1935 THE MICIGAN 'DAILY PAGE V Crowd Attends First Annual Assembly Ball Held In League & llroom I, Spring Styles Popular At Last Nights_,Dance Georginia Karlson leads Maurcl Accompanied y RichardShoupe t spite of thermometer readings and snow flurries, spring was the key- note in gowns and decorations at the Assembly Ball last night. Against a background 'of spring flowers and plants that banked the walls of the League ballroom, the Grand March swung into progress, led by Georgina Karlson, '35, general chairman, and her escort, Richard Shoupe, '38M. Miss Karlson chose for the event a green and brown printed crepe, cut on simple lines. The low decolletage was made in cowl style in the back. Committee Members Atted Several committee members ap- peared in pastel shades, matching the pale colors of the programs. Mau- reen Kavanagh, '36, publicity chair- man, wore tea-rose lace, made in prin- cess style with an off-the-shoulder ef- fect. She attended with Joe McCann, '36. Turquoise blue crepe was selected by Dorothy Jones, '36, chairman of music and floor. Her gown was made in tunic effect, with plaited straps and square decolletage, and with it she wore silver accessories. Miss Jones was escorted by David DeWees, '38M. Betty Cavender, '3, co-chairman of music, wore a smart black net gown. Ruching of the same material edged the hem and the shoulder cape, and a touch of color was provided by the red rhinestone shoulder straps. John Perkins, '36, attended with Miss Cav- ender. Jacket Frock Ellen Brown, '36, chairman of tick- ets, who was escorted by Hart Pierce, '37, wore tea-rose crepe. The short jacket had a Queen Elizabeth collar of starched organdy ruffles. A smart green lace gown was chosen by Alma Wadsworth, '35Ed., program chair- man, who attended with Elden A. Scott, '35SM. Reta Peterson, '35, chairman of decorations, appeared in turquoise blue pebble crepe, with vivid red ac- cents in the clip and flowers at the neck. Her escort was Walter Simons, '36. The chairman of chaperones, Marion Brooks, '35, wore powder blue crepe with fur trimmed sleeves. Velvet Still Good Helen Stetson, '36, co-chairman of programs, wore aquamarine lace and another member of the central com- mittee, Virginia York, '36, finance chairman, chose velvet in a wine shade, with a collar of silver lame, and long slit sleeves. She attended with' Frederick Wiselogle, Grad. Also in velvet was Betty Hill, '36, vice-presi- dent of Assembly, whose black dress was simply cut, with long shirred sleeves and a cowl neck. - Tucks And Quiltingj Dorothy Triplett, '36, a member of the ticket committee selected powder.- blue crepe with a quilted belt and rhinestone clip. Gretchen Lehmann, '37, also on the ticket committee, chose tucked black net, smartly fitted, accented by a red velvet bow at the neck. Another committee member, Betty Green, '36, appeared in whitei rough crepe with metallic threads. AI white bow lined with red taffetaI marked the decolletage in b7ack. Among the Assembly officers presenti were Eleanor Peterson, '35, president, who wore rose moire with silver ac- cessories, and Audrey Talsma, '35, t secretary, in ice-blue satin with a Peter Pan collar. Katherine England, '35, treasurer, appeared in pink laceP with net inserts in the skirt. I Last night's dance was the first ball ever sponsored by non-affiliated wom- en on campus. It is expected that it will be an annual spring affair, fill- ing the same place in the social cal- endar of independents that the Pan- hellenic Ball does for sorority women. Charlie Agnew's orchestra played for the event. Ihoadwixy's MostOut sandding Performe rs Local Players To Give Farce Here Monda 1935 J.G.P. F as Producion Conplete Cast Of Last Year Says M Craken For Hillel Pla IQ Ad y League Theatre Scen(e Of N(.4 Gwyn's Company's Last Play Of Season Wardens of the Nell Gwyn's Com- pany of Players have sent out invi; tations for the last presentation of the season, "Engaged," a farcical comedy by W. S. Gilbert, to be given this Monday, at the Lydia Mendel- sschn Theater. "Engaged" was first produced in 1877 at the Haymarket Theatre, Lon- don as an entirely original comedy. It was one of Gilbert's earliest mas- terpieces which may be characterized as a Gilbert and Sullivan opera with- out Sullivan and without music. Gil- bert wrote "Engaged" before his col- ,)oration with Sullivan. and Oscar Wilde acknowledged the fact that it was a masterpiece by stealing liberally fromi the play for "The Importance of Being Earnest." The Nell Gwyn's company of play- ers is composed of faculty members and townspeople organized solely for the purpose of reviving forgotten mas- terpieces of the English and American stage. "Engaged" will be the 11th pro- duction of the organization to con- clude its fifth successive season. Prof. Howard Mumford Jones of the Eng- lish department, director of the last play, "Love for Love" by Congreve, also will direct the production of "Engaged." The Nell Gwyn's Com- pany has produced such 18th and 19th century plays as "Beaux Stra- tgem" by Farquar, "She Would If She Could" by Etheredge, "Fashion" by Mrs. Cora Mowett, and "The London Merchant" by George Lillo. The cast selected to play the roles in "Engaged" consists of Professor Jones, Karl Litzenberg, Robert Adams, 3, Eleanor Johnson days of the Coolidge dollar, and ad- s$ nnounc1JeU11LUUt Russell McCracken, director of the vertising racketeers. These provide the Junior Girls Play, in an interview yes- chance for some clever lyrics and real- terday, stated that the 1935 J.G.P, ly vital dance compositions. 