933 THE MICHIGAN DIILY H ouses Honor Actresses From 'Dinner At Eight' Members Of Faculty Ahd Visiting Celebrities Are Entertained At Dinners Many sororities are this week sat- isfying their hidden yearnings to learn about the interesting life of the stage by entertaining several of the actresses appearing here in "Dinner at Eight." Some houses are combining these entertainments with faculty dinners. Alpha Delta Pi Alpha Delta Pi are entertaining tonight at dinner for several guests. The table decorations will be in yel- low and white. Open house will be held Saturday after the game for friends. Alpha Epsilon Phi The members of Alpha Epsilon Phi entertained Prof. and Mrs. Preston W. Slosson and Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Long at a faculty dinner last night. Florence Roth, '34, was in charge of the arrangements. Several women will be guests of the Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority at a rush- ing dinner tonight. Sylvia Bubis, '36, is in charge of the dinner. Alpha Omicron Pi Stella A. Glass, '35, is in charge of a rushing dinner Friday. The table is to be decorated with candles and fall flowers. The sorority announces the pledg- ing of Elizabeth B. Miller, '37. Alpha Phi Alpha Phi sorority honored Dean Alice Lloyd, Miss Ethel McCormick, Miss Jeannette Perry, Miss Dorothy Ogborp, Mrs. Byrl Bacher, and Miss Laurie Campbell at a dinner Tuesday night. 'Bowls of fruit and yellow tapers decorated the table. The sorority will entertain Helen Hughes, actress in "Dinner at Eight," and Mr. and Mrs. Waldo Abbot at dinner tonight. Blanche Ring, star of "Dinner at Eight," will attend Open House at the sorority follow- ing the Minnesota-Michigan game. Delta Gamma Delta Gamma announces the pledging of Hilda Kirby, '35. Mem- bers of the house entertained Helen Hughes, who is appearing in "Dinner at Eight" at dinner last night. Kappa Alpha Theta Kappa Alpha Theta entertained at a patronesses dinner last night. Their guests were Mrs. Henry C. Hutchins, Mrs. J. F. Lawrence, Mrs. C. S. Neal, Mrs. Ida C. Wheat, Mrs. H. L. Wilgis, Mrs. J. S. Worley, Mrs. Alice Wood- bridge, Mrs. F. H. Yost and Mrs. Howard Holmes. Phi Beta Phi Miss Mildred T. Beisel, president of the chapter at Province, arrived yesterday and was taken to see Edna St. Vincent Millay. She will leave Fri- day morning. Sigma Kappa Agnes Robinson, '34, is in charge of a rushing dinner tonight. A winter color scheme will be carried out with black candles and white flowers. Zeta Tau Alpha The guests of Zeta Tau Alpha's faculty dinner last night included Professor Lewis VanderVelde, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Riley, and Miss Marion McKinny. Evening Hats Add That Note T oYour Gown Do you feel just a bit discouraged about the big evening which you should be gayly anticipating? And is that blue feeling due to the fact that the dinner gown which is a perfect knock-out in itself has been before the public eye too long and is growing "stale"? If so, all you need is something brand new by way of an accessory which will add a novel touch. Such- an addition in the form of one of the new evening hats is just the thing. Try it and see how your drooping spirits revive. Such a hat is decidedly glamorous as well as decidedly new, and is very appropriate for wear with trailing dinner dresses. The most popular fabric is velvet, twisted or 'braided into tiny turbans which perch pre- cariously on the crown of the head and droop mysterious looking veils, which are often shot with silver or gold threads. In fact the metallic touch is very much in evidence, some hats being entirely covered with se- quins and others being of metallic cloth or lame, which gives a very rich effect. The turban is not the only style favored, however, for halo hats and baby bonnets are also worn and be- rets made with a sweeping touch are often seen. All these types employ rhinestone ornaments lavishly and sometimes a tiny feather or bow matches the trimming on the gown. League Dance Honors Athletes Saturday Night Lucile Wyman Describes Town Between Tennessee, Virginia If some of Chicago's big shots had in Virginia, and very young couples been wise, they would have trans- have to be married on the Tennessee ferred the scene of their activities to side. Beer is sold in Tennessee but Bristol, a town in which the main not in Virginia, so all the beer gar- street forms part of the borderline dens are on the west side of the main between Tennessee on the west and street. The school course in Virginia Virginia on the east. If a person com- is only eleven years, and it is twelve mits a crime on the Tennessee side, in Tennessee. Of course all the Ten- lftftWfto' POW --o -.-lw - all he has to do is run across the street and make his escape while the Tennessee police formally request the Virginia officials to pursue him. Bristol is the home of Lucile Wy- man, '35, physical education major here and transfer from the Virginia Intermont College. Miss Wyman, who speaks with a Tennessee accent and says "pie" as no Northerner can say it, declares: "There are lots of funny situations in Bristol. The marriage laws in Tennessee are more lax than League Continues I To Feature Weekly Student Stunt Night Five students volunteered their tal- ents for the third in a series of week- ly Wednesday stunt nights held last night in the Grill Room of the League. The program by the amateur ar- I tists was opened with Albert New- man, '34, singing. Following New- man's song, a specialty tap dance was performed by Mary Jane Busch, '35. Max