THE MICHIGAN DAILY PACIF fif LeagueCouncil PositionsA nnounce At Istalatin nquet Mortarboard, Senior Society Tap Neophytes McCormick Scholarships And Mu Phi Epsilon Award Highlight Yearly Dinner Events This year's publication managers of the 13 League "magazines" re- signed their editorships and handecd out the "press passes" to next year', League Council at the annual Instal- lation banquet held last night in the League Ballroom. Elizabeth Luckham, of Martha Cook Residence, to-ok over the Child Life magazine, otherwise known a. the Vice-President in charge of Or- ientation, and she will be assisted by the transfer Orientation advisor, Mar- garet Ida Gardner, a member of Pi Beta Phi. Betty Bailie, of Kappa Kappa Gamma, will be next year's Vice- President in charge of the Tutorial committee, while Mary Gage andi Louise Keatley, both members of Gamma Phi Beta, were named edi- tors of the Gregg Shorthand maga- zine( secretary) and Fortune maga- zine (treasurer), respectively. League Chairman Told Betty Farriss, of Kappa Alpha Theta, waa named social chairman, Marjorie Polumbaum, a resident of Helen Newberry, will be the next year's merit system chairman, while Virginia Appleton, a member of Pi Beta Phi, will succeed to the Theatre Arts chairmanship. Dance Class chairman will be Betty Johnson of Kappa Alpha Theta, while Jea* Goudy of Delta Delta Delta was named Candy Booth chairman. Senior judiciary members will be Margaret Hulbert of Gamma Phi Beta and Harriet Heames, member of Collegiate Sorosis. Lorraine Judson, resident of Jordan Hall, and Eliza- beth Gram. of Kappa Kappa Gamma, were appointed Junior members of Judiciary Council. Assembly President, Jean Hubbard, of Mosher Hall, Panhellenic Presi- dent, Patricia Hadley, of Alpha Pi, and WAA President Donelda Schai- ble, of Pi Beta Phi, also hold member- ships on the League Council. The new4 League president, Margaret Sanford,F and next year's Judiciary Council chairman, Jane Baits, as announced in last week's Daily, will head the Board in control of Publications forr all of next 'year's League magazines. The winners of the three Ethel Mc- Cormick scholarships are Rosebud; Scott, '42, resident of Betsy Barbour Residence; Elizabeth Walker, '42, of Martha Cook Residence, and Lois Gish, a member of Alpha Delta Pi. The Mu Phi School of Music Schol- arship was presented to Betty Ivan- off, '43SM, of Ann Arbor. Led by Jane Sapp, President, Senior Society tapped the following junior women to membership: Rosebud Named To Posts Of Honor In League Frank Gagen To Swing Out At Fresh Air' Freshman Groups To Entertain With Skit Parade Of Take-Offs; Performances To Be Judged Rhythm and rhyme in the form of smooth, sweet, and sweet-swing tunes, each one introduced by a brief poem, will be featured by Frank Ga- gen and his orchestra, which will play at "Fresh Air," the 1941 Fresh- man Project April 25. ,ickets for the dance will go on sale from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. tomorrow at the League desk. With Gagen will be Shirley DeRose, .soloist, and vocalists Tom Sheridan and Ralph Fisher who play the saxo- phone and trumpet in the band. Roger Cote, drummer, will present, novelty songs in frog voice. Freshman class feature will be the Skit Parade consisting of Michigan take-offs by various freshman group'i on campus. Entering the ballroom in a procession at intermission time, the groups will give two-minute per - formances of their take-off before the judges stand. Prizes of $30, $15 and $5 will go to the houses represented by the three skits judged best. Decorations for the dance will be representative of an airport scene with red, white, and blue awnings over the patrons and orchestra booths and a silver airplane suspended in the center of the ballroom surrounded by clouds. Tickets, which will sell at $1.25, will also be available from all project central committee members. /s Students Make r 4 1HIGH TIME! Sophomores To Be Guests At Coke Bar Two of the biggest of the year's biggest formals were overshadowed this veelkid by the sudden rush of fraternities to satisfy your and my ever- present yen for costume parties. It was mostly pretty rugged stuff and, as Ie always say, there's nothing like flinging oneself about in some good, healthful, rugged exercise. There were six-shooters here and stills (no, not -he camel a-shot kind) -there and fun poppin' all over the place. The Theta Chi boys didn't fail their public; they came through with their annual Bowery Ball (And no matter how you feel about it, Madame Proofreader, don't put an "r" in the "Ball"). The thing was complete from the honest-to-goodness sawdust on the floor (and Heaven save us from ow'honest sawdust!) tb Ellen Rhea's floradora hat with its feather curling from here to there. Among the Boweryites