DAiY, ThRUAiR y 2i, i TH MICHIGAN DAILyN PAGE P~iG~ Caduceus Ball nd ortarboard Dance To Be Held Today . A .,._ --- _.__e__.__.. r . Gus Arnheim Will Provide Music For Bal Couples To Lead Medical Ball Today Pay-Off Dance 'Wynx' Dance Will Feature I Committee Members' Guests Are Announced; Caricatures To Enhance Hospital Decoration Caduceus, annual medical ball to be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. today at the Union ballroom, is to be head- ed by Robert Christiansen, '41M, and John McNicholas, '41M, who will be accompanied by Margaret Bentley, 41M, apd Ann Herzog, '43SN. Others to be accompanied by cen- tral committee members are Alice Haas, '42, with Robert Medlar, '41M, programs chairman, Wayne Stewart, '41M, head of patrons committee, is to be accompanied by his wife, Vir- ginia Spooner will be with Howard Lawrence, '41M, decorations chair- man, and Esther Conuts will be ac- companied by Donald Effler, '41M, assistant decorations chairman Mason Maynard, '41M, tickets chairman, will accompany Betty Peck, '43, and Charles Tolle, '42M, assis- tant tickets chairman, will attend with his wife. Herbert Pedersen, '41M, publicity chairman, is to accompany Ruth Barnes, and assistant publicity chairman George Schaiberger, '42M, assistant patrons chairman, will be accompanied by his wife. William Wright, '42M, is assistant programs chairman. Gus Arnheim and his orchestra will provide the music for Caduceus ball, which is sponsored by Galens Hon-~ orary Medical Society. With him as vocalist will be Katherine Joyce. The orchestra, according to tradition, will wear surgical caps and gowns. Two big murals of hospital scenes will be at each end of the ballroom and cartoons will be on the walls. In these will be recognizable cari- catures of professors of the College of Medicine. Weekend Dinner Dances To Open New Semester With the opening of a new semes- ter, the second part of the social season also begins. And this week there are several dinners and one dance to take over the spotlight. Members of Alpha Kappa Kappa will have a dinner from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. today. Chaperons for the affair will be Mr. and Mrs. W. V. Marshall and Mr. and Mrs. Emil Weddige. One of the first dinner dances of the new semester will be held by Alpha Rho Chi from 9 p.m. to mid- night today. Dr. Slasr has been asked to chaperon. Phi Beta Pi will have a dinner from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. today. Guest chaperons for the evening will be Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Mull and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bacon. Xi Psi Phi will hold a dinner at 6:30 p.m. today. This will be fol- lowed with a dance which will last until 1 a.m. Dr. and Mrs. H. W. Held and Dr. and Mrs. G. Barrow will act as chaperons for the eve- ning. ROBERT CHRISTENSEN MARGARET BENTLEY JOHN McNICHOLAS ANN HERZOG LeRoy Smith Informal Affair Will Be Held In League Ballroom; To Enable Women To Repay Past Dates Saddle shoes and sweaters and skirts will be in order when the wo- men on campus repay their dates at Mortarboard's annual Pay-Off dance, to be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. today in the ballroom of the League. Decorations and favors will carry out the traditional "thank-you" theme of the dance. Favors will be huge all-evening suckers, complete with heads, faces, curls, and bows, and may be purchased by the women at the dance or from, 2 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. today in the League lobby. Hun- dreds of assorted, brightly colored notes of appreciation on a black back- ground and a large mortarboard at one end of the room will form the. decorations for the affair. Leroy Smith To Play Leroy Smith and his orchestra, heard previously in Ann Arbor at the Miami Triad dance last year, will play for Pay-Off. The band has also appeared at several League dances in former years. Tickets for the dance may still be procured from members of Mortar- board or from 2 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. today at a special desk in the lobby of the League, or during the dance at the League desk. They are priced at .1.50 a couple. President and Mrs. Ruthven head the list of patrons for this, the fourth consecutive Pay-Off dance. Sponsored By Mortarboard Pay-Off, sponsored by the senior women's honor society, traditionally. occurs the week-end after J-Hop. Originally intended as a dance to which women might invite their J- Hop dates, the affair now has become one with which women may repay any of their dates of the past semes- ter. Although sweaters and skirts are. not obligatory, the customary dress for this dance is extremely informal. Eligibility Cards Due For Merit System Eligibility cards for all women ex- pecting to do any work under the merit system of the League must be signed within the three week period beginning next Monday, Barbara Dittman, '41, chairman of the com- mittee has announced. Although work will not begin until later in the semester, she said, cards must be signed between 3 p.m. and 5 p.m. any day during the prescribed period. As each card is signed, the owner's name will be added to an eligibility ,list to be filed in the office of the Dean of Women. Chairmen of League committees, dance, and pro- ject committees must check the names of the committeemen from this list. To Be Qiven Friday At Union When Wyvern and Sphinx, junior honor societies, get together to give a dance, the result is "Wynx," which will be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, February 28, in the large ballroom of the Union. "Wynx" is patterned after the reg- ular week-end dances in the Union in that it is an informal affair and ev- eryone may attend. Extra fun enters into the pattern with the introduction of doorprizes and other awards. Some of the prizes to be given are a title to two steak dinners, a corsage, tickets to leading dances and produc- tions on campus, and other amusing gifts. Bill Sawyer's orchestra will furnish music for the dance. Tickets, which may be obtained from members of Wyvern or Sphinx, or at the desk of the Union on the night of the dance, will be $1. All IS tar Team To Be ChosenI Basketball Grou To Be Selected From Women In Tournament An all-campus star basketball team will be chosen of the women who join the intra-club tournament whichI