17; 1937 THE MI 1I -1 G A-N' D ILY 'AGE ?=lE TIL.MCHGA DIL M-. Annual Supper Will Be Given Wonen Of '37 Caps, Gowns To Be Worn For Initial Time Tonight; Usual Events Featured Senior women will wear their caps and gowns for the first time at the annual Senior Supper, traditional affair honoring fourth-year women, to be held at 6 p.m. today in the League Ballroom. Featured on the program will be a skit, several songs and a specialty dance from last year's Junior Girls Play. The seniors participating in the'skit are Grace Gray, Jean Green- wald, Hel Jones, Mary Potter and Jane Ellen Rogers. Taking ,part in the tap dance from the arcade scene in the 1936 production will be Kath-' erine Landrum and Virginia Nimmo. Last Year's Selections "The Arcade Song" and "The Mag- azine Song" from last year's play will be given, as well as a special song for the juniors, "Here's To A Feather In His Cap," which was written by Barbara Hanna, music chairman of J.G.P. last year. Helen Schmidt,, the magazine boy of the 1936 pro- duction * to lead "The Magazine Song.'' The Supper is to incorporated sev- eral features of the traditional sen- ior breakfasts of past years. Sliced lemons will be passed and every woman who has been formally en- gaged during her years at the Uni- versity will eat a slice, according to Edith Zerbe, general chairman of the affair. A lighted candle will also be passed, to be blown out by women \Who have been married during their stay in Ann Arbor. Patrons Are Named Patrons for the Supper are Regent Esther G. Cram, Mrs. Alexander G. Ruthven, Dean Alice C. Lloyd, Mrs.' Joseph Bursley, Dr. Margaret Bell, Mrs. Byrl Bacher, Mrs. George Stan- ley, Miss Jeannette Perry, Miss Ethel McCormick and Miss Marian Durell. The patrons and members of the central committee of the last J.G.P. are to sit at the speaker's table. Mortarboard and Senior Society will, be honored at the supper. Assisting Miss Zerbe are Betty' Anne Beebe in charge of patrons, and Janet Lambert, ticket chairman. Varsity Singers 0OpenHome Concert Season Sen or Supper Head And JG.P. Author J.G.P. Tonight; Senior Womenj Kendall Will Speak On Belgan Politics Dr. Henry M. Kendall of the geog- To ofe111 I red raphy department will give an in- formal talk on "Impressions of the Belgian Political Scene" at the grad-- Musical Comedy Includes uate luncheon at noon today in the C Russian Tea Room of the League. Cast, Crew Of Over 250;' Dr. Kendall returned recently from Sarah Pierce Directing a sabbatical leave spent in Belgium. _ _While he was there he talked with (Continued from Page 1) many Belgians, getting their views ofj ----the general political scene. His talk Edith Zerbe, chairman of arrangements for Senior Supper, and Dvrothy Gies, '36, author of "Feather Ih His Cap." Senior women will be honeerd at the Senior Supper after which they will be guests at the orLening performance of the Junior Girls Play. WatchOutSeior Or J. .P willWaft Awa our Dinit . o-- A German Band, Green Shorts Bring Genuine Tyrolean Effect By BETTY BINGRAM Hold on to your caps, seniors, you're in danger of losing your dignity to- night when "Feather in His Cap" opens for its first performance. When the feathers start flying and the German Band begins tootling around and those bright green shorts flash before your eyes you'll wish you were in the Tyrolean Alps, gulping beer and singing ditties. And instead, you'll be balancing those be-tasselled boards on your heads and bearing the cares of the world on your shoulders. But it's practically certain that be- fore the plump Budel and his buxom frau, Emma, find their troubles spir- ited away in the last act, and the curtain falls on the bevies of sing- ing villagers and dancing legs, you'll feel as carefree and light hearted as any of the barimaid, or even the po- licemen when they at last discovered a crime to punish in the peaceful vil- lage of Schlitz-am-Rye. Not So Easy As It Looks ' But don't thing, in the thrill of the moment that this smooth per- formance is all done with mirrors or any such mistaken belief. Sally Pierce could tell a different story. And so could Marie Sawyer and Hope Hart- wig and Ruth Bertsch, who have all been in a chronic state of hair tear- ing for the past two weeks. Take for instance the problems of certain members of the discontented band of policemen, who find life much too tame, they complain to the audience. In reality they are shud- dering at the thought of having to dash from the