FIDAY, APRIL 19, 1946 T HE MICHIGAN DATLY X] 1 L. 1 1 [i. %A N L. " T, a Senior League Petitions Are Due Tomorrow Junior Women May Apply For League Council, Judiciary Posts; Interviews Will Be Held Petitions for senior League Council, Executive Council, and Judiciary positions are due at noon tomorrow in the Judiciary petition box in the Undergraduate Office of the League. Interviewing has been scheduled for Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday in the Judiciary Council room, and coeds should sign for interviews when turning in their petitions. Duties of Offices Each interviewee will be expected to know the duties of each office for which she has petitioned, and to have original ideas to submit concerning the functions of that office. Women who are petitioning for Executive Council offices, including president, vice-president, secretary, and treasurer, will also be asked to discuss long-range League policy and the organization of all League activ- ities. Eligibility Card Required Each woman must bring an eligi- bility card which has been signed by the Merit-Tutorial Committee to her interview. She must also submit the names of a house director, a fa- culty member, and an upperclass woman as references which will be .used at the discretion of the Council. Coeds may also apply for positions as merit-tutorial chairman, person- nel chairman, social chairman, fresh- man orientation advisors' chairman, transfer orientation advisors' chair- man, publicity chairman, or drives chairman. All of these offices are positions on the League Council. Medical Students Will Hold Ball Medical students will dance to the music of Gene DeVine and his or- chestra from 9 p.m. to midnight to- morrow in the League Ballroom at the 1946 edition of Caduceus Ball. Decorations for the affair will be dominated by a huge balloon display at one end of the ballroom. White programs, bearing the caduceus em- blem in red, will be distributed as fa- vors at the semi-formal dance. DeVine and his "Thirteen Men and a Girl" last played here at the New Year's Eve Party and are fresh from engagements at hotel ball- rooms throughout the state. Miss Margaret McQueary, coed vocalist with the Michigan State College campus band, will hold the vocal spotlight. This ,year's Ball will be the four- teenth dance to be presented by Ga- lens, local honorary medical service fraternity. The function was originat- ed in 1934, when it was decided that the Medical School should have a closed dance similar to the engineers' Slide Rule Ball. Patrons for the event include Dr. and Mrs. Frederick A. Coller, Dr. and Mrs. Carl E. Bagley, Dr. and Mrs. Max M. Peet, Dr. and Mrs. Reed M. Nesbit, Dr. Henry K. Ran- sonm, Dr. Robert W. Buxton, Dr. and Mrs. Rollo E. McCotter, and Dr. and Mrs. Cyrus C. Sturgis. The list continues with Dr. and Mrs. Frank N. Wilson, Dr. and Mrs. Frank- lin D. Johnston, Dr. and Mrs. Jerome W. Conn, Dr. and Mrs. Burton L. Baker, Dr. and Mrs. Norman F. Mil- ler, Dr. and Mrs. Albert C. Fursten- berg, Dr. and Mrs. Harold F. Falls, Dr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Curtis, Dr. and Mrs. F. Bruce Fralick, and Dr.- and Mrs. Raymond W. Waggoner. Other patrons are Dr. and Mrs. Carl D. Camp, Dr. and Mrs. Brad- ley M. Patten, Dr. and Mrs. Albert C. Kerlikowske, Dean and Mrs. W. B. Rea, Dr. and Mrs. James L. Wil- son, Commander Roy Cuthbertson, Dr. and Mrs. Fred J. Hodges, Dr. and Mrs. Maurice H. Seevers, and Dr. and Mrs. Russell T. Woodburne. Chaperones are Dr. and Mrs. Har- ry Towsley, Dr. and Mrs. K. B. Con- ger, and Dr. William M. Brace. AN EDITORIAL: Coeds Asked To Aid Europea rs DURING THIS EASTER SEASON when most women are concerned with their Easter outfits and with thinking about the new spring styles, some serious thought should be given to people in war-devastated countries who are desperate for all articles of clothing. Many people are without even one change of clothing making it difficult for them to combat the skin diseases which are running ram- pant in European countries. The demand for underclothing is particul- arly great but all outer garments, coats and shoes would be welcomed by these needy people. BEGINNING Monday and continuing throughout next week the League is sponsoring the Easter Clothing Drive to collect contributions of cloth- ing from all the coeds on campus. The clothing collected during the drive will be sent to the Foster Parents Plan for War Children, Inc.. which in turn will ship the donations overseas to the people of England, France, Belgium, Holland and Malta. Coeds can help this humanitarian cause by looking over their winter clothes before sending them home this spring and contributing any gar- ments that are too small or too worn to be used next winter. Any of the old school clothes that graduating seniors will no longer want will be welcomed in this worthwhile drive. Clothes that may seem tooiworn and patched for anyone's use wil be a godsend to those who have so few. -By Joyce Johnson WAA To Present Michilodeon Soph Cabaret Petitioning To End Saturday, April 27 Petitions for committee chairman- whnt 'y _mmin thieir petitionls. I show chairman. assistant floor show, ships on the 1946-47 Soph Cab~aret Each petition should contain spe- chairman, dance chairman, stage are due in the Undergraduate office cifl' Lans for the position or posi- manager, singing