, OCT. 3, 1926 C H I G A N'p 1) A I LY THE MICHIGAN PAILY Chairman Of League Paper Chooses Staff Mackintosh, Melin, Head 'League Lantern,' New Paper For Women The editorial staff members for the "League Lantern," a new women's paper, were announced yesterday by Marjorie Mackintosh, '37, chairman of the League publicity committee, and managing editor of the publica- tion. Roberta Jean Melin, '38, is to be Miss Mackintosh's chief assistant. Miss Melin has been active in Play Production and several League com- mittees. In addition she was a mem- ber of the women's staff of The Daily last year. The remainder of the staff also is to be composed of members of the publicity organization. They are Betty Bingham, '37, Janet Carver, '38, Helen Douglas, '38, Jean Hoffman, '38, Margaret Jack, '38, Barbara Lov- ell, '38, Mary Sage Montague, '37, Katherine Moore, '38, Harriet Pom- eroy, '39, Barbara Schacht, '37, Mar- ian Smith, '39, Betty Strickroot, '38, and Elizabeth Whitney, '37. Tentative Date Set The tentative date set for the in- itial publication is the second week in October. The first issue is to be in the nature of an introductory ori- entation number, according to Miss Mackintosh. The paper will be planned for both campus circulation and distribution to alumnae. It will contain a col- umn of special interest to alumnae to be written by Mrs. S. Beach Con- ger, executive'secretary of the Alum- nae Association, which will incor- porate news from national headquar- ters of the association. In addition there is to be news of general ingrest to undergraduates and Miss Mackintosh is planning a column of campus activity notes. To Appear Monthly The paper, a four-page sheet, is to appear monthly or eight times throughouttheyyear. It is hoped, Miss Mackintosh said, that it will be enlarged to eight pages for special editions such as the May Festival and the beginning of the semester in February. There is to be no advertising in the publication and it is to be operated on a non-profit basis. Tables will be set up on campus to sell the paper and representatives will be sent around to sororities and dormitories to aid in the all-campus sale. The price will be five cents a copy and 50 cents for a year's subscription. There is to be a meeting of the paper staff at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the Undergraduate Office of the League. Attendance is compulsory, according to Miss Mackintosh. T rkets Go'On Sale or B eta OpenFormal Tickets for. the first formal dance of the year which is being sponsored for the entire campus by the Beta Theta Phi fraternity went on sale yesterday. The price of the tickets, according to an announcement by John Seeley, '37, chairman of the dance commit- tee, will be $2.50 per couple and they can be obtained at the Union desk and Van Boven's or from members of the fraternity. The committee urges that reserva- tions for tickets be made early as a capacity crowd is expected to attend as the dance is the first formal of the year and will have the music of Ben Pollack and his orchestra. The dance will be one of the few, formal affairs given on the campus that will not have a grand march, which is a customary feature at these functions. Dancing will be continuous, however, from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., the committee announces. Ben Pollack and his orchestral have been presented over station WGN, Chicago, Sue Thomas, George Lawton To Marry Today Four Michigan Students Tell CHAPTER HOUSE x Tm1T NT is Nuptial News Among the various houses which are entertaining this weekend, two Jsororities and four fraternities will. Bartling, IRudIick, DJ ewey, ihave as their guests several out-of-, Lockwood Are Featured town alumni.i i Alpha Chi Omega In Wedding Events i1Alpha Chi Omega sorority is en- tertaining Grace Lamb, '36, Jean Many weddings and engagements Nelson, '36, Highland Park, Mich., have been listed on the University of and Dorothy Anderson, '36, of Grand Michigan social calendar. Members Rapids, Mich., who are here for the