THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIV9 9,err-o-Tound - ySTEPHm AT This warm weather is really ideal in Stephanie's estimation . . . it makes running from one dance to the other much more fun . . . you just get nicely cooled off by the time you dasn irom the Union to the Phi Psi house . . then up to Mosher-Jordan .. . and then back to the League again . . . At least that's the way it was this week-end for there were any number of fraternity and sorority dances all over campus . . . Mother Nature made the weather just right for spring formals and every one enjoyed it . . . Now to stop for breath and assemble some jumbled notes . . . On Mosher Steps . " " We noticed Helen Jesperson and Bob Andrew on the steps of Mosher having a cigarette between dances as we entered the door . .. Helen was wearing a green crepe formal with much ruffles around the shoulders . . . Inside Angel Maliszewski and Jack Washburn were talking to Nancy Kover and Bob Blackburn . . . Nancy had on a lovely yellow chiffon . . . On the dance floor we noticed Joanne Kimmell and John Saunders whirling around down by the fire place . .. Dorothy Gittelman and Sid Moyer flew by and we got a glimpse of Dorothy's yellow organdy formal . . . Maureen Kav- anaugh and Joe McCann decided it was a little warm for fast dances and they adjourned to the dining room for some punch . . . We noticed Jean Holland and Bill Taylor were down there too . . . Jean was wearing pink organdie . . . Some of the other couples at the dance were Mary Andrew and Tommy Ayers. . Margaret Bryant and John Luecht . . . and Georgana Elson and Dick Meacham . . . Jordan Hall was transformed into a spot in Venice . . . A big map of Italy greeted our eyes as we entered the door . . . We noticed Bob Jaedecke and Mabel Allison commenting on it . . . Mabel was wearing a white dotted swiss with navy accessories . .. The orchestra was seated in a huge gondola and dressed in true Venetian style .. . hats and all . . . Betty Messenger and Darrell Phillippi danced by just then .. . Incidentally Betty painted all the decorations for dance . .. Among the dancers we caught glimpses of Helene Kipf and Ward Meldrum and Rosemary Neuhaus and Jake Aldinger . . Helen looked lovely in orchid organdy with a stand-up collar . . . And Now In Venice.. . Down around the punch bowl we noticed Beatrice Schink and Don Schneider . .. The Baron and the Baroness to those who know them . . . Stan Kilgore was deftly balancing three cups of punch for Lois Keddy and Lucille Johnston while Lloyd Parr followed him with more punch and the cookies . .. Marion Reynolds and Jack Porter came down the steps . . they had been trying out some very complicated steps upstairs and needed some refreshments .. . Back upstairs again and onto the dance floor . . . We saw Virginia Krieg- hoff and Bishop Kuhn admiring the striped lamp posts around the room . . . Madeline Krieghoff came up just then with Jack Wenz and they got into a very complicated discussion which Stephanie just caught snatches of .- Maddy was wearing a very springlike gray and yellow striped organza ..-. and then Stephanie had to leave Venice but she went for a nice long ride this time .. . Out at the Washtenaw Country Club the Scabbard and Blade put on one grand party ... It was one of those friendly informal affairs where every- one greets everyone else like a long lost brother . . . Mary Jane Mueller and Melville Hyatt were there talking with Bing Crosby and Margaret Guest . . We noticed Edith Merickel curled up in a chair downstairs almost asleep while Paul Philips talked with Margaret Rogers and Jack Heles . . Edith and Paul you remember led the grand march at the Military Ball .. . Edith must have been bicycle riding in the afternoon for she was pretty tired .. . Betty Whitney and Bob Beuhler left the crowd to go upstairs and dance . - Paul Jones Dances.. . Some ingenious faculty member started a few Paul Jones dances .. . you know those circle affairs where you end up dancing with anyone except your partner? Perhaps the faculty wanted a chance to dance with the co-eds . .. anyway it was lots of fun . . . Jane Willoughby in blue lace with wine colored bows down the front started out with Butch Abbott but after the first circle we couldn't keep track of her . .. Bill Eason and Betty Gou'tremont came up the steps just then and joined the circle ... Ruth Kennedy and Floyd Sweet decided it was lots of fun as they marched around the room . .. the dance was supposed to end at midnight . . . just like Cinderella's Ball . . . but everyone