PAGE SIX THE. M ICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JANUARY 26, 1941 Helen Independent. Annual Danc Culley To Be Chairman Of Assembly Ball 4 : For Warmth Try Fur Jacket With Fitted Coat. Tuesday To Be 'Don't Be A Wack, Be A Wit Man'; Ont7Ae Ites Opening Date That's What Michigan Coeds Say i i. LOOKIHGI GL SS In To Be March 7 Central Committee For Affair To Be Held In League Ballroom Is Chosen By Assembly Board Helen Culley, '41, has been chosen as general chairman of this year's Assembly Ball, to be held March 7 in the League Ballroom, Patricia Walpole, '41, president of Assembly, announced yesterday. Other independents who hold cen-, tral committee positions, selected by a representative group of interview- ers from the Assembly Board, are headed by Elizabeth Luckham, '42, The Assembly Ball central com- mittee will hold its first meeting at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the League. from Martha Cook, who will assist Miss Culley as general chairman. -Miss Culley lives at Helen Newberry. Co-chairmen of decorations are Kay Negus, '43, of Stockwell Hall and Evelyn Kuivinen, '42A, from Adelia Cheever House. The tickets committee will be headed by June deCordova, '41, of Martha Cook, and Betty Newman, '43, from Jordan Hall. Assisting them on this com- mittee is Dorothy Davidson, '44. At the head of the patrons and programs committee is Barbara Al- corn, '43, of Betsy Barbour. Cleo Covert, '41, of Martha Cook, will be her assistant. Marjorie Greene, '43, from Mosher Hall, has been chosen finance chairman for the dance. Will Co-Head Publicity Doris Cuthbert, '42, and Peggy Polumbaum, '42, of Helen Newberry, will co-captain the publicity com- mittee. Membership on the various committees is open to all who peti- tioned, but the real committee work will not start until next, semester. The newly chosen general chair- man has been active in outside ac- tivities on campus; some of the po- sitions she has held include Assem- bly Banquet ticket chairman, '38, and Assembly Ball in the same year. She is this year's president of Helen Newberry dormitory and is on the social committee of the League. Miss Luckham has worked on Freshman ' Project, the Assembly Tea, the Assembly informal, was an orientation advisor and has been a member of the Assembly Board. Miss Negus has worked on Freshman Project, Sophomore Cabaret, and is at present a member of the Assem- bly Board. Worked On 'Ensian The 'Ensian and JGP of '41 were the activities toward which Miss Kui- vinen concentrated her. extra ener- gy. Miss Alcorn worked as chair- man of dance for the Freshman Proj- ect, and on the Theatre Arts, social and tutorial committees of the League. Co-head of tickets, Miss deCordova has participated in Varsity debate, JG-P, and worked on the Assembly informal. Miss Newman is a mem- ber of the candy booth committee and worked on Assembly Banquet. Freshman Project, candy booth and the Spanish Club have been the ma- jor interests ofMiss Greene. Publicity committee co-head Miss For Petitioning! Scholarship Awards For Juniori Women To Be Based On NeedI tbir rzc T h"t P"ec Edcitor's Note: Thisi is the first of a :Tries of articles designed to en- lighten the campus on subjects here- tclore confined to bull sessions. Our nen article will present the male vie\point on the same subject. masculine, aggressive, a good drink- er (only four mentioned this , de- vilish, athletic. a good mixer, and he must have original ideas about, whereI 1 . ., In T v Nigh.. I understand some of our wel known radio personalities are having I7/ ..../Thce '{ I' , . o ; K v< , 2, :: }: Average, And Outside Activities By FRANCES ROGERSI Talk! Talk! Talk ! Apparently' Petitioning for junior women in- that's the best way tokget a woman- terested in the three $100 Ethel Mc- or a Michigan woman at least. From Cormick scholarships offered each a survey made of 150 of the coeds year by the League will begin Tues- here, "a good conversationalist" is the day and continue through Friday in most important qualification for a the Undergraduate Office of the "good date." League. A talker, yes, but he's got to make Qualifications for petitionees in- sense too. The majority of thegirls elude, in addition to junior standing, rated intelligence and sense of humor participation in extra-curricular ac-- as the next most necessary attributes. tivities, and a 2.7 scholastic average. As one young gal so neatly put it, Two letters of recommendation con- cerning the applicarit's life and char- acter will also be requested, and questions asked on the application blank about any previous honors or, awards received, and how the indi- vidual's years in school have been financed. The Judiciary Council will inter- view those who have petitioned