'Unifinished Picture' Is To "Tune in On Love," is "every bit as Though the story of "Tune in on G good a play as 'Gang's All There,' Love" is frankly sentimental, Mr. Mc-- which was presented last year." Cracken feels in no word or action Theatre March 15, 16 In spite of the difficulty of predict- that it is a harkback to the sentiment ing exactly how a play will look with- of "yester-year." Thechief characters Additional members of the cast and out settings, lighting, costumes and are not at all the traditional boy' usiness stafI for theHillel Play, "Un- orchestra, Mr. McCracken feels that and girl' of the old theatrical album. ishes stfr th H ill a "Un- the quality of the rehearsals, which They are very much alive and modern, finished Picture," which will be pre- are running considerably ahead of he stated. sented March 15 and 16 in the Lydia schedule indicate that "Tune in on "In directing Alison Tennant and Mendelssohn Theatre, were an- Love" will fully measure up to the Claire Gorman in the leading parts, nounced yesterday by Norman L. gangster epic. I have stressed with them, the im- Mr. McCracken stated that this portance of keeping their characteri- fman, acting president of the year's story is more original and the zations away from the pasty, too di- Hillel Players. music and lyrics are definitely su- mensional quality of the traditional James A, Randall, '36, Helen M. perior. There is twice as much danc- musical comedy hero and heroine," Wright, '35, Theodore Cohen, '35, and ing in this year's play, and there is he concluded. Joseph Lesser. '35, have been added one number which junior women an- This is the third J.G.P. Mr. Mc- ticipate will equal the famous "Garbo Cracken has directed. Of the three to the original cast, according to ,ceaproductions, all have been strictly Sharfman. The play has no gangsters, show against the usual campus themes of Members of the various commit- ghrls, or nightlife as found in "Gang's the preceding plays. The characters tees which have been chosen inlude: All There." It contains the minor i" Tune in On Love" are only grad- publicity, David Friedman,. '38, Mor- tragedy of a sentimental young man nates from high school, the hero from ton Jacobs, '38,.and Stephen Stone, named "Walt," who feels that the man Maple City High School and the '38: program, Genevieve Field, '35, who invented the Townsend Plan hci cine from the one in Beaver Falls. and Sally Leavitt, '37; tickets, Irma shold have remembered the people Sykes, '38, Phyllis Devay, '38, Sylvia "under 25" in order "to keep love Bubis, '36, Prances Levenson, '37, Ada alive." gFo i' A aably Zola, 37, Mildred Haas, '38, and Inserted in this seemingly innocu- Poshio,,s Due Today Frances Bernstein, '37. ous background, Mr. McCracken said, Rehearsals for the play are being "is some very pert lampooning of big All petitions for A.sembly offices directed by Robert K. Adams, Grad. business men, who cannot forget the' must be filed by 6 p.m. today in He is a former director of the Con- the Undergraduate Office of the edy Club and is at present a ineinber " League. All non-affiliated women of the Flint Community Playei's and .IOtiZnlK1 ere interested are urged to fill out the Nell Gwyn Players. application blanks. Positions open Ti(kets for the production may be ( ~ 1 I a~ prsidntvicepreidet, ee-purchased from members of the busi- W ithevean rtarytreasuier, and chirman of th tre.tndngcmmtee Hess staff, at Wahr's, Ulrich's or the three standing conmmttees Slater's bookstores, or at the box- ylsoon hi. cimbe fce of the Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- tre, beginning Marchd, 12. tickets } ~are priced at 35, 50, and 75 cent s. -Associated Press Photo. \ot one male perform r has won such approval this season as liatharine Cornell in "Romeo and Julitt" and Elizabeth Bergner, shown in her role in "Escape Me Never." They have won the honor of being the season's most outstanding performers, according to a unanimous decision of theatrical critics. 