THE MICHIGAA -DAILY. PAGE: THE MCHGA__AL _A_ ..... I f , I The Primrose 'Path "Off to the hunt!" cried Miss Primrose ... galloping into her flowered organdy formal and laying on another circle of green eye shadow to her h'eady dazzling lenses . .. She swept several dozen fraternity pins . .. the rieWard of a long and successful campus career . . . into her evening bag ndl dashed out the front door . . stopping long enough to collect "her Hero" wh6 was lounging in somewhat wilted fashion on the door stoop .. . having been waiting patiently in the usual masculine fashion for at least an hour . . . They plodded off on swiftly falling arches to a round of fraternity parties ... Steaming up Hill Street they came suddenly upon the Psi U hovel .. lurking in the shadows . . . Strains of music issued from the door . . along with clouds of smoke . . Miss Primrose hesitated on the threshold but "Her Own" pressed boldly on . .. Into the shadows of death, into the mouth of hell . . . he muttered under his breath . . . Once inside they pee'red through the smoke screen which appeared to be issuing from the fire place . . . (What . . . No boy sprouts among the Psi Up's!) . . . Jim race .. former African Headhunter ... refused to apply his talents to relieving the congestion where the fire was supposed to be . . . Mary Aandolph and Chuck Coe went coughing by . . . with Marian Dailey and Sandy McPherson . . . Betty Crandall with flowers in her hair (and Bill Lord) was putting her whole sole into the dancing . . . The walls of the house were black with stags, Miss Primrose noted with a thrill of pleasure . . . and she dropped her left eye softly at a tall blond youth with curly eyelashes who answered to the name of Paul . . . with no results . . Doris Bolton floated by on the arm of Fletcher Platt . . right arm . . . John Closterhouse of the flaming locks rose up through the smoke like a fiery brand brought to life by Jim Hammond . . . Miss Priirosti Likes Them Dark.* Mary Lavan and Marshall Rogers ... Ruth Calkins and Jack Chapman .. .Jane Nussbum and Guy Howard were all here and there . . . Arthur Kleinschmidt was escorting Cherie Nan Moffet of Detroit about the mansion. depths and windings of the Primrose Path - . . By this time Miss Primrose had smoke in her eyes so she set out to conquer greener pastures . . . namely the Chi Phi-Ethel Fountain Hussey dante . . . Helen Jesperson was looking angelic in a white formal with Bob Hammond . .. Miss Primrose decided tall, dark 'n' handsome Don Effler was a perfect foil for the blond flame of Helen alias "Happy" Rowe . . . Also among the first noted were Frannie Sutherland and John Treadway ... Elea- nor Skiles and Fred Vogt, deeply engrossed in a rousing game of rabbit ... Probably their own contribution to the party . . . Dean and Mrs. Rea were flying about lending official atmosphere . .. Also Dr. Brace and Miss Ethel McCormick . . . Betty Riddell was with Wally Wendell . Betty Bird . . . another one of the fiery planets . . . was with Ros Curtis . . Ruth Washburn was the picture of spring in her pink chiffon formal dancing with Jdhn Lorenzen . . . Leah Russell was taking Bob Canning for a ride . .. Margaret Lindberg flitted past with Carl Johnson . POl te" Planks Hold Fascintion .. . The Ylished plahks of the A.T.O. house had fascination for Ted Fraser, that 'smoothie dancer who leads with his chin . . . Miss Primrose caught a glimpse of him in full sail on the floor with Nancy Saibert . . . Bill Shaw's curly blond pate was seen looming above that of Betty Davis . . . George Jones and Ruth Dillman were seen crushed against the wall and Stella Dawson and Don Wangelin swooped by in a gust of wind . . . Esther Johnson . . . Kappa Venus . . . with arms . . . glided across the floor with Don Siegel . . of the Parrot Squawks fame . . . The Sigma Chis and their sweethearts were throwing a slight enter- tainment under the home roof . . . "Rosey Cheeks" Hugh Rader squired Mary Lou Hulbert . . . Barbara Telling and Carl Jones . . . Herb Gibbs and Mary Skinner are here, murmured Miss Primrose to herself, snapping her aspergum to avoid going into her 53rd faint . . . and for pity sakes there is Dorothea Wassell and Bill (accorcian player extraordinary) An- derson . . . Peggy Cleland . . . looking exotic as ever tripped through the door in the arms of Dair Long . . while Jane Steiner and Stan Crego veered to leeward just in time . Theta Delt Mansion Mobbed As Usual.. .. The usual mob was hanging out at the Theta Delt mansion.. . Margaret Hamilton and Hubert Bristol were milling about jocously in the throng, poking their elbows in the ribs of all and sundry . . . Betty Gregory looked out from beneath a combination of