THE 'MIGtAN -DAILY Galens To Present Annual Caduceus Ball Feb.21 In Union Committees, Co-Chairmen Are Selected Christensen And McNicholas Will Head Traditional Formal; Ticket Sale To Be Restricted Caduceus Ball, sponsored by Gal- ens Honorary Medical Society, takes its traditional Feb. 21 as a date and the Union Ballroom as a place for the annual formal. Robert Chrisensen, '41M, and John McNicholas, '41M, are the general chairmen of the dance. Howard Lawrence, '41M, has been namedl decorations. chairman and he is to be assisted by Donald Effler, '41M, and Logan Hovis, '42M. Mason May- nar, tickets chairman, will be assist- ed by Charles Tolle, '42M. Chairmen Are Named Robert Medlar, '41M, is to head thei programs committee with William Wright, '42M, assisting. The pub- licity chairman is Herbert Pedersen, '41M, to be aided by George Schai- berger, '42M, and head of the pa- trons committee is Wayne Stewart, 41M, with William Purfield, '41M, as assistant. Tickets sale for the dance is to be restricted to doctors and medical stu- dents. The date of the opening of the tickets sale is to be announced later, as are plans for the orchestra and decorations. Last Year's Ball Described Last year's decorations included caricatures of professors and instruc- tors of the College. of Medicine, hung on the wall, and the music at last Caduceus Ball was furnished" by Griff Williams and his orchestra. John Hodson, '40M, wasrchairman that year. Hours of the dance, will be from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. This week's concert in the Union series of classical hours, to be held at 4 p.m. today in the North Lounge, will begin with Beetho- ven's Seventh, and include a pro- gram of waltzes, according to Bob Samuels, '42, who is in charge of the event. Dim inutive Vocalist To Appear Here This Weekend With Scott Assembly Ba 11 I i Set Designer n "71 0 ~~ Club Will Sponsor Guest Day Concert By LOIS SHAPERO She's a tiny bundle of rhythm, a seventeen year old internationalist, this Gloria Hart, who was launched on her career just three weeks ago with Raymond Scott and his orches- tra, and is coming to the Michigan > ' -1 Theatre with*the band Friday and Saturday and to sing for the J-Hop- pers, Feb. 14. Gloria was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina and has attended schdols in England and France. She came to America at the age of fourteen with her mother, and they settled in Chi- cago. She had long been a fan of Scott, had collected many of his rec- ords, and when he came out to Chi- cago on an extended road tour, she summoned up all her courage and wrote him for an audition. Made Home Recording When asked to send in a record of her singing, she made a record with his orchestra in the back-ground on her home recordiograph. - Scott had been looking for a girl vocalist and on this particular afternoon he had listened to sixty records sent in by hopeful singers. All except ten were eliminated and these were given per- sonal auditions. Then the number was cut to three, and finally Gloria was selected. She has a husky lovely voice which came to her naturally and in the show she uses it to good advantage in four numbers, for each of which Lily Dache has designed hats for her to wear. Music Inspired Hats The first number is "Egyptian Barn Dance," a song written by Raymond Scott which inspired a black felt hat with a broad band of red kid around the brim. Hanging from this band are a series of 'tiny Egyptian figures fashioned of kid in charac- teristic poses. With the hat Gloria wears black suede gloves and bag trimmed with the same kid band and figures. The second hat is featured "In an Eighteenth "Century Drawing Room," and is a little model of light blue feathers with a pink face veil, tiny musical notes forming the lace- like edge. "War Dance for Wooden Indians," inspirdd a tight fitting navy blue suede skull cap fashioned like a baseball cap, with a visor Interviewing J To Start Today Central Committee Positions Open To All Independents, c Assembly President Announces Interviewing for the annual As- sembly Ball will begin from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. today and continue at these hours through Friday in the Kala- mazoo Room of the League. Patricia Walpole, '41, president of Assembly, wishes to remind all in- dependent women who have peti- tioned and who are planning to be interviewed, to come to their inter- views with their ideas well in mind. She emphasized the fact that this was the applicants only opportunity to sell her plans to the interviewing; board, and that it is on this basis that appointments will be made. Even though not petitioning for general chairmanship, each applicant should have formulated a theme for the dance and made plans for the or- ganization and running of the parti- cular committee in which she is in- terested, Miss Walpole advised. Interviewing will be conducted by a group of representatives from the Assembly Board. These include the four officers of Assembly and the presidents of each of the four groups of the organization; the League houses, the dormitories, Ann