THE MICHIGAN DAJJY, Chaperons Are Announced For; Fmternity Ball Alumnni And Faculty Will Be Honored At Function Of Interfraternity Body Chaperons for the Interfraternity tall, to be held Jan. 5 at the League, will be the faculty and alumni mem- bers of the Judiciary Committee of the Interfraternity Council, which is sponsoring the event. The alumni members who will be accompanied by their wives are Al- fred B. Connable and Charles W. Graham. Dean and Mrs. Joseph A. Bursley, Dr. and Mrs. Warren G. Forsythe, and Prof. and Mrs. Robert G. Rodkey will be the faculty mem- Wers honored. Tickets for the dance, for which Duane Yates and his 12-piece or- dhestra will provide the music, will be on sale in the lobby of Angell Hall 'and at Van Boven's, as well as being offered by council tryouts in a house-to-house canvass. Womens Club To Hold Home gpen Hou s e The Ann Arbor Women's Club is holding an American Home Open House Wednesday and Thursday at the Masonic Temple. Entertainment features will be located on the sec- and floor, while shops will fill the lower floor. _ Each day from 10:30 to 11:30 a. m. members of the club will tell their lest recipes, and describe in detail the process of making them. From 11:30 a. m. until 2 p. m. visitors will have an opportunity to inspect the rnany exhibits. It will be possible to remain in the building for lunch, or at night on the same ticket. The baked goods shop is in charge ot =Mrs. E. W. Staebler, who will -be assisted by Mrs. R. A. Nixon, Mrs. D. L 'Hoatson, Mrs. R. K. Hollard, Mrs. HI D. Godfrey, Mrs. Elmer Litteer, Mrs. R. E. Shook, Mrs. James Helber, and Mrs. George Bleekman. The committee has called on 200 of the club members for contribu- tions of baked goods, but Mrs. Stae- bler has said that any additional con- tributions would be greatly . appre- ciated. Wednesday morning -ten minute talks on recipes will be given by Mrs. George Carrothers, Mrs. George Walterhouse, Mrs. Lucille Chapin, Mrs. Alton Hewett, Mrs. Nathan Stanger, and Mrs. R. H. Finley. Thursday the speakers on this prac- tidal part of the program will be Mrs. Howard Jackson, Mrs. William Drury, Mrs. Charles H. Eaton, Mrs. J.:E. Emswiler, Mrs. A. B. King, and Miss Nan Johnson. Svpreme Court Upholds Military Training Ru e (By Intercollegiate Press) WASHINGTON, Dec. 11.- In re- fusing to review an appeal challeng- ing the Maryland 1a w requiring teaching of military training at the state university; the United States Supreme Court last week in effect upheld the right of the University of' Maryland to require its students to take the military course.; The case was that of Ennis H. Coale, a conscientious objector who was ousted from the University 'when he refused to accept the military training as part of his schedule. Ballot Boxes Nailed To Courthouse Fence Airmail]Pilots Escape Death In Snow Storm PORTAGE, Pa., Dec. 11. -VP)- Braving a raging storm to get the mails through, 'two planes of the Transcontinental and Western Air Lines crashed in the snow-swept Al-I legheny mountains early today, the pilots bailing out safely. Wings encrusted with ice 4under a falling temperature, the two mail ships, neither carrying passengers, lost altitude so rapidly that the pilots had to take to the parachutes over the treacherous mountains during a snowfall of blizzard-like intensity. lumbus, 0., reported he was safe shortly after he went over the side of his eastbound plane near Portage. The other, Harold G. Andrews of New York, pushing his way west- ward, phoned hours later that he had reached the ground at Roaring! Springs, in Blair country, 50 miles from Portage. Neither s h i p had been located at that time. A howling wind began to swirl snow over the "graveyard of the skies," as the Alleghenies are known in the flying world, some time be- fore midnight. Stormy conditions caused discontinuance of all passen- ger flights as early as 4 p. m. One plane, fight no. 3 from New- ark westward, got through the snow and flashed into Pittsburgh Airport' Sat 12:05 a. m., the last ship to get Good-Will Meal Governor Will Not _. Free Law Violator Rieceives Aid Fr o rn Council Following an old campus custom many fraternities will be planning to entertain indigent children at dinner Thursday night. Some of the fraternities inaugura- ting the policy will be in need of help. According to Bethel B. Kelly, presi- dent of the Interfraternity Council, this service will be offered by the In- terfraternity Bureau. With the aid of the Ann Arbor Welfare League the Council has been able to assemble the names of many children in need of a good square meal. LANSING, Dec. 11. - () - Gov. Comstock will not interfere with the sentence imposed upon Henry Sass, of