WEDNESDAY, MARCH li, 1959 THE MtCHIFGAN DAlllLV IM41LA4W , WEDESDYMARH1, 959TJK s ii 4I( 1t lT BATT.VL PAGE Tun Frosh Weekend's Teams To Hold Meeting at League WAA's Golf Club To Hold Reorganizational Meeting The central committees of both the Maize and Blue teams for Frosh Weekend will hold a mass meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the League Ballroom for all freshman women! interested in working on this year's project. At the meeting students will draw for membership on one of the two competing teams and vol- unteer to work on committees. The Blues will present their annual dance and floorshow May 8 with Maize planning their pro- gram for the following night. After the teams get organized, Marcia Welch, '62, co-publicity chairman for Maize, said they will start planning for the competition for best floorshow, decorations and publicity campaigns built around central themes. Publicity campaigns will prob- ably begin next week, Miss Welch said, after the teams have chosen the themes for their programs. Traditionally well-:guarded secrets until the publicity plans have been completed, themes last year were "Magne-Maize" and "Bluetopia." The winning team, chosen on the basis of originality of the skit and music in the filoorshow, ticket sales, program design and publi- city will have its name engraved on th winner's plaque which re- mains in the League Undergradu- ate Office. The purpose of the traditional project, Miss Welch said, is to "unite the freshman women in a class project promoting friendship and cooperation, teach the stu- dent the art of working together on committees and acquaint first year students with the League." Its present form was established in 1949, but the program actually began in the 1920's as Freshman Spread, she explained. Later, the freshman class presentation un- derwent a "succession of changes," she continued, including pageants, plays, mardi gras and even ice- cream socials. ICC 'Co-op Week' Features Series Of Open Houses "Anyone who thinks that co- operative houses are only cheap places to live is very wrong," said Neil Munro, '60, president of the Inter-Cooperative Council. "The resident in a cooperative house (has the opportunity to live with a large number of foreign students, and to eat in co-educa- tional dining facilities," he con- tinued. In order to acquaint the Univer- sity with the way of living in co- operative housing, the ICC is sponsoring "Co-op Week" March 16-22. As part of this week, all cooperative houses will hold open- open houses Sunday from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. "The purpose of Co-op Week is to furnish interested University students an opportunity to learn about cooperative living. Growing prosperity has probably lowered interest in this type of living," Munro said. "The most important thing co- operative' housing has to offer is the experience of living in a group that operates entirely on its own resources," Munro declared. Any University coed with pre- vious golf experience may join the Women's Athletic Association's Golf Club, which will hold its Spring reorganizational meeting tomorrow night at 7:15 p.m. at the Women's Athletic Building. Coeds do not have to be experts and anyone who has had some golf experience either at home or who has received instruction at the University may join the club. Students are asked to come pre- pared to practice after this first meeting, says Miss Barbara Rot- vig, sponsor of the group. The Golf Club is an active group on campus, with an all-year round program. When the golf course opens in the spring, the club will engage in nine-hole weekly play each Thursday afternoon. Oppor- tunities to establish a handicap and to receive special attention will be granted to the group. Other planned spring events in- clude the sponsorship and partici- pation in an all campus "Two-Ball Foursome" Golf Event. This se- mester's activities also include matches with Purdue, Ohio State, Michigan State, Bowling Green and, a number of other colleges, with both "A" and "B" class par- ticipation being held. Yearly events of the group in- elude a fall club tournament which is open to club members with flight winners receiving prizes. During first semester of this year, 16 mm movies were taken of the strokes of individual members and were studied and analyzed in order to correct posi- tion faults. At Christmas time, the group has a dinner and they have as their guest a visiting professional. Jo Fleming, '61, is acting manager of the organization. Graduate Council Sponsors Dance Graduate students will have a "Friday the 13" party from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday in the ballroom of the V.F.W. Club at 314 E. Lib- erty, sponsored by the Graduate Student Council. Nate Ribbron and his combo will provide the music for danc- ing. Identification cards will be required. Sponsored by the Gradu- ate Student Council, this all- superstition party and dance is designed to bring together grad students from all departments and schools of the University. What's new In boats for 159? Summer is growing near andit's time to start.thinking once more of life outdoors. With more and more of us succumbing to the. lure of the water, you'll want to know everything about the '59 boats. The Star Weekly's 16 page color supplement this week gives you a complete roundup of the boating delights in store for you this summer. The Star Weekly is a periodi- cal unlike any other in America. Every week it brings you fea. tures, stories, all your favorite color comics-even a complete novel by a best selling author. On sale all week. -Daily-Allan Winder SNAP TO!