1949 TIE ZICilICiN iDAILY Audience Will Select Winners In 'Gulantics Revue' Talent Show: The audience will pick tie win- ners at the "Gulantics Revue," first competitive campus talent show which will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Sunday in Hill Audito- rium. From the fourteen varied acts, chosen earlier in competitive try- outs, the audience, with the aid of an audiometer, will choose the three most talented, who will cop $175 in prizes. Sponsored by the Union, Glee Club and League the show will be centered around a night club theme and will be the first event to use a stage setting in Hill Auditorium. To get the audience into the spirit of the evening a new warm- up period will be tried. From 7 to 7:30 p.m. the combination of Ted' Smith and His Band, the Men's Glee Club, Mike Klaver and his walking mike and Bob Halbrook, MC, should be enough to put the audience into a competitive mood, according to Philip Morris, Glee club publicity chairman. * *I * TICKET SALES are continuing this week from 3 to 5 p.m. in the League and the Union and will re- main on sale from 10 to 12 p.m. Saturday. The price will be 60 cents. The fourteen "Gulantics" for the first time revealed, will in- Hillel To Present Festival The entire Hillel Foundation will be transposed into one big, 3ustling festival from 6:30 to 10:30 p.m. Sunday to provide members 'with an evening of fun while add- ing to the funds of the United' Jewish Appeal. Bridge Tournament The weekly Union bridge tournament will be 'held at 8 p.m. today in the Terrace Room of the League. Students attending will have an opportunity to meet and talk with bridge experts. Among those who will be present is George Alderton, former Amer- ican Contract Bridge League president and recent mid-west champion. Every room in the Foundation will be decorated and equipped for each of a variety of games and booths which have been planned for the affair. Not only will the students par- ticipate in the project, but at this year's festival, members of the faculty will also be on hand to offer their talents as entertainers. According to publicity com- mittee member Lorraine Gold- berg, some of the sights worth seeing will include a freak show, a mock marriage booth, and a nickolodeon. Other amusements have been planned which will offer fun-seek- ing Hillelites a variety of enter- tainment for the entire evening.' elude types and tempos from acrobats to torch singers and "Dixieland" to "My Hero." The "Barbarous Four" will leave the Gamma Phi House, to attempt to convince the audience to "Listen to the Mocking Bird." In true gay nineties style they also will ren- der "My Mustache." "Impossible!" adds MC, Halbrook. * * * SPOT NUMBER TWO will go to magic man, Al Goldman, who will attempt to remove his subject's lingerie with a sly bit of prestidigi- tation, while Beverly Olszynsk. will make quicker changes in her personality imitation, running from Gracie Fields to Carmen Mi- randa. From Carmen to Negro spirit- uals is quite a jump but the "Travelers Four" will attempt to sooth their listeners with their arrangements of "Were You There"? and "Animals 'A Comin'." June Chadwick will follow with interpretive ballet. Wym Price will take over sixth position with. a slightly different view into the atomic situation. Wym is a guitar crooner and will come forth with the "Atomic Blues," wherein dwells the secret of protoplasm and life. * * * "EAST SIDE, WEST SIDE" is the song and the problem is whether the twenty foot extension ladder held by balancing artist, Sam Dudley, will fall to the east or west in the seventh act. Doris Kays, soprano, will put all worried minds to rest with "My Hero," and "Summertime." The Golden Bantam boys don't quite know what they are going to present as yet, accord- ing to Halbrook. In fact it may not even be golden bantam, but it will be corn, for sure adds the MC. They sing, too! The deepest baritone this side of the Mississippi will be heard when Conwell Carrington