THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1947 THE MICHIGAN DAICI Y PAGS .'R 1,E i 1.1VICALN Z./dA1"1/ PAIIE FIVE Coeds To Petition 'Hans Brinker' Will Be Qiven I i/ia L u Mixer Dance Class of '49 For Wfl Posts Executive Board, Club Managers' Duties Will Be Discussed at Meeting in WAB Will Be Given WAA Board posts and petition- ing will be explained to all coeds interested in applying for WAA, positions at 4:30 p.m. today in the WAB lounge. Jean Brdwn, the president of WAA, will explain the procedure for applying for the positions, and will discuss the duties of each of- fice. Memberships of the executive beard and club managerships are open to eligible freshman, sophomores, and juniors for 1947-48. Any coed may petition for any office, although those ~ipplying for WAA president mist have had one year's expe- rience on the board. Executive board posts include president, vice-president, secre- tary, treasurer, representative to the A.F.C.W., and publicity man- aler. The intramural manager Booths Committee For Michigras Will Hold Meeting The Booths Committee of Michigras will meet at 5 p.m. to- morrow in the Garden Room of the League. According to Jerry Gaffney and Kieth Jordan, booths co-chairmen, all students who signed up for the work with this committee should attend this meeting, and all men and women interested in working on booths at the carnival are welcome to attend and become members of the committee. Students who wish to join the Booths Committee and cannot at- tend the meeti g tomorrow should call Miss Gaffney at 2-2543. FLOWERS for the hair! _ So much appreciation rewards your small ffort. CHELSEA FLOWER SHOP THEY'RE THE and her three assistants, the lormilory, sorority, and league. Zouse managers, are also membersj f the executive board. WAA petitions may be ob- taied at the League Under- graduate Office, and informa- tion is posted on the WAA bul-i letin board there, as well as on the WAA bulletin boards in Barbour Gym, and the WAB. A coed may petition for sev- ral offices, though not more han three of these may be execu- ive board posts. Club manager- hips, all of which are open, in- volve the planning of the club iport season in cooperation with 'he faculty instructor, and the managing of the club during its season. Clubs for which managers will e chosen include archery, bad- minton, basketball, bowling, dance, fencing, golf, hockey, ice skating, outing, Crop and Saddle,s rifle, swimming, softball, table tennis, tennis, and camp counsel-z ors. Movie star Alexis Smith uses a small amount of salt mixed with her cleansing cream whenever sheL finds that her skin is becoming the least bit dry or flaky. She says this formula removes all of the flakiness and leaves her skin1 bright and smooth.I Butchers wear straw hats allt year 'round to protect their facesi from bumping into sides of beef,t lamb and pork in the refrigerator.N Tomorrow Hans Brinker or the Silver Skates" will be presented at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Ann Arbor High School Auditorium. The story, a classic in children's literature, was written by Mary Mapes Dodge for the entertain- ment of her two boys. The book has had over a hundred editions and was translated into other languages. Children's Favorite The play has also received an award from the French Academy, The story, which concerns life in Holland a hundred years ago, has long been a favorite of youth- ful audiences. The play. staged by the Clare Tree Major Children's Theatre of Chappaqua, N.Y., is being present- ed under the auspices of the Jun- for Michigan Alumnae Club, a! branch of the Michigan Alumnae Club. First Post War Project This is the first project spon- sored by the club since its reor- ganization following wartime in- activity, according to Mrs. Fran-, cis E. Wessenger, publicity chair- man for the play. Tentative plans have been made for the presenta- tion of another play next spring. There are unreserved seats only and tickets may be purchased at all Ann Arbor elementary schools. The Art-Craft Studio Group of Willow Run Village will meet at 3 p.m. today in the University Com- munity Center. Mrs. Alyce Mc- Mahon will continue instruction in textile painting and all who are interested in this art are asked to, bring some kind of material to work on. intormaiHop o 1-eature Tom McNall's Orchestra By LOIS KELSO NE OF THE more inspiriting facets of life in the democratic Middle Tickets for the League mixer t adance which will be held frcm 2 West, as opposed to life in the alien, caste-ridden East, is the re- to 5 p.m. Saturday in the League freshing attitude of tradespeople. ballroom, are