THE MICHIGAN-DALY _____ I M w1.....r LTAVA T \° 5.T\J?'w L _5 'x _ 2 5Z I&,I U . r FRESHMAN GLEE CLUB WLL ORGANIZE TOD&Y ~~LAT SCHOLF MUI MISS THELMA LEWIS, NEW MEMBER OF MUSIC FACULTY,j TO BE DIRECTOR MEMBERS ARE ANNOUNCED Miss Nora Crane Hunt, Director Of Major Girls' Glee Club To Open Meeting I HOUSE PRESIDENTS I One completed k sample of C syour article for the Christmas : bazaar must be brought for inspection to the parlour in Barbour gym on Friday after- noon, Nov. 16, between 3 and k and 5 o'clock. C Dorothy M. Flynn, I Chairmanr of Articles. 10 0 W. (A. A. Drive Closes SAdding100 Members Arliene Heilman, '30, treasurer of W. A. A., announced that more than 100 women have joined the organization during the member-! ship drive which came to an end yesterday. This figure does$ not constitute the total for the year, because dues can still be mailed to the treasurer at Martha Cook building. The first closed meeting for W.a A. A. will be held at 4 o'clock on Friday at the Women's Athletic building. Besides the regular bus- iness meeting, presided over by Betty Smither, '29, president, Or- chesis, the dancing club, will en- tertain, and Dr. Margaret Bell, of the department of physical educa- tion, and Miss Dorothy Colby, ad- visor of the association, will give short talks. For the opening and organization meeting of the year, the Freshmen Girls' Glee club is scheduled to gather at 4:30 o'clock this after- noon on the top floor of the School of Music.: At this meeting, according to custom, the constitution will be read, the officers elected, and the time and day set for regular prac- tice. Miss Nora Crane Hunt, direc- tor of the University Girls' Glee club, will open the meeting and present the club's future director. Miss Thelma Lewis, who is a new member this year of the faculty of the School of Music, and who is also the director of the Couzen's hall choral club, has agreed to be- come the leader of the Freshman Girls' Glee club. Because of the enthusiasm evinc- ed concerning the organization, a larger membership is enrolled this year than ever before. The mem- bers who have been chosen by try- out are: Reva Derby, Frances Cal- vert, Winifred Gare, Katherine Pessin, Frances Rayburn, Ruth Al- lison, Dorothy Malone, Lucile Lan- gle, Helen Haapamaki, Dorothea Torbeson, Gertrude Guenther, Jean Levi, Maurine Knox, Elizabeth Ger- hard, Marie Westin, Sally Ensmin- ger, Amerene Montgomery, Cath- elia Pollock, Alice Merrick, Betty Covert, Violet Ansorge, Phyllis Orn- stein, Clare Leith, Louise Hinch, Helen Blanchet, Marie Sinkheiner, Elizabeth' Narey, Betty Carpenter, Edwina Jenney, Bettyy Ropp, Eliz- abeth Covert, Jane Smallman, Hadie Supe, Hortense Gooding, Helen Kitzmiller, Dorothy Malcolm. Plans for the year, including the sale of candy at the Junior Girls' Play and, other possibilities of rais- ing funds, as well as the music to be studied, will be discussed. I 1 }' _ 1 ) x, ,t } j] , ri ' 1 >((, t 1 CHI OMEGA BY ZETA T) By defeating Ch Tau Alpha entered the intramural hoc The game was ha though not particu I played, and ended i 'The offensive play was outstanding ox Alpha team. Gusti ward line and Ohls field also starred. the close score t evenly matched. On team, LeRoy, fullba goal guard, played games, and Sibley the offense. Kappa; Delta won Newberry team b though a practice the members of th were "present result 'for the small Newt League team defu Epsilon Phi. The result of th and Delta Delta De will be played, thisN mine the team whi with Zeta Tau Alpl: It is hoped that the ed on Monday. In ment Kappa Delt Epsilon Phi will pla3 pionship. The tours ed between the tea defeated in the first As the winning t vited to the hockey they will receive the essary that the ga off soon. The banc DEFEATEDLecture To Be Given On Children's Books U ALPHA Miss Louise Seaman, head of the children's book department of the McMillan publishing company for i Omega, Zeta the past ten years, will deliver an d the finals of illustrated lecture at 8 o'clock to- key tournament. night in Pattengill auditorium, Ann ard fought, al- Arbor high school, under the ilarly brilliantly I uspices of the Print and Book n a 4 to 3 score. shop, in recognition of the tenth ying of Cassidy annual children's book week now a the Zeta Tau in progress. ine on the for- A graduate of Vassar in 1915 and on in the back- editor