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May 17, 1935 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1935-05-17

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

FRIDAY, MAY 17, 1935

TIDE MICHIGAN DAILY

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______I_______W,__Ilk___OWN_____ 'Pl. 11.1______"'__111___I'll____I'll-

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Dental Students
Will Hold First!
Spring. Formal

Mike Falk And His Orchestra To Play At Union

Spring Plays Mike Falk's Band
Attract Guests Will Play At Union

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Of Distinction

i

Duane Yates To Play
Dance To Be Given
League Ballroom

At
In

'Laburnum Grove'
Dramatic Season+

Sends
Off To

The first annual All-Dental Dance
will be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
Wednesday, May 29, in the Leagu
Ballroom, according to L. Benson
Bristol, '36D, chairman of the centra
committee. The affair will be a spring
formal.
Duane Yates and his orchestra
which has had previous engagements
playing for the Crease Dance and In-
terfraternity Ball a few years ago,
will provide the music for this func-
tion.
Chaperons are Dr. and Mrs. R. K
Brown and Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Som-
mers. Dr Chalmers J. Lyons was pre-
viously included in this list but du
to a recent operation will not be able
to attend.
Tickets, which are priced at $1.50,
will be sold to dental students only
They may be procured through th
chairman or through committe
members. The committee includes
Wayne Oglestone, '36D, Leo Beldo,
'36D, Howard Ross, '36D, James Bak-
er, '36D, Bert Forster, '36D, Miltor
Kamler, '36D, and Louis Gans, '36D.
W.A.AMeets
To Install New
Sorts heads

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e

The Union will again bring Mike Falk and his orchestra to Ann
Arbor tonight ini cne of its regular week-end dances. This orchestra
played at the Seri-or Ball in 1930 and at the League in 1932 and is well
knliwn bath in Detreit and throughout Michigan.
Mlany Houses Will Entertain At
ring Forma anes Tonioht

Dr. Bell To Lectur
Conference; Men
To OpenProgram

re At
tubers

The W.A.A. Training Conference
will open at 4 p.m., today in the Wom-
en's Athletic Building, when Ruth
Root, '35, will speak on "The Past
Year in W.A.A.," and Betty Evans,
'35, will trace the history of sports.
Other addresses will be given by Miss
Marie Hartwig, of the physical edu-
cation department, who will speak
on "A Board Member's Job," and
Brenda Parkinson, '36, president, who
will speak on "W.A.A.'s On Other
Campuses."
After a buffet supper Dr. Margaret
Bell, director of physical education
for women, will speak on "New
Trends in W.A.A."
After this lecture, the new officers
and board members will be installed.
The officers, Miss Parkinson, presi-
dent; Jean Gourlay, '37, vice-presi-
dent; Elizabeth Howard, '36Ed., sec-
retary; Dorothy Shappell, '36, treas-
urer, will take separate oaths, while
the others will be installed in a body.
The new sports heads who will of-
ficially take office are Martha Bragg,
'37, archery; Louise Paine, '36, bad-
minton; Bessie Curtis, '36, basketball;
Thelma Peterson, '37, bowling; Julia
Wilson, '36, dancing; Grace Gray, '36,
fencing; Louise Lockman, '37, field
hockey; Louise Nash, '37, golf; Angie
King, '37, ice hockey, Mabel-Allison,
'36, outdoor sports; Jane Reed, '36,
ping pong; Betty Grove, '36, riding;
Harriet Kanouse, '37, rifle; Mary
Montgomery, '37, swimming, and Jane
Quirk, '37, tennis.
An address by Prof. Howard Mc-
Clusky of the psychology department
on "The Qualities of Leadership"
opened the W.A.A. Training Confer-
ence Wednesday night. Prof. Mc-
Clusky ,discussed two types of leader-
ship, that of dominance and aggres-
sion, and that of persuasion and de-
fined a leader as "a person who can
dominate a person without his being
aware that he is being dominated."
He listed the characteristics of a
persuasive leader, saying that first
of all he should have a genuine inter-
est in people, second, that he should
be a good listener, and third, that he
should be skillful in detecting other
people's viewpoints. He should also
be able to make his subordinates feel
important, Professor McClusky said,
and he should have complete control
of his own emotional attitudes.
ELIZABETHDIILON
{GOWN SHOP
is Shwing
An Exquisite F
New Collection of
Modern Woman
Fashions
i. highlighting a type much
in demand, but not easy to .
# find - the dressy summer 1
afternoon frocks for missesk
and women whose summer
social life demands "impor-
tant" day fashions.-
CHIFFONS - NETS
SHEERS - CREPES f

