1933 THE MICHI GAN DAILY AMMON- '"Now CAMIPIUj SO CiETY I I B,,Cm is OcetaT Outdoor Club To Hold Initial Party Saturday Halloween Entertainment To Be At Sylvan Estates; To Conduct Elections The Outdoor Club will open its activities for the year with a Hallo- ween party Saturday at the Sylvan Estates Country Club. Trucks will leave the League at 1:15 p.m. and students planning to attend must give their names to Miss Ethel McCormick, social director of the League (phone 2-3251). All interested in joining are invited to be present at this in- itial party. Officers will be elected. Transportation and dinner will cost approximately 75 cents. Miss McCormick, the Rev. Lee Klaer, pastor of the Presbyterian Church, Randoff Webster of the in- tramural department, Marie Harwig of the physical education depart- ment, and representatives of the stu- dent body made the continuation of this organization possible. At a meet- ing Monday, they formed plans for tl* coming season and completed ar- rangements to rent and outfit a truck, thus assuring comfortable and accessible transportation. Exchange Teas, Banquets Held At Sororieses Sorority activities have decreased after a busy week-end. Pledging still continues. Alpha Chi Omega Alpha Chi Omega sorority will en- tertain this afternoon at an exchange pledge tea. The pledges will be host- esses for the occasion. Pink and white. are the colors to be used, white 'mums and roses being supplemented by tapers. Elizabeth Bingham, '34, is in charge of the arrangements. The for- mal pledge dance will be given Friday night. Delta Zeta Delta Zeta sorority entertained last night at a Founder's Day Banquet for 20 guests. The tables were decorated with roses and pink paper, and in- dividual place-cards were used as fa- vors. Elizabeth Duddleson, '35, and Ruth Knepp, '35, were in charge of the dinner. Kappa Alpha Theta Kappa Alpha Theta announces the pledging of Marian Neilson, '37, of Ann Arhor. Chased By Hounds Sally Pierce, '35, will play the part of Eliza, who flees across the ice with hounds in hot pursuit, in Har- riet Beeher Stowe's famous "Uncle Tom's Cabin," which opens tonight in LydiaAMendelssohn Theatre. aintings Will e Shown Tomorrow Mr. Helmuth Lohse of Detroit is presenting a public exhibition of old and modern master reproductions Thursday from 1 to 6 p. m. in the Grand Rapids Room of the League. Among the exhibits will be: Reproductions of the old masters of the 15th and 16th century, the so-' called Florentine Collection. Reproductions of modern masters such as Cezanne, Van Gogh, Gauguin, Monet, Picasso, Manet, Renoir, Ma- tisse, Utrillo, Marc, Kokoschka, Pech- stein, etc. Etchings in color and in black and white by such European artists as Kasimir, Figura, De La Broye, and Simon. Original Mezzotints and copper- plate gravures of old masters, par- ticularly covering the English school. Miniature facsimilies of some of the world's greatest miniature art- ists. Facsimile reproductions in color of Holbein and Durer drawings. Early Italian masters and primi- tives in museum edition, including Fra Angelico, Cimabue, Michelangelo, Da Vinci, Raffael, Botticelli, Modena, and School of Avignon. .S. Commissioner Guest Of State Officia At Gime Guy Helvering, '06L, United States commissioner of internal revenue, was the guest of Horatio Abbott, State col- lector of internal revenue, at the' football game Saturday and for the week-end. Mr. Helvering served in Congress in 1913 during the Wilson administration and has held numer- ous important political offices. Dr. William T. Foster Is Guest At Reed Home Women's Club To Oen Year With Rece tion League Ballroom Chosen; Prominent Local Faculty Women Assisting The Faculty Women's Club will open its year's program with a re- ception at 3 p. m. tomorrow in the League Ballroom. The receiving line will include Mrs. Alexander G. Ruthven, Mrs. Emil Lorch, president of the club, Mrs. Henry Bates, Mrs. Frederick Novy, Mrs. Marcus Ward, Mrs. Herbert Sadler, Mrs. Carl Huber, Mrs. Edward Kraus, Mrs. Samuel Dana, Mrs. Alare Griffin, Mrs. James Edmonson, Mrs. Joseph Bursley, Miss Alice Lloyd, Mrs. Charles Sink, and Mrs. Howard B. Lewis. Among those assisting as hostesses will be Mrs. Herbert Kenyon, Mrs. Lewis Simes, Mrs. Peter Field, Mrs. Roy Cowden, Mrs. Clair Upthegrove, Mrs. Earl Wolaver, Mrs. Alfred Lov- ;l, Mrs. Wassily Besekirsky, Mrs. Ed- win B. Mains, and Mrs. Mark Oster- lin. Pouring at the tea tables will be Mrs. William Comstock, Mrs. Junius Beal, Mrs. Shirley Smith, Mrs. Clar- ence Yoakum, Mrs. James Bruce, Mrs. Evans Holbrook, Mrs. Allen Whitney, Mrs. John Sundwall, Mrs. Henry Riggs, Mrs. Jesse Reeves, Mrs. O. J. Campbell, and Mrs. Fielding