WE, DNESDAY, NOVEMER 20, 1946 TH MT.CTTTGA N4A. _ P . J -D- .1....U. pn : S WO. 11. 1 1 4.72'H~f11{ LIATTV ra , r A4i -- Gym Jam Ticket Sales Begin Today Number of Admissions Will Be Limited; Sports Event To Feature Varied Program Ticket sales for the WAA Gym Jam, to be held from 8 p.m. to mid- night Friday in Waterman and Bar- bour Gyms, will begin today on the center diagonal. The tickets are scheduled to be sold from 9 a.m. to noon and 1 to 4 p.m. today and tomorrow on the di- New Division Is Announced For Judiciary A new League Interviewing Com- mittee will be formed this semester to take over the petitioning and inter- viewing functions formerly carried on by the Women's Judiciary Coun- cil, with the latter retaining its du- ties of enforcement of campus house rules. In the division of the Council's functions, the new committee will conduct all petitioning and interview- ing for League positions, including League Council posts, class project central committees, junior assistant- ships, orientation adviser positions and memberships on other League committees and projects. Petitioning and interviewing for positions on the new council will be held during the first week of December, according to Jean Louise Hole, chairman of the Ju- diciary Council. The Interviewing Committee will be composed of seven members. Sen- ior women will hold the posts of president and secretary of the com- mittee, and the remainder of the group is to include three junior members and two sophomore coeds. A rotating membership plan will be in effect, according to Miss Hole. Two of the junior members will be appointed to the senior positions, and one sophomore will hold a jun- ior post the following year. "Each year there will be four new mem- bers and three old ones, giving a continuity of membership neces- sary for such an organization," Miss Hole said. The Women's Judiciary Council will continue its present functions of enforcing house rules, including thel checking of latenesses and the en-1 forcement of quiet hours and signout] rules. Both the chairman of thei Judiciary Council and the president of the. Interviewing Committee will serve as members of the League Ex-t ecutive Council. Coeds To Organize Rifle Club Tuesday The WAA Rifle Club will hold anr organizational meeting at 5 p.m. Tuesday, in the WAB.- This club will provide an oppor- tunity for everyone who likes tot shoot, or would like to learn, to get experience in shooting. The club shoots at the ROTC range. Rifles and ammunition are furnished. Belonging to the National Rifle Association the club will participate in intercollegiate meets sponsored by the organization. Telegraphic matches are also scheduled for this season. Anyone having questions about the Elub may call Barbara Crosby, club manager, at 3018. '7 agonal. Students may attend the in- formal affair in couples or as stags, since individual tickets will be sold. Ticket Sales Limited A limited number of admissions will be offered for sale on campus to- day and tomorrow. Additional tick- ets for the dance from 10 p.m. to midnight will be offered Friday, ac- cording to Betty Eaton, ticket chair- man. Sponsored by the WAA Board, the Gym Jam will feature dancing, bridge and other active sports in- cluding volleyball, badminton and ping pong. Both Barbour and Water- man gyms -will be used, and the so- cial dancing ;s scheduled to be held in Barbour with a juke box furnish- ing the music. Informal Dress Will Be Worn According to Collee Ide, chairman of the event, the informal sports night will call for informal dress, with coeds attending in sweaters, skirts and saddle shoes. In addition to the games, bridge anddancing, refreshments will be available in the Barbour fencing room. Central committee members as- sistingMiss Ide in the presentation of Gym Jam include Gwen Sperlich, patrons and hostesses; Barbara Dewey, checking; Pat Doelle, finance; Betty Eaton, tickets; and Betsey Moore, refreshments. Other members are Lucille Shletz, equipment; Ann Wallerstein, pos- ters; Janet Osgood, records; and Betty Hahneman, publicity. Host- esses - and committee members in- clude WAA Board members and coeds from campus residences who volun- teered to help for Gym Jam through house athletic managers. Veterans To Hold Mid-Week ance In League Today The sixth in the series of regular weekly dances sponsored by the American Veterans Committee will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. today in the League Ballroom. The dance will be informal and noI date will be necessary. Dancing will be to records and the League coke bar will be open for refreshments. Decorations will be the same as those for the Campus Casbah. These mixer dances are held every Wednesday afternoon in an effort to help veterans meet women stu- dents. More than 500 students have been present at previous dances. Open to all men and women students, the dances provide a mid-week activity which the campus formerly lacked. The AVC originated the series of dances because they felt the acute need foV a place on campus where veteran and women students may meet in an informal atmosphere. The dances have become a campus insti- tution, and students are urged to drop in after classes. U' High School Team Defeated By Hockey Club The WAA Hockey Club won a 5-1 decision over the University High School team in a game yesterday on Palmer Field. Playing for Michigan were Anne Guinan, Jerry Mulson, Barbara Mc- Cready, Harriet Fenske, Jean Marson, Betty Eaton, Cathy Houston, Pat Gil- lilan, Janice Olivier, Norrinne Tay- lor, Dot H.lt, Mary Riggs, and Bar- bara McNeill. Officials for the game were Miss Marie Hartwig and Miss Ruth W. Harris of the physical edu- cation department. Hockey Club, organized during the first week of school, has practiced twice a week and has played three outside games. Under the coaching of Miss Mildred Anderson, approxi- mately fifteen coeds learned the fun- damentals of techniques and team play. Dues collected by the club have been used to pay National Hockey As- sociation dues and to purchase re- freshments for after the games.. Manager of the club was Barbara McNeill, assisted by captain Janice Olivier. No further meetings of the group will be held this session unless further notice is given. All members who have not yet paid their dues are asked to call Miss McNeill at 