WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1953 T HE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE F'TV ?AGK F'IYI League Will Hold Bridge Classes Men, Coeds May Register For Lessons Students who attend the bridge lessons sponsored by the League will learn that it takes brains just to be a "dummy." Bridge lessons will start Tues- day, Oct. 6, and anyone who is interested in answering the call "Fourth for bridge" is eligible to join. * * *k CLASSES WILL be taught by Ed Simons, who is entering his fourth year of teaching bridge. All students, faculty members and Ann Arbor residents may buy their tickets at the Under- graduate Office daily in the , League. The price for the lessons is $3.50. Because the series extends over a ten week period, the fee per ses- sion is 35 cents. KIBITZERS can now try their actual skill in bridge by joining the beginners class which 'will be held every Tuesday from 7 to 8:30 P.M. For those who have had more practice with no trump bidding or the grand slam, there will be intermediate classes from 8:30 to 10 p.m. where they can learn more card skills. At the classes students not only receive detailed instructions, but also learn while they play. Usually the last 15 minutes is set aside for actual practice. Typewritten instructions sum- marizing the proper play and de- tails of the game are presented to the bridge fans after each lesson. -Daily-Malcolm Shatz THOUGHT PROVOKING-While before and after dinner are the most popular times, coeds and men on campus may be found in their residences playing bridge at almost any hour classes aren't in session to almost all hours. For those who do not know how to play or would like to improve their game, the League is once again sponsoring classes. Students may register for these lessons now at the League. 'Little Club' Will Feature Dance Music Cabaret Atmosphere Will Prevail in Union For Weekly Session "Under twenty - oners" w h o would like to dance in the soph- isticated atmosphere of a dimly- lit night-club will have an op- portinity to do just that when the 'Little Club' opens its doors from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday in the North Lounge of the Union. Acting as band-master for this season's 'Little Club,' Red Johnson and his orchestra will provide the music for dancing. Featuring a five piece combo, including piano, drums, saxo- phone, trumpet and trombone, the group will play "sweet and smooth" numbers appropriate to the candle-lit atmosphere of the club. Members of the combo, besides Johnson, who are all students at the University include David Ca- vitch, Bill Herman, Jim Pullin, and Joe Moore. Directing his group from the piano keyboard, Johnson is fa- miliar on campus as the direc- tor of last year's Union Opera orchestra. He was also in charge of orchestration for the Opera, as well as for the Junior Girls Play. As a special feature of the eve- ning, Bob Cohler, a transfer stu- dent from the University of Colo- rado, will play the vibraphone. Cohler, who has his own combo entitled "The Pastels," aims to achieve new sounds with music. Couples looking for a little re- freshment between dances will find cokes, potato chips and pret- zels available. The Union Cafe- teria will also be open. Tables placed around the dance-floor will provide a spot where couples may sip their cokes, exchange small talk with friends or just rest between numbers. The familiar checkered table- cloths and whiskey-bottle candle holders will add to the cabaret at-! mosphere. Under the direction of Santo Ponticello, the Little Club is spon- sored by the Union every Friday evening throughout the semester. The price of admission will be $1 for couples spending the entire evening at "the Club" and 75 cents for those who drop in after 11 p.m. Foreign Students Invited To Attend Banquet at Chapel Women Voters Group To Meet Tomorrow All Interested Women Invited To Participate In Planning Officers' Election, Year's Activities Politically-minded women may frage movement under Carrie attend a reorganizational meeting Chapman Catt as a memorialj of the campus League of Women to the women who helped win Voters at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the right to vote, the League. "Get out the Vote" was the early All interested women are urged s o thnd ote wfstheea- to attend the meeting which will slogan and objective of the Lea-: be concerned mainly with plans gue as it first began its program for election of officers and for of stimulating women to vote and the year's activities, assume political responsibility. * s s Organized on three levels, the ORGANIZED last year, .the League of Women Voters has 764 a eueofstomeVoters local organizations in 43 states in Campus League of Women t addition to the District of Colum- gives women, whether or not they :bia, Hawaii and Alaska. are 21, a chance to express their 1 Bridge Tournaments open to the entire campus are sponsored by the University later in the year. * * * DELEGATES TO the annual State of Michigan Tourney are determined at a playoff which is held after participants have dis- played their talents in several rounds. Bridge players also have an opportunity to exhibit their abil- * * * ities in playing with bridge fans from other colleges and universi- ties in the inter-collegiate tour- naments. Women bridge enthusiasts who