THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1940 T HE MICHIGAN DAILY 'Coffin Capers' To Preview Union Opera New Songs Will Be Featured By Chandler Pinney; Bill Sawyer And Orchestra To Furnish Music Chan Pinney, '41E, star of the 1941 Union Opera, will be featured at "Coffin Capers," the annual Congres- sional Fling, to be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., tomorrow in the ballroom of the Union. Pinney, previewing two of the songs from "Take A Number", will sing "Your Page In My Memories" by Ken Summerfelt, Grad., and "A Dream and I Went Walking", by Charles Bowen, '41, and Gordon Hardy, '41SM. A dance team will perform a waltz and a rhumba, and the program for the evening will be completed with incidental execu- tions. "A Ghoul's paradise", was the way Rigor Mortis, master of ceremonies, termed the decor for the dance. Pic- turesque gravestones and luminous Pearly Gates will add cheer to what would otherwise be, according to Mortis, a gloomy evening. Eerie tapers will light up the pessimistic countenances of the ghastly guests. The coffin, originally planned to be placed in the center of the floor, will probably have to be abandoned due to an unforeseen circumstance in connection with a state law. It seems, Mortis declared, shedding ghoulish tears, that it is illegal to place anyone who is not thoroughly dead in a coffin. However, Mortis said, brightening, if anyone knows of a dead body lying around that no one wants anymore, Congress will be glad to take it off his hands and supply it with a fitting coffin. Bill Sawyer's orchestra, which will play for the dance, an informal, open affair, will be broadcast over WJR. Tickets, at $1.25 a couple, will re- main on sale today and tomorrow at the Wolverine desk, Wahr's book- store and at' the League and the Union. Tickets may also be procured immediately before the dance at the Union desk. Emil Misura, '42, and David Panar, '41E, are in charge of the ticket sale. Entertainment To Be Provided For Knitters "Listen while you work" will be the theme of the first meeting of the new Red Cross chapter which will meet from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sat- urday at the W.A.B. Classical and semi-classical recordings will be in- cluded in the program that will keep sewing and knitting circles amused while working. A large stock of records will be kept on hand for special requests. Among these will be: Beethoven's Seventh Symphony, Schubert's "Un- finished", Stravinsky's "Rite of Spring", Bizet's "L'Arlesienne Suite" No. 2, Tchaikowsky's "Romeo and Juliet" overture, and Rossini's "Wil- liam Tell" overture. The list is completed by Beetho- ven's Fifth, Bizet's "Carmen", ex-t cerpts from Verdi's "La Traviata", an album of Strauss waltzes, plus many sign-record compositions. No special program has been ar- ranged; recordings will be played whenever requested. All campus wom- en have been invited to drop in at the WAB at any time during the specified hours; no experience or special skill is required. Dr. Bell To Attend National Conference Dr. Margaret E. Bell, head of the women's Physical Education Depart- ment, will attend an Executive Com- mittee planning meeting for the Na- tional Conference for Cooperation in School Health Education today in Pittsburgh. Friday, Saturday and Sunday Dr. Bell will be at the Commission meet- ing of the 1942 Yearbook on Health Education of the American Associa- tion of School Administrators. Assembly To Hold Mass Meeting Friday An Assembly mass meeting will be held Friday at 4 p.m. in the.Grand Rapids room of the League. It is necessary that all permanent repre- sentatives be present as the Consti- tution will be voted upon and a new treasurer elected. To Appear At Union Z7eaiher Jn Jier (ap- (Editor's note: With an inspiration bows to their cleanest, apply the hot- for the betterment of all, Frances test hot water packs you can stand, Aaronson takes over "The Feather' for this week.) and rub i ' ±ich oily cream gener- A mother waits longingly for the Ann Arbor Special at the train sta- tion December 21-daughter descends upon the platform laden down with{ extra hatboxes, a dangling pair of skates, and two coats over her arm- mother sighs as she notices her off- * spring's unkempt hair, slept-in skirt, f =' V1, and bulging laundry' bag (the silent token of the family duty to a college undergraduate). We plead: the disastrous affects I of a vacation weekend opened by the comment "alt my clothes are dirty; I must go shopping imme- _ diately; my face is in its poorest condition; all the buttons and ously. After about two minutes, hooks are off my dresses; haven't absorb the cream with a hot cloth, slept for weeks" can be avoided. A letting your face literally "steam". few moments spent each day be- Repeat the process two or three times, tween now (RIGHT NOW) and and notice the return of that natural December 20 will put your ward- fresh look. robe, your personality, and your Take the polish off your nails for disposition in good condition for a week, and work with oils and a a grand entrance into Christmas cuticle orange-stick (NOT SCIS- festivities. SORS) for the "duration". Then Let's start on you. yourself. If your go back to your favorite color 'lair is bedraggled, there is a whole scheme, and you will notice a more week to brush it into healthy condi- groomed effect to your hands. AE ;ion before getting a permanent in cream at night will counteract the Ann Arbor. That will give the new harshness caused by windy gusts wave more than a week and a half that creep up the best of mitten ;o mellow, so that the family's first sets. glance at you will find those curly Now, how about the clothes prob- locks at their best. lem? Take