THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGEF'E Jean Holland Is Chairman Of League Installation Banquet To Be March 30 h.l Just Name the Style YouWant for Easter ,... All Women Are Invited; Councils To Be Named And Societies To Tap Jean Holland, '39,' president of the League, wlil act as general chairman for the 1939 Installation Banquet to be held at 6 p.m. Thursday, Mar. 30 in the ballroom and Grand Rapids Room of the League. She will be as- sisted by Sybil Swartout, '39, chair- man of Judiciary Council. Honor Societies To Tap All women are invited to attend the annual banquet. League com- mittee chairmen will be announced, Senior Society and Mortar Board, senior honor societies, will tap and the three winners of the Ethel Mc- Cormick Scholarship will be an- nounced. New members of Judiciary Coun- cil, committee heads for Freshman Project, the new president of the Women's Athletic Association, the W.A.A. board and council will be in- troduced aspart of the program. 'Miss Holland will be in charge of the program in the League ballroom and Miss Swartout will make the announcements in the Grand Rapids room. A radio system will be in- stalled to enable the women attend- ing to hear the intiroductions and the tapping in each room. Members Of Committees Other-members of the central com- mittee for Installation Banquet who will help with the arrangements are: Marcia Connell, '39, decorations chairman; Harriet Pomeroy, '39, chairman of patrons; Dorothea Staebler, publicity head; Stephanie Parfet, '39, program chairman; Made- line Krieghoff, '39, chairman of tick- ets; Betty Spangler, '39, seating chairman; and Grace Wilson, '39, music chairman. Dates for the sale of tickets for the banquet will be announced later. Group tickets may be purchased, and seating will be arranged according to affiliation. Barney Rapp To Play Debate Teams Will Continue Series Today Aniual Odonto Ball Will e Broadcast Over Radio Friday A half-hour radio program will be presented by Barney Rapp and his New Englanders as part of the fourth annual Odonto Ball to be held this Friday from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday in the ballrooms of the Union, William R. Mann, general chairman an- nounced yesterday. The program will be broadcast over WJR between 11 p.m. and 1 a.m., and it will feature Rapp's vocalist, Ruby Wright. Among the numbers to be broadcast will be Stardust, Deep Purple, Hold Tight, Melancholy Baby,, Dancing in the Dark and Alexander's Rag-time Band, several of them ar- ranged in medley form. Decorations for the dance will be flowers and ferns in the tradition of spring, Lawrence Zoerner, publicity chairman, said. Odonto is given by the junior class of the School of Dentistry, open to students in the school, to hygeinists and alumni. Goodyear's Spring Style Show Will Be Held Today At League Goodyear's Spring Fashion Show will be held at 8 p.m. today in the League Ballroom. 86 costumes, with appropriate accessories, will be shown. Reade Pierce and his band will furnish the music for the show. One of the outstanding costumes to be modeled is a "Midshipman Top- coat" in red, white and blue im- ported plaid tweed, worn over a "little-girl" suit in navy tweed. With it will be worn a deep-crowned rough navy straw sailor with white ribbo,n trim. A two-piece tweed suit in "hunt- ing" plaid has a one-button, cardi- gan neckline jacket. With it is worn a yellow shirtwaist blouse and a gold Knox sailor with the new higher crown, trimmed with red and blue ribbons. A pure silk afternoon dress in ele- phant grey with red, black and white all-over print design buttons down the front. An attached hood forms a graceful cape effect when not worn over the head. A beige evening gown is made of Merchandising Expert To Talk L. B. Sappington Names Needs Of Modern Stylists fish-net material with a draped bo- dice and a full skirt. With it is worn a wide japonica girdle in soft crushed kid, and sea-shell bracelets to carry out the sea motif. A silk crepe jacket dress in navy green looks very cool and fresh, espe- cially when accented by collar, sleeve edgings and shaggy flower of crisp white pique. Worn with it is a hat in gold milan with purple taffeta ribbon around the crown. Oklahoma Dean Advocates D.Q4 In College Life The young "Counselor of Women" at the University of Oklahoma, (the old fashioned title is Dean of Wom- en) thinks a college ought to worry as much about a girl's D.Q. (dating quotient) as about her LQ. (in- telligent quotient). This amazing young woman, Mar- garet B. Stephenson, says, "It is more important to any normal person to have friends, to be recognized and respected as a person, and to be part of a social group than to study any subject, no matter how interesting and important that subject may be." She also pointed out that the so- cially maladjusted girl is likely to be found living in one of the less de- sireable rooming houses rather than in a dormitory, that often she is a student who either is working her way through and hasn't the time or the clothes to get into the "social swing," or.she is a very brilliant girl who is over conscientious and spends all of her time with her "nose in a book." The girl who makes Phi Beta Kap- pa may think that she is getting the most out of her four years of col- leges, Miss Stephenson said, but then she may be getting nothing else but grades. If- that is the case, when it comes to getting a job or a husband, and who doesn't want one or both, the girl who made average grades and had time for activities and dating will show her up, Miss Stephenson concluded. Supper To Be Held At League Stnday The Social Committees of the League and Congress are jointly sponsoring the third