SUNDAY, MAY 12, 1946 THE IfflUIMAN DAMV PAGE *iv 1PL E, i l' lFTVP Coed Positions WillBe Revealed at Tnsta lation Night Annual Ceremony Tomorrow To Reveal Women in Charge of, Various Activities for 1946-47 Mirror Drive For Coed Bat I League Houses Will Qive Final Dance Saturday Senior Ball Will Feature Music of Louis Prima Will Conclude Tomo~trcj ie th~ lo rs d fn.rnli Honor Societies WiIl Tap Members; Reception Will Be Given in League Coeds who will head women's ac- more and junior women who h tivities for 1946-47 will be installed in been outstanding in scholarship office at Installation Night, which activities. will be held at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow A highlight of Installation Ni in Rackham Lecture Hall. will be tapping of new members Positions to be revealed at the tra- Mortarboard, senior women's ho ditional ceremony include new mem- society; Senior Society, which h bers of League Council, Judiciary ors independent senior women; a Council and members of WAA Board, Scroll, honor society for affilial Assembly and Panhellenic Board. In senior women, Membership in V addition, orientation advisers will be honr societies is based upona announced as well as the chairmen tivities, scholarship and service. and committee members of JG Play Immediately following Installa and Soph Cabaret. Night, a reception llii be serveda Included on the program will be the th recepti( n will e anrOPd presentation of the three Ethel A. the recption will provide an op Mc~omic scolashis t soho-tunny for coeds to meet the McCormick scholarships to sopho- members of League Council, Judic] Council and the newly-tapped m Second A nnual ers of the senior honor socie: S e on A nnThe Installation Night central cc: mittee has urged that coeds att both the installation ceremoniesa M tl~e reception which will follow- iiasitogether in blo in the lecture hall, and a plan4 D ance lanned the seating arang emnt willb Dance Planned post"-tnn l u posted in the lolby of the ltacha .Building tomorrow. The committ Alpha Phi Omega, national service requests that sororities make I fraternity, will present the second stallation Night a required fun annual Memorial Day Dance from 9 Lion or count it as a house meetin p.m. to midnight Wednesday, May It is expected that a record bre 29, in the Union Ballroom. nisg crowd will attend the event si The dance was originated last year en cwmen petitioned this sp as part of the V-E Day celebration r n n various (Omm I, and proved to be such a success that, n roet hanv ever before ~i] Alpha Phi Omega decided to maked the merit system of petitioning it an annual affair. The dance will inteviewing was established be informal and is open to all stu- dents on campus. Bill Layton and his orchestra will ART ISTS NOTE: provide the music for the dancers. Tommy Lough, boogie woogie stylist, will furnish the intermission enter- e rt tainment. Decorations, following a Se ir uaP Miemorial Day theme, have been plan- ned for the dance. Tickets will be sold at the UnionAll students on campus may co League, and on the Diagonal, and' Pete in a poster coftest for Sen Union cards are not necessary to at- Ball, sponsored by the central co tend the dance. All women students mittee of the event. have 12:30 permission May 29, and Posters must be submitted betw Navy men have been granted late :30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Saturd permission for the dance. May 25, at the main desk oftheU Bud Keville is. general chairman ion. Judging will be handled by 1 of the dance, assisted by John John- dance committee, which reserves son, publicity; Chuck Lewis, fi- right to keep and use any post nance; John Buczynski, decorations, entered in the contest. and Sydney Zilber, building. Two prizes, each a $5 gift cert cate to be used in Ann Arbor, will awarded to the designers of the w Glee Club To Give ning posters. Each contestant m enter as many posters for judging Concert in Toledo; he wishes. T dOriginal effects in design and co Tro iwill count heavily in the judging, rio Wil erorm cording to Jim Artley, one of I publicity chairmen of the affair. TI The Women's Glee Club will pre- date, place, time, price, and "ser sent a concert at 9 p.m. Wednsday formal" should appear on the post at McComber High School in Toledo, and the entire layout should be a followed by a special buffet supper proximately thirty by eighteen inc for the group. es. The program will feature Lennis Each contestant should placeI Britton, Rose Derderian, Suzanne ----------- Smith and Ruthann Perry as soloists. Nancy Lewis and Augusto Malabet will dance the rhumba and conga accompanied by a Latin-American orchestra. A trio made up of Rose Derderian, Jean Thalner, and Len- nis Britton will sing. The Glee Club program will feature Latin American songs, and will close with the singing of Michigan songs. Miss Marguerite V. Hood is the direc- tor of the Women's Glee Club, and student directors are Rose Derder-r. ian, Ruthann Perry, and Lennis Brit- ton. Marian Riegel will be acting pianist for the concert, and Bernice Hall, president, will announce. Other officers are Dorothy Gray, vice-president; Barbara Everett, bus- iness manager; Libby Gauthier