WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Seniors ' Preview Slickers, Signs Identify Frosh Maize Team Preparing for Traditional Weekend in April SOf 'Heavenly Days' Set for Tomsorrow Tickets for Junior Girls' Play Productions Now on Sale at Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre; Songs, Dances To Follow College Theme Tickets for the 1952 "Heavenly Days" Junior Girls' Play produc- tion are on sale now at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre box office. The box office will be open from 1 to 4 p.m. today and from 8 p.m. to noon and 1 to 4 p.m. tomorrow r through Saturday. * * * TICKETS ARE priced at 90 cents for the regular performances at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday and 75 cents for the matinee perfor- mance at 2 p.m. Saturday. Having worked nearly a year on JGP, the central committee will sit in the audience with hopeful thoughts tomorrow when the seniors view "Heaven- Grads Offered 'U' Fellowship Applications are now open for the 1952-53 Lucy E. Elliott fel- lowship for women graduate stu- dents from any college or univer- sity who want to study at this Uni- versity. u. The fellowship, amounting to $750, is awarded on the basis of personality, achievement a n d scholastic ability. Preference is also'shown to those women doing creative work. Application blanks can be pick- ed up in the Alumnae Council Of- fice in the League and should be returned by April 1. Questions concerning the award will be answered in the Alumnae Office by Miss Alice Russel. )1 Union To Display Valuable Locks Of Past, Present Locks dating from 400 B.C. up to the present time will be on dis- play during the month of March in the Union lobby. The display, worth $50,000, con- tains. locks used for the past 24 centuries. Ancient Egyptian wooden tumb- ler locks with massive wooden keys as well as tiny keys will be fea- tures of interest in the ten by three foot lighted showcase. 0kher replicas of the past in- clude huge door handles cast from iron decorated with fine lacelike designs. In addition to. the keys and locks, pictures will illustrate the eras from which the keys were chosen. ly Days," a three-act creation of junior women. Entirely written, produced, di- rected and composed of junior wo- nen, this year's JGP will feature over 20 song and dance numbers. This number is much greater than usual. "HEAVENLY DAYS" is a lively comedy play interspersed with numerous singing and dancing acts which range from tap to bal- let numbers. Given originality exclusively for senior women, JGP still gives a special performance for senior women. Tomorrow night, seniors will at- tend their annual dinner after which they will march across the stage of the ballroom, married wo- men carrying candles, engaged ones sucking lemons, pinned ones wearing common pins and those unattached pitching a penny for each year of their age into a well. *1 * * AFTER THIS ceremony, the seniors will have entertainment by members of their own class. Then in a body, the senior women will go to Lydia Mendels- sohn Theatre where they alone will view the opening night of "Heavenly Days" as a climax to their senior activities. On Senior Night, seniors may request any, lines or acts from JGP to be re- peated and they frequently heckle the cast. Although the plot of JGP is tra- ditionally surrounded by an air of mystery, it has been revealed that "Heavenly Days" is centered about college life and that there will be many interesting dance numbers including a Can-Can number. JGP centralcommittee members Joan Brown, general chairman; Nancy Born, director and Berta Houston, music chairman were guests last weekend on the WU- OM-WHRV "Guest of Honor" pr'o- gram where theywereinterview- ed concerning their activities on JGP. Music from "Heavenly Days" was also given on another WUOM program. A JGP display has been set up this week in the window of a local bookstore. Assembly Line The Assembly Line staff will meet at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the League. All copy is due then, according to Nancy Willbrandt, assistant editor. Letters to the paper will also be accepted for publication up to that time. Moon shines east Moon shines west Maize team makes The Moonshine best! Members of the Maize team of Frosh Weekend, to be held April 18 and 19, can be identified on campus this week by yellow slick- ers and signs announcing the theme of their dance, "Moonshine Madness." * * *1 FLOORSHOW chairman Shyrlee Bloom, says "'Moonshine Madness' promises to be a terrific show. Singing, dancing and laughs will be plentiful." Miss Bloom stressed that all interested Maize team members should try out for the floorshow from 7 to 9 p.m. tonight in the League. The room number will be posted. Frosh Weekend was originated four years ago by combined As- sembly and Panhellenic to give the freshmen women a class project and to initiate them into League activities. THE CLASS OF '52 was the first to hold a Frosh Weekend and they originated the idea of having two individual dances and floor shows and for this purpose the women were divided into two teams and competition ran high during the weeks of preparation and the final show. The teams are judged on the basis of their ticket sales, scho- larship, program design, decora- tions and finally the floorshow. Each team strives to outdo the other in originality and