I M3ER 2,1941 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'AGE F IDaily Model Try To Take P Annual Fall Style Show To Be Held Nov 131 1 outs lace Wednesday Judging Of All Mannequins Will Be By Store Exhibitors; Winter Clothes To Be Shown "All Eyes On You!"' will be tie theme when the Ann Arbor mer-t chants set out to disprove once and for 'all that Michigan expression about the "four out of five" Their annual fall style show will be heldg Thursday, Nov. 13, in the Lydia Men-d delssohn Theatre, under the spon- sorship of'The Daily, ,with Lou Car- penter, '42, women's advertising man-r ager, as general chairman. , Tryouts will take place from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday in the Grand Rapids Room of the League for allt those who wish to model in the pre-. view display of winter clothes. Rep- 1esentative's of the various Ann Ar- bor stores which are exhibiting fash- ions Will judge the models on appear-k ance and the ability to wear clothes.1 Any University woman is eligible to try out. To Give Door PrizeF Door prizes will be offered by the 'i local stores participating in the fash- ion show to those who attend.,Tickets will be distributed throughout the sorority houses and dormitories, buta they may also be obtained at thee door. Admission will be free., .y Assisting Miss Carpentr in mak- ing arrangements for the display willt be Carole Kleiner, '43, with MarciaY Stern, '44, and Lucy Chase Wright,1 '44, as her assistants. Virginia Young, '43, assisted by Jane Lindberg, '44, and Beth Frehse, '43, will be int charge of the selection of models. Committees Are Listed Programs. will be designed by Alice Pearlman, '43, and her committee,, which includes Phyllis Buck, '44A, Ellen Goldstone, '44, June Hastreiter, '44, and Sue Scheffer, '44\ Martha Opsion, '44, and Margery Welber, '44, are responsible for con- tacting the local stores. The ushers committee will be headed by Miss Stern, who .will be assisted by the women's business staff of The Daily. WAA SCHEDULE Volleyball: At 4:30 p.m. Tues- day, Alpha Epsilon Phi vs. Kappa l Delta; at 5:10 p.m. Alpha ChiP Omega vs. Helen Newberry; Delta Delta Delta vs. Alpha Omicron Pi. At 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, Betsy kBarbour vs. Kappa Kappa Gai- ma; Alpha Gamma Delta vs. Mo- sher. At 5:10 p.m. Zeta Tau Alpha vs. Alpha Phi; Pi Beta Phi v. Al- pha Delta Pi. At 5:10 pm. Thurs- day, Delta Gamma vs. Jordan. Archery: Club will meet at 4:30 p.m. Thursday at the WAB. Fencing:. To Meet at 7:15 p.m. Thursday at Barbour Gymnasium. Dace: Club will meet at 7:30E p.m. Wednesday at Barbour Gym- nasium.I Pitch and Putt: To meet at 5 p.m. Wednesday at the WAB. Crop and Saddle: Will meet at 5 p.m. Wednesday in front of Bar- bour Gymnasium. Swimming: Club will meet at 8:30 p.m. Thursday at the Union. Tennis: Club will meet at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow. Faculty Club To Meet The Faculty Women's Club drama group will met at 7:45 p.m. tomor- row 4t the League. Any member of the Faculty Women's Club who is in- terested is invited to attend. Section and hostess dues will be payable at this meeting. Panhellenic Banquet To Be Tomorrow "Haloes and angel wings will be the order of the evening at the Pan- hellenic Banquet tomorrow," was the! only hint that Virginia Morse, '43, general chairman would give as to the theme of the affair. Thus it seems that a surprise is in store for those attending the ban- quet as to the general theme and the! decorations, and since the event will take place from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m to- morrow in the League, such a surprise will only whet the anticipation of all. Dean Lloyd To Speak Miss Morse did divulge the fact that Dean Alice Lloyd will be the main speaker of the evening, while Virginia Osgood, '41, will make a re- port on rushing during the last year. Since the scholalrship cup will also be presented at the dinner, Registrar Ira M. Smith will do the honors in- aolved in that presentation. Ten-page programs have been re parec or the even. ant will