PWIU1 94 w THE Mltn lAN- DXWV Panhel fssembly Bail To Be Held Moy 2 4 in T. B ing 'Heavenly Daze' Will Feature Raymond Scott's Orchestra; Dance Will Be Coed-Bid Affair Prizes Will Be Awarded to Residences Donating Largest Number of Mirrors To Be Used for Decorations; Tickets Sales Will Begin in H11,e Two W('e1,I BeWf(e Formal The third annual Panhel-Assem- the League during the week immedi- bly Ball, "Heavenly Daze," will be ately preceding the dance. held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, In 1944 Panhellenic and Assembly May 24, in the Intramural Building. decided to sponsor jointly a formal Featuring Raymond Scott and jli- ball vhich would replace separate 13-piece orchestra including the Sc)t1 t swhich the organizations held Quintet1,an s. new in n preous ears.The 1944 presenta- C lothing Drive group called the Secret Seven, tIe dance is open to all women in 1H University, and is one of the fewk coed-bid affairs of the year. To Be Semi-formal . "The ball will be semi-formal thisI year, due to the difficulty men have in getting formal attire," Collee Ide, Gamma Phi Beta, and Margaretr Thompson, Stockwell, general co- chairmen, explained. In keeping with the theme of theJ dance, which will be "heavenly," sev- eral hundred mirrors, either broken or whole, will be needed to make pos- sible an ethereal atmosphere, the chairmen announced. All houses are asked to have special boxes for any mirrors the girls may contribute. Th mirror drive will continue from today through May 13, and a prize will bet awarded to the sorority and inde- pendent house having the large'st collection per girl, thus giving smallerr houses an equal chance with largerl ones. Members of the decorationt committee will collect the boxes that last day. Assistants ListedI Assisting the general chairmen on the central committee are BarbaraE Hitchcock, Betsy Barbour, and Leslie McVey, Zeta Tau Alpha, decoration co-chairmen; Rosemary Connors, Al- pha Chi Omega, and Jean Clare, Mar- tha Cook, finance co-chairmen: Vir-T ginia Oberding, Alpha Phi, and Jean Engstrom, Mosher, ticket co-chair-i men; Audrey Weston, Mosher, andr Phyllis Wilman, Delta Gamma, pa-l tron co-chairmen; Lois Iverson, Al-c pha Delta Pi, and Sarah Simons, Stockwell, program, music and build- ing co-chairmen, and Marie Neu-c meister, Kappa Kappa Gamma, and Bettyann Larsen, Adelia Cheever, publicity co-chairmen. League To Sell Tickets Tickets, for the dance will be $3.00, and will go on sale in all coed houses on campus two weeks before the dance. A booth will also be located in tion marked he first of these and was 'alled "Boulevard Ball." The laf,,n for last year's Panhel-Assem- wly ial was "It's Your Lucky Strike." Student Nurses To Be Ca pped In Ceremony Eighty student nurses who have successfully completed the first six moths f nurses training will re- ceive caps in the traditional annual ipjiing ceremony to be held at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday in the Rackham Lec- ture Hall. Highlight of the program will be1 an address by Miss Mildred Tuttle, nursing consultant for the W. K. Kel- logg Foundation. "Future Oppor- tonitis in Nursing" will be the sub- =a ( of her talk. Miss t.hoda F. Iteddig, director ot Shocl of Nursing will pre- s (I. The class will be presented to Miss Reddig for their caps by Miss Ada !Hawkins, assistant director of them c-hool of Nursing. The Choral Club of the School of Nursing, under the direction of Charles Matheson, graduate student in the School of Music, will sing two numbers for the program; "The Dance of the Flowers" by Nepomu- ceno and "Lift Thine Eyes" from Eli- jah by Mendelssohn-Bartholdy. The singing of the "Yellow and Blue" will close the program. Each nursing school in the coun- try has a different cap, and their j:rcsenrtaticn marks a high spot in the training of every student nurse. Students who have received caps will now begin to spend more hours en hospital duty in addition to their regular work. MARY HAS THREE LAMS-Unlike Mary of the nursery rhyme, one- year-old Mary Mordan (above) has triplet lambs as playmates at the farm of