11, 1947 r: TH Mif4XN DAILY Coeds For R To Petition ecognition Service U n i ts iLantern Night Dr. Bell States University Student's Healti Night Positions Saturday Noon Set as Deadline For Applications Petitioning is now open for cen- tral committee posts for Assem- bly's annual Recognition Night, which will be held early next fall, according to Irma Eichhorn, presi- dent of Assembly Association. BalI To Honoq Fraterni ties The first annual Alpha Sigma Phi Sweetheart Dance will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday in the League Ballroom honoring the University of Toledo chapter. Al Townsend and his band will play for the dance. Invitations willj be sent to all fraternity house pres- idents and members of Alpha Sig- ma Phi will invite two couples. Each member and guest will be honored at a banquet in the Grand Rapids room of the League. During the intermission a grand march will be held. Recognition Night is a tradi- tional event, honoring indepen- dent women for outstanding achievement in scholarship and in extra-curricular activities. Petitions will be due at noon Saturday in the Undergraduate Office of the League. Positions which will be available include general chairman and chairmen for dectrations, refreshments, rsublicity, programs, patrons and honors committees. A more detailed list of the duties entailed by each office will be posted on the bulletin board in the Undergraduate Office. Additional information may be procured from past League President's Reports, which may be found in the League Library. Petitions should include ideas for a general theme for the af- fair. Coeds will be given oppor- tunity to discuss their plans at the interviews, which will begin Monday, May 19, in the Assem- bly Office on the third floor of the League. Interviewees will be required to bring with them their Assembly Membership Cards and their Eligi- bility Cards. Women may sign for interviews at the time they turn in their petitions. HEROINE-Mrs. Anna Trump, Worth, Mo., school teacher who rushed her 14 pupils to a storm cellar shortly before a tornado wiped out the bavn, holds the school records which she also took to safety. Will Present Military Ball Decoratons for the annual Mili- tary Ball. to be held from 9 p.m. toI 1 a.m. Friday in the League Ball- room, will feature Army and Navy. insignia of sr'rvice andi rank. The bandstand will be trans- formed into a replica of the bridge of the battleship USS Missouri. In addition, Navy ROTC membersI will fly several lines of signal flags in the ha1 Iroom and will displayj many types of Navy gear. Dance Open to Servicemen The dance is being sponsored by Scabbard and Blade and is open to members of Army and Navy ROTC units, members of the Reserve Of- ficers Association and all other reserve officers on campus, Tickets are being sold at the Army ROTC headquarters at 512 S. State St. and at the Navy head-' ouarters in North Hall. Service uniforms or civilian formal attireI will be worn at the ball, and ROTC members are being issued new uni- forms which will be ready in time for the dance. Townsend Will Play Allan Townsend, regular Cas- bah dance band, will play at the Military Ball. Lois Roberts andl the Symphonaires will supply the vocals. According to Robert Ware. committee chairman, no corsages will be worn. Women students have been granted 1:30 a.m. per- mission for the affair. During the war the society spon- sored small dances. Song Trophy To Be Awarded; Coeds Will Form Annual March Before Program Contest Will Feature except for one influenza epidemic, according to Ir. Margaret Bell, Lantern Night, the annual womn- former acting director of the Uni- en's song-fest, will be held Mon-v ersity Health Service. day, May 19 in Hill Auditorium, Dr. Bell said that she is hoping following the traditional line ofj r. Bellsitateisoing march. originating at 6:45 p.m. in this excellent rate will continue. front of Aneill Hall. "Students have learned to be ju- Each year, League Houses, dor- dicious about the use of good medi- mitories and sororities compete for cal care," she said, adding that a trcp y awarded t~o the winnngnuisance calls are now at a mini- group. The affair is held primar- mum. "One important aim of the ily to honor seniors. Health Service is to teach the stu- Coeds will line up for the pro- dent discriminating use of good cession five abreast, each senior medical seivice." Dr. Bell stated. Delt a Omega honorary public health fraternity, is listed in "Who's Who in America." She is a member of many national and local medical and physical educa- tion groups, and was president of the American Association for Physical Education and Recrea- tion in 1939-40. The health of the women of the University has interested Dr. Bell intensely, and, with Dr. Claire E. Healey. she took an exhaustivet survey of the effects of college life on the health of Michigan coeds. I mproved Due To Use of Medical Service By BETTY HAHNEMAN Dr. Bell, a Fellow of the Amern- "The health record of University can College of Physicians, and a of