and .. Meg Schalk, librarians. , have and ght by nor on- nd led the ac - tion and por- new iary .em- ties. end and O jS of i be ee tn- ng. lak- ,nce ing ces nee RAY HERBECK . . . and his or- chestra will be featured at Crease Ball. Traditional Ball Will Be jiven By Law School Ray Merbeck and his orchestra will be featured at the 1946 Crease Ball, to be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Fri- day in the League Ballroom. The traditional dance is to be pre- sented by the senior class of the Law School, and will be the first Crease Ball since 1942, when the dance was held in the Law Club. Pete Price is chairman of the af- fair, which is to be a semi-formal dance. He has announced that the 1946 edition of the "Law Review," traditional Crease Ball publication, will be distributed to those attending in place of programs and favors. 1 SWe lasrayUIor i Assembly will sponsor the final butions to the mirror drive sponsoredi League House Tea Dance of the year by the Panhel-Assembly Ball com- . mittee. from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday in The mirrors collected in the cam- the League Ballroom. paign will be used for decorations for The dance which will climax the the "Heavenly Daze" ball which will series of League House Dances pre- be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., Friday, sented this semester is open only May 24, in the Intramural building. to coed residents of league houses. The women of all campus zones will Members of the decoration con- be nostesses at the affair. All campus rrittee will collect the boxes of men are invited to attend the after- mirrors from all women's dormi- noon dance. tories tomorrow. A gift contribution E Morh d his fiv will be presented to the house whose band will play for the dance. Mr- residents contribute the greatest hoes has provided the musical back- amount of mirrors--according to ground for previous League House pounds-per woman. The award Dances and has played for Willow of the certificate will be made Run parties. A coke bar will also be during intermission at the dance. featured at the dance. Patrons will Raymond Scott and his orchestra be housemothers of the various lea- including the Scott Quintet, will play gue house zones. at the third annual affair. Scott and Tickets for league house women his 16-piece orchestra was. formerly will be placed on sale from noon to 1 .tarred on the Luck Strike Hit Pa- p.m. Wednesday and Thursday in the rade. League. The number of tickets is Tickets will be sold in all women's limited and coeds are urged not to dormitories until May 20, when the wait until the last day to buy them. remaining ones are to be put on sale 'Tickets will be priced at twenty-five at a booth in the League. They are cents. No admission charge is re- $3 including tax. cluired for men. Newman Cub, Hilel Formats Scheduled for Friday, Saturday Spring Formal, the annual New- hillel Foundation will present its mnan Club dance, will be presented annual spring formal from 9 p.m. from 9 p.m. to I a.m. Friday in t he to midnight Saturday in the League. Rainbow Room of the Union. 1Ed Woodworth's orchestra, featur- ing Muriel Miller, vocalist, will furn- Tickets are now on sale at the ish music for the semi-formal affair. main desk of the Union, St. Mary's The dance will be called May Frolic, Chapel,and may also be obtained and the decorations will carry out from Newman Club members. The the spring theme. Real flowers will dance is open to all students on cam- be sold at the door, the proceeds of pus, and the committee has urged which will fro t-' the Twisqh N atinna1 June 6 Set as Date For Annual Dance Louis Prima, "The Man Who Plays Pretty for the People", will be featur- ed at the 1946 Senior Bail scheduled from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. Friday, June 6, in the Intramural Building. This year's Senior Ball will be open to all students, with no preference by class. "We came, we saw, we con- quered" is to be the theme of the event, staged annually as the climat- ic social event of graduating seniors. Prima, rendwned for his jazz num- bers, has promised to play sweet and Seniors Needed As Volunteers Seniors who are interested in work-' ing on the committee to plan recrea- tional activities for Senior Week are urged to contact either Paul John, at 2-3189, Helen Alpert or Nora Mac- Laughlin at the League, 2-3251 as soon as possible. Senior Week will begin Wednesday, June 19, and end Friday, June 21. This is a period when seniors will have little to do, and plans for a general mixer on Wednesday, a picnic on Thursday, and a dance on Fri- day have been submitted. The com- mittee requests that more students turn in ideas. "We are anxious to get other stu- dents' views on the situation and would appreciate their cooperation in planning activities for tha time," John stated. Wayward wisps and straggly ends of upswept and braided hair can be' easily remedied with a quick swoop of one of the lacquer pads now on the market. dance-ble music for Senior Ball. De- votees of swing will come in for their share in "Robin Hood", "Don't Squeeza Da Banana" and other of Prima's hot hit tunes. Women have been granted 2:30 permission