was having so much fun that they passed the hat and continued to one o'clock . . . But like Cinderella, Ste- phanie had to leave for she had more places to cover .. . The A.T.O.'s couldn't resist this fine weather so they had their spring formal last Friday evening. As we came in we couldn't help but notice Nancy Seibert and Ted Fraser vieing with Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers for dancing honors . . . Nancy wore a yellow dress with a brown taffeta jacket. They stopped dancing a minute to greet Marjorie Link and Bill Slattery . . . Marjorie had on an aquamarine chiffon . . very springlike. Pictures Of The A .T. O.'s. . . The candid cameraman was present . . . Stephanie noticed Barbara Schacht and Don Patterson looking pretty for the birdie . .. Ginny Rich- ardson and Bob Handley spent the evening sitting out. . . the reason for it all being Bob's sprained ankle. Don Meyer and Jean Rheinfrank strolled out on the terrace .. . they chatted there with Margaret Cram and Bill Shaw . . . Margaret wore a navy blue pique trimmed with red. . . Spring's attack of restlessness seized Stephanie at this point and she strolled over to the Phi Delt house .. - Arriving just in time for the food Stephanie descended to the lower floor to partake of punch and cookies . . . Florence Lucas was firmly settled in a chair and Jimmy Schaus turned waiter for the moment to bring her punch and cookies . . . they were joined by 'Ted Wohlgemuth and Priscilla Abbott . . . Barbara Teall and Harrison Williams couldn't be induced to leave the dance floor even by the lure of food . .. Dan Jones and Doris Bolton tried to convince them but they finally came down alone . . . Doris wore a white crepe formal . . . Roy Heath and Marietta Arner came down the steps fol- lowing the crowd to the punch bowl .. . Reed Low and Martin Newcomer were squiring two damsels imported from Michigan State for the occasion . . . Dorothy Hallsebring. and Betty Wilson We noticed them as we headed for the door again. . . Just as Stephanie left she caught fleeting glances of Betty Anne Beebe and Paul Keeler with Ginny Jack 'on and bob Weis'ert . . . A t The Phi Psi House. .. The Phi Psis entertained Saturday night at a dinner dance . . . Stephanie was crushed because all she could do was peek in the windows . . . neverthe- less she noticed quite a few people . . . Jo McLean . . . former women's editor . . . seemed to be enjoying herself with Bob Wessels . . . Stephanie sends an orchid and lots of blue ribbons to Jo for her swell work on The Daily all this past year . . . Bill Markle and Dora Ann Day were eating their dinner and chatting with Eleanore Swan and John McKee . . . she and T. K. Fisher were talking with Dave Barnett . . Anna Belle Haag and Bill Griffiths stopped dancing for a second to greet Dutch Van Dyke and Bill Farnsworth who came in after the concert . . Ed DeVine and Dotty Barrett left the crowded dance floor for the great outdoors. . . Mary Agnew and Bob Sankey followed suit and went out on the sun porch for a breath of air . . . Barbara Heath and Phil Newman were doing some very complicated steps as Stephanie left her little window to continue on her way . . The Tri-Delts gave their spring formal Saturday too and as we entered we saw Charlene Vallet and Jim Barnett talking to Dorothy Ray and John Hastead . . . Dorothy was wearing a red and white checked seersucker . . . Avis Day and Stan Thomas were occupying one end of the dance floor as they St i.l>d to chat with Helen Mogford and Jack Bulkeley . Libel' Draws Can You Cook, Sew? College Laroe Opening Men Prefer Domestic bri Norh t Aiu n.n' - -_ deseibi' ~ne Where To Go I Yorag; Represc xtatives O01 Brighit Spring Prints Add Brilliance And Color To Notale Performance The opening nightaudience which gathered to see Kenneth McKenna) star in Edward Wooll's "Libel" last] night showed an outstanding pref- erence for gay spring prints. Estelle Winwood, who will play ina "The Distaff Side" and in "Hamlet', was seen admiring the art exhibit( between the acts. She wore a mauve formal. Dean and Mrs. Joseph Burs-I ley were seen talking to Professor and Mrs. Howard Mumford Jones. Mrs.' Bursley wore a red print formal and Mrs. Jones a printed chiffon. Miss Alice Lloyd, in a black print- ed chiffon, came in with Miss Jean- nette Perry, who was wearing a print- ed chiffon with a short green coat. Dr. Margaret Bell, wearing a blue crepe with rhinestones, was seen in the lobby before the performance. Other faculty people seen in the lobby were Mr. and Mrs. Robert An- gell. Dr. and