1f f 11 th i ,~~. ..I N r 1 i InstallationBanquet Traditio Is Altered ToHeighten Eff ect x *Of 4. Ifg.e and kings . . . Dear Mother: What's wrong with me mother? Here I am in a University famous as a happy husband hunting ground, and all I do is sit, sit, and sit. The Phi Kaps, Acacias, Michigamuas (they're all BMOCs) all had parties this week-end but no one called me to go. And, mother, they have weekly dances at the League and Union and some sort of athletic event scheduled almost every night (that is what The Daily says) and still all I do is sit and think with nothing to do. Union Sponsors Bunny Hop Most of the girls are popular, too, in fact some of them are BWOC's. Why Friday night Mary Lou Ewing went to the Union and she said everyone was there, Jeanne Noyes and Bruce Beyer, and Millie Hulbert went to the dance with Dale Chamberlain. Saturday night Jeanette Hof- man went to the Union Bunny Hop with Kenny James, and she saw Janet Hiatt dancing with Bill Hander, and Jean Rakestraw who was there with Ben Case. At the Union Grill, Esther Honeywell was talking to Phil r Herman while Dottie Couzens came rushing in late with Russ Crois. Over at the Phi Kap house, the boys had an in- formal radio dance and ever so many went over to the House Friday night. Sue Adams was seen there with Dick Ebbets and Marge Allison went with Bury Otis. Kristin Lee came late with Fred Culver and joined Bob Pinkney and Jean Morgan who had been there from the start of the party. Mary tulbert spent the eVo ning at the house with KenmAy Marble, too. Leet Keefer and Frances Oseboom slipped out from thej Alpha Omicron Pi dance for a "coke" Saturday night, but hurried back to join Kitty Maytag and Larry Wick. Blanche Anderson was at the House with Cyril Collins- you remember her, don't you, mother?-and Irene Do- herty was there with Al Healy. Kappa Nus Hold Dance On that very night the Kappa Nus had a dance at their house, too, mother. Dotty Davidson went to the dance at that house with Bill Shkind. Gertrude Coh~n and Phil Baris joined them later, and not so long after Hilda Sneider and Norman Rosenfield came along. Muriel Levy and Dan Schmidt were there, and Cyril Schneit and Gerald Eder, too. I guess I didn't tell you, mother, but I did get to the A.A.U. track meet that night, and it was thrilling. Carolyn Denfield and Johnny Goodell were so excited when Ralph Schwarzkopf won the two-mile race against the famous Finn, Maki. I saw Patty Donnelly and Tom Hutton who were enthusiastic about his breaking that record, too. Freda Vandermeer and Burd Pierce slip- ped out early, though, to get to the League before the floor became too crowded. The Michigampa boys had a party Saturday night and everyone had a super time. Running Buffalo John Nichol- son took Doris Yoder over to the Phi Delt house for the evening where they saw Dottie Shipman with Stoneface Don Treadwell and Rowena La Coste with Squaw Gait Phil Westbrook. Arrow Back Bill Davidson, Half Wind Dye Hogan and Great Falls Butch Jordan were seen around, too. I hope you don't mind all this chatter, mother, but I get a feeling of reflected glory in it. Would you please send me a pamphlet on how to land a man so I can get to one party before I graduate? - The Fifth One Council Posts To Be Named During Dinner To Open Three-Day Sale Of lickets Tomorrow In League ,Ballroom In violation of the precedent estab- lished in recent years, members of League Council yesterday decided to announce all of next year's Council excepting the president of the League and chairman of Judiciary Council at Installation Banquet Monday. The change was made to heighten the effectiveness of the banquet as the primary occasion for the announce- nment of League positions. It has been the custom to announce the secretary and treasurer of the League as well as the president and chairman of Judiciary Council a few days before the banquet, and presi- dents of WAA, Panhellenic Associa- tion and Assembly have been an- nounced during the week preceding installation. Change Is Made Another change has been instituted regarding the use of a speaker. It has been customary to have a formal speaker for the occasion, in addition to the fact that Dean Alice Lloyd always gives a short informal talk. This year it is planned to dispense with the formal speaker in the inter- ests of brevity since the business of the banquet itself takes considerable time. Tickets for the banquet which will be held at 6 p.m. Monday in the ball- room of the League will be sold from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow, 3 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Thursday, and 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Friday. Attendance at the banquet is almost universal for wo- men. Tickets are priced at 65 cents. Many Announcements Made Installation Banquetis not only the occasion for the announcement of memers of League Council, but also of orientation advisers, Pan- hellenic Board members, the sopho- more and special junior members of Judiciary Council. Assembly Board members, and winners of the Ethel McCormick and music scholarships. In addition, it has long been a tia- dition that Senior Society and Mor- tar Board tap new members at the banquet as the concluding features of the evening. 