tSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 192 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGER WAA Board Positions, Duties To Be Explained at Meeting Posts Open Include Managers of Sport Clubs; Interested Women Invited To Attend Today Board members of WAA will be on hand at 5 p.m. today in the lounge of the WAB for a mass meeting of all women interested in petitioning for board positions , for the coming year. Questions concerning writing petitions, interviewing; posts open and duties of the various positions will be discussed at the meeting. THIS WILL give every petition- er an opportunity to meet and talk with all the members of the executive board and the mana- gers of the sport clubs. Petitions may be obtained in the Undergraduate Office of the League, WAB and Barbour Gym, and copies of old petitions are available in the League. Petitions are due on March 4 and interviewing will begin on March 5 and continue until March 14. * * * APPLICANTS mu s t comply with t h e University eligibility rules, and besides writing a peti- tion they must be interviewed by senior members of the WAA Board. A person may petition for a total of three positions, two of which may be executive offices. In order to petition for presi- dent, the applicant must have served at least one year on the board and be a second semesterl junior at the time of petitioning. BESIDES THE offices of presi- dent, two vice-presidents, secre- tary and treasurer, whose duties were discussed in a previous arti- cle in the Daily, there are 8 other positions on the executive board and 18 sport managers. Other positions on the board are AFCW representative, par- ticipation chairman, sorority manager, dormitory manager, league house manager, co-rec- reational chairman, public rela- tions chairman and Daily pub- licity manager. Co-recreational sports mana- gers, whose positions are now open to petition, are ballet, ice skating, folk and 'square dance, modern dance and town and coun- try. * * * THESE POSTS are open to both men and women petitioners. Eligible women may petition for the posts of managers of any of the WAA coed sport clubs. Included in this group of clubs are badminton, basketball, bowl- ing, camp counselors, fencing, field hockey, golf, michifish, of- ficials and coaches, rifle, softball, tennis and riding. Women, and also the men, who are petitioning for the positions, will be expected to have a general knowledge of WAA as an organi- zation and all its activities. Correction Informal rushing will end on Friday instead of on Feb. 29 as stated in yesterday's Daily. New Students To Be Feted At Reception International Center Schedules Welcome; Chinese Tea Planned RECEPTION ... Newly arrived foreign students on campus will be given an official welcome at the International Center's annual Spring reception at 8 p.m. Satur- day in the Rackham Building. Students will be received by President Hatcher, the Board of Governors and the Council of Foreign Students as they enter the reception line. Informal record dancing and refreshments will round out the entertainment planned for the evening. Invitations to all foreign stu- aents on campus as well as mem- bers of the faculty and interested people in the community have been extended. Representative student groups on campus including Student Leg- islature, Panhellenic Association, the Union and League have also been invited to attend the recep- tion. The International Center gives welcoming parties each semester as part of their program to make foreign students feel at home on. campus and to promote better relations between the foreign and American students. TEA ... Mr. David Adeney, re- turned missionary from China, will be the guest speaker at an informal discussion and tea to be given for Chinese students from 7:30 to 9 p.m. today at the Inter- national Center. The tea, sponsored by Michigan Christian Fellowship, is open to all Chinese students. The guest speaker worked for a number of years in China as a missionary. After a time in the United States, he returned to China and served there for four years under Inter-Varsity Chris- tian Fellowship. Mr. Adeney traveled extensive- ly in China, working with student groups, until the Communist oc- cupation of Shanghai in 949. He then returned to Shanghai and worked exclusively with the Chin- ese students in 20 universities and colleges in the Greater Shanghai area. Mr. Adeney will show slides of Chinese universities and students which he took during his work there. Meeting To Form JGP Committees A mass meeting of Junior Girls' Play will be held in the League at 8 p.m. today. Everyone interested in working on the costumes, stunts, makeup, stage, props, or scenery committees is urged by the central committee to attend. All those who signed up for committee work before may work on another committee, also. No previous experience or spe- cial talent is needed. Try FOLLETT'S First USED BOOKS at BARGAIN PRICES Scroll will present Bob Leopold and his Ann Arbor Alley Cats in "Jazz Jamboree No. 2" from 9 till 11 p.m. tomorrow night in the League Ballroom. Proceeds of the concert, spon- sored by the honorary society for senior affiliated women, will go to a Panhellenic scholarship fund. This is the second jazz concert to be given at the University. By popular acclaim Don Herman will again MC and relate the history and stories about jazz. Selections such as "Alexander's Ragtime Band," "When the Saints Come Marching In," and "She'll Be Coming Around the Mountain" will be enjoyed in the informal at- mosphere provided by tables, chairs and cokes. Bob Shanahan will play the trombone in the "tailgate" tradi- tion of New Orleans. This style of music received its name in New Orleans when the: tailgate was removed from trucks which carried bands to make room for the trombonist and his instru- ment. In addition to posters, programs, which are duplicates of those to be given at tle concert, have been distributed in the residence halls on campus. Bob Leopold, who has played at numerous campus events, special- izes in