Mrs. Howard Ross and Professor and Mrs. Julio del Toro were also present. Mrs. Ross was wearing a flowered crepe formal and Mrs. del Toro a peach chiffon. Professor and Mrs. Rudolph Win- nacker, who are leaving Michigan this semester, were seen going up the stairs. Mrs. Winnacker wore a yel- low net for the opening. Miss Ethel McCormick was there in a blue and white printed pique formal with a short jacket. Miss Helen Manchester, chose black with a white top for the first night performance. Miss Marie Hartwig wore a print' pique formal with white reverse and Miss Virginia Peaseley wore a pink hand-knit suit. Mrs. Byrl Bacher wore a black net embroidered with white dots, with a very full skirt and full sleeves., Jean Seeley, last year's president of; the League, and Frederick Shaflmas- tcr, were seen talking to Mr. Gordon, Mendelssohn, donor of the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Miss Seeley wore a blue formal with a tiny tucked cape. Downstairs in the cafeteria follow-' ing the performance we saw Marionr Donaldson, wearinga. navy blue pure silk suit with a prined blouse. En- joying cokes were Lucille Johnson, in an orchid taffeta with a figured deep, purple jacket with violets at the neck, and Lois Keddy, in a figured formal. ALPHA OMICRON PI Alpha Omicron Pi announces the pledging of Doris Koch, '38, Detroit, and Mary Alice Smith, '39, Ann Arbor. Men Arc(Quiz~zed With June just around the corner and nothing new in wedding themes (except gray trousseau lingerie, Eliz- abeth Hawes' glass-clad bride and Le- long's motif in mauve) fashion scouts from Mademoiselle magazine invaded five male sanctumsiof higher learn- ing in search of opinions from those so seldom consulted in such matters, namely, the grooms-to-be. Five young eligibles were queried, I and speaking in behalf of their re- spective alma maters, present the fol- lowing symposium for what is worth to prospective Lohengrin marchers. Not Grandmother's Wedding Gown Beginning with the bridal gown, Yale, Harvard and Williams, emphat- ically preferred the conventional white as opposed to such radical de- partures as pink, glass, and mauve. Princeton only wanted to be sure that it wasn't "the gown grandmother wore," while Dartmouth contended that "Cellophane would keep this most prized of packages, fresh and sweet." Princeton and Williams wished to forsake their celibacy in comparative peace and quiet but Harvard, Dart- mouth and Yale thought a big wed- ding would be more impressive and consequently make it last longer. A chorus of emphatic "ayes" greeted "the honeymoon in some secluded spot," but there wasn't a murmur in favor of "Monte Carlo and other gay place,, Prefer Prints Just how long the trousseau ought to last was a matter for conjecture but the hopeful estimate was "at least a year." Dartmouth voted alone in favor of "mad, silly hats," though "dingbats for evening wear," received no support whatever. Ultra-short bathing suits were, generally speaking, quite acceptable, but of doubtful de- sirability for one's own wife. Only Williams approved flat-heeled shoes for other than sports wear and likewise voiced a singular approval for mannishly tailored suits. Printed silk dresses were preferred in solid colors, Princeton, however, advising selective care lest the result be some- thing like Aunt Martha's Christmas tie. Ban Red Nail Polish In -matters of beauty, the jury seemed most opinionated. "Lipstick is a necessity to be used judicially - and indellibly." Red nail polish was per- turbing to all except Williams who balked only because "it is too often vividly overdone." Bleached hair was voted out completely though Yale and Princeton condescended to over- look an occasional slight something in the rinse water. Faise eyelashes received not one affirmative vote and the same went for painted toe nails, Princeton observing that "their only value might be to some future an- thropologists who wished to compare the decorative habits of ring-in-the- nose aborigines with 20th Century American women." Pencil-thin eye- brows were another taboo, "such hir- sute adornments as do not approxi- mate those of Irvin S. Cobb or a mountain goat, should be left alone." Eye-shadow reminded the jury of Dracula, and a bride retiring foi the night in hair curlers and gobs of cold cream would bear striking resem- blance to a White Zombie. Favor Careers IHarvard alone came out whole- heartedly in favor of perfumes, Dart- mouth insisting that "a man notices it until it is put on in such quan- tities as to become distasteful." On the subject of "making