chairman, script ( .f the Lcague by noon Saturday, tions which the candidate desires. chairman, costumes chairman, make- April 27. Posts open to women who will be up chairman, programs chairman. Interviewing for the pomitions will sophomores next fall include general eligibility chairman, refreshments e held on April 30 and May 1 nd 2 chairman, assistant chairman, secre- chairman, hostess chairman, finance in the Council Room of the Lea>ue. tany, publicity chairman, posters chairman, decorations chairman, and Coeds should sign for interiew chairman, tickets chairman, floor usher chairman. I n Post-War Edition April 27 Offering an evening of gala in- formal entertainment, the Women's Athletic Association will present the 1946 postwar edition of Michilodeon Carnival from 8 pm.. to midnight Saturday April 27 in Barbour and Waterman Gyms. The proceeds of the carnival will go into a fund for a swimming pool for all women on campus. The fund was established a few years ago by WAA and the event will feature booths manned by various campus residences in Waterman Gym and dancing to a campus orchestra in Barbour Gym. Games To Be Featured Typical carnival games will be featured at the booths. These will include weight guessing, throwing wet sponges, turtle races and other car- nival events. In addition, some houses will run refreshment booths offering ice-cream, cokes, pretzels and potato chips. Those who win at the booths will be presented with "Michibucks" which, when turned in at the prize booth, will pay for prizes ranging from picture frames, billfolds and earings, to ashtrays and cards. A special feature of the evening will be an "apple polishing" booth at which University professors will sell and pol- ish apples. Prizes Offered Prizes will be awarded for the booth which collects the greatest amount of money and the most orig- inal booth. The prizes are large sil- ver trays which may be engraved." Also, pictures will be taken by a local camera shop and novel carnival dec- orations will keynote the evening. ' Floorshows will be spotlighted at Annual Odonto Ball To Be Held April 26 The 12th annual Odonto Ball, tra- ditional Dental School spring dance, will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday, April 26, in the Rainbow Room of the Union. Presented by the junior class in honor of graduating seniors, Odonto Ball was originated when dental stu- dents decided they should have a dance similar to the medical Cadu- ceus Ball. Odonto means "of the tooth" and was chosen by the first committee as an appropriate name 'for the Ball._ The semi-formal affair will fea- ture Bill Layton and his orchestra on the bandstand, with Patti DuPont holding the vocal spotlight. The event will be preceded by dinners and parties at dental fraternity houses. - -INTING PROGRAMS CARDS . STATIONERY HANDBILLS, ETC. Downtown: 308 NORTH MAIN ATHENS PRESS 9:30 p.m. and at 10:30 p.m. and will consist of well-known campus talent. Michilodeon was a time-honored event at Michigan before the war and the last edition was held in 1941 in Barbour and Waterman Gyms. At that time, Michilodeon was jointly sponsored by the Union and the WAA and a record crowd attended the af- fair. Veterans Will Give Australian Wartime Party, 'Pub Crawl' "The Pub Crawl," an Australian term for wartime diversion, has been adopted by the Ann Arbor Chapter of the American Veterans Committee for their first party from 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. today at a local catering house. The origin of the term "pub-crawl" was explained by Jim Woodison, member of the AVC and veteran of the 5th Air Force. "When the first contingent arrived in Australia in January 1942, the Aussies invited us to what they called a 'pub swagger,' which we nicknamed a 'pub crawl.' Since then, any party has assumed the name," Woodison explained. He continued by telling that after liquor was rationed in Australia in the fall of 1941, the pubs, or public houses, were open only two hours each day. Each pub kept different hours so that there was always one open. In order to have a long party, 'it was necessary to go to several pubs, staying at each until it closed, then rushing out to another that was just opening. When you've done your work faith- fully each day, you can zip through final exams like a breeze. And when you complete your secretarial train- ing at Katharine Gibbs, you can enter any business office with confi- dence. Personal placement service in four cities. College Course Dean. KATHARINE GIBBS NEW YORK 17_..........20 Pak Ave BOSTON 16A 0 Marborogh St CHICAGO 1...................720 N. Michigan Ave PROVIDENCE 6 -...... ......155 Angell St SYLLABUS FOR A SLEEK SILHOUETTE - '. /I scarfs perform magic . they're wonderful easter gifts .. . and what exciting things you can do with them . . . dicky, ascot, turban, shawl, or belt ... a whole wardrobe with one or two scarfs . . . rayon and silk prints and solid colors .. . V 4 t £ F Y i ;^4 s Rr' 4 it S F Rvr 'nIM4t 2.00 to 5.50' I I Don f-/I'." ,t despond- try a intoxication by d'orsay .. . your lilting easter fragrance that captures the gay hoarted mood of spring . .. a sentimental gift for easter time or anytime . perfume, 10.00 . . . cologne, 5.00 plus federal tax " 1 , You are invited /. 6.to open a Jacobson I Y Create an exciting study in a curvesome you with persuasive I