Y, JUNE 25, 1940 THE M1 ICI AN DAILY "J2 OPAGE FIVE .. of cabbages and kings ... Heave -Ho For Barton In Sailor Suit r . Weekend Brings Three Weddings Of Interest In University Circles So Ann Arbor should just die on its feet when its usual gay, noisy children have left for sunny climes and vacation spots? Not at all, not by a long shot. For instance several lads and lassies-namely Dru Handy with Julian Kilman and Charles Clarke with Charlotte Noble were having a high old time at a downtown tavern last weekend, as Bob Straub dropped by for a minute of gabbing. And who were those familiar face,# we saw at a nearby amusement park?- oh, yes!-Betsy Gregg with Jim Wood- ruff, Dave Easlick and Peggy Whitker, Edith Walph with Jim Norris and last, but not least,. Connie Lorch and Ted Treadway. Said chillun were whooping it up in great style-fast is the roller coaster fascinated Edith-and she stayed with it six times straight. Seen milling around the registrar's desk with very perplexed expressions were several Ann Arbor gals who spent their freshman year at eastern and southerI junior colleges. Penny Shaw went to Ward Belmont this year and will return there in the fall after taking several courses on campus this summer. Ann Evarts, who spent this year at Sullins College, plans to stay here for the rest of her college days. Then there is Jean Moehlman, a Stevens gal who is greatly interested in ceramics-pottery to you. Marge Killins was at National Park College in Washington, D. C., no less, and will be seen batting around our good ole stamping ground from now on. Soaking In Culture . . , / i Mary Jordan and Peggy Weismer were soaking in a little culture Sunday afternoon listening to symphonic records in the League, as they rested their little bones in an easy chair or two. The summer social season was ushered in with a whoop and a holler Saturday night at the first League dance. The congestion was terrific as all the students in town jammed the ballroom. There were so many stags, hear tell, that the hostesses couldn't get in more than a step or two with each partner. Ah for the good old sing line. Same was composed mostly of engineers and law- yers, too-so there! Bustling around with "Official" tags pinned to their chests were a bevy of energetic little femmes. Marion Conde, who occupies the position of secretary of the Summer League Council, was there in fine fettle. An- otherrrepresentative of that august body was Barbara DeFries, publicity chairman of the same. DeRhuia Skinner, Ann Vedder, Betty Brackett and Nancy Warner were flying from one stag to another. Introducing The Stags . . Joan Clement was doing a bit of introducing, as stags Al Watson, Gil Walker, Roger Pryor ..- and Don Nixon hung on every word. Pat Stearns was seen dancing with Bob Engels, and Jack Harwood and Francis Faust did a bit of wan- dering around. Frances Griffin, Roberta Fer- guson, Phila Karr and Jane Cary Fristoe assisted in the job of hostessing like veterans. What with intermediate dancing classes, beginning dancing classes and square-dancing classes, the campus ought to be pretty nifty on its collective feet 'ere August rolls around. Sandwiched in between these terp- sichorean activities will be a bit of duplicate bridge, Play Production, canoe- ing, golf, b--ring and general raising Cain to occupy the summer student- then they'll have to come back in the fall to get through! Jean E. Bonisteel Marires WilliaiiiC arl Knecht; Dorothy Vogel Weds Ann Arbor was the scene of two weddings of former students of the University over the weekend, and a tbird took place in Birmingham. Jean Ellen Bonisteel, '38, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe O. Bonisteel of Fair Oak Parkway, and William C. Knecht, '38, son of Mr. and Mrs. Otto G. Knecht, of Evanston, Ill., were married at 8:30 p.m. Saturday in the First Presbyterian Church. Attended by her three sisters, who were dressed in apple green and white, Miss Bonisteel was married in a condlelight ceremony. She wore white Chantilly lace robes over the traditional satin. Attended By Sisters Betty Bonisteel, '39, was the maid of honor, and two other sisters, Frances, '40, and Nancy, '43, were bridesmaids. The University was represented by five others at the wedding. Mr. Bonisteel, father of the bride, is a graduate of the Uni- versity as are two of the ushers, Dr. W. Allen Fisher, of Buffalo, N. Y., and Charles E. Darling, of Detroit. John C. Knecht, '40E, brother of the bridegroom, was best man, and Roscoe O. Bonisteel, Jr., '43, was an usher. Miss Bonisteel and two of her sisters, Frances and Betty, are members of Kappa Alpha Theta, while Nancy is affiliated with Delta Gamma. Mr. Knecht, his brother, Mr. Darling and Dr. Fisher are all members of Phi Gamma Delta. Reception At League After the wedding the principles and attendants attended the recep- tion for friends of the bride and bridegroom in the Ethel Fountain Hussy lounge at the League. The University was represented again at the presiding table with wives of faculty members and one recent graduate. They were Mrs. Charles A. Sink. Mrs. E. Blythe Sta- son, Mrs. Paul A. Leidy, Mrs. Lewis M. Gram, Mrs. James B. Edmonson, Mrs. F. N. Menefee and Mrs. C. H. McKinley. Marjorie Coe, '38, and Margaret Reichert, graduated from Smith this June, had charge of the guest books. ..The couple will honeymoon at Lake Tahoe. Miss Vogel Married Dorothy Jean Vogel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Vogel, mar- ried Dr. Gerald Vincent Barrow, son of Mrs. Walter Barrow and the late Mr. Barrow of Machias, Wash., at 7 p.m. Saturday in the parish hall of Zion Lutheran Church. Rev. Er- nest C. Stellhorn read the service. The bride wore a street length pow- der blue chiffon frock and a large cocoanut straw hat with white ac- cessories. Dr. Barrow was graduated last week from the School of Dentistry and is a member of Xi Psi Phi, den- tal fraternity, and Phi Kappa Phi, Pi Tau Iota, Omicron Kappa Upsilon, honor societies. He will be with the Alma Children's Foundation of Mich- igan at Alma for the summer and will return here in September to work on a two-year teaching fellow- ship