TilIE MICHIGAN I XILY Blue Team Informal Dance Initiates First Frosh Weekend i Otn the oue Visitors Meet For Play Day The Diag is still the scene of the antics of vivacious freshmen wom- en, dressed as couples, cigarette girls and clowns today for the last day of campus ticket sales for the "Frosh Weekend" dances. Tickets will continue to be on sale from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the League, the Union, on the Diag and in the Engine Arch. Latepur- chasers may also buy tickets at the door for the dances both nights. "Frosh Weekend" will high- light this weekend's social calen- dar of events with three days of entertainment sponsored by fresh- men women. WEEKEND EVENTS will in- clude two informal dances, one to be presented today in the League Ballroom by the Blue Team, and one to be held tomorrow sponsored by the Maize Team. Also included in "Frosh Week- end" festivities will be "Frosh Fantasy," a fashion show to be held at 3 p.m. Sunday in the League Ballroom. The central committee of the dances has been divided into the Music Cites Sorority Freshmen Mu Phi Epsilon, national music sorority, recently honored eleven freshmen women for scholastic achievement at a formal musicale. Patricia Joy received the Mu Phi medal for the highest grades. Others honored were Mary Bal- lard, Carol Eagle, Frances Hans- lovsky, Lillian Johnson, Barbara McGoey, Marilyn Palm, Jeanie Parker, Margaret Strand, Kather- ine Tabern and Faith Zeeuw. Maize and Blue Teams which are working in competition for an en- graved plaque which will be passed down from year to year to the winning team. * * * THE TEAM will be judged or decorations, floorshow, entertain- ment, program and ticket designs, dues collected and total dance cost. "Deuces Wild" will be the theme of the Blue Team's dance tonight. The life and loves of a deck of cards will be featured in intermission entertainment, with a Joker acting as master of ceremonies. Giant sea shells, underwater specimens and even mermaids will add to the atmosphere of "Com- motion in the Ocean," the dance sponsored by the Maize Team to- morrow. ACCORDING TO publicity chairman, Janice James, plans for the Maize Team's decorations have been upset, so the outcome may be a little surprising. Joyce Howard is general chairman of the Blue Team, Mary Muller is assistant chair- man, Tracy Redfield is in charge of floorshow entertain- ment and is being assisted by Helen Yeager. Other committee members are Sue Sears, who is handling pub- licity, Sally Fish, in charge of tickets, Nancy Watkins, decora- tions chairman, Margaret Ryburn, in charge of programs, Nancy Por- ter, patrons chairman and Beverly Young, in charge of awards and judges. -Daily-Wally Barth COEDS SUMMONED--Law students Jack Reinhart and Art Prine serve summonses on Karin Lindh and Barbara Sickels, ordering them to appear at Crease Ball tonight. Law Students PresentBall Serving Coca-Cola Serves Hospitality Surrounded by traditional court- room atmosphere, law students will present their annual Crease Ball from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. tonight. The lawyers, in true legal fash- ion, have served summonses on their dates, ordering them to ap- pear at Crease Ball. The theme of the semi-formal dance will center around a satire of legal practices. The theme will carry out a mate- rialized play on law terms. Crease Ball has a long, tradi- tion-filled history, much of which is based on the long-standing ri- valry between the lawyers and the engineers, who sponsor Slide Rule Ball. Music will be provided by Frank Tinker's Union orchestra. Women attending the dance will be granted 1:30 a.m. permis- sion. No corsages are to be worn. Lorne MacDonald is general chairman of Crease Ball. Chaper- ons will be Prof. and Mrs. L. H. Wright, Prof. and Mrs. C. Joiner and Prof. and Mrs. A. F. Smith. By MARJE SCHMIDT and JO KETELHUTt TIS WEEKEND will see a great influx of parents. especially moth- ers, to campus town where they will be honored at house parties and pre-Mother's Day celebrations. The ZBT house will be filled to overflowing with 40 to 50 pairs' of these