TIMMICHIGAN DALY DannyKaye and His All Star Comedy Revue' Com ing Oct. 18 Stars Include Skitch Henderson, Page Cavanaugh Trio, Dancers Women's Camp Counselor's, Outing Clubs Plan Organization Panhellenic Association is bringing to Hill Auditorium "Dan- ny Kaye and His All Star Comedy Revue" on the night of Oct. 18. Starring with Danny Kaye will be the Page Cavanaugh Trio, Skitch Henderson and hisorches- tra and the Dorothy Dorben Dan- cers from the Chez Paree in Chi- cago. TICKETS MAY be purchased immediately by checks made out to the Panhellenic Association or by mail order at the Hill Audito- rium box office. The office is open from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. daily. Mary Nell Walker is chairman of the committee which is bringing the show to Ann Ar- bor and is assisted by Diane Faulk. Jean Marson is secretary of the committee, Tracy Redfield, treas- urer and Jean Russ is handling publicity for the show. Miss Russ is assisted by Myra Hahn, Joan Broomfield, Valerie Lemper and Pamela Stump. PANHEL IS bringing the show for the benefit of the Fresh Air Camp. This is the first time since they brought Spike Jones in 1946, that such a -project has been planned. It took the regimented life an Army man gets used to to make Page Cavanaugh decide that trios have a place in the musical world. Until he tired of the 'up at five, bed by nine' style of liv- ing, the youthful pianist was a firm believer in the big-band style of playing. Before he entered the Army in' 1943, Page was widely known along the West Coast as a brilliant young pianist who was stepping up the ladder of success with Bobby Sherwood's band. It wasn't soon after that the Army changed his mind about big bands. AT CAMP ORR, California Page played with the post orchestra. His regular duties plus the unin- teresting work with a band play- ing "stock arrangements" leftl Page morose and unhappy. It wasn't until he met a G.I. guitarist who knew a G.I. bassman that Cavanaugh really snapped out of it and showed renewed interest in music. The boys formed a trio fo 'kicks' and jammed their blues away. They becampe so popular that the Army sent them out on tour. When the three boys were dis- charged Page immediately made plans for their civilian activities. They were booked for several out- standing West Coast clubs includ- ing the Bocage and Trocadero in Hollywood. * * * WHEN THEIR name started to create excitement on a nation- wide scale, they came East 'for a stay at the Wedgewood Room of the Hotel Waldorf-Astoria in New York. Their sustaining program for NBC led to an engagement on the Lucky Strike Show and sev- eral film performances appear- ances including "Romance In High C," "The Big City" and 'A Song Is Born." They have been selected to play with some of the biggest stars in the show world. Frank Sinatra, Mel Torme, Doris Day, Connie Haines, Johnny Desmond, Martha Tilton and Jane Harvey have all appeared with the trio. They are known as the perfect group for a vocalist. * * * WALTER WINCHELL claimed that Page Cavanaugh's engage- ment at the Worwick Hotel was the 'Biggest thing to hit town since kissing." Patrons agreed for they were held'over on an extend- ed contract. Organization is taking rapid steps now for two of the WAA's most popular clubs, the Outing and Camp Counselors' clubs. The Outing Club is the only club sponsored by WAA which does something completely dif- ferent at each meeting. Their activities for the year will include sailing, canoe trips, horse- back riding, skiing and a variety of other outdoor sports, to be planned at the first meeting 2 p. m. Sunday in the WAB. HIGHLIGHT of the season will be a tobaggan party in mid-win- ter and a swimming party at Portage Lake will finish the club's activities in the spring, according to Lynn Walldorf, manager of the club. Featured activities of the club last year were ski trips and a barn dance held at the Uni- versity Fresh Air Camp. New members with or without experience in general sports will be accepted at the club's first meeting Sunday. HATS OFF: Bare-HeadedI By VERONICA EMERSON Men! If you want to look sporty, collegiate and be popular with coeds-go bare headed. Out of 100 women polled, from freshman to grad students, only one stated that she preferred col- lege men who wear hats. * * * ' COLLEGE MEN who wear hats for casual campus or date wear were generally termed as looking "silly." Many coeds said hats on younger men were terrible. "I'd hate to have anyone pick me up wearing one," a junior replied. INSTRUCTION is provided to} club members in the various sports by movies, lectures and privately. Approximately 15 meetings are planned for the Outing Club, each of which will be de- voted to a