THE MICHIGAN DAILY CAMPUS I CIL ly I i_. ........., ..",. .... ... ...0 Decorations Of J-Hop To Be Put On Display Will Show Model Today; Winning Posters Also To Be Exhibited A large lighted model of the deco- rations for the J-Hop will be placed on display in a State Street book store, this morning, Francis Palms, '34A, announced last night. The model was constructed by, Palms and other students in the ar- chitectural school and shows a cut- away half of the plan lighted by miniature colored electric lights. Two posters by Donald Gooch, '34E, one of which won a prize re- cently for the best design for a J-] Hop poster, will be placed on either side of the models. Other posters designed by architectural students will be placed around the campus. The posters were executed as a sketch problem in the decorative de- sign courses in the College of Ar- chitecture. Gooch is taking an art teacher's course in the School of Ed- ucation. There is no charge for booths for the J-Hop, Nils Lundberg, '34B.Ad., emphasized in a statement last night. Any group of 20 couples may com- bine and be furnished with a booth. The only expense to them beside the cost of the tickets will be getting fur- niture for the booth, having it taken to and from the Intramural Building, and furnishing a punch bowl for the booth. There will be only 28 booths, Lund- berg pointed out, and 12 of them have been reserved already, so that those organizations planning to take a booth would do well to sign up im- mediately. No group can reserve a both, however, Lundberg said, until it can present a list of 20 names and numbers of tickets already pur- chased. A meeting of all independents who want to combine to form booth groups, will be held on Thursday night at the Union. Mclusky Conducts Church Discussion At the regular Sunday night dis-j cussion group held in the Presby- terian Church House on Washtenaw Avenue, Dr. Howard McClusky of the psychology department led an inter- esting discussion on "Am I Get- ting an Education?" The following lines of thought were developed by the group: Students get more out of a man than his course; therefore it is vastly important that a professor have so- cial vision and character, the group decided. It was suggested that upperclass- men and graduate students make a research into the honest student re- action to courses taken and put out Hilda Burr And W.A.A.Entertain At Tea Sunday Independent Women Not Living In Dormitories Honored At Affair A tea honoring independent women who do not live in dormitories was given by Hilda Burr of the physical education department Sunday, at the Women's Athletic building. The ex- ecutive board of the Women's Ath- . dc Association assisted. Many nembers of the physical education department attended. Jordan Gives Faculty Dinner SundayN ight Jordan Hall juniors entertained several members of the faculty at dinner Sunday night. After dinner. the guests and hostesses gathered in- formally in the Jordan living room. Some of the guests who attendedE were: Prof. L. M. Eich and Mrs.I Eich, Louise Cuyler, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Angell, Mr. and Mrs. Gor- don W. Harrison, Prof. Wassily Bese- kirsky and Mrs. Besekirsky, Prof. Peter O. Okkelberg and Mrs. Okkel- berg, Prof. Leslie A. White and Mrs. White, Prof. W. B. Ford and Mrs. vSylvia Lee's MarriageI Announced For Jan. 31 Sylvia Lee, '33. of Ann Arbor. will, be mtarried to Richard 0. Overton of1 Mancheste r, Vt., on Jan. 31 at St.. Andrews Church in Arn Arbor, it Y.W.C.,A. President was announced yesterday. Beta Phi Will Lecture Here sorority, is the daughter of Dr. A. 0. Lee of 2307 Hill St. The engage- _______- Iment was announced last spring. Mrs. H-arrie Chamberlain, presi- Mr. Overton, who graduated from dent of the Y. W. C. A. of America, Williams in 1929, is a member of will speak at the annual dinner of Theta Delta Chi fraternity and is the association in their building on Inow a master at Hotchkiss School in South Fourth Street tonight. The Lakeville, Con. subject of her talk will be "The After the wedding, which is to be attended by the families of the Y. W. C. A. Speaks For Itself." bride and bridegroom only, the Mrs. Chamberlain was elected couple will drive down to Hotchkiss1 president of the organization in Min- School. According to the present neapolis last May. She has been plans, they will spend spring vaca- poie on in Bermuda and next summer in president of the association twice Norway. and has served on the National Board of the Y. W. C. A. She is an active member of the world's council of the Young Women's Christian As- sociation which has its headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, the League of Women Voters, and the A. A. U. W. of Toledo. ii T3;he eCichi l VA V LL ." 