TII~ MICITIGAN t~AILY PAGE ri 1946 J-Hop Will Spotlight T~or 4-. S e y S Orchestra I -M Ballroom T With Vivid, Sp Traditional Bopth I Ref reshments Will, (Continued from Page 1) Ide, booth chairman. Realizing the usually inadequate facilities for meet- ing friends and resting between dances, the committee felt the tradi- tional booth plan should be revived, Miss Ide continued. All furniture must be set up in booths by noon, Friday, March 8, and removed by noon, Saturday, March 9. A refreshment bar and place for in- dividual dance pictures will be set up in one of the small gyms, dispensing with the congestion of the lobby coke bar and overcrowded dance floor. In- Motar Board ill Present Coed-Bid Dance All women on campus are invited to bring a date to the informal Pay-Off Dance which will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight, Saturday, March 9, the day after J-Hop, in the League Ball- room, sponsored by Mortar Board, senior women's honor society. Tickets priced at $1.50 may be pur- chased from the House Presidents this week, and beginning Monday, March 4, tickets will be sold on cam- pus. The band which will play for the dance and the program, to be pre- sented will be announced soon. Since this is one of the few women- bid dances presented on campus, the Pay-Off dance will be a good oppor- tunity for women to repay their J-Hop date o'r any of their other dates," Doris Heidgen, general chair- man for the dance explained. This year's presentation of the Pay- Off Dance is a revival of a traditional pre-war function. Mortar Board tra- ditionally presented the dance the week-end after J-Hop but it was abandoned during the war. The dance was last given in February of 1942. o Be Decorated arkling3 Colors PIan To Be Revived; Be in Extra Room dividual pictures will be taken against an unusual backdrop, providing dif- ferent scenery for pictures of an ex- travagantly different dance. J-1Id Extra Will le 1istributed Unique programs and the special Daily edition of the J-Hop Extra will be distributed as favors at the dance. Feattued in the Extra will bie humor- ous satires of campus life, the janitor >f the Student Publication Building's >wn plan for an effective student government, pictures of previous Hops, cuts, quips, and cartoons. Shots :aken at the Hop will appear in the second edition of the Extra Saturday. Identification cards should be pre- Mented at the trine of ticket applica- tion and tickets will be allotted pro- portionately by class. Juniors will re- 2eive approximately 900 tickets, sen- iors, 200, and underclassmen, the re- .nainder. A stamped, self-addressed envelope must be turned in with each ipplication blank to facilitate mailing reply cards. Reply Cards To Be Mailed Reply cards will be mailed to each. applicant Saturday, and no tickets will be issued without an accepted re- ply card. Tickets may be purchased Monday and Tuesday, March 4, 5, at the Union Travel Desk. .All tickets will sell for $7.50 and will be paid. for upon receiving them. Students who applied for tickets at the first price f $10 need not reapply. Women have been granted 2:30 a.m. permission for the event and Navy personnel will have 3 a.m. per- mission. Private parties will be ap- proved for Saturday, March 9, by the dean of Students Office to complete he gala weekend. Students in Fine Arts 415 in the Twilight School at Ohio State Uni- versity give two-dimensional life to sparkling new jewelry, latest fashion creations, tall streamlined buildings, complicated highly-polished machin- C? I. Coeds To Sign TOMMY DORSEY, "That Sentimental Gentleman of Swing" who will be spotlighted at the 1947 J-Hop, March 8, with The Sentimentalists, sister-foursome, and Stuart Foster on the vocals, and Charlie Shavers, sensational trumpeter. For Rushing March 4 3 6 Explanation of Local System To Be Given at Mass Meeting; Parties Will Begin March 7 Registration for formal rushing will take place from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mon- day, March 4, Tuesday. March 5, and1 Wednesday, March 6 on the second floor of the League, according to Nancy Jefford, rusing secretary of Panhellenic. Registrants must bring their report cards,s as evidence that they have at least a 'C' average. No coed may register without her report card, and there will be absolutely no registration after the deadline on Wednesday. At 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 6 in Rackham Auditorium, there will be a compulsory meeting for all tltose wcmen who have signed up. The cur- rent rushing system will be explained end there will be opportunity for the 2oeds to ask questions. The first rushing parties