JULY 20, 1930 THE SUDS= MICMGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JULY 22, 1930 JULY 20, 1930 THE SUMMEL~ MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JULY 22, 1930 MARIONETTE ,PLAY TO OPEN JULY 28 Tatterman Puppets to Appear in Two Performances at League Theatre. Establishes New High Altitude Flying Mark STRONG ARM OF LAW TRIES VAINLY TO LASSO YOUTHFUL TREE-SITTERS (By Associated Press) LASSIFIEU ADVERTISING ACCLAIMED BY CRITICS The Tatterman Marionettes will ..'} .. 4.'**r' r' be presented in two performances of "Pan Pipes and Donkey's Ears" by the William Duncan and Edward Mabley company on Monday, July > 28 in the Lydia Mendelssohn the- atre under the auspices of the Play a Production department. Ruth Alexander, Mills and Dunn, in their book, Kansas farm girl, who flew into "Marionettes, Masks, and Shad- Aviation's Hall of Fame when she ows," have said, "William Duncan recently established a new 26,000 and Edward Mabley, creators of the foot altitude record for women at T a t t e r m a n Marionettes, have San Diego, Calif. brought to the marionette stage,. - - - unusual imagination and skill." Much interest in the career of the marionette has been evident during recent years in America. Perhaps the best known name as- sociated with its promotion is that of Tony Sarg, who has given con- League to Entertam With Bridge Party Thursday Afternoon All women enrolled in the Sum- mer Session of the University are CHICAGO, July 21. - The law' shook an angry fist at endurance this-and-thatters today and shout- ed up at young Chicago to come down out of the tree. There was a conference called today between juvenile and proba- tion officers to see what could be done. Meanwhile the department of health was beginning to get worked up about the business. While the law was unwinding its red tape with a view to lassoing the tree sitters, et cetera, the beaming sun was beating them to it, driving the enduring adolescentsi from the tree tops and into the' comparative coolness of t h e i r homes. The health department an- nounced that the tree-sitting con- N]ESTLE PERNE T WAVE (Yrculine.. for RE-WAVING As often as the new hair growth requires, your hair may be re-waved safely - gently - beautifully with x NESTLE Circuline. . . o tests were apt-if carried too far- to result in physical breakdowns if not actually breakage. It pointed out that permits from the depart- ment are necessary of public ex- hibitions in which life and limb are endangered. The law had a triumph-the cur- few ordinance-which requires that children up to age of 17 must be off the street between 10 p.m. and 6 a. m. One argumentative young tree sitter pretended to see a flaw in this, in that a tree sitter is off the street when he's tree-sitting. Whether or not this argument will put the law up a tree remains to be seen. Numerous complaints have been made. WANTED HELP WANTED -- FEMALE- Teachers (175)-for High School and Grades wanted at once. CONTINENTAL T E A C H E R S' AGENCY, 316 Brooks Arcade Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah. 2-27 LOST LOST-Saturday morning probably on campus - pair glasses in brown leather case. Mynette Long, 106 Tappan Hall or call 3378. 17, 18, 19 LO0S T - (near libary)-Howard open face gold watch. Watch, chain and knife probably attach- ed. Reward $10.00. Call at 322 N. State or phone D. S. R. Rice at 9544. 17, 18, 19 1 siderable time to experimentationiinvited to attend an informal bridge with the puppet. The marionette has had a varied, though continuous career through the centuries. Hlaving its beginning in the Oriental countries, it has undergone many changes in its passage from country to country. The Japanese have been able to develop the marionette to its high- est degree of perfection, creating creatures who were capable of countless facial expressions, not un- like the human. Rome is credited with the pos- session of three kinds of marion- ettes: the Burattini, worn like a glove; the Factoccini, jointed dolls strung across the knees; and the type which is in use today, the pup- pet worked by strings and wires from above. The Tatterman Marionettes are of the latter type and have been acclaimed by many critics. They were recently shown in New York for 11 weeks and are at present on a 20-week road engagement. party to be given from 4 to 6 o'- clock Thursday afternoon, July 24, in the Kalamazoo room at the Michigan League building, accord- ing to an announcement by Mar- garet Morn, '31, social chairman of the League for the summer. Following the bridge, light refresh- ments will be served. Guests may come in groups of four, or wait until they arrive to be seated at tables. This is the first affair of this kind to be sponsored by the Lea- gue. Assisting Miss Morin are Isa- belle Rayen, '31, summer president of the League and Jessie Winchell, ;31. McGILL UNIVERSITY: The Mc- Gill Daily, student newspaper, re- cently noted an increase in the force of the curses used in men- students. It maintained that the men are being driven to greater virility by the encroachments of women on the field of mild swear- ing. Ii BLUE BIRD HAIR SHOPPE 5 Nickel's Arcade Phone 9616 r 1