her father, H. W. Morden, Jr., Toronto, Canada, where the little fellows were born recently. Swim oi KngMee.. . Tuesday: Zeta Tau Alpha vs. Alpha .m i -eEpsilon Phi, Alpha Phi vs. Ann Arbor The WAA Swimming club will Independents at 5:10 p.m. Couzens sponsor its annual women's swim- II vs. Barbour, Gamma Phi Beta vs. ming meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Mosher, Jordan vs. Madison at 7 p.m. the Union Pool. Wednesday: Collegiate Sorosis vs. A feature of the meet will be a Zone , Sigma Delta Tau vs. Zone III novelty relay event, with four WAA at 5:10 p.m. Baldwin vs. Zone V at 71 Board members competing against a p.m. team of four members of the League Thursday: Tri-Dltla vs. Alpha Council. Gamma Delta, Alpha Xi Delta vs. Al- Teams from sororities, dormitor- pha Omincron Pi at 5:10 p.m. Michi- ies, and league house, will compete gan League vs. Zone VIII, Martha for awards which will ;e given to Cook vs. Couzens IV at 7:10 p.m. the top three residence teams and to the three women making the Putting Contest highest point total. [ t . Contests will be held in 25 and 50 The WAA Golf Club will hold a yard freestyle, backstroke, and putting contest for all club mem- breaststroke events, as well as in a bers at 5 p.m. Tuesday at the WAB 100-yard freestyle relay in which putting green. house teams have been entered. Scores in the all-campus women's Cmpetition in diving will also tournament are due Tuesday at the be held, withSeach entrant required desk of the WAB. Those entering to do a front dive, back dive, and should hand in a signed scorecard for one optional dive of her choice. the last nine holes of the University Members of the Women's Physical Course at the WAB desk. Education staff will act as diving The four top scorers in the con- judges. test will be named team members Members of the Swimming club are to represent the University in to act as ushers for the meet, which women's golfing events. The sec- is open to the public. All participants and four best scorers will hold al- are reminded that they must be at ternate postions for the team, and the pool and ready to swim promptly all eight will have the privilege of at 7:30 p.m. free play on the University Course. C be nGolf club members were reminded s . . . yesterday by Barbara Dewey, golf The following WAA club meetings manager, that club membership lists have been scheduled for the coming are available and should be obtained week: as soon as possible at the WAB desk. Golf Clb: putting meeting and Miss Dewey also stated that all contest at 5 p.m. Tuesday at the WAB members should attend the Tuesday putting green. Instructional meeting meeting, and contest. The club's from 4 to 6 p.m. Friday at the WAB plants for the remainder of the se- with student instructors in charge., mester include a play-day scheduled Fencing Club: meeting at 4:20 p.m. for May 11 and other putting con- Thursday with fencing on the WAB tests. terrace. Interviews for Soph Cabaret Cen- Softba I I Games. tral Committee posts will be held Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday in The games in the WAA softball the Judiciary Council Room of the tournament for tne coming week League. All freshmen women who have been scheduled as follows. In petitioned for sophomore positions case of unfavorable weather, games and were unable to sign for inter- will be cancelled, and team managers viewing times should sign for in- in doubt as to whether games will be terviews tomorrow in the Under- played should call the WAB after 3 graduate Office. Each coed must p.m. present an eligibility card signed Monday: Kappa Kappa Gamma by the Merit-Tutorial Committee vs. Delta Gamma, Kappa Alpha of the League at her interview. Theta vs. Zones VI and VII at 7 p.m. Shlie I -- FEATURED IN THE PAGES OF... " MADEMOISELLE " SEVENTEEN -' " VOGUE 0 PHOTOPLAY *JUNIOR BAZAAR GL0AMOUR Yes, out of your favorite magazine into your junior heart super-smooth Carole Kings... gay, winning, accented for man-appeal. Dress for the men in your life in these eye-catching, fury-loving originals. Will Continue Tuesday Set as Final Deadline; League