THURSDAY, APiIL 13, 1944 THE MTCIVA.N . DAILY PAGE m Assembly Ball Petitions Due By Wednesday Dance To Be Held Together With Panhel's Annual Party; Eight Positions Are Available Petitioning for Assembly Ball Com- mittee will begin tomorrow and con- tinue through Wednesday, announced Doris Barr, president of Assembly Board yesterday. Eight positions are available on the committee: general chairman, tickets chairman, program, publicity, decor- ations, patrons, finance and music. Petitions are available in the Under- graduate Office of the League. Inter- viewing will take place from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, April 20, through Wednesday, April 22. This year's Assembly Ball will be held in conjunction with Pan Hel- lenic's annual dance. It was decied by Assembly Board and Pan Hellenic to combine the functions and make it a great big event rather than two small ones, Miss Barr explained. Pan Hellenic's committee has al- ready been chosen. For each general heading such as, tickets or decora- tions there will be two chairmen, one representing Assembly and the other representing the sororities. All unaffiliated women are eligible to petition for the positions. Archery Club To Meet Today Bull's-eye targets set up on Pal- mer Field may look like a far cry from the green depths of Sherwood Forest, but the spirit of the archers is still present in the WAA Archery Club, headed by Barbara Fairman, '46, who will assume the managership of the Archery Club in addition to that of the Outing Club. The first meeting of the Archery Club will be held at 5 p.m. today in the small lounge of the WAB, and all coeds who are interested in arch- ery are urged to attend. At this initial meeting, plans for the organi- zation and activities of the club will be discussed. No previous experience is necessary for membership in this club, and wo- men of all classes are invited to join. However, those coeds who have had some archery practice either at the University or at other schools are especially asked to join.aIt is not necessary to own a bow and arrows, because all equipment may be rented at the WAB for a small sum. Two groups will be formed within the club. One group will be for those coeds who have had advanced arch- ery with instruction while the other group will be for beginners. Instruc- tions will be given to those who need it. Inter-club tournaments will be sponsored as wel las matches with neighboring colleges. Notice of Bowling Tourney Matches Is Posted in Barbour The schedule of matches to be played off in the campus bowling tournament is posted in Barbour Gymnasium, and all entries are asked to complete their matches by Satur- day, April 22, at the downtown alleys. The bowling alleys at the WAB were closed April 1 when the federal tax went into operation, so all match- es must be played downtown. Those matches which are not recorded by April 22 will be forfeited, according to Virginia Dodd, '45, bowling club manager. Sorority Plans Party Pledges of Zeta Tau Alpha will give a party from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday at the chapter house for all pledges of all other sororities, according to Bon- nie Brown, chairman of the affair. New officers have been elected. Elsie B. Wellman is president; Alice McKenzie, vice-president; Harriet Godshalk, treasurer, and Marian Bassett, secretary. Junior WomenE Are Eligible for Scholarships All junior women who have par- ticipated in League and war activities and have a scholastic rating of at least 2.7 are eligible to petition for either the McCormick or Alice Lloyd scholarships which will be awarded at the Installation Night ceremonies on May 2. Two original letters of recommen- dation must accompany every peti- tion which should be deposited in Monna Heath's box in the Under- graduate Office of the League. - Both the McCormick and Alice Lloyd Scholarships have been built up by undergraduates of previous years. Funds have been given from the various class projects each year so that the scholarships could be awarded to women outstanding in both activities and scholarship each year The McCormick Scholarships were won last year by Ann McMillan, Bar- bara Smith and Mildred Otto. All women eligible and interested may obtain petitions for these scholar- ships in the Undergraduate Office of the League. V&eddings cN and Engagements The marriage of Roberta Troper, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Tro- per of Ann Arbor, to Capt. Jack R. Sutherland, USMCR, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Pierce of Coldwater, was announced by her parents. The former Miss Troper graduated from the University of Michigan