THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1941 THE MoICHICITGA=N DALY Gordon Hardy Plays At 'Hangover Hustle' Today In Union f"? t Tickets For Engineering Ball To Go On Sale Today In Union General sale of tickets for the an- nual winter Engineering Ball on Fri- day, Jan. 17, will begin at 8 a.m. to- day in the Union, Edward King, '41E, general chairman announced yester- day. Tickets are $2.50 per couple. The sale will be held from 8 a.m. to noon and from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. it was announced, under the direction of George Hogg, '41E, and Don Hart- well, '41E, Engineers will be able to procure tickets during those same hours in the lobby of the East En- gineering Building and on the second floor of the West Engineering Build- ing above the Arch. Proceeds from the sale of tickets, King said, will be used to help spon- sor Open House next semester to show the rest of the ,campus what activities are being carried on in the College of Engineering. Furnishing the music for the En- gineers' 'first formal of the year will, be Everett Hoagland and his orches- tra which has recently completed an engagement at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York. Featured with the group will be Don Burke, vocalist. The theme of the dance will be "Modernism;" scenery and music will be arranged to comply with the gen- eral spirit of the "Modern Age." Sev- eral of the decorations will be sim- ilar to those in the scientific exhibits of last year's New York World's Fair. Meeting Is Announced There will be a meeting of the AnnS Arbor Independents at 4:45 tomor- row in the League. The place of meeting will be posted on the Leaguej bulletin board. ii 'F Special Sel1ing! Genuine HIARRIS TWEED Novelty Games WilllBe Played At Milk Dance Dancers To Demonstrate Numbers For Danco; Prizes Will Be Given "Hangover Hustle," to be held from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. today in the Union Ballroom, while it is a milk dance, will be far from sour. Gordon Hardy's orchestra will play, for the dance, with novelty arrange- ments for the various dance numbers which will be featured as part of the entertainment. Main feature of the afternoon will be danco, the modern, form of bingo, set to rhythm. Here's how you play it: it's all a, matter of identifying a few simple, little dance steps. Demonstrating the steps will be Claire Reed-Hill, '42; Murray Markland, '43; J ne fConnell, '42, and Bob Shedd, '42. As the various novelties are danced by these two couples, the participants in the game will fill in their danco cards as they recognize the dances. Prizes will be awarded for those who are successful enough to keep their Virginia r;eels and congas straight, according to Dick Strain, '41, social co-chairman of the Union. Another novelty will be a balloon relay dance, in which the contestants have to blow up their balloons until they break before continuing the race. Guaranteed the right remedy for all sizes and descriptions of hangovers are the 60 hosts and hostesses. The hostesses may be recognized by small milk bottle pins, while the hosts will wear little whisky bottles in their lapels. There will be a charge of 25 cents for men, while women are invited to attend as guests of the Union. Tick- ets may be obtained at the door, or from staff members of the Union earlier. Today Is Deadline For Eligibility List Of Junior Women All women who wish to have their names included on the official JGP list must have their eligibility cards signed between 4 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. today in the Undergraduate Office of the League, if they have not done so already. This is absolutetly the last oppor- tunity to get cards signed, announced Rosalie Smith, '42. Those whose cards remain unsigned will not be able to work on JGP until second semester. There will be a meeting of the pro- grams committee, under Virginia Drury, '42, at 5 p.m. in the League. Glee Club To Rehearse Good Costumes Are Necessary Aids ForPlays Poise and mastery-the attributes so important to the performance of the actor-are aided and abetted by correct costuming in a play, accord- ing to Emma Mellencamp, costume designer for the plays presented in the Children's Theatre. Young actors and actresses particularly, Mrs. Mel- lencamp pointed out, lose embar- rassment and self consciousness when properly dressed to play their roles. For "Children 1777," which will be- gin its three performance run tomor- row night in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, Mrs. Mellencamp and her student assistants outfitted 16 play- ers in costumes of the American rev- olutionary period. A trip through the costume room in the League brought to light the wide variety in the type of garments needed for the play, which included among its characters representatives of almost every class living in the American colonies as well as some immigrant peoples. The material going into the gar- ments was equally as varied as their design: old pantaloons made sleeves in one dress; ten-cent store chamois made a buckskin costume; the blue velvet lining of an old fur coat made the jacket for a little rich girl's dress; an old gold