THE MICHIGAN DAILY League Heads Plan eason's Social Events Duties Of Two Committees Added; Clearing - House For Tickets Planned By JENNY PETERSEN With the beginning of the fourth week of school, all the committees of the League have plans under way for a busy season of activity, according to Hope Hartwig, '38, president of the League. Helen Louise Arner, '38, recently appointed third vice-president of the League, in charge of candy bootns, announced that, starting tomorrow, the candy booths in Mosher-Jordan Halls, Betsy. Barbour House, Helen Newberry Residence and University Hall will be in full operation. Profits from the booths, which sell cigafettes and bluebooks besides candy, go into the scholarship fund of the League. Special Committee Sponsors Tea, Its duties multiplied by the addi- tion of the functions of the former house-reception committee, the so- cial committee is headed this year by Betty Gatward, '38. This commit- tee sponsors two Ruthven teas and one Undergraduate Tea every month, besides arranging exchange dinners between sororities and between dor- mitories. Also, under its direction, each sorority entertains a group of foreign students once a year. When visitors come to the campus, guides are provided by the social committee. Another function taken over from the house-reception com- mittee is the arrangement for the annual League Open House, held on Dec. 16. Assumes New Duties Under the direction of Ruth Fried- man, '38, the theatre-arts committee has also assumed new duties. This year, besides ushering for Dramatic Season presentations and the Ora- torical Lecture Series, it will now usher for the Art Cinema League films and the Little Symphony con- certs and will provide a ticket clear- ing house. The most important work of this committee is making costumes and soliciting advertising from merchants for the three children's plays, pro- duced in collaboration with Play Pro- duction. Before each play is pre- sented committee members also go to elementary schools and tell the story of the play. Roberta Melin, '38, is in charge of the League publicity committee. This group takes care of the League files, sends out material to newspapers, and distributes posters advertising the various projects sponsored by the League.. Beauty Consultant To Speak The Orientation Committee, under Margaret Ferries, '38, has almost completed its work of acquainting new students with the University, but it is sponsoring a series of How To Study lectures which will continue for some time, and next week it will present Elizabeth Macdonald Os- borne, consultant in appearance. Miss Osborne will have conferences with freshmen and upper classwomen to suggest how to' capitalize on their good points and minimize their bad ones. I Merit System Counts Activities The merit system committee, head- ed by Barbara Bradfield, '38, keeps records of the League activities of every woman on campus, and of every sorority, dormitory and League house zone. It awards one point for every ten hours of League work and gives an activities cup to the sorority with the greatest number of points per person. It also maintains the bulle- tin board in the League which indi- cates how many women each sorority and zone has in activities. Short? Medium ? ~~j' Tall? \k Here's Your Length! SILK STO KINGS are made to fit your Log as well as your FootI League Council Member i Lake Freighter's Pilot Wheel Is Center of 'Excursion' Scenery Ship-Board Play Requires a great amount of the noises, whistles, F r- sbells and foghorns, found in the har- Foghlorns, Whistles For bors of New York. Recordings and Sea-Going Sound Effects various forms of "noise making" equipment are slowly being collected1 By MARIAN SMITH for the set. A public address system Announce Meeting Contemporary Of Michigan DamesCm Seeks Student Wives of all students and internes' are invited ,o join the Michigan Literary W ork Dames, which will have its first gen- L eral meeting of the year at 8:15 p.m. Any contributions from the stu- Tuesday at the League, according to denysot ritfom the stud Mrs. Paul Smits, publicity chairman. dents of the University for the student Helen Louise Arner, who is af- filiated with Alpha Phi sorority, is now the third vice-president of te League. In her new position, Miss Arner will be in charge of the candy booths, the profits of which will go to the League scholarship fund. Alumnae Plan New Projects For University Special Assembly Attended By More Than Sixty-Five Group Representatives The next ten year project of the Michigan Alumnae Council was de- cided upon at a special meeting of the council held at 10 a.m. yesterday in the Mary B. Henderson room of the League, according to Mrs. Lucille B. Conger, executive secretary of all alumnae from this university. A woman's co-operative house hasl been planned as a memorial to the late Mrs. W. D. Henderson, and it will be known as the Mary Henderson House. A gift of $1,000 has already been given to the fund by the coun- cil, Mrs. Conger said. Shades of old Detroit - reviving memories of the old time lake freight- ers, will creep into the properties to be used in Play Prodution's opening presentation, "Excursion," which will be given Oct. 26, 28, 29 and 30. A pilot wheel from a freighter, used more than 50 years ago, has been se- cured by Oren Parker, who is in charge of properties for the play. The boat is now