-SATURDAY, MAY 29, 1937 TH-E MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE F VE Annual SeneorBall To BeHeld At Intramural Building For Fir st Time n* More Tickets To Go On Sale At Union Today Ticket Demand Surpasses That Of Any Other Year, Committee Announces Because of immediate sell-out of Senior B411 tickets, plans have been made to hold the dance in the In- tramural Building rather than the Union Ballroom to satisfy the large demand, according to John Otte and Joseph Hinshaw, co-chairmen. Additional tickets will be available at 11 a.m. today at the Union desk for a general campus sale which will continue through the afternoon. Un- like the first sale, the tickets will not be limited to Seniors, but will be sold at $4 to any student presenting his identification card. To Complete Plans Later Complete plans for the dance will not be formulated until the number of tickets sold has been ascertained, Otte said. At this time the elaborate- ness of decorations and otherdetails will b determined. In addition to the added room which will be afforded by the larger ballroom, the ventilation will be ex- cellent, Otte stated. Windows will be open on three sides and auxiliary ventilating fans will be used to sup- plement the Intramural Building air conditioning system. Ticket Demand Is Great This year's demand for Senior Ball tickets, Otte said, has surpassed that of any other year. The committee decided to enlarge the capacity of the dance, not only because many seniors were unable to obtain tickets/ but also, to enable other classes to at- tend the final social function. Jan Garber and his orchestra have been contracted to play for the dance. Garber will start a nation wide tour from New York in June and will stop in Ann Arbor to play for the Senior Ball. Jan Garber and Jimmy Lunce- ford's orchestras played for the 1936 . -HUop. The dance will be held from 10 p.m. to 3 a.m. as originally announced, Otte said. Foreign Group Give University Book On China A new book entitled "The Far East in World Politics" by F. F. Hudson has been received by the Barbour Scholarship Committee. It is the annual gift of the Barbour Scholars in Tientsin, China, to the University of Michigan Library. This is the second book to be presented to the library by this group of former students. The first book was "The Most Famous Beauty of China, Yang Kuei Fei" by Madame Wu Lien Teh. The group of scholars is the main- tenance of a Barbour Scholarship Fund at Nankai University, a large co-educational Christian institution located at Tientsin. Miss Yu Hsui- yung, the recipient, is now a third year student there. Last year there were 10 former Barbour Scholars in Tientsin, but be- cause of the political unrest, there are only four residing there now. Mrs. Lucretia Liu Jen left a position as Dean of Women at Nankai Univer- sity to move to Shanghai. Dr. Chin- yi Wang is now connected with the Department of Pediatrics Institution. The four Barbour Scholars now liv- ing in Tientsin are Mrs. Jina Pian Wang, Mrs. Lucy Tan Sun, Miss Net- tie Ssu-tu, who is head of the English Department of Nankai University and is now editing a new textbook for Freshman English and Dr. M. I. Ting, who is continuing her import- ant work as Superintendent of the Tientsin Women's Hospital. officers Announced By Oimiega Upsilon Omega Upsilon, national radio and dramatic sorority, elected officers for the coming year Wednesday night in the Concourse of the Michigan League. Jeannette Strauss, '38, is the new president. Margaret Ann Ayres, '38, is the vice-president for the coming year. Mary Bell, '39 and Marjorie Lehner, '39. were elected secretary and treasurer, respectively. Plans to send representatives to the National Convention, which will be held in Minneapolis in late June are being made by the group. The eight new pledges were initiat- ed last Sunday at 2 .p.m. in the League Chapel. Following the initiation ceremony, refreshments were served in the grill. The new initiates in- clude Carrie Wallach, '39, Janet F.1 Sport Shoes Lead In Grand Parade Turner, Chavenelle Term Projeets Plan June Wedding Tn Q- MnI c .