200 Selected) For Positions Eligible Freshmen Named For League Conmitees Names of approximately 200 fresh- man women were posted on the bul- letin board in the Undergraduate Of- fice of the League yesterday by Ro- berta Leete, '40, chairman of the merit system committee. These freshmen have signified theil. interest in League activities by peti- tioning for positions on the various committees which handle the varied activities of the League. Their names have been checked for eligibility, and the list posted yesterday announced the names of the freshmen and the committees to which they have been assigned. Miss Leete stressed the fact that freshmen should check these lists to discover to which committees they now belong, and should continue to watch the bulletin board for notice of meetings. Most of the initial meet- ings will be held next week following Be Casual For Spring F 1 t -v Lawyer Berates 'Unsubtle' Acts Of Puerile' Engineers In Letter Editor ' Note: The filowing letter ,announcing some kind of a Slide Rule was received yesterday by the womln' ' Ball, (2) the Engineering School, (3) staff of The Daily. The Daily ass1umlsI themselves. The last mentioned feat, no responsibility for the views e ifimylbso terme old beain pressed therein. if i may be so termed. would be, in legal terminology what is known as An open letter to Miss Debs Harvey, "abating a nuisance." That the engineers and the like: Chairman of the "Committee on Re- The puerile and weak attempt at moval of Posters" requested his name repartee on the part of the Engineer- be withheld is the first indication of ing School's representative brought modesty and or discretion ever dis- to this writer's attention, and prob- played by an engineer. ably to the rest of the campus as well, For a truer indication of the char- the hitherto unrevealed fact that acter of an engineer I refer you to there is apparently another dance on March 29 than that of the lawyers. their apparent text, "Do the wrong Engineers will apparently do any- thing at the right time" and a "Judi- thing to get some publicity, regard- cially noticed fact," to wit: that their less of how unsubtle they may ap- presumption is exceeded only by their pear in the process, but the latest badmanners. May the inglorious episode of childishly removing ad- tradition of "letting the rules slide vertisements of the Crease Ball forever" here stop. plumbs new depths. John F. Somerville, Jr., '40 The fact that there is warfare, and---------- that it is traditional, between the lawyers and the engineers came as a distinct surprise to this corner, it having been previously upposed that persons armed with slide rules and a notable paucity of intelligence would not be adequately equipped to cope with legal minds. Lest any engineer be too discomforted by the engineer's announcement that retaliation was planned by the lawyers, peris the thought. It is peculiarly appropriate to repeat at this Easter season that "little children should be suffered." 4 It is regrettable that the so-called F. / "Engineer's Protective Committee" will not even have the opportunity of becoming martyrs but if they are so aethetically inclined and acute-It'' ly aware of their public duties in re- moving eye-sores it is suggested that they dissipate their energies by re- moving, in the following order: (1) the unsightly posters around town ;: A AUW Meeting To Have Alumna As Guest Speaker Mrs. Louise V. Armstrong, '09, author of the novel "We Too Are The People," will address members of the AAUW at their regular meet- ing which will be held at 3 p.m. to- morrow, Mrs. John Bradshaw, chair- man of the social studies division, announced. Mrs. Armstrong (Louise Van Voor- his) will speak on "Dwellers in Lone- ly Little Houses, or Problems of Rural Michigan." When an undergraduate in the University she was women's editor of The Daily, and a member of Comedy Club. Members of Alpha Chi Omega will give a buffet supper after the meet- ing in honor of Mrs. Armstrong, and alumnae are invited to bring their husbands and friends. c{ Ik. . League Property Room Reveals .Treasures Of Artistic Triumphs Fx -2- ?: / 1 "I:t i 144W NEW BACK PANEL that not only shadow-proofs the slip but reinforces it for extra wear. The shirred bust section fits beauti- fully. No side seams. A shamed waist darted in to fit! \I - - I NORMAL CHOIR BACh FESTIVAL E.xcerps fro1 B MINOR MASS 300 SINGERS NORMAL CHOIR and GUEST HIGH SCHOOL CHOIRS FREDERicK ALEXANDER, Condfctor PEASE AUDrrORIUM Friday, March 29, 8 