present were Jackie Laird and Leon Coquilette, Claire Reed-Hill and Chuck Dillman, Mary C(raig hughes and Dick Strain, and Kit Carson and Chuck Low The Old West Rides Again.. . The Spirit of the Old West (in a horrible sort of way) was typified by the party at the Beta house the same night. There was a thirty foot ah urn . . . milk bar, a brass rail and even (dare we mention such indeli- . cate objects?) three cuspidors! The high point' " == of the evening, was, so we are told, reached with a royal water pistol fight which went right on to L _include water glasses and water pitchers. One gets soooo cultured at these institutions of higher learning. Annie Stresau and Jim Holland whip- ped the water pistols around with vim and vigor-not at each other, we hope, though. So did Jean Schafer and Lorne Black, Margaret Cobb and Jim Duffie, Margot Thom and Hank Watson, and Pat Stelle and Bob sunl quist. S.A.E. continued the weekend the very next night with- a rousing "Rustlers' Rustle." Daisy Mae costumes and burlap skirts of all types were Sophomores have their turn to be the class specially invited to the Union Coke Bar, which will be held from 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. today, in the small ballroom of the Union. Besides all Sophomore men and women, Phi Psi, Psi Upsilon, and Theta Xi have special invitations. Personal invitations' have been sent to 35 women on campus, and to Jeanne Crump and her staff, on The Daily. Virginia Morse, '43, will be hostess at this week's Coke Bar, which will be the last to be given before/spring vacation. Admission charge for men will be 10 cents, while all women will be considered guests of the Union, and admitted free of charge. There will be a group of specially delegated men waiting at the top of the stairs to escort to the ballroom those women who come to the affair without dates, as they are encouraged to do. LOUISE KEATLEY MARY GAGE More Students Study Sani f During European War Crises I By BARBARA De FRIES Spanish departments in colleges and high schools throughout the na- tion are preparing today for an ex- pected wartime boom in the study of1 the Spanish language. Pointing out the increased pop- ularity of Spanish following Ameri- ca's last two foreign entanglements - the Spanish-American War in 1898 and the first World War - Prof.' Charles P. Wager of the University 1 Romance Language department ex- pressed his belief that, before the ending of the present world conflict, more American students will study' Spanish than at any other one time in the country's education history. The first indication of another] boom came last year when class at-, tendance here jumped from 690 to 911 students, Wagner said, and if the gradual increase which began in 1934 continues at the same rate, enroll-j ment should reach a new maximum next year. Closer To Latin America When normal commercial relations with Europe were cut off during thej last World War, Wagner continued, America was instantaneously drawn. into closer contact with Spanish} America - a condition now being re-< peated.1 "Good Neighbor" statements issued from Washington then, Wagner add- ed, also greatly influenced the gen- tion's schools, he said, were placed in a chaos of unsettlement and be- wilderment by having to cope with more students than could be capably handled. Throughout the country, he said, many incompetent men were installed in the capacity of teachers because of the lack of experienced instructors. Caught unprepared by the sudden change, Wagner went on, the Ro- mance Language department here found themselves confronted by 112,3 students. Fortunately, he continued, satisfactory teachers were obtained and the situation was able to be man- aged. In the next years, enrollment in Spanish classes declined, reaching its minimum of 425 students in 1933, and BLOUSES l I,, i rampant, and gals!-they introduced a motif at this party which I sincerely hope will b7e continued! The men and women' were separated at the door and then the women whipped around all over the place search- ing for their dates a la Sadie Hawkins. Maybe now we'll be able to use that bear trap we've been savin', Cobina! Mary Sellon and Ray Buehler, and Ginny Ward and Bob Burckhalter did their best to get right into the spirit of things. (To tell the truth we didn't know how to end that paragraph, and that was the best we could do at the moment). Formals are More Decorous.. . make your outfit a Trip To Toledo Art Exhibition BLOUSES are more importan aain, increasing in 1934. Prepara- I 1 /[ L l -'L1 'Lto1"' .Ions since then, Wagner said,'have been made along with. and according Spanish Originals Illustrate to, the growth of the Spanish Development Of Painting language. During Last Eight Centuries Departments Now Prepared "If we do have