T1. i .,.., 1. .iM ~ f LA k 11A3. R PAGE FIEW TI-fE Ma14 a 1 1 . .C VAN IIAt1ET [ A dIA"JU AL a v Au w ____ , Soph Committees Speed Plan Of Mistletoe Mingle Evening. Program To Include Movie, Floor Show With the Mistletoe Mingle only a week away, preparations for the 1945 Soph Cabaret are progressing rapidly for the production which is to be pre- sented to the campus on Saturday, December 8. Featured will be the music of Lowry Clark and his orchestra, the motion picture, "Made for Each Other," star- ring Carole Lombard and James Stewart, and a special sophomore floor show. Floorshow to Be Presented The floor show has been written especially for this year's cabaret, and will feature large singing and dancing choruses as well as a group of spe- cialty acts. The central committee, headed by Jean Gringle, has also planned other entertainments, including refresh- ments, bridge, booths, fortune tellers, and a mixer room where students will have the opportunity to meet. Tickets Now On Sale Tickets for Mistletoe Mingle are now on sale in all women's dormi- tories and converted fraternities, and campus sales will begin on Monday. Betty Eaton, tickets chairman, is in charge of the sales which will be held in the Union, the League, the library, and- several other campus locations beginning Monday. The central committee of Soph Cabaret will meet at 8 a.m. today in the League. * * * There will be a special meeting of the floorshow unit of cabaret at 4 p.m. today in the League. * * * The singing chorus will rehearse from 1 p.m. until 3 p.m. today in the League. The dancing chorus and spe- cialty acts will meet from 1:30 p.m. until 3 p.m. today in the League. * * * The Hostess committee will meet House Heads To HoldMeeting There will be a compulsory meet- ing for all house presidents and house heads at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre of the League, it was announced yesterday by Ruthann Bales, president of Ju- diciary Council. The meeting which concerns the house heads and presidents of all women's dormitories, league houses and sororities is under the authoriza- tion of Judiciary Council and the Of- fice of the Dean of Women. PY-CO-PAY,--- NATURAL BRISTLE TOOTH BRUSHES= The famous Py-Co-Pay brush, professional7 shape-the brush more dentists recommend ( than any other-now available with natural bristles. No finer brush] made.& PY- CO-PAY "NATURAL" f For Sale at Swift's Drug Store . 340 S. State St. -The Rexall Store on the Campus at 10 a.m. today in the League. The meeting room will be posted at the main desk. Bowling Club Op"'ens Season The WAA bowling club is off to a good start in its new season, with 100 coeds already enrolled as club mem- bers. Everyone is welcome to join the club, from the star bowler to the coed who's never lifted a bowling ball in her life. There are to be three groups, meeting from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays, so that WAA bowling activities can be fitted into almost any schedule All women, including first-semester freshmen, are eligible for this club. The bowling season will open with two weeks of open bowling, then several leagues will be organ- ized, after which league tourna- ments are to be the principal club activity. It has also been rumored that the faculty of the women's physical education department plans to challenge the winning league to a special tournament. A highlight of the club's activities for the winter season will be a Christ- mas coke party, planned so that all club members will have an opportun- ity to become better acquainted. Following the termination of league bowling, there is to be an individual tournament in Febru- ary. All club bowling is under the direction of Marie Neumeister, bowling manager. Other officers of the club include Sally Ware, sec- retary; Ulfern Larrance, recording secretary, and Joan Buckmaster, treasurer. Army-Navy Tilt Will Be Heard At Mixer Today Alpha Delta Pi sorority will act as hostesses at the Grid Shuffle from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. today in the Union Ballroom. A play by play description of the Army-Navy game will be given on the grid board, while music for dancing is furnished by records. The tap- room will be open to women during the dance. The affair will be com- pletely stag, according to John Sorice, chairman. "The practice of having hostesses was begun at the last Grid Shuffle, and met with such success that it will be in effect at every Saturday Mixer," Sorice announced. Billy Layton and his all campus or- chestra will be featured at the regu- lar weekend dances from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday and Saturday in. the Rainbow Room of the Union. Zone, Representative Election Announced League House presidents recently elected zone representatives whose main duty it will be to check atten- dance at weekly league house presi- dent meetings. The 90 league houses on campus have been divided into ten zones. The representatives elected are as fol- lows: Zone I, Jacqueline Horton; Zone II, Barbara Sullivan; Zone IIIL Pat Mitchell; Zone IV, Mary Joe Lett; Zone