THE MICHIGAN DAILY i I FAUX FVf: PAG~E I'IVF~ harmacists To Hold Mortar n estle May t eague } # ---- Formal Ball To Have Music By Max Gail Orchestra Leader Is Originator Of League Weekend Dances; Jeanne Carroll To Be Featured Pharmacists will have their an- nual Apothecary Ball from 9 p.n. to 1 a.m. Friday, May 2, in the ball- room of the League. Returning to the Michigan campus to play for the Mortar and Pestle Ball will be Max Gail, who was glad- uated from Michigan in 1934 Gail was the originator of the regular week-end dances that were formerly held at the League. Band Played In Detroit Gail and his orchestra have been playing at the Detroit Yacht Club for the past three and a half years. Gail has played for several JGP's that were put on while he was here. Jeanne Carroll, young songstress, will provide the vocal accompaniment. Smooth sweet music is the chief feature of Gail's style, which has a good seasoning of versatility. Gail is also the originator of his "minia- ture piano" numbers. He has his own special sized piano, on which he per- forms his solos with an orchestrated background. . Arenson heads Committee General chairman for the Ball is Sydney Aronson, '42P. Committee- men under him are Tilden Betchel- der, '42P, who is in charge of tickets, David Ott; '41P, decoration, co-chair- man with David Meier, '42P, and Dave Schlisting, "41P. Marjorie Kern, '41P, is in charge of patrons, and Arthur Pugh, '42P, is chairman of programs. favors chair- man is Arthur Pugh, '42P, while John Grege, '41P, is in charge of the orchestra. Ticets are on sale now, and can be obtained from any committee members. All Countries Will At First Interne By RHODA LESHINE ; An authorized dating bureau has at 1 last arrived on the Michigan campus. but for one dance only - the Inter- national Ball to be held April 26 in1 the League Ballroom. This first formal ball ever to be given at Michigan by foreign students will defy events -abroad by bringing together all nationalities represented on campus. And to insure that all students who wish to attend the cos- mopolitan affair will have guests tol accompany them, Mrs. Ruth L.J Wendt, foreign language counselor,, is arranging dates for those desiring them. Language Groups Diverse T Will Return May 2 MAX GAIL Alumnae Groups Plan Vacation Entertainment| For Campus Women Three Michigan alumnae groups have announced holiday plans to en- tertain undergraduate women home for the Easter vacation. Two Buffalo, New York, groups' have invited all Buffalo women nowt on campus to be guests at a luncheon on April 16,.at Tuyn's on North Street. Assisting as hostesses will be four recent graduates who are active in the alumnae organization: Frances Bonisteel Fisher, '40, Frances Robin- son Whiting, '39, Jean King Mertens, '39, and Mary Loughborough Shower, '39. The Chicago alumnae have invited all Chicago undergraduates at Mich- I igan to their regular April meeting and luncheon which will take place April 15, at the Chicago Women's Club, on East 11th Street. Lillian Gish, now playing in Chicago inI "Life With Father," will be the guest Twenty Skits Dr. Hann's Bird List Is Qrowing To Be Feature As Spring Comes To Ann Arbor O f i By MARGARET AVERY r;oing northwest. According to Dr. From the tufted titmouse to the Hann, however, swans have appeared Tickets Are On Sale This Week Great Blue heron, Dr. Harry Hann frequently and in greater numberst At League; Decorative Theme has them listed. in Michigan in recent years. Wil Create Aeronautical Mood 62 species of birds have returned The bird lists are not by any or remained in the vicinity of Ann means comhplete. After vacation they Twenty college caricatures - not Arbor since January 1, their presence will grow rapidly as the ornithology in pen and ink but in real life - will personally ascertained by the profes- class begins longer field trs in place { i of the present Saturday lectured and be the amusement features to "take- sor of Ornithology and his laboratory short expeditions. At six o'clock on off" from the Fresh Airport of the assistant, John George, Grad. Day by the morning after their Friday night annual Freshman Project to be held day Hann adds to his list, which is dates