THE MICHIGAN DAILY Serviees For Iitiates Keep Houses usy Dances, Rushing Dinner Are Part Of This Weck'i Peas For Enrtainmen . Fraternities and sororities, in ad- dition to holding formal initiations last 'week-end, also entertained with banquets and dances. Alpha Omicron Pi Florence Brady, '33, of Kalamazoo, is visiting here throughout the week. Delta Phi Delta Phi fraternity held formal initiation Saturday for the following pledges: John Berger, '35, Jackson; Douglas Calkins, '37, Painted Post, N. Y.; Gordon Claussen, '35, Chica- go; Charles Emling, '36Ed, Detroit; Newton McFadyen, '37E, Montclair, 14. J.; and Albert Ammerman, '37, Sturgis. Delta Tau Delta Among the alumni present at the banquet honoring the newly-initiated members on the 75th anniversary of Delta Tau Delta fraternity Saturday. night were "Doc" Morrison, Royal Oak; Jack Chambers, Marquette; Rehn Nelson, Chicago; Kyle Wor- ley, Luke Hepburn, Chuck Boose and Bob Sinclair, all of Detroit, and Leigh J. Young and Frank Oakes of Ann Arbor. Ed Lincoln, president of the north- ern division of the fraternity, was toastmaster at the banquet. A watch was presented to Mr. Sinclair in commemoration of 30 years of serv- ice to the fraternity. |'ranklin T. Danemiller of Canton, Ohio, whose name was omitted from the list of initiates previously pub- lished was also initiated Saturday. Phi Kappa Tau Phi Kappa Tau fraternity held its annual Founders Day banquet Saturday at the Union for the active members and alumni. The guests who attended were: Prof. Frank A. Mikle of the Engineering School, David Vocks, Harry Coll, and James Preish, all of Detroit. Phi Mu Alpha-Sinfonia Phi Mu Alpha-Sinfonia announces the initiation of John A. Wilson, '37, Albert T. Zbinden, '37SM, Kenneth L. Bovee, '35SM, and Kenneth L. Clark, '35SM. Pi Lainbda Phi Pi Lambda Phi fraternty h e 1 d formal initiation Friday, March 17, for the following men: Robert Adel- man, '36, Chicago, Ill.; Louis Avner, '36, Bronsville, Pa.; Leonard Cohen, '36, Chicago, Ill.; Sidney Finger, Jr., '37, Newark, N. J.; Marcus Ginsberg, '36, Marietta, O.; Morton Mann, '37, Woodmere, N. Y.; and William Sobo- roff, '37, Chicago, Ill. Following the initiation, an instal- lation banquet was held, at which Dr. Reuben L. Kahn was the princi- pal speaker. The officers installed for the coming year are: Joseph Su- dow, Rex; Albert Conviser, Archon; Benjamin Harris, Keeper of the Ex- chequer; Marshall Silverman, Keeper of the Archives; LeeRosenberg, Mas- ter of Work; Paul Pearlstien, Frter Correspondent. Sigma Kappa Carlotta R. Weitbrecht, '34, was in charge of a rushing dinner which was attended by eight guests Mon- day. Theta Chi Theta Chi fraternity held formal initiation last week-end. The initi- ates are: George Frid, '36E, Buffalo, N. Y.; Gordon Drummond, '36E, Washington, D. C.; William Wells, '36E, Ovid, N. Y.; John riner, '37E, D e t r o i t; William Sheehan, '37E, Rochester, N. Y.; John Batdorff, '37, Traverse City; Charles Peterson, '37, Michigar City, Ind.; and Clare Graves, '37, Albany, N. Y. Theta Chi also announces the pledging of Samuel Peet, '36E, Roch- ester, N. Y.; Norman Lawton, '37, Detroit; and John Shorter, '37E, De- troit. Theta Xi Theta Xi fraternity held formal initiation for four men Saturday. The initiates are Graham Batting, '35E; (Continuccd on Page 6) HEEL Men's, Women s Ch:idroii's Live Regular Rubber TUES.- anY Put On While You Wait ori Shop To Be Playboy And Mo 1I In 'Gang's All There' -Photo by Barbara Lorch. Bearice DeVine as Mac, a yowng 9rcducer, and Virginia Chapman as te sophis icaleld Vlura Veimnrx will have the leads in the Junior Girl-' Play, "The Og. 