spring flowers at Ed Higgins . . . JuneI Laing . . . just an old delegate . . . drooped' over the shoulder of Roy Fraser . . . Nelson Persons and her southern drawl was accompanying BillI McHenry's rich basso profundo . .. Betty Whitney had Bruce Telfer by the1 forelock . . . yes, and last but hardly least were those illustrious stags . . . Vincent Moore and Jack Kleene . . . and also Helen Higgins and John Jordan, purveyor of the pigskin . . . Aspergum notwithstanding . . . Miss Primrose then passed away and had to be carried to her downy couch for the rest of the night . . .By Sunday, however, in spite of the onslaught of mammas and papas which took the campus by storm . . . she was out again giving an eagle eye to the big parade . . . Bamby Boucherle and Dick Goldcamp were out with Mr. and Mrs. Boucherle . .. Betty Gatward with Frank Dannemiller and Mrs. Gatward . . . Margaret Dodds and her mamma . . . Marian Holden and hers . . . were taking the air .. Several non-weather prophets took it into their heads to seek the great out-of-doors Sunday morning . . . Addie Ely and Greg Maxwell decided to rough it on bikes in preference to ruining the picnic spirit by taking a taxi to the island where others of their clan were planning to consume much food and fresh air . .. Hope Hartwig and Bob Cooper --- Genevieve Adams and Forest Jordan . . . who never quite recovered from having an Easter chick named after him . . Betty Notley and John Sloop . . great man of the South . . were among the consumers . . until the rain started and ended the outing . . . anti sending Miss Primrose scurrying for the hills and valleys of her trundle bed . . . where she has since been confined with quadruple pneumonia . . . and will probably never recover... L arge Audience Attends Opening Play Of Season' Bright Spring Prints Lenda Color To Performance Of TonightAt 8:30' A large crowd of faculty, students,I and townspeople last night attended the opening performance of Noel Coward's "Tonight at 8:30," starring Helen Chandler a n d Bramwell Tennis Facilities Offered By W.A. A. Fletcher. Chatting in the lobby during inter- mission were President and Mrs. Al- A exander G. Ruthveh and Miss Alice C. Lloyd, dean of women. Mrs. Ruth-} ven was wearing printed chiffon gown with aablack net jacket. Miss Lloyd wuore 'a very becoming, yellowy, f print. Prints seemed very popular last night, for Mrs. Byrl Bacher chose one in shades of tan and brown. During Intermission Other members of the faculty seen ~° - ~~- ~- during intermission were Prof. and l Mrs. Arthur W. Bromage and Dean! and Mrs. Wilbur Humphries. Mrs. Underhand Serv Bromage chose blue dotted chiffon for the occasion. Dean Clare E. Grif- -. fen, of the business administration N ow Sissy In school, was seen talking to Mrs. Julia M. Jamison who was wearing a green print. Prof. and Mrs. Arthur E. . Wood were also among the group. First Equipment Clumsy Prof. and Mrs. Ralph W. Aigler When Sport Introduced and Prof. and Mrs. John B. Waite hiFngland in -1874, were seated together during the per-l formance. Nearby sat Dr. Mehmety Oga-Oglu, and Dr. and Mrs. Cameron By hELEN hENDERSON Haight. Dean and Mrs. Joseph Burs- j Tennis has changed since women ley and their daughter, Rebecca played in skirts that hung to six Bursley, '39, were also there. Prof. inches from the ground (shockingly and Mrs. ArthurL. Dunham were short, too!) and patted the ball gent- seen talking with Prof. and Mrs. New- ly and slowly across the net. Those a .y Students were the days when tennis was a Many students attenied the first man's game and women were more Manystudntsatteded he irst1k ~s+ 1 _1r~f: iv. rrn w. # iy r #'.e n * * e, Feeble Shots z Women's Gane Women Defeat Ypsilanti Team In Tennis Meet The University of Michigan women took an easy victory from Michigan State Normal College at Ypsilanti in a tennis meet yesterday afternoon at the Palmer Field courts. Four singles and one doubles matches were played, with the Michigan women winning every set, including two love sets. Francis Alpert, '37Ed., winner of last season's women's singles tourna- ment, was No. 1 player for' Michigan. Lillian Golbrath, of Normal College lost to Miss Alpert, 6-4, 6-4. Margot Holzauer of Ypsilanti showed excellent form, but was de- feated by Merida Hobard, '38, 6-0, 6-2. Margaret Veenboer, '37, won her match from Olga Madar, 6-2, 6-1, while Leone Cartwright lost to Jane Quirk, '38, with the same score. One doubles set was played, with Dorothy Maul, '39, and Margaret Wa- terston, '38, women's tennis manager, teamed against Miss Madar and Miss Holzauer. The Michigan women were victorious, 6-0. A return match is scheduled for Wednesday, May 26 at Ypsilanti, Miss Waterston