they will roll away from cam- from 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, nearly as long and varied as that pus in a University Storehouse truck, April 25, in the League ballroom. maintained by his ornithology class bound for such wild life resorts as Tickets to the "Fresh Air" dance Whitmoe Lake, Independence Lake, and the Skit Parade which will make with the help of 23 pairs of eyes. and Base Lake, to observe until noon. up the floor show will be on sale Their score is 69 different species Arboretum Is Classroom from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. this week in the since the beginning of the second se- The Ann Arbor Arboretum is a League. inester, fast mounting with spring convenient place to study small mi- Inclaided in the take-offs on Michi- weather, grant land birds, especially the warb- .an life will be skits on the Health bsyers. But for the water birds common ,ne'eRobin Appears Janutary 5 otireonD.Han rdhis Service, publications, rushing, fresh- o thisregion, Dr. Hann and h man health exams, and dormitory The Robin qualified himself for ornithology class will tramp the bull sessions and others up to the the position of Daily weather prophet hores of the neighboiiing lakes. grand total of 20 two-minute perfor- by appearing on Dr. Hann's chart By the end of the semester this mances which will be held during the I January 5. "A more accurate guage dear's class will probably have a manseofwspringi"lsuggesteddDr.ng thn' intermission of the dance. of spring," suggested Dr. Hann, list equal to that of 181 different "would be the return of the red-pce eonzd n eoddb The League ballroom will be dec- winged blackbird." hpecies recognized and recorded by crated to represent an airport scene last year's ornithology class. with striped awnings ovr the band This year, for instance, he identi- i patons booths and a silver air- fied one March 20. Or according to iUane suspended from the center of this year's chart the Bronzed Grackle" Installation Services he room. The Parade will proceed is even more pecise, putting in his To Be Held By WAA icross the ballroom for performances appearance with the calendar's ver- -. it ndiidit of spring. But what the Grackle Y itsmaindividualtiunitsvibeforer he Judges stand. The three skits judged gains over the Robin in accuracy he Formal installation services for the loses to him in unpoetic connotation new Women's Athletic Association ..he best will receive prizes of $30, of him more common name, Black-Borwilbheda5pm.tayn $15, and $5 to go to the houses repre- bird. the Women's Athletic Association. rented by the groups. An impressive yield of water fowl Members, of theI executive board Frank Gagen and his orchestra will was added to Dr. Hann's list following for 1941-42, and all sports chairmen play for the dance assisted by fourW a vst to the moutl of the Detroit who will make up the incoming board featured vocalists. Tickets are selling River late in March. "The ducks and will attend the ceremony. geese hover around there," he ex- plained, "until the ice on the inland _ *~ lakes thaws." Bracelet-Necklace Is Smart And New The new bracelet-necklace com- bination serves double duty at ma- demoiselle's neck or wrist through the use of a detachable chain. The combination forms a full- length necklace when complete. With the chain detached, the remaining p~ortion becomes a neat bracelet. Initiates Announced, Phi Rho Sigma announces the ini- tiation of Robert A. Borden, '44M; Robert S. Bowden, 144M; John E. Burnett, Jr., '44M; John H. Cahal- ane, '42; William D. Cheney, '44M; Hugh K. Cook, '44M, and Alfred S. Gardinerm, '44M. Dr. Stuart :Wil- son, '07, was the speaker at the ini- tiation banquet, which followed the ceremony. A Free Garment Storage in Ann Arbor's ONLRefrigera tedVAULT. A small. ciarge to insure your clothes at your own valuation is payable next winter. All Fur Coats, (blankets, and Winter Woolens are protect- ed against.. . i! Moths. 