docked in Detroit, where it has remained since it last plyed the waters of the Great Lakes. The wheel is one of the few remaining in this locality-two others being in Detroit and one in Canada. Pilot Wheel Forms Center This pilot wheel will form the cen- ter about which all other properties will be built. The entire scene of the play is laid in two settings, one the stern deck of a Coney Island pleasure boat, the other, in the pilot's cabin. "The extensive realistic element of the play makes it difficult to get the proper equipment," said Parker. He also stated that it is necessary to have various nautical instruments which are difficult to find in Ann Ar- bor. Action On Stern Deck Most of the action of the play will take place on the stern deck of the boat, but the necessity of rapid change of scene of action does not allow time for an entire new set-up of scenery. Therefore, the back drop has been so constructed that it will open "book-like" to form the setting for the pilot cabin scene. Sound effects offer another problem to stage hands, for the play requires Foreign Group To Hold Public Forum Today I Forty Students In Cast Costuming presents only, a minor question. Whitford Kane, who is playing the male lead, will wear the original costume, which he used in, Broadway productions. Other mem- bers of the cast, with the exception of the sailors, will wear summer attire. "Excursion," under the direction of Mr. Kane, is now going into the sec- ond week of rehearsal. The cast is composed of more than 40 students, all members of Play Production. Chantal Saunders Weds Ronald A. Wolf, Detroit Miss Chantal Saunders, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert R. Saunders of Ann Arbor and Detroit, married Ron- ald C. Wolf, '36, son of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin A. Wolf of Ann Arbor at 8 p.m. Friday in the chapel of the Brewster Pilgrim Congregational church. Following the ceremony a reception for about 150 guests was held in the church lounge. Mr. and Mrs. Wolf left for a motor trip to Ohio and will be at home in Detroit after Nov. 1. Baird, '95L, To Represent University At Installation' Charles L. Baird, '95L, University I alumnus and former athletic director, has been named to represent the University -at the inauguration on Oct. 29 of William Lindsay Young as president of Park College at Park- ville, Mo., a suburb of Kansas City, where Mr. Baird lives. Mr. Baird, donor of the carillon which bears his name, is in Ann Arbor for homecoming and witnessed the Minnesota football game yester- day. INDIAN STUDENT TO SPEAK "The Oultook of Young India To- day" will be discussed before the Ex- change Club tomorrow at the Michi- gan Union by Shoran Singha, secre- tary among Indian students in Great Britain for 15 years. The Tappan Junior Harmonica band, under the direction of Miss Eileen Lynch will also be on the program. I will also be installed for the produc- tion. General meetings of the organiza-; tion are held twice a month. Member- ship is divided into various interest1 groups, such as art, bridge, child study and a number of others, which meet separately once each month. Chair- men of these various groups will. out- line their plans for the year at the meeting Tuesday. Officers for the new season are as E follows: president, Mrs. Roy Joyce; recording secretary, Mrs.' Robert Car- son; corresponding secretary, Mrs. R. G. Klepser; and treasurer, Mrs. Donald Kimmel. Mrs. Louis Kulcinski acted as chairman of the committee assisting with a tea given Friday at the home of Mrs. Donald Weller. literary publication, Contemporary, will be welcomed, according to F. Randall Jones, '38, managing editor. The magazine has been criticized because the scope of student material has been small and from a select group, Jones said. In former years, the first issue has been composed mainly of Hopwood writings. This year, however, the first issue will con- tain entirely new material. The first number of Contemporary will be issued the first week in No- vember, and although the page size of the publication will be smaller than that of last year, Jones stated that there would be more actual ma- terial in each issue.. The price has been reduced from 25 cents to 15 Gwyn Players To Give Invitational Tea Today An invitational tea will be given by the Neil Gwyn Players from 4:30 until 6 p.m. today in the Ethel Fountain Hussey room of the League, according to Mrs. Francis Gravit, in charge of the event. The tea is being given for members and those who are interested in joining the group. Those who will pour are Dean Alice Lloyd. Mrs. Campbell Bonner, Mrs. Hugo Thieme and Mrs. Herbert Kenyon. cents per issue, and the subscription price from 75 cents to 50 cents. According to Jones, the policy of Contemporary is that each issue shall be representative of the best student writing, yet still be of interest to the students who will buy it. 'ENSIAN TRYOUTS TOMORROW Tryouts for the business staff of the Michiganensian are asked to report at 4 p.m. tomorrow at the 'Ensian office in the Publications Building on May- nard St. li ______ _____--'-._®----.