THE MICHIGAN DAILY PACs w a. _.. -.i Bill Sawyer To Play At Union Formal FridayNovember 6 <. Crop 'n Saddle Riders Chosen, Nine Out Of Thirty Contestants Elected.To Club Membership Nine women riders were selected out of a group of 30, for membership in Crop and Saddle Riding Club, fol- lowing tryouts, held at 5 p. m. Wdnetsday at thehGolf-Side Riding Stablese- Those who made the grade are as follows: Pat Coulter, Mary Liz Don- aldson, Elizabeth Hendel, Kit Kam- meraad, Cynthia King, Glory King, Emily Peter, Margaret Saddler, and Oriel Straehley. First regular riding meet of the club will be at 5 p. m. Wednesday, and- it is imperative that all old and new members meet at that time at Barbour Gym, according to Sybil Graham, '44, president of the organi- zation. Transportation will be pro- vided for the group, to the Golf-Side Stables. Meals will not be served at the stables this year, so the riders will return about 6:30 p. m. Since Crop and Saddle club is lim- ited to a membership of 25, because no more than that number of horses is available, plans are being made for the organization of an auxiliary rid- ing group. Riders from the auxiliary: group will be selected to fill vacant places which may occur in the Crop and Saddle club. Riders need not be experienced to join the auxiliary group, and there Coeds Invade Men's Schools' Hallowed Halls By BETTY HARVEY Century-old traditions are being broken this year; women have entered the hallowed halls of many eastern men's colleges in the interest of sci- ence and the War, and there is now such a thing as a Princeton Co-ed. According to the Princetonian, "twenty-three coeds, engaged in a map-making program partly suppor- ted by the Government, served to shatter a 195 - year - old tradition which reserved Princeton's campus for male students only." Renssalaer College has this year, for the first time in history, opened its gates to women in offering to accept a limited number for the full, technical training program. Electri- cal, chemical and civil engineering courses are being offered to women at the Illinois Institute of Technology. And from Union college, a men's college since 1795, comes word that electrical engineering and physics courses are being arranged for women students. will be no tryouts. All those inter- ested are invited to join, and an- nouncement of the first meeting will be made soon. r 1 s 4 l i 1 E Y i > : 1 l } Time To Apple Polish '1 :{ii :p: "::: ' ' :: f;:ti}; i ' .g : ::; S : ?:". Y .: },;: