WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1946 - U4.TA ~ UR IU.kPfT A.1 1N.Jhl A T.V I a aaIE M~iTCT-Tl tIA-11\ IiATTV Students May Order J-Hop Tickets in'U' Hall This Week Actual Sales To Begin after Christmas; Junior Applications To Have Preference Orders for J-Hop tickets for juniors, seniors, and graduate stu- dents will be taken tomorrow, Fri- day, and Saturday at a booth in VJniversity Hall. Students must bring identifica- tion cards and self-addressed, stamped envelopes with them when they apply. The booth will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. to- morrow and Friday, and from 9 a m. to noon Saturday. Juniors To Have Preference All juniors will be given prefer- ence in buying tickets, but they are urged to apply early so that they may all be accommodated. After tickets have been allotted to juniors, seniors will be given pref- erence over graduate students in order of their applications. Applications will be mailed back after Christmas- vacation, and stu- dents are requested to put their Ann Arbor address on the self-ad- dressed envelopes. Ticket sales for students whose applications have been accepted will begin after the vacation. J-Hop To Last Two Nights In order to take care of the in- 'E,.Cue Ball ToBe Hel T e He I The East Quadrangle Council will sponsor the "E-Cue Ball," a semi-formal dance to be held from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday, Jan. 11 in the East Quad. Two dining rooms of the resi- dence, decorated in twodifferent motifs, will be used for the dance. The music will be provided by two bands. Guests will receive favors or programs, but no corsages are to be worn. Two hundred tickets will be available. Ticket sales will begin Friday and will be limited to resi- dents of East Quad. Jack Adams is general chairman for the dance. Assembly Holds Ball Interviews Interviews for centra commit- tee posts for Assembly Ball will be held for petitioners from 3 to 5 p.m. today, and from 4 to 5 p.m. tomorrow in Room D on the third floor of the League. Interviewees are requested to bring with them their eligibility cards, signed by the Merit-Tutorial Committee, and their Assembly membership cards. Soap Shortage Aid To help alleviate present soap shortage, make a jelly from the remnants of soap bars by dissolv- ing small pieces of soap in hot water, using /3 cup soap to 1 quart water. Then cool and set aside to jell. This may be used for laundering purposes. creased enrollment, the J-Hop will be held from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. two nights. Friday and Saturday, Feb. 7 and 8. Fifteen hundred tickets will be sold for each night, and men students will only be eligible to buy a ticket for one night of the J-Hop. J-Hop tickets will cost $5 plus $1 tax: Women students are also eligible to apply for tickets. Breakfasts To Be Served In addition to the two formal dances to be held in the Intra- mural Building, arrangements have been made to serve break- fasts to J-Hoppers at the Union and possibly the League immedi- ately after the dance. Since men students may only buy tickets for one night of the J-Hop, the Union and the League have agreed to hold semi-formal dances both Friday and Saturday nights. Dennis Youngblood is chairman of the 1947 J-Hop, and committee chairmen are Sarah Stephenson, music; Preston R. Tisch, fi- nance; A. Rebel DerDerian, pub- licity; Nancy Neumann, tickets; Jane Quail, general; Nancy Holt, decorations; Chuck Lewis, build- ings; Camille Ayo, programs and patrons, and Pat Chaffee, booths. Meadowbrook Will Feature Elgart's Band Les Elgart and his orchestra will play for the "Michigan Night" re- union to be held Dec. 28 at Frank Dailey's Meadowbrook, located at Cedar Grove, N. J. The dance will be a reunion for all Michigan students and alum- ni who live in the New York-New Jersey metropolitan area, as well as those who are visiting there during the Christmas holidays. Les Elgart was formerly fea- tured with Hal Kemp, Les Brown, Charlie Spivak, and Woody Her- man. After forming his own band, Elgart made a tour of theatres and recently completed an 8-week en- gagement at a New York hotel. Terry Parker is vocalist with the band. Reservations will be necessary for "Michigan Night," and stu- dents may make reservations now by sending a postcard to Lou Or- lin, 952 Greenwood, Ann Arbor. The card should include