FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1948 T MTCTIGANT AILY PAGE VIVID Coeds Selected For Soph Cabaret Annual Affair To Be Held Dec. 10, 1 1; Committee Meetings Begin Next Week According to Ethel Morris, gen- eral chairman, members have been selected, on the basis of eligibility and preference for committees on the 1948 Soph Cabaret, to be held Dec. 10 and 11. Women on the eligibility com- mittee are Lois Bamborough, Pat Cotter, Pat Crotty, Dorothy Feir and Ruth Mary Nelson. The first meeting will be at 4 p.m. today in the League. Decorations will be planned by Joyce Andrews, Susan Baker, Nancy Joan Clark, Phyllis Dickie, Mary Dooge, Jose Engel, Merilyn Granger, Lita Hagen, Joyce Marie Hale, Jane Hendrie and Charlene Hilt. *, * * OTHERS include Beltina Hoff- man, Ruth Kahn, Ileana Lindh, Nancy MacKay, Nancy Jane Mar- in, Gerry Morse, Florence Mor- row, Catherine Murtha, Anne Mc- Coll, Mary Lou Porter and Martha Rennie. The list concludes with Carol Schumacher; Ida Semerijan, Barbara Anne Smith, Doris Stoll, Ethel Varga, Marnie Wat- son, Caroline Weber and Car- olyn Wilcox. The makeup committee consists of Nancy Coleman, Lois Cronk- wright, Nancy Cutting, Edythe Goldman, Mary Goodyear, Mary Helen King, Ruth Matterson, Mar- ilyn Reed, Pamela Wagner, Jane Dieterle, Nancy Sommers, Nancy Rand, Phyllis Fraser and Wilma Wallace. * * * WORKING ON THE stage crew will be Joan Badgley, Phyllis Bliss, Eleanor Decker;, Hodges, Kruger, Strauss Boja, Sally Dalton, Margery Fisher, Margaret Kennedy, Virginia Stoddard, and Dorothea Wulz. Jean Polly Judy Sally In charge of special booths will be Sally Alber, RuthBjerre- gaard, Marilyn Coe, Nancy Eg- gleston, Janice Ellinghausen, Joan Ely, Ann Grainger, Helen Hager and Judy Harger. Completing the list are Bette Krickstein, Val Lemper, Sally McBride, Sarah McHale, Sue Rod- gers, Rita Sachs, LaVerne Schmit- kons and Jean Schroeder. This committee will meet at 5 p.m. Monday in the League. * * * WOMEN ON the finance com- mittee include Alice Coburn, Pat Day, Janet Dewey, Marjorie Fish- er, Marilyn Granger, Barbara, Hall, Mary Lou Hook, Fumiko Ikemori, Marjorie Ingram and, Arlene Jew- ell. Others are Judy Johannsen, Yvonne Johnson, Louise Keller, Shila McComb, Loretta Meggs, Florence Morrow, Caroline Nel- son, Joyce Neumeier, Anne O'Connor, Ginny Stoddard, Sally Strauss and Betty Tornquist, The hostess committee consists of Carolyn Black, Joyce Clark, Ann Cudney, Ann Flitcraft, Eve Havas, Vera Hosley, Patricia Kly, Dorothy Khoury, Alice Proctor, Joyce Robichand, Mary Schuma- cher, Jeanne Segerstrom, Turry Welden and Valerie Polk. * * * * ASSISTING THE patrons chair- man will be Sue Hughes, Betty (Continued on Page 8) Oth. .JoU3 1 By MARJE SCHMIDT AND SYLVIA FOLZ The fervor of the sports world will keep parties in Ann Arbor town to a minimum this weekend as students travel to Lafayette to watch our own Wolverines tangle with Purdue or to Cleveland to take in a game or two of the World Series. The Theta Delta Chis have planned a listening party with a new angle for tomorrow afternoon. Members and dates will move en masse to picnic grounds toting their portables behind them. Coed football and baseball games will be in session on the ground while games of the same name, but of different quality, will come over the air. Survivors are invited to attend a record dance that evening at the house. * *~ * * THE DELTS WILL ALSO HOLD a listening party tomorrow for football fans who couldn't make the trip to Purdue. Between dances wild cheers will be raised in hopes that the team may hear them and be spurred on to victory. All this plus a buffet supper and more dancing until midnight will round out the day. Members of Delta Zeta will celebrate their annual State Day tomorrow. Members of the Michigan State and Albion chapters will storm the house early in the morning. During the day national officers will give pep talks and, those present will swap chapter news. The gals' dates are invited to join in celebration that evening at a record party. Fall leaves and flowers will decorate the rooms, helping to produce a snappy seasonal setting. Intermission entertain- ment will take the form of a skit, reenacting past events in the Michigan chapter. MEANWHILE, the popularity of listening parties extends to the Delta Sigma house. The men have invited all other dent students and women hygienists to join them shortly before game time. The "U" Fresh Air Camp, will be invaded by students for the first time this semester when two independent houses entertain their dates at picnics this week-end. Residents of Hayden House and their guests will leave by bus at 6:30 today. Main Lodge will be blanketed by firelight for dancing later in the evening. Busses will pick up about 45 couples from Tyler House at 5 p.m. tomorrow for their out-door fest at the camp. Sport events and danc- ing will follow a supper of hot dogs and all the trimmings. * * * * THE THETA XIS and their dates will be roughing it also when they don their oldest clothes tomorrow evening and search for buried treasures. The hunt will take them to every part of Ann Arbor as the scavengers unearth clues near well-known landmarks. Prizes will greet some, and refreshments