T WE M9 IA~DAL AEP Feads Chosen For Exhibition Fur Lining Is Practical Junior Women Three Candles Lit To Honor To Hold J.G.Pq Birthday Of Children's Theatre I By Swimmers W.A.A. Will Sponsor Meet For First Time In Drive For Swimming Pool The general committee for the swimming exhibition annually given by the varsity swimmers and spon- sored by the W.A.A. for the first time this year in their drive for a new swimming pool was announced yes- terday by Kate Landrum, '37, W.A.A. president. Helen Harp, '39, Sally Kenny, '38, Mary Jane Mueller, '38, Betty Whit- ney, '38, Hope Hartwig, '38, Mary Johnson, '38, Lois Spreen, '37, Char-, lotte Baxter, '38, and Betsey Ander-' son, '38, comprise the committee.! Miss Harp, as president of the wom- en's swimming club, will be in charge of the tryouts for the women's relay in the exhibition. Tickets for the event, costing 40 cents, can be purchased from any of the committee members according to Miss Landrum. - The funds received from the ex- hibition will go partly towards send-1 ing the varsity swimmers to an out- side meet and the remainder toward' the proposed women's swimming pool. A relay featuring six four-member teams chosen from the best sorority, dormitory and zone teams on campus will be one event o sthe meet. Try- outs for these teams will take place at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, and the fol- lowing Tuesday and Thursday at the Union pool. . x ff ,. r ' , r - ; ,,,. { J /. r / j; . ;, ,%' ' ' , 1 oA; '34 has been responsible for a in Wonderland." Children's Theatre great deal of the coloer and life which xviii carry on its good work again this has gone into these productions, his ; year with Sally Pierce as director, greatest triumph perhaps being in and the program planned promises a last spring's presentation of "Alice popular season. j I' gr 'pit //J , , j '; I ;t .;,; r,, rr; ;;; r i i v i i A fur-lined tweed coat has all of a fur coat's comfort and none of its ,prishable qualities. No rain or snow can mat the hairs, and carry- ing one's books on one side cannot make worn spots. Tm- - A1 HAVE - YOUR t -HAIR DONE HERE! Shampoo and Wave - 30c on Monday and Tuesday I Dnner Announced. For Foreign Group' The annual International Dinner will be held at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday tin the Union Ballroom, according to Prof. J. Raleigh Nelson, counselor to foreign students., Three hundred and seventy reser- vations have been made, including 216 students, faculty members and their wives, pastors of the Ann Arbor' churches and their wives who will act. as hosts and hostesses, and com- mittee members who are helping Professor Nelson with preparations for the dinner. The International Dinner is held yearly for students from foreign! couxtries and from United States ter- rtorial possessions as an expression of good will. Remainder of eat 5 uty iI 3544 Week - 40c rice Shop 305 S State Dia __ . We have a complete assortment of LINENS Ideal for Christmas GiftsU -Guest Towels Q -Cocktail Napkins © - Handkerchiefs Luncheon Sets Y ALWAYS REASONABLY PRICED GAGE LINEN SHOP 0 10 NICKELS ARCADE Goc.:..a;():, (c..=. t) ->(c oc ()c*( Mass Meeting Ho>e Hartwig To Name Tryout Dates; Dr. Bell, Dean LloydTo Talk The annual mass meeting of junior wcmen will be held Tuesday, Dec. 8 in the League, acording to Hope Hartwig, general chairman of the 1937 Junior Girls Play committee. Dean Alice C. Lloyd and Dr. Mar- garet Bell will address the group, speaking on eligibility and health. Hiss Hartwig will introduce the cen- tral committee and announce the dates for tryouts. Virginia Hunt, chairman of the music committee, and Marie Sawyer, dance chairman will explain the choruses that will be needed for the production.- The various committee positions will be announced soon after the mass meeting. Preference slips will be distributed to the group to be filled out with each woman's choice for committee work. It should be under- stood that a woman may work on a committee and at the same time take part in the actual play or the chor- uses. There will be no interviewing of applicants for committee work. Po- sitions are open on all the commit- tees including: dance, music, finance, ushers, costumes, tickets, make-up, programs, properties, and publicity. Sarah Pierce, Grad., has been chos- en to direct the production. As yet no manuscript has been decided upon, and any suggestions will be welcomed by the committee. The regular $1 fee that is collected each year for class projects must be paid at the time an- nounced for tryouts. No one will be allowed to try out until the fee is paid. It is also necessary