8, 1945 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE IFIVE ...--.. ... .. r +.r.r . r'r a .a a i u t. a w .ai i t a i/ _ .iP a s y i 1 VUE It Postwar Plans Include Larger School Staffs Specialists Required To Give Students Special Instruction; Guidance Will Play Major Part "Additional numbers of teachers will be needed after the war to properly staff the elementary and high schools," James B. Edmondson, dean of the School of Education, said in an interview yesterday. Dean Edmondson went on to sayj that there will be an increased num- ber of specialists necessary in post- war school systems. Vocational Work .Stressed More attention will be devoted to giving students instruction in voca- tional work, courses such as child care, home nursing, and problems of family living will also be stressed and a number of schools will offer courses in consumer education, ei- ther as a separate subject or as vari- ous units of several courses, he as- serted. Guidance will occupy a major rule in school systems, he continued, and specialists will be empwyed to sup- plement the work of regular class- room teachers. Service of other ex- perts will be available to students needing instruction in remedial read- ing, mental hygiene, and similar fields, according to Dean Edmonson. Active Community Role Teachers will continue to take an" active part in the postwar communi- ty, in continuation of their partici- pation and leadership in public activ- ities during the war, he said. Accord- ing to Dean Edmonson, "No group has taken a more active part in com- munity activities during the war period than the teachers, and I think this will continue." Courses preparing teachers will includeincreased instructionrelated to the nature of learning and to the actual problems with which schools and communities are faced. Work will be offered in guidance and in various other fields of specialization, Dean Edmonson concluded. Coeds To Attend Hospital Dance Seventy-two coeds will leave at 6 p.m. EWT today for Percy Jones Hospital where they will attend a danc to be given from 9 p.m. to mid- night EWT at service club number three. The women will leave and return today in buses which will be char- tered by the League. The project is being sponsored by the Social Com- mittee and plans are now under con- sideration for similar projects for next year. Women of Sorosis and Gamma Phi Beta sororities will be among the coeds attending, as will a few mem- bers of the Women's War Council. Miss Ethel McCormick, League So- cial Director, Mrs. Rowles, Sorosis, and Mrs. Vibert, Gamma Phi Beta, will accompany the coeds. V&eddrngs ( c~ ,and ,o Engagements The engagement of Bernice Grimes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin L. Grimes of Ann Arbor to Apprentice Seaman Hugh S. Crim USNR, son of Mrs. Grace S. Crim and the late Williard Emerson Crim of Akron, O., has recently been announced. Miss Grimes is a member of thef class of '47 at the University. Sea- man Crim is in the Navy V-12 unit "and is a member of Tau Beta Pi and Quarter Deck.I Mr. and Mrs. Maurice H. Rieger of Chicago, Ill., announce the mar- riage of their daughter, Joan Phyllis, to Corp. Irving B. Siden, USAAF, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. Siden of Detroit. Mrs. Siden is a graduate of Ste- phens Junior College and is' a senior at the University. Corp. Siden at- tended the University of Detroit and has just returned from active service overseas where he served withthe 15th Air Force. k Sociat4o1ej The residents of Helen Newberry will hold a semi-formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday. There will be dancing to records in the dining room and on the side porch. An arboretum theme will be car- ried out by the decorations. The dance is under the direction of Jan- ice Stuck, general chairman; Betty Perrien, decorations chairman; and Shirley Robin, refreshments chair- man. * * * Coeds of Couzens Hall cordially in- vite servicemen and civilians on cam- us to their Cotton Ball at 7:30 p.m. Friday. "Doc" Fielding, master of cere- monies, will keep the cotton ball roll- ing with mixer dances and novelty acts. Refreshments will be served in the main lounge and dancing, ping pong and bridge will round out the evening. Betsy Barbour house held its an- nual honors dinner Wednesday night, with Dean Alice Lloyd as the speaker. Miss Lloyd announced the winners of dormitory scholarships for 1945- 46 as Betty Lou Bidwell, Barbara Davenport, and Louise Jacobacci. Officers for 1945-46 who were elected recently include Miss Shattuck, An- nette Anderson, vice-president, Fran- ces Bull, secretary, Marjory Bean, treasurer, Betty Lou Bidwell, war activities chairmen, and Pat Planck, social chairman. CONTACT RULES ABOLISHED: Houses