- I Of Caipus Styles Marjorie Turner, '37, daughter of IMrs. Marguerite D. Turner of Ann At Ito use Party Two by two they go marching Arbor, will be married June 25 to across the campus, all shapes, sizes Gilbert Chavenelle, '33, son of Mr.,; and kinds-the new summer shoesj and Mrs. H. A. Chavenelle of Detroit. Thirty-five girls of the recreational This year's crop of sport shoes fors It will be a quiet wedding, attended leadership class are holding a house- camrpus wear is composed of so many only by members of the two families. party today and tomorrow at Pat- diffcrent styles as to please the heart The couple plans to live in Ann Ar- terson Lake as the finale to their se- of each and every co-ed. White, as bor where Mr. Chavenelle is employed mester's activities. The group will) usual, is predominant, with the em- by the King Seeley Corporation. phasis on colored trim. One novelrmmleave at 12:30 p.m. today from the way of producing color is by the de- is urr i a meber o P - Woman's Athletic Building and re- tachaable flaps over the tongue of Phi sorority and also belongs to Mor-EI e so w h c i brow, black tarboard, the senior women's hon- turn at 4:30 pi.m. tomorrow. thd bro ighcortomatchnvry, lcksj orar y society. During her freshman A complete program for the week-I dturigh year she was a committee member for end has been arranged and each girl ee Frosh Frolic and was active in is responsible for her part of the ac- A very demure and Puritan effectIFrosh Project work. Last year she tivities, as she will be- graded on her is given by one conservative pair with received the Ethel B. McCormick work at the end. a small amount of visible stitching, scholarship award. t its only decoration a square buckle- Chavenelle is affiliated with which willtb eetendirctiontof like flap. The very simplicity of the Mr. h rtent.wihwilb ne hedrcino shoe makes it outstanding. Tct h faentthe various project committees, will The Indian, in one respect, comes include a photography display, a into his own again, for the comfort A is bSrowrhike, handicraft, a waterfront and walking-ease of the mocassin has -1B ii l orse ~iO program, two plays, a baseball game, '.nd~t wakn-ae ftemcasnhs. star gazing, and out-of-door meals. been realized. One type is plain with rvayRs raised stitching around the toe, a Alice Miles, '38, Mary Schweick- military heel, and is white, brown, or hard, '40, Ruth Calkins, '40, Myrra smoke in color. Also along this line The fourth annual horse show was Short, '39, Olga Dobosz '39, Alberta is the spiked golf shoe without the permanently called off today by Dor- Royal, '40 Jane Anderson '40, Ruth spikes. That may sound rather odd, othy White, '38, president of Crop Hartmann, '39, Elizabeth Gross, '40, but one of the beauties of the type and Saddle. Mildred MacArthur, '39, Janice is that the spikes are detachable. So, The show was originally schedule( Friedman, '40, and Bettie Howard, the shoe is perfect for golf; without I for May 22, but was postponed then '39, will act as chairman of the proj- the spikes, one has a grand walking because of bad riding conditions, Miss ects. shoe. White said. It was to be sponsored Miss Virginia Peaseley and Miss For those who like their sport shoes by the Women's Athletic Association Marie Hartwig, physical education a little dressier, a rough white linen and Crop and Saddle at the Wash instructors, will chaperon the group. crash oxford is being featured. Here, tenaw County Fair grounds at Mulli- once again, the flap is present; in this son's stables. FLOWERS and PLANTS case it is of pigskin. Resembling the l An increase in games had been for Morse Code is the footwear on which planned for this year's show in addi- the dots and dashes are so prominent. tion to the regular features which gDccorationiDay This type of punch work, or some-' were included in that of last year. CHELSEA FLOWER SHOP thing similar, is shown on the ma- Mrs. Alexander and William Watrus 203E Liberty Phone 2-2973 jority of summer sport shoes. were to act as judges for the event. i i Pr fe, in Europe and will discuss some of the S"' i religious issues involved in the grow- T ' ie T l e ing nationalism in Europe and Amer- To G!We 'Ta k Here ica. The Liberal Students' Union will James L. Adams, professor of The- close their activities for the year with ology at Meadville Theological School, a picnic at Saline Valley Farms, leav- which is affiliated with the Univer- ing the church at 3:30 