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May 19, 1946 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1946-05-19

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAiLY

PAGI

WRA Will Present Annual Lantern Night May

2

8

Prima To Play at Senior Ball

Singing Groups
To Participate

'Heavenly Daze' Tickets On Sale
Tomorrow, Tuesday at League

June

7 in Intramural Building

I

n Program

Line of March Will Proceed
From Diagonal to League;
Faculty To Judge Song Contest
The Women's Athletic Association
will sponsor its annual Lantern Night
Tuesday, May 28, at Hill Auditorium.
Singing groups from 30 women's
residences will participate in the
singing contest, which is to be judged
by Miss Marguerite Hood, director of
the Women's Glee Club, Prof. Hardin
Van Duersen, Choral Union director,
and Prof. David Mattern, director
of the Men's Glee Club.
Line of March
The line of march will form at
the center diagonal, and will be led
by the five senior women who have
served as presidents of League organi-
zations, including Nora MacLaughlin,
League president, Ruthann Bales,
judiciary chairman, Barbara Osborne,
WAA president, Helen Alpert, Assem-
bly president, and Marian Johnson,
president of Panhellenic.
The group will march from the
center of the campus to the Engineer-
ing Arch, and from there to the
League, following East University
Ave. The singers will then form an
"M" near the League Fountain.
After singing "The Yellow and
Blue" and the "Star Spangled Ban-
ner," the coeds will enter Hill Audi-
torium for the song contest. Groups
will sing in an order which has been
arranged by drawing lots among
house representatives.
Songs Judged by Points
The songs of the groups will be
judged by a point system set up by
the judges. The basis for award of
singing honors will be interpretation
and artistic effect, intonation, ac-
curacy, rhythm, tone, diction, and
presentation and appearance.
Committees for Lantern Night were
announced by Jean Brown, WAA
President, and include Barbara Mc-
Neill, line of march, Jerry Gaffney,
song leaders, Rae Keller, patrons
Mary Lou Ware, judges, and Betty
Hahneman, publicity.
School of Nursing.
To Hold Coed Tea
All women on campus who are in-
terested in nursing as a career are in-
vited to attend a tea given by the
faculty of the School of Nursing from
3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday at Couzens
Hall.
The party will feature planned}
tours of the educational division of
the hospital and of the student nurses'
residence halls. The purpose of the
tea is to acquaint undergraduate wo-
men with the future possibilities of
the nursing profession.

All remaining tickets for Panhel-
Assembly Ball, "Heavenly Daze," will
be on sale tomorrow and Tuesday at
a booth in the League lobby.
The dance, which will be held from
9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday in the Intra-
mural Building, will feature Raymond
Scott and his orchestra with Doro-
thy Collins as vocalist.
Scott, who comes here following
a stand at a Detroit ballroom, is the
originator of the Scott Quintet,j
and a new musical aggregation,
the Secret Seven, which is part of
his 15-piece band.
In addition to his position as an
,rchestra leader, Scott is the compo-
ser of such novelties as "Hucklberry
Duck," "Twilight in Turkey," "In a
Magic Garden," "Toy Trumpet," and
)ver 150 more.
The dance, which will be semifor-
mal due to the difficulty in obtain-
ing men's formal attire, is open to
all women students in the Univer-
sity, and is the only all-campus
coed-bid affair of the year.
Tickets are $3, including tax, and
ticket stubs should, be turned in to
the seller when tickets are purchased.
The award to the house collect-
ing the largest amount of mirrors
for decorations will be made dur-
ing intermission at the dance. These
mirrors will be used to make glittery
stars to cover the walls, and a huge
crescent moon will be hung high in
the vaulted ceiling.
Late permission of 1:30 a.m. has
been granted to women attending
the dance, and Naval personnel have
been granted 2 a.m. permission.
All unsold tickets for the Panhel-
All Students Urged
To Submit Posters
Saturday at Union
Posters of the Senior Ball poster
contest must be submitted between
8:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Saturday
at the main desk of the Union, and
any student on campus is eligible to
compete for the two first prizes.
Completed posters should measure
approximately thirty by eighteen
inches, ,and must carry the following
information: Senior Ball, 10 p.m. to
2 a.m., Friday, June 7, IM Building,
semi-formal, and the ticket price, $4
including tax.
Contestants mqy enter as many
posters as they wish and judging
will be handled by the central com-
mittee of the ball. All posters will
be kept by the committee and will
be used for publicity purposes.
League House Presidents will
net meet Tuesday as scheduled.
For further information, call Al-
lene Golinkin, 2-4471.