'L.aw~h ..l a, Entertins Faculty At Tea Members of the Polonia Literary Society, an organization for students of Polish descent interested in Polish literature and art, entertained at tea from 3 to 5 p. m. Sunday in the Russian Tea Room of the League for the active members and the faculty sponsors of the society. Among the Faculty patrons hon- ored were Prof. Felix W. Pawlowski of the engineering college and Mrs. Pawlowski, Prof. Alexander P. Gwiaz- dowski of the engineering college and Mrs. Gwiazdowski, Mr. and Mrs. Ma- kielski, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Klimek. BREAKFAST SPECIAL Ham or Bacon and Two Eggs Buttered Toast and Coffee 25c BALTIMORE DAIRY LUNCH 436 South State Street a bulletin to protect bad courses. One of the criticis and standards of the cational plan was t taught what to thi think. He is taught his environment r transform it. He is e petuate the world o stead of constructive. experiences to create A great difficulty in educating ideally environment is soc education. Students "re"'zm "'s'n Jean Botsford, '33Ed., president of Ford, and Prof. Alfred H. Stockard the W. A. A., took this opportunity and Mrs. Stockard. ms of the ways to acquaint the independent women Prof. Philip Hadley and Mrs. Had- University edu- with the program of intramural ley, Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Koella. hat a student is sports, and announced that those in- Prof. Roy J. Burroughs and Mrs. nk and how to terested in taking part in them Burroughs, Prof. E. A. Uehling and t to conform to should present their names to Marie Mrs. Uehling, Charles E. Boertman, ather than to Hartwig, or Jean Porter, '34, W. A. A. Prof. Lowell Carr, Ethel McCor- educated to per- intramural sports manager. Teams mick, S. Morley 'Scott, Prof. A. H. f his elders, in- will be organized for various sports, Robertson and Mrs. Robertson, and, ly using the past including basketball, practice for Mr. and Mrs. Harvey C. Webster. a better world. which will start Fe6. 13. Fencing, is encountered baseball, and tennis are offered to when the social independents. S tudy Group Addressed ; opposed to trueE Marie Murphy, '35, announced that I By Elzabeth McCrickett enter college in the badminton season would begin to make money, at the opening of the new semester Elizabeth McCrickett, of the and will be open for all women inter- Roosevelt Training School of Michi- ested in taking part. gan State Normal College, was guest Ethel McCormick, social director i speaker at the meeting of the Ann of women, Katherine Koch, assistant Arbor Child Study Group held at 8 director of Mosher Hall, Laurie p. im. yesterday in the Russian Tea Michigan, "The Campbell, and Dr. Helene Schultz Room of the League. Majestic, "The k poured. In the receiving line were l Miss McCrickett's topic developed ,igan ianleague order to learn how to be successful. I Were- Motion Pictures: Animal Kingdom"; J , Sl P M C A H G F E F L tr N St C+ b- CHIC BEAUTY SHOPPE SPECIAL hampoo and Fingerwave $ .5 ersonality Haircuts ...... .51 [anicure ................ .5 lean Up Facials ..... .. . 7. rnoil Steam treatments.. .1.0 enna Pack ...........1.0 PERMANENTS abrieleen .............. $6.40 rederic .................0 ugene ..................0. our expert licensed operator illian May, representativeo he Countoure Laboratories ew York City, will be at th i hop Friday, January 27, to giv+ mplimentary make-ups using ountoure Cosmetics. There wil e no obligation to you. Phone 2-2757 208 Michigan Theatre Bldg. 50 50 50 75 00 00 00 00 00 rrs Of of AS ve a ill FREE DANCING Grill Mask of Fu Manchu"; Wuerth, "Grand Hotel." Athletic- Events: Women's intra- mural swimming meet, 8 p. m., Union Pool. Dances: Tea dancing, 3 to 5 p. m., League Grill. Lectures: T. S. Elio, "Edward Lear and Modern Poetry," 4:15 p. m.,a Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Exhibits: Henry Wright's "Hillside Housing," exhibition room, Architec- tural building. Dr. Margaret Bell, Catherine Rent- schler, '33Ed., Jean Botsford, '33Ed., Jean Beridge, '33, Marie Hartwig, and Hilda Burr. Selections provided by a string trio were included in the entertain- ment. The serving table was attrac- tively decorated with a centerpiece of pink snapdragons. the study subject of the group, "En- vironment of the Child," with special emphasis on educational problems to be met with. After the business meeting, Mrs. Lee M. Thurston and Mrs. Lois H. Hollway were hostesses at the re- ception and social hour following the talk. AFTERNOONS AND EVENINGS Except Saturday, Sunday and Monday --ONO_ IIIIw - - - - - - - IN I 11111111- 11 Ahe Qad-cAbout I And once upon a time, my dears, some very jolly juniors de- cided to do things on a big scale, so they got Kings of Jazz and ole Maestros and Intramural build- ings and had a J-Hop. One more item was needed and that was the fairest damsels from near and far to help the decorations along. So with the latter in mind we've been doing our accustomed gadding For the J-Hop -the Special Occasion - it is