THE MICHIGAN .DAILY Knight, (7 Pate By MARIANNE -Right this way, folks, to Michigras, the Beta Follies, Loop-o-plane, and other concessions. . . on the other hand there was the Architects' Ball, Rococo Revels . . . gay, dashing, weird, fantastic, the peculiar looking costumes con- fused even the B.M.O.C.'s who couldn't start to recognize some of their pals in the odd-looking garbs ... The hit of the Michigras was the Beta Follies . with Bart Myers scaring two or three of the boys every night with his act .. irregular to say the least . .. Brad Terrell's strip-tease took first honors . . . demure and shy, his exit created a furore .. Alys Pierce and Jim Cole sat back aways . . and Vince Vis was very careful about keeping out of the front row when he went Saturday . he 'played in the band on Friday and he knew ... even though Betsy Lightner wanted to hop in there . .. but she didn't know ... The Chi Phi-Pi Phi Starlight Roof was a popular rendezvous . . Bud Lundahl and Dorothy Shipman went up for a coke and a dance ... and Barbara Heath, Phil Newman, and Roberta Chissus were engrossed in a bridge game . . . Roy Frazier was down on the main floor with Eleanor Anibal looking around for something else to try their luck at . . . Stark Ritchie - who incidentally is breaking in'to this column for the -first time in two months . . . was trying to break records at baseball throwing Ed Andronik, varsity pitcher, made five bulls-eyes during his stay at one of the booths .. . Loop-o-Plane Looped Stomachs ... Chuck Lovett and Ruthie Bauknecht were getting a twirl on the ferris wheel ... Bill LeCoe and Carol Ashbaugh were sauntering past the Kappa booth . . Bob Merriman, Annette StroupBob Henderson and Ruth Keck were right in back of them trying to catch up. . . Betty Mandel and Dorothy Boyer, in the Kappa booth were bemoaning an after- * ' noon's work spent over beauteous decorations only to find that the carmelcorn concession wouldn't fit into the booth ... and had to tear it all down again ... Harry Swarthout and Ann Blakely were on the Loop-o-Plane looking slightly green about the gills . . . Bob Stowe and Trudie Hyde braved it too ... Flo Midworth and Bud Wyman were buying frostbites at the Alpha Chi booth .Over on the other end of the building Betty Strickroot and Tony Yocum were talking to friends. . . Dave Span- gler, Jim Harlan, and Wally Hinkle wre in front of the Theta Delt booth barking ... Maxine Nelson cleaned up on the name 'Shirl' there . .. but the barkers seemed more partial 'to Miss 'X' ... Rococo Revels at the Armory looked like a miniature Mardi Gras . . Pinkie Higgins in Mellie MacCready's blue taffeta formal looked positively devastating ... just too-too ... and Mellie, in a white mess jacket and tux trousers, was quite the dashing young blade . . . Ronnie Stilson as the Bucket Brigade came in with Wally Meyers... Dotty Barrett and Al Roth as a couple of pieces of statuary looked pretty chalky in their white plaster makeup that kept cracking. . . Dotty was Diana but Al's identity wasn't so easily recognizable.- Finally wandered in the farmer's daughter and the pretty, pink, bouncing baby boy, in the persons of Charlotte Poock and Don Barnes . . . Mary Rall, the Lady in Red, was slinking around in back of them looking for some- thing . . . Marcia Connell and Russ Strickland had that certain Scotch air about them . . . they were all dressed up in plaid and all the rest, as Scotch and Soda ... Jean Steere was keeping Morris Morgan running around while she checked on finance matters . . . Peg Pulte as Sadie Thompson and her shady looking sailor-friend,'Bob Fuller, looked like they'd just left some high-class saloon down in the bowery. . . Peg looked so wicked that no-one recognized her . . . she walked up to Jack Dalton, who looked very pretty in some kind of a uniform, and talked to him for several minutes before he recognized her . . . Marilyn Norris who was with Jack looked so fragile in blue taffeta with long blue mitts,.that a high wind would have blown her right out . . - Fiend On The looe .,.. According to most spectators, the best costume, at least the most weird, was the Frankenstein? .. Invisible Man? . . . Mummy? . . . affair that Ed Downs wore . . . he kept so in character the whole evening that everyone was just a little afraid of him . . . that is everyone but Mary Jane Field who looked as though-it were an every- day occurrence for her to be dancing. with a horror-man.. . Hope Petrouleaso and Kay August, just a couple of pirates, n were wishing that there was a little m1re air in the place... and Betty Wahl and - Leo Beebe were in a huddle admiring the decorations . . . which were the cause of .the stuffiness .. . Mary Lavan was the center of attention when she came in. . . as Surrealism,. . . marshmal- lows constituted the bulk of the garb, trimmed daintily with wooden spoons and sundry odd things .'