THE MfCHIGAN DAILY Life Savers Will Enroll AtM Pool Dive in, gang! The annual Water Safety In- structor's Course, conducted by the Red Cross in conjunction with the University, will begin Monday, April 24 and last until May 5. . Men and women students, as well as townspeople, are eligible to enroll, in the course provided they are at least 19 years of age and have a current senior life-saving certificate. CLASSES WILL be under the k direction of Edmund Haapanieni of St. Louis. The fifteen hours of instruction will be divided into three Sour sessions on five dif- ferent evenings during the two- week period. All swimming instruction will take place at the Intramural Ikding. Approximately 100 persons en- roll in the course each spring, said Miss Fritzie E. Gareis, assistant supervisor in the women's physi- cal education department. THOSE PARTICIPATING in the course will be divided into two groups, which will swim on dif- ferent nights. A mass meeting for all persons interested in the course is slated for 7:30 pm. Monday, April 24, at the Intramural pool. Preliminary instruction for the course began last night and wilI continue through Thursday eve- ning at 7:30 p.m. at the Intra- mural pool. Those planning to take the course are advised to attend, Miss Gareis said. ** * THE COURSE provides an ex- cellent preparation for camp work, instructing life-saving classes, re- creation and playground programs and lifeguard jobs, Miss Gareis stated. Upon completion of the course, students will receive an instruc- tor's certificate from the Red Cross. Coed Golfers Will Organize At WAB Today Now that the putting green on Palmer Field has at last shown its head above the winter snow and spring rain, women golfers are get- ting together. WAA's golf club, better known to old members as the Pitch and Putt Club, will organize for their spring season at 4:30 pm. today in the mnain lounge of the WAB. THOSE COEDS who tried their first game of golf over the holi- days will perhaps be glad of an op- portunity for some instruction in the fundamentals of the game. Other veteran women golfers will also have an opportunity during club meetings to smooth out drives and other aspects of the sport under the supervision of Mrs. Hanley, club instructor. Club members will be divided in- to separate groups for both in- struction and play. In this way they will have a chance to meet other enthusiasts and arrange times to play on the University greens. * * * EACH CLUB member should have her own golf clubs or have access to a set as the regular golf classes make it difficult to obtain clubs at the WAB. Included in the spring season, in addition to regular instruc- tion and practice sessions on Palmer Field, will be a play day' for club members at the Uni- versity golf course. Marilyn Thisted, club manager, has also planned a crazy putting contest to be held at the final party. At this time the high scor- ers of the season will also be an- nounced. Those women who are interested in the club and unable to attend the organizational meeting today may call Miss Thisted, 23159. Pledge Trainers Present sorority.pledge train- ers will meet at 5 p.m. today in the League. ENGAGED-Mr. and Mrs. Myral C. Ross of Ferndale have an- nounced the engagement of their daughter, Virginia Anne, to Howard Stephenson, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Stephenson of Kansas City, Missouri. Miss Ross is a junior in the School of Business Administration and is a member of Delta Delta Delta. Mr. Stephenson is a senior in the literary college and is affiliated with Kappa Sigma. Wedding bells will ring for the couple a year from this June. Frosh Week-End Activities Take Campus Spotlight in Springtime WAA Notices Michifish Club - The Tuesday Night group will meet at 8:30 p.m. today in the Union pool. * * * Coaches and Officials Club - Members will hold regular meet- ings at 5:10 p.m. Thursday on Palmer Field or in the WAB if it is raining. * * * Fencing Club - Tournament play will be finished with a paty to be held at 5:10 p.m. Thursday in the WAB. Softball Club - Membership is still open to interested women. Those who wish to join may at- tend club meetings from 4 to 5:30 p.m. on Palmer Field. The club meets in Barbour Gym on rainy days. Riding Club - Members are still welcome to join the club. Each member rides once a week at Golf- side Stables and may join by con- tacting Patricia Gullberg, 22543. * * * Tennis Club - Intermediates will meet at 5:1.0 p.m. today, ad- vanced players at 5:10 p.m. to- morrow and beginners at 5:10 p.m. Monday at the WAB, regardless of the weather. * * * The softball tournament will be- gin this week with the following games being played: Tuesday at 5:10 p.m. - Gamma Phi Beta III vs. Angell I; Mosher II vs. Alpha Delta Pi I; Pi Beta Phi III vs. Barbour II; Stockwell V vs. Newberry II; at 7 p.m. - Jordan III vs. Stockwell VII; Al- pha Chi Omega I vs. Stockwell IX; Chi Omega III vs. Hinsdale III; Jordan I vs. Stockwell VIII.. Wednesday at 5:10 p.m. - Alpha Gamma Delta II vs. Stockwell X; Kleinstueck II vs. Mary Markley; Gamma Phi Beta I vs. Delta Zeta; Chi Omega IV vs. Kappa Kappa Gamma IV; at 7 