name, Ann Arbor address and phone number, home address, and num- ber of reservations desired. Stu- dents are requested to state the number of couple, not individual, reservations desired. A booth will be set up today in University Hall at which students may make reservations and ob- tain information about questions of finance and transportation. League Sells DanceTickets Mixer Will Be Sponsored For League House Women All women living in league and universities, ten representa- houses may purchase tickets for tives from eight colleges will be the League House Dance from 10 honored at the first dance of the a.m. to noon and from 1 to 3 p.m. two-night annual winter Union today in the League. Formal, to be held from 9 p.m. to The sale of tickets will continue midnight Friday andSaturday in from 2 to 4 p.m. tomorrow and the Union Ballroom. from 10 a.m. to noon and from 1 The visiting coeds will be escort- to 4 p.m. Friday.When purchas- ed to the formal affair by mem- ing her ticket each woman must bers of the Union Executive Coun- To establish a closer relation- ship between Michigan colleges Union Will Honor Delegates Of Eight Colleges at Formal' worth, Louis Lapierre, Andrew Poledor, DicksCortwright and Brad Straatma. Colleges to be represented in- clude Olivet College, Hillsdale Col- lege, Wayne University, Michigan State College, Alma College, West- ern Michigan State Teachers Col- lege, Kalamazoo College and High- land Park Junior College. Be- cause of their size, two coeds will represent Wayne University and# Michigan State College. All visi- tors will be the guests of the Del- ta Delta Delta Sorority. Juniors Will Begin Collection of Dues To Finance JGP The collection of junior class dues to finance Junior Girls Play will begin today according to Cyn- thia Coates, finance chairman. Committee members will collect dues in women's houses on campus today, tomorrow, and Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, Dec, 16, 17 and 18. . Juniors who are not contacted. may pay their dues from noon to 2 p.m. Friday and Thursday, Dec. 19, in the Undergraduate Office of the League. Hold Those Bonds! AVC ToNHolc Weekly Hop The sixth in the series of week ly record dances sponsored by thi American Veterans Committee wil be held from 2:30-5:30 p.m. toda3 in the League Ballroom. The purpose of these mixer af- fairs held every Wednesday after- noon, according to Bob Slaff, pub- licity chairman, is to provide ar informal atmosphere where coed: and men students can become bet- ter acquainted. Slaff also added that these dances have already be- come a campus tradition, anc urges all students to drop in after classes. present her Assembly membership cil. Pr pm banque Assembly cards may still be honor. obtained from 3 to 5 p.m. today To a through Thursday in the As- ber of sembly Office, Rm. D in the presen League. limited The League House Dance to be Tickets held from 2 to 5 p.m. Saturday in Rem the League Ballroom, sponsored by from 3 league house-residents for the pur- day at pose of giving students the oppor- of the tunity of getting better acquaint- tained ed. All men on campus are invited cardsv to attend tlis affair as the guests stampi of the coeds. Anyone The music of Ed Morehaus mittan and his orchestra will be fea- there of tured at this League House Fran Dance, and special mixer dances orchest will be introduced. For those Patti E who like bridge, tables and cards for the will be provided. Refreshments the we will be served. Coedsq Corsa The central committee for coedsb League House Dances consists of: Entert Blanche Berger, general chirm talent. Gladys Relkin, assistant chair- tlime inrt man; Libby Myers. entert ainm'ent; trosinn Ruth JadtIsich, decorations; and Thet Shirlee Rich, publicity. gan is t oration Wyvern To Meet Maize scene o There will be an important two lar meeting for all Wyvern members of ther at 5 p.m. tomorrow in the League. will be Pictures will be taken for the Conmi 'Ensian, and several important Co-c matters will be discussed. All those Milan who will be unable to attend please Shaffer contact Virginia Olberding at 4089 gent S or Carol Lieberman at 2-3225. ian, J Persons interested in forming a The coed ski club for weekend outings seasoni this winter will meet Thursday, browni Dec. 12, in room 302 of the Union. and ric eceding the dance, a formal et is to be given in their ccommodate a larger num- students, the event is being ted two days. Couples are to one night attendance.