FRIDAY; APRIL 1?, 1946 T-'E 111C-141C~A A II-D.IY PAGE IWI ..w./ .a 1 W' 8 i # t:l f 1 L t .f } 1 1:l 1 "^qRn M Ouin Cam pus-Wide Ticket Sales fucker Wil Play at Slide Rule Ball Today in Union Petitions for WAA, Assembly, Panhel Boards Due Tomorrow I Continue Today Traditional Decoration Themes Will Feature Giant Slide Rule, Model Engine Arch, Portraits Engineers and their guests will dance to the music of Orrin Tucker from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. today in the Union Ballroom when the School of Engineering presents its seventeenth annual Slide Rule Ball. The dance, originally intended only for engineering students, is now open to all students on campus. Tickets can still be purchased from 10 a.m. to noon and from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. to- day at the Engine Arch and the Un- ion Travel Desk. Traditional Decorations Decorations for the dancewill fol- low the traditional theme with a huge slide rule gracing the dance floor, and insignia of the various en- gineering societies decorating the walls. A model arch, resembling the Engine Arch, will be constructed over the doorway, and caricatures of the engineering professors will be dis- played along the corridor leading to the ballroom. Blue leather dance pro- grams with a gold slide rule on the cover will serve as favors, Tucker first started leading a band when he was in high school. Then at Northwestern University his band played for many social functions, but when he received an offer to play in New Orleans, he left his studies t make a career of band-leading. After enlarging his orchestra, Tucker toured the South and Middle West. He also made a number of guest ra- dio appearances and played on the Hit Parade. Original Arrangements Tucker is best known for his ren- dition of "Billy" and "Oh, Johnny Oh." However, he has also penned many of his own hit tunes. Among them are "Especially for You" and "My Resistance Is Low." In his spare time, Tucker enjoys playing the saxophone and clarinet, and occasionally he exercises his own vocal chords. The regular singer with his band is Scotty Marsh. Plans for Booths At '46 Michilodeon Due Tomorrow Plans for booths to be sponsored by dormitories, sororities and fra- ternities at the Women's Athletic As- sociation 1946 edition of Michilodeon Carnival, to be held from 8 p.m. to midnight, Saturday April 27 in Bar- bour and Waterman Gyms, must be turned in by noon tomorrow to a box placed for that purpose in the Under- graduate Office of the League. All the above houses have re- ceived circulars and form slips sent out by Michilodeon Central commit- tee and are reminded by the com- mittee that prizes will be awarded for the booth which collects the great- est amount of money and for the most unusual booth. Residences may decide to either sponsor a refreshment or game booth and various kinds of carnival games will be acceptable. Petitions for WAA board, Assembly board, and Panhellenic Council are due at noon Saturday in the Under- graduate Office of the League. Petitions for the above positions are available in the Undergraduate Office. *All coeds petitioning must be eligible and eligibility cards must be brought to the interviews. * * * 'Offer WAA Posts Women petitioning for WAA posi- tions should sign for an interview on the WAA bulletin board in the Un- dergraduate Office. Interviews are scheduled for 1:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday in the up- stairs office of the WAB. Candidates for the office of presi- dent must be second-semester juniors at the present time and must have served one year on the WAA Board. All of the remaining positions are open to women of all classes. Positions for which coeds may ap- ply include president, vice-president, secretary, treasurer, A.F.C.W. repre- sentative, publicity manager, intra- mural manager, dormitory manager, sorority manager and league house manager. Other posts open include manager- ships of the following sports: archery, badminton, basketball, dance, fenc- ing, golf, hockey, outing, University Women's Riding Club, riflery, swim- ming, softball, table tennis, tennis, bowling and camp counselors. Copies of the WAA constitution are posted on the WAA bulletin boards in the Undergraduate office, the WAB, and Barbour Gym, so that women may read them. All coeds who are petitioning for WAA board posts should familiarize themselves with this constitution. Interviews Today Women who have already sub- mitted petitions for Assembly.Board posts will be interviewed from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. today in the Assembly Of- fice, Room D, on the third floor of the League. The remaining interviews will be held from 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Mon- day and Wednesday in the Assembly Office. Positions on Assembly Board open to coeds who will have senior stand- ing next year and who have at least a year's experience in League activi- ties are those of president, vice-presi- dent of league houses, and vice-presi- dent of dorms. The positions of sec- retary-treasurer, personnel chair- man, league house activities chair- man and dormitory activities chair- man are open to women of both sen- ior and junior standing next fall. Independent women are urged to petition for these positions in Assem- bly, according to Helen Alpert, As- sembly president. Miss Alpert state-, ed, "The present board desires that, the work of Assembly be carried on by women who are interested in pro- mating and improving the organiza- tion." Panhe I Posts Interviews for women petitioning3 for positions on Panhellenic Council will be held from 2 p.m. to 5'p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday in the Panhellenic Office, in the League. Coeds may petition for president, vice-president, secretary, rushing secretary and treasurer. Positions are open to sophomores and juniors, butI second semester juniors who will beI seniors next fall will be given pref- erence. The bulletin board in the Under- graduate Office may be consulted for further information. League To Give Annual Bridge For All Women The Coed Annual Bridge Party. reviving an old tradition, will be held from 2 p.m. to 5 pm. tomorrow in the League Ballroom. Tickets are priced at fifty cents each, including tax, and may be pur- chased from dormitory, league house, or Panhellenic representatives or at the main desk in the League. There will be a