will begin play Monday.1 Entrants who sign up on the Bar- bour Gymnasium bulletin board by noon that day will play under one of the eight captains chosen to head -the club teams. These are: Betty Steffen, '42, Jane Guinnane, '41Ed., Helen Gairels, '44, Louise Fulde, '41, Verna Geoffrion , Grad., Julienne Fenske, '42Ed., Margaret Johnson, 41Ed., and Nancy Bercaw, '43Ed. The teams, which are limited to three Physical Education Majors each, will spend the first few weeks in practice, with concentration on plays and formations. After this period of non-tournament play, com- petition among the teams will begin. All tournament games will be played Tuesday and Thursday after- noons; there will be eight members on each club squad. The all-star team will compete with outside schools at the close of the intra-club season. Any women who wish to practice scoring and timing may do so in the tournament after calling Pat Stelle. Independents To Hold Mass Meeting Today Committee Heads To Present Plans For Assembly Ball; All Attending May Sign For Work Assembly will hold its second mass meeting of the year at 4 p.m. today in the Grand Rapids Room of the League, according to Patricia Wal- pole, '41, president. All independent women on campus are invited to attend, especially jun- iors, for at this time Miss Walpole plans to announce the date for the opening of petitioning for Assembly's four elective offices. The main purpose of this meeting, however, is to provide an opportunity for all eligible students to sign up for work on committees of the As- sembly Ball, which will be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. March 7 in the League Ballroom. Helen Culley, '41, general chairman of the Ball, will announce the cen-. tral theme and give a short talk discussing general plans and ,enlarg-' ing on the theme title. She will intro- duce each of her co-workers on the central committee in turn. Each chairman will give a talk explain- ing the work which will be done by her committee. After the meeting. there will be an opportunity for those present to sign up for the committee of their preference. All members of the central com- mittee are reminded to bring their eligibility cards to the meeting. To Hold Open House The Westminster Guild of the First Presbyterian Church will hold its first open house of the new semester from 9 p.m. to midnight today. A varied program of entertainment is planned for the evening. To Give Spanish Tea A Spanish tea will be given from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. today in the Kala- mazoo Room of the League. Anyone interested in coming is asked to call Mrs. Wendt at 2-4471. Beta Kappa Rho Will Present Colonial Dance Beta Kappa Rho will present "Co- lonial Capers," an informal dance, as a Washington's birthday celebra- tion from 8:30 p.m. to midnight to- morrow in the Cave of the League. George and Martha Washington will both be there in silhouette along with other figures of their period, ac- cording to Sara Jane Hauk, '42, presi- dent of Beta Kappa Rho. The colon- ial atmosphere will be in evidence in both the decorptions and the music. Mary Worchester, '43,, chairman of decorations for the dance, will solve the problems of those who have never before found their ways to the Cave by setting picture posts at inter- vals to show the direction. The "hatchet" has been promised as a sur- prise feature of the evening. Music will be mainly waltzes, al- though some of the latest swing re- cordings will also. be played.'Kath- erine Call, '43, general chairman of the dance, announced that this is an informal mixer open only to members of the organization and their guests. C ASU AL'S for Friday and Saturday SHOWING CASUALS in all Postel Shades t Genie Of The Bright Green Hair Port rays Dual Role In 'Aladdin' 22 and 23 head size DANA RICHARDSON Michigan Theatre Bldg. 523 East Liberty St. By FRANCES AARONSON "We're nothing unusual in our own home Fifth Dimension," said A1- adin's Genie 'todaybas he explained hat the only problem is a social -ne-acute because of the rave pre- judice. "We are not to be confused with the Hy-genies," he emphasized.) The Genie with the bright red hair, heir to the ring, and the Genie with the bright green hair, heir to .he lamp, have constant arguments -bout the relative merits of their re- spective color schemes. William Mills, 'Grad, who plays bothi the parts in -he Children's Theatre musical "Al- !adin," which opens today at 3:30a o.m. at the Lydia Mendelssohn The- .tre, expressed his extreme preference for the green. Green Hair Is Fancy "Green hair is much more fancy, and so much more suave, he declared. The Genies argue, too, about their parents, who were first cousins. It hasn't been decided yet who was the more magically powerful of the two. Both Genies carry Alladin and his friends through an exciting round of musical adventure in the next play. "The most difficult stunt of all," comented Genie the Red, "was in carrying the Princess' castle from persia to Africa. Africano, the villain, cursed me for losing the whole first floor on the way over; my only re- gret is that he was on the second." Neither Genie expressed a prefer- ence for Africano. Greenie said, "I dislike mostly his horribly crude table manners. He is the most unsubtle creature in the story." Africano was not around to carry on the debate; he expects to tell his tale at the, theatre. Genies Have Harems "Back in Fifth Dimension we have a complete population of Genie's,, including the all important Persian harems," the Genies said in unison. Both declared that they would rather stay in Dimension than be forced to, serve Africano again. Red and Green, the Genies will both be on the Lydia Mendelssohn stage today and tomorrow in Richard Mc- Kelvey's slightly musical version of the children's favorite tale, from the Arabian Nights. Two performances will be given tomorrow, at 1:30 p.m. and again at 3:30.I Badminton Courts Open The badminton courts in Barbour Gymnasium are open for mixed play from 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Monday and Friday. Read The Daily Classi fieds Galson Wi On Skiing II Lecture Principles A lecture and demonstration, open to all men and women students, on preliminary instruction in skiing will be given at 4:30 p.m. today in the WAB lounge by Mr. Walter Galson. 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