of a college news sheet while As is shown by there, Miss Seaman has done some he teams were writing for publication. She was the Chi Omega head of the first department of ck, and Muffly, children's books maintained by 2 good defensive publishing company, although sev- and Crane led eral have been created in recent years. Oridinarily it has been over the Helen customary to place women in this y default, al- position, because it is felt that they game between are better adiapted to thE work ze teams which than are men. ed in a victory There will be no admission ery team. The charge for the lecture and any alted to Alpha one interested in books for chil- one interested is invited. URGE WOMEN TO YRuths Sweep Nation; Three Are In House BALL- TICKETS EARLY "Ruth" is a good name in poll- tics this year. Three Ruths were elected to Congress on Nov. 6, along More than three-fourths of the with four other women who were entire allotment of tickets for the re-elected to sit in the House of sixth annual Pan-Hellenic ball, to Representatives. be held Friday, November 30, at the Mrs. Ruth Hannah McCormick, Union, have b: en sold, according to Republican, was elected as a repre- an announcement made by Ailene sentative at large from Illinois. Yeo, '30, chairman of the party, Mrs. Ruth Bryan Owen, Demo- yesterday. The number of tickets crat, will represent the fourth Con- issued for the party will be strictly gressional district of Florida. She limited to 200, according to Miss is a daughter of William Jennings Yeo, and it is expected that all Bryan. will be sold by the end of the week. Mrs. Ruth Baker Pratt, Republi- Women on the campus still de- can, is the first' woman to be elect- siring to purchase tickets for the ed to Congress from New York, Pan-Hellenic ball should get in and she replaces a Democrat. touch with Janet Calvert, '30, (7817) The House of Representatives immediately, is was announced. will, it appears, seat seven women The ball this year, as in the past, when the seventy-first Congress is sponsored by the sorgrity women convenes in ecember, 1929. The : Cora Opines My dear, I have just been talk ing to the official go-between fo the League bazaar. That reall is the best name for Margaret Ohl son, who is chairman of the Serv ice committee. That's my idea c a thankless job and I think any one who takes it on is big-hearte to say the least. It seems toer that it is a job in which there little glory and much work. C course you have the personal sat isfaction .of knowing that the af fair probably couldn't functio nearly so efficiently without yo1 but if no one else knows it, what that? All the go-between has to do i to see that everyone gets anyythin they want from yards of wire t scissors, presumably to cut it witl and all other little items anyon ever thought of wanting. I sup pose if someone wanted gold-fis to make the fish-pond more realis tic she'd have to get those, too, she had to get in a bathing su and rob the aquarium. That's th kind of job it is. And that isn't all she has to do either. She has to inspire tt noble B and G boys to set up th tables for the booths and do a the other dirty work of like na ture. And still that isn't all. She ha to arrange for all the janitor serv ice connected with the busines And probably if someone failed t turn up, she would have to tal on the job herself. Anyway as I said before, I thin anyone who would take the job very big-hearted, and I thin something ought to be done to lE people know that the Service con mittee has a real and importar place in the work of the bazaar o I PAN-HELLENIC BALL e Martha Cook lta game which week will deter-, ch will compete ha in the finals y may be play-' the B tourna- a and Alpha y for the cham- nament is play- ims which were t round of play. eam will be in- banquet where e cup, it is nec-, imes be played suet is held on Women desiring to purchase tickets for the Pan-Hellenic ball should get in touch with Janet Calvert, '30, (7817), im- mediately. i i i i i I Sororities To Hold Intramural Tourney Five sororities and four other house: organizations( will be repre- sented in the archery tournament which will be held at 9:30 o'clock Saturday morning at Palmer field. Thej sororities which will partici- pate are Alpha Gamma Delta, Gamma Phi Beta, Kappa Delta, Sigma Kappa, and Theta Phi Alpha, Alumnae House, Betsy far- bour House,. Couzens hall. A team composed of women from thre.e L 't f Immediately after the hockey banquet, the indoor season will open, the primary sports of which are basketball, indoor golf, archery and rifle. Frances Whipple, '31, manager for outdoor sports, has planned, an active program for the next month beginning with a steak ,l 1V11 N 111 W~j V tl u . 