THE MICHIGAN DAILY . ....... - ------- . . ....... ----------- WAA To Offer Games, Dancing At Mtchtlodeon '46 Carnival Will Be Presented Saturday; Campus Residences Plan Varied Entertainments Featuring a colorful carnival at- mzosphere, the Women's Athletic As'- sociatin will psn ineon from8 p.mn. to mnight Saturdiyin Bar bourand Waterman Gyms. Booths, manncd by campus resi- dences, will be erected in Waterman Gym, and music for dancin in Bar- bour Grm will be furnished by Tony Desiderio and his orchestra. Decora- tions wlil nclude a ceiling covered with maize and blu decoratin ma- terials, and in aditon ures will greet gusts as tey enter Michilodeon through Barbour Gym. Tickets will be sold i five cent denominations and three ti?-ets will be included in the twenty-five cent admission charge. The booth games will be aid for in tickets end refreshments will also be pur- chased in the same manner. Those who win at the game hcths will be presented with "'iihib k." These will then be taken to the WAA prize booth where prizes such as cigarette cases, billfolds, cards and earrings -may be purchased with the bogus bills.. Among the booths to be run will be "Loop the Leg, planned by Alpha Epsilon Phi, fortue tellin manned by Kappa Alph Theta, Sigma Chi's "Electric Penny Pitch and Kappa Delta's "Michilodeon Nickelodeon." The Delta Gammas will allow their booth patrons to throw sponges at them and a turtle race will be offered by Pi Eta Phi. Newberry will sp nsor a "House of Horrors." Other booths will offer games of chance aId beau bag throwing. Refreslhment booths, offering cokes, ice-cream and po- tato chips will also be 'mAnned by certain campus residences. A sxe- cial "apple pohing booth will be rtn by Unverity professors who will polish apples before each sale. Prizes of silver trays will be award- ed to the house which has the most original booth and to the booth which collects the largest amount of money.; The tray will be engraved with "1943 Michilodeon." Houses planning the booths are reminded by the Michilo- deon central committee that only fire-proof decorating materials may be used. Pictures will be taken by a local' camera shop and on Thursday novel invitations will be delivered by the central committee to house mothers or house presidents during the dinner hour. The exact nature of the invitations has not yet been, revealed by the central committee, but each house will be asked to1 post the invitation once it is re- ceived. Also, students have been asked to be on the lookout for a gigantic clown who will appear on campus sometime before the evening of Michiloedon. He will be here to invite everyone to; attend the first edition of the tradi- tional affair to be presented since 1941. It has been rumored that his headquarters will be the center of the diagonal. Soph Cabaret Petitions Due Saturday Noon Petitions for the 1946-47 Soph 'aba ret are due at noon Saturday in the petition box of the League Under- raduate Office. Coeds may petition for chairman, ssistant chairman, secretary, public- ity chairman, posters chairman, tickets chairman, floor show chair- .nan, a nt floor show chairman, lance ,chlairman, stage manager, sing- ng chairman, script chairman, cos- °umes chairman, make-up chairman, programs chairman, eligibility chair- man, refreshment chairman, hostess chairman, finance chairman, decora- tions chairman, and usher chairman. All of the chairmanships are posts on the central committee which will nake all plans and produce the 1946- 17 Soph Cabaret. Each will be ex- pected to have original plans for each position for which she is applying. Interviews lasting ten minutes will be held on April 30 and May 1 and 2 and coeds should sign up for an in- terviewing time when handing in their petitions. An eligibility card signed by the Merit-Tutorial Com- mittee of the League will be required for each interviewee. The Michigan Lames' Child Study Group will meet at 7:45 p.m., today, at the home of Mrs. Robert H. White- ley, 1237 Olivia. '1he group will attend a meeting at leyk School. By LOIS KELSO "One, two, three! To the side! 3irls, keep your feet out of the way ind they won't get stepped on." JGP's social dancing ('aVse: were in progress, attended by about wC hundred men, mostly veterans, for- gn students, and fsshme For an hour they earnestly l)U7iei-d their .partners around th, floor to the ac- companiment of loudly shouted di- rections from the teacher, John B. Gwinn. Mr. Gwinn, formerly a lieuten- ant-commander in the Navy, said that he had first developed an in- terest in teaching social daneing at Kanoehie Naval Air Stat'ion ini the Hawaiian Islands. "Some of the boys usrd to sit around wondering what to do," he ex- plained. "They seemed to be inter- ested in learning how to dance, and as I had a professional course, I started to teach in the rec hall."' Mr. Gwinn said that the classes here compare very favorably with those at Kancehe. "No one seems at all backward about entering into the thing," he commented. One source of confusion to him has been the Del Foy. People kep ask- ing about it, and he doesn't knew it. Apparently the Del Foy has not yet reached the Hawaiian Islands. JGP's social dancing classes are a very good idea, according to Mr. 2'~'nnHle pointed out that the lass es are a wonderful place to make nistakes without being conspicuous. Some of the social dancing done on Wis campus has surpri-ed him con- idem ably. "Girls nowadays have to be riagicians to figure out what will happen next." he remarked. Coed Contributions To Aid Europe s Clothing Shortage The League is asking all coeds on campus to contribute to the Easter Clothing Drive in an effort to aid the Foster Parents' Plan For War Children, Inc., which is attempting to remedy the clothing shortage in the countries of Europe devastated by war. The clothing drive will continue throughout this week, ending Tues- day. All women's organized houses will be personally canvassed by the house presidents and each coed will be asked to give any articles of cloth- ing that she can spare. All clothing collected .during the Easter Clothing Drive will be sent to the Foster Parents' Plan For War Children, Inc., which in turn will ship them overseas to England, France, Holland, Belgium and Malta. Clothing' should be brought to the Game Room on the second floor of the