p.m. - Stockwell XIII vs. Couzens II; Stockwell XIV vs. Newberry III. Thursday at 5:10 p.m. - Gam- ma Phi Beta II vs. Alpha Delta Pi II; Kappa Delta II vs. Stock- well XVI; Hinsdale I vs. Alpha Epsilon Phi; Kappa Delta I vs. Alpha Omicron Pi III; at 7 p.m. - Stockwell XVIII vs. Alpha Kappa Alpha I; Henderson House vs. Chi Omega II; Jordan VI vs. Stockwell XVII. The starred team is responsible for the bases; the opposing team is responsible for the basket with the rest of the equipment. New Rules Allow Coeds Preference On Tennis Courts "Women students will have pre- ference at all times" on Palmer Field Tennis Courts, Dr. Laurie E. Campbell, acting head of the women's physical education de- partment, has announced. Because of the lifting of the fee for tennis play by the Board in Control of Athletics, a number of rules have been set down by the department for use of the courts, Dr. Campbell explained. Women only will be permitted to play between 1 and 6 p.m. on Mon- day through Thursday. At all other times the following order of preferences will apply: 1) women, singles or doubles; 2) coed, singles or doubles; 3) men, singles or doubles. i By JANICE JAMES Freshmen may be green, but that doesn't keep them from set- ting the campus' on its ear with their second annual presentation of Frosh Week-End! Given their first opportunity at making upperclassmen sit up and take notice last year, the members of the class of '52 put on a Frosh Week-End that really made its mark in campus activities. * * * IT ALL STARTED last year when the members of the Pan- hellenic and Assembly boards put two and two together and came up with the right answer to the prob- lem of orienting freshmen into the whys and ways of League func- tions. For too long, newcomers to the University had gone around in a daze wondering just how and when upperclassmen ever became acquainted with the ob- stacles of putting on a class pro- ject. The juniors had a play, the jumping JGP, and the sophomores Ticket sales for the Frosh Week-End Maize Team dance, Saturday, April 29, will begin at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the League Union and at the En- gine Arch. There will be a special sur- prise treat for each ticket buy- er. had their cavorting Cabaret, but just what could the freshmen do? THIS PROBLEM confronted the members of Assembly and Pan- hellenic when they met to decide the frosh's future. After much discussion and de- bate, the idea of Frosh Week- End was conceived. The proof of the pudding came last year when the first week-end was at- tempted. With the two central committees selected, one for each team, the fun began. After deciding to ac- cept toge familiar maize and blue as their respective names, each; team then solicited members for its various committees. SINCE EACH TEAM was to pre- sent their dance on a differentj night of the week-end, this neces- sitated twice as many energetic frosh as normally would be used. On their respective nights, the teams presented their own floor- show and dance and for which they had their own publicity and tickets, and programs. The teams were judged on a ba- sis of points for decorations, floor- shows, programs and tickets de- sign, and dues collected from the class members. WHEN IT CAME TO the ques- tion of decorations, a startlingly different system was arranged. The ballroom would be decorated for both nights by both the maize and blue teams. Each group decorated one half TYPEWRITERS l lic higr A ria1Ne a r of the ballroom according to the theme of its dance. Thus it was, that one half of the ballroom was a complete "Commo- tion in the Ocean", the Maize members theme, while the blues Ticket sales for the Frosh Week-End Blue Team dance, Friday, April 28, will begin at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Adminis- tration Building and in the League. The Blue Team Stunts and Skits Committee will meet at 5 p.m. today in the League. really let the jacks and queens run loose with their "Dueces Wild." MANY A MIND was puzzled by the thought of just what the freshmen were coming to, when each team broke its respective publicity. A public funeral was held by the blues for the maize members one sunny noon right in the middle of the Diag. The maize retaliated by proving they were very much alive and fishing for goldfish on the steps of the main library. Then too, the campus became slicker mad when the yellow out- fits overwhelmed the campus by raising commotion, not in the ocean, but on the diagonal. CLIMAX TO THE big campaign came when the two teams held a rip roaring tug-of-war at 2 p.m. in the middle of the campus one bright and sunny day. It wasn't so bright, though, after the blues showed up with water pistols with which they thoroughly soaked the flour car- ried by the commotion raisers. Peace reigned again when the week-end finally drew to a close finish with the blue team's 'Deuces Wild" winning out over the maize by a score of 199 to 190. This year, the class of '53 is fev- erishly working out the final plans for their presentation of the fabu- lous Frosh Week-end. The blue team hopes to have the whole campus watching when they "Watch the Birdie," while the maize members will feature their friend "Maizie" in a return to the good old "Flapper Daze." Carnival7 Ou RPRval , To Shatter All -Records Hundreds Join in Preparing Fete Two full days of sure-fire fun- making are guaranteed when the 1950 " Michigras hits campus Fri- day and Saturday. More than 500 students from every section of campus are join- ing their talents in the gigantic carnival, spear-headed by a Cen- tral Committee which is out to break all records set by preceding Michigras since the first perform- ance in 1904. WITH ITS many rides, games, shows and refreshment booths concentrated in and around Yost Field House, Michigras promises bigger and better entertainment for the 20,000 people expected to attend this year, according to Jan Olivier, '50, and Bill Peterson, '50 BAd, general co-chairmen of the massive event. Mainstays of the carnival, the 44 booths which will fill Yost Field House clear to the bal- conies, are now being brought to perfection by the various cam- pus organizations which sponsor and man them. While each has its basis in stan- dard side show and fair amuse- ments, the students have put their learning to use in developing the shows far above carnival stan- dard. REPRESENTATIVE of this trend is the Delta Kappa Epsilon booth, at which contestants will try to shave a lathered balloon without bursting it with the straight edge razor. Williams House will present the public with a Human Pin Ball game, with residents sub- stituted for loop-holes into which the customer throws the ball. For more violent sport, there is The - hchigan Daily's booth, "Throw Rocks at them Dirty Communists," at which ball- throwers will get a chance to hit a disc which dumps alternating, oft-accused, senior staff members off a swing into a vat of water dir*ctly below. SPECTATOR entertainment this year will reach a new high, in the many elaborate show booths, some of which are pictured on this page. Michigras will go Broadway in the Kappa Delta - SAE show, "North Atlantic," a Midwestspar- ody on the New York hit, complete with shampoos, songs and dances. K.D.'s play the sailors while the nurses' corps will be portrayed by S.A.E. 's. Horror shows also abound, in greater strength than ever. ZBT will turn its efforts to showing what goes on "Behind the Iron Curtain." Chi Phi will make it easy for the thrill-seek- er; he will be carried on a sedan chair for a gruesome trip through the forbidden mysteries of Darkest Africa. The Wacks Works of Phi Sigma Delta will reputedly lay bare to all attendant the medieval tor- ture devices used by the Univer- sity. As relief from such harrowing sights, carnival-goers can seek rest in numerous refreshment booths: the elaborate German root beer garden; Alpha Chi Omega's fire-water counter, where girls do a Western can-can on the bar; and Gamma Phi's hot-dog stand, where customers will be treated to a lavish slice of harem dancing. * * * COMPLETING the attractions will be pie - throwing booths, weight-guessing, strength-testing, EXPOSEE-Night life in the Rue Pigalle is bared in Martha Cook's Michigras booth. Rehearsing for the bold exposition are Apache dancers Mary Ann Kulas (left forground) and Mary Jine In- man. Standing ready in the rear are can-can girls (left to right) Mary Ann Detzer, Sue Mock, Diana Guerin and Lois Patterson. Also featured will be a French chanteuse. "We'll expose a lot more than French night life," Deora Nelson, booth chairman, predicted. CHOOSING THE BOOTY-Michigras Central Committee members select some of the prizes which will be given in return for "Michibucks." The coveted notes will be won by carnival-goers at the vari- ous game booths. Gifts ranging from balloons to electric clocks will stock the prize distribution booth this year. Looking over some possibilities are (left to right) John Baum, general publicity chairman; Jan Olivier and Bill Peterson, general co-chairman; and Jean Ileidgen, prizes co-chair- man. a Kissometer to measure heat gen- eration, horse-racing, and live wrestling. Outside, mechanical rides will operate in Ferry Field. Already selected are a full-sized ferris wheel, merry-go-round, tilt-a- whirl, and roloplane, with two kiddiesrides for the younger cus- tomers. All will run throughout the two evening performances and the April 22 kiddie matinee, while the booths will be closed during the afternoon show. Rounding out the entertain- ment, a free show-professional high wire artists-will be featured far above the fun-seekers in the field house. * * * TO SET the gala week-end off on a rousing start, the Michigras Circus Parade will be held on the afternoon of April 21. The entour- age will contain floats entered by more than 50 organizations, with its center theme "Comic Capers." Two winners of the kiddie beau- ty contest will lead the parade as Li'l Abner and Daisy Mae, along with several marching bands. I A Daily Photo Feature 1 Story by Fran Ivick Pictures by Alan Reid TO DAY'S SPECIAL Special from 5 to 7 P.M. SPANISH RICE ON FRANKFURTER Whipped Potatoes Cole Slaw Roll and Butter Coffee or Tea 45c Special MEAL TICKETS on Sale $5.00 value for $4.50 6 '41 # ______________ *,~**~ U U - :.,