's All There," which will be given tomorrow night fot he benea of t h siir women at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theiatre. OVEER TN WEEK-END The last week-end was rather a quiet one, although there were a number of small parties. Perhaps the weather had something to do with it, and of course 200 of the junior women were tied up in re- hearsal of "Gang's All There," which opens tomorrow night in Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre (with the tradi- tional invitational performance for senior women, faculty members, hon- ored guests, and a few students who will purchase tickets to fill the house). The Union dances Friday and Sat- urday nights were well attended, and the Delta Kappa Epsilon formal par- ty Friday night and the Mosher Hall St. Patrick's dance Saturday helped the general festivities along. Seen at the Deke dance were Winifred Pike, in blue with a cleverly-cut train; Grace Mayer, League president, in a flame lace with chartreuse trim; and. Mary Stirling, in black and white. Pastels are coming into their an- nual popularity, prettier and more chic than they ever have been be- fore. A number of the style-wise women are choosing them for their dressier frocks, and perhaps the smartest note is the traditional and ever-so-becoming ;black, in lighter materials to match the spring mood. The residents of Mosher Hall en- tertained in honor of the Irish pa- tron saint with an informal dance in the Mosher lounges. The pastels and brilliantly-colored gowns were gay and charming against the deco- ration of sidelighted shamrock and the yellow of daffodils set off by green lighting. Lenore LeGendre, Mosher presi- dent, was gowned in blue and white, with a fitted white taffeta jacket. Linda. Crosby, social secretary of the hall, chose crepe in Eleanor blue with a high neckline edged with white gardenias. iarjory Winch wore or- ange crepe with rhinestones trim, and Betty Morgan, freshman presi- dent, appeared in a wine-colored gown. Chaperons for the party, which more than 50 couples attended, were! Mrs. Edward Legendre, Calumet; Mrs. Frederick Ray, and Miss Kath- erine Koch, '32. Mr. Walter Donnelly, editor of the University Museums Publications, gave a gallery talk Sunday afternoon in connection with the exhibition of etchings and prints sponsored by tie Ann Arbor Art Association, and on view in the three upstairs galleries of Alumnae Memorial Hall. The "13 etchings by Donald Shaw MacLaughlan, exhibited in the large gallery, come from the Toledo Mu- seum as the gift of Miss Alice Roul- lier of Chicago, and represent slight- ly more than half of tacLaughlan's life work. His etchings are said to show strongly the influence of Rem brandt, Meryon and Whistler. M4ost of his plates were done abroad, many of them architectural subjects, and he is considered one of the soundest of the etchers working in what might be called the traditional "grand manner." Lucille Douglass' Work In Etchings Shown At Exhibits' If you enjoy color and vitality in your art, by all means take in the current exhibit of pastels and etch- ings by Lucille Douglass, on view in the ground corridor of the Archi- tectural Building. The selected group of works by this well known artist, lecturer, and journalist consists of vivid interpretations of the dazzling pageantry of color and splendor that is life in the Far East. Miss Douglass spent three years in Indo-China and several months in the islands of Bali and Java. While in Angkor, she worked with the French archeologists, thus obtaining a background of authenticity which has proved most valuable in her artistic and literary work. Miss Douglass' exhibit brings to Ann Ar- bor all the glamor, charm and mys- tery of the Orient as she found it in the ancient temples