watchful, loving eyes. The men have planned a banquet for tomorrow evening to be followed by a Monte Carlo gambling party, which will be for dates as well as family. A prize will be given tol the largest money-holder. MEN OF PHI GAMMA DELTA plan to initiate their mothers to campus "spirits" by adjourning to a popular tavern at 4 p.m. tomor- row.. After dinner at the chapter house, there will be a program dance at which time Fiji sons will request the honor of signing for dances on the mothers' programs. After the Phi Gam mothers have retired in the evening, they will be serenaded in true campus style. Following church on Sun- day the mothers will be served a real home-cooked meal-away from home-with no after-dinner dishes! If one should see such strange sights as zebra-painted horses, rainbow-colored goats, French poodles or baby alligators being led across the threshold of the Sigma Chi house tomorrow night they won't need a second guess to know that the Sig Brothers Circus has come to town. CANDY COTTON MACHINES, popcorn and candy-apple booths will be tucked into various corners of the "Big Top." Sideshows, including a magician act, a burlesque show, the tall man and the fat man, complete with barkers, will add to the constant din. Guests will come dressed as "kiddies" and the most ingenious costume will gain its owner a real, live, baby alligator. Losers of this cuddly prize may drown their sorrows in pink lemonade. The SAE's Waterfront Dive will take the men and their dates back to the days of the Barbary Coast. Costuming can range from the cut-throat sailor's to the Diamond Jim top hat and tails. Art Starr's five-piece combo will play mood music in an atmosphere of sawdust and smoke. TOMORROW NIGHT those who visit the Lambda Chi's Davy Jones Locker may also find themselves on the better end of a "Strike It Rich" theme. Sometime during the evening they will be presented with the nautical $64 question, and to the winner will go wealth untold. Their spokesman said, "It will be the most knock-down-drag- out affair since the Bikini test in the Pacific." The women, clad in replicas of early-century bathing suits, will be presented with seaweed corsages. Tomorrow afternoon, a tea honoring the Kappa Alpha Theta pledges will be the beginning of a big weekend for them. In the eve- ning the girls and their dates will have dinner at the Stage Coach Inn and then return to dance amidst a garden atmosphere to the music of Del Elliot. THE ZETA PSI'S will throw an Apache "Brawl" tomorrow eve- ning at their "Lucky Pierre's Cafe." Slit skirts, T-shirts, bell-bottoms and Apache doin's will be the theme of the night. Preceding Crease Ball tonight the Phi Delta Phi's will give a dinner for the members honoring the seniors and their dates. This is to be followed by a record dance tomorrow from 9 p.m. until midnight, and on Sunday with a charcoal broiled steak dinner. Winchell House plans to take over the generous facilities of the Fresh Air Camp tomorrow from 2:30 until 10:30 p.m. Square dancing, picnicing and baseball will be the reverse order of the day. * * * * THIS WEEKEND ALSO will bring another round of pledge for- mals. "Flamingo Isle" will be the theme of the Alpha Gam formal tonight which will be preceded by a dinner at the Allenel. Dancers will find themselves amidst volcanoes, Budas and palm trees frolicing to the strains of Doug Lent's music. The KD's plan to hold their pledge formal tonight at the home of Jan Nickelsen in Barton Hills. The girls will have dinner at the League beforehand. Al Rice's orchestra will do the musical honors. Program Includes Tennis andArchery Women Physical Education ma- jors from campus and surrounding colleges will take aver Palmer Field tomorrow with a "Play Day" of sports. Coeds will arrive at WAB early in the morning from Michigan State, Michigan State Normal, Western Michigan. Wayne Univer- sity, Adrian College, the Univer- sity of Toledo and Mt. Pleasant. As hostesses, the Michigan ma- jors have planned tennis matches, archery, golf and softball games with luncheon in WAB and an informal tea to end the after- noon. "PLAY DAY" is a