be given o all women present. These pro- grams are said to contain a poem or a jingle for eakh class represented, ,he words to several Michigan songs, and also various other items of inter- est. Another point ferreted out in the interview with the general chairman, was that one of the 1941 Lantern Night winners, namely, Delta Gam.. ma, will sing "Hail To Michigan" as part of the evening's entertainment. To Stress Scholarship Cooperation has been the main theme of past Panhellenic Banquets and will also occupy much of the spotlight tomorrow night. However, this year, scholarship improvement will receive the greatest stress in the program. An attempt was made at first to arrange seating at the ban- quet in the order of the scholastic averages of each house, but since the ballroom of the League would not accommodate that plan, the seating will be arranged according to the number of women attending from each house. Patrons for the affair will be Miss Lloyd, Dean Jeannette Perry, Dean Eyrl eBacher, Dr. Maragret Bell, Miss Ethel A. McCormick, Registrar and Mrs. Smith, Miss Osgood and Mrs. S. Beach Conger.. Special guests will be Margaret Sanford, '42, presi- dent of the League, and Patricia Hadley, '42, president, of Panhellenic Association. Petitioning For Two WAA Board Posts To Open Tomorrow , Petitioning for Awards manager and Hobby Lobby chairman, will be- gin tomorrow, Donelda Schaible, '42, president of WAA, has announced. Petitions may be obtained at the desk of the Women's Athletic Build- ing, and must be turned in to the same desk by 5 p.m. Wednesday. Any sophomore, junior or senior woman may petition for these posi- tions, which "\ automatically makes them members of the WAA executive board. The Awards manager keeps rec- ords of every woman who partici- pates in tournament and club ac- tivities, while Hobly Lobby - chair- men will take over the handicraft, leather and metal work which goes on in the little white house on Palm- er Field. Interviewing for these po- sitions will be from 3;30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Thursday and Friday in the of- fices of the W. A. B.' Interfraternity To Hold Yearly Ball In Union Crests Of Campus Fraternities To Decorate Ballroom Walls; Osborne's Orchestra Will Play Fraternity pins, will not be given away at the door, but everything else in the way of Greek decoration will be offered to patrons of the an- nual Interfraternity Ball, to be held Nov. 14, in the ballroom of the Union. Outstanding feature of decorationsI for this year's affair will be an ar- rangement on the walls of the ball- 'room. of the crests beonging to the campus's 38 fraternities, Buel Morley, 43, and Rufus Teasdale, '43E, co- hairmen of the decorations commit- tee, announced. Balloons Add Color Huge, colorful balloons, festooning the ceiling will add brilliance to the ball and will be released in a shower at an unannounced time during the evening. Masses of flowers and palm trees, imported from California especially for the dance, will complete decor- ations. Osborne To Play Will Osborne and his orchestra, complete with Osborne's trumpet and the orchesta's famous "Slide Music" will supply the rhythms for the af- fair. This issue of the ball will, in a better degree than ever before, keep up the Interfraternity Ball's policy of being the first formal of the season featuring a "name" band, Don Stev- enson, chairman, said. Chairmen Named Others on the committees are Rob- ert Porter, working with Stevenson in the general chairmanship; Carl Riggs, '43, and Wallace Rosenbaum, '43, tickets Charles Otto, '43, and Hugh Ayers, '43, programs; Brad- ley Higbie, '43E, and Jake Fahrner, '43, publicity; Paul Wingate, '43E, and John Fletcher, '43, patrons and house. Tickets are going fast, ticket chair- man Riggs announced, and since the supply is limited, preference going to fraternity men, it is urged that pur- chase be made immediately. Meeting To Be Held There will be a meeting of the tickets committee for Assembly Banquet at 4:45 p.m. tomorrow in the League, announced Shirley