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January 13, 1951 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1951-01-13

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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SATURDAY, JANUARY 13, 1951

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

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Coeds Called
To Final JGP
Role Tryouts
Juniors To Compete
In Singing, Speaking
Eliminations Today
Elimination tryouts for thej
Junior Girls' Play will be held
from 9 a.m. to noon and 1 to 4
p.m. today in the League.
There will be no dance tryouts
today. The cast for the dancing
chorus will be announced next
Tuesday. Singing and speaking
tryouts only will be held today.
Coeds listed below are request-
ed by Mickey Sager, director, to
attend the final tryouts.
SPEAKING PARTS: Beth Mar-
ie Adams, Jane Barker, Lila Beck,
Barbara Beckley, Nancy Bever-
idge, Emily Blair, Elaine Bauer,
Margaret Brown, Cynthia Anne
Bruce, Ethel Cada, Nancy Carter,
Beverly Clarke, Ann Cleary, Bar-
bara Cohn, Teetah Dondero, Lois
Eisele, Barbara Elliott, Marilyn
Florider and Dell Ford.
The list continues with Shirley
S. Forsyth, Mary Gratzer, Sally
Hughes Gresham, Abby Funk, An-
ne R. Gilbert, Muriel Grabow,
Ann C. Hanson, Jeanne Henes,
Sarah Hoffman, Joyce Howard,
Jo Ann Kelly, Carol K. Kazahn,
Gloria Knoob, Ann Koncar, Diana
Lahde, Arlene Lange and Jerry
Lane.
Others include: Jane Lehman,
Nancy Marshall, Mary Jo McCor-
mick, Mary Anne McCusker, Shi-
ela Patterson, Nancy Philbin, Jo
Poch, Joyce Rashti, Tracy Red-
field, Edith Paula Rew, Pat Skin-
ner, Georgiana Tayler, Gloria
Thomas, Cecily Wade, Nancy
Watkins, Mary Watt and Gail
Foster.

Engagement Told

Paul Bunyan
To Be Hailed
By Woodsmen
Bluejeaned Couples
To Greet Strongman
At Formal Tonight
Garb of the woodsman will be
evident at the Forestry Club's an-
nual Paul Bunyan "Formal," from
9 p.m. to 1 a.m. today in Water-
man and Barbour Gymnasiums.
Blujean-clad couples will dance
to the music of Paul Lavoie and
his orchestra amidst red pines
imported from the forestry
school's experimental forest near
Portage Lake.
s s
THE FOREST also furnished
material for the "longest bar in
Ann Arbor," which will be seen
at the dance. The bar is a replica
of those in the early saloons
which were frequented by the
old-time lumberjacks.
All purchases of cider and
doughnuts at the bar will be
made in terms of chips instead
of the usual dimes and quarters.
* a
TECHNIQUES of lumbering
will be demonstrated during in-
termission by couples selected
from the audience to participate
in an authentic sawing contest.
All contestants will be rewarded
for their efforts.
A door prize, along with an
award for guessing the correct
number of pine scales on dis-
play in the Administration
Building, will be presented dur-
ing intermission.
The intermission entertainment
will also feature a novel game of
"Guth or Consequences" in which
a forester named Guth will have
the starring role.
BECAUSE GUTH and his fel-
low foresters feel that no forestry
dance would be complete without
the presence of Paul Bunyan and
his blue ox, Babe, they have per-
sonally escorted these legendary
figures down from their north-
land home.
Paul was a little dubious
about leaving his specially-built
shanty, because of a fear that
it would greatly inconvenience
his hosts when they tried to
find suitable accommodations
for him.
His prophecy came true when
he went on a quick tour of the
campus Wednesday and found
that he couldn't get through the
Engine Arch.
Forestry Club members arranged

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PLEASURE B E F O R E D U T Y - Stanton Griffis,
new U. S. Ambassador to Spain, waves from his yacht, Marycia,
at Miami Beach before starting on a fishing trip in the Keys.

WEATHER PRANK - Snow on an auto parked in a
Chicago street forms a face, with wiped sections of the windshield
for eyes, radiator ornament for nose and grille for mouth.;

BETROTHED-Announcement has been made of the engage-
ment of Annette Fazio, daughter of Mrs. Joseph Fazio of Marion,
O. and the late Mr. Fazio, to William Lawrence Reeve, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Russell C. Reeve of Holland, Mich. Miss Fazio was
graduated from St. Luke's Hospital School of Nursing in Cleve-
land, O. and is now on the staff of the University Hospital. Her
fiance will graduate in June from the University where he is a
senior in the chemical engineering department. He is a member
of Zeta Psi fraternity. The cogple plan a June wedding.
LIMITED POWER:
Ten Most Influential WA.omen
-Namedby Washington Writer

