% APRIL 5, 1 944 THE MICHIG~AN DlAILY t as ai ar} i 1...r. hi 8 W 1'i 1 ] it iC /, L 1 i ZXT4jl R Ak Independents Guest Speaker, Dessert, Skits To Highlight Program at 8 P.M. Unaffiliated Coeds To Receive Individual, Group Awards for Activities, Scholarship will Hold Rec Congeniality and companionship will head the attractions offered by Assembly Recognition Night which will be held at 8 p.m. today at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. All unaffiliated women are eligible to attend the affair which will sparkle with variety, according to the central committee. Humorous skits, the pre- sentation of awards, a talk by Ger- aldine Elliott, the author of the pop- ular broadcast the "Hermit's Cave," and dessert are all included in the 30 cents admission charge. Tickets may be purchased from house repre- s4 iatives and at the League from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. today and will also be sold at the door. Miss Elliott is the script director for Station WJR in Detroit and is an alumna of Michigan. She will speak on the subject, "Tomorrow the Wo- man" and will be introduced by Doris Barr, president o Assembly. Honoraries Will Give Skits Dorothy DeVries, '44, general chair- man of the event, will act as mistress of ceremonies for the rest of the program. The honorary societies, Senior Society, Mortarboard and Wy- vern, will give original skits describ- ing their activities. Ira M. Smith, registrar, will pre- sent three scholarship awards, one each to the sophomore, junior and senior women who have maintained the highest scholastic averages for two semesters. These women will, have their names engraved on the scholarship cup in the League. Three honorable mentions for each class will also be given. The house with the highest average will be recognized. Monna Heath, president of the Wo- men's War Council, will give engrav- Sherwood Reeder To Meet with Child Care Volunteers Sherwood L. Reeder, director of the Federal Public Housing Administra- tion, Miss Dorothy Cline, and the Willow Run center staff will meet with the Child Care volunteers at 7;15 p.m. tomorrow in the Grand Rapids Room of the League. The meeting is compulsory and is being held to give the coeds working at Willow Run background informa- tion about the project. Mr. Reeder and Miss Cline will discuss the gen-1 eral problems during the mass dis-; cussion. Following the mass discussion the' volunteers will assemble in groups, according to their type of work. In these group meetings coeds will re- ceive individual instructions and aid, and may bring up any questions orl problems that have arisen. Dance Club Needs Larger Tap Section The WAA Dance Club will have to give up its tap and musical comedyE section, which meets at 7:30 p.m.? Thursday, unless there is an in- creased coed turn-out at its meeting tomorrow, according to Rae Larsen,I '44, Dance Club chairman. The five present members of the club have professed their reluctance to give it up, for the club furnishes,I they said last Thursday, fun andt enjoyment as well as.experience. Missc ,arsen, a member of the DancingI Masters of America, teaches theI group at no cost to the members, and1 the hour is usually spent working on1 new steps and on musical comedy routines.I The club, inaugurated last fall,? will be dropped from the WAA sched- ule unless students show a greaterc interest by coming out and dancing tomorrow, Miss Larsen reported. "New suggestions for the club," she added, "will be welcome."c ed scrolls to the eight women, two from each class, who were the most active in war work last semester. Martha Cook and Pray league house have already received wooden plaques for being the most active houses in war activities. Dessert To Be Served Dessert, which consists of punch and cake, Will be served immediately following the program in the Grand Rapids Room. The room will be decorated with graphs illustrating the participation of the houses in the various war activities. Miss DeVries, in commenting on the event,'said, "This is the one night in the year when independent women can all get together to have fun and enjoy themselves. It certainly is an evening which no one can afford to miss." Those assisting Miss DeVries in planning Recognition Night are Ros- alie Bruno, '44, assistant chairman; Edith Helberg, '44, and Kay John- son, '45, arrangements; Lee Chaice, '46, program; Claire Macaulay, '46, and Sybil Baum, '46, tickets; and Frances Goldberg, '46, and Audrey Jupp, '46, publicity. Dressings Unit To Inaugurate New System A new system requiring each wo- men's residence to contribute a spe- cified number of hours each week to the League Surgical Dressings Unit has been inaugurated, according to Mickey Thielen, '45, publicity chair- man of the Unit, who also announced that houses which fail to fulfill their quota of hours will be placed on a well-publicized "black-list." Miss Thielen urged regular work- ers to continue coming on days their house is not required to send mem- bers. "Just because a definite num- ber of hours is asked it does not mean that houses cannot and should not contribute more," she said. "Coeds who have been working at the Unit deserve credit for the fine attendance record of last wee," Miss Thielen continued. Sorority pledges must record their hours for t'_e house in which they are now living, and workers are in- vited to come in groups of five or six. "A group of women who know each other will find it very pleasant to work at the same table. Why not have "bull sessions" at the Unit rath- er than at the nearest drug store?" Miss Thielen suggested. Coeds who work or have classes during the afternoon are asked to spend one evening each week at the surgical dressings unit in the Rack- ham Building, which is open from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday. Hours contributed in the evening are transferable to house records. Ruthvens Entertain Five Houses Today President and Mrs. Alexander G. Ruthven will entertain members of the student body and especially resi- dents of Martha Cook, Lloyd House, Michigan House, Adelia Cheever, Kappa Kappa Gamma and Zone IV League Houses at a tea from 4 to 6 p.m. today in their home. Mrs. Diekema of Martha Cook and Mrs. Owen from Kappa Kappa Gam- ma will pour from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m., while Miss Starr, assistant director of the USO, and Mrs. Glass from Adelia Cheever will preside at the tea table from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. Kay Klintworth, '45, has been in charge of arrangements for the tea. Soph Project's New Directors Are