WEDNE~SDAY, APRIL 10,, 194Gk THE Ml( IIIC.AN'. D ATIN .Tas .u ie CHWi i A A WN DI TVA1 PAGE F Panhel, WfRl, Assembly Petitions Due Coed Annual Saturday in Undergraduate Office Bridge Party i Spring Fantasy Will Be Qiven Petitions To Include Suggestions, Plans Meeting To Be Held Today for Applicants Petitioning Extended By Coeds' Request To Be Revived Ann Arbor Department Store By West Quad The deadline for petitions for Pan- The WAA will hold a meeting for hellenic Council positions has been all coeds interested in petitioning for set for noon Saturday, at which time WAA board positions for 1946-47 atI they are to be placed in the Panhel- 4:30 p.m. today in the upstairs loungeI lenic box in the Undergraduate Of- of the WAB.I fice of the League. Applicants will be told the duties ofI Women should sign for interview- each office and petitioning procedureI ing appointments at the same time will be discussed. Petitions are due at they turn in their petitions. They I noon Saturday in the WAA box inI may sign for interviews from 2 p.m. to the Undergraduate Office of the 5 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, and Fri- League, and those petitioning should day, of next veek. Interviews will be sign for interviews on the sheet post- held in Room E on the third floor of ed on the WAA bulletin board in the3 the League. All petitioners must Undergraduate Office. bring their eligibility cards. Interviewing is scheduled to be held Council posts are open for presi- from 1:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, dent, vice-president, secretary, rush- Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday ing secretary, and treasurer. Peti- in the upstairs offices of the WAB. tions should include criticisms o Women petitioning for president present policies and suggestions and must be second semester juniors at plans for the future. the present time and must have All eligible affiliated women are served for one year on the WAA urged to petition. Further informa- Board. Other positions are open to tion may be obtained in the Under- all eligible coeds of all classes. Eli- graduate Office of the League. gibility cards should be brought to A--interviews. C . i aThose women who are planning to \a rni va Ipetition should familiarize themselves with the WAA constitution copies of which are on the WAA bulletin WrI Featu re boards in the WAB, Barbour, and the Undergraduate Office. . Petitioning for positions for the ITo Present Coed Sty 1946-47 Assembly Board has been Door Prizes Will Be extended by request until noon Sat- D urday, according to Helen Alpert, As- The Coed Annual Bridg sembly president. . ivngaCod Araid Interviews for candidates who Xivml an old tradition, have already submitted their peti- from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Satu tions will be held from 4 p.m. to League Ballroom. 5:30 p.m. today, from 3 p.m. to 5:30 A style show, presented p.m. tomorrow and from 4 p.m. to Arbor department store w 5:30 p.m. Friday. Coeds who intend the afternocn. University to petition during the extendedr| model fashions includ time are asked to sign for an inter- dresses, bathing suits, fo viewing time in the Undergrad- dresses, raincoats and otl uate Office of the League when wear. - they turn in petitions. ;There will be a drawin Independent women who will have numbers for door prizes 2 senior standing next fall may yeti- ble prizes and refreshme tion for the offices of Assembly served. Tickets will be fif president, vice-president of dormi- eluding tax, and may be tories, vice-president of league hous- from dormitory, league es, personnel chairman, secretary- Panhellenic representative treasurer, league house activities main desk of the League. chairman and dorm activities chair- The committee for th man. All coeds petitioning for senior Dottie Wantz. general char positions must have at least one year Robir'on. arrangements; of League activities to their credit. publicity: Betty Lou Bidwe All positions except president and ments; Estelle Klein, s the two vice-presidents are also Barbara Brady. prizes; an open to women who will have ju- throp, tickets. nior standing next year. It is preferred that wom All candidates are urged to con- foursomes, but groups of a sult the President's Report in the will be welcomed and tab Social Director's Office in the League arranged upon arrival. T for general ideas and the organiza- Paity is sponsored byt tional structure of Assembly. Committee of the League. yle Show; Awarded e Party. re- will be held urday in the by an Ann ill highlight y coeds will ing sports rmals, date her campus ag of ticket nd also ta- nts will be ty cents in- purchased houses, or es or at the e party is irman; AnnI Lucy Stone, ell, refresh- tyle show; .d Grace La- nen come in any number bles will be The Bridge the Social Resuming a pre-war tradition of an amnual ,:pring party for civilian men's residences in the West Quadrangle, Spring Fantasy. a semi-formal dance, will be presented from 9 p.m. to mid- night Satu'day in the League Ball- room. The ballroom will be decorated in pastel spring colors for the party and a band will provide music for the dancers. The list of patrons is headed by President and Mrs. Alexander G. Ruthven, and includes Dean J. A. Bursley, Provost and Mrs. James P. Adams, Assistant Dean and Mrs. W. J. Emmons, Associate Dean and Mrs. E. A. Walter, Assistant and Mrs. W. B. Rae, Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Shiel, Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Peake, Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. Ostafin, and Miss Eleanor Scanlon. The list continues with Miss Inez Harrison. Miss Irene Boelts, Mr. Ray M. Steele, Mr. Harry Merritt, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Harlan, Detroit, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Londick. Pontiac, Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Rock, Detroit, and Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Boyne, Mason. The Women's Glee Club will hold