MAY 23, 1948 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE Union To Present SpecialtyDance Elimination Dance Contest Diversion For Students Relaxing from Studies-. Campus Bandleader Art Starr To Play For Summer Casbah Bluebook Ball, the final special- ty dance of the year, will be given by the Union Executive Council from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday in the Union Ballroom. Bluebook Ball is presented each semester as a "final fling" in order that students may relax from those ever exhausting bluebooks. Frank Tinker and his orchestra, J heard weekly at the Union dances, will be on hand to provide music. He is quoted as saying, "This dance will feature sweet, dance- able music-something the stu- dents will long remember." A novel elimination dance '48 Fortnight Council Picked Assembly Board announces the central committee for Fortnight 'show scheduled for next fall. Members are Patt Newberg, Martha Cook, general chairman; Josie Valerio, Ann Arbor, decora- tions; Betsy Vinieratos, Martha Cook, honors, and Mary Davidson, Mosher, assistant honors. The list continues with Barbara Thelen, Martha Cook, publicity; Marylin Klafer, Helen Newberry, assistant publicity; Doris Clark, Stockwell, assistant publicity; Charlotte Eagle, Mosher, skits; Rose Potcova, Jordan, assistant skits; Shirley Fage, Mosher, pro-' grams and favors, and Norma Jak- sec, patrons and judges. Fortnight Show next fall will in- corporate Fortnight show, Recog- nition Night and Installation of House Presidents. contest will be held immediately preceding the intermission. The winning couple will receive an award as "The Couple Most Likely To Pass Their Finals." Intermission entertainment will be provided by the Vaughan House Trio, featuring Stan Chal- lis, Bill Brehm and Don Srull. Huge bluebooks bearing the names and appropriate grade of Council members will be used for decoration. Traditional miniature bluebooks will be given as favors. Couples will wear caps and gowns for their souvenir pictures. Bluebook Ball is one of a se- ries of specialty dances spon- sored each year by the Executive Council of the Union. Included in the series have been Bunny Hop, Ju-Hon-So Ball and Se- Hon-So Ball. Co-chairmen of the dance are Keith Jordan and Loyal Jodar. Other committeemembers are Al Sosin and Al Borger, entertain- ment; John Linquist, Norman Kroll, Martin Kohlenberg and Jerry Mehlman, decorations; Rich- ard Bender, Ralph Pullman and Don Coombs, publicity; William Race, programs; and Dave Tease, property. Dick Slocum, newly-appointed social director, feels that this dance will offer all the students a chance to blow off a little steam before finals. Assembly Notice There will be no dorm or league house presidents meet- ings this week, according to Arlette Harbour, president of Assembly. By MARY ANN HARRIS Unique, original instrumenta- tion of sweet and danceable music blending into the informal atmos- phere of the summer Casbah will be provided by campus band- leader Art Starr and his five "quality" music makers. Starr's boys, who will keep their "instrumentation voiced for the Michigan crowd," with an accent on personal requests, will attempt to give the Casbah the appro- priate informality of a party dance. By combining the popular "Tinker tempo" with Starr Sex- tet arrangement the new Casbah maestro hopes to provide summer session students with a pleasant innovation in dance band style. Complementing the sextet will be WJR songstress Renie Peters, Renie is currently featured coast to coast on a regular Saturday program.F Preceding the Casbah engage- ment Starr has a long band his- tory. He organized his first band at the high school stage with a WAA Notices Cancellations of softball games must be reported to Helen Hub- bard at 2-4514 by Monday noon. The schedule is as follows: Monday-5:00 p.m.: Mosher vs. Alpha Xi Delta I, Kappa Alpha Theta II vs. Newberry, Alpha Xi Delta II vs. Chi Omega II, Mary Markley vs. Gamma Phi Beta II. Tuesday-7:00 p.m. Kappa Kap- pa Gamma I vs. Delta Gamma I, Chi Omega I vs. winner of Alpha Xi Delta1-Mosher game, Delta Delta Delta I vs. winner of Kappa Alpha Theta II-Newberry game, winner of Alpha Xi Delta II-Chi Omega II game vs. winner of Mdry Markley - Gamma Phi Beta II game. Wednesday-7:00 p.m.: Stock- well IX vs. winner of (Chi Omega vs. winner of Alpha Xi Delta