PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MAY 26, 1946 finnual Lantern NightWill Be Held Tuesday Student Group Will Give Concert Today, Ending Hospital Entertainment Project Holiday Dances To Be Presented For Entire Campus Wednesday. !Line of March To Be Formed At Angel I Hall Olympic Ball Tickets 1 Will Be Put on Sale Tickets for Olympic Ball will be placed on sale from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Wednesday at Waterman and Barbour Gyms, and at the campus diagonal.] The dance, which will be held from1 p.m. tomorrow through Wednesday at League Ballroom, is sponsored by the members of the M-Club and students; of the men's and women's physical education department. Charlie Bird and his twelve piece orchestra from Muskegon, will pro- vide music for the affair. As the dance will ,be held on the eve of Memorial Day, women will be) granted 12:30 a.m. permission. Bob Ufer, All-American track star and local sports commentator, with) Art DerDerian will act as masters) of ceremonies during intermission.' Lettermen will entertain the guests by presenting farcical imitations ofj the events that originally took place in ancient Greece. In addition, sev- eral musical numbers will be given1 by the men.c Decorations will feature a globalc theme emphasizing the famed Mt. Olympus. Green and white silhouettes of athletes of traditional ancient times will line the windows of the) ballroom. Electric lights placed be-; hind the silhouettes will illuminate the five foot figures. Behind the bandstand, olive branhes will be displayed. A large blocked M will appear on the op- posite wall, in keeping with the1 athletic theme. General chairmen of the dance are Jo Osgood, Dick Korte, and Elmer Swanson. Art DerDerian, Virginia Hertzick, and Elmer Madar are co-a chairmen of publicity. The ticket committee is headed by) Bob Nussbaumer and Naida Chernow. Decorations chairmen are Jack Pe- tosky and Eleanor Daniels. Mary Lou; Larmee and Bliss Bowman are co-1 chairmen of programs. Pat Crandall and Glen Whittle are in charge of music.1 Special guests of the evening will be Prof. and Mrs. Herbert "Fritz" Crisler, Dean and Mrs. James Edmonson, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Doherty, and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Fisher. Mr and Mrs. Tom Harmon, and Mr. and Mrs. Bob U-) fer will also be honored guests. 1 Patrons include Dr. and Mrs. Alex- ander Ruthven, Provost and Mrs. James Adams, Dean Alice Lloyd, Commander and Mrs. Norman Gil- lette, Dr. Margaret Bell, Dr. and Mrs. Elmer Mitchell, Dr. Laurie Campbell, Dr. and Mrs. Leroy Weir, and Mr. and Mrs. Matt Mann. The list continues with Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Keen, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Leibee, Mr. and Mrs. Newton Lokan, Miss Marie Hartwig, Miss Josephine Yantis, Miss Mildred An- derson, Miss Fritzie Gareis, Miss Mar- ion Weiss, and Mr. and Mrs. Russell Nielsen. Interviewing for the Rushing Aid Committee will be held from 2 to 4 p.m. tomorrow and from 3 to 5 p.m. Wednesday at the League. The room will be posted on the bulletin board in the Lea- gue lobby. Event Will Be Given By Alpha Phi Omega Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, will present the second annual Memorial Day. Dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Wednesday in the Rainbow Room of the Union. The dance was originated last year as part of the V-E Day celebrations, and was so popular with the students that Alpha Phi Omega decided to make it an annual affair. This year's dance represents the results of a poll designed to discover the type of entertainment Michigan students prefer. The dance will be informal, with music provided by Bill Layton and his orchestra. Patti Dupont will sup- ply the vocals. Tommy Lough, boogie woogie stylist who has performed at several all-campus shows, will be the featured intermissions time enter- tainer. Tickets are now on sale at the Union and League and will go on sale on the diagonal this week. Union cards are not necessary for admis- sion to the dance. All women students have been granted 12:30 permission the night before Memorial Day, and Navy men will also have late permission. Picnic To Be Given By Prescott House. To celebrate,Memorial Day, Pres- cott House will sponsor a picnic Thursday from 1 to 7 p.m. at Huron County Park, Dexter. Included in the day's program are baseball games, old fashioned sport contests, Latin American singing, and dancing for all. Prizes have been selected and a full afternoon of ac- tivities has been arranged for all Prescott men and their dates. A pic- nic lunch prepared by the house will be served at 5 p.m. In case of rain the affair will be held at East Park. General chairmen of the picnic are William Fitzgerald, Robert Foley, Charles Bilby, and Robert Steele; entertainment, Bob Rizarddi; - re- freshment, Robert Olshefsky; and transportation and location, Ray Courage. 