in' February. She was a member of the Alpha Phi sorority. Capt. Suther- land attended Washington and Lee University and was graduated from the Law School at the University of Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Noble of Ann Arbor announced the engage- ment of their daughter, Charlotte, to Wesley Ross Caire, son of Mrs. Ed- ward Moles of Long Island and the late Adam Ross Caire. Both Miss Noble and Mr. Caire are graduates of the University of Mich- igan. Miss Noble graduated in June, 1943. Immediately after graduation she became a member of the Women's Army Corps. She was the first stu- dent to join the corps. Because of illness she took a medical discharge; in August of last year. She is a member of Alpha Phi sorority, and while on campus was an officer of Student's Post-War Council, charter member of the International Rela- tions Club and theatre-arts chairman on the Michigan League Council. The marriage of Susan Stephenson, to Pvt. Henry G. Cooper of Detroit, was announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Stephenson of Grosse Pointe. The former Miss Stephenson is a senior at the University of Michigan. She is affiliated with the Young Wo- men's Christian Association as the Girl Reserve Secretary. She is also active in the Student Religious As- sociation. Pvt. Cooper took gradu- ate work at the University of Michi- gan and is now stationed at Camp Hale in Colorado. Rev. and Mrs. Paul Wuerfel of Ann Arbor announced the marriage of their daughter, Jewel Winifred, to Alfred Meigs Davock, son of Mrs. Clarence Davock of Detroit. The former Miss Wuerfel is a graduate of the University and of the Tobe-Coburn School of Fashion Ca- reers in New York. She is a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Mr. Davock, a member of Psi Up- silon fraternity, attended Cranbrook School, Cranbrook Academy of Art, and the University. More Workers Assist at Unit House Honor Roll Announced As New System Is Inaugurated "Last week was unusually success- ful for the League Surgical Dressings Unit," Mickey Thielen, publicity chairman, said yesterday. "If attendance continues to be as excellent we shall be able to meet our Red Cross quota," she added. The newly adopted system whereby wo- men's residences are asked to send enough workers to contribute a speci- fied number of hours each week will be continued. The honor roll thus far for at- tendance at the unit consists of the 1 following houses; sororities, whose quotas are 16 ho'urs a week for each house, are Chi Omega, with 30 hours; Delta Delta Delta, 27 hours; Alpha Epsilon Phi, 27 hours; Alpha Chi Omega, 22 hours; Kappa Delta, 21 hours; Alpha Delta Pi, 20 hours; Kappa Kappa Gamma, 16 hours; auxiliary dorm with a quota of 16 hours is Washtenaw House, 16 hours; League House with a quota of 3 hours, are Pray House, 14 hours; Starring House, 6 hours; Strickland House, 5 hours; Hen- drickson House, 5 hours; Augspur- ger House, 4 hours; Rock House, 3 hours. Miss Thielen emphasized that the new system is not designed to limit houses to a specified number of hours, but to recruit new workers and to encourage them to be regular in attendance. Far more hours than those asked of the houses are neces- sary to fill the quota. Surgical Dressings' workers must not wear sweaters, but cotton blouses, dresses or smocks are required. No lint from woolen material must be allowed to get into the bandages. Nail polish is also prohibited. The Unit is open from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday each week. Workers may go in at any time. Instructors are pres- ent each day to orientate new work- ers. A minimum of twd hours is asked of each coed, since much of ....; , Pvt. Esther M. La Rowe, an "Air Australia, where she will assume her Wac," is stationed at the First WAC duties as American Red Cross hospi- Training Center, Fort Des Moines, tal recreation worker; Red Cross Na- Iowa, for her basic training. After tional Headquarters announced to- she completes this training, she will day. Miss Belcher attended the Uni- be assigned to the Army Air Forces. versity, George Peabody College and Pvt. La Rowe received a B.S. degree the University of Tennessee. She had in Education from the University of been an instructor also in the English Michigan, and a Master's degree from departments of Allegheny and Milli- Columbia University. She taught for gan Colleges. several years at Beaver College, Jenk- intown, Pa., and more recently atMeXican Student Has State Teachers College, Dickinson, N.D., under the Navy's V-12 program. Optimis tic Outlook She is a member of the National Education Association, and the Amer- On Plight of Coeds can Physical Education