, Cleveland Heights, O.; David A. Schiffer, '37, Cleveland. Pi Beta Phi Pi Beta Phi sorority held a formal initiation Saturday for 25 girls, Those initiated were Mary Margaret Barnes, '37A, Alice Boucherle, '37, Camilla Bowman, '35, Florence Corpenter, '35, Josephine Cavanagh, '37, E s t h e r Greenwood, '36, Barbara Hanna, '37M, Harriet Heath, '37, Marion Holden, '37, Gertrude Jean, '36, Ruth Ann Jernegan, '37Ed, Suzanne John- son, '37, Lois King, '37, Jeane Mc- Lean, '37, Mary M. Moore, '37, Bar- bara Morgan, '35, Virginia Randolph, '37, Mary J. Rice, '35, Nancy Shep- pard, '35, Grace Snyder, '37, Helen Strand, '35Ed, Marjorie Turner, '37, Virginia Ulrich, '35, Lucile Wright, '36, Edith Zerbe, '37. Mrs. Homer Heath entertained the initiates at a luncheon Saturday noon, and a formal dinner was held at the sorority house Saturday night. Mary Fitzpatrick, '34, presided as toastmistress, and Mrs. Frederick B. (Continued on Page 6) I Women Given FERA Jobs So Far Exactly 103 women have been em- ployed in various faculty and muse- um projects under the Federal Emer- gency Relief Administration here, authorities in the dean of students' office stated yesterday. This number comprises all women students who have registered for po- sions. Work in the zoology museum is one of the major projects in which women are employed; work as typ- ists, statisticians, clerks, and filing' agents is included in the jobs opened to these. Although temporarify registration1 for FERA jobs has ceased, women in urgent need of aid from the Uni- versity have been advised to apply at the office of the dean of students. Where TO Go Harriet Jennings, '34, chairman of Judiciary Council, wail take charge of the meeting of freshman women, to be held tomorrow afternoon at the League. The class project will be decided upon at that time, and officers elected to take charge of plans and arrangements. Play Production Show Is To Open At Mendelssohn 'Elizabeth The Queen' To Start A Four-Night Run Tomorrow A vivid portrayal in line and color, as well as intelligent use of move- ment and voice, will be presented when Play Production opens with Maxwell Anderson's "Elizabeth the Queen" tomorrow night in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, with perform- ances also scheduled for the follow- iing three nights. The -play is now in final rehearsals, in which full costumes, and the req- uisite stage sets are being used so that the actors can blend with the atmosphere of- the pJ'.y. The ladies of the court have had to accustom themselves to walking. gracefully in the long -and cumbersome dresses, some of which are four feet across. The men in the cast are also prac- tising in costumes to get used to the starched ruffs around the necks of their elaborate court dress, and to the long swords, which have an un- happy way of becoming entangled with the legs. The make-up and costumes of these court characters, which include Essex, Cecil, Bacon, Raleigh, and Burghly as well as Elizabeth, have been done according to studies made by Play Production students of au- thentic portraits. Making up the famous queen only requires three hours of patient application of make- up, which has been worn now through several dress rehearsals, so that Elizabeth will become accus- tomed to the mask-like quality and can make her expressions seem na- tural to the audience. The cast for "Elizabeth the Queen" requires so large a number of men that a crew of ten women is being used in the technical side of the production, so that the shift from scene to scene will be almost instan- taneous. For the cumulative emo- tional effect of the play, the action must be as continuous as possible. A very efficient system of backstage or- ganization has been devised by Wil- liam Halstead, Jr., Grad., so that these quick shifts are possible. The women in the stage crew have shown themselves to be very ingenious and dextrous in this technical work, al- though it is only in emergencies that women do the prt in this activity to so large an extent, said Valentine B. Windt, director of Play Production. The play will be the most expen- sive to be produced by Play Produc- tion this year, due to the cost of cos- tumes, and to the fact that no stage props are being neglected as far as historical accuracy as well as pic- torial quality goes. Reception Will Be HlRhl For Secretary Of Labor At a meeting of the University of Michigan Young Democrats Club held Sunday afternoon, the mem- bers voted to hold a reception for Miss Frances Perkins, Secretary of Labor, who is coming to speak here under the auspices of the University Oratorical Association, Friday, March 23. Dean Emerson, '34, chairman of the club, appointed Maureen Kava- naugh, '36, Mary McCarty, '36, and Marian Sanders, '37, to take charge of the arrangements for the recep- tion. FroshWoiiien Plan Meeting For Election Year's Freshman Project To Be Discussed; Will Pick Council Group All freshman women will gather at a mass meeting at 4:00 p.m. tomor-~ row in the League to discuss the freshman project for this year and to elect an executive council to carry out their plans. The committee chosen will consist of a chairman and her assistant and three committee heads, according to Harriett Jen- nings, '34, chairman of Judiciary Council which will assist the fresh- men in their elections. Last year, the freshman group abandoned the traditional Freshman Girls Pageant and adopted, instead, a Freshman Lantern Dance. For many years previous to the last, the women in the freshman class had put on a pageant, usually depicting the development of music, by song and dance. This had been staged on Palmer Field. The "Lantern Dance" was unique in that it was "girl's date night," a thing which heretofore had been reserved for the Pnhellenic Ball. Money from the dance was turned over to the League Under- graduate Fund. The dance included not only social dancing, but special cabaret numbers by members of the freshman class. Several dance cho- ruses performed, and unique song ar- rangements were also featured. "This year they need not adopt the same idea as that carried out last year, although the dance was very successful. The freshmen have ade- quate training," Miss Jenning said, "to go ahead and get something new if they would prefer it." Members of Judiciary Council will explain the purpose of the meeting at the beginning, and the discussion from then on will come from the floor. 