, APRIL 30, 19417 THE MICHIGAN D AiL PAGE . . . ... . . ... .................. . . . . . ........... ........ ...... ............... .. ..... Twommortsn. . ......... .. . .. ....... ........................................... . ... .... . . ........................................... .... . .............. Installation Night To Be Held Monday F 1{Q' y 1 . .r .URE EWS League Posts To Be Filled Program in Rackham Hall Will Feature Betty Brown Installation Night, annual pro- gram to install new League offi- cers, will be held at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the Rackham Lecture Hall. Miss Betty Brown, College Edi- tor of Junior Harper's Bazaar is to be the guest speaker at the event, which is open to all wom- en on campus. Miss Brown, a graduate of U. C.L.A., will speak on "Job Opportunities in Mer- chandising." Officers To Be Announced Following a short talk by Dean Alice C. Lloyd, announcement will be made of the holders of the top positions in women's activities for 1947-48. Included in these posi- tions are the officers of the League Council, Judiciary chair- man and committee, Interview- ing chairman and committee, cen- tral committee of Junior Girls Play, and League junior assistants. Also to be announced are the sophomore positions including the Soph Cabaret central committee, orientation advisors, Women's Athletic Association president and board, Assembly president and board and Panhellenic president and board. The winners of the Mortar Inter-Fraternity Council To Hold Annual Formal "A Night with the Greeks" will be the theme of the sixteenth an- nual Inter-Fraternity Council Ball, to be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a. m. Friday in the Intramural Building. Feature of the decorations will be- a Greek arch in the center of the dance floor and a Greek god- dess at one end of the floor hold- ing the Inter-Fraternity Council key. The color scheme for the af- fair will be black and silver, and novel programs designed in the shape of the IFC key will be dis- tributed to women guests. Each fraternity will have a booth at the dance, similar to those at the 1947 J-Hop. Dec- orations will include a 14-foot high Greek warrior in each booth, bearing the initials of the fra- ternity, Furniture for the booths will be supplied by the individual houses and may be set up Friday. The dance will be formal, and women students will have 1:30 a.m. permission for the evening. No corsages will be worn except by guests of the central commit- tee members. Tickets will be sold tomorrow and Friday in Room 306 of the Union. The Inter-Fraternity Council Office will be open from 3 to 5 p.m. Monday and Tuesday, and all afternoon Wednesday so that fra- ternities may turn in money from the sale of IFC Ball tickets. Wed- nesday is the deadline for turning in ticket money. Camp Counselors Will Hold Meeting The WAA Camp Counselors will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in the WAB. The meeting will be open to all students who are interested in camp counselor work. The meet- ing will include a song fest. Learn- ing new songs and singing old songs will make up the program. This is the second in a series of programs designed for students who will be counselors for the first time this year. Those at- tending Ur(' akOd to bring pencil and paper so that they imay write new words. All rnembcrs of Senior So- ciety are to attend a meeting at 5 p.m. today in the Presi- dent's Office of the League, ac- cording to President Shirley Hansen. i)C ;>0<:X_- 0c 0<;-.07 10 OPAGE-BOY FLAT-TOP I'Ycu's/ coiIjire rage . . . the Iflat-top bob! S~Ob, shtimu nat ral . . . sty l by r y (no, l i k '1: sta i o 4 aden II,, Board and Ethel A. McCormick scholarships will also be an- nounced. These scholarships are awarded on the basis of service, participation in extra-curricularf activities and scholarship.I Scroll, senior honor society for affiliated women, and Senior so- Scroll To Hold Annual Dinner Today Scroll will honor members of Mortar Board, Senior Society, and the Board of Directors of the Alumnae Council at their annual ciety, independent women's hon- UUH or society, .will tap new members Mich at Installation Night. Member- Me ship in these societies is based on:ubj scholarship, activities and service. Heat Reception Will Be Held Leagi An informal reception at which coeds can meet the newly install- ed officers, will be held in the en- trance lobby of the Rackham Building ,following the. installa- tion ceremony. Houses will sit together in blocs in the lecture hall, and signs will