20, 1941 TIHE MICHIGAN DAILY Foresters To Hold Annual Paul Bunyan lL? _____ Qala Week-End Begins As Eight Ic. Chester Ewing Groups Hold Dances Tomorrow I . I Bands play, couples dance, and everyone has one grand time as the longest week-end so far sees another night of gay parties. With the pre- Thanksgiving and Thanksgiving Day parties mounting enthusiasm, tomor- row will top it with eight parties to be climaxed only by Saturday's game. Katherine Pickerill House is giv- ing a house dance from 8:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. tomorrow. Mr. and Mrs. John Winkleman and Miss Dorothy Pravda will chaperon the dance. The Kappa Sigmas are also having a formal from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday in the Ethel Fountain Hussey room of the League. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Pishleigh and Mr. and Mrs. Arch Pet- erson will be guests at the party. Pi Lambda Phis are giving a dance at the house from 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. tomorrow. Mr. and Mrs. F. Weiss and Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Kane will chaperon the dance. For Mary's practicing- Lambda Chi Alpha is having a for- mal dance at the house from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. tomorrow. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Gilbert and Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Steere will be guests of the fraternity. Kappa Kappa Gamma is holding its pledge formal at the sorority house from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. tomor- row. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Van Deuren and Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Mann will chaperon the dance. The Class of 1943 of the School of Nursing are giving a formal dance at Couzens Hall from 9:30 to 12:30 to- morrow. Miss G. DeArmond will be a guest of the class. Sigma Phi is giving a dance from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. tomorrow at the house. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Can- non and Mr. and Mrs. George M. Johnson will chaperon the dance. Sigma Phi Epsilon is giving a radio dance at the house from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. tomorrow. Mrs. Leila Vibert! and Prof. and Mrs. W. E. Britton will be guests at the dance.- Nancy Anne Warner, Marv V. Hathaway Betrothals Revealed Mrs. James T. Warner of Detroit announced the engagement of her daughter, Nancy Anne, to Peter A. Cummins, jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. Cummins of Detroit, at a bridge-luncheon held Saturday in Detroit. The wedding will take place in May. Miss Warner is a graduate of Kem- per Hall, Kenosha, Wis., and attended the University and the University of Detroit. Mr. Cummins graduated from the University of Detroit last June where he wasa member of Delta Sigma Pi. -* * * Mrs. L. R. Hathaway of Ann Arbor announces the engagement and ap- proaching marriage of her daughter, Mary Virginia, to Edward Crawford Echols, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Davis of Gottoes, Va. Miss Hathaway and Mr. Echols at- tended the University and Mr.'Echols is a graduate of the University of Virginia where he is at present work- ing on his master's degree. f U AN I.E.S.3-LITE LAMP Does Mary hate to practice? Poor light may have some- thing to do with it. Give her, a grand new I.E.S. 3-Lite Lamp with a 100-200-300- watt bulb to brighten her music pages! (See the attrac- tive new models on display at your dealer's today. We do not sell these lamps.) The Detroit Edison Company. Taboos Tails, Tux And Ties Special Program Will Feature 'Lumberjack Four' And Skits; Bill Sawyer's Band Will Play There'll be no sprucing up for the annual Paul Bunyan "Formal," spon- sored by the Forestry Club, which will be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Fri- day, Nov. 28, in the Union ballroom.- Bill Sawyer and his orchestra will provide the rhythms for the only "formal" informal of the year, which gets its idea from the fact that Paul Bunyan, the famed lumberjack, would frown on anything more for- mal than old, comfortable attire. Ewing Is Chairman, Chester Ewing, '42, chairman of the dance, has announced that "tux, tails, and ties are taboo, for the pu- pose of the dance is to just have fun, without worrying about the propriety of the clothing worn." Assisting the general chairman will be Jerry Schneider, '42, and Sam Bel- lanca, '42, co-chairmen of decora- tions, who have hinted only that Paul Bunyan will be on hand himself to see that things go right. Also on the committee are Bill Hauser, '42, tickets, Carl Meyer, '43, programs, Frank Kent, '42, music, Alex Yorman, '42, house, and Jim Snodgrass, '43, publicity chairman. r Program Planned Tickets may be obtained at the desks in the League and Union lob- bies as well as from any forestry school student. To advertise the dance, every student in the school will wear his field clothes all of next week. Meyer assures a ,lively program during dance intermissions which will include songs by the "Lumber- jack Four," and skits by members of the club depicting comical scenes in the life of Paul Bunyan. Anyone wearing ties or coats will be cordially asked to either remove same or roughen them up a bit. Ewing stressed again that the more comfortable the clothes worn the more fun the dance will be. Infor- mality at a "formal" will be the vogue for the Paul Bunyan dance. J-Hop Dates Announced 'The College Dance Of Year' Will Be Held Feb. 13 And 14 (Continued from Page 1) and tails won't have to wait so long for their dates if Publicity Chairman Bob Burstein's plans go through-he merely wants more mirrors installed in the women's lounge. A