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March 31, 1940 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1940-03-31

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

SUNDAY, MARCH 31, 1940

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

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Awards Will Be Made By

Judiciary

At Installation Dinner

'V

Jordan Hall Talent
To offer Classics
At Musicale Today
A musical-tea will be held at 3 p.m.
today at Jordan Hall, Barbara Baggs,
chairman in charge of arrangements,
announced yesterday. She is being
assisted by Lorraine-Judson and Janet
Levin.
The program will consist of classi-
cal and semi-classical numbers, Miss
Baggs said. The opening piece will be
a piano duet rendered by Shirley
Kaplan and Virginia Crall which will
be followed by a flute solo by Jean.
Jeffrey. A voice solo offered by Lil-
lian Mack will precede the initial
appearance of the Jordan ensemble
comprised of Betty Likely, pianist;
Cecily Duggan, cellist; Jean Cox and.
Dorothy Johnson, violinists.
Miss Cox will render several violin
selections followed by a piano solo by
Miss Likely. Concluding the pro-
gram, Miss Kaplan will play a solo
on the piano.
Tea will then be served in the liv-
ing room. The following women will
pour: Mrs. Karl Litzenberg, Miss.
Sarah Rowe, house director of Mar-
tha Cook; Miss Ethel McCormick,
social director of the League; Mrs.
Cornelia Matthews, resident counsel-,
or of Mosher; Miss Rosemary Neu-
haus, house director of Mosher; Miss
Kathleen Hamm, dietician for the res-
idence halls, Mrs. Frederic G. Ray,
house director of Stockwell Hall, and
Mrs. Lura D. Niles, house director of
the Michigan House.
Both the dining and living rooms
will be decorated with spring flowers.
"No
SPECIAL
THREE-DECK
TOASTED BACON AND
TOMATO SANDWICH
LARGE COKE
25c
FREE AND
PROMPT DELIVERY
to Residents
EAST OF STATE STREET
within half mile of campus
SANDWICHES
AND DRINKS
Saturdays, Sundays and
Evenings
Call 6833
1324 North University
Bigger - Better -.Quicker

Virginia Hardy
Will Officiate
Over Banquet
League, Judiciary Council
To Announce Members
Tomorrow At Affair
Appointments, awards and schol-
arships which have been withheld
from the campus for some time will
be revealed by members of Judiciary
Council at the annual Installation
Banquet to be held at 6 p.m. tomor-
row in the ballroom of the League.
Virginia Lee Hardy, '41, president-
elect of the League, will preside, and
the theme of the banquet this year
will be based on one radio station
signing off in favor of another,as
retiring members of the Council hand
their positions down to the new mem-
bers.
Mortar Board and Senior Society
will tap new members at the ban-
quet, and the three Ethel McCor-
mick scholarships will be awarded
to the winners, who will be an-
nounced at that time.
Orientation advisers will also be
announced by Doris Merker, '41, new
chairman of Judiciary.Council, along
with the new members of League
Council and Judiciary Council.
The woman in each class having
the most League points to her credit
according to the files of the merit
system committee will be cited, and
the number of points for each an-
nounced.
A large crowd is expected to at-
tend, judging from the attendance of
other years, and tables will be set
in the Grand RapidsRoom to ac-
commodate them all. A loud speaker
system will take care of the program
in that room, and singing will also
be amplified by the speaker.
Installation Banquet is a tradi-
tional affair which is eagerly awaited'
by all women on campus, and espe-
cially so this year, inasmuch as only
the president of the League and the
chairman of Judiciary Council have
been announced previous to the ban--
quet.
WAA SPORTS SCHEDULE
Badeinton: 7:15 p.m. Wednesday
for mixed play; 4:30 p.m. to
6 p.m. ;for women students.
Bowling: Team tournament now
in progress.
Dance Club: Meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at Barbour Gymna-
sium.
Fencing: Practice session at 7:30
p.m. Thursday at Barbour
Gymnasium.
Rifle: Regular instruction and
practice sessions as scheduled.
Open House: From 7:30 p.m. to
9:30 p.m. Wednesday at Bar-
bour Gymnasium. Men and wo-
men are invited.

