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March 28, 1951 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1951-03-28

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

THE MICHIGAN DAII

Petitions for Sophomore Posts
Due Friday at League Office

Freshmen Women Vi
Interviewing, Soph C
Deadline for sophomore peti-
tions is 5 p.m. Friday at the
League Undergraduate Office.
Forty-five positions are open to
freshmen women including the
central committee for Sophomore
Cabaret, dance class captains, In-

ie for Dance
ab, Judiciary

Class,
Jobs

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and-95.
Dropin or our1airof aesr
or fut e - or n ame tn
Sizs a3 t 1
6 tye trhos fo
895
m d9 .95
o ORY U
A PAIR t isWhirE SHioE LACES
Drop in for your pair iof laces
or just send us your name and
} address, and you'll receive a
pair with our compliments.
Sizes 31/2to 1
Widths AAA to C
6 styles to choose from
TWO STORES
Campus--619 E. Liberty
Downtown-121 S. Main

terviewing and Nominating Com-
mittee and Judiciary Council.
Coeds who are interested in be-
coming voting members of Judi-
ciary Council in, their junior year
are urged by the Council to peti-
tion for sophomore aid positions
now.
ALTHOUGH the aides are not
voting members of Judiciary
Council, they have the privilege
of attending the Council's hear-
ings on policy cases as well as
trials. The aides' duties include
c h e c k i n g dormitory sign-out
sheets and sending out post cards
to girls who are to appear before
Judiciary Council or make up
time for being late.,
The sophomore members of
the Interviewing and Nominat-
ingCommittee are given voting
privileges. They also assist in
reading and evaluating peti-
tions, interviewing and publiciz-
ing the Interviewing Committee.
Sophomore dance class captains
become active members of the
Dance Class Committee. They aid
in checking dance class partici-
pants and making arrangements
for the dance classes.
CENTRAL COMMITTEE posi-
tions on Soph Cab over a wide
field of interests including fi-
nance, writing, art, music, and
sales.
Chairmanships are also open
for the hostess, program, re-
freshments, s ecial booths, ush-
ering,,' publicity, posters, and
stunts committees.
The list continues with floor-
show director and assistant, and
chairmen and assistant chairmen
of the costume, dance, make-up,
music and script committees.
Interested women are advised to
contact the activities chairmen in
campus residences for assistance
in writing positions.
The Interviewing and Nominat-
ing Committee are holding office
hours from 3 to 5 p.m. this week
to answer any questions about the
positions that are open or petition-
ing in general.
Union To Hold
Spring Dance
Students and their dates may
welcome spring at-' the "Wishing
WellBall" to be presented from 9
p.m. to midnight Saturday in the
Union Ballroom.
In keeping with the spring
theme, flowers will be sold at a
special booth. Spring flowers such
as roses and carnations will be on
sale throughout the evening.
The new season will also be de-
picted in the decorations for the
dance which will include a canopy
over the bandstand and painted
trees in the concourse leading to
the ballroom.-
In addition, an authentic wish-
ing well will be erected in the ball-
room. Artificial grass will provide
a suitable setting for the well.
Providing the musical back-
ground for the dance will be Frank
Tinker and his orchestra.
Refreshments will be served in
the Terrace Room for couples who
prefer to take a rest and quench
their thirst.
Admission will be $1.50 per cou-
ple.

ANOTHER anniversary which is
being observed this year and the
one which will provide the theme
for the dance is the founding of
the University of Michigan School
of Dentistry seventy-five years
ago.
The diamond jubilee celebra-
tion will feature pictures and
murals depicting the evolution
of dentistry from pioneering ef-
forts in the field to the modern
scientific methods now used.
Old-fashioned and early equip-
ment will be shown in scenes
which present the life of the den-
tist in bygone days.
s* * +*
CHANGES AND improvements
in dentistry will also be illustrated
to show the development of the
modern dentist.
Entertainment which is being
kept secret until the night of
the dance will carry out the
theme of the evolution in this
field.
Frank Tinker, who iWa senior
in dental school, and his orches-
tra will provide the musical back-
ground for the event.
According to tradition the
dance will be sponsored by the'
juniors in the school in honor of
the seniors.
"The committee," said Howard
Adilman, general chairman of the
dance, "is working hard to make
this year's Odonto Ball one of the
very beft."
Junior Panhellenic-Members of
Junior Panhellenic will meet at
4:30 p.m. today in the, League.
Pledge presidents are/ requested to
bring the money collected for the
pledge picnic.
* s
Dance Classes - League dance
classes will not meet Wednesday.
They will meet next week at the
regular time.
House Presidents -- Dormitory
presidents will meet at 4 p.m. today
in the Garden Room of the League.
Deora Nelson, president of As-
sembly asks that all presidents'
oaths be brought to the meeting.

