100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

October 21, 1938 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1938-10-21

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

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

More Tb
PlansIndclude
Supper, Floor
Show, Dance
3-Act JMogram Will Star
Unicyclists, Pantomime,
Artist And Tap Dancer
The annual Union Formal supper
dance will be held from 9 p.m. to 1
a.m. today in the ballroom of the
Union. More than two hundred and
seventy couples are exp'ected to at-
tend.
Plans for the dance this year in-
clude supper, which will be served at
11 p.m. and a three act floor show
which will follow the supper, begin-
ning at 11 :45 p.m. The first act of
the floor show will feature Spec and
Spot, unicyclists who have toured
the country in vaudeville.
The second act will star Chaz
Chase, well known pantomime artist
who has covered .Europe with great
success, been billed with the Earl
Carroll Vanities, and who was lately
co-starred with Jimmy Durante in a
Hollywood production.
The last act of the floor show will
be given by a tap dancer from New
York, whose identity will be a secret
until this evening.
The decorations will be predomin-
ately autumn in color and theme.
The tables will be ornamented with

an 270 Couples

Will Attend Union Formal Tonigh

Children's Theatre W ill Open Season iW ith Rumpelstiltskin

0

n r ,

Tickets On Sale At Union
For Interfraternity Ball
Tickets sales began yesterday for,
the annual Interfraternity Ball, to be
held from 9. p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday,
Nov. 4, in the Intramural Building.
Tickets are on sale from 3 to 6 p.m.
daily at the Union desk. Thomas
Adams, Jr., '40, pubxicity chairman,
announced.
Orrin Tucker and Jack Denny willf
play for, the dance.
bittersweet and brown oak leaves. In
the center will be red bowls with
yellow chrysanthemums floating in-
side.
On the central committee arej
James Halligan, '40, whose guest will'
be Ruth Skog of Kalamazoo; Jim
Wills, '40, with Francis Nevin, '41;
Don Treadwell, '40, who has invited
Eileen Hayward of Detroit; Harry
Howell, '40, with Margaret Bryant of
Larium, Ohio; Don Nixon, '40, who
wil lattend with Mary G. Connine,
'42; Hadley Smith, '40, with Kayf
Dye, '42; Douglas Tracy, '40, with
Sophie Reichel of Detroit as his guest,
and Paul Brickley, '39, and Don Bel-
den, '39, who have invited Bettie
Schuele, of Cleveland, Ohi), and
Marilyn Johnson, of Royal Oak, re-
spectively.

Performanees Hea
Are To Begin1
This Afternoon
Tickets Will Be Available
Today And Tomorrow
At Lydia Mendelssohn
The Children's Theatre wvil open
its fifth anniversary season with a,
matinee of "Rumpelstiltskin" at 3:45'
p.m. today at Lydia Mendelssohn:
Theatre, Roberta Chissus, '39, chair1
man of the Theatre Arts committee,
announced yesterday. Two more per-
formances will-be given at 1:30 and!
3:30 p.m. tomorrow.
Richard McElvy, Grad., who last
year won a major Hopwood award
with a volume called "Ten Essays,"
adapted the story and directed the The Th
production. Sets were designed by'j which Rob
Robert Corrigan, '39. man, iss
The story concerns a miller's! dren's pl
daughter whose mother tells the king, be givenl
that the girl can weave gold cloth of ternoons.
straw. The part of the mother who is -----
telling the story to her children as
the play opens is playedh by Mary Mrsls
Frances Brown, 39, and herbchildrenM
will be Dolly Vlisedes and Richard
Gauss, of Ann Arbor. A
The miller's wife will be Betty Jane
Mansfield, '39, president of Assembly, "Vocatio
and her daughter, Hilda; is Ruth! Voai
Menefee, '39, a previous member of springs fr
Play Production and Children's The- Dunbar,l
atre. Rumpelstiltskin himself is Gibbs Scho
Bernard Benoway and the court jes- a intervi
ter is James Robert Stephenson of It is ne

ids Theatre-Arts

Congress Holds
'Fliig'_Tonight
League Ballroom Is Scene
Of Informal Dance
The second annuai Congressional
Fling, an informal dcance sponsored
by Congress, independent men's or-
ganization, will be held from 9 p.m. to
1 a.m. tonight in the League Ball-
room.
A floor show, featuring songs by
Warren Foster, Grad., harmonica
solos by William Strasser '39E,
dances by Morris Miller, '41, and his
sister Bertha, '39, and special mu-
sical presentations by Charlie Zwick
and his orchestra will be presented.
Edward Wetter, '39, is chairman of
the affair, which last year attracted
one of the year's largests crowds.
Alice Kornat, '41, will be Wetter's
guest. Others on the committee and
their guests are: Edward Egle, '39E,
and Mary Ellen Spurgeon, '40; Har-

r ,i.

eatre-Arts Committee, of
berta Chissus, '39, is chair-
sponsoring the first chil-
ay, "Rumpelstiltskin," to
Friday and Saturday af-

I . f

Katharine Dunbar Gives
dvice For Vocational Work
nal guidance is a job thatthat I wasn't suited for that type of
W I. . r. W- - - I-L ..i , .._. n V a±