Fern
Inani ties
Being the kind of people that sit
down the week before vacation to
decide on our millings and meander-
ings which in the common vernacular
is just plain traveling, we are at
this point wondering:
East or West?
It would seem that no one here
and abouts goes north and south
or maybe they think the birds hold'
a monopoly on those directions. But
with the elimination of these two
the problem becomes comparatively
simple. East or west-it must be one
or the other.
To many this would seem a ques-
tion of "wahooing in the wilds" vs.
"capering with the civilized." Then
there are others to whom it means
"wandering through wild open
spaces" vs. "endangering the perils
of the city." It's all in the point
of view and whether you've ever been
in the other direction before or not.
Train Or Auto?
Having decided on the general di-
rection to mill and meander, the
next problem is the mode of trans-
portation. Except for the disgusting-
ly wealthy who have "fly-ty" notions,
this question would seem to resolve
itself into train or auto-or for those
who persist in listening to early
morning radio programs-the choo-
choo or the put-put.
Here again there is a divergence
in opinion. There are those who get
lost on trains and near starvation
because they cannot locate the diner,
but on the other hand there are
those who must necessarily prolong
their automobile trips for weeks in
order to get the road maps folded
up. It depends upon which of these
dangers one would rather face.
And so there's always an alterna-
tive. Need we come right out in
the open and mention it? Think
of the work one could accomplish
by staying in A.A. during vacation.
Yes, just think about it and let's be
off on our journeys.
Wolverine Offers
A Fool's Paradise
"Fool's Paradise" will be the theme
of this week's Sunday night so-
cial hour to be held from 6 to 10:30
p.m. at the Wolverine tonight, Dick
McClurg, '40, social chairman of the
Michigan Wolverine Student Coop-
erative announced today.
Records of Beethoven's Fifth Sym-
phony obtained through the Detroit
Music Appreciation Society will be
played from 6 to 7:00 p.m. This will
be followed by a collection of Benny
Goodman recordings and an elim-
ination contest open to all terpsi-
chorean artists. The winners will be
awarded a prize in keeping with the
April Fool motif.

Sale Of Tickets
To Military Ball
Begins Monday
Central Committee Named;
Walter J. Clement Gets
General Chairmanship
Ticket sale for the 1940 Military
Ball, to be held Friday, April 26,
in* the Union Ballroom, will begin
from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow and
continue through Thursday in room
303 of the West Engineering Annex,
Frank Ellis, '41, ticket chairman, an-
nounced yesterday.
Reserve officers may purchase
their tickets either at the West En-
gineering Annex or at ROTC Head-
quarters from 9 p.m. to noon, and
1:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. throughout
this week, Ellis continued.
Walter J. Clement, '40E, Corps
of Engineers, was elected general
chairman of the dance. Othermemn-
bers of the central committee elected
by their respective corps are Lowell
R. Moss, '41E, Ordinance Dept., sec-
retary and chairman of favors; Wen-
dell E. Lenz, '40 F&C, Infantry, pro-
grams; Robert L. Brown, '40E, Or-
dinance Dept.; and Ellis, treasurer
and chairman of tickets, finance and
publicity.
Other committeemen are Douglas
C. Jeffrey, '41E, Corps of Engineers,
decorations, Walter A. Scoville, '40
Infantry, honorary member repre-
senting Scabbard and Blade, and
Louis A. Hopkins, '40E, representing
the Signal Corps.
Scabbard and Blade will sponsor
a banquet preceding the Ball for all
advanced students and their guests.
The orchestra will be announced as
soon as negotiations have been com-
pleted, Ellis stated.
Herbie Kay and his orchestra play-
ed for the 1939 Military Bill; and
Hugh Downer, '39, was general chair-
man of the dance. Decorations con-
sisted of special lighting effects,
bunting, and the use of silhouettes.
On each of the pilasters of the ball-
room were 12 lighted red, white, and
blue shields. Along the hallway lead-
ing into the ballroom were 12 sil-
houettes of men in uniforms of the
various wars in which the United
States has been involved.