ENGAGEMENT-Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bailey of Petoskey have
announced the engagement of their daughter, Betty, to John R.
Edman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Edman of Oxford, Mich. The
announcement was made March 26 at Miss Bailey's'sorority,
Collegiate Sorosis. Mr. Edman, a member of Sigma Chi, will re-
ceive his Masters' degree from the School of Business Administra-
tion in June. The couple is planning an August wedding.
JOURNALISTS MEET:
Famed Writer To Be Speaker
At Theta Sigma Phi Banquet
<l-__Q D Q

Scouts Begin
Cookie Sales
Campus Welcomes
Annual Canvassing
Newest addition to dormitory
and house desk tops are the deco-
rative boxes filled with chocolate
and vanilla sandwich cookies
which are being sold by the Ann
Arbor Girl Scouts.
With the stocks of jelly-beans
and candy Easter eggs being
rapidly depleted in campus resi-
dences, students are welcoming the
annual cookie sale which is taking
place from March 26 to April 6.
"THOSE COOKIES really come
in handy when you're cramming
for an econ bluebook at 3 a.m.,"
said Ted Papes, '52.
Another student also enjoyed
them-but for a different rea-
son.
"As house manager, I Jo mad
trying to stop the nightly raids on
the icebox - but since the Girl
Scouts have been coming around,
policing has been at a minimum,"
said Lee Gallagher, '52.
AND THERE ARE enough
cookies being sold to last through
final exams. A grand total of
608,832 creamed-filledacookies are
being sold this week and next by
door to door canvassing.
Poceeds from the sales will go
toward the operating of Hilltop
House, Ann Arbor Girl Scout
headquarters, which is a log
cabin located ofA Huron Drive.
The cookies are 40 cents a box,
three boxes for $1 or $3.75 for a
carton.
The Girl Scout sale is communi-
ty chest supported and is under
the direction of Mrs. C. Mercier,
505 E. Kingsley.
Approximately 840 Girl Scouts
from 69 troops are participating in
the city canvassing.
League, Union Slate
'Spring Tonic Mixer,'
Coffee Hour This Week
Faculty and students in the
School of Architecture and Design
and Fine Arts Department will be
honored at the Student-Faculty
Coffee Hour to be held from 4
to 5 p.m. today in the Grand Rap-
ids SRoom of the League.
Sponsored by the League and
Union, the coffee hour is present-
ed to enable students and faculty
to discuss their problems on a
friendly basis.
Continuing with their function
of providing students with enter-
tainment facilities throughout the
week, the Union will present its
"Spring Tonic Mixer" from 2 to
5 p.m. Saturday.
The North Lounge of the Union
will be the scene of record danc-
ing, and there will be 175 hostesses
present from the various dormitor-
ies and sororities on campus. 1

Melba Marlett, Michigan free
lance writer, will be guest speaker
at the Matrix Table, formal ban-
quet to be presented by the Uni-
versity chapter of Theta Sigma
Phi, national honorary and pro-
fessional fraternity for women in
journalism.
The banquet will be held Friday,
April 27 at the Masonic Temple in
Ann Arbor. The event, held each
year in April by Theta Sigma Phi
chapters throughout the country,
takes its name from the matrix, a,
small copper plate used in news-
paper linotype machines to mold
the face of a type.
MRS. MARTLETT, whose home-.
town is Detroit, has written a
number of mystery stories publish-
ed by a well-known book club and
translated into several languages.
"Tomorrow Will Be Monday,"
one of Mrs. Martlett's novels,
was banned in Spain by Franco
because of its advanced opinions
on the status of women.
As for "The Garden Path," its
author says that the three-act
play, written in collaboration with
Schuyler Watts of New York,
"threatens momentarily to be pro-
duced."
"RUNAWAY CLOWN," a child-'
ren's play, won the Seattle Junior
Play Contest in 1949 and was
bought by the Children's Theatre
Press.
"Death Is In The Garden," a
mystery, was published last fall,
while a long straight novel will
be finished by the end of the
year "if I live so long" declares
Mrs. Marlett.
The author was guest speaker at
the national Matrix Table held at

the fraternity's national conven-
tion in Detroit last June.
* * *
TITLE OF HER Ann Arbor talk
will be "Have A Chair." "It's the
best advice I can give a writer,"
she says.
Outstanding women from Ann
Arbor, Detroit, and Lansing will re-
ceive invitations to the local ban-
quet. Not only women in journal-,
ism, but those interested in wom-
en's activities, will be asked to at-
tend.
With more than 10,000 alumnae
and 75 chapters throughout the
country, Theta Sigma Phi has
made much progress since seven
college women first organized the
fraternity in 1909.
Among the well-known honorary
members of the organization are
Dorothy Thompson, Eleanor
Roosevelt, Jan Struther, Dorothy
Canfield Fischer, Kathleen Norris,
Edna Ferber, Dorothy Dix, Mar-
jorie Kinnan Rawlings, and Cor-
nelia Otis Skinner.

A
To cut or not to cut-
that is the question for
spring! Let us create
the hair-do most becom-
ing to you.
Saet/er deauilj Shota
601 E st Liberty
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