WEDNESDAY. MAY 15, 1946 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE 1 t Navy, Maise nit To Hold Final Ball M A Ma.y 3 tUnion Jess Stacy's Orchestra To Furnish Music; Guests Will Present Graduation Honors During Senior Ceremony at Farewell Dance The Navy Farewell Ball, the last Navy dance to be presented on cam- pus, will highlight the week of fare- well celebrations on Friday, May 31, in the Rainbow Room of the Union. Members of the Navy and Marine unit and their guests will dance to the music of Jess Stacy and his fif- teen-piece orchestra. Sharing the spotlight as featured entertainers will be Jess Stacy, who is noted for his modern piano stylings, and his wife, Lee Wiley, vocalist. Played With Bands Stacy's orchestra has promised the best in popular dance music for the Farewell Ball. Before forming his own band, he ganed experience in the music world by playing with Benny Goodman, Bob Crosby, and later with Tommy Dorsey. The dance is being presented as the last social event for all naval and marine personnel. Tickets for the affair, priced at five dollars, are now on sale at the West Quadrangle. Elaborate decorations carrying out a farewell theme have been planned by the committee. Winning Company Honored The Grand March, honoring the winning company of the competitive drills, will be performed by the sen- iors and their dates immediately fol- lowing intermission. During the sen- ior ceremonies the men will be pre- sented with ensign bars, or if going on inactive duty, with a U. S. Naval Reserve discharge emblem, by their guests for the ball. A few appropri- ate farewell songs will be sung after the ceremonies. The battalion parade and review will be held Wednesday, May 29, in the presence of Navy officers from Washington, D.C., and Great Lakes, and University officials. The colors will be awarded to the company ac- quiring the greatest number of points. There will be one marine and four navy companies competing. To Hold Open House On Memorial Day, the public will be invited to an Open House at Newman Club To Hold Formal Tickets for the all campus New- man Club Spring Formal are on sale now at the main desk of the Union and at St. Mary's Chapel, and may also be purchased from club mem- bers. Scheduled from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday at the Rainbow Room of the Union, the semi-formal affair will offer another opportunity for coeds to repay their dates, and women are urged to make this a coed-bid dance. Any student on campus is eligible to attend the formal which is not solely a coed-bid dance. Sponsored by the local Catholic students' organ- ization, the event will be the high point of Newman Club social activi- ties in the state. Delegates from Michigan State Col- lege, Wayne University, ,Western Michigan College, Flint Junior Col- lege and Jackson Junior College will represent Newman Clubs at their respective schools. Bill Layton and his campus orches- tra will be spotlighted on the band- stand with Patti DuPont sharing vo- cal honors with Layton. Intermis- sion entertainment will feature a Filipino dance team in native dances and singer Gloria Glennon. Decorations will follow a spring garden theme and huge flower cut- outs in vivid colors will adorn the walls of the ballroom. The Union taproom will be open during and following intermission time. No cor- sages are to be worn to the Spring Formal. North Hall. Exhibits will be shown by the various departments of Naval Science and Tactics at the Univer- sity, and will consist of displays of equipment used in instruction as well as some actual drills. In the evening a buffet supper will be given in the West Quad to which JESS STACY.. . students may invite their parents or their dates. After the dinner a short variety show will be presented by various members of the unit in one of the mess halls of the West Quad. VLeddinrgs Engagements Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. McCracken announced the engagement of their daughter, Martha, to Phillip B. Mar- cellus, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Phil- lip B. Marcellus, of Rockford, Ill., at a golf tea recently. Miss McCracken is a graduate of the literary college and was affilia- ted with Alpha Xi Delta sorority. Mr. Marcellus, a senior in the architec- ture school, is a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. The wedding is expected to take place in the fall. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Feinberg of Bayonne, N.J., announced the en- gagement of their daughter, Carol, to Mr. Martin Feferman, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Fishman of Newark, N.J. Miss Feinberg is a member of the class of '47 and is affiliated with Al- pha Epsilon Phi. Mr. Feferman is a senior in the medical school and is a member of Zeta Beta Tau, Sphinx and Michi- gama, men's honor societies, Phi Del- ta Epsilon, medical school fraternity, and Galens. The wedding will take place July 7 in Asbury Park, N.J. ** * Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wick of Do- wvagiac recently announced the mar- riage of their daughter, Jean, to Philip Cobb, son of Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Cobb of Battle Creek. Mrs. Cobb graduated from the ar- chitecture college in February and was affiliated with Alpha Gamma Delta sorority. The couple was mar- ried April 27, in St. Andrew's Epis- copal church, Ann Arbor. There will be a meeting of the decorations committee of Panhel- Assembly Ball at 4:30 p.m. tomor- row in the ABC Rooms of the Lea- gue. Barbara Hitchcock, commit- tee co-chairman, emphasized that it is important that all committee members attend. League 1ouses Will Sponsor Final Tea Dance Tickets for the final League House dance of the year to be held from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday in the Lea- gue, will go on sale to all coed leaguer house residents from noon to 1 p.m. today and tomorrow in the League lobby. The number of tickets is limited and they will be sold to the first com- ers. Tickets will be sold tomorrowv only if any remain and the dance is open to women of all league house zones. Ed Morhous and his five piece band from Ypsilanti will provide the music for the afternoon dance. Morhous has played for previous tea dances and also for recent Willow Run dances. A coke bar will be featured for the enjoyment of the dancers.r All campus men are invited to the dance, and no admission fee will be charged. Patrons will be house- mothers of the zones. Rosalyn Long, chairman, and Mar- cie Dubinsky, assistant chairman, ex- pressed their appreciation for the cooperation received from league house coeds in presenting the series of dances. "We hope that every woman living in a league house will attend this final dance and contrib- ute to its success," Miss Long added. Nursing School1 Wil.l Give Tea For 'U' Coeds All women on campus who are in- terested in nursing as a career are invited to attend a tea given by the faculty of the School of Nursing,1 from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday, Mayt 21 at Couzens Hall., During the party, there will be1 planned tours of the educational di- vision of the hospital and of the student nurses' residence halls in order to familiarize the guests with1 the general surroundings. "The purpose of this tea," accordingr to Miss Rhoda Reddig, director of the School of Nursing and Nursing Ser- vice at University Hospital, "is to interest young women in the excellent future of nursing. Many qualified young women are still needed for pub- lic health nursing, nursing education, institutional and industrial nursing." Miss Reddig also said, "We are all interested in the achievement and maintenance of good health in the United States, as well as in every other country. A career of nursing offers women the opportunity of be- ing the health workers both in this country and abroad." Fashion Versatility Is Shown in Cobra Cobra has sprung into fashion news. This spring the leather is be- ing handled in a fabric fashion, as is seen in the numerous suits and dress- es with cuffs and buttons of cobra. 'Gautnlets and umbrella covers are also being featured, and if one de- sires, a clever skullcap and handbag set may be added to complete the ensemble. The favorite reptile shoes come in many colors . . . lavender, light green and yellow among the newest. Annual Coe-Bd Ball To Feature Raymond Scott Panhel - Assembly ball, entitled AM S "Heavenly Daze," will be held from faeI 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, May 24, in face t the Intramural building, featuring We the music of Raymond Scott and his believ( orchestra. heard Corsages will be permitted at this about third annual combined Panhellenic while and Assembly ball, which is the only A gi semi-formal woman-bid affair of the full of g year. spect la Tickets are now on sale in all just wh women's residences and are $3 in- cluding tax. A booth will be set up HE in the League Monday where the gan the remaining tickets will be sold., dampen Stubs from the tickets, which are that be. to be filled out with the buyer's namef and address are used as a means of little checking if the ticket is lost. The the ne ticket committee, headed by Virginia are th Olberding and Jean Engstrom, ad- anoth vised all women purchasing tickets to hand in their stubs to the seller. Nos In line with the ethereal theme part of of the dance, the 12 basketball to ther baskets lining the dance floor will everyon be covered with cheesecloth clouds ALL G and mirrored stars. A huge, re- that fleeting crescent moon will hang "Is that from the vaulted ceiling, and a large, mirrored shooting star with smaler trailing stars are to cover Tu r l thefa end of the ball room. Entrances to the ball room will be transformed into "Pearly Gates" Nume and two "Nectar Bars", one immedi- by the ately inside the vestibule and another versity1 on the main landing of the IM build- semi-for ing, will serve gingerale. 