another boom," By JEANNE CRUMP Wagner stressed. "the result to the Spanish painting is now residing inj student will be much more satisfac- Toledo in an American town which is: tory as we are now fully prepared." I the namesake of a Spanish town. He pointed out that Spanish libraries Appropriately enough, it has in its have been enriched, advanced courses Museum of Arts the works of such introduced. and many experienced in- masters as Velazquez, El Greco and structors, capable of teaching both Murillo, and they may be seen at no French and Spanish, on hand. charge. Prof. Wagner feels that if the' Taking advantage of such an op- Western Hemisphere should be iso- portunity, the Fine Arts and Spanish lated for a number of years from close departments combined forces Satur- A slightly more decorous note was strugk by the Chi Omegas and the Alpha Delts with their formals, both on Saturday e0 ning. Jean Linsay and Keats Vining, Ginny Brereton and Bill Chamberlain, "Speedo" Swift and Bill Lapworth, and Ginny Frey danced at the Chi 0 house, and Ginny Young and Dick Winter, Phyllis Sheehy and Russ Had- ley, Lucy Barnwell and Jim Skinner, Olga Gruhzit and Bill Beebe, Patty -Palmer and Dick Sturges, Nancy Avary and Jim Watson and Jean Knappen and Jim Watson did the same at the house on State Street. As for Slide Rule and Crease Ball-well, of course, they, too, functioned jFriday night, it is reported. The most outstanding thing about either of them, we think, is the fact that Cab Calloway, at Slide Rule actually played some sweet music, as he promised, and Belle Barton and Jack Cooney, Eleanor Maliche and Tom Kokler, and Jane Luxan and Bill McKay reported that it was l)len-ty good too! Well, that's the weekend, kids. See ya'. Lt than ever this Spring. Wear them with suits, skirts, and jer- kins. They may be had in both dressy and sport styles. All fab- rics and colors, including the very important white. WI da eia± puuiw WiIIrcII suaUnry 1 eY contact with Europe, North and day and chartered two buses to make aware of the importance of Spanish. South America will be more and the trip. They were shown through of According to Wagner, reaction of more dependent on each other and galleries of originals that illustrated ch the country in 1920 due to these pat- 'there will be many ways in which the development of the art of Spain coo riotic and economic conditions was yunfrom 12th century Romanesque fres- bu ritcanfcnmi odtin 1a young Americans who know Spanish c to the magnificent oils of the last the reflected in the introduction of Span- will findt practical use for the lang-co h ish in thousands of schools through- uage two centuries. fr out the land, with 40,000 students in aFurthermore, he is sure that more Works Efplained br New York alone studying the lang- Expertly explaining the various ac uagee students, convinced of the importance orks to the University groups Was wh Needed More Teachers Spash, ill pusue te guage Jose Gudiol, the very person who I beyond its elementary courses, for oi'ganized the exhibition . He is a tu Scott, Marjorie Polumbaum, Marg- aret Sanford, Jean Hubbard, Rhoda Leshine, Doris Cuthbert, Dorothy Anderson, Mildred Curtis, Emilie Root, Betty Walker, Elizabeth Luck- ham, Jean Krise, Pearl Brown, Don- na Baish, Mary Virginia 'Mitchell. Mortarboard Taps, Too New Mortarboard members, tap- ped last night, are Miss Scott, Miss Curtis, Miss Polumbaum, Miss San'- ford, June Baits, Harriet Heames, Veitch Purdom, Elaine Fisher, Fran- ces Aaronson, Shirley Silver, Grace Miller, Phyllis Waters, Miss Walker, Louise Keatley, Mary Gage, Phyllis Lovejoy, Virginia Frey, Virginia Ap- pleton, Virginia Drury, and Gertrude Andresen. In the Senior class, Virginia Os- good, of Kappa Kappa Gamma, won the distinction of having earned the most League points. In the Junior Class, Frances Aaronson, of Alpha Epsilon Phi, won the honor, and Barbara De Fries, of Delta Delta Del- ta, was the winner in the sophomore' class. - Freshmen orientation advisors were announced as follows: Doris Allen,] '42; Betty Altman, '42; Elaine Barth, '43; Suzanne Bentley, '42; Margaret Brown, '43; Joanne Bouchard, '42; Virginia Capron, '43; Joanne Clem- ent, '43A; Jane Connell, '42; Marga- ret Collins, '43; Jean Coffelt, '43; Jeanne Cordell, '43; Mary DeMong, '42; Gloria Donen, '43; Mary Louise Ewing, '43; Mary Gage, '42; Con- stance Gilbertson, '43SM; Nancy Gould, '42; Janet Grace, '42, and Bet- ty Griswold, '43. New Members Named Other members of this staff include' Alice Haas, '42; Elnice Hoffer, '43; Gertrude Inwood, '43; Doris Jones '42; Lorraine Judson, '43; Dorothy It'sReally Funto SLENDERIZE The Eaiy MacLEVY Way yr Lose 2 to 3 inches in'only 10 visits. No starvation diets no strenuous exercise. You lose while relaxing. Me. Spanish departments