1 - '-- "r- 48~.. ..... . ...... D A I ... . f-. _... ,, r; a- a t.'. Panhellenie Holds Recognition Night Program ____________________________ Kappa, Gamma Phi Receive Top Honors at Annual Event, ; K'appa Kappa Gamma was awarded the ActiVities Pai'ticipa- tion Cup and Gamma Phi Beta walked away with first place scholastic honors at the annual Panhellenic Recognition Night last night in Rackham Lecture Hall. The Kappas had accumulated 2,250 activity points to win the cup. Second and third places went r' to Delta Delta Delta and Pi Beta Phi with the respective totals of 1,940 and 1,605. Ira M. Smith, registrar of the University, presented the sehoil- arship award to Gamma Phi Beta with an average of 2.75. Pi Beta Phi was second with a 2.74 average, while Alpha Chi Omega and Alpha Epsilon Phi tied for third place with averages of 2.74. Scroll, senior honor society for, affiliated women, tapped during the program. Coeds tapped were Jane Wetmore, Delta Delta Delta; Carol Holly, Alpha Phi; Nancy Helmick, Alpha Chi Omega; Bar- bara Busse, Pi Beta Phi; Lucille Kennedy, Chi Omega and Leslie McVey, Zeta Tau Alpha. Individual activities awards for seniors were presented as follows: Jan Osgood, Alpha Omicron Pi, tnd Ruth Klausner, Sigma Delta Tm, tied for first place withl165 points each. Julia Diggs, Kappa Kappa Gamma. wats second with Li5 points and Carol Holly, Alpha Phi, received third place with 150 points.M Virginia Nicklas, Delta Delta Delta, with 250 points, was awarded top honors for the in- dividual junior activity award. Nancy hess, Kappa Kappa Gamma was second with 200 points, and Corinne Schild, Al- pha Omicron Pi, third with. 195 points. The following sophomores re- ceived honors for activity points:I Jeri Mulson, Kappa Kappa Gam- ma, first with 200 points: June Shoup, Zeta Tau Alpha, second with 160 points and Adelaide Klingbeil, Pi Beta Phi, and Shir- ley Osgood, Delta Delta Delta, tied for third place with 130 points each. The theme of the program was a court case: The Case of Pan- dora Versus Panhellenic. Speak- ers for the event were Miss Ethel A. McCormick, social director of the League; Sally Stamats, Pan- hellenic president, and Jane Wet- more, rushing secretary. Coeds Needed To Run 'U' Hall Candy Booth An opportunit 1yto gain actual sales experience and obtain Lea- gue activity credits will be offered to interested coeds at a meeting to be held at 3 p.m. tomorrow in the Undergraduate Office of the League. Women volunteers are needed to man a student-run candy booth which will operate next semester in University Hall. The booth will be sponsored by the Benefit Drives Committee, which recently rees- tablished the candy store system in women's dormitories. Workers will be free to choose hours most convenient to them. "Only coeds who are interested and responsible will be chosen for the job," asserted Janet Cork, chairman of the committee. Candy, cookies, kleenex and other incidentals will be on sale at the booth at cut-rate prices. Although the system was started for the benefit of the student body, any profits accruing will be donated to the winterization fund for the University Fresh Air Camp. Union Honors Michigamua "Tomahawk Trample" honor- ing Michigamua, all-campus men's honorary society, will be present- ed by the Union Executive Coun- cil from 9 p.m. to midnight Jan- uiary 17 in the Union Ballroom. Music for dancing will be furn- ished by Frank Tinker and his or- chestra with Margeann as vocal- ist. A program is being planned for intermission entertainment. This will be the final dance in a series honoring men's honorary societies on campus, which in- cluded Ju-Hon-So Ball and Se- Hon-So Ball. Gerry Goldsmith, general chair- man of the dance, is assistedy Pete Craighead in charge of deco- Continuing our. JANUARY CLEARANCE of Nationally Advertised SHiOES Regularly $6.95 LOAFERS with buckle on the side $488 SIZES to TO AAA to C RED or BROWN The number one sport Shoe on any hit parade. This will rate on and on at any campus. 121 SOUTH MAIN STREET - DOWNTOWN Rea(ind Use The aily Cassified Ads. . Read All the Rest Selers l . "Raintree County" Unconquered" "House Divided" "East Side, West Side" "About Lyddy Thomas" "Where I Stand" "Speaking Frankly" BACKSTAGE VISITOR-Clement Attlee, British prime minister, shakes hands with Jean Langston, 4, one of the performers in a charity show put on to raise funds for the aged. 