Arbor Independents and Beta Kappa Rho. The interviewers are, then, Miss Wal- pole, Elizabeth Lyman, '41, Betty Hall, '41, and Anne Crowley, '41, Barbara Ann Friedberg, '43, Frances Nevin, '41, Jean Krise, '42, and Sara Jane Hauke, '42. Central committee positions which are open for competition are gen- eral chairman (music), assistant general chairman (merits), co-heads of publicity, tickets and decorations, finance, and chairman in charge of patrons and programs. Eligibility cards should be brought to the in- terview. Freshman Luncheon Petitioning To Open Petitioning for chairmanship fo'r the Freshman Honor Luncheon will begin today and last through Friday, Annabel Van Winkle, '41, president of Panhellenic, announced yesterday. The luncheon, which is an annual affair honoring the freshman from each sorority house on campus who received the best grades in her pledge class the previous semester, will be held the early part of the new se- mester. Petitioning is open to sophomore and junior delegates of Panhellenic and interviewingnwill be held from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. next Tuesday. B uitts Scenery The Faculty Women's Club will sponsor a concert program at 3 p.m. Thtoday in the Lydia Mendelssohn The- F or Theatre atre, with the Michigan Dames in- vited as special guests of the club. Behind the scenes, or more literally Prof. Thor Johnson, of the School in the midst of them, Bob Mellencamp of Music, will conduct the Little and his crew of scenists can be found Symphony Orchestra in a musical almost any day at any hour working program. Faculty women are re- beneath the stage of the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre on flats for coming attractions. Mr. Mellencamp began this year to design and make the scenery for the Children's Theatre productions when it became evident that the minor ac- cidents pf past years were becoming too disconcerting for the youthful players of the productions. In one instance a falling tree, fortunately a fabricated one, scored a direct hit on the heroine's head, while use of a ping pong table for a bed by a scenery crew with no time to make a real bed, resulted in a fold up act for its occupant. The University Hospital School of Nursing Alumnae Association will meet at 8 p.m., tomorrow in Couzen's Hall. Dr. WV. P. Lemnon will address the group on the sub- ject. "Human Moods in Litera- ture." minded that today is to be guest day. and are urged to bring their, friends to the concert. 74**1 / r ._ GLORIA HART of vari-colored feathers, in which brown is the predominating color. Gloria's singing is personality it-I self, and in the short time she has been with the orchestra she has won many fans.- Fratern ities"Choose New Semester Heads Alpha Sigma Phi fraternity has an- nounced its newly elected officers for the coming semester: Louis Toth, '41E, president; John Wilkie, '42E, vice-president; Bob Hoffman, '43, re- cording secretary; Bill Chase, '41, house manager; Ken Nelson, '42E, assistant house manager; Alex Wil- kie, '42E, corresponding secretary; Orville Roeglin, '42, marshall; and Charles Daniels, '42E, custodian. Delta Tau Delta announces its election of a new treasurer, John Dighton, '42. During this year's fall season in the Children's Theatre, sets have been constructed under Mr. Mellencamp's guidance for the "Princess and the Pea" and "Children, 1777." At pres- ent the stage requirements for "Han- sel and Gretel," dance pantomime to begin with its four performance run Friday, have called for the construe- tion of a small hut, a gingerbread house, a stove, and a cage. Trees and bushes from past sets will be used in the outdoor scenes. Mr. Mellencamp works chiefly with strip lumber, muslin, water paints, and feminine carpenters whom, he contends, are often better at their work than boys, it all depending upon interest and the willingness to try to do the work. Broad techniques and bright colors are important in scen- ery construction, Mr. Mellencamp says, inasmuch as too detailed workt cannot be seen by the audience. In addition all scenery for the Lydia Mendelssohn stage must be con- structed with an eye to fitting it through a nine-foot square hole in the floor of the stage. Thus large pieces must be made either to fold or to come apart. Scenery on the stage is kept erect by means of props and braces; during changes it is pushed off stage but snot removed from the wings. IJGP Meeting Announced There will be a meeting of the art division of the publicity com- mittee for JGP at 5 p.m. today in the third floor drafting room of the School of Architecture. BlouseoofotheoMonth 3.50 "STRIPES FOREVER"... Spring-fresh blouse with new features all its own. Notchless deep V-neck, flagpole sleeves and turn-back cuffs. Of Mallinson's "An.gelskin" rayon crepe in red, blue, yellow, rose. GOODY&FAR 's LARGEST SELECTION IN TOWN ! SPORTS HEADQUARTERS for SADDLE SHOES C A' BROWN andWHITE CALF...SMOKED ELK and BROWN SCALF...BROWN and BEIGE RUFFIE! C'.. Red rubber or crepe sole! So inex pensive! -;: prigp l \.0 .. 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