J. Hamilton Is
Fit it Girl Pilot4
in GAA Class
By JUNE DE CORDOVA
Forty nine men and a girl!
In the CAA ground school, the
lone girl is Joan Hamilton, '41, lithe,
dark-haired transfer student from
Yonkers Junior College, New York.
Her eyes fairly sparkle with the thrill
of being able to start flying this
week.
"My banks aren't as smooth as
they might be, but they will im-
prove," and Joan was off again on
her favorite topic. However, long
hours of research, study and stiff
government examinations had to be
mastered before she could even start
to earn the 35 to 50 hours nece&,ary
for a private pilot's license.
Now in case your memory needs
jolting, we'll remind you that the
throaty soloist with. Bill Gail's or-
chestra and Joan Hamilton are one
and the same person. Besides having
an affinity to two-seater Cub planes,
she is an active member of the Glid-
ing Club.

Ruthvens' Tea
Is Wednesday

Special
. To

Invitations Given
Organizations

Mary Minor, '40, chairman of the
social committee, announced yester-
day that the next Ruthven tea will
be held from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the home of President
and Mrs. Ruthven.
Special groups invited to the tea
this week are Beta Kappa Rho, co-
operative sorority, Alpha Gamma
Delta, Betsy Barbour House, Gamma
Phi Beta, Kappa Sigma, Alpha Tau
Omega, Sigma Alpha Epsilon and
Sigma Phi.
All members of the social commit-
tee of the League, including those
new members who have just peti-
tioned for it, must be present, Miss
Minor said.
Assistants for the tea will be an-
nounced later, and all who are ap-
pointed from the social committee
should arrive promptly and stay un-
til 6 p.m.

Georgina Shuck Married
To J. Nichols Yesterday
Mr. and Mrs. Benedict Shuck of
Detroit have announced the marriage
of their daughter, Georgina, to James
A. Nichols, Jr., '38, of Detroit, son
of Mr. and Mrs. James Nichols, of
Oswego, N. Y.
The ceremony took place yesterday
at the Shrine of the Little Flower
in Royal Oak.
V
Flower-of-the-
Month
DAFFODILS
OAND
S EET-PEAS
O~
rhese lovely pinted hand-
kerchiefs make ideal gifts to
take home to someone.
They come in several prints,
al d rgay and colorful - Try
one as an accessory to your o
new Spring suit. They're al-
ways new and always loyely.
GAGE
LINEN SHOP
10 Nickels Arcade
==>0 <=<:::: ==>0

,,.A\\\\ \\\\\ \\\\\\KV\\

mtWwt i W,, A Jiat
WHEN YOU TRAVEL HOME
FOR SPRI NG VACATION ...
You may trot about the campus in
a peasant kerchief or no headgear at
all, but for traveling, you must have
a hat!
For those all-important vacation
luncheons,teas, and dinner-dances,
take one home from our complete
Spring collection. From $3.95.
helen Dolhem

r $ . }.,
~ , n

S

.M :1

Shop of Distinctive 7illinery
613 East William 4 Doors off State

;;

:

MWIR '1\ V W alw m1\ -

Musicale Will Be Given
Today By Mosher Hall
Mosher Hall will hold the first
of a series of informal musicales
from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday in the
drawing- room of the, dormitory.
The program will consist of four
vocal and instrumental selections.
The following residents will take
part in the program: Jean Hub-
bard, '42; Charlotte Tuite, '41SM;
Joan Stevens, '41SM; Ollierae Bilby,
'41; and Ethel Mathis, '42P. Helen
Hoogsteen; Spec.SM, is in charge of
the program.

4

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Checks on Spring
PRECISE ENOUGH for town,

casual enough for campus . . .
this new series of beautifully
tailored classics. Fine shepherd
checked wool for the skirt and
'slacks. Charcoal black for the
jacket. Color or white for the

Jacket 19.95
Skirt 14.95

Slacks
Rl,-m jcP

12.95

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