'Caney]Players Give Program HereTonight S.C.A. Sponsors Kentucky Mountain Group In Lane Hall At 8 P.M. A program which will be based rfbon an open forum discussion about the situation and sociological condi- tions of the people living in the "heart" of the Kentucky mountains will be given by the Caney Creek Players at 8 p.m. tonight in Lane Hall Reading Room under the auspices of the Student Christian Association. In addition to conducting the dis- cussion, the Players will give many brief local color sketches of events that have happened in the mountains. Various members of the Players have written original plays which give much of the folk-lore surrounding "one of the picturesque regions of the nation." "Civic organizations, educational clubs, schools and colleges all over the country have received these mountaineers with great enthusiasm," S.C.A. officials stated. "But the real purpose of the Players is to acquaint the general population of America with the sad plight of the people liv- ing in one of the most backward parts of our country." In the past few years the Caney Creek Players have raised enough funds to keep a school open. It is the first time the mountain popula- tion has had a chance to acquire any of the benefits open to most Amer- icans. In addition to keeping schools open, providing better means of com- munication, fostering public health, and bettering sociological conditions generally, the Players have built and improved many homes in the region for the people. Banqut Giveni By The annual banquet of the Gradu- ate Outing Club will be held at the Washington Scout Cabin today. The group will meet at 3 p.m. at Lane Hall and hike out to the cabin which is at the entrance to the Huron River Drive. About 30 graduates are ex- pected, according to Miss Celia Knight, the secretary of the organiza- tion. A steak dinne will be served and a special program will be presented. The program, which has been planned to acquaint graduate students wit h the history of the Club, will include speeche s by the officers of the group. They are Wayne Whitaker, president, J. Edward Marceau, vice-president. and chairman of the banquet, Miss, Celia Knight. secretary, and Ira George, treasurer. The organization which is spn- sored by Miss Jeannette Perry,.as- sistant dean of women, was formed, three years ago and has a floating membership of 40 graduates. Social Meeting plainn e For Cosmopolitan Clu b The meeting of the Cosmopolitan Closed Dances Are Given By Many Houses j One sorority and two fraternities John Weimer, Victor H. Lane, Shirley are holding dances tonight, and an- Paine, Mrs. Lois Maier, Mrs. Mary other house will entertain at tea to- Bromage, Mrs. Margaret Gnau, and morrow afternoon. Mrs. Charlotta Wagner. Edith Forsythe, '36, is in charge of arrangements for the hard times . T '.* party to be held at the Alpha Omicron SJLU.1Cflt Is 'Iven Pi house. Whit Lowe and hic orches- tra will furnish music for dancing, Position In China and Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Griffith and? Mrs. Ada Zimmerman wiW be the One of the most active of the for- chaperones. eign students in all international ac- Acacia fraternity is holding a closed tivities on this campus, Siao-sung formal dinner-dance, which has been Djang, left recently for New York on planned by James Lientz, '36E. The her way to her native country, China, chaperones will be Mr. and Mrs. T. via England and the continent. Miss Hawley Tapping, Mr. and Mrs. C. Rus- Djang has been a student at the Uni-I sell Pryce, and Mr. and Mrs. Louis G. versity for the past four years and1 Christman. has just received a doctor's degree in Reed Pierce and his band will play psychology. for the Xi Psi Phi closed formal A position on the faculty of the de- dance, which will-also be held tonight. partment of psychology at Jing-ling George Atwell, '36D, is in charge of College, the largest and most promi- the party, and Dr. and Mrs. George nen women's college in China, awaits Moore and Dr. and Mrs. J. W. See- Miss Djang on her arrival. Miss Djang burger will chaperon, has spent the last few months travel- Grove Ginder, '36, is in charge of ling extensively in the United States the tea which will be held at the Theta lecturing in the interest of the Union Clii house tomoirow afternoon from Christian Colleges of China. 4:30 to 8 o'clock. __________ PHI RHO SIGMA THETA DELTA CHI MebeRsofthePiRhoSig Theta Delta Chi fraternity held! .Members of the Phi Rho Sigma initiation for fifteen new members wish to announce the initiation Wed- Saturday, March 2. nesday of seven members: Richard Those who were initiated were Fred- Ashley, '38M, George Brown, '38M, erick Allen, '38, Marshal Case, '38, George Clinton, '371v, Jack Jacoby, Carl Clement, '38, Jack Finley, '37, '38M, Reed Prugh, '38M, George Roy Frasier, '38, Robert Geyman, '37, Rieth, '38M, and Hillis Rigtermink, '37 William McHenry, '38, Edward Hig- M. gens, '38, George Peck, '38, Edward The e:,e1t:r at the banquet was Thompson, '36, Robert Weeks, '37,1 Dr. Norman Kretzschmar of the ob- James Wilde, '37, Donald Wilsher, '38,1 stetrics department. John Winder, '38. The Cleveland Symphony Orches- tra, under the direction of Artur Rod- zinski, will appear for the first time in the Choral Union Series at 8:15 p.m. Thursday, March 28 in Hill Au- ditorium. The orchestra has entered its sev- enteenth season, having won universal recognition for its accomplishments 