Michigan students has been un- nember of Alpha OmegzAlpha, usually good for the past six years, nrry Aepa Oega Alpha - honora'ry medical society, andcl of Extensive physical exaninatio t;ere given women entering in t fall semesters of 1934-37, and ea of these coeds who completed fo consecutive years' work was aga thoroughly examined at the con pletion of her University resid.ent h1calth Improves at 'U' Results of the survey show that the total health of the women was improved. but senio "appear to have lost a certain d gree of visual acuity and des: able habits of sleep," she said. "We now have a men's full tin health staff and expect to add o more woman physician. Plans a in progress for the opening of mc beds in the infirmary. i AVG To Hold Picnic Sunday "Island Rendezvous," AVC spon- sored picnic, will be held from, 2:30 to 10 p.m. Sunday at the Is- land. All members and their friends are invited to attend the affair, which will include softball, volley ball, horseshoe pitching, tug of war, singing and dancing. flanked -by four underclassmen. All coeds may Join the line of march whether or not they are singing. The procession will be led by the five women holding the highest positions in women's activites. The University marching band will lead the line of march around campus to the mall between the League and Hill Auditorium where a block M will be formed. The group will proceed to the audito- rium following the singing of the "Yellow and Blue" and the "Star Spangled Banner." Seniors will wear caps and gowns to the traditional event. lnderclassmen will wear col- ored hairbows to designate their class: juniors will wear red bows, sophomores will wear yellow, and freshmen, green. Each house has been assigned a position on the program. Pre- sentation rules state that not more than 30 singers may participate in any one group, no soloists may be t ed, and no song may be over three minutes in length. The name lantern night origi- nated from the fact that in early ye ars senior women carried Japan- , e lanterns. Juniors carried col- ored hoops through which the freshmen jumped. At the end of the program, lanterns were given to the juniors, and sophomores re- ceived hoops from the juniors. Thus the seniors were honored and passed from campus life. ~WAA NOIE[ SHOULDERS BARING? you need r t THE STRAPLESS BRA THAT STAYS UP , ... ...H.. ..,..s ....,,.,? ........ ..... ...,..v .,. .,.. . _... ._. v._____ _. .d.._..___.__.-..___.., .. __.__._ . .._.. ____.. **4 . , . cut low enough so you can keep the fact you're wearing a bra under your swooping decolletage, your bare- back fashions, even your most minimum 1 , c I t r COLLEGE SHOP B. HWRAGGE Goe0 Cotton PIClking .. . comes up with a stunning cotton print by Everfast to highlight summer wardrobes. Black on white medallion print of Oriental inspiration .. . banded in bold primary colors, orange, blue or green. The two-piece dress with wrap-around skirt (left) ... 25.00. The zipper-front style with dramatically flared skirt (right) . . . 29.95. Also, a sun-dress in the collection. Misses sizes. - 3- r playclothes, a sec S4 -In nylon net, or t skin nylon, DARI a Model Brassiere, V.. 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The schedule for games in the WAA Softball tournament for next week follows: Monday: Couzens III vs. Pi Beta Phi I, Delta Delta Delta vs. Alpha Delta Pi Delta Gamma vs. Jor- dan V, Kappa Delta I vs. Adeha Cheever at 5:10 p.m.; Couzens II vs. Mosher II at 7:10 p.m. Tuesday: Sigma Delta Tau vs. Alpha Phi II at 5:10. Wednesday: Zeta Tau Alpha vs. Alpha Xi Delta I, winner of Delta Gamma vs. Jordan V plays winner of Kappa Delta I vs. Adelia Cheev- er, winner of Delta Delta Delta vs. Alpha Delta Pi I plays winner of Couzens III vs. Pi Beta Phi I at 5:10 p.m.; winner of Mosher II vs. Couzens II plays Martha Cook, Jordan IV vs. Zone II team II at 7: 10 p.m. Thursday: Alpha Phi I vs. Stock- well II, Jordan II vs. Alpha Delta Pi II at 5:10 p.m.; winner of Jor- dan IV vs. Zone II team II plays Jordan III at 7:10 p.m. Golf lessons will be given at 5 p.m. tomorrow and Tuesday in the WAB to any Pitch and Putt club member desiring student instruc- tion. The tournament is now in prog- ress and scores for the first round must be in by Monday, May 19. Scores should be turned in to the matron at the WAB with the sig- nature of the partner and a nota- tion that it is a score for Mrs. Stewartt Hanley. t t 1 i C c A fi.e 66zaet4h2 61 /SL0 'Round the Corner on State - a Aor ti _aY .Y I picks posies / ~ , ' < ~ ; 'r ; ,:'; z f\ f . H f n s" _ k .< ' v V t the t7lowe ting closer to us every day SP ' , ov, i y S r l_ a r Summer is get 4ri L. r and now is the time for our cotton skirts to strew across the bodice and around the waist of a luscious chambray. Skirt softly gathered for back interest and to add a gem-like touch, spar- kling dew drop bzuttons march down the front. Pi$/u5red $17.95 and peasant blouses. perfect for the approaching hot weather. t _. Skirts sizes 10-18. Blouses sizes 32-38 -K j \ . F From $3.95 WYA ?1