in the orthodontia department of the dental school. The ceremony was followed by a reception for relatives and close friends in the Mary B. Henderson Room at the Michigan League. Mrs. Elizabeth Fikes Heusner and Dr. Cecil Ward Lepard, both of De- troit, were married Saturday in the First Baptist Church in Birmingham. The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Fikes of Birmingham, and Dr. Lepard is the son of Mrs. Warren Ward Lepard and the late Mr. Lepard of Ann Arbor. The bridesmaids were Mrs. Rich- ard D. Young and Jeune Stanley Fikes of Birmingham, sisters of th% bride. Harold Lepard, of Ann Arbor, assisted his brother. Dr. Lepard was graduated fron the University medical school in 1928 and interned and taught in the oph- thamology department here. He is now practicing in Detroit. While here he was affiliated with Nu Sigma Nu and Phi Kappa Sigma. Beginners' Dance Class Held Today At League Today will feature the first of the beginners' dancing classes to be con- ducted at the League by Miss Ethel McCormick, social director of the League, assisted by Elva Pascoe and Barbara MacIntyre. The classes, beginning at 7:30 p.m., are open to students and faculty of the University, and are priced at $1.50 for the group of six lessons. Instructors teach popular steps, such as the fox trot, waltz and tango. Pu- pils can progress as rapidly as pos- sible, and may stay after the classes to practice, Miss McCormick said. Recordings will provide music for the dancing. This will be the first time that Miss Maclntyre has taught, but Miss McCormick and Miss Pascoe have been in charge of the winter danc- ing classes. These instructors will also teach the intermediate classes V TUESDRY While Ann Arbor's summer residents are not customarily treated to such classy visions in the way of sailing clothes as those of Eastern resort town, shown above is a suit that could be adapted to use here. It is lightweight and water proof, just the thing for sailing on Baron Pond or picnicking along the Huron. Students, Faculty To Be Honored At Rackharn Reception Friday Faculty members and students of order to limit the attendance to '' t the University Summer Session will be honored at a reception to be held from 8:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. Friday in the Assembly Hall of the Rackham Building. The receiving line of the annual affair, which is given for the pur- pose of acquainting members of the Summer Session, will be headed by Dr. Louis A. Hopkins, Director of the Summer Session, and Mrs. Hop- kins. The deans of the various schools will receive with Director Hopkins. Miss Ethel McCormick, so- cial director of the League, is in charge of the event, and is being as- sisted by members of the social com- mittee of the Summer Undergraduate Councjl. Following the reception there will be dancing from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. at the League and at the Union, both given free of charge. Admission tick- ets for the dances will be distributed at the end of the receiving line, in those attending the University. The tickets will be good for one or both of the dances. Earl Stevens and his orchestra will be featured at the League, while Red Ritz and his musicians will play at the Union. Refreshments will be served at the Rackham Building, Miss McCormick has announced. Plans for the program have not been completed, but will be an- nounced in full later in the week. READ THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS! ~'Thrift Event f .savingi fOr .smrn t I lIom en! DRESSES 5 former values $7.95 to $16,95 COTTONS SPUN RAYONS Print and pastel crepes Sizes 9-17, 12-44 \ji; EXTRA-SPECIAL 25 dresses at $3.95 formerly $7.95 to $1.2.95 Sizes 9 - 20 SHOP 'round the corner on State 500 Attracted To FirstDance In New Series Theophil Markiewicz, assistant to Benjamin Lovett, supervised the first in a series of six square dances last night attended by a capacity crowd of 500 summer school students. Mr. Markiewicz has been assisting in this project for three years while Mr. Lovett, head of the organization, began teaching for Henry Ford in 1929. These square dances are sponsored by Mr. Ford who includes this social project in the curriculum of his in- dustrial school at Greenfield Village. Mr. Lovett and a staff of eight assist- ants have instructed this type of dancing as a course in 100 schools in the vicinity of Dearborn, as well as in many colleges including Wayne University, Ypsilanti Normal and Western State Teachers' College. In Kalamazoo, students receive credit . for this course as a part of physical education and training. Mr. Ford pays the expenses for the entire or- ganization and all classes are given free of charge. "The purpose of the square dance," said Mr. Markiewicz, "is to emphasize social grace. Through dancing, we can teach social training to the stu- dents and at the same time break down a timidity which so often exists among children of grade school age." As an annual affair at the end of the school term, all Dearborn schools .~are represented at a performance held at Fordson high school in Dear- born. The object of this program is to show the parents and friends of participants what has been accom- plished during the year. On various occasions, students are invited to Lovett Hall ballroom in Greenfield Village to dance before Mr. and Mrs. Ford who take great pleasure in at- tending such affairs. Out of an extensive repertoire of old time square dance steps, Mr. Markiewicz named the old rye waltz. Two Queens Will Reign PORT AUSTIN, Mich., June 24.- (P)-There'll be two queens named when this city holds its fourth an- nual bass festival tomorrow. One- the dowager-will be selected for her ability to cook fish; the other-the minnow queen-is to be picked for beauty and personality. STUDENT SUPPLIES PENS - NOTEBOOKS - PENCILS "NO-TEAR NOTEBOOK PAPER - TYPEWRITING PAPER BALL & THRASHER "Everything for the Office" 229 South State at Liberty Phone 3955 - ---------- NEW and USED I II at Reasonable Prices BOOKS - - - FOUNTAIN P STATIONERY STUDENT SUPPLIES BENS AND PENCILS - - - - SOUVENIRS i 1r1TAT1 T T '0Michigan's