THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIX~ MaryL Other Heads Of Committee Announced New Chairmen Have Worked On Previous Class Productions; Two Transfers Also Named (Continued from Page 1) wuise Ewing IS Chosen To Lead Next Year s JGP 9t HIGHlt TIME!- By KAY RUDDY Patrons of the arts were either honored or outraged-we can't decide which--at the Doodle Dance sponsored by the Architectural School last Friday. The serious art did the honoring, and the doodles did the outrag- ing with things that looked like something Salvadore Dali might draw onI a rainy Sunday. The dancers, disturbed, though they no doubt were, byI the weird decoration, kept right on dancing in the approved manner. Ollie Rae Bilby and Johnny Stamm, Esther Guntley and Nick Athens, Helen Cox- man and Eddie Stroko, and Fern Rice and Phil Dickinson were among them, -the dancers, we mean, not the doodles. EmbarassmentA t A Tea... Neatest Trick of This Week: Scene: the latest of the Ruthven teas. Actors: President Ruthven, Dick Schell and onlookers. Script: For some minutes Schell had been staring at a picture on the Presidential wall which Dance Class, Theatre-Arts, and So- cial Committee were among activi- ties aided by Miss Gruhzit, Alpha Phi. Miss Jones, a transfer from Stephens College, is a, member of Kappa Alpha Theta and was here in time to aid Sophomore Cabaret. Miss Ralzen, Zeta Tau Alpha, worked for Michilodeon andTheatre- Arts, while Miss Ranahan is an ori- entation adviser. Miss Rakestraw, Delta Gamma, served for Theatre-! Arts and Michilodeon; Miss Morley is a member of Social Committee and worked for Theatre-Arts. j Wrote JGP Songy Miss DeFries, Delta Delta Delta, who wrote the song "I Can't Get You Out of My Heart" for JGP, was active in summer League work and Theatre-Arts. Miss Gilbertson, an orientation adviser, worked for As-~ sembly Ball. Panhellenic Ball, Orientation, The- atre-Arts, Social Committee, and style show were among Miss Brown s activities. She is a member of Kap- pa Kappa Gamma. Miss Thompson, Alpha Xi Delta, worked for Theatre Arts, Panhellenic committees, and Merit System Committee. Miss Fil- strup, a transfer from Lake Forestj College, is on WAA board. ' Helped Red Cross< Miss Lewin, Alpha Epsilon Phi, has served for Red Cress, Michilodeon, Lantern Night and Daily. Miss Mc- Laughlin, a member of Alpha Chi Omega, was general chairman of1 Panhellenic Ball, and served for The- atre Arts and Social Committee. Miss Alt, Alpha Gamma Delta, serves on League publicity and social commit-1 tees, and works for Theatre-Arts and candy booth committees. Scroll Society Taps Leaders 17 Junior Women Are Chosen In Annual Tapping Ceremonyf Seventeen leaders among the juniorc women on campus were honored byc Scroll Society last night in its annual tapping ceremony held after LanternI Night. Included in the group of new mem- bers are Lois Basse, Dolly Haas, Dor- othy Merki, Jeanne Goudy, Betty Bailey, Anna Jean Williams, Lou Car- penter, and Donelda Scheible. 1 Mary Hayden, Betty Fariss, Agnes Crow, Margaret Gardner, Rae Gus- tafson, Patty Hadley, Rosalie Smith, Janet Hiatt, and Mildred Radford; were also tapped by the honorary so- ciety for next year's senior women.1 Miss Crow will be formally tapped3 later as she is in the University Hos-1 pital.1 Selection for-membership in Scroll is based on leadership in campus ac-1 tivities, scholarship up to the stan- dard for eligibility, and compatibility. Initiation will be held at 7 a.m. to- morrow in the court of the League,; according to the President of this year's group, Pedo Ortmayer, '41. New members are to be dressed in navy] blue.1 * 4* * hung slightly to one side. His eyes were becoming glazed and haunted, and he clenched and unclenched his hands nervously. Finally, one could see that he had made the great resolve. He edged carefully over to the picture, looking furtively over his shoulder, straightened it, and then threw back his shoulders with a sigh of relief. But he hadn't looked carefully enough. The presid'ential voice boomed out: "You're going to make some girl a wonderful husband." The presidential voice has remarkable