p. -.-4 SATURDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1950 SAILORS OF THE SLOPE: THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAG Christmas Holidays Provide Time for Skiing Expeditions By JO KTELHUT For many winter enthusiasts, two weeks of glorious vacation means frequent treks to higher altitudes with a pair of well- waxed skis resting securely on their shoulders. For a few avid sailors of the slope, the Christmas holidays pro- vide an appropriate time for ex- tended jaunts to northern ski re- sorts. MICHIGAN SKI FANS who have such a trip in mind might pick up a few tips for their jour- ney from University of Chicago *lstudents, who embark on 15-day ski safaris every year during the holiday season. With their destination at Ida- ho Springs, Colo., a thous- and miles away from campus, some 50 spirited students board chartered busses and cars. They : take with them baggage, skis -and ample supplies of crackers and apples for all-day excur- sions. The snow-skimmers ski for 13 days, sleep in steam-heated ca- bins, eat Salisbury steak, ham or roast beef-all for the sum of $67 per person. THE UNIVERSITY of Chicago Student Union Outing Depart- ment sponsors the "Christmas Caravan," but the students or- ganize every detail and have com- plete responsibility for all ex- penditures. Under- this plan, Chi- cago students have also junketed to Pennsylvania in summer, Flor- ida and Texas at Easter. Early in November, a meeting is called for all ski enthusiasts, beginners and experts alike, in- terested in going to Colorado for Christmas vacation. A trip leader is elected who se- lects an advisory board of stu- dents signed up for the caravan to supervise the planning. BUSSES ARE chartered, cabins are reserved and ski equipment is Annua Dance Petitions Due Petitions for Assembly Ball are due today in the League Under- graduate Office. Positions open for the dance are: general chairman, decora- tions co-chairmen, publicity co- chairman, programs and patrons chairmen, tickets, finance and buildings-and grounds chairmen. Sponsored by independent wo- men, the dance will be held in the spring of 1951. Members of the central com- mittee for the annual event de- cide where the dance will be held, the theme which will be car- ried through decorations, favors and programs, the orchestra, and patrons. Second semester freshmen, so- phomore and junior women may petition for these positions. Interviewing will be held on Dec. 13, 14 and 15. Coeds interested in petitioning may find reports of former com- mittees in the Undergraduate Of- fice and in the League Library. rented from the University's ath- letic department. Skiers whose experience -is at the golf-course level take out injury insurance, and a regis- tered nurse goes along to ski and to bandage. Each member of the group takes over some job during the trip. Everyone shares KP, and a food committee purchases menu selec- tions each morning before start- ing out for the slopes. BETWEEN THE hours of con- centrated skiing, barn dances, bridge tournaments, ice skating parties and the usual "jam ses- sions" keep the men and coeds entertained. By the middle of vacation, the beginners no longer cause traffic tie-ups or wild melees of interlocked poles and skis on the T-bar and rope tows. A morning church service, a noon venison roast and an eve- ning holiday party with all the trimmings are planned events for Christmas day. Leaving the snow country on Dec. 31, the group arrives on the Chicago campus the following day. A reunion is held, usually late in January, when the caravan clan turns up to view the display of pictures taken in Colorado. Rings Denote Various Ideas Used for Centuries To ShowAuthority Friends, Romans and country- men, have all followed the prac- tice of wearing rings, either as a sign of authority, or as 'in the case ,of women, a tie to dishpans and cooking pots. The signet is the earliest form of a ring which was developed from a coiled-round strip of gold. Not everyone was privileged to sport this piece of jewelry. Only special citizens and officers were allowed the rights to it. Merchants found a constant use for their rings which indicated that the wearer was a propetry owner. The rings were also used as identification for messengers attempting to obtain valuables from their masters' bankers. In medieval times, e n t r y through a drawbridge or gateway was often obtained by the show- ing of a signet ring to the cap- tain of the guard. The Greeks and Romans used