__ __ __ -________ Classic Casuals ° piwcm g 9dea4 The "SN I P" A saucy little roller of soft you can tilt off your brow r felt that and snap the brim either up or down (Michigan style), or wear straight across your forehead. o . t u + f , i. N The "MONTEREY" Anotner gilt or $500 was given to;_W the Alice Crocked Lloyd Fellowship A Fund, she said. The goal for this A public panel discussion, followed fund, which the Undergraduate by a tea, will be given by the Inter- Cfunwicth e ndenrgfra atw national Council at 4 p.m. today in Council has been sponsoring for two the Grand Rapids Room of the years, is $15,000; with this recent do- the irst of se natin i no toals$3,00.League. This is the first of several nation it now totals $3,500. discussions planned by the council, Mrs. Conger also said that the for tl e general public, according to Council will donate $5,000 toward the Prof. J. Raleigh Nelson, counselor to women's swimming pool. Fellowships foreign students. and scholarships will be continued as The topic will be, "In wshat ways before. can the exchange of students and A gift of $200 for the Henderson teachers from one country to an- Memorial Fund was given by the Dra- other affect the friendly international m, Season Committee of the Coun relations of the future." The student's viewpoint will be This special meeting was attended given by Behice Sakik, Grad., who1 by more than 65 representatives from will speak as a representative of the organized alumnae groups from Ak- Near East. She is from Turkey and ron, O., Ann Arbor, Battle Creek, Bay attended the Women's College at Is- City, Benton Harbor, Birmingham, tanbul. The Far East will be rep- Buffalo, New York, Cleveland, De- resented by Sarah Chakko, Grad. Miss troit, Flint, Grand Rapids, Kalama- Chakko is a graduate of Isabelle Tho- zoo, Lansing, Marshall, Minneapolis, burn College, Lucknow, India. She Minnesota; Monroe, Owosso, Pontiac, spent last year studying at the Uni- Saginaw, St. Paul, Minnesota, and versity of Chicago. Toledo. From Canada, Daniel Girardi, _- j Grad., will give his opinion. Girard, DEAN EDMONSON IN HOSPITAL who is of Italian descent, is a mem- Dean James B. Edmonson of the ber of the International Council. education school is a patient in St. The teacher's viewpoint will be ex- Joseph's Mercy Hospital, where he is plained by Dr. Arno Bader, from the undergoing treatment for a kidney University, and Dr. Y. Z. Chang, ailment. Doctors believed yesterday from National Central University, that an operation would be necessary, Nanking, China. Dr. Bader and Dr. but Dean Edmonson will remain in Chang exchanged places last year the hospital for several days. in their respective institutions. GFID-fIBOUT. For Information -Call MISS JONES at 2-3241 4 .a i OPP, A versatile little felt that you can pinch and punch into countless styles . . . the perfect hat to give you scope for self-expression. Each RAYMOND ROY P1-I OTOG RAP MlY GOODYEAR'S DOWNTOWN and on the CAMPUS r7--: 1-1 I L L US T R AT I V E NOME AND STUDIO PORTRAIT r F ... 320S . STATE-OVER THE QUARR\Y _ 9 .d-' SWING HIGH, Jo Blow, swing low! Swing to and fro! Now you've got it - yep, the real spirit of the thing - be it the Big Apple or just plain "swing" which will blossom this week at the Union Supper Dance and fraternity pledge for- mals. But what's the dance with- out the trimmings, I always say! May I suggest a bit of the sapphire blue for the gala occasion. THE ELIZABETH DILLON SHOP is rarin' to go when it comes to deck- ing out all you gay social butter- flies. Let's see - a sapphire blue velvet formal trimmed with silver kid sounds exciting -or maybe taffeta, to make that escort feel a bit "not normal"-if you know what I mean! Or if you'd rather -may I suggest a gold sequin jacket over a flowing black dress or one of those Jean Carol original dresses, exclusive with the Dillon Shop, you know - come in and see for yourself. You can't miss! SPEAKING OF getting all decked out -you can't forget the perfume, the sweet aroma,- some- thing that will be a bit exciting! CALKINS-FLETCHER are featur- ing some of the most intriguing perfumes ever, Now take, for ex- ample a bit of Lanvin's "Intimate Hour"-how does that sound? Ti n m4 +4., i ai n n lce .. lr . hi Mary Dunhill products. Take heed, my friends, take heed! PARIS DICTATES evening caps for formal wear this season - matching that new formal. AND let your little gadder give a hint as to where all the campus "cuties" are getting their Paris touch this year. You've guessed it. It's JUNE GREY'S (the little hat shop near Wikels). Sequin caps are definitely in, you know, and will go perfectly with that new gown - or perhaps a velvet halo with an enchanting and flattering veil. Sounds sort'a O.K., I think! MILADY BEAUTIFUL is going to be very gay -and look so very very this week-end with all her finery - providing, of course, she takes a little time off just before the great day for a trip up to the DI MATTIA BEAUTY SHOP to get that last minute "touching up" - a glamorous coiffure, a refresh- ing facial, and that manicure for which you've been waiting. After all we can't go just half way with this week-end - it must be the whole thing or nothing (which naturaly means only one thing - right? Right!) Look your best, and have the best time. AFTER it's all over - the danc- ing and actual festivities, I mean «Bad Elctor>> Winter Has Joined Our Cast With The ((First Snowing> On Wednesday Last But Why waste worry over winter when wise women worst wicked weather while wear- ing wiliess woolens Cleaned By GRE E N E"'S The Best Hosiery Value in Town ! 89c to CLEANERS &- DYERS ERUN ICETHE~l ROSCOPE' iN $i.35 E I