will be given from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Thursday, March 7, beginning with Open Houses at all of the sororiteies. Other open houses will be given from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, March 9, and Sunday, IMarch 10. Coeds will attend all of these events in the order given them upon the sheet of Rushing Rules. This sheet will be distributed at the time of registration. Other invitational rushing parties will be given all through the month of March, culminating in pledging to be held Sunday, March 31. A rchers Will Meet For Contest Today The Archery Club will hold a meeting at 4:20 p.m. today in the W.A.B. to begin shooting for the Intercollegiate Telegraphic Meet. The tournament will last three weeks, starting the last week of this term and continuing through the first two weeks of the next term. The three weeks series of scores will be submitted after the closing of the contest on March 17. Each team will have four members and the four women with the high- est shooting score each week will form the next weeks teams. Lynne Sperber, president of the club, urges all members to partici- pate in this contest. Den Wives of Veterans, Faculty Members Will Have Meeting in League Monday Finishes Tour Mrs. Mary Bromage, assistant Dean of Women, returned yesterday from Lansing and Grand Rapids, where she addressed alumnae groups. Monday she addressed the Mich- igan Alumnae Association of Lan- sing on the subject of "Post War Changes at the University." Tuesday Mrs. Bromage spoke to the Michigan alumnae group of Grand Rapids on the "International Role of a State University." After the mieeting, Mrs. Bromage interviewed alumnae and answered their questions in regard to the Vic- tory Reunion to be held in June for alumnae and alumni. Wives of all veterans on campus are urged to join th~e local 'Vets' WVives Club which will hold. its next' meeting at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the League. The group has been functioning since the beginning of the semester and is designed to provide an oppor- tunity for wives of veterans to meet and become acquainted with one an- other. The organization is thle onily cne of its kind on campus and al- ready has the enthusiastic support of those who have recently joined. Membership is open to all women whose husbands are veterans and those who are students, wives of fac- ulty members, and local res idents are invited to join. Women are reminded that frce undergraduate baby sitters may be obtained by calling Mrs. Mary C. Bromage, 4121, extension 341. Sitters are available for the hours during which the group meets. The organization will hold a party for all veterans on campus and their wives at 8:00 p.m. Saturday, March 2, in the League. There will be danc- ing to a jukebox, and Bingo will be played. The club gives one party every month. "We urge all veterans and their wives to attend this party and meet others in their group," Mrs. John Murray , Social Chairman, an- nounced. "The aim of the Veterans' Wives Club is to provide entertain- ment which will appeal to married veterans and their wives." i Indispensable Membership O ffer Social Security to Cards oeds i I SMART 'N' CASU AL. 100% wool coat sweaters, grand for all-around wear. Your choice of cadet blue, tan, or maroon. Sizes 38 to 46. x;', . j, t- .;: : i Ey ELLEN HILL For Febraryr Grafdutates O ja - THE MtCIGAN Official Publication of the Alumni Association of the University of Michigan FirSe Y(eat Jror Oiilg S2.9O Place order at offices of AuInnthi AS>Socihtioml AUMNI MTEMORIAL hALL 1f ery, smooth modern lines of an auto- mobile, and many other things. The class, a coimercial art course, is under the direction of Mrs. Pris- cilla F. Rhiel, a former commercial artist. Varied interests in professional art are shown by the students in the class. A few intend to make this type of art their vocation, while commercial art is just a hobby with others. Some take this course along with a variety of other courses to increase their general knowledge and culture. 'This course provides good training and improves the students artistic skills. Itralso offers an opportunity for creativeness and forms no limit for employing the imaginatibn in modern design and invention. The scene is the entrance of the League Ballroom. The time is spring. Music can be heard in the back- ground. 