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December 17, 1937 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1937-12-17

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

VRIDAY, DEC. 17, 19'7

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

. . ....... . .......... . .... - - --------

Cast Of "Knaves And Maids"

, Children's M sical, Ainounce

Dancing Gro'up
Of 30 Childr-enI
Will' erforlmf

Smart Travel Costume
~A<

M~arie

Sawyer

Is Named

Assistant Director; Play
To Be Given Jan. 7, 8
The cast for "Knaves and Maids,"
third Childrens Theatre production,
by Eleanor McCoy, '39, to be given
Jan. 7 and 8, was announced yester-
day by Sarah Pierce, Grad., director.
This will be the first musical com-
edy to be given by Childrens Theatre, I
and dancing choruses will consist of
more than 30 children. Marie Saw-I
yer, '38, will be assistant director and
will work with the dancing choruses.
Character leads will be played byf
Marjory Coe, '38; Robert Wooster,,
'38; Donald Butler, '41; Ruth Mena- I
fee, '39; Eleanor McCoy, '39; James
Moll, '39, and James Robert Stephen-
son.
'Pretty Maids' Dance
Dancing choruses are composed of'
town children. The pretty maids
chorus will consist of Patricia Bird,I
Patricia, Cline, Marilyn Bothman
Baibara Bay, Elizabeth James, Bar-
biara Flickenger,NShirley Dey and
Nancy Cress.. Nancy Cory, Colly
Vlisides, Betty Lou Cox, Patricia
Hume, Alice Huntington, Geraldine
James, Jean Reynolds, Jackie Koch,
Barbara Barr, Charlotte Ferris and
Helen Stegman will be in the sheep
chorus.

JAUNTS O JOURNEYS
By BETTY BONISTEEL
Ice and snow and cold wintry blasts will be left behind by many facultyt
members and students who plan to spend Christmas vacation basking in the
sun in Florida, Bermuda and other parts of the "sunny South."l
Among those bound for Bermuda are Mary Katherine Adams and Phyllis1
Bauer, two Alpha Chis who are seeking relief from Ann Arbor weather.
Jane Lyon and Bruce Purdy are going to spend their vacation there, too. 7
Florida seems to rate as first choice among the Michigan students.
Perhaps Michigan's victorious swimming team is one of the attractions for
those Florida bound. Among the members of Phi Delta Theta fraternity
who are going are Dan Jones who will stop off at Tampa and Tom Adams
and Dekle Taylor who will visit in Jacksonville. Joe Black will go to Coral,
Gables, Fla. David Underdown, Leona Siff, Phyllis Miner, Carolyn Beltra-
mini and Jimmy Fischer will also be traveling in this section of the country.
Edith Butler plans to join her family there. Others visiting the Everglade
country will be John Mulkey, Chuck Darling, Violet Brodbeck and Dave Lans-
dale.
Faculty members find this peninsula a popular resort. Prof. I. L. Sharf-
man and his daughter, Marcia, are going. Prof. Bruce Donaldson and his
father are leaving soon as are also the Waldo Abbots who are driving
down.' Mrs. Mott, housemother of Phi Delta Theta fraternity, is traveling as
far as St. Petersburg.
Sunny Southland Calls.. .
Those seeking the warm California suns are Jane Reinach, Helen Weiss-
man, Florence Kean and Norah Kennedy. Dr. James F. Breakey of Barton
Hills left Ann Arbor yesterday for Hot Springs, Ark. where he will remain
for the rest of the winter. His wife will join him within a week.
Prof. Robert Angell plans to attend the National Sociology Meeting which
will be held in Atlantic City, N. J. John Hunt is going to Houston, Texas.
Flying down to Sumatra are Don Knapp and Glen Brink of, the A.T.O.
fraternity. Arthur Warner is going to Cuba and Betty Walker plans to see
Mexico.
Marjorie Link's wedding will attract a large number of Kappas to Oak
Park. Ill. Among those attending the wedding will be Nancy Saibert, who will
act as maid-of-honor, Tink Johnson, Margaret Cran, Betty Fauver, Mary
Skinner and Nancy Dall.
Louise Samek and Dorothy Glass will go to the Pi Lambda Phi conven-
tion which will be held in Chicago.
Fraternit'y Plans Iouseparty ...
Harlan McCain is planning a houseparty for the members of A.T.O.
fraternity who live in the eastern section of the country. It will be held at
Lake Placid Country Club, Lake Placid, N.Y. John Costello, Edward Soucaze,
Wallace Knape, and Charles Schuh are planning to attend. George Carle
will sail from Portland, Me. to a small island off the coast of Long Island
where he will spend his vacation.
The bright-lights of Broadway will attract several Michigan students
to New York. Jim Talmon, Tom McGuire, Dotty Barrett, Barbara Dittman
and Marian Fitzgerald are among those going. Traveling to Philadelphia
are Mary Elliot and Charles Hohman. Hohman will attend the Delta Kappa
Epsilon National Convention.