P.M. Ypsilanti No Reservations Seats 25 Exactly cents - - - - - - - - - - - '41 AFTER-EASTER Skirts Jackets Sweaters $ 00 - $ 95 - $395 2 2 formerly $2.95 to $5.95 SWEATERS . . . "One messy Cinderella dress. One flannel night shirt. Ten chicken dresses. One fairy's costume-slight- ly dirty." No, not the wardrobe of someone with a dual personality,'or even Elsa Maxwell's party wardrobe; merely Richard McKelvey, Grad., director o Child: n .Theatre, mak- ing an inventory of the League pro- perty and costume room. With the end of the year as far as dramatic productions are con- cerned, McKelvey was checking up o nthe properties room, familiarly known as Room Five, in order to find out what had been collected during the past year. Last year a large yellow egg and a throne were the outstand- ing additions to Room Five; and this year it took much cleaning to separate the accumulated dust from the many properties and costumes which would be valuable for future use. Scenery Familiar As one enters Room Five after in- ventory, scenery from the four Chil- drens' Theatre productions and the 1940 JGP can be recognized at vari- ous angles. Bedroom interiors are stacked on top of store fronts, and a kitchen wall lies next to a wall of a Hindu king's room. Stairs and cupboards, a puppet show ,and a tree stump stand in front of all these in one corner. Against the other walls, free from scenery, are situated large trunks filled with hand properties, makeup, and tools of all sorts. Large swords of no particular era, two large, and two small stuffed carrots, a bo-peep stick, and a box of Sunny Day clothes pin are merely a few of the gadgets which will probably be converted next year to serve a purpose totally dif- ferent from their use this year. Stuffed Squirrel Fake bottles, and paper-china platesI rub shoulders with a king's scepter and yards of chicken wire. A stuffed squirrel with a nut between his paws stands between a bouquet of crepe Military Ball Tickets (2ontintim TO Ile Sold Tickets for Military Ball to be held April 26 in the Union Ballroom are still on sale from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. daily in Room 303 West Engineering Annex, Walter E. Clement, '40E, gen- eral chairman of the dance announced yesterday. Sale of tickets, which is for ad- vance course students only, will con- tinue through Friday, April 3. Price of tickets is $3, and the sale is limit- ed to 300. Date of ticket sales for reserve officers and basic students will be announced later. ham, '43; Richard Eyster, '43; Ogden Smith, '43E; Robert Brodie, '43; and paper roses, reminiscent of the spit- prouder of the new additions to Room 'Five. In the costume room, the collection. of dresses is just as varied as the col- lection of properties. Most of the dresses are ageless, adaptable to any period in history. A "poor girl's" dress is on the, rack besides 12 bi- cycling dresses. 1890 chorus girls' outfits are lined up between a dairy maid's dress and a queen's costume. The costumes on these racks will in all probability be changed for future productions as to style and size. Room Five this year is exceedingly different from the Room Five of three years ago when the majority of the properties and costumes had to be bought or built for that special play. As each year adds more to Room Five, the budgets for the following year become lower and McKelvey and the Theatre Pate i'lli etep 250 T TOODYOflR'S STATE STREET'" DOWNTOWN d e. . Straight and half sizes. Regulation and short lengths. BLUSH-WHITE R FORMAL MOOD Installation Banquet on Monday. I Angoras and classic pullover gans. Pastels and shetlands in and cardi- dark shades. SKIRTS.r. . . This is a season of many skirts. So get to this sale in a hurry. Dark shades and Chapter House Activity Notes Three chapter houses announce their rectn activities, two have ini- tiated, one house has pledged, and one announced officers. Chi Phi Chi Phi has pledged Charles Bark- er, '41E, of Limona, Fla., and James Dew, '43A, of Flint. Sigma Nu The initiation of Richard Archer, '43; Herbert Bentley, '42A, William Cobb, '43E; George Fox, '41SM, Rich- ard Gilliom, '43E, Robert Killians, '43; John Lewis, '43; Richard Meinke, '43; and Joseph Parker, '43E, has been announced by Sigma Nu. Theta Xi The following men have been ini- tiated by Theta Xi: F. Carter Tarfor, '43E; Robert Arnold, '43E; John Nies, '42E; Phillip Fisher, '43E; Joseph Hal- lissy, '42E; James Rogers, '42; James Jones, '42FC; Robert Richardson, '43; pastels; flared and styles. Sizes 24-32. JACKETS . Cardigan and revere in plaids. Sizes 12-18. gored GLAMOROUS AND SOPHISTICATED-haive and young - whatever role you choose to play after dark, you'll find the perfect dress to fit your aood at CoUNS. Sheath yourself in glamour . . . fling an aura of drama around yourself . . . after dark, when you want to look your loveliest! Gay printed styles C ' I I,