'U' Band WHI Play for Parade; Song Contest To Feature Coed Groups from 26 Residences Coeds participating in the 1946 Lantern Night will :orm a line of march for the traditional c:mpus march at 6:45 p.m. Tuesday at Angell Hall. Accompanied by the University Band and led by five senior women representing five major women's or- ganizations on campus, the line will be formed on the sidewalk in front of Angell Hall. Senior women will form a single line on the center side- walk between Angell Hall and State street. Double lines of juniors, sophomores, and freshmen will form on each of the other two walks between Angell Hall and State St., following the walks toward Alumni Memorial and Haven Halls, respectively. Line of March Described The band will march south on State St. from Harris Hall, and the coeds will follow them on the rest of the line of march, with a center single line of seniors flanked on, each side by a double row of underclassmen. The line will proceed by way of South University, East University, and North University Avenues to the Mall near the League fountain, where the group will be led by the band in the singing of the "Yellow an&'Blue" and the national anthem. Auditorium To Be Scene of Contest The formation will then break up, and the group will proceed to Hill Auditorium for the song contest, in which choral groups from 26 women's residences will participate. Order of singing was determined by lots. Committees for Lantern Night in- clude Pat Doelle and Barbara Mc- Neill, line of march, Betty laton and Jerry Gaffney, song leaders, Ja- nice Bernstein and Rae Keller, pa- trons, Harriet Risk and Sally Lo Ware, judges, and Joan Wilk and Bet- ty Hahneman, publicity. Flowers in all colors and forms are appearing in great profusion again this year. One particularly charming fashion is achieved by sewing small white ones onto a bicycle clip and wearing it with a black date dress. Qiee Club, Choir To Qive Concert The University of Michigan Wo- men's Glee Club under the direction of Miss Marguerite Hood, will pre- sent its annual spring concert at 8:30 p.m. Thursday, June 6, in Hill Auditorium. The first half of the program will! be given over to a group of short for- mal selections. Included will be a number accompanied by two horns and two harps. Solos will be sung by Rose Derderian and Lennis Brit- ton, and jean Thalner and Suzanne Smith will sing a duet. The second half of the concert will be an informal program entitled "A Latin American Fiesta." The Women's Glee Club will be assisted by the Navy Choir under the direction of Howard Farrar, reinforced by other male singers on campus. A group of Latin American songs will be sung by the two groups separately and then together. Dance Planned By Wives' Club The Veterans' Wives Club will pre- sent a dance for married veterans and their wives from 9 p.m. to midnight Eaturday in the League Ballroom. The dance is to be an informal affair, with Klaas Kuiper and his or- chestra furnishing the music. Open only to married student veteran couples, the dance is one of the series of functions sponsored through- out the year by the club. The Veterans' Wives Club was or- ganized for the purpose of furnishing suitable and adequate entertainment for married couples on campus. The group has previously sponsored mixer dances, bridge parties, and a "gym- jam" for veteran couples. A special feature of the dance, according to Mrs. Kenneth Marshall, committee chairman, will be a floor show to be presented at 10:30 p.m. in the ballroom. The show is to con- tain musical and variety acts. The final project of the Camp and Hospital Committee for the enter-I tainment of the soldiers at PercyI Jones Hospital will be a concert to be held at 6:30 p.m. today in the hospital auditorium which will bel broadcast to all bed patients. The program will consist of the Men's Glee Club to be augmented by a quartet of harps, a trio of trumpe- ters from the Michigan Band, Mar- jorie and DorothyBosscowen and Mary Kelley. Joseph Skrysnski will perform "Summertime" on the trom- bone, Daryll Shuker will dance, and Nancy Neuman with the 1946 Soph Cabaret chorus will also dance. A trio from the Women's Glee Club, Barbara Lee Smith and Norma Lee Swinney will sing in the program. Accompan- ists for the group are Marilyn Mason, Lois Florburger ana Arlene Peugeot. 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