izz~i~zu ts~i~ jgjgT HE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE Annual Hillel Social Mixer WV I I Be Today Dance Will Be Held In Union From 3:30 P.M. To 5:30 P.M.; Sawyer's Orchestra Will Play As a special feature of the mixer, Bill Sawyer and his orchestra will play for dancing. Sawyer will feat- ure his vocalist Gwen Cooper. Ar- rangements for the. affair are in charge of Laura Katzenel, '41Ed., chairman of the social committee of Hillel. Committee Heads Drive The committee in charge of the membership drive is headed by Her- bert London, '43, and Helen Bittker, '42, who is head of the women's divi- sion. The initial drive for solicitors was begun Saturday with a banquet at the Union to make plans for the membership campaign. Hostesses for the mixer today will be Beverly Cohen, '42; Miriam Rubin, '41; Rhoda Leshine, '42; Rita Gold- stein, '41; Eleanor Press, '43; Char- lotte Kaufman, '43; Arlene Lazan- ski, '43; Josephine Moyses, '43; Ger- trude Cohen, '42, and Miss Bittker. Chaperons for the affair will be Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Morgan and Prof. and Mrs. Samuel Goudsmit, All Students Are Invited All students holding Hillel affiliate memberships will be admitted free. Those who wish to obtain member- ships will be able to buy tickets at the door, Miss Katzenel announced. Non-members will be charged an ad- nission fee of 50 cents. New comers, including transfers and graduate students are especially invited to attend the mixer to be- come alcquainted with each other, and also with old members of the Hillel Foundation. Amateur Show Started Career Of Ruth Draper By GRACE MILLER It was another generation's idea of an amateur show which first revealed the talent Ruth Draper has for giv- ing character sketches in the form of her original monologues. Miss Draper, who will speak here Nov. 19, was the one who didn't get the gong during the entertainment stunts at a houseparty of young peo- ple where her act began her career. After everyone had sung his song, or grotesqued through his dance, it was Miss Draper's turn. After puzz- ling awhile, she decided to try a mon- ologue after the memorable Beatrice Hereford's style. Gave Impromptu Sketch With no time for preparation, she swung into her act. Her sketch was about a little Jewish tailor who had been doing some work for her. With nothing but his accent and amusing mannerisms to work with, she improvised her story, and built up his character as she went along. Her first audience almost refused to believe that the sketch was im- promptu. Reception Was Enthuskistic Encouraged by the enthusiastic re- ception of this first effort, Miss Dra- per went back over the miniature drama that had been so unexpectedly born, and sharpened the characters and heightened the detail. Then one monologue after another followed, until she acquired a repertoire of 35 sketches, anyone of which she can do at a moment's notice, as they are all in her memory. One intriguing feature of her work involves her linguistic skill. She speaks French, German, Italian and Spanish fluently, and uses these lan- guages in her sketches. She is also very- clever at imitating foreign ac- cents, and uses many dialects in her sketches-Dalmatian, Balkan, Swed- ish and East Indian among them. The sketches come into being by direct acting-they are not written out first. Antique-Finish Leather Is Popular With College Woman For Accessories Latest love of the college woman are the touches of antique-finished leather~ she works into her accessor- ies, with purse and shoes blending with the rest of her costume. Shoes come in the soft rusty-brown shade that harmonizes so well with beige and other autumn shades. Most popular are the pumps with the squarish turned-up toes that seem 'to make the most gross feet sizes smaller. This same finish is shown in a very sporty alligator oxford, with the oh- so-English tie. Many are the words of praise we've heard from harassed women who are obliged to practically live in their purses all day long. The envelope har.