revision of the "Major Day" held last spring when the Women's Physical Edu- women from near-by high-schools who were interested in the pro- gram. If tomorrow is a success, the department will alternate "Major Day" and "Play Day" each spring. Registration will begin festivi- ties when guests receive both name tags and team numbers. Dr. Margaret Bell, chairman of the Program of Physical Educa- tion for Women, will welcome participants to the campus. At 10 a.m. the sports will begin with each team moving from one activity to another, matching wits and training with the bow, bat and balls. * * * SUE ROSE, chairman of post- luncheon entertainment, has planned a midget comedian act, a dance duet by Virginia Seput and Edith Daniels, a dance num- ber centered around "The Dark Town Strutter's Ball," group sing- ing, mixers and a square dance. At 1 p.m. the coeds will re- turn to Palmer Field to renew the competition until 3:30 p.m. when tea will be served, inter- spersed with a general exchange of ideas and questions which may have gone unanswered. Faculty members will also come from each school to watch the ac- tivity and enter into discussion with the younger guests. 1/Ueddnls4 § 6fl9a emYef V 1 <""}{ < "">fi ""}> <" ">0<" {"> < }G><"""> C""0<"'""(<"'"> O""" <"5 VET'S WATCH REPAIR EXAM TIME demands EXACT TIME Blue Front-Packard and State West Lodge PX-Willow Lodge An Amazing Offer by H LIDAY Pipe Mixture Me pipe that every smoker wants-DANA. the modern pipe, with brightly polished alumd mshank and enuineimportedbriarboi English-Boucher Mr. and Mrs. Edwin L. English of Urbana, Ohio have announced the engagement of their daughter, Virginia Anne, to Roy D. Boucher of Dayton, Ohio, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. James Boucher, of Gata- sauqua, Pa. Miss English was graduated from Sullins School, Bristol, Va. and attended the University and Miami University. She is a mem- ber of Pi Beta Phi and Phi Up- silon Omicron. Mr. Boucher attended the Uni- versity where he received his Bachelor of Laws degree in June, 1947. He is a member of Phi Delta Theta and Phi Delta Phi. During his undergraduate years at the University, Mr. Boucher was affili- ated with Phi Eta Sigma, Phi Kappa Phi and Kappa PhiSigma. He was president of the' Michi- gan Union and a member of the Western Conference champion tennis teams for two years. The wedding will be an event of midsummer. Nelson-Duncan The engagement of Sigrid Nel- son to Allan Duncan was an- nounced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Nelson of Berkley dur- ing dinner at the Alpha Chi Omega House. The news was received in the form of a miniature newspaper bearing pictures of the couple. Miss Nelson is a senior in the literary college and affiliated with Alpha Chi Omega and Theta Sig- ma Phi. Mr. Duncan, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Duncan of South Bend, nd., was graduated from Kalamazoo'College and is attend- ing Northwestern Dental School. He is a member of Psi Omega. Barker-Kal Istrom Announcement has been made of the engagement of Barbara Lou Barker to Robert Donald Kall- strom by her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Vincent L. Barker of Monroe. Mr. Kallstrom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gustav R. Kallstrom of Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio. Miss Barker is a junior in the literary, college and is affiliated with Alpha Phi. Mr.AKallstrom is a senior at Yale University and is a member of Sigma Nu. The couple plans a September wedding. Cole-Lindhout Dr. and Mrs. Hazen P. Cole of Ithaca, Michigan have announced the engagement of their daughter, Betty, to William Lindhout, son of Mrs. Pierre Lindhout of Grand Rapids, Michigan. Miss Cole is a senior in the School of Literature, Science and the Arts and is affiliated with Gamma Phi Beta. Mr. Lindhout is a junior in the School of Architecture and Design and is affiliated with Sigma Phi. V, ( .~ 6 .. Only 50t with inside wrappers from 12 pocket tins of DOIIDAY PIPE MIXTi Hot Weather Fresh-Up CLUB 211 Soda Fountain 211 S. 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