one-half hour off some evening, and go over your complete Don't let your friends believe wardrobe. Decide to have all your that some disastrous diet has spoil- cleaning done now: it probably will ed your skin, or that failure to wash not cost any more in town than it your face has removed the lus- will at home. (Most cities have their trouts glow from your features. problems in common.) Studying late hours for last exams is bound to take its toll; we want If you think you are too busy to to try to counteract that in the sew hooks and eyes now, think of best possible way. what the rush will be when lunch- eons, gab-fests, teas, and dances Try this nightly remedy: before call your attention during the holi- showering, scrub your face and el- S days. Eight Houses To Entertain I League Tutors Will Give Help In Any Subject "Exam-cram'" time will be upon the ;I Sororities Plan Formal Dinners Before Annual Panhellenic Ball' With the annual Panhellenic Ball, which will be held from 9 p.m. to ca I a.m. tomorrow in the Lcague ball- fe impus soon, and ars and worries with it all the that accompany room, comes the usual number of dinners given by scrority houses. Alpha Gamma Del' will entertain' 22 couples at their house at 8 p.m. mnd Alpha Omicron Pi will serve din- ner to 14 couples before the dance. At their house on Washtenaw. Chi Omega will entertain their guests be- ,ore the ball. Twenty-five couples will be served at the Delta Delta Delta house and Gamma Phi Beta will entertain a total of 18 couples. Kappa Alpha Theta continues the list of eight houses, with 32 couples attending the dinner at their house. Twenty couples will be served dinner at the Kappa Delta house tomorrow evening and will continue from there to the League and Pi Beta Phi will entertain 30 couples at 7 p.m. Corsages will be permitted at the ball, Barbara MacLaughlin, '43, gen- eral chairman of the Panhellenic Ball, announced. Westminster Guild Plans Dinner-Dance The Westminster Guild of the Presbyterian Church will hold a semi-formal, closed dinner-dance from T p.m. to midnight Friday. . There will be dancing between courses. Decorations will carry out i a winter theme, with scenes on each table depicting winter sports. poor or troublesome classwork. Thus efforts are being made to avoid these blights to effective examination study by preparing all who wish help in any specific subject for examination time through the League tutorial system. Women are advised by chairman of the tutorial committee, Margaret Hubbard, '41 that tutoring is best done now-before it is too late, since tutors will not be available before finals time. About 40 women have been tutored through the system, so far, she stated, and very favorable results have been reported. Tutors are available in all freshmen and beginning courses and in many advanced courses as well. Most tutoring, Miss Hubbard fur- ther stated, has been in chemistry, mathematics, geology and French. She added that there is great demand for chemistry tutors and that any women wishing to assist others in these subjects may leave a note in her League mailbox, or call Miss Mc- Cormick's, office in the League. Women wishing to be tutored may reach committee members the same way, since office hours will no longer be held. All tutoring is done in the League, and a fee of 25 cents an hour is paid to the tutors. Alpha Omicron Pi announces the recent pledging of Margaret Cor- nelius, '41, of New York. CHANDLER SPINNEY Tobe-Cobu rn School To Give Scholarships Women Interested In Fashion Urged To Meet In League For Further Information Women aspirants to careers in fa- 3hion or designing and related fields ire being offered an opportunity for tudy in this work through the Tobe- Coburn School for Fashion Careers of New York City. Five senior women will be given $700 scholarships again ,his year as has been done in the past. Virginia Osgood, '41, in charge of further information about registra- ion blanks and test questions for ap- plicants of the scholarships, has an- 'mounced that she will meet all women Interested in them from 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. today in the League, at which time all further questions will be answered. Those who cannot at- tend the meeting at this time should get in touch with Miss Osgood. Two sets of test questions and a -esearch project will complete the vork for the awards, which will be announced April 25. Registration )lanks and answers to the first 10 questions must be mailed to the school on or before next.. Sunday. JGP Dance Group To Rehearse Friday Juniors who have signed up for the Friday rehearsals for JGP dance will meet at 4 p.m. this Friday in- stead of Friday of next week, as was previously announced. Low heeled, hard soled shoes are suggested for those rehearsing. The committee is reminded by Mil- dred Radford, '42, dance chairman, that eligibility cards must be put in the folder on League bulletin boards, or handed in at time of first meeting. Advisers AreNeeded All women who have experience in sewing or knitting and who are in- terested in being student advisers dur- ing Red Cross work periods are re- quested to call Janet Lewin, 2-3119, chairman of the WAA Red Cross pro- ject. V ~ >'-.." "' \/.\\ , .4< "7 7< 4 -7. A .ACCESORIE Make the Costue v a.. . r THE MOST WELCOME GIFT OF ALL . . Slippers ofGENUINE SHEAR LING with flat heel! Beige! Red! Blue! Wine! White or Black! All sizes. FOR DISTINCTIVE GIFTS 4 7.' / , %'< , / j/ ii/ %/ ", $3.95 to $5.50 Looking for something new and startling in accessories - something to add zest to your costume? Came see our collection of handbags. Big ones and little ones in various sizes. 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