SUNDAY. 00' ERR 26- 1930 'THE MICHIGAN DAILY I r ~TThTThAV '~TIWP. 9~ 1 Q~A 'TVIF. MT(A-ITGAN DAILY "Womio . 400 Kill Cil _Js sm 'wA { HUSBAND'S FLIGH T LNBER CHAIRMEN SELECTIHOSADS- LGT HELENNW1R HONORED BY WIFE FIRST COMMITTEES'___ HONORSDIRECTORl T WORKONartha Cooke Entertains Fifty Alumnae; Betsy Barbour Holds Dance. Assistant Chairman Jane Chooses Group to Man Tryouts, Rehearsals. Inch age CHAIRMEN MEET TODAY Sitton Has Partial Committee on Music and Lyrics, Others to Volunteer. Appointments to two Junior Girls' Play committees have been an- nounced by their respective heads, Jane Inch, assistant chairman, and Katherine Sitton, chairman of music and lyrics. The latter com- mittee is not yet completed, how- ever, and Miss Sitton wishes any- one interested in composing music or lyrics to communicate with her at 7717. Members of the assistant chair- man's committee, whose duties will be the arrangements for tryouts and checking attendance at re- hearsals, are Josephine Convisser, Katherine Ferrin, Margaret Healy, Lucille Lough, and Helen Mussel- white. A meeting will be held at 4' o'clock tomorrow in, the League building for the members of the music committee who have been chosen. They are Bernette Bradley, Norma Brown, Louise Leonard, Jeannie Roberts, and Helen Van Loon. The central committe of the Play will hold a special meeting at 2:15 o'clock today at the League build- ing, for the re-reading of plays. Of the five manuscripts which have been turned in, two have been selected for reconsideration. Regu- lar meetings of the committee have been held at 3 o'clock every Thurs- day. A list of all junior women is being compiled for Dorothy Birdzell, busi- ness manager, who will start col- lecting the dollar dues from all members of the class. No one who ds not able to present her receipt for the dues will be allowed to try out for the Play. MICHIGAN NIGHT RADIO PROGRAM WILL OFFER PLAY' "Wives-In-Law," the one-act play written by Mrs. Elizabeth Smith, spec., which was one of the three entered in the final play contest, Will be presented over the radio Friday, October 31, on the Michigan program. The play was produced in the Play Production laboratory last fall and will be broadcast Friday eve- ning by the same cast with but one exception. Miss Kathryne Suggs, who formerly played' the wife, graduated and her place will be filled by Mrs. Margaret Greggory, special. FACULTY DINNER GIVEN In honor of Miss Eunice Van Camp, the new assistant director at Helen Newberry Residence, the students entertained at tea on Wednesday afternoon; Miss Alice C. Lloyd and Mrs. H. W. Douglas assisted at pouring.f An event which caused much amusement and grief on the part of the new girls was the annual pro week which preceeded the more formal ceremony of initiation Fri- day night, where in appropriateI silence and subdued candlelight girls pledged themselves to the ideals of the dormitory. Miss Lloyd opened the ceremony with a brief resume of Helen Newberry history. With the festivities of the Home coming week-end Martha Cooke is entertaining fifty guests and re- turning alumnae. Betsy Barbour plans a special football dinner for Saturday night following the game. I[" MInlMES WELCOMES lE OE HELP F 'NMEN't j Skits, Dialogue, Music, Scenery I and Costume Designing I Are Needed. CHORUS, CAST ARE OPEN' Stressing the fact that women as well as men will takepart in the all-campus revue to be presented by Mimes the week of December 7, James Yant, '31M, president of the organization, stated that their as- sistance in staging, producing, and managing the production, as well as in writing skits, music, dialogue,, and designing costumes and scen- ery would be welcomed. "We want this show to be strict- ly an all-student presentation, and' therefore want to keep the action and background as much on cam- pus as possible," said Yant. "The skits should be written with this idea in mind, and the local color emphasized as much