THE MICHIGAN DAILY finnual IFC Ball To Feature Music Of BlueBarron Best Displays To Be Awarded Trophies; Bowery Wharves, Flashing Signs, Ferry , To Carry Out Waterfront City Theme "I Cover the Waterfront", the 18th annual IFC Ball, will be pre- sented from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. to- day at the Intramural Building. Tickets for the dance are still on sale through representatives in each of the fraternity houses and from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. today in the Administration Building. Tickets may also be purchased from 3 to 5 p.m. today in the IFC Office at the Uniont and at the dance. MUSIC MAESTRO of the eve- ning will be Blue Barron and his orchestra, featuring their "Music of Yesterday and Today." Barron, who started his musical career while attending Ohio State Uni- versity, combines swing with sweetness, smoothness and show- manship. Realizing that there are many by-gone favorites in the memo- ries of the dancing public, Bar- ron includes many nostalgic airs as well as the current hits. Shar- ing the bandstand will be "The Three Blue Notes," harmoniz- ing in the traditional Barron Sign Contest To Be iven By, Tenis Ball Free tickets to Tennis Ball, which will be held May 13 on the Palmer Field tennis courts, will be awarded to ten winners of an observation contest. Signs are being prominently dis- played in the windows of ten stores located on State, South University, IUberty and Packard streets. A dliferent letter contained in the words, "Tennis Ball" will be print- ed on each sign. The ten people who send the earliest post-marked correct lists of the stores'displaying signs and the letters featured at each spot will be awarded free tickets. Lists should be mailed to Judy Loud, Martha Gook Building, Tennis Ball, first open air dance held on 'campus during a regular school year, will feature the music of Charlie Manning's fourteen- piece orchestra. Members of the decoration committee for the Tennis Ball will report to the Women's Ath- letic Building during their spare time to work on decora- tions. way, with Bobby Beers and Betty Clark as soloists. As an added attraction, frater nity sweetheart songs, styled the Blue Barron way, will be featured. Fraternities have already submit- ted copies of their songs which will be played throughout the eve- ning. * * * INTERMISSION entertainment will be provided by approximately 30 members of the IFC Glee Club. Decorations for the affair are centered around the waterfront theme. Travel posters and pen- nants, and murals of typical scenes will create the proper at- mosphere in the foyer of the In- tramural Building. Photograph booths will special- ize in the passport type photo, which can later be put in the pro- grams which are designed like tra- ditional passports. Steamship tick- ets on the "IFC Line" also carry out the theme. MAIN PART of the decorations in the ballroom proper will be the 21 booths which will be patterned on buildings in waterfront com- munity. Two fraternities will com- bine their efforts in the construc- tion of the individual booths. Six trophies will be awarded to the three winning displays in the booth contest. Identical trophies will be awarded to each of the two houses winning first, second and third place. Trophies have been donated by local iner- chants. With the construction of the booths, the ballroom will suggest a small city built on the edge of the water. A ferry boat will be moored at the east end of the floor while a skyline scene will deco- rate the other end. * * * ELECTRIC SIGNS and flashing lights on the booths and glittering stars suspe'nded from the ceiling will add detail to the decora- tions. Barron's bandstand will be the scene of one of the reknowned bowery wharves. Boardwalk beverages will be served the guests in the foyer of the building. Couples will also receive gift packages of cigar- ettes. Women will be granted 1:30 per- mission for the dance. Only guests of the central committee will wear corsages. Co-chairmen of the dance are Harold Jacobson and John Baum. They are assisted by Don Hiles, tickets; t Larry Straton, booths; "Steve" Stevenson, decoration; Dick Morrison, programs; and Jim Brown, publicity. On the .._q~d By MARJE SCHMIDT It would seem that sunny, spring days have at last come Ann Arbor way, though whether they remain or not seems a bit dubious, as proved by the many alternate parties planned for this weekend. The AK Psi spokesman seemed rather confused at the time of my call, but amid frequent exclamations of, "I see!" and "Cheers!", he managed to relate that the men had planned a picnic to be held to- morrow down by the river. In case of rain they will hold the party at the house, roasting weiners over an inside grill. GREENE HOUSE plans to hold their annual spring picnic tomor- row on the Island. They're hoping that the weather gods will be smiling on their baseball, etc., but should they be of unruly temperament, the men will hasten back to "greener" fields. Tonight's plans center around formal dinners and open houses preceding IFC