clever- ness of ideas, costume and set designs and decorations. The League Ballroom is divided into two parts, the teams choosing for their half, and then members go ahead and decorate their part in keeping wtih their theme. LAST YEAR the Maize team copped first honors for the first time in Frosh Weekend's history. Their mwinning theme was "Make Mine Moccasins" with members becoming Indians of the Micha- gauma tribe. The Blue team's theme of "The Big Scoop" followed a newspaper idea. The year before, 1950, the Blue team was victorious with "Watch the Birdie" while the Maize team gave them strong competition with COFFEE HOUR-Students and members of the Psychology Department enjoy free coffee and cook- ies at the last Student-Faculty Coffee Hour. There will be another Coffee Hour from 4 to 6 p.m. to- day in the Terrace Room at the Union, with the Natural Science Department as special guests. Places Open For Wolverine FloridaTrip Reservations may be made for the Wolverine Club "Sunland Spe- cial" spring vacation train trip to Florida from 1 to 4:30 p.m. through March 26 at the Admin- istration Building. Tickets are being sold at a re-t duced rate of $69.50. The train will leave Detroit at 5:30 p.m. Friday, April 4, and arrives in Ft. Lauder- dale at 10 a.m. Sunday, April 6. It will leave Ft. Lauderdale at 5 p.m. Friday, April 11, and arrives in Detroit at 8:30 a.m. Sunday. There will be a special bus serv- ice to and from Detroit's Pennsyl- vania station. It will leave the Union at 3:45 Friday, April 4. The trip includes a five-hour stop-over in Washington, D.C., each way, with a chartered bus tour of Washington on the way down to Florida. Special entertainment features will be available at Ft. Lauderdale, including a glass-bottomed boat excursion on the ocean, a river trip through the Everglades jungle and an all-day deep-sea fishing ex- perience. Cars will be available for $3.00 a day. Students who are not travelling or staying with the group may take advantage of the entertain- ment features. Daily Classifieds I Bring Quick Results MONDAY DEADLINE: Fortnite Petitions Will Be Due Petitions for the Assembly Fort- nite committee are due at 4 p.m. Monday in the Undergraduate Of- fice of the League. Petitions may be picked up from activities chairmen in each dorm- itory or in the League. Interview- ing will be held from 4 to 5:30 p.m.j next Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. * * * INDEPENDENT women inter- ested in' petitioning may sign up for an interview when the peti- tions are handed in. The positions open on the cen- tral committee are general chairman, publicity chairman, poster assistant, and skits as- sistant; decorations, skits, hon- ors, programs and patrons chair- men. Any independent women is eli- gible including those who live in dormitories, private homes, league houses and cooperatives. * * * FORTNITE IS presented in the fall and is a program that installs house presidents, presents scholar- ships and activities awards to the houses and entertains the audience with three-minute skits put on by every dorm, league house and co- operative. Senior Night Twelve more seats are now available for the Senior Night dinner and JGP to be held to- morrow night. They may be picked up this morning at the Undergraduate Office. The price is $1.75. Two years ago the system whereby big sisters accompany their little sisters to the pro- gram was started, and has been carried on since. In last fall's Fortnite Mrs. Har- lan Hatcher made her first ap- pearance at a student function, and presented the house activity awards. * * * A NEW innovation that year was a door prize given to the hold- er of the winning program. It was a date withLaurie LeClaire, mem- ber of the football squad. Fortnite originally took place over a two-week period of time. During the two weeks three sep- arate programs were presented including recognition night, in- stallation of house presidents, and skits. Now installation night is held in Y . ' ' r r 1 " r ' . ,.. Yr^'" Gr III Dance Casses Women who would like to take advantage of the League dance classes may attend the class at 7:15 p.m. tonight in the League Ballroom. The dances taught will include the rhumba, samba and tango. Make the appointment to record that spring recital N\OW! ;STUDIO, III the spring as a separate program. The skits are judged according to originality, effectiveness of pre- sentation, clarity, and audience response and the winners are an- nounced at the end of the pro- 7J- Z III 521 East Liberty Phone 2-3053 COEDS - It's the Short-cut - 5 Stylists to Please - No Appts. - The Baseola Barbers Liberty near State :1 IL -rm ii .' I I t - '( " I ... .! - i Good telephone positions for outstandingwomen Take the first step from college to career ... find out about MICHIGAN BELL'S OPPORTUNITIES for CUSTOMER REPRESENTATIVES handling customer contacts in the business office for WOMEN IN MANAGEMENT preparation for good supervisory positions " no special courses or experience necessary * good salary from the start " regular increases * many more advantages Soft, Flexible WEDGE LOAFERS in creamy elkskin or navy calf I H 5 ON YOUR SPRING HORIZON I ...... ...... ............ ..... ... ...... ..... .... ..... ... .... ...............4 ..... ......- X~.:1 . . . . . .. . . .... . . .. C ', ~(C 9'$ >,C, ..........N..*-> ......' HurrySchroeder, Gargzoyle 's Li I I I I