all, when the adventurers finally drag themselves back tothe house. To introduce their new house-mother, the AD Pi's will hold a team from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday. In an effort to acclimate Mrs. Ufer to campus life, other sorority house-mothers and several deans have Newer Styles Increase Value Of Proper Hosiery Selections By MARYLIN PRAFER Hosiery selection has jecome more implortant than every with the advent of new styles. As dresses inchedcloser to the ankle, women had to make the most of that small area of the leg still in view. At this point, smart women realized the value of choos- ing stockings which would lend the utmost flattery to them and to their costumes. However, there is more to buy- ing hosiery than meets the sur- veyance of the admiring male eye. THE SHADE OF a woman's skin and the sheerness of a stock- ing are of prime importance. A shade of hosiery should always be sampled against the skin of the hand to insure a becoming choice. A sheer 15 denier nylon in a dark shade will appear as a faint tint on the leg, while a 30 denier nylon in the same shade will have approximately the same deep tone it had in the box when it is worn. darker on the leg than those of a higher gauge and are usually less flattering. HEAVY LEGS seem slimmer in dark, sheer, seamed hose. Thinlegs appear more shapely in seamless stockings in light or neutral shades. Special hosiery has been de- signed to be worn with the bar- est of evening sandles. These stockings are marked only with a narrow seam line and look like a faint film on the leg. An even barer seam-free version of this stocking is also available. This fall emphasis is being placed on stocking shades, with a wonderful variety offered to choose from. Deep browns, blacks and dark blues are still very popu- lar. Bright new shades in honey, blackberry, redwood, green and rose tones are also featured. Women have a great opportunity to experiment with new and abun- Daily-Heggem MAN'S GAME?-Coeds engage in rugged game of Lacrosse, recent addition to list of clubs sponsored by WAA. Brave members, nearly all novices, are coached by experienced Priscilla Ball, student manager. Those pictured are Janet Dewey, Marilyn Sheldon, Marge Ingram and Betsy Bousfield. Television Added to Casbah Lower guage stockings appear dant hosiery colors. "Small parties, large parties and even lonely little couples will en- joy the informal atmosphere of the Campus Casbah, which begins its third successful weekend from 9 to 12 p.m. today and tomorrow in the Michigan League," predicts Jackie Reid, Casbah chairman. "Those who choose the Casbah for their weekend festivities will find not only dancing pleasure, but also listening and seeing pleasure before the League's new television set," she continued. Installed in the Grand Rapids Room, the television set will be open to all Casbah goers who care to use it. Art Starr's sextet will be the musicmakers in their informal style, and will welcome personal requests. WJR songstress Renee Peters will complement the outfit with her "sultry to sweet" renditions. -, J y? , :{d ~p ,sim f or 3OII$p4 FALL DRESS SALE 1':"- ~i1 so she donned a Soft Sole Ballets K" Gabardines Wools New Fall Styles $) (values to $19.95) \A-\ \ been invited. 1d I C.j FLY to out of town FOOTBALL GAMES - Purdue, Minn. & O.S.U. - ANN ARBOR AERO SERVICE is now accepting reservations for fast, reliable, transportation PHONE 8337 Coed Nite at the IM Building will be held from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. today. Activities offered include volleyball, badminton, fencing, paddleball and swimming. The BUDGET SeetHOP 61 1 East Liberty Stret Pvts$OL s#9RgssEvevt AT 10 ' E4 See them in Detroit at ERNST KERN - CROWLEY MILNER Free booklet: "WARDROBE TRICKS". Write Judy Bond, Inc., Dept. D, 1375 Broadway, New York 18 k I I I I Headquarters for Ballet Slippers Black, brown, red, green. In soft soles, hard soles, crepe soles. All priced within your budget. $3.95 and $4.95 "Ballet Makers to the New Generation" ALARM O CLOCKS TELECHRON GENERAL ELECTRIC WESTCLOX NEW HAVEN INGERSOLL SPECIAL MINIATURE ALARM $4.95 HALLER'S JEWELERS 717 North University RANDALL'S Store Hours: 9:00 to 5:30 306 S. State It's Shoe Week at Jacobson's DEDICATED TO BEAUTIFUL FOOTWEAR MADEMOISELLE GOLD CROSS JOYCE OLD TOWN TROTTERS 0 SHENNIGANS TONI DRAKE with SJHOES e 64eje. focus cOtt /ere /4 9004 Ta te IC 0 . . tn h * u a N a .: !':. r ." a b } r j s hee /4 qoo4 d9A4t hon. flats I 0 d o o0 , (Io G . . SUEDE Sassy Toni Drake pumps are swept to a new point of interest in an exciting way to attract attention . . . some with a glint of gold kid here and there dramatized against deep-toned suede, some with frisky little Hattie heels with baby doll vamps. Whimsically light-footed pumps and flat wedges; designed by the imaginative Toni Drake for Fall. "The M stars a pert bi buttons an in washab especially for istress of Ceremonies" blouse lack tie, simulated diamond stud d tux front. Ideal for day or evening. le Celanese Alluracel crepe. Block or Brown Suede 10.95 Shoe Sal an 0 ~7 (M tat±__ia _r-L __.L:a- _-I.. C:-e '4H ##. 'oft Bloack sr. fi Miaa & ctvb white only. blzes sz to sa. !U ! a I I I