as possible." Women will be.needed especially in the choruses and cast, and are urged to try out for these positions. Calls for try-outs will be made as soon as the committee has selected the material to be used. Anyone interested in make up work should also report to the committee. HOMECOMING WEEK-END CELEBRATED BY SORORITY HOUSES WITH ENTERTAINMENTS FOR ALL VISITORS Dances and Teas Held in Honor a number of the members of its Evansville, Indiana. of Homecoming. Illinois chapter and alumnae yes- Sororities Give Pledge Teas. terday serving a buffet supper in Pledge teas have also been the One of Michigan's Homecoming their honor. order of the week at many of the week-ends is here again and with Phi Sigma Sigma is also enter- Greek letter houses on campus. it the life and gaity that only a taining Illinois guests and Florence Among those entertaining t h e college town can assume. Fra- Morrison, Grand Rapids ,for the pledges of other sororities were week -end. CleitSroiadApaP, ternity houses are vieing with each Alpha Chi Omega entertained who held their parties on Thursday other in decorations, dances are in Mrs. John Mathus, Jackson;Esther afternoon. Zeta Tau Alpha and full swing -and with it all comes the Ricker, Cadillac; Mary Crawford, Sigma Kappa held their teas Fri- crowded activities in honor of re- Highland Park; Frances Ray, To- day afternoon. turning alumnae at sorority houses. ledo; Aileen Yeo, West Branch; and Zeta Tau Alpha announces the Alpha Phi is entertaining women Eloise Harnau, Muskegon, at a pledging of Lydia Seymour, Chica= from the Illinois chapter this week- buffet luncheon yesterday. end as well as its district governor, Sigma Kappa is entertaining the Alpha Epsilon Phi announces the Mrs. L. F. Kimble. Parents and following at the chapter house pledging of Heila Fishman, Grand alumnae were feted at tea follow- this week-end: Mrs. Gilbert Lyon, Rapids, and Miriam Carver, Detroit. ing the game. Chicago; Mrs. Brandon Nerger,Chi- Phi Sigma Sigma announces the Sorority Honors Founder's Day. cago; Dorothy Marshick, Detroit; pledging of Edith Kramer, Free- Zeta Tau Alpha honored 25 alum- Frances Cope, Detroit; Dorothy port, L. I., and Ilo Freiberg, Mt. nae at a Homecoming - Founder's Fencl, Cleveland; Mrs. Oscar Wilde, Vernon, N. Y. Day banquet at the chapter house Detroit; Mrs. Glen Bixley, Detrbit: last night at which time Mrs. and Mrs. Carol Sann, Cleveland. Willabelle Harper Hoyt, '26, presi- Gamma Phi Beta is entertaining dent of the Detroit Pan-Hellenic women from the Illinois schapter association, was guest of honor. and many returning alumnae for Others returning for the week-end Homecoming week-end. Among are: Marguerite Roby, Eleanor those guests are Ruth and Helenh Short, Merle Raine, Anita Baukus, Kumerow, Helen Bush, Margaret Elizabeth Lloyd, Dorothy Lincoln, Gray, Esther Way, and Mrs. Fred Nellie Hamel, Cornelia Walker, and Seitz. Sarah Buckley. Alpha Epsilon Phi has as house fl Kappa Alpha Theta served a guests for the week-end. BeatriceJ. !" buffet supper to its guests and visit- Greenberg and Carmen Greenberg. ing alumnae following the game Alpha Epsilon Phi announces the yesterday. marriage of Ruth Rosenthal, '28L, _m__. u Alpha Omicron Pi was hostess to to Myron Weingarden, '29L, at Mme. Dieudonne Coste, pictured, wearing an ensemble made to commemorate the Paris-to-N e w York trans-Atlantic flight of her husband and Maurice Bellonte in tne plane, Question Miark..The first faculty dinner of the sea- Students having original features son took place at Betsy Barbour may turn them in at the Union Thursday night when they enter- desk any time before November 7. tained the following guests: Pro- fessor William H. Hobbs and Mrs. MODERN A TTITUDE Hobbs, Professor Cooper H. Lang- fordand Mrs. Langford, Professor TAKEN BY REVIEW Louis I. Bredvold and Mrs. Bred- -E tvold, Professor Walter B. Ford and "Women are no longer separated Zeta Phi Eta to Give