PAGE SIX T HE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1940 Kalamazoo Room Will Open Friday As ecreation Center Varied Types. Of Amusement To Be Offered Coke Bar Will Be Installed; Music For Informal Dancing To Be Furnished By Nickelodeon A coke bar, a bridge emporium, and a dance hall will be combined in the Kalamazoo Room of the League which will have its gala opening Friday night. The plans to make the room available to students have been put into effect under the chair- manship of Betty Baily, '42. The Kalamazoo Room will be open from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. every Friday night, and from 8 p.m. to midnight every Saturday night throughout the school year. Music for dancing will be available on the nickelodeon, and bridge tables will be provided for those who want them. Orders will ,be taken and refreshments served at the tables. Plans for the opening of the Kala- mazoo Room were first formulated, according to Miss Baily, when it was discovered that students have long desired a place where they can spend an entire evening at cards, dancing, and cokes or all three. Such a place has been difficult to locate up to now since all dormitories, sorority houses, and League houses are closed to men at 11:30 p.m. on week nights. "It is estimated," Miss Baily said, "that about 60 people can be accom- modated in the Kalamazoo Room." Prospective enlargement plans will be put into effect as soon as the de- mand warrants more space for the project. This is the first venture of its kind to be established on campus. The group in charge of the plans for the opening of the Room is a divi- sion of the Social Committee of the League under the chairmanship of Virginia Osgood, '41. Ticket Sale To Open Today For Forestry Tickets for the Paul Bunyan "For- mal," Forestry Club dance to be held from 9:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, Nov. 1, atthe League will go on sale today at the Union and League, it was an- nounced. Based on the theme of the gigantic Paul Bunyan, mythical woodsman and patron saint of Northern lum- bermen, the affair will be marked by the complete absence of formality. Everyone attending will wear old clothes. Included in the decorations will be a series of murals depicting the lumbering process. Bill Gail's orchestra will supply the music for dancing, and plans are being made for Virginia reels and other country dances to the music of a hill-billy band to intersperse the regular dancing. JGP Group To Meet There will be a meeting of the Central Committee of JGP at 5 p.m. today in the Council Room of the League. ,Suit. Are Practical Sorority Dinner Will Feature Musical Theme Musical notes of gold swinging on a background of white will decorate the annual Panhellenic Banquet which will be held at 6 p.m., Oct. 28, in the ballroom of the League, with the theme "Panhellenic Harmony." A musical staff, which will be be- hind the speaker's table, will have gold notes, each representing a dif- ferent sorority, on a field of white, according to Bonnie Lowden, '42, chairman of the banquet. Large pins of each sorority will decorate the walls of the room and a huge Pan- hellenic crest will be placed at the end of the room. Table decorations will consist of autumn leaves scattered down the centers of the tables, and gold pro- grams will be at each woman's place. The guest speaker of the evening will be Dr. Margaret Bell, and Dean Alice Lloyd will also be present to give a short address. Registrar Ira M. Smith will present the scholarship award to the sorority having the highest average during the past year. Beth O'Role, '40, rushing secretary of the °past formal rushing season, will give a report on rushing. Miss Lowden will act as toastmistress, Annabel Van Winkle, '41, president of Panhellenic Council, and Lee Hardy, '41, president of the League, will address the gathering of soror- ity women Tickets To GoI On Sale Today For Banquet I Chairman Discloses Committee Members For Assembly Affair To Be Held Nov. 4 In League Tickets for the Assembly Banquet, to be' held Nov. 4, will go on sale to- day in the League Lobby and com- mittee members have been announced by Jean Hubbard, '41, general chair- man. Members of the ticket committee will be present at the Assembly Tea, which will be held from 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Friday, and tickets may be -;btained from them at this time. Marjorie Polumbaum, '42, who is chairman of the ticket committee gas announced that they will also be .old at the door, Nov. 4. Progress Chart To Be Kept A progress chart will be kept Throughout the period to mark the :peed and success which the sale is neeting in the four divisions of As-1 sembly. These four parts are the dormitories, the League house group, the Ann Arbor Independents and 3eta Kappa Rho. The chart will be ;osted by the ticket booth in the League lobby. It is under the direc- tion of Mary Mitchell, '42, chair- man of publicity, and her committee. Assisting Miss Mitchell with pub- licity are Ruth Clark, '43, Rhoda Le- shine, '42, Adelaide Carter, '42, Shir- ley Hecker, '43, Maida Cohan, '41, and Jean Mieras, '42. Committee members have also been announced to work on tickets, decor- ations and patrons. Helping Dorothy Anderson, '42SM, with patrons are Roberta Holland, '43, Cleo Cavert, '43, and Jean Mieras, '42. Decorations chairman, Virginia Capron, '43, has the following women to assist her: Ma iett