League. Residents of Betsy Barbour House will have an exchange dinner with residents of Tyler House, East Quad- rangle, at 5:30 p.m. today. JQP Dancing Instructor Finds Classes Qood, Pupils Interested Annual Dance' Will Be Given Ball To Be Presented Friday By Latin-American Society In ccmmemoration of Pan-Ameri- can Day, the Latin-American Society of the University will sponsor the an- nual Pan-American Ball from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday in the League Ball- room. The Pan-American Union, now 56 years old, is an internationa or- ganization created and maintained by twenty-one American Republics: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Co- lumbia, Costa Rica, Cuba, El Salva- dcr, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Para- guay, Peru, United States, Uraguay, and Venezuela. Originally known as the Interna- tional Bureau of the American Re- publics, the union was established as such, in 1890 in accordance with a resolution passed April 14 of that year by the first International Con- ference of America in October, 1899. April 14 was tlien set aside in 1931 as the official holiday honoring the Republics of the Americas to be known as Pan-American Day. Pro- grams have been taking place since then to further the unity among the countries. The creation of machinery for the orderly settlement of inter-American disputes is known as one of the out- standing achievements of the Pan- American Union. The purpose of the union is to promote friendship and close relations among the Republics of the continent, and peace and se- curity within their borders by foster- ing constructive cooperation among them. The annual dance in keeping with these ideals is placed as close as pos- sible to the holiday. A "dream fantasy" theme will high- light the Architecture and Design School party to be held from 8 p7,m.! 4o midnight Friday in the WAB. The decorations, under the direc-f tion of Ann Heiwick and Don Flan- nigan, will feature a number of ab- stract designs depicting a fanciful world to be found by going through a picture frame in Alice in Wonder- land fashion. One of the important events of the evening will be a baseball game be- tween the architecture students and the design students. Some of the pro- fessors will play on the teams and Art School Will Hold Party Friday c E, _._ ____ ....,.. , [I Come on you students, let's begin Ulrich's, Follett's, and Slater's, too - DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) Coming Events The Geological Journal Club will meet in Rm. 4065, Nat. ScR. Bldg. at 12:15 p.m. on Friday, April 26. Dr. W. Fiedler of the Jones-Laugh- lin Co., will speak. All inteicsted are cordially invited to attend. Veterans enrolled in the University of Michigan as well as other veterans are most cordially invited to attend the meeting being held Thursday afternoon, April 25, at 2:00 in the Amphitheatre of the Rackham Build- ing, at which time compulsory mili- tary service in peacetime will be the topic under consideration. After the able presentation of e6ch side of the question, the meeting will be thrown open for a free-for-all discussion. Veterans as well as others are in- vited to participate in the discussion. Tea at the International Center: The weeciy informal teas at the In- ternational Center on Thursd ys, from 4:00 tc 5:30 p.m. are open to ali foreign students and their Ameri- can friends. Undergraduate Education Club will meet in the Library of the Uni- versity Elementary School Thursday at 4:00 p.m. This week the club will sponsor a round-table discussion on the ques- tion of establishing a newspaper for the School of Education. The Undergraduate Education Club extends its invitation to all students interested in education. ICC The Education Committee of the Inter-Cooperative Council will present a talk by Howard McClusky, Professor of Educational Psycholugy: "The Educational Role of Co-ops,' on Friday, April 26th, 8:15 p.m. at Rob- ert Owen Co-op. 1017 Oakland. A bull session will follow and refrcsh- ments will be served. Open to every- one. The Annual French Play: Le Cer- cle Francais will present "Les Femmes Savantes," a comedy in five acts and in verse by Moliere, on Wed- nesday, May 1, at 8:30 p.m. in the Lydia MendCssohn Theater. All seats are reserved. Tickets will be on sale at the box office on Monday, April 29, on Tuesday, April 30, from 2:00 p.m. to 5 p m., and on Wednesday, May 1, from 2:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Call 6300 for reservations. Members of Le Cercie Francais will pay the federal tax only. Assembly Speakers' Bureau will hold a short meeting Thursday at 5:00 in the Assembly Office of the League. All those interested are urged to attend. Please bring your eligibil- ity cards. For further iniormatilon, contact Gretel Schinnerer at 23225. All campus non-date record dance at the Rackham building Friday eve- ning, April 27, 8:30-12:00 p.m. Re- freshments will be served. 'I'ere will be a small fee-sponsore i by the All Nations' Club. Scroll, senior honor society for af- filiated women, will give their second annual dinner honoring members of Senior Society, Mortarboard and the Alumnae Council at 6:30 p.m. to- morrow in the Grand Rapids Room of the League. There will be 45 guests at the din- ner including the executive board of the Alumnae Council and members of the Administration. A program of three speeches will be given after the dinner. Margaret Ayres will speak on "A GAL in the ETO," Molly Carney will talk on "Odds and Ends from Africa to Italy" and the title of Mary Brownrigg's speech will be "A Year in Iran." Scroll Will Entertain at Annual Dinner U' -- it DON'T TRKE Place your precious furs n the care of FUR EXPERTS Lit\ P -I At STORE YOUR FURS IN OUR REFRIGERATED VAULTS r Short-Cut Coats Now 2°" Just when you can use one most, these popular little coats reduced for clearance! Perfect over date dresses, formals, casuals ... now and all summer. Two styles from I THE CRAFTSMEN in our Fur Studio will give individual attention to your garments and carefully advise you in their proper care. ALL FURS are stored in refrigerated vaults on our premises and we 46pecalife in, . REMODELING . RESTYLING . RELINING Let its make your old furs look like new! I 1 Phone 23-23-1 Micro cle a i P N UNDER THE MICROSCOPE Iu ,I , , , I