THE IiCHIGAN DAILY Skirted Males Will Shake A Leg In '42 MimesOpera, 'Full House' Show Based On Hopwood Mimes' 'Oomph, Twist A nd Grind Girls' Script By Ray Ingham; Collins ToPlay Lead Concert Band Will Start Air Series today, WJR Will Carry Program Of Morris Hall Studio; Revelli Will Conduct Presenting the first in a series of regular Thursday programs, the Uni- versity Concert Band under the direc- tion of Prof. William D. Revelli will play a 25-minute broadcast at 5:10 p.m. today over station WJR, De- troit, through the studios in Morris Hall. Opening this first weekly program will be Saint-Saens' "March Hero- ique," followed by a Chorale and Fugue by Bach-Abert. The program will be concluded with the playing of Alford's Army March. Although this is the concert band's first radio appearance this year, it has already played its inaugural con- cert, having appeared at the annual Varsity Night show held October 28 in Hill Auditorium. Also scheduled for the concert band before the Christmas holidays are a concert in Jackson on Tuesday, Dec. 9, and the annual Christmas concert in Hill Auditorium the following week. Although a great many good men are not back this year, Professor Revelli reports that he has every ex- pectation of achieving the same de- gree of perfection this year as last, when conductor Edwin Franko Gold- man judged the Michigan band the "outstanding college band in the na- tion." Together with the regimental band, the concert band replaces the March- ing Band, which is active only during the football season. Group To Attend Meeting Ten members of the Episcopalian Students' Guild will attend the sec- ond Episcopal student conference to be ,held Nov. 28, 29 and 30 at Albion College. The Rev. Angus Dun, D. D., Dean of the Episcopalian Theologi- cal School and Professor of System- atic /Divinity, has been secured as the conference leader. Three University girl Debaters To Attend Big Ten Conference Three debaters from the women's varsity debate team will represent the University at the annual Women's Discussion Conference of the Big Ten to be held tomorrow and Saturday at Purdue University. The proposition under discussion is: What part should the United States play in establishing a just and stable post-war world order. Shirley Field, '44, acting for Mich- igan, will take part in the opening panel discussion Friday morning. This group will outline for the delegates the-basic aspects of the problem. Miss Field will also participate in the after-dinner speaking at a banquet tomorrow evening. Rosebud Scott, '42, will act as chair- man for three meetings of a round- table group which will convene to- morrow afternoon and evening, and also Saturday morning. In addition to this, Miss Scott will present a ten minute report to the general session Saturday morning. Dorothy Wineland, '43. will repre- sent Michigan in various round-table discussions, and she will also take part in a radio broadcast from sta- tion WBAA at 2 p.m. Saturday after- noon. Coach of the University squad, Boddy Will Speak At AIEEMeeting Leonard Boddy, consulting engi- neer for the King-Seeley corporation, will speak before a meeting of the student chapter of the American In- stitute of Electrical Engineers at '8 p.m. tomorrow in the Union. Mr. Boddy will speak on "The Theory and Application of Electric Gauges" and will bring sample gauges for demonstration. George Gotchall, '42, secretary of A.I.E.E. explained that Mr. Boddy's speech will be of particular interest because of his part in King-Seeley's experimental work with electrical gauges. "King-Seeley began their work with gauges two and a half years ago and have spent $200,000 in the perfection of their equipment," Gotchall continued. Glen E. Mills, will attend a coaches' meeting which will plan conference forensic activities for next semester. After the conference this group will announce the 1942-43 schedule for the Big Ten women's varsity debating1 teams. Two Purdue professors will render critiques of the conference sessions at a luncheon which will take place Sat- urday noon before the radio broad- cast. Later at a general session meet- ing, a final summing up of the topic will be given, and the reports of the group chairmen will be presented in order to draw conclusions from the discussions of the proposition. The colleges besides Michigan, which will participate in this confer- ence, are Ohio State, Purdue; Illinois, Chicago, Northwestern. Minnesota. Iowa, and Wisconsin. Graduate Club Hike Will Test Members At SundayMeeting No place for lovers of lounging chairs and hearth-side ease will be the meeting of the Graduate Outing Club Saturday afternoon, warns President Ivor Cornman, Grad. With hints of something exciting, rough and new, all club members are cautioned to wear old clothes and be prepared for anything from wad- ing creeks to climbing mountains. Graduate girls are advised not to come. The club will meet behind the museum at 12:50 p.m. Saturday and will return about16 p.m. Transporta- tion will be furnished and there will be no charge for the outing. There will be no meeting of the club Sunday unless there has been a,heavy snowfall. New Gun Is Tested CANBERRA, Australia, Nov. 26- UP)-An Australian wartime