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January 28, 1942 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1942-01-28

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

SIX

THE MICHIGAN DIY

Pay-Off D ance To Be Held Feb.,2 7 In Lea gue

NO FLUNKING ALLOWED, FELLAS!

Sharp Issues
J-Hop Rules
For Feb. 6, 7

Dance To End At 3 A.M. Friday
And At Midnight Saturday; No
Corsages Will Be Permitted
(Continued from Page 1)
Hop patron list or from the approved
list of fraternity chaperons, or from
the University faculty.
All charges for taxicabs in excess of
the rates authorized by the city ord-
inance should be reported to the
Committee. Control of lighting shall
be in the hands of the Committee
and not delegated to the orchestra
leaders.
The J-Hop Committee shall be re-
sponsible for the proper conduct,
while in the gymnasium, of, all those
attending the Hop. The use, posses-
sion, or showing the effect of intoxi-
cants will not be tolerated. Offenders
will be ejected from the hall and
their names reported to the president
of the Men's Council.
Smoking in the booths or on the
floor of the hall is absolutely for-
bidden, and is permitted only in the
space provided for that purpose.
Violatibns of the regulations of the
Hop traceable to groups, but not to
individuals, will render the entire
group liable to penalty. The responsi-
bility for the maintenance of proper
conduct in any booth and for the
observance of the rules by the mem-
bers of a group having a booth shall
rest upon the president and the
J-Hop representative of the group.

Committeemen
Announce Quest
List For J-Hop
First lady of the 1943 J-Hop will
be Lorraine Panzer of Detroit, who
will behthe guest of Ted Sharp, gen-
eral chairman.
"The College Dance of the Year"
will also be attended by music chair-
man Bob Bartlow and Marilyn Mer-
cer of Pontiac; Bob Burstein, pub-
licity chairman, and Elayne Jess of
Chicago, and Bob Begle, tickets
chairman, and Nancy Doran, '43.
Mary Louise Knapp, secretary, will
attend with William Aitken of De-
troit, Tom Poyzer, buildings chair-
man, wvith Nancy Worrell, '43A, and
Elaine Barth, programs, with Leon
Landsberg, '42.
Bruce Renaud and Jim Snodgrass,
co-chairmen of booths, have invited
Jean Whittemore, '42, and Martha
Wood, of Cincinnati, Ohio, respec-
tively, to attend.
Mildred Christa and Marjorie Mul-
len will be there with Dick Osmer of
East Lansing and Owen Johnson, '43,
respectively, and Rose Mary Mann
and Leanore Grossman, co-chairman
of patrons, will have as their guests
Bruce Corson, '43E, and Alex Kas-
mer of Detroit, respectively.
Other than those just mentioned,
400 student couples are expected to
attend sometime during the week-
end-to say nothing of the special
guests and sundry patrons and pa-
tronesses, aptly headed by Gov. and
Mr. Van Wagoner and President and
Mrs. Ruthven-and of course the
various photographers, reporters
(cubs and otherwise) and music
critics.

Mortarboard
Stresses Spirit
Of Informality
Anyone May Attend; Women
Are Afforded An Opportunity
To Offset Social Obligations
Designed to eliminate complaints
from the men about the double stan-
dard and women getting all the
breaks, Mortarboard will sponsor
again this year the annual Pay-Off
dance, to be held from 9 p.m. to 1
a.m. Friday, Feb. 27, in the League
ballroom.
Falling in line with the current
campus efforts to cut out unneces-
sary extravagances and conspicuous
consumption, Pay-Off will be a strict-
ly informal, almost sweater-and-skirt
affair, with the music provided by the
latest recorded tunes of the bestf
dance bands played on an automatic
nickelodeon.
Forget J-Hop
Pay-Off was originally instituted
to give the women on campus a
chance to thank their J-Hop dates
for the big week-end of the year.
Since its beginning four years ago,
the dance has gradually evolved to
be an opportunity for any woman to
"pay off" any man she has dated,
J-Hop or no J-Hop.
At this dance, the men will get all
the "breaks" they lavish on the wo-
men all year. Women who really take
their obligations seriously could call
for their dates before the dance and
see them home afterward.
On Receiving End
Shy people. are excused from this
duty, however, because Mortarboard
realizes the strong hold convention
has on the average college student.
Nevertheless, the men can expect
boutonnieres, as the nearest approxi-
mation to corsages that the women
could pay off with, and still not im-
ply that the men are sissies.
Committeemen in charge of the
affair are Virginia Appleton, music;
Louise Keatley, programs; Jane Baits,
boutonnieres; Peggy Polumbaum,
tickets; Margaret Sanford and Vir-
ginia Frey, decorations; Phyllis Love-
joy, finance; Rosebud Scott, patrons,j
and Grace Miller, publicity.