p.m. Sunday. sity of Chicago, in Chicago, will speak at the Ann Arbor Unitarian Church PHI SIGMA DELTA at 11 a.m. tomorrow on the subject, Phi Sigma Delta announces the "The Ghost of Caesar." pledging of Samuel E. Grant, '40, Dr. Adams spent the year 1935-36 Oil City, Pa., and Jack R. Wolin, '40. DRAMA TO BE GIVEN The Iampstead Community Play- ers will present a social drama, "Threshold," June 7 and 8 in the Jones' School Auditorium. The play was written by Ilma H. Brigham and is under the direction of Mrs.'Leah M. Carr. ZETA PSI Zeta Psi announces the pledging of Sam Fitzpatrick, '37, Detroit; and John Tietjen, '37, Cleveland. MOTH GANGS ARE GATHERING and they're going to Put your furs ion the spot" if you don't take steps" to stop theln! q - _ Let ZWERDLING'S Be Your Bodyguard! this summer against moths, fire and theft. We'll also cleanse, repair and refashion your coat, if you so desire . . . next fall they will be returned to you with the lustrous beauty renewed . . . all I for the merest fraction of the actual cost of your fur for 100% Safety ... Phone 8507 -8A' 4HI 1904 2f . UEs coat. I d In those hot dripping summer months so near at hand, going bare- foot appeals very strongly as a means of keeping cool. One doesn't, think of doing that in this present day, butl in the new air-conditioned shoes one achieves practically the same sensa- tion.. The more holes in the shoes the better they are for style and coolness. Those ever popular perennial clas- sics, the ghillies, are still very pop- ular for sport wear and they come in various colors. HONOR SOCIETY HAS ELECTION Tau Sigma Delta, honorary society in architecture and the allied arts announces the election of the follow- ing officers: Harry Morris, '38A, pres- ident; John VanderMuelen, '38A, vice-president; Florence McConkey, '38A, secretary; aid Stewart Van Keuren, '38A, treasurer. The WHITE SEASON is here. Large, flattering brims of felt, straw and leghorn ... More medium brims of felt, straw and panama ... 22-23 Headsizes DANA RICHARDSON 309 South State Street - At the Dillon Shop a. Y * I ",4 i Y: -2' ' AW7n ~1 3 0c I s 0 r.A Drastic Reductions Month -End Clearance I- II , I of I How Many Beads For A Silver Fox?7 TIMELY FASH IONS p in most Cases 1/2 off and more THIs is the world's oldest problem. It's as old as man, yet it exists today, varied perhaps in aspect, but essen- Formerly to $19.75 Prints, dark sheer crepes and high shades for all Summer occasions. L.I tially the same. Wherever men live SUITS and REDINGOTES Y1/2 Price You would gladly have paid much more for these grand suits earlier in the season. BRADLEYS GOWNS Two- and Three-PieceDINRadFMA EARLY SPRING COLORS DINNER and FORMAL $15 .00 1/2 Price Formerly to $25.00 WHITES and PASTELS together and.produce more than they need for their own use, exchange en- ters in. Though on the one hand we have a car, and on the other money, it is still but a civilized way of say- ing, How many beads for a Silver Fox?" THE EXCHANGE OF GOODS and serv- ices for other goods and services, as expressed at present in currency, forms the basis of all business today as it did in the era when the American Fur Trader wandered through the wilderness in search of beaver, mink, otter, and fox pelts. Now as then contact between buyer and seller is of prime importance and alone makes possible exchange. THE COMPLEXITIES of modern life have added many ramifications to the simple, direct contact of the moun- tain men. No longer is it feasible for a man who would trade to wander in search of a taker. He must reverse the process and bring men to him or meet them half way. Where the Old Fur buyer depended on word of mouth, merchants of today must de- pend on effective advertising methods. In its DISPLAY and CLASSIFIED adver- tising service this paper offers not only an effective, but an amazingly inex- pensive basis for contact with poten- tial buyers. For with a paid circula- tion of more than 3,000 and a reading public exceeding 10,000, comprised of students, faculty, and townspeople, it reaches the group whose purchasing power has made possible the develop- ment of Ann Arbor. if N eckwear 79c ' Formerly to $1.50 SKIRTS $1.95 HATS $ I.95 1 Formerly to HOSE 59c Broken Sizes Formerly to $1.15 SLEEPING Pajamas s1 :Z E l i 11 11 11 E 11 ,IE I I I i