FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1949 r THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fortnite Goes Country Style With Annual Performance, n 4i on 14e Jouse By PAT BROWNSON OPTIMISM seems to be reigning throughout the campus this weekend as many houses plan parties tomorrow to "celebrate our victory over Army." KAPPA NU'S and their dates will pass between goal posts to- morrow night to enter the house, where they will find a football field complete with star players silhouetted on the walls. Programs giving the starting lineups (names of couples attending) are to be distributed and half-time refreshments of hot dogs, peanuts and crackerjack will be on hand. The social committee added that "there will be no offensive holding." ALPHA TAU OMEGA opens the, "formal" season tonight when they honor their current pledge class at the fall pledge formal. Chair- man Dick Frank announced that the theme is to be a surprise to the k pledges. Ted Smith's orchestra will provide the music. VAUGHAN HOUSE is planing an after-the-game open house and record dance. Refreshments of punch, sandwiches and cookies will be served. S* * * * "AFTER THE VICTORY over Army" the Phi Kappa Sigma's will have a buffet supper. The house will become "Club 907" in the evening when party-goers are entertained in a night club atmosphere. Dancing will be to the music of Howard Smith and his Triple Shuffle Rhythm. MC for the evening is to be "Lucky Pierre" Rohring, while the Bowery Boys, a softshoe dance team, will display their talents in the floorshop. "RING AROUND THE ROSY" is the name chosen for Trigon's cshildren's party tomorrow evening. A large maypole will bedeck the center of the living room and balloons, lollypops, ice cream cones and pink lemonade will be available. Also on the agenda is a game of Truth or Consequences. DELTA CHI'S and their dates will don blue jeans for the strictly informal "Corn-Cob Shuffle" tonight. The house will take on a harvest-ltime look with cornstalks and a wienie roast will be the feature of the evening. As Dick Humes, social chairman, described the party "it's a sort of hayride only we're not going anywhere." * * * * A BIG WEEKEND is in store for the ZBT's when they welcome 150 alumni, some from as far back as the Class of 1917. Tonight they will have an open house and record dance. Before members and their guests set out en masse for the Army game they will be enter- tained at a buffet luncheon. A banquet and dance at the Union will round out a busy day. FOLLOWING AN ARMY THEME will tbe the Phi. Tau's record dance tomorrow. Refreshments will be cider and doughnuts. GAY COLORED LIGHTS will adorn the entrance to Pi Lambda Phi's carnival tomorrow night. Those who have a good aim or just feel lucky will have an opportunity to try their hand at some of the games such as the dart-throwing booth. Large plaster-of-paris dolls will be awarded to the winners. There will also be booths dis- pensing pop corn, cotton candy, hot dogs and cokes. THE CASUAL PASSER-BY might think the Acacias are pre-1 paring for another global war tomorrow evening when they see thei sand bags and even a machine gun beneath a sign marking the entrance to the "Fort Acacia Officers' Club." Music-maestro for the+ evening will be Ted Smith, while entertainment in the form of a series of skits on rushing will be provided by the Acacia Little Theatre Group. Independent Women To Receive Honors; Skit By Housemothers Will Be Featured Attraction -Daily-Carlyle Marshall GOTTA DATE-Leaving one coed less to ration out to the Army cadets is Bill Wolfe, shown buying his A/A Hop ticket from Mar- ilyn Eisenbach. The affair will take place tomorrow night in the IM Building and will honor the men from West Point and their football team with its theme, "Welcome Army." Assembly and AIM are the co-sponsors of the annual dance which will feature the music of Bob Strong. Mary Hinsdale House To Honor British Labor Party President A brief jaunt into the carefree country will be on Assembly's itin- erary for its annual Fortnite pro- gram which will begin at 7:15 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 19 in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Fortnite is a traditional presen- tation which in past years, as its name implies, 'too place over a pe- riod of two weeks. Three separate ceremonies occurred during the 14 days, Recognition Night, installa- tion of house presidents and the culminating celebration, Fortnite. Recognition Night honors those independent women in each class who have shown themselves out- standing in scholarship and in ex- tra-curricular activities. Also, the dormitories having the greatest coed participation in activities and the best over-all