carrying qualities. Exit Schell amid snickers of a suddenly gathered audience. The Phi Epsilon Pi's, heated up with the Spring Formal fever, gave their-Spring Formal, of course, on Friday night. Some of the couples there, were Adeline Gittlen and Al Hirschfeld, Edith Sandler and Dick Allen, Bert rater and Sylvia Kasper, Barbara Finsterwald and Dick Goldsmith, andI .arbara Savage and Ralph Berlow. Frannie Mendelssohn volunteers to add class (unquote) to this edition of the column with her contribution. Mademoiselle Mendelssohn attended the Ivy Ball at the University of Pennsylvania, which affair is one of the swankiest given in the East. (It says here) Good for Frannie, and may we all take a lesson from her. The Parade Of he Formal-cers ... Kappa Kappa Gamma also decorated its chapter house with Spring Formal-eers on Saturday night. (Al right so Spring Formals are getting monotonous; can we help it? )\ Anyway dear readers-or reader-be patient, spring can't last forever, and you probably enjoy go- ing to them as much as Ann Winters and George Combs,, Betty Kinsey and Ben Douglas, Margaret Dodge and Irl Brent, Elaine Richert and Webb Cook, and Betty Henkel and Nevin Jamieson did. Theta Xi's formal-and we are on them, aren't we?-was decorated Friday night by such luminariesY (That makes the column sound more Broadway-ish) as Helen Jean and Don Kipka, Liz Graham and Bill Wadsworth, Jane Connell and Chuck Munn, and Suki Scheffer and John Hunter. Senate Scholarship Dance To QiVe Proceeds To Deserving Students Adelia Cheever Wins Lantern Night'Festival Outsinging 23 other women's cam- pis groups. Adelia Cheever with "Can't Stay Away" won the tradition- al Lantern Night Sing and a silver, loving cup last night at Palmer Field. In second place, with "Now I Am Anchored in Thee," was Delta Gam- ma while Jordan Hall singing "Mem- ories of Michigan".came in third. The participation cup, awarded to, the sorority, dormitory, or league house zone with the highest number of girls participating in WAA sports throughout the year was awarded at the Sing also, as is customary, by Dr. Margaret Bell, to Gamma Phi Beta which had 551 points and 84 per cent of participation. Pi Beta Phi came in second in par- ticipation with 370 points and 89 per cent, while Martha Cook ranked third with 201 points and 60 per cent of participation. j First Nighters Qreet Premier Of 1941 Plays Amidst the swishing of colorful formals and the gay chatter of First Nighters, the 1941 Dramatic Season officially opened last night with the first performance of "The Male Ani- mal." In the lobby, early-comers were conversing with friends and among them there were Pres. and Mrs. Ruth- ven, Prof. and Mrs. Palmer Christian, Prof. and Mrs. Herbert Kenyon, Dr. and Mrs. C. H. Ross, Mr. and Mrs. T. Hawley Tapping, Prof., and Mrs. Waldo Abbott, Prof. and Mrs. I. L. Sharfman and -Dr. and Mrs. George Moore. Glancing to the other side of the lobby, we caught sight of Prof. and Mrs. C. D. Thorpe just entering close-1 ly followed by a party of 8 who had just come from dinner at the Union: they were Mr. and Mrs. Francis Schilling, Mr. and Mrs.Francis La Pointe, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dolfe and Mr. and Mrs. Cone Lighthall. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Rentschler (minus the camera) came dashing in with the first curtain warning buzz- ing in their ears. Miss Ruth Ann Oakes swept by us on the arm of Bill Harrison of Doodle fame. Needy English Children Are 'Adopted' By Ann Arbor Residents AndGroups Dr. and Mrs. R. Bunting 'Adopt' Two Year Old Baby War Veteran shelter in England for 30 children for a year. Buntings 'Adopt' Child Foster parents of young Raymond are Dr. Russell Bunting, Dean of the College of Dentistry, and Mrs. Bunting. Information direct from England concerning the baby States that there are two children in his family whose income is only -3.00 a week, of which 12/6 has to be paid for rent. Adoption will enable the youngster to have greatly needed extra nourishment of which he would otherwise be deprived. Approximately 200 such adoptions have been made in Ann Arbor in re- cent