young people's time. Since the first merry confusion was started by home- coming boys and girls, dinners, débuts, luncheons and dances bave been planned for these vacationers to make their recess f rom school joyous. Not quite go many marks are -on their holiday calendars ,this year, but even, so tbey mnotor hither and yon, f rom this social affair to that. Dances with'many hosts and 'hostesses are, .perha-ps, the Most -p~Irmode of, eitertaining this sea-; sou. As if set off by a, spark, announce- ments of holiday' parties ýalready have corne -in, some* of. which now are: over., For us nothing is.left this week but to re-annouince, those large, affairs to fol- low iii the davs to corne. Six ýyoung girls of Kenilworth and its vicinity 'are beinig hostesses. at a party at the Ëvanston Country club Wednesday, evening, December 23. They are Gertrude Matthews, Su-ý sanne ýLord, Lorna *Beaton, Mary, Louise Morris, Kathryn Brothers, and ~~J',1 Elizabeth Quinlan. toW nekgilwhsdbis on the north shore are Miss Annie A, The day after Christmas is the tirne Eustis Gerhard, a! the right. Miss M, of a dance at the Medinah Athletic ahrndmteM.ndMsR club, with the hostesses Barbara Crowe, famhesr. arrmo e, r. oznd Mrs. . j Jane Darling, Bety, Dostal, Beatrice at Indiant Hill club. Miss Gerhard, th Driver, Jane Erickson, Mary Fowler, Ahe ehrmd e oTed Katherine French, Ann Griffith, Kath- aveu e hrmd e o us leen Hardy, Ruth Johnson, Jean Keith, avuc Harriet Leach, Margaret Lindstrom,. Jane Lundahi, Jane Murray, Dorothy Alpha Phis Atsanging Reynolds, Mary jane Rich, Jane Simnp- son, Catherine Schmiidt, Jane Spinney, Holiday Bridge Luncheon? Helen Taft, and Doris TansiL North shore alumnae of Alpha Phi December 28 brings three large events sorority are giving their annual holi-. for the college crowd and those a day bridge luncheon in honor of little youngtr. A group of New TJ.rier hoidays visitors and home-corners high school bbys, Don Alford, John frorn other chapters Wednesday, De- Bartlett, Claude Hamnilton, Jr., Ray- cember 30, at the Alpha Phi hbouse mond Kimbeil, Jr., Harry Kinne, Jr., on Northwestern University campuis Albert Lind, Robert Nason, Carroll at 1 o'clock. Aluninae of Wiscon- Murphy, Jr., Charles Ostrom, Don sin and DePauw chapters residing Pavlicek, George Quin1an, Jr.,,. Billy on the north shore are the hostes ses. Rac-iine, Van Soule,' Kennethi Stilling,, Mrs. Marshall G. Simonds and Mrs.- Charles Venrick, Charles Weed, Jr., and Alfred Corneil of Evanston are, co- Ray Whidden, will give a, dance at thé chairmen in charge of arrangements Lake Shore Athletic club, for the affair which, the. alumnae ati- Member of the Harvard Instrumental notince, will lie delightful. clubs,~ who will give a concert in Win- Winterberry, hemlock, juniper netka Monday n!ght,_will be entertained berrv andt £nruce. andýsaef tan- photos by Paul Stone -Raypior, Ltd. tr are amon th 7e kolday socteiy çenîs WaSO)t, at the 1< ft, and Miss Dorotlsy Jason is being introduced at a tea her ?oswtell Mason, and her grandfather, "er's afternoon from 4 until 7 o'clock, ýhe daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. E. Iay in the Gerhard homie ut 460 Ma pie Chairnwn of Chdldren's Christmas Part y ut Drake Mrs. Charles J. Wieland, 1111 Sheri - dan road, Wjlniette, was chairman of the, Christmas, party for children given by the Woma n's Progressive Club of Chicago at the Drake Tues- day, December 22. One-hundred needy chilciren whose namnes we re procured from Sally Joy- Brown, were guests of the club, as wè-re the sons and daughters of ýmemb.ers.I Santa Clausý made his appearance, laden witli gifts, baskets, and good things to eat, and carols were sung. Mrs. Gustav W. Kuntsrnan is presi- at the Studebaker theater next Sat-' urday, December 26, with proceeds to be donated to the Joint Emer- gency Relief fund of Cook county. The popularity of the show i.4 due flot only to the- holiday' atmosphere of students' homeécoming, but' to..the reputation for splendid college -shows built up by the Triangle club in the thirty-eight years of its spirited. ex- istence. The club wâs formed-in 1893 by the t hen, undergraduate Booth Tarkington, who reorganized' it from the Princeton Dramnatic club. 'Mu- . sical comeédy was first attempted in 1898, and the organization took'to the road 1 playing Trenton and Morris- town. The itinerary, -steadily* in- creased until this year :the tour of. "Spanish. Blades" inclu des. twelve stops after, Princeton and covers 2,500 miles. General fi nancial success has been so' maiked that two. years ago the Triangle club, with the gen- .rous assistance of t. N. 'McCar- ter; built, t hé McCarter theater at Princeton, a modern' playhouse viewed with justifiable envy by rival iiniversities. "Spanish BIl'ades," the forty-third production of 'the Triangle club, is, seventeenth century: Spanish 'With undergraduate, not to. say, modern touches. The plot concerns' the old Spanish custom of the beauty con- test, where Don Juan is the fickle judge. Having accepted Ritz's bribe to give Dulcinea the crôwn, the Don promptly bestows it upon the volup- tuous Carmen. This causes trouble enough, which is complicated ini song and danc~e by Carmen's husband, AIý- phonso, and by the arrival of Don Quixote and. the faithful Sancho Panza. Don Quixote tilts in favor of Dulcinea, and Don Juan is finally dis- cornfited by' a duel which is described, as an epic in sword-play. "Spanish Blades" is the work of D. S. McMillan ,'33, Seymouqr'Morris, '33 and:S. H. Iams '32. 'Leading roles' are played by, H. T. Tasker '32, as D n Juan; D. S. McMillan' '33, as Carmen; M. M. H. Dana '32, as Donr Quixote; Seymour Morris '33, ai Dul- cinea; J. N. Foran '34, as Ritz the innkèeper and J. M. Stewart '32 as to the 1o01K events are mi sômeof the Sn day calendar. their share but those ihere, as are on theholi- a tea dancea Decemnber 2e. 'jive uurnet Mr. and Mrs. Franîk C. Nason, 733 210 Melrose Ctummings avenue, Kenilworth, enter- be hostess at tained at dinner Friday evening ini e on Monday, honor of Mr. and Mrs. W. Wallace, Kýerr, who have lef t for -California.-q rectuon of Mrs. SamuelI-H. White elephant sale is to be evening's proraim. his sea- at the the di- ore. A t f the