THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1947; THE MICHIGAN DAILY Students To Hold fithleticEvents Varied Sports Activities Will Be Featured At Both WAB, IM Building Tomorrow The Women's Physical Educa- tion Club will sponsor a Sports Night program from 8 p.m. to midnight tomorrow at the Wom- en's Athletic Building. Activities during the evening will include ping pong, singing, informal dancing and bridge. WAB bowling alleys will also be open to both men and women at the usual rate. Refreshments will be served. All students are invited to at- tend, according to Betsy Bousfield. publicity manager. Admission will be 30 cents per person and 50 cents per couple. I M to Open Pool The weekly Co-Recreational Sports Night, sponsored by the, Physical Education Department and the Women's Athletic Asso- ciation, will be held from 7:30 to tramural Building. tradmural Building. Students and their wives or dates will be admitted free upon pr'esentation of identification cards at the door. Lockers and towels will be provided free. Among the activities sched- uled for this week's program are volleyball, hand ball, gymnas- t.. Olt I tics, and bridge. Swimming will be divided into two periods, one from 7:30 to 9 p.m., the other from 9 to 10:30 p.m. The di- vided period has been arranged so that more students may use the pool under less crowded con- ditions. No time limit will be placed on any other sport than swimming. Squash and badminton have also been scheduled for part of the evening's activities. Students, however, will be required to pro- vide their own squash racquets and badminton birdies. For those who wish to be mere spectators, there will be a series of exhibitions during the program. Professional athletes have been contacted to demon- strate their abilities in some of the activities, and members of j the various women's athletic clubs, including swimming, ten- nis, and golf will also be on hand to give exhibitions. In response to suggestions from many students, the central com- mittee has announced that it plans to add athletic tournaments to the program, and a schedule for the Residence Halls is now being constructed. Other sugges- tions for improvement of Sports Night may be offered to the com- mittee by students at any time. The members of the central committee include Naida Chernow, Don Bacon, Gwen Sperlich, Al Neef, Judy Diggs, Bill McAninch, Ed Carrington and Betty Eaton. Union To Hold Weekly Mixer All students on campus are in- vited to attend the Union coke dance to be held from 3 to 5 p.m. today in the Union ballroom. Music for dancing will be fur- nished by latest records from 3 to 4 p.m., and the remaining hour will feature the music of Tom McNall and his orchestra with Jackie Ward as vocalist. Women students are admitted free, but there is a small charge for men to cover the cost of cokes. Both dates and stags are urged to attend, as the dances are con- ducted on a mixer style. Bob Holland is in charge of the weekly d aces. Tickets are still on sale at the Union and in University Hall for A.-Hop, Assembly's semi-formal dance, which will be held from 8:30 p.m. to mid- night Saturday in the Intra- mural Building. Women Vets To Hear Talk On Cosmetics A meeting of the University Women Veterans' Association will be held at 7 p.m. Monday, Nov. 17 in the Grand Rapids Room of the Michigan League. The meeting will be followed 1 by a tylk on "Good Grooming" by Mrs. Zeda Norris, cosmetics au- thority and traveling manager for the House of Avon for twenty- seven years. Of special interest to women student veterans will be Mrs. Nor- ris' discussion of a lasting make- up for all day classes and the latest trends in formal make-up. Casbah Plans New Show Inaugurating a new series of intermission entertainment, the Campus Casbah will present its second floorshow, featuring audi- ence participation, guest stars and Buck Dawson as master of cere- monies, Friday and Saturday in the League Ballroom. Slated to appear this weekend are Bob Braisted and his banjo, George Olsen in an imitation of Al Jolson, and Professor Dawson's "Male Call" featuring Marcia Ames. Dawson will present a comedy on Joe's which was "as famous to