and monuments. Her most brilliant effects in pas- tel are achieved by the use of vivid blues and greens, with sharp con- trasts of light and shadow, and splashes of yellow sunshine. Frech CIb Gives 'Le Couvier' Today Members of the French Club will present "Le Couvier," a 15th century farce, at the meeting of the group at 8:15 p.m. today in the Salle du Circle on the fourth floor of the Ro- mance Language Building. Maurice Demers, '35E, is playing the role of the husband; Josephine Ball, '36, will take the part of the wife, and Louise Karpinski, Grad., is. the mother-in-law. Bertha Car- ry, '34, vice-president of the club, is directing the play. The program of the meeting will also 'include a talk by Prof. Rene Talamon .of the French department concerning the annual French Club play which will be produced early in May, and a talk by John Schmidt, '35E. Woun'es Club To Hear 111 ',, F. B. Fisher Toda1 The guest speaker a.t the meeting of the Ann Arbor Women's Club, to be held at '2:3p p.m. today in the League ballroom, will be Mrs. Frederick B. Fisher, who will discuss conditions in the Far East. The meeting is under the auspices of the international re- lations department, directed by Mrs. H-. . Curtis. The hostesses for the afternoon are Mrs. E. F. Cooper, Mrs. Charles Beld- ing, Mrs. John 'Naylor, and Mrs. J. A. Wessinger. There will also be special music, which has been arranged by Mrs. Carl H. Smith, chairman of the music di- vision. CoWplete Cast Of Junior Play Is AuunuWed 'Gang's All There' Is To Open Tomorrow Night; Lead Taken By De Vine With the Michigan Union Band accompanying, the junior women will open the 30th annual Junior Girls Play, "Gang's All There," tomorrow night at the Lydia Mendelssohn The- atre. Beatrice DeVine will appear as Mac, the young producer with the ingenious ability of getting himself into scrapes and getting out again only with great difficulty. He is ably assisted in finding trouble by the hated "Scarface Joe," king of the underworld, played by Marie Abbott. Chapman Also Appears His leading lady, the sophisticated and hardboiled Velura Velmar, played by Virginia Chapman, is another source of trouble. Mickie Powers, a part taken by Beatrice Graham, is the weak-hearted individual who is frightened out of being the lead in Mac's play and elopes with the cho- rine from Park Avenue, Camilla Bow- man. Charlotte Whitman, as Fanny, is the plump little chorine who at the crucial moment does a "Cinderella" which saves the day. Her friend and counsellor, the po- ker-faced song and dance man, Kel- ley, is played by Nan Diebel. Mac's secretary is Heather Trimm. taken by Kathleen Carpenter, who looks like a dowager but has a complete back- stage vocabulary. Comic Moments Others who add color and vitality to the comic moments of the play are: the little song, seller from the country, Mary Morrison; a stage hand with more thumbs than brains, Barbara Sutherland; and a window- washer with an eye to the stage, Jane Cissel. A typical scene in a Harlem night club brings forth the usual con- glomeration of characters headed, of course, by Henrietta, the hostess her-, self, Gertrude Shorz. Then there is the well-preserved dowager, Sally Stapleton; her gigolo, Madelyn Coe; the two unidentified gentlemen in top hats, Kathleen Patterson and Margaret Kasley; the Greenwich Village couple, Betty; Talutt and Nancy Shepherd, and Joe's gang. Many Choruses The mugs and molls chorus, one of the several included, consists of Madelyn Coe, Rosalind Greenberg, Gertrude Shutz, Alice Morgan, Mar- ion Brooks, Ann Mitchell, Betty Tal- cutt, Marjorie W a r n e r, Margaret Kasley, Isabel. Carry, Betty Gillard, Betty Wunsch, Helen Woodward, Helen Barr, Louise