LU>,06-THEMICHTGAN - Petitioning Open for Coeds In Panhel, League Activities Panhel Petitions Due March 17 Petitions for po itions on the 1948-49 Panhelleiic Board will be due at noon Wednesday, March 17 in the Undergraduate Office of the League. All affiliated women, regardless of class, are eligible to petition for the six official positions including president, first vice-president, see- end vice-president, secretary,I treasurer and rushing chairman. Interviewing will be held from Friday, March 19 to the following Friday. Appointments may be made by signing lists posted in the Undergraduate Office. Information concerning the du- ties of the various offices may be obtained from present Board members and by consulting former League Presidents' reports avail- able in the League Library and the Social Director's Office. There will be a meeting for all women interested in usher- ing for JGP at 4 p.m. Wednes- day in the Leagu.e WAA Notices Posts Available To Sophomores Petitioning is open this week for Soph Cabaret positions and soph- omore places on the League Inter- viewing and Women's Judiciary committees. Prospective Sophomores may obtain petitions in the League so- cial director's office. Information concerning high schools activities, experience pertaining to the posi- tion and plans for the position or organization of the committee should be included in the petition. The deadline for completed petitions is noon Saturday. In- terviewing will be held March 15 through March 26 in the under- graduate office of the League. Five sophomore aid petitions on the Women's Judiciary commit- tee and two places on the Inter- viewing committee are open. Soph Cabaret positions in- clude general chairman, assist- ant general chairman, secretary, assistant secretary, treasurer, assistant treasurer, decorations chairman and assistant, public- ity chairman and assistant, tiek- ets chairman and assistant, and hostess, music, programs, re freshments, and special booths chairmen. Cabaret floorshow committee consists of a director, assistant director, costumes chairman and assistant, music chairman and as- sistant, stage chairman and as- sistant, and dance, make-up, script, and ushering chairmen. Information about the various positions maw be obtained by con- sulting the president's report in the Social Director's office and copies of the League Lowdown. Further aids will be posted on the League undergraduate bulletin board. Students Invited , To Ruthven Tea The first Ruthven Tea of the semester will be held from 4 to 6 p.m. tomorrow in the home of President and Mrs. Alexander G.1 Ruthven. Although special student groups are invited to attend the tea, everyone is welcome to meet the7 president and his wife and talk with the faculty and other stu- dents.k This week's special guests will include students from Korea, Bur--t ma and the Philippines and resi- dents of Mosher Hall, Williamsc House, Alpha Chi Omega and PsiI Upsilon.I Coeds on the League Socialr Committee, under the chairman-e ship of Barbara Busse, will serveI as hostesses at the tea. 1 Camp Counselors--Open meet- ing for all students at 7:15 p.m. to- day in the fencing room of Bar- bour Gym. Mr. Don Wille of the men's physical education depart- ment will address the group. Archery-Shooting for Intercol- legiate Meet will be held from 5 to 6 p.m. every day for the next three weeks. All coeds interested in par- ticipating in the meet may do so by calling Gwen Rister, club manager, at 2-3203. Badminton - Coeducational Badminton will be offered again from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Wednesday in Waterman Gym. Players must supply their own birds and rack- ets may be rented at the gym. Tournament games must be played off in both, campus and ciub tournaments. The list of players is posted in Barbour Gym, each player contacts her own op- ponent and arranges a time for playing. The last meeting of the club will be Wednesday. Additional playing may be done on Saturday in Bar- bour Gym. Modern Dance-Regular meet- ing at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Bar- bour Gym. The club is still open to all students. Instruction will be given by Dr. Juana de Leban. Coed Society Will Sponsor Style Show "Fashionable Evening," a pre- view of spring styles specially picked for campus wear, will be presented by Theta Sigma Phi, honorary, professinal organiza- tion of women in ,journalism, from 8 to 10 p.m. Thursday in the League Ballroom. Suits, dresses, campus clothes, and play clothes donated by Ann Arbor stores will be modeled. Mu- sic will be furnished by Mary Carolyn Wright. Everyone at- tending the show will receive pre- fume favors. Door prizes will in- clude a women's overnight case. Tickets may be obtained from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday in the League Lobby. Sales for Bridge Lesson Tickets Open atLeague Tickets for the series of ten bridge lessons sponsored by the League Social Committee will be on sale today and tomorrow in the Undergraduate Office of the League. Lessons started yesterday, but tickets will be on sale as long as there are vacancies in the classes. The beginers class is held from 7 to 8:30 