for each junior woman to have the health recheck at the Health Service before she may participate in any activity. Hockey Teams Are Honored At Luncheons Following a luncheon and a tea given yesterday, a luncheon honor- ing the members of the 19 teams competing in the fourth annual Great Lakes Hockey Tournament will be given at 12:15 p.m. today at Charles Mc1kinney Hall in Ypsilanti. Lurene Prouse, Grad., as president of the Anin Arbor Hockey Club, offi- cial hostesses for the tournament, will act as mistress of ceremonies. Dr. Margaret Bell, honorary chairman, will give an informal talk. Members of the Great Lakes Hockey team will be announced at the meeting. A trio of three Michigan State Normal College students, Jean Wort- ley, Gertrude Deal and Miriam Jol- lify will entertain the group with sev- eral selections. Katherine Quick will be the accompanist. A short business meeting will be called after the luncheon by Jessica Nixon, president of the organiza- tion and a member of the Cleveland team. Miss Nixon graduated from the University in the class of 1927. Third S.C.A. Dance Held At Lane Hall The third of the recently instituted Student Christian Association dances, given for members and other stu- dents interested in informal dances, was held at 9 p.m. yesterday in Lane Hall. Postponed a week from last Satur- day, so it could be given in conjunc- tion with Thanksgiving, the affair I was more highly organized than the two previous ones, S.C.A. officials said. Kay Carey's orchestra, a local band that has played at several cam- pus parties, furnished the music for the dancers. while intermission en- tertainment consisted of movies of the Freshman Rendezvous camp at Patterson Lake. Cider and dough- nuts were also served. Mr.and Mrs.HGeorgeAlder and Rev, and Mrs. H. L. Pickerill were chaperons for the dance. KAPPA DELTA Mrs. E. R. Sunderland and Mrs. George M. Stanley will entertain the alumnae' active and pledge mem- bers of Kappa Delta from 5 to 7 p.m. Sunday for buffet supper at the for- mner's home on Cambridge Rd. About 60 are expected to attend. "SMART" HEAD-DRESS for your FORMALS By BETTY BINGHAM Bring on the cake and let the candles be lit, Children's Theatre is celebrating its third birthday this month and embarking on its fourth' season of popular plays. With "Hans Brinker" well under way and vague plans for "The Little Princess" and "A Place to Play" tan- talizing their brains, the directors occasionally recall this same seasonI three years ago when students of thel Tappan Junior High School present- ! ed the first performance of Chil- dren's Theatre, "Hansel and Gret - el," directed by Mr. Kenneth Maran- tette, and thus launched this little ship of the drama. Children As Audience Notices received by parents that year informed them that the League was sponsoring a theatre designed especially for the development of children as an audience where they could see plays suited to their under- standing produced with the smooth- ness and perfection of an adult proj- ect. It was organized by Ethel Mc- Cormick, social director. of the League, and Russell McCracken, then assisting in dramatics, partly as a means of adding to the undergrad- uate fund and partly to satisfy the need'for a children's theatre. First Year Is Success The first year 1933-34 was a suc- cess and added to the fund by the production of three plays "Hansel and Gretel," (the only play with an entire cast of children which the theatre has sponsored), "Jack and the Beanstalk" and 'The Pied Piper." This encouraged the producers to continue the project and present in 1934-35 "Cinderella," "The Emper- or's New Clothes" and "The Adven- tures of Tom Sawyer." In the second year, the children of the various schools aided in ad- 11 vertising the theatre by telling the stories of the plays to their classes, a plan which seemed to bring mu- tual enjoyment. A drive by sorority and fraternity houses was started to send underprivileged children to at least one performance of the theatre and the response was good, the sum collected being doubled , the second year of the attempt and 315 children being benefited by it. Wi ndt Made Director Last year Valentine B. Windt re- placed Mr. McCracken as official director and selected, with the aid of a committee including teachers from each school, "Aladdin and His Won- derful Lamp," "Robinhood, or the Queen's Page" and "Alice in Won- derland" for production. Outstanding features of these plays have been the stage settings and costumes which rival the stories themselves in fantastic and imagin- ative appeal. Oren Parker, graduate For Information - Call MISS JONES at 21 -21 -4 'I ... Smart and 'Practical POTTER MOSS BED JACKETS $1.95 Blue -- Tangerine Medium and Large 8 NICKELS ARCADE 1 New Black Hats in High Crowns PILL-BOX Copied in Colors The Gfl-IBOUT A! WHEW. I'm glad those midse- mesters are over - for the *time being at any rate and now once more we can get back into the swing of things. All set for a big - very big and gay Thanksgiving week-end - there will be the Pan- hell of course to say nothing of the usual run of marvelous fra- ternity and sorority parties. And Panhell is going to be just grand, I hear. Everybody is talking about it-and EVERYBODY IS GOING -Dutch uncles and everything! NEW GOWNS are definitely in order for this greatest of all occa- sions - and if there is anything you want ELIZABETH DILLON has it. Now let me give you a few handy hints and suggestions -she has the most gorgeous tur- quoise blue jewel-studded satin gown in her window and with stunning shoestring shoulder straps. Really it will knock your eyes out - and believe you me there will be compliments galore from the escort- the onegyou picked out especially for Panhell! Am I right? The modern trend, too, is to go old fashioned, you know. Look like your grand- mother did when she was a girl! And she really must have looked lovely-your granddad certainly must have thought so ! Elizabeth Dillon is ready and waiting to meet this desire too with the most adorable sapphire blue taffeta dress with a skirt of ruffles, ruff- les and more ruffles. And by the way - it's one of those lovely Jean Carol dresses firom Hollywood too! Doesn't it make your mouth water? It should. But wait! To make the old-fashioned costume com- plete, she has lovely velvet fitted wraps with leg o'mutton sleeves - doesn't that sound too cute fob words? We really must keep "wrapped" up these cold days- don't you think so? O-o-o-o! KEEPING IN LINE with Pan- hell and everything you'll want all the necessary accessories to go with that new formal- the head- dress is very important and just put yourself into the hands of HELEN POLHEMUS and you'll get something definitely new and different - after all that's what we want, isn't it? Well naturally! J t~ t And she has all the cutest things - in bright colors - that you can tuck behind a- curl and look just adorable - and gay flowers either for your hair or to add that cer- tain touch to your formal. Then of course there is the "blind-date" evening cap that your correspon- dent told you about last week - Stunning, did you say? Nothing else! And incidentally she also car- ried the very latest line of hosiery -both for evening and daytime wear - the kind formerly carried by the Rubley Shoppe in the Ar- cade - remember? And they're really quite the bargain! * * * JUST TtIE THING that you need now is a compact. This gadder-abouter has been looking around- and knows! You see the King's eyes and ears see and hear all - yes, and you didn't think I had noticed - now did you? Well, don't let it worry you, because CALKINS - FILETCHERS have the grandest assortment of stunning compacts you ever saw. Just the very newest thing, too! Among them I noticed Yardley's mirror compact and Lentheric's new "stream-lined" number in burnished silver and gold. Don't miss these - they're knock-outs! You'll also find grand represent- atives from any of your other fa- vorites - Coty, Dunhill, or Dor- othyGray. AFTER ALL dancing isn't the only thing in Ann Arbor - there's always PLENTY of walking to do -plenty! Ann Arbor really wouldn't be Ann Arbor if there wasn't a lot of A. Your correspon- dent has just the thing for you too - the, new Tyrolean Gay Friar walking shoes at VAN BOVEN'S. They're low-heeled brown suede with a decorative band of color around the top -and fastened by an attractive brassnbutton - You have heard of all sorts of brass buttons but never have they been on shoes - well it just takes Van Boven's to carry something very new and different. Now you have a grand excuse to be in utter com- fort as you walk along the "diag- onal" or down State. An innova- tion in Ann Arbor! ill 2 cKINSEY HATS OP 2 27 South State Street 1 - ______ _... ___ ____ ii -t .. . "Gone With the Wind'." I. Clothes that are repeatedly subjected to inferior dry cleaning methods TI-IAr's why the student who uses foresight will select a "best seller" like 9REENE'S - the*happy choice for fifteen years of discriminating students and faculty members. He'll be assured not only of the best and safest dry cleaning job possible, but he'll effect a monetary saving by taking i advantage of the ten percent discount for cash. NO CHARGE FOR DELIVERY GREENE'S CLEANERS & DYERS (IKNICROCLEAN I