'un beckons from within. Coed Ida Independent, however, is turning sadly from the happy sounds issuing forth from the League House Dance, which is in full swing inside. Admission has been denied her. For Ida is unable to produce the As- Colic ges Absorb M /ind Experts A survey made by the Office of Psy- chological Personnel, Washington, D.C., indicates that almost half of all qualified psychologists in the country are employed in colleges and univer- sities in normal times. The survey showed that in 1941, a total of 1,8"74 of the 3,798 psycholo- gists reported were employed in col- leges and universities, with the re- mainder employed by clinics, penal and mental institutions, hospitals, government and state service, busi- ness and industry, and secondary schools.- Shift Was Noticeable According to Dr. Carroll L. Shartle, secretary of Ohio State University's Personnel Research Board, there was a notable shift from 1941 to 1944 of psychologists from universities and colleges, schools and clinics, to the armed services, governmental war agencies, and to business and indus- try. "It is reasonable to assume that during the next decade theuniversi- ties and colleges will still employ the largest proportion of psychologists, with clinical work in guidance cen- ters, prisons, and hospitals remain- ing second. industry and government will remain third but may hold sec- ond place if the federal government continues a large proportion of its war programs." Position Descriptions Presented Approximately 250 descriptions of positions and job analysis reports were presented by the committee headed by Dr. Shartle, whose chief concern was an analysis of the kinds of jobs held by psychologists, as a guide for those seeking to prepare for professional work and also for schools offering this preparation. The report indicated that the 1,874 psychologists who are associated with colleges and universities spend most of. their tine teaching and that ad- mhinistrative, research, and counsel- ing duties come second. About 90 per cent spend at least ten per cent of their training time teaching, and 15 per cent spend as much as 80 per cent of their time teaching. In his comment on opportunities, training, and qualifications for em- ployment as a psy'chologist, Dr. Shar- tle showed that colleges and univer- sities employ more than half of all psychologists with Ph.D. degrees. sembly membership card that she neglected to procure last semester. The moral of this pathetic story is perfectly (also stupidly) obvious and does not require any explana- tion. In short, if you are an inde- pendent and have not as yet obtained your Assembly membership card, you should seriously consider ambling over to the Assembly Office on the second floor of the League soretime between 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. today to pick up that essential card. The membership cards, in addition to providing tangible evidence of association with Assembly, are to be requisites for participation in all Assembly functions and events of this spring. They will be required of all unaffiliated women who desire to petition for Assembly-Panhel Ball committee positions and for the 1946-47 Assembly Board postions. Events to be sponsored by Assem- bly, .which also require the cards, are the League ouse Dances, the; first of which was presented last irronth, and afternoon teas to be held in the League. February Activities sheets for league houses must be placed in the activities box in the Under- graduate Office of the League by 5 p.m. tomorrow in order to permit tabulation of zone hours, accord- ing to Jne Gumerson, activities chairman. TYPEWRITERS Bought, Rented Repaired STUDENT and OFFICE SUPPLIES 314 S. State St. Phone 7177 Early American Carminger V {' of U U "" finetheaming Steaks -Chichen-- Sep Food rivate oining Roomns For Parties and Banquets ~V For Reservations 503 EAST HURON STREET v .. R ED F LANNE L FOR SPOR T 57. It's red for sports of any kind. All- wool flannel for warmth. Well-tai- Iored to suit the most exacting taste. --PHONE 2-5501 312 SOUTH MAIN STREET "- I__ &I r Hick ~En U.a..i{ COMES THROUGH .. . MtJaXC fAIL Presents LIONEL H AMPTON ahd Orchest-ra in his CARNEGIE HALL CONCERT "FROM SPiITiUA L TO SWING'' With the RI0IERtT NOLAN Cfl0IR anid lintro- duehug I I-Year~ ikEflflERT PICARDl, I~nist FEBR UARY 16th (Only) 2 Shows- 11:00 P.M MUI HA L L 8:30 P.M.j Price: r. GINNELL OS$ 2.00, 2.50 Plus Tax 35O Madison (Detroit) CHerry 2810 There may not be 12 bands for j-Iiop There may not be 5:00 permission for J-HOI There may not be week-end parties for But the Daily comes through with the ....., .,...... , o... . _.. ..... --- .... ... .... ). ,i S 1R i JU]NE GREY Mademoiselle Swiss tailored suits . . known for their ingenious designing and su- perb styles . . .perfect weight First time in four years 1Oc a copy ORDER NOW!! to wear now and in the THE MICHIGAN DAILY GENTLEMEN: i . iE _ . _ _ _