11 141 U L 0 fu" V14h1.1qG l YV1VL 1V1 jjl roast. Thursday, the twenty second, at league houses will also enter the the field house. contest. INTERCLASS HOCKEY STANDINGS Won Lost Tied Seniors ...........4 0 0 Juniorsl ...........0 3 1I Sophomores .......1 1 21 Freshmen........1 2 1 Ill inuiuu liniimiiknnguu1 lif lnnnliur WNeLi ngeie I-I 300 S. State St. . (Cor. Liberty and State) any have net applques in PERMANENT WAVING, dainty flower patterns and MARCELLING, FACIALS, French IANCURNG, exquisite Fenh pleatings. MANICURING, SHAMPOOING = Lovely hemstitching and beau- FINGER WAVING =tful drawn work in Blue Mrs. N. M. Hitchcock, Mgr. Open Evenings Dial 2-141. Peach, Flesh and Green. ill11,l illIl l 1111l11111111111 111111111116 H The Collins Shoppe *-_ "Exclusive but not Expensive" Liberty at Maynard dbrics _a tea= - -= _ - 0 _~ _ nac Afer _- o PRME, E=N, ATO for formal= - _ ronds oft trakparidt sedreiethedt - o en00 dsg sa .........$.0u . After oint l ce P E , braEL NsGtoPAT TO er N d blac and,. CRYDSTACLC ESBAE T, transrparenEtRIGS d iitok eris t .... .... . ................... $. up. 54" Bcsits o....................to............$1.2dip N e w ~ a viEa lr ign a................................. 2. 0 0 p atsm m'etaa ioCRYESTATAHKE SFRINA LING ofTHEaMODEngNEJEWELRY t lae ostaudce a nestr mtlle in sotOREMTELORNTPATTN_ blck on jut npckd Large and small head ON HANDKERCHIEFS sizes. in white or color. $1.00 a'dozen extra. )f the campus, and will be held n the Union ballroom amid the most elaborate settings ever ar- ranged for the affair. Maurie Sher- man's recording orchestra of Chi- cago, one of the best known dance organizations in the country, has been secured to furnish music for the affair. Sherman's band is known from coast to coast both because of its radio broadcasting and its dance engagements. Subscribe for the Michiganensian now. It costs only $4.00. Rain Water Shampoo Hair, Eyebrow, Eye Lash Dying Scientific Scalp Treatment Finger Waving, Marcelling, Hair Cutting Facial, French,Russian, General, and coarse pore treatment. CAYER SHOPPE Dial 9471 406 E. Liberty Get Acquainted With Schaeberle & Son MUSIC HOUSE For Everything in Musical Instruments and Supplies Radiola and Atwater-Kent Radios 110 So. Main St. four women who were members of1 Congress last year have all been1 re-elected. They are: Mrs. Edith Nourse Rogers, Republican from; Massachusetts, Mrs. Kate G. Lang- ley, Republican from Kentuckky, Mrs. Florence P. Kahn, Republican from California, and Mrs. Mary T. Norton, Democrat from New Jersey.1 For the present,. the Senatoriali ranks seem secure against feminine 1 invasion, although a woman once took her seat in the Senate* fori two days.7 NOTICE The seniors will play the sopho- mores, and the juniors the fresh- men at 4:15 o'clock this afternoon on Palmer field. Marie Hartwigo and Helen Wilson will have tickets for the hockey banquet on the field for those who want to buy them. Don't Have 0, Ugly Red Hands' Marvelous New Kind of Cream, Specially for the Hands, Quickly Makes Them Soft and White! An end to rough, red, work- coarsened hands! A marvelous new kind of cream makes the ugliest hands attractive and interesting. Improves them noticeably in two minutes-note the instant whiten- ing! Daily massage with THINC will keep your hands :.-quisitely dainty, soft and white. Not a cold cream, vanishing Lleam or lo. tio. Entirely new. Approved by Good Hlousekeepingl nstitute. Try THING- money back inot delighted. At any good drug store, toilet goods counter or beauty shop. F KING OF BEAUTY (lAND CR EME Re=. U.S. Pat. OFF. TANTC WHEN THIN 1E IL0 This collection of frocks' for formal wear. Gay bouffant creations of crisp ombre- hued taffeta - - lacey frocks - frocks of tiered chiffon - - frocks of rich velvets. Showing the smart uneven hemlines,- using the decolletage effectively. The "robe de style" is here - as well as adaptations of practically every Paris success. A wide range of prices from $2,75 to $98050, c' 1C tl