Ten houses are entertaining to-
night with formal dances or dinner-
dances. This list includes two dor-
mitories and nine fraternities.
Mosher Hall will hold its annual
spring formal tonight with George
s Kavanagh's orchestra from Detroit
providing the music for dancing. A
special decorative scheme will trans-
fer the hall into a city park against
a metropolitan background of sky-
scrapers. Maureen Kavanaugh, '36,
social chairman, is in charge of ar-
rangements for the dance. President
and Mrs. Alexander G. Ruthven will
be guests of honor, and Mrs. Fred-
erick G. Ray, Miss Kathleen Hamm,
Miss Marcella Schneider, and Miss
Katherine Koch will chaperon.
Marion Brooke, '35, is planning the
closed Spring formal dance to be
held at Jordan Hall, and the decora-
tions will be nautical. Miss Isabelle
Dudley will chaperon, and Bob Steinle
and his Union Band will play.
Diner-Dance To Be Held
At the Pi Kappa Alpha house, a
spring formal dinner-dance will take
place, according to Arthur Fisher, '36,
who is in charge of this party. Wally
Gail and his orchestra will provide
the music. The chaperons will be
Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Phelps and
Mr. and Mrs. William Palmer.
Phi Sigma Delta will hold its closed
spring formal dinner-dance at the
Washtenaw Country Club. Dr. and
Mrs. S. M. Goldhemer, Mr. and Mrs.
L. Baum, Mr. and Mrs. L. Klapper
will chaperon, and the Blue Collegian
orchestra will play for the dance.
Owen Williams, '37, social chair-
man, has arranged for William La-
Baw's orchestra to play at the closed
spring formal to be held at the TauI
Kappa Epsilon house. Mr. and Mrs.
Gilbert Shaw and Mr. and Mrs. Clare
Gates will act as chaperons.;
Chaperons Announced<
Dr. and Mrs. Sidney L. LeFever,
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie A. Wikel, and Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Oakes will chaperon
the dance at Alpha Tau Omega fra-
ternity. This will also be a spring
formal. Bill Marshall and his or-
chestra will play according to Sam
Maxwell, '37, who is in charge of ar-
rangements.c
Whit Lowe will play for the closedE
spring formal to be held at the Kappa
Sigma house. Mr. and Mrs. E. A.I
Mercado, and Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Mar-t
tell will chaperon.
Bob Welle's orchestra will play for
the closed formal at Sigma Phi Ep-
silon. Mr. and Mrs. Franklin C. Cap-
pon, and Mr. and Mrs. Clark H. Moore
will chaperon.
Sigma Nu will hold its annual
Spring formal dinner-dance. The
chaperons are Mr. and Mrs. Frank

Oakes, Mr. and Mrs. Len Wilson, Prof.
and Mrs. Henry Kendall, and Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Denn. The orchestra will
be Russ Armstrong and his Colum-
bians from Detroit. Decorations of
colored lights have been arranged by
Charles Frick, '35, social chairman in
charge.
Dr. William Brace and.Mr. and Mrs.
F. A. Park, Jr.. will act as chap-
erons for the informal dance at Phi
Kappa Sigma. Al Cowan's orchestra
has been engaged to play, according
to George Kohler, Jr., '36, who is in
charge of the affair.
Max Crossman's orchestra will play
for the Phi Kappa party.
Adeiphi To Debate
Engineer's Society
A special feature of the Engineering
Open House which is being held this
week-end is the debate which will
take place this afternoon betwen
Adelphi, House of Representatives,
speech society of the Literary College,
and Sigma Rho Tau, a similar group
made up of engineers.
The contest, which is an annual
event, will be held at 3 p.m. at the
historic Sigma Rho Tau stump near
the Engineering Arch. Members of
the Sigma Rho Tau team will uphold
the affirmative of the question, "Re-
solved: That the Literary College Is
Suffering From Co-Education," while
members of Adelphi maintain that
such a system is not only not an un-
mitigated evil but distinctly enjoyable.
George Malone, '37E, Eric Sommers,
'35E, and Maurice Taylor, '36E, will
make up the Sigma Rho Tau team
and Howard Meyers, '37, Bruce A.
Johnson, '38, and Victor H. Weipert,
'37, will debate for Adelphi.
ELECT OFFICERS
Athena Literary Society, organiza-
tion of women interested in speech
work, elected new officers at the last
meeting of the year held Wednes-
day night. Lillian Rosen, '36, was
elected president, Barbara Lutts, '36,
vice-president, Grace Gray, '37, sec-
retary, and Jean Greenwald, '37,
treasurer.
Senior Ball
June 14 10till 3
TICKETS LIMITED TO 300.
On Sale Now to Seniors Exclusively
until May 24.