jazz, although the concert music will be varied from Dixie- land to swing and vocals. Tickets which are 50 cents a person or 75 cents a couple can be purchased at the door. DIXIE JAM SESSION: Scroll'To Star Bob Leopold With 'Jazz Jamboree No. 2' RENT a typewriter and keep up with your work Portables Standard Office Machines Wide Carriage Machines Since Morrill's 1908 314 S. State St. Phone 7177 a I ______________ GRUESOME TWOSOME-Vera Simon and Max Emshwiller wave to talent scouts as they assume a pose for their humorous inter- pretation being featured in the Gulantics talent revue on Sat- urday night in Hill Auditorium. MYSTERIOUS THREE: Gulantics Show To Feature FacultyTrio, Other Talents w COMPLETE DEVELOPING & PRINTING SERVICE 24-HOUR FILM SERVICE Purchase Camera Shop 605 Church St. Phone 8696 Coed Petitions Due atLeague Petitions for League sophomore positions will be due at 5 p.m. Fri- day, Feb. 29, in the League Under- graduate Office. All freshmen women are eli- gible to apply for these posts which include three positions on the In- treviewing and Nominating Com- mittee, six positions on the Judi- ciary Committee and four captains for the League dance classes. Central committee posts for So- phomore Cabaretare also avail- able. In the business division these include general chairman and her assistant, secretary and her as- sistant and finance chairman and her assistant. Chairmenships are also open on the following committees: decora- tions, hostess, programs, publicity, refreshments, special booths and tickets. Assistants will be appointed to the decorations, publicity, special booths and ticket chairmen. The floorshow committee will consist of a floorshow director and assistant, stage manager and as- sistant, an ushering committee chairman and a chairman of the script committee. Chairmen and assistants will al- so be chosen for the dance, cos- tume, make-up and music com- mittees. taffeta. Sizes 10 to 16. Right out of VOGUE! Here's worsted texture and appearance in crease-resistant ribbed rayon- big fashion for little money! And it's Van Houten tailored in a petticoat suit that's fashion news in itself. Doll-waisted jacket and whirl skirt, with a contrasting petticoat of taffeta that matches the jacket lining . . . all brought to charming climax by a jewelled medallion at the hip! Mist blue, navy, gray, all with red taffeta; beige with brown the new PE-tti1C oat 1:, s uit " e ,r.,nr~rrrr ,r° $2500 s .. , _1 _ 000 An element of mystery shrouds the coming Gulantics production as the sponsors of the show re- veal that a surprise faculty trio consisting of one dean, one pro- fessor and one faculty "coed" will be featured on the program. "Who are the members of the faculty that make up the mys- terious three?" will be a question that will be whispered all over campus, but only answered at 8 p.m. Saturday night in Hill Audi- torium. LAST YEAR the surprise facul- ty act starred Dean Walter B. Rea, Professor Preston W. Slosson and Glen V. Edmonson of the En- gineering department in a parody on the ballet. Talent from all over North and Central America has been gathered to make Gulantics the top talent show on Campus. Vera Simon and Max Emsh- willer are slated to do a humor- ous interpretation. Delores Lowry of the Gambea in the Canal Zone will be the fea- tured soprano in a semi-classical role while Robin Renfrew will pre- sent the other extreme as a sing- ing comedienne. CAROL LEYBOURNE, '55, a. recent National 4H talent contest winner will give a humorous but classical p i a n o demonstration. Miss Leybourne will also make an appearance on television in De- troit on. March 9. A vocal quintette, four men I Union Do your laundry the Laundromat way. Your laundry will come out of our automatic ma. chines sparkling clean. It takes only 1 hr. to wash and dry that 8 lb. bundle . and costs only .. . 60c and a coed, composed of Bob McGrath, Dave Calahan, Dick Frank, Ara Berberian and Joan Robinson will also enter into the competition for the three cash prizes. "This is the biggest variety show put on here at Michigan" says Frank, chairman 'of the pro- duction. "Don't miss it." WAA Notices Modern Dance-There will be no regular meeting of the Modern Dance Club today. Members will be going to Ypsilanti for a master lesson from Charles Weidman. The lesson will be conducted from ' :30 to 9:30 p.m. today. Members wish- ing to attend may sign for trans- portation in Barbour Gym. The charge for the trip is $1. The workshop scheduled from 3 to 5 p.m. tomorrow will be held. ** *. Basketball-Any women inter- 6sted in playing basketball may attend the organizational meeting of the WAA Basketball Club at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Barbour Gym. Everyone should be dressed for a game. Fencing-Beginning and advan- ced fencers are welcome to attend the organizational meeting of the WAA sport club, which will be held at 5 p.m. today in the base- ment of the WAB. Michifish-Tryouts for Michi- fish will be held from 9 to 10 a.m. Saturday in the Union Pool. There will be approximately 10 openings in the swimming club to be filled by women with above average swimming ability. A knowledge of all strokes is required and further requirements may be obtained from Barbara Beckley, manager of the club. Tat K r6r) J in ever-so- worstdOy rayon by a Ca~a Featuring Genuine ITALIAN SPAGHETTI and RAVIOLI with Salad, Rolls, Coffee Also SANDWICHES and SHORT-ORDERS I 3 SHIRTS laundered to a sparkling clean in just 48 hrs... 22c I aut dnvtrat 510 E. William 1 P South State off N. U. boom" """""" WON" it All men interested in parti- cipating in the Union all-cam- pus pool, billiards and ping pong tournaments must sign up in the Union by tomorrow. The tournaments begin Monday, February 25. If I' Records You've Been Asking About: FREE EXAMINATION OFFER 0~0 5peeA The Latest Budapest Recordings: on the famous Mozart Quintets K516, K614 with Katims, Second Viola NEW RECORDINGS OF: Ravel: Introduction & Allegro Berlioz: Symphonie Fantastique... 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