have entered the bridge tourney in previous years have been able to obtain late permission. With the highest scoring con- testants as the winners, the elim- ination tournaments are run off on a duplicate bridge basis. ~~"r r Super-flexible! looks good feels wonderful a interest in government in a very constructive way. It fulfills a need on campus for a non-parti- san political organization, and gives women an opportunity to gain experience in citizen parti- cipation. The group is organized in much the same way as other Leagues of Women Voters throughout" the country, and works in cooperation with the Ann Arbor League. Through its affiliation with the; total League structure, the cam-' pus League can draw on the ex- perience and information of the local, state and federal organiza- tions. The campus League is concern- ed with all phases of government, from the international level down to the University level. From this broad field, the members choose certain projects on which to work. * * * LAST YEAR the group sponsor-} ed a voter's service which included! such things as a radio broadcast concerned with absentee voting and the soldier's ballot. Another part of the project was the demonstration of voting machines in the Ann Arbor State Bank. On Election Day itself, the cam- pus League offered a baby-sitting service so that Ann Arbor resi- dents would be able to get to the polls. During an informal coffee hour sponsored by the group last year, Prof. James K. Pollock, chairman of the political science depart- ment, said that he feels it im- portant for students to take ad- vantage of opportunities for learn- ing about politics and government! during their college careers. * * * HE STATED that being a good1 citizen involves more active par- ticipation than merely voting ev- ery two or four years. The League was founded in 1920 by the leaders of the suf- ALTHOUGH THE League re-! mains non-partisan, one of its many functions is gathering and publishing information on candi- dates and issues so that its mem- bers may be well-informed before they vote, Affiliated with no political party, the League nonetheless encourages its members to join political groups and in general to take an active role in poli- tics. A Board of Directors acts as a central cognating group but or- ganizational standards and pro- grams of work are adopted by lo- cal members at state meetings and, on the national level, by conven- tions that are held every two years. League members also work to- gether in smaller groups. Towns and cities are divided into separ- ate areas which have their own discussion meetings. The group gathers information on a specific topic for about a year, and then presents this information both toI its own members and to other groups in the area. Each year the problems are changed so that in time one dis- cussion group has studied several issues quite tlhoroughly. On a local level, the League also sponsors and gives speeches to schools and organiztions to fur- ther political interest and parti- cipation. 10 b*i. THE FEATHER-WEIGHT MOCCASIN The leisure shoe BROWN ypu've dreamf4 about is AND TAN LEATH ER, here ... to baby your foot with an incredibly easy-bending sole. ,. so airyfight,' GREY NAVY so dreamy-soft you hardly know you BLACK SUEDE have shoes on! What a wonderful way to play or breeze through a busy day. $f95 . ,;' . . . r : .;: , . WONDERFUL WOOLS Handsomely interpreted in tweed, jerseys - smooth solids, nubby mixtures and knits to give you all the graCe' that goes with being feminine this fall! Virginia Spears designed this smart grey smoke wool crepe dress . . cleverly edged the pockets with grey persian. Sizes 9-15 ait $25 j ust one of many at I I #IcPI'44 Camnpo LEAGUE COUNCIL-There will be a meeting of the League Coun- cil at 4 p.m. today in the League. All members are asked to attend. * * * WAA-All timers and scorers for the WAA volleyball tourna- ment will meet at 5 p.m. tomor- row in the fencing room at Bar- bour Gym. CAMPUS rDOWNTOWN 619 E. Liberty 121 S. Main OPEN MONDAY NITES DAILY CLASSIFIEDS BRING QUICK RESULTS mom" The Angora Banded Velour Cloche bg 8.95 The Chc Pull-oR Gloves 3.00 All international students on campus are invited to attend a banquet immediately following the game Saturday in the basement of the Campus Chapel on the corner of Washtenaw and Forest. The banquet is being sponsored by members of Michigan Chris- tian Fellowship, a chapter of In- ter-Varsity Christian Fellowship. After the banquet, a short talk on. Christianity will be given by Mr. David Adeney; a returned mis- sionary from China. Since his return to the United States Adeney has served as a re- gional secretary for Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship. He spent a number of years in Chita as a missionary. After a short time in the United States, he returned to China and spent four years there under Inter-Var- sity. Until the Communist occupa- tion of Shanghai in 1949, Adeney traveled extensively in China working with student groups At the time of the occupation, he returned to Shanghai and worked exclusively with Chinese students in the Greater Shanghai area. r - 4%lb.- 0-i N Z.; 4. S Pearl Dog Collar 1.00 plus tax .. t -.,. ,y,,,.: i > > a JUST OFF S. U. ON FOREST I ,r ..:,.,.. r . , :: 4 , ' . m ., ;.. 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