by appointment during the first part of the second semester. The award, winners will be announced at theI Installation Banquet in the spring. The McCormick scholarship fund is supported by the student activities of the League. Each class project contributes a large percentage of its earning to this fund which awards the three scholarships annually. Seven Teams Win Basketball Contests "A wit but not a wack!"I Courtesy was demanded by a large per cent of the ladies. "Chivalrous," however, was an adjective used only once. Maya Gruhzit said, "Someone who doesn't always have to be funny -who can be chivalrous at one time and facetious at another." Prefer Good Dancers The Fred Astaires come in for their share of the laurels too. Most of the lassies indicated that they wanted a good dancer, though most of them seem to feel about this somewhat the same as did one girl who said. "I pre- fer a good dancer, but if he's not, we can always go to a show." As for appearances, 15 of those trouble dreaming up new theme songs to go. Don't. isince their original identifiers are Taking the neati raharegistered with ASCAP. Lest this Takmny the eae dpproach, a difficulty spread to the campus The good many of the females declared Mie akes this opportunity to sug- themselves violently against men with ,est a few theme songs for our own lines. Others said they disliked to lime-lighters. as follows: date jitterbugs, joe colleges, lawyers, Don Wirtehafter: "I've got trouble, engineers. smart-alecks, and men Double trouble." who are too romantic, who have bi D u t Margot Thorn: "Can't get Indiana ears or thick lips, and who don't off my mind." keep their mouths shut! jGus Sharemet: "The Broken Rec-' A few of the responses were: ord." "I want someone who'll love me." To1nm Harmon: "Keepin' out of mis- "I want someone who's trusting chief now." -who'll believe it even when you lie Jeff Solomon: "Baby face, you've to him." got the cutest little baby face." "Natural, but not corny." University of Michigan: "Time on "The Jimmy Stewart type." my hands. you on my mind."j "Gimme a playboy!" "Stardust": "See what the boys in "I like to be teased." the back room will have." One young miss, we think, best Thag: "Trees." summed up the entire situation as{ ouoms:d He must have the physique Faculty Cub T-M of Apollo, the naive charm of L'il Ab- ner, combined with the sophistica- The Monday Evening Drama See- tion of Charles Boyer-just an all- tion of the Faculty Women's Club will round college boy, just any college meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the boy-MichiganUnion.___ questioned stated that their date must be tall. Three mentioned specifically that they preferred medium height. Few girls cared whether a man is handsome, though most of them said that they liked a "good general ap- JI N O R pearance." Quite a few specified neatness, and 11 cited a "good dress- A 1N D R I G ID er" as a must. Five said "well-built."{ IN WEI REST to G 9 T TINT With the basketball semi-finals < in view, seven more intramural teams were spurred on to victory, and one ° tilt proved to be a hard-fought tie. Alpha Delta Pi took over Couzens * Hall I 15-7 as Palmer House was de- If the coldest weather of this winter feated by Mosher I, 19-6 Monday. has made you decide that a fur jacket Stockwell Hall won over Kappa Al- pha Teta, 21-0, as Couzens II whipped' or theZeta Tau Alpha 13-0 Tuesday. that you had wanted for dates, but you don't want to buy a winter coat Wednesday's only game gave Mosh- so late in the season, then try this er II a 24-22 win over GammaPhi idea. Beta II. Alpha Gamma Delta beat Like the mannequin above, go ahead PiBeta Thi 11-8 Thursday, as Col- and buy a spring coat, but make it a legiate Sororosis took the lead over very plain and fitted one. Couzens Hall IIL19-14. Helen Newbery and Delta DeltaI Blonds And Brunettes O.K. i There was not much differentation made between blonds and brunettes. Only about 15 of the answers seemed to contain any prejudice one way or the other, and these were pretty even- ly divided up between the two types. No one said anything about red-heads. Consideration seems to be another important qualification for a man, and after this comes sincerity. Other qualities mentioned were poise, cheer- fulness, nonchalance, sweetness, am- bition, vivacity, shyness, and awk- wardncss. Other various opinions were that a date must be crazy, hap- py-go-lucky. clean-cut, little boyish, HICKORY proves again that fabrics need not be heavy to be heavenly. See for yourself what skillful styling and two-way pull can accomplish for lean body lines. WAA Sports Schedule Basketball: At 5:10 Monday: Stockwell II vs. Sorosis. At 4:30 Tuesday: Mosher I vs. Alpha Delta Pi. At 5:10 Tuesday: Newberry vs. Delta Delta