'l/&ic~a~n~j & 6a8emenu You can get them here for only a nickel a day. COONS LENDING LIBRARY Double Engagement Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Bott of De- troit recently announced the en- gagements of their daughters, Peggy, to Jack R. Pointon and Betty, to Albert Mathieson. Mr. Pointon is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Pointon of Detroit and Mr. M'athieson is the son of Mr. and Mrs. W' .R. Mathieson, also of Detroit. Peggy Bott is a senior in the School of Education. Her sister, Betty, was graduated from the University in '45. Mr. Pointon, a former Michigan student, is now attending the Walsh Business In- stitute in Detroit. Mr. Mathieson is a senior at the University. Koning-Kazarinoff Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Koning of Grand Rapids announce the en- gagement of their daughter, Lou- ise, to Nicholas D. Kazarinoff, son 14 Nickels Arcade Phone 4326 N JJ ----- --- -- t 1 _ 4 steS~wtest by Elizabeth Moodward America's foremost authority on young people's problems Fooling some of the people some of the time is a justifiable indoor sport. A little tact is like a stitch in time. Helps you avoid ruffled feelings, uncomfortable situations, violent arguments. And you do prefer your public relations to be smooth, pleasant, and comfortable, don't you? Make-up is a justifiable subterfuge, too. Disguise your bad points and play up your good ones. It doesn't hurt anyone else. It's fun to fool'em? Innuendoes, insinuations, leaving things to other peoples' imaginations - these pay off, too. "you can make your impression by the things you say... and the things you leave unsaid. Unfinished sentences, tantalizing hints, dropped clues ... they'll establish a rep for yon.'ou can cut yourself quite a romantic figure. It's all fooling the people ... and it's legitimate. But in most other deals ...play it straight. Give phoney excuses for not keeping dates... and you'll cross yourself up.l)ish out alibis for not being on time, for reneging on a job, for not being responsible ...and you'll be the fooled one. Break out into full-fledged lies and you'll tangle your tongue so it trips you. Blame it on somebody else. Use someone to accomplish your own nefarious purposes. Cultivate only the people who will "do you the most good". Play politics. Compromise your conscience ( to curry favor with big shots. You may get away with it for a while... but you won't fool too many people for long! You just confuse the issue by being devious, cagey, roundabout. Nobody knows where you stand. If you want your friends to count on you... and count you in ... take the shortest route, the straight one. of Prof. and Mrs. D. K. Kazarin- off of 1515 Cambridge. Both Miss Koning and her fi- ance are sophomores at the Uni- versity. * * * Schurr-Chiesna The engagement of Evelyn Schurr has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. C. Schurr of Lima, Ohio, to Theodore Chiesna, son of Mr. Martin Chi- esna of Chicago, Ill. Miss Schurr was graduated last June and is affiliated with the Alpha Delta Pi sorority. Mr. Chi- esna will graduate from the for- estry school in June. Traditional J-Hopi Breakfast Ticket Sales Will Begin Tickets for the J-Hop break-' fasts to be presented at the Lea- gue and Union will go on sale from 9 a.m. to noon and from 1 to 5 p.m. Thursday ,and Friday at the ticket booth in University Hall. The breakfasts, traditional parts of the J-Hop weekend, will be served at 2:30 a.m. after both formal dances in the League and the Union. Tickets will be issued in four different colors to dis- tinguish the time and the place of the breakfast. J-Hop will be presented from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. Feb. 6 and 7. The breakfasts are being present- ed for hungry dancers after the formals. Ticket sales are open to both in- dependent and affiliated men al- though most fraternities will pre- sent post-dance breakfasts at their houses. rations, Dalef _WAA NOTICES 'Ensian pictures of the WAA Rifle Club will be taken at 5 p.m. today At the ROTC Range. A short business meeting will be held at this time. * * * The University Ice Skating Club will not practice tomorrow. The Coliseum will be open from 1 to 3 p.m. Friday for this group. programs, and Bob Maier publi- city. 112,000 STRICKEN Dramatic strides in the con- cim-t of nolio have been made in the last decade through the Amer- ican people's con- tinued support of . the annual March of Dimes of the Na- tioftal Foundation for Infantile Paral- ysis. Since its estab-~ lishment in 1938 by the late President Roosevelt, the Na- tional Foundation and its 2,735 local county chapters have as- sumed the burden of providing medicalcare and treatment for 88,000 infantile paralysis vic- time out of a reported total of 112,000 stricken in the ten- year period. Join the 1948 March of Dimes today! Coenen in charge of WONDERFUL SMOKE SALE BARGAINS Ua&k4U VsS." Zd"C4 t,.aj&. 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