;1959 THE MICHIGAN DAILY H Y , AYliAL 1 , 1959 TUE MICHIGAN DAILY League Night To Announce Group Heads To Bestow Offices, Honors, Trophies, Scholarships, Awards Spring Weekend Skit Night Tickets To Go On Sale at Hill Auditorium The 36th annual League Instal, lation Night will be held at 7 p.m. tomorrow at Rackham Amphi- theatre. At that time announcement, will be made of newly elected and appointed presidents, officers and committee chairmen of the League, Panhellenic Association, Assembly Association and Wo- men's Athletic Association. The League is the only organization whose newly-appointed pesident has not yet been announced. Scroll, Mortarboard, Senior So- ciety and Circle women's honor- ary societies will also announce new members. Recipients of the three Ethel McCormick scholarships for wo- men who will be seniors in the fall and the Delta Delta Delta schol- arships will be revealed during the program. The Alpha Omicron Pi Commu- nity Service Trophy will be awarded to one of the women's housing units. Also scheduled for announcement are winners of the Alpha Lambda Delta awards The audience will learn of the appointments to the central com- mittees of Junior Girls Play and Soph Show. Block seats will be reserved for each independent and affiliated women's housing unit. Dress will be informal. -Daily-Allan Winder TUNING UP-Jim Lloyd puts a hand-brake on the bicycle his team will ride next Saturday in the first annual Prescott House- Inter-House Council Bicycle Race. Teams of six from various houses of the Quadrangles will ride in relay, and the team that goes the farthest in three hours will be the winner. They will ride round and round the Michigan Stadium on the asphalt pavement. Prescott, CH Initiate Annual B1ic ycle Reay Spring is here and so are tickets for Spring Weekend events. Spring Weekend including bi-, cycle races, a picnic, canoe races, a dance and a Skit Night will take place Friday, April 24 and Saturday, April 25. Block tickets for the Skit Night performance, entitled "The Great White Way" and for the Saturday night dance, "Russ Des Cafe" are now on sale and will continue to to be sold through Tuesday, April 14. Give Points Both reserved and unreserved tickets may be purchased for the event. Houses buying Skit Night block tickets will receive five points for every 10 per cent of the house buying advance tickets. Men's housing groups that buy tickets to the dance in advance will also receive five points toward winning the weekend for each 10 per cent of the house buying tickets. General sales for Skit Night tickets and for the dance will begin Kpril 15 and continue until they are sold out. Skit Night tickets may be picked up at the Hill Aud. box office from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. April 20 through April 23, or until 9 p.m. on Friday, April 24. Sell Tickets Dance tickets will be sold on the Diag and various other spots on campus starting April 20. On this year's Spring Weekend Ticket Committee are the following stu- dents: Marty Farnsworth, '60, Jeff Jenks, '61, Judy Householder, '62, Karen Tait, '62, Robert Lane, '62, Sue Beamer, '61, Jeff Wise, '61, Rachel Cohen, '62, and Joel Jacob- son, '61. Ww ,r" .4? G A Y C I B S 0 N To further promote Spring Finals for a yo-yo contest will Weekend activities, the Spring be held during Spring Weekend. Weekend Committee will be selling Preliminaries for the contest will Bowlond theUnioang, beii ibe held at 3 p.m. on the Diag Monday. April 21, April 22 and April 23. Around and around the Stadium several bicycles will whiz Satur- day afternoon. The occasion is the first annual Inter-House Council and Prescott House bicycl6 race. The -race will last from- 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. with various houses in the quads participating. Each will enter a team of six men who will ride in relays, Jim Lloyd, '61A&D, chairman of yesterday. The bikes the race, announced must be single-seat- ers originally built for general use. They may be stripped of all parts, Lloyd said, except for one brake. Prizes will be a perpetual trophy for the winning team plus one- year trophies for first through third places. 'U' To Hold Special Events For National Library Week V {I ', \ TONIGHT at 8 HILLEL presents DR.N.A. WIESNER of Detroit Midrasha- College of Jewish Studies in his final Lecture on WHAT IS MAN- "Two Views:. Kierkegaard and Buber" EVERYBODY IS WELCOME B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation 1429 Hill Street " Suits and Coats Find yours in this outstanding collection, at Spring Clearance prices, By PHILIP SHERMAN National Library Week will be celebrated this week, April 12 to 19. The purpose of the event is to encourage use and support of American public libraries and to encourage reading in general,. us- ing the slogan, "Wake 'Up and Read." In conjunction with the Week, several events are scheduled on the. University campus. The larg- ,est is the children's book exhibit held in Rackham Memorial Hall where a collection of 1500 chil- dren's books is on display. Displays Paperbacks- In addition, the Undergraduate Library is featuring an exhibit of "Ten Dollar Shelves," collections of paperback books in various areas of knowledge suggested by world famous authorities with which to start a library. Finally, the library will distri- bute sheets prepared by Donald Poroda of the library staff sug- gesting a method of expanding -reading horizons. Advocates Daily Reading Briefly, Poroda suggests con sidering events in history that took place on each day of the year and reading something about each one on the day it happened. For National Library Week he suggested the death of Franklin Roosevelt for tomorrow and the birth of Thomas Jefferson for Tuesday. Calls Books Key to Past Setting a keynote for the week, Prof: Frederick H. Wagman, di- rector of the General Library, ISA To Visit Congregation International students have been invited by the Second Bap- tist Chuirch in Detroit to spend next weekend with members of its congregation. The group will leave at noon on Saturday. Visits are planned to the Urban League housing project, the harbor and the church. Dis- cussions will be held with leaders of Detroit's negro community, pos- sibly even leaders of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Sunday, Dr.-Howard Thurman, a Boston minister, will preach and dinner will be held at the Gotham Hotel. Students will stay at mem- bers' homes. Registration for the weekend must be completed by Wednesday at the Protestant Foundation for International Students in Lane Hall. said "The book is the key to the past and understanding our own age. Education consists less in the acquiring of a fixed body of knowl- edge than in the development of both the ability to read critically and of a lasting desire to read the great books of the past and pres- ent. "The slogan of National Library Week, Wake Up and Read, might well be on the seal of every col- lege." Mrs. Roberta C.Keniston, direc- tor of the Undergraduate Library, pointed out that the value of the week is in publicizing the role of the library as a public service in- stitution. The American library system, she said, the best in the world, is too often taken far granted by the public. Come choose from a collection of magic-hour fashions, each one prettier than the next . Crisp petit point cotton with full push pleated skirt . . . Irish crochet trim on flattering over-size collar. 14.95 MAIN AT LIBERTY ANN ARBOR Ann Arbor's Most Fashionable Address OPEN DAILY 9:30-5:30 White Stag Fashions ready to enjoy the sun in a trim-carefree way! s Suits & c oat s originally $49.95 to $69.95 now $39.98 Suits & Coats originalliy $39.95 to $45.00 now $29.98 Brokensizes 7to 15--10 to20 --1100 U U ~ ~ .. Group Suits (some Wools--smaller sizes) others of Rayon Flannel and Blends Group Better Dresses of every kind including cocktail and evening $14.98 and $19.98 See these and other Spring Clearance values ineallr departments ON FOREST off the corner of South U. opposite the Campus Theatre j / 4 t (; 4 o.i s . . ttst , b / /w , WA TONIGHT at 8, at HILLEL .ti. ,' , ' ''. .' . , .v <. F k; i ! l J'il t it a u- -rr- - i I Im A O .i.I ii I I II ' . 11 11 % o< °1