stage, erase from their noses the tell-tale marks of the beer they are forced to drink to drown their sorrows, and change from beard- ed gentlemen into beautiful young sylphs. Even Dr. Jekyll might be forgiven for turning pale at such a feat. Knees Present Problem. And the make-up department has spent many a sleepless night over the vital problem of the perfect blend of rouge for the scores of bare knees that must be exposed to the brutal glare of the stage lights. And one begins to wonder, before the first scene comes to a close, if a number of outraged members of the poultry tribe aren't sneaking about their respective barnyards minus their tail feathers. The whole effect, however, is a mass of bright, moving colors, rollicking music and robust humor. There is something definitely. inebriating about the cocky, Tyrolean bonnets and flashing green and red shorts and suspenders. The members of the cast seem to have caught the spirit and go into their parts with much zest and good will, like true. Tyroleans, "of the blood." Here Comes The law High points in the play include the moment when Captain Allington. looms up from behind the garden wall and leads on her band of stalwart and bloodthirsty officers of the law with Sergeant Ayers a perfect ob- struction to the military precision of these worthy gentlemen. If you can find an officer behind the array of bristling mustaches, topping a row of sturdy bare legs which is the po- lice force of Schlitz-am-Rye, you can cancel that appointment with your eye doctor immediately. Wall Scaling Is Easy And don't have an attack of nerves when Fritz scales the garden wall in search of the fair Katinka. Shirl Crossman has added this practice to her other accomplishments and by] now has the matter well in hand, let it be hoped. A few laurels may also be cast at the feet of the remarkable steed who conducts the coach of the would-be elopers onto the scene. The beast is of undetermined origin, but note the dancing feet. Last but not least, the author, Dor- othy Gies, who won't be on hand to see her masterpiece go into produc- tion, deserves a long cheer and don't forget Sally Pierce, whose seemingly unquenchable spirit has been the chief force in tiding over the darker hours. BOX OFFICE HOURS CHANGED The box office at the League will be open from 8 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. today through Saturday, and not until 9 p.m. as advance sale tick- ets for the Junior Girls Play state, according to Janet Allington, ticket chairman. Crosman. Harriet Shackleton will play Katrinka, the leading love in- terest, and Norreen La Barge, as Kronfeldt, will be the villian. Bar- bara Bradfield will portray Kurt. The captain and lieutenant of the policeman's chorus will be enacted by Janet Allington and Margaret Ann Ayeis. Ruth Friedman will take the part of' the poet. The Teddybear King, Adolf, oldest son of the Budels, will be played by Marian Dailey. Elinor Somerville will play the role 6f the sargent. German Band Will Play In addition to this cast there will be a German band composed of Car- olyn Beltramini, Doris Holt, Eileen Icheldinger, and Mary Sudhoff. They will be led by Artemis Kouzian. Thee choruses are made up of over 100 junior women. Charlie Zwick's orchestra will playj for the show. The music was written by University students under the di- rection of Virginia Hunt. Work for the play has been done under the direction of Hope Hart- wig, general chairman of the central committee. Miss Ayers is assistant general chairman. In addition to Miss Sawyer, dance chairman, Miss Hunt, music chairman, and Miss Allington ticket chairman, the central com- mittee is made up of the following people: Joanne Kimmell, chairman of properties, Ruth Bertsch chairman of costume committee, and Nancy Ko- ver, chairman of programs. More Comnmitteemen Named Florence Kean and Elizabeth Baxter, 2cchaiiman of make-up, Betty Gat-. ward, chairman of ushers committee, and Betty Strickroot, publicity chair- man. In addition to the opening tonight there will be three more perform- ances of "Feather In His Cap." It is scheduled to run at 8:30 p.m. Thurs- day through Saturday night. Tickets for the production are available at the box office of the Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre. They are priced at 50 and 75 cents and $1. All seats are reserved. Patrons and patronesses of the show will also be guests of honor at the opening performance tonight. There