8:30 p. W AB. Women students attending the The o dance will have 1:30 a.m. permis- ning are sion, and Naval personnel have been one of t granted 2 a.m. permission. awarded Any house whose mirrors have not gowned been collected are asked to bring Ions wil them to the Game Room of the Lea- and one gue today or tomorrow, according to Two j Leslie McVey and Barbara Hitch- and five cock, co-chairmen of the decoration as judg committee. Accordir Announcements of the winning awards house in the recently ended mirror in taste drive will be made during the inter- son to t mission at Panhel-Assembly ball. In ad+ afai... By LOIS KELSO SHAKEN, I am shattered, I have been to Percy Jones hospital and o face with the Horrors of War. complacent civilians have no idea what those boys went through, e me. The weather we have heard about, the woman we have about, the K-rations we have heard about, but did you ever hear the cap-and-tie relay or nose-to-nose? Hang on to your hats I unfold my atrocity story. roup of bright-eyed Michigan coeds arrived at Percy Jones recently, good intentions and properly instructed ("Remember gentlemen re- dies. It is up to you to make the advances." - I'm still wondering en an advance stops being ladylike). IETERANS seemed glad to see the women, even if they were Michi- coeds. Gargoyle, please take note. However, they seemed a bit ed when confronted by the entertainment provided by the powers irst on the agenda was the cap-ani-tie relay. In this red-hot number a woman ties a piece of lovely baby-blue ribbon around ek of a veteran and puts a paper cup on his head. The ornaments hen removed by the next woman in line, who transfers them to er lucky veteran, and so on down the line. c-to-nose is another thriller. The woman puts the outer, or sliding, a matchbox on her nose and transfers it, without benefit of hands, nose of a veteran. It is removed by another coed, and so on until e's nose is sore. 3OOD CLEAN FUN, but, as one of the veterans, whose age, with of most of the majority, I should estimate at about thirty, remarked, what you kids learn in college?" kish Society To Give Dance Friday rous gifts will be presented Turkish Society of the Uni- to guests of "Turquoise," a mal dance, to be held from n. to midnight, Friday, in the utstanding prizes of the eve- e credits of $30 and $20 from he local women's stores, to be to the two most attractively coeds. Also, two pairs of ny- 1 accompany the first choice pair to the runner-up. uries, consisting of five men women, will be chosen to act es in selecting the winners. ng to the dance committee, will disclose the differences of the fairer sex in compari- he masculine preferences. dition, ten voice recordings will be offered as door prizes and enlarged photographs will be given to each guest. Ed Woodworth and his orchestra, a local organization, will be featured at the affair. Decorations for the dance will cent- er around the color, turquoise, in keeping with the name of the affair and various aqua designs and figures will line the walls. Weather permit- ting, the terrace leading off the main lounge of the WAB building, also, will be decorated with Chinese lan- terns. .Members of the committee are Faruk Sabuncu, chairman, Turan Muskara and Altimur Tanrioer. Honored guests of the evening will be Prof. and Mrs. Robert H. Sher- lock and Dr. and Mrs. Esson M. Gale. Tickets are available in the Union, League and the International Center.. Sale of Tickets For Lawyers' Dance Continues Tickets for the Crease Ball, to be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday in the League Ballroom, are still available, according to Peter Price, general chairman of the dance. Tickets may be purchased from Allan Miller, Edward Dleake, and from Price. As has always been the custom, Crease Ball will be open only to law students and their guests. The committee in charge of the affair has ruled that corsages will be banned at the dance. Crease Ball is traditionally presented annually by senior law students. Herbeck To Play The 1946 Crease Ball will present the music of Ray Herbeck and his orchestra. Herbeck's orchestra, which has been reorganized following the discharge of its members from the armedforces, features "music with romance." The group, which 'is made up of Herbeck's former college class- mates at the University of Californ- ia, plays sweet and swing music, along with instrumental and vocal novelties. Herbeck's orchestra has also been heard in radio broadcasts over four major networks. With his pre-war group he made numerous appear- ances on national network programs, with Aerbeck"himself featured as saxophonist. "Raw Review" Distributed As a special feature, dancers will be given copies of the 1946 edition of the "Raw Review", traditionally distributed at Crease Balls. The mag- azine, containing jokes and cartoons, is published as a takeoff on the school's well-known "Law Review." Price has announced that the dance is to be a semi-formal affair. Women attending Crease Ball will receive late permission of 1:30 a.m. Those serving on the dance com- mittee include Richard Smith, Mil- ton Solomon, peake, Jerry Brown and Ned Glad. The Michigan Dames Bridge Group will meet at 8 p.m., today (Wednes- day), at the home of Mrs. Alfred Scheips, 1511 Washtenaw. I here they arelI ,6WA 0 1 hand-mlade *. 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