By SHAPP Y
'Tis the day before finals, and be-
lieve us, news is plenty scarce, bar-
ring of course, the war fronts. But
one headline and one tearing bit of
news is that Stockwell defeated Alpha
Delta Pi with a score of 22 to 19 to
be crowned (figuratively, of course)
victor of the WAA interhouse basket-
ball tourney.
Behind the lines were the scores
of Jordan and Stockwell I, finalists
in the B tournament when Jordan de-
feated Delta Gamma, 15-14, and
Stockwell II downed Alpha Chi
Omega, 23-17 and Couzens I, 44-19.
When the two greats met each other,
Stockwell I proved to be the stronger
to the tune of 39 to Jordan's 13.
Alpha Delta Pi had defeated Martha
Cook, 29-19 to be victorious in the
A tournament and so met Stockwell;
I of the B tourney yesterday in the

unpleasant memory tomorrow, why
not 'say it with exercise' and heave
a ball down the well-kept alleys of
the W.A.B. Bowling alleys are openi
from 3:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. and 7 p.m.
to 10 p.m. daily and on Saturday
from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. as well as from
7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
If you've got time for a dip, and
maybe getting all wet will help you
on your next exam, if you're not all
wet already, or is that too corny?
. anyhow the Union pool will be
open from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
Tuesdays and Thursday. Badmin-
tonites can hold forth in the gym
anytime through next Monday night.
Be sure to take advantage of the
swell opportunities you all have to
relax and refresh yourself during
this exam period... and so long until
soon.
- - - - - -

WAAPntics
By SHAPP
-J

1

L.

R ..e..r.. .._ ._-... ....

final game. 1roth Ur Gradua te
To celebrate the triumph of having Student Is Revealed
one final only a dim, and not-too-
_____________ _ ___ Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. H'arrison,
of New York City, announce the en-
iil Defense gament of Mrs. Harrison's sister,
V Elizabeth Adams, Grad.. to John
Lothrop Daniels. of Forest Hills, Long
Island.
Miss Adams was graduated from
Held N ext W eek Vassar College last year. She is a
member of Phi Beta Kappa and of
The Michigan campus will join Collegiate Sorosis. At present she is
wholeheartedly in the National Ci- studying in the English department,
vilian Defense program next week and holds a University scholarship.
when enrollment in defense courses Mr. Daniels was graduated fromiar-
will begin. vard University in 1938.
Thursday, February 5, registra-
tion for the classes will be held from Directors Wmi3p Mtoeet
1:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. in the office There will be a meeting of the
of Miss Ethel McCormick, Social Di- Fraternity House Directors' Associa-
r rof the Le sa wti e,con- tion at 1:30 p.m. today at the League.
inue Frday t nth sametimeda/y Dr. Claire Healy of Health Service
from 9 a.m. to noon, Saturdaly. will speak to the group.
First Aid Offered
Standard as well as advanced
training in first aid is being offered
to both men and women. Home nurs-
ing will also be taught, and it has After that exam
been announced that there will be
room in the class for men if enough S'eeing these nev
will sign up. Motor mechanics will
only be open to senior women, while
the course in food and nutrition will
be open to both men and women. 9g iu - ea
For those who are not interested
in these, classes in braille, co-recrea-
tional training, and leadership will
be held. There will be compulsory
attendance at every meeting. M

get Odorono Cream tc
104, 390, 59¢ sizes (plus
TiE OnoRoNo Co., IN
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In FEB. too -
Nf4CLER'S SfILE
of FURJItS

I

Continues at
The same low January
prices. If you missed the
sale in January be sure
and see our stock while
these low prices remain.

Marriage Announced
Mildred MacArthur and Ensign
William Byron Darnton were mar-
ried Sunday in the Flint Central
Church, Flint, Mich.
Both are University graduates and
Mrs. Darnton is a member of Alpha
Delta Pi sorority. Mr. Darnton at-
tended Culver Military Academy be-
fore coming to the University to re-
ceive his bachelor's degree.
There's nothing like a wide felt
belt to make your waistline do the
dwindling act. Clap a black one
glinting with gold braid on a simple
black dress or dirndl and you're ready
for the evening.

i get a lift from
tv Spring Clothes,...
huar dayv~s
P'We -nd

SaVings Up to /

.

\ 1 U

A faculty
held from.
Wednesday,

Alumni Dance will be
9 p.m. to midnight,
Jan. 28, at the Union.

_ _ - ! +...." i !III

4aetin

/~e1ih6e . .

. . . in eye-catching picture gowns fo
biggest event of the year . . . past
nets, moires, chiffons, crepes, and jer-
seys in all the newest spring styles.
Wear them now and all through
the summer.

N4,y
I } .
t
4.
4 44

Il

Committee Announced
Nan Gray, '43, has been appointed
as head of the registration commit-
tee. Mary Brownrigg, '44, chairman
of League houses, will be in charge
of all correspondence with Michigan
men who are in, the service.
Josephine Fitzpatrick, '44, is
chairman of the committee on De-
fense Classes and Volunteer Work,
and Betty Steffan, '42, heads the
Placement Bureau. Miriam Williams,
'44, is responsible for publicity, and
Ruth Schwab, '43, general secretary,
is in charge of national doings of
Red Cross in national defense work.
Barbour Gymnasium will be avail-
able for badminton up to Saturday
noon, Feb. 1. It may not be used
after that because of preparations
for registration.
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New Pastel

Sweaters-Shirts--Skirts from $3.00.
Slim flannel slacks at $6.75 and $7.50

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Casual and "soft" styles.
Pastels and dark .

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- - A

1131E11

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