FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1950 THE MICHIGAN DAILY _______________________________________________________________________________ I I Town-Country Club Members Offered Varied Sports Program With snow comes thoughts of skiing and tobogganing; spring brings to mind hiking, bicycling, and riding; while just plain bad weather days can be brightened by the cheerful aspects of a glow- ing fire, hot chocolate, and per- haps several square dance sets. These are a few of the varied activities possible for the newly organized co-recreational Town and Country Club, which replaces the former WAA Outing Club. The first all-campus meeting of the club this semester is slated from 8:30 p.m. to midnight today at the Women's Athletic Building. 'raking the form of a blue jeans party, the combined indoor and outdoor program will include games, singing, square dancing and refreshments. Ivan Parker will call the dances. All men and women students in- terested in participating in a var- iety of sports may join. The Town and Country Club, organized last Spring, was inau- gurated after a poll conducted by the Women's Athletic Association disclosed that a large percentage of students were interested in be- longing to such an organization. A group of students, responding to invitations sent to every or- ganized house on campus, met several weeks ago to discuss plans for the club at the new University Golf Course Club House. Athletic Director H. O. Crisler has given the group permission to use the Club House for future ac- tivities. Hile T Give H l e To'LotkIasParty Lotkas will be the main re- freshment at the all-campus Hillel Lotka Party which will be held from 8 to 10:30 p.m. Sunday in the WAB Lounge. The Lotka is a pancake similar to a dish made from potatoes. Jeanie Rosen will make the Lot- kas from a secret recipe. "She has been offered a fortune for this recipe," says Alden Harris, Hillel publicity chairman. Harris also stated that these Lotkas will be the most delicious this side of Ireland. There will also be dancing and party games at the party which will be free to Hillel members and 25 cents to non-members. Ca er's Clinic Will Be Held Instructors To Give Officials Ratings The Women's Department of Physical Education will hold a basketball clinic from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Bar- bour Gymnasium. Several Washtenaw county high schools will participate. In the morning a technique session will be taught. In the afternoon there will be an officials rating session. Those who wish to try for a national bas- ketball officials rating may parti- cipate. The clinic is open to those peo- ple who are interested in obtain- ing the national officials rating in basketball. This rating will make it possible for them to be- come paid officials. Basketball Club All interested coeds are eli- gible to join the WAA Basket- ball Club which will meet at, 4 p.m. today in Barbour Gym- nasium. Previousiexperience is not a pre-requisite. [ ON T IHIE IHIOUSE -Daily-Roger Reinke Busy putting up figurines in a Lloyd Hall lounge is Sue Kerner, '53, chairman of the decorations committee of Winterlace Ball. The dance, annual winter for- mal of the dormitory, will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight today. Featured throughout the Hall will be a. general Santa Claus-winter theme. Ken Nor- man's orchestra will provide the music,.while a Lloyd Hall choir will present special entertain- ment during intermission. Tick- ets will be on sale at the door. U set for the Parts Season DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN By JO KETELHUT Pledge formals, like the perennial blanket of Ann Arbor snow, will descend upon the campus this weekend as football frolics bow out. "KNIGHTS AND DAZE" is the name chosen for the Zeta Psi pledge formal tomorrow night. Peasants will peer in thy windows1 of the Zete castle as ladies-in-waiting and knights in armor dine andt dance in the medieval banquet hall. * * * *i WILLOW RUN will be the