up in public" Dartmouth was again most vitrolic, citing "powder in public - pet in the park" as its best reason. All except Harvard were against beaux after marriage, this dissentei, 'Maintaining that extra curricular companionship was all right if it didn't come too soon after the wed- ding and provided, of course, that "they weren't too utterly utter about it." Careers were all right too as far as Harvard was concerned "for aside from certain economic advan- tages they keep a young wife out of mischief." Attributes unanimously desired were: beautiful face and figure (in that order), a flair for cooking and sewing, "after all what was a wife for," participation in golf, tennis, swimming, etc., courage in avoiding that one last cocktail that invariably ,(Toes the damage, (providing she drinks at all), sunny enthusiasm (but only when it is appropriate), ability to save without stinting and, most of all, occasional glimmerings of in- telligence. Undesirable Traits Undesirable traits, including the antitheses of the above, were: habit- ual saicasms, risque stoies (particu- lairly if badly told), swearing (except T_' Sc.1h(ool of1Educal131nv*Il hold sl spring fro( ~li from 9 p?(m. t id- r nih auray, My 23 i he Wom- en's Athletic Building. ITickets are now on sale at i per 'Ol.pi. The d l1ce wvi l be n informal one The following i the ist of 'commit- teer:men: Kai L. Nielsen. '36Ed. is gen- eral 'chairman for the affair, while Robert Sper1, '3ffEd, Chsrles Eing, have charge of the sale of tickets. Publicity will be under the direction of John English, '36Ed and William Pendorf, '36Ed. Keith Campbell, '36Ed, Beasic Curtis, '36Ed and Le- land Hall. '36jiEd will have charge of all plans for decorations. fTrilit Ar Mr's. Kiiehn>1 The Michigan Dames will hold a meeting at 8:30 p.m. tonight at the home of Mirs. Clifford Keuhn, '712 Ann St. There will Nbe a short busi- ness meeting followed by a social hour, of which Mrs. H. N. Dickie is in charge. The group will plan its entertain- ment for the summer months. The first party is 'to be a reception at the League for the wives of all visiting faculty of the Summer School Ses- sion. when undeniably justified), calling the office at frequent intervals to chat, leaving a party too early or staying too late, buying furniture that is too modern for comfort, or too antiquated for safety -in short, extremes of any sort, for the commit- tee seemed to place a wishful rever- ence in the two words, "conservative" and "natural." Ann Arbor 'E Antique Dealers SALE & EXHIBIT MAY 21, 22, 23 Open 9:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. HARRIS HALL Corner State and Huron Admission 25c l~r i'a: L'dwv' i( 'd Wool'.' ."Libel!" wt i Kenth "'I1MacKeilna, Ernest I awford. Doris Dalton arid George Somnes at 8:15 p.m. in Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theat ire. HALLER'S Jewelry State and Liberty Watch Repairing! SWANKY but INEXPENSIVE OUTDOOR and INDOOR KNITTEI Do C L O0 H E'S Cw of .; At'h oS ii "'>* AN appealing "Smartsport" two-piece dress of waffle- stitched "Lyncord." Fash- ioned throughout. Chic wood- en buckle and bow buttons. Colours: Natural; Aqua; Maize; Pink; Violet. Sizes: S 14 to 20. Hi-styled but lo- priced ! at $5.95 The Elizabeth Dillon SHOP ow->o o o o o 0 I Here'sIWill and Dale Traveler For the Active Sports Woman cZ-r I., yI N i 4y 4ioodyf't' r's NIBLIC . . . the perfect rubber soled sports shoe of all-white buckskin. F 1 s i if .1 11 Do your sports up Right Wearing Smart Play Togs .. from Goodyear College Sh RIDING A BIKE.. playing or golf ... hiking and swi are all just loads of fun .. you'll enjoy yourself twice as if you're dressed comfortab properly for any of these sports. The College Shops carry al of play togs at prices just to .it budget allowances. Culottes . . . . 2 pc. Separate Culottes . . Jantzen Swim Suits . . . . $4.95 and tennis but s much ly and active L types made $6.50 !',' -.* 2.00 $5.95 COLLEGE SHOE SHOP 713 North University - Telephone 4171 11 I E rr Think a Minute ! Everybody s Reading9The pich'9g"al alyWant Ads! ~Z.. Shorts . . $1.25 to 2.50 Slacks. . $2.25 and 3.50 ~ - Panty-Shirts . . . $1.95 Jersey Pull-ons . . $2.25 '"- ::?.a d Sweaters . . $2 and 2.50 \\\. Yl \ J t rtsngi Our C~d hae {'U tha MVS b if9 Th DAILYo5 ClasididedSection Gs bought fReSDULTS. 1 S you e lost antbi r ThSt e O e time tUSC OU ROESUT S- s tthe tr t . -O. .- V ti T l 1 r J (iJ Y t y . 4!} \ i 30 for a tllree-~line time. Additionlal insecionlsonlya tittle more. Dial .1 The 4 jclhigafl ail~Y \N NT-AD DEPART MENT V 7 III i [ ff Adilk I