r HE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE Fall Season's First Parties Jumpers Rival Skirts For Favor ToBeginToday1 Open Houses And Informal Dances Will Be Sponsored By Dormitories And Societies As would be expected from a cam- pus of this caliber, the first big weekend of the year is starting out with one terrific round of open houses, dances and parties. The rival- ry between Michigan State and Mich- igan does not seem to prevent the brothers here from giving the bro- thers there a warm welcome, and the dorms are right in there too! Just to substantiate this last state- ment, there is the West Quadrangle, which includes Adams, Chicago, Lloyd, Wenley and Winchell Houses, who are going to repeat their traditional open house following the game to- day. Refreshments will be served between 4:30 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. in the Concourse with the house moth- ers acting as hostesses to the par- ents and guests of the boys. Stockwell Has Open House Stockwell Hall will have its first open house this afternoon after the game too. The committee in charge is composed of Martha Ann Wagner, '41, chairman; Doris Marty, '43, Bet- ty Pons, '42, Lois van der Meulen, Grad., Michelle Silverman, '41, Grace Feldman, '42, Honny Elias, Grad., and Willmanette Troutwine, '41. Mrs. Martha L. Ray, social director, and Miss Rosemary Neihaus will pour. Helen Newberry and Betsy Bar- bour are to hold forth at tea dances from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. today. The social chairman of Betsy Barbour is Betty Brougham, '42, and the cha- peron for Helen Newberry is Ruth H. Danielson. Alpha Chi Sigma will entertain at open house for the Michigan State Chapter as will Theta Delta Chi for alumni and friends. Pi Lambda Phi follows suit. Alpha Delta Pi, with Phyllis Hoffineyer in charge, and Chi Omega will entertain guests at open house also. Alpha Omicron Pi will have guests from Michigan State. Houses Give Radio Dances Radio dances and supper parties will also be in full swing. Phi Kappa Sigma is having an informal radio dance from 9 to 12. Chaperons will be Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Hagermeyer Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Truet and Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Sotherland. Kappa Sigma will have a dinner and radio dance after the game. Their guests, the Michigan State Chapter, will stay overnight, returning to Lansing Sun- day morning. Decorations for the dance will include fotballs, college banners, and a goal post stationed at each end of the room. Chaperons will be Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Griffiths and Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Peterson. Phi Kappa Tau will honor their Michigan State Chapter with a buf- fet supper, followed by a radio dance. Chaperons are to be Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Jacobs and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Heller. Lambda Chi Alpha will hold an alumni gathering after the game with a radio dance, called The Joe College Swing, in the evening. Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Prasil, of Howell, and Dr. and Mrs. F. W. Hartman will chaperon.. Phi, Rho Sigma will have Mr. and Mrs. Norman Skippy and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Foley as chap- erons for their informa radio dance, and Phi Beta Pi will have a radio dance with Dr. and Mrs. A. W. Cox- on and Dr. and Mrs. M. L. Snyder as chaperons. Fraternity Plans Victory Dance Over at the Kappa Nu house there will be a victory radio dance, with surprise decorations. Chaperons will be Dr. and Mrs. S. A. Goudsmith and Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Kessel. Phi Chi will start with a buffet supper and wind up with a radio dance later. Dr. and Mrs. William Slasor and Dr. and Mrs. Paul Lindquist will chaper- on. Alpha Sigma Phi is having a radio dance, with Mr. and Mrs. Doug- las Hammial, Prof. and Mrs. Eugene Ash, and Dean and Mrs. Ivan Craw- ford chaperoning. Alpha Tau Ome- ga will hold a tea dance and buffet supper from 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., with Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Perkins and Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Emmons as chap- erons. Chi Psi will have a closed radio dance after the game. Chaperons will be Mr. and Mrs. Harry V. Col- lins of Birmingham, and Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Armitage. Dr. and Mrs. Milton Sappin and Dr. and Mrs. Allen Collins will chaperon the Al- pha Omega radio dance, and Phi Delta Epsilon will have Dr. and Mrs. Harry Jurow and Dr. and Mrs. Her- bert Bloom as chaperons for theirs. Hermitage- will entertain alumni' and guests at a dinner following the game ,taking their'guests to the All-; State dance at the Union