WEDNE~SDAY, D~ECEMB~ER 4, 1946 THE MICHIGAN DALY I I Women To fpply For Spring, Fall Orientation Posts Advisers Needed; For Freshmen, Transfer Coeds Petitioning is now open for coeds who wish to serve as orien- tation advisers for the spring and fall terms, 1947. Posts as freshman advisers and transfer alvisers are open to eli- gible coeds who will be juniors or seniors next fall, according to Jean Louise Hole, Judiciary chair- man. Former Advisers Need Rest Coeds who served as advisers this fall need not petition now, Miss Hole said, since these women will be sent postal cards asking whether they wish to participate in the orientation program this spring or next fall. The petitions are due at noon Monday in the Judiciary petition box in the Undergraduate Office of the League. Each applicant will be required to sign for a five-mm- Sophs Will Hold Final Rehearsals The final dress rehearsals for Soph Cabaret will be at 6:45 p.m. tomorrow and Friday in Lydia Mendelssohn Theat r e in the League. The entire cast and stage com- mittee are expected to attend both rehearsals. Those in Choral Un- ion will be excused from that re- hearsal tomorrow by turning in their names at the office in Bur- ton Tower Coeds will be granted 11:30 p.m. permission for tomor- row's rehearsal. * * * The patrons committee of Soph Cabaret will meet at 7 p.m. today in the League. The room will be posted on the League bulletin board. ute interview when she, turns in her petition. Interviews To Be Held Interviews will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. Monday, from 1 to 5:30 p.m. Tuesday and from 3 to 5:30 p.m. Wednesday and Friday in the Council Room. Each interviewe'e must present a. University eligi- bility 'card, signed by the Merit- Tutorial Committee of the League, at her interview. Each applicant should list her preference for freshman or trans- fer adviser and for spring or fall orientation. Petition forms which may be obtained at the Office of the Social Director, should be filled out in full, including infor- mation on previous activities and scholastic average. Advisers To Attend Meeting Coeds appointed as advisers will be expected to attend the mass meeting held during the semester preceding the orientation pro- gram. She is responsible for at- tending all meetings for advisers during orientation week, and for conducting the group assigned to her through.the orientation pro- gram. According to Miss Hole, quali- fications include a desire to be of service to new students and a knowledge of the campus and campus events. The prospective adviser must also know the Uni- versity registration procedure. Included in each petition should be a criticism of past orientation programs, with suggestions for im- provements. Specific plans are desired on the petitions, including ideas for the orientation week pro- gram. The WAA Board will have an informal supper following its reg- ular m'eetig at 5 p.m. today in the WAB. Board members are requested to wear pastel sweaters and pearls for the Ensian picture to be taken at the mceting. VIOLIN-Dorothy Hale, concert violinist, plans to rebuild an old violin which she found while riUmanaging in an abandoned dance hall in the ghost town of Elkhorn, Mont. Coeds WiIl Study Counciling Work AtCQub meeting Extending their activities be- yond the summer months, expe- rienced and aspiring camp coun- selors exchange ideas through the WAA Camp Counselors' Club. At their next meeting, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the WAB, the club will discuss types of camps and opportunities for counselors. j During the season the club will study handicraft, music, evening programs, and waterfront organi- zation. Past experience will be1 combined with new ideas for the improving of teaching methods. Members will learn to work with leather, carve, spatter-print and do other crafts as suggested by members. Music will form an in- tegral part of every program with members exchanging new songs. Different types of evening pro- grams will be discussed. Ball Tickets To Be Sold I RA Members To Sponsor All-Campus Dance Friday Tickets f or the informal dance to be presented from 9 to midnight Friday in the Union Ballroom by the Inter-''7 acial Association, are now on sale on the diagonal and at the Union desk. They will be sold from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on the diagonal, and all day at the Union. Tickets may also be purchased from IRA members. This dance is being given to help promote iiter-racial good feeling, and is the first all-campus dance to be sponsored by the IRA. In- vitations are being issued to all foreign groups on campus to make it an intermational as well as in- ter-racial dance. Frank ' inker, whose orchestra plays for tne regular Union dances, will provide the music for this special dance. Special feature of the evening will be a rendition of a medley of songs of all nations by the band. Terrell Whitset, president of IRA, will be master of ceremonies for the danice, and an intermis- sion program will be presented by various foreign student groups. Plans are being made to decorate the Ballroom with balloons and streamers AVC To Present Dance in Ballroom The American Veterans Com- mittee will present its regular weekly record dance from 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. today in the League Ballroom. These :nixers, which have be- come a campus institution, are sponsored in an effort to help vet- erans