- in th an rtinie shaides not nlyv Jeater fin Jer (lap- Each fall, fashion picks on one feature to make itself distinctive. This year, luckily for youth, there's nothing that can put a feather in your cap like the length of your waistline. Lucky is the word to use here, for, much as fashionable matrons of Newv York and the vicinity may object to such a statement, there seems to be no group of women who can wear the low waistline as successfully as can those of college age. It's an opportunity that ought not to be allowed to slip away. Many are conscious of this, but there is arco fsiderable group that clings to the belt line as a stopping point for skirt and top. It should be considered that one is being attrac- tively dressed as well as subtly ad- vertising oneself as being up to date by tending toward the long torso. A coincidence at the Union dance last Saturday provesthis point. An extremely pretty girl wearing a two piece silk with pleated skirt stepped from the dance floor to the hall, but hardly a head turned as she walked by. Immediately following her was another in the same type of dress, but with a distinctive fac- tor added. Comments were num- erous and complimentary. The outfit is worth describing. It was of teal blue. The jacket was very long and well fitted, with straight, long sleeves, and a neat, lace collar topping it, From the throat- line to jacket hem was a double row of closely set buttons to accent the length. Its skirt was quite short and pleated all around. Best of all about this style is that, contrary to many opinions,, any- one can wear it. The success of wearing it is in the color combina- tion. Thin people should have un- pressed pleats in the skirt, with two very contrasting colors being used, or just one dark color. Those who are heavier, should pick a straight skirt, with stripes in either the top or bottom, but not both, for it makes the attempt at deceiv- ing the eye too obvious. Such a style note cuts the smart- est possible figure that has been pro- duced by designers in a great many fashion seasons. It's not the type of style that one may wear with dis- taste just because it's new but really not pretty, for it creates a chic and fastidious air that is altogether pleas- ing. It's not the straight, low waist- line of some twenty or less years ago, that didn't fit, gave no advan- tage to the figure, and included a low belt. Long torso dresses are Interviews Start Today For Committee Positions Interviewing for central commit- tees on Assembly Banquet and Pan- hellenic Ball and Banquet will be held from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow in the undergraduate office of the League. Only women who had their petitions in the office be- fore today are eligible to be inter- viewed. Women who wish to serve on in- dividual committees, rather than seek postions on the central committee, need not be interviewed. , They must, however, petition. Assembly Banquet will be held Nov. 4. Panhellenic Banquet is scheduled for Oct. 28 and Panhellenic Ball will be held Dec. 6. Patricia Walpole, '41, is president of Assembly, the independent women's organization, and Annabel Van Winkle, '41, is head of Panhellenic for sorority women. Vogue Offers First Children's Theatre Play Opportunities Tryouts Will Be Tomorrow By JANET HIATT of the search for the princes For, C areers "Men who can take it" and aspir- search which takes many humo ing actresses, too, are being called twists and turns. Annual Prix de Paris Contest to the rehearsal room of the League Stage To Be Extended at 4 p.m. tomorrow by Richard Mc- In fact, not only will the stag To Give Seven Major Awards Kelvey, director of the plays pre- the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatr To Senior University Women sented each fall by the Children's used for the production, but also Theatre group."stage steps, aisles and the box in Senior university women all ovbr A "screwball comedy" is Mr. Mc- balcony. Said Mr. McKelvey, the country once more may read into Kelvey's description of the first play might even call it "Handzapoppi Vogue's Prix De Paris contest the op- tobe presented-"TherPrincess andmdv cto Hndoppi portunity of a career in fashion, ad- the Pea" by Hans Christian Ander- The production end of the play vertising, and writing. son. A cast of about 20 players will e he om ee Seven major awards, plus several be chosen for it. the Theatre-Arts committee of honorable mentions, to be given to Cast Is Revised League who through various the women who prove most capable Some deviations from the original committees will manage the costu in this sixth. annual contest, will open fairy tale have been made in Mr. scenery, properties and make-up, the doors to those hard-to-break- McKelvey's "adaptation" of the play. men on the committee may, how into fields of which the "futures" Trick gadgets in the scenery, waitersa-s are so tempting to women with spe- on roller skates