Risburg, '42, and Betty Parten- felder, '42, co-chairmen. Phi Sigma Sigma announces the pledging of Norma Schwartz, '44, of Hartford, Conn. fanquet Ticket i I Sale To Start Tomorrow Tickets for the annugl Assembly Banquet, "Curtain Raisers," to be held Nov. 10, will go on sale tomor- row in the League and will continue until the day of the banquet, an- nounced Shirley Risburg. '42, and Betty Partenfelder, '42, co-chairmen of the tickets committee for the af- fair. Beginning at 12:30 p.m. every day, until,5:30 p.m., independent women may buy their tickets at a booth, especially constructed for the sale, in the 'League Lobby. Tickets may also be obtained from members of the central committee and from Assem- bly representatives in the dormi- tories. Poster Is Constructed Above the ticket booth in the League Lobby, members of the com- mittee have constructed a large poster which represents the inside of a the- atre, another instance of the theme of the banquet. The seats in the "theatre" poster are clearly shown, 500 of them, and each time a ticket is sold, a small disc will be placed in one of the seats, showing just how many tickets have been sold. The tickets themselves are in the form of the well-known theatre tick- , et, and in their publicity scheme for the banquet, committee members have presented skits in each of the dor- mitories and have put posters adver- tising 'their "show" in various logical spots on campus, Acts To Be Given The program of the banquet, which will premier the season for the in- dependent organization, will be pre- sented in several acts, one of which is the presentation of scholarship plaques to the individuals, dormitories and houses with the highest aver- ages, another, the giving of awards to the persons and houses with the highest average in activities partici- pation, and last, the tapping of five women by the present members of Senior Society. Announce University Students' Betrothals The engagement of Betty Ship- man, '42, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. W. H. N. Shipman to M. Leslie Bradbury, Jr., son ,of Dr. and Mrs. M. Leslie Bradbury of Muske- gon, was announced at a dinner par- ty at the Pi Beta Phi house. Mrs. 'arl Baldwin McKinley an- nounces the engagement of her daughter Janet, '42, to Frank Lang- stron, Jr., '41, son of Mr. and Mrs.' Frank Langstron, of Detroit. Miss McKinley is a member of the Pi Beta Phi sorority, and Mr. Langstron is affiliated with Alpha Delta Phi. Sixty League houses, located in many and varied spots in Ann Arbor, will be the focal pointo of Assem- bly's Independent Fortnight pro- grams in this second week of the Fortnight, Rosebud Scott, '42. presi- dent of Senior Society, announced yesterday. The after-iours parties to be held in each one of the houses will stress particularly the participation of in- dependent women in athletics, in As- sembly activities, in class projects such as Sophomore Cabaret and Jun- ior Girls' Play, and in the League activities. Senior Society members will have with them tickets to Assembly Ban- quet, to be held Nov. 10, providing an opportunity for league house resi- dents to be contacted personally. Ac- tivity blanks will also be passed out and the functions of Assembly will be presented !and discussed. , At 8 p.m. Thursday,- Nov. 6, the Ann Arbor Independents and Beta Kappa Rho will receive theif share of Fortnight proceedings, with simi- lar programs to be presented. Later in the week, Senior Society will con- tact the various cooperative houses on campus at dinner parties. Fortnight Prog ram Continues The Fortnight programs, which began last Monday with programs being given in the six women's dorm- itories, are presented annually by the Senior Society during the two weeks preceding Assembly Banquet, to acquaint the five branches of As- erie 4 I I sembly with campus activities. .1 owQ Christmas Is Just Around the Curler! i in less than with a faded You'1 be going home seven weeks. Don't go worn-out look. DIMATTIA'S is giving Christmas PERMANENTS now. Treat yourself to one or give a friend a PERMANENTspresent