WEDEfDAY, JANUARY 8, 1947 'TE MICH IGA N DAILY P1i Final Design' To Be Given By Engineers Friday, Jan. 17 The Engineering Council will present the "Final Design," an- nual engineering winter formal, from.9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, Jan. 17 in the Union Ballroom.t Women students have been granted 1:30 permission for the "Final Design." The dance is a revival of the engineering winter J-Hop Breakfast WilI B Served{ At Union, League Reviving a pre-war custom, breakfasts will be served to SJ-Ropers immediately after the dance both Friday and Saturday, Feb. 7 and 8, at the Union and League. 250 couples will be served each right at each place, and tickets for the breakfast will go on sal; soon. The menu will include fruit juice, cereal, toast, bacon, egg: and milk or coffee. Tickets will be sold on a first-come, first- served basis, and a different col- ored ticket will be necessary for each night. J-Hop ticket sales for all stu- dents whose applications have been accepted will be held from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow and Fri- day and from 9 a.m. to noon Satur- day at a booth in University Hall Tickets will be sold to applicant this week only, and students whc fail to pick up their tickets ther will not be able to claim them lat- er, according to Nancy Neumann ticket chairman. The tickets will cost $5 plus $1 tax, and purchasers must bring the $6 in exact change. Check, made out to the University will b accepted. Identification cards an( accepted applications will also b. necessary in order to buy tickets The name of the band whic will play for the 1947 Hop is stil unannounced, but the committt< plans to have the same band foI both nights of the two-night af fair in -order to make both th( Friday and Saturday night dance: identical. formal held annually before the war. The formal is open to all stu- ients on campus, but attendance will be limited to the capacity of the ballroom. Tickets Are On Sale Tickets for the "Final Design" are on sale from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Engineering Arch. Decora- ions for the dance will follow an engineering theme. Novel pro- ;rams have been planned, and re- :reshments will be served to dan- cers. Art Jarrett, equally famous as a vocalist and bandleader, has -een chosen to play for the dance. His new orchestra was formed after his discharge from the Navy,1 ind includes members of the late Hal Kemp's band. Jarrett Featured As Soloist As a soloist, Jarrett was fea- ;ured with Ted Weem's band, and later co-starred in movies with Joan Crawford, Carole Lombard, Sonja Henie and Ginger Rogers. Ele has also appeared as vocalist :n a number of radio programs. In the Navy, Jarrett organized a band and was put in charge of ntertainment for all branches of he services in the San Francisco 'a.rea. In the Central Pacific thea- ter he commanded the Armed ,orces Radio Show for the Nimitz Navy. Eugene Sikorovsky is general 3hairman for the "Final Design," mcd central committee members ire Hal Walters, decorations; Ev 7llin, publicity; Herb Schreiber, >and; and Andy Poledor, tickets and programs. Hiawatha Club The Hiawartha Club will hold tn important business meeting at 3 p.m. today in the Union. All nembers are asked to bring their lance tickets as this is the last neeting of the semester. All stu- lents living in the Upper Penin- ula will be welcome to attend. Panhel Night To Be Qiven In Rackham The annual Pan-Hellenic Rec- ognition Night honoring affiliat- ed women for scholarship and ac- tivity participation will be pre- sented at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Rackham Auditorium. The program theme, called "Pan-hellenic Portraits," will be based on the idea of a family group. Each sorority, acting as a member of a family, should work for the welfare of the whole or- ganization. The goal is to pro- mote cooperation within the group for the integration of ideas and aims like that of a unified family. Presentation of the scholar- ship cup award will be made by Ira Smith, Registrar and Dean Alice C. Lloyd will speak on "Place of sorority women in the Social Life of the Campus." Dean Lloyd will also present ac- tivity awards to a senior, junior and sophomore for outstanding participation. Margaret Gage, 1946 president of Panhellenic Association, will talk about the aims and accom- plishments of the Association. Lois Cochran, rushing chairman, will give the rushing report and discuss the new rushing system. The committee in charge of the program this year is headed by Sally Stamats. The other chairmen are as follows: pa- trons, Margery Yolk; finance, Jean Flood; program arrange- ment, Kathleen Watson; pub- licity, Beverly Garrett; and pro- grams, Marilyn Holtom. Pan-hellenic Night is a tradi- tional function given annually to replace the recognition banquet which was held every year before the war. WAACIub Meetings Set THE WAA RIFLE CLUB will resume practice tomorrow and Friday at the ROTC