inven- tion, a mortar-type gun which uses compressed air propulsion instead of ordinary explosives, is being tested by the Australian government. HORSES GOLFSIPE STABLES Lfa Sociedad Iispanliea To Mleet At Leagueic Today Professor Julio dcl Toro of the Spanish department will conduct the conversation group of La Sociedad at 8 p.m. today in the League. The regular meeting of the group will be held next Thursday, but all Spanish students are requested to at- tend La Sociedad's conversation groups. A program is planned for the regular meeting; the conversation groups are allowed to run as natural speaking situations would. .0lHAVE a "HO-HUM" LAMPS in your living room! Glaring lamps that make it difficult to read...lamps that cause squinting and frown- ing . . . lamps ghat tire the eyes . . . these are 'ho-hum" lamps, and they have no place in your living roomn. Try one of the $lew LE.S. lamps in- stead, with a I50-watt bulb. (We do not sell these lamps. See them at your dealer's.) The Dieroit Edison Company. Dance lines like these are one-two-three kicking today in prepara- tion for the 1942 Mimes Opera, "Full House." Chest and Awakened Rameses, played only to Ann Arbor audiences. The sixth, Contrarie Mary, was invited by some alumi to play in Chicago and was so well feceived that Model Daughter was demanded for the next year's trip. Beginning Of Trip This was the beginning of the an- nual trip. The 1915 All That Glitters show, played in other Michigan cities as well and in the war years the shows went to Fort Camp Custer, at Battle Creek. In 1921 the Opera season was shift- ed from spring to December and Make It For Two of 1921 ured Michigan, Ohio, Indiana and Illi- nois during Christmas vacation. 1923 was the banner year in Union Opera history. Cotton Stockings played in Ann A'bor, Toledo, Bif- falo, New York, Philadelphia, Wash- ington, Pitts\trgh, Cincinnati, In- dianapolis, Cicago, Grand Rapids, Saginaw, Flint, Bay City and Detroit. The show grossed almost $100,000 with a profit of $30,000 and played before 40,000 persons. It was Cotton Stockings which set the record of income for an amateur production at New York City's Metropolitan Op- era House, grossing $6,000 for a one- night stand. Many of the Michigan songs which U. of M. students sing today are prod- ucts of past Operas. "College Days" came from Koanzaland, "When Night Falls Dear" from Michigenda. "The Friars Song" from Contrarie Mary and "Men of the Mdize and Blue" from Tres Rouge of 1916, are but a few of the many Opera songs written by students. Strikers Reject Plan MT. CLEMENS, Nov. 26-(AP)-The United Pottery Workers (CIO) on strike against the Mt Clemens Pot- tery Co., rejected today a proposal that they return to work pending ex- pedited mediation of their complaints that five union members were un- fairly discharged. is thelatest ill LEAThER IUJMPP + Swanky new, use ful gifts fashioned by Rumpp in west ern SEQUOIA- a romantic western saddle leather every man is eager ' to have. b A (A) BILL-OLDS-Slim trim with many The University Musical Society announces the following concerts CHICAGO F rwmci . STOCK, Conductor Sun., Nov. 30, 3:00 P.M. War Restricts Postal Service Christmas deliveries pied foreign countries to Nazi-occu- will be under sharp restrictions this year, accord- ipg to Ann Arbor postmistress, Mrs. Florence Abbot. Package delivery will be made only to England, Portugal, Switzerland and Spain on the European conti- nent. No insurance will be written on packages destined for Spain. These restrictions, Mrs. Abbot ex- plained, will not apply to letters, which may be sent to any country except occupied France. Gift packages to the four European and any Asiatic points will be limited to five pounds weight and must not include more than two pounds of any one kind of food. Universal re- strictions prohibit the sending, of tobaccos anywhere on the Continent. As all shipments will be made by Litvinoff To Arrive SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 26-(P)- Pan American Airways said today Maxim M. Litvinoff, newly-named Russian ambassador to the United States, would board the China Clipper at Singapore Nov. 30, and was sched- uled t arrive here Dec. 6. boat in convoys, Postmistress Abbot warned that to expect delivery by Christmas all packages and letters sent outside of this country should be mailed immediately. Airmail by Atlantic Clipper will be accepted at 60, cents for each ounce. A special arrangement has been made for the sending of Christmas packages to prisoners of war. An eleven-pound parcel will be har)dled by parcel post free of charge if the complete address-concentration camp, prison number and country- is known of the addressee. No type of insurance or guarantee is made that these packages will reach their destinations. Free Transportation to and from stables SUPPER RIDE Every Friday Cal 2-3441 r I I ---- . : I I Frederick Stock BOS TO N SYMPHONY I I L Order your Personal Christmas Cards Now! YOUIR LAST, CHANCE, to buy a typewriter at the old price a $49.50 Remington Streamliner for $39-50* Others $15.00 and up . .. All Makes All Makes -- Bought, Sold, Rented, and Repaired c I HOCWD~Y 50 for $1.00 and up Your Name Imprinted Free HIII.11_' L'. II .1 I I I _ _