on sale this week Back in the degenerate East waitresses frequently smile at the from 10 till noon and 1 to 3 p.m. customers, occasionally even so far forgetting themselves as to bring through Friday, and at the door that which was ordered. The shocking truth seems to be that these of the ballroom Saturday. merciful acts are performed, not from a love for humanity, but from 'the dance will feature the mu- a desire for pecuniary gain. In other, chaster words, in the East wait- sic of Tom McNall and his orches- resses get tipped. tra with Jackie Ward as vocalist. In the Middle West we find none of that degrading servility Miss Ward has been starre at the which causes man to lower his dignity by waiting on a customer tCasbah and has sung over a De- trait radio station. with some appearance of amity. Children of a sturdy pioneer All independent women on cam- stock, the waitresses here know that they are not only as good as pus may attend the mixer which the next man but in all probability a lot better. women. Refreshments will be How incomparably wholesome is th7e atmosphere in one of Ann served and cards supplied for' Arbor's Finest, where the customers are swept out with the refuse those interested in playing bridge. at 4:30 unless they purchase a thoroughly inedible meal as forfeit All men students are invited to be for the giddy delight of sitting for a few precious moments in greasy the guests of the coeds. air while dust is swept over their feet and ashtrays emptied in their This Mixerix the fourth in a mouths by a waitress who holds the city title for sturdy incivility! League house women. AS SHE HAS so rightly pointed out. she has to clean up each booth --------_ -_ To Hold Prom Following a gold rush of 1849 theme, the class of '49 will present their soph prom from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. tomorrow in the Union Ball- room. Decorations, with a red and gold color scheme. will feature a covered wagon as the entrance to the ballroom. The Union dark room will be transformed into a mine shaft for the evening. Pro- grams, bearing a covered wagon design on the cover, will be dis- tributed to all women at the dance. A replica of the program over the band stand, gold nuggets, axes and cacti on the walls, and a wishing well will complete the decorations. The "Forty-Niner Ball" is a re- vival of the soph prom presented annually before the -war. Tickets are on sale from 1 to 5 p.m. daily at the Union, League and in Uni- versity Hall, and the dance is open to members of all classes. i I 1 f E' 3 ' ACTRESS-In a scene from the play, "Hans Brinker and the Silver Skates," to be presented by the Clare Tree Major's Chil- dren's Theatre, Gretal Brinker does her part to help about the home by kneading dough for the family's bread. I Hiawatha Club Will Meet Today The Hiawatha Club, a social or- ganization for Upper Peninsula students, will meet at 8:00 p.m. to- day in the Union. Newly elected officers who will preside at the meeting include:" Robert Shempky, president; Wil- liam Flanagan, vice-president; Le- nore Olson, secretary and Michel Miatech, treasurer. All members are urged to attend. There will be a social hour fol- lowing the regular meeting. three or four times in an afternoon, and it would be an awful lot of work for her if she let a bunch of Students (the word is epithet enough) sit around and mess up the place. Nobody thinks she's in there to work, do they? This inspiring example of rugged individualism should hearten all those who worry about the deterioration of the American charac- ter. An ancounter with almost any one of Ann Arbor's charmers is like being hit in the face with a breath of cold air-being hit in the face, at any rate. Sturdy defenders of their own rights, they take no nonsense from those on whom they deign to wait. Requests for some such exotic vagary as two teabags in a pot of tea or an unbuttered sand- wich are met with the scorn they so richly deserve (as well as one teabag and lots of butter. on the sandwich. It's not the extra effort required to put in an extra teabag or re- frain from buttering the sandwich; it's the principle of the thing. THESE ALTRUISTIC women realize full well what pampering and luxury can do to a people. Look at the Roman Empire. And so, one eye fixed firmly on Marie Antoinette, these guardians of the public morals plod along their appointed path, filled with the exaltation of a noble purpose as they snarlingly repress any tendencies towards self- indulgence. Commendable also is the attitude of the populace, which ex- poses itself unflinchingly to all this spiritual discipline, never