quicker and simpler checking system will be introduced. The between-semester dance is al- ways the high spot of the Michigan social season with every fraternity house on campus holding house par- ties where the men go out and the women move in. There will be no driving ban during J-Hop weekend. Approximately 1,200 tickets will be printed, not counting those given to the patrons.cThe tentative price is $7 plus tax. The other chairmen assisting Sharp are Bob Begle, tickets; Bruce Re- naud and Jim Snodgrass, booths; Rosemary Mann and Leanor Gross- man, patrons; Tom Poyser, building; Mary Louise Knapp, secretary; Elaine Barth, programs; Mildred Ciista, decorations;- Bob Bartlow, music, and Bob Burstein, publicity. The first meeting of the 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. section of Home Nursing will be held in Barbour Gymnasium Wednesday, Nov. 26. Kaw-Qoosh-Kaw-Ncks-That Was Ann Arbor In Days Of Redskins By DOROTHY BLICKE Kaw-goosh-kaw-nick-sounds fas- cinating, if meaningless, doesn't it? However, there's no mysterq concern- ing these four unintelligible syllables,; they're merely what the white man's brother used to call Ann Arbor. If you want to take the thing one step farther, you could say Kaw-goosh- kaw-nick was located in the center of Wishte-Nong county. Of course, you'll guess right away that Wishte-Nong is the Chippewa word signifying "further county!" Of coursey! Named After Arbor The noble red men really meant what they said, for when John Allen and Elisha Rumsey came to this ex- traordinary bit of terrain in 1817, searching for a town-site, it was liter- ally the last jumping-off place. After thinking long and futilely, the two men decided to name their town after the arbor in which their two wives, both obligingly named "Ann," were I accustomed to meet. It's really rather obvious in a subtle sort of way, isn't it? Life in Ann Arbor at that time wasn't too dull even though they "un- fortunately" didn't get the University until around 1836. They had a local beer tavern of sorts in which "a cele- bration was. always in progress," a choice store or two whose stock was likely to consist of "half a barrel of whiskey, with a nail on the side hold- ing a tin cup, three open-top thim- bles, five darning needles, and a hank of linen thread." Clubs Are Formed 1-However, it wasn't only the com- mercial side which flourished. Both the men and women had special clubs. The town bachelors used to meet, more or less regularly, to dis- cuss pertinent questions such as "Is the married state more conducive to happiness than the single one?" .I The women under twenty-six (we suppose after they passed this ripe old age they were hopelessly on the shelf) also met to generally improve themselves by discussing topics of eat an sleep, members o f cacia the ay.Theby-aws f tis itte {fraternity crawled out at 3:30 a.m. the day. The by-laws of this little this morning for no other reason than group are quite enlightening, one to hike. stating that the members should de- This Thanksgiving hike is an an- fend each other's characters and ad- nual affair at Acacia and so is the vise each other. Queer that they direction in which they hike-out should consider this precaution nec- along the Huron River. After dinner, eshould nerpsthesrecsn'tisonmuchpledges will entertain members and essary! Perhaps there isn't so much guests with a play. Still not satisfied difference between the "Ann Arbor to call it a day, the actives will take then" and the "Ann Arbor now*' as on the pledges at -a game of touc.1 we thought there was! football in the front yard. 0^ / e! :-:'ii -.b }T. 5 .. iii'}., ;" >'i :: v ,. i i, t9>, v; ... .1 ~i. v ;Y '"t'':: 'ti ' ; Q, A. Theatre Arts Ushers Members of the ushering commit- tee of the Theatre Arts committee may sign up tomorrow and Saturday to usher for "The Puritan," a Cinema Art League movie. Those interested may also sign up;I for the movie Sunday; four Charlie Chaplin films. Lists are posted in the Undergraduate office of the League. The next meeting of the Motor Mechanics class for women'*ill be at 7 p.m., Wednesday, Nov. 26, at Ann Arbor High School. A. Scuffies with a platform sole! Blue, pink, white! B. D'Orsay 'relaxer' in red, white, blue. Platform solel C. Furry D'Orsay sandal with platform sole. Red,, pink, blue; whiteI JE f Nov after the game .. all thtu" the holidays... Calendar starred with Holi- day Dates? Then fly down here - see our collection of sparkling "Date" Dress- es - Sequin trim on pep- lum jackets-slhoulder yokes - Long Torsos - dirndls. Sizes 9-17, 12-40. from . BUDGET DRESSES $7.95 * Never drop a stitch- An I. E. S.3-LIGHT LAMP makes knitting and sewing easy For more enjoyable sewing, knitting, mending, etc. try an I.E.S. 3-light lamp with a 100-200-300-watt bulb. It's grand light-and so easy on your eyes! (We do not sell these lamps. See them in many attractive styles at your dealer's.) The Detroit Edison Comp-ny. Just in time for holiday wear, a grand variety of fall and winter fashions in- cluding our famous Ellen Kaye Frocks. /J p++ Jrn: ' A i t , }I'I2 ! f} : s{ 7 t t l f 2. p!?~' ;r- ,. ;; ,1 ' c-sue' >.=< < '<>'' . :. : t 'i: ;'. , 4nn F $300 Formerly $4.00 F Os ter Frock S Formerly $6.50 to $7.95 y$9700 Formerly $8.95 to $1 2.95 } ~ aC rru *M I SUITS Formerly to $17.95 The grads have been around and have seen a lot. When they say that GLO-RNZ, the professional hair tint rinse is the BEST hair rinse, they know. That's why we recommend that you regu- larly use GLO-RNZ. Besides counteracting the harmful effects of alkali released during the shampoo, GLO-RNZ gives your har luster and sprin wave that will surpse even you Ask $ 7-00 Formerly to $49.50 Formerly to $10.95 1 11 1 ' 1