and cracks about cialized talents. Unionism have been added as well First Meeting Of H o Prizes Are Offered as a somewhat revised cast of char- First prize will take the form of a acters. In the 1940 version will Presidents To Be Hel year's position on the Vogue editorial appear a "fake king, a real king who's staff, which amounts to the chance_ At 4:30 PM Today to prove one's talents in the fashion USHERS TO MEET TODAY P.M. field. Second prize, a special Vanity A required ushering test will be Another step towards complete Fair months piteinon ethe Voue held in the Lydia Mendelssohn ter-house cooperation, the aim o staff as a feature writer. It will be Theatre at 4:30 today for any wo- eague ouncil, as en is awarded to the contestant who turns man who wants to usher in the with the inauguration of House F Children's Theatre Plays or the dents' meetings, the first of w~ in the best papers on non-fashion ACie'spThdt ions rh will be held at 4:30 p.m. today in material; specifically on the theatre, Art Cinema productions. League. music, painting or comparable The group will also go over h themes. not very bright either, and a prince rules and sign out sheets. The m Cash prizes will be awarded to the dumber than both of them who runsi next five winners, Who also must be an advertisement in the paper to ent will domitories, sor the p in the graduating class of '41. Hon- find a genuine princess." league house groups as well as orable mention will be made of those In the original story, a king and members of the League Council. women whose papers are praise-wor- queen sought a real princess by hav-_ _ thy, but who do not win one of the ing her sleep on 20 mattresses under first seven- prizes. Honorable men- 20 quilts with a pea under the bot- Jordan Hall To Hold tion winners will be interviewed by tom mattress. When the truth was advertising and other staffs of stores obtained, the pea was put in a mu- Birthday Dinner Tod and advertising firms. seum. The new version opens in a Questions To Be Asked museum, then reverts back to the tale In honor of all residents w s-a rous ,e of e be the the "We n'." will g on the sub- mes Wo- ever, use d to in- f the fall ?resi- rhich i the house mieet- resi- and s they hys whose Stitched, Knife Pleated Skirts Are Popular Maybe Dame Fashion is not quite as fickle as she has been accused of being for at least. she hasn't yet successfully changed the classic cam- pus costume. namely the skirt and sweater outfit. In fact, she doesn't seem to be try- ing because even the most casual ob- server can see that skirts and jack- ets or sweaters are more popular than ever this year. Almost every skirt one sees these days features pleats in one form or another. There are models with accordion pleats all around the skirt so that there is none of that ugly bunchiness. Box pleats are especially neat and smart looking if they are pressed to a knife edge, and the gay, casual unpressed pleats, stitched down a few inches from the top and then falling into draped lines give that young, wind-blown look. There is one particularly new and clever skirt being seen around. In the front it is entirely made up of rather narrow pleats stitched a short way from the top. But in the back, the new feature of just one large pleat in the middle to give the swing effect adds a note of originality. Exactlydthe opposite of the skirt just modeled is one with all of the pleats in the back and the Scotch "kiltie" effect in front. Just as the canny Scots fasten their kilties as* they wrap them around, with a large safety pin, so has this unusual skirt a clip resembling a huge pin Fencing Club To Meet The first meeting of the Michi- gan Women's Fencing Club will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in the fenc- ing room at Barbour Gymnasium. The program for the coming year will be presented, and all fencers who took beginning or intermediate fenc- ing last year, or fenced previous to entrance at the University] are in- vited to attend. MILDRED RADFORD well fitted, and if there is to be a belt, it is worn at the normal waist- line. After all there is really no reason why a belt must come exact- ly where the material for the top and bottom of dress is sewn togeth- er, and it doesn't defeat the pur- pose of style to have it cut the smooth line of a wrist length bod- ice. Some women on campus have al- ready discovered how attractive a two piece dress of contrasting color, with a dark belt on a light top can be. Such a dress, cut