for this semi-formal af- fair. Corsages will not be allowed at the ball, according to the custom established during war-time. Senior Ball is a longstanding tra- dition, and was originally a part of commencement *week activities. Fes- tivities opened with the ball on Sat- urday, followed by Baccalaureate ser- vices Sunday, with graduation taking place on Monday. Within recent years, Senior Ball was combined with J-Hop in Victory Ball, but last year returned to its previous state as a separate event. Committee heads for the dance represent Lit and Engineering col- leges. Co-chairmened by Dick Ford and George Abbott, committee chair- men include Gloria McElroy, Bliss Bowman and Fay Azenberg, tickets; Tom Hayes and Bob Snell, building; Cam Fisher and Pat Abel, decora- tion; Jean Gatfney and Bob Gold- man, music; Virginia Garrett, pat- rons; Norma Johnson and Bob Mor- rison, programs; and Rita Auer, Mar- jorie Wilson, and Jim Artley, pub- licity. Fraternity Honors Mothers with Party Motlers (f mnembers of Chi Phi fraternity are being honored this week end at a mothers' house party, The mothers arrived yesterday and, after a dinner at the house, were ini- tiated into the Chi Phi Mothers' Club. Mrs. William Lehman of De- troit, president of the Mothers' Club, conducted the special meeting fol- lowing the initiation. ster Contest Opens <. women to make the dance a coed-bid affair. Fund. ll gu IJui c Yolsi.' atn.luial m- ioi' )m~ een Jay, Un - Lhe the ers ifi- be rin- nay as lor ac- the 'he mi- ers, ap- ch his name, address, and telephone number on the back of each poster. If more information is desired, Jim Artley may be contacted at 2-1147. Woodworth To Play At Turquoise Dance Members of the Turkish Society of the University will present "Tur- quoise," a semi-formal dance, from 8:30 to midnight Friday, in the WAB. Ed Woodworth and his orchestra, a local organization, will be featured at the affair. During the intermission, and high- lighting the evening, nylons will be offered as door prizes. Also, to the two women wearing the most attrac- tive gowns, credit of $30 and $20 as first and second, preference, will be awarded by a local women's store. Tickets are available in the Un- ion, League, and the International Center. General co-chairmen for the dance Delegates from Newman Clubs at are Marshall Wallace and Barbara Michigan State College, Wayne Uni- Levin, and the chaperones are Dr. versity, Western Michigan College. and Mrs. Isadore Lampe and Prof: Jackson Junior College, and Flint and Mrs. William Haber. Junior College will attend the dance,I Ticket sales, open to the entire stu- which is the high point of the localdetbywlcoinealhswek Catholic student organization's social dent d ill contiue al this week. activities for the year. The tickets can be purchased at Hil- BilLyton a his yeamp alel Foundation, 730 Haven, or from Bill Layton and his campus orches- one of the student representatives on tra will be on the bandstand for th t campus. gala affair. A Filipino dance team and singer Gloria Ganon are two ofe the entertainment features pl,,nned here will l;e a meetig at 7:30 for intermission time. p.m. tomorrow in the WAR for all TiJme f1or a Chainge? Look sharp for mo/her For campus and holiday charm let its design a on her day wi/h a netu qitiw - change, double- and different hair-do! rttly hair slyle for you! 0 1205 SOUTH UNIVERSITY PHONE 4818 Decorations will follow a spring garden theme with enormous flower cutouts in vivid color adorning the ballroom. Special programs will be distributed as favors at the dance. The Union taproom will be open dur- ing and following intermission time for refreshments. Persons interested in working on the decorations committee of Olym- pie Ball to be held Tuesday, May 29 in the League Ballroom. All students planning to attend are asked to call Eleanore Daniels at 7330 or Jack Petosky at 9815. t .+* -; " ..: M '.y !r r . WAA Notices The following WAA meetings have been scheduled for this week: Tuesday: Crop and Saddle will meet at 5:10 p.m. at Barbour Gym. Wednesday: meeting of Lantern Night song representatives at 4:30 p.m. in the correctives room of Bar- bour Gym. All houses planning to participate in the song contest must be represented, since lots will be drawn for order of singing. * *~ * Softball games will be played as follows this week. In case of rain, games will be played the following day. If Tuesday games are rained out, they will be played at 7 p.m. Wednes- day and Wednesday games at 7 p.m. Thursday. Monday: Sorosis vs. Alpha Xi Delta at 5:10 p.m. Tuesday: Zone 10 vs. Jordan, Cou- zens 1 vs. Couzens 3, Gamma Phi Beta vs. Madison House at 7 p.m. Wednesday: Zone 9 vs. winner of Gamma Phi Beta-Madison House, i i 4 .. . . . .4.... date-minded COTTONS in cool Shadow black, shadow sheer, shadow cool. Just the thing for warn weather dancing dates or big city wear. Right - Shepherdess neckline dress for juniors . .. 19.95. Far right-lace- edged peplunI to fla/ter the /all and and sin. Misses' siZes . . . 22.95. x'. -a"1 - . .- ' 1 . , ., . " i ,_ J j ti ..t " > # ._ r r f Y h : ; , 4+ } ; .t , i 5 ,' t}r . 'H { , .: ; : , ' . ""rcei IIti ', " 7' _I ' r '' . 1Y.. YV y + F 1'\ p' ti h i