V, Barbara Downs; Zone VI, Nancy Webb; Zone VII, Roslyn Long; Zone VIII, Helen Griefer; Zone IX, Jean Stockman; Zone X, Marcie Dubinsky. Other duties of the representatives will be to organize zone bridge parties. and to act as chairman for zone teas to be given for members of the In- ternational Center. Mary Ellen Wood, vice-president of Assembly and director of league, house activities, expressed the hope that the new zone system would en- able league houses to be in closer con- tact with one another. League Revives Play Groups Pre-War Paper Wi/l Be Held The first issue of the "League Low- Physical Education Classes Down," League newspaper, which is mainly a bulletin for women on To Conduct Children's Games campus, was published last Tuesday. A revival of a project used before The physical education departmenty the war, it contains news about all will conduct play and dance classes meetings, petitions, interviewing, an- for children between the ages of three nouncements, and general League and ten from 9:30 to 11:00 a. m. be- news. "The paper's news will be very ginning Saturday, December 8, in brief and to the point," Jane Strauss, Barbour Gymnasium. secretary of the League said. These classes will constitute a series Facilitates Announcements of meetings to be held every Saturday The paper is a safer way of getting for nine weeks, and will serve as a notices to the coeds than the previous laboratory for students majoring or method of announcing them at the minoring in physical education. They House President and Pan-Hellenic will be especially beneficial to coeds meetings. It also enables these meet- who expect to work with nursery or ings to be shorter and less confusing pre-school children, according to Dr. than formerly. Lourie Campbell, supervisor in the "We hope, that the paper will serve physical education department. to interest more women in League The children ranging in age from activities," Miss Strauss said. three to five will be taught rhythmic Panhel-Assembly Project fundamentals as well as story telling Junior assistants to Miss Strauss and craftwork by student instructors. are Judy Rado, Lois Cothran, and Those from six to ten will also learin baE Ju ferd Lo ar w ng rhythmic fundamentals, but in addi- Br'brepresentatives from Assembly tion will learn how to use playground awi thn-Heeim and gymnasium apparatus for their games. The paper is put out weekly in the This type of program was carried League and is distributed to all wom- out successfully last year; over 100 en's residences on campus. children attended the classes. The Icharge for the entire series is fifty SuOmynona TO Hold cents, and all children desiring to attend are welcome. First Mass Meeting; * * * Alumnae Council Features Novel, ''Useful Yuletide Qlifts for Women BY BETTY HAHNEMAN With the Christmas season ap- proaching more quickly than most of us realize, the matter of presents for various friends, parents, aunts, and cousins once again confronts harried coeds. Featured by the Alumnae council office in the League are many attrac-. tive articles, both useful and orna- mental, which any woman would be proud to give as Christmas presents. Fascinating trick bill folds are avail- able-the type which is folded over to lock bills securely in place. These are made of leather and come in an assortment of gay colors. A popular item as a gift for any woman is the "Blue Book of Cook- ing." Bound in blue leatherette, with a picture of the Burton Tower stamped upon it in yellow, this book is now in its second edition. All types of recipes are included, wit' a large section of time-honored campus favorites collected from the League, Union, and various soror- ities and dorms. There are also many which have been contributed by alumnae from all parts of the United States, and favorite recipes of celebrities, including Edna Fer- ber's "baked steak" and Lynn Fon- tanne's "kidney pudding." An item which has always proved popular in the past is the chinaware -service plates and cups and saucers are available in a pattern centered about a University of Michigan seal. Bought individually or in sets of six,, eight, or a dozen, these articles rate "tops" as Christmas gifts. The ever-popular Michigan cal- endars are back again in the 1946 edition and include many photo- graphs, all of which are new. These campus scenes are combined with an, engagement calendar to make a most attractive and useful gift. Double decks of cards will be avail- able first of this month. These are to be backed in yellow and blue, with "Michigan League" on one deck and "Michigan Union" on the other. These cards make much-appreciated gifts for any friend who enjoys play- ing bridge. Christmas cards designed by Mrs. R. T. Bittinger, noted local artist, especially for sale by the Alumnae Council have been made by the Ann Arbor alumnae group. The folder has an attractive picture on the front, with space for grectings and messages inside. One hundred fifteen cards and eighty-eight c a 1 e n d a r s, totaling $115.75 have been sold to date. These items are being sold by the presidents of houses for the