afterwards. Trigon, which has just been newly7 redecorated inside and out is enter- taining alumni and friends at a buf- fet supper and housewarming. To Entertain 'State' Phi Delta Theta is going to en- tertain the Michigan State Chapter' at a radio dance, with Mr. and Mrs. Philin Stann Mr and Mrs .Thn Wil- I _ I League Group Will Present News Bulletin Information About Women's Activities Wil Be Featured In Forthcoming Publication Aviatrix Carolyn Anne Hager Descends On Michigan By Air "What's Up" at the League-a common question to be answered in the future by a small bulletin of the same name. "What's Up" will make its first appearance Oct. 10 at the newly inaugurated House President's meeting in the League. League Houses, dormitories, and sorority houses will then have at their disposal a 'brief bulletin con- taining pertinent information about League petitioning. interviews, and committee meetings, in addition to contributions by the League Council and the Judiciary Committee. "What's Up" will be published once a month throughout the year. Work on "What's Up" will be par- tially taken over this year by the members of the League Publicity Committee who will work in con- junction with the Judiciary Commit- tee, who conceived the idea of the bulletin and published one issue last spring. Hopes of the women work- ing on the project now are to en- large the bulletin into a small League newspaper containing details on League events of interest to all cam- pus women. Women interested in assisting with the publication of the paper may do so through the League Publicity com- mittee Betty Boothby To Wed Frank Smith Today In Methodist Church Elizabeth Boothby, '40, daughter of Mrs. Alfred Russel Boothby, of Westbrook. Me., will be married to Frank Smith, '38E, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. Smith, of Corning, N. Y., at 11 a.m. today in the chapel of the Methodist Church in Ann Arbor. William Boothby, the bride's broth- er, will give her away, and Dorothy Cox, Grad., and Josephine Fry, '40, will be bridesmaids. Best man will be William Smith, brother of the Elinor Sevison, '41. By DOROTHY BRIDGEN A course in aeronautical engineer- ing may teach Carolyn Anne Hager, '43, a great deal of engineering, but to this veteran aviatrix little can be taught in the way of actual flying. At an early age Miss Hager was interested in anything that had to do with planes. In fact. it might be said that she was born with her wings. For her mother, Alice R. Ha- ger, is a noted writer of several avia- tion books, one of which is "Wings Over America." Mrs. Hager also re- ceived a plaque for being one of the few people who has spent over 1,000 hours in the air. It is quite plausible that the interest in flying is a hered- itary trait. Began Flying At 17 It was at the age of 11 that MissI Hager met Amelia Earhart, and af- ter that time she anxiously awaited the day that she would start flying. That day came when she was 17 years old. She began taking flying lessons in Alexandria, Virgina, and after three weeks of training in dual control she began soloing. Within three months she received her private pilot's license, after successfully com- pleting 35 hours of flying. Miss Hager entered Stanford Uni- versity upon graduation from high school. There she was an active member of the Stanford flying club. She represented the school in the National Intercollegiate Flying Meet. and ran off with the third prize in the safety division. Lone Woman To Enter Contests Glories didn't end here, for she was continually entering contests in "spot landing" at the Alexandria, Virginia. airport. In a contest such as this, the flyer must set down the plane close to a circle 50 feet in diameter, or on a line one foot wide. The avia- tor who comes closest to this goal is the winner. At Virginia Miss Hager was the only girl pilot to take place in these contests. 1 i J Since September. our aviatrix has practiced stunt flying. She excels in this. too. At a meet of the Ninety Niners at Hartung Field in Detroit Sept. 29, she received first place among the group of entrants. If you hear an airplane motor booming overhead it might easily be Miss Hager. She received her own plane, an Aeronca 65. Sept. 21 for her nineteenth birthday gift. The plane will never be sold from lack of use, as Miss Hager is continually tak- ing her Alpha Omicron Pi sorority sisters for free air rides. I Prof. Pollock To Give 'WorldlProblems' Talk Bill Sawyer, Guest Of Radio Program, Returns To Union ' i Prof. James K. Pollock of the Po- litical Science department will give the first talk in a series of three "World Problems" discussions at the meeting of the Congregational Stu- dent Fellowship Sunday evening at 7 p.m. Professor Pollock will out- line the factual situation of the world today, and will describe the problems we are now