of Kappa Delta sorority, Sigma Phi, Michigan State game. Zeta Psi and Phi Epsilon Pi fratern- Mrs. K. Krause of Detroit, Mich., ities are among the principles in the the alumnae faculty adviser is a announcements. guest of the sorority -for the rushing A wedding of great interest in cam- period. pus circles was that of Miss Grace Alpha Gamma Delta Bartling, '36. daughter of Mr. and Tie Alpha Ga ma Delta sorority Mrs. Charles Bartling of Glenview, will have for their guest this week- Ill., to Albert R. Brownridge of Chi- end Maureen Friar, graduate of last cago at 8:30 Sept. 18, in the Metho- June. dist Chapel in Evanston, Ill. A re- Kappa Delta Rho ception followed at the Georgian. Guests of Kappa Delta Rho fra- Miss Helen Rankin, '36, a sorority termty, following the game today, sister, was maid of honor. Mr. and will include Truman Stienko, '33, for- Mrs. Brownridge are residing in Chi- mer president of the house; Barney .ra -Coats, '30; Abe Hanje, '32; Glenn cago. Mrs. Brownridge was presi- Edmundscn, '34; George Ahn, '30; dent of Mortarboard, elected to Phi Thomas McVay, Chicago, and Sam Beta Kappa in her junior year, and Burns, Pontiac. a member of Kappa Delta sorority. a I Holland-Ruddick Marriage Kappa Phi Mr. Edward Rolland and Mrs. The Nu chapter of Kappa Phi will Clara G. Holland of Grand Rapids entertain Oct. 25 at a tea given for announce the marriage of their them by Mrs. Alexander G. Ruthven, daughter, Mary Claire, to Eustice honorary sponsor, at the Ruthven Wells Ruddick of New' York City. Mr.home. . I Ruddick was graduated from the The club, which is for all women University in the class of '35 and was of Methodist preference, will hold its affiliated with Sigma Phi fraternity. first regular meeting of the year on The couple was married Sept. 16 in Oct. 20, following which members will St. Andrews Rectory in Grand Rap- call cn women showing much prefer- ids and are living on Long Islandoence in their homes or dormitories. N. Y Following the tea, a rushing dinner Mr. and Mrs. J. Ingalls of Alpenawill be given on Tuesday, Oct. 27, Mich. have announced the engage- and pledging ceremonies havebeen ment of their daughter, Jane, to Al- planned for the following Sunday, len C. Dewey, '37, son of Mr. and Nov.1Throughouttheye, super meetings will be held every other Mrs. John Dewey of Chelsea. Miss Mrs.JohnDewe ofChelea. issTuesday at Stalker Hall, local head- Ingalls was graduated from the Uni- ,yartestekgru, versity of Chicago last year. Mr. qhe Group. Dewey is president of Zeta Psi fra- HolPMable Gm28m Delta i ternity and a member of Mimes Dra- y, , wi e entertained matic society. The wedding is to be at the Phi Gamma Delta house this week end. Mabley was formerly bus- an event of the Christmas holidays. ipess manager of The Daily, and Announce Engagement a member of Michigamua honor so- Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Rogers of piety. Moline, Ill., announced in August the Phi Epsilon Pi engagement of their daughter, Pa- Sal pr o Te Smela, to George Lockwood, '39, son Stanley Cooper of Toledo, O., will eaf tr. Gedorse. Lockwood, son be entertained at the Phi Epsilon Pi of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Lockwood of _____ Monroe, Mich.,.at a supper dance.-- Miss Rogers is attending Rockford college at Rockford, Ill, Mr. Lock- wood is a 'member of Zeta Psi fra- ternity. The wedding will take place in June. Phi Epsilon Pi fraternity has an- nounced the marriage of Charles Murray of Detroit to Miss Anne Ad- ams of that city in August. They are residingim Ann Arbor. Alumnae Club Makes Plans For Campaign Executive Board To Hold Luncheon Today; NewI Chairmen Appointed The members of the executive board of the Ann Arbor Alumnae Club will confer with Mrs. Stowell C. Stebbins of Marshall, chairman of the Alumnae Council, at a luncheon today at the League, to plan for the launching of a membership cam- paign. Mrs. Seymour Beach Conger, Mrs. A. C. Furstenberg, Mrs. Eugene B. Power, 'Mrs. Theophil Raphael and he~re T0Go j Thatre :Michigan, "Yours