Captivating Campus Contours
with Symphony Foundations
styled by HICKORYt

om a job," Mrs. Katharine
lecturer from Katharine
ool in Boston, explained in
ew Wednesday.
Scessary to have a general

r xxrnrlr Tff uYn C nn l xT hxr o fnxv ca nnn rf c I

Even "freshies" know that bul
are taboo! Symphony by Hick
keeps you looking your best
gardless of what happens in m
or history. The slimming ma
of comfortable two-way stre
Lastex Symphony keeps you t
and collected in campus tc
sports things and dress-up froc

FOUNDATION

ges
ory
re-
ath
agic
tch
rim
)gs,
cks-.
GIRDLE
$2.00
FOUNDATION: Two-way
stretch Lastex, flattering lace
and satin Lastex uplift bra-top,
self-edged bottom. In three
lengths. $3.50
GIRDLE: Fifteen inches of
strongly woven Lastex with
self-edged bottom and light
bonipg inside front panel.
Long enough for good con-
trol of thigh lines. $3.50

Ann Arbor High School.
A few good tickets are still avail-
able Miss Chissus said, and the LydiaI
Mendelssohn box office will be open
from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. today and
from 10 a.m. until the last per-
formance tomorrow. Single tickets are
25 cents for children and 50 cents
for adults. Season tickets, including
all three plays to be given this year,
are 50 cents for children and one
dollar for adults.

lii .d1

S4ris tocra tic,
style and
O

knowledge of a certain field and in-
formation and experience in place-
ment before one can attempt voca-
tional guidance work, Mrs. Dunbar
pointed out. "I'm a Topsy in the
field," she said, "because i've never
had any instruction in guidance."
When asked if she had any em-
ployment difficulties after gradua-
tion from Radcliffe, Mrs. Dunbar ex-
claimed, "Oh my, yes! I started first
in the publishing field, but soon found

-
T

6j-3eauty

11

work. it was only by a iew secons
that I avoided being fired by resign-
ing." Of her present occupations,
Mrs. Dunbar most enjoys her work
in teaching.
Admires Co-Education
"I'm full of admiration for co-
education, because it is system which
so obviously works," Mrs. Dunbar
said. "I'm really impressed by the
maturity (there seem to be fewer
gigglers in this school) and the effi-
ciency of the University women." The
women seem to have an air of sophis-
tication and poise which is seldom
found in smaller schools, she ex-
plained.
Although I never attended a co-
educational institution, Radcliffe is
far from being isolated from the in-
fluence of men," Mrs. Dunbar an-
-ounced. And don't ever believe that
Harvard men don't like Radcliffe
women. I want to explode that tra-
ditional belief," she said.
Lists Qualifications Of Employee
Mrs. Dunbar outlined the qualifi-
cations business men demand in ap-
plying for a woman employee, and
gave the usual business man's ex- I
planation for these qualifications.
First in the list is general intelli-
gence--(just intelligence, you know,
intelligende). Secondly, secretarial
accomplishment is necessary. (Secre-
tarial accomplishment is the ability
to do office work well without both-
oring the employer). The next re-
quirements is college background.
( (You know, background. That is,
'er, well, just background).
Personality is also necessary, em-
ployers say. (Personality equals dress,
posture and general appearance to
the employer). The final qualifica-
tions are voice, (something that is
pleasing to hear over the telephone),
and health, (the ability to work over-
time).
IDeleates To Attend
PanIellenic Meeting
Two University of Michigan dele-
gates to the district convention of
the Panhellenic Association left on
the 9:32 p.m. train yesterday for a
weekend in Louisville, Ky., where the
convention is being held. The dele-
gates were Stephanie Parfet, '39,
president of the local Association, and
Harriet Pomeroy, '39, treasurer.
Delegates to the convention, which
opens Friday night with roundtable
discussions, will live at the Brown
Hotel in Louisville. Plans include a
formal banquet which will be held
Saturday night, and Michigan's dele-
gates expect to return Sunday.
Michigan colleges which will be
represented at the convention, in ad-
dition to the University, are: Michi-
an State College, Adrian College, Al-
bion College, and Hillsdale College.
HOSIERY
Twin Week-end Specials.
Two-thread Silk Sealed, Snag-
resisting - by DEXDALE.
THREE-THREAD CLEAR
and Cheer by McCALLUM.

Also White Satin and *Seen in Madem diselle
Gold Kid.

. . . are yours with the latest New York fashions,
reasonably reproduced by Nagler furriers. Hud-
son Seal, Caracul, and the 1938 favorite, Skunk,
made to order in all the popular sizes and lengths.

0(0 o -

Nagler's

318
S. Main

P holg
2-2619

- - - - - - - ~ ~ - - - - - - - . - - . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - U__... "

V ,\
f 4

FACCESSORIES

4

Match

Your 0Colors

In.

Dramatically smart and so NEW. . . MATCH your ACCESSORIES this
Fall! With your new Fall clothes, wear hosiery that blends . . choose
matching bag and gloves ... add a dash of color with a vivid wool scarf!
See Fall's newest matched accessories here . . . excitingly low priced!
- - '

L a W. -I 0 h A " C

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan