rRIDAY, APRIL 30, 1948 '. NF: Tf UI A N 11A T T v Am....- A T l L' I U1 a 1 gYIV ' AITT.! AI4LJ.LjJLA.tY ..ti WIAGE I _ - Installation Night To Honor Women, List New Positions The newly - chosen positialn holders in League, WAA, Panhel- lenic and Assembly activities wil be installed at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Rackham Auditorium in the an- nual Installation Night ceremon- ies. Scholarship presentations will also be given at the time by Mor- tar Board and Delta Delta Delta, Dean Alice Lloyd will present the three Ethel McCormick scholar- ships and will give a short talk. Senior Society and Scroll will tap new members. The leaders in next year's women's activities will be hon- ored with the announcement of the new members of League Council, Assembly Board offi- cers, Panhellenic Board, Judi- ciary Council, Interviewing Board, WAA officers and Board, women's editor of The Daily l and members of the central committees of Soph Cabaret and JGP. The members of the various committees functioning under teague Council will be recognized including Casbah, merit-tutorial, lance, publicity, social, personnel 'nd orientation. Orientation ad- visors for the fall and spring se- nesters will also be announced. The traditional seating ar- rangement with special sections for each house and sorority will be in effect. Signs will be posted to guide coeds to their section. A reception for new officers and all coeds will be held immediate- ly following the installation in the League Ballroom. Refreshments will be served. Hell'za Poppin In Union Hades T0morrow Red devil head stickers found on campus this week announce the Union sponsored Hell'zapoppin dance to be held from 9 p.m. to midnight tomorrow in the Union ballroom. Produced annually under the direction of the Union Executive Council, the dances have provided an evening of entertainment in the best Olsen and Johnson tradi- tion. This year the committee has planned to convert the staid Rain- bow room into a fire-bedecked hades, entered through the fa- mous gates. Featured during the evening will be a 100 year old tu- pence farthing bike, which will cross the ballroom ceiling periodi- cally throughout the evening. Flash bulbs will be set off in the darkroom "to see,"' said Loyal Jodar, chairman of the dance, 'if anyone ever does dance in there." House Officers Recently elected officers for Betsy Barbour House include Joan Katz, president; Nathalie Elliott, vice-president; Joan Sheppard, treasurer; Eleanore Doersom, sec- retary; and Elizabeth Gellately, social chairman. J Casbah Holds am Session Cn the J/otte IFC Will Feature Johnny Long At Annual Ball May 7, at IM Olsen Acts as MC; Pullen Bacon, Olszynski Beat' Jive George Olsen, comedian and imitator, will act as master of ceremonies at the regular weekly floorshow at the Campus Casbah tomorrow. The program will include Bev- erly Olszynski, who ,is known to her fans as "a slightly tamed Bet- ty Hutton," and songs in a strictly jam style by Joanne Pullen and Paul Bacon. Miss Olszynski will sing "All That Glitters Is Not Gold" and "Stuff Like That There.' 'Bugs' Beat Boogie Joanne and Paul, pupils in Jones Junior High School, have been entertaining at high school functions with their boogie beat. Joanne will sing "Write Me a Let- ter" and "Buzz Me Baby." Olsen is well-known on campus for his accurate portrayals of Al Jolson, who is a personal friend of the student entertainer. Wine-Gar To Play Fran Wine-Gar and his student band will furnish music for the dance. Wine-Gar will be featured on the banjo. The Casbah will be open from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday only in the League Ballroom. Parties may reserve tables upon entrance. . I SHOE S W4-1 IL ULDL By MARILYN JONES and MARJE SCHMIDT FRATERNITIES have taken advantage of the May Festival con- certs to entertain mothers at weekend parties. Spring formals have also been planned to honor pledges and new initiates. The Beta's have planned a big weekend for their mothers who will arrive on campus today. The festivities will begin with a welcoming dinner party at the house followed by an informal evening of bridge. The house has been vacated by the members in order to accommodate the guests. Tomorrow afternoon there will be a picnic to which coeds have been invited. At the formal banquet that night each mother will receive flowers. An informal evening has again been planned for those who do not attend the May Festival concert. At midnight all the guests will be serenaded before retiring for the night. The weegend will end with their attendance at the Presby- terian church and a farewell dinner. The living-room of the Theta Chi house will be transformed into a garden tomorrow for the annual spring formal "Spring Gardens." Following a dinner at the Allenel, the guests will return to the house to dance to the music of Johnny Harberd and his orchestra. Guests will receive trophies as favors. Victor Vaughan will play hosts to Betsy Barbour, Helen Newberry, Cousins Hall and Jordan Hall at an open house from 8:30 p.m. to midnight today. Residents and their dates will also be guests. Dance music will be furnished by a band from Detroit. Entertainment during intermission will include skits and selections by the Victor Vaughan Trio, consisting of Doi Srull, Stan Challis, and Bill Brehm. K APPAPLEDGES will be honored at a spring formal given at the house tomorrow. Guests will dance under a false ceiling to the music of Doug Lent and his orchestra. Balloons, and pastel shaded streamers will bring out the spring theme. A white picket fense will surround the bandstand. Small souvenir paddlies will be given as favors at the Acacia spring pledge formal tomorrow. A dinner at the Tavern will precede the dance. A lilac bedecked 'trellis will decorate the outside of the house. Art Starr and his orchestra will play for dancing. Refresh- ments of punch and cookies will be served throughout the evening. Today the Sigma Chi brass band will meet 33 mothers at the train station, and accompany them to the house where they will be guests for the week-end. Saturday morning the mothers will be shown around campus-their sons the loving guides. In the afternoon they will be given pins and formally initiated into the Sigma Chi Mothers. Following a banquet in the evening they will be escorted to the May Festival concert. To top off the holiday the women of leisure will be served breakfast in bed on Sunday morning. The Phi Chi medical fraternity will hold a dinner dance this week-end in honor of the present freshman members. Bill Hemline will be maestro. The decorations are to carry out a Rip Van Winkle theme. ANDERSON HOUSE will entertain this Saturday with music by the best bands in the land (on record), ping pong and bridge. A May pole atmosphere will be created by effected decorations. Punch and cookies are to be served for refreshment. The members of Alpha Phi have chosen Al Rice and his orchestra to provide dance music at their initiation formal. Following a ban- quet at the League in honor of the initiates, the dance will take place at the house. The line of decorations will follow a "flowers and green" spring theme. After dinner at the Union, the Lambda Chi pledges will be honored at a formal dance to be given at the house. The merry- makers will dance to the music of Al Chase and his orchestra. Decorations will follow the general spring pattern by producing a flower garden effect. Ferry Field will be transformed into an outdoor terrace for dan- cers at IFC Ball on"May 7. Colored lights will be strung over that part of the field adja- cent to the Intramural Building. and the music of Johnny Long will be heard through a loud- speaker system. Chairs will also be provided for those persons sitting out dances. Searchlights will lighten the sky over the IM Building, and an elec- tric sign stating "IFC Ball" will hang over the entrance door. Doormen in bright colored uni- forms will assist guests in opening taxi doors and act as escorts into the building. NOW Arrangements are also being made, Jack Waters, publicity chairman of the ball announced, for a national magazine to cover the dance. Detroit papers will also feature pictures and news of the Ball in Sunday's society section. Fraternities are planning Sat- urday house parties to make the dance the beginning of a "Greek weekend." New long dresses require new longer slips, but if you find your- self with a deluge of the old short ones it might be a good idea to convert them and lengthen by adding wide rows of eyelet or lace. l. \ sq- Friday .. . April MONTH-END Resort and Spring Group. .. B. H. Wragge Casuals 1/3 Less $1095 ..: , } }: '. ::.;."... Y ..... .: . ... 1 Look crisp and cool for classes in one of our WASHABLE Cottons, Chambrays and Seersuckers. frou $64#8 up Rayons, too. 345 MAYNARD STREET EVERYWHERE ANKLETS . for this summer when fashions are more feminine .in white suede with a platform. They're news for your summer wardrobe. 306 South State I Cocoa 14 .. 8.95. 1 Cocoa 16... Brown . Was Silk Shantung Coat, 69.50. Matching hat, Size was Size Brown Silk Shantung Dress, Was 55.00. WAA Notices Softball-Members will meet for practice and business meeting at 4:15 p.m. today at the WAB. In event of rain the business meet- ing will be held inside. Michifish - All members who ordered suits may buy them at Moe's Sport Shop as soon as pos- sible, according to Rose Marie Schoetz, club manager. I. 44 j ay91 .z 4 1 A sweet and sentinctual gift for a very special person. Embroidered petit-point carnations on snow white imported handkerchiefs. Handrolled hems of course ...packaged in gift folders. 1.00 LU NAHVV..* in Colorful Hand-Crocheted Sisal High Wedges Eat 11-Ad / i MADE IN HAITI / t SAE's Present 'Black-and-White' FormalToday Sigma Alpha Epsilon will play host to the officers and executive council members of the SAE chap- ters at Michigan State and Adrian, and their dates at the annual "Black-and-White" Formal which will be held from 9 p.m. to mid- night Saturday in the ballroom of the League. Eddie Marshall and his orches- tra will play for the dance which will climax the regional conven- tion to be held this weekend. Women who attend the dance will wear white or black and white formals. Plans for the weekend include a stag dinner at the house to- night, meetings of the executive committee tomorrow morning, a tour of the campus in the after- noon and a record dance ingthe evening. Among the distinguished guests present will be Mr. J. G. DeHority of Indianapolis, Pr-ovince Ar'chon, and Mr. Arthu- M. Peck Jr., Prov- ince Recorder-Treasurer. a- m ^ I Printed Pure Silk Dress, Size 10 . . . Was 49.95. 2 Oyster White Rayon Shantung Dresses, Sizes 10 and 12 . . . Were 49.95. 3 Rayon Crepe Dresses (Grey, navy and rose beige), Sizes 10, 12 and 16 . . . Were 39.95. 3 Printed Rayon Crepe Dresses, Sizes 12, 14 and 1 6 . . . Were 39.95. 2 Two-piece Polka Dot Rayon Dresses, Size 10 in green, Size 14 in blue . . . Were 39.95. 3 One-piece Polka Dot Rayon Dresses (Green, toast or blue), Sizes 14, 16 and 18 . . . Were 39.95. 4 Pairs Polka Dot Rayon Shorts (Green, toast or blue), Sizes 10 to 16 . .. Were 10.00. 3 Butcher Linen Blouses ... Were 16.95. 3 Printed Rayon Crepe Blouses, Sizes 10 to 16... Were 17.95. 2 Two-piece Butcher Linen Dresses, Sizes and 16 . . . Were 34.90. 12 PETIT-POINT and EMBROIDERED HANKIES Co I lege Shop Hats 1.98 In Straws, 3.98 In Felts, A token kcepsake... gossamer sheer cotton corded handkerchief by Burmel... beauti- fully embroidered carna-tions (and other flowers Casual and dressy styles in light and dark colors. Blouses. 3.98 and 6.98 Bright tropical flowers embroidered on I ITli;i-n c ] A - s ;Cy . :Iin .:tr:] n ~ i I k I I