at- tempting to lure the girls from the stern path of duty by tipping although the temptation must be almost irresistble. It takes a certain moral fortitude to refrain from squandering money on useless amenities like smiling service and good government. Fortunately the American character has a great deal of this particular strength. CHINESE LINENS (111INESE WRITING BRUSHES ORIENTAL ART OBJECTS SANDAL WOOD JEWEL BOXES inlaid wi/b Sitver d ltory fi lia At SE 330 MAx NAlU) STREi :-- 111 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING_ LOST AND FOUND FOUND - A cigarette lighter. Call 2-2230. )11 LOST - Blue Zircon Ring with gold band; sometime Saturday. Reward for return. Phone 6943.)6 LOST: Wallet containing checks, cash, and papers. $10.00 Reward. Call Peter Storer 2-4401. LOST-Red wallet, all identification, important. all C. Dewey, 5011 Stock- well. Reward. LOST-Near W. Quad - Silver ID barcelet with name Johnny Smith. If found please call 204 Mich. House, 2-4401. Reward. SMALL black purse containing valuable keys and compact. Lost at Union Sat-. urday night. Please call Rhoda Hor- witz, 3056 Stockwell, 2-4471. REWARD-Black Shaeffer Pen-initials A.W.S. Lost near Romance Language Bldg. Please call A. W. Storey, 422 Williams House. Phone 2-4401. )61 LOST-10" K&E Slide Rule. D. N. Buell printed on brown leather case. Reward for returning to 1367 Enfield j Ct. Willow Run or Rm. 235 W. En- gineering. LOST-Lady's Acme wrist watch, black face, gold case, between Willow Run bus stop and Metzgers Saturday night. Notify Mrs. F. R. Bussey, 1701 Darby Court, Willow Run Village. Reward. )12 FOUND: Parker '51. Owner may have by calling 433 Mosher and paying for ad. )54 LOST: K & E Slide Rule. "Murray" in case, on rule. Reward, Murray, 763 West Lodge, Ypsi. ) 20 TYPEWRITERS Bought, Sold, Rented Repaired STUDENT & OFFICE SUPPLIES O. D. MORRILL 314 S. State St. Phone 7177 -A- c7a 07' BUSINESS SERVICES CARPETING and Rugs cleaned in your home. Place orders early. Free esti- mates. Phor 4 Chelsea 6691. )41 TYPING: Theses, term papers, address- es, etc. Duplicating: notices, form letters, programs. A2 Typing Service, 232 Nickels Arcade, phone 9811. )55 FOR RENT VACANCY for one male student in two-room suite. Call at 510 Benjaminl after 6 p.m. )501 FOR SALE ARMY-NAVY Surplus Goods, many items. Come in and look around. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. )14 GOLF-The greatest names in Golf Clubs. Hagen, Spalding and Wilson. Have a good assortment of these. Municipal Golf Course. Call 9230. Phone number 2-0175. )17 PONTIAC ROAD DISTRICT within city close to new school. Attractive home with income located on Plot of ex- cellent soil 90x295 feet. Shade and fruit. Part of house is one of the early brick colonial homes with walls as straight as when built. Balance nearly new. As now used, owner has 4 nice rooms and $70 per month in-1 come. 3 car garage. Big value for $14,000. Call 2-2839 for appointment. Oril Ferguson, Realtor, 928 Forest. )56_ REAR your children with electronics. "Electronic Baby Sitter" will reliably watch your baby, day or night. Priced reasonably. Call 2-1371. )24 FORD. 1937 Tudor Deluxe. Recondi- bioned motor, new parts, new clutch, clean. Phone 2-0960, 9 to 5. )16 new brakes. Sacrifice. Seat covers. REMINGTON-RAND Noiseless, Model 6 Typewriter, in good shape, $40. Call Newnan, 9077, after 7 p.m. )9 CO-EDS: look traditional, feel tradi- tional, be traditional! Complete stock of 1890 bathing suits just received. No wear, no tear, no bare! Weingar- ten-Stone Co., 503 Williams House. )64 FOR SALE: Electric Hot Plate, four heat controls. Almost new, $15.00 Call beteen 12 and 1 Daily, Lawrence Niblett, 1014'Church. )33 TAILS, New. Size 37-38. Call 2-4591. ask for DeCoster, 207 Prescott. )3 yTAILORING and SEWING DRESSMAKING. Dresses, SuitsG For- mals, and Bridal Gowns. Alterations, For appointments, call Mrs. Ringinen. 2-2604. )52 PERSONAL MUCKET-USERS: Yesterday's attempt to burlesk our product is unfounded. misleading and implausible. 24-carat gold indeed! And why the anonym- ity? The violation of patent claims and business ethics prove the inva- lidity of the ad(?) The Amalgamated Mucket Co. C. Hooker, 6 Winchell, 2-4401. )13 OVERWHELMING demand for Muckets forces limitation of sales to those in urgent need. Please be patient. The Amalgamated Mucket Co. C. Hooker, Rm. 6, Winchell. 