said. She added that a meet with the Ann Arbor Women's Club will take place Wednesday of this week at 4:30 p.m. at the Palmer Field courts. A match with Michigan State. College is tentatively planned for Saturday. Miss Waterston announced that first and second round matches in the doubles and singles tournaments must be played this week. Students Will Form Intercultural Group A series of conferences with the aim of organizing an intercultural council for next year are being held Prof. J. Raleigh Nelson, counsel to foreign students, announced yester- day. "The time is ripe for forming a plan for the more systematic ex- change of ideas between the various national groups on campus, 'ind be- tween the foreign and the Ameiican students," Professor Nelson said. Fif- teen students, representing several foreign countries and the United States, are now working on the plan. The intercultural council to be formed, which will include both American and foreign students, will work with the counselor to formulate a unified program. Equipment Needed For Sports Exhibit In connection with the centennial exhibit in women's sports to be spon- sored by the department of physical education for women, Miss Dorothy Beise, instructor, has issued a call for old sports equipment. The exhibit will take the different decades from 1890 on and show how the more popular sports and costumes have changed since then. As an ex- ample she cited the change in tennis racquets from the old-fashioned, big- handled, long and narrow-faced racket to the modern stream-lined model. The equipment will be taken good care of and immediately returned to the owner following the exhibition Miss Beise said. She requested that all equipment be sent to her at Barbour Gymnasium. Schedule Of Baseball Games Is Announced The week's schedule for the wom- en's baseball tournament was an- nounced yesterday. The Ann Arbor Independents will tangle with Martha Cook and Delta Gamma will play Alpha Delta Pi at 4:15 p.m. today at Palmer Field. The Jordan Hall team will play the winner of the Chi Omega-Gamma Phi Beta game, which was postponed yesterday because of the weather and Kappa Alpha Theta will challenge Alpha Chi Omega Thursday at the field. .i performance. Lois Keddy, '36, stood talking with Beatrice Schink, '38 and Helen Stevenson, '38. Again the pref- erence for prints was noticeable. Miss Keddy chose a navy blue with gay flowers and'Miss Schink had on black with a white figure. Lucille Johns- ton, '37, was standing with them. Miss Jean Keller and Miss Ruth Barrett attended the play with Bry- mer Williams, Grad. Miss Keller wore a brown print with a redingote and Miss Barrett chose pink with a white coat for the occasion. MargaretI Guest, '37, also chose brown crepe. Some of the- others seen during the intermission were Ansel B. Smith, '38L, Frank Stone, '38L, Robert Hen- och, '38L, Betty Anne Beebe, '37 and Nancy Quirk, '37. Former Students Plan XVT -7A . r, t .. _. f or less glad of t -for vasntit a fact that a woman was too weak to do more than wave at the ball flying swatter-like and send it in a beautiful high-flown curve in the general di- rection of her opponent? Tell her that tennis is too strenuous Sfor her today and she'll answer by slamming hard drives all over the court until you're tired out and then she'll slip a sizzling volley off the forecourt at an angle you couldn't possibly reach with a canoe paddle. Ever since Helen Wills Moody took the limelight in women's tennis, the game has been becoming more and more like the man's game. Before Mrs. Moody's time it was almost un- heard of for a woman to make a practice of going to the net. One ranking player in the early 1900's even used an underhand service and got away with it? Play Was Slow national competition for women was stimulated. The serve, the two drives, forehand and backhand, the lob and the volley are the principle strokes of any game. Fancy strokes like the top-spin or the back-spin are effective if executed correctly but otherwise should be avoided. First Individual Spot Tennis was the first individual sport to be taught to women at the University of Michigan. It was made part of the curriculum long before golf, swimming or archery. At pres- ent the tennis classes are divided into three types-beginning, intermediate and advanced. Rudiments of the strokes are taught as well as theory and strategy of the game. The increasing amount of mixed play has contributed toward speeding up the woman's. game. A glance at the Palmer Field tennis courts any afternoon proves that the Michigan woman prefers to match her skill and wits against a member of the opposite sex. Mixed doubles play forces a woman to develop her net game, for