be posted in alphabetical order for all houses on campus. at 6 p.m.utoday in the iigan League. onna Heath will speak on the ect "On Your Own." MissC th was president of the ue in 1943-44 and is at pre-f sent affiliated with the Girl Scouts of America. Ann Lippincott, president of Scroll, will welcome members and guests. Mrs. Lucille Conger. Alumnae Council Secretary, will bring greetings. Group singing will be led by Barbara Everett, president of the University Wom- en's Glee Club. -- - - -- 'Dance Tickets To Go on, Sale Ticket sales for Olympic Ball, all-campus semi-formal. will be- gin today on the diagonal and to- morrow in the League and Union. The annual event sponsored by; the men's and women's physical education clubs will be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, May 9, in the League Ballroom. Al Town- send and his band will provide the music for the dance. The decorations will center around a theme of ancient Olym- pia, and dancers will dance amid the clouds of Mt. Olympus. The stairway will represent the climb to the summit of the mountain. Pictures will be taken before the flag of Olympus. A huge figure of Oenomaus, King of Olympia will dominate the dance floor from his throne at one end of the room. The char- iot race in which Pelops, founder of the Olympic games, escaped with the princess, Hippodamia, will be portrayed oil the walls of the ballroom. Door prizes will be awarded dur- ing the intermission entertain- ment. The committee has asked that no corsages be woTn. Late permission has been granted to all women attending. Traditional Dance To. Be Presented By Lawyers Club Crease Ball, traditional event sponsored by Barristers,.will be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday in the League Ballroom. Teddy Phillips and his 18-piece band will provide the music: Bea Herold and Bill Howard will pre- sent vocal selections with The Four Mountaineers assisting with comedy numbers. Phillips was a prodigy of the late Bel Bernie and built up his band after the death of his sponsor. The dance is open to law stu- dents, faculty, and alumni. Tick- ets may be purchased at the club desk or store. Late permission until 1:30 a.m. has been granted to all women attending. The newest raincoats feature hoods lined in every color to frame and complement the face and also to detract from wet eye- lashes and a shiny no. e. There are loose flowing hoods for lon, coiffures and the novel helnet for short curls. "Tip-Tap" Automatic Perfuumue Dispenser Just a simple tap with the tip of a finger and the compelling aroma of your favorite perfume traps you in an era of loveliness. Just right for purse in shining gold or silver finish. 3040 No Fed. Tax The right note for Mother's Day s nte S n a lil 1. 00 'm Send t of you ft\ 1some\o Cmn3 m t o \ 3 \ ax e r eS are a s..._:s'a"l ways Here's her billfold rn the smartest of spring shades~reBu lvrydsge owr ai G -dnZ Registrar photo card case for cards and photos. $5.00 O/her colors . . . fne leathers 3.50 to 5.00 plius tax J acbton LOOK I NG PITCH ER OVER--Comedian Bob Hope, (left) part owner of the Cleveland Indians, tests the biceps of his high-priced hurler, Be-b Feller, on the latter's Hollywood visit.' T 0 O T H P I C K T 0 W E R--Bruno Juodagalvis and Bar- bara Mudie admire a model of the Eiffel tower. built out of tooth- picks, which was entered in the annual hobby show of Tilden High School, Chicago. ONLO-KERA Z ulu spectator at S ?tAranwa dance sae frT ri. oal arrives suitably garbed for the occasion-. A I R - G R 0 U N D M A N E U V E R S -- Planes fly low over ground personnel during joint mzneuvers of U. S. Marine reserve units based in the San francisco Bay area. 1 f411 Out for work or play - B O W L S FROM C H A I R--Although he has lost both legs, Arthur Pierson, World War I veteran from Jamestown, N. Y., is able to bowl at Batavia veterans' hospital. A member of the hospital staff devised the chair platform. R ! N C O F F I R E-A ring of flame blazes in the General Electric locomotive shop at Erie, Pa., as a workman tests a gas ring used for heating wheels of locomotives before steel tires (foreground) are put on. . "' , W[ HITE STAG "Clarn Diggers"/ I I fi Rugged o utdoorables in "Topsoil," a comfortable-to- wear, wonderfully sturdy cotton fabric by Wellington. Double-stitched seams, streamlined fit. Red . . gold . . . sailing blue . dark blue. '" .: _a5 d ... .?"> ,.:=.. ,K' . . : i. .. ::: 2: . ' a4a 1 :..... .. - . > . ; '{ :.' ......,J ... .....: ..%s .., ' 3. i. r . 4 $+3 ,.r ._ ., . _ .. . ,.. ._. ;;ijf;r,; ,