sings "It's Magic" and "Blue Moon," says Morris. THE NUMBER ten entertainers will manage to violently awake any dead soul who has not been previously sirred with their Dixie- land Combo, strictly improvised under Bob Leopold. Bob Tamplin, will record pantomine Jimmy Du- rante and his "Dollar a year man." All he lacks is the nose, according to his publicity manager. Freshman Patty Joy will really make the piano talk with her piano monologues, leading into Gershwin in an original style. The Vaughan House Trio, who are us- ually at the head of their class, will beaat the foot of the show with "Binga Boola Baby" and O'Mc- Donald. The latter number is straight from the farm. :5I Panhel Selects Ten To Couns l F COED CAILIENDARP -Daily-Wally Barth GIBSON GIRLS-To perform at the University Women's Glee Club concert are: back row, from left to right: Charlotte Boehm, Barbara Riggs and Jean Dennis; front row: Doris Kays, Dona Schneider and Ruth Spore. * * * * UnivFersity Womens Qlee Club To Feature Gibson Girl Medley AWIy WYW YMWMWWMMIIIWY II YYI MMMIYWWWWWWIle111y11WW114WWWW/4W iMWWYyOWWWIIWWYW1111WIlYiYYIV/W Panhellenic Associati n has aI- nounced the names of the ten women who have been chosen as rushing counselors for the inaug- uration of the new rushee counsel- ing system next fall. Coeds who will start training this spring are Nancy Clark, Al- pha Gamma Delta; Frances Doty, Alpha Delta Pi; Anne Harriton, Alpha Omicron Pi; Jane Hem n- way, Alpha Phi; Dorothy Hierony- mous, Chi Omega; Jeanne Hinkel, Alpha Epsilon Phi; Jo Hoey, Soro- -is; Eleanor Irwin. Alpha Xi Del- ta; Barbara Little. Delta Delta Delta; and Myrna Rees, Alpha Chi Omega. Selection was made from a group of coeds consisting of two women chosen from the ten houses who will be represented next year. Counselor training will be di- rected by Christine Blair, rushing secretary of Panhellenic, Miss MacCormick, social director of the League, psychologists and person- nel experts will help to start the first training sessions. TASTY BARBEQUE BAR B.Q. CHICKEN BAR B.Q. SPARE RIBS Bar B.Q. Beef Sandwiches Bar B.Q. Pork Sandwiches ITALIAN SPAGHETTI and MEAT BALLS Phone 9484 122 W. Washington $3 Minimum Order Delivered Free Open at 4 P.M.-Closes at 3 A.M.--Closed All Day Tuesday Ne) Rushe)s lFrosh-Weekend-All girls work- jug on the floorshow for "Comnmo- tion in the Ocean" will meet from a to 6 p.m. today in the Cae of the League. Maize publicity committee will have a meeting at 7 p.m. today in Suite 1 on the third floor of the League. * * *a Officials' Club-The ccaching division will meet at 5 p.m. today in WAB. Tennis Club--New members are still welcome to attend the meet- ing at 5 p.m. today in WAB, Dancing Clubs-Members of the Folk and Square Dancing Clubs expecting to participate in the fes- tival are requested to be present at the meeting at 7:30 p.m. today. The last student-faculty tea for this term will be given by the pharmacy school. The tea will be held from 4 to 5 p.m. today in the Terrace Room of the League. t* TE~LEVISION!. the best in entertainment every night at the DEN DELICIOUS FOOD AT ANY TIME WOLVtERINE DEN 1309 South University A medley of Gibson Girl songs dedicated to the first University Women's Glee Club formed in 1904 will be one of the featured attrac- tions of the Glee Club's annual spring concert 8 p.m. today in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Guest performers will be mem- bers of the University Dance Workshop who will present three dances, under the direction of Dr. Juana de Laban. Miss Marguerite V. Hood, asso- ciate professor of Music Education, will conduct. Soloists will be Charlotte Boehm, Doris Kays and Patricia Herman. Accompanists are Dorothy Danko and Cohleen Jenson. THE PROGRAM will open with "Regina Coeli" by Lotti; "Ave Vera Virginitas" by Depres; "Sing We and Chant It" by Morley; "The Silver Swan" by Gibbons; "Four Arms, Two Necks, One Wreath- ing" and "Strike It Up, Tabor" by Weelkes. Other compositions included