months, according to Mrs. Slos- son, while $500 has been raised since May 1 toward the shelter - the fund for which it is hoped will be coni- pleted by commencement time in June. Since it has been impossible to bring children to this country since the bombing of the children's ship last fall, "adoption" or contribution toward the shelter is suggested as the next best thing to actually car- ing for a child. School Children Contribute Largest single contributor toward the cause of the Federation, accord- ing to Mrs. Slosson, has been the 7 GIRLS from the University of Michigan are now enroll- ed for Gibbs secretarial training. It makes degrees marketable! Catalogue des- cribes Special Course for College Women. 1I Bach School whose children financed the adoption of a 13-year-old girl, Mary Gwendoline Arthur, and whose teachers are working for the adop- tion of their second child. Pupils of the Angell School have adopted 10-year-old Joan Titchener, and are also raising funds to adopt a second child. First campus group to contri- bute, Mrs. Slosson stated, were the senior wonien of the Alpha Delta Pi sorority who made a $15 gift for the shelter, while the Ann Arbor Girl Scouts have contributed 100 per cent toward the fund. A unique shelter contribution, Mrs. Slosson stated; ca'me through Lieut.- Col. H. R. Wells of Selfridge Field and Mrs. Wells, and was the gift of Mrs. Wells' mother, Mrs. L. M. C. Churchill of Seattle, Wash., r - - - 1 KATWARINF CAARS I * * * I U1 t.11 l 11k ' l l -3Pa~' -5-e e Yr"C I Baby "war veterans," such as two- year-old Raymond George, pictured here, are among the English children who are being "adopted" by Ann Ar- bor individuals and organizations through the Save the Children Fed- eration under the sponsorship in Ann Arbor of Mrs. Preston Slosson. Thirty dollars will "adopt" a child for a year with the money going to England to pay for milk, medicine, food, or clothing according to the child's most urgent needs. In addition to the sponsorship of these adoptions, the local chapter of the Federation is attempting to raise $3000 for a Meet YOUR Career! WOMEN from 60 colleges have been introduced to the career hest suited to their talents through the vocational guid- ance and secretarial -business training offered by The Career Institute. Start on YOUR way to a career NOW. Special summer Career Clinic. Professional vocational coun- selling for all college women. SUMMER QUARTER . . . JUNE 30 FALL QUARTERe. . . ...SEPT. 29 TR~ "~Write for Free Booklet "Careers" INSTITUTE x20 North Michigan Ave., Dept. 9, Chicago ~i1 Of the 120 students who applied for scholarships last year, 60 received interviews. Out of those interviewed only five were turned down, leaving 55 deserving and needy students. "Un- fortunately, however, only 11 scholar- ships could be awarded," said Dean Lloyd S. Woodburne. With this situation in mind, the Student Senate is sponsoring the Scholarship dance to be held Friday in the Union with the hope that with the money raised more scholarships may be given to worthy students. Example Is Typical A typical example of the truly "de- serving" student is Mr. Y. He is a 'ophomore in the College of Litera- ture, Science and the Arts. He has been entirely self-supporting during these two years of college except for an Alumni Undergraduate Schol- arship, which pays his tuition. He has worked successively as a waiter in a local cafe and at the .Michigan Union. The family-income is meagre and so irregular that it is utterly impos- sible for his family to give him any assistance whatever. Despite these handicaps he has maintained a scho- lastic average of 3.7. In order that he may pursue his plan of further study in economics and business ad- ministration, it will be absolutely es- sential for him to receive some assis- tance in the form of scholarships. 1 ~ $ nl :1 y } KA IlN-ST aV / . * " 44\a 1-: YOUR FAVORITE "SPEC!" The simple beauty of the "BOOMPs SEP4RATES Country cousinis that are fun Cool and crisp in Sanforized denim with an urban-looking. pins-stripe. Milkmnaid Blue.. Rooster IRed. 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