Governed By Honor System1 CONTACT RULES have been completely abolished during the first semes- ter and following the formal rushing period, according to a recent announcement by the Panhellenic rushing committee. Coming at the close of a long period of debate concerning the rules which governed the intermingling of independent and affiliated women, the abolishment represents a constructive effort to improve relations between the large group of independent women and the smaller number of sorority women on campus. Contact rules merely accentuated the barrier between independent and sorority women by arbitrarily depriving them of normal contact with one another. Moreover, the situation was aggravated by an inadequate campus understanding of the rules, which resulted in new freshmen wondering if they might even speak to friends who wore a sorority pin. A large part of the aim of deferred rushing was defeated by the very rules which governed it. Coeds, theoretically, were supposed to become more familiar with sorority groups during the fall semester so that when rushing actually came, they would not be completely at a loss to choose. Such an idealistic arrangement was virtually impossible under contact rules, since contacts leading to familarity were banned completely. Probably the most regrettable effect of the rules was upon the women, especially upperclassmen, who had no intention of rushing, but found that many of their friends were forbidden to visit them in dormitories or even meet them for a coke. ARGUMENTS AGAINST the abolishment of contact rules have thus far centered about one objection - "dirty rushing." Recognizing this objection, the rushing committee has announced that a voluntary honor code will govern the actions of all sororities before and after the deferred rushing period. There will be no enforcement of the honor system, it will be up to every group to conduct itself in the way it would want every other group to act. Certainly, college women have high enough principles to observe such an honor code. The Michigan campus has a reputation which differentiates it from many of the eastern and southern colleges. U. of M. is reputedly a univer- sity in which it does not matter whether a coed is a member of Assembly or Panhellenic. Both organizations are strong and equally desirable; both provide the extra-curricular activities necessary _to a mature college existence. -By LYNNE FORD QUEEN AND MAYOR--Queen Mary of England leaves St. Paul's Cathedral, London, with the lord mayor, Sir Frank Alexander, after attending a thanksgivingservice. 'ADPiHeads Panhel In Activities H ours Sorority houses leading in Pan- hellenic war activities for the month of May were announced by Doris Deidgen, vice-president of Panhel. Alpha Delta Pi was first with an average of 50 hours per woman; Zeta Tau Alpha was second with an aver- age of 46; and Kappa Delta was' third with an average of 37. Alpha Delta Pi announces its new' officers for the coming year. Those elteed were: Evelyn Farquhar, pres- ident; Mavis Roden, vice-president; Lois Bockstahler, treasurer; Jacque- line Wilson, corresponding secretary; Marjorie Littefield, recording secre- tary; Helen Kearney, Rushing chair- man; and Dorothy Kuhnle, house manager. Lily-White Legs Tan In a Minute When summer weather comes and cceds sport tan stockingless legs, those of the fair-skinned clan can always resort to deception with leg make-up. With a little care it can be a clever deception. For a more "nat- ural" look, some leg make-up may be diluted with water, eliminating that "gooey" look. All women in Regiment V of the USO who do not plan to be here this summer must turn in their membership cards before leaving Ann Arbor. The cards should be placed in the colonel's box in the director's office. Also state when you will leave Ann Ar- bor and when you- expect to re- turn. INVEST IN ..............+,. n. :' i:}} i.W)? y Y (3y White and Light..bhit built for stay iig pow er! VICTORY owl A4 Take h easy! A "wall'd last" Ghillie tie with cleverly hidden arch support to make your walking miles a real pleasure: Shoe Salon Smart couplets for capricioi cool days. Over all a feathe weight rayon gabardine belte shortie coat . . . in California soft sunset colors. Sizes 10-. Priced t9: { i r c 3a! iN 11 r:.~ °C po- I z,., SLACKS or slack suits .. . skirts . pleated or plain . . . crew shirts in plain colors and stripes- and an extremely smart tailored sport jacket . . . A perfect ward- robe tonic for unpredictable days . taken singly or mixed, they are super. -- P-r rmop, Y476 '"Ch eck-Mates" IX-MATCH SEPARATES checked for summer fun outdoors. Hayseed ginghams sweetened with embroidered eyelet ruffling. 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