1, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2G, 1947 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAC" IV WTVW. I, SUWDAY~ UA~W WUW Panhel Presents Stan Kenton at IM 'Elysian Eve' Features Greek Theme; Ticket Sales Will Continue This Week Junior Dues Collections Casbah's New Request Card Prove Successful, also Amusing Begin Soon "Elysian Eve," this year's all- campus Panhel Ball, which will be presented from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. K Friday in the Intramural Build- ing, will feature that "Artistry in Rhythm" of Stan Kenton and his band. The Kenton troupe, whose rhythmic interpretations of mod- ern "progressive jazz" gave them the national spotlight in 1946, have maintained their popularity this season, playing for capacity crowds on their recent western tour. The constant pulse and har- monic appeal of the Kenton ar- rangements have created a pop- ular demand for concert ap- pearances, and Stan will do an eastern series of "elevated jazz"' concerts illustrating the Kenton version of "American" music. The 1947 Panhellenic presenta- tion will innovate several new fea- tures. A reception committee which will greet patrons and their guests has been arranged and the x - Buy and Hold Savings Bonds I following. housemothers .will compose the committee: Mrs. john Owen, Kappa Kappa Gam- ma,; Mrs. Lawrence C. Piatt, Delta Delta Delta; Mrs. Mildred Anike, Pi Beta Phi; and Mrs. Vir- ginia Williams, Kappa Delta. Another innovation will be the seating arrangement whereby groups of friends may sit out dances together. Special booths will be set up for sororities and independent houses. This year's affair will be semi-formal but men owning tuxedos are re- quested to wear them. Alpha Phi Omega, national serv- ice fraternity, will handle the men's check room donating all the proceeds to the Fresh Air Camp. The decorations and programs for "Elysian Eve" will follow the ancient Greek theme chosen by the central committee. Gigantic columns and balloon grape clus- ters will give the I-M Building the simple atmosphere of an- cient Greece, according to Lois Steere, Alpha Xi Delta, decora- tions chairman. Ticket sales which are open to all women on campus, will con- tinue this week from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the Undergraduate Of- fice of the League. A campaign for the collection -f junior dues will begin tomorrow, it was announced by Pat Hanne- ;an, general chairman of Junior Girls Play. The drive will be conducted by ±he finance committee of the play. This committee is headed by Jackie Reid, treasurer of the play. During the campaign, mem- bers of the finance committee will personally contact all jun- ior women on campus. A can- vass will be made of all dormi- tories, league houses and sor- ority houses. Announcement will be made at a later date concerning the meth- od to be followed for collection of dues from those women living in private homes. The funds collected during this drive will be used to fin- ance the Junior Girls Play, an- nual play written, directed and produced by junior women. The amount of the dues will be $1.00 per person. The committee requests that all junior coeds have this amount available when the collector arrives at the residence. Tula Will Give Indian Dances At Barbour Gym Tula, one of the foremost auth- orities on dance ethnology, will present a program of original Mexican Indian dances at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Barbour Gym dance studio, sponsored by the Modern Dance Club. The program will be given for the Modern Dance and Ballet Clubs. the WAA board, and stud- ents and faculty of the Women's Physical Education Department, and will include a 'master" class in special native dance techniques given by Tula for the members of the Modern Dance Club. Tula, a member of the American Anthropological Association, and the New Mexico Archeological and American and Michigan Folk Lore Societies, has collected her pro- gram of native dances through direct research with the Indians of New Mexico. The latest innovation at the Campus Casbah, the introduction of special request cards, has prov- ed to be a great success with dan- cers and sometimes a source of amusement to its originator, band leader Fran Wine-Gar. His band has been flooded with.I requests for tunes ever since the, cards were printed this fall. They carry a simple message: "Dear Fran Wine-Gar . . . 