THE MICIGAx -DAILY PAGE FiVE Lawrence Will Play for Homecoming n .l i WAA NOTICES -Annual Affair o Be Given At IM Building Tickets Will Be Sold at Union, League, Diagonal This Week; Football To Be Dance Theme Elliot Lawrence, his piano, and his 20-piece orchestra have been cho- sen to play for the Homecoming Dance, the first big all-campus dance of the year, to be held from 8:30 ' p. m. to midnight, Saturday, in the Intramural Building. The 21 year old musician has ten years of musical experience behind him. He began making arrangements and orchestrations after he gradu- ated from high school,. and played over the radio every week with his own band, the Bandbusters. When a sophomore in high school he won the state of Pennsylvania's contest for pianists. "Listen to Lawrence" At the University of Pennsylvania, Lawrence studied classical music and led the school band. He was much in demand for proms at many colleges. After graduation, he was 4 chosen for the position of musical director of WCAU in Philadelphia. In 1945, the "Listen to Lawrence" program was inaugurated on WCAU and was soon broadcast coast-to- coast. His band later appeared on the "Treasury Bandstand" program Sunday afternoons. Lawrence's band features Rosalyn Patton and Jack Hunter as vocalists, and Alex Fila on the trumpet. In a July article of Billboard Magazine, the band was given "Odds to be a new top name before the year goes by." Lawrence and Jerry Mulligan do the arangements for the band which was voted the third most promising band of the year by Amer- ican colleges in Billboard's eighth annual poll. Ticket Sales Tickets for the dance will be sold tomorrow through Saturday until they are all gone at the Union, League, and on the Diagonal. Hours of the sales will be from 9 a. m. to noon every day, and from 1 a. m. to 4 p. m. every day except Satur- day. The Homecoming Dance, which will climax Michigan's 1946 Home- coming Weekend, will be informal. Decorations and programs will fol- low a football theme. The Student Legislature Varsity Committee is sponsoring the entire weekend. Bill McConnell is general chairman of the dance and Ken Herring is in charge of ticket sales. ELLIOT LAWRENCE-The youth- ful pianist and band leader has been chosen to play for the annual Homecoming Dance Saturday in the Intramural Building. Longer Skirts Become Legal WASHINGTON, Oct. 19 - (P) - Longer skirts, for which women gen- erally have been hankering since the end of the war, became legal today with a suddenness that left the trade gasping. The Civilian Production Adminis- tration dropped all the limitations on women's clothes-its order known as L85-which it imposed originally April 6, 1942, with the aim of saving cloth. The order originally banned three- piece ensembles sold as a unit, re- strained the length and fullness of skirts, and limited the amount of material that could be used for sleeves, cuffs, pockets and trimmings. Event To Honor independents Tuesday, Oct. 29 Assembly Association will present their annual Recognition Night at 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, October 29, in the League Ballroom, according to Margaret Thompson, general chair- man. Tickets are now on sale at the various league houses and dormitor- ies, and at the League. Coeds are requested to purchase their tickets from their respective house presi- dents. Recognition Night is a traditional Assembly affair; honoring indepen- dent women who have been out- standing in academic and extra- curricula activities, and was initiated during the war to replace the awards banquet which was formerly held. This year, scholastic awards will be presented to the two coeds with the highest average in the junior and senior classes by Ira M. Smith, Registrar of the. University. Ellen Hill, president of the League, will present awards to the two women in each class who have been outstand- ing in extra-curricular activities for the past year. Those women who receive honors will have their names added to the plaque on which are inscribed the names of independent coeds who have been recognized in the past. There will be an organizational meeting at 5 p. m. tomorrow in the Assembly Office, Room D in the League for all independent women interested in working on the Assembly Personnel Commit- tee. Petitions Due Petitions for positions as WAA league house zone managers are due at 5 p. m. tomorrow in the WAA box in the Undergraduate Office of the League. Managers will be chosen for each zone of league houses, and each coed appointed to one of the posts will be in charge of athletic activities and participation of women living in her zone. Interviews will be held from 2 p. m. to 5 p. m. Tuesday and Thursday in the Women's Athletic Building. Time sheets are posted in the Un- dergraduate Office, and each coed should sign for an interview when she turns in her petition. Rae Keller, league house manager, is in charge of the WAA activities for residents of league houses. Archery Club -4 will hold a practice meeting at 5 p. in. Monday in the WAB. All coeds interested in arch- ery activities are asked to call Pat Newberg, manager, at 2-4471. The group is open to freshmen. Mem- bers should bring rental fee for bows. Fencing Club will hold a demon- stration match at 7:30 p. m, for former club members and all oth- er interested coeds. Hockey Club will meet at 4:45 p. in. Tuesday and Thursday at the WAB. Golf Club will meet at 5 p. m. Tuesday in the WAB lounge. Plans will be made for the fall tournament. ,Zone Pk/1-iatZ.Jer Wh1~ etng o i ibez he-Id :!iYohW5 Tuesday: Kappa Alpha theta . vs. Kappa Kappa Gamma 1, Alpha. Epsilon Pli vs, Alpha Xi Delta I at 5:10 p. m.; Jordan V vs. Willow Run, Zone II vs. Alpha Omicron Pi at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday: Jordan III vs. Kappa Alpha Theta II, Cheever vs. Zeta Tau Alpha II at 5:1.0 p. m.; Jordan VI vs. Jordan VII, Kappa Delta vs. Chi Omega at 7:30 p. m. Thursday: Pi Beta Pii II vs. Jor- dan II, Alpha Xi Delta II vs. Alpha Chi Omega at 5:10 p. m.; Delta Del- ta Delta II vs. Sigma Delta Tait at 7:30 p. m. * * * The Modern Dance Club will meet at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Dance Studio of Barbour Gym. Beginners Games in the interhouse volley- and intermediates will practice bas- ball tournament have been scheduled ic techniques together and plans for for this week as follows. All con- the club will center around choreo- tests will be played in Barbour Gym. graphy. Monday: Delta Delta Delta I vs. Gamma Phi Beta, Zone I vs. Alpha The WAA Fencing club will hold Delta Pi at 5:10 p. m.; Markley a fencing demonstration at 7:30 House vs. Jordan IV at 7:30 p. m. p. m. tomorrow in tthe WAB. HAND KNIT 100% WOOL MITTENS ' All colors . . . $2.95 HEAD SCARVES Prints and colors . . . $1.00 00000:*:0* There "e a "e p " e e.000 0 0 "0 0 0 "' " "0 "e00 0 0 0 0 0 "*"0"0 0 "0 0 0 "0 " " 0* 0 0 0 0 I.~~ 0" 0 0 " Anter e e ".!e.' O "e e 0"0oa0 0 0 * 0 0 0 > , 0es e O0!0 " 0 0 O 0 10 0"0" 0 " 0 0 0 0 ' te o 0 ! " " 0 i e 0 0 00000" O 1. 0.9.00"..0.0 e 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0t" 00 0 "0 "0 0 t " " ! e 0 " " t "/" 0 e 0 0 e " o e e e " ® Drssed e ate e a e "e " f " 00 0 "0 t 001 0" 0 "0"0 0 0 0 0 e 00 "'a i 0o" e 0 0 " e' 0 0".0 " 0" e 0 e 0"0,,"00 " *" 0o 00 000 , " , ees "s"" 000000000 Se ""o p s " " ! " e oe se ® e e " f " 0 " * 9 '*00 00 * e a a v mas"e " " o S0, * ,o0 "0 0000 !" i 0" " 0e 0 ""a 0 00e 0 " e0. ." 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