Ionia, for violation of the liquor law, he said today. The governor de- clared he had investigated Sass' rec- ord sufficiently to convince him the sentence was justified. He asserted Sass has been a con- stant law violator, selling liquor to intoxicated persons. The governor investigated the case following reports that Sass had been sentenced to the Michigan Reforma- tory in Ionia for from 15 months to four years merely because he gave a drink of liquor to a friend. i One pilot, Gene Burford of Co- safely over the mountains.v I -Associv'ed Press Photo Ballot boxes, sent from New Orleans into the sixth congressional district of Louisiana for use in the riotous election, are shown nailed to the courthouse fence at St. Franeisville' after they had been emptied of ballots by incensed voters. 'Many ballots were burned. ISc(Iu y OflfairA nd iNew A rranements Important To Style With the pert little turbans and berets which leave most of the head uncovered, and the scintillating tiaras for nightly wear which attract atten- tion to the hair, a good-looking coif- fure is important for beauty. One of the most charming arrange- ments this season is a fairly short bob combed back from the face in loose waves with a mass of curls cov- ering the back of the head almost to the crown. It gives the air of sweet sixteen to any miss. Anether becoming coiffure is the coronet effect for long hair, which consists of a braid or strand bound around the head. Nothing can make one more regal and stately, especially when it is worn with one of those new formals ending in a queenly littleI train. I-owever important the style of theI coiffure, it is still secondary to the actual condition and beauty of the hair. Frequent shampoos and the old. standard prescription of vigorous1 brushing make the hair glamorousf and gleaming. And for the busy1 woman who has to squeeze in beauty 'parlor appointments by split seconds, the dry shampoo is a life-saver. There are several new products on the mar- ket, generally consisting of a pow- dered oris root base, which for little money will keep the hair as clean and shiny and fluffy as a regular -soap-and-water bath.I ranee To Be Given At Y.W.C.A. Club A Christmas dance is being given by the Supper Club of the Y.W.C.A. from 9 until 12 p. m. Thursday, Dec. 14, in the Unitarian Social Hall for members of the club and their friends. Armand Phillip's orchestra will fur-_ nish the music for the dance, for which tickets will 'be available at the YW.C.A., Miss Ethel Swarthout, gen-. eral chairman for the affair, said yesterday. Miss Mabel Le Mar is acting as ticket chairman, and Miss Lottie Dietrich is chairman of the refresh- ment committee. Miss Ailene Neyer and Miss Lillian Swartout are chair- men of the decorating and music committee, respectively. 1, . Fraternity Men Report Decline In Memhership A reduction of more than 2,000 members has been suffered by 685 national fraternities since the school year 1929-30, when there were 19,- 057 men enrolled in those organiza- tions which reported to the Interfra- ternity Conference, according to fig- ures released recently by conference officials. There are at present 16,971 men who are members, the decline being 11 per cent. That fraternities are 'letting down the bars" on their membership re- quirements is shown by the fact that whereas the decline in total member- ship was 11 per cent, the number of pledges to the same fraternities de- clined only eight per cent. The num- ber of men who could afford to take the formal initiation ceremonies has declined by 22 per cent. The average active chapter was re- ported by the conference as being 27.8 men in 1929-30, as compared with 24.8 men for this year. The section of the country that suffered most from the drop-off in the number of members is the Rocky Mountain district, while the north central part of the country, including; the states of Illinois, Michigan, Iowa, Wisconsin, Indiana, and Ohio, was the next in line in the decline. Initia- tions fell off by 36.3 per cent and pledges 13.5 per cent. "Like industry," the report says in its concluding paragraphs, "the fra- ternity system, riding on a wave of increasing membership, has become overbuilt. The crushing burden of overhead which goes on whether there are three or thirty men living in the house will take its toll on many campuses which were overbuilt even in better times." *5 " ~- Ak ~ Ribbons M AKE your gifts so fascinating that it will be a real effort 'Not to Open Until Christ- ,mas.' uyour O W/ All rubber qaloshes with snap fasteners . . . made to fit snugly over any type of heel ... fleece lined in black or brown. 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