Yost. Ann Arbor Women ade Club Officers At the closing session of the re- cent Kings' Daughters convention, officers for the coming year were chosen. Among Ann Arbor women elected to office were Mrs. Frank Mickle, Washtenaw County president, and second vice-president of the state sroup, Mrs. J. J. Kelly to the board of directors, Mrs. A. R. Crittenden, out-going state president, and Mrs. George Carrothers were named to the board of directors. Women Must Register To Attend Chicago Game Women who intend to go to the Chicago football game Saturday must register in the office of the dean of women, and must also present a letter from home granting permission to take the trip, it was said yesterday. The University will not provide chaperons because there are so many ways of getting to Chicago, Mrs. Byrl Bacher, assistant to the dean of women, said. However, women will travel in separate coaches. More than one hundred former Rhodes scholars attended a fare- well dinner aboard the Holland- American liner "Veendam" in honor of the 32 Rhodes scholars-elect who sailed for England the following day. WATCH OUR WINDOW for a Sensational Announcement 302 South State Street Bernie Cummins'OrchestraT Play At Union Formal Nov. 17 Bernie Cummins and his New in Philadelphia; two winters at the Yorkers orchestra, selected last week Belleview Biltmore in Bellair, Flor- to play for the fourth annual Union ida; and was picked out of 54 bands Formal, to be held Friday, Nov. 17, applying to open the Hotel New will come to Ann Arbor direct from Yorker. a long run at the Trianon Ballroom Tickets for the Formal went on in Chicago. sale yesterday, and members ,of the Vhile there he broadcasted regu- committee announced that several larly over WGN, the Chicago Tribune had been sold as soon as they were Station, and over the Columbia in distribution. The committee for the Broadcasting Company' network. Pre- dance is made up of members of the vious to this engagement he spent executive council of the Union. three years at the Hotel Biltmore in New York City and one year at the To Hotel New Yorker. He has made Plans ToBe Made many recordings of his dance ar- rangements. oFor Flower Show His coming engagement here is one stop on a few weeks personal appear- The southern and eastern districts ance tour that will include a number of the Federated Garden Clubs of of cities in this part of the country. Michigan are meeting today at the It is described by the Music Cor- League in preparation for a flower poration of America, managers of the show to be held here in the spring. orchestra, wi a vacation for the group Mrs. C. C. Meloche, president of the Cummins began his band in 1923 in club, will preside at the luncheon Cincinnati, at a small place called served at noon. Mrs. James Inglis is Toadstool Inn, and at that time he in charge of the general program. was the drummer. Since then he has The luncheon is being planned by played many notable engagements, Mrs. Paul Leidy, assisted by Mrs. including a season at the Ambassador Fielding Yost, Mrs. Everett Brown, Hotel, Atlantic City; the Club Madrid Mrs. R. E. Drake, and Mrs. Jesse Reeves, table decorations; and Mrs. MANUSCRIPTS DUE NOV. 1 Manuscripts for the 1934 Junior Girls' Play are due Wednesday, Nov. 1, it was announced yesterday by Barbara Sutherland, '35, gen- eral chairman. An inadvertent er- ror in The Daily has caused con- siderable confusion as to the date by which the manuscripts are due, Miss Sutherland said. ° W I i I w 11 t P I I I i, , ;i Where ToQGo. I 'I Motion Pictures: Michigan, "Dr. Bull" with Will Rogers; Majestic, "Gold Diggers .of 1933" with Joan Blondell; Wuerth, "Midnight Mary" with Loretta' Young; Whitney, "By Appointment Only" with Lew Cody. Play Production: ."Uncle Tom's Cabin" at Lydia. Mendelssohn The- atre, 8:15 p. m. Dancing: League Grill room, Hut, Den. Organ Recital: Palmer Christian, at 4:15 p. m. at Hill Auditorium. Dr. William T. Foster, director of the Pollak Foundation for Economic Research, of Newton, Mass., was a guest Sunday and Monday at the home of Prof. Thomas H. Reed of the political science department. Dr. Foster is an expert on small loans. efay &e Expect You? You are cordially invited to attend Jacobson's Fall Fashion JRevue on Thursday evening, October twenty-sixth, at eight !4 o'clock. We have gathered together such a rich collection of pro per Fall wear that vanity again becomes a lovely sin, -adwe want to present it for your ins pection. Entertainment will be given in the form of music, under the dir.ction of Zilpha Lewis, Violinist, and soloist over the Michigan Radio Network, featuring I-elen Talbott. _ 1 I as cIL Wnen ayes jewe I .ilk2 . " :....:.=