Announced Virginia Councell, of Kappa Kappa Gamma, was yesterday named chair- man of 1944-45 Sophomore Project by Marilyn Mayer, '44, chairman of Women's Judiciary Council. Joan Wilk, of Alpha Epsilon Phi, in charge of St. Joseph's Hospital, will be assistant chairman, while captains are Carolyn Brown, Kappa Alpha Theta; Pat Doelle, Pi Beta Phi; Avery Grant, Pi Beta Phi, and Margery, Harrington, Betsy Barbour. Marilyn Holtom, Alpha Chi Omega; Carolyn Newberg, Jordan Hall; Bar- bara Scott, Kappa Alpha Theta; Alice Spicer, Alpha Chi Omega; Shir- ley Spike, Alpha Phi; Elaine Stembol,I 520 S. Forest, and Barbara William-I son, Alpha Gamma Delta fill out the roster of hospital captains. Soph Project, converted in the fall of 1942 into a war project, is in charge of volunteer workers for Uni- versity and St. Joseph's Hospitals. Lag in Laundry, Volunteering Donald A. Callnin, manager of the University laundry, stated that of 125 University students registered at the laundry, only 79 worked last week, putting in a total of 406 hours for the week. Callnin said that because of the small number of students working for this period, the hours put in equalled those of only seven and one-half full time employes. He. emphasized that coeds have worked! in very well with regular employes, but some of them have not been too dependable. University women averaged less than two hours a person during a ten day period, but Callnin felt that as the semester progressed, they Panhel Night Seating Chart Posted Today Representatives from every soror- ity house may find their seating arrangements for Panhellenic Night posted in the Undergraduate Offico of the League today, according to Peg Laubengayer, '45, chairman of the committee. Panhellenic Night will be held at 7:30 p.m. Monday at the Rackham Building. The affair will take the form of a radio program to be pre- sented by Panhellenic Products, Inc. The title for the 'broadcast' will be "Panhellenic Parade," a program which will endeavor to sum up all the activities of the sororities for the year. f r J l1 l { { 1 Panhellenic Council Petitions for positions on the 1944- '45 Panhellenic Council must be left in the Undergraduate Office of the League by Monday, according to Mary June Hastreiter, '44, president of the Council, who also announced that applicants will be interviewed from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday. Council positions include president, vice-president, secretary, treasurer and rushing secretary.j WAA Board Women of all classes are urged toj petition for positions on the Wo- dormitories, sororities, league houses and co-operatives. Sports managers to be chosen are: bowling, ping-pong, fencing, outing, softball, tennis, swimming, golf, badminton, archery, hockey, la crosse and rifle clubs. Bomber Scholarship The League and the Union will each be represented by a co-chair- man of the 1944-45 Bomber Schol- arship Committee, for which peti- tioning is now going on, according to Jean Bisdee, '44, chairman of Bomber Scholarship. Petition blanks, which must be left in a box labelled "Bomber Schol- arship" in the Undergraduate Office of the League by Wednesday, April 12, may be secured by both men and women from the League social direc- tor from 10 a.m. to noon, and 1:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Fri- day and between 10 a.m. and 12 a.m. Saturday. In addition to information request- ed on the petition blank, applicants are asked to state whether or not they intend to attend the summer session or the summer term, and also the date they expect to be graduated. Petitioners will be interviewed at a date to be announced later by the present Bomber Scholarship Com- mittee. Freshman Project Petitioning for three positions on the Freshman Project, open to all first semester freshman women, and to second semester women whose homes are in Ann Arbor, will begin today and will continue through Saturday, according to Estelle Klein, '47, chairman of Freshman Project. Petitions may be obtained at the Undergraduate Office in the League. Interviewing will be held Monday and Tuesday. "We want the new freshmen and the Ann Arbor women to take an active part in their class project," said Miss Klein. "Many girls do not yet realize that the upkeep of Uni- versity lawns and grounds is war work and a responsibility that the freshman women must assume." Women's War Council Interviewing of applicants for po- sitions on the 1944-45 Women's War Council will be held April 10 through April 14 and April 17 through April 20, and petitions must be turned in to the Undergraduate Office of the League by Friday. Petitions must state the position desired, contain plans for carrying out the duties of the office, and must be filled out in ink. Dgnition Night Today Petitioning for Five Campus Central Committees To Continue at League I I Special gues.ts for the occasion will II be Dean Alice C. Lloyd, who will pre- sent the war activities award; Regis- trar Ira Smith, who will award theI scholarship cup; Nancy Hattersley, '44, president of the WAA, who will make the sports presentation. Others on the program will in- elude: Mary June Hastreiter, '44, president of Panhellenic and director of the company; Sue Wood, '44, rush- ing secretary of Panhellenic who will give the rushng report; the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, winners of last year's Lantern Night, who will. sing two selections, and the Panhel- lenic Ball Committee who will pre- sent a skit highlighting their func- tion which will take place at a later date. Personnel reports of the mem- bers of all activities must be turned into the Undergraduate Office of the League by committee chairmen by 5 p.m. tomorrow. would get back into the swing of things. Gerry Stadelman, '44, personnel administrator, stated that the women had a very good record last semester and should keep it up this semester. men's Athletic Association (WAA) in the capacities of sports managers and' executive board members. Available in the WAB, Barbour Gym and the League Undergraduate Office, the petitions must be filled out and returned to the main desk at the WAB or to Nancy Hattersley's box in the League before 5 p.m. Fri- day. Interviewing will be held from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. April 10 to April 14 in the WAB. Positions open are: president, vice- president, secretary, treasurer, Amer- ican Federation of College Women representative, publicity charman, inter-house manager and heads of FOR YOUR SUITS AND SKIRTS t L . . . f. . , ... . v. 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