scholastic average receive awards. ON FORTNITE, which now combines the three celebrations, unaffiliated women gather for an evening of entertainment center- ing around a bill of three minute- long skits which are put on by the various independent groups. The program brings the coeds in the skits and in the audience the chance to work together and cheer together in competing for the prize which is awarded to the house with the most original pres- entation. Always a stellar attraction of Assembly Resets Petition Deadline Petitioning for Assembly posi- tions on the Student-Faculty tea committee has been extended, ac- cording to Jo Wilson, president of the organization. Monday noon has been set as the new deadline and interview- ing will begin that afternoon and continue through Tuesday and Wednesday, Oct. 11 and 12. Peti- tions may be turned in at the. Undergraduate Office of the{ League. Coeds who petition are_ asked to sign up for an interview on the list posted in the office. Positions which are open are: general chairman, refreshment chairman, chairman of hostesses and publicity chairman. Appli- cants are asked to bring their elig- ibility cards to their interview. Fortnite is the, annual skit pre- pared and enacted by the house- mothers. According to the Fort- nite committee, a new dramatic group will also offer its talent to this year's show. As yet the group's identity has been unan- nounced. Fortnite, then, is the evening on which independents do honor to the past year of activities and study by recognizing those among them who have achieved outstand- ing records. At the same time, the present year will be ushered in with the installation of new house presidents and skit competition. THE THEME for this year's program, "Assembly Goes Country Style" will set a mood of informal- ity. Typical Well-dressed Fortnit- Dean Bromage To Lead Talk Mrs. Mary C. Bromage Asso- ciate Dean of Women, will lead a discussion of the resident counsel- ing plan, which was introduced by the University, at a meeting of the Michigan State Association of Deans of Women, which will be held tomorrow in Flint. According to the counseling plan, graduate women, who have' completed a special training pro- gram, are employed as counselors in women's residence halls. They discuss such problems as those concerning dating, dress, jobs, roommates and class work with residents. In leading the discussion of dormitory problems, Mrs. Bromage will be assisted by Miss Jane Ben- nell, social director of Jordan Hall last year and new guidance expert for the Grand Rapids public schools, and by the deans of women at Hope College and West- ern Michigan College. Ladies' Haircutting... ers will wear blue jeans, plaid shirts and, length of hair per- mitting, pigtails. Countryish dec- orations and favors will add more atmosphere. Arrangements for this fall's Fortnite are being handled by Pa- tricia Patsloff, general chairman, Mosher; Martha Chandler and Jo Collins, decorations, Cook; Jane By MAXINE RYCKMAN . Residents of Mary Hinsdale House, in the New Women's Res- idence Hall, will entertain Lady Violet Bonham Carter, president of the British Labor party, at dinner Monday. Following the dinner, there will be an informal discussion of Brit- ish public affairs. Lady Violet will spend the night at Mary Hinsdale House. Daughter of the late Earl of Oxford and Asquith, who was the prime minister of England from 1908 to 1916, Lady Violet is one of Britain's leading public speak- ers on political and social welfare subjects. In addition to being pres- ident of the Labor party, an office which she has held since 1944, she is the vice-chairman of the United Europe Movement, under Winston Churchill's chairmanship. The United Europe Movement sponsored The Hague conference in 1948, which paved the way for the Council of Europe. LADY VIOLET served as gov- ernor of the British Broadcasting Commission from 1941 to 1946. She is a member of the Royal Commission of the Press. She has also served as Pres- ident of the Women's Liberal Federation and as an honorary president of the United Nations Association. The latter is an or- ganization to encourage popular interest in international affairs and to stress the need for build- ing a strong United Nations. Lady Violet lectured at German universities in 1947, in behalf of the Control Commission for Ger- many. She is also known in Brit- ain for her earlier speeches in which she vigorously challenged the appeasement policy of the Chamberlain government and con- demned Hitler's persecution of Jews. LADY VIOLET has contributed to several British newspapers and magazines, including the Sunday Times, The Spectator, and Good Housekeeping. 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