To Receive Donations The Easter Clothing Drive, spon- sored by the League will continue through this week until Tuesday, by which time all clothing contributions shculd be turned in at the Game Room on the second floor of the League. All articles of clothing collected during the drive will be sent to the Foster Parents' Plan for War Chil- dren in New York which in turn will see that they are distributed to the needy people of England, France, Holland, Belgiur and Malta. Persons living in these Euro- pean countries that are suffering from the war have very few clothes. Because of these unsanitary cloth- ing conditions, skin diseases are be- coming rampant. All kinds of gar- ments are needed, especially those for men, women and teen-agers. The League committee has sug- gested that every women's organized house strive to see how many persons they can completely clothe with their contributions. House presidents are taking the responsibility of personally canvass- ing every room in their particular houses and each coed will be asked to donate all and anything that she can. The complete house contribution should be turned in with a list of all articles donated. Newman Club To Give .Dance Something new has been added to the annual Newman Club Spring Formal this year, according to Doris Heidgen, co-chairman, . who ex- plained that women may ask men to the affair. Sponsored each year by the local Catholic students' organization, the 1946 edition is scheduled from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday, May 17, in the Rainbow Room of the Union. Bill Layton and his campus orches- tra will be on the bandstand for the semi-formal dance. Tickets are re- stricted to Newman Club members and may be purchased from mem- bers of the organization. The dance is under the co-chair- manship of Bill Muha and Doris Heidgen. Other committee chairmen include Tom Donnelly, tickets; Kay Kaye, programs; Mary Battle, deco- rations; Barbara Luke, patrons; Cam Fisher, entertainment; and Pat Barkey, publicity. By SHIRLEE RICH INEVITABLY, sometime during the day, one will overhear a drenched, irate freshman crying, "But it was so warm and springy when I left the house!" Predicting the weather in Ann Ar- bor is very simple; it all comes with experience and certain indications will always appear. We have discov- ered that there are five sure signs of stormy weather: First of all, you see your roommate run to the window at five minute in- tervals, peek out at the blue sky, then pry open the box in which she has been storing her new saddles, and carefully slip into them. SECONDLY, the sun, streaming into Kthe room plays lightly on your tweedspring coat, which has been hanging on the closet door for weeks waiting for a nice day. The tempta- tion is overwhelming, and you are forced to wear it. The results are al- ways damp and chilling. Thirdly, you are going to have that extra-sltecial iairset at the beauty shop, and you have neglected to take your kerchief. Anoither evil omen is that you are :oing to a formal dance that night. AND, last of all, complete arrange- ments have been made for a spring picnic in the 'Arb.' So, if you should see any of the preceding signs, here's a bit of fair warning: dust off the umbrella and slip you kerchief into your pocket, because it'll rain every time! Diamonds and Wedding I RINGS ( 717 North University Ave. LU.GANT The light-weight lastex garment especially for the junior figure. Now that spring is here you'll want this step-in girdle to flatter your spring clothes to the ut- most. In sizes 26, 27, and 28 with satin lastex front and back, and net lastex sides. Lo s70 8 Nickels Arcade Phone 2-2914 Hints for Predicting Amt Arbor Weather Are Discussed by Coed _. N Stripes Are Tops In Emily Wilkins" Cottton Date Dress 1.95 STRIPES . . . wide, rainbow-colored ones for the bodice of this one-piece dress. Jet black for the flaring wrap- around skirt. A combination with loads of fashion appeal for young sophisticates who like their summer cottons done with distinction. Sizes 7 to 13. AS, SEEN IN INADEMOISELtJK SHOVE U YOUR SLEEVES... II