-The Petticoat Platoon comes to attention as they ready the Junior Girls Play production of the same name for opening night, just a week away. The play focuses on the life of six recruits to the Women's Army Corps and their escapades when they discover that a talent scout will be coming to the post looking for a cast for a movie to be made there. 'Petticoat Platoon' Set ToMac FrJuniorGil'Pa at League i STAR WEYlY I L r look for the BLUE COVER Softball Fquipinent P'yga' (n'm thePp DIG THIS COUPON! medium and large pizza L This coupon is worth M R G 2 ONE COUPON PER PIZZA V PIZZA-DOUGH M 1 i Good for Wed. and Thurs., March 11 and 12 only No 5-5705 .I By PEGGY GREENBERG "Petticoat Platoon," this year's Junior Girls' Play, will open next Wednesday night and run through Saturday night. Opening night will be presented for seniors only in the traditional Senior Night. Seniors may call for as many encores as they wish from the 40 junior girl cast members. Featuring life in the Women's Extend Deadline .For WAA Posts Petitioning for Women's Ath- letic Association Board positions has been extended until Friday, March 13, Norma Clarke, '59, W. A. A. president, said yesterday. Petitions may be picked up at either the Women's Athletic Building, Barbour Gym or the Women's Pool. Positions available include those of president, vice-president of special projects, vice-president of student relations, secretary, treas- urer, sorority manager, dormitory manager, public relations chair- man and A.R.F.C.W. (Athletic Recreation Federation of College Women) representative. Students may also petition for a position as manager of one of the 15 W.A.A. clubs. Several of these clubs offer both women's and men's positions as co-recreational club managers. Show on Travel Planned at Union There will be a special travel show for all students interested in going overseas this summer from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. tomorrow on the third floor of the Union. Sponsored by the Union and Student Government Council, stu- dents will be able to go from room to room to hear talks by inter- national students on what to see and do this summer in their re- spective countries. A brief talk will be given in each room and then there will be a question period. Pamphlets on foreign countries will be available as well as hotel rates and road maps. There will also be an area where students may go to get in- formation on passports and cus- toms laws. Army Corps, the show begins as its six main "characters" regis- ter as new recruits for the petti- coat platoon. Billie, the truck driv- er, Rubie, the stripper, Petunia, the naive hillbilly, Elizabeth, the lady of culture from Vassar, and Pat and Barb, the normal colle- giates, compose the group of re- cruits. To Act Rubie will be played by Judy Wilson, '60 Ed.; Billie by Linda Crawford, '61; Petunia by Nell Weaver Hurt, '60; and Elizabeth by Nina Slawson, '60Mu. Pat and Barb will be portrayed by Mary Wilcox, '60, and Jill Bement, '60, respectively. The plot is mobilized when the general, played by Sherrie Beth Kotzer, '60, announces that a tal- ent scout is coming to recruit a cast for a movie to be made at the post. She vigorously opposes the plan. After a wild calisthenics scene in which Rubie shows the girls how they did it in Burlesque, the girls meet in the barracks to plan numbers for the talent scout. A calypso number about satellites, "America Needs a Moon," follows. Fear For Petunia Fearing that Petunia has an "in" with the talent scout, played by Karol Buckner, '60, the platoon decides to get rid of her. She is sent on the all-important mission of finding a moon for the United States, convinced that she is per- forming a great service. -9 I - ~III' S Meet and low-. dow a ut soft! What taste from yonder FILTER-BI BALLS BATS MITTS Sleek little sportster with the low, tapered look you love. Wafer-thin Crown Neolite sole 6.95 SPECIAL! *AL KALINE MODAL GLOVE, by Wilson $17.50 Value.. only $jQ95 lffoe ort S' HAROLD S. TRICK 711 NORTH UNIVERSITY I LEND " f i a smart print-a mul- ticolored stripe or a pretty dot of the fin- est pure silk from $17.95. or a well behaved cot- ton; or cotton and da- cron. That drip'n'dry needs no ironing at $10.95 to $17.95. We've collected the cream of the crop for you by "Jonathan Lo- gan," "Jerry Gilden," "Henry Rosenfeld" -- and other of your favor- ite fine makers - from our cotton shop second floor at The Fashion Look is the Shirt look For Spring '59 Black, Red, Smooth . 1 ( /f 7 Il;%, ' , 1 -. - ,,;, Always the fashion, whatever the hour . . . be loved by one and all .if a tiny 7 to a tall 20. Choose a glamour-float silk organza for dress-up $29.95. from Campus Bootery 304 South State t~ {O o A:" %' "x'"44/::$.:} :. 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