their imagination and vast stores of mythology to carve historical episodes and scenes on their rings. Certain carvings were suggested to endow the rings with virtues upon which the wearer may rely. The hardest of the gems were used including jasper, sardonyx, carnelian and sapphire. Gulantics Tryouts First tryouts for Gulantics Show will take place from 1 to 4 p.m. today in Rm. 3G of the Union. The second tryouts are scheduled for Saturday. Winter Brings Hair Switches Back toStyle Coiffure May Change To Blend with Dress, Current Skirt Lengths Winter has brought about the return of false hair pieces to warm cropped napes. The "switch" business was giv- en a sbn:A i the arm by Faye EmE,6onr, television star, who captured her video audience's at- tention with her onion-headed coiffure with dollop on the back. MISS EMERSON achieved this style by using switches and falls which she twisted to suit her moods and costumes. It is possible to achieve many variations by the use of switch- aes. A page boy bob to be worn with tailored suits is made by turning a fall under. One may cover her ears with two doughnuts or coil the false pieces into a bun to cover the whole back of the head. CHINESE CORONET braids may also be purchased. A serpen- tine figure eight extending from crown to nape with a bustle of sausage curls is another possible variation. Use of switches and falls in- creased this autumn when skirts crept up to a fashionable 14 inches. With them, short hair cuts made women look too thin. Fuller heads are demand- ed by short skirts. The best hair is imported from the Balkan states. It has never been permanent waved and it is long and firm enough to hold its shape. False hair pieces should never be washed. Washing damages workmanship. They should be dry cleaned or dressed in a salon. Grandmother's big bone hair- pins have returned with the switch. Some pins have been im- ported from France and Switzer- land. Dance Tickets To Go on Sale Ticket sales for the Union Christmas formal, "Santa's Fan- tasy," will begin today and will continue through Friday, Decem- ber 15 in fraternity houses, men's dormitories and at the Union. "Santa's Fantasy," a semi-for- mal will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday, Dec. 16. The tickets, which are priced at- $1.50, will also be on sale at the door. Womens Faculty Club To Hold Square Dance The Women's Faculty Club will hold a square dance at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in Barbour Gym. The caller for the dances will be Scott Colburn. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Whitaker will be in charge of refreshments. Assisting them will be Burton Baker, Dr. and Mrs. Paul Dwyer, Frank Hooper and Albert Rich- ards. f 1 J f ,, yam. ~L r-e ..JYY.F- - HUNGRY VISITORS KNOW NO FEAR-- Wild raccoons living in the dense underbrush near-Crandon Park, Miami, Fla., visit the kitchen of Al Fernandez daily for a handout. W A I T I N G THEIR TURN ON THE IE L D -Young German athletes watch as others engage in a game of pushball on a new field built at their school near Munich. O U T F 0 R A S P 1 N-M. Greder of Saint Etienine, France, takes a spin around the town in his "motorail." The wheel is turned by a pulley system from a three horsepower engine and is steered by leaning to the right or left. r i Slips galore Shes ssure to adore .9. i+47 # * 5.. .9l NEW PET F OR DUTCH ROYAL F AM I LY .--.Daughters of Holland's Queen Juliana and Prince Bernhard make friends with their new pet collie on grounds of royal palace neaa Soestdijk. Left to right, are the Princesses Marijke (foreground), Irene, Margriet and Beatrix. Just the kind of pretty slips she always loves to wear 'neath her favorite fasrhions Sizes 32-44, 321/2 to 391/2 SLIPS fine enough for any gift. All the fitting qualities you expect from famous pat- ented Mary Barron "Bias- trait" slips. The dressmak- er-created design has no unsightly side or front seams. It assures perfect fit and full- freedom in action or repose . . . Lace-lavished or beautifully simple at value- packed priges. NYLON CREPES SATINS - TRICOT from 6.00 RAYON CREPES and TAFFETA from 2.95 COLORS: 1~1 A Mary Barron s nylon crepe and1 nylon Alencon la shell pink and I Sizes 12, 32 to 31 Vi to 391/. M A R B L E M A S T E Ra-Pete Zeolla of Los Angeles works on some of the small hobby pieces he has carved from marble. lip of lavish ce in white. ' 44, 6.00 , ,j I I &4 ? k^ y'}k:s :.SYfiji+}si2,:,: :5=: i:S:i ii7: :ice k .. CCOt<''. faa :.f ;: AMM R,