for the .Asking" with George Raft and Do- lores Costello; Orpheum, "Widow !from Monte Carlo" with Dolores Del Rio and "The Devil's Squadron" with Richard Dix; Whitney, "End of the Trail" with Jack Holt; Wuerth, "Flash Gordon" with Buster Crabbe and "Last of the Pagans" with Mala; Majestic, "Anthony Adverse" with Fredric March and Olivia de Havil- land. Dancing: Football dance, Union ballroom; Silver Grill of the League, Chubb's; Armory. M.S.C. Band, Steinle Will Play Tonight Mis. Irene B. Johnson, all of Ann Ar- bor, are the members of the execu- The first football dance of the year, tive board which will consider chair- which will be held from 9 p.m. to 12 manship appointments with Mrs. midnight today in the Union ball- Stebbins in the organizing of the room, is to feature the band of Bill campaign at the luncheon meeting Porter who is coming from Michigan today. State College at East Lansing for F uflds To Be Raised the occasion. The membership campaign and This band played at the overflow another project to be announced lat- dance held last year and they have er are for the purpose of raising furnished music at the Michigan funds for the scholarships the as- State Union for the last three years. sociation offers, and it is expected Along with Porter's orchestra the that the enlarged enrollment will regular Union band led by Bob give the club a wider participation Steinle will be featured. There will in national and local program of pro- be dancing on the second and third viding student loans and gifts. Espe- floors of the building. cial efforts will be made this year to - raise scholarships for Ann Arbor may become associate members of women wishing to enter the Uni- the club. It is hoped that there will versity. be an increase of at least 1,000 wom- All women who have attended the en in the enrollment of the local University for any period of time are branch at the conclusion of the eligible for membership, and those membership campaign. interested in the scholarship plan AYin.me1I*VArntniemi Today marks the wedding of Miss Sue Thomas, '36, of Dayton, O., and George Lawton, '35, of Royal Oak. The ceremony will take place at 8:30 p.m. at the First Prest.yterian Church in Dayton. Miss Thomas, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Thomas, is affiliated with Delta Gamma sorority. Lawton, a member of Trigon fraternity, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Fred Lawton, of Royal Oak. Both have been active in campus activities. Following the honeymoon, thescouple will live in Detroit. Football Games Will Popularize Comfort, Gaiety In Sportswear house this week end. Cooper, who is coming for the State game, was House Superior during his senior year here and is now practicing law in Toledo. Zeta Psi George Quimby, '36, of Grand Rap- ids, Mich., former president of the fraternity is a guest at the Zeta Psi house for the Michigan State game. Dean Emerson, head of the En- gineering School of the University of Indiana, together with his wife and two children will also be guests. Mrs. Johnson, president of the Ann Arbor branch of the club, has announced several appointments for the club year. Mrs. Evans Holbrook has been delegated chairman of the local homecoming committee, and Mrs. Harold P. Trosper, chairman of the membership group. At the head of the publicity com- mittee Mrs. Johnson has placed Mrs. Alfred 0. Lee. Mrs. Barry Townsley, Mrs. J. F. Breakey, Mrs. E. W. Dal- strom have been appointed as chair- men of the fellowship, social, and finance committees respectively. T-_. _ -- By JENNY PETERSEN Today is the day on which the freshmen will at last feel fully ori- ented to campus life, and the upper- classwoman will realize that she isl truly "back to the old grind." This week the newcomer has ex- plored the diagonal, has located the Natural Science Building, , and has perhaps made merry at the League or Union. Her sophomore, junior, or senior sister has resumed her knitting in class and has greeted her old pals in the Parrot. Neither, however, has