Rolleston, '43, Ruth Burlingame, '43, Shirley Ris- burg, '42Ed, Doris Jones, '42, Roberta Howard '42, Betty Partinfelder, '43, Emilie Root, '42A, Mary Jane Den- nison, '42, Margaret Evans, '43, Vir- ginia Ahlstrom, '41, and Miss Mieras. Ticket Committee Announced Assistant chairmen on the ticket committee are Anne Crowley, '41, from the League houses, Betty Jane Auirey, '43, of the dormitories, and Lee Keller, '41, who is representing Ann Arbor Independents. The 30 members of the ticket comnittee in- clude Elizabeth Newman, '43, Ger- trude Inwood, '43, June Fredericks, To Head Banquet 150 Entries Swim In Meet Gamma Phi Beta Wins Trophy As Janet Clarke Scores High Gamma Phi Beta took the watery lead over 24 organizations opponents ~esterday to win the annual all-cam- cas swimming meet with a total -ore of 30 points, taking the trophy which last year went to Mosher Hall. Janet Clarke, '44, of Kappa Alpha I heta out-swam over 150 Qppenents o score the highest individual total .f 16, while Margaret Davidson. '43A, ;f Alpha Omicron Pi, kicked into a ,lose second with 15 points. Third- nigh individual score went to Evelyn1 3pamer, '42Ed, of Gamma Phi Beta, vho brought down 12 points: fourth -iace was taken by Marianne Tay-j lor, '42, of Chi Omega, wi'h11 points, ,xhile Dorothy Johnson, '44, of Jor- dan Hall, claimed fifth place with a, score of 10., Kappa Alpha Theta rated third in the organization score with a total of 19; Chi Omega, with 17 checks lithered into fourth place, while Jordan Hall, with 16 points, took1 fifth. Meeting Of League Social Committee Will Be Held Today The Social committee of the League will hold its meeting in the Grand Rapids Room of the League today at 4:30 p.m. instead of tomor- row as was announced in The Daily yesterday. All members are expect- ed to be present, Virginia Osgood, '-1, chairman of the committee an- nounced, or they will be officially dropped from the committee roll. Women desirous of working on the committee but who have not yet signed up for it are also invited to attend this meeting to join the group, Miss Osgood said. Any old or new members who cannot attend the meeting today must call the head of their group to explain their absence, she stated. Heading the groups are Marne Gardner, '42, for those whose names begin with the letters from A-E; Betty Fariss, '42, F-I; Louise Keat- ey, 42, J-P; and Jeanne Goudy, '42, Q-Z. Carillon Tower Contains Fine Musical Library For Students JEAN HUBBARD '41, Janet Sibley, '41, Laura Katzenel, '41, Lois Drummond, '43, Ruth Krein son, '41, Miriam Rubin, '41, and Miss Dennison. Continuing the list are Jane Ros- ing, '42, Earla Smith, Miss Evans, Maida Cohan, '41, Betty Altman, '42, Dorothy Schloss, '43, Norma C-ns- berg, '41, Constance Gilbertson, '43, Elizabeth Farrell, '41, Janet Dickin- son, '41, Harriet Pratt, '43, Ruth An- nell. '41, Beverly Cohen, '42, Judith Donnav, '42, Phyllis Bernstein, '43, Virginia Smirl, '41, Grace Rozel, '42, Miss Howard, Miriam Westerman, '43, Rosemary Maljan, '43, and Lor- raine Judson, '43. Boxing Glove Mittens Add Punch To Outfit Boxing glove mittens have invaded the feminine wardrobe for the win- ter season. Designers are not content to let the man-tailored shirt and suit be the only masculine apparel in a wo- man's wardrobe, and so have added boxing glove mittens. These mittens are similar to the regular boxing gloves, being laced up the back and having a rib across the top of the fingers. They are lined with fleece for extra warmth. Wedding Is Announced Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Sands, of Kan- sas City, Mo., announce the marriage of their daughter, Virginia, on Oct. 5 in Clinton, Iowa, to Stephen Hann, '41E, of Kansas City. By RHODA LESHINEC "Everything that makes for the study of good music, including ap- proximately 25,000 records, composes the School of Music Library in the! Carillon," declared librarian Meyer Victor, Grad. Primarily for School of Music stu- dents, the Library occupies part of the sixth and seventh floors of the Tower as well as maintaining four private rooms in the building. Here sheet music and a collection of piano, voice and violin solos are available to students for use. Ar-, rangements of chamber and choral music and full orchestral scores are also obtainable. Records Are Available Records for use within the build- ing are supplied to students enrolled in music courses upon payment of a two-dollar semester fee. This en- titles them to listen to the discs be- tween the hours of 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. The School of Music provides all the supplies and equipment for the Library in addition to furnishing musical instruments which may be borrowed by music students through the facilities of the Library. Instru- ments may be procured free of charge by those enrolled in private or class courses requiring their use. Microfilm Library Planned Victor, who came to Michigan this summer after receiving his Master's Degree from the University of Wis- consin and teaching high school mu- sic for three years, revealed that newest plans are to build a Micro- film library. Microfilming is the process of copying -music from books onto film which later may be pro- jected on a wall or read from the machine itself. Of ich assistance in the class- room, the machine will cut down considerably the cost of supplying individual sheet music. 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