2-4471. "Open Sesame," first women-bid dance to be presented on campus this semester, will be given by Panhel- lenic Association from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, Nov. 29 in Waterman Gymnasium. Tickets for the semi-formal dance are now available in the sorority houses through the Panhel represen- tatives. Late permission will be granted until 1:30 a.m. to coeds at- tending the dance. Dance Open to Affiliated Women "Open Sesame" is also open to all affiliated graduate students and alumnae, who also may obtain tickets through their sorority houses. The music of Sonny Dunham and his sixteen-piece orchestra will be featured at the ball. Dunham does many of the dance arrangements himself in addition to leading the orchestra and performing on the trumpet and trombone. The band promises the best in smooth dance music, with Pete Hanley taking the vocal spotlight. Affair Will Be Semi-Formal This woman-bid affair will be one of the few to be presented this year and will give affiliated coeds a chance to repay their dates. Although the dance is semi-formal, men owning tuxedos are urged to wear them. The committee has planned elabor - ate decorations for the affair. Novel dance programs designed on the "Open Sesame" theme will be dis- tributed to coeds, and a unique seat- ing arrangement will be worked out for groups desiring to sit out a few dances together. The various com- mittees working on the dance plan to dress up the dance in pre-war style. During the war years Panhellenic Association presented the annual ball jointly with Assembly Associa- tion. This year the two organizations will give separate dances. I6 Soph Meetings The entire Ticket committee of Soph Cabaret will meet at 5 p.m. to- day in the League. The room will be posted on the League bulletin board. * * * A combined rehearsal of the Soph Cabaret cast will be held at 7:15 p.m. today in the Grand Rapids Room in the League. "Pellet clothes" are very handy to carry while traveling. They are com- pressed cloth tablets which when dunked in water expand into a wash- cloth. Hold Those Bonds-! Panhellenic-Sponsored Dance To Be Held in Waterman Gym YOUNG MUSICIAN-Patricia Travers, 18-year-old violinist, prepares at her Clifton, N.J., home for a concert tour of the U.S. and Canada. She began studying the violin at the age of four and gave her flrst public concert at six. t ;Cit v a *4/e By LOIS KELSO FOR RICH, GLOWING PROSE, replete with powerful imagery and spark- ling with original phraseology, I commend the sportswriters of The Daily. After a confusing season spent with the sporIs page and an icebag, I have discerned several cardinal principles lurking behind all that verbiage. rr0 THE uninitiated, it mighl, seem tha l w hlfoot ball uly ers do most of the time is run, throw balls, kick them, r tackle each other. However, no sportswriter worth his salt i or his byline, on The Daily) sees it this way. Football players do not run; they gallop, barry the leather (or pig- skin-never football), lug it, grind out yards, whip, or possibly bullet through, speed, or scamper. Usually they scamper. THEY never throw balls and seldom pass. They loft, pitch, flip, toss, arch, or heave. No one catches passes, either; the players gather the leather in, take the heave, snare or grab aerials. Maybe it's the altitude in the pressbox. Clark Baker's picturesque account of the Michigan-Minnesota game distinctly says that "the Gopher forwards reared up and threw back two Michigan thrusts in- side the Minnesota 30 before the visitors could break the ice." The ice confused me until I remembered that it was probably cold in Minne- sota. Two paragraphs later, Mr. Baker states that "the Wolverine back- field let only three tosses leak through out of the 14 the Gophers tried." He doesn't say who took his finger out of the dike. I THINK Clark has a subconscious yearning for some power station. He felt that "Michigan State couldn't hang onto the leather long enough to generate a sustained drive of any length," while at the Minnesota game de- clared that Bumps Elliott "provided the spark that kept the Wolverine ,dynamo clicking." Engineers might object to this last statement, but I feel that a creative artist like Clark Baker can afford to use a little poetic license. If Keats can have Cortez discovering the Pacific, Ie can have a dynamo powered by sparks. I'm starting a little collection to present a dictionary of synonyms to the sports staff, and I look forward to the day when we will read that someone consummated the triumph by lassoing the hog epidermis and prancing across the finish line for a sextupler. Loan Funds Available to Women Vets v, ..__.. tlMBwnv Y exw+vst rnnnwaaaareay vn .n IIYYN _ _ e _. M ® IAOiI11i1 ii Y I ' o 1 'ye r~ 'lot A. Tyrolean motif'd ski-sweater in red on white, white on red, white on green, green on beige, blue with red and white. 7.95 to 9.95 1' x-- M,.. Women veterans whose subsistence checks have not arrived may secure immediate funds by applying at the Office of the Dean of Women. Due to the present emergency caused by the failure of government checks to arrive on time, a number of women veterans have received help in the last few days through University loan funds. Since July 1, 38 loans have been granted to women students of whom 16 were veterans. All requests for loan funds for women are made on the basis of rec- ommendations made by the Office of the Dean of Women. The Dean of Women is a member of the University Committee on Student Loans. Order Those prints NOW " r . 4'-. j -AO aI B. White jitterbugs dance on a red ground, also maize on blue , or brown. 7.95 Campus hit that's a collector's item.. colorful jacquard-weave sweaters . . . cleverly L r. designed with Tyrolean and very-contemporary jitterbug motifs . . . styles by Jantzen and Bermuda in pure wool . . . sizes 34 to 40 brown and white Connies soe *i White . rugged genuine buck leather, saddled with prime polished calf y...you're sure to want yours JAP r { Y 'F 4 a J2c' The Kodak snapshots that you are fond of will please other people, too. Bring in your favorite negatives today. POSE FOR YOUR PORTRAIT IN Inspired by you ...it's made exclusively for you. Our consuritt -elects pastels in face powder ... capturing your %cry own sun tone in the blend she creates for you. Come in and enjoy the luxury I I