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April 02, 1941 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1941-04-02

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

()ktCdoi"r

$EDNESDAY, APRIL 2, 1941-

TH E M I C H I G-A N DAILY

Gagan s
Benefit Dance
Will Be Held

Orchestra

To

Play

For

nternational Ball, April 26

Il

n The League.

Proceeds Of Dance To Be Given
To Foreign Student Group;
Famous Band To Be Featured
Frank Gagan, nationally known
band leader of smooth and sweet
tunes will play for the formal Inter-
national Ball to be given April 26 in
the League Ballroom, Primitiva De-
mandante, Grad., chairman of the
dance, announced.
His melodic music will be heard at
the first International Ball planned
by foreign students on campus. The
dance is planned as a benefit for the
International Center.
Gagan's orchestra has just con-
cluded a 16-week engagement at the
Statler in Chicago. Before this en-
gagement he played at Bordewick's in
Westchester County, N.Y.
Locally the orchestra was well-
known because of its engagement at
the Hotel Statler in Detroit last sum-
mer and its broadcasts over the Mu-
tual Broadcasting System.I
Appearing with the orchestra will
be Shirley De Rose who comes orig-
inally from Detroit. She joined the
band after she sang at one of the!
proms at Loretta College in Phila-
delphia.I
Other feature artists appearing with
the band include'Tom Sheridan, Irishr
saxophonist; Ralph Fisher, trumpet-
er, and Roger Cote, novelty drum-
mer.t
These artists have become known r
to audiences throughout the country
~after their apearance at the Carlton
Hotel of Washington, D.C., and at
President Roosevelt's GoldaPlate
Breakfast, and from their coast-to-t
coast programs over NBC and CBS. t
The dance will be held in order toc
raise funds for the International
Center, the student center, for stu-
dents from other countries. Headed
by Miss Demandante, the committeesl
of more than 50 foreign. st.udents are
participating in the project.'

Capes Featured With Spr in
<Siv
/ 'l' ii
ql
- aa

9
.S

Suits

'League Press'
Patrons List.
Is Announced
All Campus Installation Dinner
To Be Held Monday At League;

Now that March has caught up
with April, most people are catching
colds. Our cold-catchers, not con-
tent with one obstacle-the weather,
have been cornering all dissipated

coughing, moaning and sniffing an
inhaler through Geography lecture,
hesitantly admitted putting down the
fop of her convertible last Sunday.
(Aha, a local girl. For a nominal

Hot Lemonade, Tea And Pepper
Will Shake Those Spring Colds

I New Positions Will Be Named victimt who dare to sneeze in class fee The Daily will disclose her name).
in order to find out the cause, and Doctor says, "stay inside," but that
Ladies and Gentlemen of the Press effect, what they're doing about it, indepedent youngster merely bundles
for a night will be Pres. and Mrs. and what can be done in the future up in a woolen scarf and takes a nice
Ruthven, Vice.president and Mrs. to prevent colds. long walk to outdistance her cold
One young lady armed with a box bugs.
of kleenex, regretfully remembered An Alpha Delt proudly stated that
ty men and women who will act as forgetting to take her vitamin pills the only colds he ever gets are from
patrons and patronesses for the one day and low and behold the next other people. Hummm-could be. He
"League Press," the all-campus In- day found her flat on her back sur- says hot tea plus a dash of something
staflation Banquet to be held at 6 rounded by lemon juice and soda, Ma- to make it even hotter and minus the
p.m. Monday in the League. ma's own remedy. sugar can't be beat.
Included on the list are Dean Alice A naive Miss turned sophisticated, health Service Offers Aid
C. Lloyd, Dean Joseph A. Bursley, wore a backless evening gown to Cap- Desperately fighting a sinus attack,
Mrs. Byrl F. Bacher, Miss Jeannette italists' Ball and what with the hot one student informed us that ultra-
Perry, Dean and Mrs. Walter B. music and constant cooling off be- violet ray via the Health Service
Rea, Dean and Mrs. Erick A. Walter, tween numbers she can't decide would do the trick, while a premature
Registrar and Mrs. Ira M. Smith and whether it was worth it or not. She jhay-fever victim merely grunted mis-
Dr. Margaret Bell. carries a pepper shaker around with erably,
The list concludes with Prof. and her and when the opportunity arises, Then too, there are those many in-
Mrs. John W. Reigel, Miss Ethel A. she slips into a vacant class room and dividuals who don't live right and
McCormick, Miss Marie Hartwig, Mrs. goes into a sneezing fit. This drives who annually succumb to the season's
Irene Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. D. C.,} out the cold bugs, she says. worst colds. Well, it serves them right,
May, Mrs. Ruth Richardson, and Boots Are For Rain so why bother with them?
K dnap'Mrs. William Walz. Then there are those quaint in- Having satisfactorily completed
i Theme of the dinner will be the dividuals who plod around in Glum- their mission, our cold-catchers snap
g L f League Press which will be carried sy rubber boots on dry days and their notebooks shut and glance over
--- grams which will have listed in them slushy days. to perfect health. It's a tough task,
ds, the two South all the class projects of the graduat- Now wet feet as a fore-runner to but they must begin immediately to
who, while back- ing senior class. Members of the re- the bugaboo must be dealt with wipe out the weather, BMOC's, back-
o visit them when tiring League and Judiciary Councils quickly. Of course, you can always less evening dresses, rainy days, con-
,mbia. Miss Max- will be named as publishers of var, dry them briskly, and let it go at that, vertibles, pessimistic people and peo-
raciously. ious magazines, while Lee Hardy, '41, but best you hop in bed. Mix "some- ple in general.
ng Miss Maxwell. President of the League and general thing hot" and lemon juice, swallow --
yed talking about chairman of the dinner will be head it scalding and proceed to sweat 'til Informal Gathering
nds." A very few !of the publishing company. An- all your pores complain. If you still
ady Mendl, Irene nouncement will be made at the din- get a cold-try something else, Fetes Elsa Maxwell
Churchill to you, ner of League officers for next year Another afflicted person, after,

