WEDNESDAY, JUNE 27, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE WENSA, UE2, 91TE IcI;A -L Social, Recreational Events Open to Campus Varied After-Class ciies Scheduled by League Council Dances To Be Staged in Rumpus Room: Bridge Lessons To Be Given Tuesdays Women's Athletic Department Plans Full Sports Program Coeds Ilave Many Facilities Open to Them At WAB i-M. Union for Co-Recreation SchoolSlates Party Tonight Bowling, tennis, golf and square dancing are among the entertain- ment planned for School of Edu- cation party at the Women's Ath- letic Building tonight. Students and faculty have been invited to attend the event which will include sports, dancing, cards and refreshments. The party will be held from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. WELCOME Ladies' and Children's HAIR-STYLING A SPECIALTY Five courteous experienced hair stylists to please you. o appointments necessary. The Daseola Barbers Liberty off State Read and Use Daily Classifieds Winter or summer, the Wom- en's League, coed mecca for many student generations, is one of the busiest places on campus. The summer League council has planned a program which includes an activity for- nearly every eve- ning in the week and will con- tinue to sponsor all-campus events during the summer. * * * A BEGINNING - of - the - week "slump" will be taken care of with some spirited square dances from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Mondays in the League Ballroom. Lessons on the art of "do-si-doing" and "promenading the hall" will be i conducted by Mrs. Valerie Moffett. A fee of $1.50 for five lessons and 40 cents for each individual les- son will be charged. "Seven no trump" and "I pass" will be heard at the League on, Tuesday evenings. Bridge lessons, under the dir- ection of Mrs. C. P. Ervin, will be given at 7 p.m. each week. A fee of $3 will be charged for six lessons. Students who would like to brush up on their ballroom danc- ing techniques this summer will welcome the dance classes which will be held each Wednesday, be- ginning tonight MR. EDWARD FUSCO, an Ar- thur Murray dance instructor will conduct beginner classes at 7 p.m. and intermediate classes at 8 p.m. in the League Ballroom. Coeds are admitted free of charge and men will pay a fee of $2.50 for six lessons. Duplicate bridge is slated forI Thursday nights at the League. The "Rumpus Room" of the League will be the scene of in- formal record dances each Friday evening this summer. Admission is free to all students, who may attend with or without dates. THE DANCES will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight in the1 basement of the League. Televi- sion will also be available for those who are interested during the week. Additional informationand tick- ets for the activities may be ob- tained in the Undergraduate Of-. fice of the League. The League summer council in- cludes Ginny Gish, president; Corienne Bacon, judiciary chair- man; Jean Martin and Marilyn Kollenberg, judiciary members; Dorothy nPrettie, dance class chairman; Jeah Freshour, Round- up Room chairman; Ann Houch, social chairman and Marcia Gold- farb, publicity chairman. w , GERMAN DESIGN-Telescope glasses exhibited at Universal German Industry Fair in Han- over, can be adjusted to fit any eyesight. They fold together like any glasses. TOUR TOGS-Nancy Chaffee, of Los Angeles, women's na- tional indoor champion, shows a white pique ensemble, one of several she will wear gin Euro- pean tourneys. TOURED WEST COAST: Visiting Instructor To leach Modern Dance This Summer Afternoon lullnesses and empty July and August evenings need not discourage the active summer school student, for the women's physical education department has provided many opportunities for summertime fun around campus. A variety of sport programs has been planned in which both men and women may participate and, upon student requests, the pro- grams can be expanded to include many sports which have not been organized. i* CO-RECREATIONAL meetings have already been organized for badminton and modern dance. Both men and women who are in- terested in swinging at a few bird- ies can go to Barbour Gym at 7:30 p.m. Wednesdays. Information can be obtained at Barbour concerning the modern dance recreational program. Volleyball, basketball, swim- ming) trampoline, paddleball, ping pong and horseshoes are among the sports which will be offered on co-recreational night every Friday at the Intramural Building. Coeds will find the Union pool available to them for swimming from 8:15 to 10:15 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday evenings. * * * ALL KINDS OF equipment and facilities are available at the Wo- men's Athletic Building to campus sport enthusiasts who may have left their tennis racquets and golf clubs at home this summer. -r At Miss Shirley Wimmer, visiting supervisor of dance at the Uni- versity this summer, will direct the modern dance classes in the Department of Physical Education UF- and will also direct much of the Play Production dance work. She was chaurman of the dance department at Mills College in Oakland, California and taught at Connecticut College, New York University and Columbia Univer- sity. She has also had extensive dancing experience on Broadway and has toured the west coast with her own concert group. Miss Wimmer said that she "will gear the modern dance classes to the students' needs." She plans to do both technique and composi- tion work in her classes. I~ Tennis courts, putting greens, and fields for softball, archery, soccer and other sports are open to students who prefer the great outdoors following a morning of classes and studying. All the necessary utensils and equipment tobe used on a picnic can also be rented for a small fee from WAB. COURSES IN elementary and intermediate golf, tennis, modern dance and swimming are being giv- en as well as instruction in archery and posture, figure and carriage. Most of these classes, which are being conducted for both recrea- tional enjoyment and instruction, are open to men and women. The classes will be small and will be designed to fit individual needs and desires, said Miss Mar- ie Hartwig. Students may register for sports instruction this week in Office 15 at Barbour Gymnasium. A health permit, which may be obtained at Health Service, is required for par- ticipation. Students are urged by the phy- sical education department to take advantage of the recreational fa- cilities which are available to them this summer. They are also prompted to re- quest for any sport instruction or recreational program which they 1would like to see organized. Clerical Work Takes Honors With Women There are now more women stenographers, typists and other office workers in America than there are women in any other oc- cupation, statistics have proven. In the last eighty years, ac- cording to government figures, the number of women in these clerical jobs has risen from a few thousand to over four million. The women who work in offices in the United States now receive a considerable part of all income earned by women, the government reports, and account for much of the saving and spending which women do. Their average income during a recent year was approximately $2,000 a year, even when the in- comes of part-time workers were included and the incomes of wom- en who worked only a, few weeks or a few months during the year. Studies made by a life insur- ance association have revealed that more than a quarter of all the insurance which women buy is bought by clerical workers. A third is bought by business and professional women, by stu- dents, by self-employed women and by women working in other kinds of jobs. Pictured-- broadcloth in white-pink-ye black-navy Other styles in pique and linen. Colors in plaid and pastels. I sllow '; ,ti,^ i4 ems:;::{} ;;> tix . t" : s: ''' 'yv1 S.{'r: Z. t "4 . ""' .._. 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