Association. "Things are never as bad as they Wilma Bernhard, who is now in seem," and Felipe Garcia Beranza, a England, is an American Red Cross former student at the National Uni- hospital social worker. Miss Bernhard versity of Mexico, now attending was a case worker with the American Macalester College, Saint Paul, on a Committee for Christian Refugees in special scholarship to study litera- New York City, and she previously ture, habits, and customs of the peo- held a similar position with the Fam- ple of the United States has given ily Welfare Society, Providence, R.I. proof of the fact to coeds who gripe She is a graduate of the University because dates are so few. of Michigan and the New York "Dating," says Felipe, "is some- School of Social Work. thing unknown to college students in Mexico." Students attend college Hannah G. Belcher, former instruc- only to study, and there are no extra- tor at the University, has arrived in curricular organizations, dances or parties. Mexican men never ask a girl to attend a movie with them or JGP Stamp Money to step over to the drug store for a Requested Today e. However, the superfluous cokes and All JGP stamp and bond repre- stuff aren't really necessary, for a sentatives in the various houses and Mexican gal lands her man in one dormitories are requested to come move. If a boy wishes to see a girl, he to the Undergraduate Office of the goes to her home and visits the whole League today to turn in any money family-this gesture is an indication that they have on hand. that he is interested in marrying her! The following houses are especially asked to come: Adelia Cheever House, Alpha Delta Pi announced the re- Day House, Ingalls House, Lester Co- cent pledging of Dorothy Kuhnle, op, Palmer House, Pickrell House, '47; Patricia Meanwell, '47; and Vir- Shevers House and University House. ginia Mueller, '46. MISS BETTY LUTZ, 24, of Benton Harbor, a liberal arts student at Michigan State College, plunged to her death from a fire escape window in a Lansing office building Monday. Coroner Ray Gorsline said the young woman had committed suicide, apparently because of worry over her health. -AP Photo, courtesy of The Lansing State Journal. Women in Auxiliary Territoria I Service Now Number 212,000 the first hour head-dresses ready. is spent in putting on and getting material British women in the Auxiliary Territorial Service now number 212,- 000, according to Mrs. L. V. Whately, its new director, who recently an-" nounced that some 12,000 of these women are serving with the Army overseas. In Africa a number of ATS mem- bers will receive the New Africa Star in recognition of their praiseworthy work. This decoration is awarded by Britain to soldiers who served in the African campaign. One-third of the 200,000 ATS mem- bers stationed on the British Isles perform their duties in cooperation with male gunners at anti-aircraft posts. Nearly equal in number are fully qualified tradeswomen who are replacing soldiers in eighty skilled crafts, among which are drafting, armoring and wireless. Another 50,- 000 women are serving as technical storewomen, switchboard and tele- printer operators and cooks in the British Army. Relative to the conditions under which the ATS women live, Mrs. Whately revealed that a new center which will be devoted to their needs, has just been established. The cen- ter, the first of its kind to be opened in England, will house girls who need further conditioning after completing ordinary hospital treatment and con- valescence. In addition it will pro- vide treatment for ATS who are gen- erally rundown 'or who have minor ailments. House President Meeting Held Each house president is responsible for every coed's attendance at Instal- lation Night, which will take place on Tuesday, May 2, in Rackham Lecture Hall, the house presidents decided at their meeting in the League yester- Sday. Installation Night will be one of the largest functions of the year for all campus women. All League offi- cers will be recognized, orientation advisers will be announced, and coeds will be given the opportunity to feel more a part of campus activities, according to Marilyn Mayer, presi- dent of Judiciary Council. The eve- ning will be further highlighted by a speech given by Madame Barzin from Belgium. It was also decided to enforce pen- alties on negligent house presidents. A fine from 25c to five dollars is to be placed on each house failing to send representatives to the monthly meet- ings. ThOUSands of women want A "MECHANICAL PIG" in their kitchens- F Chino Lamps Brighten up your rooms with a " w v lovely piece of Crown Stafford r -China. We have lamps, vases, }