will be a few remaining seats available in the balcony for the gen- eral public. Last Dates Are Set For Interviewing The last times for interviewing of applicants for Freshman Project cen- tral committee positions has been scheduled from 4 to 5:30 p.m. today and tonmorrow in the League Under- graduate Office, according to Mary- anna Chockley, '37, head of Judiciary Council. No one will be considered for an office who has not been interviewed by the Council, Miss Chockley said. Although it is not necessary for ap- plicants for membership in the vari- ous committees to be interviewed, she added, it is recommended that they do so. will be impressionistic, not an an- alysis, Dr. Kendall said. He will discuss, from the inter- national point of view, the partial, fall of the Rexist party due to a series of public fiascos, he said, and the Belgian people's feelings of content and discontent IWedding Dates Set For June And Early Fall Betrothals Are Announced By Parents Of Former University Students Atda tea last Saturdayr Mrs.M. Weadock Porter of Detroit an- nounced the engagement of her daug- ter, Mary Elizabeth Porter ,to Robert Laslo Bodor, son of the Baroness Eugen von Kassanyi-Boder von No- gyida of Budapest, Hungary. The wedding is set for this fall. Miss Porter attended the Univer- sity, where she was affiliated with Kappa Alpha Theta sorority, and the Art Students' League in New York. Mr. Bodor is a graduate of the University of Budapest, later taking his master's degree at the University of Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. Gustav J. Scherling of Detroit announce the engagement of their daughter, Betty Scherling, '36, to Harold O. Love, '36L, of De- troit, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Love of Indianapolis, Ind. The wedding is to take place June 12. Both Miss Scherling and Mr. Love are graduates of the University. The bride-elect is a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority of which she was presi- dent in her senior year and the bride- groom-elect is affiliated with Phi Delta Theta fraternity. I Monograms Decreed For Spring Sweaters Sale Of Tickets For Slide Rule ToOpen Today Instruments Of Engineers Will Be Used As Theme Of Dance Decorations I The sale of tickets will begin today for the eighth annual Slide Rule Dance, sponsored by the engineering school, which will be held Friday, April 2, in the Union ballroom, it was recently announced by George Allen, '37E, ticket chairman. The sale, which will be open to en- gineers only until Friday, will go on general campus sale after that. En- gineers may purchase the tickets on the second floor of the West Engin- eering Building or from members of the central committee of the ball. Tickets Are Limited Allen urged engineers to purchase tickets as soon as possible as the dance is limited to 350 couples and last year a ticket sell-out took placef by the end of the first day. The decoration scheme was also announced yesterday by Max Schoetz, '39E, and Willis M. Hawkins, Jr., '37E, co-chairmen of the decoration committee. The orchestra will play in the glass partition of a huge slide rule which will enclose the platform. Red Norvo and his band have been engaged to play for the affair. Decorations Are Described A large T square and a triangle' will hang in the south alcove, Haw- kins said, and a protractor will be placed opposite these two on the mantel on the north side of the ball- room. The traditional slide rule which isj kept locked up in a display case dur- ing the year as a result of the time when the lawyers stole it during the days of intense rivalry between the two groups will not be used this year, Hawkins stated. Dr. Lemon To Review ;Poem For Local Club] Dr. William P. Lemon will review Robert Browning's "The Ring and the Book" at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow in, the League ballroom before the Wom- en's Club. Dr. Lemon is represented on the club program by the literature divi- sion. Acting director of the division is Mrs. Jackson R. Sharmen. Dormitory To Hold FacultyTea Today The first of a series of two informal teas for members of the University faculty and their wives will be held by Helen Newberry residents from 4 to 5:30 p.m. today. Dean Alice C. Lloyd, Miss Evelyn Heuvelhorst, and Maurine Coffee, '37, house president, will receive with Miss Ruth Danielson, house director. Mrs. Alexander Ruthven, Mrs. Shirley Smith, Miss Jeannette