Ceremony d Mrs. r, Professor e a from men in their activities. They Tody BuffeS. and. Carr, Professor Benjamin are joined to them in every phase Toay; Bfet Supper D. Meritt, and Mr. and Mrs. Fuller. flf oaadteeoewa Will Follow. Another social event of the week o life today, and therefore what is of interest to men should be of was the informal dance given Fri- interest to women and vice versa," Zeta Phi Eta, formerly Portia, day night by the Betsy Barbourshs Editor of the campus literary and debating so- women.hLondon Daily Express, w h i c h ciety, will hold pledging at 4 o'clock 'adopts a modern attitude toward today in the lounge at Palmer Field WOMEN IN CHINA . the place which women's news house. The pledges 'were chosen should take in the paper. The hough tryouts upon i toen' LEAD MARAUDERS policy of this paper is not to pay through tryouts upon invitationasmhatetntowmnn- from the society, but will not be Women, in China, have entered i as much attention to women in- announced until after pledging. Woei hnhvInee dividually as do most of the Amer- An uffet upper ldglog. into a rather unusual field for ican newspapers, but to make ceremony. Mrs. Ike is a patroness their sex, having become leaders of women's news interesting to the of the group. Other patronesses are bandit or pirate gangs. Such wo- men also. Mrs. Spokes, and Mary Kent-Miller men are commonplace figures in The Daily Express believes that Tennant, 27 and '28. Alumnae from present day China. They have it is no longer necessary to publish Detroit are expected to attend the been seen among the marauders a "Women's Page" in order to make pledging. who attacked a vessel or looted a women read the paper, and conse- Zeta Phi Eta is the oldest pro- village. quently, news pertaining to women fessional sorority in the United The women are far outdoing the is scattered throughout the paper, States. The Michigan chapter was men in the ruthless treatment of on pages with the regular news ar- affiliated this semester, and the their victims. One band of women ticles, where the men will be more group being pledged today is the is holding one hundred victims for apt to find and read it, than if it first to be taken into the chapter. $30,000 ransom. were relegated to a page of its own. I-= Il', NEW. EVENING FASHIONS ADOPT CLASSIC LINES nz.)-.. T* HE Grecian influence ts j responsible for the striking new surplice backs, the lonk slender lines, boleros, drapery, peplums and tunics. Bright colours for night! The new dictum of the evening mode. Satin with' its high lustre. Also crepes; chiffons and velvets: I V T HOCKEY CLUB TIES ALUMNAEIN GAME One to one was the score of an evenly contested hockey g a m e played October 25, at Palmer Field, between the Ann Arbor Hockey Club, which is composed of faculty members, and the class of 1928. The playing was marked by some good passing, attacking; and dribbling, although the team work was not outstanding. FRATERNITY JEWELRY PARTY FA ARCADE JEWELRY SHOP CARL F. BAY JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST VORS Nickels Arcade 1111 - - - -i _ __ .. E TheOperaPmp $750 The classic shoe for any occa- sion. This model comes in black patent leather, black mat kid- and lustrous white moire, which may be dyed to match your evening jewelry. Mezzanine Shote Shop W " SUN DAY' NIGHT11 DRESSES What could be more flatter- ing for late afternoon and informal evening than this lovely creation of lace? I I J11 I 9 L Vl This group of ev dresses reflects the est trends in alld able shades. Prices begin at $1f ening new- desir- 6.75. hops I. c. j. hutzel s Other frocks of chiffons -''1 and velvets, many with little jackets which make them suitable for many day time occasions. Priced $19.75 up Il I Y ou will enjoy being photographed at our studio. Better have your Christmas photographs made early. ( A i! C' Wi h, proudl O p /. s i 1 t f'C CnThXV A D' I 1 1 1F1 I 1111 I Z-*. I r% -w- a IV " I- ir-tqrl% I