.. all of this atop a pair of atrocious blue bloomers Casey Carter's outfit looked pale in comparison with Mary's mon- strosity,. . Friday night the Tau Betes . . . Engine School honor society . . . had a spring formal at the Bartoh Hills Country Club . . . Al Erickson and Flor- c'nce Russ were doing the Big Apple over on one side of the room . . . even though, it was supposed to be a Virginia Reel . . . . and Jane Giesecke and Bob Young were clapping away for the Reel on the other side of the oom . . . Professor and Mrs. Axel Marin and Ernie Tanzer were watching the combination with some surprise . . . Bernice Cohen, oddly enough a junior Phi Bete in the lit school, was with Tau Bete Jim Eckhouse showing off the advantages of higher education.. . by giving a trucking exhibition,. .. Fred Smith was engaged in a long conversation with Jane Munson,.. George Heas Double Trouble.. George Hanson spent at least half of the evening explaining to Mary Ellen Smith that it must have been the other George Hanson on campus that had made the hole-in-one on the golf course Ken Graf and Helen Purdy were investigating the contents of the punch bowl . .. and Rog Frazier and Irene Bessolo explored the golf course Ernie Christiansen and Mrs. Ernie were expound- ing the glories of the golden west to anyone who cared to listen . . . and Sidney Steinborn. this years Technic head. was Fred Astairing it all by himself all over the floor . . . Harry Marshall and Peg Bennett were requesting a special number . At the Delta Sig house Saturday night the food was on the table and between courses of baked beans and crab-meat salad dancing was in order . . Stan Crego and Bunty Bain were lucky to get into the dining room to eat . . . and Wayne Oglestone and Billie Schrader were drinking coffee after dinner while some of the later arrivals had to dash upstairs to eat . . . Marjorie Wilcox and Hugh Godfrey were eating with gusto . . . while Si Glerum was telling again and again the story of the sudden shower that Harry Kittell got during the course of the afternoon . . . when Si threw a paper bag of water on him from an upper window . . , Angie Roknich and 'Laine Matheny listened intently to the humorous repetitions . . . Marg Limber: and Bill Heads Women's Sing NORMA CURTIS Miss Curtis, '39, is general chair- man of the Lantern Night Sing, the first all-women's sing to be held on the University campus. Scheduled for May 23, it will be open to soror- ities, dormitories and zones. W&eddi ng s Jj &igagemen ts Mr. and Mrs. E. Floyd Griffin, of Oyster Bay, N.Y., recently announced the engagement of their daughter, Barbara, '39, to Joseph L. Karpinski, '38, of Ann Arbor. Mr. Karpinski is the son of Prof. and Mrs. Louis Kar- pinski. Miss Griffin, who is a transfer stu- lent from Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, N.Y., is affiliated with Gam- ma Phi Beta. Mr. Karpinski, a Feb- ruary graduate, was a member of the Daily staff in 1933-34. He is a member of Phi Sigma Kappa. t To Fete Dorothy Corson A miscellaneous shower will be given at 3:30 p.m. today in the League by Jane Willoughby, '38, honoring Dorothy Louise Corson, '38, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry P. Corson. Miss Corson's engagement to Robt. M. Graham, Springfield, was recently an- nounced. Mr. Graham is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Graham, of Springfield, Ill. Miss Corson is affiliated with Delta Gamma. The wedding will take place in June. Marie Abbot Engaged The engagement of Marie Amanda Abbot, '35, daughter of Prof. and ,Mrs. Waldo Mack Abbot, of Ann Ar- bor, and Dr. Howard C. Jackson, son af Dr. and Mrs. John Bert Jackson, of Kalamazoo, was announced Sunday at a tea at the home of the bride- elect's parents. Miss Abbot is affiliated with Alpha Phi. Dr. Jackson received his de- gree from the Harvard medical school. He is now acting as resident surgeon at University hospital. Mr. and Mrs. William K. McHenry of South Bend, announce the en- gagement of their daughter, Cathar- ine Baker, '33, to Paul Knapp Rogers. Jr., of New