an informal get-together after re- hearsal at 8:30 p.m. today in the Grill Room of the League. Orrin Tucker T At Traditional E The Slide Rule Ball Committee has announced that Orrin Tucker and his band, wil lay or heannalSid Rule Ball to be presented from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday in the Union Ball- room. The center of decorations for the dance will be a huge slide rule, sym- bol of all engineering students. An arch, resembling the Engineering Arch, will be built over the doorway and caricatures of various professors of the Engineering School will dec- orate the corridor leading to the ball- room. Insignia of engineering societies will be displayed on the walls, andI the dance programs will be of blue leather with gold slide rules on the cover. Ticket sales will be open to every one on campus. They may be pur- chased at the Engine Arch and Union travel desk from 10 a.m. to noon and from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. every day until the dance. Tucker's band, which features vo- cals by Scotty Marsh, was first or- ganized when he was in high school. When Tucker entered Northwestern University, his band played for vari- ous campus functions to help defray college expenses. When he was of- fered an engagement in New Oreans, Tucker left his studies to take the job. Tucker enlarged his band, and filled o Be Featured Engineers' Ball a succession of engagements in the South and Middle West. The band also made a number of guest radio appearances, and played on the Hit Parade program. Besides conducting his orchestra, playing a clarinet and saxophone, and occasionally singing, Tucker is a songwriter in his spare time. "Espe- cially for You" and "My Resistance Is Low" are among the tunes he has written. His band is well known for its renditions of "Billy" and "Oh, Johnny, Oh." Underwriters Club To Give Luncheon In Russian Room The Underwriters group will hold a luncheon meeting from 11:45 a.m. to 1 p.m. tomorrow in the Russian Tea Room of the League. Every woman student earning her room and board by providing house- hold asistance in the private home in which she lives is cordially invited to attend. Each member is asked to bring her own lunch and sugar for tea and coffee if desired. Virginia Howe is chairman of this business and social meeting. Booths, Games Qffering dancing, booths, erected and manned by various campus resi- dences, and an informal atmosphere, the Women's Athletic Association will sponsor its traditional Michilodeon Carnival at 8 p.m. to midnight Sat- urday, April 27 in Barbour and Wat- erman Gyms. The affair is open to all students on campus and their friends and will be the first Michilodeon to be presented since the war. Music for dancing in Barbour Gym will be furnished by Klaas Kuiper and his orchestra. In addition, intermission entertainment will occupy the spotlight with two floor shows being presented at 9:30 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. during the Car- nival. Booths will be built in Waterman Gym and both men's and women's houses will be responsible for them. Some booths will offer dart games, a telegraph system, rifle range, throw- ing balls and other carnival games. , It 4 Carnival Tryouts Tryouts for. entertainment for Michilodeon will be held from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday in the dance stu- dio of Barbour Gym. Both men and women may tryout for singing, danc- ing or variety numbers. 11 I t t I I z 4 N C (1 } Y { 4S. Y{ t, N O C, tl Student Nurses To Give Benefit Carnival Friday A Benefit Carnival, sponsored by the students of the School of Nurs- ing, will be given for all students on campus, from 7:30 p.m. to midnight Friday, at Couzens Hall. All forms of entertainment will be provided at the Carnival. There will be dancing to records, square dancing, penny pitching, side- shows, a chamber of horrors, a wishing well, fortune telling, card and hoop tossing, portrait paint- ing, and telegram and marriage booths. Refreshments will be serv- ed. Tickets will be sold at the door for a nominal fee, and door prizes will be awarded. The proceeds from the Carnival will be sent in response to the French Nurses' plea to rebuild the Florence Nightingale School of Nursing, which was taken over by the Germans dur- ing the war. The hospital and school, a Memorial of the American Nurses, sponsored by the American Nurses' Association long before World War I, was practicaly destroyed by the Ger- mans. When the French finally regained the hospital they discovered that most of their essential equipment had been confiscated, and that the entire ground floor, as well as the dining room and sitting rooms were rendered useless. They managed, however, to establish a temporary organization, and within fifteen days, requests for admission to the school began to come in. Though its present state is weak and the supplies are low, the memorial still lives. In the United States, Nursing Schools are again offering their aid to the hospital. Five boxes of nurses' uniforms have already been sent to relieve the shortage. In New York, the Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing has taken over the respon- sibility of re-equipping the library. New Jersey and other states have started collecting funds to purchase other necessities. Regular Ruthven Tea To Be Held Today for Students The first Ruthven Tea for this month will be given from 4 to 6 p.m. today at the home of President and Mrs. Alexander G. Ruthven. All University students are invited to attend the tea, and the special guests for this week are Delta Delta Delta, League House Zone Number II, Greene House, and Phi Gamma Delta. All coeds on Social Committee are expected to attend the tea end those who have not had their eligibility cards signed should bring them. Student Riding Clubs Will Meet at Barbour Crop and Saddle and the Univer- sity Women's Riding Club will meet with the Men's Riding Club at 9 p.m. today in Barbour Gym. 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