2-4401. )21 TRANSPORTATION RIDERS wanted: Commuting Monday thru Saturday from Detroit. Call Ar- lington 6691 in Detroit. )8 MISCELLANEOUS MALE STUDENT, child counseling ex- perience, excellent references, former- ly diplomatic service, desires position caring for children afternoons, e'e- nings. Exchange private room, break- fast. Box 23. Michigan Daily. )2 'AND THE NIGHT shall be filled with Music." That is, if your radio works O.K. If not, call 9241 or leave it at The Tavern Cafeteria for quick re- pair service. I am Fred, Ze Great Radio Man. )62 PHOTOSTATIC Copying, Enlargements or Reductions. Leave your work at Wikel Drug, Calkins-Fletcher, Pur- chase Camera, Card and Camera, marriage and birth certificates, dis- charges, records. 24-hour pick-up service. Technical Photo Service. 917 Sunnyside, Phone 4559, 2-6958. )53 WANTED I CAN TOP $30 for a lead to a suitable apartment vacancy this spring for wife, son, and self. Phone 6636. )5 DANCE BAND-Experienced bass man needed. Also alto sax man. Call Lee Stewart, 4843 (4:30-5:30 p.m.). )15 WANTED - Secretary who can take shorthand and type. Must be very capable. Good salary. Telephone M. B. Rogers, Superintendent, Willow Run Public Schools, Ypsilanti 423. )63 WANTED: Ride to New Orleans about April 4. Will share expenses. Call 2-3823. ) SWAA Notices MEMBERS of the WAA Rifle Club will participate in a prone Intercollegiate Match at 3 p.m. today at the ROTC Range. This match will be held with Massachusetts State College, Cor- nell University, University of Wis- consin, University of Kansas, Texas State College for Women, and Oklahoma A&M. Regular practice will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. tomorrow, also. A locker has been secured for the storage of club equipment. Each member is asked to bring 20 cents for the purchase of a lock for the locker. *HE WAA ARCHERY CLUB will meet at 5 p.m. today in the basement of the WAB. Shooting for the intercollegiate match will be continued at this meeting. WAA BASKETBALL club mem- hers will meet 4 p.m. today at University High school gym- nasium for the game. Mortarboard will have a meet- ing at 5 p.m. today, at the League. The room number will be posted at the League. Are Due Today Todlay is the deadline for reser- vations for two special trips to De- troit to see the light opera, "Ba- lalaika." The trips are sponsored by the American Association of Univer- sity Women. All students inter- ested should call Mrs. Lee Wor- rell, 2-3870, for information and reservations. The opera will be presented from Monday, March 24 through March 30 at Mason Auditorium in Detroit. The first trip is sched- uled for Wednesday, March 26. The group will leave the League at 6:45 p.m. The second group will leave by bus at 12:45 p.m. Saturday, March 29. Diamonds and O Wedding : ERings 717 North University Ave. O O~o~d All Reservations For 'Balalaika' II",____Z~i3... III PEN REPAIR SERVICE OurFactory-Trained Workmen Guarantee Expert Workmanship for all makes of Fountain Pens. BALL & THRASHER 211 South Fourth Avenue HAND-MADE, HAND-TAILORED FRENCH CREPE BLOUSES from Santurce, San Juan, Porto Rico. ORIENTAL METALLIC dress patterns in several designs. DISTINCTIVE and EXCLUSIVE creations in silver by MARJORIE MARSH. SEE OUR SHADOW BOX WINDOW DISPLAY Wed., Thur., and Fri., evenings. For Further Information, call 4720, 2-1586, 2-0906. KEPPEL'S Handcraft Mart 802 South State Phone 4720 9fi44le4 a LAUNDRY HOLIDAY Why send your dirty clothes to Mother? We can help you do your own washing right here on campus SAUTOMATIC: Washes, triple rinses, and damp dries in 30 minutes! ko THRIFTY: 30c per tub (up to 9 lbs. ) We furnish soap! m' CONVENIENT: A trained attendant to help you! z GENTLE: Famous Bendix tumbling action saves wear and tear! VERSATILE: Washes anything washable! NO DELAY: We have 30 Bendix washers J Read and Use Daily Classified Ads - 1 6.4 k T IDI - 0 * Give fresh, new effects to your suits, sweaters, K dresses! Full- is length back and ; front, adjustable waist. In white,' new colors and STom, ; louls: 9:30-5:10 -Al //"C(of6il pK + K, > Z/> SLEEPYTIME TOMMYCOATS Fullcut in silky rayon, the drawstring neck- line and puff sleeves are appliqued with daisy trim. Tearose and blue . . . $5.95. MAN-TAILORED PAJ AMAS TWO-PILECE STYLES - White washable satin with blue binding . . . $5.95. "Teloweave" Crown Tested crepe in brown ] __ '.. __ _ L 1 - . _ _ .- .. / - They travel by Greyhound and save money on evry trip. She gets "door-st-p" convenience whenever she shops, visits or calls on out-of-town friends. He gets time-saing service whenev er he heads for busi- ness appointments, across the county or across the coun- try.They both ride in relaxing "airfoam" comfort, enj o ng all thesgtsaog h igh- way... iree from csery driving worry. Go b; Greyhound! 1f. /ic Smart uw t) ha /re. STATIONERY SALE! 3 boxes of stationery for only I I