in the program are "Donde lieta from "La Boheme" by Puc- cini; and "Miranda" by Hage- man. "Moon-Marketing" by Weaver; "The Green River" by Carpenter; "XXth Century" by Sargent; Hageman's "Do Not Go, My Love"; "Wild Swans" by Priesing; "On the Streetcar" by Purvis; and 'North Argentinian Folk Dance," will also be sung.. PARTICIPATING in the Gibson Girl Parade, a medley of songs from the turn of the Century hon- oring the Women's Glee Club of the year 1904, will be the Glee Club, the Harmony Girls and solo- ists, including: Charlotte Boehm, Jean Dennis, Patricia Herman, Doris Kays, Nedra Ohmstede, Bar- bara Riggs, Virginia Ross, Dona Schneider, Ruth Spore and Joy Williams. Gibson Girl songs include "Strolling Through the Park"; "My Sweetheart's the Man in the Moan"; "Ta-ra-ra-booh- de-e"; "After the Ball is Over"; "When You Wore a Tulip"; "And Her Golden Hair Was Hanging Down Her Back"; "In the Good Old Summer Time"; "Come Josephine in My Flying Machine-; "My Mother Was a Lady"; "By the Sea, By the Sea, By the Beautiful Sea"; "Sym- pathy"; "She is Only a Bird in a Gilded Cage"; and "Yip-i-addy- i-ay." A group of University of Michi- gan songs will conclude the pro- gram, which is open to the public. OFFICERS OF the club are Ruth Spore, president and as- sistant conductor; Anne Parker, vice-president; Jean Dennis, sec- retary; Nan Hubach, business manager; Dorothy Jemal, publici- ty; Patricia Hollis, librarian; and Valerie Polk, assistant librarian. Other members of the club are; First Sopranos: Jean Boos, Patricia Herman, Betsey Iden, Doris Kays, Virginia Ross, Max- ine Smith, Joy Williams and Rosemnary Wise. Second Sopranos are: Carolyn Bergren, Nancy Beveridge, Glee Ducigeon, Lillian Hanjian, Pa- tricia McLean, Nedra Ohmstede, Ann Shafer, Jane Standiford and Marion Stepanauskas. * * * THE LIST continues with Alto I: Patricia Becker, Charlotte Boehm, Jane Buell, Nancy Kar- nischky, Adelaide Klingbeil, Julia Ros and Joan Weaver. Alto II: Beverly Bradford, Bar- bara Riggs, Dona Schneider, Sid- ney Steck, Ina Sussman and Nancy Symons. *1 After Easter Starts Tuesday A.MI. SHOE C LEARANCE 500 Pairs from Regular Stock by Famous Makers l ... - r >C S i t 2 Values to 12.95 Also Barbara Gay Values to 8.95 I 4 85 and 85 Paradise Shoe Included Special groups from our regular this-season's stock of these famous shoes seen in Vogue and Harper's Bazaar. Choose from beautiful calfskins, suedes, patents, genuine reptiles . .. all sizes, but not in every style. RAMNDAL' 306 S. State St. 9:00 - 5:30 " It serves her right! M ARY JANE gives the telephone in her house a real work-out. But we're not worried a bit. We know Mary Jane's telephone is going to keep right on delivering good service year after year. Because the Bell System puts a lot of time, thought, and testing into making telephone equipment as rugged and trouble-free as possible. Tests are constantly under way at the Bell Telephone Laboratories. There, for example, new types of telephone instru- ments are put through a school of hard knocks. Dials and.other parts are given strength and wear tests. Even the bottom of the telephone set has been designed and checked to make sure that it will not scratch or stain furniture. Such tests-on little things as well as on big things-help give you the world's best telephone service at the lowest possible cost. . - .00 WITH 1y rr c Look "Fresh Like A Daisy" AllSummer Long in WEATHERVANES Jlcc '41a oC t2 500 First with fashion-minded women the country over . . . Handmacher's Celanese Weathervanes . . . the suits that keep their crisp, cool composure through torrid summers. For work, travel, city and even dress occasions. Shown, one of 6 new styles, in 14 luscious colors. Ours alone in Ann Arbor! Coats and Suits - Second Floor and at the Dowvntowvn Store t~ Take the style of his shoes to put him at your feet. A lad goes for the flattery of man- copying details on Friendly "Saddle-Boys." $695 ll' A41 ,- -7u and $795 14 'r:{4'rrr: _.. I 1I I