Alumnae Council's fund to enlarge and remodel Hender- son House, Michigan's newest coop- erative dormitory. Henderson House, named in, honor of Mary Barton Henderson, a member of the class of 1909, was opened this fall as a residence for 15 undergrad- uate women. When the remodeling is completed, the dormitory will house approximately 25 women in single, double, and triple rooms. The house, which is located at the corner of Hill and Olivia streets, was purchased this year by the Alumnae Council. Tutors Needed For Sciences That the merit-tutorial committee needs more tutors, was announced yesterday by Naomi Beuhler, chair- man. Tutors in the sciences are needed especially, but women interested in tutoring other subjects are requested to sign up also. A coed who wishes to be a tutor must have received a grade of "A" in the course she wishes to tutor within the last calendar year. Grades of "B" are acceptable if the mark was received in a major. Slips on which to register the subjects which a coed is eligible to tutor, are in the Under- graduate Office of the League. Tutors receive 75 cents per hour for tutoring. The new officers of Zeta Phi Eta, national speech arts fraternity, are Joyce Siegan, president, Ethel Isen- berg, vice-president, Miriam Mc- Laughlin, secretary, and Mary Battle, treasurer. Plans To Be Made Any undergraduate woman on campus who is not living in a dormi- tory, league house, sorority house, cooperative, or the Michigan League is invited to attend the first mass meeting of Suomynona at 4 p. m. Monday in the League Ballroom. The purpose of Suomynona is to create social andsrecreational con- tacts for widely dispersed undergrad- uate women attending the University of Michigan. At the meeting, Mar- jorie Baker, the president of the or- ganization, will discuss what Suo- mynona is, what it has done in the past, and what are its plans for this year. Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity will present an informal dance in honor of the new pledges from 8:30 p. m. to midnight tonight in the League. Students in the physical education department are now working as stu- dent teachers in various schools in the vicinity of Ann Arbor. For first through third grade train- ing they are sent to Angell, Jones, Bach, Perry, or St. Thomas Schools. For the fourth, fifth, or sixth grade the schools are Jones, North Side or Angell. Music Sorority Tea Mu Phi Epsilon, national profes- sional music sorority, will hold its first rushing tea of the year at 8:30 p.m. tonight in the Rackham Build- ing. Ruby Joan Kuhlman and Betty Jean Huser, graduate music students will appear on the program, and Thelma Lewis, faculty adviser to the Gamma chapter, is to be the chap- erone. Any coed interested in club is asked to call Miss at 2-5618 for information bowling activities. joining the Neumeister about WAA CLWeddngs c-N. and .- 6ngagements Mrs. Howard R. Perry, of Ann Ar- bor, has announced the engagement of her daughter Betsy, to Arthur Can- field Upton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Upton. Miss Perry, a second semester sen- ior, is affiliated with Pi Beta Phi sorority and Wyvern and Scroll honor societies. She has been active as Treasurer of WAA, on Pan Hel-As- sembly Ball, '43, and V-Ball last year. Mr. Upton is a Junior Medical stu- dent in the A.S.T.P. here at the Uni- versity, a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity and Nu Sigma Nu Medical fraternity. He is also a mem- ber of Phi Beta Kappa and phinx honorary societies and is serving on the Board of Control of Athletics. Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Bartley of Royal Oak, Mich., announced the engage- ment of their daughter Mary, to En- sign Richard L. Dreher, U.S.N.R., son of Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Dreher, Grosse Pointe Woods, Mich. Miss Barley is affiliated with Alpha Chi Omega sorority, was on the Cen- tral Committee for Soph. Project in '43, and was also Treasurer of J.G.P. '44-'45. Her fiancee, Mr. Dreher, gradu- ated from the University of Michigan last June. He is a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity. flihtand al p 04- A Light. in your AOLife.. is the evening you spend with your friends at the Ideal. The best of food always and for those of you who can, that great love of your life - beer. The Kiss of Contei itine itie will be part of every man's life after a luscious steak at Leo Ping's Lunch. Students in search of good regular meals make dinner at L \ Ping's a regular. ~ * ~\J 1. . t Yr ' ....., j. f / f I" ' ' '7 +{k t r i t 3 4 Read the STORY Str1k Crelaxing yourself a /fff /best featu at Twen Open bov day and t __ --_'------ --idays. - * A * -and bones get weary, drop in and drown your sorrows with a scrumptious portion of Golden Fried Chicken, French fried pota- toes, and a hot, buttered roll. Only 50c. Ling, Sparing. and just plain enjoying are just a few of bowling's ures. Reserve an alley now tieth Century Bowling. wling afternoons, Satur- Sunday evenings and hol- DELICIOUS FOOD and FRIENDLY ATMOSPHERE you'll find at the ALLENEL HOTEL. + - i * A_ I