scene of the ZBT "Flight Time Take-off" (pledge formal) tonight where the 'world's only flying paddle will make its trial run. Landing will be made at the chapter house tomorrow night when Z, B and T present "the greatest show on earth"--a giant circus carnival. Zeta Beta Taus and their dates will walk through a canvasI tent and clown's mouth into the sawdust-covered Big Top where1 they will be greeted by the sounds of calliope music and weirdly laughing monstrosities. A tunnel of love, freak side show, gameI booths and a pie-throwing concession will be some of the carnivalI attractions.t KAPPA SIGS will dance to the rhythms of Joe Fodder and his orchestra at their pledge formal tomorrow.c * * * * BUNSEN BURNERS, distilling flasks and all the apparatus ofI a chemist's laboratory will set the scene for Alpha Chi Sigma's "Al-I chemists Ball" tomorrow night. Al Chase and his men will provide the{ musical background for the pledge formal. ALPHA RHO CHIS will brave the winter weather tomorrow when they depart for higher altitudes and a tobogganing party. THE LIFE OF the new workers paradise of Phi Rho Sigma will be described at their Communist Revolution party tomorrow night. Following their secession from campus, the house will hold an official election and a trial for the capitalists. A concentration camp will be set up to take care of the "uncooperative" members. * * * * FIVE CHIPS AND A CHIRP will play at the Phi Kappa Sigma pledge formal, which will revolve around a Christmas theme. * * * * "FROM THE FROZEN WASTES OF MICHIGAN to the sunshine and roses of Pasadena" is a phrase describing the setting for Chi Phi's pledge formal tomorrow. Festivities will begin with a dinner at the Farm Cupboard. S * * * DELTA SIGMA DELTAS will be swinging their partners at their house tomorrow night at a gala old fashioned square dance. TOGAS AND SANDALS will be the accepted attire for Kappa Nu's "Cena Romana" banqiuet tomorrow. The house will be decorated to resemble a Roman villa for the occasion. S* s s "RHAPSODY IN ROSES" is the theme selected for the Phi Sigma Delta winter formal tomorrow. All thoughts of sleet and snow will be forgotten when the men and their dates enter the Rose Bowl (Union Ballroom) and find all the atmosphere of a football field. Yardmarkers, goalposts, silhouettes of gridiron stars and a giant "M" trophy will give an authentic touch. A RIP-ROARING Western party will take place at the Chi O house tonight, complete with barbeques, square dancing and a hay- strewn atmosphere. "CALIFORNIA, HERE WE COME" will be the cry of Adelia Cheever coeds at their Rose Bowl celebration party tomorrow night. A K PSI MUGS will be given as favors at their formal honoring pledges tomorrow night. The dinner and dance will take place at the League. Loss of Poster Grieves Coeds Soph Cab Requests Return of Bayou Sign A few tears of frustration are being shed by sophomore women this week. Cause of all the consternation is the loss of an elaborate three- dimentional poster advertising "Bewitched Bayou," the 1950 Soph Cab production which will be pre- sented December 8 and 9. The poster made its first ap- pearance on the campus Tuesday but enjoyed a short stay, as it was mysteriously missing from its place on the diag the next morn- ing. Evidently, believe the sopho- more coeds, some student grew tired of looking at the four bare walls of his room. Beverly Arble, poster chairman of Soph Cab, worked for months designing and constructing the poster. Spanish moss was sent from Florida to give an authentic touch to the sign which described! the Louisiana swamp setting of Soph Cab. 177! IZFA Hosts Seminar Here The University chapter of the Intercollegiate Zionist Federation of America will be host to the an- nual IZFA regional seminar this weekend. Elihu Katz, national president, and Hav Soloff, nation- al vice-president, will attend the seminar. Following Friday evening serv- ices an Oneg Shabbath program will be presented at 7:30 p.m. to- night at Lane Hall. Discussion sessions from 1 p.m. to 5' p.m. tomorrow at the League will fea- ture talks by Baruch Levine, Zel- da Cohen, Ray Soloff and Elihu Katz. A square dance will be held at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at Lane Hall. The closing session will be an open meeting at 10:30 p.m. Sun- day in the League. Project Petitions Senior Project petitions are due at 5 p.m. today in the Un- dergraduate Office of the Lea- gue. J 0 4 if i t 1 , +".:.:::,;.. . L.r/ . r r { Vf '.; }l Yy #' .y ti ,.