Assembly Ball must be turned in to-
morrow or Tuesday to a booth in the
League, which will be open from 5
to 5:30 p.m.; according to Virgina
Olberding, co-chairman of the ticket
committee.
WAA Notices
Games in the interhouse softball
tournament will be played this week
according to the following schedule.
In case of rain each game will be
shifted to the next day and
played alongtwith those scheduled
.For information concerning cancella-
tions, team managers may call the
WAB after 3 p.m. the day of the
game.
Monday: Sorosis vs. Alpha Phi, 5
p.m. to 6:30 p.m.; Mosher vs. Cou-
zens I, Madison House vs. Zone 9 at
7 p.m.
Tuesday: Martha Cook vs. Tri-
Delta, 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday: Winner of Mosher-
Couzens I game vs. Kappa Alpha
Theta, winner of Madison-Zone 9
game vs. Kappa Kappa Gamma from
5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
The WAA Golf Club will hold an
all-club play day from 2 p.m. to 5
p.m. Thursday and Friday at the
University Golf Course.
Members may play either day, ac-
cording to Betsy Moore, club mana-
ger, and several types of contests
will be held.
* * * ,
All women who have signed for the
all-campus doubles and singles
tournament, are to consult the draw
sheets posted on the bulletin board
at the WAB, according to Sally Ware,
newly appointed manager.
Players will be notified by mail of
their first round opponent, and are
requested to contacteach other for
playing their matches.

Riding Clubs
Wi ll Sponsor
Annual Show
The twenty-second annual Univer-
sity Horse show, sponsored by Crop
and Saddle, University Women's Rid-
ing Club, and Boots and Spurs, men's
riding club, will be presented at 2
p.m. Saturday, at Golfside Stables.
Included in the show will be a class
for each of the three clubs, a srun-
off class composed of the first three
in each of the club classes, two chil-
dren's classes. two University classes.
one for beginners and one for inter-
mediates, an open horsemanship class,
a mixed pair class, a three gaited
show class, a gaited exhibition, and
a fine harness exhibition.
Lists will be posted in Barbour Gym
and the WAB for those interested in
entering to sign. There will be a fee
of fifty cents for each class entered,
and there is no limit to the number
of classes a person may enter.
Dr. H. R. Shipman of Ann Arbor
will judge the classes. A prize will
be awarded by Dr. James Bruce to
the Crop and Saddle member whose
riding has improved most during the
year.
Karen Larson, president of Crop

Union Council
To Hold Dance
The Union Executive Council will
present the Annual Spring Formal
from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday in
the Union Ballroom.
Tickets may be purchased at the
Union Travel Desk from noon to 1
p.m. and from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. to-
morrow and from 11 a.m. to noon
Tuesday. The ticket sales will be
staggered so that the limited number
may be fairly distributed.
Elaborate decorations following a
spring theme have been planned by
the committee. Corsages will be given
to all women attending the formal
affair, and unique programs styled
of red suede will bear the Union seal.
Bill Layton and his orchestra will
furnish music for the dance, which
is to be strictly formal. An inter-
mission program will be presented and
refreshments will be Served.
and Saddle, Delight Scoville, presi-
dent of University Women's Riding
Club, and Keithe White, president of
Boots and Spurs, urge that all men
and women interested in entering the
show sign up immediately as they
would like to see a large turnout for
the show. The public is cordially in-
vited to attend.

"We came, we saw, we conquered"
will be the symbolic theme of the 1946
Senior Ball, scheduled from 10 p.m. to
2 a.m. Friday, June 7, at the Intra-
mural Building.
Louis Prima's unique combination
of personal showmanship and dance
music "played pretty for the people"
will be spotlighted on the bandstand
at the gala affair.
An outdoor terrace is planned as
an innovation at the ball, and re-
freshments will be served in the
atmosphere of a nightclub under
the stars, according to Rita Auer,
one of the publicity chairmen.
Following the general theme of ac-
complishment, programs will simu-
late military discharge papers. Deco-
rations will not be disclosed before
the event takes place, but it has been

hinted that they will follow the domi-
nant theme of the dance with unus-
ual effect.
Exact date and time of ticket
sales will be announcedlater, but
seniors are assured of at least three
days of preference before sales are
opened to the entire campus by
Gloria McElroy, ticket co-chair-
man.
Although the dance is semi-formal
owing to the difficulty of obtaining
male formal attire, men who own tux
are urged to wear them. "We made
the dance semi-formal so that no
one would be excluded, but because
it is such a big event, we hope that
men will come formal if they can."
explained Dick Ford, general co-
chairman.

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