'in concert work. The orchestra has appeared in practically every music center of the United States. Rodzinski, conductor of the Cleve- land Symphony Orchestra, entered last May in a comprehensive series of orchestral performances with the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra. In November he accepted the invitation of the New York Philharmonic Or- chestra to preside as guest conductor in Carnegie Hall. A limited number of tickets are still available at $1.00, $1.50, and $2.00, each, and may be secured by com- municating with Charles A. Sink, president of the School of Music. Dormitory i1old Dinner For Faculty Members A faculty dinner was held at Betsy Barbour dormitory Thursday. The guests included Prof. and Mrs. H. M. Dorr, Miss Louise Cuyler, John Kollen, Prof. and Mrs. R. C. Hussey, Mr. and Mrs. R. C. -lussey, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Power, Prof. and Mrs. F. S. Dunham, Mrs. Beryl Bacher, Miss Dorothy Beise, Miss Harriet Peasely, Evan S. Schmeling, Henry Meyers, Miss Marie Hartwig, and Miss Helen H. Hanley. Candles and flowers decorated the dining room: Josephine Gibson, '35, was in charge of the affair. , 1 : jj i, , Phone 2-1912 ITle GfID-AIBOUT 0 0 " BELIEVE IT or not Spring has nearly sprung so just to keep it in mind we looked for formals and things. It didn't take long to find just that at the Elizabeth Dillon Shop . . . there seems to be a great favoritism this season for blue with pink running a close second. One we particularly liked was a net . . . electric blue with a few gadgets and very smart. Another was in rough pink crepe with tiers and tiers of small ruffles . . looked most unusual. And speaking of ruffffles, there's a striking blue in matelasse with all the trimmings ... just waiting for you. ND TO GO with these formals and things the University Flow- er Shop is having a special this week on corsages; orchids, garden- ias and violets . . they're all con- sidered the smartest for Spring, too. Then there are some lovely combinations for table decorations and likewise springy cut fiowers for just incidentally around the'house we still contend that nothing dresses the same old four walls up quite so much as a well placed bowl of . . lillies of the valley, for instance, or any of the season's blooms. LADIES, Bally old England is still successfully invading the realm of cosmetology. The latest arrival is the Mary Dunhill line at C al k i n s-Fletcher's. There's bath and face powder . .frou frou du gardenia . . . in clever boxes ta gardenia with every package) With the most authentic odor we've found yet. And don't miss the lipsticks . . tiicky little "frdu frou" men top them off . . in red, green and black, S WEATER WEATHER has come again and with it the best selec- tion of smart wools and jerseys for many a moon. At the University Fashion Shop you'll find one for every occasion and pocket-book. The shades are particularly strik- ing . . . one in salmon wool has the new neck-line . . straight high neck with surprising box pleats at the shoulders. Another is in light blue trimmed with white .. . and the trimmings: a built in hal- ter and solid band of ribbing at the bottom . . don't miss at least look- ing them over at the new location across the street. ADVISES MARRIED PEOPLE WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind.. March1 8 -(I)- "Young people contemplat- ing marriage should assure them- selves of an income of $1,300 to $1,500," Prof. J. A. Estey, head of department of history, economics, and government at Purdue University said in a recent lecture as part of one in a series given to seniors. Where To Go Motion Pictures: Majestic, "David Copperfield" with W. C. Fields; Mich - igan; "Crime Without Passion" with Claude Mains and 'Charlie Chan in Paris" with Warner Oland: Whit- ney, "There Is Always Tomorrow" with Binnie Barnes and "Six-Day Bike Rider" with Joe E. Brown; Wuerth, "Here Is My Heart", with Bing Crosby I and "Under Pressure" with Victor Me- Laglen. Drama: "Dr. Knock," presented by Play Production, 8:30 p.m., Lydia# Wear. all BLIND tE S n e e d lig h t. Y o u c a nl 't sc e a n y th ug w ith - out light. And there is a proper amount of light for every seeing task. Of course, you could read by the light of an open fireplace. But it strains vision and does much more damage than our eyes tell us. The few simple rules which follow form a good guide to adequate home lighting. In the table or floor lamp next to )our easy chair, you should have correct size lamp bulbs -."WAT'TS." If it is a three-socket lamp, there should be 40 watts in each socket; if a two- socket lamp, 60 watts in each socket; if a one. socket lamp, 100 watts. All lamps in your house should have SHADES to prevent GLARE. Whenever possible, use shades with light-col- ored linings to get the most light. (Wide shades, open at the top, are best.) Finally, have at least one-tenth as much light in the rest of the room as you have on your book, newspaper, sewing, etc. I -- 'xxgw,