when her partner serves, she must take her place in the forecourt to guard the net. Women's doubles, mixed doubles and women's singles tournaments are sponsored SIGMA NU Sigma Nu announces the pledging of Vincent Vindler, '40, Detroit, and Edwin Krieghoff, '38, Grosse Pointe. Acomfortable SUMMER ahead! Watch Repairing: HALLER'S Jewelry State and Liberty ,+ . Wedding IFor June 5th Tennis, as we know it, is not an ancient game. Games were played in Mrs. William Henry McManus, of France and England centuries ago Detroit, announces the approaching that might have resembled the prin- marriage of herdaughter, Eileen, '36, ciple of tennis, but it was not until to Robert Alden Choate, '36L. The 1847 that a game with official rules date has been set for 2 p.m., June 5, was introduced in England. The court in the League chapel. was shaped like an hour-glass, the A reception will follow the cere- net was very high, the racket was mony in the Alumnae Room of th~eI clumsy, and play was slow. Never- League. Miss McManus won a fresh- j theless, this was tennis' grandfather. man Hopwood Award, was a chair- In 1881 the United States Lawn Ten.. man of the publicity committee of nis Association was founded, the serv- Penny Carnival her junior year on ice lines introduced, the 'net lowered campus and was a member of Seniori and the court made rectangular. Society. After the World War, with the intro- The couple plan to live in Detroit. duction of the Wightman Cup, inter- I 11 ii i ---- _ $ DOLLAR -DAYS $ 3 Days - Tues., WedThurs. ONLY A FEW DAYS LEFT in this GOING-OUT-OF-BUSINESS sale. Values that will set all Ann Arbor buzzing with excitement. Be thrifty and put in a supply, as high quality merchandise as this will never again be offered at such low prices; way below wholesale. It is for the wearer of this crisp cool PALM BEACH tailleur. It boasts of PASSARELLI'Sfamed man- nish tailoring and is laboratory tested for resistance to wear, wrin- Ming and frequent laun- derings. Sleeves quality lined with Earl-Glo. Kover-Zip fasteners. Whites, naturals, pastels. - e lea si o .ack blted patch pockets. Link button clos- ng. Inverted center plea skirt. El r j E L Spring, Clearance of Dresses - Suits Coats at Off Orign Prices Dresses Many black and lighter Crepes - Prints - Knits. Also groups of Evening Dresses. Sizes 12 to 46. Values $10.95 to $35.00 Suits- Three-pc. - Swagger - Two-pc. - Tailors Dressmaker types -Sizes 12 to 3 8. Values $10,95 to $55.00 a well known fact that the HOSE I lot of ladies pure silk hose, full fashioned, $1.00 Value............2 for BRASSI ERES Tailored or lace trimmed. $1.00 Value. ...... 2 for BELTS Assorted colors & widths. Fine leather. Up to $1.25 Values. .......... 3 for PURSES 1 lot of bags. Unbeliev- able values ............. RAI NCAPES A value no one can afford to miss! $1.25 capes. As- sorted colors & sizes. 2 for $1 $1 $1 $1.- Values up to $2.00. 2 for ................. GLOVES Gloves in white and colors Large assortment. Values up to $1.50. 2 pairs for SKIRTS All wool garments! Fine assortment. Really re- markable value ......... BLOUSES Laura Belle Shop handled only the best. $1 $1 $1 $1 Ii UMBRELLAS him - I I 1 lot of umbrellas while they last. '$1.95 value for HAN DKERCH I Fine linen handkerchiefs, w i t h handrolled .h e m s Exquisite workmanship. Values to 85c...... 3 for COLLARS Collars to brighten up your spring costume. Fine assortment. 1.25 val. 2 for EFS $1 CO-OPE RATION The various braitches of service offered by this bank are vital to the whole bank's service in the de- velopment of prosperity throughout the entire com- munity. Every department maintains dependable personally directed services in preparation for the time when you will need to use them. We are always happy to have you inspect our facilities. VESTS and PANTIES Fine qguality knit rayon panties. Regular 89c val- ue ............... 2 for SLIPS Silk slips in white and tea rose. $1.95 value for.. N IGHTGOWNS PAJAMAS Fine cotton, crepe, and muslin pajamas & gowns. Formerly sold for $1.95 and I Coats I Swagger - belted - Fitted. Sizes 12 to 20. $1 SWEATERS IAll wool sweaters. Nice styles and colors. $2.25 values for............ GIRDLES Two-way stretch girdles. Don't miss this item. $1.00 girdles...........2 for BRASSIERES High grade brassieres for formal and daytime wear. $1.95 value for......... $1 '$1 16-75 (~ ( The White Linen TAI LLEUR You'll be wearing with smart Palm Beach suits this summer. This four eyelet tie has perfora- tions for trimming and coolness, and a slim Cuban heel. $1 Values $16.95 to $39.75 ALL SALES FINAL LEATHER GLOVES 1 lot of fine kid gloves- some pigskin included, up Ito $2.95 values for...... $1 $6.oo I I I X11 I 11 Illi I $60