entirely savoured all that is included in "college life," until the first foot-' ball game of the season. And again the question goes up,, "what to wear?" A long coat of some kind is the first requisite, for no matter how brightly the sun shines, the stadium can be mighty chilly late in the afternoon. If the weather is too warm for the coat during the first half it can always be folded up and sat on, if you- are obeying all fashion precepts and wearing some- thing casual and sporty. Here's a note of warning about hats. Don't let your enthusiasm for, the currently popular feather spoil. somebody's game. Save your quilled hat for some time when it won't stick your neighbor in the eye or interfere; with the view of the person in back of, you. Have something small anid sturdy on your curls, for when Ann Arbor's eleven makes its first touch- down you will probably tear off your hat and wave it in your enthusiasm. Extremely bright colors would not be amiss today. Flaunt the red scarf you have been saving because it was too conspicuous. Wear colored ankle socks to match your sweater. Carry colored crochet gloves to harmonize with your hat and scarf. However, something even newer for fall sportswear is black. Two-piece knitted dresses of cashmere are stun-" ning with natural camel's hair. Black single-breasted jackets are good look- ing with black and white plaid skirts and with plain colored skirts. The weather man is not being very promising about tomorrow afternoon so perhaps you had better take along a raincoat of some kind. A cello- phane or oiled silk coat which can be folded and tucked in your purse would be a happy choice. But on no account take an umbrella. )RAL UN IO Bridge Club To Hold First Meeti n O~t. 61 According to Miss Ethel A. McCor-. mick, social directress of the League, the League duplicate bridge club, which meets at 7:30 p.m. every Tues- day evening, will start activities for3 the year on Oct. 6. All students are invited to attend. If partners are desired, call Conway Magee, 8310, who will assist in pro- curing them. 'ENSIAN TRYOUTS TO REPORT Classes In Dancing To Start At League The first of a new series of be- ginner's dancing classes will be held from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in the League ballroom. Miss Ethel Mc- Cormick, social director of the League, is to be in charge. The series will be composed of eight lessons to be given every Tues- day night. A nominal fee of $3 is to be charged for the course. The as- sistance for any woman interested in the teaching of the classes would be! greatly appreciated, Miss McCormick said. A course designed for intermediate pupils is planned for 7 p.m. Wed- nesdays in the League ballroom. Jean Seeley, Grad., and Douglas Gregory, 40, are to be the instructors. Last year Gregory assisted in the --- - CONCERTS HILL AUDITORIUM October 19 Kirsten Flagstad, Soprano November 2 Chicago Symphony Orchestra FREDERICK STOCK, Conductor November 16- Nobr1 oscow Cathedral Choir NICHOLAS AFONSKY, Conductor November 30 Jascha Heifetz, Violinist December 10 Tryouts for the Michiganensian teaching of a similar course with Ma- business staff are asked to reportrie Sawyer, '37, both pupils of Roy at the Student Publications Building Hoyer. The team won a dance con- on Maynard Street at 4:00 p.m. Mon- test and has appeared at theatres day. [ in Detroit and Cleveland. Colleg$ates Are Cheering for These GET THAT MICHIGAN SWING and DANCEE at CHUBB S Friday . . . 9 till 1 Saturday . . . 9 till 12 Sunday . . . 8 till 10O:34) -' Ut (1 r v t f . f k. t ",t i os ot SERGE December1 Josef I January 15 Detroil BERNAF nSymphony Orchestro KOUSSEVITZKY, Conductor 14 I ofann, P1anst t Symnphony Orchestra RD NO MOLINARI, Guest Conductor January 25 Gregor at orkViolonceIGLt February 23 ru--- rtur Schnabel, Pianist March 24 Nelson Eddy, Baritone TICKETS --Season Tickets (including $3.00 May Fes- tival coupon) may be ordered by mail. BLACK or BROWN REVERSE CALF .. handsome sturdy, brogues ..the style that's all the rate.. - #q I 1$ I .1