drawing of ticket numbers for door prizes. Table prizes will also be awarded and refreshments will be served. Of special interest during the af- ternoon will be a style show,presented by an Ann Arbor department store. University coeds will model spring and summer fashions including, sports dresses, bathing suits, rain- coats, date dresses, suits, formals and other campuswear. Groups of any number will be wel- comed and tables will be arranged upon arrival, although it is preferred that women come in prearranged foursomes. The committee for the party is Dottie Wantz, general chairman; Es- telle Klein, style show; Ann Robin- son, arrangements; Barbara Brady, prizes; Lucy Stone, publicity; Betty Lou Bidwell, refreshments; and Grace Lathrop, tickets. Making its post-war debut, the Bridge Party is sponsored by the So- cial Committee of the League. Be- fore the advent of the war, these parties were presented each year for University coeds. Benefit Carnival Will Be Presented By Nurses at Couzens Hall Today Students of the School of Nusin will present a Benefit Carnival o all students on campus from 8 p.m.I to midnight today at Couzens Hall.! All forms of entertainment will be provided, including dancing to re- cords, square dancing, side-slows, a chamber of horrors.- fortune telling., card and hoop tossing, a wishing well, portrait painting, and booths that offer fake telegrams and marriage licenses. Refreshments will be served. Tickets will be sold at the doors, and door prizes v ill be awarded. The proceeds from the carnival will be sent to help rebuild and re-equip the Florence Nightingale School of Nursing in Bordeaux, France, which El alens Will Sponsor Cadeuceus, Annual Ball, for Medical Students The 1946 edition of Cadeuceus Ball, spring dance sponsored annually by Galens, will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday, April 20, in the League Ballroom. Featuring Gene DeVine and his orchestra, this year's ball will be open to all students in Medical School. De- Vine and his thirteen men and a girl Coeds' Bethrothal, Marriage Revealed Dr. and Mrs. B. Auerbach of Chi- cago have announced the engagement of their daughter, Elaine, to Morris Finkelstein, son of Mr. and Mrs. N. Fi-nkelstein of Flint. Miss Auerbach is a senior in the literary college. Finkelstein is also a senidt in the literary college and served in the Army for three years. Mr. and Mrs. Sig Welber of South Bend, Indiana, announce the recent marriage of their daughter, Phyllis, to Herbert Feldman, son of Mrs Dorothy Feldman of Detroit. Mrs. Feldman was a member of t'c class of '47 and while on campr's was a member of Alpha Epsilon Phi, on the central committe of Frosh Pro- last played here at the New Year's Eve Dance, and he will be remem- bered for his sweet style. The local campus band at Michigan State Cqllege, DeVine has recently played at Jackson Armory and hotel ballrooms in Flint, Battle Creek. and Lansing. Margaret McQueary, coed vocalist, holds the feature spot in the band. Although no theme of decorations has been set, a ballroom display is expected to dominate the Ballroom White programs bearing the red Cadeuceus emblem, universal medi- cal insignia, will be distributed as favors at the dance. All committee members for the event are seniors in medical school and members of Galens, local honor- ary medical service fraternity. Chair-, man of the affair is Ken Repola, with Harold Leuben, Robert Dobbie, and Ed Sundell acting as committee chairman. ject, and circulation manager of The .aily. Mr. Feldman has been honorably discharged after serving four years in the Army Signal Corps. He was stationed overseas in the Middle- East for eighteen months. 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, was practically complete- ly destroyed during the war. When the French finally regained the hospital, they found that most of the essential equipment had been confiscated, partitions between rooms were torn down and the entire main floor rendered useless. But in spite of all the destruction, the French have set up a temporary organiza- tion, and there are now 80 students and 15 graduates sleeping in the Nurses' Home, eating and studying in the hospital. In the United States, Nursing Schools are collecting funds to aid the hospital. Miss Rhoda Reddig, director of the School of Nursing, heads the entire Michigan campaign. Under her supervision, the nurses are presenting the Benefit Carnival in an effort to raise an appreciable sum to relieve the conditions existing in the Bordeaux School. All other contributions to the fund may be sent to Miss Elizabeth Rey- nolds, social director of Couzens Hall. Tutoring Begins For All Students The Merit-Tutorial Committee an- nounces that tutoring has begun for University students. Naomi Buehler, chairman of Merit- Tutorial, urges that students who desire to be tutored start now as the tutors are always rushed at the end of the semester. Students wishing tutoring should fill out a slip in the Merit-Tutorial box in the Undergraduate Office in the League indicating their name and the subject in which they wish to be tutored. They will be given the names of tutors whom they may contact. House Events Scheduled for Week'nd Pledge formals, open houses, and other house events crowd the week- end schedule. The Alpha Gamma Delta pledge formal will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight today. Ray Bushe and his orchestra will play. Delta Delta Delta sorority will hold open house from 8:30 until midnight today. Members of Alpha Chi Omega will honor their pledges at a banquet and formal dance from 6:30 p.m. until midnight tomorrow. Lee Brandt and his orchestra will furnish music for the occasion. Chi Omega sorority will present a semi-formal pledge dance from 9 p.m. until midnight tomorrow. i .7 (; oh ur fit- f4 Sno' rV *your IHdem lored you Purs prac glean fine 41 di'es eve chow Gloves in Black, White and colors, in kids and fabrics - slip-ons -shorties and novelties - Priced $1.25-$3.5( Easter Jewelry wy Blouses new Easter to complement Suit. Frilly - urely feminine or smartly tai- d. Sizes 30-38 - Colors too. Priced $4.00 to $7.95. r blouse of Easter whiie Stunning Novelty Belts to add spice to your costume - Shiny Patents - leathers or woven Belistraws. Black, White, Pastels and Multi-colors - you'll want at least 2 or 3 of these to accent your costumes. 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