4.0 Fi re. .Theft at Greene's 516 E. Liberty Dial 23-23-1 i --- Sn onseOn 'Systm Vie Swans Visit Ann Arbor But the real thrill of bird listing comes with the unexpected appear- once of rarer species, or unusual num- bers, such as the flock of 85 swans which flew over Ann Arbor April 2, of honor and honor speaker. t\w/itk I1 rom ni mcn I'Be Re rs ne-~___ __ - lB 9 p se Th gthe work. Multiplying the two, by The Michigan Man and his coed calculus, plane geometry, and alge- companipn wear the same jackets; Lbra 1 gives the result: Johnnie's ac- r~~tional Center ~ they both vie for honor societies; theycmpihesfoteyar t do at enter BallIstrive" for male an emal'e: campus complishments for the year. -------tiefor ee andy; femlen campust As a counter-part to the popular ___ __ - --..~ position respectively; the men jeer at phrase describing a Michigan wo- the League point system, but the wo- sh acquaint American students with men may now leer back.'man's earnest efforts to crack the their friends from other countries. League service awards, a new phrase Proceeds from the Ball will be do- The Union Point System has has been construed, "Running after Proeds otheInBaltinledo- been tracked down to a darkened cor- Union Points." This small epithet nated to the International. Cen- ner of the Union Student Offices, describes a freshman in checked tgrn teg heauatens oaich i-s ated where a red, green and blue color trousers leaping up the Union steps gan foreign students which is located scheme, to match the office furni- three at a time. in a suite of rooms in the Union. I ture, graphically. records the time The secret is out at last. The Ticket Sales Continue diligently spent by young hopefuls men must confess. They, too, have Tickets for this International Ball rounding out men's activties- a Point system. They admit that are on sale in the Center and at the The Union system is more compli- such a system is essential in the main desks of the League and the I cated than that of the league. The workings of a large organization in Union. Primitiva Demandante, Grad., blue line signifies the number of which the higher positions are award- if the Philippines, is chairman of the hours spent, the red the quality of ed upon merit. :1=nt and is bei an, assisted by Kath- __- Crs cr 77 3rine Balint, Grad., of Hungary, Ka- ;im Ogel, Grad., of Turkey, Cheng Tseng, Grad., of China and Doris Nasholt, '41, representing the United L "Many students from abroad have nct yet learned English well enough to converse easily and so prefer dates that are able to speak a foreign lang-; uage fluently," said Mrs. Wendt. This has. proved to be helpful to those language majors who have benefited by acquaintance with students speak- ina their foreign mother tongues, she added. The Ball will be an attempt to ce- ment American and foreign coopera- tion in student affairs as well as being a social gathering, commented Mrs. Wendt. She also pointed out that the dance committee has made thef Ball open for participation by thel entire campus in their endeavor to -Itates. Ohers working on the committee n arranging the dance are Henry -aldera-Pallais, Grad., of Nicaragua, Jack . Tsu, '41E, of China, Pratap Chand, '42, of India, Ismail Khaldi. Grad., of Palestine, and Ubel Guavan- syen, Grad. Skits To Be Chosen The Freshmen Project Parade Committee has announced that it will continue auditions for the "Fresh Air" dance, today. Time and place of these auditions may be found in the D.O.B. / [ . :: : . ry. , "' . J Jn ti" :. . - Ev. < : . .r , ' ;' , r / <+ /r r/ rS w r.; : I :~t r/ r Regular 3 CASUALS r , Drama for your Easter costume. Any one of this new group of hats. Every one with a wide, wide brim that's such a fiattering frame for a pretty face. Poke bonnet types, off-the-face styles, sailors. Navy or black felt. ':: :i 1.G ' ":.3:.: " . .":. b :.A a.::"::"::::::.:,"::.":::: :'k' .; ' :': ? y., , : ' :. =:r ...f >}:. ;:: >: , ; Yii j _ yY ' .... .Q. "r{.f .. ' , acs :;: : : j" / vppp - U S s, , Spring's first crop of crisp cottons in luscious pastel shades, made dainty by lace trim, ric-rac braid, and bands of contrasting pastel colors. You'l I love the new baby pinks, blues, aquas, and browns. $4.95 and $6.95 T N / '# x' : ' " ALL WHITE!I BLUE and WHITE! " BROWN and WHITE!I SADDLE TANI * BLACK and WHITE! * LEATHER HEEL and SOLEI This is the shoe "born American" for Americans! Casual! Swagger! Sturdy! At home everywhere! II I