1 Would you please play (such and3 such) . . . Special Occasion? . Thank You! ... (Name and Add- ress). Some of them filled out with Wine-Gar's singer, "Nola," who sorts them, censors them, and gives them to Wine-Gar to play. "Nola" has thoughtfully pre- served some of the cleverer re- quests: - Request: "A Ghost of a Chance." Occasion: "Baptized." Request: "Sinner Kissed an An- gel." Occasion: "We are here!" Request: "Blue Champagne." Occasion: "Just for the hell of it." Request: "Imagination." Occasion: "Yes." Request: "Near You.' Occasion: "I'm Near Him." Request: "Peg O' My Heart." Occasion: (No answer: just a lipstick kiss-print). Request: "Little Brown Jug." Occasion: "Victory." Tournament To BeHeld Undergraduates Will Play In Contract Bridge Event Nelson B. Jones, chairman of the Intercollegiate Bridge Tourna- ment Committee, announced that invitations to compete in the 1948 National Intercollegiate Bridge Tournament have been sent to of- ficials of 318 colleges and univer- sities. Only undergraduates are elig- ible to play in the duplicate Con- tract Bridge event for the title and trophy, and the Committee requires that the approval of its dean be granted before a college can officially enter the tourna- ment. A preliminary round will be played by mail in February and the sixteen highest ranking pairs will meet for the face-to-face fi- nals in Chicago on April 23 and 24. To insure representation of all parts of the country in the finals, the country is divided into eight zones. We have our own innovation suggest. Why not have Fran Nola read 'em to everybody? to or e X 4 4 M To get rid of shiny spots on those new suede pumps try rub- bing an emery board gently over them. MODEL MANAGER-helen Fraser (age 28) is model and director of the Barbizon School of Modeling in New York City. Modeling Survey 'Debunks' 'Debunkers' of Ancient Art BLACK BEAUTY by Kayser C -C ~<- ~y-t What could be more Precious to her on Christmas /)or1111 tau one of our be- guililiigy ruffled gown and slid sets. They are made for figure fitting perfection at all timles. SIzEs 34-40 SLIP . . . $4.95 GOWN ... $5.95 274eVAN RUNSh SDressmaker Stit (EDITOR'S NOTE-This article was sent special, to The Daily from the Barbizon School of Modeling. NEW YORK-Ever since the day Eve tucked together some fig leaves and staged the first fashion! parade for Adam, women have been modeling. The only difference today is that what Eve and her many daughters have done through thel years, as amateurs, many girls areI now finding a highly lucrative and satisfying profession. But so much has been written "debunking" the profession that a survey was made among models in New York from every state in the Union to determine the facts. Actually modeling is easier to break into, and brings better fi- nancial returns sooner than do most jobs open to girls. New York is Mecca There are approximately 1,000 photographic models and more than 8,000 fashion models em- ployed in the United States, but 90 per cent of them work in New York. It is quite natural then for girls who are seriously interested in modeling as a career to come here. For, within a radius of one or two miles, are the most val- uable contacts in America for the model. Some writershconvey the im- pression that there is an extra- ordinary amount of competition in the profession. That is far from being the case. There is competi- tion, but it exists at the point of acceptance rather than in model- ing itself. Naturally, a woman must have certain attributes to succeed in the modeling profession, just as I she needs necessary qualifications for success in any field. Miss Helen Fraser, director of the Bar- bizon School of Modeling says, "If a girl is attractive facially and has nice figure proportions, she is a 'natural' for fashion mod- eling. And if she knows how to model clothes she should have very little d si fsulsy in gettin" into the field." Competition Over'stressed t Considering the numberof mod- els working in New York alone, the competition which new models encounter is negligible compared to other fields. There are dozens of models at work for every wom- an employed as designer, adver- tiser, publisher or merchandiser. Marriage need not interfere with a model's career, for many nationally - known models are married and continue earning top salaries. The "wolf" menace is highly exaggerated, most models insist. Using this warning to dis- courage women from entering the profession makes most of the cover girls smile. "The average model, in my ex- perience," says model Nancy Sims, "works about as hard as the aver- age successful stenographer. Yet the compensations are far greater, and the work is much more ex- citing. Models Earn Steady Incomes While the photographic model's earnings are usually at a higher rate, the income of the fashion models range from $50 to $75 weekly and has the advantage of consistency. 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