18 Freshmen To Be Honored ByPanhellenic Sorority Pledge Scholars To Be Present Saturday At Luncheon In League Freshman pledges receiving the highest grades in their respective pledge classes will be honored at a luncheon at 12:15 p.m. Saturday in the Kalamazoo room of the League. The 18 freshman who will attend the luncheon include: Barbara Mac- Laughlin, Alpha Chi Omega; Louisa Pfretzchner, Alpha Delta Pi; Janet Lewin, Alpha'Epsilon Phi; Mary Ellen Alt, Alpha Gamma Delta; Margaret Davidson, Alpha Omicron Pi; Olga Gruhzit, Alpha Phi; Charlotte Thompson, Alpha Xi Delta and Ger- aldine McKinley, Chi Omega. Others who will attend are Nancy Worrell, Collegiate Sorosis; Barbara DeFries, Delta Delta Delta; Donna Eckert, Delta Gamma; Doris Arner, Gamma Phi Beta; Mary Pfender, Kappa Alpha Theta; Mary Pate, Kappa Delta; Elizabeth Gram, Kap- pa Kappa Gamma; Fyril Greene, Phi Sigma Sigma; Nancy Stock, Pi Beta Phi, and Ellen Koopman, Zeta Tau Alpha. Miss Ethel McCormick, social direc- tor of the League, will speak at the luncheon. Here's A Spring Fashion Review College English Course Struggle Proves Opener In Radio Career C'k0eddings Sand..,# ngagements Climaxing a whirl of showers and teas, the marriage of Harriet Heath, '37, to Philip McCallum, '39L, took place at 8:30 p.m. yesterday in St. Andrew's Episcopal Church. Palmer Christian played the organ for the ceremony. Following the wedding there was a reception in the Michigan Union ballroom. Mrs. Mc- Callum, who is affiliated with Pi Beta Phi, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Homer L. Heath, of Ann Arbor. During her senior year she was chair- man of the social committee of the League, and a member of Mortar Board. This past semester she has served as secretary to Assistant Dean Walter B. Rea. Mr. McCallum, son of Sen. and Mrs. George P. McCal- lum, is a member of Beta Theta Pi. Mrs. Charles E. Hart, of Ann Ar- bor, announces the engagement of her daughter, Mary Louise Hart, '39Ed., to Harry L. Hallock, '40, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Hallock, of] Royal Oak. By FRANCES MENDELSON Apple-polishing may not be an ap- proved method of getting through college, but for Margery Soenksen, at least, what began as an innocent attempt to get a good mark in an English course, resulted in the birth of a career. "Way back" in Junior college, Miss Soenksen, universally known as Maggy, recalls that she accidentally became enrolled in a very difficult English course. The only way to get an A in this class, she discovered, was to participate in the plays which the professor directed-and partici- pate she did. Maggy was given a leading role at the first tryout. "Since that first play," she is wont to add with a smile and a bit of a flourish, "My life has been devoted to the Drama". Once arrived at Michigan, Maggy becanie an active member of Play Production and the pride of the Speech department. With such a start, and that fact that she was a pretty smart girl on the side, it was not very long before Maggy discov- ered a campus building above whose portals the words "University of Michigan Broadcasting" were en- graved. From that day on, going to see Maggy and going to the broad- casting studio has become practically synonomous. Maggy does not quite know how' it happened that her affections' swerved from the stage toaradio. "It is not that I love the theatre less," she hastened to add, "but that I love radio more." What she thinks prob- ably happened, was that someone, on that first day that she wandered into the studio, was calling for a script and, before she realized it, she had offered to write one. That first script was nothing but a prelude to many more scripts which Maggy has written for any and all kinds of programs. It is not in the least unusual for he to get desperate calls at weird hours of the night for a fifteen minute script to be completely prepared for the next morning's broadcast. Maggy does not sit around waiting for inspira- tion to strike when writing. Given specifications as to the type and length of program, and the number )f characters desired, she will man- ufacture a script to order. In between times, whenever that may be, she directs, acts on, and works the sound effects for various broadcasts, and, just for relaxation, she writes scripts for her own amuse- ment. With all this, Maggy still has time to take care of "her boys" at the broadcasting studio. Paris Styles Now Feature Lighted Heels Florida sunning circles and black- ed-out Paris give us the newest news in pre-spring shoe interest. Three inch "Babylonian wedge heels" are the "onlies" in the former place, while luminous heels for street and evening dress hold the foreground in the latter. Wedges are built solidly, or with geometric excavations through the centers. Colors in stripes, polka dots, and mazes are the startling results of the fantastic workmanship on these new heels. To offset the heavi- ness of this portion of the shoe, the toes are cut out as much as possible. Linen, patent leather, lizard, alliga- tor, and suede are only a few of the materials used in this type shoe. While lights on this side of the Atlantic are still on after dark, lu- minous heels, which serve a util- itarian purpose in Paris, are gather- ing popularity in our own country. In the daylight they look merely translucent, but the dark hours bring out the full effect of their weird originality. A literally shining trail may now be left by the maiden with a taste for this recent oddity in foot gear. Checkerboard alligator is appear- ing as the very durable, practical, and comfortable medium for spring street wear. Most unusual in the new lighter shades of blue, the trim appearance of this leather lends it- self to use in spectator sports shoes and in opera pumps. The "checker- board" is achieved by the combina- tion, in strips, of baby and regular alligator skins. me2ar baie APPLYING FOR A COKE DATE : . . she must be a vivacious coed who knows how to pick her f'weeds . . . wears stun- fing plaids dnd perfect tail- ored jackets with a flare. Snapshot of preference en- closed. Appoint Senior Suipper Head' Mariam Fiukledey Named New Ticket Chairman Mariam Finkleday, '40, has been appointed chairman of tickets for Senior Supper in place df Laya Wainger, '41, Dorothy Shipman, '40, president of the League, announced yesterday. Miss Wainger is a junior instead of a senior. Miss Shipman is general chairman for Senior Supper which will be held Wednesday, March 13, in the League. Senior women will follow tradition again this year and will attend "Hi- Falutin'," the 1940 JGP, after the supper. U I i S and plain. with the cash I Jackets, plaid Flared skirts u & carry pocket. I