on absolutely classic and familiar lines, with only the length of the fitted shirt com- ing over the skirt to add a new note,' is perfect for classwear. This should' answer the argument that this is a style for da e clothes and formals. Actually, when one looks back on the beginning of the low waist- line craze, it might be said that college women started it with their class clothes. In a way, wasn't it they that were first wearing a sweater that reached 'way below the waist. Of course, those do ab- solutely hide any waistline, but it did start to make the low line a familiar sight in colleges, and even high schools. Petitioning for Assembly banquet and Panhellenic banquet and ball is now under way at the League, so why not pick that place to try out the success of the new adaptation of the long torso. Last year Brooks-style sweaters were worn. This year, try a- low waisted dress, or a long suit coat. Although the point of every interview is to ascertain your ability to execute a job, how you look also is important. The Best Dressed Coed of the Week received this award while wearing a suit adapted to the long torso. She is Mildred Radford, '42,, and was seen at the football game Saturday in a wool skirt of fireman red, with a pork pie of the same color. Her man-tailored coat was beige, and the touch that completed the costume were tan, pigskin gloves. The silk shirt is white. A series of monthly questions will be answered by all participants; problems will ask for opinions, de- scriptions, ideas and short papers. From these contestants, will be chos- en in the primary elimination, those whose answers and papers are best. They will be asked to write a thesis, the subject of which will be chosen from an assigned list of topics. Of 60 winners of previous Prix De Paris contesest, 40 are now pursuing careers in their chosen fields. The contest is known to university women for its unusual prizes which offer not only a 'material award, but the in- tangible opportunity for future ac- complishments. Pamphlets explain- ing entrance to the contest may be obtainedat -the office of the Dean of Women. Hay Ride Will Be Held The Congregational Student Fel- lowship will sponsor a hay ride at 9 p.m. tomorrow. The hay racks will leave Pilgrim Hall and return to the Church after the ride for dancing and refreshments. George Cogger, -'42E, and Mary Edith Riner, '42, are in charge of arrangements. Ri MfN'SI EYE VIEWI Now that the League has started an Acquaintance Club, we'd like to offer one suggestion: The founders of the Acquaintance Club would do well to tell ambitious coeds not ever, ever to wear those short skirts and long stockings that seem to, be the rage these days. For all we know, they may be the latest Paris fashion. Look what hap- pened to Paris. They're even worse than those un- pressed, badly-fitted slacks that girls wear in the summer. And that means bad. * * * Why don't Michigan men organize a boycott against girls who wear these cotton or wool leg-shields? If they really mean what they say about them, they will. -Lothario birthdays occurred last month or will be celebrated this month, Jordan Hall will hold a 'special birthday dinner at 6 p.m. today. Mildred Schwarz, Ruth Leidig and Virginia Baechle, members of the Class of 1944, will be in charge of arrangements. Meeting today, the Jordan Glee Club will organize their work for the semester with Barbara Baggs, '43, acting as chairman. Are you enjoying The social advantage of good dancing? CLASSES STARTING FRIDAY OCT. 18th. SYLVIA STUDIO o/ DANCE 603 East Liberty Phone 8066 Ajac Annwverar 2avinq o Brigh1 Wools i ' SOFT, warm dresses that will lend that essential touch of gaity to your ward- , I robe. Choose a carefree plaid, soft blue or barley beige . . . and there are scads of others. You'll find them a joy to wear. Sizes 9 to 17 and 10 to 20. / Anniversary priced. this. Week only at $7 and $10 7 - - othcr Annrive'rsai y S6vinigs: 2 Pc. Wool Suits.. .$8.95\ E/ / Silk "Date" Dresses ... $10 Casual Sports- coats ... $14.95 / Wool Dressy Coats ...$25 Skirts. $2, 3.95 Coats ...$5 Blouses . . . $1 IPN CELEBRATING the debut of the "fnatural look" in under-twenty cosmetics . . . a whole new series of make-up and fragrance accessories. The "Pink Party" scent a blend of many flower -roCw a IPA IRCE Yt Cologne . . . 1.00 and 1.75 Perfume . . 1.00, 1.85, 3.50 Lipstick . . . . ... . 75c Face Powder . . . . . 1.00 Bath Powder . . . . . . 1.00 Talcum . . . . . . . . 50c r,, ,. 1All n L-