belt made gay trim on a boy's bright red suit; a quilted .1""..145Add (llniouir Volun teer Knitters Now Have Chance To Aid Red Cross Long-awaitted material and in- structions for Red Cross knitting pro- jects may be obtained from 10 a.m. to 12 noon today through Saturday at Room 222 of the Nichols Arcade. The wool may be used by all wo- men who will agree to finish the sweater by the end of January, Janet Lewin, '43, chairman of the Student Workroom, has announced. Heavy women's sweaters will be knitted. Students who expressed a prefer- ence for knitting over sewing at the Women's Athletic Building are re- minded that this is the first oppor- tunity on campus to knit for the Red Cross. Sewing operations will be con- tinued from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Satur- day at the WAB. Women Presidents To Convene Today Dormitory, sorority, and league house presidents will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in the League for their weekly open forum on house problems with the League Judiciary Council. The approximately 75 women who represent all the campus groups have found the weekly meetings, an in- novation in the League this year, helpful in making plans within their various houses and in solving prob- lems common to the group whether they concern house rules or social af- fairs. ANNOUNCE SCORES Results of Tuesday, Jan. 7, games are: Delta Delta Delta 18, Barbour 12; Mosher I 23, Alpha Xi Delta 9; Zone III 5, Couzens II 4; and Newberry 12, Adelia Cheever 7. COATS Only 25.00 MAN-TAILORED CLASSICS in a fabric we don't know when we can get again at this price. Beautiful heather-mixture tweeds with blue, grey, beige or brown tones predominat- ing. Sturdy, long-wearing. Lined and inter-lined for extra warmth. Misses' sizes. GOODYCFI y IS STATE STREET I"o(The Varsity Men's Glee Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in the Union to rehearse for their first formal out- of-town concert in Jackson. Yeatiherl3li/iCar Brilliant Past And Shining Future .. Merrily rang the bells on New navy blue skirts. For that fact, Year's, and they bade goodbye to many blouses will be worn low over twelve months that were rich in fa- the hips rather than tucked in, and shion innovation. Led for the first will be moulded to the figure. time by American designers, the fem- Red, which was the banner color inine world came forth with every- for this year, can't keep its popular- thing new, from jumpers and jerkins ity indefinitely but it will die hard through harlequin rimmed glasses for many people like it. Draped lines to cover-up evening dresses, will probably continue for a while. College clothes took up but a Saddles, although no more the com- small corner of this new, big plete rulers they were, will never wardrobe, but they adopted much completely disappear. Those are the that was new, and added import- fashions of forty, and a few for forty- ant bits for themselves. There was one. But there's a lot that we don't know about, which we trust will be a definite trend back to smooth-good. ness, which was best evidenced by the fact that neat wool blouses, mostly long sleeved, for the first time began to contend the popu- larity crown of sweaters. Dark leather shoes, worn without ankle socks, have also fitted this new mood, and hair-do's this pas year were kept neater by drawing the front up into a pompadour. m Hats have been made to fit this newest of coiffures so that they now sit on the back of the head behind CLEA RA N the puff of waves and curls. Such hats, being conservative, are more easily adaptable to the informal dat- ing clothes that are most featured here at Michigan. Fur hats, an in- troduction of this year, will probably feature more different kinds of fur~s applied in more different ways in 1941. Skirts in 1940 lost some of their *Better Di flaredness and some of their length. Lots of pleats and front and back Dresses originally $16. fullness replaced the flare. Pleats went well with the new long torso effect of dresses and suit coats. Dresses originally $16 This low waistline is causing quite a bit of contention among the fa- Dresses originally $25 an shion authorities now for some say it will continue into 1941 and others say it won't. Maybe because they aren't quite * Fur-Trim smooth, knee-length socks never made the grade on this campus. Although the South American and oriental influences were much used, they weren't seen here very much either. After many years of success on other A special group of fou zampuses, boots finally "took" in originally $169 and $1 79 Ann Arbor. A surprising thing for values at $98. cur conservative tastes is that novel- ty glasses immediately became pop- A second group of fur- alar, for many are the coeds now at $58. wearing blue, green or red rimmed glasses or pixie rims. Military notes accented many fall and early winter outfits, and in these first weeks of 1941, this style is narrowing down to a specialty Entire remaining stc on sailor boy costumes. Deep square collars are the first and the last REVERSIBLE TWEE word, and not-too-loose long torso REVERSIBLE CORD middies are destined to top your I1 I Start the tmfl Week after vacation off Riaht with i El 11