important that your dress does something for you -something dramatic. Jacobson's have a line that does just that. For sheer romance, for instance, the little lace dress pictured is everything a l a c e dress should be- feminine, wistful and beguiling. If you pre- fer to be classical a blue and white satin brocade that fits the figure sheath - like with a grecian panel in back from decolletage to floor makes you look like a daughter of the gods. The matelasses in sea greens, pale blues and sunset hues with shoulder straps that go down the back and hardly stop at the waist are elegant simplicity per- sonified. And the prices start at $12.75. Luxurious, delicate, snug fitting things to wear beneath your for- mal can be found in the new Lin-. gerie Shop at the 'League. Soft mere nothings made up in satin or crepe and lace that make your formal cling with nary a wrinkle. And as for hosiery; Phoenix ho- siery has long been known among us and with reason, they're mere wisps of gossamer and come in the smartest subtle French colors for day and evening wear, in all de- grees of fineness. It is the credo that every wom- an should be a raving beauty at least once in her lifetime and what better time to blossom out than for J- .op. A facial that would The finishing touch to your en- semble is the right kind of jewelry, and the Arcade Jewelry Shop has sets that are unbelievable for a dollar; long delicate earrings and snug little pendant necklaces of rhinestone and crystal that gleam and sparkle in the light. The ear- rings come in all varieties of shapes from flat knobs made in circlets of rhinestone to long shower-like affairs that barely brush the shoulder. The ones we liked best were intricately curved and held one tear shaped crystal drop which was repeated on the necklace, while another modern- istic set was made to appear at night convincingly like baguette diamonds. The solid bracelets re- peat the motif of some of the sets and are' charmingly victorian as well as effective. Of course, you can find other graceful long ear- rings in beautiful settings for not very much more. To shine brightly at night we have to look beauty in the eye. At the Fifth Avenue Shop in the Ar- cade there is blue mascara that is ravishing on a blonde or to har- monize ,with a blue gown. Gold and silver eyeshadow, not artificial looking, are lovely to match your accessories are to give a tinsel touch to your favourite shade, as silvered violet. Curling, glamorous eye lashes fastened on to your own is the final touch in aiding nature. If men only knew the power of flowers; how a simple bouquet can exceed the inost perfect alibi, and how a few blossoms sent before- hand can set the masculine ego aflane by 'the' appreciation re- ceived for his thoughtfulness. At the University Flower shop on 606 E. Libeirty one' finds waxy gar- denias, kept air-tight in moist cot- ton, daffodils and the blue stately iris. And the shoulder bouquets to harmonize orm conftrast with her gown are enchanting. Imagine lavendar sweet peas and gardenias ILLUSION: In this startling trick, the magician seemingly pushes a huge threaded needle through the body of an assistant, pulling the needle out the other side, followed by the thread. Itob e -f o o d EXPLANATION: , Under the clothes of the victim is a pipe, extending around one side of his body from front to back. Theneedle, which is flexible, is inserted in thefront end of the pipe, is carried around the body and emerges from the pipe in back. This operation is per- formed so quickly that the audience does not notice that the needle and thread are momentarily shortened during the act. ...it's more fuan to KNOW SoUAcLa "Magic Stage Illusions and Scientifc Diversiom" by Albert A. Hopikins. .Munn & Co. We like tricks...but we prefer to keep them out of business. Here's one that's interesting...The illusion that by some obscure magic cer- tain cigarettes are "COOLER" than others. ThE EXPLANATION: Coolness is deter- Tmined by the speed of burning. Fresh cigarettes burn slowly. They're cool. Parched, dry cigarettes burn fast. They're hot. Camels are carefully wrapped in moisture-Proof'cellophane...in the fa- mous, air-tight Humidor Pack. Camels are cool because they're fresh. A cigarette blended from choice non- irritating tobaccos also gives a cooler effect than one that is harsh and acrid. The finer the tobacco the less irritating it is, °and therefore the "cooler." it is a fact, well known by lecaf tobacco experts, that Camels are made from :finr, MORE EXPENSIVE tobaccos than any other popular brand. This-is why Camels are cool and mild, non-irritating-full of flavor. This is why Camels have given more pleasure to more people than any other cigarette ever made. It's the tobacco that counts. Keep 'the famous welded Humidor Pack on your Camels. It assures you a frosh, cool smoke. NO TRICKS. Copyright, 1933, R. I. Reynolds Tobacco company