Auspicious Start
By their attendance during the
presentation of "Laburnum Grove,"
a long list of distinguished guests will
give the opening week of the Dra-
matic Season an auspicious start.
Among the faculty who have signi-
fied their intention to attend the en-
tire season's presentations are: Presi-
dent and Mrs. Alexander G. Ruthven,
Dean Joseph Bursley, Mrs. Byrl Fox
Bacher, Prof. Louis Brevold, Prof.
John L. Brumm, Dr. William Brace,
Dr. Margaret Bell, Prof. Ralph Aigler,,
Prof. Waldo Abbot, Prof. C. O. Davis,
Prof. Thomas Diamond, Prof. J. W.
Eaton, Prof. T. H. Hildebrandt, Prof.
James Pollock, Prof. R. G. Rodkey.
Others of the faculty who will see
all the plays are: Prof. and Mrs. Clar-
ence Thorpe, Shirley Smith, Dr. B. D.
Thuma, and his party, Dr. George
Meyers, Miss Ethel McCormick, Miss
Dorothy Ogburn, Dr. Edgar Kahn,
Dr. R. L. Kahn, Prof. Michael Parg-
ment, Prof. Rodger G. Rodkey, E.
William Doty, Valentine Windt, Dr.
U. J. Wile, Dr. John Fopeano, Dr.
Warren Forsythe, P r o f. Arthur
Hackett, Prof. M. S. Handman, Dr.
Henry Field, Prof. Edward Durfee,
Mrs. Beach Conger, Prof. and Mrs.
George LaRue.
A number of prominent townspeo-
ple will also be present. Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Oakes, Mr. and Mrs. R.
R. Baker, Homer Heath, Mr. and
Mrs. James Inglis, are some among
them.
Gordon Mendelssohn, donor of the
Mendelssohn Theater will see the
cpening play. Numerous out-of-town
guests will make the trip to Ann Ar-
bor for each Dramatic Season presen-
tation. A few of those who have
made reservations are: Doyle Witgen,
Miss Jeannette Palmer, Miss Mary
Margarol, Arnold Machen, Herbert
Ludgate, Mrs. D. H. Goodwillie, all of
Toledo; Dr. Emily Stark, Adrian;
John McCully, Mrs. William Houston,
Miss Nora Frank, Dorothy Dowsett,
G. Harold VerPlanck, Mrs. G. A. Sey-
bold, Dr. B. D. Roe, of Jackson; Miss
Helen Raether, Albion; Mrs. Jesse
Root, Monroe.
Detroit and nearer towns such as
Ypsilanti are well represented in the
long list of out-of-town visitors. A
few large parties of thirty-six and
more will include school children
brought to some of the plays by their
dramatic instructors.
THETA PHI ALPHA
The members of the Theta Phi Al-
pha sorority entertained at a rush-
ing dinner last night. Tulle bows
of pastel shades and pink tapers deco-
rated the tables. Mary O'Neill, '36,
was in charge of the dinner.

Mike Falk and his Orchestra will
be featured at the Union tonight in
one of its regular Friday night dances.
Mike Falk's orchestra is especially
well-known in Detroit and throughout
Michigan, having played for many
college and club dances.
His orchestra was heard in Ann
Arbor in 1930 when it was featured
at the Senior Ball, and again in 1932
at the League.
The Union has brought Mike Falk
and his Orchestra here in order to
present a variety of entertainment in
their regular dances. The price of
tickets will be $1.00.
LAWYERS PLAN DINNER
The Lawyers Club is giving a din-
ner in honor of the seniors Sunday.
This traditional cane dinner is under
the direction of Marvin Hartung, '35L.

Let's be going, Mabel,
here comes "Twin-
Personality Pete". . .
"Unpleasant breath" creates
an unpleasant personality,
which offsets the fine qualities
of a pleasing personality.
To avoid having a "Twin-Per-
sonality" use Lavoris regularly.
Medicinal in action
- - but NOT in taste"
LAVORIS

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GlLn ~ KE(~
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MOUTH ASH

GARGLE

- 25c - 50c - $1 bottles -
At
CALKINS-FLETCHER
State at No. U. - State at Packard
5th and Washington

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CLEARANCIE
Early Mark-downs on
Season's Successes
Mean More Wear
For You
We've taken our mark-downs early to give you a
chance to get plenty of wear from these. You'll find
the season's successes at most unexpected prices.

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