'Rowdy' Harvard Men
Elsa Maxwell Into Colie

C s.

Education Party
Will Be Held .
At WAB Today
Juniors, seniors and faculty mem-k
bers of the School of Education and1
their wives will be the guests of the1
Student Faculty Relations Commit-
tee of that school at an informal
party to be held from 8 p.m. to 10
p.m. today in the Women's Athletic1
Building.1
Over 100 people are expected toi
be there, according to June Fink-
beiner, '41Ed, chairman of the com-
mittee. These calculations have been
made, she explained, on the basis of{
the attendance at the first informalI
"get-together," which was held ona
March 10. About 80 seniors and fac- .
ulty members attended the initiall
party, held for only seniors and
faculty, anc6 since "everyone had so
much fun then, it was decided to1
invite the juniors to the next one."
Included in the evening's enter-t
tainment are bridge, games andS
square dancing, but if the schedule
of the first party is any indication,
"it will be mostly square dancing."
The Ivan\Parker family will call for
the square dancing. For those not
dancing, bridge, ping-pong and other
games will be provided.
Senior members of the committee
include Maida Cohen, Helen Piele-
meier, Sally Corcoran, Harry .Erick-
son, Mary Jean O'Donnell, Charlotte
Frazee, Irene Johnson, Hercules Ren-
president of the senior class, Laura
Katzenel, treasurer, and Miss Fink-
beiner.

By FRANCES MENDELSON
A kidnap attempt by a gang of
rowdy Harvard men was Elsa Max-
well's first introduction to the col-
lege cfowd of America. She outwitted
them long enough to present a sur-
realistic fashion show under the
auspices of the "Lampoon." . "No,"
said Miss Maxwell, "I was not one
of the models."
Since then, Miss Maxwell has been
the guest of college dances all over
the country. She thinks college stu-
dents like everyone else, apparently,
are "perfectly charming." And the
average Michigan woman, she said,
is pretty, extremely well-dressed, and
less "typed" than the women she has
seen on other campuses. (Ed. note:
So there!) As a concrete example,
she gave Mrs. Byron Foy, a Michigan
woman who is considered one of the
10 "best-dressed" in America.
Ruthven Has Sense Of Humor
One of the nicest things she dis-
covered in Ann Arbor, Miss Maxwell
saidl, was that a college president
could' have a sense of humor. Presi-
dent Ruthven admitted that this was
probably because he, too, had been
born in a small town in Iowa. The
place of his birth, however, was not
in an opera box during a perform-
ance of "Mignon," as Miss Maxwell's
was.
While signing autographs, and be-
tween thanking those who came
backstage for being such a "charm-
ing" audience (Miss Maxwell is the
gracious hostess even in her dressing,
room) she stopped every minute or
so to ask how her voice sounded,
could we hear everything she said,
didn't we think her movie was hu-
morous, etc., etc. Elsa Maxwell is
probably Elsa Maxwell's best pub-
licity agent.
Will Visit South America
After leaving Ann Arbor, Miss
Maxwell will go to New York for a
"rest." She plans, early next fall, to
take a trip through South America,
visiting her many friends there. Add