Range. Instruction for beginners will be held from 3 to 5 p.m. tomorrow and Friday. Practice for advanced shooters is scheduled from 5 to 6 p.m. tomorrow. A match will be held with Drexel Institute of Technology on Jan. 18. Barbara Crosby, club manager, urged that members report for practice. THE WAA CAMP COUNSEL- ORS will meet, at 7:30 p.m. tomor- row in the WAB. The program will be a crafts workshop. Members are asked to bring material with which to work, according to Virginia Howe, club manager. Leather work, carving, sketching and fingerprinting will be done with discussion of how to teach the campers. League Group Exists To Aid Other Projects The League Personnel Commit- tee, headed by Estelle Klein, was organized to facilitate women's undergraduate activities. Members act as ushers for all Art Cinema League and Play Pro- duction events. Recently they sponsored an information booth in Rackham at the Principals' Con- vention, and sold marriage lecture tickets in the League. Two assistants heading the committee, Geraldine London and Helen Van Dyke, help enlisting members and keeping files. At present the committee needs help for serving at honor dinners as well as for ushering, art work and other miscellaneous jobs. Coeds interested may contact Miss Klein by leaving a note in her box in the League undergraduate of- fice. Plans Events The University Women's Glee Club will be heard throughout the year over a local radio station by means of recordings. The Glee Club has also planned a Spring Concert and a concert tour to be held in February, ae- cording to Barbara Everett, presi- dent. Other officers of the club in- clude. Dorothy Beatty, vice presi- dent; Patricia Slauff, business manager; Ruthann Perry, secre- tary; Doris Johnson, publicity and Libby Gauthier, librarian. The Woman's Glee Club is un- der the direction of Marguerite Hood. Games in the WAA Basketball tournament will be played .this week in Barbour Gym as follow: Today: Co-op Girls vs. Pi Beta Phi II, Sorosis II vs. Jordan IV at 5:10 p.m. 'U' Glee Club Paul Bunyan's Ax Snatched! Paul B3unyan's ax, sacred tool of the mighty woodsman. which is stolen annually, has once again been lifted. The ax is guarded tenderly by members of the forestry school and is brought forth from its hid- ing place once each year and ex- hibited to admiring students at the Paul Bunyan Formal. The implement is usually stol- en just before the dance, but this year the ax-nappers clever- ly filched it from its hiding place in the Wood Utilization Lab. A posse of foresters has volun- teered to search for the ax and plans are being made to ransack several men's and women's resi- dences which are under suspicion. According to Ken Boehme, one of the dance committee members. "Some quarters have placed Engi- neering Dean Crawford in a sinis- ter light. Jealousy of the forestry school is said to be the motive.". D espite the trag-edy, the dance comittee is going forward with its plans for the "Most in- formal formal of the year." Stu- dents in tplaid shirts and dunga- rees will dance to the music of Ted Weems and his orchestra from 9 p.m. to midnight Satur- day in Waterman Gym. An in- formal intermission program has been planned, and rustic deco- rations will be used to make the dance floor as much like a part of the back woods as possible. Tickets are now on sale at the Union and League and ,:ill con- tinue to be sold until the night of the dance. TVPEWIRITERS I3onght, Sold, Rented Rpaired Srum NT & (Or [U SUPPLIES 0. fi. MORRILL 314 S. State St. Phone 7177 ....... _._ _ .. _ 'f ':;y yarG:..':' l; "'i i;}s: :C? .% 3 t :: ,ys . r. }'+ ..r.... X: :r r. r' \IOU L0 ;s , :::; r> ':sp That T-Zone Test . T.Timber l,, ots of it at The Paul Bunyan A:"f 1 t;" ". f" 1, t . }..,: { ti Z. { : j '. f ?'t l i C?2 SiS >:: ( ¢3 1:1 1 tii l ",'1 2 'N:: "": ~ 4 For sunny Read and Use 1 The Daily Classifieds! 4 - lo'S. South now . .here days -! i i 11®I IWIMII I/q fi - YlYlii®Ii4L ll rY l later Almost as good as a winter vacation jaunt to look at them! Our sun-kissed collection of exclusive McMullen cottons from the hand of designer Dorothy Cox. Inspired by a flying trip to Nassau, there are dresses for golf or dancing, sun-loving playclothes. Wearable, gay and Short-sleeved shirtmaker .. blouse classic in petal-soft rayon crepe yours in black, brown or white .. . sizes 32 to 38. 7.95 Kick pleat and saddle pockets ... a new skirt style that's so casual. so easy to wear with blouses or tucked-in sweaters. .. red or brown check on pure white wool . sizes 10 to 18. 10.95 other Spring skirts in checks, pastels or vivid tones. 8.95 to 14.95 FROM THE SPORT SHOP.. chrmino ... :all done with the fmi-liIOLIS taste K. ;2 $, t 2 #I 3 tIt i A for which the house of Mc~4uI en' #*{s ~Misses sires,. E ly3 COLLEGE Sl Also at the Downl FF ii 4 .-. is so de ervedly famous. . 22.95 to 35.00. HOP 10)w S/ore x t As , j1 \ I{ f. t t to :. . i " ° ' low Owl." 1 J: f:: /N I ew variation of an old favorite. ..I 49