Britain, Conn.I Miss McHenry is affiliated with Kappa Kappa Gamma She was wom- en's business manager of the Daily in 1933. Hayseed Hop Tickets To Go On SaleToday~ Can Be Obtained At Union League, Angell Hall And' Under Engineering Arch The sale of tickets for the Hayseed Hop will begin at noon today, it was] announced yesterday by Helen Bar- nett, general chairman of Freshman Project. The price of the tickets is $1.25 a couple and they will be on sale under the Engineering Arch during the noon hour and from 3 to 4 p.m. and in An- gell Hall lobby from 1 to 3:30 p.m. daily until May 20. Tickets may al- so be had at the League and Union1 desks at any time up to May 20. ] Sellers To Go Rustic The women selling tickets under the Engineer's Arch and in Angell Hall lobby, will be dressed in rural attire, carrying out he general theme of the Hayseed Hop and Strawberry Social. The public is invited to at- tend in informal dress, not neces- sarily rustic in style. Plans for a floor show during the Hop have been ,completed and "ten pretty girls" in various dance num- bers will be featured. To Feature Square Dances Farmer Zwick has been drilling his men in country music and it is re- ported that they can 'now swing out a mean "Farmer-in-the-Dell," said MissnBarnett.eThere will be several dances to liven up the eve- ning. The band will be dressed in overalls with cotton shirts and straw hats. Cionminit ee M!eet At League Toda Meetings of the newly-organized so- cial and orientation committees of the League will be held at 4 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. respectively, today at the League. The places, of meeting will be announced on the League bulletin board. Even though their names were not announced in the Daily Sunday, all women who petitioned for member- ship on the social committee should come to today's meeting, Barbara Heath, '39, chairman of the commit- tee, said. Plans for next year will be announced an4, junior assistants will be introduced. All women who do not appear at the orientation committee' meeting today will automatically signify their withdrawal from the committee, Mar- cia Connell, '39, chairman said. All advisers except transfer advisers should attend. Fur Coats I Remodeled/ EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the fifth her freshman year, she said. The in a series of interviews with women who are unusual in their selection of students work with a "typo-dont," courses of study. and un-alive subject, until their jun- By ELLEN CUTHBERT ior year, when they are given a chair Only two women are included in the and allowed to do increasingly more student body of the dental school- complicated work on human patients, Annabelle Richter, a freshman, and she explained. Dr. Jenny Proskauer, a graduate stu- The little difficulties which bother dent from Germany, who believes women don't annoy men so much, she that women have a great future in has decided, stating, "They just for- her profession. get about it and try to do better next Miss Richter frankly admits that time; maybe that's what makes them she doesn't know just why she entered so congenial to work with." She has the dental school, except that "you been shown no partiality because she are able to earn a living without ask- is a woman, she declares, and just ing the other fellow for a job, and as much is expected from her as from you are looked up to in that profes- anyone. sion." Miss Richter plans to go into private Dentistry Holds Surprises practice and feels that dentistry is the Miss Richter received her pre-den- one course which she wants-in spite tal training at the Michigan State. of the hard work and competition. Normal College in Ypsilanti. Her work Female Sex An Asset there left her totally unprepared for Dentistry first appealed to Dr. Pros- the mechanical side of dentistry, so kauer as a branch of medicine. She she was surprised at being expected was very much interested in manual to'make such things as bridges during work, and felt that, as a dentist, she ii Repaired Cleaned Relined Glazed Stored at Lowest Prices. E. L. Greenbaum 448 Spring Street !' i N 0/ OUR BIGGEST COAT EVEN'T OF THE SEASON! Casual and Dressy Coats $12.00, $15.00 $18.00 Most of them good for Fall wear. BLACK and COLORS Sizes 12 to 42 RAI NCOATS Den't wait for rainy weather to buy that Raincoat. AThtec check tweed and gaberdine Reversibles . . .. at 1 x,.95 \tite and Colors in gaberdines. Novel-top and oiled silks , . . . at 11 1 11 I