I- Mosher game). Thursday-7:00 p.m.: Winner of Delta Delta Delta I vs. (winner of Kappa Alpha Theta II-New- berry game) vs. the winner of (the winner of Alpha Xi Delta II- Chi Omega II game) Mary Mark- ley-Gamma Phi Beta II game, winner of Kappa Kappa Gamma I-Delta Gamma I Gamma I game vs. winner of (Stockwell IX vs. the winner of Chi Omega (vs. the winner of Alpha Xi Delta I) Mo- sher game.) follow up style on the Detroit "Sophisticats," and played De- troit social events until the war years. Bowdoin College was his next stopping place, where he created a student outfit called the Polar Bears which catered to col- lege crowds at Yale, Bates, Uni- versity of Maine and Bradford Junior College. His college popu- larity rated him an engagement at the Hotel Roosevelt in New York. His service record holds engage- ments with the "All Vets" in many places of distinction includ- ing the Cu Ming Tennis Club in China. Art Starr transferred to Michi- gan last summer and here collect- ed a personnel who are in agree- ment as to tension releasing and relaxing factors in good dance' band music. Notwithstanding their preferences for dance-abil- ity, the sextet with the arrange- ments of Bill Ryburn, ex-Bill Sawyer man, is equally competent on the up-tempo arrangements. Jazz arranger Ryburn holds the alto sax position and doubles on the clarinet. He is a veteran of both Jerry Wald and Dean Hud- son's band. Chuck Daugherty continues the list of "quality boys." Chuck handles the trombone in "Bill Harris" phrasing. Trumpet play- er indespensible Wally Newberry, will come forth with muted "Bun- ny Barrigan" style, while finesses on the drums will be provided by Clark Pardee Guild Present Dance Clubs Alum Clubs MeetJune 5 Detroit Fair To Contribute To Funds for Scholarships University of Michigan alumnae clubs throughout the state will take over the Women's Building at the State Fair Grounds, De- troit, on June 5 when they com- bine efforts to stage their gala June Fair. Benefits from the day-long event will go to alumnae supported pro- jects on the campus: Henderson House for undergraduates, the Catherine Kellogg woman's pro- fessorship and the Alumnae Coun- cil fund for scholarship and stun dent aid. Doors will open to the public at 10 a.m. Booths, staffed and maintained by various alumnae groups, will offer both new Und rejuvenated used merchandise of every description. There will be children's clothing and equip- ment, white elephants, flowers, baked goods, candies, aprons, jewelry, toys and Michigan me- mentos. A midway of concessions will re- place booths as they sell out. Fea- tured attractions will include dish breaking, a floating target pitch- ing game, darts, a children's grab bag, candid photographs and for- tune telling. Refreshment booths will dispense carnival fare all day. Alumnae and their guests are invited to the reunion and in- formal dance at 7 p.m. Reminis- cences will be interspersed with old college songs at the reunion and the final fillip will be pro- vided by bonafide carved up tables, wobbly chairs and nicked pitchers of the famous Pr'etzel Bell, imported from Ann Arbor for the Fair. The geographic scope of the en- terprise will be stressed in decora- tions on the first floor with ban- ners and posters of greeting ex- pected from clubs unable to at- tend. Nostalgia will keynote the decor for the dance. Large maps of the campus bearing imagina- tive sketches of campus landmarks will line the walls. Clusters of maize and blue balloons will deco- rate the ceiling. Mrs. Hope Petrouleas Hansen of Detroit heads the hundreds of alumnae working on June Fair. I , 1 C . mo t r' t.4. ~* / 1 " Bright, brief-, . a:. and to the point... t ~Our all-wool F LARE EBACK SH ORT I E COATS That top everything truypace-setting at 19.95 WHITE NAVY PINK. BLUE... CORAL ... RED... GREY Small price indeed for the fashion distinction and flattery of these billowy brief coats, fully lined and beautifully crafted in high exhilarating colors, designed to lead a busy life from sun-up till dusk. I .......... wk- 'yr COOL £ttmj'ner iaca tti 0j0 0 .......... IIi °' . ' ". S . " s , 1 V: ~'~"~~' 4 LY ,: ff/ Y w. f' 1 dd^ . !w t < . . sizes 10 to 20. $x495 4', CI x The airy coolness of this stunning PROPORTION- IZED Dorall is- augmented by the graceful full- skirted lines. 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