Perry, Mrs. B. F. Bacher, Mrs. ;Donald Bleakeley, and Mrs. Jane Burton Cline will pour. Dorothy Briscoe, '37, social chairman, is in charge of the tea. ToretrUub Dance Ticy.t Placed On Sale Tickets are now on sale for the annual Forestry Club dance, to be held from 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday in the Women's Athletic Building, -ac- cording to William Yost, '37F&C, general chairman. Henry Mayer's orchestra from the Armory has been engaged to play for the dance. Helene Foster, formerly at the Silver Grill of the League, will be the featured vocalist. Patrons for the affair are Dean and Mrs. Samuel T. Dana, Prof. and Mrs. Shirley W. Allen, Prof. and Mms. D. M. Matthews, Prof. and Mrs. Willett Ramsdell, Prof. and Mrs. L. R. Schoenmann, Prof. and Mrs. Kynoch, Prof. Robert Craig and Miss Edith Hoyle. Members of the central committee are Robert Durwell, '37F&C, music chairman; Frederick Geib, '38F&C, in charge of patrons; and R. Wilson 1 Hutchison, '37F&C, ticket chairman. Tickets are available at the re- corder's office in Natural Science Building. Pi 'Beta Phi Announces Initiation And Affiliation Pi Beta Phi announces the initia- tion of Glade Allen, '40, Barbara Benedict, '40, Martha Jane Cook, '40, Grace Foote, '40SM, Jane Holden, '39, Joan Howson, '40, Flora Lewis, '39, Phyllis Miner, '39, Jane Nussbaum, '40, Mary Randolph. '39, Anna Belle Haag, '39, Dorothy Shipman, '40, and Jean Smith, '40A. Also Marguerite MacGregor, '39A, and Ann Brown, '38, were affiliated with this chapter. Prof. Mattern Will Direct 80 Members Of Men's Glee Club Tomorrow The Varsity Glee Club will make its first public appearance this semes- ter in Ann Arbor at 8:15 p.m. tomor- row in Hill Auditorium. Prof. David E. Mattern, director of the Glee Club, will conduct the con- cert in which 80 members of the club will take part. Edward L. Sinclair, '37E, business manager, has charge of the arrangements for the concert. Patrons Are Announced The patrons and patronesses for the, concert are: Regent and Mrs. Junius E. Beal, President and Mrs. Ruthven, Vice-President and Mrs. James D. Bruce, Vice-President and Mrs. Clarence S. Yoakum, Vice-Pres- ident and Mrs. Shirley W. Smith, Dean and Mrs. Joseph A. Bursley, Dean Mortimer E. Cooley, Dean and Mrs. Samuel T. Dana, Dean and Mrs. James B. Edmonson, Dean and Mrs. Albert C. Furstenberg, Dean and Mrs. Wilber R. Humphreys, Dean and Mrs. Edward H. Kraus, Dean Alice C. Lloyd, and Dean Robert G. Rodkey. Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. Sink; Registrar and Mrs. Ira M. Smith, Prof. and Mrs. Waldo M. Abbot, Prof. Henry C. Anderson, Prof. and Mrs. John L. Brumm, Prof. and Mrs. Hempstead S. Bull, Prof. and Mrs. Philip E. Bursley, Prof. and Mrs. Palmer Christian, Prof. and Mrs. Ed- win C. Goddard, Prof. and Mrs. Ran- som S. Hawley, and Prof. and Mrs. Earl V. Moore. More Patrons Listed Col. and Mrs. Frederick C. Rogers, Major and Mrs. Rosswell E. Hardy, Capt. and Mrs. Walter B. Fariss, and Mrs. Merton G. Wallington will also act as patrons and patronesses. Oth- ers are Dr. and Mrs. William W. Bishop, Dr. and Mrs. Edward W. Blakeman, Dr. William M. Brace, Mr. and Mrs. Emory J. Hyde, Mr. and Mrs. T. Hawley Tapping, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley G. Waltz, and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert G. Watkins. I 7 i { 1 t A A 1 { (A Z The initial step after buying your spring wardrobe is to have your mon- og ams inscribed on it. The new tailored blouses have your initials tucked neatly up in one cor- ner, embroidered in some contrast- ing color and in any of various kinds of writing. If you are inclined to favor the Oriental way of doing things, you may have Chinese letters; or if you're the very ultra modern, you may obtain your letters in the new stream-line manner. No longer will it be possible for the roommate to continually borrow your sweater. Monograms are the best protective insurance there is, and they also will keep the absent-minded boy friend from calling you Betty, when the bold letter "J," standing for Jane, is before him. Be in VOGUE" wvith a New Permnanent. Zotos - Jamal Ma chin eless , VOGUE BEAUTY SRLON 307 South State Street Phone 8384 ZETA TAU ALPHA Zeta Tau Alpha announces pledging, of Mary W. Hotchkiss, of Grosse Pointe. the '39, I. 1 . The Michigan Daily Subscription Prices To The End of The School Year are as follows: 4 SECRETARIAL AND ACCOUNTING TRAINING di Cash .. e~L " Ohls ... $2,00 Ii (to) 0 rI