Van Ameringen, Ruth Root, Barbara Jean Owens, Bessie Curtis, Caroline Wose, and Mary Paul. In the "high yaller gal" chorus there are Velma Wilson, Eleanor Blodgett, Harriet Oleksieuch, Rowena Goldstein, Ruth Kaser, Anita Noble, Rita Peterson, Marion Bertsch, Doro- thy Wikel, and Rosemary Osborn. Those in the Garbo chorus are Dor- othy Hall, Margaret Phalan, Betty, Aigler, Jane Langenderfer, Janice Rice, Mary Stirling, Mary O'Brien, Mable Lennon,.Virginia Morgan, Ber- nice Wetherald, and Ann Osborn. Gangster Chorus The villainous gangsters of Joe's gang are portrayed by Maxine May-~ nard, Helene Gramm, Harriet Speiss, IBy FLORECNCE 1ARER Starving in a garret may be ro- mantic and living in a room high up under the eaves may givemyou a sort of a picturesque story-book feel- ing, but aforesaid room loses all its glamour when it is studied from the angle of the interior decorator who is trying to make it into a com- fortable habitat for a college girl. In any dormitory or sorority house there are numerous rooms that seem to have been made from bargain remnants of left-over space. They are usually on the top floor and con- tain all sorts of weird corners and angles made by sloping roofs and dormer windows. These present a very real problem in arrangement and decoration. If the room is fairly large and contains only one or two awkward features the best thing to do is to ignore them or at least endeavor to make others ignore them. This can Helen Wilson, Mary Earnshaw, Elea- nor Heath, Mary Morrison, Margaret Hertrick. The little Viennese doctors will be taken by Mary Hutchinson, Barbara Sutherland, Stella Glass, Sarah Scott, Charlotte Anderson, Marjorie Israel, Althea Lisle, Betty Merril, Virginia Denne, Constance Cavender, Delta Glass, and Helene Lindenbaum. The accompanying chorus of nurs- es consists of Helen McDonald, Vir- ginia Koch, Virginia Mathews, Freda Feigel, Genevieve Field, Ann Hardy, Ruth Bosse, Mary Lou Elspass, Jane Brucker, Kitty Rucker, Estelle Stan- dish, and Esther Meglos. The night gown chorus from this same scene is made up of Janet Gib- son, Lucile Betz, Helen Crawford, Nancy Johnson, Jessie Statler, Min- na Griffin. The pajama chorus has Betty VanDyne, Alice Goodwin, Mar- jorie Solomon, Isabel Singer, Patricia Woodward, and Lavinia Creighton. In the steam cabinets in the hospital will be Betty Sibert, JeanI n e t t e Greene, Lucy Cope, Ruth Kaser,Mary Earnshaw, and Margaret Hertrick. Those in the Underworld Rhythm chorus are Dorothy Parks, Maxine Maynard, Mary Morrison, Helene Gramm, Eleanor Heath, Betty Mc- Omber, Margaret Hertrick. Singing Choruses All the singing choruses consist of almost the same persons for all are taken from the special chorus of 30 voices trained by Prof. Arthur Hackett. The scrub women's group therefore is similar to Joe's gang, the "high yeller gals," the Under- world Rhythm, and the women in the steam boxes. They are Maxine Maynard, Mary Earnshaw, Helene Gramm, Mary Morrison, Eleanor Heath, Dorothy Wikel, Billie Grif- fiths, Eleanor Blodgett, and Marion Bertsch. The voices off stage are the radio announcer, Sarah Pierce, and Greta Garbo, Betty Aigler. Others present in the night club scene are the cigar- ette girl, Mary Paul, Will Wetzel, the columnist, Barbara Sutherland, the waiter, Marjorie Warner, and the torch singer, Billie Griffiths. J.G.P. Tickets For Wednesday The remaining tickets for the Wednesday night performance, Senior Night, of "Gang's All There" are now open to the pub- lic, according to the announce- ment last night of Hilda Kirby, finance chairman. _- - - - _ _ __ ,_.:.__ . _ m _ < _ - - - __ - - ... ,.,--III I ,. a ' ~ tS " ' . " s ' . ". LYDIA MENDELSSOHN r' i DANCING Friday and'sotur