Ball. Houses that will be serving dinner for mem- bers and their dates are: Lambda Chi, Phi Kappa Psi, Pi Lambda Phi, Theta Delta Chi, Chi Psi Lodge, and Sigma Nu. Several of the fraternities will also have their annual Mother's Day celebrations this weekend. The Lambda Chi's have also invited the fa- thers to accompany their "better halves." Orchid corsages will be pre- sented to the mothers preceding dinner and entertainment Sunday. * * * * SAE MOTHERS will join ranks tomorrow when they form what will be known as the Minerva Club. Minerva is the SAE goddess. Following these ceremonies sons will honor their mothers with group singing and a humorous skit before the dinner hour. Phi Psi mothers will also arrive for the weekend. Many of them plan to attend May Festival following dinner at the house tomorrow. In all cases the typically obedient sons will move out to places unknown, making room for their mothers in the chapter houses. Kappa Nu's barn dance party will transform their living room into a maize of hay-bales, lanterns, and corn cobs. Corn cob pipes will be presented to all as favors in hopes of adding that "real" touch to the evening. Square dancing will be the password, and one of the mem- bers has promised to try his hand at calling. Chilled cider and sand- wiches will be served. * * * * SALINE VALLEY Farms will be the scene of a barn dance and picnic tomorrow for the Pi Lambda Phi's and their dates. In the after- noon there will be games and boating, while later in the evening coup- les will engage in regular dancing as well as square dancing. The fra- ternity trio will provide entertainment. THE "ODD BALL", so called because of the surprise element involved, will be the mode of entertainment to be found at the Trigon House tomorrow night. Shock-patients will be treated on the scene. Del Elliott and his orchestra will be on hand at the Phi Chi house tomorrow to play for their annual spring formal. Decorations will fol- low the seasonal patterns. Dinner is to be served at the chapter house preceding the dance. The AOPi's will play hostess to their mothers this weekend. Moms will stay at the house while some of the members move out. On Sunday everyone will go to church. After dinner at the house a musical pro- gram complete with original skits will be staged. A Mother's Day tea will fete Alpha Xi Delta mothers from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday afternoon. Wyvern Taps Junior Women Qay Cosmopolit To Pervade Intel Under a canopy of colorful fes toons, foreign and native student will dance tonight from 9 p.m. un til 1 a.m. in the Union Ballroom at the 7th annual Internationa Ball. The dance will feature a trul: internationalbatmosphere, it background borrowed from vari ous countries of the world, fron South America to India. Even the music will have a cosmopolitan flavor with Ramon Cerda, Latin orchestra leader, and Frank Tink er, regular Union bandleader, do ing the musical honors for th all-campus dance. A strolling South American gui tar trio will strum soft melodies for the entertainment of couple: sitting out dances in the Terrac( Room, which will be decorated a an old European Rathskellar. * * * COKES WILL be served on th terrace in a romantic" setting o candlelight and checkered table cloths. Midway through the evening, a gala international floorshow will be presented. Joe Czesna- kowicz will M.C. a program which will include a dance by Chico and a solo on the Indian sitar by Brij Bhushan Kumar. Hawaii will be represenited im the floorshow by a hula dance,o native song and a war chant by SUPPER CLUB 6 'Y "Your honor,-while all our Snndaj3 dinners at the - iakes me cool: his . 313 SOUT an Atmosphere rnational Ball the Hawaiian Club. Italy will have s her representation also in an Ital- - ian trio. The show will include a special surprise act. DRESS FOR the ball is either y semi-formal or national costume. Women may wear flowers and 1:30 a.m. permission will be granted to coeds attending the dance. . Tickets are on sale at the Un- ion, League, International Center - and on the Diag. They may also be purchased at the door. e1 An Amazing Offer by - HOLIDAY e.. s Pipe Mixture the pipe that every smoker wants-DANA, the modern pipe, with brighty polised alumA e num shank andenneimportedbriar bo if - Onl with inside wrappers i from 12 pocket tinsof HOLIDAY PIPE MIXTURE sees 2 MMA wawne -aet yewr DANA PIP " aJne 30.1949 by M.A.H. e ARTISTS' UNION, INC. niighbo)rs are en'j0ying their ranada Cafe , IIy bus band .vin'f that IL egal?" H STATE ST ~~s for grd ~Mat JJLZ' 44 Son of Mr. and Mrs. Robie L. Mitchell, of Garden City, New York, Bill is majoring in Civil Engineering, is Chair- man ofthe Budget Committee, and Treasurer of the Institute Committee. ..} NMEMK 3?:v MMM 1 1 i" J DB!M~iMEL3 / A / ' H Af ~iiiHr: (.f I .tiN. ;' : e' i PAGE FivE 7 i r p r ,, r FC " 1 ^' . , - ,h - ,; ?, , I' ' '- ' ,1''.i , \t , \ f , J, ' N .' . . v,. J"_'1 "%e a Wyvern, junior women's honor- ary, held its annual tapping cere- monies last night. 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