of the na- its broadly cultural aspects. Johnson, '43; Betty Krall, '43; Mary Virginia Mitchell, '42; Viola Modlin, Clark McClella n's '42; Marjorie Mahon, '43; Jean Man- Orchestra To Play waring, '42; Patricia MacFarland, '42; Martha Poe, '43; Virginia Paterson, For All-Dorm Dance '42; Grace Procter, '43; Mary Pfender, Clark McClellan's orchestra has '43; Merry Pate, '43; Eleanor Rake- been selected to play for the All- straw, '43; Shirley Risburg, '42Ed; Dormitory spring formal to be held Jane Rosing, '42; Mildred Radford, May 3, William Steen, '43, publicity '42; Marjorie Storiaan, '43; Mary chairman, announced yesterday., spaniard who is now teaching in the University of Toledo, and before the revolution was architect of the Mu- seum of Barcelona and director of the Museum. of Vich. Because of these positions, he was given the' charge of saving the national art treasures during the Spanish war,' and brought the masterpieces to Geneva in the summer of 1939. The showing there brought thousands of tourists to Switzerland. It was in that same year that Mr. Gudiol came to America, and last year he was with the Institute of Fine Arts of New York University. He wrote the large illustrated cata- logue that is being used in connec- tion with the Toledo exhibit, and tw mt sh ch va pa S: cll Si: 16 th so ly th wI fii th th ll continue this show until Sun- y, April 27. Frescos Are Presented Early Spanish frescos are effective- presented in the reconstruction a part of a tiny 13th century apel. One enters a small dark om with high vaults that has been ilt within the museum to show' e fantastically shaped and colored escos of the lower wall that were ought from Spain. They were tually found in such a chapel hich is 701 years old. Interesting are a series of six pic- res by Gaya that show a fight be- een the bandit Margato and the onk purser, Fray Pedro. It fore- adows the modern movie, even to anging the angle of each pitture to ry backgrounds. One of he 'many intings by Velasquez of the little anish princess, Margaret, are in- uded here as is his magnificent St. mon which he did when he was years of age. El Greco was the transition to e Renaissance, and his entirely per- nal forms and colors are adequate- displayed. It was one of his works, e detail of Christ with the Cross, hich was in a place of honor in the rst gallery, having been placed ere because it was voted picture of e week. I W ittStrenaous LOGE 2 TO "INCBES IN VISITS Mechanica land Swedaih Massage Vapo~r Cabinets. Mild Exercise Capor Write for FREE Fri0 "ish.~ SLENDERIZING STUDIO 725 N. University Dial 5126 Featuring the Famous MacLevy System ot Slenderizing Read The Daily Classifieds $1.00 anti up 345 MAYNARD STREET f Qd . 4( 'lk I Trelfa, '42; Anna Jean Williams, '42; Joanne Woodward, '43; Margaret' Wright, '42, and Margaret Wiseman, '42. The following women will be trans- fer orientation advisors: Frances Aarcnson, '42; Sue Barlow, '42; Char- lie Boyd. '43; Dorothy Brooks, '42; Barbara Burns, '43; Cleo Jean Covert, '42Ed; Meta Criswell, '43; Jeanne Crump, '42; Mary Jane Denison, '42; Nancy Drew, '42; Lois Gish, '42; Rosamond Griggs, '42; Harriet [eames, '42; Victoria Henry, '43; Janet Hiatt, '42; Marie Holmes, '42: Barbara Jenswold, '43; Marcia Karn.1 '42; Betty Kefgen, '43A; Marailyn MacRitchie, '43; Mercedes Matthews. '42; Jean Mieras, '43; Grace Miller, '42: Jean Mullins, '42; Betty Sachs, '43Ed: Elinor Searls, '42; Jean Sollitt. '42; Marjorie Taylor, '42A; Marjorie Teller, '43: Grace Volkman, '42; Ann Wint ers, 42; Virginia Young, '43. and Jane Zimmerman, '42. Incidentally, Steen revealed, a name for the dance ha's been decided upon. The name selected was 'Spring Dormal." The dance will be held in the grand ballroom of the League. The committee for the dance in- ludes Bob Kemp, '43E, general chair- man; Orrie Barr, and Norman Schwartz, '44, ticket co-chairmen; Norman Taylor, '42E, chaperon chair- man; Bob Shelley, '44Spec, decora- tions chairman. ( - - ---, I _ AIMING AT A CAREER? Em- ployers pick college girls with Gibbs secretarial training for inipcrtant positions. Send for catalog describing the Special Course for College Women. 1 Smnart G".is Angle on EASTER A complete Spring wardrobe for going home . . . a softly tai- lored coat, a "good" little suit and as for dresses - a gay print and a white-lathered navy. Reg- ular and half sizes. Juniors, too. COATS . . . .$16.95-$39.95 SUITS . . . . $10.95-$39.95 DRESSES . .. . . $6.50-$29.95 by* "PIIN 1K IPAREIFY1t Perfect for Easter Giving 77 AI ARN I L-Li Ar A 0P 'rit FRESH as an April morning, Lentheric's delicate "Pink Party" scent. Choose it in toiletries and' make-up packaged in pale pink . . . perfect for Easter giving. Talc... 50c. Lipstick ... 75c. 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