and women students to meet in an info, mal atmosphere, as well as to provide a mid-week activity for both men and women students. Refreshments will be available in the League coke bar, and stu- dents are urged to drop in at the dance after or between classes. There will be no meeting of the WAA Balet Club this week, ac- cording to Joan Bromm, dance manager. Coeds To Hold Student-Faculty Tea at League The first of a series of student- faculty teas, sponsored by Pan- hellenic Association and Assembly Association, will be held from 3:30 to 4:30 p.m tomorrow in the Rus- sian Tea Room of the League. All students and faculty mem- bers are invited to attend. Each week, faculty members from one special department will be hon- ored guests for the event. Profes- sors of the Speech Department will be honored tomorrow. The purpose of the social hour is to further relations between the faculty and students, and to pro- vide an opportunity for students to meet their professors informally. Co-chairmen for the teas are Regina Gruen and Sally Pearson. Invitations are under the chair- manship ;f Gene Inyart, Regina Gruen, and Nancy Helmick. Other chairmen include Pat Gurr and Doris Johnson, publicity; and Julia Diggs and Frances Hodes, refreshments. GIVE FOR XMAS- SUPPORT GALENS Independents Will Petition Petitions for central committee positions for Assembly Ball, to be presented :n March 7, will be due at noon Saturday in the Under- graduate Office of the League, ac- cording to Jeanne Clare, president of Assembiv Association. Posts ar4 open to all indepen- dent women, although Miss Clare urged that ,junior and senior coeds, in particular, should apply for general chairman. Other chair- manships which will be available include: tickets, publicity, decora- tions, finance, music and pro- grams, patrons, and building, which entails care of lighting and checking of facilities. The dance is a traditional wom- en-bid affair, and one of the im- portant highlights of the semester. For this reason, Miss Clare sug- gests that all interested women in- clude such specific ideas as theme, decoratiors and novel ideas, in their petitions. The Merit-Tutorial Committee is located in the Undergraduate Office, and Assembly membership cards are distributed from 3 to 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday in the Assembly Office, Room D, on the third floor of the League. "Soph Tale-Spin" will be pre- sented from 8 p.m. to midnight, Saturday in the League. Included in the evening's pro- gram, is a stage show, to be given at 8:15 p.m., 9:30 p.m. and 10:45 p.m. in Lydia Mendelssohn Thea- tre. There will be a running nar- rative with Lois Garnitz as nar- rator and Mary Jane Stephens as piano accompanist. The dance chorus numbers will be "Raggedy Ann and Andy," "Sleeping Beauty Waltz" with Joanne Bromm as toe solo-. ist and "Dance of the Wooden Soldiers" with the Three Trum- peters, Peggy and Dorothy Boss- cawen and Mary Kelly, as a specialty act. There is to be a tap solo by Maxine Smith and a piano solo by Pat Baumgarten. The singing chorus numbers include novelty acts "Old King Cole" with Lelitia Burke, Jackie Reid, Harriet Mer- melstein and Suzanne Tolford and "Three Blind Mice" with Francile Worthman, Lydia Pekarsky and Marjorie Reber. The program includes skits which are to be take-offs on nur- sery rhymes and satires on col- lege life. Also in the Cabaret dancing chorus are Esther Gommeson, Mary Wilkinson, Mary Long, Ruth Livingston, Barbara Whit- ing, Barbara Newell, Betsy Driscal, Nancy Cochran, Betty Schmidt, Jean Hall, Adrianne Volberding, Charlotte Peck, Mary Lou Dickinson and Eu- genia Losch. The dancing chorus list con- cludes witn Suzanne Toepel, Jo Ann Lambert, Barbara Forster, Harriet Beck, Patricia McKenna, Eleanor Hoffmaster, Marjorie Sut- fin, Edith Wortsman and Cohleen Jensen. The singing chorus includes first sopranos, Virginia Beabes, Jean Boos, Charlotte Clark, Jean Dennis, Mirabel Digel, Jean Lyman, Anne Seigel, Doris Sternberg, Lynn Wohlgemth and Rosemarie Young. The singing chorus list con- cludes with altos, Phyllis Collins, Margaret Ellingwood, Barbara Kelso, Mary Lee McDonald, Phyl- lis Marx, Carol Peak and Ruth Spore. Annual Soph Cabaret To Offer Varied Entertainment Saturday Casuals from the Sport Shop ,_. :_;'' '' " ' . s: :,.:.. .:y::r:. : . F, fr:".. .. F v' ."rl.'" ::":: LEG ANCE- f t 1 1 " ,., 4 f " / +{ "r,-:F yS. . r'.~ '. ''ly'r3:eY' ' '. y~x f i, 'j r"'r , l !.f:.. ' . .y ; ' i . ,.f': 1 . ,Y. Rizr%%_ v poplin windbreaker' to ward off winter! weather-proofed, water-resistant poplin .. . durably Zelan finished all-purpose sport-jacket you'll use 12 months a year . . misses sizes. 8.95 other windbreakers . . . 8.95 to 16.95 trimly tailored slacks in best Western style .,.. California designed slacks in black crease-resistant worsted ... colorfully combined with aqua shantung tailored shirt . .. misses sizes. 19.95 ia p 1tu ie, ti the junior t 04 V/ t an l..Ia ter...0 RATING A FULL PAGE PHOTOGRAPH IN- DECEMBER 1st YOGUE. Perfect for Soph Cabaret "Nursery Rhymes" party at the League Saturday . . . window-paired suit dress of black on coffee brown Shanokin wool. A rayon faille bow filling in the pretty shepherdess neckline. Small jet buttons lighting the tight basque jacket. 22.95 study stadiunt boots in soft-leather .,.. smart-looking and comfortable stadium boot. slide fastened in smooth brown leather with soft lamb's wool shearling cuff and lining. 10.95 A /2