different sport. One of the most unusual clubs under WAA though is for women who have been or wish to become counselors at a summer camp. THE Camp Counselor's Club de- votes its meetings to song fests, handicraft, singing games, rainy day games and to the discussion of the many camping problems that may arise. Following the organizational meeting at 5 p. m. Monday at the WAB, there will be a combi- nation bike-hike and cook-out for the new members. Last year the club started a file of the camps that members had attended. Each file card included the salary earned, the responsibili- ties they had and the number of children under their supervision. Men Rate Vote Most of the women felt that it is all right for older men to wear a head dress. * * * "A MAN'S FACE is not mature enough to look out from under a hat brim until he is at least 35," a senior said. The one in 100 who favored the wearing of hats said that a hat gives a younger man a dig- nified appearance. Others who replied in the nega- tive stated that for formal wear hats are all right. Stormy weather was about the only other occasion that they felt hats were permis- sable. Riding Club Will Convene WAA's Riding Club manager of this year is planning to greatly change the procedure of last year's club. Golfside Stables, which was closed last year, will be the new homing grounds of the club. These stables are situated closer to Ann Arbor than were Ranchhills Sta- bles of last year. Not only are the stables new, but the club will now be divided into "Crop and Saddle" for only the most advanced riders, and a separate Riding Club for other members. Last year they were one in the same organization. Phyllis Bartholomew, manager of both the Riding Club and Crop and Saddle, will hold an organi- zational meeting at 5 p. m. Mon- day in the WAB. "These cards serve as good re- ferences for future summer posi- tions," according to Marjorie Letzgus, club manager. Meetings are held every other week and the discussion is con- ducted or planned by one of the members concerning some particu- lar phase of camping life. "From these discussions and from our activities, each member learns many new things to take back to her camp each summer," said Miss Letzgus. The club will be active from Oc- tober until January and from March until May of next year. WAA Notices The volleyball tournament will begin Monday with the following games: Monday at 5:10 p.m.-Jordan I vs. Delta Delta Delta I; Stockwell I vs. Hinsdale I, Unit 3. Monday at 7:15 p.m.-Jordan II vs. Stockwell IV; Barbour II vs. Alpha Xi Delta II. Monday at 8 p.m.-Jordan IV vs. Cook I; Couzens vs. Stockwell V. * * * Tuesday at 5:10 p.m.-Klein- stuck I vs. Alpha Phi II; Stock- well VII vs. Jordan III. Tuesday at 7:15 p.m.-Jordan IX vs. Alpha Chi Omega III; Stockwell IX vs. Ann Arbor Girls. Tuesday at 8 p.m.-Alpha Chi Omega II vs. Alpha Omicron Pi I; Zone I-Team I vs. Stockwell X. Wednesday at 5:10 p.m.-Colle- giate Sorosis II vs. Alpha Epsilon Phi I; Kappa Delta vs. Mosher II. Wednesday at 7:15 p.m.-Kappa Kappa Gamma I vs. Jordan VIII; Gamma Phi Beta II vs. Stockwell XV. Wednesday at 8 p.m. No games scheduled. * * * Thursday at 5:10 p.m.-Colle- giate Sorosis I vs. Kappa Kappa Gamma IV; DeltaZeta vs. Mosher IV. Thursday at 7:15 p.m.-Jordan VI vs. Alpha Gamma Delta II; Collegiate Sorosis III vs. Stockwell XVIII. Thursday at 8 p.m.-Kappa Alpha Theta I vs. Henderson House; Martha Cook II vs. Kappa Alpha Theta II. * * * Outing Club - The organiza- tional meeting will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the WAB. Soccer Club-The organizational meeting will be held at 5 p.m. Monday in the WAB. Officials and Coaches Club- The organizational meeting will be held at 5 p.m. Monday in the WAB. Camp Counselors Club-The or- ganizational meeting will be held at 5 p.m. Monday in the WAB. Riding Club-The organization- al meeting will be held at 5 p.m. Monday in the WAB. Silk-Like Kid Qloves Form Hand Wardrobe The best kids in the world are not well-behaved school children, but the skins that go into the making of really fine gloves. Glove makers grow their own goats to make the gloves of a well-dressed woman's life, then they tan the leather with tender hands and sew them together with generations of knowledge. They use a pique stitch, for in- stance, that makes a finger look molded. Gloves like this can even use used to play a Chopin prelude, if music is on call.1 The leather that fits over the1 fingers is something like silk in softness. One particular glove de- sign is a four-button pair with pouffed design on the gauntlet. Each tiny pouf is elasticized so the gauntlet fits snugly over the arm. The four-button glove is an im- portant part of the glove ward-1 robe-the experts say you need. In addition to it, six other pair of gloves are supposedly requisite. As the hour gets later, the sleeves get, shorter and the gloves get longer. Around town with a suit a pair of shorties are required (or wrist length gloves). Gloves six inches, from the thumb are best with short sleeved tea-time dresses, and eight button gloves with briefer cocktail dresses. Gloves that rise almost to the shoulders, or 16 button are on call for bare-shoulder evening wear, while the two remaining pair of gloves in the wardrobe will be for casual wear-a pair of pigskins for driving and sportswear and a pair of white gloves for informal, after- five occasions. Flappers Flappers will be coming back again in footwear but not the boot variety. New York designers have in- troduced "flapper sandals" as ac- cessories to the new return-to- flapper-trend in clothing. Hungry Coeds Can Eat, Lose ExcessFat with ProperDiet "E'i t a d rm lim Kat and grow siim. This phrace which we read in numerous newspaper advertise- ments and hear on a great many radio commercials can work if, and this condition is important, one eats the right kind of foods. * * * DIETING IS of faily common interest to most coeds, but most of them have the misconceived idea that to diet it is necessary to de- prive oneself of almost all tasty foods and to confine one's menu to soups, salads and juices. But this, according to Dr. Margaret Bell, head women's Physician of the University Health Service, is the "bunk." Dieting does not mean merely cutting out certain foods. It is a more complex problem and in- volves different ways of eating for different individuals. Two girls may be exactly the same height and weight, but while one may have a marvelous figure, the other may look extremely overweight. Bone structure is in part responsible for the difference. for a large boned person will look much slimmer and carry her weight much better than a small boned person of the same propor- tions. And too, a muscular per- son will look thinner than a per- son who carries her excess weight as fat. * * * THE FIRST requirement of a successful diet is to have made up one's mind to the fact that she wants to lose weight, for dieting means making many changes in the potato is not fattening; it is mean learning an entirely differ- ent food pattern from the one to which a person has been accus- tomed. A successful diet is a balanced diet. This means eating required amounts of certain foods each day. Protein foods form a major part of the diet, for the digestion of proteins burns up a great deal of energy which would other- wise be stored in the body as ex- cess weight. Fats are practically entirely eliminated from the diet, and also foods containing more than twen- ty per cent carbohydrates. This would include cream, butter, oils and dressings, fried foods, gravies, nuts and all cheeses except cot- tage. * * * CONTRARY TO common belief, ways and habits of eating. It may the things which one puts on po- tatoes such as butter, gravy and cream which have a high calorie content. In general the average daily consumption of a 'college student contains about 3,000 calories. In a diet this is gradually reduced to between 1600 and 1800. The difference is made up of ex- cess fat that is stored in the body. "Obesity is in a sense a dis- ease of the appetite," commented Dr. L. H. Newburgh, Professor of Clinical Investigation. "It is not only unsightly, but it can also lead to other more serious dis- eases such as diabete, high blood pressure and an overworked heart. Committee Work Coeds are still needed to join forces with Jean Russ in the Pan- hel sponsored Danny Kaye show for publicity work. Those interested in window dis- play work, poster distribution or stunt publicity for the show should contact Miss Russ at 4089 or 5718. Benefits from the show will be given to the Fresh Air Camp. This is the first project the Panhellenic Association has han- dled since they brought Spike Jones to campus in the fall of 1946, also for the benefit of the Fresh Air Camp. Read and Use Daily Classified Ads ARTUR _ " ' t; . ' l ^, , {. . i'(J. WI I I open the CHORAL UNION i SERIES Tuesday, Oct. 4, 8:30 P.M. 10 STAR CONCERTS I SENIORS and Grad Students Don't miss the boat Rubinstein, Oct. 23; Vienna Choir Boys, Oct. 15; Boston Symphony, Oct. 23; Cleveland Orchestra, Nov. 6; Italo Tajo, Nov. 16; Rise Stevens, Dec. 5; Cincinnati Sym- phony, Jan. 17; Myra Hess, Feb. 17; Pittsburgh Sym- phony, Feb.' 23; Zino Francescatti, Mar. 20. ARTUR RUBINSTEIN I ELSO y wil open the -r- - EXTRA CONCERT SERIES Make Appointments for your YEARBOOK PICTURES Sunday, October 9, 7 P.M. NOW!! 5 STAR CONCERTS NELSON EDDY A~iI I . .. I