""SDAY,"FEBRUARY 15, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE ___________________________________________________________________________________ U U COLD WEATHER WEAR: Popular Storm Coat Warm, Smart, Thrifty; Considered by College Women as Fine Buy O- { Cold weather, dry or damp, will f still be h,-!re for many weeks, and nothing is so important in a wom- an's closet as a good warm coat. The coat designed for stormy weather that is snug, wind-resist- ant, water-repellent, and of rea- sonable price is the popular storm coat. ONE MANUFACTURER ex- plained that the classic storm coat is less expensive and a better value than a few seasons ago because of its greater popularity and the im- proved mass production method. The trim lines and cozy style have long been recognized as a fine buy for a cold campus by college women. More and more working city women are realiz- ing the coat's value. Not all storm coats look alike, but they all have a specially warm lining. Coat fullness varies this year with one style resembling that of the 1920's. The slimming straight line is like an unbelted boy's coat. MOST STORM COATS are dou- ble-breasted and have a big warm coachman collar. A belt usually cinches in the waistline, but some styles have only a belted back. The full coat styles can be worn loose or belted. A special value is a full-length heavy rayon gabardine storm coat lined with alpalca and a mouton collar. Other details of the style are knitted wristlets under buttoned cuffed sleeves, water repellent fabric, and a very wide color range. The new corduroy storm coat with heavy quilted wool and rayon lining has been especially appeal- ing to thebusiness girl. It is dou- ble-breasted with half belt. WAA Notices BASKETBALL CLUB-The club will have its reorganizational meeting at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Barbour Gym. Any coed in- terested in belonging to the club may come to the meeting. Lois Middleton, club manager, asks' that the experimental teams came as soon after 4 p.m. as possible to start play. PING PONG - The WAA ping pong tournament has been played off and Jo Poch, Delta Delta Delta, has been announced as winner with Janet Houserman, Couzens Hall, runner up. Tournament play was arranged within houses and dormitories. House winners then entered the all campus tournament for the final play-offs. AN ALL-WOOL TWEED storm coat with yoked back and inverted pleat, alpaca lining and mouton collar is high on the popularity list. A crease-resistant gabardine coat is also available with side- tucked waistline. Reversible coats for storthy weather come in various styles. One "teddy bear" coat is navy blue alpaca with gray flannel. Storm coats for this season come in a much greater variety of styles and colors, and are among the most practical coats. Camping Group Holds Meeting, Discussions The American Camping Asso- ciation held a convention for re- gion 5, Feb. 1 through 3 in De- troit. The convention, which was open to members of the Association and non-members interested in camp- ing, featured panels on different types of camps and problems as- sociated with the camp situation. Marie Hartwig, supervisor in the Dpartmnt of Physical Educa- tion for Women, conducted one of the panels. Ruth Harris an in- structor in the department was a member of the panel. El Varied Senior League Posts To Be Opened Petitions Due Friday For Chairmanships Of Executive Groups Petitions for the League execu- tive council and other senior posts will be due at 5 p.m. Friday, Feb. 23, in the Undergraduate Office of the League, announced Patricia Breon, chairman of interviewing and nominating committee. Any eligible junior may petition for the jobs which include: presi- dent of the League, vice president, secretary, treasurer, chairman of judiciary council, and chairman of interviewing and nominating com- mittee. Other senior positions include: dance class, merit-tutorial, per- sonnel, public relations, special projects and social committee chairmanships. The list continues with: secre- tary of judiciary council, senior member of judiciary, secretary of interviewing, finance chairman of dance classes, two senior dance class chairmen, assistant chair- man of special projects in charge of the talent file, chairman of transfer orientation groups, secre- tary of orientation committee, and social and information booth chairmen of the orientation com- mittee. Interviewing and Nominating committee will hold office hours from 2 to 5 p.m. this week in the Undergraduate Office to give fur- ther information. FAME AND FORTUNE: Women's Fashion Magazine To Sponsor Literary Contest =Daily-Burt