p.m. on Tuesdays, inter- mediate classes from 7 to 8:30 p.m. on Mondays and 8:30 to 10 p.m. on Tuesdays and the advanced class from 8:30 to 10 p.m. on Mondays in the League. Hillel To Hold Ann ual Sh ow B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation's traditional variety show, "Hillel- zapoppin," will be held March 20 in Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Proceeds from the show, con- sisting of humor, songs and skits, will go to the United Jewish Ap- peal. At this third post-war show, Phi Sigma Delta, Sigma Alpha Mu, Zeta Beta Tau, Sigma Delta Tau, 1027 East University and the Traumatic Players will present original skits which will be judged by members of the faculty. First and second prizes will be awarded the winners. Central committee members in- clude Blanche Berber, Shirlee Rich, Aviva Shanoff, Fred Klein, Ideane Levenson, Connie Fried- man, Marilyn Kopel, Phyllis Ros- enberg, Danny Tannenbaum, Bud Frank, Tobe Friedman, Debbie Wolson, Esther Sklar. STORE HOURS Wkdoys 8 o.m.-8:30 p.m. Sat. 8 o.m.-4:30 p.m. For Appointment PHONE 2-4241 AP P A T OM B OM B T E ST SlY TE .The wind bensk p~m trees e~"~' Eniwietok atoll of the northern Marslalls, hcadquarters fr the n , JR LOCAL I N T E R E S T I N HOLY LA N D -.young Jews of the Montifiore section of Jerusalem, which has been under Arab fire from the Old City, watch as two soldiers of the British Warwickshire Regiment check distance with a range finder. MONKEY DINES ON GRAPE-- Chito, 31 - ounce monkey perches on banana and bites into grape. Owned by Charles Sheldon of Chicago, tiny animal eats a teaspoonful of oat- meal for breakfast, thimbleful 9f hash for supper. - 3prea&t ille by Elizabeth Woodward America's foremost authority on young people's problems p Of the people you know, how many will you still - be seeing ten years from now? Only the ones you know really well, you say. The kids you've grown up up with. The new friends you've made best friends. All the others will fall by the wayside ... out of sight and out 9f memory.You haven't time to keep them for posterity. For with you ... to be friends is to go all out. Being constantly together, sharing secrets, accumulating memories, plowing into new experiences shoulder to shoulder, dishing out big doses of devotion, possessing each other. There's no halfway measure. Being that close takes so much steam... you can be friends with only a few. There just isn't any more of you to go around. You've probably settled down cozily to going steady with one boy. You have a man for all the big and little moments when you need one. You don't need other men, you think. Besides, there aren't any free dating bours. In between dates, you run around with one special girl. She's your port in all storms, your constant abettor, your other half. These best friends require a lot of attention. They don't thrive on separation, indifference or casual treatment. So you sit back in your snug harbor and date only one boy...and meet no others. iou trot with the same group of girls... and never raise your sights. While the rest of your acquaintances stay casual... just because y )u. haven't time to draw them close. )on know... a girl is known by the company she keeps. Herfriends are an indication of her taste and personality... just as are the clothes she wears, the things she reads, and the perfume she puts behind her ears. A girl can always get by with just one good dress. But just wear it every day in the week and high days too ... and it gets to be like a very old shoe. A wardrobe that offers changes to fit her moods is more colorful and more fun. Pals of the bosom are a comfort and joy. But you can still be that all-out friend with people you don't see all the time. You can share life and laughs w ith friends you don't clutch close.You can pile up back- logs of riicmories with cronies you don't possess.You can keep lots of friendships thriving if you'll spread yourself thinner...and circulate. Why not bedeck your future ,with a variety of good friends? Instead of letting then slip through your fingers ... because you haven't time to keep then? ..KAI !e(. DRY CLOTHES in just 9 MIN. We have completed installa- tion of two more large Chi- cago dryers and now have a total of four. These will dry a Bendix tubful of clothes in just nine minutes-3 tub- fuls in twenty minutes. Think of the time and effort you save! No tedious job of hanging clothes up and tak- ing them down. SOAP is FREE here at Bendix Launderette. With soap prices what they are, think of the money you save. 30O BENDIX MACHINES and you can rent as many as you need to do your washing in just 30 minutes at a cost of only 30c for approxi- mately 9 lbs. Think of the drudgery you save! PLENTY OF PARKING SPACE T -n}fl var r~i - rc lYrhl~r S K I - P L A N I N G O N L A K E -Students of Middlebury College, Vt., go skiing towed by plane on Lake Champlain. Top: Coach Joe Jones of Rutland, Vt., ties a 100-foot tow rope to plane piloted by a college club member. With him are (left to right): Lynn Meacham, Boston; Jack Valentine. Chelmsford, Mass., Gretchen Storer, Denver. Below: Valentine goes for spin behind plane. I I ~;. -. - -' ... ZONE W,