facing. The second talk in the series will be given next week by Professor Preston Slosson of the history de- partment, who will show the impor- tance of religion and its relation to these world events. The third Sun- day of the series will be taken up with a discussion by the student group of the preceding two talks. Fashion favors your preference this fall. If you like both the jumper, dress and the sweater and skirt combination, this detachable jumper ensemble will be a practical addition to your wardrobe. The bodice can be detached and the skirt can be worn with sweaters or the jumper blouse. There is an unlimited field of choice in color combinations and material. The jumper in the illustration is royal blue flannel, and a gray flannel blouse is worn with it. Corduroy or wool could easily be sub- stituted as well as other color combinations. Corduroy is becoming a favorite on campus and wool is always popular. Try the combination of a jersey blouse and a wool jersey jumper. Student Tel Is Of Concert Tour With Stowkowski's Orchestra By ROBERT SPECKHARD Michigan Union weekend ballroom partons will listen to one of the country's up and coming dance bands as they step to the sweet rhythm of Bill Sawyer and his or- chestra in the Rainbow Room this fall. Sawyer's band has just completed a very successful summer season, be- ing featured on the ether waves as special guest of the Fitch Bandwag- on program over a national hookup from Chicago. After playing most of the summer at the exclusive Rustic Tavern at Houghton Lake, the band opened the season at Flint's new IMA auditorium shortly before the be- ginning of school. In his third year at the Union Saw- er will offer two vocalists for the pleasure of the Union's guests-the lovely Gwen Cooper and Bob Hol- land who starred on the Fitch Band Wagon program with the band. The band itself is the result of much sifting and careful selection of personnel over a number of years Standout trombonist of Sawyers' eleven music makers is Harry Han- son who together with Frank Tinker of the band played in the well-known middlewest orchestra of Norman Keller before coming to Sawyer. Dave Falbey, 18 years old and for- mer trombonist in the Michigan Band is the youngest member of the band. He was featured with Raymond Paige's orchestra during the sum- mer. q 1 .. ~ 27. , t 4 x il By MARGARET AVERY From the applause of two conti- nents, Martha McCrory, '41M, cellist in Leopold Stokowski's All-American Youth Orchestra, has returned to the shadow of the Carillon Tower. Miss McCrory, first cellist in the University Orchestra, was chosen from among 16,000 young musicians between' the ages of sixteen and twenty-five who participated in the elimination contests last spring. Five hundred were heard personally by Stokowski, from which a final selection of one hundred was made. Didn't Expect Appointment "I didn't dream I'd make it," in- sisted Miss McCrory, "so I just re- laxed and enjoyed the tryout." The day before leaving Michigan for her home in Quincy, Ill., she re- ceived a congratulatory telegram. By July 8 she was rehearsing with the orchestra in Atlantic City, N. J. Enthusiastic audiences heard the young musicians in their opening concerts in Atlantic City, Baltimore, Washington and New York City. Not only the appeal of youth, picked tal- ent and famous leadership distin- guished the concerts. A special seat- ing plan was initiated by Stokowski, with string instruments in the back and woodwind in front, arranged on a portable stage with sound reflec- tors. Sailed For South America From sweltering summer in New York City, the Youth Orchestra sailed July 26 towards South Amer- ican winter. Shipboard festivities and sight-seeing were mingled with a schedule of intense practice. "But Mr. Stokowski was always patient and considerate of us," Miss McCrory hastened to add. Stokowski endeared himself to Michigan students during the May Festival of 1936 when he joined them in song at the Pretzel Bell. Still enthusiastic among youth, he Al l State Tradition To Be Theme Of Union Dance Taking the Michigan-Michigan State tradition off the gridiron and putting it into the more congenial atmosphere of the Union ballrooms, is the purpose of the annual All- State dance to be held tonight, ac- cording to Dick Scherling, '42, so- cial chairman of the Union. As has been the custom for many years, two orchestras have been en- gaged to supply continuous music for the dancers. Bill Sawyer's band will play in the Rainbow room, and Tommy Snyder and his orchestra will keep the dancers busy in the small ballroom. due chaperoning. Phi Kappa Psi will hold forth at a dinner dance; which will feature Bill Gail's orches- planned a South American Goodwill tour of twenty concerts including Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo, Monte- vedeo, Buenos Aires, and