. . . .. u .. .. , ,.... .. _ , .. CAMPUS Plans For Ball Are Announced By Committee Tickets Will Be On Sale For Panhellenic Ball At LeagueThursday Tickets for the Panhellenic Ball to be held Dec. 1 in the League Ball- room will be placed on sale for $3.50 next Thursday, Betty Spray, '35, the chairman, said yesterday. They may be purchased at the League desk, and from committee chairmen, who include Mary Louise Kessberger, '34, Ann Osborne, '34, Kay Leopold, '34, Mary Savage, '35, Mary Stirling, '35, Jane Brucker, '35, and Nan iebel, '35. Several prominent orchestras are under consideration, and the name of the one chosen will be announced within a few days, Miss Leopold, chairman of music, said.- From present indications of the number. of sorority members who ex- pect to attend, the tickets will proba- bly sell quickly, Miss Spray stated. As usual, a few tickets will be placed on sale for independent women, but the greater part of them will be sold to Panhellenic members. Rehearsals For J.G.P. To Begin This Afternoon All junior women expecting to take part in the Junior Girls Play are to attend the weekly practices, the first of which will be held at 5 p. m. today in Sarah Caswell Angell Hall. Informal tap dancing classes will be given each week, so that the fun- damental steps and movements may be learned. Through these classes the dance committee, assisted by Mr. Russell McCracken, will make selec- tions for the choruses and leads. The traditional fee of $1 will be collected from each woman, eligible or ineligible, and anyone who plans to participate in junior activities. Hilda Kirby, finance chairman, stated that women lve been ap- pointed to collect from each house and asked the co-operation of all junior women. New Football Coat Is Ideal Garment For Stadium Wear Are you looking for something warm to wear to the game which will at the same time be dashing, enough to do away with that bundled look which is more fatal to charm than any number of red noses? If so, we have found the answer to numerous prayers in the football coat which is just what the name implies, the ideal garment for sta- dium wear. It is a sport coat which will take the place of your rather bedraggled polo coat and yet differs from the swagger style which has seemed for a long time to be the only alterna- tive to the ever-popular polo. In other words, it is really new and different and yet is practical. The style is simple, unusual sleeve treatment be- ing the only decorative note. How- ever, the untrimmed collar is pro- longed to form the trimmest little scarf which performs its appointed task of keeping the vocal chords warm and at the same time waves its ends in the breeze in an exceedingly dashing manner. In addition to all this, it comes in the gayest of colors, which will liven up the drabbest of days and raise the spirits of the most despondent rooters. She Will Portray Kitty Packard In Coming Play HELEN HUGHES * * A *. * Helen Hughes, Phi Beta Kappa, To Appear In Dinner At Eight' Sororities And Fraternities Enjoy A Busy Week At Several Functions Several sororities and fraternities are holding pledging and initiation ceremonies. Alpha Epsilon Phi The members of Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority wish to announce the pledg- ing of Ella Miller, '36, of Latrobe, Pa., Helene Lindenbaum, '36, of Detioit, and Evelyn Bluestein, '37, of Brook- line, Mass. Delta Zeta Delta Zeta sorority announces the pledging of Gwendolyn Brackett, '35, of Norway. Hermitage Hermitage announces the pledging of William Bowers, '36, Howard Moore, '36, William Pierce, '36, Allan Cleveland, '36, and Robeft Crouch, '35. Kappa Delta Kappa Delta is holding a rushing dinner tonight at which the decora- tions will be carried out in white, white tapers and white roses being used. The sorority is holding open house after the football game tomorrow. Pi Beta Phi Pi Beta Phi recently initiated Mar- garet Mustard, '36, of Battle Creek; and Martha Steen, '36, of Belle Ver- non, Pa. Sigma Kappa Lucille E. Jetter, '34, is in charge of a rushing dinner and bridge at Sigma Kappa today. Yellow winter chrysanthemums and pale green tap- ers will decorate the table. Zeta Tau Alpha Zeta Tau Alpha entertained the pledges of other sororities at a tea Wednesday. Ellen Chapman, '37, was in charge. A rushing dinner for sev- eral guests was given last night. Rust-colored flowers and shell-pink tapers embellished the tables. It is a somewhat popular belief that in order to portray a character successfully on the stage, the actor must to a certain extent resemble that character in real life. In "Dinner at Eight," the Broad- way success which Robert Henderson is bringing to the Majestic theatre for a week's engagement, beginning next Sunday night, Helen Hughes, who appears as the cheap slattern wife, Kitty Packard, wife of "big bus- iness man," Dan Packard, is a direct contradiction to this argument. In all probability Kitty Packard had a difficult time getting through the grades, has never come into closer, contact with polite society than from the receiving - side of a hat-check counter, and possesses a vocabulary limited at best to two hundred words, including profanity. Helen Hughes was graduated from the University of Wisconsin with highest honors. A Phi Beta Kappa, she was one of the most popular girls on the Wisconsin campus, being cho- sen Prom Queen in 1928. She is a member of Delta Gamma sorority and was active in campus dramatics, being a member of the Wisconsin Players with whom she appeared as leading lady. Her professional stage experience has included such important engage- ments as understudy to Pauline Lord Alpha Delta Sigma Reorganizes Here Plans for reorganization of the, Michigan chapter of Alpha Delta Sigma, national advertising frater-r nity, were discussed at a dinner held in the Founder's Room of the Union Wednesday night. Robert Ward, '35, was chosen to call together 15 stu- dents interested in advertising. The movement for reorganization was begun by Arthur Hallam, grad- uate secretary of the fraternity. In addition to students in the schools of journalism ;and commerce, the, group will include members in the professional world, such as Henry T. Ewald, who is now a member of Campbell and Ewald Co. in Detroit. Only students interested in advertis- ing may belong, Ward said. Hopwood Prize Winner Critically 1.1 In Montana and member of the New York Thea- tre Guild's road production of "Strange Interlude." On Broadway she appeared in the Theatre Guild's production of "Faust" with Dudley Digges and George Gaul. She also played an important role in William Brady's much discussed play, "Simon Called Peter." Miss Hughes has attracted much favorable comment in "Dinner at Eight" from the critics in Detroit where the play is now being per- formed at the Cass theatre to ca- pacity audiences. Explanation Of Women's Point System Is Given By MARGARET D. PHALAN A clarification of the puzzling point system for women was issued by Miss Jeannette Perry, assistant dean of women, yesterday. The system is de- signed to distribute honors and du- ties among a greater number of wom- en, and to encourage more women to participate in extra-curricular ac- tivities. Each recognized activity, such as the League, W.A.A., publications, honor societies, language clubs, Pan- hellenic, literary, music, and other clubs, is given a certain value in points,'and no student will be allowed to assume more than 14 points at any one time. Activity positions are divided into three groups, according to the re- sponsibility and importance of the position held. Group C includes mem- bership in any such activities which counts one or two points, and offices of the minor clubs, for which each woman earns two points. Group B includes more important positions, with a rating of from three to five points. Group A includes the presidency of the League, of W.A.A. and a few other offices, each carrying from six to 10 points. 1 tie do its en the ou w Wi; da pa: Re no fan M wi da Ph an ch Ga of r tom i WI Ja fo Th me ter nei as r an at sis ~th ar - 1 be ds rin 1M o '3 '36 or bo II I r I I i I I i i i i Helen Newberry Residence held its second faculty dinner last night. Among the guests who attended were Prof. and Mrs. William Smeaton, Prof. and Mrs: Julia del Toro, Prof. and Mrs. John Eaton, Prof. and Mrs. Walter Reichart, and Prof. Bruce Donaldson. The decorations were chrysanthe- mums and autumn leaves. Elsa Van Slyke, '35, assistant social chairman of the residence was in charge of the dinner. 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. . , ... ,r _ ®, i , '_- --. _ ... . ._. t- i ie I ~lThu Ax Trrrr1)1gAN