Sapowitch COEDS PAY OFF--Barbara Hansen sells a ticket to Joan Willens for "Wintermezzo," a girl-bid dance slated from 9 p.m. to mid- night Saturday in the League Ballroom. The informal dance, sponsored by Mortarboard gives coeds a chance to "pay off" their dates. Tickets will be sold from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 4 p.m. today and tomorrow in the lobby of the League. Union, League Will Sponsor Sunday, Mid-Week Programs Members of the Union will pro- In addition to this Sunday eve- vide students with Sunday eveningnterta t theLe entertainment when they open the ning entainmen e eague small ballroom and terrace room and the Union will be sponsoring for dancing and card playing from mid-week entertainment at the 8 to 10:30 p.m. Sunday. Union every other Wednesday There will be no admission night from 7:30 to 10 p.m. begin- charge for couples attending the ning Feb. 21. event which is to become a weekly The same program as scheduled affair.fnt Cards will be provided for bridge for the Sunday evening events is and canasta games in the terrace being planned. There will be no room, and there will be record charge for couples attending Wed- dancing in the small ballroom. nesday nights either. Aspiring young fiction writers may reach fame and fortune through entering the College Fic- tion Contest sponsored by Made- moiselle magazine for women un- dergraduates. A total of $1,000 in prizes will be offered. * * * FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS will be awarded to each of two winners for literary rights. These winning stories will be printed in the Au- gust issue of Mademoiselle. The contest is open to women undergraduates only. Stories which have appeared in under- graduate college publications are acceptable providing they have not been published elsewhere. Manuscripts should be between 3,000 to 5,000 words in length. Contest rules specify that the story should be typewritten, dou- ble-spaced, one side of the paper only. It should be accompanied by the contestant's name clearly marked with home address, college address, and college year. * * * ONLY THOSE manuscripts ac- companied by stamped, self-ad- dressed, legal-sized envelopes will be returned. The editors of Mademoiselle will be the judges. Short stories may be submitted between now and April 15 to: Col- lege Fiction Contest, Mademoiselle, 122 East 42 Street, New York 17, New York. Entries must be post- marked by midnight April 15. This contest has been offered Barristers Hold Formal 'Court' The Student Bar Association will sponsor its first dance, "Chancel- lor's Court," from 9 p.m. to mid- night Saturday, Feb. 24, in the League Ballroom. Hugh Jackson and his orchestra will play for the semi-formal dance which will be open to the entire campus. The Grand Rapids Room has been obtained as a lounge. Tickets, priced at $1.75, may be purchased at the Law Quad store or from members of the Executive Council of the Student Bar As- sociation. The chairman of the dance is Dale Strain. The planning com- mittee has requested that no cor- sages be worn. WAA Swimming Club Will Sponsor Tryouts For SpringSemester After a four month dormant period because of the repairs being made on the Union Pool, Michi- fish, the WAA swimming club, will organize beginning Saturday. All interested coeds who know the basic skills of swimming are eligible to try out. Try-outs for new members will be held from 9 to 11 a.m. Satur- day and also next Saturday at the Union pool. Those who wish to try-out but cannot come at this time may call the club manager, Janet Dewey, at 25618. annually for, six years. In the past, fourteen different colleges have produced an equal number of con- test winners, ranging from fresh- men to seniors. Med Students Present Dance Event Will Feature Musico-Therapy' Air Medical students will leave all thoughts of textbooks and papers at home when they stage their an- nual Caduceus Ball from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, Feb. 23rd at the Union. "Musico-Therapy" .has been chosen for the theme of the semi- formal dance which is given es- pecially for medical students and members of the University Hospi- tal staff. Students from other schools, however, are invited to attend the ball which will feature the music of Frank Tinker and his men. Sponsored each year by Galens, honorary medical society, the dance is traditionally held on the Friday following Washington's birthday. Women are given late permission for the event. Tickets may be purchased now at the Galen news stand located on the first floor of the Univer- sity Hospital and at the Union from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Committee