Rosario. Everywhere large audiences awaited them, and youth turned out to meet youth. At Buenos Aires a party was given for the All-American Orches- tra, to which one hundred young English-speaking Argentines were in- vited. Trinidad Gets First Concert Never, before the performances of the Youth Orchestra, had a concert been given in Trinidad or the Do- minican Republic. The largest au- dience of the tour, 28,000, turned out for this first concert to be given in the Dominican Republic. September 17the orchestra docked in New York, met by Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt. Once again American audiences heard the Youth Orches- tra at Carnegie Hall, Baltimore, Washington and Philadelphia, where they parted. Most of the members were professional musicians, youth- ful representatives of such renowned organizations as the Philadelphia. Chicago, Indianapolis and Cincinnati Symphony Orchestras. Miss McCrory was one of the few college repre- sentatives. It is possibile that the tour will be repeated next year. "We will never know how much goodwill we have spread," Miss Mc- Crory observed, "but if fervent wel- come is a gauge, we were successful." iT ---- __._ e. __..._._. . _- _ _____. ____._ _ ______ -__ ;OCHIt DJRE( FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 51' East Huron. C. H. Loucks, Minister. Jack Ossewaarde, Minister of Music. 10:'0 A.M. The Church at Worship. "World Com- munion Service". Meditation, "Family Ties." 11:'0 A.M. The Church at Study. Roger Williams Class for students, meets in the Guild House, 50' E. Huron. C. H. Loucks, Student Counselor, leads the discussion on the "Life of Christ." 6:30 P.M. The members of the Church will hold a Reception for Students in the Church Par- lors. The pastor will speak on "Is That The Human Thing To Do?" THE LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION Sponsored jointly by Zion and Trinity Lutheran Churches. 10:30 A.M. Worship Services in Zion Lutheran Church. (E. Washington St. at S. Fifth Ave.) Sermon "Rich Toward God," by Rev E. C. 0o~ JRCH XORY . I Mosher A series< will begin r Plans Concerts of weekly record concerts for Mosher girls on the afternoon of Sunday, October 12, .in the radio room. These concerts are being planned to give the girls an opportunity to hear the music of such composers as Beethoven, De- bussy, Tschaikowski, Brahms and others whose works are represented in the dormitory's record collection. Mrs. Klein, house mother at Mosher. feels that these concerts will prove a source of great enjoyment through- out the coming year. Before tihe GAME Stop at the GACH CAMERA SHOP 14 Nickels Arcade r Stellhorn. 10:30 A.M. Worship Services in Trinity Lutheran Church. (E. William St. at S. Fifth Ave.) Sermon "The Obedience of Christian Faith," by Rev. H. O. Yoder. 5:30 P.M. Lutheran Student Association Meet- in Zion Parish Hall, 309 E. Washington St. Supper at 6:00 P.M. Program: "The Church Goes with the/Student," by Pastors Stellhorn and Yoder. Movies of the 1940 L.S.A. Ashram. BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL CHURCH 9:00 A.M. Service in the German language. 9:00 A.M. Church School. 10:30 A.M. Morning Worship. Sermon topic: "Unweary of Work." 4:00 P.M. Outing of Student Guild. 7:00 P.M. Youth Fellowship. UNITARIAN CHNRCH State and Huron Streets. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State and Williams Sts. Leonard A. Parr, D.D., Minister. Director of Music, Donn Chown. Organist, Mrs. Mary McCall Stubbins. Rev. Leonard A. Parr, Minister. Willis B. Hunting, Director of Student Activ- ities. 10:00 A.M. There will be a new Adult Study Group meeting in the church to study "Our Heritage and Polity." This will be led by Rev. Ernest Evans. 10:45 A.M. Service of Public Worship. The sub- ject of Dr. Parr's sermon will be "Yhat About Your Shadow?" 5:30 P.M. Ariston League meets for supper. Pro- gram by Mrs. Willis B. Hunting. 7:00 P.M. Student Fellowship. Prof. Jas. K Pol- lock will speak on "World Events". There will be a social hour and refreshments. ST. PAUL'S EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH (Missouri Synod). Liberty at Third Street. Carl A. Brauer, Pastor. 9:30 A.M. Bible Class. 10:45 A.M. Morning Worship Service. Sermon: "Come Unto the Marriage." 5:30 P.M. Gamma Delta Student Club meeting, fellowship supper and social hour. A hay- ride will be held following the evening service. Come prepared for the event. 7:30 P.M. Preparatory Service. 7:45 P.M. Evening Service and Holy Commun- ion. Sermon by the pastor: "Christ, The. Rock Of Ages." ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Division at Catherine. The Rev. Henry Lewis, Rector. The Rev. Frederick W. Leech, Assistant Min- ister. George Faxon, Organist and Choirmaster. 8:00. AM. Holy Communion. # I { , , II2 ! 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