Martha Coo-k iIoIds ALBION TO PRESENT HOPWOOD DRAMA
I..W91llace, 13~con's "'To Sleep Before Evening" will be presented
Yuletide Iir ikfa t niht aAlbion College under the auspices of the Histrionic Club of
Aibion. Bacon is a graduate student in the department of English
Martha Cook Building held its an- here, and his plgy won a major Hopwood award in 1936.
nual Christmas breakfast, preceeded Charles McGaw,. instructor of dramatics at the University Hig
by a candlelight service, at 6 a.m. School. wvill take the part of of the French envoy in the play.
today.
Among the guests were President -_-_ -
and Mrs. Ruthven, Dr. and Mrs. James
D. Bruce, Mrs. Edward D. Maire, Mrs, ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Frederic B. Stevens, Mrs. Delos Par-
ker Heath, Mrs. R. E. Drake, Mrs. . Catherine and Division Streets
L. D'Ooge and Martha Cook. 40. Henry Lewis, Rector Frederick W. Leech, Assistant
The guest list also includd 5
mothers of the Martha Cook Buildinn
residents. . An ua
Barbara Lovell.s'38, was named re-COMMU ITY PAGEANT
cipient of a $100 scholarship present- zMNY
ed by Mrs. Stevens. The award is for
the current year. SUNDAY, DECEMBER 19th
FOUR-THIRTY and EIGHT O'CLOCK
Dr. J. W. Reigel To A tr0_nd
Discussion In New York TABLEAU AFTER FRA ANGELICO
Dr. John W. Riegel of the Bureau
of Industrial Relations will attend a
conference in New York Dec. 20 and Music by St. Andrew's Choir of Men and Boys,
21 where industrial relations prob- directed by Nowell S. Ferris
lems will be discussed. Four other
colleges besides Michigan will be
represented: Princeton, M. I. T. Rs
Queens and Stanford. Read and Use The Michigan Daily Classified Ads
C h rtie C h ris-e t _
1,
- - -- - -

',l
,

AP

Fiddlers Three Perform * *
The court chorus will consist of
Grover Trytten, Roger Wiselogel,
Robert McMillan, Larry Darling, Paul e
Hildbrand, Mark Hildebrand, Dean This Vacation
Mason, Ann Welsh, Nancy Upson,
Elizabeth Hildebrand and Sally
Crandall. ,I A iut Is Ideal
The Fiddlers Three will be Dickie
Gauss, Tommie Moore and Loren By HELENE RUMIZEN
Wolf. The Pipe Bearer will be Teddy
Maier. An exhibition waltz will be Whether one is heading north or
given by Nancy Cory and Dickie south, east or west this vacation, a
Gauss. good-looking two-piece suit is the
ideal outfit for traveling. There is
Music for the play has been writ- nothing more flattering to wear under
ten by John Van der Meulen, '38A. a fur coat.
Frederic James, '38A, has designed Ifro ate
the sets, and costumes will be under If one has a three-quarter coat. a
the direction of Emma Hirsch, '39. tricky 'man-tailored woolen suit of
some rich color will do wonders to,
complete the ensemble. A hunter
or kelly green tweed suit would go
Sin -Japanesbeautifully with a brown or tan lapin
swagger. Different hues of blue, red,
or tile are lovely with gray persian
W ar Influenes lamb or mink swaggers.
Red, Black Tweed Smart
Chinese Student One of the most striking two-piece
suits of this type comes with a
buttonless short jacket of red and
While the mailed fist of Japanese black tweed, has a narrow black belt
militarism is invading China, the and a black skirt. Another, of black
lives of the populace are being vitally wool consists of a jacket which but-
affected by the orders which emanate tons'all the way up the front, a black
from the tiny Toykio military clique belt and a black skirt.
-and one Chinese student, Kather- Mustard color is very popular for
ine Tseng, knows well how this world two-piece suits. This shade is smart
catastrophe can mold the life of the to wear under a fur coat, too. One
individual. good-looking tweed suit of this color'
The war? Miss Tseng refused to is made with bullet pockets, two on
comment upon it. Scenes of hor- each side. It has a brown kid belt
rible destructions, whole districts to go with it. Another is of a mus-
made barren wastes; this and no tard and brown mixture and fea-
more she will say of the Sino-Japan- tures a stand-up collar.
ese conflict. But in her own case Pigskin Trim Used
the war had a definite influence, for Many of the new two-piece suits
it was responsible for the fact that come in shades of gray. One gray
she entered the University a month tweed outfit has wide lapels, empha-
late sizes the double-breasted effect, and
Studied in Wuchang is trimmed with black pigskin but-
A student in the Horace H. Rack- tons and a belt of pigskin. Another
ham School of Graduate Studies, with buttons up the front and has a small
library science her especial field, Miss Peter Pan collar.
Tseng is going to Washington, D.C. Green, too, is being worn a great
during the Christmas holidays, be- deal and black is still good. Shades
cause that city is the home of the of wine and rust are, also, very flat- I
great Library of Congress, as well as teing. Many new suits are being
other institutions of interest to her. featured with colored tweed jackets
It was far from Ann Arbor that and contrasting skirts.
she first studied library science, thou-
sands of miles away at Boone Univer- Methodist Congregations
sity situated in Wuchang, China. Af- Service To Be In Theatre
ter that she was employed at the
National Library at Peiping, and then Holiday services of the First Meth-
had charge of the Shanghai Branch odist Church, Sunday, 19 and 26
of the same institution. will be held in the Michigan Theatre
Glad To Be Here because of repairs being made to the
After her work there, came the Church building.
long-awaited opportunity to come to This Sunday, the Rev. Dr. Charles
America. W. Brashares will preach on the
"I can hardly believe that I an topic "Christmas." The choir under
actually here," she says, smilingly the direction of Prof. Palmer Chris-
pointing out that her good fortune in tian of the music school will render
receiving a Barbour scholarship made several numbers including the tra-
possible the continuation of her stu- ditional Christmas Cradle Song
dies while others were having to "Jesu. Thou Dear Babe Divine.
postpone such work until the cessa-
tion of hostilities. After she finishes ALPHA DELTA PI
her studies here, Miss Tseng plans to Alpha Delta Pi announces the
return once again to the land of her pledging of Muriel Hagemeyer, '40,
fathers and contribute in some small and Marian Weiss, '41. both of De-
part to the advancement of China. troit.
CaI1 a/ )0ltIu r rliest
CollAcD( ennIe I( WAf
"A tD R DCPD D1 aocCW A T0n

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NOW ACROSS FROM WIKEL DRUG

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~ CHRISTMIAS ?AWINGS'
PAY T TH E
ORDER OF
6~$f~~i .~?A IOULARS
CASHI ER

by . rely cXCising a little care in your Christmas shopping.
Ann Arbor merchants are nOW ready for you with . . . at-
tractive displays . . . exceptional values . ,. and tremen-
dous savings on the most attractive gifts yet seen. The
Daily too makes its contribution to this year's shopping
problem by bringing information of these values right to
your door each morning. Read the advertisements in THE
MICHIGAN DAILY and write yourself a sizeable check

I

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