SINGING PARTS: Betty Ad-
ams, Joanne Anderson, Barbara
Bockley, Lee Benjamin, Patricia
Bay, Marilyn Collins, Marion
Charles, Margaret Collins, Mar-
ion Dane, Susan Dwan, Marie
Diamond, Carol Eagle, Sally Fish,
Marilyn Floridir, Priscilla Fields,
Ginny Gish and Peggy Graham.
The list continues with: Mary
Lee Gallagher, Phyllis Gundrum,
Dorothy Garrett, Edith Hazzard,
Alice Jean Harris, Nancy Hilton,
Elizabeth Hadden, Barbara Hat-
osky, Sally Harding, Marge Jef-
feries, Marilyn Kallenberg, Mary
Keegan, Lois Kotin, Ralle Ann
Kamens, Robin McPhail and Bev-
erly Nyas.
Others are: Marjorie McLean,
Char Miettunen, Doris Meyers,
Donna Malone, Mary Peterson,
Alice Richmond, Penny Singler,
Pat Smith, V. Streicher, Jeanne
Shewman, Anne Waterman, Rose-
mary Wise, Joan Young and Dot-
tie Urban.
s s E
SINGING and speaking parts:
(the following coeds are asked to
report for both singing and
speaking parts): Carol Briggs,
Elizabeth Bean, Marilyn Bailey,
Harriet Brown, Betty Bridges,
Maury Clark, Ann Cotton, Eliza-
beth Clapham, Camilla Duncan,
Joanne Elliott, Lois Engman,
Nancy Ericke and Ileane Gudel-
sky.
The list concludes with Marilyn
U. Johnson, Peggy Kidwell, Char-
lotte Matthews, Carol Mackey,
Joyce Mersereau, Janet Parker,
Virginia Robinson, Kate Roney,
Phyllis Seput, Ruth Spillman, Ali-
cia Stevenson, Nancy Taylor and
Betty Wiles.
All coeds who did not have an
opportunity to read as well as
those whose names are not listed
above who were asked to re-read
but did not have the chance to
do so, are requested by the JGP
Central Committee to attend the
speaking tryouts.
The Committee wishes to thank
the 300 junior women who tried'
out fpr the play.
Sophisticated Cotton
Designer Balmain has created
a lavish cotton formal in black,
citrus green and gold over white
pique, complete with a stole of
I sheer fabric and pique.

By LORRAINE BUTLER
The ten most powerful women
in Washington have been named
recently by Doris Fleeson, prom-
inent political columnist.
Miss Fleeson says that although
a woman's voice can be as pow-
erful as any man's in the Senate,
President's cabinet or courts, it
is a cold fact that no woman has
power except through a man, un-
less in comparison with other wo-
men.
MISS FLEESON has included
Bess Truman in her list of ten.
She says that Mrs. Truman is a1
constant source of strength to-
the President and a very capable
woman.
Eleanor Roosevelt, in the op-
inion of Miss Fleeson, is the
most powerful woman in the
country, perhaps in the world.
She possesses an active mind,
great energy, a strong person-
ality and the wisdom of an'eld-
er stateswoman, Miss Fleeson
says.
India Edwards is the head of
the Women's Division of the
Democratic National Committee
and, according to Miss Fleeson,
her opinions are valued by Presi-
dent Truman.
MISS FLEESON put Maine
Senator Margaret Chase Smith
on her list because she "fights
for what she believes with unfe-
male Yankee grit."
Miss Fleeson says Helen Ga-
hagan Douglas was the only
woman member of the House
of Representatives with any real
power.
Ruth McCormick, editor of the
Washington Times-Herald a n d
heiress apparent to the Chicago
T r i b u n e, received recognition
from Miss Fleeson because her
voice is heard by the largest group
of newspaper readers in Wash-
ington.
* * *
HELLE' BONNET, wife of the
French ambassador to the Uni-
ted States, is the only really in-
fluential woman in the diploma-
tic set, in the opinion of Miss
Fleeson.
Laura Curtis Gross runs the
exclusive 1925 F. Street Club.

She does not lobby or cam-
paign, nor does she need to,
Miss Fleeson says. She merely
gathers the right people at the
right place at the right time.
"Anyone with business at the
capital can find out from her
how to get it done," says Miss
Fleeson in naming Betty Darling,
Washington's "Girl Friday," as
one of the ten influential women.
Betty Farrington, wife of Ha-

ENV OY TO I SR AE.
-Monnett B. Davis, Ambassador
to Panama named U. S. Ambas-
sador to Israel succeeding James
G. McDonald, has been in the
diplomatic service since 1924:

,,
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M E N A G E R I E M 0 T H E R -"Rita," a raccoon which mothers inmates of a Portland, Me.,'
animal refuge, gives welcome attention to a newly-arrived tiny kitten after its first meal.

wail's Congressional delegate and

President of the National Fdera- a detour and assured him that
tion of Republican Women's they would help him avoid any
Clubs was also named. further difficulties.

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Have you bought
your 1951 Ensian,
"The Rose Bowl
Special"
BUY NOW!
$5.00
'til February 28
0g

N 0 V E L H A T.-This John
Frederics creation is called
"Benedictine" and is of gold
mesh veiling studded with topaz
brilliants made into a little
Padre with a sling veil.

C I V I C S E R E N A D E - The civic holiday ship Valkyrie, peopled with musicians, pulls away
from its Seattle, Wash., moorage on one of its concert cruises along the city's shorelines.

SYMPHONY BAND
WILLIAM D. REVELLI, Conducting
Presents its Annual
MIDWINTER CONCERT

___ ...,Mrs. Fanny Horne, 88-year-old'
. " ..__ .:x:_ . , _ ........ .farurm wxnrkri of,.Prs - m

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