- s on Sale aining tickets will be sold to 4 p.m. today through Fri- the main desk in the lobby Union. They may be ob- by those holding Union which must be presented for ng at the time of purchase. e unable to purchase ad- ce at these times, may have obtained by proxy. .k Tinker and his 14-piece tra, featuring the vocals of DuPont, will furnish music * affair. Tinker is heard at ekly Union dances. To Receive Corsages ages will be presented to by the Union at the door. tinrrent, featuring campus will be presented during ennission. In addition, re- ents are to be served. theme of traditional Michi- to be carried out in the dec-' s for the formal dance. and blue will dominate the of the ballroom, including rge block M's at either end room. The season's yule log burning in the fireplace. ttee Members hairmen for the dance are Miskovsky and George r. Other chairmen are Eu- ikorovsky, Arthur DerDer- erry Comer, Allan Farns- "Big Four" in color this includes formal black, blue, in cocoa and deeper shades h wine tones. ALL YOU EASTERNERS ! COME TO ', U' Hopwood Winners Gain Fame as Feminine Novelists By M. J. TUTTLE Some of the leading women nov- elists of the day gained their first recognition through winning Hop- wood fiction awards at the Uni- versity. Betty Smith who recently made literary history with the publica- tion of A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, won an award in the first Hopwood contest. Her contest entries were plays, short stories, and essays, and some of the characters in her book were mentioned in these works. At present Miss Smith is helping with the production of a movie in England. Mildred Walker, who won a major award in 1932 under the name of Mildred W. Schemm, is best known for her novel, Winter Wheat. Her other works include Dr. Norton's Wife, a Literary Guild selection for 1938, The Brewer's Big Horses, Unless the Wind Turns, and The Light from Arcturus. She is now work- ing on another novel which will probably be entitled The Quar- ry. Mauritta M. Wolff won a fiction prize in 1937 with Night Shift, published in 1942, and in 1938 she won a minor fiction prize with a novelette. In 1940 she won a major award with Whistle Stop, which was published in 1941 and later made into a movie. Ruth Lininger Dobson, Hop- wood winner in 1936, has had two novels published, Straw in the Wind and Today Is Enough. Iola L. Goodspeed, who won a major award in 1939, has pub- lished The Loon Feather, a best seller for several years, and The Shining Trail. Several of the more recent Hop- wood winners who have had books published are now writing while they are students or while they work at the University. Naomi Gilpatrick, author of The Broken Pitcher, is a student and is working on another book. Marianne Finton Meisel, author of Years Before the Flood, and Andrina Gilmartin who wrote The Gifts of Love, are both students working on novels. Jeannette Hatn, winner of a major award in poetry in 1945, is now writing a novel while a student. Leslie Cameron whose book, Dancing Saints, wgs published in 1942, is now connected with the periodical room in the main library while working on another book. Rosamond Haas, author of Delay is the Song, a volume of verse, is working for the Uni- versity News Service while writ- ing. Virginia Chase Perkins, winner of a fiction prize in 1940, is now teaching English at the University and writing a novel. She has had her first novel, American House, published. DRESSMAKING P ORIGINAT, DEISlGNS S* uL1ECT'vI EA TTERNS 1352 WILMOT *Alterations Telehone 3906 Hours: 9:00 to 5:00 ~rL~uuuuuw~st~g ~~~~~r -~-v -J-~~ A OA) E MICHGA IGHT SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28 Keep in touch with the Michigan gang over Christmas vacation. Reservations can be made no)w for the big gathering of Michigan students by scding a post card to Lou Orlin, 952 (rcenw(ood Ave., Ann Arbor, or by directly contacting 4rih /adqA4MEADOwwBROOK Roj\ J Ju 23 . . . CADNG N. j. . . . pOk ON TURN'mKI MUSIC by LES ELGART and his Orchestra found at Gifts for every lady on your list A sparkling array of Cos- tume Jewelry. Priced 1.00 - 22.95 I Scarfs . . . Gay and bright for coats .. . to wear on -- ,f ? s your head . . . in rayons or wools. 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