Sunday Night Supper of the year, to be held at 6 p.m. Sunday in the Russian Tea Room of the League. The theme of this supper will be Spring Vacation, and during the1 Three contests of the second series of the women's intramural debates will be held at 4 p.m. today in Angell Hall. All students and faculty mem- bers are invited to attend. William Centner, '39BAd, will judge the debates between Zenovia Skorat- ko, '40, and Dorcas Corrin, Grad., affirmative team of Alumnae House and Jordan Hall, and Agnes Crow, and Nancy Gould, negative team of Betsy Barbour Residence in Room 1025 Angell Hall. Participants Are Listed Margaret McDermatt, and Jose- phine Kift, Zeta Tau Alpha's af- firmative team., will debate Grace Helen Barton, and Janet Sergeant, Martha Cook negative team 11, in Room 1035. Clarence Clifford, Grad., will act as judge. The third debate between Jean Maxted, and Mary Martha Taylor, of Martha Cook Residence affirma- tive ,team I, and Jane Sapp, and Elizabeth Caster, negative team of Mosher Hall, will be held in Room 4208. The three winning teams will en- ter the semi-finals of the intra- mural debate contest. All teams will argue the question, "Resolved: that intercollegiate athletics should be subsidized." Mrs. Crandall Is Advisor All students and faculty members interested are urged to attend. Mrs. Frederic o. Crandall, of the Univer- sity speech department, is acting as faculty adviser for the debates, and Betty Bricker, '40, and Anne Haw- ley, '40, are co-chairmen, The judges for this second series of debates all have been formerly connected with some phase of debating. Announce Sale Of Ball Tickets Two Groups To Receive Purchasing Preference Tickets for the annual Military Ball, to be given Friday, April 28, in the ballroom of the Union, are to be sold on a strictly cash basis, and will be allotted to students in a different manner than has been used in form- er years, Walter J. Hinkle, '40, pub- licity chairman, announced yester- day. Tickets will be set aside for two groups, instead of being reserved for individuals as before. Advanced students and reserve officers will have preference from the opening day of the sale, Saturday, April 1, to the Wednesday after Spring Vacation, April 19. One hundred and fifty tickets will be alloted to this group. The basic students have 100 tickets given them and will be able to pur- chase them beginning Wednesday, April 19. Tickets will be sold at the Regi- mental Council Office in the en- gineering annex. The price will be $3. Paul H. Simpson, '39BAd, chair- man of finance and tickets commit- tee, stressed the fact that they will be sold on a cash basis only Cancer Control Drive To Begin Local Officers Are Named Heads Of Enlistment Call Officers in the local chapter of the Women's Field Army of the American Society for the Control of Cancer who are participating in the April enlistment campaign have been announced by Mrs. Cyrus C. Sturgis, publicity chairman. Mrs. H. Marvin Pollard is vice- commander. Mrs. Bradley M. Patten is captain, and has under her five lieutenants including Mrs. J. L. Brumm, Mrs. Arthur Hackett, Mrs. C. H. McKinley, Mrs. William Giefel and Mrs. Peter Van Boven. Lieutenantsin the group os Mrs. W. S: Peck, captain, are Mrs. T. R. Piersol, Mrs. Paul.Barker, Mrs. El- liott Barnwell, Mrs. L. A. Tappe and Mrs. C. E. Griffin. Assisting Mrs. Sturgis, who is also a captain is Mrs. Ray Baker, lieutenant. Mrs. A. C. Furstenberg, captain, has as her as- sistant Mrs. R. Bishop Canfield, lieu- tenant. Mrs. Earl H. Cress, captain, com- mands a group of lieutenants com- posed of Mrs. Joseph H. Cannon, Mrs. Carl Guthe, Mrs. Charles Noble, Miss Adelaide Rueger, Mrs. Emil Arnold, Mrs. L. M. Eich, Mrs. Flora Brown, Mrs. Harold D. Golds. Mrs. Herman a- F- So- II n- I. r' " 1 1Z .. FRESH _ -. r * * 't - ' s: - ' ., .,; "% ';" '., i :. 'I $495 ~"", ' . t :., ::: :... .. . ' f,;. yy, ( ,bb ViI V a r you've got to "hand it to us," when it comes to assembling shoes that have glamourI. We haven't a pair of shoes you won't like . . . every pair was carefully selected to suit the whims and taste of our many customers .. . SPAT SHOES ... DOLL SHOES... .OPEN BACKS... CLOSED BACKS ... SPEC- TATORS ... DRAPED SAN- DALS ... ZEPHYR" SLIP- ONS . . . high heels. . . college heels . . . many many more. Come in tomorrow to see a really "splendiferous" display of Eas- ter styles! C N WYORK $ 95 and $4.95 A lecture on merchandising by Josephine Sutton, Merchandising manager of Himelhoch Brothers and Company, will be given at 4:10 p.m. today in the League under the spon- sorship of the University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational In- formation. Contrary to previous announce- ment, the lecture to be given by W.P- Edmunds on "Personnel in Busi- ness" will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday. in the League. The lecture follows the one given " yesterday by ?. B. Sappington, of the J. L. Hudson Company, on the subject of fashion. He stressed the need for a sense of color and style as well as training for a career of fa- shion. An expert must know her style trends thoroughly and be able to predict those for several months hence. Best training for this occu- pation is in actual work in large de- partment stores, he said. Reservations For Tables At StyleShow Are Free Reservations for tables for the style show which is being held from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Friday in the ball- room of the League do not entail the obligation of ordering tea, Barbara Heath, '39, social chairman, an- nounced yesterday. oih ci' style $3.95 ' oether styles $ $095-- ..* -f R $ 7.50 seen in VOGUE, HARPER'S BAZAAR, MADEMOISSLLE 2.99 I ?:. .j;.:: ...; . I IeI