that looks nice for Christmas and iasts afterwards. We have 100% supplies. HOLLYWOOD SALON (formerly Raggedy Ann) 1114 S. Univ. Ph. 7561 THE RADIO AND RE CORD SHOP is selling tickets for the R.C.A. Victor Dance Caravan for Defense. That's rather a' pompous name for such a gay' party . . . and we do promise that it's going to be gay. Vital sta.tistics . . . Date : November 3-4 . . Place: Michigan State Fair Grounds ... Time: 8:30- 1:30 . . . Price: student tickets 55c a piece ... Transportation: Round trip bus $1.00. Now for the good news . . . Tommy Dor- sey and Shep Fields will each have / their orchestras playing both nights. I I I . .1 7a 9for CajuaI Weap w I A ' , . 1'.ti It is much easier to go through classes when you feel that you are looking mighty dressed up. DILLQNS have some grand corduroys in lots of new styles. There are one, two, and three piece outfits in red, green, and blue. One very attractive en- semble consisted of a skirt and jerkin of red corduroy with a light beige jersey blouse. $7.00-$10.00 I 1 e. .'4 J y ": y t Beautiful soft wool sweater set .. . short sleeved pullover with m'atch ing cardigan. I- I There is less than two months left before Christmas. It isn't too early to begin to think about gifts. At EIBLER'S JEWELRY SHOP you can make your selection of jewelry silver, clocks, compacts, and leather goods now andthey will be glad to keep them for you. This is the time to get the finest ar- ticles at the best prices. i1 :1 'I DRAPED TOUC H E S IN Mor 0 OLD . . L (4~eeu4ee/7, Ardena Cleansing Cream and Ardena Skin Lotiony-usedtogether-cleanse your skin thoroughly. Every morning-every SILVER Kid BOW KNOT vamp on this formal sandal with high China heel. You'll want it all three ways....gold or silver kid or white satin l WEAVING for your toesl Young sandal with low or high heel. in gold of sil- ver kid, also white satinl V 4c 4 ( t \/ / 'r In all the lush new shades. $4.50 4 \\\ \\ \\\\\\\\\\\\\\ \\\\\\\\\\\\\ \\\ \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ \\\\\'\ \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ \\\\\\ \\\\\\\\ \t\\\ \\ \ N/' 4, QUAD CONVERTIBLE by PRINTZESS Featured in the College isve of Mademoiselle. .29.95 ., , ° . rv , v n., :' r r. / %' 4$ Here is an offer that is bound to be a success. At CALKINS- FLETCHER DRUG STORE, with any purchase of a Mary Dunhill product you receive a $1.25, one dram bottle of Mary Dunhill White Hyacinth Per- fume with, their compliments. This offer will only last from November 1, till November 12. Be sure to take advantage of it now. "1 32-40. .4 I f . I I . 1.1 ... ..... ... J . r " - ....r .rrr r;;rc'.' ..' .. ti _ }lYa}s f i .{? .. :fA!s6: + .>e':tii:;:} '.+."l s"r:? : Y% i.;:S'i. :;Y;r'e, iLt rs+".;..}}?;: {: - , i :. I, / ifi $t , .''f,6S"1L v'.'e7. oG' lSft!,":d?,{tL<",': l":{er+S .>x[. ,..r .:. r..r....-...... I One Girl Tells Anoth Our Populdr er ou I~t Floren als iii e night-and alway Make-up, CLEANS 'LL' the Elizabeth Arc x. ta ,;r~ ys before each new SE and REFRESH your skin den Way:. . this is the first step to a lovely complexion. Ardena Cleansing Cream, 1.00 to 6.00 Ardena Skin Lotion, 85c to 15.00 Prices sublect-to Federal and Local Taxes / k .,, ti.t, ,,4i' ' ,.., iti X ., 3$ ;S . ,n n:ti4, THAT is why we have sold hundreds of these little flat- terers. Yes, they are of crispy shark- skin. Cut long so they won't pull up. Easy to wash. New shades of corn flower blue, dusty pink, buttercup yellow and frosty white. Each (. K :- - JJ; : "ii.'s ;ri,.fr r }J V'" t ": Jft .f} f ill tif:J 1} 4A J "1{ J yt'Jl fJ The notepaper you use is as much a key to your personal- ity as the letter you write, so good-looking notepaper is a wise investment. WAHR'S BOOK STORE carries a com- plete line of Crane's fine writ- ing papers. You can get this grand stationery in the small note size or in the regular letter size-single or folded sheet. It is just the right texture whether you want it in formal white, pastels or varied colored bor- ders. i I I Now is just the in-between sea- son when you feel like adding I P. I