Delta; Couzens II vs. Martha Cook. At 5:10 Wednesday: Winner of Couzens. II vs. Martha Cook game vs. Alpha Gamma Del- ta. At 5:10 Thursday: Finals of A Tournament: winner of Newberry vs. Delta Delta Delta game vs. Mosher Ii. Cuthbert is a junior night editor on The Daily and is a publicity chairman for Theatre Arts. She has worked on Freshman Project, Soph- omore Cabaret and Assembly Ban- quet. Miss Polumbaum has partici' pated in Freshman Project, Sopho- more Cabaret, Theatre Arts, the 'En- sian -and Gargoyle. She also has been an orientation advisor, worked on the League merit committee and Assembly Banquet. Delta tied 11-11. - - --- ------ - W/ant to a e I mlx-capper" --, 1 / ' ." r , .,r. 4f,, / -- , "-- ,''I t '; , 4 j ! , il t ,11 1t ' ',? ' s , r'/ r°'1 t Y r 'pr. f/ 1 x I ITS STEP-IN GIRDLE is "little" in name - but "long" on com- fort. Unusual control in two- way stretch Swiss knit Lastex tactfully trims your hips and modulates your midriff. The welt top stays put and the self- edge bottom clings smoothly. A favorite of junior and average figures. Small, medium, and large The jungle has gone ' formal, in a new eve- ning gown from Ja- cobsons, The black and white tropical- p:int skirt and sleek black silk jersey top are accent- ed by a wide and bright red dummerbund at the waist. Another new arrival combines a red lace skirt with a white silk jersey top. Or if prints sound appealingly springlike. you'll find giant purple pansies splashed daringly on a white ground. Made for spectacular J-Hop success, all three of these! ~AvAN For hands on pa- rade! Calkins- Fletcher has Peg- gy Sage's new ''7 "Colour Guard," a set of polish,.' polish remover, and Satinbase, all in an attractive new con- tainer. The stand in which the bottles fit is of red plastic with a little trough for emory boards and manicuring gad- gets, and the shining cover comes in blue, silver, or gold. Choice of Whimsy, Skyhigh,2 Dusty Rose, Spring Fever, Cloy- er, or Flagship for the polish. A $1.50 value for $1.00. Designed for the col- lege-girl type espec- ially are Ellen Kayes, found only at the Collins shop. This ' house consistently N features unique styling and the finest workmanship, and their frocks give perennial service, 4 season after season. One of the now spring navies is of excel- 7 lent line, simply styled, with dainty white lace-edged col- lar and cuffs. Another navy has a long torso line with a self- / material peplum frill. Still another, in print, goes gay in/ red and green. Junior sizes, from 9 to 17. N A distinctive coif- fure is what you want for J-Hop weekend. Let Vogue design one for you. You'll find enthusiastic and skillful oper- ators ready to give you their advice and help to make your hair style flattering yet origin- al for that most important of all weekends. - Besides the best-look-J ing formal you've ever i owned, the Dillon shop advises concentrating, / .too, on your date-type x dress for the inform- j al dances following J-Hop. You will find a grand selection of both types here - the new l f rhumba dress in white lace with tiny black velvet bolero edged in ball fringe will make you a South-American beauty at the Hop. Then a "little" dress with black silk jersey top and little collar, a red or green print full skirt, and red or green cummerbund for brave accent will assure your success afterwards. Date dresses begin at $7.95. Pastelshold the floor at the Mari- lyn shop in suits and new reversibles. The suits, in plain or plaid pastels, all *have the longer torso in fitted In- /~ .7 v in, 94Q 7.7~ E 7 z :, p k\\MmMoRR X, N Vl ,' tJOp F O I '' Newa 8 0 CO0York cong + oti e I I Li-I I' 4 2. HIOP arrivals from New . . . rhumba y ga dresses, patri- c Americana styles, therial bouffant nets . . . and gobs Yankee- tex sides' /'/ 'j1 satin Las- panelsnto s to cling, : d --1 4ccen1j FlOP 9rma/ 4redd of other Pr; 3' Sizes 9-20 iced from $12.95 You needn't be a upper and puller-dow step-in has leno Las that hold your hips,s tex front and back smooth you, self-edges tiny stays in front tipping over, and a to avoi No-Roll t \KK ' 1 .v JW t. Y } waist. Sizes: 25-?2 . -43. st II$ a t'M-- FORMAL ACCESSORIES Beautiful jewelry, white gloves, formal slips, hosiery . . Just everything to add those "finish- ing touches." Priced around $1.95 FORMAL BLOUSES and; 4 SKIRTS ... f romn $3.95 EVERYTHING about this com- fortable-but-slimming founda- tion makes for lovelier lines: the hip-trimming leno Lastex side sections, the front and back satin Lastex control panels, the net-lined lace bra with the famous PermaLift in- ner cup that NEVER becomes just limp lace! Perfect for the scoop 'I rrr ,, average type figure. Sizes: 32- You'll want the smartest possible costume jewelry o accent your "date" A i L ; f , . I