'Gung's All There' Will Feature Both Old And New Tunes Both the distinctive, modernistic compositions and the usual musical comedy tunes will be featured in "Gang's All There," according to Maxine Maynard, chairman for the 1935 Junior Girls Play which will open March 21. "Grey Shadows," which is an im- pressionistic, blues song, composed by IMike Brennan, '36, with words by Byron Dalrymple,is the "high yeller gals" number, from the scene in the night club. The group of singers will be headed by Billie Griffiths, whose solo blues number will be accom- panied by weird motions of the others against a shadowy background. Drinking Song The drinking song, "Here's To Good Fellows," by the same com- posers, is also from this scene in "Henrietta's" and much of its appeal lies in the unusual arrangements of the number. The trio consisting of Mary Morrison, Helene Gramm, and Maxine Maynard, will carry the har- mony, while a background of six voices will sustain the melody hum- ming. "Crossing My Fingers," by Leon Kaye, '34, with words by Jay Pozz, '34, is the usual musical comedy type, for it is one of the regular chorus numbers in the show within the show with a lively foxtrot rhythm. Modern Composition Another number from this show is "Underworld Rhythm," composed by two members of the Union Band, Rubert Moran and Byron Dalrymple, which is very modernistic. Virginia Chapman will give the solo of this accompanied by an octette in 4-part arrangement. The one love song of the entire play does not follow the usual type, but is impressive and almost .plain- tive in its melody, "Wasting My Love," with music by Mike Brennan and words by Dalrymple. Charlotte Whitman sings this not as a "sweet" song, but as more disillusioned, hope- less, and despairing. The music for the pantomime of the fantasy in the Vienna hospital is by Moran and Dalrymple and is very modernistic and pictorial. Every word and gesture of the choruses is RUDOLPH S BEAUTY SHOP Special for a Limited Time "lEUGN PERMANENT WAVE $3.50 Complete EDITOR'S NOTE: This a series of articles on Michigan alumni. is the first of distinguished By DOROTHY GIES Perhaps in no other field do Mich- igan men hold such wide fame as in the field of science and medicine: chemists, physicists, astronomers, and geologists, the man who directs vast hospitals, and the man who works at night in a humble laboratory to per- feet his contribution to human wel- fare. The list is far too long to enum- erate, and only a very few names of note can be mentioned. Shortly after his graduation in 1880 from the Dental School, John Carmichael read in a medical journal that a German physician had suc- cessfully used cocaine in his work on the human eye. Cocaine was a rare and little known drug in those days, but Carmichael thought that it might also be applied to dentistry. He bought three grains from Germany at $3.00 a grain, and published his findings in "The Dental Cosmos" in 1882. It was the beginning of the local anesthesia in dentistry. The ef- fect of his work can scarcely be ap- preciated, until one realizes that painless dentistry had hitherto been unheard of. Mayo Graduated Here Probably no other name in medi- cine is as familiar to the world at large as that of Mayo, and the two famous brothers can claim the dis- tinction of being the greatest sur- geons in the United States, if not in the world. William Mayo graduated from Michigan in 1883 and began practicing immediately afterward in a small mid-western town. Since then Rochester, Minn., has become a mec- ca for the affilicted of every nation and race. Particularly is the clinic known for its work in the curing of cancer. The University awarded Wil- liam Mayo the honorary degree of Doctor of Science in 1908. Another name of national note is that of John Harvey Kellogg, '73- '74M. Not only did he found the Battle Creek Sanatarium, fampus for its healing and a pioneer in the teaching of healthful diet and living, but he has also been its director for over 57 years. Abel Michigan Alumnus One of the beter-known American scientists is John J. Abel, who grad- uated in 1883 and is at present a professor at Johns Hopkins. His nu- merous researches, which have great- ly benefited medicine, include "the illusive principles called hormones; the poison secreted in the skin of toads and isolated by him in pure - ~ - - ~~ - - University Ahunni Have Gained Note In Science And Medicine Directs J.G.P. Music MAXINE MAYNARD planned in exact rhythm with the music. Tango Hummed "Only You," by Leon Kaye, '34, is another number from the show with- in the show. The "Tango," com- posed by Mary Ann Mathewson, '34SM, is also from that show and is hummed entirely while two char- acters tango with no other accom- paniment. The humorous songs are "Wring- ing the Blues Away," by Mary Mor- rison and Dalrymple, which is the song of the scrubwomen's chorus; "You Ruined Me," by Mary Morri- son, which is the silly ditty of the little song seller; and a conglomera- tion of "Dark Town Strutters Ball," "Swanee River," "When You and I Were Young, Maggie," and others, which Mary Ann Mathewson com- bined into "Joe's Hotsey Tune." Motion Pictures: Harum" with Will "The Lost Patrol" Michigan, "David Rogers; Majestic, with Victor Mc- r i i r wr. ._ jII Laglen; Whitney, "Fury of the Jun- gle" with Peggy Shannon; Wuerth, "Dancing Lady" with Joan Craw- ford and Clark Gable. Dancing: League Grill Room, Hi- Hat Inn, Tavern, Preketes, NOTICE 1 Senior Women Orders We Can Help You ! DANCING EVERY NIGHT Except Monday at Let us help you in your financial problems. Two heads are better than one, and our sound business judgment will help you settle your problems. Seek our advise often. II 11 1 1 1 i1