Chapter House,
Activity Notes'

to her list of friend
American students
stage, invited her t
she comes to 'Color
well accepted - g]
Next to discussi
Miss Maxwell enjoy
"her very dear frie
of these include L
Dunne, Winston (
upstart), and theI
If tone of voice is,
was not overly fon
of Windsor.
When asked wh
Jimmie Stewails v
into the army, M7
"It was really tooc
don't you think?"

Duke of Windsor.,
any criterion, she
d of the Duchess
at she though of
olunt ary entrauce
iss Maxwe fsaid
charming of him, '

as well as winners of four scholar-
ships.
Tickets for the dinner will be avail-
able in the Undergraduate Office of
the League from 3 p.m. to 5:45 p.m.
today, tomorrow and Friday. Tick-
ets will sell for 70 cents and may
be purchased in block lots for dormi-
tory and sorority groups.s
Crease Ball Tickets
Are Now Being Sold
In Law Quadrangle

Tickets for Crease Ball are now on
sale in any one of the quadrangles
of the Lawyers' Club. The dance,
Two fraternities announce recent which is open only to the jurists, will
pledgings of their respective houses be held April 4.
and one initiation has been revealed. Everett Hoagland and his "Music
Theta Chi announced yesterday Designed for Dancing" band will be
featured at the ball. His sweet styles
the pledging of Merritt A. Biglow, .r., have made him one of the most fam-

Rabbit Society
To Be Guests
At Bunny Hop
According to Dick Scherling, '42,
chairman of the Bunny Hop, to be
held from 9 p.m. to midnight Satur-
day in the Union Ballroom, there is
only one organized group on campus
that is devoted specifically to the pro-
motion of the Easter spirit all year
round.
This is Kappa Alpha Theta's Wab-
bit Sowowity, headed by president
Mary Eleanor Brown, '43, who will re-
ceive a special invitation to the Bun-
ny Hop along with her gang of seven
pink-nosed bunnies.
Guests of honor at the Hop may
be picked out by their pins, but there
are other vays to decide which are,
the elect and which are not. They
have a secret grip, talk a sort of
wabbit vernacular, and are past mas-
ters of the wabbit punch.
The Bunny Hop is the last fling for
the campus before Spring Vacation,
and is given by the Union to the
campus, as its traditional Easter
party.

Elsa Maxwell was entertained as
the guest of honor at an informal
gathering after her lecture last night
at the Gamma Phi Beta House.
Pres. and Mrs. Ruthven, Dean Al-
icc Lloyd, Mr. and Mrs. Cress, and
presidents of all houses on campus
were invited to attend the gath-
ering. Mrs. Earl F. Wolaver, chair-
man of the Cofhmittee in charge of
bringing Miss Maxwell to Ann Ar-
Bor; Jane Grove, president of
the Women's Athletic ,Association,I
and Mrs. Edward L. Adams, presi-
dent of the Ann Arbor Gamma Phi
Beta alumnae, were also asked to at-
tend.

GLAMOUR LEGS FOR Cad4

. I

''44E, of Tulsa; Donald Boor, '44, of
Dearborn; George Ceithaml, '43, of
Chicago; John L. Crow, '44, of St.
Joseph; William Hawes, '44, of Deer-'
field, Ill.; Bradford John, '43E, of
Ann Arbor; Clifford A. Kurtz, jr.,
'43, o-f South Haven and Harold C.
Lockard, '43Ed., of Canton.
Trigon announces the pledging ofM
George Hoover, '44E, of Detroit;
Theodore Tent-Koop, '44E, of Ann
Arbor, and Richard Peltier, '43, of
Mount Clemens, and the initiation
of James Bazley, '44; Samuel East-
man, '44E; Donald Howell, '44E:
Karl Reed, '44, and William Thomp-
son, '44.

ous of the young band leaders in the
country.
The League Ballroom will be dec-
orated in the theme of higher learn-
ing. Shelves of books 12 feet high will
be placed at either end of the Ball-
room. A legal caricature, including
coif, and representing the spirit of
the Crease Court in all its joviality
will be behind the band in the cen-
ter of one shelf.

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