} ii: T , ,, r. ... S/" .;}:+}?: t;''.y S L' . t ,,.., r . ,: :::e:;K>;F>° . ,.. '.. r .:. °" ' ; . ;, (Continued from Page 4) IZFA: Oneg Shabbat, 8:45 p.m., Lane Hall. Everyone welcome. Op- ening of Regional Seminar. Michigan Arts Chorale: Extra rehearsal at Hill Auditorium, 8 p.- m. All members must be there. Concert Saturday night. Acolytes: Meeting, 7:45 p.m., West Conference Room, Rackham Bldg. Prof. Charles Hartshorne, University of Chicago, will speak on "Essence, Existence, and Ac- tuality." University Museums: Subject of the Friday evening program: "Surveying the Natural Sciences." Three films: "Development of a Chick," "The Robin," and "What is Science?" 7:30 p.m., Kellogg Auditorium. Mathematics Journal Club: Dr. J. L. Ullman will review a recent Mathematics periodical. 3 p.m., Room 3001, Angell Hall. Motion pictures: Four experi- mental films from Cinema 16, New York, at 7:30 and 9 p.m., Lane Hall. Small admission charge. Presented by Triton Film Society, S.R.A. Party, Sat., Dec. 2, 8-12 midnight. Instruction and entertainment. All Catholic Latin-American students and friends invited. IZFA: Regional seminar: Ses- sions, Sat., Dec. 2, 1 p.m., League. Square Dance, Sat., 8:30 p.m., Lane Hall. Tryouts for French Play: Mon- day, Tuesday and Wednesday, Dec. 4, 5, 6, from 3 to 5:10 p.m., rRoom 408, Romance Language Bldg. Scalp and Blade: Meeting, Sun., Dec. 3, 7 p.m., Room 3-A, Union. Graduate Outing Club: Overnite trip to Pinebrook Hostel, A.Y.H., South Lyon. Meet at Outing Club room, Rackham, 12:45 p.m., Sat., Dec. 2. Cars returning before sup- per, Sun., Dec. 3. Those who have not signed up contact Jerry Thompson-tel. 7858. No meeting Sunday afternoon, Dec. 3. International Center and Club "Europa" is sponsoring a "Grand Bal de Monte Carlo," Sat., Dec. 2, 8 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall. All students invited:ssAdmission fee charged. IUhat a Spot 'o,' -- 0- - '* ,TORYLAND + TOYTOWN"' 2nd Floor - State Street at North U. of QOLD or SILVER KID KAPPA DELTA will entertain the Dysphasia Division of the versity speech clinic from 2 to 5 p.m. tomorrow at their house. Uni- and 5 t95 German Coffee Hour: p.m., League Cafeteria. welcome. 3:15-4:30 Everyone Also opera pumps- in white satin, black vel- vet and silver brocade. $39 ,/Qa n cadt Hostelers: Sports activities, in- c I u d i n g badminton, volleyball, handball, and swimming, will be available for the club at 8 p.m., I.M. Bldg. Coming Events Wesley Foundation: M.SM. Con- vocation Saturday. Speakers: Dr. Hoover Rupert and Dr. Harold DeWolf. Newman Club: Latin-American X a ALAS KANS Newest, gayest, lightest way to keep your feet toasty warm and lovely, too. Ankle-length adorables 6t elk- tanned calf, lined with downy soft shearling lamb. Peaked tongue and back for a young and cute-as-a-pixie look! Grand for campus, stadium, shopping, town or country - gadding cozily anywhere in sleet and snow. Matching weatherproof wedgie soles of DuPont Neo- prene crepe. Phone 9012 306 South State St. -F=- _-- --- - front 6 to 60 it's -~F Um - . 4; ~ ~N2j Sparkled with Rhinestones RAYON TAFFETA AND NET I I li You're beautiful, you're happy as a Christmas carol in a bouffant gown sprinkled with light-capturing rhinestones at the shoulder-bar bodice. Petal capped at the hips, the net skirt whirls like a cloud. Red or white; sizes 9 to 15. 29.95 I EVERYBODY'S YEARBOOK the 1951 MICHIGANENSIAN "A gift with an Everlasting Memory" now $5.00 Student Publications Building . : "' 1. h, .;". I I I U ..Mad~W'flham~~' iii i