THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAG Crow, Brouwer Set To Lead Froshmen Appoint Thompson, Finkleperl as Assistants To Central Committee General Chairmen Assembly, Panhel, League Announce Dates For Petitioning; Interviewing of Candidates r By KATHLEEN MOORE Members of the Central Com- mittee for Frosh Weekend were announced yesterday by the League class project interviewing and nominating committee. Gail Crow of the Blue team and t Judy Brouwer of the Maize team have been appointed general chairmen of their respective teams' projects for the freshman class' annual dances and floor- shows to be held May 8 and 9. A jointt central committee meeting of both teams will be held at 4 p.m. Wednesday at the League Undergraduate Office. Name Assistant Chairmen Assistant general chairmen are Mary Thompson for Blue and Announce Cancellation Of Munroe A change has been anonunced for the mock Campus United Na- tions scheduled for Friday and Saturday. Sir Leslie Munroe, past presi- dent of the regular United Na- tions and featured speaker for the Union-sponsored affair, tele- grammed that he will not be able to attend, laurice Zilblr, '60, related. Munroe was scheduled-to speak Friday at the opening ceremonies of the, Campus United Nations, Zilber, chairman of the Interna- tional Affairs Committee of the Union, said. Since he will not be present, opening ceremonies will imme- diately precede. the debate by the. general assembly on the Algerian question at 10 a.m. on Saturday in Rackham Lecture Hall. No event will be scheduled, for Friday since everything has been moved over to Saturday due to the unexpected absence of Mun- roe, Zilber added. Munroe is in; Korea on a fact- finding mission for the United Nations. Ellie' Finkleperl for Maize. Publi- city for the Blue team will be handled by Barbara Falk and Carol Provol with Marcia Welch and Penny Thewalt heading the Maize publicity committee. Myrna Lethinger and Sue Ferb- er are co-chairmen of the Blue Iecorations committee while Carol Harris and Deanna Schmid share the post for the Maize team. The floorshow chairman for the Blue team is Sue Stillerman with Luise Abbell acting as her assist- ant. Linda Unrad will head the Maie's floorshow committee, as- sisted by Pippy Lutz. The Blue team's productions committee co-chairmen are Elsa Bilton and Sharon MacFayden, with Nancy Mitnick and Laurie Steinberg assuming these posi- tions for the Maize. To Handle Finances Finances will be handled by Barbara Denny for the Blue team and for the Maize, Patricia Henny., Barbara Berger will head the tickets committee for Blue and Linda Tann is tic)kets chairman for Maize. The Blue team's programs com- mittee chairman is Anita Clay- man, Maize's is Erna Weiner. The patrons committee chair- man for the Blue team is Nell Rose, with Helene Finberg as- suming the chairmanship for Maize. Announce Other Heads t i R t 1 V Assembly Dormitory Council is holding a tea at 4 p.m. tomorrow at the League for all independent women interested in petitioning for Assembly Board positions, Martha Kinley, '59N, activities and scholarship chairman, an- nounced yesterday. Council and Board members will explain the responsibilities of each office, she said, and petitions writ- ten by former Board members will be available to those attending the tea. Engagements Petitioning for the office of president will begin tomorrow and continue through next Monday. Interviews for those submitting petitions are scheduled for next Monday and Tuesday. Any inde- pendent woman with an over-all grade-point average of at least 2.0 is eligible to petition, Miss Kin- ley explained. Tomorrow through March 16 petitions for the nine other Board positions and general chairman- ships of I-Hop and Fortnite will be accepted, with interviewing set for March 17 to 23. Name Nine Positions The nine positions to be filled are first and second vice-presi- dents, treasurer, secretary and chairmen for the Scholarship and Activities Committee, Orientation Committee, Social Committee, Special Projects Committee and Public Relations Committee. Petitions for positions and chairmanships on League com- mittees, executive offices and posi- tions on Women's Judiciary will be accepted Tuesday through March 10. NOREEN ANNETTE BAYLY Bayly-Smith I Arlene Sherman heads the awards and judges committee of the Blue team. The Maize team chairman is Sue Solomon. Each team will select a, theme on which to base its all-campus dance and floorshow, which is traditionally a well-guarded se- cret until the publicity campaigns begin. Last year Maize chose "Magne-maize" as its central theme, with Blue opposing it with "Bluetopia." A prize is awarded to the team judged to have presented the bet- ter production. A panel of judges bases its decision on the teams' productions,, decorations, publi- city, program, patrons, tickets and financial success. The I.S.A. Debate and Discussion Committee announces Mr. and Mrs. Martin J. Bayly of Pittsburgh announce the en- gagement of their daughter, Nor- een Annette to Wayne K. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kermit R. Smith of Plymouth. Miss Bayly, a junior in the architecture and design college, is a member of Circle women's hon- orary and is president of Fletcher House. Mr. Smith is a junior in the en- gineering school. He is president of the East Quad Quadrants. No wedding date has been set by the couple. Choose 15 To Give Skits First skit eliminations have been held for Spring Weekend's jSkit Night. Fifteen skits have been chosen by the committee from those sub- mitted. These were written by Al- pha Phi and Phi Sigma Delta, Kappa Kappa Gamma and Delta Tau Delta, Phi Epsilon Pi and Sigma Delta Tau, Chi Phi and Ganmna Phi Beta, Taylor and Jordan Houses, Little and Reeves Houses, and Kappa Alpha Theta and Zeta Beta Tau. Also remaining are Delta Sigma Phi and Kappa Delta, Couzens Hall and Tau Kappa Epsilon, Theta Zi and Collegiate Sorosis, Alpha Tau Omega and Pi Beta Phi, Sigma Phi Epsilon and Al- pha' Delta Pi, Phi Sigma Kappa and Geddes House, Gomberg and Newbury Hall and Chicago and Fletcher Houses. The next eliminations will be- gin on March 23. At this time skits will be presented in Hill Auditorium. Judges will be from the speech department. s* No need to, really. By starting your savings program now, you can get on a road that leads somewhere. Provident Mutual offers a variety of life insurance plans with pro. tection and savings features, designed to take care of your present and future needs. 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