Gail, campus orchestra leader, continued with a piano solo, and then furnished the accompani- ment for a song vocalized by Durand Brown, '35E. The concluding num- ber presented by the volunteer per- formers featured Sally Pierce, '35, known for her dramatic ability, in the role of tap dancer and singer. "Apparently the students are en- joying Stunt Night as much as we expected them to, and as long as the feature has succeeded in creating the friendly atmosphere that it was de- signed to create and the students continue to offer their talent for the occasion we will continue the weekly amateur nights," Miss Ethel McCor- mick, social director of the League, said last night. Al Cowan, director of the Grill Room orchestra, is enthusiastic over the response received. Wednesdays are much more popular than Tues- days or 'Thursdays, the other two nights on which the Grill Room is open, Cowan said. Zeta Phi Eta Holds Initiation For Five Five, women were initiated into Zeta Phi Eta, woman's speech so- ciety recently: Miss Gail Densmore, Miss Irene Poole, Eleanor Chase, '35, Margaret Sauer, '36, and Nolda Mc- Camley ,'34. Prof. Louis M. Eich of the speech department read "Of Thee I Sing" at the first of a series of faculty lec- tures sponsored by the organization. Prof. John H. Muyskens of the pho- netics department will speak on "Clinic Cases" Nov. 28 in Room 302 Mason Hall. Roman Stripes Adapted To All Fashion Fields! Roman stripes are more than hold- ing their own in the fashion field, adapting themselves to formal gowns and sport scarfs. One fringed scarf we noticed was made wide and short for spectator sports wear, to fill ade- quately the neckline of a swagger coat. ANN ARBOR WOMEN'S CLUB The Ann Arbor Women's Club held their weekly meeting yesterday at the League. The program included piano numbers by Emilie Paris, '36, and a one-act play directed by Mrs. D. G. Meickle. PHI BETA DELTA The alumni of Phi Beta Delta are entertaining the active chapter at a banquet Monday night at the Book- Cadillac Hotel in Detroit.} nessee kids wish they could go to the school on the Virginia side. Trucks that do business in both parts of town have to have licenses from both states." "Each side of the city has a sep- arate government and police organi- zation," Miss Wyman continues. "Bristol, Tennessee, has the city may- or type, and Bristol, Virginia, has the city manager plan. The water sys- tems are separate, too. Tennessee water is better than the Virginia water." Incidentally Miss Wyman is from the Tennessee section. In the middle of the main street is a narrow strip of "neutral" zone. "What would happen," we asked, "if a criminal stood right in that zone when the police were pursuing him?" "He would probably get run over," was Miss Wyman's reply. Bristol is near the Unaka National Forest, a popular resort for moon- rides. u i Epsilon Will 'Entertain The Michigan chapter of Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary musical sorority, will celebrate Founders' ay with a formal muicale to be given at 8 p. m. today at the home of Mrs. Nathan E. Konold, 1908 Austin Ave. Alumni and active members have been invited to attend the mu- sicale, at which the following pro- gram will be presented: Piano solo by Frances Dell, "So- netto in E flat Major," by Liszt. Vio- lin solos by Betty Allsap Leslie, ac- companied by Mary Anne Mathew- son, "Air," from Concerto Opus 28, by C. Goldmark; "The Bee," by Schubert; "Chanson Triste," by Ka- linnikov; and "Perpetuum Mobile," by Novacek. Vocal solos by Mildred Drinkhaus Coulter, soprano, who will play her own accompaniments: "In the Boat," by Grieg; "The Mountain Maid," by Grieg; and "The Youth," by Grieg. .I Literary SOciety Holds Meeting And Initiation Five women were initiated into Black Quill literary society at a meet- ing held Tuesday night in the League. They are: Edith Engle, '35, Helen Haxton, '36, Harriet Kesse- man, '35, Kathryn Rietdyk, '36, and Marian Wiggin, '36. Recent committee appointments include Frances Carney, '36, chair- man of organization, assisted by Miss Rietdyk and Miss Engle, and Flora Sims, '36, finance chairman. Where to Go Motion Pictures: Michigan, "Charlie Chan's Greatest Case" with Warner Oland; Whitney, "Justice Takes A Holiday" with H. 1. Warner and "Tangled Fortunes." Stage: Majestic, "Dinner at Eight" with Blanche Ring. Dancing: League Grill Room, Den, Hut, Dixie Inn, Joe Parker's, Preketes. Lecture: Dr. Carl E. Guthe on "North American Archaeology" at 4:15 p. m. Natural Science Auditor- ium. A DEPRESSION PRICES * Shampoo & Finger Wave 50c Shampoo, Finger Wave, and Manicure 75c Expert Operators POWDER PUFF BEAUTY SHOP State St. (Over M Hut) Dial 6442 You've Waited for Here It Is! Beginning Thursday Morning CONTINUING TWO DAYS! Note: The Store Will Remain Open 'til Seven Thursday Night! Dresses.Gowns --Suits --W inter Coats GLAMOROUSLY ORIGINALLYJ& FUR TRIMMED MUCH HIGHER LOVELY, NEW - DRESSES ALL FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK Reduced from $16.75, $14.95, $12.95 to I$7.7 Every one of the dresses has been hand picked,.. . They're up to the last min- ute in style! TWO DAYS ONLY Wayne Knit Hosiery Regularly 79c Value THREE PAIRS FOR ONLY .. Single Pairs Not Sold 0 IfI . . ,. . THE MAIN DINING ROOM 11 at I THE MICHIGAN 1/2 O~ff on Millinery TWO DAYS ONLY FELTS - VEL VETS - SATINS HATS PRICED FROM $5.00 TO $12.50 Rust - Wine - Red - Green Black - Brown - Eel - Mist Grey - Navy Special Clearance Group 2 for $1.0 LEAGUE udil be op1 SATURDAY November 18/h 11 1 a l*Ljr^E~Ll r% AlL LIrrn I °1 1 I 11 11 \N