members in charge of the dance are Bill Wilkinson, general chairman; Dick Asbury and Jim Grast, publicity; John Zimmerman and Chuck Stevens, tickets; Bill Kretschmar, patrons; Doug Erickson, decorations and Morrie Weiss, entertainment. Budget Gown Will Introduce Creative Twist Edith Head, Paramount dress designer, has introduced a new budgetary evening creation, the dress with "nine lives." Cost of evening apparel has long been of concern to thrifty coeds and business women alike. Today a self-belted strapless black taffeta short evening dress with cuffed bodice and pocketed sheath cut skirt may serve as th basis of a nine dress wardrobe. Accessories make each version so completely different from the original it seems that one actually possesses nine different evening ensembles. Panels of orange an topaz taf- feta may be attached at the belt to convert the simple basic into a chic creation. Arms may be slipped through a reversible stole of orange faced with topaz joined together at the ends. Big dances call for extra trim- mings. Yards and yards of tulle attached to the belt and flowing down the back, swirl around the slender silhouette of the original. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 5) Concerts The Budapest String Quartet will be heard in three concerts in the eleventh annual Chamber Mu- sic Festival presented by the Uni- versity Musical Society, in Rack- ham Auditorium-Friday, Satur- day, and Sunday, Feb. 16, 17 and 18. Tlae Quartet, made up of Josef Roisman, and Jac Gorodetzky, vio- lins; Boris Kroyt, viola; and Mischa Schneider, 'cello, will play the following programs: Fri., Feb. 16, 8:30-Bach Four Fugues from "The Art of the Fugue"; Bartok Quartet, Op. 17, No. 2; and the Brahms Quartet in C minor. Sat., Feb. 17, 8:30 - Mozart Quartet in D minor; Purcell's O haconne; Stravinsky Concertino; and the Beethoven Quartet in C- sharp minor. Sun., Feb. 18, 2:30 - Haydn Quartet in D major, Op. 20, No. 4; Ravel Quartet in F major; and the Schumann Quartet in A major. Tickets are on sale at the offices of the University Musical Society in Burton Tower daily; and one hour preceding each concert in the lobby of Rackham auditorium. Student Assembly meeting. 7:301 meeting, 8 p.m., League for all per- p.m. at the chapel. Hillel: Yiddish classes begin at 7:30 p.m., Lane Hall, under Mr. Leonard Tompakov. New classes for beginners. International Center Weekly Tea for foreign students and Ameri- can friends, 4:30-6 p.m. Graduate School Record Con- cert: 8 p.m., East Lounge, Rack- ham, HAYDN: Cello Concerto in D, Op. 101; Feuermann. SCHU- BERT: Rondo in B Minor, Op. 70; Hephzibah and Yehudi Menuhin, piano & violin. MOZART: Sonata for piano & violin, K.404; Kraus and Goldberg. MOZART: Piano Concerto no. 18 in B Flat, K456; Kraus, London Philharmonic, Goehr. Silence requested. Business Administration and Economics Students: Rushing Smoker of Alpha Kappa Psi, pro- fessional business fraternity, 7:30 to 9 p.m., Chapter House, 1325 Washtenaw. U. of M. Soaring Club: Meeting, Room 1042, E. Engineering Bldg., 7 p.m. Plans for the tow ship will be discussed. Polonia Club: Meting, 7:30 p.m., International Center. Election of officers. Young Democrats: Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Union. Election of officers. Gilbert & Sullivan Society: Open i sons interested in participating in "The Mikado," which will be given in May. Anyone interested in a principal role, a place in the cho- rus, or any phase of production work should attend. Coing Events Roger Williams Guild: Valentine, Party at the Guild House, 8:30-12 midnight, Fri., Feb. 16. Westminister Guild: Hearts and Flowers Ball, Fri., Feb. 16, 8:30 to 12 midnight, First Presbyterian Church. Wesleyan Guild: Valentine par- ty, Fri., Feb. 16, 8 p.m. at the guild. Canterbury Club: Fri., Feb. 16, 7 a.m., Holy Communion followed by Student Breakfast. IZFA: Executive meeting, Fri., Feb. 16, 4:15 p.m., Union. Hostel Club: Swimming and sports, I-M building Fri., Feb. 16. Business meeting, 8 p.m. by volley ball nets. Hawaii Fri., Feb. Club: Business meeting, 16, 7:30 p.m., Union. University Museums Friday Eve- ning Program, Feb. 16: "Man and Trees." Film: "The Story of Canadian Pine," Kellogg Auditori- um, 7:30 p.m. IL R1 I So Smart .. . So Practical .. . So Utterly Right... SWEATERS from COLLINS -1 I I '1 Nylons Pullovers, 5.00 to 7.95 Cardigans, 10.95 100% Wools Pullovers, 5.95 to 10.95 Cardigans, 7.95 to 12.95 Cashmere Pullovers, 12.95 to 17.95 Cardigans, 16.95 to 19.95 Short-Sleeved Cardigans, 100% wool, 5.95. Sizes 11 I It If :.: 2 ..., J I .j ' " :,'- '.. f... n .. .. ...:.... .. :.. . w1i I .