Ann Arbor in 1910 as Morey's is to Yale." VERSATILE DRESS-The bridesmaid dress pictured above in grey taffeta with matching jacket may be worn as a date dress after the wedding. The dress has a square neckline with narrow shoulder straps. Horsehair underneath the full skirt gives it a new look. Public Invited To Wedding By Princess LONDON, Nov. 5-- (P) -The little people of Britain, who grum- ble at their increasing privations but never fail to cheer the royal family, will have their place of honor along with hundreds of the world's illustrious at the wedding of the Princess Elizabeth. A Buckingham Palace source disclosed tonight that a block of about 100 invitations had been reserved, by the Princess's own wish, for humbler guests drawn representatively from many walks of life. Thus seats in Westminster Ab- bey Nov. 20 will be allotted to members of the Auxiliary Terri- torial Service, which is similar to the American WACS; the Girl Guides and Sea Rangers, both or- ganizations which Elizabeth has fostered officially; and to work- ers on the royal estates of Wind- sor, Sandringham and Balmoral. "The Princess wants to have at her wedding as many different types of her future subjects as possible," the source said. Truman Listed Among Nation's Best Dressed NEW YORK, Nov. 5--()-The Fashion Foundation of America today came up with its list of the 10 best dressed men in 1947 and a recommendation that men carry pocketbooks like women, rather than cram odds and ends into their pockets. At the top of the list was Pres- ident Truman, who was chosen, the Foundation said, as the best dressed statesman "by his choice of hats." Ted Collins, owner of the Boston Yanks, professional football team, was given the nod over Joe Di- Maggio and Dan Topping. Other selections included: Grover Whalen, socialite Byron C. Foy, Harry Conover, Cary Grant, Guy Lombardo, shipping executive William Harloe, Basil Rathbone, and Family Court Judge P. James Pellecchia of New- ark. Wedding Announced Mr. and Mrs. Hobart R. Stivers of Bridgeport, Conn., announce the marriage of their daughter, Ann Prouty to Keith Cloe Field, also of Bridgeport. Mrs. Field is a member of Kappa Delta sorority and Mr. Field is serving with the United States Navy. A YEAR ROUND Capture her heart with an all-wool robe for the coming chilly mornings . .. or choose a delicate pastel print in quilted rayon for the lady of leisure;. . . You'll find these styles and others at SMARTEST HOSIERY SHOPPE Michigan Theatre Bldg. uDAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) p.m., Rm. D, Alumni Memorial Hall. Tickets for the series of lectures may be procured from the Secre- tary of the Romance Language Department (Rm. 112 R. L. Bldg) or at the door at the time of the lecture. These lectures are open to the general public. Members of Le Cercle Francais are admitted free upon presenta- tion of their membership cards. Art Cinema League and the' I.R.A. present Maxim Gorky's "The 'Lower Depths" (Les Bas- Fonds) with Jean Gabin and Louis Jouvet. French dialogue, English titles. Also "Does It Matter What You Think?" Sunday and Monday, Nov. 9 and 10. Kellogg Auditor- ium (Dental School). Tickets on sale at University Hall 10 to 12 noon and 1 to 2 p.m. Geology and Mineralogy Journal Club: Rm. 3056, Natural Science Bldg., 12 noon, Fri., Nov. 7. Program: Dr. E. W. Heinrich of the Department of Minerology will speak on the subject, "Pegma- tites of Montana" (illustrated). All interested are cordially invited to attend. Economics Club: Mon., Nov. 10, 7:45 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre. "The Originality of John Maynard Keynes," by Dr. James W. Long- ley of the economics department. Business administration and eco-, nomics staff and graduate stu- dents are invited. Graduate Outing Club: Meeting, 2:30 p.m., Sun., Nov. 9, Northwest entrance Rackham Bldg. Sign up at Rackham check desk before noon Saturday. All graduate stu- dents welcome. SRA Coffee Hour: 4:30 p.m., Fri., Nov. 7, Lane Hall. Mr. Ben- jamin Schmoker will be the guest of honor, and the Student Direc- tor's Association will be special guests. Everyone invited. 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